Authors: Paul Collins
Jelindel noticed the mailshirt move a little. Hampered by his wound, Zimak was probably slowly digging it up. Soon he would bring it to her and drape it over her body. It was to this reference point that she would return. Without such a beacon she was lost and she knew with dread how easily she could become trapped within this enchanted paraplane.
Enchanted! Jelindel suddenly had a new thought.
She spoke the word of binding for her own lips, using the softest, weakest intonation that she could. At once a point of light flared before her senses. She moved back towards herself, using the aura of the coils binding her own lips as a reference. She opened her eyes!
Now awake and within her body, the relief was so great it was almost painful. The mid-morning air was cool around her, the sun was warm, the stretcher was bouncing all over the place and the reek of Daretor's perspiration was very strong.
Experimentally, Jelindel lifted her hand before her face, then slumped down limp on the stretcher. But at least the binding on her lips was fading.
âThe mailshirt â I've dug it out,' Zimak called in the distance.
âBring it here, quickly,' Daretor called back as he approached.
Jelindel sat up as soon as the mailshirt was in contact with her. The risk of what might be discovered if someone else tried to get the mailshirt onto her was too great to contemplate.
âI'm back,' she said. âThank you.'
Zimak cheered as he wrapped a trail cloak about himself, then he and Daretor threw their arms around each other.
âWe got the bastard; we got one!' Daretor shouted in triumph. âHonour has prevailed.'
Jelindel stood up shakily and they both hugged her as well.
âTch, don't we make a good team!' said Zimak. âMy skill, Jaelin's magic and Daretor's brawn.'
Daretor suddenly broke away and stamped to the edge of the ravine. Peering down, he spat at the body of the linkrider far below.
âI once had skills that I'd gained honourably,' he shouted furiously into the echoing gap, âbut one such as you robbed me of them!'
Zimak stood regretting his words while Jelindel shook the mailshirt on over her head again. Some instinct warned her not to mention that the mailshirt had not been needed for her to return to herself. This way she had a good excuse to wear the mailshirt most of the time, and she was anxious to discreetly explore its properties.
Jelindel now went to the edge and looked down. She saw the smashed bodies of the linkrider and eagle on an outcropping several hundred feet below.
âAll our ropes together could not reach that far,' said Daretor.
âThe skin is flayed from my feet by those rocks, and my arm stopped his knife,' said Zimak, unprompted.
âI fought off a lion last night,' Daretor added. Then they both turned to Jelindel.
âMe? Go down there?' bleated Jelindel. âI've been
hours exploring a paraplane. I'm exhausted. Do you think it's easy for me, floundering about in all that sparkle and nothingness?'
They both continued to stare at her.
âAll right, then, I'll go,' she said finally, bending over to shake off the heavy mailshirt.
Jelindel slowly edged her way obliquely towards the linkrider's body. She had had to walk a mile along the edge of the ravine until she could find a shallower incline. Daretor went part of the way with her, but most of the seven-hour approach had to be made alone. Zimak's encouragement echoed from hundreds of feet above.
The linkrider's body had been smashed into a madly contorted shape by the hard, jagged rocks, and feathers from the dead eagle were scattered all around. Blood that had trickled from the linkrider's mouth was now dry and black, and flies buzzed about lethargically in the cold, thin air. He was wearing the link on the outer finger of his right hand, which was still wrapped around the legs of the eagle. He had been a man in his forties, and his well tanned and lined face suggested a lifetime spent mostly outdoors.
Jelindel made several attempts to touch the dead skin. Help was far away, and she could not be sure that he would not somehow come back to life.
When she finally did touch the linkrider's hand, annoyance soon replaced revulsion. His death-grip was as firm as a smithy's vice, and she had to work the finger free with her knife. The link came off easily after that, and she tied it to her belt with a piece of thonging. The revulsion returned when she began to search his body for anything else of value.
Jelindel cut through the body's robes rather than trying to remove them. There was a purse which she untied and tossed aside, but she found nothing else in the way of crests or papers to identify the linkrider. He had been handsome before falling three hundred feet onto the rocks, and was dressed well and stylishly as a lay pilgrim. His belt seemed to be of soft kid leather, but was wide and thick â too thick. She drew the point of her knife along it and peeled the leather back to reveal a calf leather spine and several strips of folded parchment.
The writing was in Hamarian, but the style of the script was more like that of Hamatriol or Gratz. Jelindel began to read, and did not notice the time passing until Zimak began calling again.
âJaelin, are you all right?'
âYes.'
âDid you get the link?'
âYes.'
âDid he have any money?'
âYes.'
âHow much?'
âDidn't count it.'
âJaelin, what the frickash are you doing down there?'
âReading.'
There was a long silence.
âWell, the bloody library is going to close in half an hour when the sun sets,' Zimak eventually shouted. âStart back now or you'll be doing the climb by Blanchemoon's light and with frost on the rocks.'
She started back, taking the purse and parchments but leaving the linkrider's body where it had fallen. The path was now more familiar, but sunset soon removed that
advantage. Jelindel was drained of energy by her hours in the paraplane, and searching the linkrider's body had been a harrowing experience. She stumbled continually, cutting her hands every time she fell against rocks made sharp by frost shatter.
Zimak walked along a path above, keeping her distant company.
The link was glowing brightly from the mailshirt that Zimak carried, and the orange glow helped to cast light on handholds shadowed by Blanchemoon.
At last Jelindel reached a place where the top was only sixty feet away and Zimak called for her to stop: Daretor had found their horses nearby, where the linkrider had tied them. Now he was splicing together a length of rope.
