DargonZine | Volume 14, Number 8 |
arly in the morning of the 13th of Yuli, not much past second
bell, Rhonwn charged into the clearing where he and his father were
staying, crying, "Bobere! Murntedd!" over and over. His heart sank when
he saw that no progress had been made toward readying the wagon for
travel; there were crates of wares stacked on one side of the clearing,
the horses were bare of tack on the other side, and around the embers in
the fire pit was almost every cooking utensil they owned. Despite the
urgency of his news and the consequent need for a hasty departure,
Rhonwn knew that the wagon wasn't going to be ready to leave for well
over a bell.
After one more shout, the elder gypsy appeared at the door of the
wagon parked half-a-dozen paces from the fire pit. "What's the noise
about, murnmib? Your dawn returnings aren't usually so noisy, luckily
for me. I need more sleep than you, my son, as you well know."
Rhonwn rushed over to his father and said, "Disaster, murntedd,
disaster for all of us, that's what. I overheard a sinister meeting
gathered by our passenger-to-be, Lacsil, and it bodes disaster!"
"Calm down, Rhonwn, calm down!" Bobere said. "Come, sit and rest
yourself, and give me your news."
Rhonwn protested, "But we don't have time, Bobere!" even as he let
himself be led to the folding chairs set by the fire pit. He settled
himself into the cloth sling of the chair, took a few deep breaths, and
then said, "Father, I've learned that Lacsil is a member of the Bloody
Hand of Sageeza." He was pleased that his father's expression changed
from amused tolerance to the beginnings of concern. "It's true. He
revealed that the Bloody Hand has plans to intrude upon the gathering of
our people in the forests of the duchy of Dargon this fall, with the
intent of killing as many of us as he and his fellow malcontents can
manage. That would be bad enough under normal circumstances, but with
the numbers that will attend this gathering for the union between Maks
and Syusahn, it could be completely disastrous.
"But that's not the worst. It seems that Lacsil has learned that
you possess a map of the Rhydd Pobl trails, through an indiscretion of
my own. I've put everyone in grave danger, father. What can we do?"
Bobere's expression had changed to deepest worry. "We can leave, as
quickly as possible, son. Lacsil must not have that map. You harness the
horses, and I'll stow the interior of the wagon. We may have to leave
our stock and our kitchen gear, but those can be replaced. We must not
be anywhere near when Lacsil comes to find us. Go!"
Lacsil, dressed all in green as usual, rode with his assistant,
Hissek, through the woodland paths that surrounded Beeikar, the baronial
seat of Bindrmon. He rode with two of the towns-people who had been at
his dawn meeting of the newest recruits of the Bloody Hand of Sageeza.
He had sent the others at the meeting off to spread the word to other
groups of the Bloody Hand -- the word that Lacsil had finally gained the
key to striking a major blow against their foes, the gypsies!
For ages, the Bloody Hand had sniped at the gypsies, ambushing them
here, inciting people to rise up against them there. But Lacsil was
marshaling what would be their crowning glory: an attack in mass on the
annual gypsy gathering. And he would have the means to lead each and
every Hand right to their enemies!
All he had to do was meet up with the gypsies he had hired to
smuggle him north out of Welspeare. Somewhere along the way, he would
find the map they had, the only map in existence that cataloged the
hidden ways of the gypsies, and break away from them. Armed with that
map, and the legions of the Hand who would be gathering in Tench by the
end of Sy, he would strike a righteous blow against the "Reethe Pobul"!
Lacsil had been told the previous evening that the gypsies would be
leaving at about third bell. Knowing that he couldn't afford to be late,
he had set out as soon as the morning meeting had ended. How could they
object to his arriving early, after all?
Rhonwn's directions had been explicit, so Lacsil knew when he was
nearing the gypsy's clearing. He reined in his horse, signaling his
associates to stop as well. When they had all dismounted, he gathered
them around and clarified his plans.
"I want the three of you to wait within earshot while I continue on
into the gypsy's campsite. I'm sure there won't be any trouble, but this
is too important not to have a backup plan, and that's you three,
straight? If anything goes wrong, I'll shout out, which is your signal
to come running. Got it? Fine.
"Now then, since everything is going to go perfectly, when I leave
with the gypsies, you'll follow us, Hissek. Once again, as a, well and
well, contingency. You two have already been told where to take my
message as soon as you are finished here. Is everything clear? Then
let's be about it."
