Читать книгу The Painted Man - Peter Brett V. - Страница 9
Aftermath 319 AR
ОглавлениеThe great horn sounded.
Arlen paused in his work, looking up at the lavender wash of the dawn sky. Mist still clung to the air, bringing with it a damp, acrid taste that was all too familiar. A quiet dread built in his gut as he waited in the morning stillness, hoping that it had been his imagination. He was eleven years old.
There was a pause, and then the horn blew twice in rapid succession. One long and two short meant south and east. The Cluster by the Woods. His father had friends amongst the Cutters. Behind Arlen, the door to the house opened, and he knew his mother would be there, covering her mouth with both hands.
Arlen returned to his work, not needing to be told to hurry. Some chores could wait a day, but the stock still needed to be fed and the cows milked. He left the animals in the barns and opened the hay stores, slopped the pigs, and ran to fetch a wooden milk bucket. His mother was already squatting beneath the first of the cows. He snatched the spare stool and they found cadence in their work, the sound of milk striking wood drumming a funeral march.
As they moved to the next pair down the line, Arlen saw his father begin hitching their strongest horse, a five-year-old chestnut-coloured mare named Missy, to the cart. His face was grim as he worked.
What would they find this time?
Before long, they were in the cart, trundling towards the small cluster of houses by the woods. It was dangerous there, over an hourâs run to the nearest warded structure, but the lumber was needed. Arlenâs mother, wrapped in her worn shawl, held him tightly as they rode.
âIâm a big boy, Mam,â Arlen complained. âI donât need you to hold me like a baby. Iâm not scared.â It wasnât entirely true, but it would not do for the other children to see him clinging to his mother as they rode in. They made mock of him enough as it was.
âIâm scared,â his mother said. âWhat if itâs me who needs to be held?â
Feeling suddenly proud, Arlen pulled close to his mother again as they travelled down the road. She could never fool him, but she always knew what to say just the same.
A pillar of greasy smoke told them more than they wanted to know long before they reached their destination. They were burning the dead. And starting the fires this early, without waiting for everyone to arrive and pray, meant there were a great many. Too many to pray over each one if the work was to be completed before dusk.
It was more than five miles from Arlenâs fatherâs farm to the Cluster by the Woods. By the time they arrived, the few remaining cabin fires had been put out, though in truth there was little left to burn. Fifteen houses; all reduced to rubble and ash.
âThe wood piles, too,â Arlenâs father said, spitting over the side of the cart. He gestured with his chin towards the blackened ruin that remained of a seasonâs cutting. Arlen grimaced at the thought of how the rickety fence that penned the animals would have to last another year, and immediately felt guilty. It was only wood, after all.
The town Speaker approached their cart as it pulled up. Selia, whom Arlenâs mother sometimes called Selia the Barren, was a hard woman, tall and thin, with skin like tough leather. Her long grey hair was pulled into a tight bun, and she wore her shawl like a badge of office. She brooked no nonsense, as Arlen had learned more than once at the end of her stick, but today he was comforted by her presence. Like Arlenâs father, something about Selia made him feel safe. Though she had never had children of her own, Selia acted as a parent to everyone in Tibbetâs Brook. Few could match her wisdom, and fewer still her stubbornness. When you were on Seliaâs good side, it felt like the safest place in the world.
âItâs good that youâve come, Jeph,â Selia told Arlenâs father. âSilvy and young Arlen, too,â she said, nodding to them. âWe need every hand we can get. Even the boy can help.â
Arlenâs father grunted, stepping down from the cart. âI brought my tools,â he said. âJust tell me where we can throw in.â
Arlen collected the precious tools from the back of their cart. Metal was scarce in the Brook, and his father was proud of his two shovels, his pick and his saw. They would all see heavy use this day.
âHow many lost?â Jeph asked, though he didnât really seem to want to know.
âTwenty-seven,â Selia said. Silvy choked and covered her mouth, tears welling in her eyes. Jeph spat again.
âAny survivors?â he asked.
âA few,â Selia said. âManie,â she pointed with her stick at a boy who stood staring at the funeral pyre, âran all the way to my house in the dark.â
Silvy gasped. No one had ever run so far and lived. âThe wards on Brine Cutterâs house held for most of the night,â Selia went on. âHe and his family watched everything. A few others fled the corelings and succoured there, until the fires spread and their roof caught. They waited in the burning house until the beams started to crack, and then took their chances outside in the minutes before dawn. The corelings killed Brineâs wife Meena and their son Poul, but the others made it. The burns will heal and the children will be all right in time, but the others â¦â
She didnât need to finish the sentence. Survivors of a demon attack had a way of dying soon after. Not all, or even most, but enough. Some of them took their own lives, and others simply stared blankly, refusing to eat or drink until they wasted away. It was said you did not truly survive an attack until a year and a day had passed.
âThere are still a dozen unaccounted for,â Selia said, but with little hope in her voice.
âWeâll dig them out,â Jeph agreed grimly, looking at the collapsed houses, many still smouldering. The Cutters built their homes mostly out of stone to protect against fire, but even stone would burn if the wards failed and enough flame demons gathered in one place.
Jeph joined the other men and a few of the stronger women in clearing the rubble and carting the dead to the pyre. The bodies had to be burned, of course. No one would want to be buried in the same ground the demons rose out of each night. Tender Harral, the sleeves of his robe rolled up to bare his thick arms, lifted each into the fire himself, muttering prayers and drawing wards in the air as the flames took them.
Silvy joined the other women in gathering the younger children and tending to the wounded under the watchful eye of the Brookâs Herb Gatherer, Coline Trigg. But no herbs could ease the pain of the survivors. Brine Cutter, also called Brine Broadshoulders, was a great bear of a man with a booming laugh who used to throw Arlen into the air when they came to trade for wood. Now Brine sat in the ashes beside his ruined house, slowly knocking his head against the blackened wall. He muttered to himself and clutched his arms tightly, as if cold.
Arlen and the other children were put to work carrying water and sorting through the woodpiles for salvageable lumber. There were still a few warm months left to the year, but there would not be time to cut enough wood to last the winter. They would be burning dung again this year, and the house would reek.
Again Arlen weathered a wave of guilt. He was not in the pyre, nor banging his head in shock, having lost everything. There were worse fates than a house smelling of dung.
More and more villagers arrived as the morning wore on. Bringing their families and whatever provisions they could spare, they came from Fishing Hole and Town Square; they came from the Bogginâs Hill, and Soggy Marsh. Some even came all the way from Southwatch. And one by one, Selia greeted them with the grim news and put them to work.
