by Dave Duncan
“Can tame!” Quiet Stalker insisted, leering.
“Take girl, then.” Wave at Kadie, then Inos — “Old woman sleep alone.” Wave at all three with three fingers — “See sun, go to Death Bird. All of us!” Again three fingers. “Are friends? Is treaty?” A whispered aside: “Trust me, Kadie!”
Quiet Stalker nodded vigorously. “Is treaty! Are friends.” He sprang to his feet and made a swashbuckling leap over the fire, then hauled Gath to his feet and embraced him to confirm the deal. Inos watched in frozen horror as her son pushed his sister toward the green horror — and Kadie went. How could she possibly trust Gath’s prescience this far? He was only a child, he did not know. Kadie seemed to trust him, but she was no older.
“No, Gath!” Inos lurched forward to intervene. Gath turned and grabbed her, but he staggered giddily, and they both almost fell.
“It’s all right, Mom,” he whispered hoarsely, leaning hard on her. His eyes were wild and brilliant, close to hysteria. “Remember Ollialo? My birthday gift to Kadie?”
The rapier? What good was that, five hundred leagues away in Krasnegar? The kid’s brains had been addled! He was crazy.
With no sign of effort, the young goblin leader had lifted Kadie and headed for the sheds — a child in thick furs being carried off by a muscular savage in almost nothing.
“Idiot!” Inos cried, struggling to free herself from Gath’s tight embrace. He clamped a hand over her mouth, and again they both teetered off-balance. He must be hallucinating that Kadie had come wearing her sword, concealed below her robe. But Inos had watched Kadie put that cloak on and knew perfectly well that she was not armed with as much as a nail file. And even if Kadie had sneaked the rapier by her, the goblins would have seen the scabbard protruding below the hem.
Quiet Stalker stopped at a ladder that led up to the hayloft. He set Kadie down. She moved aside, bowing. Apparently she had guessed the correct goblin etiquette, because he went clambering up ahead of her. Inos expected her to run then, but she began to climb submissively after the goblin.
Gath removed his hand from his mother’s mouth. “’Sawright, Mom!”
The rest of the chiefs were scrambling to their feet, the social evening completed.
“Woman sleep there!” Giant Feller commanded, pointing to the shed where the shovels and barrows were stored.
“Kadie!” Inos cried, as her daughter vanished into the darkness behind Quiet Stalker.
“Clothes, Mom!” Gath begged, still clinging to her. “You took my clothes away! Help me, I’m frozen.” Shivering, he tried to whisper in her ear and his voice broke, half crying, half laughing. “It’s all right, Mom, all right! She has her sword! I know you can’t see it, because it’s a magic sword, Mom!”
Gods have pity! He was mad.
And he kept on raving in a wild whisper, his voice lurching between boyish treble and a manly tenor she had not heard before. “She’s worn it every day since I gave it to her, and nobody ever notices it unless she wants them to and we thought it was great fun that you never noticed she was going around with a real sword on all the time and I set it up so that only one goblin gets her tonight —”
“What? You’re crazy. How do you know —”
“Watch! She drives him back with the sword and he breaks his neck and the others all make a big fuss but they accept it and the three of us all sleep safely together and everything’s all right and who cares what happens to these murdering brutes?”
Sheer madness, but not surprising. He had cracked under the strain, was all. He was only a child. She shook him, and he was not too big for her to shake. “Stop it, Gath! Control yourself! Now, tell me how you knew how to speak goblin like that.”
He blinked, and his eyes filled with tears. “Huh? Oh, if I spoke in impish then Giant Feller repeated it in goblin, right? So I just said what he was going to say. It’ll be all right. Mom!”
More insanity. How could he foresee something and then stop it happening?
“There!” Gath said. “Told you!”
Inos whirled to stare again at that black opening that had swallowed her daughter. Suddenly Quiet Stalker came into view — wearing nothing, his back to her, moving backward. It was over in an instant. He kept on retreating until he stepped on air. He back-flipped out the doorway with a shriek and fell clear to the ground. The other goblins were busily dressing themselves again and they only looked up when they heard the scream. A moment later Kadie appeared at the top of the ladder, hands on hips, staring down in triumph. There was no sign of a sword, although she had discarded her cloak.
