Two days passed before we ate, courtesy of Tracker’s skill
as a hunter. Two days we spent dodging patrols. Tracker knew those
woods well. We disappeared into their deeps and drifted southward
at a more relaxed pace. After the two days Tracker felt confident
enough to let us have a fire. It was not much, though, because
finding burnable wood was a pain. Its value was more psychological
than physical.
Misery balanced by rising hope. That was the story of our two
weeks in the Old Forest. Hell, trekking overland, off the road, was
as fast or faster than using the road itself. We felt halfway
optimistic when we neared the southern verge.
I am tempted to dwell on the misery and the arguments about
Raven. One-Eye and Goblin were convinced we were doing him no good.
Yet they could come up with no alternative to dragging him
along.
I carried another weight in my belly, like a big stone.
Goblin got to me that second night while Tracker and Toadkiller
Dog were hunting. He whispered, “I got farther in than
One-Eye did. Almost to the center. I know why Raven didn’t
get out.”
“Yeah?”
“He saw too much. What he went to see, probably. The
Dominator is not asleep. I . . . ” He
shuddered. It took him a moment to get hold of himself. “I
saw him, Croaker. Looking back at me. And laughing. If it
hadn’t been for One-Eye . . . I’d
have been caught just like Raven.”
“Oh, my,” I said softly, mind abuzz with the
implications. “Awake? And working?”
“Yes. Don’t talk about it. Not to anybody till you
can tell Darling.”
There was a hint of fatalism in him then. He doubted he would be
around long. Scary. “One-Eye know?”
“I’ll tell him. Got to make sure word gets
back.”
“Why not just tell us all?”
“Not Tracker. There’s something wrong with
Tracker . . . Croaker. Another thing. The
old-time wizard. He’s in there, too.”
“Bomanz?”
“Yes. Alive. Like he’s frozen or something. Not
dead, but not able to do anything . . . The
dragon . . . ” He shut up.
Tracker arrived, carrying a brace of squirrels. We barely let
them warm before we attacked them.
We rested a day before tackling the tamed lands. Henceforth it
would be scurry from one smidgen of cover to the next, mouselike,
by night. I wondered what the hell the point might be. The Plain of
Fear might as well be in another world.
That night I had a golden dream.
I do not recall anything except that she touched me, and somehow
tried to warn me. I think exhaustion more than my amulet blocked
the message. Nothing stuck. I wakened retaining only a vague sense
of having missed something critical.
End of the line. End of the game. Two hours out of the Great
Forest I knew our time was approaching. Darkness was inadequate
insulation. Nor were my amulets sufficient.
The Taken were in the air. I felt them on the prowl once it was
too late to turn back. And they knew their quarry was afoot. We
could hear the distant clamor of battalions moving to bar retreat
into the forest.
My amulet warned me of the near passage of Taken repeatedly.
When it did not, as it seemed not always to do—perhaps because the
new Taken did not affect it—Toadkiller Dog gave warning. He could
smell the bastards coming a league away.
The other amulet did help. That and Tracker’s genius for
laying a crooked trail.
But the circle closed. And closed. And we knew that it would not
be long before there were no gaps through which we could slide.
“What do we do. Croaker?” One-Eye asked. His voice
was shaky. He knew. But he wanted to be told. And I could neither
give the order nor do it myself.
These men were my friends. We had been together all my adult
life. I could not tell them to kill themselves. I could not cut
them down.
But I could not allow them to be captured, either.
A vague notion formed. A foolish one, really. At first I thought
it simple desperation silliness. What good?
Then something touched me. I gasped. The others felt it, too.
Even Tracker and his mutt. They jumped as if stung. I gasped again.
“It’s her. She’s here. Oh, damn.” But that
made up my mind. I might be able to buy time.
Before I could reflect and thus chicken out, I shucked my
amulets, shoved them into Goblin’s hands, pushed our precious
documents at One-Eye. “Thanks, guys. Take care. Maybe
I’ll see you.”
“What the hell you doing?”
Bow in hand—the bow she had given me so long ago—I leaped into
darkness. Soft protests pursued me. I caught the edge of Tracker
asking what the hell was going on. Then I was away.
There was a road not far off, and a little sliver of moon up
top. I got onto the one and trotted by the light of the other,
pushing my tired old body to its limit, trying to build as big a
margin as possible before the inevitable befell me.
