Shed slept badly for weeks. He dreamt of black glass walls and a
man who hadn’t been dead. Twice Raven asked him to join a
night hunt. Twice he refused. Raven did not press, though they both
knew Shed would jump if he insisted. Shed prayed that Raven would
get rich and disappear. He remained a constant irritant to the
conscience.
Damnit, why didn’t Krage go after him?
Shed couldn’t figure why Raven remained unperturbed by
Krage. The man was neither a fool nor stupid. The alternative, that
he wasn’t scared, made no sense. Not to a Marron Shed. Asa
remained on Krage’s payroll, but visited regularly, bringing
firewood. By the wagonload, sometimes.
“What’re you up
to?” Shed demanded one day.
“Trying to build
credit,” Asa admitted. “Krage’s guys don’t like me much.”
“Hardly anybody does, Asa.”
“They might try something
nasty . . . ”
“Want a place to hide when they turn on you, eh?
What’re you doing for Krage? Why is he bothering with
you?”
Asa hemmed and hawed. Shed pushed. Here was a man he could
bully. “I watch Raven, Shed. I report what he
does.”
Shed snorted. Krage was using Asa because he was expendable.
He’d had two men disappear early on. Shed thought he knew
where they were. Sudden fear. Suppose Asa reported Raven’s
night adventures? Suppose he’d seen
Shed . . .
Impossible. Asa couldn’t have kept quiet. Asa spent his
life looking for leverage.
“You’ve been spending a lot lately, Asa. Where are
you getting the money?”
Asa turned pale. He looked around, gobbled a few times.
“The wood, Shed. Selling the wood.”
“You’re a liar, Asa. Where’re you getting
it?”
“Shed, you don’t ask questions like that.”
“Maybe not. But I need money bad. I owe Krage. I almost
had him paid off. Then he started buying my little debts from
everybody else. That damned Gilbert! . . . I
need to get ahead enough so I don’t have to borrow
again.”
The black castle. Two hundred twenty pieces of silver. How he
had been tempted to attack Raven. And Raven just smiled into the
wind, knowing exactly what he was thinking. “Where’re
you getting that money, Asa?”
“Where did you get the money you paid Krage? Huh? People
are wondering, Shed. You don’t come up with that kind of
money overnight. Not you. You tell me and I’ll tell
you.” Shed backed down. Asa beamed in triumph.
“You little snake. Get out before I lose my temper.”
Asa fled. He looked back once, face knotted thoughtfully. Damnit,
Shed thought. Made him suspicious. He ground his rag into a tacky
mug.
“What was that?”
Shed spun. Raven had come to the counter. His look brooked no
crap. Shed gave him the gist.
“So Krage hasn’t quit.”
“You don’t know him or you wouldn’t ask.
It’s you or him, Raven.”
“Then it has to be him, doesn’t it?”
Shed gaped. “A suggestion, Shed. Follow your friend when
he goes wood-gathering.” Raven returned to his seat. He spoke
to Darling animatedly, in sign, which he blocked from Shed’s
view. The set of the girl’s shoulders said she was against
whatever it was he was proposing. Ten minutes later he left the
Lily. Each afternoon he went out for a few hours. Shed suspected he
was testing Krage’s watchers.
Darling leaned against the door frame, watching the street. Shed
watched her, his gaze sliding up and down her frame. Raven’s,
he thought. They’re thick. I don’t dare. But she was
such a fine looking thing, tall, lean of leg, ready for a
man . . . He was a fool. He did not need to get
caught in that trap, too. He had troubles enough.
“I think
today would be good for it,” Raven said as Shed delivered his
breakfast.
“Eh? Good for what?”
“For a hike up the hill to watch friend Asa.”
“Oh. No. I can’t. Got nobody to watch the
place.” Back by the counter, Darling bent to pick something
off the floor. Shed’s eyes widened and his heart fluttered.
He had to do something. Visit a whore, or something. Or get hurt.
But he couldn’t afford to pay for it. “Darling
couldn’t handle it alone.”
“Your cousin Wally has stood in for you before.”
Caught off balance, Shed could not marshall his excuses quickly.
And Darling was driving him to distraction. She had to start
wearing something that concealed the shape of her behind better.
“Uh . . . He couldn’t deal with
Darling. Doesn’t know the signs.”
Raven’s face
darkened slightly. “Give her the day off. Get that girl Lisa
you used when Darling was sick.”
Lisa, Shed thought. Another
hot one. “I only use Lisa when I’m here to watch
her.” A hot one not attached. “She’ll steal me
blinder than my mother . . . ”
“Shed!”
“Eh?”
“Get Wally and Lisa here; then go keep an eye on Asa.
I’ll make sure they don’t carry off the family
silver.”
“But . . . ”
Raven
slapped a palm on the tabletop. “I said go!”
The day was clear and bright and, for winter, warm. Shed picked
up Asa’s trail outside Krage’s establishment.
Asa rented a wagon. Shed was amazed. In winter stable-keepers
demanded huge deposits. Draft animals slaughtered and eaten had no
provenance. He thought it a miracle anyone trusted Asa with a team.
Asa went directly to the Enclosure. Shed stalked along behind,
keeping his head down, confident Asa would not suspect him even if
he looked back. The streets were crowded.
Asa left the wagon in a public grove across a lane running
alongside the wall which girdled the Enclosure. It was one of many
similar groves where Juniper’s citizenry gathered for the
Spring and Autumn Rites for the Dead. The wagon could not be seen
from the lane.
Shed squatted in shadow and bush and watched Asa dash to the
Enclosure wall. Somebody ought to clear that brush away, Shed
thought. It made the wall look tacky. For that matter, the wall
needed repairing. Shed crossed and found a gap through which a man
could duck-walk. He crept through. Asa was crossing an open meadow,
hurrying uphill toward a stand of pines.
The inner face of the wall was brush-masked, too. Scores of
bundles of wood lay among the bushes. Asa had more industry than
Shed had suspected. Hanging around Krage’s gang had changed
him. They had him scared for sure.
