snickering.
raisa strode past the stairs and through the kitchen, where Simon was kneading bread for the overnight rising. “My lady?” he said, looking up at her.
“i need some fresh air,” raisa said. Simon stared after her as she walked out the back door and into the rain. Shivering, she drew Fiona Bayar’s wrap more closely around her shoulders. it had come with the horse she’d stolen from the High wizard’s daughter—one of the few things of Fiona’s that fit.
The stable was warm and dry and smelled of sweet hay and horses. Ghost poked his head out of his stall, snorting and blow-ing bits of oats at her. She stroked his nose. Two stalls down, she recognized ransom, Byrne’s large bay gelding, a mountain pony cross.
The stable doors creaked open and Byrne entered, followed by a handful of bluejackets. Though they could hardly be called bluejackets, since they wore a mixture of nondescript cold weather clothing in browns and greens.
raisa scanned them quickly, but to her disappointment, 10
i n T H e B o r D e r L A n D S
Amon wasn’t there, nor any of the other Gray wolves. These soldiers were more seasoned than Amon’s cadets, their still-young faces inscribed by sun and wind.
Byrne carefully latched the stable doors and set one of his company to keep watch. The others went immediately to work, leading out their horses and saddling them up.
“you mean to leave tonight?” raisa asked, nodding toward the others.
“The sooner the better,” Byrne said. He stood gazing down at her, chewing his lower lip, examining her for damage. “it is a relief to find you still alive.”
As if he wouldn’t have known if she’d been killed. As if he wouldn’t have sensed the blow to the all-important Gray wolf line.
“what’s happened?” raisa said. “How did you know i was here? where is Amon? why is Fetters Ford no longer safe?” Byrne took a step back, retreating from the onslaught of questions. He nodded toward the tack room. “Let’s talk in there.” raisa remembered the Ardenine ladies. “oh—there’s one thing. Those two ladies i was talking to in the taproom—i agreed to travel on with them tomorrow. Could you send someone to let them know my plans have changed?” it was cowardly, she knew, but she was too weary to deal with Lady esmerell’s disappointment.
“Corliss.” Byrne motioned to one of his men and sent him back to the inn to give esmerell and Tatina the bad news.
Unlatching Ghost’s stall door, raisa led the stallion into the tack room and cross tied him, then fetched his saddle and bridle from the rack against the wall.
11
T H e G r Ay wo L F T H ro n e
Byrne followed her in and closed the door. He watched raisa work for a moment. “isn’t that the flatland stallion Fiona Bayar was riding last time she was home?”
raisa nodded. Fiona went through horses like her brother Micah went through lovers. “i borrowed him.” Dragging over a step stool, she climbed up so she could fling her horse blanket across Ghost’s broad back.
“i’d like to hear that story,” Byrne said.
“you were about to tell me the story of how you came to be here, Captain Byrne.”
“yes, your Highness.” Byrne inclined his head, giving in.
“your father intercepted a message that suggests Lord Bayar knows where you are and has dispatched assassins to murder you.”
“oh,” raisa said, looking up from her work. “right. i know about that. He sent four of them to oden’s Ford.” Byrne raised an eyebrow, which so reminded raisa of Amon that her heart stuttered. “And?” he said dryly.
“i killed one, and Micah Bayar killed the other three,” raisa said.
“Micah?” Byrne said sharply. “why would he—”
“He’d rather marry me than bury me, apparently,” raisa said.
“He kidnapped me from school and was hauling me back home for a wedding when we were overrun by Gerard Montaigne’s army on its way into Tamron. That was just north of oden’s