She would protect me for a time. I hoped. And once caught, I
might stall on behalf of the others.
I felt sorry for them, though. Neither Goblin nor One-Eye was
strong enough to help carry Raven. Tracker could not manage alone.
If they made it to the Plain of Fear, they would not be able to
evade the unenviable duty of explaining everything to Darling.
I wondered if any of them would have what it took to finish
Raven . . . Bile rose. My legs were going
watery. I tried to fill my mind with nothingness, stared at the
road three steps ahead of my feet, puffed hard, kept on. Count
steps. By hundreds, over and over.
A horse. I could steal a horse. I kept telling myself that,
concentrated on that, damning the stitch in my side, till shadows
loomed before me and imperials began to shout, and I hared off into
a wheat field with the Lady’s hounds abay behind me.
I nearly gave them the slip. Nearly. But then the shadow
descended from the heavens. Air whistled past a carpet. And a
moment later darkness devoured me.
I welcomed it as the end of my miseries, hoping it was
permanent.
It was light when I regained consciousness. I was in a cold
place, but all places are cold in the north countries. I was dry.
For the first time in weeks, I was dry. I harkened back to my run
and recalled the sliver of moon. A sky clear enough for a moon.
Amazing.
I cracked one eye. I was in a room with walls of stone. It had
the look of a cell. Beneath me, a surface neither hard nor wet. How
long since I had lain on a dry bed? Blue Willy.
I became aware of an odor. Food! Hot food, on a platter just
inches from my head, atop a small stand. Some mess that looked like
overcooked stew. Gods, did it smell good!
I rose so swiftly my head spun. I almost passed out. Food! The
hell with anything else. I ate like the starved animal I was.
I had not quite finished when the door slammed inward. Exploded
inward, ringing off the wall. A huge dark form stamped through. For
a moment I sat with spoon halfway between bowl and mouth. This
thing was human? It stepped to one side, weapon ready.
Four imperials followed, but I hardly noticed, so taken was I
with the giant. Man, all right, but bigger than any I’d ever
seen. And looking lithe and spritely as an elf for all his
size.
The imperials paired to either side of the doorway, presented
arms.
“What?” I demanded, determined to go down with a
defiant grin. “No drumrolls? No trumpets?” I presumed I
was about to meet my captor.
I can call them when I call them. Whisper came through the
doorway.
I was more startled by seeing her than by the dramatic advent of
her giant thug. She was supposed to be holding the western boundary
of the Plain . . .
Unless . . . I could not think it. But the
worm of doubt gnawed anyway. I had been out of touch a long
time.
“Where are the documents?” she demanded, without
preamble.
A grin smeared my face. I had succeeded. They had not caught the
others . . . But elation faded swiftly. There
were more imperials behind Whisper, and they bore a litter. Raven.
They dumped him roughly onto a cot opposite mine.
Their hospitality was not niggardly. It was a grand cell. Plenty
of room for the prisoner to stretch his legs.
I found my grin. “Now, you shouldn’t ask questions
like that. Mama wouldn’t like it. Remember how angry she
became last time?”
Whisper was always a cool one. Even when she led the Rebel, she
never let emotion get in the way. She did remind me, “Your
death can be an unpleasant one, physician.”
“Dead is dead.”
A slow smile spread upon her colorless lips. She was not a
lovely woman. That nasty smile did not improve her looks.
I got the message. Down in the dark inside me something howled
and gibbered like a monkey getting roasted. I resisted its call to
terror. Now, if ever there was one, was a time to act as a brother
of the Black Company. I had to buy time. Had to give the others the
longest head start possible.
She might have read my mind as she stood there staring, smiling.
“They won’t get far. They can hide from witchery, but
they cannot hide from the hounds.”
My heart sank.
As if cued, a messenger arrived. He whispered to Whisper. She
nodded. Then she turned to me. “I go to collect them now.
Think on the Limper in my absence. For once I have drained you of
knowledge, I may deliver you to him.” Smile again.
“You never were a nice lady,” I said, but it came
feebly and got said to her departing back. Her menagerie went with
her.
I checked Raven. He seemed unchanged.
I lay on my cot, closed my eyes, tried to push everything out of
my mind. It had worked once before when I needed contact with the
Lady.
Where was she? I knew she was near enough to sense last night.
But now? Was she playing some game?
But she had said no special
consideration . . . Still. There is
consideration and consideration.
