Assassin's Quest (UK)

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Assassin's Quest (UK) Page 31

by Robin Hobb


  ‘Ah. I thought you looked more like a man-at-arms than a shep­herd. Sheep don’t break one’s nose, or leave a scar like that down your face.’

  ‘They do if you tumble down a cliff look­ing for some in a mist,’ I told her dourly, and turned my face aside from her.

  For a long time, that was as close as I came to hav­ing a con­ver­sa­tion with any­one.

  We jour­neyed on, mov­ing only as fast as laden wag­ons and a herd of sheep would per­mit. The days were re­mark­ably sim­ilar. The coun­tryside we passed was re­mark­ably sim­ilar. There were a few nov­el­ties. Some­times there were other folk camped at the wa­ter­ing places we came to. At one, there was a tav­ern of sorts, and here the cara­van mas­ter de­livered some small kegs of brandy. Once we were fol­lowed for half a day by folk on horse­back who might have been ban­dits. But they veered off and left our trail in the af­ter­noon, either bound to a des­tin­a­tion of their own, or de­cid­ing what we pos­sessed wasn’t worth the ef­fort of a raid. Some­times other folk passed us, mes­sen­gers and folk trav­el­ling on horse­back, un­slowed by sheep and wag­ons. Once it was a troop of guards in the Far­row col­ours, push­ing their horses hard as they passed us. I felt an un­eas­i­ness as I watched them pass our cara­van, as if an an­imal scrabbled briefly against the walls that shiel­ded my mind. Did a Skilled one ride amongst them, Burl or Car­rod, or even Will? I tried to per­suade my­self it was merely the sight of the gold and brown liv­ery that un­nerved me.

  On an­other day we were in­ter­cep­ted by three of the no­madic folk whose graz­ing ter­rit­ory we were in. They came to us on tough little ponies that wore no more har­ness than a hack­amore. The two grown wo­men and the boy were all blonde with faces baked brown by the sun. The boy’s face was tat­tooed with stripes like a cat. Their ar­rival oc­ca­sioned a com­plete halt­ing of the cara­van, while Madge set up a table and cloth and brewed a spe­cial tea, which she served to them with can­died fruit and bar­ley-sugar cakes. No coin ex­changed hands that I saw, only this ce­re­mo­nial hos­pit­al­ity. I sus­pec­ted from their man­ner that Madge was long known to them, and that her son was be­ing groomed to con­tinue this pas­sage ar­range­ment.

  But most days were the same plod­ding routine. We rose, we ate, we walked. We stopped, we ate, we slept. One day I caught my­self won­der­ing if Molly would teach our child to make candles and tend bees. What could I teach her? Pois­ons and strangling tech­niques, I thought bit­terly. No. Her let­ters and num­bers she’d learn from me. She’d still be young enough when I re­turned for me to teach her that. And all Burrich had ever taught me about horses and dogs. That was the day when I real­ized I was look­ing ahead again, was plan­ning for a life after I’d found Ver­ity and some­how taken him safely back to Buck. My baby was just an in­fant now, I told my­self, suck­ling at Molly’s breast and look­ing about with wide eyes and see­ing all new. She was too young to know some­thing was miss­ing, too young to know her father wasn’t there. I’d be back with them soon, be­fore she learned to say ‘Pa’, I’d be there to see her first steps.

  That re­solve changed some­thing in me. I’d never looked for­ward to some­thing so much. This was not an as­sas­sin­a­tion that would end in someone’s death. No, I looked for­ward to a life, and ima­gined teach­ing her things, ima­gined her grow­ing up bright and pretty and lov­ing her father, know­ing noth­ing, ever, of any other life he’d ever led. She wouldn’t re­mem­ber me with a smooth face and a straight nose. She’d only know me as I was now. That was oddly im­port­ant to me. So I would go to Ver­ity be­cause I had to, be­cause he was my king and I loved him, and be­cause he needed me. But find­ing him no longer marked the end of my jour­ney, but the be­gin­ning. Once I had found Ver­ity, I could turn about and come home to them. For a time, I for­got Regal.

  So I thought to my­self some­times, and when I did I walked be­hind the sheep in their dust and stink and smiled a tight­lipped smile be­hind the ker­chief over my face. At other times, when I lay down alone at night, all I could think of was the warmth of a wo­man and a home and a child of my own. I think I felt every mile that stretched between us. Loneli­ness was a thing that ate at me then. I longed to know every de­tail of what was go­ing on. Every night, every mo­ment of quiet was a tempta­tion to reach out with the Skill. But I un­der­stood Ver­ity’s ad­mon­i­tion now. If I Skilled to them, then Regal’s co­terie could find them as well as me. Regal would not hes­it­ate to use them against me in any way he could ima­gine. So I hungered for know­ledge of them, but dared not at­tempt to sat­isfy that hun­ger.

