Читать книгу Curse of the Forbidden Book (Amarias Series) - Amy Lynn Green - Страница 4
Chapter 3
ОглавлениеJesse had never seen so many potatoes in his life. They poured out of three burlap bags like a rockslide in the mountains. He wondered if the house of refuge was home to more orphans than soldiers in a regiment of King Selen’s army. If not, they’re going to be eating leftovers for months.
“Welcome to our kitchen,” Anton said, his wrinkled face beaming with pride. “We take great care to keep things neat and orderly around here, as I’m sure you can see. And here’s your supervisor.”
He pointed to a young man in the corner of the kitchen, hunched over as he peeled one of the potatoes. One of his burly arms was completely wrapped in ragged bandages, turned gray from washing. “Who’re they?” he grunted, barely glancing up.
“Travelers working for their supper,” Anton said. He turned to them. “This is Telemachus.”
“Pleased to meet you,” Parvel said, extending his hand. Telemachus ignored it. Instead, he stood and slumped over to the cabinet on the far wall. That’s when Jesse realized that his back was permanently hunched, making him walk with a stooping gait.
“Grab a root or get out of my kitchen,” Telemachus ordered.
Jesse glanced at Anton. “He’s not as bad as he seems. He just doesn’t care much for strangers,” Anton whispered before slinking out the door.
“Excuse me,” Rae said, tapping Telemachus on his hunched shoulder. He jerked away, glaring at her. “Where are the knives? Unless you want us to gnaw the peels off.”
Telemachus yanked open a drawer and held out several knives in his huge fist. “Thank you,” Rae said coolly.
She handed one to Jesse, and he started in on a big, lumpy potato. He was used to these kinds of chores from his days back at his uncle’s inn.
Parvel, apparently, was not. He held the knife clumsily, scraping off a few small sections at a time. “So,” he said to Telemachus, “how long have you been here?”
“I don’t like questions,” Telemachus growled.
That didn’t surprise Jesse.
After that, they sat in silence. Once, Telemachus lumbered over to inspect Jesse’s work. Now that he was closer, Jesse could see that he had eyes the color of dirty dishwater, barely sticking out under his sandy blond hair, cut raggedly across his forehead.
Apparently, he approved of Jesse’s technique, because he lumbered back to his stool with nothing more than a grunt. Somehow, he managed to keep his eyes roving around while keeping up a quick, steady pace with his knife.
“Stupid girl,” he muttered, glancing over at Rae. “Cut away from yourself.”
Rae stared at him and made a deliberate stroke down the potato, stopping just short of her hand. “I’ll do this as I wish, thank you.” Rae didn’t take orders very well.
“Ain’t my fault you don’t know how t’ use a knife,” Telemachus said, shrugging his huge shoulders. “Like as not, yer folks are still alive—they just got rid of ya ’cause you couldn’t pull yer weight.”
“Take care,” Parvel warned, setting his knife down and looking Telemachus in the eye, a clear warning in his voice.
Parvel didn’t take insults very well, especially insults to Rae, who he called “the lady of the squad,” even though she could probably fight as well or better than any of them.
Jesse tooled a face onto the potato, scraping off two eyes, a gaping mouth, and a nose. He held it out and studied it. The nose was a little misshapen, but overall, not bad. He hated it when his squad members picked fights. Which was often.
It seemed, however, as though Telemachus was too lazy to start a fight. He just scowled at Parvel and went back to his potato. Then his red face contorted with something like a grin.
“You, girl,” he said. “Go out to the well and haul me some water.” He pointed to a large bucket with a finger covered in grime from the potatoes. “You’re gonna wash these here roots.”
“You want me to wash the peels…before we take the peels off?” Rae pointed out, mouth twisted up in scorn.
“Do what I tell you, girl,” Telemachus said.
Rae, hands on her hips, was about to protest, but Silas cut her off. “That bucket is too heavy for her.”
Jesse nodded. He had hauled a lot of water in his days, but he had never seen a bucket so large. It reached Rae’s knees.
Telemachus tossed a dirty potato skin in his mouth, chewing it with his mouth wide open. “Yeah? So?”
“I’ll get the water,” Silas said, taking the bucket. “She can wash the potatoes.”
Telemachus didn’t seem to be in the mood to argue. “Hurry it up.”
By the time Silas got back, straining under the weight of the full bucket, there was only one sack of potatoes to wash. Silas poured the water into a basin and dumped the potatoes in.
“Are you sure I should bother—” Rae began.
“Just do it, Rae,” Parvel said wearily. Telemachus grunted in agreement.
