The Wicked Day (16 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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“Snow down my neck, in my boots, in my socks,” said Jute. “Winter was never so cold in Hearne. Why would anyone want to live in this duchy? I suppose I wouldn’t mind being a farmer. He had a nice family, didn’t he? Too many girls, though.”

“Shh.” Declan stopped and turned, his face intent.

“Thank you,” said the ghost. “I can’t stand people who babble. You’re a babbler, did you know that, Jute? I tell you for your own good. A babbler is someone who chatters on about irrelevancies. Going into hideously extensive detail on topics that I haven’t the slightest interest in. You remind me of a fellow named Yoric who, fortunately for the rest of us, was boiled into pudding by a—”

“I’m not a babbler. Why, if anyone’s a babbler it’s—”

“Hush. Both of you.”

Jute and the ghost fell silent, for they saw the tension on Declan’s face. He tilted his head this way and that, eyes shut, as if he might by such slight positioning hear more of what the wind had to say.

“Something’s coming,” said the hawk.

Before they could do anything, whether that would have been climbing the nearest tree or drawing a weapon, a quiet scuffling sound came from the bushes nearby.

“It’s just a couple of rabbits,” said Jute, his voice shaky with relief.

There were two of them. Two small rabbits with fur so white they were almost invisible against the snow. Their ears were the only part of them that moved, twitching back and forth, for the rabbits sat motionless in the snow and stared at the travelers. They had red eyes.

“Is it just me,” said the ghost, “or has anyone else noticed these things are only looking at Jute?”

There was an uncomfortable silence after this, during which everyone considered what the ghost had said. He was right. The rabbits were staring at Jute.

“Rabbits are harmless, aren’t they?” said Jute. “You don’t think they know we’ve eaten a lot of their relatives, do they?”

“Speak for yourself,” said the ghost. “I’m sure I never ate a rabbit in my life.”

One of the rabbits yawned, revealing an unusually large mouth filled with unusually sharp-looking teeth. It shut its mouth with a snap.

“I think,” said Declan quietly, “that we had better—”

It was then that it happened. The rabbits grew and stretched and elongated until what stood before them were no longer rabbits but two enormous dogs. Shadowhounds.

“Jute! Run!”

Jute was already running. Declan’s sword sang through the air, and the hawk flung himself forward, slashing with beak and claw. The hounds lunged forward to meet them. Jute ran through the snow, stumbling to keep on his feet as he staggered through the drifts. He could not see where he was going. It was too dark. Branches whipped against his face and he tripped, falling to both knees. Somewhere behind him, something large and heavy crashed through the bushes. Jute staggered back to his feet. And realized he stood on the edge of the cliffs. Darkness and the sense of a great emptiness falling away lay before him. He turned around. Something ran out from among the trees and stopped in the moonlight. A shadowhound!

No.

Something worse. A huge beast with glaring silver eyes and jaws big enough to swallow him whole. Its fur was so black it was darker than the night around it, a terrible blot of shadow against the snow. Further back among the trees there came a sound of growling and then a sharper, more triumphant howl. The beast before Jute leapt forward.

Perhaps it will be quick
, thought Jute. He raised his hands, hopeless and helpless.
Perhaps I won’t feel a thing.

And then, right when he felt the beast’s hot breath and could smell the rank odor of the thing, he thought, absurdly pleased:
at least if I’m dead I won’t be cold anymore
. But the beast did not kill him. Instead, it slammed into him with one heavy shoulder, knocking the wind from his lungs and off his feet. Jute’s arms windmilled through the air, desperate to grab onto something, for he knew what was behind him. His fingers closed on nothing, and then he was falling. The cold and the wind whipped by him. He tumbled down, end over end. One second the moon was overhead, and the next second it was gone. The cliffs were a solid wall of darkness. Or was that the sky? Or perhaps it was just the ground, rushing closer and closer to bring him to his final and abrupt end. Oddly enough, he wasn’t afraid.

