Page 3 of The Margrave


  As if he sensed the mind-touch, the keeper turned and looked at Raffi. “How many in that last village?”

  “Only about ten. All old.”

  “And did you notice,” the Sekoi said, fingering its shaven tribemark, “how the cattle were unmilked and the dogs hungry? The fields untended? Whatever the Watch are building, they have taken many people. It must be some vast undertaking.”

  Galen shouldered the pack and picked up his stick. “It must,” he said grimly. “That’s why we need to find out what.”

  The road the boy had spoken of was easy to find; every inch of it had been scarred and cracked by recent cartwheels. In some places it had been hastily widened; in others the soft ruts churned through the mud on each side, with drifts of white dust that the Sekoi fingered and smelled and said was from freshly cut stone.

  They climbed all afternoon. Twice they had to let Watchpatrols pass. The second group had prisoners, all male. Galen let them go by without a word, much to Raffi’s relief. But by late afternoon they both had become aware that something terrible was waiting ahead of them; a darkness in the awen-field. Ducking under the branches of pine, suddenly, they came to it.

  A great swathe of woodland had been hacked and cut to a desolation of stumps, the smell of burning still lingering, the undergrowth blackened and charred right down to the scarred soil. Galen stopped, touching the beads at his neck. He might have been praying, but he said nothing aloud, and after a fraught second walked on, fast, with Raffi close behind, white-faced at the horror of the place, the snapped energies that seemed to spark and sting them as they passed, the ghostly whispers of lost voices that cried in the empty air.

  At the far side of the clearing the Sekoi paused, breathless, one hand on its side. “Galen,” it pleaded. “A moment.”

  The keeper kept walking, never looking back. Reluctant, Raffi stopped. “He can’t,” he said, with difficulty. “It hurts too much.”

  The Sekoi took a deep breath and walked on, looking at him curiously. “You feel the pain of the dead trees?”

  “No. Only their loss.” It was impossible to explain the choking, the tangle in the mind. After a moment the creature nodded, its yellow eyes sharp in the light of the risen moons. It put its hand on Raffi’s shoulder kindly.

  Twilight deepened in the shadows of the hills, but the clearing was still too close for them to stop; for hours afterward Raffi could feel it, a sore spot in the world, falling farther and farther back, fainter and fainter, but always a nagging ache. He was tired now, and footsore, and empty with hunger, but he knew how to deal with that, just walk into it, keep walking, not let his mind jerk free from its rhythmic trance. So that the shriek, when it came, stopped him dead.

  “Men?” the Sekoi whispered.

  “One.” Galen was moving now. “And other things. Dark things.”

  Before them, to the left of the road, was an area of broken cliff, where landslips had long since crashed down, one on another. In the mixed lights of Atterix and Agramon it was sharp-edged, a mass of jagged shadows, gleams of quartz sparkling from the tilted strata. Sense-lines echoed confusingly.

  They slipped silently through the rocks. Then Galen waved them still. Ahead, somewhere under the broken rock face with its springing thorns, someone was sobbing. A frail voice, high and helpless, muttering to itself incomprehensible words and prayers that rose suddenly to a shriek of “Flain, have mercy!” that cut Raffi like a knife.

  Carefully, Galen moved the branches. They saw a ravine, and halfway up, on a narrow shelf that crumbled away under her, a woman. She was hard to see, crouched up tight and sobbing in the shadows, and around her in a half circle were four candles, all guttering low, with grease marks where others had been. As Raffi watched, another went out. The woman rocked herself in utter misery.

  And then he saw something that filled him with terror. From the base of the cliff a dark paw reached up at her slyly. With a scream she stamped at it, beat it off. The things were gathered in the dark; inky, silent things, hunkering low. They moved clumsily, slinking from dark place to dark place. Moonlight caught their stooped, misshapen bodies.

  “What in Flain’s name are those?” the Sekoi breathed.

  “Jeckles,” Raffi whispered.

  “Too big. Too quiet.” Galen glanced at the Sekoi. “You get to the woman.” Then to Raffi he said quietly, “Join the lines. Use the Second Action.”

  “Is that all?”

  The keeper turned, his profile hooked and dark. “Do as you’re told. I want to see these things close up.” Already the tingling energies of the Crow were gathering in him; he said, “Ready?”