With more than a hundred hands, the men doubled their efforts, half of them continuing to dig as the others descended upon the only salvageable structure left in the Cluster: Brine Cutterâs house. Selia led Brine away, somehow supporting the giant man as he stumbled, while the men cleared the rubble and began hauling new stones. A few took out warding kits and began to paint fresh wards while children made thatch. The house would be restored by nightfall.
Arlen was partnered with Cobie Fisher in hauling wood. The children had amassed a sizable pile, though it was only a fraction of what had been lost. Cobie was a tall, thickly built boy with dark curls and hairy arms. He was popular amongst the other children, but it was popularity built at othersâ expense. Few children cared to weather his insults, and fewer still his beatings.
Cobie had tortured Arlen for years, and the other children had gone along. Jephâs farm was the northernmost in the Brook, far from where the children tended to gather in Town Square, and Arlen spent most of his free time wandering the Brook by himself. Sacrificing him to Cobieâs wrath seemed a fair trade to most children.
Whenever Arlen went fishing, or passed by Fishing Hole on the way to Town Square, Cobie and his friends seemed to hear about it, and were waiting in the same spot on his way home. Sometimes they just called him names, or pushed him, but other times he came home bloody and bruised, and his mother shouted at him for fighting.
Finally, Arlen had enough. He left a stout stick hidden in that spot, and the next time Cobie and his friends pounced, Arlen pretended to run, only to produce the weapon as if from thin air and come back at them swinging.
Cobie was the first one struck, a hard blow that left him crying in the dirt with blood running from his ear. Willum received a broken finger, and Gart walked with a limp for over a week. It had done nothing to improve Arlenâs popularity amongst the other children, and Arlenâs father had caned him, but the other boys never bothered him again. Even now, Cobie gave him a wide berth and flinched if Arlen made a sudden move, even though he was bigger by far.
âSurvivors!â Bil Baker called suddenly, standing by a collapsed house at the edge of the Cluster. âI can hear them trapped in the root cellar!â
Immediately, everyone dropped what they were doing and rushed over. Clearing the rubble would take too long, so the men began to dig, bending their backs with silent fervour. Soon after, they broke through the side of the cellar, and began hauling out the survivors. They were filthy and terrified, but all were very much alive: three women, six children, and one man.
âUncle Cholie!â Arlen cried, and his mother was there in an instant, cradling her brother, who stumbled drunkenly. Arlen ran to them, ducking under his other arm to steady him.
âCholie, what are you doing here?â Silvy asked. Cholie seldom left his workshop in Town Square. Arlenâs mother had told the tale a thousand times of how she and her brother had run the farrierâs shop together before Jeph began breaking his horsesâ shoes on purpose for a reason to come court.
âCame to court Ana Cutter,â Cholie mumbled. He pulled at his hair, having already torn whole clumps free. âWeâd just opened the bolt-hole when they came through the wards â¦â His knees buckled, pulling Arlen and Silvy down with his weight. Kneeling in the dust, he wept.
Arlen looked at the other survivors. Ana Cutter wasnât among them. His throat tightened as the children passed. He knew every one of them; their families, what their houses were like inside and out, their animalsâ names. They met his eyes for a second as they went by, and in that moment, he lived the attack through their eyes. He saw himself shoved into a cramped hole in the ground while those unable to fit turned to face the corelings and the fire. Suddenly he started gasping, unable to stop until Jeph slapped him on the back and brought him to his senses.
They were finishing a cold midday meal when a horn sounded on the far side of the Brook.
âNot two in one day?â Silvy gasped, covering her mouth.
âBah,â Selia grunted. âAt midday? Use your head, girl!â
âThen what â¦?â
Selia ignored her, rising to fetch a horn blower to signal back. Keven Marsh had his horn ready, as the folks from Soggy Marsh always did. It was easy to get separated in the marshes, and no one wanted to be wandering lost when the swamp demons rose. Kevenâs cheeks inflated like a frogâs chin as he blew a series of notes.
âMessenger horn,â Coran Marsh advised Silvy. A greybeard, he was Speaker for Soggy Marsh and Kevenâs father. Arlen didnât know him, so he was a Marsh or a Watch. They tended to keep to themselves. âThey probâly saw the smoke. Kevenâs telling âem whatâs happened and where everyone is.â
âA Messenger in spring?â Arlen asked. âI thought they come in the fall after harvest. We only finished planting this past moon!â
âMessenger never came last fall,â Coran said, spitting foamy brown juice from the root he was chewing through the gap of his missing teeth. âWe been worried sumpinâ happened. Thought we might not have a Messenger bring salt till next fall. Or maybe that the corelings got the Free Cities and weâs cut off.â
âThe corelings could never get the Free Cities,â Arlen said.
âArlen, shush your mouth!â Silvy hissed. âHeâs your elder!â
âLet the boy speak,â Coran said. âEver bin to a free city, boy?â he asked Arlen.
âNo,â Arlen admitted.
âEver know anyone who had?â
âNo,â Arlen said again.
âSo what makes you such an expert?â Coran asked. âEnt no one been to one âcept the Messengers. Theyâre the only ones what brave the night to go so far. Whoâs to say the Free Cities ent just places like the Brook? If the corelings can get us, they can get them, too.â
âOld Hog is from the Free Cities,â Arlen said. Rusco Hog was the richest man in the Brook. He ran the general store, which was the crux of all commerce in Tibbetâs Brook.
âAy,â Coran said, âanâ old Hog told me years ago that one trip was enough for him. He meant to go back after a few years, but said it wasnât worth the risk. So you ask him if the Free Cities are any safer than anywhere else.â
Arlen didnât want to believe it. There had to be safe places in the world. But again the image of himself being thrown into the cellar flashed across his mind, and he knew that nowhere was truly safe at night.
The Messenger arrived an hour later. He was a tall man in his early thirties, with cropped brown hair and a short, thick beard. Draped about his broad shoulders was a shirt of metal links, and he wore a long dark cloak with thick leather breeches and boots. His mare was a sleek brown courser. Strapped to the horseâs saddle was a harness holding a number of different spears. His face was grim as he approached, but his shoulders were high and proud. He scanned the crowd and spotted the Speaker easily as she stood giving orders. He turned his horse towards her.
Riding a few paces behind on a heavily laden cart pulled by a pair of dark brown mollies was the Jongleur. His clothes were a brightly coloured patchwork, and he had a lute resting on the bench next to him. His hair was a colour Arlen had never seen before, like a pale carrot, and his skin was so fair it seemed the sun had never touched it. His shoulders slumped, and he looked thoroughly exhausted.