Lacsil took hold of the headstall of his horse and set out down the
path to the clearing. His intention hadn't been stealth, but he arrived
unnoticed to see both gypsies concentrating on preparing to leave.
Bobere, the older gypsy, was hurriedly stowing items into the wagon
parked near the fire pit while his foster son, Rhonwn, was draping the
horses in blankets, and buckling straps around them.
Lacsil knew that it was not very much past second bell, and the
haste with which the gypsies were acting alerted him that something was
not right. Surely, if his guides were still intending to leave at about
third bell, there was no need for such speed? Warily, yet putting on a
cheerful face, he said, "Greetings, fellow travelers! I didn't want to
inconvenience your departure plans, so I have arrived, well and well
early!"
Both gypsies stopped in their tracks and turned toward him when his
voice sounded across the clearing. Was that fear on their faces? Bobere
rattled off a sentence in their strange language, which set Rhonwn to
work harnessing the horses again, though at a more sedate pace. Then the
older gypsy approached Lacsil and said, "Ah, sir Lacsil, I regret that
you have made your journey in vain. Matters have rearranged themselves,
and the upshot is that our wagon no longer has an extra seat this
journey. Here, let me return your Crowns, and I hope that you will be
able to make other arrangements."
Lacsil cursed inwardly, but maintained his friendly mask. "Oh, but
are you sure? I fear that the forces of so-called justice are closing in
on me and I don't know how long I might have as a free man. You were my
best chance at escaping and reaching my friends in the north. I assure
you I would be no bother; I have my own gear and can fend for myself.
All I need is a guide. Perhaps you might change your mind for another,
well and well, two Crowns?"
Bobere was backing away as he said, "No, no good sir, the sticking
point is not the amount of payment. I'm afraid that, much to my regret,
there is no leeway for compromise this time. Fare you well, Master
Lacsil."
"So be it, Master Bobere," said Lacsil, with feigned resignation.
However, instead of turning and leaving, the man in green drew his knife
and shouted, "For Sageeza!" Not waiting for his companions to arrive, he
charged at Bobere. He didn't even regret the change in plans all that
much; after all, a gypsy dead now rather than at journey's end was still
a gypsy dead!
Yawrab closed the servant's door of Denva Manor and turned the key
in the lock, securing the residence. As chatelaine of the manor, Yawrab
had returned early to prepare it for the imminent return of the
Lord and Lady Denva and their twin children from their recent trip to Fremlow
City. Arriving the previous afternoon, she had worked well into the
evening getting the large house ready.
Despite being tired from her own journey from the ducal seat and
retiring rather later than usual, she still found herself rising with
the dawn, as was her habit. Faced with the prospect of sitting alone and
idle for the day -- her duties had been carried out, and the other
servants not yet returned from their holiday -- she chose instead to
take herself into Beeikar to visit her sister, Tillna. The Denva estate
was some distance from the town proper, but Yawrab faced the two-bell
walk in good spirits. She had spent quite enough time recently on
horseback, and the weather that fine Yuli morning was well suited to a
short trek.
As Yawrab started walking, she wondered how Tillna was. Her sister
worked at an inn in Beeikar, the Ring of Swine or something similar, and
seemed to like it. There had been a time when Tillna was little more
than a trollop, using her beauty and her body to earn favors from men.
Yawrab had found that both demeaning and personally repugnant, the
latter due to a particular incident in her past, the very one that had
led to her traveling north from Shaddir Barony to Barony Bindrmon. Her
sister, as her only family, had come along, though Tillna hadn't known
why her sister was moving so far away from home.
Things were getting better for Tillna now, though. Yawrab's younger
sister had set her cap for the handsome and dashing Lord Aldan, son of
Baron Bindrmon and heir to the title. She hoped that Tillna wasn't
aspiring too high. Could the baron-to-be really be romantically
interested in a bar-maid? Could the daughter and sister of servants
really aspire to a coronet of rank?
Sometimes, Yawrab found herself wishing for that kind of
uncertainty in her life, but in general she was happy with the boringly
familiar. She was ten years older than her sister, but it sometimes felt
more like fifty, so set in her ways was she. Her world was well defined
by the limits of the Denva estate, where she knew everyone and
everything, and even had some small measure of control over well
delineated portions of it. The largest source of discomfort over her
recent trip to Fremlow City had been in how she had been removed from
her safe surroundings for more than a sennight. Fortunately, she was
well used to that periodic upheaval by now. She had learned to adjust to
it by confining herself to the apartments that the family stayed in. She
would take them over from the normal staff and re-create her familiar
world, as much as possible, within them. All she had ever seen of the
ducal seat of Fremlow City was the Street of Traders that they rode in
on, and Harthone Hall, where they stayed. And she was quite content with
that.
