It was the work of moments before they reigned in before a sleepy night guard with a lantern hanging from his pike, silver whiskers and his kettle helm pushed back so far as to be merely decorative. Bardenhold's curfew kept visitors out and not in outside daylight hours, but even so it was only their urgent insistence that there were enemies in the walls that hurried the man to lifting the bar and opening the gate. Dubious given no one appeared on the road after them, he grudgingly banged on the door of the small barracks that flanked the gate and roused a couple of his fellows, one of whom he commanded on to the manse to raise an alarm.
By the time the horses rode out they could only imagine that the mercenaries that dogged them were just discovering that they had no mounts, and hopefully that would be the end of Bardenhold's troubles.
Hopefully.
Wasting no time they put to the highway and rode through the night until they reached the northernmost border of Abbadiel. Here at the crest of a wooded hill they paused to settle their nerves, look back for pursuers and tend to Aeric. Corson fed another of his enchanted berries to the scholar, but he'd once again lapsed into unconsciousness and the prognosis looked grim under the care they could afford him on the road. A temple on the road was out of the question - it was too obvious - and it waseventually decided that Breuddwyd would guide Aeric to the elves of the Erebannien and rejoin them once a healer had been found.
There was scant time for farewells, and before the grey of dawn showed Breuddwyd and Aeric were gone.
With their task in mind, the remaining companions pressed north, but much had changed. Whatever veil of banality the Baroness had hoped they might maintain was a false hope and they were woefully unprepared to face strong opposition. Thankfully this land held many friends, and with the Bjording's hunting lodge little more than a half day north and the Lord and Lady of Edlin certainly at their woodland residence it seemed prudent to pay a visit to Tovrunn's Anuirean guardians for aid, and to get word back to Proudglaive.
Though they rode through the day keeping to the back roads as much as possible, it was still late in the afternoon before their tired mounts rounded a familiar corner and Tovrunn could see the gravel path, choked with fallen leaves and winding into the sun-dappled wood through a veil of cricket song. Here and there the sound of deer, unseen beyond the trees. Eventually they rounded the last bend to reveal a tall house built on an island in the centre of a mirror-surfaced lake, nestled in the woods.

Just off the path ahead a pair of riders watched as a hunting hound raced into the undergrowth. Even at a distance Tovrunn recognised her Roesonian hosts, and she felt suddenly self-conscious of the bloodied and exhausted state of her company. Still, the Bjordings had always been a rustic folk by the standards of Anuire and the urgency of their mission denied them the nicities of a courtly visit.