Shadow (Scavenger Trilogy Book 1)
Page 28
For an unnervingly long time nothing happened. Poldarn had wound up lying on his left side so that his head and right shoulder were out of the water; the rest of him was submerged. Having no reason to move, he stayed put. He was reconsidering this policy when a head bobbed up over the bank, looked both ways in a cursory fashion, and popped down again. He heard someone say, ‘No sign of the bugger.’ Then, after another infuriating pause, he saw a man standing up on the box of the cart. Because the bank was in the way, all he could see was the back of his head – matted, curly brown hair blowing in the wind – and the tops of his shoulders, before the man bent or knelt down and was out of his sight. While he was analysing what he’d learned, another head appeared, this time three-quarter face; same sort of hair, a thin, long face with a pointed chin scruffy with a slight growth of woolly fuzz, a very young man who probably hadn’t been eating well lately.
Lying still and quiet seemed rather more attractive at this point. He’d come to the conclusion that the weapons used were most likely slings. He found that he seemed to know a lot about slings, probably including how to use one: you could make one out of anything, they were difficult to use but could be both accurate and effective, but the rate of fire was slow and up close they were useless. Just right for knocking drivers off carts, but if that was all they had, there shouldn’t be any problem.
If. Time for another choice, damn it. The argument for staying where he was struck him as unusually persuasive; he was a courier, not a cart guard; he had an important letter to deliver, and getting involved in fights would only put the letter at risk; he hadn’t liked the new man, not one bit. The argument for scrambling out of the ditch, vaulting over the bank and starting a fight was so insubstantial and vague that he couldn’t even reduce it to words. But, he realised as his boots hit the planks of the cart bed and the two men spun round to face him, it must have had its merits, or why the hell was he doing it?
The man on the right took a step towards him. His hand may have been raised to throw a punch, or he may just have been lifting it to help him balance as he tried to jump down off the cart and escape. In any event, the step brought him inside Poldarn’s circle, and he fell backwards off the cart and out of sight before Poldarn even had a chance to see what sort of wound he’d inflicted. The other man stayed very, very still.
‘I’m sorry,’ he said, ‘really I am. I didn’t recognise you.’
For a moment, Poldarn’s mind was completely blank, then he decided he’d better put his sword away before he did himself an injury with it. He flicked the blood off the blade with a crisp crack of his wrist, drew the back over the web of his left thumb and slid it into the scabbard without looking down.
‘What?’ he said.
‘I didn’t know it was you,’ the man said, perfectly still except for his mouth. ‘All we could see was two men on a cart. I’m really sorry.’
Poldarn breathed out slowly. ‘It’s all right,’ he said, ‘I’m not going to hurt you. Just don’t go away quite yet. You know who I am?’
The man shrugged. ‘Yes,’ he replied. ‘Well, sort of. I saw you at the rendezvous when we landed.’
Poldarn stared at him a moment or so longer. ‘Listen to me,’ he said. ‘You may know who I am, but I don’t. I got a bash on the head, and when I woke up I couldn’t remember anything; not my name, where I’m from, nothing like that at all. Tell me what you know, or so help me—’
‘All right.’ The man winced, and Poldarn caught sight of a little pool of liquid forming on the boards of the box, next to the man’s left ankle. He resisted the temptation to burst out laughing, and instead said, ‘It’s all right, I promise I’m not going to do anything to you. Just help me out, please.’
The man took a deep breath. ‘All right,’ he said. ‘I’m sorry, I don’t know your name. I only saw you the one time. I don’t even know if you’re one of us or one of them; I was on watch, I saw you walking down the path from the cliffs, and before I could challenge you the skipper said it was all right, you were expected. You walked past me – close as you are now – and about an hour later you came back, went off the way you came. That’s it.’
All Poldarn could do was sigh. He didn’t need to ask the next question, he already knew the answer. He’d guessed it a moment ago, when he’d realised that the language he was talking and hearing wasn’t the one he’d been living with for the last few weeks.
‘You’re raiders,’ he said.