Asa entered the pines. Shed puffed after him. Ahead, Asa sounded
like a cow pushing through the underbrush.
The whole Enclosure was tacky. In Shed’s boyhood it had
been park-like, a fit waiting place for those who had gone before.
Now it had the threadbare look that characterized the rest of
Juniper.
Shed crept toward hammering racket. What was Asa doing, making
so much noise?
He was cutting wood from a fallen tree, stacking the pieces in
neat bundles. Shed could not picture the little man orderly,
either. What a difference terror made. An hour later Shed was ready
to give up. He was cold and hungry and stiff. He had wasted half a
day. Asa was doing nothing remarkable. But he persevered. He had a
time investment to recoup. And an irritable Raven awaiting his
report.
Asa worked hard. When not chopping, he hustled bundles down to
his wagon. Shed was impressed.
He stayed, watched, and told himself he was a fool. This was
going nowhere. Then Asa became furtive. He collected his tools and
concealed them, looked around warily. This is it, Shed thought. Asa
took off uphill. Shed puffed after him. His stiff muscles protested
every step. Asa traveled more than a mile through lengthening
shadows. Shed almost lost him. A clinking brought him back to the
track.
The little man was using flint and steel. He crouched over a
supply of torches wrapped in an oilskin, taken from hiding. He got
a brand burning, hastened into some brush. A moment later he
clambered over some rocks beyond, disappeared. Shed gave it a
minute, then followed. He slid round the boulder where he had seen
Asa last. Beyond lay a crack in the earth just big enough to admit
a man.
“My god,” Shed whispered. “He’s found a
way into the Catacombs. He’s looting the dead.”
“I came straight back,” Shed gasped. Raven was
amused by his distress. “I knew Asa was foul, but I never
dreamed he’d commit sacrilege.” Raven smiled.
“Aren’t you disgusted?”
“No. Why are you? He didn’t steal any
bodies.”
Shed came within a hair’s breadth of assaulting him. He
was worse than Asa.
“He making out at it?”
“Not as well as you. The Custodians take all the burial
gifts except passage urns.” Every corpse in the Catacombs was
accompanied by a small, sealed urn, usually fixed on a chain around
the body’s neck. The Custodians did not touch the few coins
in those. When the Day of Passage came, the Boatmen would demand
payment for passage to Paradise.
“All those souls stranded,” Shed murmured. He
explained.
Raven looked baffled. “How can anybody with an ounce of
brains believe that crap? Dead is dead. Be quiet, Shed. Just answer
questions. How many bodies in the Catacombs?”
“Who knows? They’ve been putting them away
since . . . Hell, for a thousand years. Maybe
there’s millions.”
“Must have them stacked like cordwood.”
Shed wondered about that. The Catacombs were vast, but a
thousand years’ worth of cadavers from a city Juniper’s
size would make a hell of a pile. He looked at Raven. Damn the man.
“It’s Asa’s racket. Let’s not
try.”
“Why not?”
“Too dangerous.”
“Your friend hasn’t suffered.”
“He’s smalltime. If he gets greedy, he’ll get
killed. There are Guardians down there. Monsters.”
“Describe them.”
“I can’t.”
“Can’t or won’t?”
“Can’t. All they tell you is that they’re
there.”
“I see.” Raven rose. “This needs
investigating. Don’t discuss it. Especially not with
Asa.”
“Oh, no.” Panicked, Asa would do something
stupid.
Word drifted in off the street. Krage had sent his two best men
after Raven. They had disappeared. Three more had vanished since.
Krage himself had been injured by an unknown assailant. He had
survived only because of Count’s immense strength. Count
wasn’t expected to live.
Shed was terrified. Krage was neither reasonable nor rational.
He asked Raven to move out. Raven stared at him in contempt.
“Look, I don’t want him killing you here,”
Shed said.
“Bad for business?”
“For my health, maybe. He’s got to kill you now.
People will stop being scared of him if he
doesn’t.”
“He won’t learn, eh? A damned city of
fools.”
Asa boiled through the doorway. “Shed, I got to talk to
you.” He was scared. “Krage thinks I turned him over to
Raven. He’s after me. You got to hide me, Shed.”
“Like hell.” The trap was closing. Two of them here.
Krage would kill him for sure, would dump his mother into the
street.
“Shed, I kept you in wood all winter. I kept Krage off
your back.”
“Oh, sure. So I should get killed, too?”
“You owe me, Shed. I never told nobody how you go out at
night with Raven. Maybe Krage would want to know that,
huh?”
Shed grabbed Asa’s hands and yanked him forward, against
the counter. As if cued, Raven stepped up behind the little man.
Shed glimpsed a knife. Raven pricked Asa’s back, whispered,
“Let’s go to my room.”
Asa went pallid. Shed forced a smile. “Yeah.” He
released Asa, took a stoneware bottle from beneath the counter.
“I want to talk to you, Asa.” He collected three mugs.
Shed went up last, intensely aware of his mother’s blind
stare. How much had she heard? How much had she guessed? She had
been cool lately. His shame had come between them. He no longer
felt deserving of her respect. He clouted his conscience. I did it
for her!
Raven’s room had the only door left on the upper floors.
Raven held it for Asa and Shed. “Sit,” he told Asa,
indicating his cot. Asa sat. He looked scared enough to wet
himself. Raven’s room was as Spartan as his dress. It
betrayed no hint of wealth. “I invest it, Shed,” Raven
said, wearing a mocking smile. “In shipping. Pour the
wine.” He began cleaning his nails with a knife. Asa downed
his wine before Shed finished pouring the rest. “Fill him
up,” Raven said. He sipped his own wine. “Shed, why
have you been giving me that sour cat’s piss when you had
this?”
“Nobody gets it without asking. It costs more.”
“I’ll take this from now on.” Raven locked
gazes with Asa, tapped his own cheek with his knife blade.
No, Raven wouldn’t have to live frugally. The body
business would be lucrative. He invested? In shipping? Odd the way
he said that. Where the money went might be as interesting as
whence it came. “You threatened my friend,” Raven said.