Two days passed before we ate, courtesy of Tracker’s skill
as a hunter. Two days we spent dodging patrols. Tracker knew those
woods well. We disappeared into their deeps and drifted southward
at a more relaxed pace. After the two days Tracker felt confident
enough to let us have a fire. It was not much, though, because
finding burnable wood was a pain. Its value was more psychological
than physical.
Misery balanced by rising hope. That was the story of our two
weeks in the Old Forest. Hell, trekking overland, off the road, was
as fast or faster than using the road itself. We felt halfway
optimistic when we neared the southern verge.
I am tempted to dwell on the misery and the arguments about
Raven. One-Eye and Goblin were convinced we were doing him no good.
Yet they could come up with no alternative to dragging him
along.
I carried another weight in my belly, like a big stone.
Goblin got to me that second night while Tracker and Toadkiller
Dog were hunting. He whispered, “I got farther in than
One-Eye did. Almost to the center. I know why Raven didn’t
get out.”
“Yeah?”
“He saw too much. What he went to see, probably. The
Dominator is not asleep. I . . . ” He
shuddered. It took him a moment to get hold of himself. “I
saw him, Croaker. Looking back at me. And laughing. If it
hadn’t been for One-Eye . . . I’d
have been caught just like Raven.”
“Oh, my,” I said softly, mind abuzz with the
implications. “Awake? And working?”
“Yes. Don’t talk about it. Not to anybody till you
can tell Darling.”
There was a hint of fatalism in him then. He doubted he would be
around long. Scary. “One-Eye know?”
“I’ll tell him. Got to make sure word gets
back.”
“Why not just tell us all?”
“Not Tracker. There’s something wrong with
Tracker . . . Croaker. Another thing. The
old-time wizard. He’s in there, too.”
“Bomanz?”
“Yes. Alive. Like he’s frozen or something. Not
dead, but not able to do anything . . . The
dragon . . . ” He shut up.
Tracker arrived, carrying a brace of squirrels. We barely let
them warm before we attacked them.
We rested a day before tackling the tamed lands. Henceforth it
would be scurry from one smidgen of cover to the next, mouselike,
by night. I wondered what the hell the point might be. The Plain of
Fear might as well be in another world.
That night I had a golden dream.
I do not recall anything except that she touched me, and somehow
tried to warn me. I think exhaustion more than my amulet blocked
the message. Nothing stuck. I wakened retaining only a vague sense
of having missed something critical.
End of the line. End of the game. Two hours out of the Great
Forest I knew our time was approaching. Darkness was inadequate
insulation. Nor were my amulets sufficient.
The Taken were in the air. I felt them on the prowl once it was
too late to turn back. And they knew their quarry was afoot. We
could hear the distant clamor of battalions moving to bar retreat
into the forest.
My amulet warned me of the near passage of Taken repeatedly.
When it did not, as it seemed not always to do—perhaps because the
new Taken did not affect it—Toadkiller Dog gave warning. He could
smell the bastards coming a league away.
The other amulet did help. That and Tracker’s genius for
laying a crooked trail.
But the circle closed. And closed. And we knew that it would not
be long before there were no gaps through which we could slide.
“What do we do. Croaker?” One-Eye asked. His voice
was shaky. He knew. But he wanted to be told. And I could neither
give the order nor do it myself.
These men were my friends. We had been together all my adult
life. I could not tell them to kill themselves. I could not cut
them down.
But I could not allow them to be captured, either.
A vague notion formed. A foolish one, really. At first I thought
it simple desperation silliness. What good?
Then something touched me. I gasped. The others felt it, too.
Even Tracker and his mutt. They jumped as if stung. I gasped again.
“It’s her. She’s here. Oh, damn.” But that
made up my mind. I might be able to buy time.
Before I could reflect and thus chicken out, I shucked my
amulets, shoved them into Goblin’s hands, pushed our precious
documents at One-Eye. “Thanks, guys. Take care. Maybe
I’ll see you.”
“What the hell you doing?”
Bow in hand—the bow she had given me so long ago—I leaped into
darkness. Soft protests pursued me. I caught the edge of Tracker
asking what the hell was going on. Then I was away.
There was a road not far off, and a little sliver of moon up
top. I got onto the one and trotted by the light of the other,
pushing my tired old body to its limit, trying to build as big a
margin as possible before the inevitable befell me.