It seemed to surprise the man that this point needed confirmation. ‘That’s right,’ he said. ‘Me and Turvin and about five others, we got cut off after the battle following up too far, so when the relief came, we couldn’t get back; then a squad of horsemen chased us up, and when we stopped running we hadn’t a clue where we were, what direction we’d come, anything like that. Later on the sun came up, we found out we’d been going south, so we tried to head back north-west, only we walked straight into the bloody relief again. Turvin and me, we got away, the others didn’t; we kept on going till we reached the river – they’d sent another squad after us, the bastards, we thought they were on our side, and we didn’t give them the slip till nightfall. Well, we were so scared by then that we dumped all our kit into the river – trying to make it look like we’d drowned, though I don’t suppose it fooled anybody – and swam across; we figured they wouldn’t expect us to go south-east, away from the ships, so that was the only safe way to go. Anyhow, we wound up here, and here we’ve been ever since.’
Poldarn nodded. ‘Robbing carts,’ he said.
‘Trying to rob carts.’ The man grinned. He couldn’t be more than twenty. ‘Just our luck, the first time we actually connect with anything—’
‘I see,’ Poldarn said. ‘And that’s all you know about me? You’re sure?’
The man dipped his head in confirmation. ‘You came to the ships just after we landed. They were expecting you. At the time I guessed you were one of ours – you know, we’ve got scouts in deep – but I was just assuming.’
‘Fine. Do I look like one of you?’
‘I guess. From the south island, anyhow. But you could be one of them, too. Truth is, I haven’t seen enough of them to know. This is my first time, see.’
‘First time?’
‘First time over here. The first expedition I’ve ever been on.’
‘Ah.’ Poldarn clicked his tongue. ‘Things haven’t been going well for you lately, have they?’
The young man nodded. ‘It’s been a thoroughly rotten year,’ he said. ‘First we lost twenty lambs in the cold snap, then our big shed fell in the sea during the high winds, then the sheep got into the leeks, and then we found the blight had got in the apples, ended up slinging half of ’em, and then all the bees just upped and died on us, like that, so we sold all our spare timber to get places on a ship to come here, hoping we’d be able to make enough to set it all straight, and now look. God knows what’s become of Dad and Raffenkel, I’m stuck here in the middle of enemy territory, and I can’t even rob a cart. It’s enough to make you give up.’
Poldarn agreed that it all sounded a bit much. ‘What’s your name?’ he asked.
‘Eyvind,’ the young man replied. ‘And Dad’s Kari. We live at a place called Ness – any of this ring any bells?’
‘No,’ Poldarn said. ‘But that doesn’t mean anything.’ He thought for a moment. ‘All I can suggest is that you get away from here as fast as you can, before someone comes along and finds these bodies. I’ll say there was only one of you; he killed my carter, I killed him. That’s all I can do for you, I’m afraid.’ He paused. ‘No, that’s not true,’ he said. He pulled his purse from his sleeve and counted out twenty quarters, leaving himself fifteen to cover his expenses for the rest of the trip. ‘You could try pretending to be deaf and dumb, I suppose,’ he said. ‘At any rate, you’ll stand a better chance than if you try and make a living as a highwayman. Do I speak with an accent?’
Eyvind nodded. ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘but I can’t place it. And th
ere’s all sorts of accents up and down the south island, depending on where people came from originally. Like I said, you could be us, you could be them. No way of knowing.’
‘Fine,’ Poldarn said. ‘I don’t think his boots’ll fit you, but you could pad them out with bits of shirt. I’d leave the jacket, though.’ He frowned, then said, ‘You can have my coat instead, I’ll take his jacket. You know, I have about as much luck with coats as you do with your life in general.’
‘Thank you,’ Eyvind said. ‘I—’
‘Goodbye,’ Poldarn interrupted. He pulled the dead carter up by his arms, slid him out of his jacket and toppled him off the cart; then he wriggled out of his coat, slung it out on top of the body and walked the horses on.