Still muttering under her breath, Rae rolled her sleeves up so they wouldn’t drag in the water. Jesse froze, staring. She had moved her right sleeve up too far, uncovering her shoulder. The bottom of her Youth Guard tattoo—an A inside a broken circle—showed from underneath the hem.
Apparently Rae had noticed too, because she quickly jerked the sleeve down, covering the tattoo.
Jesse’s eyes darted to Telemachus, who was poking through the sack. He came out with a potato clenched in his fist. “Rotten,” he explained, tossing it into the fire with a smirk.
The burnt potato smell that filled the kitchen was so bad Jesse was glad there was very little food in his stomach. It probably would have all come up anyway.
Telemachus sniffed the air and grinned widely. “Smells like dinner to me.”
He didn’t see the tatoo, Jesse told himself. He wouldn’t even know what it was if he did. He’s too stupid to recognize his own name tattooed onto someone’s arm.
In spite of his relief, Jesse couldn’t keep from gagging at the smell of the burning potato. Telemachus glanced over at him. His eyes narrowed. “Something wrong?” he demanded.
He thinks I was making the face at him. “No,” Jesse tried to protest. “I just—”
“Careful,” Telemachus warned, squinting at him. “You watch yerself, cripple.”
Jesse felt his face turning red, and he gripped his staff until his knuckles were white, wanting to strike Telemachus across the forehead with it.
“Be warned,” Parvel said, turning to face Telemachus, “you threaten him, you threaten all of us. We stand together.”
For a moment, the two faced each other, neither looking away.
“I’ll remember that,” Telemachus said at last. “Just have to get you when you’re on your own.”
That threat echoed in Jesse’s head the rest of the night, keeping him from enjoying his meal. As it turned out, the only food the house of refuge seemed to keep on hand was potatoes, which explained why they had peeled so many. Telemachus had made them into three different dishes, but the dozen or so orphans still grumbled as they ate.
They had been glad to see the newcomers though. Jesse had laughed quietly as three little girls crowded around Rae, asking her questions and running their hands through her silky black hair. She looked about ready to throw her bowl of potato soup at them.
As soon as the meal was over, she bolted up the stairs to their room. Jesse, Silas, and Parvel followed. “I don’t like this place,” she said, shutting the door behind them. “Or those priests, and especially not that ruffian in the kitchen. We need to leave as soon as possible.”
“We will,” Silas said, “as soon as we know what we’re doing next.”
“And how long will that be?” Rae demanded. “I say we strike out on our own and do something!”
“Yes, very good,” Silas said sarcastically, staring her down. “And what exactly would that be?”
Jesse could tell from the brief confused look on her face that Rae hadn’t thought of it, but she blurted, “Form a raiding party. Take from the king whatever we can.”
“Like the Rebellion, I suppose?” Silas demanded, turning away from her.
“Listen,” Jesse said, stepping in between them. “Parvel was right—we stand together. Or we should. Right now, all we can do is argue with each other. What we need is a good night’s sleep and time to get our thoughts together.”
“Hear, hear!” Parvel cheered, yawning loudly. “And with that, I suggest we retire for the night. I, for one, haven’t slept on a real mattress for days.”
Silas laughed and kicked one. “You won’t now either. This isn’t your father’s mansion, Parvel.” Sometimes Jesse forgot that Parvel had grown up as the son of a noble, a very different life than any of the others.
“It will do,” Parvel said. “It’s better than stone, anyway.”
Almost as soon as Rae left the room, Jesse fell asleep on the thin straw mattress. He dreamed, as usual, of his parents and of home.
That is, until he awoke to a loud shout. “Surrender in the name of King Selen!”
He blinked, making the blurry darkness come into focus. It was Harrod, holding a candle and looking stiff with fear.
No. That’s not where the voice had come from. Another figure stepped in from the hallway. It was a Patrol member, one with fiery red hair and an ugly scowl. Jesse had never seen him before.
“That’s them, all right,” the Patrol member said. He kicked Jesse in the side, then Silas and Parvel. “Get up, scum! I arrest you in the name of King Selen.”
Captain Demetri. Jesse was sure of it. He had followed them through the mountains and found them. But how? He thought we were dead.
Just then, Anton squeezed into the room, also holding a candle. He looked from Jesse to the Patrol member and back again; then turned to Harrod. “What is going on?” he asked, looking more confused than outraged.
“I didn’t want to wake you,” Harrod said. “There’s a problem with our guests.”
The Patrol member scoffed loudly. “A problem, he says. I should say so!” He turned to Harrod and roared practically in his face, “Didn’t you check their papers?”