  Raffi nodded hastily.

  The Sekoi had slipped away; now they both moved after it and apart, working their way noiselessly through the rocks, Raffi frantically making sense-lines, sending them out, frail tendrils of thought. It was hard to ignore the woman; her terror made him shiver, tangled his best efforts, but when he was almost dizzy with trying to shut her out, the powerful swoop of the Crow surged suddenly out of the dark and linked with him, snapping his eyes open. Crouched behind a tilted slab of quartz, he peered out.

  The dark things were climbing. A mass of them swarmed up, over each other’s heads and shoulders, snuffling and hissing, rattling small stones. He moved, over-careful, but his foot slipped. A rock fell with a crash. Every one of the creatures turned its head.

  Raffi stopped breathing. In the jagged moonlight their eyes were savage and reflective, like tiny bright mirrors. For a terrible second he thought they had no faces; then one opened a crooked slit and snarled, a crackling, painful sound.

  Now, Galen said silently.

  The mind-net sprang between them, a swift down-drop of searing blue lines crisscrossing the night with eerie light, falling on the dark creatures, crumpling them to a tangled, screeching, infuriated heap. Raffi scrambled out, desperate to hold it in his mind, but one of the beasts flung a rock; it hit him in the chest, flinging him back.

  Galen was yelling, the awen-net shriveling away from him; Raffi grabbed breathlessly after it, but for a second his mind had been blank and it was gone. Stones rained down on him. The cliff-face was a riot of noise and screeching; he staggered up and saw the net hanging ragged and Galen jumping down into a mass of escaping shadows.

  A muddy paw grabbed at his throat; spinning, Raffi flung a mind-flare at it and the beast crumpled with an ugly smack into the rocks, but other paws had him now, cold, evil-smelling hands tearing him away.

  “Raffi!” The Sekoi’s voice was harsh, and far. A knife whistled, sliced into the neck of the beast climbing over him; warm blood spurted onto Raffi’s face. Struggling up, he thumped into Galen. Back to back, they faced the things. There were hundreds of them; slinking out of the rocks, dropping from bushes, squatting in the ravine. Glancing up, Raffi saw the Sekoi with one spindly arm around the old woman; she seemed stunned, clutching at its fur.

  Galen said, “When they attack . . .”

  “I don’t know! I don’t know if I can!”

  “You can,” the keeper growled. “Just be ready.” From all sides the night crawled; the shadow-things swarmed over each other, their only sound a rasping, hoarse breathing, a leathery, terrifying sound. At his back, Raffi felt the keeper tense, drag energies from the broken hills, streams, the tangled whiplash bushes. His very being altered, became remote and strange and dark. When he laughed, his voice was the crackling harshness of the Crow.

  The things stopped, suddenly wary, almost at Raffi’s feet. It was too late. The night exploded in their faces.

  4

  Long after my death, what I have begun will continue.

  Creatures I could never guess at will be bred.

  Horrors I never wanted will be unleashed.

  And I will be blamed.

  Sorrows of Kest

  “RAFFI?” THE SEKOI WAS CROUCHED, looking at him, its yellow eyes sharp in the flame light. “Come closer to the fire,” it said kindly. And then, severely to Galen, “This bo
y is still in shock.”

  “He’s not the only one.” Galen’s face was edged with firelight, the small cuts on his forehead and neck still oozing. He wrapped the blanket around the old woman and pressed the cup into her hands. “Drink all of it.”

  She obeyed him, silent, her eyes never leaving his face. Raffi felt confused. As the Sekoi sat him near the crackling fire he realized he couldn’t remember it being kindled, and looked around in sudden fear. There were no rocks. This was a wooded place, green and dark. Mountain ridges rose high above them on each side. Somewhere near, a cold trickle of water cooled his mind.

  “You must drink some too,” the creature said. “Galen, I really think there should have been more warning. His wits are totally scattered, and it was a miracle the ledge held long enough for me to leap from it.” Its seven fingers pushed a cup into Raffi’s; he drank thirstily. The water seemed to wake parts of him. He remembered walking now, stumbling along with the Sekoi propping him up, Galen carrying the old woman until she insisted on making her own way. For hours. Or only minutes?