There was always a Jongleur with the annual Messenger. To the children, and some of the adults, the Jongleur was the more important of the two. For as long as Arlen could remember, it had been the same man, grey-haired but spry and full of cheer. This new one was younger, and he seemed sullen. Children ran to him immediately, and the young Jongleur perked up, the frustration melting from his face so quickly Arlen began to doubt it was ever there. In an instant, the Jongleur was off the cart and spinning his coloured balls into the air as the children cheered.
Others, Arlen among them, forgot their work, drifting towards the newcomers. Selia whirled on them, having none of it. âThe day is no longer because the Messengerâs come!â she barked. âBack to your work!â
There were grumbles, but everyone went back to work. âNot you, Arlen,â Selia said, âcome here.â Arlen pulled his eyes from the Jongleur and went to her as the Messenger arrived.
âSelia Barren?â the Messenger asked.
âJust Selia will do,â Selia replied primly. The Messengerâs eyes widened, and he blushed, the tops of his pale cheeks turning a deep red above his beard. He leaped down from his horse and bowed low.
âApologies,â he said. âI did not think. Graig, your usual Messenger, told me thatâs what you were called.â
âItâs pleasing to know what Graig thinks of me after all these years,â Selia said, sounding not at all pleased.
âThought,â the Messenger corrected. âHeâs dead, maâam.â
âDead?â Selia asked, looking suddenly sad. âWas it â¦?â
The Messenger shook his head. âIt was a chill took him, not corelings. Iâm Ragen, your Messenger this year, as a favour to his widow. The guild will select a new Messenger for you starting next fall.â
âA year and a half again before the next Messenger?â Selia asked, sounding like she was readying a scolding. âWe barely made it through this past winter without the fall salt,â she said. âI know you take it for granted in Miln, but half our meat and fish spoiled for lack of proper curing. And what of our letters?â
âSorry, maâam,â Ragen said. âYour towns are well off the common roads, and paying a Messenger to commit for a month and more of travel each year is costly. The Messengersâ guild is shorthanded, what with Graig catching that chill.â He chuckled and shook his head, but noticed Seliaâs visage darken in response.
âNo offence meant, maâam,â Ragen said. âHe was my friend as well. Itâs just ⦠itâs not many of us Messengers get to go with a roof above, a bed below, and a young wife at our side. The night usually gets us before that, you see?â
âI do,â Selia said. âDo you have a wife, Ragen?â she asked.
âAy,â the Messenger said, âthough to her pleasure and my pain, I see my mare more than my bride.â He laughed, confusing Arlen, who didnât think having a wife not miss you was funny.
Selia didnât seem to notice. âWhat if you couldnât see her at all?â she asked. âWhat if all you had were letters once a year to connect you to her? How would you feel to hear your letters would be delayed half a year? There are some in this town with kin in the Free Cities. Left with one Messenger or another, some as much as two generations gone. Those people ent going to come home, Ragen. Letters are all we have of them, and they of us.â
âI am in full agreement with you, maâam,â Ragen said, âbut the decision is not mine to make. The Duke â¦â
âBut you will speak to the Duke upon your return, yes?â Selia asked.
âI will,â he said.
âShall I write the message down for you?â Selia asked.
Ragen smiled. âI think I can remember it, maâam.â
âSee that you do.â
Ragen bowed again, still lower. âApologies, for coming to call on such a dark day,â he said, his eyes flicking to the funeral pyre.
âWe cannot tell the rain when to come, nor the wind, nor the cold,â Selia said. âNot the corelings, either. So life must go on despite these things.â
âLife goes on,â Ragen agreed, âbut if thereâs anything I or my Jongleur can do to help; Iâve a strong back and Iâve treated coreling wounds many times.â
âYour Jongleur is helping already,â Selia said, nodding towards the young man as he sang and did his tricks, âdistracting the young ones while their kin do their work. As for you, Iâve much to do over the next few days, if weâre to recover from this loss. I wonât have time to hand the mail and read to those who havenât learned their letters.â
âI can read to those who canât, maâam,â Ragen said, âbut I donât know your town well enough to distribute.â
âNo need,â Selia said, pulling Arlen forward. âArlen here will take you to the general store in Town Square. Give the letters and packages to Rusco Hog when you deliver the salt. Most everyone will come running now that the saltâs in, and Ruscoâs one of the few in town with letters and numbers. The old crook will complain and try to insist on payment, but you tell him that in time of trouble, the whole town must throw in. You tell him to give out the letters and read to those who canât, or Iâll not lift a finger the next time the town wants to throw a rope around his neck.â
Ragen looked closely at Selia, perhaps trying to tell if she was joking, but her stony face gave no indication. He bowed again.
âHurry along, then,â Selia said. âLift your feet and youâll both be back as everyone is readying to leave here for the night. If you and your Jongleur donât want to pay Rusco for a room, any here will be glad to offer their homes.â She shooed the two of them away and turned back to scold those pausing in their work to stare at the newcomers.
âIs she always so ⦠forceful?â Ragen asked Arlen as they walked over to where the Jongleur was mumming for the youngest children. The rest had been pulled back to work.
Arlen snorted. âYou should hear her talk to the greybeards. Youâre lucky to get away with your skin after calling her âBarrenâ.â
âGraig said thatâs what everyone called her,â Ragen said.
âThey do,â Arlen agreed, âjust not to her face, unless theyâre looking to take a coreling by the horns. Everyone hops when Selia speaks.â
Ragen chuckled. âAnd her an old Daughter, at that,â he mused. âWhere I come from, only Mothers expect everyone to jump at their command like that.â
âWhat difference does that make?â Arlen asked.
Ragen shrugged. âDonât know, I suppose,â he conceded. âThatâs just how things are in Miln. People make the world go, and Mothers make people, so they lead the dance.â
âItâs not like that here,â Arlen said.
âIt never is, in the small towns,â Ragen said. âNot enough people to spare. But the Free Cities are different. Apart from Miln, none of the others give their women much voice at all.â
âThat sounds just as dumb,â Arlen muttered.
âIt is,â Ragen agreed.
The Messenger stopped, and handed Arlen the reins to his courser. âWait here a minute,â he said, and headed over to the Jongleur. The two men moved aside to talk, and Arlen saw the Jongleurâs face change again, becoming angry, then petulant, and finally resigned as he tried to argue with Ragen, whose face remained stony throughout.