Quiet Stalker had landed on his head. Inos had seen that. Now all the goblins had rushed over, hiding the body, shouting in fury. She stared at Gath’s idiotic grin. Her daughter had just killed a man.
“That’s Death Bird’s nephew!” she cried.
“Well, he’s dead now. Serves him right. Give me something to wear, Mom! I’m freezing!”
Inos began to strip off her cloak. “But what happens when Death Bird finds out?”
Gath smiled Weakly. “Dunno! I can’t see tomorrows.”
Questionable shapes:
Angels and ministers of grace defend us!
Be thou a spirit of health or goblin damned,
Bring with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell,
Be thy intents wicked or charitable,
Thou com’st in such a questionable shape
That I will speak to thee.
Shakespeare, Hamlet, I, iv
TEN
Minds innocent
1
“And then the bishop looked under the pillow!” Andor said.
Rap had already been laughing. At that climactic punch line he almost fell off his horse, something he had never done in his life. His guffaws raised a flock of tiny red birds out of the hedges in terrified flight. The horses flicked their ears, but kept up their steady clopping.
When he had wiped away the tears and sucked some air back in his aching lungs, he gasped, “I don’t believe a word of it!”
“Absolutely true!” Andor said. “Strawberries everywhere! The Gods are my witness. Would I lie to you, Rap?”
“Well… it wouldn’t terribly surprise me.” But Rap grinned when he said it, because Andor had been grinning when he asked.
Three days with Andor… it was impossible to stay mad at Andor. His word of power could have no effect on a sorcerer, for a single word could only magnify an existing talent, but in Andor’s case that talent was charm. He had been purposefully wielding that charm on Rap for three days, in an unbroken outpouring of concern and reminiscences and funny stories.
They were riding up the wide valley of the Frelket. A day’s ride behind them, the river sank away in despair under palm trees and the sands of the desert. About a day’s ride ahead it would be a mountain torrent, but here it nourished a little local paradise, an oasis within the withered hills. Most of the native forest had been stripped from the flatland and replaced by rich farms; the valley walls were terraced as if combed by giants. The land looked alive and fertile even now — two days until second moon, and already there was a smell of spring in the air. The sun was hot, even at this altitude.
Second moon was the time for Timber Moot — Rap put thoughts of Timber Moot aside like an unwanted fish bone. He refused to believe that the Gods ever created indispensable mortals. Inos would find someone to deal with the goblins for her.
The Mosweeps were an icy curtain across the head of the valley, a parade of giants. Usually they were shrouded in cloud. Today they were close enough to touch, every pinnacle and glacier sparkling. They rose almost sheer from the foothills — up and up and up until they seemed to overhang. They had grown a lot since his last sight of them, a week ago. They were awe-inspiring. They were daunting.
Noticing his interest in the scenery, Andor chuckled. “I was thinking, Jalon should see that! He’d go into a trance! Wouldn’t be able to speak for days!”
“Then let’s keep him ignorant, s
hall we?” Much as Rap was looking forward to meeting the minstrel again, he knew Jalon was capable of wandering off in a daydream and disappearing for hours at a time. This was no kindergarten. There were no more towns ahead. The Mosweep Ranges were colored Imperial on Imperial maps, but trolls had no maps. This was frontier country, where legionaries might appear at any time to ask travelers where and why they were going… which reminded Rap that he was not sure of that himself. “How far do you suppose this road goes?”
“Quite a way, apparently. The villa up ahead is Casfrel, but there’s a trail goes on beyond. The army built it a couple of decades ago.” Andor flashed white teeth at Rap and adjusted his hat to a slightly more rakish angle. His finery would have looked stolen on Thinal, but Andor had style. He was one of those superb horsemen who could make their mounts seem mere extensions of themselves.
