As the hot wine of battle began to cool in his veins, Lancaelad felt his wounds more keenly. His ribs aches and head throbbed blackly as the entered the apparent safety of the barracks. "Mhairie, help me disarm," he said tersely to his armourer. The tall, young woman with the sculpted arms and shoulders of a smith loosened the fastenings on his maille, greaves and gauntlets and helped him lift the hauberk over his head, then unlaced the felt coat beneath. It stank of sweat, and there was a rusty patch under the arm. "No broken links, ser," she reported calmly, examining the armour. "A little work with the hammer and wire brush and she'll be parade-ground ready."
Stripped to the waist, the knight was a fantastic specimen, broad shouldered and hard-muscled with a tapered waist. Lancaelad flexed his arm behind his neck and ran a hand over his ribs, grimacing as he felt the bruise the ruffian had dealt him. The best that could be done for it was a tight binding of bandages, and though each breath stung sharply he felt no snapped ribs and the only broken skin was where the links of chain had been hammered into his flesh. Finding a bowl of water, Lan studied his reflection. There was a tangle of clotted blood and knotted hair on the side of his head, the scalp torn from his fall, and he winced as he worked it out with wet fingers.
By the time he'd tended to his own wounds the Haelynite brother had roused Aeric from the shadow of the Cold Rider. Lancaelad went over and clasped Aeric's hand, smiling. "It is good to see you whole and hale, my friend. Those blackguards did not account against the power of your secret lore."
Finally, he strode up to the cell that held the prisoner, folding his arms and regarding the man with a severe scowl. "There is an old Andu proverb, villain. Vae victis; woe to the vanquished. You find yourself at the mercy of those you wronged. There is no joyful end to your tale, but confess your plans, name and number your employer and fellow malefactors, and you may yet find a crumb of leniency."