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Blood Red Road

Page 21

by Moira Young


  The Tonton hang people in trees. Cut off their heads an stick ’em on spikes. Fer nuthin more’n wanderin into their King’s territory. Men like them wouldn’t think twice about killin Lugh. All the things Helen told me run through my head. All the things I know about Pinch an DeMalo. But I need to know more. I gotta know my enemy. I need to know what Jack an Ike know.

  An they know plenty, I’m sure of it. I’m gonna make ’em tell me. They owe it to me.

  I wait till we’re settled into camp fer the night. Epona’s takin the first watch. Ash an Emmi an Tommo’s wrapped in their bedrolls, already asleep. Ike’s propped aginst a log. His head lolls forwards onto his chest.

  Jack an Nero sit by the fire playin dice. Once Jack found out how good Nero was at countin, he carved a pair of dice an taught him how to play. Nero throws one at a time, usin his beak.

  I go an stand over ’em. Nero throws two sixes.

  Damn, says Jack. You beat me agin. Never thought I’d find myself losin to a crow. Think he might be cheatin.

  Nero bobs up an down, squawks with glee.

  If he is, I say, he learned it from you. I wanna word, Jack. With you an Ike.

  He sighs. Like he’s bin expectin this. But he stands up an gives Ike a nudge with his foot. Ike wakes with a grunt.

  What? he says.

  C’mon, says Jack. Saba wants to talk.

  As Ike heaves hisself to his feet, Nero flaps up to sit on my shoulder. He rubs his head aginst my cheek. He always knows when I need somebody on my side. Like tonight.

  I lead ’em away from the campsite. Climb uphill through the trees till I git to a rocky outcrop. I turn to face ’em. The fog’s completely gone an it’s a warm night with a high sky. A midsummer night sky. I can see Jack an Ike clearly.

  All right, I says. Tell me what you know about Freedom Fields. Tell me everythin.

  They look at each other.

  I bin straight with you, I says. I told you everythin. What Helen told me about the midsummer sacrifice an why they took Lugh. Pinch might be dead but Lugh ain’t safe, not till we git him outta there. Now you two gotta be straight with me. You need to tell me everythin you know. That way, at least we got a chance of figgerin out what we might be up aginst.

  Well, you know more’n we do, says Ike. We only heard things from travelin folk. You know, you meet somebody from time to time an you git talkin an—

  Ferget it, Ike, says Jack.

  What?

  I said, ferget it.

  But I thought we said we’d—

  Ike, he says. Saba’s right. She needs to know what we’re up aginst.

  I knew it! I says. I knew you knew more’n you was lettin on. Gawdammit, Jack, why didn’t you tell me before? Why didn’t you tell me right away, when you found out where I was headed?

  I know I should of, he says. But I didn’t want you to know till you had to.

  I ain’t a child, I says. I don’t need you to pertect me.

  I know, he says, I know, I’m sorry.

  Think I’ll … head on back to camp, says Ike.

  Coward, says Jack.

  Go on, Ike, I says. Jack’s gonna tell me everythin I need to know.

  Right, he says. Well … if I hear any screamin, I’ll send Emmi. He disappears without a sound. Not a rustle or a footstep. Fer a big man, Ike moves real quiet. Nero must be startin to feel restless because he takes off after him.

  Then it’s jest Jack an me.

  All right, Jack, I says. Start talkin.

  Four years ago, he says, I was in the wrong bar at the wrong time. Got picked up by the Tonton. They’re always on the lookout fer strong workers. Fer slaves. That’s how I ended up at Freedom Fields.

  You was there, I says.

  I was, he says. Let’s sit down.

  We sit facin each other, on a couple of rocks. A bit too close fer my likin. His feet nearly touch mine. The heartstone’s hot aginst my skin.

  That’s where I met Ike, he says. We got slaved there about the same time. As you can imagine, him an me didn’t take kindly to a slave life, workin in a chain gang in the fields. But everybody else … well, nuthin seemed to bother ’em. We figgered out why pretty quick. A big waterwagon ’ud come around twice a day, once in the mornin an once in the afternoon, an fill everybody’s waterskins. There’s chaal in that water.

  Helen said it was all about chaal, I says.

