by Morgan Smith
Casting In Stone
A Novel of the Averraine Cycle
By Morgan Smith
Copyright © 2015 Morgan Smith
All rights reserved.
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Table of Contents
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Epilogue
About the Author
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Prologue
News comes late and slowly here, when it comes at all.
But there were two missives today, brought to me by the last traders, stragglers working their way through the valley before the snows come. One was from the Reverend Mother, approving my request to stay on permanently in Rhwyn. I could sense her puzzlement, though. She wants a further explanation, and I cannot give it to her.
The other was about the babe. Born weeks too early, it seems, but hale enough, nonetheless. It was the old man who sent word, and he has questions, no doubt, and suspicions, aye. He’s a canny one, though, and he couched it all in unexceptional words. Nothing outright, nothing that could alarm anyone, but he knows something is wrong, that’s plain enough. He puts it down to that old stand-by, a hard birthing giving rise to the sad-mother sickness. It’s common enough. But underneath the careful phrases, I could sense his disbelief and his disquiet. She hadn’t been easy, he wrote, even before she was brought to bed.
What can I say? Mayhap time will ease their anger. If they can just keep their secrets, if they do not shout from every hilltop what a poor, misbegotten creature we wrought, if the Goddess has a care for the babe - it might yet come aright.
Chapter One
The silence was vast, broken only by the sporadic sobbing breaths of the woman crouched over that little, twisted body.
I watched the villagers with interest. As neighbours, they were usually a dull lot, but their reactions to this tragedy needed comprehension. The corpse was not pretty, and they were doing their level best not to look too closely. One of the women was kneeling beside the child's mother, trying to offer comfort.
Her heart wasn't in it, though. Even from a distance, her tense shoulders and shadowed eyes shouted soundlessly what every one of them was thinking.
“Thank the Goddess, it wasn't one of mine!”
I understood that. You couldn't blame them, it might easily have been one of theirs, after all. It already had been and likely would be again, if someone didn't do something soon.
They were grateful when Eardith arrived, brisk and business-like, but with that rough sympathy they understood. She was strong, opinionated, stern and forthright, all qualities that would have given her nothing but trouble in a larger, more sophisticated place. People in those places are accustomed to having their priests excuse their little transgressions quietly. Eardith's advice and solace tended to come with a bracing dose of sarcasm and common sense.
I had shared her cottage peaceably for nearly three years. She didn't pry, she didn't gossip, and, luckily for me, she never refused to assist anyone in need.
She looked at me over the mother's bowed head, and I just nodded. Yes, it was pretty much the same as the other ones. No, I had no idea how to prevent it.
Lord Owain and his forester Joss came around the side of the village’s only inn, looking grim. Owain went straight to the women by the little corpse, resting a hand on the mother’s shoulder in helpless sympathy.
“Something,” said Eardith, “will have to be done.”
Well, that was obvious. It was the third such incident in less than a seven-day. There was a fresh grave already for Briega’s next-to-youngest, and Gair’s daughter was lying ripped and nigh-on bloodless, barely clinging to life. Folk murmured that she was a lucky one, but I wasn’t so sure. If she lived, which seemed unlikely, it would be with a scarred face and a useless leg along with the memory of a savage and horrific attack.
Joss had stopped by Eardith, whispering something swift in her ear. Her reaction was neither helpful nor promising: she merely looked, if it were possible, more shuttered and bleak than ever.
Owain, having nothing he could do for the grieving, began to organize the removal of the body, and issuing orders for caution, patrolling, not letting the youngsters out on their own, all of which had been said from the start. What could you do? A toddler waking in the night and creeping out to use the latrines wasn’t something you could prevent, not really.
Gradually, the crowd dwindled, the women rallying around the bereft parents and bearing them off to the inn, a few of the men coming back with a hurdle to carry the little scrap of dead humanity off to the shrine. In the end, it was only Joss, Owain and Eardith left.
And me. They were all looking at me.
I was, for all intents and purposes, the only armed and mildly dangerous person here, and I filled no identifiable village role. I was easily the most expendable person they knew.
“Wolf scat, up towards the ridge,” Joss said. “Like the others. But there are three, not two, this time.”
Wolves don’t do this, I thought. Wolves don’t walk into a village and wait patiently, night after night, for human prey. But Joss was a woodsman, through and through. He knew as well as I did we were not dealing with ordinary wolves.
Hungry ones might, I supposed, go after a child out alone. But it had been a mild enough winter and an early, pleasant spring. The hills were teeming with game. We had untouched sheep in the pens and unmolested hens in the coops, if it came to that. And the children had not been eaten, merely savaged and left.