Never taking his glare off the Jongleur, the Messenger beckoned with a hand to Arlen, who brought the horse over to them.
â⦠donât care how tired you are,â Ragen was saying, his voice a harsh whisper, âthese people have grisly work to do, and if you need to dance and juggle all afternoon to keep their kids occupied while they do it, then youâd damn well better! Now put your face back on and get to it!â He grabbed the reins from Arlen and thrust them at the man.
Arlen got a good look at the young Jongleurâs face, full of indignation and fear, before the Jongleur took notice of him. The second he saw he was being watched, the manâs face rippled, and a moment later he was the bright, cheerful fellow who danced for children.
Ragen took Arlen to the cart and the two climbed on. Ragen snapped the reins, and they turned back up the dirt path that led to the main road.
âWhat were you arguing about?â Arlen asked as the cart bounced along.
The Messenger looked at him a moment, then shrugged. âItâs Keerinâs first time so far out of the city,â he said. âHe was brave enough when there was a group of us and he had a covered wagon to sleep in, but when we left the rest of our caravan behind in Angiers, he didnât do near as well. Heâs got day-jitters from the corelings, and itâs made him poor company.â
âYou canât tell,â Arlen said, looking back at the cartwheeling man.
âJongleurs have their mummersâ tricks,â Ragen said. âThey can pretend so hard to be something theyâre not that they actually convince themselves of it for a time. Keerin pretended to be brave. The guild tested him for travel and he passed, but you never really know how people will hold up after two weeks on the open road until they do it for real.â
âHow do you stay out on the roads at night?â Arlen asked. âDa says drawing wards in the soilâs asking for trouble.â
âYour da is right,â Ragen said. âLook in that compartment by your feet.â
Arlen did, and produced a large bag of soft leather. Inside was a knotted rope, strung with lacquered wooden plates bigger than his hand. His eyes widened when he saw wards carved and painted into the wood.
Immediately, Arlen knew what it was: a portable warding circle, large enough to surround the cart and more besides. âIâve never seen anything like it,â Arlen said.
âTheyâre not easy to make,â the Messenger said. âMost Messengers spend their whole apprenticeship mastering the art. No wind or rain is going to smudge those wards. But even then, theyâre not the same as having warded walls and a door.
âEver see a coreling face-to-face, boy?â he asked, turning and looking at Arlen hard. âWatched it take a swipe at you with nowhere to run and nothing to protect you except magic you canât see?â He shook his head. âMaybe Iâm being too hard on Keerin. He handled his test all right. Screamed a bit, but thatâs to be expected. Night after night is another matter. Takes its toll on some men, always worried that a stray leaf will land on a ward, and then â¦â He hissed suddenly and swiped a clawed hand at Arlen, laughing when the boy jumped.
Arlen ran his thumb over each smooth, lacquered ward, feeling their strength. There was one of the little plates for every foot of rope, much as there would be in any warding. He counted more than forty of them. âCanât wind demons fly into a circle this big?â he asked. âDa puts posts up to keep them from landing in the fields.â
The man looked over at him, a little surprised. âYour daâs probably wasting his time,â he said. âWind demons are strong fliers, but they need running space or something to climb and leap from in order to take off. Not much of either in a cornfield, so theyâd be reluctant to land, unless they saw something too tempting to resist, like some little boy sleeping in the field on a dare.â He looked at Arlen in that same way Jeph did, when warning Arlen that the corelings were serious business. As if he didnât know.
âWind demons also need to turn in wide arcs,â Ragen continued, âand most of them have a wingspan larger than that circle. Itâs possible that one could get in, but Iâve never seen it happen. If it does, though â¦â He gestured to the long, thick spear he kept next to him.
âYou can kill a coreling with a spear?â Arlen asked.
âProbably not,â Ragen replied, âbut Iâve heard that you can stun them by pinning them against your wards.â He chuckled. âI hope I never have to find out.â
Arlen looked at him, wide-eyed.
Ragen looked back at him, his face suddenly serious. âMessengeringâs dangerous work, boy,â he said.
Arlen stared at him a long time. âIt would be worth it, to see the Free Cities,â he said at last. âTell me true, whatâs Fort Miln like?â
âItâs the richest and most beautiful city in the world,â Ragen replied, lifting his mail sleeve to reveal a tattoo on his forearm of a city nestled between two mountains. âThe Dukeâs Mines run rich with salt, metal, and coal. Its walls and rooftops are so well warded, itâs rare for the house wards to even be tested. When the sun shines on its walls, it puts the mountains themselves to shame.â
âNever seen a mountain,â Arlen said, marvelling as he traced the tattoo with a finger. âMy da says theyâre just big hills.â
âYou see that hill?â Ragen asked, pointing north of the road.
Arlen nodded. âBogginâs Hill. You can see the whole Brook from up there.â
Ragen nodded. âYou know what a âhundredâ means, Arlen?â he asked.
Arlen nodded again. âTen pairs of hands.â
âWell even a small mountain is bigger than a hundred of your Bogginâs Hills piled on top of each other, and the mountains of Miln are not small.â
Arlenâs eyes widened as he tried to contemplate such a height. âThey must touch the sky,â he said.
âSome are above it,â Ragen bragged. âAtop them, you can look down at the clouds.â
âI want to see that one day,â Arlen said.
âYou could join the Messengersâ guild, when youâre old enough,â Ragen said.
Arlen shook his head. âDa says the people that leave are deserters,â he said. âHe spits when he says it.â
âYour da doesnât know what heâs talking about,â Ragen said. âSpitting doesnât make things so. Without Messengers, even the Free Cities would crumble.â
âI thought the Free Cities were safe?â Arlen asked.
âNowhere is safe, Arlen. Not truly. Miln has more people and can absorb the deaths more easily than a place like Tibbetâs Brook, but the corelings still take a toll each year.â
âHow many people are in Miln?â Arlen asked. âWe have nine hundreds in Tibbetâs Brook, and Sunny Pasture up the ways is supposed to be almost as big.â
âWe have over thirty thousands in Miln,â Ragen said proudly.
Arlen looked at him, confused.
âA thousand is ten hundreds,â the Messenger supplied.
Arlen thought a moment, then shook his head. âThere ent that many people in the world,â he said.
âThere are and more,â Ragen said. âThereâs a wide world out there, for those willing to brave the dark.â
Arlen didnât answer, and they rode in silence for a time.
It took about an hour and a half for the trundling cart to reach Town Square. The centre of the Brook, Town Square held just over two dozen warded wooden houses for those whose trade did not have them working in the fields or rice paddies, fishing, or cutting wood. It was here one came to find the tailor and the baker, the farrier, the cooper, and the rest.
