A Company of Heroes Book One: The Stonecutter (22 page)

BOOK: A Company of Heroes Book One: The Stonecutter
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“I don’t know, but I was counting on him going with me. I guess I assumed he would.”

“No, no. He must stay with us. How soon does the princess think she can be ready to leave?”

“I don’t know,” she replies, distracted by thoughts of Thud’s perfidy. How can he desert her like this? Has he no sense of loyalty?

“Would an hour be too soon?”

“May I ask: what
is
this mission that is so important?”

“We are helping the refugee faeries of Londeac to emigrate.”

Bronwyn found Thud waiting for her when she returns to her chamber. The news that he would not be going on with her has depressed her more than she would have expected. And it has angered her as well: she feel cheated, abandoned and betrayed. Loyalty is something she expects, takes for granted; it is her due. She does not say a word to the big man, but goes directly to the small pile of neatly folded clothing and begins stuffing it into her pack.

“Where are you going?” asks Thud, but Bronwyn refuses to answer him.

“Princess? Are we going somewhere?”

She turns to face him. “No, we’re not! I’m leaving here. You’ve made your decision: now stay here if you want.”

“I don’t understand; why can’t I go, too?”

“Because you’d rather stay here, that’s why.”

“I would?”

“I don’t want to depend on anyone I can’t trust, and I can’t trust anyone who isn’t with me of their own free will,” she says with more passion than logic. “I’d thought you wee loyal, and my friend, I won’t make
that
mistake twice.”

“But why would I rather stay here?”

“How am I supposed to know? It was your decision, not mine.”

“But I don’t
like
it here, Princess.”

“Well, you should’ve thought of that first.”

“I did! That’s why I don’t want to stay.”

“Then why did you decide to stay in the first place?”

“I
didn’t
! Why do I have to? I thought you wants me to help you?”

“Just a minute, Thud. You never told King Slagelse that you wanted to stay behind when I leave?”

“Why would I tell him something like that?”

“I guess because you’re a Kobold, like everyone else here.”

“So?”

“So, aren’t your real parents here? Your real mother and father?”

“I don’t know.”

“Well, haven’t you tried to find out?”

“No one here knows who their parents are. They just have little Kobolds, and they get bigger, and that’s all there is to it.”

“Then you do want to go with me?”

“I never thought I wasn’t.”

“I think we need to have another talk with the king.”

King Slagelse, however, is not very pleased.

“No,” he tells Bronwyn, when she and Thud return to the throne room and tell him of Thud’s intention to leave with her, “that is impossible. Thud must remain here.”

“Why, if he doesn’t want to?”

“He is a Kobold. He has come home. The matter is settled.”

“He’s never lived here in his whole life. He didn’t even know he
was
a Kobold until a few days ago.”

“It makes no difference. This is his home. This is where he must stay.”

“Even if he doesn’t want to?”

“We find it hard to believe that a Kobold would not prefer to stay here, in the real world! Thud, tell us: what do you want to do? Do you want to stay here with your people?”

“No.”

“No?” A perceptible widening of the king’s obsidian eyes denoted intense surprise. “And why not?”

“I don’t know.”

“You don’t know...This is your home, Thud. You belong here.”

“I’ve never been here before. My home is in Blavek: fifteen-oh-six Nixnixx Road. Room eight, uh, eight seventy-three, I think.”

“Your Highness,” Bronwyn interrups, “how can you ask any loyalty from Thud? How can you ask him if he thinks this is home? Didn’t you abandon him as a baby?”

“It is a great mission he was sent on.”

“A mission? A little baby? He could’ve died or been killed! How can a baby know it’s on a ‘great mission’?”

“We will not force Thud to stay if he wishes not to. Perhaps it has been a mistake to send Kobolds into the outer world: Thud has been the first to ever return to us, now we can see what has happens to all of the others. Obviously, they have not been able to improve the blood of the outsiders, so that one day those might return to us; instead the outer world has destroys our missionaries. I am saddens at the thought of the many hundreds of Kobold children we have condemned to Thud’s terrible fate. Our only consolation is the thought of the equal number of surface children who have had the glorious advantage of being raised as Kobolds. Yes, you may go with the princess. You no longer belong here.”