“Been doing a little research?” Rap inquired. He hadn’t let Andor out of his farsight, so when could he have?… Oh — last night, obviously. Or the night before.
“Just a little. Dear girl was one of those talky ones, so I guided her into productive channels. You do know about the escaped trolls, of course?”
“Acopulo gave me some names of places. Frelket Valley was one of them.”
“It was Casfrel,” Andor agreed. “Little more’n a year ago, a half dozen ‘agricultural workers’ went missing. Presumably they escaped up the river and into the mountains. The army went after them, but found no trace.”
“With dogs?”
“Probably. It’s quite a racket, isn’t it?”
“Slavery is illegal. I don’t know how they manage to keep it secret.” Rap did know that Shandie disapproved strongly — so strongly that he had not explained very well.
Andor shrugged. “Casfrel is a big plantation, owned by some senator back in Hub. A troll is a sort of semi-intelligent ox, very valuable help around that sort of place. The army rounds them up on one pretext or another and collects the money. Helps pay the garrisoning bills. Political favors count, too.” He eyed Rap thoughtfully. “Who cares about trolls?”
“Shandie does. I do. Remember Ballast, on Stormdancer?”
“Frankly, no. I was traveling first class, you will recall.”
Rap hesitated, then returned the smile. “Yes, I remember.”
“Rap…” For once Andor seemed at a loss for words. “Look, I won’t say I’m sorry, because you wouldn’t believe me. But I am glad things turned out the way they did. Name of Evil! You were only a stableboy, and you had no idea how valuable that word of yours was, or what it would mean to me. And I didn’t just get you in a corner and call Darad to work you over, as I could have — I really did try to help you. Now, didn’t I? I helped you with your job and your education, and so on. Sure, I was trying to pry your word of power out of you, but who wouldn’t?”
Lots of people. Rap thought, but apparently Andor was trying to apologize. It was ancient history, almost a childhood memory for him, although to Andor it would seem more recent, only four or five years ago.
“It wasn’t what you did to me I minded. It was Inos.”
“But I was going to marry her! Gods, man! That’s the only time in my entire life I’ve ever offered to marry a girl and meant it.”
He’d tried the other way first, though, and he wasn’t saying how long he’d planned to stay married. Andor’s moral vision was sadly defective. He shot Rap a worried frown, then grinned. “And I appreciate what you did for the five of us, when you could. You kept your word. And right now, I admit, I’m enjoying myself hugely. You know how I like traveling! I never seem to get out of Hub anymore. Anytime I’ve tried in the past few years, or Darad’s tried, Thinal or Sagorn has gone right back home again.”
“You’re offering to help, you mean?”
“I want to help. I think you’re on a noble cause.”
He truly believed the words coming out of his own mouth at the moment, which meant nothing, because he would lie to himself as much as anyone. All the same, cooperation was better than opposition.
“Then I’m glad to have your help,” Rap said. “Gods know, I need all the help I can get! And, since we’re baring souls now, I’d better confess that my premonition is beginning to itch. There may be trouble ahead.”
Andor’s radiant smile faltered. “What sort of trouble?”
“I don’t know. It’s vague. Maybe nothing. Maybe death.”
“I have just remembered I left a toothpick back in Ysarth.”
“I also have a hunch that says the risk is worth taking. It’s not much of a guarantee, and it won’t apply to you anyway.”
“Oh, I just love your attitude! Well, it won’t be the first time we’ve been through danger together, will it Rappie-boy?”
God of Villains! Only Andor had ever called him that, but who was the youngster now? “No, it won’t.”
“So if we’re going to be allies, you wouldn’t mind telling me what you’re up to, would you?”
“Thought you knew.” Rap was trying to read a road marker ahead. It looked like a boundary stone, and there was a subtle change in the fields beyond it, a hint of more prosperity, more fertility. This might be the start of the Casfrel estate that Andor had mentioned.
“The Mosweep Mountains are about five hundred leagues long and Gods know how wide,” Andor said impatiently, “mostly covered with jungle so thick you can’t see your hand behind your back. You expect to find sorcery in that mess? Really, truly? How? That’s what I want to know.”