At the centre lay the square where people would gather, and the biggest building in the Brook, the general store. It had a large open front room that housed tables and the bar, an even larger storeroom in back, and a cellar below, filled with almost everything of value in the Brook.
Hogâs daughters, Dasy and Catrin, ran the kitchen. Two credits could buy a meal to leave you stuffed, but Silvy called old Hog a cheat, since two credits could buy enough raw grain for a week. Still, plenty of unmarried men paid the price, and not all for the food. Dasy was homely and Catrin fat, but Uncle Cholie said the men who married them would be set for life.
Everyone in the Brook brought Hog their goods, be it corn or meat or fur, pottery or cloth, furniture or tools. Hog took the items, counted them up, and gave the customers credits to buy other things at the store.
Things always seemed to cost a lot more than Hog paid for them, though. Arlen knew enough numbers to see that. There were some famous arguments when people came to sell, but Hog set the prices, and usually got his way. Just about everyone hated Hog, but they needed him all the same, and were more likely to brush his coat and open his doors than spit when he passed.
Everyone else in the Brook worked throughout the sun, and barely saw all their needs met, but Hog and his daughters always had fleshy cheeks, rounded bellies, and clean new clothes. Arlen had to wrap himself in a rug whenever his mother took his overalls to wash.
Ragen and Arlen tied off the mules in front of the store and went inside. The bar was empty. Usually the air inside the taproom was thick with bacon fat, but there was no smell of cooking from the kitchen today.
Arlen rushed ahead of the Messenger to the bar. Rusco had a small bronze bell there, brought with him when he came from the Free Cities. Arlen loved that bell. He slapped his hand down on it and grinned at the clear sound.
There was a thump in the back, and Rusco came through the curtains behind the bar. He was a big man, still strong and straight-backed at sixty, but a soft gut hung around his middle, and his iron-grey hair was creeping back from his lined forehead. He wore light trousers and leather shoes with a clean white cotton shirt, the sleeves rolled halfway up his thick forearms. His white apron was spotless, as always.
âArlen Bales,â he said with a patient smile, seeing the boy. âDid you come just to play with the bell, or do you have some business?â
âThe business is mine,â Ragen said, stepping forward. âYou Rusco Hog?â
âJust Rusco will do,â the man said. âThe townies slapped the âHogâ on, though not to my face. Canât stand to see a man prosper.â
âThatâs twice,â Ragen mused.
âSay again?â Rusco said.
âTwice that Graigâs journey log has led me astray,â Ragen said. âI called Selia âBarrenâ to her face this morning.â
âHa!â Rusco laughed. âDid you now? Well, thatâs worth a drink on the house, if anything is. What did you say your name was?â
âRagen,â the Messenger said, dropping his heavy satchel and taking a seat at the bar. Rusco tapped a keg, and plucked a slatted wooden mug off a hook.
The ale was thick and honey-coloured, and foamed to a white head on top of the mug. Rusco filled one for Ragen and another for himself. Then he glanced at Arlen, and filled a smaller cup. âTake that to a table and let your elders talk at the bar,â he said. âAnd if you know whatâs good for you, you wonât tell your mum I gave it to you.â
Arlen beamed, and ran off with his prize before Rusco had a chance to reconsider. He had sneaked a taste of ale from his fatherâs mug at festivals, but had never had a cup of his own.
âI was starting to worry no one was coming ever again,â he heard Rusco tell Ragen.
âGraig took a chill just before he was to leave last fall,â Ragen said, drinking deeply. âHis Herb Gatherer told him to put the trip off until he got better, but then winter set in, and he got worse and worse. In the end, he asked me to take his route until the guild could find another. I had to take a caravan of salt to Angiers anyway, so I added an extra cart and swung this way before heading back north.â
Rusco took his mug and filled it again. âTo Graig,â he said, âa fine Messenger, and a dangerous haggler.â Ragen nodded and the two men clapped mugs and drank.
âAnother?â Rusco asked, when Ragen slammed his mug back down on the bar.
âGraig wrote in his log that you were a dangerous haggler, too,â Ragen said, âand that youâd try to get me drunk first.â
Rusco chuckled, and refilled the mug. âAfter the haggling, Iâll have no need to serve these on the house,â he said, handing it to Ragen with a fresh head.
âYou will if you want your mail to reach Miln,â Ragen said with a grin, accepting the mug.
âI can see youâre going to be as tough as Graig ever was,â Rusco grumbled, filling his own mug. âThere,â he said, when it foamed over, âwe can both haggle drunk.â They laughed, and clashed mugs again.
âWhat news of the Free Cities?â Rusco asked. âThe Krasians still determined to destroy themselves?â
Ragen shrugged. âBy all accounts. I stopped going to Krasia a few years ago, when I married. Too far, and too dangerous.â
âSo the fact that they cover their women in blankets has nothing to do with it?â Rusco asked.
Ragen laughed. âDoesnât help,â he said, âbut itâs mostly how they think all Northerners, even Messengers, are cowards for not spending our nights trying to get ourselves cored.â
âMaybe theyâd be less inclined to fight if they looked at their women more,â Rusco mused. âHow about Angiers and Miln? The dukes still bickering?â
âAs always,â Ragen said. âEuchor needs Angiersâ wood to fuel his refineries, and grain to feed his people. Rhinebeck needs Milnâs metal and salt. They have to trade to survive, but instead of making it easy on themselves, they spend all their time trying to cheat each other, especially when a shipment is lost to corelings on the road. Last summer, demons hit a caravan of steel and salt. They killed the drivers, but left most of the cargo intact. Rhinebeck retrieved it, and refused to pay, claiming salvage rights.â
âDuke Euchor must have been furious,â Rusco said.
âLivid,â Ragen agreed. âI was the one that brought him the news. He went red in the face, and swore Angiers wouldnât see another ounce of salt until Rhinebeck paid.â
âDid Rhinebeck pay?â Rusco asked, leaning in eagerly.
Ragen shook his head. âThey did their best to starve each other for a few months, and then the Merchantsâ guild paid, just to get their shipments out before the winter came and they rotted in storage. Rhinebeck is angry at them now, for giving in to Euchor, but his face was saved and the shipments were moving again, which is all that mattered to anyone other than those two dogs.â
âWise to watch what you call the dukes,â Rusco warned, âeven this far out.â
âWhoâs going to tell them?â Ragen asked. âYou? The boy?â He gestured at Arlen. Both men laughed.
