Assassin's Quest (UK)

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Assassin's Quest (UK) Page 74

by Robin Hobb


  They are eat­ing now. And no one keeps a watch.

  I re­layed the in­form­a­tion to Kettle, who nod­ded grimly. To my­self I fret­ted and wondered if she would be able to do what needed do­ing. To be good with a bow is one thing. To shoot a man down while he is eat­ing his din­ner peace­fully is an­other. I thought of Starling’s ob­jec­tion, and wondered what kind of man would show him­self and is­sue a chal­lenge be­fore try­ing to kill all three men. I touched the hilt of my short sword. Well, it was what Chade had prom­ised me so long ago. Killing for my king, with none of the hon­our or glory of the sol­dier on the bat­tle­field. Not that any of my battle memor­ies had much of hon­our or glory in them.

  We were sud­denly clam­ber­ing down from the loose rock of the slide area, go­ing very quietly and care­fully. Kettle spoke very softly. ‘We’ve a way to go yet. But when we get there, let me choose my spot, and get my first shot off. As soon as the man is down, show your­self and draw their at­ten­tion. They may not look for me, and I may get an­other clean shot.’

  ‘Have you done this sort of thing be­fore?’ I asked softly.

  ‘It’s not that dif­fer­ent from our game, Fitz. From here, let us go si­lently.’

  I knew then she had not killed this way be­fore, if she had ever killed a hu­man be­fore at all. I began to doubt the wis­dom of giv­ing her the bow. At the same time, I was selfishly grate­ful for her com­pan­ion­ship. I wondered if I were los­ing my cour­age.

  Per­haps you are learn­ing that a pack is best for such things.

  Per­haps.

  There was little cover on the road. Above and be­low us, the moun­tain­side rose sheer. The road it­self was flat and bare. We roun­ded a shoulder of the moun­tain and their camp was in plain sight. All three guards still sat care­lessly about the fire, eat­ing and talk­ing. The horses caught our scent and shif­ted with small snort­ings. But as the wolf had kept them un­easy for some time, the men paid them no mind. Kettle set an ar­row to her bow as we walked and car­ried it ready. In the end, it was simple. Ugly mind­less slaughter, but simple. She let go her ar­row when one of the men no­ticed us. It took him through the chest. The other two leaped to their feet, turned to see us, and dived for their weapons. But in that short space of time, Kettle had nocked an­other ar­row and let fly as the help­less wretch drew a sword clear. Nighteyes came sud­denly from be­hind to bear the last man down and hold him un­til I could rush in to fin­ish him with a sword.

  It had happened swiftly, al­most quietly. Three dead men sprawled in the snow. Six sweat­ing, rest­less horses, one im­pass­ive mule. ‘Kettle. See what food they have on the horses,’ I told her, to stop her aw­ful star­ing. She swung her gaze to me, then slowly nod­ded.

  I went over the bod­ies, to see what they might tell me. They did not wear Regal’s col­ours, but the ori­gin of two were plain in the fea­tures of their faces and the cut of their clothes. Far­row men. The third one, when I turned him over, near stopped my heart. I’d known him in Buck­keep. Not well, but enough to know his name was Tal­low. I crouched look­ing down into his dead face, ashamed that I could re­call no more of him than that. I sup­posed he had gone on to Trade­ford when Regal moved the court there; many of the ser­vants had. I tried to tell my­self it did not mat­ter where he had be­gun; he had ended here. I closed my heart and did my tasks.

  I tumbled the bod­ies off the cliff’s edge. While Kettle went through their stores and sor­ted out what she thought we two could carry back, I stripped the horses of every bit of har­ness and tack. This fol­lowed the bod­ies down the cliff. I went through their bags, find­ing little be­sides warm clothes. The pack an­imal car­ried only their tent and such things. No pa­pers. What need would co­terie mem­bers have of writ­ten in­struc­tions?

  Drive the horses well down the road. I doubt they’ll come back here on their own.

  That much meat, and you want me to just chase it away?

  If we kill one here, it’s more than we can eat and carry. Whatever we left would feed those three when they re­turn. They were car­ry­ing dry meat and cheese. I’ll see your belly is full to­night.

  Nighteyes was not pleased, but he heeded me. I think he chased the horses fur­ther and faster than he truly needed to, but at least he left them alive. I had no idea what their chances were in the moun­tains. Prob­ably end up in a snow­cat’s belly, or as a feast for the ravens. I was sud­denly hor­ribly tired of it all.

