Assassin's Quest (UK)

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Assassin's Quest (UK) Page 42

by Robin Hobb


  ‘It could be,’ I agreed. I scratched him gently be­hind the ear and he all but fell over in the snow. ‘Will you go back to them, some day?’

  He was hav­ing dif­fi­culty fo­cus­ing on my words while I scratched his ears. I stopped and asked him again. He cocked his head to one side and re­garded me with amuse­ment. Ask me on the some day, and I will be able to an­swer.

  One day at a time, I agreed with him. I am glad you are here. But I still don’t un­der­stand why you came back to me. You could have stayed with the pack.

  His eyes met mine, and even in the dark­ness they gripped me. You are called, are you not? Did not your king howl to you, ‘Come to me’?

  I nod­ded un­will­ingly. I am called.

  He stood sud­denly, shook him­self all over. He looked off into the night. If you are called, I am called, too. He did not ad­mit it will­ingly.

  You do not have to come with me. This call from my king binds me, not you.

  In that, you are wrong. What binds you, binds me.

  I do not un­der­stand how that could be, I said care­fully.

  Nor do I. But it is so. Come to me, he called to us. And for a time, I could ig­nore it. But no more.

  I am sorry. I groped for a way to ex­press it. He has no right to you. I know that. I do not think he in­ten­ded to call you. I do not think he in­ten­ded to bind me. But it happened, and I must go to him.

  I stood up and dus­ted off the snow that was start­ing to melt on me. I felt ashamed. Ver­ity, a man whom I trus­ted, had done this to me. That was bad enough. But through me it was im­posed on the wolf. Ver­ity had no right to put any de­mands on Nighteyes. For that mat­ter, I had no right to put any de­mands on him. What had been between us had al­ways been entered into vol­un­tar­ily, a mu­tual giv­ing on both sides with no lay­ing-on of ob­lig­a­tions. Now, through me, he was en­trapped as surely as if I had caged him.

  We share a cage, then.

  I wish it were oth­er­wise. I wish there were some way I could free you of this. But I do not even know how to free my­self. Not know­ing how you are bound, I do not know how to loose you. You and I, we share the Wit. Ver­ity and I share the Skill. How could his Skill-send­ing have gone through me to seize you? You were not even with me when he summoned me.

  Nighteyes sat very still in the snow. The wind had come up, and in the faint star­light I could see it ruff­ling his coat. I am al­ways with you, brother. You may not al­ways be aware of me, but I am al­ways with you. We are one.

  We share many things, I agreed. Un­eas­i­ness itched at me.

  No. He turned to face me squarely, met my eyes as no wild wolf would have. We do not share. We are one. I am no longer a wolf, you are no longer a man. What we are to­gether, I have no name for. Per­haps the one who spoke to us of the Old Blood would have a word to ex­plain it. He paused. See how much a man I am, that I speak of hav­ing a word for an idea? No word is needed. We ex­ist, and we are whatever we are.

  I would set you free if I could.

  Would you? I would not part from you.

  That is not what I meant. I meant I would have for you a life of your own.

  He yawned, then stretched. I will have for us a life of our own. We shall win it to­gether. So. Do we travel by night or by day?

  We travel by day.

  He sensed what I meant. You will stay with this huge pack to travel? Why not break free of it and run with me? We shall go faster.

  I shook my head. It is not that simple. To travel where we must, I will need shel­ter, and I have none that is mine alone. I need the aid of this pack to sur­vive in this weather.

  There fol­lowed a dif­fi­cult half hour, as I tried to ex­plain to him that I would need the sup­port of the oth­ers in the cara­van to reach the Moun­tains. Had I had a horse and pro­vi­sions of my own, I would not have hes­it­ated to trust to luck and strike out with the wolf. But on foot with only what I could carry my­self, fa­cing the deep snows and deeper cold of the Moun­tains, not to men­tion a river cross­ing? I would not be that great a fool.

  We could hunt, Nighteyes in­sis­ted. We would curl to­gether in the snow at night. He could take care of me as he al­ways had. With per­sist­ence, I was able to con­vince him that I must con­tinue to travel as I did. Then I shall have to con­tinue to sneak along like a stray dog, fol­low­ing all these folk?

  ‘Tom? Tom, are you out there?’ There was ir­rit­ated an­noy­ance and worry in Nik’s voice.

  ‘Right here!’ I stepped out of the bushes.

  ‘What were you do­ing?’ he de­man­ded sus­pi­ciously.