Yawrab had trekked her way past several other estates and two farms
as she traveled along the road to Beeikar. It might have been around
second bell -- still very early, in any case -- when the road she was on
curved around some trees and neared the Renev River. She had stepped
well clear of the cover of the trees when she realized that in the
clearing between the road and a bend in the Renev there was an empty
barge pulled up on the bank of the river.
Barges weren't normal parts of the scenery and, moreover, they
usually implied bargemen. And bargemen were only trouble. Yawrab cast
about her for a quick exit or some concealment. The trees she had just
cleared were only a few steps behind her. The road continued on past the
clearing, but the trees didn't resume for at least three score strides.
The road branched about halfway across the expanse of the clearing, but
she couldn't see anything down that branch that looked helpful.
Her heart beating wildly, she continued on at an even pace, praying
to any and all gods of defenseless women that nothing would happen.
Her prayers were answered. Unfortunately, the answer was 'no'.
Two bargemen stumbled out of the trees on the opposite side of the
road from the clearing. Laughing suddenly and for no obvious reason,
they lurched to a halt almost directly in front of Yawrab but facing
away from her. One was tall and lean, the other was short and round;
both were obviously drunk, taking long swigs from the wineskins they
were carrying. The tall one turned first and spotted Yawrab, and wasted
no time elbowing his companion into noticing her as well.
"Look, Jurce, a fine, fine filly," said the tall one. "A fine filly
for to end our respite, yas?"
The round one chuckled, a low and utterly filthy sound. "Ah yas,
Essipt, a fit end, yas. Couldn't see getting back to the barge without
doin' for this filly so fine."
Yawrab began to shake. It was just like before, even if it was
nothing like before. These bargemen, these scum, these filth, these
dregs of humanity shunned by almost all polite society, were as far from
Lord Cranhull as one could get, but the look in their eyes was exactly
the same. Last time it had been in a wood paneled room with fine wall
hangings and elegant furniture; this time it would be in the grass like
an animal. But it would all be the same in the end: rape!
It wasn't until the two men actually grabbed her that she cried
out, shouting and flailing in anger and fear. It didn't inconvenience
the men in the least. The short one even said, "Good, she can talk. It's
better when they can talk, right Essipt?" The tall man's chuckle wasn't
as deep as Jurce's, but it was just as filthy.
As the bargemen dragged Yawrab off of the road and into the
clearing by their barge, the chatelaine saw a gypsy wagon up along the
part of the road that branched away. It was a large wagon, colorfully
painted, drawn by three horses, with two people on the bench in front
and another riding along side.
Hope dawned inside of Yawrab; she was going to be rescued! But that
brief ray of hope only made the despair that followed deeper, for the
wagon turned aside a good way from the clearing. Her shouts turned to
sobs as the golden fox painted on the side of the house-like wagon
vanished into the trees.
Ganba of the Rhydd Pobl, the Free People, had been riding her wagon
along the paths of Bindrmon since before the sun's awakening. It was now
something like second bell by rooted-folk reckoning, on the day they
labeled the 13th of Yuli. For Ganba, it was simply early on a day in the
middle of summer, and she loved the freedom that gave her. For her
purposes, it didn't matter what divided one day from the next; she
counted days and nights from event to event, like the number of days
from her last camping spot to her next. For her, the question of when
the 13th had begun was only interesting in as much as she had to
interact with those to whom it did matter. Whether it began at sunrise
or sunset, mid-day or mid-night, it was all the same to her. But as the
rooted-folk changed their numbers at sunrise, so would she.
Folk like those who lived in this part of the world -- Bindrmon,
Welspeare, Baranur -- grouped the passing of time into months and gave
the days within a month a number. The joke of it all was that, even with
all of their marshaling of time into twelve even months of thirty days
each, they still had to throw five, or sometimes six, extra days into
the middle so that the first of Yule fell on the summer solstice. Ganba
had never understood why the middle of their year had to be so precise,
since the beginning of their year only sometimes actually fell on the
winter solstice. She wondered how many times they had lost count of
exactly how many years had passed over the supposed one thousand
thirteen since they started trying to keep track.
