and gave the signal to ride.
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He never caught sight of the boy during the next four daysâ journey to Alston, but Larenz reported on him each day. Only the night before they reached Alston did the boy show himself and only for a moment before he tucked himself back into the shadows of the camp.
Sorenâs rest was fitful the night before the battle, as it always wasâpartly due to facing an unknown outcome and partly due to the thrill of battle. He woke from dozing and walked the camp, speaking to some of the men, yet in reality seeking out the boy heâd taken. He found him, curled in a ball far from the cooling ashes of a fire, shivering in the dawnâs chill. Seeing an unused blanket nearby, Soren draped it over the scrawny formand began to walk away, stopped by the quiet whisper of the child.
âAnd what are you called?â Raed asked.
âSoren,â he said. âSoren the Damned.â
For no matter what happened on the morrow, no matter the outcome of Williamâs fight against the rebels plaguing his lands, no matter that the blood of his enemy would be spilled, Soren knew his soul was damned to the darkness in which it now lived.
Chapter Two
S ybilla, Lady of Alston, stood up straight and moaned as her back spasmed in response to the movement. Pressing her fists into her lower back, she tried to ease the pain caused by leaning over too much and by carrying too many large rocks to the wooden palisade. They must shore up the defences, said Gareth, the commander of those who yet defended her and the keep. So, she helped as much as she could. Lady or not, another pair of hands lightened the work of all and gave her the hope that the wall could be strengthened to protect the keep from the coming invader.
Sybilla accepted a cup of water from the servant girl passing by, tightened the leather ties around her braid and began anew. They had little time to finish this task before the invader kingâs pawn arrived at their gates. After receiving the message that he travelled there to claim the lands of her father, Sybilla and her late fatherâs steward Algar decided to protect themselves from thedevastation committed on their neighbours and kin when faced with the same situation. She did not believe they could hold out long, but if they presented their strength, she and they hoped to negotiate a peaceful transitionâone that allowed her people to live and her to travel to her cousinâs convent and live out her life there in peace and contemplation.
With her father and her brother dead, with no other Saxon kin able to come to her rescue or to stand against these invaders as they moved inexorably north towards her lands, Sybilla knew she and her people had few choices and little power.
They worked until nightfall, taking advantage of every moment of summerâs daylight to build the wall as high and strong as they could. Gareth had nodded his approval of their efforts in that stern, serious manner of his, but Sybilla knew it was not enough. Still, they had two days, possibly three, before the invaders arrived and they would take every moment given to them to prepare.
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The birdsâ song that heralded the dawn also brought terror to their doors, for the invaders crested the hill across from the keep and formed their lines to attack. Sybilla quickly gathered the children and took them to the back of the keep and carried out whatever Gareth ordered. Though sheâd lived there for all her life, never once had they needed to defend it from outsiders. Even when her father and brother went off to fight alongside their kingâher brother to Stamford Bridge and then her father to Hastingsâtheir defences here were perfunctory and never needed.
Now, though, it meant the difference between life and death.
When things were settled in the keep, she climbed to the top of the wall to see what forces they faced. Gareth ordered her away, but Sybilla thought that