"
"It was not large as such things went, but it looked strong. Two stout wooden barricades had been thrown across the stream from bank to bank, made from the trunks of trees with the bark still on. The space between them was filled with rocks and earth and packed down hard. Behind the dam the flow was creeping up the banks and spilling off into a ditch that had been cut through Lady Webber's fields. Dunk stood in his stirrups for a better look. The glint of sun on water betrayed a score of lesser channels, running off in all directions like a spider's web.
""See what you went and did, lunk"", said Bennis. ""Couldn't have it that the stream dried up, no. Might be this starts with water, but it'll end with blood. Yours and mine, most like"". The brown knight drew his sword. ""Well, no help for it now. There's your thrice-damned diggers.
Dunk had no choice but to follow. Ser Arlan's longsword rode his hip, a good straight piece of steel. If these ditchdiggers have a lick of sense, they'll run. Thunder's hooves kicked up clods of dirt.
One man dropped his shovel at the sight of the oncoming knights, but that was all. There were a score of the diggers, short and tall, old and young, all baked brown by the sun.
""And that's an Osgrey stream"". Bennis pointed with his longsword. ""Who put that damned dam up?""
""Maester Cerrick made it"", said one young digger.
""No"", an older man insisted. ""The gray pup pointed some and said do this and do that, but it were us who made it"".
""Then you can bloody well unmake it"".
The diggers' eyes were sullen and defiant.
""You lot don't hear so good"", said Bennis. ""Do I need to lop me off an ear or two? Who's first?""
""This is Webber land"". The old digger was a scrawny fellow, stooped and stubborn. ""You got no right to be here. Lop off any ears and m'lady will drown you in a sack"".
Bennis rode closer. ""Don't see no ladies here, just some mouthy peasant"".