Page 32 of The Poison Throne


  “Not so much… well, of course, yes, it is so much the better for Lorcan that you will be there. And for that I am also grateful, because I have come to love him very much. But…” he seemed to consider something a moment, then he put his glass down on the hearth beside him and turned to look at her again, leaning forward, his elbows on his knees. “Wynter. My father and I were taken by the slavers in a little village on the Hollish border. Our troupe had been invited there to play a wedding. We were meant to stay a week, but it was all a ruse. When we got there, the village had been invaded by the Loups-Garous; they had come for their sevenths…” he paused, looked at her uncertainly, “You… you understand about the sevenths?”

  Wynter nodded, her mouth dry. She knew all about the custom of the sevenths. Dear God. The Loups-Garous. That vicious, uncontrollable tribe of nomadic creatures. The bane of the Northlands wilderness. They would converge on a village, take it over for five days, help themselves to the food, the shelter… the women. Seven years later they would return for their choice of the strongest and hardiest of the children produced by their unions. Woe betide a people who didn’t hand over their sevenths. It was a system that had been in effect for generations. Some villages had even come to regard it as an honour and welcomed the Wolves with banquets and the free choice of their daughters. Wynter shivered. “But Christopher,” she whispered. “I did not know that the Wolves dealt in slaves.”

  The shining reflection of Christopher’s eyes met hers, and his voice was dark with meaning when he said, “There are so many things people don’t know about them… For one thing, folk think that all the sevenths grow up to be Loups-Garous, but that ain’t the way; most of the sevenths actually end up sold as slaves. He glanced at Lorcan, then back to Wynter, keeping his voice low. “The village had no sevenths to give them, there had been an outbreak of the smallpox and all the wee uns had succumbed.” Christopher tilted his head and spread his hands. “So the village offered us instead. There was no wedding, there never had been, we were their gift to the Wolves. The magnificent Garron Troupe, famed in all of Hadra for our skill in music and song.”

  “Oh Christopher… I’m… that’s just so…”

  He shrugged and waved his hand, as if to say no matter. He glanced at Lorcan again. “There were six of us in the troupe. All very talented. Most of us…” he paused. “Most of us… pretty. They knew as soon as they looked at us, as soon as they looked at the girls… they knew they’d get a good reward. So they took the deal.”

  The cold that had been planted in Wynter’s chest at the mention of the Loups-Garous spread to her belly. She tried not to imagine the depths of meaning behind Christopher’s spare words. “Wh… what age were you, Christopher?”

  “I was thirteen, or was I fourteen already…? I’m not certain. You know…” he looked up at her, frowning as if it was still a puzzlement to him, “… before all that happened, I had such a great life. I was the luckiest lad in the world, everything was such fun…”

  He sat staring a moment, then shook himself and continued quietly.

  “It’s a long journey from Hollis to the Morrocos. It got on to winter. They had picked up a fair string of us along the way by then… goods they called us. Goods. Somewhere… I guess it was the Midlands somewhere… We were all roped together, crossing this moor. A long empty road across this moor. Naught for miles. Naught for miles… Just snow. Something happened to my father.” He made a motion over his stomach, pushing his hand into the pit of his belly and grimacing as if to indicate what had happened. Wynter winced and leant forward to take his hand, but he just squeezed her fingers, then gently separated from her, as if unable to continue while being comforted. His voice was strangely flat and emotionless, “He got a pain in his belly and couldn’t walk. After a while we couldn’t carry him anymore, because he was in too much agony.” He stopped completely for a moment, then jerked to a start again. “They unshackled him and left him by the side of the road in the snow. He was curled in a ball. He… was crying. I couldn’t help.”

  “Oh, Christopher…” she reached for his hand again and he pulled back, inhaling deeply and holding his hand up, as if to silence her. He shook his head, looking away.

  “Look…” he whispered, “Look, all I’m saying is. You’re lucky.” He looked her in the face then, pointedly catching her eye. She sat back on her heels, her stomach cold. He suspected. Christopher suspected that she was going to leave, and he was trying to tell her not to.