  ‘Shall we go on?’ I asked Kettle need­lessly, and she nod­ded. It was a good trove of food she had packed for us to carry, but I privately wondered if I’d be able to stom­ach any of it. What little we could not carry nor the wolf stuff down, we kicked over the edge. I looked around us. ‘Dare I touch it, I’d try to push that pil­lar over the edge, too,’ I told Kettle.

  She gave me a look as if she thought I had asked it of her. ‘I fear to touch it also,’ she said at last, and we both turned away from it.

  Even­ing crept across the moun­tains as we went up the road, and night came swift on her heels. I fol­lowed Kettle and the wolf across the land­slide in near dark­ness. Neither of them seemed afraid, and I was sud­denly too weary to care if I sur­vived the trek. ‘Don’t let your mind wander,’ Kettle chided me as we fi­nally came down off the tumble of stone and onto the road again. She took my arm and gripped it tightly. We walked for a time in al­most black­ness, simply fol­low­ing the straight flat road be­fore us as it cut across the face of the moun­tain. The wolf went ahead of us, com­ing back fre­quently to check on us. Camp’s not much farther, he en­cour­aged me after one such trip.

  ‘How long have you been do­ing this?’ Kettle asked me after a time.

  I didn’t pre­tend to mis­un­der­stand the ques­tion. ‘Since I was about twelve,’ I told her.

  ‘How many men have you killed?’

  It was not the cold ques­tion it soun­ded. I answered her ser­i­ously. ‘I don’t know. My … teacher ad­vised me against keep­ing a count. He said it wasn’t a good idea.’ Those weren’t his ex­act words. I re­membered them well. ‘How many doesn’t mat­ter after one,’ Chade had said. ‘We know what we are. Quant­ity makes you neither bet­ter nor worse.’

  I pondered now what he had meant by that as Kettle said to the dark, ‘I killed once be­fore.’

  I made no reply. I’d let her tell me about it if she wished, but I really didn’t want to know.

  Her arm in mine began to tremble slightly. ‘I killed her, in a tem­per. I didn’t think I could, she had al­ways been stronger. But I lived and she died. So they burned me out, and turned me out. Sent me into ex­ile forever.’ Her hand found mine and gripped it tightly. We kept on walk­ing. Ahead of us, I spied a tiny glow. It was most likely the bra­zier burn­ing in­side the tent.

  ‘It was so un­think­able, to do what I had done,’ Kettle said wear­ily. ‘It had never happened be­fore. Oh, between co­ter­ies, cer­tainly, once in a great while, for rivalry for the King’s fa­vour. But I Skill-du­elled a mem­ber of my own co­terie, and killed her. And that was un­for­giv­able.’

  TWENTY-NINE

  The Rooster Crown

  There is a game played among the Moun­tain­folk. It is a com­plex game to learn, and a dif­fi­cult one to mas­ter. It fea­tures a com­bin­a­tion of cards and rune chips. There are sev­en­teen cards, usu­ally about the size of a man’s hand and made from any light-col­oured wood. Each of these cards fea­tures an em­blem from Moun­tain lore, such as the Old Weaver-Man or She Who Tracks. The ren­der­ings of these highly styl­ized im­ages are usu­ally done in paint over a burnt out­line. The thirty-one rune chips are made from a grey stone pe­cu­liar to the Moun­tains, and are in­cised with glyphs for Stone, Wa­ter, Pas­ture, and the like. The cards and stones are dealt out to the play­ers, usu­ally three, un­til no more re­main. Both cards and runes have tra­di­tional weights that are var­ied when they are played in com­bin­a­tion. It is re­puted to be a ve
ry old game.

  We walked the rest of the way to the tent in si­lence. What she had told me was so im­mense I could not think of any­thing to say. It would have been stu­pid to voice the hun­dreds of ques­tions that sprang up in me. She had the an­swers, and she would choose when to give them to me. I knew that now. Nighteyes came back to me si­lently and swiftly. He slunk close to my heels.

  She killed within her pack?

  So it seems.

  It hap­pens. It is not good, but it hap­pens. Tell her that.

  Not just now.

  No one said much as we came into the tent. No one wanted to ask. So I quietly said, ‘We killed the guards and drove off the horses and threw their sup­plies off the cliff.’

  Starling only stared at us, without com­pre­hen­sion. Her eyes were wide and dark, bird-like. Kettricken poured mugs of tea for us and quietly ad­ded the stores of food we had brought to our own dwind­ling sup­plies. ‘The Fool is a bit bet­ter,’ she offered by way of con­ver­sa­tion.

