

The White Stag was an omen, that much was beyond question. Whether it augured well or heralded doom remained to be seen. In the center of the road, where the track crested the forested hill, 18 hands tall and silhouetted by the brilliant blue sky. The coach rattled to a stop on the up slope, the four horse team unwilling to challenge the beast. Fortunately the incline was not so great that this resulted in anything other than stamping and snorting from the four brown coach horses. The forest of Vertz was beautiful in the warm spring air. Birds sang and called to each other and a soft breeze blue through the ancient forest.
The coach seemed a grotesque intrusion in such a natural scene. It was a deep burgundy with embellishments painted a cheery gold. On each side it bore a coat of arms, gules an paired chevrons or surmounted by six martlets argent, the proud symbol of the Count of d’Orbais. The matched chestnut mares were fine horses, though they sweated and swatted with their tales to displace the dust which was slowly staining them grey with the dust of the long road. Three armsmen and a minor knight, the son of the castellan, were spread around the coach as an escort, their surcoats and mail equally diminished by several hours in the saddle. Painted lances stood in leather tubes attached to their stirrups, and their pennants flapped lazily in the air.
Theophana thrust her head from the coach to ask why the ostler had stopped but froze in place as her eyes met those of the stag. Its eyes, like hers, were a dark liquid brown. They seemed ancient and knowing, like the statues of Il they carved from smooth desert rock on the coast of Vantia. It shook its head as though displacing an annoying fly and then walked, quite calmly, off the road and into the woods, brushing against an elm and disturbing a nest of bees which buzzed energetically, though apparently their stings were not enough to disturb the stag's equanimity.
“Shall we proceed M’lady?” the ostler asked, twisting from the drivers bench to look back at his mistress. Unlike her Vencel retainers, Theophana had the olive complexion of far Basalaea with glossy brown hair and dark, almond shaped eyes. Noble Basalian wives, those with blood connections to the Emperor were prized in the west. Those blood connections were necessarily remote, no princess of the purple would ever be sent into these barbarous lands, but they were still valuable. A blood connection to the Imperial house was necessary for a family to hold a fief in the rich land of Tarlia, the former heartland of the Empire and much more developed than these lands across the Alps. It also exempted a lord from certain tithes to the Church as he could claim that a part of his fief was technically held in readiness for the Emperor. This was a legal nonsense, no Basalian Emperor had walked these lands in over five hundred years, but few laws were ever thrown away where they touched the Church of Il whose obsession with the transmitted words of their prophet spilled over into a general mania for keeping ancient wisdom alive.
“Yes, yes, we must reach Yattar by nightfall,” Theophana urged. Seven years in the Convent had given her the tools to erase her accent, so that she sounded every bit the Vencal when she spoke. That was far from the only skill they taught at that ancient mountain top edifice but it was the one she used most frequently.
“Plenty of time yet m’lady,” the ostler replied, a touch of irritation in his voice. Theophanna let it go. Doubtless he was no more pleased that he had to convey her to the tournament at Yattar than she was to be going. Baldwin, Count of Orbai, had sent for his wife Theophanna, and in this, as well as all things, she was compelled to obey. That being said, she could think of more pleasant ways to spend a week than jouncing over rough roads in poor company. At least it was only a few more hours. Theophanna sat back and opened her book of hours, reading the elegantly scribed prayer inscribed in the small book and enjoying the colorful illumination. That was another skill they taught at the Convent. The ability to read and write was not widespread outside of the priesthood, which was why so many nobles employed clerics as administrators. Theophanna lifted her eyes to glance at Brother Albrecht. The tonsured priest sat across from her, staring out into the forest and moving his fingers over the string of polished knucklebone prayer beads. He was rotten company, but it would have been improper for a young lady to travel without a chaperone. In theory priests of Il were celebate, though given the number of priestly bastards that seemed to pop up, that either wasn’t true or was yet more evidence of the miracles of Il.
“Shall we pray for safe passage Lady D’Orbai?” Albrecht asked, his voice nasal and superior. He didn’t look at her, it was possible he believed looking at women in general to be a sin, though this somehow did not prevent Theophanna from feeling his judgement and disapproval.
