“Right,” Da said. “And what if River had come here in the morning to fetch a few potatoes, sleep still in her eyes?”
“I’d thought of that,” said Talen.
“No,” said Da. “You hadn’t. The best way to avoid accidents is to not hide traps from your fellow defenders. But I give you credit. It’s a good idea. Still, you’re not going to reset this. Not tonight.”
Talen had put the others in danger. “You’re right,” said Talen. “I won’t.”
“Now you’re being sensible,” Da said and clapped Talen on the shoulder. “You can clean this up in the morning. Right now you can help me saddle up Iron Boy.”
Talen did. Then he watched Da mount and ride off into the moonlight with the men. When they disappeared into the moon shadows of the forest, Talen wondered: Da was formidable, so what would they do now if the armsmen returned? Or if the hatchling worked some evil?
Ke restrung his bell alarm line, then pointed at Talen. “Since you’re so eager to catch something, I think I’ll let you take the next watch. In fact, you and Nettle can have the next two.” He didn’t wait for their reply, just yawned and walked back to the house.
Nettle and Talen followed. When they entered, they found River by the fire, a kettle over the fire. “The water’s heating. I suggest you make a cup of nightwatch tea.”
“Thanks,” Talen said.
River smiled and retired to her bedroom. Talen looked at Nettle. “First or second watch?” he asked.
“First,” Nettle said.
Talen nodded and retrieved the kettle from the hot coals in the hearth. He made a cup of tea for Nettle and handed it over. Talen didn’t think he would be able to fall back asleep, but unrolled his blanket on the floor by the table and lay down on it anyway.
Nettle rummaged through the pantry. He soon found a thick heel of two-day-old bread upon which he spread salted lard. He said around his mouthful of old bread, “I don’t know who to worry about more—hunters or hatchlings. I’m beginning to think we should have laid half-a-dozen snares.”
“Call me when they attack,” Talen said.
Nettle opened the shutters to look out on the yard full of dark moon shadows. “Queen’s out there. Although I don’t know how much good that will do.”
“Listen for the bell,” Talen said. He relaxed, listened to the crickets outside, and surprisingly found himself drifting to sleep.
Sometime later, Nettle nudged him awake. The stars still shone outside.
“Did you see anything?” asked Talen.
“A family of skunks,” said Nettle. He yawned. “Came right up to the window, but they must have gotten a whiff of you, because they turned tail and ran.”
“Funny,” said Talen.
“But true,” said Nettle.
Talen rose and put the kettle back over the coals. Before his tea had finished steeping, Nettle lay asleep.
Talen waited at the window into the small hours of the morning. Twice he heard something and brought his bow up to the ready, but nothing materialized. Nothing moved but the night shadows as the moon made its way to the western horizon.
He thought about the upcoming Festival of Gifts, where the people celebrated the end of the fall harvest and all the gifts of the Creators. There would be no Divine bestowing gifts of healing and Fire, but that would not stop the merchants and entertainments.
He had planned on going and buying a few sweets and being content to look at everything else. But now he sat listing out in his mind what a hero and his reward might buy. He was going to surprise everyone. Nobody seemed to think he would amount to much of anything. But what would they say when he hogtied the hatchlings and carted them into Whitecliff?
He waited and watched and waited and began to tire of waiting. A pressure began to build in his bowels. He stood, tried various positions to hold it, but soon he realized that if he didn’t get to the privy immediately, he was going to have other problems besides hatchlings.
Lords and lice, he thought. There was an old chamber pot in the back room, but he couldn’t imagine the ribbing he’d get if Ke discovered Talen had been too scared to go out. Besides, there was nothing in the yard.
He nudged Nettle, but Nettle only rolled over to his other side. Talen looked out at the yard, the moon shadows about the barn, and the dark woods. He did not want to go outside, but he could not wait. So he picked up his bow and a clutch of arrows, walked to the front door, and opened it just a nudge. He scanned the yard again and found nothing. Then he slipped out the door, hurried across the yard past the well with his bow and a clutch of arrows, and ran to the privy.
