Cloud on the other hand was faring much better. Cloud sank down after that treatment, , seeking warmth on the evergreen boughs that were the flooring. Cloud was feeling much better and very glad to have blankets thrown over him, then. Danny swiped a salved, horsey back of his hand across his nose and made a last assault with the salve at Clouds neck, where he could get warmth to the big artery, with the warming salve under Clouds mane and onto Clouds throat, which had to be as raw and dry as his.
Then from somewhere out of the dark came the girl-kid lugging a bucket too heavy for hera heavy bucket that steamed and smelled, such as his and Clouds altitude-ravaged sense of smell could detect, of warm mash. Cloud gave a snort, interested, as the other horses were interested, having had one supperbut, being horses, always willing to eat. Ridley took the bucket and poured a taste into the common trough before he brought the rest to Cloud, who hadnt gotten up. Ridley set the bucket in front of him.
Cloud sucked up a mouthful of warm mash, and on the strength of that, found it worthwhile to get to his feet and go head-down in the bucketmaybe not to eat much: Cloud wasnt a fool, among a canny, self-preserving kind. But certainly Cloud meant to get his promised reward.
That meant that Clouds rider could go to the warm barracks and the fireside, and Danny started toward the door by which hed come in, back into the snowbut the Evergreen rider pointed with the beam of the electric torch toward a second doorway, one framed by shattered boards.
Danny didnt ask. Horses were horses, and boards suffered when the night was full of alarms. He scooped up a handful of snow blown in from the outside door and pressed the icy handful against the bridge of his nose before he went back to that door, through which Ridley and the kid led him into a night-black wooden tunnel.
Where did you come from? the little girl wanted to know, looking back as she walked ahead of them in their little sphere of light; but Ridley said sternly, as he shone the light down the passage: Get on to the barracks, Jennie-cub. Leave the man alone. Hes got a nosebleed.
Man. Man, the senior rider said. People down in Shamesey certainly hadnt called him that. Hed been struggling all during the trip for Dan instead of Danny.
And a village rider saw him as a man, an equal, worth respect just for living to get up this mountain.
That was worth the hike up here.
Jennie-cub hadnt gone. She looked back this time upside down, or at least with her head tilted way back as she walked ahead of them. I had a nosebleed once. Whats your horses name? Mines name is Rain.
Rain isnt your horse, Ridley said. You wait for Shimmers foal, miss. Get to the barracks and open that door before I tan your backside for good and all.
Young Jennie went ahead of them. Light and shadows ran on either side of the little girl, who became a shadow as she skipped ahead of them down a course grown dizzier and dizzier. The walls seemed closer as they went and the air grew more still and dank, smelling of old wood and wet stone and earth.
Couldnt feel his feet. Couldnt see up from down in the shadows. He was passing out of Clouds range and his sense of orientation was going.
He put out a hand along the wooden wall, seeking balance, thinking, Im going to fallabout the time they overtook Jennie, who pulled open a door on blinding light.
Warm air met them. He dumped his handful of bloody snow and walked in blind, with Ridley behind him, caught a lungful of the heat inside, and felt himself going as his knees had just turned to jelly.
Strong arms caught him around the ribs and helped him toward the fire and the light. Carlo and Randy were sitting on the floor against the wall.
Brionne was lying there too, unbundled from the travois, but still folded in her nest of furs.
Ridley let him down. He sat against the fireside stones, that being all that was going to hold him up. He had just enough strength to take off his hat and scarf, and a moment later to struggle out of his coat and a couple of sweaters before he smothered. He told himself he wasnt going to pass out. Wasnt going to make a spectacle.
Ridley came and checked his hands in the bright lamplight.
Not as bad as could be, Ridley pronounced his fingers. A little burn. But not real bad. Then Ridley unlaced his boots for him and carefully pulled them off. He wasnt sure he really wanted to know; but they were his feet, hed no choice, and it wasnt would-happen, it was already had-happened, whatever the verdict was going to be as the socks came off, one layer after another.
Mmn, Ridley said. Going to lose a little skin. Feel that?
Yeah. It felt as if Ridley drew blood. Then Ridley stripped the other foot. He felt those toes, too. It hurt so much tears began running down his face. His ankles hurt. His knees hurt. There wasnt any part of him that didnt hurt, and Carlo and Randy didnt look any better off.
Wasnt sure for a long time that you were human, the woman said, squatting down near him. Lot of spookiness out there tonight. Lot of spookiness the last week or so. You know anything about it?
Yeah. His gut knotted up. He started thinking frantically what he could say. But get these kids to the village first.
You go, Ridley said (he thought) to Callie, and a second later said, Jennie can go with you. Its all right.
The woman for her part wasnt enthusiastic about leaving Ridley alone, Danny decided, small threat that he and Carlo were. Carlo looked to be fading out, Randy was asleep, and BrionneBrionne was a bundle of furs the other side of the fire.
Theyd gotten her here.
And hadnt they done something good in that? Even heroic?
Even if he had been stupid and missed not just one shelter but both of them in the storm?
