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Doremus skidded down the slope, arms out to keep his balance, towards the yapping, screeching tangle.
'Karl! Franz!'
He called the dogs, but they didn't hear or didn't care.
Behind him, Rudiger stood on the crest of the ridge, watching the dogs go for Otho.
This had gone far enough. He wasn't going to let the fat idiot get killed. It wasn't as if his father really cared about his mistress. As far as Doremus could judge, he would have thrown Sylvana away soon. It was only natural the woman should cast around for another protector. Admittedly, she had shown poor taste, but Otho was a duke, albeit a thin-blooded parvenu of a duke.
'Karl,' he shouted, and the dog looked up, red on its teeth.
He took Karl's collar and pulled him away. Franz was chewing Otho's knee, tearing through cloth to get to the flesh.
The lodge master was still alive. He didn't even seem to be hurt that much. He had scratches on his face and neck, but the dogs hadn't a taste for human meat.
Doremus pulled Franz away.
Calmed, the dogs sat and slavered. Doremus patted their heads.
Otho moaned and cried.
For some reason, Doremus remembered Schlichter von Durrenmatt, the undersized lad who hadn't pa.s.sed the initiation into the League of Karl-Franz. Otho and his fellows had mercilessly kicked and pummelled the boy, throwing him naked into the Reik, advising him to swim home to mother. Doremus wished Schlichter, now a novice of Manaan, were here to see Otho Waernicke fouled and humiliated.
Doremus threw Otho a kerchief.
'Clean yourself up,' he said.
His father and Magnus were with them now. Rudiger made no attempt to intervene, and watched coldly as the sobbing Otho, his boy's eyes streaming in his fat libertine's face, wiped his wounds, wincing as he touched the cuts.
'This quarry was poor,' Rudiger said. 'Not worth taking a trophy from.'
'You should clip his ears, at least,' Magnus said, half-smiling to show he was joking.
Otho, who didn't see the smile, whimpered.
'I should have his b.a.l.l.s for what he's done,' Rudiger said, not smiling. 'But a man's a man, and bears little responsibility for the actions of his loins.'
'The mare,' Otho said. 'She was here'
Rudiger smiled, 'Was she, indeed? A finer quarry than you, jostling for position. But it's no use. The unicorn is tomorrow's animal. Tonight we're after man's mare.'
Magnus was concerned. 'It could be dangerous. Unicorns don't believe in hunters' etiquette.'
Otho was hugging himself, s.h.i.+vering with fear and the cold.
'Master Waernicke,' Rudiger said, 'listen well'
Otho shut up, and half-sat, looking to the graf.
'Go back to the hunting lodge, and a carriage will take you to Middenheim. Tell the coachman to leave before I return from this hunt.'
Otho nodded, relief dawning on his face. He bent forward, to kiss Rudiger's boot. The graf prodded him in the chest, and snarled disgust.
'My son will be the next lodge master?'
Otho said 'yes' several times, tears flowing freely.
'And he will restore the honour of the League of Karl-Franz.'
Magnus helped Otho stand up. It was clear the quarry had wet his trousers. Even Doremus had no more disgust for the fool.
'Get out of my sight,' Rudiger said.
Otho bowed nervously, and scrambled up the slope, grunting and huffing, foam falling from his mouth.
The last Doremus saw of Otho was his ample behind vanis.h.i.+ng over the crest of the ridge.
'He'll find his way back by dawn,' Magnus said. Rudiger shrugged, and plodded on.
'The woman took the left fork back there,' he said. 'She'd have headed for the stream, to break her scent.'
'Father?' Doremus said.
Rudiger and Magnus both turned to him.
'What?' Rudiger asked, glaring dangerously.
'Nothing.'
'Come on then. It'll be dawn in an hour, and the quarry will have flown.'
Doremus felt shamed, but fell in step with the two huntsmen.
Rudiger had been right. The dogs followed Sylvana's trail to the stream, then hesitated. The graf set them loose, knowing they would find their own way back to the lodge.
'It's just us now. A man hunts a woman. That's the way of the world, my son. A man hunts a woman.'
'Until she catches him,' Magnus said, completing the saying.
They followed the stream into the woods. The pre-dawn light was already in the skies, filtering down through the trees as an eerie glowing.
'Plenty of time,' Rudiger said.
'We're near Khorne's Cleft,' Magnus said, making the sign of Sigmar at the mention of the dread power's name.
Khorne's Cleft was a deep subsidence, some three or four hundred feet, cutting through the forest as if a giant axe had struck the hillside. There was a waterfall gus.h.i.+ng into the Cleft, and local legend had it that the water ran red whenever a mortal crime was committed by the fall. That, of course, was nonsense, although Doremus had heard the waters did have unusual properties. Natural healing, the woodsmen's wives called it. As a child, he had cut himself badly on the forehead and Magnus had washed his face with waters from Khorne's Cleft, wiping away and closing up the wound as if it had never been.
'Good,' the graf commented. 'She can't get over that.'
They emerged from the trees, and stood on the edge of the Cleft. Doremus heard the water cras.h.i.+ng to the thin, deep lake at the bottom, and saw the rush of the fall from the opposite side of the gorge.
