Spellsinger 02 - The Hour of the Gate

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by Foster, Alan Dean;


  to the east.

  "Into the Teeth." He fixed a bulbous eye on Jen-Tom.

  "You'll have no need for money in there, nor on the other

  side, if there is one. My offspring will find it here if I don't

  come back, and it will do them more good than the dead."

  84

  THE HOUR OF Tm GATE

  Humming to himself, he turned and padded back toward his

  house.

  They slept in the wagon again that night. As Bribbens

  formally explained, their fee included only his services and

  transport and did not extend to the use of his home.

  But the following morning he was up before the sun and

  was ready to depart before they'd hardly awakened. "I like to

  get an early start," he explained as they gathered themselves

  for the journey. "I give value for money. You pay for a day's

  travel, you get a day's travel."

  Caz adjusted his monocle. "Reasonable enough, consider-

  ing that we've given a month's pay for every day we're likely

  to travel."

  Bribbens looked unperturbed. "I once saw a rabbit who'd

  had all his fur shaved off. He was a mighty funny-looking

  critter."

  "And I," countered Caz with equal aplomb, "once saw a

  ftog whose mouth was too big for his head. He experienced a

  terrible accident."

  "What kind of accident?" inquired Bribbens, unimpressed.

  "Foot-in-mouth. Worst case I ever saw. It turned out to be

  fatal."

  "Progs aren't subject to hoof-in-mouth."

  The rabbit smiled tolerantly. "My foot in his mouth."

  The two held their stares another moment. Then Bribbens

  smiled, an expression particularly suited to frogs.

  "I've seen it happen to creatures other than my own kind,

  three-eyes."

  Caz grinned back. "It's common enough, I suppose. And I

  see better out of one eye than most people do out of two."

  "See your way to moving a little faster, then. We can't

  sleep here all day." The boatman ambled off.

  Talea was leaning out of the wagon, brushing sleepily at

  reluctant curls tight as steel springs.

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  Alan Dean Foster

  "Since you layabouts aren't ready yet, I'm going to take

  the time to secure my team and wagon and lay out fodder for

  them," said the frog.

  "Possessive little bugger, ain't 'e?" Mudge commented.

  "It's his wagon and team now, Mudge." Jon-Tom carefully

  slipped his staff into the loops crossing his back beneath the

  flashing emerald cape. "They're in his care. Just like we

  are."

  When they were all assembled on the boat and had tied

  down their packs and supplies, Bribbens loosed the ropes,

  neatly coiled them in place, and leaned on the long steering

  oar. The boat slid out into the river. Pog shifted his grip on

  the spreaders high up on the mast and watched as silver sky

  raced past blue ground.

  Before very long the current caught them. The cove with

  its mud-and-thatch house vanished behind. Ahead lay a gray-

  brown wall of granite and ice; home to arboreal carnivores,

  undisciplined winds, and racing cloud-crowns.

  Jon-Tom lay down on the edge of the craft and let a hand

  trail lazily in the water. It was difficult to think of the journey

  they'd embarked upon as threatening. The water was warmed

  from its long journey down from distant Kreshfarm-in-the-

  Geegs. The sun often snuck clear of obstructing clouds to lie

  pleasantly on one's face. And there seemed no chance of rain

  until the night.

  "Three days to get to the base of the mountains, you

  said?"

  "That's right, man," Bribbens replied. The boatman did

  not look at Jon-Tom when he spoke. His right arm was curled

  around the shaft of the steering oar, and his eyes were on the

  river ahead. He sat in a chair built onto the railing at the

  craft's stem. A long, thin curved pipe dangled from thick

  lips. River breeze carried the thin smoke from its small white

  bowl up into the sky.

  86

  THE HOUR Of THE GATE

  "How far into the mountains does the river go?" Flor was

  on her knees, staring over the front of the boat. Her voice was

  full of expectation and excitement.

  "Nobody knows," said Bribbens. "Leagues, maybe weeks

  worth. Maybe only a few hours."

  "Where does it end, do you suppose? In an underground

  lake?"

  "Helldrink," said the boatman.

  "And what's Helldrink, Senor Ranar'

  "A rumor. A story. An amalgam of all the fears of every

  creature that's ever navigated on the waters in times of

  trouble, during bad storms or on leaking ships, in foul

  harbors or under the lash of a drunken captain. I've spent my

  life on me water and in it. It would be worth the trip to me if

  we should find it, even should it mean my death. It's where

  all true sailors should end up."

  "Does that mean we're likely to get a refund?" inquired

  Caz.

  The boatman laughed. "You're a sharp fellow, aren't you,

  rabbit? I hope if we find it you'll still be able to joke."

  "There should be no difficulty," said Clothahump. "I, too,

  have heard legends of Helldrink. They say that you know it is

  there before you encounter it. All you need do is deposit us

  safely clear of it and, we will continue our journey on foot.

  You may proceed to your sailor's discovery however you

  wish."

