boulders to see that there was shelter aplenty among them, chinks and crevices that looked large enough to swallow both of them with ease. He lowered Sinclairâs bier to the ground and peeled himself agonizingly out of the network of straps and braces that had sunk into his tortured flesh. As he bent to check his friendâs breathing, Sinclair opened his eyes.
âLachlan. Itâs you. I was dreaming. Where are we?â
âHazard a guess. Youâre as likely to be right as I am.â Moray was massaging his right arm, moving his elbow in circles and grimacing with pain as his fingers dug into the muscles of his shoulder. âDamnation, but you make a heavy load, Sinclair. I feel as though Iâve been hauling a dead horse behind me since the day I was born.â He saw his friendâs quick frown and waved away the apology before it could be uttered. âYou would do the same for me. But Iâm looking forward to having you back on your feet and walking again. Then youâll be able to pull me.â He grunted and switched his ministrations to his other shoulder. âI believe Iâve found us a place to rest out of the sun tomorrow, but Iâm going to leave you here while I make sure of it. In the meantime, you should pray and give thanks to God that I was clever enough to get rid of all our armor before we set out on this little sojourn. Iâll be back.â
He returned quickly, a strange expression on his face, so that Sinclair, after hawking to clear his throat, asked, âWhatâs wrong? Did you not find a place?â
Moray shook his head. âDid you pray? You must have. I hoped to find a gap between the stones thatwould shelter us. I found a cave insteadâa cave that has been very recently in use as a living place. I found a cache of breadâstale but edibleâalong with water, dates, dried meat and a bag of dried dung, camel and horse both, for fuel. If I had not been here in this accursed Holy Land for so long, I would think it a miracle. As it is, itâs a stroke of fortune of the kind a cynic like me can barely contemplate.â
Sinclair was frowning. âWho would live out here?â
âSome nomad. There are more than a few of them out here. And who but a nomad would think to hoard dry dung?â
âButâthink you he might be still around here?â
Moray stooped and hoisted the bier by the short cross-brace at its head, throwing the mass of straps across Sinclairâs legs at the same time. âI doubt it,â he said, grunting with the effort of lifting Sinclairâs weight again. âWhoever he was, heâs probably at La Safouri now, or at Tiberias, celebrating our defeat. Since you appear to be praying effectively, pray then that I am correct. One way or the other, we will know soon. Now lie back, itâs not far.â
SINCLAIR AWOKE IN THE DAWN LIGHT , his arm on fire, the pain of it a living thing that he could feel somewhere at the back of his throat, or so it seemed to him. He knew immediately what had happened to him, and that his arm was broken, but he had no awareness at first of where he was or how he had come there. Then he heard a soft sound and turned his head to seeMorayâs shape silhouetted against the morning brightness at the caveâs mouth, and everything came back to him. He tried to call Morayâs name, but on the first attempt, although his lips moved and he articulated the sounds, nothing emerged. He swallowed, trying to moisten his dry mouth, and tried again, his voice emerging as little more than a croak.
âLachlan.â
Moray did not stir, although Sinclair knew he must have heard him, and his eyes narrowed as he took note of the tension and rigidity of the other manâs posture. Moray stood stiffly in the entranceway, one hand braced against the side of the deep cleft in the rock that was their shelter, his entire body inclined slightly forward as he peered at
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