Jelindel spent an hour in cold but welcome rest on the rocks. Finally Daretor lowered the end of his rope to Jelindel, who tied it beneath her arms and allowed herself to be raised by one of the horses.
Zimak had a brushwood fire going by the time she came over the final ledge. She gladly huddled up close to the flames.
âWell, what did you get?' asked Zimak.
âThe link, as you see, and some fascinating parchments â'
âYou said he had money.'
âAh yes. I've not opened the purse yet.'
âWhat? You're mad! Give it here.'
As Jelindel handed the heavy purse to Zimak she thought she felt something squirm within the soft leather. But her hands were numb and lacerated from the long climb back and her mind was as chilled and lethargic as her body.
Zimak fumbled with the drawstrings. There were coins in the purse, so it could not squirm unless â
âZimak! Drop that!' Jelindel screamed as he loosed the drawstrings.
âWhat? You'll get your share â'
She spoke a word of binding and blue coils flashed from her mouth to bind Zimak's hands about the purse. They also bound a long, reptilian head and neck covered in fur, whose needle-sharp fangs hovered just above Zimak's fingers.
Jelindel collapsed, a large portion of her already depleted life-force having poured into the coils.
âJaelin, what the hell is that?' bellowed Zimak, frantically trying to pull his hands free.
Daretor came running over, and held Zimak down while he peered at the strange animal.
âA jh'arat, a Lycellian snake-mouse,' he declared. âWarm blooded but venomous and quite intelligent. They are left in purses by some folk to make sure that no thief does any thievery. Death is within minutes.'
âGet it away from me.'
âJaelin saved your life with his coils, but he also bound the jh'arat to you for many hours to come.'
âHours? I can't stay like this for hours. What happens when the coils vanish?'
âWe'll make sure the jh'arat is dead by then. There's a meltwater stream back yonder. We can drown it for you.'
Jelindel dozed by the fire while they were gone, and by the time she woke it had become no more than dying coals. The return of her life-force was what had jolted her awake. She sat up and stoked the fire, sending a cloud of red sparks up into the cold night air.
Footsteps were crunching towards her in the distance, and Daretor and Zimak soon came into sight. Zimak was rubbing his hands together, while Daretor was holding a purse in one hand and something that looked like a yard of thin cord in the other.
While Zimak warmed his completely numb hands in warm ashes and sand, Daretor and Jelindel examined the jh'arat. It had scales on its belly, but very fine fur elsewhere.
âHad I opened this on the cliff face, it might have bitten me before I could speak a word of binding,' said Jelindel.
âSo?' Zimak said tersely.
âSo too much interest in money might have killed me, as it nearly killed you.'
âWe all make mistakes,' Zimak said hotly. âDaretor made one when he threw those tools into the river. He must have known that the dragonlink needs to be joined into the mailshirt before it will stop glowing. Can we do it? Oh ho, no! We have no tools to split the link or re-join it. How do we tell if another link is nearby if the mailshirt is blazing bright orange every minute of the day? Meantime any other linkrider will see his ring glowing when
we
approach. We're blinded, don't you see?'
âThese parchments will help,' said Jelindel. âThe linkrider had plans to collect together all the links after he stole the mailshirt. He names the Passendof capital, Dremari, and a place called the Valley of Clouds as having other linkriders. He must have been loitering near Fa'red's house, studying it for weaknesses when Thull and Daretor did the job for him. It took him a few days to find our trail, but he managed.'
Jelindel waved the parchment for emphasis. âHis notes
mention that each of us has a price of 1000 silver argents on our heads back in Skelt. Apparently we've caused a dozen deaths and committed two acts of arson in D'loom.'
âYou mean I'm worth 1000 argents?' breathed Zimak, genuinely flattered.
âDead or alive, but preferably dead,' replied Jelindel, pointing to the relevant part of the parchment. âWe're officially safe here in Baltoria, but bounty stalkers will be after us and they know no laws.'
âMeantime we need tools to join in the link,' grumbled Zimak. âEvery smithy in the entire east half of the continent will have watchers on the alert for three youths trying to get stray links joined into an antique mailshirt.'
âWe can keep it muffled under your sheepskin coat,' said Daretor to Jelindel. âSlowly we'll buy tools, but until they are all assembled we must keep the link and mailshirt safe while looking for the next link.'
Chapter | 12 |
I
t took five weeks for the trio to reach the part of the Passendof Mountains where their first destination was to be found.
The craggy peaks and plunging rockfaces were daunting to look at, but the trail was clearly defined and well maintained. Although they probably travelled five miles for every one that a bird would fly, at least the trail was free of bandits and customs posts. As always, the main problem for Jelindel and Zimak was the cold after a lifetime of subtropical D'loom.
As they approached the pass that was the entrance to the Valley of Clouds, Jelindel stopped and dismounted. She climbed a short way up a rock face and began chipping at the soft sandstone with a knife. After some minutes she came back down with some shells and brown, triangular things.
âWhat are those?' asked Daretor.
âSea shells and shark teeth.'
âWhat? Up here?' laughed Zimak. âThat's impossible.'
âSo what are these?'
âAh, magical amulets, seeded to grow in the rock by some master Adept?'
Jelindel laughed and packed the shells and teeth into her saddlebags, then mounted again. âThis place was once under the sea. Perhaps it was raised up as some other continent was drowned.'
âWhat of it?' snorted Zimak. âWho cares?'
âI care,' Jelindel retorted. âIt's interesting.'
They entered the pass. Part way along was a skull the size of a peasant's cottage. The back was still embedded in the sandstone, but the jaws were a little open and displaying teeth the size of a shortsword. Initials and messages were carved into most of the surface by generations of travellers.