  "Sounds like a fine scenario, sir," the boatman agreed.

  "Assuming I can make a landing somewhere safe, if there is a

  safe landing. Otherwise you may have to accompany me on

  my discovery."

  "So you're risking your. life to leam the truth about this

  legend?" asked Flor.

  "No, woman. I'm risking my life for a hundred pieces of

  gold. And a wagon and team. I'm risking my life for

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  Alan Dean Foster

  twenty-two offspring. I'm risking my life because I never

  turned down a job in my life. Without my reputation, I'm

  nothing. I had to take your offer, you see."

  He adjusted the steering oar a little to port. The boat

  changed its heading slightly and moved still further into the

  center of the stream.

  "Money and pride," she said. "That's hardly worth risking

  your life for."

  "Can you think of any better reason, then?"

  "You bet I can, Rana. One a hell of a lot less brazen than

  yours." She proceeded to explain the impetus for their jour-

  ney. Bribbens was not to be recruited.

  "I prefer money, thank you."

  It was a good thing Falameezar was no longer with them,

  Jen-Tom thought. He and their boatman were at opposite ends

  of the political spectrum. Of course, with Falameezar, they

  would not have required Bribbens' services. He was surprised

  to discover that despite the archaic, inflexible political philos-

  ophy, he still missed the dragon.

  "Young female," Bribbens said finally, "you have your

  romantic ideas and I've got mine. I'm helping you to satisfy

  your needs and that's all you'll get fr
om me. Now shut up. I

  dislike noisy chatter, especially from romantic females."

  "Oh you do, do you?" Ror started to get to her feet.

  "How would you like—"

  The frog jerked a webbed hand toward the southern shore.

  "It's not too far to the bank, and you look like a pretty good

  swimmer, for a human. I think you can make it without any

  trouble."

  Flor started to finish her comment, got the point, and

  resumed her seat near the craft's bow. She was fuming, but

  sensible. It was Bribbens' game and they had to play with his

  equipment, according to his rules. But that didn't mean she

  had to like it.

  88

  THE HOUR OF THE GATE

  The boatman puffed contentedly on his pipe. "Interesting

  group of passengers, more so than my usual." He tapped out

  the dottle on the deck, locked the steering oar in position, and

  commenced repacking his pipe. "Wonder to me you haven't

  killed one another before now."

  It was odd, Jon-Tom mused as they drifted onward, to be

  moving downstream and yet toward mountains. Rivers ran out

  of hills. Perhaps the Sloomaz-ayor-le-WeentU dropped into an

  as yet unseen canyon. If so, they would have a spectacular

  journey through the mountains.

  Occasionally they had to set up the canvas roofing that

  attached to the railings to keep off the nightly rain. At such

  times Bribbens would fix the oar and curve them to a safe

  landing onshore. They would wait out the night there, rain-

  drops pelting the low ceiling, until the sun rose and pushed

  aside the clouds. Then it was on once more, borne swiftly but

  smoothly in the gentle grip of the river.

  Jon-Tom did not fully appreciate the height of Zaryt's

  Teeth until the third day. They entered me first foothills that

  morning. The river cut its way insistently through the green-

  cloaked, rolling mounds. Compared to the nearing moun-

  tains, the massive hillocks were merely bruises on the earth.

  Here and there great lumps of granite protruded through the

  brush and topsoil. They reminded Jon-Tom of the fingertips

  of long-buried giants and brought back to him the legends of

  these mountains. While not degenerating into rapids, the river

  nonetheless increased its pace, as if anxious to carry those

  traveling upon it to some unexpected destination.

  Several days passed during which they encountered nothing

  suggestive of habitation. The hills swelled around them,

  becoming rockier and more barren. Even wildlife hereabouts

  was scarce.

  Once they did drift past a populated beach. A herd of

  unicorns was backed up there against the water. Stallions and

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  Alan Dean Foster

  marcs formed a semicircle with the water at their backs

  protecting the colts, which snorted and neighed nervously.

  Pacing confusedly before the herd's defensive posture wa

  a pack of perhaps a dozen lion-sized lizards. They were sleei

  as whippets and their red and white scales gleamed in th

  sunlight.

  As the travelers cruised past, one of the lizards sprang

  trying to leap over the adults and break the semicircle

  Instead, he landed on the two-foot-long, gnarly hom of one

  of the stallions.

  A horrible hissing crackled like fresh foil through the day

  and blood fountained in all directions, splattering colts and

  killer alike. Bending his neck, the unicorn used both forehooves

  to shove the contorted body of the dying carnivore oflf his

  head.

  The boat drifted around a bend, its passengers ignorant of

  the eventual outcome of the war. Blood from the impaled

  predator flowed into the river. The red stain mindlessly

  stalked the retreating craft....

  90

  VI

  It was the following afternoon, when they rounded a benc

  in the river, that Jon-Tom thought would surely be their last.