  I looked at him sleep­ing in his blankets and doubted it. His eyes had a sunken look. Sweat had plastered his fine hair to his skull and his rest­less sleep had stood it up in tufts. But when I set my hand to his face, it was al­most cool to the touch. I snugged the blanket closer around him. ‘Did he eat any­thing?’ I asked Kettricken.

  ‘He drank some soup. I think he’ll be all right, Fitz. He was sick once be­fore, for a day or so in Blue Lake. It was the same, fever and weak­ness. He said then that it might not be a sick­ness, but only a change his kind go through.’

  ‘He said some­what the same to me yes­ter­day,’ I agreed. She put a bowl of warm soup in my hands. For an in­stant it smelled good. Then it smelled like the re­mains of the soup the pan­icked guards had spilled on the snowy road. I clenched my jaws.

  ‘Did you see the co­terie mem­bers at all?’ Kettricken asked me.

  I shook my head, then forced my­self to speak. ‘No. But there was a big horse there, and the cloth­ing in his bags would have fit Burl. In an­other there were blue gar­ments such as Car­rod fa­vours. And aus­tere things for Will.’

  I said their names awk­wardly, in a way fear­ing to name them, lest I sum­mon them. In an­other way, I was nam­ing those I had killed. Skilled or not, the Moun­tains would make an end of them. Yet I took no pride in what I had done, nor would I com­pletely be­lieve it un­til I saw their bones. All I knew for now was that it was not likely they would at­tack me this night. For an in­stant I ima­gined them re­turn­ing to the pil­lar, ex­pect­ing to find food and fire and shel­ter await­ing them. They would find cold and dark. They would not see the blood on the snow.

  I real­ized the soup was get­ting cold. I forced my­self to eat it, mouth­fuls that I simply swal­lowed, not wish­ing to taste. Tal­low had played the penny whistle. I had a sud­den memory of him sit­ting on the back steps out­side the scull­ery, play­ing for a couple of kit­chen maids. I shut my eyes, wish­ing vainly that I could re­call some­thing evil about him. I sus­pec­ted his only crime had been serving the wrong mas­ter.

  ‘Fitz.’ Kettle in­stantly poked me.

  ‘I wasn’t wan­der­ing,’ I com­plained.

  ‘You would have, soon. Fear has been your ally this day. It has kept you fo­cused. But you must sleep some­time to­night, and when you do, you must have your mind well war­ded. When they get back to the pil­lar, they will re­cog­nize your handi­work and come hunt­ing you. Do you not think so?’

  I knew it was so, but it was still un­set­tling to hear it spoken aloud. I wished Kettricken and Starling were not listen­ing and watch­ing us.

  ‘So. We shall have a bit of our game again, shall we?’ Kettle ca­joled.

  We played four chance games. I won twice. Then she set up a game with al­most en­tirely white pieces, and gave me one black stone with which to win. I tried to fo­cus my mind on the game, know­ing it had worked be­fore, but I was simply too tired. I found my­self think­ing that it had been over a year since I had left Buck­keep as a corpse. Over a year since I had slept in a real bed I called my own. Over a year since meals had been re­li­able. Over a year since I had held Molly in my arms, over a year since she had bid me leave her alone forever.

  ‘Fitz. Don’t.’

  I lif­ted my eyes from the game­cloth to find Kettle watch­ing me closely.

  ‘You can’t in­dulge that. You have to be strong.’

  ‘I am too tired to be strong.’

  ‘Your en­emies were care­less today. They did not ex­pect you to dis­cover them. They won’t be care­less again.’

  ‘I hope they’ll be dead,’ I said with a cheer I did not feel.

  ‘Not that eas­ily,’ Kettle replied, un­know­ing of how her words chilled me. ‘You said it was warmer down in the city. Once they see they’ve no sup­plies, they’ll go back to the city. They have wa­ter there, and I’m sure they took at least some sup­plies for the day. I don’t think we can dis­reg­ard them yet. Do you?’

  ‘I sup­pose not.’

  Nighteyes sat up be­side me with an anxious whine. I quelled my own des­pair and then quieted him with a touch. ‘I just wish,’ I said quietly, ‘that I could simply sleep for a time. Alone in my mind, dream­ing my own dreams, without fear­ing where I’ll go or who might at­tack me. Without fear­ing that my hun­ger for the Skill will over­come me. Just simple sleep.’ I spoke to her dir­ec­tly, know­ing now she un­der­stood well what I meant.

