Ask him what brought him up from the flatlands? Callie asked, coming close to his bed. What cause to be here in the first place? Was there a convoy down there?
Friends partner died up here. He came for her. I camecame for him. He was pretty shaken up.
Names, Ridley said. His. Hers.
Guil Stuart. Aby Dale.
Oh, damn, Callie said with what seemed real sadness, and Ridleys hand let up its vise grip on his arm. Not Aby, Callie said. We just saw her.
Last convoy down. She was in the way. Just He didnt want to go into all of it. Most of all he didnt want to think about Tarmin tonight. There was too much white in his mind, and winter was such a dangerous time. Dreams turned real when the wind was howling like that outside, and the horses carried the worst imaginings. Justshe died. They saidthey said a rogue horse spooked the convoy. And Guil came up here to get it.
But it got Tarmin?
Up at the gatesjustpeople opened doors. I was in the woods looking for Guil, and I heard it goandI dont want to tell this around the kid.
Shes asleep, Ridley said. Keep going. Horses arent hearing you. You just happened into Tarmin when a rogue happened on the mountain. And wheres this other guy and why isnt he up here?
Rogue horsewas rare as legends and campfire stories. And they shouldnt believe a pile of coincidences. But he couldnt begin to tell them the connecting strings without giving them leads to other things. He just strung it together as best he could.
Gunshot. This guyHarpernot from this mountainhe thoughtthought, I guess, I mean, hed seen a rogue once before, or he thought he had, and he wasnt real right in his head. He really, really hated Stuart. The rogue wasnt him, you know, it wasnt Stuart, but everything just got tangled up in his head. I knew this guy was on his track, and HarperHarper justjust went crazy. Tried to kill Guil.
Before the rogue got Tarmin, Ridley said. Is Guil this rogue? Is Harper?
Horse. Rogue horse. Danny forgot and shook his head. Harpers dead. Its dead. Shot it. Guil shot it.
Youre sure of that.
Yeah.
There was a little easing of tension.
You came in with a damn spooky feeling, Ridley said.
Yeah.
So what was it?
Horsefollowed us. Maybe five, six horses loose down there.
Followed you up the mountain. Through that?
Kids with menobody alive down there. None without horses. Cant go down the mountain, snows down there avalanches
And? Ridley asked. Fisher? Youre not going to sleep until you talk. What happened with the rogue? What happened to that girl?
It was just He didnt want to lie. He didnt dare tell the truth. Justwhen Tarmin went downkids hid out. I rode in. Searched for survivors. Babies. Old people. There wasnt anything. I felt it go, understand me? I felt it go, I dont want to remember it in this camp, I dont want to remember it near the horses.
Damn, Callie said.
Im all right. My horse is all right.
And those kids?
He let his eyes shut, closing out the questions. They could hit him. They could toss him into the snow. He had to keep the lid on things until he could get his story straight. He didnt need to pretend to drift toward sleep. His mind kept going out on himand he didnt trust themdidnt trust them not to call a horse close to himoutside the wall.
What about the rogue horse? Callie came to stand over him. How bad is this kid, Fisher? What happened?
Just He had ultimately to tell them all the truth. But not tonight. Not tonight. The girl was beyond the wall. The gates were shut. It was daylight. Justthe kid was affected. Keep her in the village. Dont bring her near the horses. Had a hell of a time on the road. My horse is all right. Didnt ever come near the rogue. Couldnt think about Tarmin, though, I didnt want to think about it all the way up. And the kids kept remembering it, spooking my horse. Didnt help. Didnt help at all.
They had no more questions for a moment. He didnt open his eyes to see, but he thought hed answered everything.
Jennies eight, Callie said, nothing else, but he understood what she meant. As if a whole village on her hands wasnt reason enough in itself to worry about him or Cloud in the camp.
Ill leave if you like. Give me a day or so.
Not saying that, Ridley said.
Decent, good people. Hed had all the way up here to imagine the godawful situations a lone junior could get into, including finding himself in some shelter alone with a bunch of guys older and rougher and maybe far crazier. Winter came down and bunched people up in shelters at the same time the horses were in rut, and memories and sex flew thick as falling leaves through present time.
You didnt want to get in with a rough crowd, damn, you didnt, and he hadnt wanted to scare Carlo and Randy about that possibility. Hed held his own nerves together and was so, so relieved to find himself with a solid, sensible lot of people with an ordinary little girl
But hed never never thought about a little kid exposed to the outspillings of his mind he just wasnt safe
Here. Callie came near, but it was Ridleys voice, and a smell of vodka. Hed been out, or almost out. Theyd had time to go and come back again, and Ridley nudged his hand with a glass. Drink it.
Theyd done it to him before, and hed hit his head on the fireplace. Drunk wont help.
Panic wont either. Just calm down. An eight-year-old in the next roomwere a little protective. You understand? Theres yellowflower in it. Drink it.
Understood Ridleyd shoot him before they let him spook the camp, or hurt the kid or Callie.