Life seems to be mostly about falling, doesn’t it? Falling down.

The wind chuckled in his ear.
Or falling up
.

And just as Jute expected, though he hadn’t realized it until the moment it happened, the wind caught him. It spun him around a few times, merely for the fun of it, and then bore him high up, high into the sky until the cliff and forest below shrank away into the darkness of the night.

Here
, said the wind, forming its words in gusts and sighs and the tumbling torrent of its passage,
we shall see
.
Shall we not?
It blew against the clouds until they unraveled like rotten thread. They frayed apart and then vanished, rolled up on the horizon like dirty garments waiting for the rain and their washing. The moon shone down.

Far below them, beneath the cliffs, a snowy valley stretched away to the south. Further down the valley, miles and miles away, the lights of a city sparkled in the night. Wall upon wall and tower upon tower rose to a pinnacle so lofty that it was a wonder Jute and the wind were higher still. Jute’s eyes sharpened. It seemed that he could see across the land if he wanted to, across the mountains and even to the sea if he wanted. But the lights of the city drew him.

Aye
, said the wind.
We’ve always been drawn to bright things. You and me. Shiny baubles. Pretty bits of this and that. Careful now. Some are sharp!

I think that’s the city we must go to
, said Jute.
Ancalon.

But then he remembered Declan and the hawk. And the ghost. He could not forget the poor old ghost. And the shadowhounds.

Let us go
, said the wind.
We can whirl and blow and dance. Knock over chimneys! Steal the laundry and throw it in the mud. Break windows. What fun we shall have!

You must set me down near the cliffs.

No.
The wind’s voice sounded petulant.
I want to play. I want to break windows!

You must set me down. Please.

Hmmph!

The wind whisked him across the sky, grumbling in a voice that sounded like thunder on the horizon. The stars rushed by overhead and the clouds blew like streamers around the moon. The air was as cold and as thick as water. Snowflakes stung Jute’s face. And then he was on the ground, stumbling with the sudden weight of his own self. The wind whirled around him, mumbling and disconsolate. He floundered through the snow. The cliff rose up high above him. Moonlight shone on ice and crag. Icicles hung down in clusters, sharp as spear points, from the overhanging rocks. He heard a howling on the wind.

“Well, we’re in tremendous luck.” The hawk swooped down out of the darkness and settled on Jute’s shoulder. “Superb luck, for such a terrible day and an even worse night.”

Before Jute could say how delighted he was to see the bird, something huge and dark hurtled over the top of the cliff. The shape seemed to fly down the face of the cliff—no, not fly—rather, the thing was running down the cliff. Ice fell in sharp and sudden shards. Jute’s mouth fell open.

“Get out of the way!” said the hawk.

Snow showered up around them. And there, standing before them was the terrible creature from the top of the cliff. Its jaws gaped open to reveal teeth as sharp as knives. Jute stumbled backwards.

“Help!” he shouted.

He would have shouted a great deal more than that, none of it flattering to himself and the ideal of courage, but at that moment Declan appeared. Rather, he peered over the creature’s head. The creature was so enormous that Jute hadn’t seen Declan sitting on the thing’s back.

“Ah, Jute,” said Declan. “There you are. Hop on.”

“Did you say hop on?”

“As in: get on, mount up, jump on, ascend, clamber up,” said the ghost, appearing from somewhere behind Declan’s head.

“This is no time to throw about words,” said the hawk. “Quickly now. He’s our friend.”

Friend?
Jute looked over at the hawk.
What is he?

I am a wolf.
The voice filled Jute’s mind. It was deep and growling, but there was a hint of laughter in it. The wolf’s tongue lolled out of his mouth in a grin.
Get on. We do not have much time. Do not worry. I shall not eat you, little one. You would be exceedingly tough and stringy.

This did not encourage Jute, but a sudden howl from high above them on the cliff did, and he jumped for the wolf as if someone had filled his boots with hot coals.