  “You will never forgive yourself, lass,” he said, his gaze intense. “If you aren’t here. It’s not something you can get back. There’s no second chance. That’s all I’m saying. There’s no second chance.” He held her eyes for a moment, then nodded and patted her hand. “I must go,” he said softly.

  Wynter sat, staring at nothing, her hands folded in her lap, too stunned and too numb to say or do anything.

  Christopher rose to gather up his things. When he was ready, his jacket on, his saddle and his tack on one shoulder, his dressing case on a little trundle by the door, he stood and looked uncertainly down at her. He asked softly, “Are you angry with me, girly?”

  She looked up at him in shock. He was standing in Lorcan’s doorway, ready to leave, his face miserable. All this time he’d been getting ready, she’d sat like a stone and now he thought she was…

  She leapt to her feet and slipped past him into the retiring room. “I need to get my robe, Christopher. Wait for me.”

  “Oh no,” he hissed in alarm. “You can’t, I’m going through the secret passages; you’ll never get back.”

  She paused in the doorway. “I’ll scale the orange trees and climb through my window if I have to, Christopher Garron. You’re not going to the stables alone with no one to wave you farewell.”

  She pulled on her robe and her soft indoor-boots and belted her dagger around her waist. When she hurried back into the retiring room, Christopher was standing just outside Lorcan’s door, gazing in at her father who still slept, oblivious as a baby, his face turned to the fire. Christopher had placed a glass of tea on his bedside table, and it steamed gently in the firelight.

  “It’s the hope of things lasting that does us in, ain’t it?” Christopher said quietly, his eyes on Lorcan. “If only we could shake that stupid illusion, the belief that this time we’ll be able to stay. This time, things will last. Then we’d all be much happier.”

  Wynter stayed very still for a moment, trying not let those words burrow into her heart and break her down completely. “Aren’t you going to say goodbye to him?” she asked.

  “I don’t want to wake him.”

  Wynter hesitated uncertainly. She wasn’t sure that it was the right thing to do, to just leave like that, but Christopher bent and shouldered his saddle, looping his tack across his arm. He took the trundle by its handle, ready to go. He glanced at her, waiting patiently for her to slide open the secret door.

  She did and then stepped into the passageway, moving aside to let him get past her, since he would have to lead the way. He didn’t move, and she glanced up expectantly. He was still standing in Lorcan’s doorway, the light from the fire dancing in distorted shadows across his face. He was staring through her, as she stood in the darkness of the passageway and his eyes were miles away.

  “Christopher…?” she whispered.

  Suddenly Christopher dropped the saddle and tack to the floor and fled back into Lorcan’s room without a sound. Wynter rushed after him and came to halt in the doorway, tears springing to her eyes.

  Christopher had fallen to his knees by Lorcan’s bed and was shaking the big man urgently by the shoulder, his face distraught. “Lorcan,” he whispered, “Lorcan. I’m going. Lorcan. I’m going now. Wake up.”

  Lorcan gasped, and his green eyes snapped open, startled. “Whu…?” he said, staring without comprehension into Christopher’s face.

  Christopher tried to say something. He grimaced, baring his teeth and curled in on himself slightly as if he had a pain in his
chest. He grabbed at Lorcan’s hand and pulled it to him squeezing it to his lips. Big tears stood out in his eyes, shivering, but not falling. “I’m going…” he managed finally, staring into Lorcan’s face. “I’m going away…”

  Lorcan blinked at him, still obviously confused and disorientated. He searched the young man’s face, as if seeking a clue to who he was. “Christopher…” he breathed.

  “Aye. Aye…” Christopher had run out of words and he just kept holding on to Lorcan’s hand and looking into his face.

  Lorcan seemed to have no idea what was happening, his green eyes never really cleared, and almost immediately they began to flutter closed again. Christopher watched him, his mouth quivering, as sleep took the big man under again. Gradually Lorcan’s breathing returned to the steady, innocent cadence of sleep.

