Page 22 of The Witchwood Crown


  Without finishing his sentence, he swung a huge fist at Snenneq’s face. The troll dropped beneath the blow so neatly that for a moment Morgan thought the little man’s head had been knocked cleanly from his shoulders. Lomskur swore loudly and tried to drop on him. Morgan had no doubt that if he did, no trick in the world would save the troll from being crushed to death, but Snenneq had somehow already rolled out of the way, grabbing the handles of the two overturned tankards as he went. Lomskur, on his knees, seemed to have lost the use of words completely. He snarled and swung, but Snenneq kept dodging. Lomskur grabbed a heavy bowl from a table and flung it at him, but the troll simply ducked. Now the Rimmersman clambered to his feet once more, roaring like a wounded bear, but something glinted in his hand.

  “ ‘Ware!” Morgan shouted. “He has a knife!”

  Many of the customers nearest the door decided this would be a good time to leave, but the rest of the crowd seemed unable to move or look away as the huge man swiped at the troll with a long, crude-looking blade. None of Lomskur’s friends or fellow Rimmersmen made any move to stop him, although they could hardly be blamed.

  At first Little Snenneq simply backed away, but he was beginning to run out of room. Lomskur, despite his lumbering, clumsy steps, was steadily backing the troll into one corner of the room. Even using the two heavy mugs as shields would not protect Snenneq when that happened, the prince knew, and for the first time he realized what kind of utter disgrace he would be in if something happened to one of his grandfather’s troll friends.

  The bearded man’s blade lashed out and cut through the troll’s jacket. Morgan thought he saw blood. “Enough!” he shouted. “Put up, man! The heir of the High Throne commands you to lay down your weapon!”

  But Lomskur, if he even heard, was too far gone in rage now to care about princes. Someone ran outside and began calling for the city guard, but Morgan felt certain no soldiers would arrive to end this before someone was hurt or killed. “Astrian! Olveris!” he shouted. “Help the little fellow!”

  “It is his fight,” Astrian said. “He challenged the man.”

  “But the man has a knife!”

  “Even so.” Astrian had not even taken his eyes off the fight. “It is you we are meant to protect, my prince, not any troll who wanders down out of the mountains.”

  Frustrated and frightened, Morgan was about to draw his own blade and try to even the odds, but he never had the chance. The next time the big man jabbed the knife at him, Little Snenneq did not duck or dodge again, but instead brought the two mugs together and hammered Lomskur’s hand from either side. The big man dropped the blade, cursing loudly, blood suddenly welling from his knuckles. A moment later the troll flung himself down at Lomskur’s feet and crashed one of the heavy stone mugs against the Rimmersman’s kneecap. With a howl of agony, Lomskur collapsed. He did not try to rise again, but rolled back and forth, screeching and holding his leg.

  “I was only at buying him an ale because I made a promise,” said Little Snenneq with a distinct tone of irritation, then brought the other tankard around in a wide arc and slammed it against Lomskur’s temple. The big man dropped on the floor like a sack of grain and lay silent.

  Suddenly Rimmersmen were rising all over the room, but Morgan didn’t think they looked as if they were coming to congratulate the victor. Snenneq calmly backed toward Morgan’s table, a move that the prince did not approve of much, because the angry crowd was following him. Morgan wondered whether these unhappy people remembered that he, Morgan of Erkynland, was the heir to the High Throne. He hoped so.

  “Enough! Stand back!” Astrian sprang up, and his sword rang as it slid from his scabbard. “Back, you northern scum. I will gut the first one of you who takes another step toward the prince.” However drunk he had been earlier, the knight gripped his sword as steadily as a jeweler would hold his chisel over a large, uncut gem. The people in the alehouse stopped short and watched him, silent and sullen. Astrian nodded at them, like a teacher pleased with his clever students. “Highness,” he said in a pointed tone, “I suggest we take our leave of this establishment.”

  “I agree with your suggestion.” But as Morgan backed toward the door he noticed that Little Snenneq still stood between their table and the disgruntled patrons. “You! Troll! You’d better come with us.”