  We came to one vil­lage that was al­most worthy of the name. It had sprouted up like a fairy ring of mush­rooms around a deep-wa­ter spring. It had an inn, a tav­ern and even sev­eral stores, all ca­ter­ing to trav­el­lers, with a scat­ter­ing of houses sur­round­ing it. We got there at mid­day, and Madge de­clared that we would have a rest, and not move on un­til the fol­low­ing morn­ing. No one really ob­jec­ted. Once we’d watered our an­im­als, we moved our beasts and wag­ons to the out­skirts of town. The pup­pet­eer de­cided to take ad­vant­age of the situ­ation, and an­nounced in the tav­ern and inn that his troupe would stage a per­form­ance for the whole town, with gra­tu­it­ies cheer­fully ac­cep­ted. Starling had already found a corner of the tav­ern to call her own and was in­tro­du­cing this Far­row town to some Buck bal­lads.

  I was con­tent to stay with the sheep on the out­skirts of the town. I was soon the only one at our en­camp­ment. I did not es­pe­cially mind. The horses’ owner had offered me an ex­tra cop­per if I’d keep an eye on them. They scarcely needed watch­ing. They were hobbled, but even so, all the an­im­als were grate­ful to stop for a bit and search out whatever graz­ing they could find. The bull was staked out and like­wise oc­cu­pied with scav­en­ging grass. There was a sort of peace to be­ing still and alone. I was learn­ing to cul­tiv­ate an empti­ness of spirit. I could now go for long stretches without think­ing of any­thing in par­tic­u­lar. It made my end­less wait­ing less pain­ful. I sat on the tail of Da­mon’s cart and stared out over the an­im­als and the gentle un­du­lat­ing of the brush-spot­ted plain bey­ond them.

  It did not last for long. In the late af­ter­noon, the pup­pet­eer’s wagon came rat­tling into camp. Only Mas­ter Dell and the young­est ap­pren­tice were in it. The oth­ers had stayed in town to drink and talk and gen­er­ally en­joy them­selves. But the shout­ing of the mas­ter soon made it ap­par­ent that his young­est ap­pren­tice had dis­graced her­self with for­got­ten lines and in­cor­rect move­ments. Her pun­ish­ment was to stay in camp with the wagon. To this he ad­ded sev­eral sharp cuts with his strap. Both the snap of the leather and yelps of the girl were clearly aud­ible across camp. I winced at the second one and was on my feet by the third one. I had no clear idea of my in­ten­tion, and was ac­tu­ally re­lieved to see the mas­ter go strid­ing off away from the wagon and back into town.

  The girl wept nois­ily as she went about the task of un­hitch­ing the team and peg­ging it out. I’d no­ticed her be­fore in a cas­ual way. She was the young­est of the troupe, no more than six­teen, and seemed most of­ten to be un­der her mas­ter’s lash. Not that that was un­usual. It was not un­com­mon for a mas­ter to have a lash to keep his ap­pren­tices de­voted to their tasks. Neither Burrich nor Chade had ever taken a strap to me, but I’d had my share of cuffs and raps, and an oc­ca­sional boot from Burrich if I wasn’t mov­ing fast enough to suit him. The pup­pet­eer was no worse than many mas­ters that I’d seen, and kinder than some. All of his un­der­lings were well-fed and well-clothed. I sup­pose what ir­rit­ated me about him was that one snap of his lash never seemed enough for him. It was al­ways three or five or even more when he was in a tem­per.

  The peace of the night was gone. Long after she’d fin­ished stak­ing out the horses, her deep sob­bing rent the still­ness. After a time I
could not stand it. I went to the back of their trav­el­ling wagon and rapped on the small door. The weep­ing paused with a sniff. ‘Who is it?’ she asked hoarsely.

  ‘Tom the shep­herd. Are you all right?’

  I’d hoped that she’d say she was and tell me to go away. In­stead the door opened after a mo­ment and she stood peer­ing out at me. Blood was drip­ping from her jaw-line. I saw at a glance what had happened. The end of the strap had curled past her shoulder and the tip had bit­ten wickedly into her cheek. I didn’t doubt that it hurt badly, but I sus­pec­ted the amount of blood was scar­ing her even more. I saw a look­ing-glass set up on a table be­hind her and a bloody cloth be­side it. For a mo­ment we looked at one an­other word­lessly. Then, ‘He’s ruined my face,’ she sobbed.

  I couldn’t think of words to say. In­stead I stepped up into the wagon and took her by the shoulders. I sat her down. She’d been us­ing a dry rag to poke at her face. Had she no sense at all? ‘Sit still,’ I told her tersely. ‘And try to be calm. I’ll be right back.’

