The Two Torcs (22 page)

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Authors: Debbie Viguie

BOOK: The Two Torcs
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Too long have we been fighting a human war against inhuman opponents
, he thought fiercely.
That must stop.
He breathed a prayer, asking for strength, that God would let him live to protect those who could not protect themselves.

Surely Friar Tuck and the others would have gained the safety of Sherwood. The mighty forest seemed to be the only thing that could stand in the Sheriff’s way. They needed to figure out why that was, how to extend its protection, and how to prevent it from being breached.

His opponent’s sword whistled past his head, nicking the hood and nearly taking off his ear.

His arms were burning with the strain of parrying the man’s blows. Even as Robin retreated, step by step, he did so with purpose. Behind him lay the trees. He needed to draw the Sheriff closer to them.

* * *

Friar Tuck was exhausted and almost numb from shock when he, Much, Alan, and Lenore arrived at the camp. Their arrival was heralded by a lookout, and soon he was face to face with Old Soldier and Little John.

“What has happened?” Old Soldier demanded, his voice like burnished steel, strong, resolute.

“The Sheriff and his men burned the monastery,” Tuck said. “They killed… all my brothers.” The grief was there, raw and terrible just below the surface, but held in check by the dreamlike state he felt he was walking in.

It wasn’t real. It couldn’t be. How was Nottingham so emboldened that he could destroy the representatives of God? Was it because he knew they were cut off from Rome, and that the Pope remained unaware of how dire things had grown?

Next to him Lenore wept quietly. Alan and Much were both silent.

Little John had recoiled in horror, crossing himself. Even Old Soldier looked rattled.

“The Sheriff, he’s a monster,” Much said quietly. “Robin shot him twice, arrows through the chest, and he did not even fall.”

“Where is Lord Robin?” Old Soldier asked.

“He sent us to safety,” Tuck answered. “He was battling Nottingham. The man truly is a demon, walking abroad by some dark magic, as Much said.” Guilt gnawed at his insides like a starving dog worrying a bone.

“If that’s true, then Longstride will be dead,” Little John said, voice strained.

Silence fell among them.

“I’m not that easy to kill,” a voice spoke up suddenly.

They all turned to see Robin staggering into the clearing, bloody and so battered as to be almost unrecognizable. Relief surged through the friar.

“The Sheriff?” he asked, daring to hope.

“He can’t enter the forest, just as we’ve heard,” Robin responded grimly. “Unfortunately, he’s also unkillable, just as the rumors have said… just like that bastard John.”

Tuck thought of the black arrow. Before he could ask, however, Robin locked eyes with him and gave his head a short, sharp shake.

Then Robin’s eyes drifted past Friar Tuck to fall upon Much. “If the Sheriff is to be believed, the soldiers we killed will rise again at nightfall.”

Tuck’s blood ran cold at the thought, and he involuntarily crossed himself.

“Did any of them see you?” Robin asked, addressing Much.

“I don’t know.” The boy hesitated a moment and then nodded. “Some of the villagers did.”

Robin nodded grimly. “Then we shouldn’t take chances. If one of the soldiers revives, and remembers you, they might look for you at home and focus their revenge upon your family.” He spoke the truth, and every man there knew it.

“I’ll run straight home to warn them,” Much said, his face pale.

“Take care that you are not seen,” Robin instructed, “and when you reach them…”

“Bring them here,” Old Soldier said. “We can settle them in the forest with some of the others.”

“What of you?” Little John spoke up, pointing a shaking finger at Robin. “Did the Sheriff or his men recognize you?”

Robin shook his head. “I managed to keep my face disguised. The identity of the Hood should still be a secret.”

* * *

Much’s heart was in his throat as he ran for home. There was still plenty of daylight left. If the soldiers would wake at nightfall, then he should be able to reach home and get his parents to safety before any of them could remember seeing him.

He was grateful to Robin for thinking of that. He never would have. He hadn’t even done any fighting, just followed Robin and watched in awe. That wouldn’t stop the Sheriff or his men, though. They were cruel. Less than men.
Demons
, as Friar Tuck had said.

He held to the forest as long as he could before bursting out of it close to home. His feet flew down familiar paths that he had walked so many times, laden with goods to trade. His heart pounded harder and harder and his legs burned but he dared not slow down. They’d have just enough time to pack a few things before leaving. They wouldn’t want to leave their home, but they’d understand. He’d tell them Robin had sent him, and then they’d listen.

At last the mill was in sight and his heart swelled with relief to see it standing. A moment later, though, something cold touched him. There was something wrong. The door was open wide. There was no smoke rising from the chimney, though it was growing even colder as the day drew to an end. A fire should be burning on the hearth for his mother to use to cook dinner.

There was a stillness to the place that terrified him.

He wanted to stop, turn, and flee back to the safety of the forest, but he couldn’t. He had to know. His feet drove on, running even faster up the path as his mind screamed that it was dangerous. It was as if he had no control over himself, like he was compelled to move forward.

Then he smelled something burning… something terrible.

He grabbed the edges of the doorway and jerked himself to a sudden halt. A moment later he crashed to his knees with a cry. His father lay, blank eyes staring at the ceiling, his shirt coated in blood. A few feet away his mother lay in the fireplace, her body half its normal color and half charred like a bit of meat fallen into the fire.

He didn’t look away as he retched.

Even as he did, though, his mind tried to work. The Sheriff’s men would come alive at night. They couldn’t have told the Sheriff that he had been there, and he was sure the Sheriff hadn’t seen him, his attention focused on Robin. Some of the villagers had seen him, a couple in particular. One of them must have told the Sheriff about him. It was terrible, unthinkable. They knew him, his family. They were friends. Yet the truth was there to see, no matter how terrible it was.

