Luck in the Shadows (12 page)

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Authors: Lynn Flewelling

BOOK: Luck in the Shadows
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Alec had never been inside the place before, though he’d passed it often enough. The plastered walls of the central room glowed with fanciful underwater scenes and icons showing several of the patron deity’s more noteworthy labors.

Near the central shrine a young acolyte dozed at his post. Passing quietly, they found their way to a door at the back of the temple and into the storeroom beyond.

Offerings, sacks of food for the priests, and oddments of furniture were stacked carelessly about. Alec sat down on an upended crate while Micum cast about, looking for something.

“Isn’t it over to the left more?’ asked Seregil.

“I’ve got it.” Micum pulled open a trapdoor in the floor.

Looking over his shoulder, Alec saw a ladder descending into the darkness. Cold, earth-smelling air rose up the shaft.

“Let’s hope the mayor neglected to tell his visitors about this route,” Seregil muttered.

Micum shrugged. “A good fight puts the fire of Sakor in your blood. I think we could all use the warmth!”

Seregil cocked a wry eyebrow at Alec. “He works as hard to find trouble as I do avoiding it.”

With a derisive chuckle, Micum climbed down the ladder. Alec followed while Seregil took a moment to prop several small crates to fall over the door when it closed.

Once down, Micum rummaged in a belt pouch and drew out a small glowing object. Its pale radiance spilled out through his fingers, spreading a small circle of light.

“Magic?” Alec asked, leaning closer.

“A lightstone,” Seregil told him. “I lost mine in a dice game two months ago and I’ve been fumbling around with flint and steel ever since.”

“Too bad it doesn’t give off any heat,” Micum said, chaffing his arms as he led the way down the tunnel.

“Where are we?”

“An escape tunnel leading out of town,” Micum explained. “It has openings near the lake shore and another just inside the
woods. The Temple of Dalna has one, too. The idea was to be able to evacuate the town secretly if it was ever besieged. I doubt it would work, though—most likely bring you right up in front of the enemy. But it was thought up by merchants, not generals. As it is, Seregil and I have probably made the best use of them over the last few years.”

“Where to now? The cave?” Seregil was shivering visibly now as he tried to pull his stiff cloak more closely about him.

“That’s the closest place.”

The passage ran in a fairly straight line back from the river. It was hardly wide enough for two men to pass, and the roof was so low that Micum had to stoop in places. The damp earthen walls, shored up at intervals with timber, gave off an unpleasant chill. Blotches of lichen and pale fungi sprouted from the support beams. After some time, the tunnel branched.

Taking the right fork, Micum drew his sword and whispered over his shoulder, “Look sharp, boy, in case we have company.”

Alec moved to draw his own blade but Seregil nudged his hand away from the hilt. “Never mind that,” he said. “You couldn’t get by to fight and if you stumbled, you’d probably run Micum through. If we meet anyone, fade back with me and stay out of the way.”

But they met nothing except a few rats and slow-moving salamanders, and soon the tunnel began to slant upward, ending at a narrow cave. It was hardly more than a thin cleft in the rock and the floor of it narrowed sharply to a V, making for uncomfortable going.

Barking shins, hands, and heads against sharp-edged stones, they clambered up the fissure. Micum pocketed the lightstone as they reached the top and they pushed their way through a dense thicket of bramble at the mouth of the cave.

Looking around, Alec saw that they were somewhere in the woods; stands of oak, birch, and fir grew thickly around them. The sinking moon cast netted shadows through the canopy of branches overhead, curling darkness beneath the firs. Dawn was a few hours away and all was still.

Seregil was trembling more violently than the others.

“You never could stand the cold,” Micum said, unclasping his cloak. When Seregil moved to shrug it away, Micum stopped him with a stern look and swung it around his shoulders himself.

“Save your pride for warmer days, you damn fool. The boy and I are bred to it. Your blood’s too thin. Come on.”

Still scowling, Seregil tied the cloak strings under his chin without further protest.

Moving quietly over the snowy ground, they headed deeper into the forest. The ground rose and fell sharply, and the shadows were thick, but Micum went along as confidently as if they were hiking a highroad.

Halfway up a hillside, they reached another cave. It was larger than the last and its opening lay in plain sight. High-roofed and shallow, it narrowed at the back to a tiny passage leading farther into the hillside. Alec and Seregil were slim enough to pass through sideways without much trouble, but Micum grunted and swore as he worked his way in.

