Assassin's Quest (UK)

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Assassin's Quest (UK) Page 23

by Robin Hobb


  When I awoke the next morn­ing, I was dis­or­i­en­ted. It had been too long since I had awakened in a real bed, let alone awakened feel­ing clean. I forced my eyes to fo­cus, then looked at the knots in the ceil­ing beam above me. After a time, I re­called the inn, and that I was not too far from Trade­ford and Regal. At al­most the same in­stant, I re­membered that Duke Brawndy was dead. My heart plummeted in­side me. I squeezed my eyes shut against the Skill-memory of that battle and felt the ham­mer and an­vil of my head­ache be­gin. For one ir­ra­tional in­stant I blamed it all on Regal. He had or­ches­trated this tragedy that took the heart out of me and left my body trem­bling with weak­ness. On the very morn­ing when I had hoped to arise strong and re­freshed and ready to kill, I could barely find the strength to roll over.

  After a time, the inn-boy ar­rived with my clothes. I gave him an­other two cop­pers and he re­turned a short time later with a tray. The look and smell of the bowl of por­ridge re­vol­ted me. I sud­denly un­der­stood the aver­sion to food that Ver­ity had al­ways mani­fes­ted dur­ing the sum­mers when his Skilling had kept the Raid­ers from our coast. The only item on the tray that in­ter­es­ted me was the mug and the pot of hot wa­ter. I clambered out of bed and crouched to pull my pack from un­der my bed. Sparks danced and floated be­fore my eyes. By the time I got the pack open and loc­ated the elf­bark, I was breath­ing as hard as if I had run a race. It took all my con­cen­tra­tion to fo­cus my thoughts past the pain in my head. Em­boldened by my head­ache’s throb­bing, I in­creased the amount of elf­bark I crumbled into the mug. I was nearly up to the dose that Chade had been us­ing on Ver­ity. Ever since the wolf had left me, I had suffered from these Skill-dreams. No mat­ter how I set my walls, I could not keep them out. But last night’s had been the worst in a long time. I sus­pec­ted it was be­cause I had stepped into the dream, and through Celer­ity, ac­ted. The dreams had been a ter­rible drain both on my strength and my sup­ply of elf­bark. I watched im­pa­tiently as the bark leached its dark­ness into the steam­ing wa­ter. As soon as I could no longer see the bot­tom of the mug, I lif­ted it and drank it off. The bit­ter­ness nearly gagged me, but it didn’t stop me from pour­ing more hot wa­ter over the bark in the bot­tom of the mug.

  I drank this second, weaker dose more slowly, sit­ting on the edge of my bed and look­ing off into the dis­tance out­side the win­dow. I had quite a view of the flat river coun­try. There were cul­tiv­ated fields, and milk cows in fenced pas­tures just out­side Pome, and bey­ond I could glimpse the rising smoke of small farm­steads along the road. No more swamps to cross, no more open wild coun­try between Regal and me. From hence for­ward, I would have to travel as a man.

  My head­ache had sub­sided. I forced my­self to eat the cold por­ridge, ig­nor­ing my stom­ach’s threats. I’d paid for it and I’d need its susten­ance be­fore this day was over. I dressed in the clean clothes the boy had re­turned to me. They were clean, but that was as much as I could say for them. The shirt was mis­shapen and dis­col­oured vari­ous shades of brown. The leg­gings were worn to thin­ness in the knees and seat and too short. As I pushed my feet into my self-made shoes, I be­came newly aware of how pathetic they were. It had been so long since I had stopped to con­sider how I must ap­pear to oth­ers that I was sur­prised to find my­self dressed more poorly than any Buck­keep beg­gar I could re­call. No won­der I had ex­cited both pity and dis­gust last night. I’d have felt the same for any fel­low dressed as I was.

  The thought of go­ing down­stairs dressed as I was made me cringe. The al­tern­at­ive how­ever was to don my warm, woolly winter clothes, and swel­ter and sweat all day. It was only com­mon sense to des­cend as I was, and yet I now felt my­self such a laugh­ing stock, I wished I could slink out un­seen.

  As I briskly re­packed my bundle, I felt a mo­ment of alarm when I real­ized how much elf­bark I had con­sumed in one draught. I felt alert; no more than that. A year ago, that much elf­bark would have had me swinging from the rafters. I told my­self firmly it was like my ragged clothes. I had no choice in the mat­ter. The Skill-dreams would not leave me alone, and I had no time to lie about and let my body re­cover on its own, let alone the coin to pay for an inn room and food while I did so. Yet as I slung my bundle over my shoulder and went down the stairs, I re­flec­ted that it was a poor way to be­gin the day. Brawndy’s death and Bearns Duchy fall­ing to the Raid­ers and my scare­crow cloth­ing and elf­bark crutch. It had all put me in a fine state of the doldrums.