Rap had already been over this, but Andor could not recognize the truth when he heard it. He expected every man to be as devious as he was.
“There’s no great secret.” Rap tried to look as innocent as possible, and thereby provoke the greatest possible suspicion. “I want to talk to trolls. When I’ve done that, I’ll go and appeal to the anthropophagi. I’ll try not to seem too appealing to the anth—”
“Wild trolls or tame trolls?”
“Both or either.”
Andor looked exasperated. “Wild trolls are as solitary as comets and about as hard to catch. You could spend a lifetime rummaging that haystack and never prick your fingers once. So you must be planning to use sorcery, and yet you insist that the Covin will hear you if you do!”
“Hunch, remember?”
“Bah! The Covin’s back in Hub, isn’t it?”
“The Covin is probably just about everywhere now,” Rap admitted. “Zinixo must have caught most of Bright Water’s votaries, and she had ’em scattered all over. He won’t collect all his forces into Hub, because that would be a risk. He must have agents in place just about everywhere, spying for him. The more he knows, the more he’ll suspect he doesn’t know, of course.”
Andor was not happy to hear that, and still not trusting.
“I think you’re holding back on me, Rap! You can’t hope to find a wild troll in your lifetime, and the brute wouldn’t know its next-door neighbor anyway, let alone the address of the nearest sorcerer.”
“Which leaves tame trolls.”
“What can they know? Even if there is an escape conspiracy working, and even if it does employ sorcery, why would the present slaves know anything about it? If they did, they’d be gone!”
“Maybe,” Rap admitted. “But now’s the time to find out. Look there!”
Far off across the fields, a wagon was moving through the spring mud. There were no oxen or horses between the shafts, and no driver. The motive power was a human being.
“A troll?” Andor said, peering against the sun.
“Must be.” Rap was confident enough that he did not risk using farsight.
“So what are you planning to do?”
“Go and talk to him. See if he knows anything about the ones who escaped — who helped them, especially.”
“Rap, Rap!” Andor shook his head pityingly. “What do you expect to learn?”
“Trolls are a lot smarter than they like to make out!”
“Even if they are, this is an ille
gal conspiracy you’re talking about. You just ride out from town in your fancy clothes, and he tells you all about it?”
“Er, good point,” Rap agreed. Of course a sorcerer could apply compulsion to win answers. If the Covin had agents in the district, that use of power might be detected. Worse, though, it would require Rap to apply the sort of people mastery he so despised in Andor. “What are you suggesting?”
Andor’s brilliant smile could make the icy Mosweeps look in need of polishing. “Start at the top, of course. Those roofs above the trees there are probably Casfrel itself, right? Let’s go and accept their eager offers of hospitality. If the manager doesn’t know a lot more than his slaves do, I’ll eat my hat — feather and all.”
He did want to help, apparently. Rap risked a quick glance of farsight. The troll pulling the wagon was a pubescent girl.
“It’s worth a try,” he agreed.
“Come on, then!” Andor kicked his horse into a canter.
2
Casfrel was an extensive and prosperous plantation, and its station was as large as a village. Andor rode brashly in through the main gate, with a debonair wave to the astonished legionary standing guard. The road wound uphill between barns and cottages, barracks and storage sheds, until it arrived at the main villa, which was an imposing, sprawling mansion. There he dismounted and flipped the reins to a servant.
“Inform Tribune Uoslope that Prince Rapiboy and Sir Andor have arrived,” he said, and strode up the steps with an amused faun at his heels.
The staff needed some time to locate the manager, and when he at last appeared he scowled suspiciously at these unexpected visitors. He was a stocky man with gray hair and a prominent paunch, a typical retired soldier, distrustful of well-dressed civilians from Hub and scornful of royal fauns. His broad physique was combined with narrow views. He glowered at Rap as if assessing his ability to muck out stables. If he expected a Sysanassoan accent, he would be disappointed; Rap could not fake that without using sorcery.