by Robin Hobb
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 very 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 b
ack 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.’
Kettle called my gaze away from the Queen. ‘Fitz. Focus on the game. Only on the game. His threats could be a ploy, to trick you into betraying them. Don’t talk about them. Don’t think about them. Here. Look here.’ Her trembling old hands moved my blanket away and spread out the gamecloth. She spilled stones into her hand, and plucked out white ones to re-create the problem. ‘Solve this. Focus on this, and this only.’
It was next to impossible. I looked at the white stones and thought it all a stupid task. What players could be so clumsy and short-sighted as to let the game degrade into such a clutter of white stones? It was not a problem worth solving. But neither could I lie down and sleep. I scarcely dared blink lest I see that eye again. Had it been Regal’s whole countenance or both his eyes it would not perhaps have seemed so awful. But the disembodied eye seemed all-seeing and constant, inescapable. I stared at the game pieces until the white stones seemed to float above the junctures of the lines. One black stone, to bring a winning pattern out of this chaos. One black stone. I held it in my hand, rubbing it with my thumb.
All the next day, as we followed the road down the mountain’s flank, I held the stone in my bare hand. My other arm was about the Fool’s waist, his arm around my neck. These two things kept my mind focused.
The Fool seemed somewhat better. His body was no longer feverish,
but he seemed unable to stomach food or even tea. Kettle forced water on him until he simply sat and refused it, shaking his head wordlessly. He seemed as indisposed to talk as I was. Starling and Kettle with her staff led our weary little procession. The Fool and I followed the jeppas, while Kettricken with her bow strung kept our rear guarded. The wolf prowled restlessly up and down the line, now ranging ahead, now loping up our back trail.
Nighteyes and I had gone back to a sort of wordless bond. He understood that I did not wish to think at all, and did his best not to distract me. It was still unnerving to sense him trying to use the Wit to communicate with Kettricken. No sign of anyone behind us, he would tell her as he trotted past on one of his endless trips. Then he would go ranging far ahead of the jeppas and Starling, only to come back to Kettricken and assure her in passing that all was clear ahead of us. I tried to tell myself that she merely had faith that Nighteyes would let me know if he found anything amiss on his scouting trips. But I suspected she was becoming more and more attuned to him.
The road led us very swiftly downwards. As we descended the land changed. By late afternoon, the slope above the road was gentling and we began to pass twisted trees and mossy boulders. Snow faded and became patchy on the hillside while the road was dry and black. Dry tufts of grass showed green at their bases just off the shoulder of the road. It was hard to make the hungry jeppas keep moving. I made a vague Wit-effort to let them know that there would be better browsing ahead, but I doubt that I had enough familiarity with them to make any lasting impression on them. I tried to limit my thoughts to the fact that firewood would be more plentiful tonight, and to gratitude that the lower the road carried us the warmer grew the day.
At one time, the Fool made a gesture to a low growing plant that had tiny white buds on it. ‘It would be spring in Buckkeep by now,’ he said in a low voice, and then added quickly, ‘I’m sorry. Pay no attention to me, I’m sorry.’