“Oh. Excuse me, Shed. A misstatement. It’s partner, not
friend. Partners don’t have to like each other. Little man.
You have something to say for yourself?”
Shed shuddered. Damn
Raven. He’d said that so Asa would spread it around. Bastard
was taking control of his life. Nibbling away at it like a mouse
slowly destroying a head of cheese.
“Honest, Mr. Raven. I
didn’t mean nothing. I was scared. Krage thinks I tipped you.
I got to hide, and Shed’s scared to put me up. I was just
trying to get him to . . . ”
“Shut up. Shed, I thought he was your friend.”
“I just did him some favors. I felt sorry for
him.”
“You’d shelter him from weather, but not from
enemies. You’re a real gutless wonder, Shed. Maybe I made a
mistake. I was going to make you a full partner. Going to give you
the whole business eventually. Thought I’d do you a favor.
But you’re a yellow-dog creep. Without the guts to deny
it.” He whirled. “Talk, little man. Tell me about
Krage. Tell me about the Enclosure.” Asa went white. He
didn’t open up till Raven threatened to call the
Custodians.
Shed’s knees racketed off one another. The hilt of his
butcher knife was sweat-moist and slippery. He could not have used
the blade, but Asa was too scared to see that. He just squeaked at
his team and started rolling. Raven followed them in his own wagon.
Shed glanced across the valley. The black castle brooded on the
northern skyline, casting its dread shadow across Juniper. Why was
it there? Where had it come from? He rejected the questions. Best
to ignore it.
How had he gotten into this? He feared the worst. Raven had no
sensibilities.
They left the wagons in the grove, entered the Enclosure. Raven
examined Asa’s wood stash. “Move these bundles to the
wagons. Stack them alongside for now.”
“You can’t take my wood,” Asa protested.
“Shut up.” Raven pushed a bundle through the wall.
“You first, Shed. Little man, I’ll hunt you down if
you run off.”
They had moved a dozen bundles when Asa whispered, “Shed,
one of Krage’s goons is watching us.” He was about to
panic.
Raven was not displeased with the news. “You two go get
bundles from the woods.”
Asa protested. Raven glared. Asa headed uphill. “How does
he know?” he whined at Shed. “He never followed me.
I’m sure of that.”
Shed shrugged. “Maybe he’s a sorcerer. He always
knows what I’m thinking.”
Raven was gone when they returned. Shed looked around, nervously
decided, “Let’s get another load.”
Raven was waiting next trip. “Take those bundles to
Asa’s wagon.”
“An object lesson,” Shed said, pointing into the
wagon. Blood ran across the floorboards, seeping from under a pile
of wood. “See what kind of man he is?”
“Up the hill now,” Raven ordered when they returned.
“Lead off, Asa. Collect your tools and torches to
start.”
Suspicion nagged Shed as he watched Raven build a litter. But
no. Even Raven wouldn’t stoop that low. Would he?
They stood looking down into the dark mouth of the underworld.
“You first, Asa,” Raven said. Reluctantly, Asa
descended.
“You’re next, Shed.”
“Have a heart, Raven.”
“Get moving.”
Shed moved. Raven came down behind him.
The Catacombs had a carnal smell, but weaker than Shed had
anticipated. A draft stirred Asa’s torch.
“Stop,” Raven said. He took the brand, examined the
gap through which they had entered, nodded, passed the torch back.
“Lead on.” The cavern widened and joined a larger cave.
Asa halted halfway across. Shed stopped, too. He was surrounded by
bones. Bones on the cave floor, bones on racks on the walls,
skeletons hanging from hooks. Loose bones in tumbles and piles, all
mixed together. Skeletons sleeping amidst the clutter. Bones still
within shreds of burial raiment. Skulls leering from wooden pegs on
the far wall, empty eyes sinister in the torchlight. A passage urn
shared each peg.
There were mummified bodies, too, though only a few. Only the
rich demanded mummification. Here riches meant nothing. They were
heaped with all the rest. Asa volunteered, “This is a real
old place. The Custodians don’t come here anymore, unless
maybe to get rid of loose bones. The whole cave is filled up up
that way, like they just pushed them out of the way.”
“Let’s look,” Raven said. Asa was right. The
cavern narrowed and its ceiling descended. The passageway was
choked with bones. Shed noted the absence of skulls and urns. Raven
chuckled. “Your Custodians aren’t as passionate about
the dead as you thought, Shed.”
“The chambers you see during
Spring and Autumn Rites aren’t like this,” Shed
admitted.
“I don’t guess anybody cares about the old ones
anymore,” Asa said.
“Let’s go back,” Raven suggested. As they
walked, he observed, “We all end up here. Rich or poor, weak
or strong.” He kicked a mummy. “But the rich stay in
better shape. Asa, what’s down the other way?”
“I only ever went about a hundred yards. More of the
same.” He was trying to open a passage urn.
Raven grunted, took an urn, opened it, dumped several coins onto
his hand. He held them near the torch. “Uhm. How did you
explain their age, Asa?”
“Money has no provenance,” Shed said.
Asa nodded. “And I made out like I’d found a buried
treasure.”
“I see. Lead on.”
Soon Asa said, “This is as far as I ever went.”
“Keep going.”
They wandered till even Raven responded to the oppression of the
cavern. “Enough. Back to the surface.” Once up top, he
said, “Get the tools. Damn. I’d hoped for
better.”
Soon they were back with a spade and ropes. “Shed, dig a
hole over there. Asa, hang on to this end of the rope. When I yell,
start pulling.” Raven descended into the Catacombs.
Asa remained rooted, as instructed. Shed dug. After a while, Asa
asked, “Shed, what’s he doing?”
“You don’t know? I thought you knew everything he
did.”
“I just told Krage that. I couldn’t keep up with him
all night.”
Shed grimaced, turned another spadeful of earth. He could guess
how Asa worked. By sleeping somewhere most of the time. Spying would have interfered with wood-gathering and
grave-robbing.
Shed was relieved. Asa didn’t know what he and Raven had
done. But he would before long.