  What real chance did I have of get­ting past Regal’s walls and guards and mak­ing an end of him?

  A bleak spirit, Burrich had once told me, was one of the after-ef­fects of elf­bark. So that was all I was feel­ing. That was all.

  I bade the innkeeper farewell and he wished me good luck. Out­side the sun was already high. It bid to be an­other fine day. I set my­self a steady pace as I headed out of Pome and to­ward Trade­ford.

  As I reached the out­skirts, I saw an un­set­tling sight. There were two gal­lows, and a body dangled from each. This was un­nerv­ing enough, but there were other struc­tures as well: a whip­ping post, and two stocks. Their wood had not silvered out in the sun yet; these were re­cent struc­tures and yet by the look of them they had already seen a bit of use. I strode swiftly past them but could not help re­call­ing how close I had come to gra­cing such a struc­ture. All that had saved me was my bas­tard royal blood and the an­cient de­cree that such a one could not be hung. I re­called, too, Regal’s evid­ent pleas­ure at watch­ing me beaten.

  With a second chill I wondered where Chade was. If Regal’s sol­di­ery did man­age to cap­ture him, I had no doubt that Regal would put a quick end to him. I tried not to ima­gine how he would stand, tall and thin and grey un­der bright sun­light on a scaf­fold.

  Or would his end be quick?

  I shook my head to rattle loose such thoughts and con­tin­ued past the poor scare­crow bod­ies that tattered in the sun like for­got­ten laun­dry. Some black hu­mour in my soul poin­ted out that even they were dressed bet­ter than I was.

  As I hiked along the road I of­ten had to give way to carts and cattle. Trade prospered between the two towns. I left Pome be­hind me and walked for a time past well-ten­ded farm­houses that fron­ted the road with their grain­fields and orch­ards be­hind them. A bit fur­ther and I was passing coun­try es­tates, com­fort­able stone houses with shade trees and plant­ings about their sturdy barns and with rid­ing and hunt­ing horses in the pas­tures. More than once I was sure I re­cog­nized Buck­keep stock there. These gave way for a time to great fields, mostly of flax or hemp. Even­tu­ally I began to see more mod­est hold­ings and then the out­skirts of a town.

  So I thought. Late af­ter­noon found me in the heart of a city, streets paved with cobbles and folk com­ing and go­ing on every sort of busi­ness ima­gin­able. I found my­self look­ing around in won­der. I had never seen the like of Trade­ford. There was shop after shop, tav­erns and inns and stables for every weight of purse, and all sprawled out across this flat land as no Buck town ever could. I came to one area of gar­dens and foun­tains, temples and theatres and school­ing places. There were gar­dens laid out with pebbled walk­ways and cobbled drives that wound between plant­ings and statu­ary and trees. The people strolling down the walks or driv­ing their car­riages were dressed in finery that would have been at home at any of Buck­keep’s most formal oc­ca­sions. Some of them wore the Far­row liv­ery of gold and brown, yet even the dress of these ser­vants was more sump­tu­ous than any cloth­ing I had ever owned.

  This was where Regal had spent the sum­mers of his child­hood. Al­ways he had dis­dained Buck­keep Town as little bet­ter than a back­ward vil­lage. I tried to ima­gine a boy leav­ing all this in fall, to re­turn to a draughty castle on a rain­swept and storm-battered sea-cliff above a grubby little port town. No won­der he had re­moved him­self and his court
here as soon as he could. I sud­denly felt an ink­ling of un­der­stand­ing for Regal. It made me angry. It is good to know well a man you are go­ing to kill; it is not good to un­der­stand him. I re­called how he had killed his own father, my king, and steeled my­self to my pur­pose.

  As I wandered through these thriv­ing quar­ters, I drew more than one pity­ing glance. Had I been de­term­ined to make my liv­ing as a beg­gar, I could have prospered. In­stead, I sought hum­bler abodes and folk where I might hear some talk of Regal and how his keep at Trade­ford was or­gan­ized and manned. I made my way down to the wa­ter­front, ex­pect­ing to feel more at home.

  There I found the real reason for Trade­ford’s ex­ist­ence. True to its name, the river flattened out here into im­mense rip­pling shal­lows over gravel and bed­rock. It sprawled so wide that the op­pos­ite shore was ob­scured in mist, and the river seemed to reach to the ho­ri­zon. I saw whole herds of cattle and sheep be­ing forded across the Vin River, while down­stream a series of shal­low-draught cable barges took ad­vant­age of the deeper wa­ter to trans­port an end­less shut­tling of goods across the river. This was where Tilth met Far­row in trade, where orch­ards and fields and cattle came to­gether, and where goods shipped up­river from Buck or Bearns or the far lands bey­ond were un­loaded at last and sent on their way to the nobles who could af­ford them. To Trade­ford, in bet­ter days, had come the trade-goods of the Moun­tain King­dom and the lands bey­ond: am­ber, rich furs, carved ivory and the rare in­cense barks of the Rain Wilds. Here too was flax brought to be man­u­fac­tured into fine Far­row linen, and hemp worked into fibre for rope and sail­cloth.

