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"That you are," Bren Adahan said. "And may one inquire why you're glaring at me?"
"You and I will have a talk about my sister," Jason said. "After Salket. And give me back my d.a.m.n sword."
INTERLUDE.
Ahira
The world is a vast temple dedicated to Discord.
a"Voltaire The dwarf was tired, dirty, and sore as, still on the back of his gray pony, he was hurried past the guard stations, into the inner bailey of Biemestren castle. The tendons in his thick neck burned like hot wires and a hot gray film had taken up residence behind his eyes. His right shoulder was a constant dull ache. It never went away, not even when he slept. The skin around the edges of the wound was raw and red.
After he had been picked up near New Pittsburgh, riders had been sent ahead, bringing word that he was on his way. So it was no surprise that they were waiting for him on the gra.s.s.
But it was still good to see them; it had been too long.
He dropped heavily to the ground and tossed his weapons to one side.
Kirah, D.A. in her arms, ran over to him. She dropped to her knees, burying her face against his good shoulder, and wept.
"Ta havath, Kirah, ta havath," he said, awkwardly patting her on the back. "Walter was fine, last I saw him." But that was too d.a.m.n long ago.
He'd taken a bolt in his shoulder three weeks before, but he ignored the pain as he scooped up little D.A. She balanced easily on his forearm for a moment, then planted a wet kiss on his wet cheek.
"I love you, Uncle Ahira," she said, clear as a bell.
He folded the little girl in his arms and held her gently, carefully, in arms that could, that had snapped a man's ribcage like matchsticks. Fingers that had crushed, fingers that had destroyed, fingers that ripped flesh, toyed with her pageboy-length hair. "Got a new haircut, eh?" he said.
She nodded and smiled, practically bubbling. "Aunt Doria and Auntie Andy did it."
They surrounded him, Doria, looking as she did in his dreams sometimes: young again, if you only looked at the arms and neck and face, and didn't quite notice the eyes.
Still holding D.A. in his right arm, he wrapped his left around her waist. "It's good to see you, old friend," he said, d.a.m.ning the quaver in his voice. "Is Ellegon here?" he asked, although he'd been shouting with his mind for the dragon for hours.
"No." Doria shook her head. "He's trying to rendezvous with Jason and the rest in Mipos. He'll be backa"maybe with thema"in a day or two. I hope." She bit her lip.
Thomen Furnael stood a few yards apart, his face creased in concern. He was dressed informally: trousers, a light shirt, a black robe tucked over his arm. "We have to know, Ahira: is he alive?"
Andrea's face was a mask of grief. She didn't have to ask.
G.o.d, she looks old.
The dwarf shook his head. "Of course not. He blew himself up in Melawei, just like Jason and the others must've told you. Get me a drink, and get me into a hot bath, and we'll talk about it. We've got a day or two before we can do anything. If we can do anything."
The water was already hot in the officers' bath, over by the barracks. Ahira crouched in the oaken vat, the water up to his neck, steam rising from the surface.
It had been forever since he'd had a hot bath.
He sat back and tried to ease his muscles; he was strung tight as a lute's treble strings.
It had made sense, when Walter had proposed it on the beach at Melawei.
"Look," Walter had said, "he's dead, and there's nothing we can do about that."
"Except gather together what we can for burial," Ahira said, kneeling in the hot sun over Karl's hand.
It was Karl's left hand: the three outer fingers were just stumps.
Miraculously, the hand had survived intact, severed almost cleanly at the wrist, although it had been thrown easily a hundred yards from the center of the explosion.
Ants were already crawling on it, but Ahira couldn't force himself to reach out and pick it up, or brush them off.
d.a.m.n it, d.a.m.n it, d.a.m.n it.
"We can't bring him back to life," Walter said. "But we can keep him from dying."
"You're getting clever, Slovotsky," the dwarf said. "Sounds like a bad idea to me." But he didn't mean it, not really. It was just a reflex, after so many years.
"First thing we got to do is bury the hand, plus any other parts of him we can find. Or parts of the slavers that might be him. We can't let the Mel see that hand, and work it out. The official story is that Karl left."
"And then?"
"We've got to kill us some slavers." Slovotsky's smile was broad in the sunshine. But it wasn't really Walter Slovotsky's smile.
It was Karl's.
"When the Mel came back down from the hills, wea"well, Walter, actually, lied his head off. Karl had left aboard Ganness's boat, we said, and we were to follow, once the slavers were dead.
"Old Wohtansen wasn't any too happy about thata"I think he still remembers the time Karl punched hima"but some of the Eriksen men volunteered.
"Didn't like the trip much. If anybody ever asks you if you want to face a storm on the Cirric in nothing more than an outrigger canoe with the sloppiest lateen rigging the universe has ever seen, tell them no.
"We hit them in Ehvenor. And then Lundeyll, and then Erifeyll, careful to leave evidence of three of us at all times.
"Walter and I split up in Erifeyll. The next part of the plan called for some time at sea, in the Shattered Islands. I'd be too conspicuous. A dwarf sailor? No; better they look for two humans and a dwarf. And just in case the legend of Karl Cullinane were to reach here, and raise false hopes, I was to hie myself back, fast as possible."
Ahira leaned back in the water and toyed with a cake of pear-scented soap, blunt fingers gently stirring up lather on its translucent surface. He tried to loosen his tense muscles, but that didn't happen. He fastened his hand around the bar of soap and squeezed. The soap flowed between his fingers like wet clay.
"I ran into a bit of trouble. Tell you about it sometime."