Harrod’s face remained stiff. “No,” he said. “As a house of refuge, we…”
“They don’t have any,” the Patrol member snapped, cutting him off. “Their papers were revoked when they were thrown in prison for theft and murder. That was before the escape.”
Anton gasped sharply.
“It’s not true,” Jesse said, staring straight at him, willing him to believe them. Anton just moaned and backed away.
“I’ll take ’em off your hands quick enough,” the Patrol member said, grabbing Parvel first.
“By yourself?” Harrod pointed out. “They’re dangerous criminals!”
“I have help.” He jerked his head toward the door. “Now, march, in the name of King Selen!”
Jesse reached down to pick up his bag and walking stick. To his surprise, the Patrol member didn’t protest.
“No,” Anton said, shaking his bald head. “I don’t understand. This is a house of refuge. You can’t…”
“Yes,” the Patrol member said, towering over the priest with his hand on his sword. “We can.” Anton, eyes wide, bowed and retreated into the hallway.
The first thing Jesse saw when he stepped into the hallway was Rae, arms pinned behind her, held by a hulking form of a man.
It was Telemachus, his twisted grin glowing in the flickering candlelight. “I said I’d get you,” he said. He jerked his head toward Rae’s shoulder and grinned.
Rae’s tattoo. So he had seen it. Fear twisted in Jesse’s stomach like a knife.
Then he thought of something else. But nearly everyone in Amarias believes the Youth Guard members are heroes, not criminals. He didn’t have time to think about it more, because the Patrol member shoved him forward.
“Even the girl?” Anton protested weakly. He was pressed against the far wall, as if he wanted to disappear into the shadows.
“Her?” The Patrol member laughed a deep, coarse laugh. “She was the ringleader, old man.”
“Lies,” Rae said, her voice like ice. “Like everything else the king and his men have ever said.”
The Patrol member stepped forward, hand raised. He’s going to slap her, Jesse realized.
In the second it took him to make that realization, he saw movement beside him. Silas ran forward, grabbed the Patrol member, and slammed him against the wall so hard it shook.
Immediately, Telemachus let go of Rae and pulled Silas off. For a moment, Jesse was sure that Telemachus had straightened up, losing his hunch.
Rae tried to run, but Harrod blocked the staircase. “Oh, no you don’t, young lady,” he said, fat arms crossed.
“See?” the Patrol member said. “First, the girl speaks evil words about the king, and then this one attacks a member of the king’s law-keeping force. Highest treason!”
One of the doors in the hallway opened slightly. Anton closed it firmly. “Stay where you are,” he ordered the orphans inside.
It was useless to fight back now. If the Patrol said they were criminals, then they were criminals.
The Patrol member took lengths of rope from his sack. He had come prepared. “I hereby bind you, in….”
“In the name of King Selen,” Jesse finished. “We know.”
“That’s enough from you, or I’ll tie your mouth shut too,” the Patrol member said. He paused. “That’s not a bad idea. Wouldn’t want to disturb the good citizens nearby.”
The Patrol member gagged and bound them, tying the four of them together by a rope around their necks. Then he tied their hands together behind their backs, leaving their legs free. The process took considerable time, since Rae decided not to be compliant. Finally, he nodded to Telemachus. “You, boy. Help me get these ruffians back to the compound.”
Telemachus turned to Harrod. “Can I?”
But it was Anton who answered. “It seems we have very little choice. Be back by morning. And stay safe.”
Telemachus gave a surly nod and shoved Parvel toward the stairs. That jerked the rest of them forward. Jesse tried to reach up and rub his sore neck before he remembered that his hands were tied too.
Between the Patrol member at one end and Telemachus at the other, Jesse hardly had to walk. They dragged their line of prisoners down the dark, empty road.
Suddenly, Jesse found himself jerked to a halt. In front of him, Rae had stopped. Somehow, she had managed to work her gag loose. “I warn you,” she said, between clenched teeth, “you will not be able to force me to come with you…not without a fight.”
Someone laughed, and for a minute, Jesse couldn’t place who it was. When the voice laughed again, he blinked in surprise. It was Telemachus—but it wasn’t the same low, surly laugh he had heard early. It sounded almost…friendly.
“Well, we wouldn’t want that, would we?” he said. He straightened up, his hunched back disappearing. Now he was even taller than before, almost like the giants Jesse had heard about in stories.
Instead of shoving them down the road, Telemachus rolled up his sleeve. “You are among friends,” he said.
There, faint, but still visible in the moonlight, was a broken circle with an A. The symbol of the Youth Guard.