  His chest and ribs ached, and it hurt to breathe. Somehow he felt deaf, though he could hear perfectly well; his mind was numb, sore to use, and some great echoing crash was still going on fathoms deep inside him, over and over.

  “What did you do?” he mumbled.

  Galen glared at him. “What I need not have done if the net had been well made! Or held tight. Of all the scholars I could have chosen in Anara I had to choose you!”

  “Not now,” the Sekoi said mildly. “Let him be.”

  “We could have been killed!”

  “But we weren’t. Thanks to the Makers.”

  Galen gave it a sour stare.

  “I’m sorry.” Raffi rubbed his chest. “I think I got knocked down.” He froze then, seeing the thing that lay in a heap by the fire. “Is that . . . ?”

  “Don’t worry. It’s dead.”

  The beast lay on its side. Close up it looked hideous, its fur mangy and bald in patches, an odd rusty color, its distorted body crumpled in a pitiful heap.

  Galen left the woman to drink and came back. With one foot he rolled the beast over, then kneeled at its side. Fascinated, the Sekoi crouched next to him. “This is no jeckle. Look, it has hands.”

  Galen turned one, cautiously. The paw was remarkably like the Sekoi’s own but thicker and more stubby; seven jointed fingers, one a distinct thumb, the nails ridged to abnormal sharpness, bloody and split.

  “It’s got no nose either,” Raffi whispered.

  Galen turned the head. It fell back, and Raffi jumped. The beast’s eye stared up. He could see himself reflected, shadowy, upside down.

  “But it must breathe.” Puzzled, Galen explored the fur. “There are small flaps here. Like gills.”

  “Gills?” The Sekoi looked disgusted.

  “Similar. And here, look, these spines behind the neck.” Galen snatched his hand back quickly, then crouched, bringing his face close. “They are sharp. Venomous, I should think.”

  “Then be careful.” The Sekoi shivered. “Such Kest-poisons can harm even after death.”

  But Galen had turned the beast’s face and opened its mouth. Its teeth were long and sharp.

  There was a moment of silence, broken only by the cracking fire. Then the Sekoi said, “Certainly an eater of meat.”

  Galen sat back on his heels. “This is the seventh new species since the winter. Remember that antelope, the one with the striped horns? A ferocious thing.”

  “The jellyfish that crawled out of the stream.” Raffi massaged his sore ribs.

  The Sekoi made a mew of distaste. “The worst was that bloated toad.”

  “Crab.”

  “It could have been either.”

  Galen went back to the fire and stirred the flames. A shower of sparks lit his face. “Kest made many horrors. The Order once had a great catalog of over twenty thousand different species of creature, but even that number was nothing like the total. There may be millions. There were always things we had never seen before; the beasts interbreed or mutate.” He gazed down somberly at the dead creature. “But lately there seems to have been more. And each more dangerous.”

  In the silence the stream sounded loud, trickling over invisible stones. Raffi’s hunger came back like a sudden wave and overwhelmed him. “Can’t we have something to eat?”

  Galen looked at him, intensely irritated. “Is that all you can ever think about! Do what you want, for Flain’s sake.”

  The Sekoi laughed and tipped the food bag out. There were some mushrooms, a small turnip, and the last few strips of uncooked fish, looking cold and unappetizing. Raffi didn’t care. He speared one on a stick and held it hastily over the fire.

  “Haven’t you got any cooking things?” It was the old woman who had spoken.

  Surprised, Raffi said, “Yes, but . . .”

  “Then let me do it, keeper. It’s the least way I can thank you.” The herbal drink had done her good. Her face was tearstained and haggard, but she pushed the wisps of hair back fussily and took the pan Raffi held out.

  “Not very clean.” She tipped it critically.

  “No.”

  “And you have some fat?”

  He glanced at Galen, then took out the precious jar of oil. The jar was a relic—it had a strange lid that sprang open with a gentle pressure on a thumb-pad; he showed her how it worked.

  She made the sign of honor furtively, then poured the oil. “At home, we have five relics.”

  Galen came and sat down nearby. “In your house?”

  She nodded. “They are kept in secret. You may see them, if we reach that far. If you wish, keeper, and they are important, you may take them. We are always in danger of the Watch finding them.”

  Galen nodded. “You feel well enough to go on tomorrow?”