  It slows yer brain down, he says. Makes you stupid. A good thing if you wanna control people. But if you take too much, everythin speeds up. Yer heart races, you git all excited an aggressive, you don’t need sleep or food.

  I think of Mad Dog, back at Hopetown, what he did to Helen. Of the crowds in the Colosseum, bayin fer blood in the gauntlet.

  I seen what it can do, I says.

  Me an Ike ’ud fill our waterskins with the rest, he says, but we never touched it. We’d sneak water from the irrigation channels in the fields.

  How long was you there? I says.

  A couple of months. Jest long enough to collect what we needed to pick the locks on our ankle chains. Then we had to wait fer a stormy night. The dog patrols don’t go out when there’s lightnin or bad weather, it spooks ’em.

  So you got away, I says.

  An counted ourselves lucky, he says. We hit the road, layin low, keepin outta trouble. Ike eventually settled at the One-Eyed Man. But I kept on goin.

  Till you ended up in the cells at Hopetown, I says.

  Yeah, he says. Wrong bar, wrong time. Agin.

  You’d think you’d learn, I says.

  You’d think.

  Whaddya know about the King? I says.

  He was crazy, says Jack.

  I know, I says. I seen him.

  He was crazy, he was smart, an he controlled everythin an everybody, he says. Lived in a big white house up at Freedom Fields. The Palace. With the finest of food an drink. Everythin. Amazin stuff from Wrecker days. Soft chairs, big tables, lookin glasses, pictures hangin on the walls. He had house slaves who’d crawl on their hands an knees if they went into a room where he was. If you looked at him the wrong way, he’d run his sword through you. I only ever seen him from a distance. That was close enough.

  I know what you mean, I says.

  An over the last couple of years, he started expandin his empire. Everywhere I bin lately, I’m havin to dodge Tonton or I’m hearin about ’em. Any place where there’s good water or land fit fer growin food, they’re comin along an claimin it fer the King. If there’s somebody already on the land, they eether work it fer the Tonton or git killed. They got spies an informers all over the place.

  He don’t control everythin, I says. Look at the Free Hawks.

  Maybe they won’t be free fer much longer, he says. The King might be dead, but somebody’ll step into his shoes. His empire’ll keep growin. You can bet on it.

  I cain’t believe Maev don’t know this, I says. That she ain’t heard about it.

  I tried to tell her, he says. She wouldn’t listen. I believe her ezzack words was, I dunno what yer game is, but as far as I’m concerned yer a lyin chancer. That desperate fool might trust you, but I sure as hell don’t.

  My belly hollows out. A desperate fool. That’s what Maev thinks of me. Then the rest of what he said starts to sink in. I stand up slowly. Stare down at him.

  So that’s it, I says. That’s why you came after me. Why you showed up at Darktrees. You wanted the Free Hawks to help you clear out Freedom Fields. You don’t care if I find Lugh. You don’t care about me. All that … crap about how you couldn’t help it, you had to follow me … that’s jest what it was … crap. Gawd, I am such a idiot.

  No, he says, that was all true, I swear it was. It is!

  He throws his head back an curses unner his breath. Stands up. Whatever I say now, he says, you ain’t gonna believe me.

  Probly not, I says.

  I did want the Hawks to help me, he says. When me an Ike left Freedom Fields, I warn’t thinkin about nobody but myself. But I started to see wha
t was goin on everywhere an I started thinkin about them poor bastards we’d left behind in the chaal fields. Then I ended up in Hopetown an saw what was goin on there, an I met you an the Hawks an suddenly there’s a chance I can do somethin decent in my life … so I took that chance. It all happened at once, Saba. You gotta believe me. It’s fate, like I said.

  Jack, I says, you cain’t possibly think that seven of us an a crow’s gonna bring down the Tonton an their operation.

  Why not? he says. Me an Ike know the layout. We can take ’em by surprise. They won’t expect trouble from outside.

  I’m here to git Lugh back, I says, not to change the world. I told you before. An by the way, yer outta yer mind.

  C’mon, Saba, he says, if we come up with a good enough plan, we can all have what we want. D’you wanna git yer brother back an then hafta live in a world run by the Tonton? I don’t. Ike don’t. Ash and Epona don’t neether. An if you asked ’em, I bet Tommo an Emmi’ud say the same. You might of burned Hopetown to the ground, but they’ll be buildin on its ashes already. You can bet on it.