  “I am being owed my copper back for those two ales,” the little man said, frowning at the empty tankards he still held. “And I was not even given the courtesy of drinking mine.”

  “Let it go.” Morgan beckoned. “We’re leaving. You should leave with us.”

  Little Snenneq shook his head in frustration, but set the tankards on the table and joined the prince and his friends. Porto and Olveris had their blades out now too. Nobody opposed them as they backed out into the narrow street and slammed the door behind them.

  “Goodness,” said Sir Porto. “They have not changed much since I was a young man, these Rimmersgarders.”

  “When you were a young man,” said Astrian, sheathing his blade, “the Rimmersmen were still in the lost West.”

  “But how did you do that?” Morgan asked the troll. “How did you beat that big lout?”

  The little man shrugged. “No tricks. It is like stick-fighting—balance, that is the story to tell. And another word that I am not knowing, but it means changing the strength of the pulling, and the direction. Feeling what the other man is doing. No tricks, no secret. With only a small effort, I can be teaching it to you. I have much to teach you, Prince Morgan. We will be famous friends.”

  Morgan stared at him. “You keep saying things like that. What on the wide, green earth are you talking about? We have only just met.”

  “I am fated to be your companion, Morgan Prince.” The troll nodded vigorously. “This I feel certain to be true, and I have the blood of a Singing Man in me. That is what I will be one day, and because of it, I have knowing of things.” He bobbed his head again, as if this stream of nonsense proved something.

  “Dear God, no,” said Astrian, amused. “If you’re his companion, the prince wouldn’t need us any more. What would Olveris and I do for entertainment? But we will allow you a temporary apprenticeship in our noble guild, Sir Ogresbane, as long as you have enough of those coppers to keep us in drink. Do you approve, Olveris? Porto?”

  “What?” said Sir Porto. “I beg pardon, Your Highness, but there are some men coming out of the tavern behind you. Several of them. And is that the city guard they are waving to . . . ?”

  “Sadly, there are urgent matters that require our attention elsewhere,” Astrian declared, and led them off into the dark streets.

  They had a long walk back to Elvritshalla Castle. As he grew more sober, Morgan began to feel sickly certain his grandparents would hear about this latest fuss. Of course, by the time they did, he had no doubt it would all have somehow become his fault. But what did I do wrong? Nothing. I tried to help Grandfather’s friend, the famous troll Binny-whatsit. Is it my fault he saddled me with a tiny madman?

  The unexpected sight of the tiny madman lifting a skin bag and squirting himself a mouthful of some liquid chased Morgan’s gloomy thoughts away. “What is that you’re drinking?”

  Little Snenneq held out the bag. “Try if you wish, Morgan Prince. I am of course preferring this to the weak ale the croohok drink,” the troll said. “Little more than weasel-piss, that is being.”

  Morgan lifted the bag and squeezed a long draught into his mouth.

  A short time later Olveris and Porto helped him back onto his feet, to the hooting sound of Astrian’s laughter. Morgan could not speak for a while because he was still wheezing and coughing, but when he finally could, he asked—still with a certain breathlessness—“What is that?”

  “Kangkang,” said Little Snenneq. “It has real goodness, eh? And when the burruk is coming, the . . . bilch? Belch?” He laughed. “Oh! but it is burning like fire, lik
e the breath of a dragon. A fine drink for a man’s life, it is.” The troll reached up and patted Morgan on the elbow. “Did you know that my grandfather was fighting beside yours at Sesuad’ra, as Sithi call it—the famous Battle of the Frozen Lake? My grandfather was killed there. But I am not blaming you for that, Morgan Prince.” The troll patted him again, reassuring him. “Despite that sadness, we can be to each other friends. And now you are to be spending more time with me, you will be learning oh so many useful things.”

  “Just remember always to bring your purse,” said Sir Astrian, reaching out to try some kangkang for himself. “Thirst is an expensive mistress.”