“Thank you,” says Thud.

“Thank you,” says Bronwyn.

“It pains us to insist upon this one final matter, however. We can only hope that the princess understands our position. We do not doubt the princess’ good intentions for even one minute, but what guarantee do we have that she will abide by her bargain?”

“I’ve given you my word!” answers Bronwyn hotly. “Yes, yes! Of course! It is not the princess whom we doubt. It is just that we have not had a great deal of experience with surface people, in the past it has almost always turned out badly for us. We know all too well that the farmers and woodsmen in the mountains above us leave their little offerings only because they fear us and in the hope that they might gain some gift in return. In the early days of our reign, our last guest from the surface abused our hospitality terribly. He is supposed to have kept our existence a secret yet, we are led to understand, he created images that reproduced everything he saw here and showed them to many thousands of his people. We’ve been waiting ever since for the invasion.”

“Was his name Lach-Szyrma?”

“We have no idea. It has been a long time.”

“I don’t think you need worry, I don’t believe that anyone took his pictures very seriously. I mean, everyone thinks he made them up. They think they’re pictures of the Weedking’s kingdom.”

“Oh, really? Oh, that’s rather amusing. Nevertheless, we still feel we must have some sort of guarantee of the princess’ good faith. It is nothing personal.”

Bronwyn feels a tug at her sleeve. She glances down and Henda is pressing a folded scrap of paper into her hand. With an apologetic smile at the king, she opens and reads the note. It is brief and when she finishes reading it she favors the boy with another, sharper glance.

“prinsis [the note read], tel the king that i wil sta as hostij. it dozint mater if yu do wat he wants or not. i want to sta here. pleez.”

Henda nods to her anxiously, his mouth grinning but his eyes filled with tears, pleading. She is neither so slow nor so sentimental not to realize that this is An Opportunity.

“Your Highness, I will leave this boy, who is as dear to me as a brother, as hostage against carrying out my half of our bargain. I make this offer though it breaks my heart to do so.”

“Agreed!” says the king, delightedly. “The princess is ready to leave, then?”

“Yes, your Highness, I believe so.”

“Then our Thud will show the princess the way. Her visit has been a rare treat for us all. May Musrum go with her.”

At a signal, the human Thud appears. He is dressed as before; only a small satchel has been added, slung beneath one arm. Bronwyn sends her Thud back to their room to fetch her pack and the bag of letters. He returns after a few minutes carrying those items along with his prized coat. Bronwyn looks for Henda, but he has vanished. She has a moment’s pang of betrayal toward the boy, but it quickly passes. It had been his decision, after all.

There are a few more farewells, and an offer of food that Bronwyn declines as politely, but as forcibly, as she can. Still without having yet spoken a word, Thud II leads Bronwyn and Thud I through a low door at the rear of the throne room. This opens into a broad passageway that slopes gently upwards. The going is easy and the three fall into line, Thud II, Bronwyn, Thud I, and walk silently.

The princess, left with her thoughts, finds them distracted by the figure ahead. The muscles beneath the white skin of New Thud’s back work as though that broad expanse was being kneaded by invisible fingers. There is no fat to spare on the man’s body and its muscles are revealed as bundles of writhing cords, like a sack of boa constrictors, as sharply defined as though they had been engraved with a rake. His buttocks, nearly at Bronwyn’s eye level as they ascend the slope, are as round and hard as a pair of ball bearings; they roll alternately, as machine-like as a cow chewing her cud. When Bronwyn thinks of the vacant face now turned away from her, she is sickened by the feelings she feels stirring in her.

The march, made without break, takes nearly three hours. The air, blowing into their faces from ahead, has been steadily growing colder. The tunnel makes two or three sharp bends and then suddenly they are outside. They have stepped from between a pair of giant boulders that lay on a grassless slope. The wind is strong and icy pellets of sleet sting their faces. Below, filling a grey meadow, lay the encampment of Baron Piers Monzon.

“By Musrum’s hairy earlobes,” mutters Bronwyn earnestly, “real food at last!”

