The Wicked Day (13 page)

Read The Wicked Day Online

Authors: Christopher Bunn

Tags: #Magic, #epic fantasy, #wizard, #thief, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #hawk

BOOK: The Wicked Day
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“Be sure an’ get a dear price for that honey, Birt, you hear me?” said the farmer’s wife. “Raised them bees myself. Clover and honeysuckle. Sweeter’n anything them cityfolk’ve tasted. A good price, you hear me?”

“I hear you, I hear you. I heard you now, didn’t I?”

The old trader was a withered stick of a man, bundled up in a coat large enough to double as his tent. Despite his age, he bustled about with greater energy than both Declan and Jute, heaving sacks and barrels up into his wagon and periodically hopping up to rearrange the goods stowed there.

Birt agreed to give them a ride south in exchange for their company. “The company of your sword,” he said, cackling a bit. “Times ain’t what they used to be these days.”

“And the boy?” said Declan.

“Don’t look like he weighs much. Mules won’t mind. ‘Sides, he can scarper after wood for the fire an’ make himself useful, no doubt, or we can beat him.”

“Why, no one’s—” said Jute, outraged.

Hush.

The hawk’s voice floated through his mind.

The old man is fond of talking. Perhaps we can learn something from him of Ancalon and what goes on there. Traders hear much. Do not allow him to remember you more than he should.

The farmer’s wife hurried back out with a bulging sack for them.

“A bite for the road,” she said. “Eat the pie first, else it go bad. Watch that Birt, though. He’s a greedy lout.”

The old trader laughed and swung up behind his mules.

“Giddup there.”

A line of sunrise bloomed into light in the east, but the morning was still dark around them as the wagon pulled out of the farmyard. The mules grumbled to themselves.

“Anytime you’re by this way, lads, you’re welcome,” called the farmer. “Plenty of work here.”

Jute waved back at him. He sighed. It would be nice to stay in one place for a while. With a family. Not that he had to be part of the family. That wouldn’t be necessary. Just to live in the barn, perhaps. He could learn how to farm. He could learn anything. Despite three giggling girls.

And what if the wihht comes sniffing along your trail? How long would that last? He would slay the lot of them. And you would live with the memory of their deaths.
Jute could hear the hawk’s wings rustle inside his mind. The bird sighed.
Some things must be left behind.

The wagon was stuffed full of goods. Barrels smelling deliciously of salted beef, fish, and other things Jute could not put a name to. Sacks and boxes and chests tied down this way and that with a perfectly crazed weaving of ropes. Stone jugs wedged into whatever nooks Birt considered safe enough for their travel. Crates of beets and carrots and potatoes, muddy onions and withered apples. It was a wonder that four mules were enough to pull such a load.

“Don’t sit on the cheeses, son,” said old Birt. “Now, what about that pie?”

The miles rolled away through the day. The sun rose and disappeared into a gray sky that spat down a sleeting rain. Jute wormed himself down into a gap between a sack of wheat and a crate of apples. He pillowed his head on his knapsack, pulled his cloak around him, and stared up at the sky. From time to time, he saw the hawk float by overhead. The ghost mumbled to itself inside the knapsack. At the back of the wagon, the top of Declan’s head was visible beyond a barrel.

It was a lonely land that they traveled through. The road, which was more of a stony, rutted track than a proper road, never went straight but veered and climbed and dropped with fatiguing regularity. The wagon rolled down through canyons choked with pine forests that plunged them into even darker gloom than the day itself. Ice sheathed the tree trunks, and the wind moaned among the branches. The road climbed back up through hills until the travelers found themselves on a high moor. The ground was pocked with pools scummed over with ice and the broken remains of reeds that rattled like old bones as the wind passed by. There were almost words in the rattle of the reeds, if listened to close enough—a rattle and a whisper and a rustling broken by cracks and snaps as the reeds bent under the wind’s breath. The words came in a tumbling confusion of thoughts, a hundred different voices: all similar, but still different enough to discern each reed. There was a whistling quality to their voices, as if the wind blew across the open hollows of their broken joints like a hundred little flutes.

Vole’s been gnawing and sawing at my roots again.