  12

  The Bloody Sand

  The morning sky seemed so bright between the branches, and the world so full of new sights and smells and sounds, that Nezeru found it hard to keep her attention on what was before her. The mountainside forest was shrill with birdsong. The colors, more shades of green than she had imagined existed in the world, seemed to crash against her eyes like the sea flinging itself onto the rocks of the shore.

  She had seen so much in such a short time since leaving Nakkiga, first the plains and headlands that had seemed to throb with life, then the ship and the impossibly wide ocean, and now on this island mountainside the mad cacophony of colors, a thousand different trees and vines crawling over each other to stretch toward the sun. It was almost hard for her to believe that it was all happening to her, a halfbreed, perhaps the youngest Talon ever gifted with the Queen’s trust.

  Yes, see me now, Father! she exulted. At the order of the queen herself, we seek the bones of Hakatri, brother of the Storm King! It was like a story—a new one, a tale whose ending she had not heard time and again.

  “You make too much noise,” Makho the chieftain growled. “I hear your every footfall.”

  The Queen’s Talons, their guides from the village, and their translator, the ship’s captain, had begun climbing again by dawn’s first light, when the mortals could see. Makho was clearly disgusted at being delayed by mortal frailties, but the islanders had warned that the shrine, as the ship’s captain called it, was guarded against strangers and there was no way to tell them of the Hikeda’ya’s arrival beforehand.

  As the sun rose higher and Nezeru grew more used to the rioting greenery, the slopes on either side of the mountain trail continued to produce more astonishing colors; crimson, cup-shaped flowers like falling blood drops, great swaying banks of yellow mountain olive, and lavender-blooming heathers that clung to the slopes like a fur mantle, delighting Nezeru’s eye. The Singer Saomeji insisted on naming them all, breaking in on her pleasure to identify marsh marigold in wet ditches, moss campion and saxifrage, as if naming something added to its pleasure, or knowing was somehow better than simply seeing.

  The sun was still well short of noon when they reached the summit and what the mortal captain called “the place of the bones,” a large, low, circular stone house with a sod roof. Many more of the small, brown people came out of the building to greet them, all of them males with shaved heads and wearing similar clothing, yellow and blue robes belted at the waist by colorful scarves. To Nezeru, some seemed no more than children, and it was these who watched the approach of the Hikeda’ya and their escort with the greatest curiosity. Then, as Makho and the rest approached the low front door of the building, a final small group came out, two shaven-headed men helping a third who was the strangest, oldest mortal she had ever seen, his skin so full of wrinkles he might have been made of jerked meat.

  The Rimmersman captain stepped forward and made a long speech in the villagers’ tongue that had the old man nodding and smiling. When the captain finished, the wrinkled old man replied at some length.

  “The head priest welcomes you,” the captain explained. “He says he is very pleased that the People of the Bones have come to this place to pay their respects, and he wishes to let you know that he and his priestly ancestors have honored and cared for them for more years than the meadow has grass blades, and will do so until the sun falls from the sky.”

  Nezeru understood now that this place was some kind of religious shrine, and that all these men and boys were either priests or in training to become priests, like order acolytes back home. But how had mere mortals become the stewards of Hakatri’s remains?

  Makho was not one for decorated speech. “Tell him we will see the bones now.”

  His abruptness caused more than a little consternation among the priests, but at last they led their Hikeda’ya visitors inside the building. A few hides covered with swirls of paint hung on the walls, but otherwise the large main room with pounded dirt floors was dark but for the firepit in the center and the smokehole in the roof. The place smelled of many things, mortal human bodies not least, but Nezeru could also detect sweet oils and the charred dust of flowers and plants, small offerings, burned over many years, whose cloying scents had infused everything.

  The old chief priest said something, gesturing with his hand.

  “The fire always burns,” the captain translated. “That way the sacred bones are always in the light.”

  The collection of brown bones was piled in a shallow pit just beyond the fire—a skeleton, neatly stacked, with the skull placed on top. The bones were oddly pitted, filled with holes as though someone had attempted to make them into musical instruments, then put them aside again, unfinished.

