“My father wishes to speak with you—”
Fors gathered his wits. One of the men facing him now was a slightly older edition of his friend. But the other wore about his throat a pair of silver wings fastened to a chain of the same stuff.
The chieftain was smaller than his sons and his dark skin was seamed and cracked by torrid winds and blistering suns. Across his chin was the ragged scar of an old and badly healed wound. Now and again he rubbed at this with a forefinger as if it still troubled him.
“You are Fors of the mountain clans?”
Fors hesitated. “I was of those clans. But now I am outlaw—”
“The Lady Nephata gave him earth—”
Arskane was both interrupted and effectively silenced by a single sharp look from his father.
“My son has told us something of your wanderings. But I would hear more of this Plainsmen encampment and what chanced with you there—”
For the second time Fors repeated his outline of recent events. When he had finished the Chief favored him with the same sort of intimidating glare which had worked on his son a few minutes before. But Fors met it forthrightly.
“You, Ranee,” the Chief turned to the young man with him, “will alert the scouts against this trouble and make the rounds of the western outposts every hour. If an attack offers, the two beacons on the round hills must be fired. That you must keep ever in the minds of the men—”