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The Warded Man

Page 22

by Peter V. Brett


  “This is no different,” Arlen said, tapping the book of wards. “If all the Warders shared what they knew, how much better for everyone? Isn’t a safer city worth losing a little profit?”

  Cob stared at him a long time. Then he came over and put a hand on his shoulder. “You’re right, Arlen. I’m sorry. We’ll copy the books and sell them to the other Warders.”

  Arlen slowly began to smile.

  “What?” Cob asked suspiciously.

  “Why not trade our secrets for theirs?” Arlen asked.

  The chimes rang, and Elissa entered the warding shop with a wide smile. She nodded to Cob as she carried a large basket to Arlen, kissing him on the cheek. Arlen grimaced in embarrassment and wiped his cheek, but she took no notice of it.

  “I brought you boys some fruit, and fresh bread and cheese,” she said, removing the items from the basket. “I expect you’ve been eating no better than you were upon my last visit.”

  “Dried meat and hard bread are a Messenger’s staples, my lady,” Cob said with a smile, not looking up from the keystone he was chiseling.

  “Rubbish,” Elissa scolded. “You’re retired, Cob, and Arlen isn’t a Messenger yet. Don’t try to glorify your lazy refusal to go to the market. Arlen is a growing boy, and needs better fare.” She ruffled Arlen’s hair as she spoke, smiling even as he pulled away.

  “Come to dinner tonight, Arlen,” Elissa said. “Ragen is away, and the manse is lonely without him. I’ll feed you something to put meat on your bones, and you can stay in your room.”

  “I … don’t think I can,” Arlen said, avoiding her eyes. “Cob needs me to finish these wardposts for the Duke’s Gardens …”

  “Nonsense,” Cob said, waving his hand. “The wardposts can wait, Arlen. They’re not due for another week.” He looked up at Lady Elissa with a grin, ignoring Arlen’s discomfort. “I’ll send him over at the Evening Bell, Lady.”

  Elissa flashed him a smile. “It’s settled, then,” she said. “I’ll see you tonight, Arlen.” She kissed the boy and swept out of the shop.

  Cob glanced at Arlen, who was frowning into his work. “I don’t see why you choose to spend your nights sleeping on a pallet in the back of the shop when you could have a warm featherbed and a woman like Elissa to dote on you,” he said, keeping his eyes on his own work.

  “She acts like she’s my mam,” Arlen complained, “but she’s not.”

  “That’s true, she’s not,” Cob agreed. “But it’s clear she wants the job. Would it be so bad to let her have it?”

  Arlen said nothing, and Cob, seeing the sad look in the boy’s eyes, let the matter drop.

  “You’re spending too much time inside with your nose buried in books,” Cob said, snatching away the volume Arlen was reading. “When was the last time you felt the sun on your skin?”

  Arlen’s eyes widened. In Tibbet’s Brook, he had never spent a moment indoors when he had a choice, but after more than a year in Miln, he could hardly remember his last day outside.

  “Go find some mischief!” Cob ordered. “Won’t kill you to make a friend your own age!”

  Arlen walked out of the city for the first time in a year, and the sun comforted him like an old friend. Away from the dung carts, rotting garbage, and sweaty crowds, the air held a freshness he had forgotten. He found a hilltop overlooking a field filled with playing children and pulled a book from his bag, plopping down to read.

  “Hey, bookmole!” someone called.

  Arlen looked up to see a group of boys approaching, holding a ball. “C’mon!” one of them cried. “We need one more to make the sides even!”

  “I don’t know the game,” Arlen said. Cob had all but ordered him to play with other boys, but he thought his book far more interesting.

  “What’s to know?” another boy asked. “You help your side get the ball to the goal, and try to keep the other side from doing it.”

  Arlen frowned. “All right,” he said, moving to join the boy who had spoken.

  “I’m Jaik,” the boy said. He was slender, with tousled dark hair and a pinched nose. His clothes were patched and dirty. He looked thirteen, like Arlen. “What’s your name?”

  “Arlen.”