  The foothills had grown steadily steeper around them. They

  were impressive, but nonexistent compared to the sheer

  precipices that suddenly rose like a wall directly ahead

  Clouds veiled their summits, parting only intermittently to

  reveal shining white caps at the higher elevations; snow and

  ice that never melted. The mottled stalks of conifers looked

  like twigs where they marched up into the mists.

  It was a seamless gray cliff which rose up unbroken ahead

  of the raft. Solid old granite, impassable and cold.

  Bribbens was neither surprised nor perturbed by this im-

  passable barrier. Leaning hard on the sweep, he turned the

  boat to port. At first Jon-Tom thought they would simply

  ! ground on me rocks lining the shore, but when they rounded

  a massive, sharp boulder he saw the tiny beach their boatman

  was aiming for.

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  Alan Dean Foster

  It was a dry notch cut into the fringe of the mountain.

  Warm water slapped against his boots as the boat's passen-

  gers scrambled to pull it onto the sand. Driftwood mixed with

  the blackened remnants of many camp fires. The little cove

  was the last landing point on the river.

  On the visible river, anyway.

  The wind tumbled and rolled down the sheer cliffs. It

  seemed to be saying, "Go back, fools! There is nothing

  beyond here but rock and death. Go back!" and a sudden

  gust would send Talea or Mudge stumbling westward as the

  wind tried to urge their retreat.

  Jon-Tom waded out into the river until the water lapped at

  his boot tops. Leaning around a large, slick rock, he was able

  to see why Bribbens had rowed them into the protected cove.

  Several hundred yards downstream, downstream was no

  more. An incessant crackling and grinding came from the

  river's end. An immense jam of logs and branches, bones,

  and other debris boiled like clotted pudding against the gray

  face of the mountain. Foam thundered on rock and wood like

  cold lava.

  He couldn't see where the water vanished into the moun-

  tainside because of the obstructing flotsam, but from time to

  time a log or branch would be sucked beneath the brow of the

  cliff, presumably into the cavern beyond. The thickness of the

  jam suggested that the cave opening into the mountain couldn't

  be more than a few inches above the wateriine. If it were

  higher, he would have been able to see it as a dark stain on

  the granite, and if lower, the river would have backed up and

  drowned out, among other things, me cove they were beached

  upon.

  But the opening must be quite deep, because the river had

  narrowed until it was no more than thirty yards wide where it

  ground against the mountainside, and the current was no

  swifter than usual.

  92

  THE HOUR OF THE GATS,

  "What do we do now?" Flor had waded out to stand next

  to him. She watched as logs several yards thick spun and

  bounced off the rock. They must have weighed thousands of

  pounds and were waterlogged as well.

  "There's no way we can move any of that s
tuff upstream

  against the current."

  "It doesn't matter," he told her. "Even if Clothahump

  could magic them aside, the opening's still much too low to

  let the boat through."

  "So it seems." Bribbens stood on the sand behind them.

  He was unloading supplies from the boat. "But we're not

  going in that way. That is, we are, but we're not."

  "I don't follow you," said Jon-Tom.

  "You will. You're paying to." He grinned hugely. "Why

  do you think the Sloomaz-ayor-le-WeentU is called also The

  Double River, The River of Twos?"

  "I don't know." Jon-Tom was irritated at his ignorance. "I

  thought it forked somewhere upstream. It doesn't tell me how

  we're going to get through there," and he pointed at the

  churning, rumbling mass of jackstraw debris.

  "It does, if you know."

  "So what do we do first?" he said, tired of riddles.

  "First we take anything that'll float off the boat," was the

  boatman's order.

  "And then."

  "And then we pole her out into the middle of the current,

  open her stoppers, and sink her. After we've anchored her

  securely, of course."

  Jon-Tom started to say something, thought better of it.

  Since the frog's statement was absurd and since he was

  clearly not an idiot, then it must follow that he knew some-

  thing Jon-Tom did not. When confronted by an inexplicable

  claim, he'd been taught, it was better not to debate until the

  supporting evidence was in.

  "I still don't understand," said Flor confusedly.

  93

  Alan Dean Foster

  "You will," Bribbens assured her. "By the way, can you

  both swim?"

  "Fairly well," said Jon-Tom.

  "I don't drown," was Hor's appraisal.

  "Good. I hope the other human is likewise trained.

  "For the moment you can't do anything except help with

  the unloading. Then I suggest you relax and watch."

  When the last buoyant object had been removed from the

  boat, they took the frog at his word and settled down on the

  beach to observe.

  Bribbens guided the little vessel out into the river. On

  locating a place that suited him (but that looked no different

  from anywhere else to Jon-Tom and Hor) he tossed over bow

  and stem anchors. Sunlight glistened off the boatman's now

  bare green and black back and off the smooth fur of the nude

  otter standing next to him.

  Both watched as the anchors descended. The boat slowly

  swung around before halting about a dozen yards farther

 

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