âAnd now I have to bring Euchor news of Riverbridge, which will make things worse,â Ragen said.
âThe town on the border of Miln,â Rusco said, âbarely a day out from Angiers. I have contacts there.â
âNot anymore, you donât,â Ragen said pointedly, and the men were quiet for a time.
âEnough bad news,â Ragen said, hauling his satchel onto the bar. Rusco considered it dubiously.
âThat doesnât look like salt,â he said, âand I doubt I have that much mail.â
âYou have six letters, and an even dozen packages,â Ragen said, handing Rusco a sheaf of folded paper. âItâs all listed here, along with all the other letters in the satchel and packages on the cart to be distributed. I gave Selia a copy of the list,â he warned.
âWhat do I want with that list, or your mailbag?â Rusco asked.
âThe Speaker is occupied, and wonât be able to distribute the mail and read to those that canât. She volunteered you.â
âAnd how am I to be compensated for spending my business hours reading to the townies?â Rusco asked.
âThe satisfaction of a good deed to your neighbours?â Ragen asked.
Rusco snorted. âI didnât come to Tibbetâs Brook to make friends,â he said. âIâm a businessman, and I do a lot for this town.â
âDo you?â Ragen asked.
âDamn right,â Rusco said. âBefore I came to this town, all they did was barter.â He made the word a curse, and spat on the floor. âThey collected the fruits of their labour and gathered in the square every Seventhday, arguing over how many beans were worth an ear of corn, or how much rice you had to give the cooper to make you a barrel to put your rice in. And if you didnât get what you needed on Seventhday, you had to wait until the next week, or go door to door. Now everyone can come here, any day, any time from sunup to sundown, and trade for credits to get whatever else they need.â
âThe town saviour,â Ragen said wryly. âAnd you asking nothing in return.â
âNothing but a tidy profit,â Rusco said with a grin.
âAnd how often do the villagers try to string you up for a cheat?â Ragen asked.
Ruscoâs eyes narrowed. âToo often, considering half of them canât count past their fingers, and the other half can only add their toes to that,â he said.
âSelia said the next time it happens, youâre on your own,â Ragenâs friendly voice had suddenly gone hard, âunless you do your part. Thereâs plenty on the far side of town suffering worse than having to read the mail.â
Rusco frowned, but he took the list and carried the heavy bag into his storeroom.
âHow bad is it, really?â he asked when he returned.
âBad,â Ragen said. âTwenty-seven so far, and a few still unaccounted for.â
âCreator,â Rusco swore, drawing a ward in the air in front of him. âI had thought a family, at worst.â
âIf only,â Ragen said.
They were both silent for a moment, as was decent, then looked up at each other as one.
âYou have this yearâs salt?â Rusco asked.
âYou have the Dukeâs rice?â Ragen replied.
âBeen holding it all winter, you being so late,â Rusco said.
Ragenâs eyes narrowed.
âOh, itâs still good!â Rusco said, his hands coming up suddenly, as if pleading. âIâve kept it sealed and dry, and there are no vermin in my cellar!â
âIâll need to be sure, you understand,â Ragen said.
âOf course, of course,â Rusco said. âArlen, fetch that lamp!â he ordered, pointing the boy towards the corner of the bar.
Arlen scurried over to the lantern, picking up the striker. He lit the wick and lowered the glass reverently. He had never been trusted to hold glass before. It was colder than he imagined, but quickly grew warm as the flame licked it.
âCarry it down to the cellar for us,â Rusco ordered. Arlen tried to contain his excitement. He had always wanted to see behind the bar. They said if everyone in the Brook put all their possessions in one pile, it would not rival the wonders of Hogâs cellar.
He watched as Rusco pulled a ring on his floor, opening a wide trap. Arlen came forward quickly, worried old Hog would change his mind. He went down the creaking steps, holding the lantern high to illuminate the way. As he did, the light touched on stacks of crates and barrels from floor to ceiling, running in even rows stretching back past the edges of the light. The floor was wooden to prevent corelings from rising directly into the cellar from the Core, but there were still wards carved into the racks along the walls. Old Hog was careful with his treasures.
The storekeeper led the way through the aisles to the sealed barrels in the back. âThey look unspoiled,â Ragen said, inspecting the wood. He considered a moment, then chose at random. âThat one,â he said, pointing to a barrel.
Rusco grunted and hauled out the barrel in question. Some people called his work easy, but his arms were as hard and thick as any that swung an axe or scythe. He broke the seal and popped the top off the barrel, scooping rice into a shallow pan for Ragen to inspect.
âGood Marsh rice,â he told the Messenger, âand not a weevil to be seen, nor sign of rot. This will fetch a high price in Miln, especially after so long.â Ragen grunted and nodded, so the cask was resealed and they returned upstairs.
They argued for some time over how many barrels of rice the heavy sacks of salt on the cart were worth. In the end, neither of them seemed happy, but they shook hands on the deal.
Rusco called his daughters, and they all went out to the cart to begin unloading the salt. Arlen tried lifting a bag, but it was far too heavy, and he staggered and fell, dropping it.
âBe careful!â Dasy scolded, slapping the back of his head.
âIf you canât lift, then get the door!â Catrin barked. She herself had one sack over her shoulder and another tucked under her meaty arm. Arlen scrambled to his feet and rushed to hold the portal for her.
âFetch Ferd Miller and tell him weâll pay five ⦠make it four credits for every sack he grinds,â Rusco told Arlen. Most everyone in the Brook worked for Hog, one way or another, but the Squarefolk most of all. âFive if he packs it in barrels with rice to keep it dry.â
âFerd is off in the Cluster,â Arlen said. âMost everyone is.â
Rusco grunted, but did not reply. Soon enough the cart was empty, save for a few boxes and sacks that did not contain salt. Ruscoâs daughters eyed those hungrily, but said nothing.
âWeâll carry the rice up from the cellar tonight and keep it in the back room until youâre ready to head back to Miln,â Rusco said, when the last sack was hauled inside.
âThank you,â Ragen said.
âThe Dukeâs business is done, then?â Rusco asked with a grin, his eyes flicking knowingly to the remaining items on the cart.
âThe Dukeâs business, yes,â Ragen said, grinning in return. Arlen hoped they would give him another ale while they haggled. It made him feel light-headed, like he had caught a chill, but without the coughing and sneezing and aches. He liked the feeling, and wanted to try it again.