She would protect me for a time. I hoped. And once caught, I
might stall on behalf of the others.
I felt sorry for them, though. Neither Goblin nor One-Eye was
strong enough to help carry Raven. Tracker could not manage alone.
If they made it to the Plain of Fear, they would not be able to
evade the unenviable duty of explaining everything to Darling.
I wondered if any of them would have what it took to finish
Raven . . . Bile rose. My legs were going
watery. I tried to fill my mind with nothingness, stared at the
road three steps ahead of my feet, puffed hard, kept on. Count
steps. By hundreds, over and over.
A horse. I could steal a horse. I kept telling myself that,
concentrated on that, damning the stitch in my side, till shadows
loomed before me and imperials began to shout, and I hared off into
a wheat field with the Lady’s hounds abay behind me.
I nearly gave them the slip. Nearly. But then the shadow
descended from the heavens. Air whistled past a carpet. And a
moment later darkness devoured me.
I welcomed it as the end of my miseries, hoping it was
permanent.
It was light when I regained consciousness. I was in a cold
place, but all places are cold in the north countries. I was dry.
For the first time in weeks, I was dry. I harkened back to my run
and recalled the sliver of moon. A sky clear enough for a moon.
Amazing.
I cracked one eye. I was in a room with walls of stone. It had
the look of a cell. Beneath me, a surface neither hard nor wet. How
long since I had lain on a dry bed? Blue Willy.
I became aware of an odor. Food! Hot food, on a platter just
inches from my head, atop a small stand. Some mess that looked like
overcooked stew. Gods, did it smell good!
I rose so swiftly my head spun. I almost passed out. Food! The
hell with anything else. I ate like the starved animal I was.
I had not quite finished when the door slammed inward. Exploded
inward, ringing off the wall. A huge dark form stamped through. For
a moment I sat with spoon halfway between bowl and mouth. This
thing was human? It stepped to one side, weapon ready.
Four imperials followed, but I hardly noticed, so taken was I
with the giant. Man, all right, but bigger than any I’d ever
seen. And looking lithe and spritely as an elf for all his
size.
The imperials paired to either side of the doorway, presented
arms.
“What?” I demanded, determined to go down with a
defiant grin. “No drumrolls? No trumpets?” I presumed I
was about to meet my captor.
I can call them when I call them. Whisper came through the
doorway.
I was more startled by seeing her than by the dramatic advent of
her giant thug. She was supposed to be holding the western boundary
of the Plain . . .
Unless . . . I could not think it. But the
worm of doubt gnawed anyway. I had been out of touch a long
time.
“Where are the documents?” she demanded, without
preamble.
A grin smeared my face. I had succeeded. They had not caught the
others . . . But elation faded swiftly. There
were more imperials behind Whisper, and they bore a litter. Raven.
They dumped him roughly onto a cot opposite mine.
Their hospitality was not niggardly. It was a grand cell. Plenty
of room for the prisoner to stretch his legs.
I found my grin. “Now, you shouldn’t ask questions
like that. Mama wouldn’t like it. Remember how angry she
became last time?”
Whisper was always a cool one. Even when she led the Rebel, she
never let emotion get in the way. She did remind me, “Your
death can be an unpleasant one, physician.”
“Dead is dead.”
A slow smile spread upon her colorless lips. She was not a
lovely woman. That nasty smile did not improve her looks.
I got the message. Down in the dark inside me something howled
and gibbered like a monkey getting roasted. I resisted its call to
terror. Now, if ever there was one, was a time to act as a brother
of the Black Company. I had to buy time. Had to give the others the
longest head start possible.
She might have read my mind as she stood there staring, smiling.
“They won’t get far. They can hide from witchery, but
they cannot hide from the hounds.”
My heart sank.
As if cued, a messenger arrived. He whispered to Whisper. She
nodded. Then she turned to me. “I go to collect them now.
Think on the Limper in my absence. For once I have drained you of
knowledge, I may deliver you to him.” Smile again.
“You never were a nice lady,” I said, but it came
feebly and got said to her departing back. Her menagerie went with
her.
I checked Raven. He seemed unchanged.
I lay on my cot, closed my eyes, tried to push everything out of
my mind. It had worked once before when I needed contact with the
Lady.
Where was she? I knew she was near enough to sense last night.
But now? Was she playing some game?
But she had said no special
consideration . . . Still. There is
consideration and consideration.