Of course, he hadn’t much idea of where he was, so it was fortunate that the road went straight to Liancor, with no options or choices to betray him. The first things he saw, as he laboured up a slope between two high hedges and suddenly found himself at an unexpected crest overlooking a deep, hidden valley, were two sand-yellow towers four or five miles away, their tops poking up above the folds of the ground like the heads of Eyvind and his dead colleague. Half an hour or so later the gentle hills got out of the way and he was able to look down on the whole town.
It reminded him of a lake, filling the lowest point in a valley, as if the houses and buildings had drained down the hillsides and flooded the flat water meadows on either side of the shallow, lively river that wound away at right angles to the road. Certainly, Liancor gave the impression that it had got there by some natural process of accretion, that it had grown there or been carried there like river silt over a very long period of time. The light brown stone and brown-grey thatch gave the impression of camouflage, as if the town was an animal who’d grown that way to avoid the attention of predators.
He’d made a point of finding out the correct procedure, so the first thing he did was ask the way to the prefecture, which turned out to be a doorway in the side of a long, low, scruffy-looking building with large chunks missing from the outside rendering. He gave a small boy a quarter to look after the cart and went inside. There were three clerks sitting at a bench, huddled together so as to be able to share the narrow beam of light from the one small window high in the wall to their left. One of them looked up as he walked in; the other two carried on writing slowly and carefully in big ledgers.
‘Hello,’ he said. ‘I need to report a death.’
The clerk glowered at him as if he was a small child pestering his mother for sweets. ‘Right,’ he said irritably; he pushed away the ledger in front of him, stretched out an arm for another ledger behind him without looking round, laid it on the desk and let it fall open at the bookmark. ‘Citizen or offcomer?’
Poldarn frowned. ‘Me or him?’
‘Both of you.’
‘Both from Sansory,’ Poldarn said.
That cheered the clerk up a little. ‘Fine,’ he said. ‘Where?’
‘Four hours by cart towards the Bohec, about a day south of the river.’
‘Splendid,’ the clerk said. ‘Outside the jurisdiction,’ he explained. ‘Outside the jurisdiction, I just take names and details, check the outstanding warrants, you sign or make your mark and that’s that. Inside, I have to arrest you and hold you for interrogation.’
Since the clerk was short, fat, just the right side of sixty and younger than his two colleagues, that told Poldarn a lot about the way things were done in Liancor. There was a three-legged stool against the wall next to the door. Poldarn picked it up, carried it over to the table.
‘Sorry,’ the clerk said, ‘forgot my manners. Yes, please take a seat. Names. His first.’
As the clerk dipped his pen in the inkwell, Poldarn realised that he didn’t actually know the dead driver’s name; the man had been sitting on the box of the cart Falx Roisin had pointed to, Poldarn had got up beside him, the cart had moved off and the man had started moaning about how unfair it all was. Quite justifiably, as it had turned out.
‘I’m sorry,’ he said, ‘I don’t know his name. He was new; at least, it was the first time we’d worked together.’
‘Oh.’ The clerk looked sad. ‘I need a name,’ he said. ‘Who do you work for?’
‘Falx Roisin,’ Poldarn replied. ‘He runs a—’
‘Unknown, Falx house, Sansory,’ the clerk recited as he wrote. ‘That’ll do fine. You see, we pass our returns on to the prefecture in Sansory, they check them against their returns, it’ll be sorted out then. Your name?’
‘Poldarn.’
‘Poldarn what?’
‘Just Poldarn. I’m a southerner.’
The clerk looked up for a moment. ‘Oh well,’ he said. ‘All right, just Poldarn. Now then, what happened? Accident?’
Poldarn shook his head. ‘He was the driver, I was the guard. A man tried to rob the cart; killed him with a slingshot, then came for me. I killed him.’
‘Right.’ The clerk nodded, didn’t look up. ‘That’s fine, then; my condolences on your loss, sign the register here—’ He turned the book round and pushed it across the table, then handed Poldarn the pen. ‘Oh, you can write, that’s good. All right, I’ll make out a certificate and forward that to the prefecture at Sansory, copy for my file, job done. Thank you, you can go now.’