Someone he knew had got them killed.

He had to leave, before someone could come back, looking for him. His parents should be buried, and properly, but he knew deep down he couldn’t be the one to do it. He hadn’t the time. He needed to make his way back to Sherwood, and pledge himself to fight beside Robin and his men. Old Soldier would train him and he would avenge his parents.

Much forced himself to his feet, tried to think through the haze that clung to his mind. He made it to his room, grabbed some clothes and his warmest boots. He wrapped them in a blanket from his bed. He moved back into the living room and he took his father’s axe from the wall. It was the only weapon his family possessed, though it had only ever seen use as a tool.

He was about to go out the front when he remembered something else. He turned and stared at the small door that led to his father’s private room. It was like invading a sacred place as he opened the door now, stooping to get inside.

With reverent fingers he took the boxes that held his father’s tobacco and the jug with the sweet, fermented currant drink that his father had shared with him but once. These were his now. He felt the weight of them in his hands, and another weight on his shoulders, like the remembered weight of his father’s hands.

He closed his eyes, allowing the weight to work upon him. He could smell his father in this room, almost hear his rare laugh, and he couldn’t help but feel that he’d been given a blessing by the man who had given him life.

Without a word Much turned and slipped from the room. Out of habit he closed the front door of the house as he left. Then he set his steps toward Sherwood. His pace quickened as he noticed the sun sinking toward the horizon. Night was coming. The demons would be waking up.

The tears froze on his face as he walked back to the camp.

THE MANTLE OF WINTER MOURNING
CHAPTER TWENTY

Will spent the day working on the plans for the feast King John would be hosting in just over a week’s time. Even as he ordered food and materials, and spoke to various household staff, there was an itching in the back of his mind.

He convinced himself he was being paranoid, that Chastity’s fear had rubbed off on him. He didn’t know why he was putting such stock in the girl’s vision anyway—such things weren’t to be believed.

Of course, as he was learning, he didn’t have to believe in dark things for them to be true. The girl had been so afraid, too. He had seen her express many emotions, but never abject terror. He had held her in his arms for many long minutes while she cried. Then it had taken everything in him to let her go when she was finished.

Since then his thoughts had been on her more often than not. She was beautiful, her charms beyond dispute. There was a strength about her that fascinated him. Maybe it was because she was one of the few women who had never shown any interest in him. There was no denying that the chase could be an intoxicating thing.

He sighed. Chastity was Marian’s maid and friend. Pursuing her was unwise. It might also prove impossible. If the rumors were true, then she was well-named. Will shook himself.

He had pursued many an alluring female but none had so occupied his thoughts. Maybe when all this unpleasantness was behind them, he would consider it. Until then he had plans to make, plans to foil, and he still needed to figure out a way to frame the steward.

* * *

It was dark and there was only a sliver of a moon out when Chastity made her way from the castle. Fear washed over her in waves. Fear not for herself, but for the Lady Marian, whom she was leaving alone in a nest of vipers.

Chastity was not accustomed to being afraid. All her life she’d been quick, clever, strong as a boy and twice as smart. Many a time she’d defended her name and her virtue with her fists and a good swift kick. More often than that she’d bested her opponents with her wits.

Of late, though, the fear had been creeping in. It had started with the vision of the Hood dead, and his lady brought to woe. Even then she’d suspected that Robin was the Hood and Marian his lady. Having acknowledgement just made it all worse. She didn’t want harm to befall either of them. England
needed
the Hood. Even more it needed Marian, particularly if anything happened to King Richard, God save him.

She didn’t know what she could do to stop the vision from coming true. She just knew that she had to. Chastity couldn’t stand it if something happened to Marian, who had not only been her lady, but had also been her friend since they were both very young. Marian was everything that was good and right in the world. She was someone to believe in.

She took a deep breath, waiting for the guards to clear the corners of the wall, then she ran, fleet as a deer across the small stretch of open ground where she was most likely to be caught.

She made it to a patch of shrubs that concealed her and gave herself a moment to catch her breath. She was dressed in dark clothes from head to toe to match her need for stealth, and kept her eyes moving, making sure that no one was following her.

No one, and no
thing
.

Chastity had caught just the barest glimpse of one of the Sheriff’s pets a few nights ago as it wrapped itself around his collar, pretending to be naught but a fur stole. She knew better, though, and kept a careful eye out for it or any other minions that might do the Sheriff’s bidding.

She’d planned to charm a groom into letting her borrow a horse, but had decided it was safer if no one knew she was leaving the castle. It would be a long walk, but at least none would be the wiser, except for Marian.

Slipping further into the bushes, she moved quiet as a mouse. Her wary eyes darted ahead and behind. At last she began to move at a faster pace—she’d need speed to make it to Sherwood on foot and accomplish her mission.

There was an elusive scent on the wind that seemed to disappear and reappear periodically. The farther she made it from the castle, the stronger it became. It was smoke. Not the warm, smoky smell of a hearth fire, but a deep, acrid stench. Something sickly sweet floated on the air with it, and the stronger the scent became, the more her insides twisted.

She didn’t want to know where the smell was coming from.

When she finally made it to the forest she began to breathe a bit easier. The stench wasn’t as strong, and she was off the roads and safe. Most folks were afraid of Sherwood, of the haints and fey that were said to roam it. She didn’t discount the existence of such creatures, but after seeing what the Sheriff and Prince John were capable of, she didn’t fear them, either. There was no darkness in the forest that could equal the one outside it.

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