  I took her rag and damped it in cool wa­ter. I went back in and dabbed the blood away. As I sus­pec­ted, the cut was not large, but it was bleed­ing pro­fusely as cuts to the face or scalp of­ten do. I fol­ded the rag into a square and pressed it against her face. ‘Hold that there. Press on it a bit, but don’t move it. I’ll be back.’ I looked up to find her eyes fastened to the scar on my cheek as tears brimmed over from her eyes. I ad­ded, ‘Skin as fair as yours doesn’t scar all that eas­ily. Even if it leaves a mark, it won’t be large.’

  The huge­ness of her eyes at my words let me know I’d said ex­actly the wrong thing. I left the wagon, be­rat­ing my­self for get­ting in­volved at all.

  I’d lost all my heal­ing herbs and my pot of Burrich’s oint­ment when I had aban­doned my things in Trade­ford. I’d no­ticed a flower that looked a bit like a stun­ted golden-rod in the area where the sheep were graz­ing, how­ever, and some suc­cu­lents sort of like bloo­d­root. So I pulled up one of the suc­cu­lents, but it smelled wrong, and the juice from the leaves was sticky rather than like jelly. I washed my hands and then looked at the stun­ted golden­rod. It smelled right. I shrugged. I star­ted out pick­ing just a hand­ful of leaves, but then de­cided as long as I was at it, I could re­stock a bit of what I’d lost. It ap­peared to be the same herb, but grow­ing smal­ler and more strag­gly in this dry rocky soil. I spread out my har­vest on the tail of the cart and sor­ted through it. The fat­ter leaves I left to dry. The smal­ler tips I crushed between two cleaned stones, and then took the res­ult­ing paste on one of the stones to the pup­pet­eer’s wagon. The girl looked at it with doubt, but nod­ded hes­it­antly when I told her, ‘This will stop the bleed­ing. Soon­est closed is smal­lest scar.’

  When she took the rag away from her face, I saw that it had al­most stopped bleed­ing. I smoothed on a fin­ger­tip’s worth of the wound­wort paste any­way. She sat quietly un­der my touch, and it was sud­denly un­nerv­ing to re­call that I had not touched a wo­man’s face since I’d last seen Molly. This girl had blue eyes and they were wide open and look­ing up into my face. I looked aside from the earn­est gaze. ‘There. Now leave it alone. Don’t wipe at it, don’t touch it with your fin­gers, don’t wash it. Let the scab form and then do your best to leave that alone.’

  ‘Thank you,’ she said in a tiny voice.

  ‘Wel­come,’ I told her, and turned to leave.

  ‘My name is Tassin,’ she said to my back.

  ‘I know. I’ve heard him roar­ing it at you,’ I said. I star­ted to go down the steps.

  ‘He’s an aw­ful man. I hate him! I’d run away if I could.’

  It didn’t seem like a good time simply to walk away from her. I stepped off the wagon and paused. ‘I know it’s hard to feel a strap when you’re try­ing hard. But … that’s how it is. If you ran away and had no food, no place to sleep and your cloth­ing all go­ing to rags, that would be worse. Try to do bet­ter, so he won’t take up the strap.’ I be­lieved so little of what I said, I could scarcely form the words. But those words seemed bet­ter than to tell her to leave now and run away. She wouldn’t sur­vive a day on the open prairie.

  ‘I don’t want to do bet­ter.’ She’d found a spark of spirit, to be de­fi­ant. ‘I don’t want to be a pup­pet­eer at all. Mas­ter Dell knew that when he bought my years.’

  I edged away back to­ward my sheep, but she came down the steps and fol­lowed after me.

  ‘There was a man I liked in our vil­lage. He’d made an of­fer for me, to be his wife, but had no money just then. He was a farmer, you see, and it was spring. No farmer has money in spring. He told my mother he’d pay a bride-price for me at har­vest-time. But my mother said, “If he’s poor now with one mouth to feed, he’ll only be poorer after he has two. Or more.” And then she sold me to the pup­pet­eer, for half what he’d usu­ally pay for an ap­pren­tice, be­cause I wasn’t will­ing.’

  ‘They do it dif­fer­ently where I’m from,’ I said awk­wardly. I couldn’t grasp what she was telling me. ‘Par­ents pay a mas­ter to take on their child as ap­pren­tice, hop­ing the child can make a bet­ter life.’