  I was offered a few hours’ work un­load­ing grain sacks from a small barge to a wagon. I took it, more for the con­ver­sa­tion than the cop­pers. I learned little. No one spoke of Red Ships or the war be­ing fought along the coast, other than to com­plain of the poor qual­ity of goods that came from the coast and how much was charged for the little that was sent. Little was said of King Regal, and what few words I did hear took pride in his abil­ity to at­tract wo­men and to drink well. I was startled to hear him spoken of as a Moun­t­well king, the name of his mother’s royal line. Then I de­cided it suited me just as well that he did not name him­self a Farseer. It was one less thing I had to share with him.

  I heard much of the King’s Circle how­ever, and what I heard soured my guts.

  The concept of a duel to de­fend the truth of one’s words was an old one in the Six Duch­ies. At Buck­keep there were the great stand­ing pil­lars of the Wit­ness Stones. It is said that when two men meet there to re­solve a ques­tion with their fists, El and Eda them­selves wit­ness it and see that justice does not go awry. The stones and the cus­tom are very an­cient. When we spoke of the King’s Justice at Buck­keep, of­ten enough it re­ferred to the quiet work that Chade and I did for King Shrewd. Some came to make pub­lic pe­ti­tion to King Shrewd him­self and to abide by whatever he might see as right. But there were times when other in­justices came to be known by the King, and then he might send forth Chade or me to work his will quietly upon the wrong­doer. In the name of the King’s Justice I had meted out fates both mer­ci­fully swift and pun­it­ively slow. I should have been hardened to death.

  But Regal’s King’s Circle had more of en­ter­tain­ment than justice to it. The premise was simple. Those judged by the King as de­serving of pun­ish­ment or death were sent to his Circle. There they might face an­im­als starved and taunted to mad­ness, or a fighter, a King’s Cham­pion. Some oc­ca­sional crim­inal who put up a very good show might be gran­ted royal clem­ency, or even be­come a Cham­pion for the King. Forged ones had no such chance. Forged ones were put out for the beasts to maul, or starved and turned loose on other of­fend­ers. Such tri­als had be­come quite pop­u­lar of late, so pop­u­lar that the crowds were out­grow­ing the mar­ket circle at Trade­ford where the ‘justice’ was cur­rently ad­min­istered. Now Regal was hav­ing a spe­cial circle built. It would be con­veni­ently closer to his man­or­house, with hold­ing cells and se­cure walls that would con­fine both beasts and pris­on­ers more strongly, with seats for those who came to ob­serve the spec­tacle of the King’s Justice be­ing meted out. The con­struc­tion of the King’s Circle was provid­ing new com­merce and jobs for the city of Trade­ford. All wel­comed it as a very good idea in the wake of the shut­down of trade with the Moun­tain King­dom. I heard not one word spoken against it.

  When the wagon was loaded, I took my pay and fol­lowed the other steve­dores to a nearby tav­ern. Here, in ad­di­tion to ale and beer, one could buy a hand­ful of herbs and a smoke censer for the table. The at­mo­sphere in­side the tav­ern was heavy with the fumes, and my eyes soon felt gummy and my throat raw from it. No one else seemed to pay it any mind, or even to be greatly af­fec­ted by it. The use of burn­ing herbs as an in­tox­ic­ant had never been com­mon at Buck­keep and I had never de­ve­loped a head for it. My coins bought me a serving of meal pud­ding with honey and a mug of very bit­ter beer that tasted to me of river wa­ter.

  I asked sev­eral folk if it were true that they were hir­ing stable-hands for the King’s own stable, and if so, where a man might go to ask for the work. That one such as I might seek to work for the King him­self af­forded most of them some amuse­ment, but as I had af­fec­ted to be slightly simple the whole time I was work­ing with them, I was able to ac­cept their rough hu­mour and sug­ges­tions with a bland smile. One rake at last told me that I should go ask the King him­self, and gave me dir­ec­tions to Trade­ford Hall. I thanked him and drank off the last of my beer and set out.

