That was the sort of name a hedge knight might choose, but Dunk had never seen any hedge knight garbed or armed or mounted in such splendor. The knight of the golden hedge, he thought. "You know my name. My squire is called Egg."
"Well met, ser. Come, ride with us to Whitewalls and break a few lances to help Lord Butterwell celebrate his new marriage. I'll wager you could give a good account of yourself."
Dunk had not done any jousting since Ashford Meadow. If I could win a few ransoms, we'd eat well on the ride north, he thought, but the lord with the three castles on his shield said, "Ser Duncan needs to be about his journey, as do we."
John the Fiddler paid the older man no mind. "I would love to cross swords with you, ser. I've tried men of many lands and races, but never one your size. Was your father large as well?"
"I never knew my father, ser."
"I am sad to hear it. Mine own sire was taken from me too soon." The Fiddler turned to the lord of the three castles. "We should ask Ser Duncan to join our jolly company."
"We do not need his sort."
Dunk was at a loss for words. Penniless hedge knights were not oft asked to ride with highborn lords. I would have more in common with their servants. Judging from the length of their column, Lord Cockshaw and the Fiddler had brought grooms to tend their horses, cooks to feed them, squires to clean their armor, guards to defend them. Dunk had Egg.
"His sort?" The Fiddler laughed. "What sort is that? The big sort? Look at the size of him. We want strong men. Young swords are worth more than old names, I've oft heard it said."
"By fools. You know little and less about this man. He might be a brig-and, or one of Lord Bloodraven's spies."
"I'm no man's spy," said Dunk. "And m'lord has no call to speak of me as if I were deaf or dead or down in Dome."
Those flinty eyes considered him. "Down in Dome would be a good place for you, ser. You have my leave to go there."
"Pay him no mind," the Fiddler said. "He's a sour old soul—he suspects everyone. Gormy, I have a good feeling about this fellow. Ser Duncan, will you come with us to Whitewalls?"
"M'Iord, I ..." How could he share a camp with such as these? Their serving men would raise their pavilions, their grooms would curry their horses, their cooks would serve them each a capon or a joint of beef, whilst Dunk and Egg gnawed on strips of hard salt beef. "I couldn't."
"You see," said the lord of the three castles. "He knows his place, and it is not with us." He turned his horseback toward the road. "By now Lord Cockshaw is half a league ahead."
"I suppose I must chase him clown again." The Fiddler gave Dunk an apologetic smile.
"Perchance we'll meet again someday. I hope so. I should love to try my lance on you."
Dunk did not know what to say to that. "Good fortune in the lists, ser," he finally managed, but by then Ser John had wheeled about to chase the column. The older lord rode after him. Dunk
was glad to see his back. He had not liked his flinty eyes, nor Lord Alyn's arrogance. The Fiddler had been pleasant enough, but there was something odd about him as well. "Two fiddles and two swords, a cross engrailed," he said to Egg as they watched the dust of their departure.
"What house is that?"
"None, ser. I never saw that shield in any roll of arms."
Perhaps he is a hedge knight after all. Dunk had devised his own arms at Ashford Meadow, when a puppeteer called Tanselle Too-Tall asked him what he wanted painted on his shield.
"Was the older lord some kin to House Frey?" The Freys bore castles on their shields, and their holdings were not far from here.
Egg rolled his eyes. "The Frey arms are two blue towers connected by a bridge, on a gray field.
Those were three castles, black on orange, ser. Did you see a bridge?"
"No." He just does that to annoy me. "And next time you roll your eyes at me, I'll clout you on the ear so hard they'll roll back into your head for good."
Egg looked chastened. "I never meant—" "Never mind what you meant. Just tell me who he was."
"Gormon Peake, the Lord of Starpike."
"That's down in the Reach, isn't it? Does he really have three castles?"
"Only on his shield, ser. House Peake did hold three castles once, but two of them were lost."
"How do you lose two castles?"
"You fight for the Black Dragon, ser."
"Oh." Dunk felt stupid. That again.
Александра Антонова , Алексей Родогор , Елена Михайловна Малиновская , Карина Пьянкова , Карина Сергеевна Пьянкова , Ульяна Казарина
Фантастика / Самиздат, сетевая литература / Героическая фантастика / Фэнтези / Любовно-фантастические романы / Любовное фэнтези, любовно-фантастические романы