  ‘Piss­ing,’ I told him. I made a sud­den de­cision. ‘And my dog has fol­lowed me from town and caught up with us here. I left him with friends, but he must have chewed his rope. Here, boy, come to heel.’

  I’ll chew your heel off for you, Nighteyes offered sav­agely, but he came, fol­low­ing me out into the cleared yard.

  ‘Damn big dog,’ Nik ob­served. He leaned for­ward. ‘Looks more than half a wolf to me?’

  ‘Some in Far­row have told me that. It’s a Buck breed. We use them for herd­ing sheep.’

  You will pay for this. I prom­ise you.

  In an­swer I leaned down to pat his shoulder and then scratch his ears. Wag your tail, Nighteyes. ‘He’s a loyal old dog. I should have known he wouldn’t be left be­hind.’

  The things I en­dure for you. He wagged his tail. Once.

  ‘I see. Well. You’d best get your­self in­side and get some sleep. And next time, don’t go off by your­self. For any­thing. At least, not without let­ting me know first. When my men are on watch, they get jumpy. They might cut your throat be­fore they knew you.’

  ‘I un­der­stand.’

  I walked right past two of them.

  ‘Nik, you don’t mind, do you? The dog, I mean.’ I tried to be af­fably abashed. ‘He can stay out­side. He’s a real good watch-dog, ac­tu­ally.’

  ‘Just don’t ex­pect me to feed him for you,’ Nik growled. ‘And don’t let him be any trouble to us.’

  ‘Oh, I’m sure he won’t. Will you, boy?’

  Starling chose that mo­ment to come to the door. ‘Nik? F … Tom?’

  ‘We’re right here. You were right, he was just piss­ing,’ Nik said quietly. He took Starling’s arm and began to guide her back into the shed.

  ‘What’s that?’ she de­man­ded, sound­ing al­most alarmed.

  I sud­denly had to wager everything on her quick wits and our friend­ship. ‘Just the dog,’ I said quickly. ‘Nighteyes must have chewed his rope. I warned Creece to watch him when I left him there, that he’d want to fol­low me. But Creece didn’t listen, and here he is. I’ll guess I’ll have to take him to the Moun­tains with us after all.’

  Starling was star­ing at the wolf. Her eyes were as wide and black as the night sky above us. Nik tugged at her arm and she fi­nally turned back to the door. ‘I sup­pose so,’ she said faintly.

  I si­lently thanked Eda and any other god that might be listen­ing. To Nighteyes I said, ‘Stay and guard, there’s a good fel­low.’

  En­joy it while you can, little brother. He flung him­self down by the cart. I doubted that he’d stay there for more than a few heart­beats. I fol­lowed Starling and Nik in­side. Nik shut the door firmly be­hind us and dropped the bolt in place. I pulled off my boots and shook out my snow-laden cloak be­fore I wrapped my­self in my blankets. Sleep was sud­denly very close as I grasped the full re­lief I felt. Nighteyes was back. I felt whole. Safe, with the wolf at the door.

  Nighteyes. I’m glad you’re here.

  You’ve an odd way of show­ing it, he replied, but I could sense he was more amused than up­set.

  Black Rolf sent me a mes­sage. Regal seeks to turn those of Old Blood against us. He of­fers them gold to hunt us down for him. We should not speak overly much.

  Gold. What is gold to us, or those like us? Do not fear, little brother. I am here to take care
of you again.

  I closed my eyes and sank into sleep, hop­ing he was right. For an in­stant, as I teetered on the edge of wake­ful­ness, I no­ticed that Starling had not spread her blankets by mine. She sat on her blankets on the other side of the room. By Nik. Heads to­gether, they spoke softly about some­thing. She laughed. I could not hear the words she next said, but the tone was a teas­ing chal­lenge.

  I al­most felt a pang of jeal­ousy. I re­buked my­self for it. She was a com­pan­ion, no more. What was it to me how she spent her nights? Last night she had slept against my back. This night she would not. I de­cided it was the wolf. She couldn’t ac­cept it. She was not the first. Know­ing I was Wit­ted was not the same thing as con­front­ing my bond-an­imal. Well. That was how that was.

  I slept.

  Some­time in the night I felt a gentle grop­ing. It was the barest brush­ing of the Skill across my senses. I came alert, but still, wait­ing. I felt noth­ing. Had I ima­gined it, dreamed it? A more chilling thought came to me. Per­haps it was Ver­ity, too weakened to do more than reach for me. Per­haps it was Will. I lay still, long­ing to reach out, and fear­ing to. I wanted so badly to know that Ver­ity was all right; since he had blas­ted Regal’s co­terie that night, I had felt noth­ing of him. Come to me, he had said. What if that had been his dy­ing wish? What if all my seek­ing would yield me were bones? I pushed the fear away and tried to be open.