  “My daughter and the little one will be worried sick.” She looked around at them all. “Bless you again, keepers. Flain sent you to me. It was a great miracle.”

  The oil was hissing. Deftly she took the fish and mushrooms and set them to fry. From a bag around her waist she measured salt and a dark powder and added it; it smelled like spices, and Raffi’s mouth started watering. The fish hissed and crackled.

  “Will you tell us what happened?” Galen asked.

  She was quiet a moment, stirring the mixture. Then she said, “My name is Alys Varro, masters. My village lies at the foot of these mountains, in the valley of the small river called Radicas, about a day’s walk now from here. A quiet place, with few people. Four days ago, a Watch-patrol rode in.”

  Galen looked at the Sekoi. “For work slaves.”

  “They took twenty of us. All the men, some of the young women. And me.” She managed a proud smile. “Either I was to make up the quota or I look young for my age.”

  “You look very young,” the Sekoi said politely. It had unwrapped a parcel of small green berries and dried apple and was sitting with its back against a tree stump, long legs stretched out.

  Alys nodded. “As if you would know, master. But yes, I was in the smaller group. We walked for two days, up the road.”

  “Where does the road lead?” Galen’s voice was quiet.

  She shrugged. “Some say to a castle. A great castle.”

  Raffi sat up. “The Castle of Halen?”

  “I don’t know.” She flipped the sizzling, delicious-smelling fish over easily. “I was in a group of ten. No, eleven. We picked a girl up on the way.”

  Raffi felt the sense-lines shiver.

  The Sekoi paused with a slice of apple halfway to its mouth. “A girl?”

  “Yes. Quist brought her out of the wood. They let the razorhounds go, as if there had been someone else with her.”

  The creature scratched its stitches. It looked smug and then, barely seen, a flicker of terror went through it. Raffi dared not guess what such a chase had been like.

  Galen edged forward, urgent. “This girl, Mother, is a friend of ours. Can you tell us what happe
ned to her?”

  “First, you eat. Both of you.”

  The Sekoi grinned. Galen almost hissed with impatience, but he had to wait while Alys divided the food, sorting the bones out, pushing the largest pieces to Raffi’s corner of the pan. Ravenous, he ate quickly, tearing the dried bread from the pack to mop up every morsel.

  Galen waited while the woman ate; she obviously needed it. But before she had finished, his patience had run out. “We need to know.”

  “You need to look after yourselves more.” She licked her fingers and nodded at him. “All right. Quist was the patrol captain. He seemed to think the girl was important. When they searched her they found some discs on a chain around her neck; he sent them on ahead.”

  Raffi swallowed hard bread. “The insignia!”

  “Was there anything else?” Galen snapped. “Did they find anything else?”

  Raffi looked at him curiously, but the woman said, “No. She was a clever lass. I spoke to her once, but she never told us her name. Kept herself apart from the rest, kept her eyes open. And she wasn’t scared of them, not at all. Spoke up for me when I fell.”

  “That’s Carys.” Raffi scraped up the last scraps. “But the Castle of Halen? For a start it’s a ruin.”

  “Maybe not.” Galen tossed sticks on the fire. “Not if it’s being rebuilt. It would take a lot of men. And why?”

  “A supply base.” The Sekoi spat out a pip.

  “Supplying what?”

  “Is Carys all right?” Raffi turned to the old woman. “Is she hurt? And how did she get away?”

  “She didn’t. No. But I did.” Alys smiled coyly. “Kept stumbling and coughing, making out I couldn’t keep up. It was Quist, you see. I’ve lived a fair time; I can tell how a man is. He acted hard, but there was something about him. Last time I fell, I just didn’t get up. So he cut me loose and marched them on.”

  “They left you for dead?” Galen laughed his harsh laugh. “So much for the mercy of the Watch!”

  “Don’t judge too quickly, keeper. For now I’ll tell you a very strange thing. Quist yelled at them to go on, but he waited beside me. When the patrol was out of sight I felt him lift me. For a moment, yes, I thought I’d go over the cliff, but then, masters, he laid me down soft in the wood and said, ‘Keep off the road,’ just as if he knew I could hear him. Then he went. When it was safe, a while after, I lifted my head. There was this bag beside me. With water. And a knife.”