  I sup­pose I had ex­pec­ted some stone edi­fice with walls and for­ti­fic­a­tions. This was what I watched for as I fol­lowed my dir­ec­tions in­land and up away from the river. In­stead, I even­tu­ally reached a low hill, if one could give that name to so mod­est an up­swell­ing. The ex­tra height was enough to af­ford a clear view of the river in both dir­ec­tions, and the fine stone struc­tures upon it had taken every ad­vant­age of it. I stood on the busy road be­low, all but gawk­ing up at it. It had none of Buck­keep’s for­bid­ding mar­tial as­pects. In­stead, the white-pebbled drive and gar­dens and trees sur­roun­ded a dwell­ing at once pala­tial and wel­com­ing. Trade­ford Hall and its sur­round­ing build­ings had never seen use as fort­ress or keep. It had been built as an el­eg­ant and pens­ive res­id­ence. Pat­terns had been worked into the stone walls and there were grace­ful arches to the entry­ways. Towers there were, but there were no ar­row-slits in them. One knew they had been con­struc­ted to af­ford the dweller a wider view of his sur­round­ings, more for pleas­ure than for any war­i­ness.

  There were walls, too, between the busy pub­lic road and the man­sion, but they were low, fat stone walls, mossy or ivied, with nooks and cran­nies where statues were framed by flower­ing vines. One broad car­riage­way led straight up to the great house. Other nar­rower walks and drives in­vited one to in­vest­ig­ate lily ponds and clev­erly-pruned fruit trees or quiet, shady walks. For some vis­ion­ary gardener had planted here oaks and wil­lows, at least one hun­dred years ago, and now they towered and shaded and whispered in the wind off the river. All of this beauty was spread over more acre­age than a good-sized farm. I tried to ima­gine a ruler who had both the time and re­sources to cre­ate all this.

  Was this what one could have, if one did not need war­ships and stand­ing armies? Had Pa­tience ever known this sort of beauty in her par­ents’ home? Was this what the Fool echoed in the del­ic­ate vases of flowers and bowls of sil­ver fish in his room? I felt grubby and un­couth, and it was not be­cause of my clothes. This, in­deed, I sud­denly felt, was how a king should live. Amid art and mu­sic and gra­cious­ness, el­ev­at­ing the lives of his people by provid­ing a place for such things to flour­ish. I glimpsed my own ig­nor­ance, and worse, the ugli­ness of a man trained only to kill oth­ers. I felt
a sud­den an­ger, too, at all I had never been taught, never even glimpsed. Had not Regal and his mother had a hand in that as well, in keep­ing the Bas­tard in his place? I had been honed as an ugly, func­tional tool, just as craggy, bar­ren Buck­keep was a fort, not a palace.

  But how much beauty would sur­vive here, did not Buck­keep stand like a snarling dog at the mouth of the Buck River?

  It was like a dash of cold wa­ter in my face. It was true. Was not that why Buck­keep had been built in the first place, to gain con­trol of the river trade? If Buck­keep ever fell to the Raid­ers, these broad rivers would be­come highroads for their shal­low-draught ves­sels. They would plunge like a dag­ger into this soft un­der­belly of the Six Duch­ies. These in­dol­ent nobles and cocky farm-lads would waken to screams and smoke in the night, with no castle to run to, no guards to stand and fight for them. Be­fore they died, they might come to know what oth­ers had en­dured to keep them safe. Be­fore they died, they might rail against a king who had fled those ram­parts to come in­land and hide him­self in pleas­ures.

  But I in­ten­ded that king would die first.

  I began a care­ful walk of the peri­meter of Trade­ford Keep. The easi­est way in must be weighed against the least-no­ticed one, and the best ways out must be planned as well. Be­fore night­fall, I would find out all I could about Trade­ford Hall.

  NINE

  As­sas­sin

  The last true Skill­mas­ter to preside over royal pu­pils at Buck­keep was not Ga­len, as is of­ten re­cor­ded, but his pre­de­cessor, So­li­city. She had waited, per­haps over­long, to se­lect an ap­pren­tice. When she chose Ga­len, she had already de­ve­loped the cough that was to end her life. Some say she took him on in des­per­a­tion, know­ing she was dy­ing. Oth­ers, that he was forced on her by Queen De­sire’s wish to see her fa­vour­ite ad­vanced at court. Whatever the case, he had been her ap­pren­tice for scarcely two years be­fore So­li­city suc­cumbed to her cough and died. As pre­vi­ous Skill­mas­ters had served ap­pren­tice­ships as long as seven years be­fore achiev­ing jour­ney status, it was rather pre­cip­it­ate that he de­clared him­self Skill­mas­ter im­me­di­ately fol­low­ing So­li­city’s death. It scarcely seems pos­sible that she could have im­par­ted her full know­ledge of the Skill and all its pos­sib­il­it­ies in such a brief time. No one chal­lenged his claim, how­ever. Al­though he had been as­sist­ing So­li­city in the train­ing of the two princes Ver­ity and Chiv­alry, he pro­nounced their train­ing com­plete fol­low­ing So­li­city’s death. There­after, he res­is­ted sug­ges­tions that he train any oth­ers un­til the years of the Red Ship wars, when he fi­nally gave in to King Shrewd’s de­mand and pro­duced his first and only co­terie.

 

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