  “You work for Warder Cob, right?” Jaik asked. “The kid Messenger Ragen found on the road?” When Arlen nodded, Jaik’s eyes widened a bit, as if he hadn’t believed it. He led the way onto the field, and pointed out the white painted stones that marked the goals.

  Arlen quickly caught on to the rules of the game. After a time, he forgot his book, focusing his attention on the opposing team. He imagined he was a Messenger and they were demons trying to keep him from his circle. Hours melted away, and before he knew it the Evening Bell rang. Everyone hurriedly gathered up their things, fearful of the darkening sky.

  Arlen took his time fetching his book. Jaik ran up to him. “You’d better hurry,” he said.

  Arlen shrugged. “We have plenty of time,” he replied.

  Jaik looked at the darkening sky, and shuddered. “You play pretty good,” he said. “Come back tomorrow. We play ball most afternoons, and on Sixthday we go to the square to see the Jongleur.” Arlen nodded noncommittally, and Jaik smiled and sped off.

  Arlen headed back through the gate, the now-familiar stink of the city enveloping him. He turned up the hill to Ragen’s manse. The Messenger was away again, this time to faraway Lakton, and Arlen was spending the month with Elissa. She would pester him with questions and fuss about his clothes, but he had promised Ragen to “keep her young lovers away.”

  Margrit had assured Arlen that Elissa had no lovers. In fact, when Ragen was away, she drifted the halls of their manse like a ghost, or spent hours crying in her bedchamber.

  But when Arlen was around, the servant said, she changed. More than once, Margrit had begged him to live at the manse full time. He refused, but, he admitted to himself if no one else, he was beginning to like Lady Elissa fussing over him.

  “Here he comes,” Gaims said that night, watching the massive rock demon rise from the ground. Woron joined him, and they watched from the guard tower as the demon snuffled the ground by the gate. With a howl, it bounded away from the gate to a hilltop. A flame demon danced there, but the rock demon knocked it violently aside, bending low to the ground, seeking something.

  “Old One Arm’s in a mood tonight,” Gaims said as the demon howled again and darted down the hill to a small field, scurrying back and forth, hunched over.

  “What do you suppose has gotten into him?” Woron asked. His partner shrugged.

  The demon left the field, bounding back up the hill. Its shrieks became almost pained, and when it returned to the gate, it struck at the wards madly, its talons sending showers of sparks as they were repelled by the potent magic.

  “Don’t see that every night,” Woron commented. “Should we report it?”

  “Why bother?” Gaims replied. “No one is going to care about the carryings-on of one crazy demon, and what could they do about it if they did?”

  “Against that thing?” Woron asked. “Probably just soil themselves.”

  Pushing away from the workbench, Arlen stretched and got to his feet. The sun was long set, and his stomach growled irritably, but the baker was paying double to have his wards repaired in one night, even though a demon hadn’t been spotted on the streets in Creator only knew how long. He hoped Cob had left something for him in the cookpot.

  Arlen opened the shop’s back door and leaned out, still safely within the warded semicircle around the doorway. He looked both ways, and assured that all was clear, he stepped onto the path, careful not to cover the wards with his foot.

  The path from the back of Cob’s shop to his small cottage was safer than most houses in Miln, a series of individually warded squares made of poured stone. The stone—crete, Cob called it—was a science left over from the old world, a wonder unheard of in Tibbet’s Brook but quite common in Miln. Mixing powdered silicate and lime with water and gravel formed a mu
ddy substance that could be molded and hardened into any shape desired.

  It was possible to pour crete, and, as it began to set, carefully scratch wards into its soft substance that hardened into near-permanent protections. Cob had done this, square by square, until a path ran from his home to his shop. Even if one square were somehow compromised, a walker could simply move to the one ahead or behind, and remain safe from corelings.

  If we could make a road like this, Arlen thought, the world would be at our fingertips.

  Inside the cottage, he found Cob hunched over his desk, poring over chalked slates.

  “Pot’s warm,” the master grunted, not looking up. Arlen moved over to the fireplace in the cottage’s single room and filled a bowl with Cob’s thick stew.