“We have already done so, I would not presume further on Lord Il, upon whose shoulders the world rides,” she replied sweetly, her index and pointer finger sketching a stylized I in the air. Brother Albrecht stiffened at the gesture. The Imperial and Universal Church worshiped the same god and professed the same beliefs, but over the centuries differences had emerged. Brother Albrecht, like many clerics, viewed the Imperial Faith as bordering on a heretical sect and Theophanna’s observance of it filled him with disgust. Which of course was why she had done it. She thumped the side of the coach with the heel of her hand and the ostler snapped his reins. After a few seconds the coach jolted upwards and over the ridge.
The view was well worth the wait. The forests fell down the ridge and raced away towards the Atlee mountains that rose, vast and snow capped in the distance. The great silver ribbon of the River Tae ran along their feet, drinking in the runoff from the near permanent snow melt as well as the rains which gathered against their imposing bulk after midsummer. Along the banks of the river the spires of little villages could be seen, the smoke from their cook fires mere heat shimmering in the air from this lofty vantage point. The Abbey of Milliac was easily identifiable by the long rows of vines that covered the surrounding hillside, lush and overgrown before the fruit had set. An impressive windmill, so distant it looked like a child’s toy turned in lazy rotation. Theophanna fancied she could pick out tiny ant like figures, though in truth they were too far away for such detail. Further to the south she found her destination. Yattar was not a true city, but rather a permanent camp which engulfed the northern shores of Lake Fondre. Tents in every color imaginable were grouped around more permanent structures in a riot of conflicting colors. Tall wooden stands were raised to create several oval shaped parks in which knights and men at arms could compete for Glory and the not inconsiderable prizes distributed to the winners. Here again Theophanna thought she could make out movement, but it was more like watching lice than people, a general crawling motion rather than anything particular. At any given time there were tens of thousands of people at the tournament, fighters, merchants, healers, preachers, apothecaries, the families and hangers on of them all. There was also a community of smiths who made and repaired armor, their quarter distinguishable even from here by the smoke rising from their forges. Cattle were being driven in, wagons brought bread, wine, cheese and every other kind of foodstuff in from the surrounding villages and abbeys. It was surprising that the clink of coin changing hands wasn’t visible from here, twenty miles distant.
“Whoa,” the ostler called and Theophanna felt her irritation spike. Once again she thrust her head out the window. There was no stag this time. Ten men astride powerful horses stood in a line across the path. Four of them had lances and the rest held crossbows. All had scabbarded swords near to hand. Were these bandits? Knights who had lost everything in the tournament turned to brigandage? Such things were not unheard off, but these men seemed clean and well armed, their plate mail in good order. They had shields but leather coverings had been fastened over their devices to hide their identities. Theophanna felt a chill steal through her body. Perhaps not bandits afterall.
“We have come to escort the lady d’Orbai,” their leader, a powerfully built man with a sallet concealing his face declared. His voice was haughty and tinged with cruelty.
“She already has an escort,” Castellan's son declared, his teenage voice all but breaking under the strain. His horse danced slightly, sensing its riders unease. The remaining armsmen began to close, hands gripping their lances tight. Albrecht had stopped praying, apparently unwilling to do anything remotely useful.
“This is the order of Count Baldwin,” the knight with the sallet wheedled. Theophanna could tell by his voice that he was toying with the boy, amused to find defiance against his superior numbers. She could taste the steel on the souls of them, whatever else they were, these men were killers. The Castellean’s son had none of Theophanna’s gifts but he none the less reached the same conclusion. Which made what he did next all the more inexcusable.
“Charge!” he roared. He had already spurred his horse before he spoke, wrenching the reigns with one hand as the other snatched his shield from his saddle bow. Crossbows twanged and metal rang off metal. There was a dull thunk as one bolt buried itself into the coach. One of her escorts was struck from his saddle, screaming with a quarrel buried in his breast plate. The other three charged home in a thunderous clamor of steel and horses. The Castellan’s son thrust his lance into the bandit chief’s shield, half driving the other man from the saddle but his sturdy horse wobbled and fell, blood flecking its lips from the bolt that had struck it in the chest. Theophanna heard his leg snap as the horse pinned him. The remaining two knights cast away their lances and drew their swords but it was obvious they had but moments to life.