He looked inside himself and found little self-disgust. Damn! He
was accustomed to these crimes already. Raven was making him over
in his own image.
Raven shouted. Asa hauled away. He called, “Shed, give me
a hand. I can’t get this by myself.”
Resigned, Shed joined him. Their catch was exactly what he
expected, a mummy sliding out of the darkness like some denizen of
the deeps of yesteryear. He averted his gaze. “Get his feet,
Asa.”
Asa gagged. “My God, Shed. My God. What are you
doing?”
“Be quiet and do what you’re told. That’s the
best way. Get his feet.”
They moved the body into the brush near Shed’s pit. A
passage urn rolled out of a bundle tied upon its chest. The bundle
contained another two dozen urns. So. The hole was for burying
empty urns. Why didn’t Raven fill his pockets down there?
“Let’s get out of here, Shed,” Asa whined.
“Back to your rope.” Urns took time to empty. And
Raven had two men up top with little to do but think. So. They were
busy-work. And an incentive, of course. Two dozen urns with each
cadaver would build up quite a pile.
“Shed . . . ”
“Where you going to run to, Asa?” The day was clear
and unseasonably warm, but it was still winter. There was no way
out of Juniper. “He’d find you. Go back to your rope.
You’re in it now, like it or not.” Shed resumed
digging.
Raven sent up six mummies. Each carried its bundle of urns. Then
Raven returned. He studied Asa’s ashen face, Shed’s
resignation. “Your turn, Shed.”
Shed gulped, opened his mouth, swallowed his protest, slunk
toward the hole. He lingered over it, a hair’s breadth from
rebellion.
“Move it, Shed. We don’t have forever.”
Marron Shed went down among the dead.
It seemed he was in the Catacombs forever, numbly selecting
cadavers, collecting urns, dragging his grisly booty to the rope.
His mind had entered another reality. This was the dream, the
nightmare. At first he did not understand when Raven called for him
to come up.
He clambered into gathering dusk. “Is that enough? Can we
go now?”
“No,” Raven replied. “We’ve got sixteen.
I figure we can get thirty on the wagons.”
“Oh. Okay.”
“You haul up,” Raven said. “Asa and I will go
down.”
Shed hauled. In the silvery light of a three-quarters moon the
dead faces seemed accusing. He swallowed his loathing and placed
each with the others, then emptied urns.
He was tempted to take the money and run. He stayed more out of
greed than fear of Raven. He was a partner this time. Thirty bodies
at thirty leva meant nine hundred leva to share out. Even if he
took the small cut, he would be richer than he’d ever
dreamed.
What was that? Not Raven’s order to haul away. It sounded
like someone screaming . . . He nearly ran. He
did go to pieces momentarily. Raven’s bellowing brought him
together. The man’s cold, calm contempt had vanished.
Shed heaved. This one was heavy. He grunted,
strained . . . Raven came scrambling up. His
clothing was torn. A bloody gash marked one cheek. His knife was
red. He whirled, grabbed the rope. “Pull!” he shouted.
“Damn you, pull!”
Asa came out a moment later, tied to the rope. “What
happened? My God, what happened?” Asa was breathing, and that
was about it.
“Something jumped us. It tore him up before I
could kill it.”
“A Guardian. I warned you. Get another torch. Let’s
see how bad he is.” Raven just sat there panting, flustered.
Shed got the torch, lighted it. Asa’s wounds were not as bad
as he had feared. There was a lot of blood, and Asa was in shock,
but he wasn’t dying. “We ought to get out of here,
Raven. Before the Custodians come.”
Raven recovered his composure. “No. There was only one. I
killed it. We’re in this now. Let’s get it done
right.”
“What about Asa?”
“I don’t know. Let’s get to work.”
“Raven, I’m exhausted.”
“You’re going to get a lot tireder before
we’re done. Come on. Let’s get the mess cleaned
up.”
They moved the bodies to the wagons, then the tools, then carted
Asa down. As they worked the litter through the wall, Shed asked,
“What should we do with him?”
Raven looked at him as though he were a moron. “What do
you think, Shed?”
“But . . . ”
“It doesn’t much matter now, does it?”
“I guess not.” But it did matter. Asa wasn’t
much, but Shed knew him. He was no friend, but they had helped one
another out . . . “No. Can’t do it,
Raven. He can make it. If I was sure he was checking out, yeah.
Okay. No body, no questions. But I can’t kill him.”
“Well. A little spirit after all. How are you going to
keep him quiet? He’s the kind who gets throats cut with loose
talk.”
“I’ll handle him.”
“Whatever you say, partner. It’s your
neck.”
The night was well along when they reached the black castle.
Raven went in first. Shed followed closely. They pulled into the
same passage as before. The drill was the same. After they laid out
the bodies, a tall, lean creature went down the line.
“Ten. Ten. Thirty. Ten. Ten.” And so forth.
Raven protested vigorously. The only offers above ten were for
the men who had followed them to the Enclosure and for Asa, who
remained in his wagon.
The tall being faced Raven. “These have been dead too
long. They have little value. Take them back if you’re not
satisfied.”
“All right. All right. Let’s have it.”
The being counted out coins. Raven pocketed six of each ten. He
handed the rest to Shed. As he did so, he told the tall being,
“This man is my partner. He may come alone.”
The tall figure inclined its head, took something from within
its clothing, handed it to Shed. It was a silver pendant in the
form of serpents entwined.
“Wear that if you come up alone,” Raven said.
“That’s your safe-conduct.” Under his icy stare
Shed slipped the pendant into a pocket already filled with
silver.
He ran the arithmetic. One hundred twelve leva as his share. It
would have taken him half a decade to accumulate that much
honestly. He was rich! Damn him, he was rich! He could do anything
he wanted. No more debts. No more Krage killing him slowly. No more
gruel every meal. Turn the Lily into something decent. Maybe find a
place where his mother would have proper care. Women. All the women
he could handle.
As he turned his wagon, he glimpsed a high chunk of wall that
hadn’t been there last visit. A face stared out. It was the
face of the man he and Raven had brought in alive. Its eyes watched
him.