“Climb up,” said the wolf. “Plenty of room for all. Caught hold? Good. Now, we are off.”

The night surged around them. The wolf ran as fast as the wind. Snow flew up from his paws, shining with moonlight and sparkling like tiny stars in their wake. The countryside blurred past in a confusion of ice-bound trees, of darkness pooled in defiles, and of expanses of snow. The stars glided overhead, their fire frozen into shards of light studding the sky. The moon tumbled by from cloud to cloud. Near them, in the darkness, the hawk flew as fast as an arrow, but even he could fly no faster than the speed of the wolf. They fled through the night, but behind them in the darkness there sounded the belling of the shadowhounds.

The city rose up like a swath of night sky, speckled with lights like stars. As they drew closer, its aspect hardened into towers, battlements, and walls, spiked with chimney spires trailing smoke from their smoldering tips. The city sprawled at the mouth of the valley, out of whose expanse swam a river that hugged the northern edge of the city before curving away to the west. Bridges spanned the water in several places. Torches burned holes in the darkness, along the walls, atop towers, and at the heads and tails of the bridges.

The wolf stopped his headlong rush in a stand of trees halfway down a ridge descending to the valley below. Declan and Jute tumbled off and stamped around to awaken their aching muscles.

“We’re nearly there,” said the hawk. “Why stop now? You, more than us, surely know what’s hidden behind those walls.”

“I know full well, old wing,” said the wolf. “I’ve approached this city, from south and north, east and west, and every time I’m stopped in my tracks. There’s a strange, dark magic guarding this place and it listens for such as you and I. Each time, the gates opened and a company rode forth on my trail. Shadowhounds, ravens with iron beaks and iron claws, men on steeds and themselves ridden by magic, and other such almost men, but not men, full of death and darkness. This accursed city is shut to me, even though my heart is there.” A growl escaped his throat. “She’s there. I know it.”

“I wouldn’t regard ravens as much,” said the hawk. “Ugly, smelly birds not good for anything except pecking dead flesh.”

“These aren’t precisely ravens,” said the wolf. “But time’s passing us by now. The hounds are still on our trail and shall not rest until they find us. You and Jute must make your way into the city alone. Find my mistress—find your sister—and free her from whatever holds her fast, for I can sense her presence somewhere behind those walls. I’m balked by darkness, for there is too much magic in me, but in you it shall find none and so shall be blind to you. If we can, we shall delay the hounds, the hawk and I.”

“But how’ll we find her?” said Declan. “Ancalon looks near as big as Hearne and I’ve never set foot in this city.”

“You will find her,” said the wolf, his voice grim. “And we shall await you.”

He drew near to both Declan and Jute and breathed on them. There was a scent of earth and green growing things in his breath. And with it they gradually became aware of a delicate tug in their minds, almost as if a vine had wrapped its tendrils around them and began to pull with the slow yet inexorable strength of its growth.

“What about me?” said the ghost. “I expect you think I’m going to stay here and mumble among the trees while you’re gallivanting around. And this after I saved your lives back in that wretched inn. Hmmph.”

“On the contrary,” said Declan, eyeing the ghost thoughtfully. “You’ll come with us. You might prove useful before the night is out.”

“Oh?” said the ghost. “Well, I—”

But he did not get to say more than this, for at that moment there came from behind them on the ridge a sudden sharp howl. The wolf wheeled around.

“Quickly now,” he said. “We’ll attempt to draw them off. But the shadowhounds have your scent, and they’re not known to give up easily.” And with that, the wolf and hawk vanished into the darkness.

“Well, that’s that,” said Jute. He glanced nervously back toward the ridge. “We should go, shouldn’t we?”

“Yes,” said Declan.

"I suppose," mumbled the ghost.

They plunged down the snowy slope. Pines grew in miserable and twisted states, hunched over themselves under the weight of their icy branches and the fact that winter had many months before it would relent into spring. Jute’s side ached. His lungs burned. His mind felt numb with cold and weariness.

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