  Christopher made a desperate little sound, his eyes liquid, his body trembling. His hands were shaking as he clutched Lorcan’s hand to his chest. His eyes opened wide and the shivering tears overflowed abruptly in two shining trails down his face. He took a huge breath and held it. Wynter could see that he was in a fierce internal battle for self-control. She thought for a moment that he would fall on her father and shake him again, try to wake him properly so that they could say goodbye.

  But Christopher just relaxed suddenly, and released his breath in a long shaky sigh, swallowing hard. His hands were trembling when he put Lorcan’s hand back down on the covers, but his face was set, and he was back in control of himself.

  Christopher leant over and gently kissed Lorcan’s cheek. “I’m leaving,” he whispered. “I wanted you to know. God protect you, Lorcan Moorehawke, and watch over you, on your journey to the better place.”

  Escape

  Christopher seemed to know exactly where he was going. He moved confidently through the blackness, turning unerringly left and right. He led her up and down staircases, ducked through tiny archways, passed by echoing, chilly voids. Wynter could hear his hand trailing the walls, and he counted under his breath as each panel passed by under his fingers. At first, the trundle had made a terrifying amount of noise in the confined space, but Wynter had quickly picked her end off the ground and they carried it between them through the winding darkness.

  Finally they came to the top of a flight of stone stairs, and Christopher pushed his way up and out of a trapdoor, which seemed to be set in open ground. Wynter followed him up the steps and found herself in the echoing space of the indoor horse arena.

  Good God! She thought, looking around her in the vague twilight, We must have been underground for the best portion of that journey.

  It was still very dim, but the air was beginning to shimmer with pre-dawn light. They were rapidly running out of time.

  Christopher was calm now and he showed no trace of his earlier distress. He glanced at Wynter, shifting the saddle higher on his shoulder, and waited patiently as she shut the trapdoor and hid it again under loose straw. She took the handle of the trundle from him and followed behind as he led the way to the big double doors. They peeked out. It was very hard to see in this shifting non-light and they carefully scanned the exercise yard, before slipping into and moving along the deeper shadows of the walls until they got to the stables. Wynter wished that she had worn darker clothes; she stood out like a moonbeam in her white robe and shift.

  She kept watch at the alley while Christopher tacked up his horse. The sturdy little animal had whickered and snorted happily when they entered the stalls, and Christopher quietly smacked his lips and made breathy noises to her in reply. Wynter glanced back at him; he worked quickly and with the ease of familiarity. The horse nipped his tunic and lipped his hair, snuffing fondly down the back of his neck as he tacked up. He scrubbed between her eyes, murmured gently to her in Hadrish and led her out into the alley between the stalls. He brought the horse to where Wynter was peering out the door and the two of them stood, nervously waiting.

  It was very quiet, the sky starting to pale. Christopher’s horse moved behind them, stamping gently, blowing hot breath down their backs. The air was chilly and Wynter began to shiver in her shift and robe. She hugged her arms tightly around herself and hopped from foot to foot.

  Oh God, she thought, where are the pack animals? Where are the extra horses?

  Razi had promised that they would be ready, he had told Christopher to wait here, that everything would be set to go. Christopher should be leaving now. Wynter looked up at the roofs of the barns: they were starting to show against the sky; it was beginning to get light. Christopher had to leave before dawn, had to catch the gate sentries by surprise. He had to hand over his egress papers and be gone before anyone knew he was out of his rooms.

  Jonathon would want to control every inch of this journey, would want Christopher in his power for as long as he could manage to keep hold of him. Soon the hall guards would be hammering on the suite door, seeking to escort him to the stables. It wouldn’t take long for them to discover that his rooms were empty. Christopher had to be well gone by then, out of the complex, well on his way to losing himself on the little winding roads leading south. Wynter started to shiver in earnest, the misty air and her growing fear combining to chill her to her bones.

  Without saying anything, Christopher moved behind her and gently put his jacket over her shoulders. Wynter found herself unexpectedly engulfed in Christopher’s spicy scent and the delicious warmth of his body. She was about to say thank you, when he drew her to him, wrapping his arms and the jacket tightly around her and holding her close. He casually rested his chin on the top of her head, and resumed his surveillance of the alley.