Shed slept badly for weeks. He dreamt of black glass walls and a
man who hadn’t been dead. Twice Raven asked him to join a
night hunt. Twice he refused. Raven did not press, though they both
knew Shed would jump if he insisted. Shed prayed that Raven would
get rich and disappear. He remained a constant irritant to the
conscience.
Damnit, why didn’t Krage go after him?
Shed couldn’t figure why Raven remained unperturbed by
Krage. The man was neither a fool nor stupid. The alternative, that
he wasn’t scared, made no sense. Not to a Marron Shed. Asa
remained on Krage’s payroll, but visited regularly, bringing
firewood. By the wagonload, sometimes.
“What’re you up
to?” Shed demanded one day.
“Trying to build
credit,” Asa admitted. “Krage’s guys don’t like me much.”
“Hardly anybody does, Asa.”
“They might try something
nasty . . . ”
“Want a place to hide when they turn on you, eh?
What’re you doing for Krage? Why is he bothering with
you?”
Asa hemmed and hawed. Shed pushed. Here was a man he could
bully. “I watch Raven, Shed. I report what he
does.”
Shed snorted. Krage was using Asa because he was expendable.
He’d had two men disappear early on. Shed thought he knew
where they were. Sudden fear. Suppose Asa reported Raven’s
night adventures? Suppose he’d seen
Shed . . .
Impossible. Asa couldn’t have kept quiet. Asa spent his
life looking for leverage.
“You’ve been spending a lot lately, Asa. Where are
you getting the money?”
Asa turned pale. He looked around, gobbled a few times.
“The wood, Shed. Selling the wood.”
“You’re a liar, Asa. Where’re you getting
it?”
“Shed, you don’t ask questions like that.”
“Maybe not. But I need money bad. I owe Krage. I almost
had him paid off. Then he started buying my little debts from
everybody else. That damned Gilbert! . . . I
need to get ahead enough so I don’t have to borrow
again.”
The black castle. Two hundred twenty pieces of silver. How he
had been tempted to attack Raven. And Raven just smiled into the
wind, knowing exactly what he was thinking. “Where’re
you getting that money, Asa?”
“Where did you get the money you paid Krage? Huh? People
are wondering, Shed. You don’t come up with that kind of
money overnight. Not you. You tell me and I’ll tell
you.” Shed backed down. Asa beamed in triumph.
“You little snake. Get out before I lose my temper.”
Asa fled. He looked back once, face knotted thoughtfully. Damnit,
Shed thought. Made him suspicious. He ground his rag into a tacky
mug.
“What was that?”
Shed spun. Raven had come to the counter. His look brooked no
crap. Shed gave him the gist.
“So Krage hasn’t quit.”
“You don’t know him or you wouldn’t ask.
It’s you or him, Raven.”
“Then it has to be him, doesn’t it?”
Shed gaped. “A suggestion, Shed. Follow your friend when
he goes wood-gathering.” Raven returned to his seat. He spoke
to Darling animatedly, in sign, which he blocked from Shed’s
view. The set of the girl’s shoulders said she was against
whatever it was he was proposing. Ten minutes later he left the
Lily. Each afternoon he went out for a few hours. Shed suspected he
was testing Krage’s watchers.
Darling leaned against the door frame, watching the street. Shed
watched her, his gaze sliding up and down her frame. Raven’s,
he thought. They’re thick. I don’t dare. But she was
such a fine looking thing, tall, lean of leg, ready for a
man . . . He was a fool. He did not need to get
caught in that trap, too. He had troubles enough.
“I think
today would be good for it,” Raven said as Shed delivered his
breakfast.
“Eh? Good for what?”
“For a hike up the hill to watch friend Asa.”
“Oh. No. I can’t. Got nobody to watch the
place.” Back by the counter, Darling bent to pick something
off the floor. Shed’s eyes widened and his heart fluttered.
He had to do something. Visit a whore, or something. Or get hurt.
But he couldn’t afford to pay for it. “Darling
couldn’t handle it alone.”
“Your cousin Wally has stood in for you before.”
Caught off balance, Shed could not marshall his excuses quickly.
And Darling was driving him to distraction. She had to start
wearing something that concealed the shape of her behind better.
“Uh . . . He couldn’t deal with
Darling. Doesn’t know the signs.”
Raven’s face
darkened slightly. “Give her the day off. Get that girl Lisa
you used when Darling was sick.”
Lisa, Shed thought. Another
hot one. “I only use Lisa when I’m here to watch
her.” A hot one not attached. “She’ll steal me
blinder than my mother . . . ”
“Shed!”
“Eh?”
“Get Wally and Lisa here; then go keep an eye on Asa.
I’ll make sure they don’t carry off the family
silver.”
“But . . . ”
Raven
slapped a palm on the tabletop. “I said go!”
The day was clear and bright and, for winter, warm. Shed picked
up Asa’s trail outside Krage’s establishment.
Asa rented a wagon. Shed was amazed. In winter stable-keepers
demanded huge deposits. Draft animals slaughtered and eaten had no
provenance. He thought it a miracle anyone trusted Asa with a team.
Asa went directly to the Enclosure. Shed stalked along behind,
keeping his head down, confident Asa would not suspect him even if
he looked back. The streets were crowded.
Asa left the wagon in a public grove across a lane running
alongside the wall which girdled the Enclosure. It was one of many
similar groves where Juniper’s citizenry gathered for the
Spring and Autumn Rites for the Dead. The wagon could not be seen
from the lane.
Shed squatted in shadow and bush and watched Asa dash to the
Enclosure wall. Somebody ought to clear that brush away, Shed
thought. It made the wall look tacky. For that matter, the wall
needed repairing. Shed crossed and found a gap through which a man
could duck-walk. He crept through. Asa was crossing an open meadow,
hurrying uphill toward a stand of pines.
The inner face of the wall was brush-masked, too. Scores of
bundles of wood lay among the bushes. Asa had more industry than
Shed had suspected. Hanging around Krage’s gang had changed
him. They had him scared for sure.
