The Gathering Storm
Page 120
The guide glanced repeatedly toward the gully, expecting the troop of horsemen to burst free at any moment. At last he edged away from them and, with a nervous burst of speed, jogged back the way they had come.
“Let him go,” said Rosvita as Aurea started after him, brandishing the staff. “He drove a fair bargain, and gave us what we asked for.”
“And no doubt had his kinfolk betray us to the ones pursuing us, for an equal price,” said Aurea bitterly.
“I hope he got a better bargain than the one we gave him,” said Fortunatus. “The axle on that cart had already broken once and it was ready to crack for good and all.”
“One of you must have a stronger voice than I,” said Rosvita. “We must all shout together.”
They did so, but there was still no answer.
Day lightened around them, although they remained in the rock’s shadow.
“How are we supposed to climb up there?” Hanna asked.
“There were rope ladders before,” said Fortunatus, squinting at the glint of sun as it crested the eastern hills. He pointed to the fluttering scrap Hanna had noticed before. “That’s one there, you can see the corner of it, but it’s been pulled up.”
“There must be someone still up there,” said Rosvita. “If they had all left, the ladders would be down.”
“Oh, God, I’m afraid,” said Gerwita, beginning to cry. “What will they do to us if they catch us?”
“I’ll climb,” said Hanna. “If I can reach that ledge, then at least we can get up that far, out of their reach.”
“Not out of reach of their bows,” said Fortunatus.
Rosvita had a serious gaze, one that Hanna had come to trust in the last weeks. “It will be risky to climb, Eagle. We might hide farther down into the ravine and hope our pursuers turn away, thinking we have escaped them.”
“We might. But I don’t think it would work.”
“The north face can be climbed,” said Fortunatus. “Lord John Ironhead sent soldiers that way. Don’t you recall that they were killed by the daimone?”
“Yes, poor souls. May God have mercy on them.”
“We’re trapped, aren’t we?” said Aurea. “No matter what we do. For even if we can get up there, we haven’t enough people to hold off an attack if they choose to send soldiers up after us on this north face you speak of.”
“We shall see,” said Rosvita. “One can set traps of one’s own in such precarious circumstances. They cannot besiege us forever. And there is one other chance….” She trailed off, looked at Hanna again, a searching gaze, and nodded.
“I’ll go,” said Hanna. None of the clerics were hardy enough, in truth, nor had they the strength to haul Rosvita up the cliff, and despite how much strength Sister Rosvita had gained in the last weeks of their flight, she had not the strength to climb a rugged rock face.
Fortunatus led Hanna around the base of the huge outcropping to the north face. It took a while; the outcropping was huge, and beyond the level field where olive trees had once grown, the ground became rugged enough that they had to slow down in order to pick their way through fallen rocks and shallow gullies. She was sweating by the time Fortunatus halted, out of breath, and wordlessly gestured to the rock face above them. She studied its contours and ledges as well as the message written by the way burnet and scraggly pine had taken root in crevices and ledges along the face.
“Here,” she said, stripping off her gloves and handing them over. She took rope, her knife, and a skin half full of bitter ale, leaving the rest of her gear with Fortunatus.
“I’ll wait until I see you’re safely at the top. Then I’ll return to the others.”
She picked her way over scree to the place where she had chosen to begin. The climb wasn’t as difficult as she’d feared, as long as she didn’t look down. Her fingers and hands began to hurt; that she had expected. But her shoulders ached, too, the soles of her feet, her thighs, any muscle she had to tense in order to hold on. She learned to brush dust from any handhold before surrendering her weight; she was less likely to slip if no grains slid under her fingers. At times she wedged her knees into hollows and shelves into the rock, and once or twice was able to lean into the rock face because of a shift in its slope, giving hands and feet a rest. Yet at such moments, given a chance to reflect, she decided that an enemy lurking above could easily send her plunging to her death by rolling rocks onto her from above.
But no one did.
No horsemen came riding out of the gully. No movement stirred above as she fought her way up the cliff, resting wherever she could but never for long. Human assailants were not the only danger she faced; the scree at the base of the slope was testament to that. One of her fingers began to bleed, stinging each time she used it to grip. The day remained quiet, disturbed by only a light breeze. The sun warmed her shoulders although the air remained chill.