Theyd shoot him before they let him go off the mental edge, the way Spooks rider had gone. Harper should have had somebody a long number of years ago, someone whod hand him a glass of yellow and figuratively hold a gun to his head and say straighten out or Ill blow your brains out.
Might have saved a lot of people.
Might have saved Harper himself.
He drank it. At least three fast mouthfuls.
You think that horse followed you all the way? Ridley asked. Or where did you lose it?
Dont think it came near the village. But it could be on the road.
Must have a real strong notion what it wants.
Yeah, he said, and felt a rush of fearwhat it wanted.
Id hate to have to shoot it. But I will if it comes around.
Yeah, Danny said. I know. Five, six, loose, though. He had no idea. Predators could have gotten some, but it could be more than six.
Bachelors are the fools. Mares with the lot?
Mare down with Tara. He recalled Stuart, and the cabin, and Taras mare, and the vodka and yellow began to hit him like a weight. Yeah. Taras mare. But theres a stallion with her. He wanted it quiet, quiet, just barricade it out of his mind. Hed held his sanity this farbut he felt himself not able to hold onto the vodka glass, and it burned his raw throat when he took another sip. You better take it. Im going to spill it.
Ridley took the glass back. Danny couldnt even coordinate his fingers to turn it over to him. His head spun, and his temples pounded, and that and the cough went with the altitude.
He hadnt slept in a bed since Shamesey.
Couple with a kid wouldnt put on him or rob him.
Nice little girl. Cute kid. He missed Denishe really missed Denis. Last time hed met Denis hed hit him. Hed ridden out of Shamesey without a word to his family. He really wishedwished he hadnt done that.
Dark, then. He thought theyd blown out the light.
The morningit was mid-morning now, though the sun hadnt even been a faint suspicion in the sky when the party had come in
settled down finally to quiet, except for the wind and the snow still going on outside. Ridley made a late, late breakfast for himself and Callie. Jennie was still sleeping like the dead after her unprecedented night wide awake in the den.
Young Fisher was asleep, too, and might not get out of bed for three or four days, by the look of him. He was anxious to get Fisher over to Peterson and see what else he knew.
Fear had come up the mountain with those kids. Fear had lent them the strength to do what only a couple of young men could do, in making (Ridley didnt question that part of the story) the whole trek from midway in one day and most of a night, up that iced slant. It was the kind of thing young folk could do, maybe once in their livesand that some didnt survive. And the trouble they brought wasnt going to bed as quickly or as easily as Dan Fisher had.
But the kidsincluding the problem the girl posedwere disposed of to the village side of the wall, out of the reach of their horses, Fisher wouldnt stir for thunder, and that was enough to let him and Callie at least draw breath and have their breakfast and a following cup of tea in quiet, mental and otherwise.
All the same Callie had to go look in on Jenniejust checking.
And that, from Callies partner, required at least a look up when Callie came back. He generally disapproved Callies hovering over the kid. Today there was reason.
Calliewho was used to reading his mind, literally so when Slip and Shimmer were in questiondidnt tell him Jennie was all right when she came back into the main room. Callie didnt give him a bit of information, meaning hed have to go look in for himself or hed have to ask her, dammit.
She all right?
Shes fine. Callie went to the fireside and poured herself a cup of tea.
It was their hardest argument, how much exposure to the realities of life, sex, and death was too much too soon for their daughter, and when they shouldnt baby her. It was certain as sundown and sunrise that Jennie would take off on a horse and go long before either of her parents thought she was ready. Kids always did. Young horses didnt know their young riders were too young, or that two horse years and eight human years didnt exactly make a mature decision.
Theyd been worrying about Rain. But with this arrival in the camp they knew there could be much worse going on. Hed heard of rogues, and in the tales that ran among riders, if you got one in a district you could have others.
And dammit, Fisher offered to trek out of here, but the kids hed escorted were here. There was no way in good conscience to pass that mess on to Mornay village, which was smaller than Evergreen and less equipped than they were to handle the kids.
Especially the girl.
Tarmin gone?
Thered been five riders down there. Five riders hadnt been enough, against what had come down on Tarmin.
And these kids survived?
Its quiet out there, Callie said as she joined him by the fire. Id think the horses would have been out and about.
If there were any intrusion into their hearing, that was what Callie meant, specificallyif that loose horse Fisher had talked about had come in. Thered been a disturbance before theyd put Fisher to bed, a little queasiness in the ambientbut it might have been a bushdevil, something stirred out of a burrow nearby. They hadnt heard anything they could be certain of.
Just hope the quiet lasts, he said as Callie warmed her cup with a dollop from the pot. He truly didnt want to have to kill a horse but, dammit, he was defending a daughter. If that stray comes in I dont know. The horses down the mountain may attract it back down. I hope so.
It could have been us, you know that? Callie had been upset since hed brought Fisher into the barracks. Hed seen it in every line of her body. Shed been dealing with the village kidsincluding the girl. What got Tarmin could have come to Evergreen instead.
Well, the last rider in Tarmin must have done something right. Its dead. He swears they did get it, Callie.
If weve heard the truth, Callie said. Were leaning an awful lot on Fishers word.
Hes got no motive to lie.