“I don’t recall you having so much trouble a few years back,” observed Seregil.

“Shut up, you,” Micum wheezed, pulling free at last.

The crevice twisted sharply several times, threatening to close altogether, but finally opened into a wider space. Micum brought out his light again, and Alec saw that they were in another cave, this one quite large.

Wood lay arranged for a fire in a circle of stones. Hunkering down beside it, Seregil found a small jar among the logs and shook what appeared to be hot coals onto the tinder.

“More magic for you.” Grinning, he handed Alec the jar. Small chips of stone glowed bright as embers but, like the lightstone, gave off no heat.

“Those are fire stones,” he explained. “Be careful with them. They won’t hurt skin but the second they touch anything that will burn—cloth, wood, parchment—they ignite. I’ve seen too many accidents to carry them traveling.”

Flames licked up through the dry wood, dispelling the chill and darkness. The natural chamber narrowed overhead to a crevice, and by some trick of the draft the smoke was drawn neatly up this natural chimney.

Firewood, folded blankets, and a number of pottery jars lay on various ledges around the caves. Piles of dry bracken and fir boughs were formed into rough pallets against the walls.

“This is snug camp,” said Alec, admiring it.

“Micum found it a while back,” Seregil said, huddling over
the flames as closely as he dared. “Only we and a few friends know about it. Who was here last?”

Micum inspected the stone shelf that held the jars and held up a black feather. “Erisa. She must have stopped here before going into town. Let’s see what she’s left in the larder.”

Carrying a few of the jars to the fire, he inspected some marks carefully incised on the wax seals. “Let’s see. There’s a bee on these, that’s honey. A wheat stalk, that’s hard biscuit. A bee and a cup—mead. What’ve you got?”

“I’m not certain.” Seregil held a jar closer- to the light. “Dried venison. And here’s some tobacco for you.”

“Bless her kind heart.” Micum took a pipe from somewhere inside his tunic and filled it. “I left my pouch behind in all the scuffle.”

“And these two must be herbs,” Seregil continued. “Looks like yarrow and fever bane. Well, thanks to our good friend Micum Cavish, we’re in no need of healing. I just want to get dry!”

Stripping off their filthy garments, they spread them by the fire and wrapped up in blankets.

Too cold to concern himself with modesty for once, Alec noticed that both of his companions had a number of scars, though Micum’s were by far the more numerous and serious. The worst was a pale rope of tissue that began just beneath his right shoulder blade. It curved down around his back to end just short of his navel. Noticing the boy’s interest, he turned to the light and ran a thumb proudly over the end of the welt.

“Closest I ever came to Bilairy’s gatepost.” Lighting his pipe, Micum puffed out a few rings of mellow smoke. “It was nine winters ago, wasn’t it, Seregil?”

“I believe it was.” Seregil gave Alec a wink. “A group of us were traipsing up around the Fishless Sea and ran into a particularly unfriendly bunch of nomads.”

“Unfriendly!” snorted Micum. “I’d never seen their like before—great hairy giants. We still don’t know where they came from. They were too busy trying to kill us to answer questions. We stumbled across their camp by accident one evening, and figured we’d say hello and try to trade for supplies. But just as we reached the pickets, a whole pack of them—big as bears and twice as mean—came charging out of nowhere at us on foot. We were mounted, but they had us surrounded before we realized what was going on. The weapons they used looked something
like a big flail; a long haft with several lengths of chain attached, each two or three feet long. Only the links of the chains were flattened and the edges ground keen as razors. Of course, we didn’t know about that until after we’d started to fight. Cyril lost an arm, cut clean off, and Berrit was blinded and died soon after. One of the bastards took the front legs off my horse and then laid into me. That’s when I got this beauty.” He ran a hand over the knotted ridge of flesh again. “I was all tangled up in the stirrups, but I managed to get my sword up in time to block his swing—all but one of the chains, and that laid me open to the bone right through my jerkin. If I hadn’t blocked the rest, I believe he’d have cut me in half. Seregil popped up from somewhere and killed him just as he was going for another stroke. It’s lucky we had the drysian Valerius traveling with us, or I’d have crossed over right then and there.”

“I suppose this was my worst,” said Seregil, showing Alec deep indentations in the lean muscle on either side of his left thigh.