Ganba and her brothers were currently making a detour from the rest
of the bantor, or wagon group, of her family, as it made its casual way
north for the annual gathering. This year the gathering would be made
even more special by the union between Maks and Syusahn, and she was
looking forward to the ceremony.
The detour was to meet up with Bobere and Rhonwn, who were supposed
to be stopping to sell their wares in a few cities in Bindrmon during
this second month of summer. Their last stop was to be Beeikar, from
which they would be setting out for the gathering. Of course, she wasn't
sure whether the pair had already left, or had even arrived yet; gypsies
seldom scheduled anything for a specific day beyond very large
gatherings since any number of things could delay one in travel. She
knew roughly where their camp would be though, and there would be blazes
on the surrounding trails to direct them to the right location.
Ganba was an artisan, as was most of her bantor. She carved figures
from wood with more than a little skill, according to her family. Bobere
often sold her wares for her, and she was always eager to see which of
her fanciful creations had caught someone's eye. The money her carvings
brought was secondary in importance, but well received in any case; even
gypsies needed gold from time to time.
Ganba's older brother, Hiranw, was driving the large, brightly
painted wagon on this trip. Ganba had the skill too, but Hiranw's touch
was more sure, especially with the larger wagons. Three horses pulled
their wagon along the wooded pathways around Beeikar, and although they
were well matched and used to the harness, Ganba was happy to let Hiranw
drive even though she had been given the leadership of the detour trip.
Her younger brother, Shaiff, was riding alongside the wagon on his
own horse for this trip. Shaiff and Rhonwn, Bobere's son, were friends
and when the detour had been approved he had asked to go along, even
though the wagon's steering bench wouldn't hold three comfortably for
any length of time. Which meant that he was riding alongside, instead of
along with, his siblings.
Ganba caught sight of the glint of sun on water well down the path
at the same time as she noticed the small blaze on the tree indicating
that they needed to turn away from the path they were currently on.
Since Hiranw was already coaxing the horses to slow and bear right, she
knew that he had seen the marking as well. As the wagon turned away from
their former trail, she looked back toward the sun-glint.
She was shocked to see three figures move into view in the clearing
at the end of the path. It looked as if two men were dragging a
struggling woman between them. Ganba knew that something was wrong, both
from the knife in the tall one's hand and the sideways-circle hats that
the men wore that marked them as bargemen. That woman was in trouble!
"Stefyll!" she commanded, indicating that they should stop.
Hiranw pulled back on the reins, and the wagon slowly ceased
moving. Shaiff drew up beside the wagon's seat on horseback, and asked,
"What's wrong, chwrd?" of his sister.
"Just as we were turning off the other trail back there, brwd," she
answered her brother, "I saw a woman being dragged along by two
bargemen. She was struggling, and one of the men had a knife. We have to
help her."
Hiranw said, "Well, the wagon won't turn around in this space. Do
either of you know whether this path meets that one again?"
Ganba sneered at her other brother. "What, has your brain shut down
from being sat on for so long? We don't need a wagon to get us down to
that clearing, Hiranw. Grab your bows, boys, and your knives too. We
need to hurry! Move!"
The men fetched their bows from the wagon, which Hiranw hurriedly
secured. As Ganba led them through the trees toward the clearing and the
water, she hoped that nothing spooked the horses -- the locked wheels of
the wagon wouldn't hold against three frightened animals if it came to
that.
As the edge of the trees came into view, Ganba needlessly hushed
her brothers and slowly crept closer. She could hear the bargemen
mumbling to each other, but nothing from the woman. Had she fainted, or
been gagged, or even killed?
Ganba sidled up behind a tree and peeked around. She saw the woman
on the ground, and the two bargemen kneeling on either side of her. They
were grinning at each other and making pleased-sounding, unintelligible
conversation with each other. The fat one was pawing at the victim's
breasts, while the thin one was waving his knife around while plucking
at the hem of her dress.
Ganba turned to her brothers, who had their bows ready and were
taking in the scene from their own concealment. She said, "Hiranw, can
you shoot the one with the knife? Not to kill, just to disable. They're
filth, but human for all of that."
Hiranw gazed thoughtfully across the intervening distance for a
moment, and then nodded. Ganba turned to Shaiff and said, "And the other
one?"