But just before he flung open the door, he realized the privy would be a fine place to hide. A hatchling could lie in wait there, waiting for some groggy soul to stumble into its clutches.
Talen nocked an arrow, took a step back, and waited for it to come out. But the privy was silent as stone. So he carefully stepped to the side toward which the door opened, reached out, grabbed the door handle, and counted to three. Then he ripped the door open and stepped back. The door banged into the side of the privy. Talen drew his bow. Aimed.
Nothing emerged. Nothing but the night insects made a sound. He skirted round the front to get a clear view, but the privy was empty.
Thank the Six, he thought then rushed in and closed the door behind him. With a great sigh of relief he dropped his trousers and went about his business. As he did, he began to think of the story of the sleth woman cutting people up and curing them like hog meat. And then he realized he’d just put himself in a box—if some sleth abomination was out there, grabbing him would be like grabbing a fish out of a barrel, like fetching a chicken out of a bird basket.
Goh! The hackles rose on the back of Talen’s neck. He was a fool. He should have used the chamber pot, not come out here in the middle of the night when everyone was sleeping because it was quite likely—with all the noise and theatrics he’d made—that the hatchlings had seen him enter the privy and were now waiting in the dark shadow of the house to steal his immortal parts as he made his way back.
It was true they hadn’t attacked him earlier, but that was during the day. Everyone knew sleth powers waxed at night. He was an idiot.
Talen finished his business and drew up his trousers, but didn’t dare open the door. Instead, he dropped to his knees and peered at what he could see of the moonlit yard through a knothole about a foot from the bottom of the door. He spent what seemed at least half an hour at it and saw nothing. He held his breath and closed his eyes to hear better. Nothing.
Maybe he’d slipped by them. Maybe they hadn’t seen a thing. Talen rose up and sat on the seat and realized he could stay the whole night in the privy if he had to. But that would leave everyone else back at the house exposed.
He sighed. His job was to stand watch, and, by Regret’s hairy arse, that’s what he’d do. He reached for the door and heard the distinct creak of the well crank. He paused. Surely, it was a floor board underneath him. But the well crank creaked again, high and light.
Talen dropped back down to the knot hole. Two dark figures stood at the well. The larger one was cranking the bucket up ever so slowly. It was a woman or girl with one long braid of hair. The smaller figure was a boy. He just stood there holding what looked like a goat’s bladder.
The girl drew up the well bucket, and then had the boy hold the bladder as she filled it. They filled it good and plugged its mouth shut. The girl quietly hung the bucket back on the peg. And then the girl turned toward the privy and began walking. The boy grabbed the back of her tunic and followed like he was blind.
Blind. He was blind!
Walking across the yard was a girl and a blind boy, no doubt her brother—the precise description of the hatchlings.
One part of Talen felt the satisfaction of being right. The other shrank in dread. The hatchlings were here. And coming his way.
There was no way Talen could get to the house now. If he were a coward, he might lift some of the loose
boards off the seat and jump down into the cesspit. But the hatchlings would hear him prying the boards. They would know to look down there. After all, it wasn’t so uncommon for people to string a rope from underneath the privy bench to hang their valuables above the cess below.
He was trapped. They were coming for him.
And Nettle and the others, especially that cretin Sabin, would talk about how he’d died: his pants down, shivering on the stink throne with fright. It would be the talk of the whole district. They’d come for miles to see the spot where Lord Anal Thunder had died, his bow in hand and not one shaft released. He’d be forever known as the Bung Boy or some other such nonsense.
The shame of it washed over him.
He would not die here. Regret’s eyes, he would not die at all! What was he thinking? This was his opportunity. He wouldn’t be able to trap the hatchlings and take them in alive, but so what? They were wanted dead or alive. He had his bow. He had four arrows. Da had taught him well.