  The mind I felt brush mine was Regal’s.

  I had never Skilled to Regal, had only sus­pec­ted he was able to Skill. Even now, I doubted what I sensed. The strength of the Skill seemed Will’s, but the feel of the thoughts was Regal’s. And you have not found the wo­man either? The Skilling was not meant for me. He reached for someone else. I grew bolder, ven­tur­ing closer. I tried to be open to his thoughts without reach­ing for them.

  Not as of yet, my king. Burl. Hid­ing his trem­bling be­hind form­al­ity and cour­tesy. I knew Regal could sense it as clearly as I could. I even knew that he en­joyed it. Regal had never been able to grasp the dif­fer­ence between fear and re­spect. He had no be­lief in a man’s re­spect for him un­less it was tain­ted with fear. I had not thought he would ex­tend that to his own co­terie. I wondered what the threat was that he held over them.

  And noth­ing of the Bas­tard? Regal de­man­ded. There was no mis­tak­ing it now. Regal Skilled, us­ing Will’s strength. Did that mean he could not Skill by him­self?

  Burl steeled him­self. My king, I have found no sign of him. I be­lieve he is dead. Truly dead, this time. He cut him­self with a poisoned blade; the des­pair he felt at that mo­ment of de­cision was ab­so­lute. No man could have pre­ten­ded it.

  Then there should be a body, should there not?

  Some­where, my king, I am sure there is. Your guards have simply not found it yet. This from Car­rod, who did not tremble with fear. He hid his fear even from him­self, pre­tend­ing it was an­ger. I un­der­stood how he might need to do that, but doubted the wis­dom of it. It forced him to stand up to Regal. Regal did not ap­pre­ci­ate a man who spoke his mind.

  Per­haps I should put you in charge of rid­ing the roads, look­ing for it, Regal sug­ges­ted pleas­antly. At the same time, you might find the man who killed Bolt and his patrol.

  My lord king … Car­rod began, but SI­LENCE! Regal over­rode him. He drew freely on Will’s strength to do it. The ef­fort cost him noth­ing.

  I be­lieved him dead once be­fore, and my trust in the word of oth­ers nearly got me killed. This time I will see him, see him hacked in pieces be­fore I rest. Will’s feeble at­tempt to trap the Bas­tard into be­tray­ing him­self failed miser­ably.

  Per­haps be­cause he is already dead, Car­rod ven­tured fool­ishly.

  Then I wit­nessed a thing I wished I had not. A needle of pain, hot and pier­cing, he sent to Car­rod with Will’s Skill. In that send­ing, I fi­nally glimpsed the whole of what they had be­come. Regal rode Will, not like a man rides a horse, to be thrown by the horse in an­ger, but as a tick or a leech bites into its vic­tim and clings and sucks life from him. Wak­ing or asleep, Regal was with him al­ways, had ac­cess al­ways to his strength. And now he spent it vi­ciously, caring noth­ing for what it would cost Will. I had not known pain could be in­flic­ted with Skill alone. A numb­ing blast of strength such as Ver­ity had spent upon them, that I knew. But this was dif­fer­ent. This was no show of force or tem­per. This was a dis­play of purest vin­dict­ive­ness. Some­where, I knew, Car­rod fell to the floor and thrashed in word­less agony. Linked as they were, Burl and Will must have shared a shadow of that pain. It sur­prised me that a mem­ber of a co­terie was even cap­able of do­ing that to an­other. But then, it was not Will who sent the pain. It was Regal.

  It passed, after a time. Per­haps in real­ity it only las­ted an in­stant. For Car­rod, it cer­tainly las­ted long enough. I sensed from him a faint men­tal whim­per­ing. He was cap­able of no more than that just now.

  I do not be­lieve the Bas­tard died. I dare not be­lieve it un­til I’ve seen his body. Someone killed Bolt and his men. So find his body and bring it to me, whether alive or dead. Burl. Re­main where you are, and re­double your ef­forts. I am cer­tain he is bound that way. Let no trav­el­ler pass you un­chal­lenged. Car­rod, I think per­haps you should join Burl. An in­dol­ent life does not seem to agree with your tem­pera­ment. Be on your way to­mor­row. And as you travel, do not be lazy. Keep your minds upon your task. We know that Ver­ity lives; he proved that to all of you most ef­fect­ively. The Bas­tard will try to get to him. He must be stopped be­fore he does so, and then my brother must be elim­in­ated as a threat. These are the only tasks I have given you; why can­not you do them? Have you no thought for what will be­come of us should Ver­ity suc­ceed? Search for him, with Skill and men. Do not let folk for­get what I have offered for his cap­ture. Do not let them for­get the pun­ish­ment for aid­ing him. Am I un­der­stood?