Oh, my poor, aching back.

Blood’s gone to ice and then it snaps—crack!

Curse this wind.

The vole. . .

Curse this wind and the vole.

Hush, hush! No cause to complain.

Mud and muck and stone. Clack and snap and groan.

Perhaps it’ll rain?

Rain? Never, you fool. Just more snow. . .

Old Birt kept up a tuneless whistle that whipped away into the wind. The mules clopped along, heads down and ears flicking back every once in a while to hear the encouragement of their master. Jute must have fallen asleep, for he woke with a sour taste in his mouth and an ache in his neck. The day had grown considerably colder, and he rubbed at his nose. It felt like ice. His stomach growled and he groped for the bag of food from the farmer’s wife.

“Here,” said Declan, handing it to him. “There’s even a wedge of pie left.”

“Pie?” said old Birt, looking back over his shoulder. “Did someone say pie?”

After some argument, Jute surrendered the last piece of pie and contented himself with investigating the rest of the bag. The sack was stuffed with all sorts of victuals, for the farmer’s wife was used to people who ate in large quantities and, doubtless, she could not imagine any other way to think about food.

“That’s fish, hey?” said the ghost, poking its head out of the crate of apples.

“Yes, shh.”

“You don’t have to be snippy,” said the ghost. “I was only curious. Smoked fish, no doubt. I can’t remember the last time I ate fish. Hundreds of years ago. That’s a long time to go without fish. And does anyone care? No.”

“What’s that?” said old Birt. The ghost vanished back into the crate of apples.

“Nothing,” said Jute. “I was just eating this fish.”

“Hand some up, laddie. Hand some up.”

“Do you trade in Ancalon a lot?” asked Declan.

“Aye, fair amount.”

“I suppose it’s like other big towns. Hearne, Lura, Damarkan even.”

“Can’t say I’ve been to Lura or that there Damarkan. Too many foreigners for my taste. But I’ve been to Hearne. Fine city, fine city. Why, there were a lady singing in a tavern there. Sang and danced and clanged little bells on her fingers. Wiggled her hips faster’n a woodpecker tapping for grubs. Done it all at the same time.” Birt shook his head in admiration. “It were a wonderful sight. Fine city.”

“Not much different than Ancalon?”

“I wouldn’t say that,” said Birt slowly. He shifted back and forth on his seat as if trying to find a more comfortable spot. “Ancalon’s a quiet city. Peaceful, I suppose. Always a good price for food, aye. It’s a wonder how much they buy.” And he refused to say more on the subject.

The evening brought them to the edge of a valley. The moon shone fitfully through the clouds and the sleet was thickening to snow. Some lights gleamed down in the valley, cheerily enough, but they also served to heighten the darkness around them.

“Pigtown!” called out Birt with some satisfaction.

“Pigtown?” said Jute.

“Aye, laddie. Ain’t much of a place, but they got plenty of pigs. We’ll stop there for the night.”

The presence of pigs asserted itself long before the wagon reached the town. The air thickened with their scent. Jute pulled his cloak around his nose. Old Birt produced a pipe and proceeded to puff out clouds of smelly black smoke that would have stank horribly in any other situation but now seemed almost refreshing. The road descended into a pinewood, silent with snow and night. The mules quickened their pace, anticipating food and rest. Pigtown really wasn’t a town at all. Half a dozen ramshackle houses huddled together at the edge of the pinewood. Light shone from windows. Beyond them, further out on a fenced and snow-covered field and barely visible in the darkness, stood several barns, sturdy and in good repair.

“Plenty of pigs,” said Birt. “Whoa, now.” He hopped down and began to unharness the mules.

A door creaked open somewhere beyond them, and a man stumped out of the dark, lantern in hand. He was tall and had a long beard that gathered snowflakes.

“Eh, Birt,” said the man. “Expected you yesterday.”

“Nice to see you too, Doyl,” said Birt. “Road ain’t so good up north.”

Doyl nodded and turned away. Birt followed him, leading the mules. Snowflakes swirled down. Jute looked longingly at the cheerily lit windows of the houses nearby. Smoke curled up from their chimneys. He shivered.