  So what’re you sayin, Jack? That you ain’t gonna help me unless I fall in with yer plan?

  No, he says. No! What I’m sayin is, we think big. We git Lugh back an take out their operation at the same time. The Tonton, the chaal fields … everythin. But we cain’t do it without you.

  You promise me that we’ll git Lugh outta there, I says.

  I promise, he says. I promise.

  All right, I says. I’ll go along with yer plan. What is it?

  To be honest, he says, I never bin much fer what you’d call a plan. They’re more like … ideas.

  Jack!

  I said I promise! he says.

  We’re gonna need more help, I says.

  I whistle fer Nero. He comes in a flutter of wings an lands on my shoulder. I pull Maev’s little gold ring from my pocket.

  If you ever need me, if you need the Hawks, send Nero with this an we’ll come. Wherever, whenever … you send this ring an we’ll be there.

  It’s Maev’s, I says. She said to send it if I needed her. D’you got somethin to tie it on with?

  He fumbles in his pocket an pulls out a good sized piece of string.

  Tie it to his leg, I says. Make it good an tight, but don’t let it cut into him.

  He works quick.

  Done, he says, steppin back.

  I stroke Nero’s feathers. Look into his clever black eyes. Find Maev, I says. I touch the ring, then I touch him on his breast. Nero find Maev. Find Maev.

  He cocks his head to one side. Then he caws twice an takes off into the night.

  He ain’t never let me down yet, I says.

  I should of told you everythin sooner, Jack says. I should of …

  What? I says. Trusted me?

  Yeah, well …, he says. I ain’t ezzackly bin in the habit of trustin people.

  Me neether, I says.

  We could try startin agin, he says.

  He holds out his hand.

  I hesitate. Then I take it. Warm. Callused. Strong.

  I’m sorry I was such a ass back at Ike’s place, he says. It was jest that … ah hell, Saba … I was jealous that you smiled at Tommo an not me. You was hardly even talkin to me, let alone smilin, an it was like I couldn’t help myself.

  Jealous? I says. You? Jealous? Of Tommo? He’s a child.

  I’m jealous of anybody you smile at that ain’t me, he says. He takes a step closer. Reaches out. Runs the back of his hand down my cheek. A hot shiver ripples through me. You look at me with them eyes of yers, he says, an I look at yer lips … an all I can think about is what it ’ud be like to kiss you. You got no idea, do you? You got no idea how beautiful you are.

  We stare at each other. The moon silvers his face. Shadows his eyes. Makes him look strange. Not quite real.

  I step back so’s his hand falls. I block out what he jest said. Even though my heart’s bangin aginst my ribs. Even though I cain’t git my breath an the heartstone’s burnin into my skin.

  I think we’re gonna head back to Crosscreek, I says. Me an Emmi an Lugh. To start with, anyways. We got a friend there, Mercy. Did I ever tell you about her?

  Saba, he says.

  She’s real nice, I says. A old friend of my ma. Yeah, I got it all worked out. I had plenty of time to think about it.

  Saba, he says.

  I know I’m babblin. I cain’t seem to stop myself. An I don’t dare look at him. If I do, I fear I’ll say somethin I shouldn’t or do somethin I don’t mean to. I dunno what ezzackly but it’s … I feel like I’m walkin along a narrow ridge an my foot could slip at any moment. I jest gotta think about Lugh, think about why I’m here, an everythin’ll be okay.

  Well, I better git back, I says.

  I go to slip past him an he grabs my hand. Stops me. We’re standin close. Too close. Stay, he says.

  Before I can stop myself, I look at him. A mistake. Hot silver eyes. Burnin fer me. My heart lurches.

  He leans his head down. Stay with me. He whispers it into my ear. Jest fer a while.

  I … I gotta go, I says.

  Please, he says.

  The brush of his breath aginst my skin. The warm Jack smell of him. I feel myself weakenin. Dangerous. This … the way I feel whenever I’m near him … it’s dangerous. I pull my hand from his.

  No, I says. I … I caint. G’night, Jack.

  I slip past him. Gotta git away. I cain’t move fast enough.

  He don’t reply.