He would take them now, despite the fact that he couldn’t hear anything but his heart banging in his ears.
He’d have one shot. If it flew wide of the mark, they’d be on him. But if he made the first count, they’d hesitate just long enough to let him nock a second. And that’s the one he would send into one of their hearts. Or lungs. Either was fine. And with the one crying out in pain, he’d nock his third arrow and take the other deep in the chest.
It all depended on that first arrow, which meant he’d wait until they were a bit closer, until it was impossible he’d miss.
Talen bent and looked out the knothole again. It was definitely a girl and a boy. It was definitely the hatchlings. He gauged the distance between them and the privy then stood and slowly lifted away the bar that secured the door. He took a calming breath, picked up his bow, and nocked the first arrow. He reminded himself that he was an expert shot. He might not pull a bow as strong as Ke’s, but what he did pull was deadly enough for a girl and a boy.
He did not have enough space to properly draw his bow in the privy, but he didn’t want to wait for them to open the door on him anyway. That would be far too close. So he’d kick the door open, then draw.
This was not going to be hard. He could do this.
Talen took one more breath. Now was the time. They should only be a few paces away.
He kicked the door with all his might, but it banged off of something and swung back at him.
Someone grunted.
Lords, he’d kicked it into one of them!
The shock of his miscalculation panicked him. He tried to draw his arrow and step back, but the privy bench got in the way and he fell against the wall.
He expected the door to fly open and one of them to rush him with claw and fang, but the door just hung ajar.
He heard the padding of feet running away, and felt relief. Then he realized they were running. They were getting away!
Talen kicked the door again, and this time it flew wide and banged against the outside of the privy.
The girl ran, holding the boy’s hand. They ran like the wind toward the old house and the woods.
He took a step forward and drew the string to his chin. Calm, he had to be calm. The string was locked behind his thumb ring. He had practiced this thousands of times. There were days when Da had demanded he draw and release his bow 500 times. He had used up eight bows over the years, drawing then relaxing the position of his thumb ever so slightly so that the string might jump away.
The precise moment of the perfect release, he had learned, would always come as a small surprise.
The string hummed. The arrow snicked away into the dark, a perfect shot. But the hatchlings darted left as the arrow left his hand, and the arrow flew wide.
He strung the second arrow. “Ware!” Talen shouted. “Ware!” He yelled again, and saw Nettle throw open the door just about the same time the creatures disappeared behind the old house.
Talen ran to get a clear view of the open space between the old house and the woods. The things would not escape this time, but when he got a view of the open space, nothing was there.
Nettle came stumbling out with his bow in one hand and a half lit torch in the other. “What’s going on?”
“They’re here!” Talen shouted. “Behind the old house!”
Nettle’s eyes went wide. Talen motioned for Nettle to take one side; he’d take the other. Nettle nodded, and then they both approached the old house. It was the first place Talen’s father and mother had built. Talen had slept in it now and again until a snake had come wiggling through the ceiling one night to land on him. Such were the hazards of sod roofs. Now it was only used to store things and shelter the dogs who had dug their warren underneath the old floorboards.
Talen and Nettle split apart, giving the house a wide enough berth, positioning themselves so that each covered two of the house’s four walls.
“Nothing,” said Nettle.
Where could they have gone? Talen realized he’d given the creature the opportunity to slip in the front door of the house both this and the time before.
He swung his bow and pointed it at the door.
“Open it,” Talen said to Nettle.
River called out from the house. “Talen? What’s going on?”
“We’ve got them in the old house!” he yelled back.
Talen nodded at the door. “Go on. Open it.”
Nettle looked at the door. “Right,” he said. “Cover me.” Then he grabbed the handle, shoved the door in, and stepped back.
“There’s no use hiding,” said Nettle. “Come out where we can see you.”
Nothing moved.
“Queen,” Talen called, hoping that she hadn’t already been killed by the creatures.