  Wynter found herself completely overwhelmed by the tenderness of this gesture, and to her horror, and without any warning, she sobbed loudly. Christopher’s arms tightened around her in surprise and he said, “Oh girly”. The quiet protectiveness in his voice cracked something inside Wynter’s chest and the tears that had been threatening all morning finally forced their way to the surface. Mortified, she lifted her hands to her face and tried to pull away. But Christopher tightened his arms a little more, and, as Wynter’s tears streamed down her face and soaked the dark sleeves of his tunic, he began gently to rock her to and fro.

  Christopher would not release her. He held her against his chest with gentle, insistent strength and, quite suddenly, Wynter realised that she had nothing left to fight with, she had no energy left with which to pretend. She stopped struggling and slumped against him in defeat.

  “All right,” he murmured. “It’s all right…”

  Wynter leaned her head back against his shoulder and gave in to her tears.

  Christopher bent his head forward and rested his cheek against hers. His skin was smooth and cool against her face. “Shhhhh,” he crooned, cradling her against his chest, “Shhhhh. It’s all right, sweetheart. I promise. Everything will be all right. Don’t worry…”

  She twisted in his arms and burrowed against him, pushing her face in against the warm skin of his neck, snaking her arms around his waist, pulling him closer. He continued to whisper in her ear, telling her it was all right, everything was all right, and then his lips were moving in her hair as he spoke, and against her neck, murmuring reassurances. She inhaled his scent, her tears drying against the fabric of his tunic, and his words lost meaning and the sound of his voice was all that mattered.

  She turned her face against Christopher’s neck and moved her cheek against the cool smoothness of his cheek. His hand was in her hair then, cradling the back of her head, and his lips were on her lips. Soft, unbelievably soft, his mouth moved against her mouth. She pressed up into his kiss, her lips parting, and for a moment, that was all there was. His warm mouth moving against hers, the scent of him, the encompassing safety of his arms.

  A soft cough in the alley shocked them apart, and then Christopher was pushing her behind him, reaching for his knife, a growl in his throat. But it was only Marcello Tutti, his eyes soft, his cheeks pink, as he led the pack mule and spare horses
up the alley, trying hard to pretend he hadn’t noticed their kiss.

  Wynter hid herself behind Christopher for a moment, wiping her eyes and trying to get her knees to support her weight. Christopher’s jacket began to slip from her shoulders, and she absently shrugged her arms into the sleeves. She heard Marcello whispering as he came up the ally.

  “Buongiorno, Christi. Mi dispiace ma…”

  Christopher replied softly, “Ciao, Marcello. Non importa…” As he spoke, Christopher reached behind him and took Wynter’s hand in his. She stepped to his side and they stood pressed together, hand in hand as Marcello brought the horses to a halt before them.

  The little Italian bowed to her, his eyes gentle. “Buongiorno, Signora Della Protezione.”

  She smiled faintly and bobbed her head.

  “Marcello,” said Christopher, “Dov’è il Signore Razi?”

  Marcello spread his hands and shrugged sympathetically. “I am sorry, Christopher. Il Signore, he can’t get away… his father, you know. He keep… ah… the eye?”

  Wynter felt her heart twist, and Christopher’s face creased in sorrow and disappointment. He hesitated and looked away a moment before nodding, his lips tight. “Can’t be helped,” he murmured.

  “I, too, must leave you,” said Marcello regretfully, “The guards, they keep the eye on all Razi’s allies, in hope that they will be catching you in your escape. I must make myself to be scarce.” He handed the lead rope to Christopher and bowed, “Take good care, Christopher. Be safe.” He backed quietly up the alley and then turned and hurried quickly from sight.

  They stood for a moment, hand in hand, looking blankly at the empty air where Tutti had been, the animals shifting gently in the narrow space. Then Wynter shook herself to life and turned to press her hand urgently to Christopher’s chest. “You must go now!” she insisted, looking up into his face. “The cockerels will begin to crow soon!”