“Are we just supposed to sit here?” said Jute.

“Patience,” said Declan. He got down from the wagon and began to walk around, swinging his arms back and forth and stamping his feet on the ground. “Always see to your beasts first.”

Birt reappeared soon enough.

“All right, then,” he said. “Time for some shut-eye.”

“Out here?” said Jute in disbelief. “We’ll freeze to death!”

“Freeze? This ain’t cold, laddie. Bracing, I call it. You wait until winter’s here. Now that’s a proper cold.” The old man cackled out loud. “Poke your nose outside and—snap—ice. Off it comes.”

He produced some wool blankets from beneath the wagon seat and, taking one for himself, crawled beneath the wagon, rolled himself up in his blanket and promptly began to snore. Declan shrugged, grinned, and then did the same.

“But what about sleeping inside?” said Jute.

The light in the windows of the nearest house went out at that moment. As if on some silent cue, any other lights that were visible also went out, winking out one by one as if eyes closing to sleep. The snow fell thicker and faster.

I do not think these folks friendly except to their pigs. Get some sleep. You shan’t freeze.

“Oh, all right,” said Jute. “If I wake up frozen dead, it’ll be your fault.”

The hawk chuckled inside his mind and then fell silent.

Jute grabbed the last blanket and scrambled underneath the wagon. He wrapped himself up, tucked his knapsack beneath his head, and promptly fell asleep. Sometime in the middle of the night, he awoke with a start, shivering not from the cold but thinking of wihhts and shadows and the wind blowing in silence through some faraway place. The snow lay so deeply now that it had piled up past the sides of the wagon. They were entombed. The air beneath the wagon, trapped as such, was somewhat warm and pleasant. Jute stretched out his hand and touched the bank of snow and then fell back asleep.

They left early in the morning, before the sun rose. Moonlight shone through the pine trees, and everywhere, despite the dark sky, there was a sort of shabby radiance reflecting from the snow and ice. The villagers had their own wagon packed and ready to go, piled with barrels of salt pork, smoked hams, sausage, and brined trotters. A tall, gloomy man who looked like Doyl, but younger and without a beard, sat knock-kneed on the buckboard, dangling a whip over his team of oxen.

“Ox ain’t so good as mule in this weather,” said Birt. “Y’should consider mule. I recommend ‘em highly. Eat on anything, anytime, anywhere. Eat on your salt pork, if’n you let ‘em.”

“Ox’ll do,” said Doyl. “Doyl’s cartin’ corn for ‘em. Get a good price on that pork, y’hear me?”

“I hear you, Pa. I hear you.”

“Doyl?” said Jute.

“Named all his sons Doyl,” said Birt. “All six of ‘em.”

“Saves time, boy,” said Doyl. “Time’s money.”

The snow had stopped falling sometime during the night, leaving the countryside deep and white with its passing. Gray clouds scudded across the sky. The wind whipped through the trees, blowing snow off branches and along the top of the drifts below.

“Cheer up, laddie,” called old Birt over his shoulder. “We’ll make Hager’s Crossing tonight. Hot ale and a bit of shut-eye, and then Ancalon tomorrow. If y’freeze solid, we’ll sell you fer statuary.” He snorted and cackled. Declan laughed as well.

“Very funny,” said Jute, but he cheered up at the thought of hot ale.

“I must concur,” said the ghost from inside Jute’s knapsack. “He’s somewhat humorous. Though, if you do get sold for statuary, I’ve no desire to moon about a garden, or wherever they install you, for the rest of my life.”

“The rest of your death, you mean.”

“You, my young friend, are not humorous.”

They made good time despite the deep snow covering the road. The mules trotted along, heads down and grumbling but oblivious to the drifts they trudged through. At noon, after much berating from Birt, Doyl reluctantly agreed to take the lead with his team of oxen.

“After all,” said Birt, “your pa says they’re as good as mule, don’t he?”

“Sure enough,” said Doyl gloomily.

The hawk sailed through the sky, almost invisible against the dark clouds. Jute could always pick him out. His eyes instantly found him, wherever he was. Jute reached out with his mind.

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