And as for himself, at the definite end of his stupid years, his do-anything, dare-anything childhood, and grown older and wiser all in one disastrous climbhe fingered his nose and his ears, wondering if they were frostbitten and whether hed be scarred for life from this adventure, or whether he could just swear to God hed learned and didnt need to do anything this stupid again.
The woman put on a coat and prepared to leave as Ridley pressed a warm teacup into his hands, wrapped in a cloth. That was, the pain in his hands told him, a very, very good idea.
Meanwhile the little girlJenniecame near, leaned over and asked, Whats your horses name?
Cloud, he said, grateful for such simple, answerable questions. My names Dan Fisher. Im from Shamesey.
From Shamesey!
He was aware her father was listening. And her mother. His voice was down to a hoarse thread. Yeah.
What brought you to the mountain? Ridley asked, with clear suspicion, and the woman hesitated in leaving.
Friend of mine needed help.
Ridley went to the cabinet and took out a bottle. It was spirits. Ridley came and poured a generous dollop into Dannys tea. And he went over and poured some for Carlo, too, who was sitting up and looking dazed, but likewise lifting up a cup.
And what brought you all the way up here? Ridley asked, and Carlo blurted out,
Because theres nothing left down there. Tarmins gone.
You didnt need the horses to feel the shock in their minds: fear, disbelief, that Tarmin, the biggest village on the mountain, their main depot for shipments going or coming didnt exist anymore.
Tarmin is gone, Danny said, to draw all the questions back to him and not to Carlo. He sipped the fortified tea to gain time for a breath and a second thought. The woman stood in her jacket, and Jennie, likewise dressed for the cold, came and huddled against her legs.
Whats he saying? What happened, mama?
So what is the story? Ridley asked him, dead calm, as controlled as a rider needed to be. The horses couldnt hear them here. At least, they shouldnt be able to.
And he neednt tell even half of it. Hed given his caution, in asking that the kids leave th
e camp. They hadnt. He said only, Somebody opened a gate. I dont want to give the detailsdont know the range from your den
Is your horse all right? Ridley asked. The senior rider here, boss-man in this camp, had an absolute right to ask that question. He had a kid lying on his hearth stiff and gone somewhere she couldnt get back from. He had a strange horse in the den with their horses. He had a village locked in for the winter, with all its people. He had a daughter as well as a partner to protect.
And if they themselves hadnt been hallucinating, he had a horse out there in the woods whose distress had waked the wild things in their burrows and relayed its sending God knew how far, disturbing the mountain a second time in less than a month.
We werent there when it happened, Danny said, the horse-and-rider we, but he wouldnt elaborate more than he had to, either didnt quite lie, just leaned very heavily on Ridleys assurance the horses in the den were beyond their ordinary range of picking up human beings.
Which could change if one horse picked up a suspicion of human distress in the rider barracksand they had a young horse out there, an unridden horse of their own, at a stage notorious for being loud and hearing even humans unnaturally far.
So he concentrated entirely on the cup in his hands and sipped it this time not to keep his voice from cracking, but to save his mind from wobbling from the very narrow path of information he had to hold.
I came in after the fact. These threetheyre all that lived through it. Theyre brothers and sister. Weve been trying not to think of it near the horses. Couldnt do anything for the girl down there. Shes caught in it, deeper and deeper. She used to react to things. She doesnt now. I understand theres supposed to be a doctor in the village.
The woman pressed Jennie against her legs. Danny found his hands shaking so he burned himself as the tea slopped over. He didnt look at their faces. He didnt want to. A mind that wasnt right wasnt ever anything to bring near the horses.
A mind that wasnt right wasnt anything to leave within range of anything of the Wild. And Brionnes mind, above all else that was wrong with her, wasnt right. They were senior riders. They had to recognize the kind of shock she was in and know that she was dangerous. Hed meant to be out in a shelter tonightcome to Evergreen on a clear, quiet day with no emergency in the situation. But that wasnt what had happened. Things were donechoices were made around a set of facts that involved several lives, facts he didnt want to let loose just for the askingbecause the truth could cause a panic that itself could get people killed.
Was it her, Ridley asked, making that spook-feeling out there?
No, he thought: direction and location had been in the sending: that was what had made it so damn real. It had convinced Cloud.
No, he said aloud. Im pretty sure it was behind us. A horse. Riders died. With the sisters conditionI didnt want to stay where it was.
Go get the marshal, Ridley said, meaning, Danny thought, get the little kid out of here and get Brionne the hell out of reach of the horses. The woman took the kid and went out the door to the passageway theyd useda second and third passage had gone off from there, he remembered them in the light from the door.
Ridley went meanwhile and warmed Carlos cup with tea from the pot. Randy was sleeping like the dead, on his stomach, his hand up near his face, head on his armhe didnt wake for anything. Poor kid, Danny thought, and hoped there was better luck for the brothers. Theyd earned it.
Ridley came and poured tea into his cup. And in that closeness and the quiet of the ambient Danny took the chance. Theres more to it than Ive said. Were all right. But get the girl out of here fairly soon.
What have you brought us? Ridley asked sharply, and Danny ducked his head to coughhed been wanting to since he tipped his head back, and he didnt want to look Ridley in the eyes.