The younger brother took his own look at the situation, and then
said, "Sorry, Ganba, I don't see any target that wouldn't kill with that
one. The way he's kneeling and bending over ... I just don't see a
shot."
"Fine. Hiranw, put your arrow in the one with the knife. Maybe
that'll scare them both off. If not, well, be ready for anything."
They both nodded, and Hiranw pulled an arrow from his quiver and
nocked it. Taking a step sideways, he drew, aimed, and fired in a
smooth, practiced motion. By the time Ganba turned her head from her
brother to the bargemen, the arrow had already hit its target and was
buried deep in the knife-wielding arm. The knife slipped from the
bargeman's hand as he cried out and lurched backwards. Then he fell flat
on his back, clutching his wounded arm.
The other bargeman straightened up and looked around somewhat
stupidly for a moment. Then he noticed his companion with an arrow in
his arm, lying flat on the ground. "Essipt!" he cried. "What happened,
Essipt?"
The thrum of a bowstring to Ganba's left seemed almost coincidental
to the appearance of an arrow in the remaining bargeman's shoulder.
Whether Shaiff had been aiming for the same place as his brother or not,
his arrow had the same effect. With a grunt and then a grimace of pain,
the other bargeman fell over as well.
Ganba was up and running in a trice, her brothers following shortly
after. She knelt beside the woman, checking to see that she was still
breathing. Ganba couldn't see any sign of injury, and the woman seemed
to be breathing normally. Relieved, she said to her brothers, "You two
take care of these brutes. Dump 'em in their barge and push it off the
bank, yes? I'll see if I can revive her."
Ganba dipped her sleeve in the river and bathed the woman's face
lightly, hoping to wake her up without frightening her any further.
Yawrab was dragged across the clearing by the bargemen and dropped
carelessly to the ground. She had ceased to struggle, ceased to sob.
What was the use, after all? These two brutes were going to have their
way with her, and she was just as helpless as she had been in the face
of Lord Cranhull's advances. But this time, if she survived, there would
be no one to be her advocate against the injustice. No one to go to the
perpetrator and shame him into getting her a job at another estate on
the other end of the duchy. No daughter of Lord Cranhull, no
Lady Shorilen, to be her bastion of courage.
No, these bargemen would go free, back to their fellow animals,
free from recriminations, from justice. It was all so unfair! How could
this happen to her again?
As the two grease-smelling drunks knelt down on either side of her,
looming over her like the fate she knew she was going to suffer, Yawrab
felt an all-encompassing despair flood over her, as if she was at the
bottom of a cataract being battered by the water falling on her. The
water turned into years, pummeling down on top of her, drowning her in
time. Every year of her life pooled above her, and then twice that, a
hundred years, four hundred, a thousand, more. She was trapped by the
past, by a history that she didn't know but that seemed to be part of
her, borne down until she couldn't move, crushed, pulverized like herbs
in a mortar.
And then, the years turned into flames that ringed her all around.
But instead of bringing fear, they brought calm, safety, release. She
felt reassured, comforted, happy ...
The strange dream faded away slowly as Yawrab felt something cool
against her forehead. She opened her eyes to find the face of a young
woman hovering over her. Brown hair, brown eyes, pretty in a swarthy
way, something about the face connected with her fading dream and made
her feel safe, despite her sudden recollection of the bargemen and their
intentions.
"Are you all right?" asked the brown-haired face in a
slightly-accented voice. "Did they hurt you?"
Yawrab stared into the brown eyes and answered, "No. No, they
didn't actually hurt me. Are you ... are you from the golden fox wagon?"
"Yes, I am. I'm Ganba, and these are my brothers, Hiranw and
Shaiff. Do you think you can stand?"
Yawrab sat up with Ganba's help. She looked around and found no
sign of the bargemen or their barge. Ganba's brothers were squatting a
couple of paces away, and Yawrab was grateful that they had the sense
not to crowd her just at this moment. Even though she knew that they
were no threat, they were still men and she had just been through quite
an ordeal.
Yawrab was next helped to her feet and then, slowly and
solicitously, up the trail and to the gypsies' wagon. The back was
lowered into a platform, and Yawrab was given a seat on the steps while
the older brother, Hiranw, fetched her an herbal concoction to drink. It
smelled horrible, but tasted fairly neutral and she did feel more steady
once she had it inside her.