A rabid wolf might go after a child. One rabid wolf, maybe, but rabid wolves do not act in groups, and a rabid animal is not usually given to patience or patterns. This was becoming all too predictable.
“Lady Caoimhe?” This was Lord Owain, and I didn’t need for him to spell it out.
“Right.”
I knew what they wanted. There was no good reason I knew of for me not to give it to them.
“Joss, you’ll go with her.” Owain was
n’t very good at giving orders, they always came with the faintest of questioning tones trailing in at the end, but Joss was used to this and just shrugged.
Eardith was already moving off, down towards the path leading to the shrine. I caught Joss’s eye, said “A half-glass, and we can meet at the crossroads,” and trotted after her, catching up as the path led off into the trees.
I didn’t speak. Eardith, if she wanted to tell me anything, would do so in her own time, and I was never one for asking questions, anyway. Instead, I listed in my head the things I needed: hunting spears, my long knives, something to eat in case we were out past midday…
What I liked about Joss mainly was his silence. Occasionally we hunted together, or in high summer, took a little boat out onto the lake and fished. Beyond noting some form of imminent weather change or remarking on tracking potential, we rarely spoke, and that suited me. What happened in the village, the endless litany of who was angry or in love with whom, or who was a lazy sod or a lucky one - I couldn’t see what any of it had to do with me or why I should care. I just lived here, on a probably temporary and barely tolerated scrap of allowance that Eardith’s authority had allotted me.
When I got to the crossroads, where the cart track threading north through Rhwyn met the road west to Davgenny, he was squatting by the evidence the wolves had left behind, but he rose soundlessly and headed to the little trail that veered back into the hills, halting only to wordlessly point out the signs that they had passed here as well.
It looked almost as if the wolves had stopped to have a conference. There were three depressions that spoke of animals sitting for some time, prone and indolent in last year’s dead grass. There were paw-prints that circled, as if at least one of them had paced restlessly, bored by some vulpine debate.
I squinted up into the mountains beyond Rhwyn Vale, where mist still clung to the trees.
There was an overgrown and unused twisty little pass out of Camrhys somewhere above us, theoretically a concern for Lord Owain, but far too small and too treacherous to accommodate more than a really courageous mountain goat or a desperate fugitive with nothing to lose. Owain scarcely heeded it. Certainly there was no organized effort at patrols: he hadn’t the manpower.
If he’d sometimes hinted that my attention there might be welcome if I cared to put the effort in, Eardith had rather discouraged me from venturing into the mountains too much. The pass was of no use to anyone, she said, and a solitary traveller could easily come to grief out there.
The wolves - if wolves they were - disagreed. The signs pointed resolutely eastward and upward out of the valley.
Chapter Two
Technically, I was Joss’s overlady.
To be perfectly exact, I was Lord Owain’s overlady, simply because of a thoughtlessly bestowed bride-gift, although Owain had never once given any indication that he was aware of who or what I was. He called me “Lady” out of simple good manners and neither he, his wife nor anyone else in Rhwyn behaved as if I was anything more than a stranger who had stumbled into their midst. Someone Eardith had given sanctuary and a quasi-legitimate place to, for reasons she had not shared. I hadn’t intended this as my destination, and it was a good couple of weeks after I’d arrived that I became aware myself that I owned this valley.
So, when we came to where the wolf signs ran out, still pointing inexorably east up into the heights, and Joss turned to me and asked, diffidently, what we ought to do next, I was mildly surprised. I had expected him to either remain in charge or to abandon me to whatever the wolves had in store. Instead, it seemed as if he expected me to determine his fate, and that was odd.
The kindest thing, I thought, was to send him back. Whatever we were tracking wasn’t ordinary or safe, I was fairly sure of that. But if we were to have any hope of ending this disagreeable interlude, two people likely had a better chance than one.
Hells, if we were to have any chance of picking up their trail out along the rocky terrain ahead, I needed Joss, who had that peculiar intuition that all good woodsmen have, that uncanny ability to out-think any animal and anticipate their actions.
“They’re up there somewhere. With luck, we can find their lair and make an end of it.”
Joss gave me a mildly exasperated look. The wolves would hear and smell us miles before we came across them. I just shrugged. It wasn’t as if there was some better plan in the offing.
A glass or two later, I was beginning to think better of this. We had worked our way out of the thinning trees and traversed an expanse of rocky scrabble only to come up against a sheer drop of a deep gorge that seemed to extend for miles. The only way around appeared to be looping back towards the tree-line and heading further east where the rift veered away from what seemed to be, from this distance, a wooded slope up towards that unusable pass.
When we made it that far, the trees were dark and closely ranked, blotting out almost all of the sunlight, and the silence lay on us, heavy and unsettling. Every footfall echoed. It had been long and long since people had come this way.