  The mean white sun’s bin poundin down on our heads all day. The way turned steep an rocky around noon. We had to dismount an start leadin the horses an we bin climbin ever since. We’re headed fer a pass high in the mountains that’s our last big crossin before we git to Freedom Fields. Jack says he wants to reach it before nightfall, but it’s slow goin in this terrain.

  The higher we climb, the hotter it gits, even with the day closin down around us. There ain’t bin no relief from the heat, none at all. Not even a single tree to shade us on our way.

  When we was stuck in the fog fer days on end, I never would of thought fer a second that I’d be longin fer its cold dank heaviness, but I am.

  Em’s bin bit by bit fallin behind th’others an I bin holdin back to walk with her. But she’s gittin slower an slower. I look over my shoulder. She plods along on heavy feet. She looks so pale an tired. I wait fer her. The sweat runs down my face, stingin my eyes. I mop myself off with the end of my sheema.

  I’m so thirsty, she says when she reaches me.

  Waterskin empty? I says. She nods. Siddown, I says.

  She sinks onto a rock. I unstop my skin an hold it to her lips. She sucks hard on it, gulpin the water. It runs down her chin an neck an I wipe it away with the tail of my shirt.

  She looks a bit surprised. I don’t ever bother with her that way, worryin about when she last had a wash or if her face is all grubby. Once Pa gave up carin, Lugh looked after that kinda thing. I ain’t gived it a single thought till this moment. I stare down at her, frownin.

  When did you last have a wash? I says.

  She looks even more surprised. I dunno, she says.

  You should wash more regular, I says. You gotta be decent.

  Okay, she says.

  I turn away an take a swig of water myself. I rub a drop into my dry lips.

  The rest of ’em’s well ahead of us. Ash turns back, sees us, waves. She cups her hands around her mouth. No time to stop! she shouts. Jack says we gotta make the pass before dark!

  Emmi needs to rest! I shout back.

  She can rest later!

  She needs to rest now!

  I can see ’em talkin amongst theirselves. Then Ike hands his reins to Tommo an makes his way back down to us. He crouches down beside Emmi.

  Hey there, kid, he says. Yer doin real good. How’s about a ride to the top?

  She nods, not lookin straight at him. She likes Ike, but she’s a bit shy of him. I think on account of him bein so big an her bein
so small.

  C’mon then, he says, hop on. She climbs onto his back.

  Thanks Ike, I says.

  We gotta reach the pass before dark, he says.

  I know, I says. I heard it the first hunnerd times.

  He checks the sky. The light’s startin to soften, turn to gold. We’re gonna be pushed, he mutters.

  Ike starts up the mountain, with Emmi clingin to his back like a spider. I cain’t believe how fast he moves, pickin his way around the rocks. Like she don’t weigh nuthin. I guess to a man his size, she don’t.

  I take a last swig of water. Then I pick up Hermes’ reins an follow behind Ike, fast as I can.

  They’re all waitin fer me when I git to the top. Emmi gives me a quick look, but nobody else looks my way. They’re starin at somethin in front of ’em.

  What is it? I says.

  Then I see what it is. What they’re all lookin at.

  We’re standin on the edge of what used to be a mountain lake. Back in Wrecker times it must of bin a stretch of cool clear water, a welcome relief fer the tired feet of travelers. But it sure ain’t that no more.

  Now it stretches away in front of us. Parched, scorched, criss crossed with great cracks an crevasses. Endless.

  My heart drops into my boots. I lick my lips.

  I cain’t see th’other side, I says.

  It’s there, says Jack. We should of had it in sight by now.

  We couldn’t of gone no faster in this heat, I says.

  I know, says Jack, I know. It’s my fault. We should of set off earlier or … He grabs at his hair, frustrated. Gawdammit, he says, I thought we’d have plenty of time. He looks at Ike. Whaddya think?

  We might make it across before nightfall, says Ike. But you can tell by his face, by his voice, that he don’t think no such thing.

  I don’t see what the problem is, says Epona with a frown. We’ll jest ride across. As fast as we can.

  Yeah, I says an Ash nods.

  We cain’t go fast, says Jack. There’s too many cracks, too many places a horse could stumble.

  Well all right, I says, we’ll go slow an careful then. An if it turns dark before we finish crossin, we’ll jest set up camp on the lakebed.

 

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