She said, "That does help, Hiranw. Thank you. And ... well, I ...
ah, I don't know how to thank you enough for rescuing me. It was ...
well ..."
Ganba said, "No need, no need. We were there, and able-bodied
enough to help, so we helped. What else could we have done?
"So, where were you headed when you were ... when it ... ah, this
morning?"
Yawrab smiled at Ganba's stumbling phrasing, and said, "I was
headed for Beeikar to visit my sister. Were you headed that way?"
"Well, honestly, no," said Ganba. "But, in the interests of not
having our good deed wasted by giving some other ruffians the chance to
attack you, we'll happily give you a ride into the town."
"That would be most welcome, Ganba. Thank you again. I just ...
thank you."
Ganba just smiled, and then the three gypsies were bustling around,
getting the wagon ready for travel again. Soon, the caravan was on the
move again, carrying Yawrab into Beeikar.
The sun was sliding past its zenith, what the locals would call
fifth bell, by the time Ganba and her wagon were once again among the
roads and paths through the forest around Beeikar, looking for the trail
blazes that would lead to Bobere's camp. She didn't regret the time
spent rescuing Yawrab, nor getting her safely to the Boar-Ring Inn where
her sister worked. This was just one of many things that could delay a
journey, and it was all for a good cause.
As Hiranw drove the wagon expertly through the forest, finding the
blazes left by Bobere with ease, Ganba couldn't stop thinking about
Yawrab. There had been something about the woman, something just on the
edge of familiarity even though they had never met before. Yawrab's
black hair, pale skin, and most especially her differently-colored eyes,
one blue, one brown, had struck a chord deep within her. That wasn't why
she had put herself out helping the woman, of course, but it was why she
couldn't get Yawrab out of her mind.
The older woman hadn't revealed much about herself during the ride
into Beeikar. Ganba had learned that she was the chatelaine of an estate
a short distance from the town, and that she had recently been to the
ducal seat of Welspeare with the noble family that lived at the estate.
Yawrab had also mentioned that Tillna was her younger sister, and worked
at the Boar-Ring Inn. But that was all, despite a ride of more than a
bell.
Ganba hadn't pressed, knowing that despite the woman's tough
exterior, she was probably still unsteady after the attack. They had
said farewell in front of the inn, then Ganba had left, probably never
to see the woman again. But that, too, was the way gypsy life was, ever
traveling, ever meeting and departing.
Her thoughts were still on the enigma of Yawrab when Hiranw said,
"Chwrd, we've arrived. But ... by the ocean's depth, what's happened?"
Ganba looked around, and gasped. Bobere's campsite was a shambles.
A stack of wooden boxes on one side of the clearing had been smashed
open, revealing the kinds of wares Bobere usually sold, including some
of her statues. Kitchen gear was scattered about the fire pit, and it
looked as if half of the contents of the wagon itself had been thrown
around the clearing. Several holes had been smashed into the side of the
wagon, and one of the wheels had been cracked. There was no sign of life
anywhere -- not Bobere or Rhonwn, nor the horses.
Ganba and her brothers hurried into the clearing and started
looking around. Shaiff called out, and Ganba raced over with Hiranw to
the back of the wrecked wagon. They found Shaiff kneeling next to
Bobere, who was breathing very shallowly and looked very pale as he lay
amongst the debris of his caravan. It was easy to see why; the older
gypsy's multicolored tunic was reduced to but one color by the blood
that soaked half of it, blood from a knife that was still impaling his
side and which was probably the only reason he hadn't yet bled
completely to death.
"Take a look around," said Ganba, "and see if you can find any
reason for this. Also, see if Rhonwn is lying under something, similarly
wounded. I'll see what I can do for Bobere."
As her brothers did her bidding, Ganba wondered what she might be
able to do for a fatally-stabbed man. This wasn't going to be made
better by a damp sleeve across the forehead. She touched his neck
gently, and could barely feel his life-beat. She could hear that his
breathing was raspy, even bubbly, which wasn't a good sound at all. She
took his hand, and it felt cold. She tried rubbing some warmth back into
it, as if that would heal his wound, but she knew that it was too late.
Only magic would have had a chance to reverse Bobere's course now, and
there was none to be had.
The older gypsy stirred, his head turning weakly. His eyes opened,
and focused with some effort on her. His lips moved slightly, and then
he said in a very faint voice, "Cytwer Ganba, is that you?"