“I was exploring an abandoned wizard’s keep. She’d been dead for years, but a lot of her wards were still in place. I’d been very careful, spotted all the symbols, disarmed device after device. She’d been something of a genius in that way and I was feeling pretty proud of myself. But no matter how good you are, there’s always a trap with your name on it somewhere, and I found one that day. I missed a trigger of some sort—never did see it—and the next I knew my foot went through the floor. An iron spike shot across, pinning my leg like a speared fish. Half an inch to the left and I’d have bled to death. I couldn’t reach far enough into the hole to free myself, short of cutting off my leg. I’ve no stomach for pain. From what little I remember, I did a lot of yelling and fainting until Micum found me and carried me out. Not a very heroic tale, I’m afraid.”

Alec had stripped the oilskin cover from his bow to check for damage. Without looking up from his work, he ventured shyly, “Still, you were brave enough to do all that.”

“You’ve got a short memory all of a sudden,” Seregil scoffed, passing him the mead jar. “Aren’t you the same half-starved lad who survived Asengai’s dungeons and followed me out, not to mention what we did tonight? That’s a lot to claim before you’re even grown.”

Alec shrugged, embarrassed. “That wasn’t bravery. There just wasn’t anything else to do.”

Micum laughed grimly. “By Sakor, then you’ve learned the secret of being brave. All you need is some training.”

Reaching over the fire, he retrieved the mead jar from Seregil. “So what will you do now?”

Seregil shook his head. “I’d planned to blend into some caravan and take the Gold Road all the way to Nanta, but now I’m not so sure. What was all that fracas about tonight? I was certain nobody saw us.”

“I was watching the house from the square. Everything was quiet until well after you left. The party broke up soon after, the guests went home, and the lamps inside were mostly out. I was just about to leave myself when all hell broke loose. Someone started yelling, then there were lights all over the place, and soldiers running everywhere. I got as close as I could—which wasn’t too hard with all the excitement—and looked into the hall. That big fellow, Boraneus, had the mayor cornered. All I heard was that anyone who’d been at the feast was to be arrested and brought back immediately. That’s when I lit out after you. Those Plenimarans are a damned well-organized bunch. I didn’t think I was going to get to you in time.”

Seregil tapped his chin with one long forefinger. “If someone had actually seen us, then they wouldn’t be arresting all the guests. That’s a bit of luck, I’d say.”

“And what, exactly,
did
you steal?”

“Just this.” Seregil dug into his belt pouch and handed Micum the wooden disk. “I wanted to show Nysander the pattern.”

Micum turned it over on his palm and tossed it back to him. “Looks like a gaming piece to me—not the sort of thing anyone would make that kind of fuss over. You know, I think you might not have been the only ones ghosting around there tonight. Could be one of the guards got a case of light fingers.”

“We saw one coming out of Boraneus’ room before we went in, carrying a box,” Alec recalled. “And someone nearly caught us in the other room as we were leaving. It could have been one of them.”

“I suppose so.” Seregil frowned into the fire for a moment. “At any rate, we’ve certainly made ourselves look guilty enough, leaving the way we did. I say we avoid the Gold Road. We’ll find some horses—”

“Find?” Micum interjected wryly.

“—and head cross-country to Boersby Ford,” Seregil went on, ignoring the remark. “That should be far enough to shake loose of any pursuit. Then we can take passage down the Folcwine to Nanta. With any luck, we’ll be there in less than a week. If the weather holds, we can get a ship across to Rhíminee.”

“I think I’d better stay clear of Wolde until the Plenimarans are well gone,” Micum said, stretching out on a pallet and yawning until his jaws cracked. “I’ll go back with you as far as Boersby, in case there’s any trouble.”

“Did they get a good look at you?”

“I’m not sure they didn’t. They were right on my heels all the way to the Fishes. Better safe than dead, eh?”

Sheltered in their hidden cave, they slept deeply until afternoon.

“We’d better wait until dark to move on,” said Seregil, squinting up at the narrow crack of light from the smoke hole. Pulling his harp from its case, he satisfied himself that it had survived the dunkings of the previous night, then set about tuning it. “We’ve still got a few hours to kill. Micum, how would you like to give my young apprentice a few lessons in swordsmanship? He’ll benefit from learning your methods as well as my own.”

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