CHAPTER VI

DISCUSSIONS

When Payne Roelt finally arrived in Blavek and made his way to the palace, he found waiting there a situation far worse than that for which even his outstandingly unpleasant imagination has been able to prepare him. Even the news that the Princess Bronwyn is probably dead does not bring the roses back to his pale cheeks. He had never liked the word “probably”. As long as the princess remains unaccounted for, she poses a threat. And that is all there is to it.

It is just two weeks until the ceremony of Ferenc’s coronation and a great deal of damage can be done in two weeks, as he knew very well. He meant to eliminate all possibilities of interference, however remote. It would mean considerable and numerous difficulties, but the magnitude of the reward warranted the effort. What angers him is that these efforts needed to be made at all. Had the prince been less of an idiot, Payne’s schemes would never have been put into jeopardy. ‘Had the prince been less of an idiot, there might not be any basis for Payne’s schemes in the first place, but it would require a good deal more fairness than Payne possesses for him to admit that.) All that he had asked is that the princess’ powerlessness be maintained for only a few more weeks, and she would afterwards be forever harmless. And has the prince been able to accomplish even this simple task? A task that had already been set into motion, and that he needed only oversee? No, the simple-minded peacock hasn’t.

Payne has admitted himself unannounced into Ferenc’s apartment, and when the prince sees the slight figure suddenly appear before him, as though it had coagulated from the cigarette smoke that fogs the air, he suffers an almost religious ecstasy. He had been certain there would be some warning of Payne’s arrival, that he would be able to steel himself before the inevitable confrontation. He had spent that entire morning smoking cigarette after cigarette, pacing his rooms, rehearsing the excuses he hoped would placate the chamberlain, laying the blame on other shoulders, any other shoulders. But when he turns and sees that very figure he wants to see less than any other on the planet ‘with the possible exception of his sister), all the glib speeches slip away from him like the cigarette that falls from his slack lips.

Payne’s arrival has been so silent that all that remains of Ferenc’s resolve is a kind of supernatural awe. The two men stare at one another for several speechless minutes: the tall one open-mouthed, bug-eyed, bloodless, perspiring; the small one cool and dark and motionless within the blue smoke. For one brief moment the hope begins to flicker within the prince’s mind that the apparition is only a figment of his overwrought imagination, that he has had Payne on his mind so much that he is finally beginning to hallucinate. But this wan hope is snuffed out at its first flicker when the apparition speaks.

“Been having fun?” it asks.

“Huh?”

Payne crosses the room and flings himself into a chair. He helps himself to one of Ferenc’s gold-banded cigarettes, kept in an onyx box on a table next to the chair. The sudden sputtering flame of a match illuminates his reptilian face briefly; then the match is flicked negligently across the room, leaving a thin, smoky parabola behind, like the trail of a meteor. Ferenc had jumped convulsively at the sound of the match being struck.

“Musrum! I’m tired,” says Payne. “D’you know that I’ve been on the road nonstop for nearly a week? Can’t take any of the main roads, of course, not even the secondaries, the barons have them all watched. I think I’ve been on every lousy dirt track between here and the coast. A week to make a two-day trip! As to getting off the island itself...Well, I’m too tired to go into all of that now.”

He has been looking at the glowing end of his cigarette as he speaks, but now he turns his gaze toward the prince, who has not moved an inch since he first saw Payne.

“And what have
you
been up to?”

Ferenc winces as though Payne’s eyes had given him an electric shock, but manages to squeak an ineffective, “Me?”

“Yes...and how is your sister, by the way?”

“My sister? Bronwyn? Well, yes...I...ah, want to speak to you about her. Yes,” Ferenc stammers, appreciating the chance to turn Payne’s attention onto someone else.

“I, too, would like to talk about her.”

“You would?”

“Yes, you pinheaded ass! Does you think I was living in a vacuum while I is exiled? Do you think I haven’t been aware of what is happening in the capital? Almost as soon as I set foot on the road to Blavek I received news of what you’d allowed Bronwyn to do...”

“Now, see here, Payne! I don’t...”