Dammit. Ridley dropped down on his haunches to meet him eye to eye in that privacy of the fire-crackle and the wind outside; and the ambient still stayed quiet and numb as he finished his coughing fit with a swallow of tea that still had spirits in it. Whats going on down there? Ridley asked. Whats a Shamesey rider doing here, for Gods sake? Whats the real story?
Rescuing a friend, Danny repeated. He heard the indignation in Ridleys voice. He knew he deserved it. Its a long story. Get the kids safe and Ill talk. He took another sip of the spirit-laced tea, saw Carlo staring into his cup as if it held answers, and saw Randy sleeping.
Brionne didnt change. Thank God. He was all but counting the minutes until they could bring someone in and get Brionne out of the camp. And very rapidly now the very last reserve of strength was running out of him. He sipped the tea and his hands began to shake.
Feeling was coming back to his feet. They hurt. His hands did. His face did.
The whole damn seasons felt bad, Ridley said in a more moderate tone. It wasnt like a statement. It was a peace offering he didnt deserve, from a man he deserved worse of, in a situation he couldnt, right now, discuss. This was, Danny thought, a good-hearted and forgiving man. A man more reasonable than he deserved to have to deal withhe hadnt wanted to go all the way to Evergreen. But he had. And now he had to deal with the consequences.
Yeah. Agreement seemed safest, agreement with everything the local riders said at least until he could use clear-headed judgement.
Meanwhile Carlo had edged over to try to see to his brother, lifting the blanket theyd wrapped him in to look at his feet, and that movement was a distraction for the conversation. How is he? he asked Carlo across the intervening space.
I dont know. Carlo let the blanket down. Randy didnt stir through any of it, and Carlo made a fast swipe at his eyes. Carlos hand was shaking.
Ridley got up and squatted down again to take a look at Randys hands and feet and ears. He looked at Carlos, too, while he was at it.
Better than yours, Ridley said. Work your fingers. Fist.
Carlo tried. Ridley made a doubtful expression. Horse medicine, Ridley said, and got a small grimy pot off the shelf and squatted down and rubbed salve into Carlos hands. Hands and feet. You take the pot with you, son. Its cheap. Weve got buckets of it for the horses. Use it. Marshals going to find a place for you. You think you need a doctor?
No. Carlo shook his head fast, and Danny could read his mind without Clouds help: Carlo didnt want to be under the same roof with his sister. Didnt want Randy there, either. Smith, Carlo said. Our folks His voice faded and came back again. They were the smiths down in Tarmin. Needneed to find work if we can.
Ours might take you on. Ridley maintained a tight reserve. But those hands arent going to be fit for smith-work for a while. He patted Carlo gently on the leg and got up to pace the flooranother not too difficult guess, that Ridley was aching for Callie to get back safely with the marshal and a means to get his problem out of the camp.
Danny drank his tea and kept his mouth shut, feeling even with the pain in his feet and hands and ears that he could pass out where he was sittingbut he held on: if something happened, he wanted to be awake. He wanted to know what disposition village authorities would make of the boys and Brionne, who came under village law.
He didnt. He was in Evergreen, looking at the authority that governed the rider camp, and what Ridley said in these walls had to be lawincluding the possibility that Ridley would tell him get out of the village and go somewhere else, weather or no weather. A camp boss always had that authority, and he had to respect it.
But, God, he didnt know where he or Cloud would get the strength to go on.
* * *
Chapter 6
Ť ^ ť
Came, in due course, a thumping in the passage leading to the back door. The door opened and Calliestill with young Jennie, which Danny didnt expectcame in ahead of a big burly man and three o
ther village types in heavy coats.
That would be the marshal and his deputies, he supposed, the law on the other side of the wallthe dividing wall that existed here the same as it existed in substance and in fact in every town and village in the world, dividing the wicked rider camps from the godfearing and righteous townsmenwho couldnt live without them. He didnt trust town authorities. On principle of that wall of Theirs and Ours and on principle of his days as a bad boy of Shamesey streetsgranting his father was absolutely right to have hit him harder than the deputy hadhe had several misgivings about turning Carlo and Randy over to the law, and far more about answering questions.
These the young folk? the oldest of the men asked, as his companions shut the door and stopped the gale from the passageway. This the young lady? He had thick gloves on, but he didnt offer his hand, just took off his hathe had thinning white hairwhile Ridley went through the course of introductions identifying village marshal Eli Peterson, his deputies Jeff Burani and Josh Hartley, and, not a deputy, preacher John Quarlesthe hat should have told him.
On the other side, Ridley named Carlo and Randy Goss and their sister Brionne.
Then on an apparent afterthought, as riders knew they were always afterthoughts to townsmen of any stamp, This is the rider that got them through. Names Dan Fisher.
One hell of a job, the marshal said. Danny decided he liked the man. And was almost moved to get up and shake the mans hand. Damn, the marshal said then, youre half a kid yourself. Or maybe not, Danny thought, and stayed where he was, leaning back against the warm stones. His hand hurt too much, anyway.
Youre saying Tarmins gone? another man asked, him in the black hat, Reverend Quarles.
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