'Where is that harlot?' Rudiger swore, nocking an arrow and drawing back his bow.
It was impossible that Sylvana could have climbed down. The Cleft had no bottom, just the lake. Too many woodsmen had left their bones down there.
Doremus looked down, around and, finally, up.
The Cleft was the beyond the length of even an athlete's jump, but the spreading trees above met and mingled, creating one canopy. He couldn't see the woman, but he could see where the branches were moving, weighed down by something heavy.
Doremus said nothing, but his father looked up anyway.
'Cunning minx,' he said, aiming at the moving branches.
Magnus laid a hand on his friend's shoulder.
'Rudiger,' he said. 'No. This ends here. Your honour is restored.'
The graf shook off Magnus, and cold fury burned in his face.
'My honour, Magnus? That has not always been your first concern.'
Magnus stood back as if slapped, and his eyes fell. Rudiger took aim again. Doremus could see Sylvana now. She was almost across, her legs hanging down over the waterfall.
'Rudiger,' Magnus shouted Then, things happened, quickly and together. Doremus was whirling around, trying to follow it. Inside his mind, there were explosions of clarity.
His father let loose his arrow, and it flew straight. Nearby, in the woods, there was a cras.h.i.+ng as something large loomed. Sylvana didn't scream as the arrow pierced her side, but Doremus heard the tearing of her clothes and flesh as the barb slid into her. Magnus' protest died in his mouth. Hooves struck hard ground, and young trees bent aside. A huge head burst from the trees behind them, amber eyes aflame, hornpoint flas.h.i.+ng like lightning. Rudiger had another arrow ready and away. Sylvana shook the branches she was clinging to, and leaves fluttered down like dead birds, swept away by the torrent of the fall. The mare's horn sliced through the distance, and Doremus knew the unicorn would stab his father, spearing him, shoving him from the edge of Khorne's Cleft. Rudiger's second arrow took Sylvana higher up, in the shoulder, and she lost one handgrip. Boughs creaked and cracked. Magnus made a wrestler's grasp for the unicorn's neck, and she turned her horn to slice at him.
The unicorn mare was a vast, awesome creature, silver-white and ancient. Sylvana fell, impossibly slow, towards the waters. The mare's horn caught Magnus below the ribs, and gored him. With a splash, Sylvana hit the lip of the waterfall, and scrabbled at a rock which divided the rus.h.i.+ng waters. The unicorn tossed its head, and Magnus was lifted off the horn, a rope of blood bursting from his wound. Rudiger had still another arrow ready.
Magnus. .h.i.t the ground, spilling over the edge of the Cleft and Doremus, unfrozen at last, reached for him. Sylvana's hands were torn from the rock, and she was swept over the fall. The unicorn bellowed, its sound joining with the woman's scream. Rudiger turned from his kill, and met eyes with the mare. Doremus had hold of Magnus, and was hauling him back from the precipice. Sunlight broke through, and shone off Rudiger's arrowpoint and the tip of the mare's horn. Magnus was babbling. Rudiger and the unicorn looked at each other, his arrow pointed to the ground, her horn to the sky.
'My boy,' Magnus said, through agony. The unicorn withdrew, without turning, and was gone into the woods.
It was over, for the moment.
'My boy, I must tell you'
Doremus listened, but Magnus had fainted. His chest still rose and fell, but his furs were soaked with blood.
'Father,' Doremus said. 'Help me with uncle, help me.'
He looked at the graf, who had relaxed his bow. Doremus' father was staring across the Cleft.
In the first light of day, the waters of the fall seemed red with blood.
IX.
First, Otho had limped out of the night, dogs at his heels, screaming for a coachman. One was ready, and without a word to Genevieve, the lodge master of the League of Karl-Franz left, his hastily packed bags rattling around the carriage with him.
Then, shortly after dawn, the others came back, Rudiger and Doremus supporting Magnus.
'Keep away from him, leech,' Doremus warned her as she went to help.
Magnus, barely awake, shook his head at him.
The count broke away from his companions, and Genevieve took his weight in her arms. It was nothing to her.
She laid him down on cus.h.i.+ons in the dining hall, and tore his clothes away from his wound.
'It's deep,' she said, 'but clean. And nothing has been broken or punctured. He's been lucky.'
She had picked up a deal of doctoring in her years, among many other skills. Balthus tore up a tablecloth for bandages. Magnus, drifting in and out of consciousness, winced as she wrapped him up tight. A little blood seeped through his bandage.
'The wound should knit,' she told the others.
Doremus was concerned for the Invincible, but Rudiger hung back, not interested in the count's survival.
'We should go out soon,' the graf said. 'The mare is still around.'
Genevieve couldn't understand the man she was supposed to kill. His best friend was sorely hurt, and he thought only of chasing a unicorn.
'He'll be avenged,' he explained, answering her unasked question.
'He's not dead; he doesn't need vengeance.'
Magnus was quiet, compliant.
'Balthus,' Rudiger ordered. 'Be ready to leave within half an hour. Today, we'll bring back the ivory.'
Balthus saluted, and went off to get his hunting gear.
A door opened, and Anulka wandered in, eyes vacant, bodice badly laced, hair in rat-tails.
'You,' Rudiger said. 'Look after Count Magnus.'