The hell he hasnt! He brought that girl up here, in her conditionwhat kind of judgment is that?
He had to think of Jennie. Im not sure I could have let her die. And she was getting worse.
And theyve got a horse after them. We have his word the rogue is gone. We dont know thats not what chased him up the mountain! He had walls down there, shelters near Tarminand why did he leave there? Because the girl would have died? Or because something was chasing him?
We have his word it ever existed in the first place, Callie. If he was a thoroughgoing liar, why would he have to tell us anything?
In case the phone lines arent down for the winter here. In case wed already got a message from Tarmin! In case we listened to him and caught how damn scared he is! In case we asked why he didnt go down the mountain if thats where hes from? Look at the girl, for Gods sake! He saidwhen she came out of itshe shouldnt be near the horses. What did he mean by that, except that shes not safe here, she was spooking him and his horse, and I dont think shes safe even in the village!
He didnt have an answer for thatnot one Callie couldnt knock down. Callie wasnt a trusting woman. And shed formed conclusions it was well to listen to.
The lines going down early this year, she said. Maybe it wasnt just the ice on the lines, you know? As crazy as things have felt for weeks, the way things felt out there when he was coming in with those kidsoh, I believe him when he says there was trouble at Tarmin. I dont believe him when he says the rogue situations done with. And hes under this roof and that girls just the other side of the camp wall!
Are you saying we should put him out? The little I did catch from him while we were in the denI believe hes honest; I also think hes young, hes skittish, hes holding stuff in, but I dont think hes actually lying to us. I think hes told us what he feels safe telling and I dont blame him for not letting all he remembers loose on a night like that.
I wish I thought he wasnt lying.
Wish I had an answer for you, Ridley said. But he didnt.
And by now hed had time to realize that not only did they have a winter problem, they were facing a spring and summer and years down the road problem, and the very scary prospect of not just Evergreen but all the villages on the mountain going into next autumn without supplies.
Much of their supply source for equipment and half their trade with the lowlands was a company down in Anveney town that mightwho knew the minds of townfolk?be very reluctant to send even the usual number of trucks up here without some hard dealing. The main source they had for food was Shamesey. Oil and gas came from the south. One truck lost, when Aby Dale had died that happened. But Tarmin gone?
That was the staging area for all trucks going up to the High Loop and it was the depot for supplies, the warehouses for trade goods that were just too heavy to ship up: warehouses for everything coming down off the mountain and everything that had to be sent upsome items by oxcart, as things moved when the villagers were paying the freight; and some by truck, when the trucks hauling company loads had space and the item wasnt too heavy.
Food for the High Loop villages stayed in warehouses in Tarmin before it moved up the Climb by oxcart. They were going to be eating a lot of bushdevil and willy-wisp if they couldnt get lowland beef and pork. Flour already cost twice what it did in Tarmin, which was already three times its cost in the lowlands.
Gasoline and freight costs could easily quadruple for Evergreen.
And the oxen that made those runsthe only transportation for goods that didnt run at Anveneys cost for fuelhe didnt need to ask young Fisher what their fate had been once those gates were open. They were gone. The men that drove those teams were gone along with everything else edible that wasnt cased in steel or
locked behind it.
Tarmin gone meant no local goods moving until they replaced the oxen and the drivers. And oxen with experienced drivers didnt exist except over on Darwin Peaka far journeyor down in Shamesey district, which had a long-running feud with Anveney, which had no oxen. Anveney was Rogers Peaks primary contractorand the best source of people with the nerve to leave the big towns and venture into the High Wild.
I tell you, he said, wed better spend less time sitting in camp this winter, do a little extra hunting, store whatever we can. Its going to be a long year.
Callie shot him a look that said hed caught her attention. Think Cassivey will deal hard?
That was the company in Anveney.
Will snow fall this winter? was his counter. Hes a townsman. I tell you, if we dont get some ox-teams up here its going to be a cold, damn expensive next winter, or were going to make a lot of trips with wheelbarrows up and down that road.
Shameseys going to know were in trouble. And theyll jack the price. Its not going to be easy this summer.
Theyll rebuild Tarmin, he said, and as he said it a thought came to him, the glimmering of an idea that, yes, Tarmin had to exist: Anveney and Shamesey were as dependent on Rogers Peak as Rogers Peak settlements were on them, and even if they had help from Anveneys most desperateit wasnt townsmen from the flat-lands that were going to be able to bring it back to life.
* * *
Chapter 8
Ť ^ ť
Hearing Randy stirring, Carlo stretched the kinks out of his back; hed been sleeping fitfully, coatless and in his stocking feet, leaning against the stones of the low furnace wall. The stretch stopped in a dry-air cough.
You all right? Randy asked.
Yeah. Carlo took a drink from the metal cup and then took a stale, crumbling biscuit off the fireside wall and offered it to him. You want a biscuit? Saved it from the rider camp. Theres no tea, but theres hot water. Tastes awful but it feels pretty good on the throat.
Randy didnt look enthusiasticless so when Carlo got up and poured him a cup of hot water from the pot hed set on the coals.
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