He helped carry the remaining items into the taproom, and Catrin brought out a platter of sandwiches thick with meat. Arlen was given a second cup of ale to wash it down, and old Hog told him he could have two credits in the book for his work. âI wonât tell your parents,â Hog said, âbut if you spend it on ale and they catch you, youâll be working off the grief your mum gives me.â Arlen nodded eagerly. Heâd never had credits of his own to spend at the store.
After lunch, Rusco and Ragen went over to the bar and opened up the other items the Messenger had brought. Arlenâs eyes flared as each treasure was presented. There were bolts of cloth finer than anything he had ever seen; metal tools and pins, ceramics and exotic spices. There were even a few cups made of bright, sparkling glass.
Hog seemed less impressed. âGraig had a better haul last year,â he said. âIâll give you ⦠a hundred credits for the lot.â Arlenâs jaw dropped. A hundred credits! Ragen could own half the Brook for that.
Ragen didnât care for the offer, though. His eyes went hard again, and he slammed his hand down on the table. Dasy and Catrin looked up from their cleaning at the sound.
âTo the Core with your credit!â he growled. âIâm not one of your bumpkins, and unless you want the guild to know you for a cheat, youâll not mistake me for one again.â
âNo hard feelings!â Rusco laughed, patting the air in that placating way he had. âHad to try ⦠you understand. They still like gold up there in Miln?â he asked with a sly smile.
âSame as everywhere,â Ragen said. He was still frowning, but the anger had drained from his voice.
âNot out here,â Rusco said. He went back behind the curtain, and they could hear him rummaging around, raising his voice to still be heard. âOut here, if you canât eat something, or wear it, paint a ward with it, or use it to till your field, itâs not worth much of anything.â He returned a moment later with a large cloth sack he deposited on the counter with a clink.
âPeople here have forgotten that gold moves the world,â he went on, reaching into the bag and pulling out two heavy yellow coins, which he waved in Ragenâs face. âThe millerâs kids were using these as game pieces! Game pieces! I told them Iâd trade the gold for a carved wood game set I had in the back, they thought I was doing them a favour! Ferd even came by the next day to thank me!â He laughed a deep belly laugh. Arlen felt like he should be offended by that laugh, but he wasnât quite sure why. He had played the Millersâ game many times, and it seemed worth more than two metal discs, however shiny they might be.
âI brought a lot more than two sunsâ worth,â Ragen said, nodding at the coins and then looking towards the bag.
Rusco smiled. âNot to worry,â he said, untying the bag fully. As the cloth flattened on the counter, more bright coins spilled out, along with chains and rings and ropes of glittering stones. It was all very pretty, Arlen supposed, but he was surprised at how Ragenâs eyes bulged and took on a covetous glitter.
Again they haggled, Ragen holding the stones up to the light and biting the coins, while Rusco fingered the cloth and tasted the spices. It was a blur to Arlen, whose head was spinning from the ale. Mug after mug came to the men from Catrin at the bar, but they showed no signs of being as affected as Arlen.
âTwo hundred and twenty gold suns, two silver moons, the rope chain, and the three silver rings,â Rusco said at last. âAnd not a copper light more.â
âNo wonder you work out in a backwater,â Ragen said. âThey must have run you out of the city for a cheat.â
âInsults wonât make you any richer,â Hog said, confident he had the upper hand.
âNo riches for me this time,â Ragen said. âAfter my travelling costs, every last light will go to Graigâs widow.â
âAh, Jenya,â Rusco said wistfully. âShe used to pen for some of those in Miln with no letters, my idiot nephew among them. What will become of her?â
Ragen shook his head. âThe guild paid no death-price to her, because Graig died at home,â he said. âAnd since she isnât a Mother, a lot of jobs will be denied her.â
âIâm sorry to hear that,â Rusco said.
âGraig left her some money,â Ragen said, âthough he never had much, and the guild will still pay her to pen. With the money from this trip, she should have enough to get by for a time. Sheâs young, though, and it will run out eventually unless she remarries or finds better work.â
âAnd then?â Rusco asked.
Ragen shrugged. âItâll be hard for her to find a new husband, having already married and failed to bear children, but she wonât become a Beggar. My guild brothers and I have sworn that. One of us will take her in as a Servant before that happens.â
Rusco shook his head. âStill, to fall from Merchant class to Servant â¦â He reached into the much lighter bag and produced a ring with a clear, sparkling stone set into it. âSee that she gets this,â he said holding the ring out.
As Ragen reached for it, though, Rusco pulled it back suddenly. âIâll have a message back from her, you understand,â he said. âI know how she shapes her letters.â Ragen looked at him for a moment, and he quickly added, âNo insult meant.â
Ragen smiled. âYour generosity outweighs your insult,â he said, taking the ring. âThis will keep her belly full for months.â
âYes, well,â Rusco said gruffly, scooping up the remains of the bag, âdonât let any of the townies hear, or Iâll lose my reputation as a cheat.â
âYour secret is safe with me,â Ragen said with a laugh.
âYou could earn her a bit more, perhaps,â Rusco said.
âOh?â
âThe letters we have were meant to go to Miln six months ago. You stick around a few days while we pen and collect more, and maybe help pen a few, and Iâll compensate you.
âNo more gold,â he clarified, âbut surely Jenya could do with a cask of rice, or some cured fish or meal.â
âIndeed she could,â Ragen said.
âI can find work for your Jongleur, too,â Rusco added. âHeâll see more custom here in the Square than by hopping from farm to farm.â
âAgreed,â Ragen said. âKeerin will need gold, though.â
Rusco gave him a wry look, and Ragen laughed. âHad to try ⦠you understand!â he said. âSilver, then.â
Rusco nodded. âIâll charge a moon for every performance, and for every moon, Iâll keep one star and he the other three.â
âI thought you said the townies had no money,â Ragen noted.
âMost donât,â Rusco said. âIâll sell the moons to them ⦠say at the cost of five credits.â
âSo Rusco Hog skims from both sides of the deal?â Ragen asked.
Hog smiled.
Arlen was excited during the ride back. Old Hog had promised to let him see the Jongleur for free if he spread the word that Keerin would be entertaining in the Square at high sun the next day for five credits or a silver Milnese moon. He wouldnât have much time; his parents would be readying to leave just as he and Ragen returned, but he was sure he could spread the word before they pulled him onto the cart.
âTell me about the Free Cities,â Arlen begged as they rode. âHow many have you seen?â
âFive,â Ragen said, âMiln, Angiers, Lakton, Rizon, and Krasia. There may be others beyond the mountains or the desert, but none that I know have seen them.â
âWhat are they like?â Arlen asked.