“Silence when you’re speaking to me! You most certainly did allow her to do what she did! How was she able to steal those letters if you hadn’t ignored my orders to destroy them? How was she able to have the run of the palace, to say nothing of your own apartments? You poor sap, I don’t know...maybe I must share the blame for trusting you to do even the simplest thing.”

“Now look here,” answers Ferenc, wiping his beaded face with a silk handkerchief. “It’s not as bad as you think. I don’t know what you’ve been told, or who you’ve been talking to, but give me a minute and I’ll set you straight.”

“All right, I’ll give you one minute. Convince me that things aren’t as bad as I think they are.”

“Well, now,” the prince begins, uncertainly, taking a chair hesitantly, as though he was seating himself before the late king instead of his own chamberlain. “Look, you’re quite right: I
am
to blame for letting her take those letters. I was wrong there. I admit that. I should’ve listened to you. You’re always right; I know that. It’s just that...well, never mind. But as soon as I knew the things were gone, I sicced the Guards on her, I knew right off who must’ve taken them!”

“That was certainly a bright deduction. But how’d she get out of the palace?

“I don’t know. And that’s not my fault, either! You’ll have to ask Praxx about it; it’s not
my
fault if his men can’t perform a simple thing like that!”

“And then she got out of the City?”

“Well, yes. You have to blame Praxx’s men for that, too; there’s just no way that Bronwyn can have gotten away from them if they’d been doing their duty!”

“Ferenc, you fool!”

He stood and took a step toward the prince, who cringes back into his cushions. Payne is small enough that even when standing his eyes are not much above those of the prince.

“I could kill you this very minute!”

He turns from the blancmange-like Prince ‘white, quivering and speechless) and strode in a few quick, silent steps to the door. He flings it open and Praxx enters the room, stopping after only a few paces. It looks rehearsed and altogether too ominous to suit the prince, who hates being ganged up on.

“Praxx,” says Payne, “tell me what’s happened.”

“Yes, Sir. When I received the order to hunt for the Princess Bronwyn and recover what she has stolen from the prince...”

“Just a moment. When did you get this order?”

“The day after the...articles...were taken.”

“The next day. Ah. Go on.”

“Yes, Sir. The princess was discovered trying to enter the chambers of the Privy Council and is prevented from doing so. She was pursued, but fled into the Transmoltus where she was lost. We discovered later that she had enlisted the aid of a stone worker with whose help she made her way across the City. Once again an attempt was made to apprehend her but, with the assistance of her accomplice, she again escaped. We discovered later that she eventually left the city with a company of gypsies.”

“Gypsies,” says Payne flatly.

“I knew nothing of any of this...” begins Ferenc.

“Shut up, I told you. Go on, Praxx.”

“As soon as her route and means of escape were discovered, I dispatched a patrol of Guards after her, led by one of my most trusted captains. There has been no report yet.”

“Very good, Praxx. Now, Ferenc, where do you think the princess is going?”

“How’m I supposed to know?”

“She can’t get to the Privy Council. Who would she go to instead?”

“I don’t know. One of the barons, I suppose.”

“One of the barons, indeed. But which one? There are only thirty and I have the approaches to their estates carefully watched as a matter of course. I have at least one man in the service of each, too. The princess would be easily stopped. But just any of these barons, formidable enemies though they may be, won’t do. It must be the one they all would follow. The one they all listen to. The one they trust the most. Their leader.”

“Piers Monzon?”

“Very good, my dear Prince! Now we know why she is so determined to travel north. Praxx, how long has it been since your men went in pursuit of the princess?”

“Since just this morning, Sir. I should have a report in no more than forty-eight hours.”

“Excellent. Ferenc?”

“Yes, Payne?”

“You have more than an apology owed to me and I mean to collect on that debt.”

“Well, I...yes, Payne, of course,” meekly answers the Crown Prince of Tamlaght.