Asa entered the pines. Shed puffed after him. Ahead, Asa sounded
like a cow pushing through the underbrush.
The whole Enclosure was tacky. In Shed’s boyhood it had
been park-like, a fit waiting place for those who had gone before.
Now it had the threadbare look that characterized the rest of
Juniper.
Shed crept toward hammering racket. What was Asa doing, making
so much noise?
He was cutting wood from a fallen tree, stacking the pieces in
neat bundles. Shed could not picture the little man orderly,
either. What a difference terror made. An hour later Shed was ready
to give up. He was cold and hungry and stiff. He had wasted half a
day. Asa was doing nothing remarkable. But he persevered. He had a
time investment to recoup. And an irritable Raven awaiting his
report.
Asa worked hard. When not chopping, he hustled bundles down to
his wagon. Shed was impressed.
He stayed, watched, and told himself he was a fool. This was
going nowhere. Then Asa became furtive. He collected his tools and
concealed them, looked around warily. This is it, Shed thought. Asa
took off uphill. Shed puffed after him. His stiff muscles protested
every step. Asa traveled more than a mile through lengthening
shadows. Shed almost lost him. A clinking brought him back to the
track.
The little man was using flint and steel. He crouched over a
supply of torches wrapped in an oilskin, taken from hiding. He got
a brand burning, hastened into some brush. A moment later he
clambered over some rocks beyond, disappeared. Shed gave it a
minute, then followed. He slid round the boulder where he had seen
Asa last. Beyond lay a crack in the earth just big enough to admit
a man.
“My god,” Shed whispered. “He’s found a
way into the Catacombs. He’s looting the dead.”
“I came straight back,” Shed gasped. Raven was
amused by his distress. “I knew Asa was foul, but I never
dreamed he’d commit sacrilege.” Raven smiled.
“Aren’t you disgusted?”
“No. Why are you? He didn’t steal any
bodies.”
Shed came within a hair’s breadth of assaulting him. He
was worse than Asa.
“He making out at it?”
“Not as well as you. The Custodians take all the burial
gifts except passage urns.” Every corpse in the Catacombs was
accompanied by a small, sealed urn, usually fixed on a chain around
the body’s neck. The Custodians did not touch the few coins
in those. When the Day of Passage came, the Boatmen would demand
payment for passage to Paradise.
“All those souls stranded,” Shed murmured. He
explained.
Raven looked baffled. “How can anybody with an ounce of
brains believe that crap? Dead is dead. Be quiet, Shed. Just answer
questions. How many bodies in the Catacombs?”
“Who knows? They’ve been putting them away
since . . . Hell, for a thousand years. Maybe
there’s millions.”
“Must have them stacked like cordwood.”
Shed wondered about that. The Catacombs were vast, but a
thousand years’ worth of cadavers from a city Juniper’s
size would make a hell of a pile. He looked at Raven. Damn the man.
“It’s Asa’s racket. Let’s not
try.”
“Why not?”
“Too dangerous.”
“Your friend hasn’t suffered.”
“He’s smalltime. If he gets greedy, he’ll get
killed. There are Guardians down there. Monsters.”
“Describe them.”
“I can’t.”
“Can’t or won’t?”
“Can’t. All they tell you is that they’re
there.”
“I see.” Raven rose. “This needs
investigating. Don’t discuss it. Especially not with
Asa.”
“Oh, no.” Panicked, Asa would do something
stupid.
Word drifted in off the street. Krage had sent his two best men
after Raven. They had disappeared. Three more had vanished since.
Krage himself had been injured by an unknown assailant. He had
survived only because of Count’s immense strength. Count
wasn’t expected to live.
Shed was terrified. Krage was neither reasonable nor rational.
He asked Raven to move out. Raven stared at him in contempt.
“Look, I don’t want him killing you here,”
Shed said.
“Bad for business?”
“For my health, maybe. He’s got to kill you now.
People will stop being scared of him if he
doesn’t.”
“He won’t learn, eh? A damned city of
fools.”
Asa boiled through the doorway. “Shed, I got to talk to
you.” He was scared. “Krage thinks I turned him over to
Raven. He’s after me. You got to hide me, Shed.”
“Like hell.” The trap was closing. Two of them here.
Krage would kill him for sure, would dump his mother into the
street.
“Shed, I kept you in wood all winter. I kept Krage off
your back.”
“Oh, sure. So I should get killed, too?”
“You owe me, Shed. I never told nobody how you go out at
night with Raven. Maybe Krage would want to know that,
huh?”
Shed grabbed Asa’s hands and yanked him forward, against
the counter. As if cued, Raven stepped up behind the little man.
Shed glimpsed a knife. Raven pricked Asa’s back, whispered,
“Let’s go to my room.”
Asa went pallid. Shed forced a smile. “Yeah.” He
released Asa, took a stoneware bottle from beneath the counter.
“I want to talk to you, Asa.” He collected three mugs.
Shed went up last, intensely aware of his mother’s blind
stare. How much had she heard? How much had she guessed? She had
been cool lately. His shame had come between them. He no longer
felt deserving of her respect. He clouted his conscience. I did it
for her!
Raven’s room had the only door left on the upper floors.
Raven held it for Asa and Shed. “Sit,” he told Asa,
indicating his cot. Asa sat. He looked scared enough to wet
himself. Raven’s room was as Spartan as his dress. It
betrayed no hint of wealth. “I invest it, Shed,” Raven
said, wearing a mocking smile. “In shipping. Pour the
wine.” He began cleaning his nails with a knife. Asa downed
his wine before Shed finished pouring the rest. “Fill him
up,” Raven said. He sipped his own wine. “Shed, why
have you been giving me that sour cat’s piss when you had
this?”
“Nobody gets it without asking. It costs more.”
“I’ll take this from now on.” Raven locked
gazes with Asa, tapped his own cheek with his knife blade.
No, Raven wouldn’t have to live frugally. The body
business would be lucrative. He invested? In shipping? Odd the way
he said that. Where the money went might be as interesting as
whence it came. “You threatened my friend,” Raven said.