âFort Angiers, the forest stronghold, lies south of Miln, across the Dividing River,â Ragen said. âAngiers supplies wood for the other cities. Farther south lies the great lake, and on its surface stands Lakton.â
âIs a lake like a pond?â Arlen asked.
âA lake is to a pond what a mountain is to a hill,â Ragen said, giving Arlen a moment to digest the thought. âOut on the water, the Laktonians are safe from flame, rock, and wood demons. Their wardnet is proof against wind demons, and no people can ward against water demons better. Theyâre fisher-folk, and thousands in the southern cities depend on their catch for food.
âWest of Lakton is Fort Rizon, which is not technically a fort, since you could practically step over its wall, but it shields the largest farmlands youâve ever seen. Without Rizon, the other Free Cities would starve.â
âAnd Krasia?â Arlen asked.
âI only visited Fort Krasia once,â Ragen said. âThe Krasians arenât welcoming to outsiders, and you need to cross weeks of desert to get there.â
âDesert?â
âSand,â Ragen explained. âNothing but sand for miles in every direction. No food nor water but what you carry, and nothing to shade you from the scorching sun.â
âAnd people live there?â Arlen asked.
âOh, yes,â Ragen said. âThe Krasians used to be even more numerous than the Milnese, but theyâre dying off.â
âWhy?â Arlen asked.
âBecause they fight the corelings,â Ragen said.
Arlenâs eyes widened. âYou can fight corelings?â he asked.
âYou can fight anything, Arlen,â Ragen said. âThe problem with fighting corelings is that more often than not, you lose. The Krasians kill their share, but the corelings give better than they get. There are fewer Krasians every year.â
âMy da says corelings eat your soul when they get you,â Arlen said.
âBah!â Ragen spat over the side of the cart. âSuperstitious nonsense.â
They had turned a bend not far from the Cluster when Arlen noticed something dangling from the tree ahead of them. âWhatâs that?â he asked, pointing.
âNight,â Ragen swore, and cracked the reins, sending the mollies into a gallop. Arlen was thrown back in his seat, and took a moment to right himself. When he did, he looked at the tree, which was coming up fast.
âUncle Cholie!â he cried, seeing the man kicking his feet as he clawed at the rope around his neck.
âHelp! Help!â Arlen screamed. He leapt from the moving cart, hitting the ground hard, but he bounced to his feet, darting towards Cholie. He got up under the man, but one of Cholieâs thrashing feet kicked him in the mouth, knocking him down. He tasted blood, but strangely there was no pain. He came up again, grabbing Cholieâs legs and trying to lift him up to loosen the rope, but he was too short, and Cholie too heavy besides, and the man continued to gag and jerk.
âHelp him!â Arlen cried to Ragen. âHeâs choking! Somebody help!â
He looked up to see Ragen pull a spear from the back of the cart. The Messenger drew back and threw with hardly a moment to aim, but his aim was true, severing the rope and collapsing poor Cholie onto Arlen. They both fell to the ground.
Ragen was there in an instant, pulling the rope from Cholieâs throat. It didnât seem to make much difference, the man still gagged and clawed at his throat. His eyes bulged so far it looked as if they would pop right out of his head, and his face was so red it looked purple. Arlen screamed as he gave a tremendous thrash, and then lay still.
Ragen beat Cholieâs chest and breathed huge gulps of air into him, but it had no effect. Eventually, the Messenger gave up, slumping in the dust and cursing.
Arlen was no stranger to death. That spectre was a frequent visitor to Tibbetâs Brook. But it was one thing to die from the corelings or from a chill. This was different.
âWhy?â he asked Ragen. âWhy would he fight so hard to survive last night, only to kill himself now?â
âDid he fight?â Ragen asked. âDid any of them really fight? Or did they run and hide?â
âI donât â¦â Arlen began.
âHiding isnât always enough, Arlen,â Ragen said. âSometimes, hiding kills something inside of you, so that even if you survive the demons, you donât really.â
âWhat else could he have done?â Arlen asked. âYou canât fight a demon.â
âIâd sooner fight a bear in its own cave,â Ragen said, âbut it can be done.â
âBut you said the Krasians were dying because of it,â Arlen protested.
âThey are,â Ragen said. âBut they follow their hearts. I know it sounds like madness, Arlen, but deep down, men want to fight, like they did in tales of old. They want to protect their women and children as men should. But they canât, because the great wards are lost, so they knot themselves like caged hares, hiding terrified through the night. But sometimes, especially when you see loved ones die, the tension breaks you and you just snap.â
He put a hand on Arlenâs shoulder. âIâm sorry you had to see this, boy,â he said. âI know it doesnât make a lot of sense right now â¦â
âNo,â Arlen said, âit does.â
And it was true, Arlen realized. He understood the need to fight. He had not expected to win when he attacked Cobie and his friends that day. If anything, he had expected to be beaten worse than ever. But in that instant when he grabbed the stick, he hadnât cared. He only knew he was tired of just taking their abuse, and wanted it to end, one way or another.
It was comforting to know he wasnât alone.
Arlen looked at his uncle, lying in the dust, his eyes wide with fear. He knelt and reached out, brushing his eyes closed with his fingertips. Cholie had nothing to fear any longer.
âHave you ever killed a coreling?â he asked the Messenger.
âNo,â Ragen said, shaking his head. âBut Iâve fought a few. Got the scars to prove it. But I was always more interested in getting away, or keeping them away from someone else, than I was in killing any.â
Arlen thought about that as they wrapped Cholie in a tarp and put him in the back of the wagon, hurrying back to the Cluster. Jeph and Silvy had already packed the cart and were waiting impatiently to leave, but the sight of the body defused their anger at Arlenâs late return.
Silvy wailed and threw herself on her brother, but there was no time to waste, if they were to make it back to the farm by nightfall. Jeph had to hold her back as Tender Harral painted a ward on the tarp and led a prayer as he tossed Cholie into the pyre.
The survivors who werenât staying in Brine Cutterâs house were divided up and taken home with the others. Jeph and Silvy had offered succour to two women. Norine Cutter was over fifty summers old. Her husband had died some years back, and she had lost her daughter and grandson in the attack. Marea Bales was old, too; almost forty. Her husband had been left outside when the others drew lots for the cellar. Like Silvy, both slumped in the back of Jephâs cart, staring at their knees. Arlen waved goodbye to Ragen as his father cracked the whip.
The Cluster by the Woods was drawing out of sight when Arlen realized he hadnât told anyone to come see the Jongleur.