Something more than forty-eight hours passes before news is received from the patrol that had been sent in pursuit of the princess, or, rather, from what remains of it. Only two Guards return, the one who had been left with the horses on the bank of the Moltus and one who returned from the sinkhole. The latter had found the body of the captain ‘not more than an hour after Bronwyn and Henda has left it, though he had no way of knowing that) and he also witnessed the destruction of the other three Guards in the landslide of the previous evening. He knew he was thus alone, and that his search of the immediate area was therefore perfunctory; he is a city-bred boy and wildernesses make him nervous. They lack symmetry and order, without a right angle within miles. Nor did he relish having to deal with someone who could squash like melons the heads of older, experienced Guards. Therefore he gave the surroundings a quick once-over and then hastily made his way out of the crater. Rejoining his companion, he recited a story that he had had nearly two hours to perfect: how the princess has been rescued by a band of ferocious woodsmen, how his ‘the Guard’s) party had been ambushed, how he had made a narrow escape followed by a harrowing retreat through the strange forest ‘this latter part at least is true). As he and his companion made the long journey back to Blavek, the young Guard honed his tale to a simple perfection. When the pair finally arrived at the capital, after a sleepless three days’ hard riding, exhausted to the point of death, they nevertheless went directly to Praxx and to their surprise, Payne Roelt, to report. The young Guard told his story. Exhaustion lent it a verisimilitude it might not otherwise have possessed. As it came from cracked lips and a dusty face, it rang true.

“Who can they be?” asks Payne of his general when the two patrollers has been taken away to their barracks. “It can’t possibly be anyone she met by prearrangement. She hasn’t had time.”

“True,
if
she took the letters on a whim,” says Payne, forgetting himself: Praxx is not to know the nature of the theft, though of course he has known from the very beginning. “But what if she planned the theft? What if it had been premeditated? What if she were merely the agent for others, the barons themselves, perhaps? If she had known of the papers from the first, she would have had weeks to create a plan.”

“I don’t think so, Sir. So much of what she does has been forced upon her, she can’t have foreseen it all. She had obviously intended to take the canal as far as its terminus; only the arrival of the patrol forced her to abandon it and head into the mountains. No, I believe that her ‘rescuers’ were as much a surprise to her as they were to our men.”

“Who are they, then?”

“Could be almost anyone. The mountains are wild. There are still people who live there in tribes: bandits, thieves, cutthroats and worse. You know that no one can travel through the deep mountains alone and unarmed, even large parties have been attacked, robbed and have even disappeared. I think she has fallen in with such a band.”

“What will they do with her?”

“Who knows? If they discover who she is, I would imagine they would demand a ransom.”

“In exchange for what? Her life? That’d be a joke on them!”

“I think they’d learn who she is fast enough; the princess would not be slow in letting them know her identity. But what if she told them about your, ah, papers? What then?”

“What do you mean?”

“I think she’s smart enough to figure out for herself what the chances of getting a ransom from the palace, that is, you, might be. What if she explains her position to the bandits, that she is worth nothing as a hostage? She can point to her pursuit as proof that something is amiss with her standing here.”

“You mean they might just go ahead and kill her, rather than be burdened? Or just keep her? Either would suit me equally well.”

“Not exactly. What I mean is: what if she makes them a counter offer of her own?”

“Such as?”

“She can show them your...um...property, explaining that it’s the reason behind her flight. She can offer a reward of any amount she would care to name for her safe delivery to her cousin, Piers Monzon. No one would doubt that he would honor it.”

“What’s to prevent these bandits from killing her and selling the goods to Monzon themselves?”

“Nothing, if she is unintelligent enough to tell them
why
the material is so important. Even if she does, the results for us...
you
, that is, would be the same, don’t you see?”

“Yes, I do see. I don’t think there’s any point in either of us pretending that you don’t know what she stole, is there?”

“No, Sir.”

“I thought not. Well, it saves explanations. It’s clear what we ought to do then, isn’t it?”

“Yes, Sir.”

“We have to assume that Monzon will have the letters in his hands sometime in the near future, whoever he gets them from. If he gets them, say, anytime up to a week before the coronation, then he’ll have ample time to act on the information. If he gets them after that, it’ll be almost impossible to rally the other barons, most will be on the road to Blavek or already in the city; he won’t know where. Once the coronation has taken place, he’ll be powerless; the letters will be so much scrap paper.

BOOK: A Company of Heroes Book One: The Stonecutter
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