"Yes, Amdan Bobere, it's Cousin Ganba. What happened, uncle? How
did you end up like this?" The gypsy convention of referring to the
members of other wagon-groups as cousins, and the leaders of those
groups as uncle, was even more poignant here, with her good friend
grievously wounded next to her.
"Attacked. Bad man, Lacsil, of the Bloody Hand of Sageeza, attacked
us. He wanted us to guide him north, to get away from some bad business,
but Rhonwn found out what he really wanted, who he really was. Where's
Rhonwn? Rhonwn!"
"Quiet, uncle, rest. I'll ask my brothers if they've seen Rhonwn.
You conserve your strength." Ganba looked up, but both Hiranw and Shaiff
shook their heads. She turned back to Bobere and said, "No, uncle,
Rhonwn isn't here."
Bobere said, "Did he get away? Did they take him?" He struggled
briefly to sit up, but cried out in pain as fresh blood oozed out around
the knife. "Ahh! Uhn, did they ... the map ..."
"Map, uncle? What map?"
"I didn't see. Lacsil stabbed me, I didn't see. Did they get the
map? Look, cousin, look for a map case. Tell them to look, and I'll tell
you ..."
Ganba gave her brothers the new instructions, and then sat beside
Bobere as he gasped out the story of the map. How he had set down the
hidden ways of the Rhydd Pobl onto parchment because of his bad memory.
How Rhonwn had let that information slip, and how Lacsil of the Bloody
Hand of Sageeza now knew about it. About how Rhonwn had overheard
Lacsil's plans to gather his fellow Bloody Hand followers and attack the
northern gathering in force, with the map as their guide.
Ganba was appalled. Bobere probably wasn't the first gypsy to set
the secret trails to parchment, but to have the bad luck of having a
fanatic like this Lacsil find out about it! She checked with her
brothers, but they had found no map case yet. There was a lot of debris
to search through, but since Lacsil had left, he had probably left with
the map.
Bobere squeezed Ganba's hand, drawing her attention back his way.
"Cousin, you have to find that map. That, or stop Lacsil. He's heading
north. Follow him and stop him. This is all my fault, but I can't do
anything about it any more. But you can. Promise, Ganba. Please?"
Ganba looked into Bobere's eyes, holding his hand tightly. There
was no question about her answer. She said, "I promise, uncle. I
promise."
Bobere smiled, and then he died. She felt it happen. She felt the
strength leave his hand, saw his chest halt in mid-rise, watched the
light fade from his eyes. In an instant, he was gone, leaving an empty
husk behind.
It happened so suddenly that Ganba was unprepared. Having his life
leave him like that, where she could all but feel it go, wrenched a sob
from her. She couldn't help herself, and soon she was crying full on,
bent over Bobere's chest.
Suddenly, Ganba seemed to be standing in the rain. Except it wasn't
rain falling on her, it was chips of wood. The sawdust piled up, higher
and higher, faster and faster, and she knew that each chip was a day,
one day of her life. The days piled up around her ankles until she felt
like she was standing in her lifetime's worth of sawdust. But it kept
spilling down from above. Another lifetime, and another, and the pile
around her rose higher and higher, to her knees and up her thighs, and
even higher. Decades of chips, and then centuries piled up, and just
kept piling higher and higher. She felt the constriction of so much
sawdust, so light one chip at a time, but smothering in their abundance.
A thousand years of sawdust, fifteen hundred years, and the sawdust rose
to her neck, squeezing her chest until she couldn't breathe. Higher and
higher, covering her mouth, her nose, almost to her eyes ...
And then, the chips turned into flames that flared up all around
her. But instead of bringing fear, they brought calm, safety, release.
Ganba felt reassured, comforted, happy ...
The strange vision faded, and she realized that she was no longer
kneeling over Bobere. Ganba was sitting on the rear platform of Bobere's
wagon, and she saw Hiranw covering the older gypsy's body with a
blanket. Despite the death of Bobere, despite the disappearance of
Rhonwn, and despite the threat of Lacsil's minions of Sageeza, she felt
hopeful, serene, at peace.
Ganba looked around and found one of Bobere's favorite carvings
lying on the platform next to her. It was a fragment of a strange stone
sculpture, about a foot and a half across and comprising perhaps a third
of what had once been a fully-circular, plate-like carving. It had a
series of glass, gold, and silver bands interwoven across the inner
two-thirds of it, while the outer third had a stylized fox facing a
stylized cat carved as if they were sitting on the outer, curved rim.