  “Creator, boy, you started a mess with this,” Cob growled, straightening and gesturing to the slates. “Half the Warders in Miln are content to keep their secrets, even at the loss of ours, and half of those left keep offering money instead, but the quarter that remain have flooded my desk with lists of wards they’re willing to barter. It will be weeks in the sorting!”

  “Things will be better for it,” Arlen said, using a crust of hard bread as a spoon as he sat on the floor, eating hungrily. The corn and beans were still hard, and the potatoes mushy from overboiling, but he didn’t complain. He was accustomed to the tough, stunted vegetables of Miln by now, and Cob could never be bothered to boil them separately.

  “I daresay you’re right,” Cob admitted, “but night! Who thought there were so many different wards right in our own city! Half I’ve never seen in my life, and I’ve scrutinized every wardpost and portal in Miln, I assure you!”

  He held up a chalked slate. “This one is willing to trade wards that will make a demon turn around and forget what it was doing for your mother’s ward to make glass as hard as steel.” He shook his head. “And they all want the secrets of your forbidding wards, boy. They’re easier to draw without a straightstick and a semicircle.”

  “Crutches for people who can’t draw a straight line.” Arlen smirked.

  “Not everyone is as gifted as you,” Cob grunted.

  “Gifted?” Arlen asked.

  “Don’t let it go to your head, boy,” Cob said, “but I’ve never seen anyone pick up warding as quick as you. Eighteen months into your apprenticeship, and you ward like a five-year journeyman.”

  “I’ve been thinking about our deal,” Arlen said.

  Cob looked up at him curiously.

  “You promised that if I worked hard,” Arlen said, “you’d teach me to survive the road.”

  They stared at one another a long while. “I’ve kept my part,” Arlen reminded.

  Cob blew out a sigh. “I suppose you have,” he said. “Have you been practicing your riding?” he asked.

  Arlen nodded. “Ragen’s groom lets me help exercise the horses.”

  “Double your efforts,” Cob said. “A Messenger’s horse is his life. Every night your steed saves you from spending outside is a night out of risk.” The old Warder got to his feet, opening a closet and pulling out a thick rolled cloth. “On Seventhdays, when we close the shop,” he said, “I’ll coach your riding, and I’ll teach you to use these.”

  He laid the cloth on the floor and unrolled it, revealing a number of well-oiled spears. Arlen eyed them hungrily.

  Cob looked up at the chimes as a young boy entered his shop. He was about thirteen, with tousled dark curls and a fuzz of mustache at his lip that looked more like dirt than hair.

  “Jaik, isn’t it?” the Warder asked. “Your family works the mill down by the East Wall, don’t they? We quoted you once for new wards, but the miller went with someone else.”

  “That’s right,” the boy said, nodding.

  “What can I help you with?” Cob asked. “Would your master like another quote?”

  Jaik shook his head. “I just came to see if Arlen wants to see the Jongleur today.”

  Cob could hardly believe his ears. He had never seen Arlen speak to anyone his own age, preferring to spend his time working and reading, or pestering the Messengers and Warders who visited the shop with endless questions. This was a surprise, and one to be encouraged.

  “Arlen!” he called.

  Arlen came out of the shop’s back room, a book in his hand. He practically walked into Jaik before he noticed the boy and pulled up short.

  “Jaik’s come to take you to see the Jongleur,” Cob advised.

  “I’d like to go,” Arlen told Jaik apologetically, “but I still have to …”

  “Nothing that can’t wait,” Cob cut him off. “Go and have fun.” He tossed Arlen a small pouch of coins and pushed the two boys out the door.

  Soon after, the boys were wandering through the crowded marketplace surrounding the main square of Miln. Arlen spent a silver star to buy meat pies from a vendor, and then, their faces coated with grease, he handed over a few copper lights for a pocketful of sweets from another.

  “I’m going to be a Jongleur one day,” Jaik said, sucking on a sweet as they made their way to the place where the children gathered.

  “Honest word?” Arlen asked.

  Jaik nodded. “Watch this,” he said, pulling three small wooden balls from his pockets and putting them into the air. Arlen laughed a moment later, when one of the balls struck Jaik’s head and the others dropped to the ground in the confusion.