There were faint signs that we were on the right track, though. At least there were according to Joss. I had the minimum hunting skills anyone in my position would have had, in that the more obvious evidence was clear to me, and I could move soundlessly enough not to be a hindrance. The tiny changes and infinitesimal clues that Joss relied on were out of my league, though.
At some point well past mid-day, we stopped to pull out packets of bread and cheese and to rest in that oppressive silence. Far off, I could hear the faintest echo of a brook or rivulet tumbling over rocks, but that was all I could hear, beyond our own breathing. No wind stirred the branches overhead, no sunlight filtered through the dim of the shade and no birdsong enlivened the air. It was, as they say, as quiet as the grave, and rather nearly as chilly.
After a bit, we went on, threading our way among the trees in an erratic route governed by those indefinable traces Joss seemed to see, still eastward and more or less upward ever higher towards the slim break between two scarred peaks that signaled what had once been a pass. It had only ever been suitable for smaller pack-trains and roaming bands of less than competent bandits across a now highly contested border. Rock falls had closed this pass long ago, if I remembered correctly; rock falls and laziness on the part of those traders and outlaws who had just moved on to use other passes or given up trying altogether.
Joss stopped so suddenly, I almost walked into him. I had just enough awareness not to grunt out loud in surprise, but peered into the gloom ahead.
There: the slightest moving shadow among deeper shadows. I didn’t dare so much as breathe, mentally cursing at my own unreadiness and reversing my grip on my spear, and then carefully easing back a step as smoothly and quietly as I could. Joss, at least, had not been as careless. His hand slid to the quiver at his hip and slid an arrow out, suddenly nocked and ready in one swift movement.
I felt, rather than heard the beginning of a growl behind me and whirled, crouching instinctively, just as an enormous gray shape hurtled towards me. My spear came up just in time to catch the beast at the shoulder, throwing him off course as the tip glanced away down his side, and the shock of that weight wrenched the shaft from my hands. I heard the whistle of an arrow behind me and then an uncharacteristic curse from Joss and the thunk! as something connected with a tree-trunk.
There was a snarl from the trees, the sound of branches crackling, and then, as suddenly as they had come, they were gone.
Joss was still kneeling, another arrow nocked and ready. I retrieved my spear.
“Well, they aren’t stupid,” I said. Joss shook his head, and rose, still watchful. He seemed angry, although with someone like Joss, it’s hard to tell.
“Is it worth going on?” I asked. “I mean, we won’t be surprising anything now.”
“Den can’t be far off,” he said, finally. “No point in stopping now.”
“Fair enough. But do me a favour? Don’t get hurt. I swear I won’t carry
you back down if you do.”
He grinned. “You, neither.”
After a while, it seemed as though the trees began to thin, although we still walked in shadow. The early spring had not penetrated this far and there was a fair bit of snow in patches against the gnarled, exposed tree roots.
We came to a place where the rock began to reassert itself through the soil, great walls of granite where scrubby bushes clung desperately to tiny footholds in the crevices and we passed into a kind of ravine of smooth, grey stone walls reaching up towards the sky and yet there was no more light here than when we had walked among the trees below.
I stopped, frowning. There was something not quite right about this. The rocks were too smooth, too even, there were small stone piles that seemed just a bit too regular, too deliberately placed to be natural, and a sense of vague familiarity was tugging at me, like a housecat begging to be let out to mouse.
For just a moment my vision wavered. Things shivered and blurred at the edges and then, just as suddenly, they stilled, and I caught a strange, fugitive chill of something being about to break, wide and wild.
My hands were moving to my belt and pulling out my long knives without bidding, and they were on us, leaping down from a rocky ledge hidden by a few bits of bush and the shadow of the stony ridge above.
One knife, by some lucky chance, caught the first one perfectly at the heart, but I went down under the weight, losing my breath and precious seconds in the process. There was a roaring in my ears and blood everywhere and I heaved at the wolf carcass, half-crawling and half-rolling out from under, wondering if I was too late for Joss.
He was still standing, though he’d abandoned the bow and was fending off a second huge grey beast with the spear I’d loaned him, his back against the rocks, and blood dripping from his left arm. I tucked my feet under me and lunged toward the wolf, yelling, in the vain hope of distracting it.
The sound and the movement worked, just a little. The wolf slid its gaze just that hair sideways and Joss, Goddess love him, jammed the spear down his gullet. The reacting rage and convulsively renewed attack flung Joss brutally against the rocky ground, but he hung on, somehow keeping the wolf at bay, until the damage caught up to it and it sank, whimpering and gushing blood, onto the ground.