A few moments passed, and then Queen wriggled out of the dog warren and came to him.
All this time in the warren, Talen thought, and not one bark. Something was very wrong. It was if the dogs were blind and deaf.
“Stu, girl!” Talen said to Queen and pointed at the open door. “Stu!”
Queen looked at the house and sniffed, but then she turned away and came to him wagging her tail.
“Are you sure it went in there?” Nettle asked.
Ke and River walked out into the yard, Ke with nothing but his underclothes on. “What are you hollering about?”
“We’ve got ourselves a hatchling,” said Nettle.
“Two,” said Talen.
“Where?” Ke demanded.
Talen pointed at the open door, and to his horror, Ke walked right in.
Ke looked around, turned, and held his hands out. “Nothing in here,” he said. “Goh, you’re an idiot.”
But Talen had seen them. Right here. Where else could they be? Then he looked at the dog warren and everything came clear.
“They’re underneath,” he said to Nettle. “With the dogs!”
Talen ran to the hole where the side of the house met the ground and pointed his arrow into the blackness.
“Bring the torch.”
“No,” said Ke.
But Nettle paid him no mind. Talen took the torch and knelt to the side of the hole. It was definitely wide enough for the girl and boy to get through. He knew because he’d gone down himself a couple of times, but who would have thought they would be down there? He stuck the torch down as far as he dared.
It illuminated a leg that quickly drew itself back into the shadow. Talen scrambled back and dropped the torch. “Goh,” he said. “They’ve subverted the dogs.” He drew his bow and pointed it at the mouth of the hole.
“Put that down,” said Ke.
“You can’t doubt me now,” said Talen.
“River,” said Ke and motioned at the mouth of dog warren with his head.
River calmly walked to the side of the house and knelt by the dog warren.
“Stop!” Talen warned. “Get away!”
Ke’s hands closed around the bow. “Give me the bow, and shut up.”
“Di
dn’t you see the leg?”
Ke yanked the bow from his hands.
“What are you doing?”
“Get them,” Ke said to River.
Talen watched in horror as River leaned forward, then crawled partway into the blackness of the hole. He expected to hear her cry out or be pulled entirely in. But after a few moments, she backed out and extended her hand to help a girl and then a smaller boy out. The girl had long black hair and a scar on her cheek. She looked to be about Talen’s age, maybe a bit older. The boy stared off at nothing.
The girl looked at him with no fear. She looked at him like a bird might a bug. Talen noticed she was wearing River’s trousers all rolled up on the leg.
“Douse that torch,” said Ke. And when Nettle didn’t move, Ke snatched it and ground its flame out in the dirt.
“What is this?” asked Talen.
“Will you shut up,” hissed Ke. He studied the woods.
Deep in the woods someone shouted. Hunters!
“Get inside,” whispered Ke. “Now!”
Talen looked at his brother and sister. They were harboring sleth. They were risking the anger of the Nine Clans and putting all of their lives in danger. Had they too been subverted like the dogs?
When Talen didn’t move, Ke handed the bow to River. He grabbed Talen by the nape of the neck with one hand and the back of his trousers by the other. Talen struggled, but Ke’s grip was like iron, and he marched Talen back into the house.
Talen watched in dismay as the girl hatchling led her brother to the hearth. When they were all in, River quietly barred the door and shuttered the window. She faced Ke, “I told Da it would never work.”
Someone called out again in the woods.
River motioned for everyone to be still.
Ke turned to Talen and pitched his voice low. “If you’ve brought a pack of idiot hunters down on us, I’m going to kill you.”
“Kill me?” Talen hissed back. “Kill me? You two and Da, it appears, have already seen to that.”
“Shush,” said River.
They waited and listened. Queen barked twice and then fell still. Talen strained to hear what was going on outside, but heard nothing. Of course, that didn’t mean a pack of hunters were not moving now to surround the yard or running off to alert the Bailiff.
Servant: The Dark God Book 1 Page 15