  She smoothed her hair back from her face. It was light brown, with a lot of curl to it. ‘I’ve heard of that. Some do it that way, but most don’t. They buy an ap­pren­tice, usu­ally a will­ing one, and if he doesn’t work out, then they can sell him for a drudge. Then you’re not much bet­ter than a slave for six years.’ She sniffed. ‘Some say it makes an ap­pren­tice try harder, to know he may end up do­ing scut work in a kit­chen or pump­ing a bel­lows in a smithy for six years if his mas­ter isn’t pleased.’

  ‘Well. It sounds to me like you’d bet­ter learn to like pup­pets,’ I said lamely. I sat on the tail of my mas­ter’s cart and looked out over my flock. She sat down next to me.

  ‘Or hope someone buys me from my mas­ter,’ she said des­pond­ently.

  ‘You make your­self sound like a slave,’ I said re­luct­antly. ‘It’s not that bad, is it?’

  ‘Do­ing some­thing you think is stu­pid, day after day?’ she asked me. ‘And be­ing hit for not do­ing it per­fectly? How is that bet­ter than be­ing a slave?’

  ‘Well, you’re fed and clothed and sheltered. And he’s giv­ing you a chance to learn some­thing, a trade that would let you travel all over the Six Duch­ies if you be­came good at it. You might end up per­form­ing for the King’s Court at Buck­keep.’

  She looked at me oddly. ‘You mean Trade­ford.’ She sighed and shif­ted her­self closer to me. ‘It’s lonely for me. All the oth­ers, they all want to be pup­pet­eers. They get angry at me when I make mis­takes, and al­ways call me lazy and won’t talk to me when they say I spoiled a per­form­ance. There’s not one kind one among them; none of them would have cared about my face get­ting scarred as you did.’

  There seemed noth­ing to reply to that. I didn’t know the oth­ers well enough to agree or dis­agree. So I said noth­ing and we sat watch­ing the sheep. The si­lence lengthened as the night got darker. I thought that soon I should kindle a fire.

  ‘So,’ she began after a few more minutes of my si­lence. ‘How did you be­come a shep­herd?’

  ‘My par­ents died. My sis­ter in­her­ited. She didn’t par­tic­u­larly care for me, and here I am.’

  ‘What a bitch!’ she said fiercely.

  I took a breath to de­fend my fic­ti­tious sis­ter, and then real­ized I’d only be ex­tend­ing the con­ver­sa­tion. I tried to think of some­thing I needed to go and do, but the sheep and other beasts were right there be­fore us, graz­ing peace­fully. Use­less to hope that the oth­ers would soon re­turn. Not with a tav­ern and new faces to talk to after our days on the road.

  I fi­nally made ex­cuse that I was hungry and got up to gather stones and then dry dung and sticks for a fire. Tassin in­sis­ted on cook­ing. I was not truly hungry, but she ate with a hearty ap­pet­ite, and fed m
e well from the pup­pet­eer’s trav­el­ling sup­plies. She made a pot of tea as well, and af­ter­wards we sat by the fireside sip­ping it from heavy red por­cel­ain mugs.

  Some­how the si­lence had changed from awk­ward to com­pan­ion­able. It had been pleas­ant to sit and watch someone else pre­pare the meal. She had chattered at first, ask­ing if I liked this sort of spice and did I make my tea strong, but not really listen­ing for any an­swers. Seem­ing to find some sort of ac­cept­ance in my si­lence, she had gone on to speak more in­tim­ately of her­self. With a sort of des­pair, she spoke of days spent learn­ing and prac­tising a thing she had no de­sire to learn nor prac­tise. She spoke with a grudging mar­vel of the ded­ic­a­tion of the other pup­pet­eers, and their en­thu­si­asm that she could not share. Her voice dwindled off and she looked up at me with eyes full of misery. She did not need to ex­plain to me the loneli­ness she felt. She turned the talk to lighter things, the minor ir­rit­a­tions she felt, the foods they ate that she dis­liked, the way one of the other pup­pet­eers al­ways smelled of old sweat, of one wo­man who re­minded her to speak her lines by pinch­ing her.

  Even her com­plaints were pleas­ant in an odd way, filling my mind with her tri­vi­al­it­ies so that I could not fo­cus on my lar­ger prob­lems. Be­ing with her was in some ways like be­ing with the wolf. Tassin was fo­cused on the now, on this meal and this night, with little thought of any­thing else. From con­sid­er­ing this my thoughts wandered to Nighteyes. I ques­ted softly to­ward him. I could sense him, some­where, alive, but could tell little more than that. Per­haps too great a dis­tance sep­ar­ated us; per­haps he was too fo­cused on his new life. Whatever the reason, his mind was not as open to me as it had once been. Per­haps he was simply be­com­ing more at­tuned to the ways of his pack. I tried to feel glad that he had found such a life for him­self, with many com­pan­ions and pos­sibly a mate.

 

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