“We surrender in the name of Il! Spare us and we will…” ALbrecht was screeching. The stench of blood and dust was choking and the sound of men and horses screaming all but unendurable. One of the escorting knights lost three fingers when a sword blade struck his un-gauntleted hand. The old ostler fell from the coach seat with a boneless thump, a quarrel through his forehead and blood dribbling from his lips and nose. The man in the sallet helm was laughing like a demon.
Theophanna spoke. It wasn’t a word as regular people understood it. In truth even among the learned few people could or would have understood it. It was not some simple piece of language. It was a Word. The exact meaning of the Word was as difficult to describe as it was to Annunciate but it would have meant something like ‘a description of the way the sound of thunder peels off cliff during a violent storm’ though it also carried subtext about the taste of salt, the feeling in one’s stomach of vibration, and the flash of light against eyes straining in the dark’. It roared out of her, not physically loud, but so accurately capturing reality that it seemed to impose itself on the scene with more authority than anything as prosaic as steel or flesh. Everyone reeled back, two knights fell from their horses, clutching their eyes against light that was only theoretical. One horse reared and tossed it’s rider before bolting over the ridge. The carriage team panicked and lurched into a full sprint to try and distance themselves from what they thought they had heard. So furiously did they charge that clods of dirt clattered against the coach as it lurched forward, scattering the attackers. Theophanna was hurled against Albrecht who was screaming and clutching his ears, his knucklebone necklace gone. There was a disconcerting crunch as the ironshod wheels went over something and Theophanna could only hope it wasn’t one of her own escort.
“Blasphemy! Heresy!” Albrecht screamed, clawing at Theophanna as though she were a demon from the very pit. She struck him hard with her book of hours then tumbled away as the coach careened down the hill at incredible speed. The road was rough and every bump tossed them into the air and assailed them with the queasy feeling of weightlessness. The horses were screaming they had run too fast and had no option other than to keep running to avoid being crushed by the weight they had so loyally dragged these last few days. The forest whizzed by so fast it was little more than a green blur. Theophanna dragged herself to the window and risked a look out that nearly got her decapitated by a low hanging branch. To her horror she saw a gentle bend ahead racing towards them like the Sign of Doom Itself. There was no hope of the undirected team making the turn, even if there was a driver the sheer momentum of the runaway coach would make that impossible.
“We need to get out of here!” she shouted at Albrecht, then cursed herself, in her panic she had spoken in Basalian. She repeated the words in the local Vencal tongue and made a desperate gesture ahead of them. Albrecht was screaming out what seemed to be a combination of prayer to Il and curse against her, so hopelessly intermingled that she knew she would never get through to him in time. Screaming her own frustration she pulled open the door, the rushing wind of their passage all but ripping it from her finger. She cast one final look back at Albrecht and leaped clear, her gown flapping and trailing like the tearing mast of a doomed ship. She landed and rolled, slamming hard into the bushes which lined the road. The world spun and she tried to right herself and crawl into cover. There was a tremendous sound that combined screaming horses and splintering timber and bone as the coach missed the turn and crashed into the trees, mighty oaks which had clung to the rocky mountainside for generations resisted the coach and it exploded into shattered splinters of wood, bone and horse. Theophanna didn’t want to think about what it did to Albrecht still cowering in his seat.
“Lord Il, He How Hung the Stars, forgive your servant,” she murmured to herself, finally managing to get up onto all fours. The sound of hooves was pounding down the road and she squirmed through the bushes and out of sight a moment before the unidentified knights thundered past, already yelling and trying to reign in their mounts as they approached the crash. It would only be a moment before the realized she wasn’t in the coach. Theophanna crawled under the root of a larch tree, then pulled herself up and began to run blindingly into the forest, blood leaking from her lips, heart hammering in terror.