She remembered the piece well, because the shape of the fox was the
exact shape she had chosen as her primary decoration; the golden fox on
the side of her wagon looked exactly like the fox on the stone. The
memorable part was that she hadn't seen the stone until years after she
had chosen the shape.
Pulling the stone next to her, she decided to keep it in memory of
her Uncle Bobere. Ganba knew what needed to happen next. She would
return to her bantor with the news of Bobere's death and the news of
Sageeza and the map. And then she would head north to Dargon to find
Lacsil and avenge Bobere.
It was half past fourth-bell when Yawrab walked onto the grounds of
Bindrmon Keep. She instinctively walked up to the servants' gate, and
was admitted with no questions. Perhaps it was her serious manner, or
her severe expression that won her past the guards, or maybe it was her
unconscious air of 'I belong here,' gained through years as chatelaine
of a noble manor, that got her in.
Once in, however, she was at a loss as to where to go. Bindrmon
Keep was far larger than the Denva estate, with all manner of
outbuildings and store houses within the outer walls whose purpose she
didn't recognize. She did know the stables, though, so that was where
she headed.
Yawrab was at Bindrmon Keep because of what she'd learned at the
Boar-Ring Inn. She had asked the gypsies to drop her off at the inn
because Tillna often worked during the day there, and because even if
Tillna wasn't on duty, Yawrab had felt in need of a good hearty
breakfast after her morning ordeal.
But what she had found first at the inn was a stranger waiting
tables. She knew Aivney, the older barmaid that Tillna worked with, but
this willowy redhead was not Aivney. Yawrab had asked the newcomer about
her sister, and had then received the shocking news that Tillna was
dead.
"What?" she had asked. "Dead?"
"Yes," said the redhead. "Some man that Aivney said was Lord Aldan
came in last night and said that Tillna was dead. Then, he ran out
again."
"That's all? Who did it?"
"I don't know anything more. I didn't even know who Lord Aldan was
until Aivney told me that he was the son of the baron. I only just
arrived in Beeikar a few days ago, you know ..."
"Tillna's dead. No, it can't be true ..."
Yawrab had stumbled to a seat, overwhelmed by the realization that
the only family she had left was gone. The redhead had fetched
Oablar, the owner of the inn, whom Yawrab also knew. The unhandsome, but
basically kind, man had done his best to comfort her, while revealing
that there wasn't actually any proof that Tillna was dead save for Lord
Aldan's word, though she hadn't been seen anywhere for almost three
days.
Eventually, after some good, cold ale and some bread and cheese,
Yawrab had recovered from the shock and formulated a course of action.
Lord Aldan had brought the news, so Lord Aldan was the one she had to
find. After thanking Oablar for his help, she had set out for Bindrmon
Keep.
Entering the stables of that keep, she searched for someone to talk
to. In the tack room, she found a man repairing some leather straps. He
noticed her standing in the doorway, and said, "Good day, good lady. Can
I assist you?"
"Perhaps," Yawrab said, hesitantly. "I'm Yawrab, the chatelaine of
the Denva estate, and also sister to Tillna."
The man didn't seem to have any particular reaction to the mention
of Tillna's name, which puzzled Yawrab. He said, "My name is Ricce, and
my job is stablemaster to the Bindrmons. I've heard of the Denvas, and I
believe I've heard of your sister -- she works at the Boar-Ring down by
the river, right?"
"Ah, yes. Yes, she does," Yawrab said, not wanting to tell the
whole truth just yet. She continued, "I was wondering ... my sister has
mentioned the son of your employer, Lord Aldan, several times. I was
wondering if you knew where he was? I'd like to speak to him, ah ....
well, concerning Tillna."
"So those rumors are true, are they?" Ricce's grin and chuckle told
Yawrab that the rumors weren't of her sister's death, but of her
involvement with Lord Aldan. Ricce continued, "I can see why you'd want
converse with him; just looking out for family, straight?
"Just now, though, Lord Aldan's away. He came bursting in here in
the last few bells of last night, rousted me out of bed, and demanded
that a horse be saddled for him. I'll say that he was acting somewhat
strange, asking me how far away Dargon was, and all. Never been out of
Welspeare myself, so I couldn't tell him.
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