  “Still got grease on my fingers,” Jaik said as they chased after the balls.

  “I guess,” Arlen agreed. “I’m going to register at the Messengers’ Guild once my apprenticeship with Cob is over.”

  “I could be your Jongleur!” Jaik shouted. “We could test for the road together!”

  Arlen looked at him. “Have you ever even seen a demon?” he asked.

  “What, you don’t think I have the stones for it?” Jaik asked, shoving him.

  “Or the brains,” Arlen said, shoving back. A moment later, they were scuffling on the ground. Arlen was still small for his age, and Jaik soon pinned him.

  “Fine, fine!” Arlen laughed. “I’ll let you be my Jongleur!”

  “Your Jongleur?” Jaik asked, not releasing him. “More like you’ll be my Messenger!”

  “Partners?” Arlen offered. Jaik smiled and offered Arlen a hand up. Soon after, they were sitting atop stone blocks in the town square, watching the apprentices of the Jongleurs’ Guild cartwheel and mum, building excitement for the morning’s lead performer.

  Arlen’s jaw dropped when he saw Keerin enter the square. Tall and thin like a redheaded lamppost, the Jongleur was unmistakable. The crowd erupted into a roar.

  “It’s Keerin!” Jaik said, shaking Arlen’s shoulder in excitement. “He’s my favorite!”

  “Really?” Arlen asked, surprised.

  “What, who do you like?” Jaik asked. “Marley? Koy? They’re not heroes like Keerin!”

  “He didn’t seem very heroic when I met him,” Arlen said doubtfully.

  “You met Keerin?” Jaik asked, his eyes widening.

  “He came to Tibbet’s Brook once,” Arlen said. “He and Ragen found me on the road and brought me to Miln.”

  “Keerin rescued you?”

  “Ragen rescued me,” Arlen corrected. “Keerin jumped at every shadow.”

  “The Core he did,” Jaik said. “Do you think he’ll remember you?” he asked. “Can you introduce me after the show?”

  “Maybe.” Arlen shrugged.

  Keerin’s performance started out much as it had in Tibbet’s Brook. He juggled and danced, warming the crowd before telling the tale of the Return to the children and punctuating it with mummery, backflips, and somersaults.

  “Sing the song!” Jaik cried. Others in the crowd took up the cry, begging Keerin to sing. He seemed not to notice for a time, until the call was thunderous and punctuated by the pounding of feet. Finally, he laughed and bowed, fetching his lute as the crowd burst into applause.

  He gestured, and Arlen saw the apprentices fetch ha
ts and move into the crowd for donations. People gave generously, eager to hear Keerin sing. Finally, he began:

  The night was dark

  The ground was hard

  Succor was leagues away

  The cold wind stark

  Cutting at our hearts

  Only wards kept corelings at bay

  “Help me!” we heard

  A voice in need

  The cry of a frightened child

  “Run to us!” I called

  “Our circle’s wide,

  The only succor for miles!”

  The boy cried out

  “I can’t; I fell!”

  His call echoed in the black

  Catching his shout

  I sought to help

  But the Messenger held me back

  “What good to die?”

  He asked me, grim

  “For death is all you’ll find

  “No help you’ll provide

  ’Gainst coreling claws

  Just more meat to grind”

  I struck him hard

  And grabbed his spear

  Leaping across the wards

  A frantic charge

  Strength born of fear

  Before the boy be cored

  “Stay brave!” I cried

  Running hard his way

  “Keep your heart strong and true!”

  “If you can’t stride

  To where it’s safe

  I’ll bring the wards to you!”

  I reached him quick

  But not enough

  Corelings gathered round

  The demons thick

  My work was rough

  Scratching wards into the ground

  A thunderous roar

  Boomed in the night

  A demon twenty feet tall

  It towered fore

  And ’gainst such might

  My spear seemed puny and small

  Horns like hard spears!

  Claws like my arm!

  A carapace hard and black!

  An avalanche

  Promising harm

  The beast moved to the attack!

  The boy screamed scared

  And clutched my leg

  Clawed as I drew the last ward!

  The magic flared

  Creator’s gift

 

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