“Oh. Excuse me, Shed. A misstatement. It’s partner, not
friend. Partners don’t have to like each other. Little man.
You have something to say for yourself?”
Shed shuddered. Damn
Raven. He’d said that so Asa would spread it around. Bastard
was taking control of his life. Nibbling away at it like a mouse
slowly destroying a head of cheese.
“Honest, Mr. Raven. I
didn’t mean nothing. I was scared. Krage thinks I tipped you.
I got to hide, and Shed’s scared to put me up. I was just
trying to get him to . . . ”
“Shut up. Shed, I thought he was your friend.”
“I just did him some favors. I felt sorry for
him.”
“You’d shelter him from weather, but not from
enemies. You’re a real gutless wonder, Shed. Maybe I made a
mistake. I was going to make you a full partner. Going to give you
the whole business eventually. Thought I’d do you a favor.
But you’re a yellow-dog creep. Without the guts to deny
it.” He whirled. “Talk, little man. Tell me about
Krage. Tell me about the Enclosure.” Asa went white. He
didn’t open up till Raven threatened to call the
Custodians.
Shed’s knees racketed off one another. The hilt of his
butcher knife was sweat-moist and slippery. He could not have used
the blade, but Asa was too scared to see that. He just squeaked at
his team and started rolling. Raven followed them in his own wagon.
Shed glanced across the valley. The black castle brooded on the
northern skyline, casting its dread shadow across Juniper. Why was
it there? Where had it come from? He rejected the questions. Best
to ignore it.
How had he gotten into this? He feared the worst. Raven had no
sensibilities.
They left the wagons in the grove, entered the Enclosure. Raven
examined Asa’s wood stash. “Move these bundles to the
wagons. Stack them alongside for now.”
“You can’t take my wood,” Asa protested.
“Shut up.” Raven pushed a bundle through the wall.
“You first, Shed. Little man, I’ll hunt you down if
you run off.”
They had moved a dozen bundles when Asa whispered, “Shed,
one of Krage’s goons is watching us.” He was about to
panic.
Raven was not displeased with the news. “You two go get
bundles from the woods.”
Asa protested. Raven glared. Asa headed uphill. “How does
he know?” he whined at Shed. “He never followed me.
I’m sure of that.”
Shed shrugged. “Maybe he’s a sorcerer. He always
knows what I’m thinking.”
Raven was gone when they returned. Shed looked around, nervously
decided, “Let’s get another load.”
Raven was waiting next trip. “Take those bundles to
Asa’s wagon.”
“An object lesson,” Shed said, pointing into the
wagon. Blood ran across the floorboards, seeping from under a pile
of wood. “See what kind of man he is?”
“Up the hill now,” Raven ordered when they returned.
“Lead off, Asa. Collect your tools and torches to
start.”
Suspicion nagged Shed as he watched Raven build a litter. But
no. Even Raven wouldn’t stoop that low. Would he?
They stood looking down into the dark mouth of the underworld.
“You first, Asa,” Raven said. Reluctantly, Asa
descended.
“You’re next, Shed.”
“Have a heart, Raven.”
“Get moving.”
Shed moved. Raven came down behind him.
The Catacombs had a carnal smell, but weaker than Shed had
anticipated. A draft stirred Asa’s torch.
“Stop,” Raven said. He took the brand, examined the
gap through which they had entered, nodded, passed the torch back.
“Lead on.” The cavern widened and joined a larger cave.
Asa halted halfway across. Shed stopped, too. He was surrounded by
bones. Bones on the cave floor, bones on racks on the walls,
skeletons hanging from hooks. Loose bones in tumbles and piles, all
mixed together. Skeletons sleeping amidst the clutter. Bones still
within shreds of burial raiment. Skulls leering from wooden pegs on
the far wall, empty eyes sinister in the torchlight. A passage urn
shared each peg.
There were mummified bodies, too, though only a few. Only the
rich demanded mummification. Here riches meant nothing. They were
heaped with all the rest. Asa volunteered, “This is a real
old place. The Custodians don’t come here anymore, unless
maybe to get rid of loose bones. The whole cave is filled up up
that way, like they just pushed them out of the way.”
“Let’s look,” Raven said. Asa was right. The
cavern narrowed and its ceiling descended. The passageway was
choked with bones. Shed noted the absence of skulls and urns. Raven
chuckled. “Your Custodians aren’t as passionate about
the dead as you thought, Shed.”
“The chambers you see during
Spring and Autumn Rites aren’t like this,” Shed
admitted.
“I don’t guess anybody cares about the old ones
anymore,” Asa said.
“Let’s go back,” Raven suggested. As they
walked, he observed, “We all end up here. Rich or poor, weak
or strong.” He kicked a mummy. “But the rich stay in
better shape. Asa, what’s down the other way?”
“I only ever went about a hundred yards. More of the
same.” He was trying to open a passage urn.
Raven grunted, took an urn, opened it, dumped several coins onto
his hand. He held them near the torch. “Uhm. How did you
explain their age, Asa?”
“Money has no provenance,” Shed said.
Asa nodded. “And I made out like I’d found a buried
treasure.”
“I see. Lead on.”
Soon Asa said, “This is as far as I ever went.”
“Keep going.”
They wandered till even Raven responded to the oppression of the
cavern. “Enough. Back to the surface.” Once up top, he
said, “Get the tools. Damn. I’d hoped for
better.”
Soon they were back with a spade and ropes. “Shed, dig a
hole over there. Asa, hang on to this end of the rope. When I yell,
start pulling.” Raven descended into the Catacombs.
Asa remained rooted, as instructed. Shed dug. After a while, Asa
asked, “Shed, what’s he doing?”
“You don’t know? I thought you knew everything he
did.”
“I just told Krage that. I couldn’t keep up with him
all night.”
Shed grimaced, turned another spadeful of earth. He could guess
how Asa worked. By sleeping somewhere most of the time. Spying would have interfered with wood-gathering and
grave-robbing.
Shed was relieved. Asa didn’t know what he and Raven had
done. But he would before long.