  Of course, my lord king. I shall spare no ef­fort. Burl was quick to reply.

  Car­rod? I hear noth­ing from you Car­rod. The threat of pun­ish­ment hung over them all.

  Please, my lord King. I shall do all, everything. Alive or dead, I shall find him for you. I shall.

  Without even an ac­know­ledge­ment, Will and Regal’s pres­ence van­ished. I felt Car­rod col­lapse. Burl lingered a mo­ment longer. Did he listen, did he grope back to­ward my pres­ence? I let my thoughts float free, my con­cen­tra­tion dis­sip­ate. Then I opened my eyes and lay star­ing at the ceil­ing, think­ing. The Skilling had left me queasy and trem­bling.

  I am with you, my brother, Nighteyes as­sured me.

  And I am glad that you are. I rolled over and tried to find sleep.

  SIX­TEEN

  Bolthole

  In many of the old le­gends and tales of the Wit, it is in­sis­ted that a Wit user even­tu­ally takes on many traits of his bond-an­imal. Some of the most fright­en­ing tales say that even­tu­ally a Wit­ted one be­comes cap­able of as­sum­ing the guise of that an­imal. Those who know in­tim­ately of such ma­gic have as­sured me it is not so. It is true that a Wit­ted one may, without real­iz­ing it, as­sume some of the phys­ical man­ner­isms of his bond-an­imal, but one bon­ded to an eagle will not sprout wings, nor will one bon­ded to a horse be­gin to neigh. As time goes by, a Wit­ted one grows in un­der­stand­ing of the bond-beast, and the longer a hu­man and an an­imal are bon­ded, the greater will be the sim­il­ar­ity of their man­ner­isms. The bond-an­imal is as likely to as­sume the man­ner­isms and traits of the hu­man as the hu­man is to ad­opt those of his beast. But this only hap­pens over a long period of in­tense con­tact.

  Nik agreed with Burrich’s idea of when morn­ings began. I awoke to the sound of his men lead­ing the horses out. A cold wind blew in the open door. Around me in the dark­ness the oth­ers were stir­ring. One of the chil­dren was cry­ing at be­ing awakened so early. Her mo
ther shushed her. Molly, I thought with sud­den long­ing. Some­where hush­ing my child.

  What’s this?

  My mate bore a cub. Far away.

  Im­me­di­ate con­cern. But who will hunt meat to feed them? Should not we re­turn to her?

  Heart of the Pack watches over her.

  Of course. I should have known that. That one knows the mean­ing of pack, no mat­ter how he denies it. All is well, then.

  As I rose and bundled my blankets to­gether, I wished I could ac­cept it as blithely as he did. I knew Burrich would care for them. It was his nature. I re­called all the years he had watched over me as I had grown. Of­ten I had hated him then; now I could not think of any­one else I would prefer to care for Molly and my baby. Save my­self. I would much rather it was I watch­ing over them, even rock­ing a cry­ing babe in the middle of the night. Though I rather wished, just now, that the pil­grim wo­man would find a way to quiet her child. I was pay­ing for my Skill-spy­ing of the night be­fore with a sav­age head­ache.

  Food seemed to be the an­swer, for when the girl had a piece of bread and some hon­ey­comb, she soon quieted. It was a hasty meal we shared, the only hot item be­ing tea. I no­ticed Kettle was mov­ing very stiffly and took pity on her. I fetched her a cup of hot tea to wrap her twis­ted fin­gers around while I rolled up her blankets for her. I had never seen hands so dis­tor­ted by rheum­at­ism; they re­minded me of bird claws.

  ‘An old friend of mine said that some­times the sting of nettles ac­tu­ally re­lieved his hands when they ached,’ I sug­ges­ted to her as I tied her bundle.

  ‘You find me nettles grow­ing un­der the snow and I’ll try them, boy,’ she replied peev­ishly. But a few mo­ments later she was of­fer­ing me a dried apple from her small store. I ac­cep­ted it with thanks. I loaded our things onto the cart and har­nessed the mare while she fin­ished her tea. I glanced about but saw noth­ing of Nighteyes.

 

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