A March of Kings
Gareth’s neck at that last word.
    “Injured?” Gareth echoed, the word nearly sticking in his throat. “Is he still alive then?”
    “He is, my lord. And god be with him, he will survive, and tell us who did this heinous act.”
    With a short bow the guard hurried from the room, slamming closed the door.
    A rage overwhelmed Gareth and he grabbed Firth by his shoulders, drove him across the room and slammed him into a stone wall.
    Firth stared back, wide-eyed, looking horrified, speechless.
    “What have you done?” Gareth screamed. “Now we are both finished!”
    “But…but….” Firth stumbled, “…I was sure he was dead!”
    “You are sure of a lot of things,” Gareth said, “and they are all wrong!”
    A thought occurred to Gareth.
    “That dagger,” he said. “We have to retrieve it, before it’s too late.”
    “But I threw it away, my lord,” Firth said. “It is washed away in the river!”
    “You threw it into a chamber pot. That does not mean it is yet in the river.”
    “But it most likely is!” Firth said.
    Gareth could stand this idiot’s bumbling no longer. He burst past him, running out the door, Firth on his heels.
    “I will go with you. I will show you exactly where I threw it,” Firth said.
    Gareth stopped in the corridor, turned and stared at Firth. He was covered in blood, and Gareth was amazed the guards had not spotted it. It was lucky. He was more of a liability than ever.
    “I’m only going to say this once,” Gareth growled. “Get back to my room at once, change your clothes, and burn them. Get rid of any traces of blood. Then disappear from this castle. Stay away from me on this night. Do you understand me?”
    Gareth shoved him back, then turned and ran. He sprinted down the corridor, ran down the spiral stone staircase, going down level after level, towards the servant’s quarters.
    Finally, he burst into the basement, to the turned heads of several servants. They had been in the midst of scrubbing enormous pots and boiling pails of water. Huge fires roared amidst brick kilns, and the servants, wearing stained aprons, were drenched in sweat.
    On the far side of the room Gareth spotted an enormous chamber pot, filth hailing down from a chute and splashing in it every minute.
    Gareth ran up to the closest servant and grabbed his arm desperately.
    “When was the last pot emptied?” Gareth asked.
    “It was taken to the river just minutes ago, my lord.”
    Gareth turned and raced out the room, sprinting down the castle corridors, back up the spiral staircase, and bursting out into the cool night air.
    He ran across the grass field, breathless as he sprinted for the river.
    As he neared it, he found a place to hide, behind a large tree, close to the shore. He watched two servants raise the huge iron pot and tilt it into the rushing current of the river.
    He watched until it was upside down, all of its contents emptied, until they turned back with the pot and trekked back towards the castle.
    Finally, Gareth was satisfied. No one had spotted any blade. Wherever it was, it was now in the river’s tides, being washed away into anonymity. If his father should die on this night, there would be no evidence left to trace the murderer.
    Or would there?

 
    CHAPTER FIVE
     
     
    Thor followed on Reese’s heels, Krohn behind him as they weaved their way through the back passageway to his father’s chamber. Reese had brought him through a secret door, hidden in one of the stone walls, and as Reese held a torch, they walked single file in the cramped space, working their way through the inner guts of the castle in a dizzying array of twists and turns. They ascended a narrow, stone staircase, which led to another passageway. They turned, and before them was another staircase. Thor marveled at how intricate this passage was.
    “This passageway was built into the castle hundreds of years ago,” Reese explained in a whisper as they went, breathing hard as he climbed. “It was built
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