Doria felt at his shoulder, dry, practiced fingers touching impotently at a wound that was only partly healed. "We've sent for a healer," she said. "Spidersect."
He shrugged. "Walter's hopping among the Shattered Islands now, working his waya"as indirectly as possiblea"to Elleport, then back up the Orduin toward Endell. He may head there, or he could change his route and head toward Home."
"Islands?" Garavar's voice sounded like gravel.
"Yes, yes, islands. He hires on as a sailor, and spends some time in the taverns across the islands, talking up the Warrior, and how he's been heard of here, there and everywhere. With his two, or twenty, or two hundred sidekicks. He should be finished soon; by now there'll be far too many hunters on the Warrior's trail, and Walter won't want to run into them." The dwarf sighed.
"Or, maybe he won't be finished. Not if he sees a Home signal rocket. He'll have to investigate that, which means that he's going to be looking for the kids just as hard as they're looking for him. Say, about half as hard as the slavers are looking for the Warrior."
Doria's fingers gripped his with surprising strength. "I'll come with you."
The dwarf shook his head. "No. Just me and the dragon. We'll try the next rendezvous that Jason and Janie set up, and if that doesn't work we'll try to find him."
"No," Andrea said. "No. It's you, Ellegon and me. I can find them."
"How do you expect to do that?" Doria was angry.
"I have my methods, Doria. Magic." Andrea muttered a few quick syllables that could only be heard and forgotten. She held out her right hand, and sparks danced between her fingers. "I know you think I use too much magic, but don't you think it's worthwhile for this? For my son's life?"
The sparks grew more violent, more frenzied, snapping like whips between her thumb and forefinger. Andrea's skin flinched where the sparks touched her, but she didn't shrink from it. Her lips moved silently, and the sparks grew louder, the flashes brighter and sharper, until with a quick flick of her fingers she dismissed the light and sound into nothingness.
"I know a bit about magic." Doria pursed her lips. "Sure, you can make a model of Jason, but you can't break through the protection spell of his amulet, no matter how much power you use. Magically, he isn't even vaguely similar to any form, not while he's wearing it."
"You're quite right." Andrea smiled thinly. "I can't. And I can't find Bren Adahan, or Tennetty, or Walter. Not while they're wearing their amulets. But Kethol and Durine aren't wearing amulets, are they?" She stalked out of the bath house, her skirts flaring as the breeze caught them.
And then she was gone.
"I don't like her using magic," Thomen Furnael said. "But I don't see any good way around it."
Or of stopping her, Ahira added silently.
Doria kept her thoughts to herself.
There was nothing to do, for the moment, but lean back and soak in the hot water, and rest.
He closed his eyes.
CHAPTER 22.
Steer's Head Inn.
All h.e.l.l broke loose.
a"Milton.
Tell me again why it's a good idea to take a lot of chances.
a"Walter Slovotsky.
The storm moved in as the day was moving out. The sun hung just above the horizon, but the sky was dark with oncoming thunderheads. The damp wind whipped gra.s.s and leaves into the air around Jason as he stood on top of the hill.
Jason shivered and pulled his cloak around him, then bent to pick up the signal rocket. "Set the launching pole," he said.
Durine firmly shoved the thin metal pole into the bare ground, canted just a bit into the wind.
Jason straightened, then carefully slipped the rings on the side of the signal rocket along the launching rod. He knelt to unwrap the base of the rocket; it had been covered in waxed paper to keep the damp out.
It seemed to have worked just fine; his fingers couldn't feel a trace of wetness. The roll of fusing he took from a canvas bag was another matter. Something or other had gotten to it, and it was soggy.
It would probably burn, but perhaps not. Best not to fool with it. They had already taken that possibility into consideration; Jason had a flintlock pistol stuck into his belt, its tamping rod protruding from the barrel.
Dragging the heel of his boot to carve a shallow trench in the dirt, Durine kept his eyes on the road below.
Down there, Bren Adahan waited with their rented transportation: two saddle horses and the flatbed wagon, drawn by a pair of ragged mules. Janie and the others were a day's ride away, at Tesors, the port village, with the boat.
Durine handed him a powder horn, and Jason carefully tipped a trail of the powder into the trench, leading up to the signal rocket. He finished up with a heaping spoonful under the base of the rocket.
That ought to get it going.
"Okay, now, head on down there. I'll be with you in a moment." He could move faster than Durine, and while it was unlikely that the rocket would blow up, there was no sense taking a chance on it.
He waited for Durine to get to the base of the hill, and noted with approval that the big man had the horses' reins held firmly in his hands.
Standing at the far end of the trail of gunpowder, Jason took the tamping rod out of the pistol and stuck it carefully in its slot below the barrel. He primed the pan, then snapped the frizzen down, c.o.c.king the pistol before he aimed it carefully at the snaking trail of black powder.
Why was he aiming? He didn't need to aim. He knelt and set the muzzle against the end of the trail of the powder, and pulled the trigger.
The flintlock pistol spat fire, lighting the trail of gunpowder, sending a line of fire sizzling toward the rocket.
Jason didn't wait to see if the rocket would launch safely; he was already partway down the slope, out of line of sight of the rocket.
A vast cloud of smoke billowed from the base of the rocket, the reek of sulfur sending Jason huddling into his cloak, in a coughing fit.
He straightened, his eyes tearing, as the rocket roared away, leaving behind smoke and sulfur. Rising on a pillar of smoke and fire into the darkening sky, it climbed faster and faster, the fire growing more and more intense, as though challenging the brightness of the dim stars themselves.