‘Thank you,’ Poldarn replied, getting up. He put the stool back where he’d found it, then asked, ‘So you believe me, then?’
The clerk looked at him. ‘Does it matter?’ he said.
He left the office and asked the boy who’d been minding the cart where the Fejal house was.
‘What?’ the boy replied.
‘The Fejal house.’
The boy looked puzzled, then grinned. ‘Oh, right, the Feejle house.’ (Poldarn had pronounced it Feyjarl, as Falx Roisin had done.) ‘Sorry, but you talk funny. Right, you follow this street till you come to the tannery, then twice left, right, left again by the Virtue’s Own Reward, follow that road round, you’ll see the old ropewalks on your right—’
‘Better still,’ Poldarn interrupted, ‘you show me and I’ll give you another quarter.’
‘Sure,’ the boy said and hopped up on to the box. ‘So,’ he said, ‘what’re you carrying?’
Poldarn realised he didn’t know. The load was roped in at the back, covered up with waxed hides and sailcloth. He shrugged. ‘You tell me,’ he said. ‘What do they do at the Fejal house?’
The boy grinned. ‘Biggest button-maker this side of the Bohec,’ he replied, ‘so probably it’s either horns or bones. Maybe both. I’ll take a look if you want.’
‘I’m not bothered,’ Poldarn replied.
‘Aren’t you just a little bit curious?’
Poldarn shook his head. ‘For reasons I won’t bore you with,’ he said, ‘I’m not curious about anything any more.’ The letter inside his shirt was for someone else, a man called Huic Penseuro, but all he had to do was hand it over to Fejal Nas, along with the stuff in the cart. ‘Where’s a good place to get something to eat?’
There were, it turned out, two Fejal Nasses, father and son; the father was out, but the son seemed to be expecting the letter and gave him thirty quarters for his trouble. ‘Any problems along the way?’ he asked.
‘Nothing to do with the letter,’ Poldarn said. ‘Will there be a reply?’
Fejal Nas shook his head. He hadn’t opened the letter. ‘Just out of interest,’ he said, as Poldarn was getting ready to leave, ‘but have you been to the Cunier house in Mael Bohec lately?’
It occurred to Poldarn that the sensible reply would be No. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Why?’
‘Nothing. I just heard Falx Roisin had got a new courier, that’s all.’
There was obviously a lot wrong with that answer, and equally obviously Fejal Nas didn’t care. ‘That’s me,’ Poldarn said.
‘Ah. Well, I expect I’ll be seeing you again, then. Safe journey home.’
Obviously more to that than met the eye, he thought, as he waited for the por
ters to unload the cart, but, as he’d told the boy, he didn’t want to know. It was bad enough keeping himself from facing up to the implications of what Eyvind had told him. He’d been carrying that all the way from the place where the fight had happened, making him feel like an ambassador at a special reception held in his honour who can’t think of anything except how desperately he needs to take a leak. Sleep, for example; he knew for certain that unless he got himself drunk enough to pass out in a chair or on the floor, he’d lie awake all night desperately not thinking about it, not endlessly turning the various explanations, likely and improbable, over and over in his mind till they’d rubbed sores on the backs of his eyes – raider, traitor, duly authorised negotiator, herald. Every conceivable possibility had flared up in his imagination long before Eyvind had finished talking, the arguments for and against each hypothesis had been analysed, correlated and compared with archived data, debated and voted on, appealed against, decided on by a whole hierarchy of levels of imagination and belief. He felt like the garrison of some small fortress surrounded on all sides by the armies of the greatest power in the world, bombarded by engines, assaulted with rams and ladders, undermined by saps and camouflets, enfiladed by archers from cavaliers and ravelins, invested and breached in every bastion, on the point of arriving at the critical moment when the losses make further defence impossible.
‘That’s the lot,’ the head porter said, putting his hand inside his shirt to wipe the sweat from his neck and shoulder. ‘Bloody lumpy stuff,’ he added, ‘you’re not going to tell me that was just bones.’
‘You’re right,’ Poldarn replied with a smile. ‘In fact, I’m not going to tell you anything at all. Thanks for your help.’