He looked inside himself and found little self-disgust. Damn! He
was accustomed to these crimes already. Raven was making him over
in his own image.
Raven shouted. Asa hauled away. He called, “Shed, give me
a hand. I can’t get this by myself.”
Resigned, Shed joined him. Their catch was exactly what he
expected, a mummy sliding out of the darkness like some denizen of
the deeps of yesteryear. He averted his gaze. “Get his feet,
Asa.”
Asa gagged. “My God, Shed. My God. What are you
doing?”
“Be quiet and do what you’re told. That’s the
best way. Get his feet.”
They moved the body into the brush near Shed’s pit. A
passage urn rolled out of a bundle tied upon its chest. The bundle
contained another two dozen urns. So. The hole was for burying
empty urns. Why didn’t Raven fill his pockets down there?
“Let’s get out of here, Shed,” Asa whined.
“Back to your rope.” Urns took time to empty. And
Raven had two men up top with little to do but think. So. They were
busy-work. And an incentive, of course. Two dozen urns with each
cadaver would build up quite a pile.
“Shed . . . ”
“Where you going to run to, Asa?” The day was clear
and unseasonably warm, but it was still winter. There was no way
out of Juniper. “He’d find you. Go back to your rope.
You’re in it now, like it or not.” Shed resumed
digging.
Raven sent up six mummies. Each carried its bundle of urns. Then
Raven returned. He studied Asa’s ashen face, Shed’s
resignation. “Your turn, Shed.”
Shed gulped, opened his mouth, swallowed his protest, slunk
toward the hole. He lingered over it, a hair’s breadth from
rebellion.
“Move it, Shed. We don’t have forever.”
Marron Shed went down among the dead.
It seemed he was in the Catacombs forever, numbly selecting
cadavers, collecting urns, dragging his grisly booty to the rope.
His mind had entered another reality. This was the dream, the
nightmare. At first he did not understand when Raven called for him
to come up.
He clambered into gathering dusk. “Is that enough? Can we
go now?”
“No,” Raven replied. “We’ve got sixteen.
I figure we can get thirty on the wagons.”
“Oh. Okay.”
“You haul up,” Raven said. “Asa and I will go
down.”
Shed hauled. In the silvery light of a three-quarters moon the
dead faces seemed accusing. He swallowed his loathing and placed
each with the others, then emptied urns.
He was tempted to take the money and run. He stayed more out of
greed than fear of Raven. He was a partner this time. Thirty bodies
at thirty leva meant nine hundred leva to share out. Even if he
took the small cut, he would be richer than he’d ever
dreamed.
What was that? Not Raven’s order to haul away. It sounded
like someone screaming . . . He nearly ran. He
did go to pieces momentarily. Raven’s bellowing brought him
together. The man’s cold, calm contempt had vanished.
Shed heaved. This one was heavy. He grunted,
strained . . . Raven came scrambling up. His
clothing was torn. A bloody gash marked one cheek. His knife was
red. He whirled, grabbed the rope. “Pull!” he shouted.
“Damn you, pull!”
Asa came out a moment later, tied to the rope. “What
happened? My God, what happened?” Asa was breathing, and that
was about it.
“Something jumped us. It tore him up before I
could kill it.”
“A Guardian. I warned you. Get another torch. Let’s
see how bad he is.” Raven just sat there panting, flustered.
Shed got the torch, lighted it. Asa’s wounds were not as bad
as he had feared. There was a lot of blood, and Asa was in shock,
but he wasn’t dying. “We ought to get out of here,
Raven. Before the Custodians come.”
Raven recovered his composure. “No. There was only one. I
killed it. We’re in this now. Let’s get it done
right.”
“What about Asa?”
“I don’t know. Let’s get to work.”
“Raven, I’m exhausted.”
“You’re going to get a lot tireder before
we’re done. Come on. Let’s get the mess cleaned
up.”
They moved the bodies to the wagons, then the tools, then carted
Asa down. As they worked the litter through the wall, Shed asked,
“What should we do with him?”
Raven looked at him as though he were a moron. “What do
you think, Shed?”
“But . . . ”
“It doesn’t much matter now, does it?”
“I guess not.” But it did matter. Asa wasn’t
much, but Shed knew him. He was no friend, but they had helped one
another out . . . “No. Can’t do it,
Raven. He can make it. If I was sure he was checking out, yeah.
Okay. No body, no questions. But I can’t kill him.”
“Well. A little spirit after all. How are you going to
keep him quiet? He’s the kind who gets throats cut with loose
talk.”
“I’ll handle him.”
“Whatever you say, partner. It’s your
neck.”
The night was well along when they reached the black castle.
Raven went in first. Shed followed closely. They pulled into the
same passage as before. The drill was the same. After they laid out
the bodies, a tall, lean creature went down the line.
“Ten. Ten. Thirty. Ten. Ten.” And so forth.
Raven protested vigorously. The only offers above ten were for
the men who had followed them to the Enclosure and for Asa, who
remained in his wagon.
The tall being faced Raven. “These have been dead too
long. They have little value. Take them back if you’re not
satisfied.”
“All right. All right. Let’s have it.”
The being counted out coins. Raven pocketed six of each ten. He
handed the rest to Shed. As he did so, he told the tall being,
“This man is my partner. He may come alone.”
The tall figure inclined its head, took something from within
its clothing, handed it to Shed. It was a silver pendant in the
form of serpents entwined.
“Wear that if you come up alone,” Raven said.
“That’s your safe-conduct.” Under his icy stare
Shed slipped the pendant into a pocket already filled with
silver.
He ran the arithmetic. One hundred twelve leva as his share. It
would have taken him half a decade to accumulate that much
honestly. He was rich! Damn him, he was rich! He could do anything
he wanted. No more debts. No more Krage killing him slowly. No more
gruel every meal. Turn the Lily into something decent. Maybe find a
place where his mother would have proper care. Women. All the women
he could handle.
As he turned his wagon, he glimpsed a high chunk of wall that
hadn’t been there last visit. A face stared out. It was the
face of the man he and Raven had brought in alive. Its eyes watched
him.