  The old priest spoke. “He says, ‘Behold,’” the captain translated. “‘These are the bones of the Burning Man.’” His fellow priests made a kind of moaning sound, but precise and measured, as though part of a long-practiced ritual.

  “See the scars made by the dragon’s blood,” said Saomeji. He spoke quietly, but there was exultation in his voice. Nezeru, too, was awed to see the actual remains of Hakatri, the Storm King’s brother—Hakatri the Dragon-Burned, revered by both Sithi and Norns. Together Hakatri and his younger brother, who would one day be known the world over as Ineluki the Storm King, had slain the black worm Hidohebhi, but the curse of Hakatri’s unhealing wounds had driven him out of the lands of his people and neither Zida’ya nor Hikeda’ya had ever seen him alive again. Could these bones truly be his? Nezeru looked to Makho, but saw no doubts in the chieftain’s expression.

  “These are what we came for,” was all he said. “Mortal, tell the priest that our great queen needs them, so we will take them now.”

  The captain stared at him, his bearded face so pale he almost looked like one of Nezeru’s band. “But I c-cannot say that,” he stammered. “They will kill us!”

  Makho looked at him with contempt. “It is possible they will try. No matter. Tell them.”

  “Please do not make me say these words, immortal ones,” the captain begged.

  “Tell them!”

  The priests had been watching in apprehension, understanding something was wrong, but when the captain translated Makho’s words they cried out in agony. The old priest pulled free from his two helpers and limped forward until he stood between Makho and the bones. He raised trembling arms. His high-pitched voice was full of agitation and anger. But when the captain started to translate, Makho waved his hand for silence.

  “I do not need to know his objections. They are unimportant. The Queen of All has sent us for the bones of her kinsman. Tell the old man that his people have cared for them well and they have the queen’s gratitude. That should be enough for them.”

  But the captain had barely begun speaking when the old priest let out a cry of anguish, then turned and threw himself across the bones where they lay on their bed of sand, shielding them with his scrawny body. Makho stared at him, then looked at the other priests and acolytes now shoving in through the door, their faces dark with anger.

  Makho had his sword in his hand so quickly that Nezeru did not see him draw it; a moment later it swept out and the ancient priest’s head rolled to one side. Before the severed neck had pumped twice, Makho us
ed his foot to shove the body away from the bones so that the blood only seeped onto the stones and into the crevices between them. The old priest’s comrades cried out in horror.

  “Singer, gather noble Hakatri’s remains,” Makho ordered. “We return to the ship.”

  Even as Saomeji hurried to comply, the nearest of the dead priest’s helpers leaped at Makho with a shout of fury, only to be sliced through to the backbone by an offhand flick of Cold Root, the chieftain’s witchwood blade. More priests began streaming into the temple-house, screaming as if they had lost their minds, grabbing at the Norns with the clear purpose of tearing them to pieces. Kemme immediately killed two with one thrust of his spear, spitting them like meat on a skewer.

  “Some of those outside are running for help,” Ibi-Khai called from the doorway.

  Nezeru felt something tighten around her neck and yank her backward. One of the shaven-headed priests, small but wiry and strong, had pulled Nezeru’s own bow across her shoulder and over her head and was now trying to strangle her with the string. She got one hand between the bowstring and her neck at the last moment, but the mortal had his knee in her back and was pulling as hard as he could. She was separated from the rest of her comrades by the swirl of attackers, and could not get leverage on the string to loosen it, so she groped for her knife with her free hand and cut the string. As the bow fell uselessly to the floor, Nezeru spun and slashed through the priets’s sacklike garment, opening his belly. He sagged, a look of surprise and disappointment in his suddenly mild eyes.

  Three more dead priests now lay at Makho’s feet, but he seemed almost oblivious to the grief-maddened mob. “Nezeru, Kemme, go after those who fled,” he directed them. “Do not let them reach the village or they will raise the alarm and the rest will swarm us like ants. Saomeji, you must keep the bones safe as we go. We may have to fight our way down to the water.”