  ‘I can’t give you that,’ Kettle told me calmly. ‘All I can give you is the game. Trust it. It’s been used by gen­er­a­tions of Skill-users to keep such dangers at bay.’

  And so I bent to the board once more, and fixed the game in my mind, and when I lay down by the Fool that night, I kept it be­fore my eyes.

  I hovered that night, like a nec­tar bird, some­where between sleep and wake­ful­ness. I could reach a place just short of sleep and keep my­self there by con­tem­plat­ing Kettle’s game. More than once, I drif­ted back to wake­ful­ness. I would be­come cog­niz­ant of the dim light from the bra­zier and the sleep­ing forms be­side me. Sev­eral times I reached out to check the Fool; each time his skin seemed cooler and his own sleep deeper. Kettricken, Starling and Kettle ro­tated through watches that night. I no­ticed that the wolf shared Kettricken’s. They still did not trust me to re­main wary through one, and I was selfishly grate­ful for that.

  Just short of dawn, I stirred once more to find all still quiet. I checked the Fool, and then lay back and closed my eyes, hop­ing to find a few more mo­ments of rest. In­stead, in hor­rific de­tail, I be­held a great eye, as if the clos­ing of my own eyes had opened this one. I struggled to open my own eyes again, I floundered des­per­ately to­ward wake­ful­ness, but I was held. There was a ter­rible pull on my mind, like the suck­ing pull of an un­der­tow on a swim­mer. I res­is­ted with all my will. I could feel wake­ful­ness just above me, like a bubble I could break into, if only I could touch it. But I could not. I struggled, grim­acing my face, try­ing to pull my way­ward eyes open.

  The eye watched me. One single im­mense dark eye. Not Will’s. Regal’s. He stared at me, and I knew he took de­light in my struggles. It seemed ef­fort­less for him to hold me there, like a fly un­der a glass bowl. Yet even in my panic, I knew that if he could have done more than hold me, he would. He had got past my walls, but had not the power to do more than threaten me. That was still enough to make my heart pound with ter­ror.

  ‘Bas­tard,’ he said fondly. The word broke over my mind like a cold ocean wave. I was drenched in its threat. ‘Bas­tard, I know about the child. And your wo­man. Molly. Tit for tat, Bas­tard.’ He paused and his amuse­ment grew as my ter­ror swelled. ‘Now there’s a thought. Has she pretty tits, Bas­tard? Would I find her amus­ing?’

  ‘NO!’

  I wrenched clear of him, sens­ing for an in­stant Car­rod, Burl, and Will as well. I flung my­self free.

  I came awake ab­ruptly. I
scrabbled from my bed­ding and fled out­side, boot­less and un­cloaked. Nighteyes fol­lowed at my heels, snarling in every dir­ec­tion. The sky was black and scattered with stars. The air was cold. I drew breath after shud­der­ing breath of it, try­ing to still the sick fear in me. ‘What is it?’ Starling de­man­ded fear­fully. She was on watch out­side the tent.

  I just shook my head at her, un­able to voice the hor­ror of it. After a time, I turned and went back in­side. Sweat was cours­ing down my body as if I had been poisoned. I sat down in my muddle of blankets. I could not stop pant­ing. The more I tried to still my panic, the greater it be­came. I know about the child. And your wo­man. Those words echoed and echoed through me. Kettle stirred in her bed­ding, then rose and came across the tent to sit be­hind me. She set her hands on my shoulders. ‘They broke through to you, did they?’

  I nod­ded, tried to swal­low with a dry throat.

  She reached for a wa­ter­skin and handed it to me. I took a drink, al­most choked, and then man­aged an­other swal­low. ‘Think about the game,’ she urged me. ‘Clear your mind of everything but the game.’

  ‘The game!’ I cried out sav­agely, jerking both the Fool and Kettricken awake. ‘The game? Regal knows about Molly and Nettle. He threatens them. And I am power­less! Help­less.’ I felt the panic build­ing in me again, the un­fo­cused fury. The wolf whined, then growled deep in his throat.

  ‘Can’t you Skill to them, warn them some­how?’ Kettricken asked.

  ‘No!’ Kettle cut in. ‘He should not even think of them.’

  Kettricken gave me a look that mingled apo­logy and right­eous­ness. ‘I fear Chade and I were cor­rect. The prin­cess will be safer in the Moun­tain King­dom. Do not for­get that his task was to fetch her. Take heart. Per­haps even now Nettle is with him, on her way to safety, out of Regal’s reach.’

 

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