Seg the Bowman

Home > Science > Seg the Bowman > Page 9
Seg the Bowman Page 9

by Alan Burt Akers


  So they all took wine.

  This fine fat animal-trader was on his way upriver to buy what saddle-animals he could from traders out on the plains. Milsi looked at him carefully, and smiled, and intimated that if horter Obolya was going to Mewsansmot—

  “Why, yes! I have business contacts there. All this is new to me, this is my first journey so far upriver. I trade normally in North Pandahem; but things political up there are parlous, most parlous. I am confident that if I can secure good cargoes of saddle animals I can sell every last one back in North Pandahem.”

  Incautiously, Seg said: “Then the journey around the island by sea is less dangerous than crossing the mountains?”

  Obolya lowered his wine cup, of polished silver, studded with gems.

  “Of course — as everyone knows. My business associate, a fine brave fellow, Naghan Loppelyer, just managed to stagger back home after an attempt to cross the mountains. He lost his caravan, his guards, his girls, his money, his clothes and escaped only with his life.”

  “You are then from Tomboram?” Milsi looked up.

  “Yes. And a pretty pickle we are in up there, I can tell you.”

  “Yes,” said Milsi. Then, quickly, to Obolya: “If you’d kindly take us to Mewsansmot I have friends there.

  I am sure I could arrange a number of profitable introductions.”

  “My dear young lady! That is splendid! It is a bargain, as Pandrite is my witness!”

  When he had the chance of a private word, Seg said to Milsi: “Look, my lady. You are the lady in waiting to the queen. Why don’t we go straight to the capital? Surely your—”

  “The king and queen are dead. We know that. The whole country is not sure, but suspects. I want to see my friends first, Seg. You’ll just have to trust me in this.”

  “Oh, I trust you all right. Perhaps you do not trust this Kov Llipton who is the regent?”

  “I have no reason not to trust him. Anyway, he will do what he wants to do. I am only a handmaiden.”

  There was something else troubling Milsi, Seg could sense that with a sympathy that aroused his own guilt that he had not fully confided in her. Yes, they might have been shafted by the same bolt of lightning; but he felt sure that when Milsi did at last confide the more important parts of her history he would discover facts that, just perhaps, might better be left undiscovered.

  He considered the interesting notion that she might be Queen Mab herself. He dismissed the idea because he and his old dom had seen the queen dead in the next cell to Milsi’s. And it was certain the queen would be recognized somewhere along the river. If Queen Mab was Milsi and she trusted Kov Llipton — and, it seemed sure that so far there was no reason to distrust him apart from the cynical natures possessed by wandering paktuns — then there would be no need to continue with the masquerade. She could just sail grandly up to her palace in the capital city of Nalvinlad and take over from the regent.

  Maybe, just maybe, if the handmaiden Milsi was really Queen Mab, she might not wish to marry Kov Llipton if that was his intention. She might have another in mind. If that was the case, Seg couldn’t see that other fortunate man being a wandering warrior Bowman of Loh.

  He brushed all this nonsense aside.

  The facts were that the lady Milsi had asked him to be her jikai and to escort her safely to her friends in Mewsansmot.

  This he intended to do to the best of his ability or die trying.

  Milsi joined him as he sat on the central gangway trying to keep his stupid thoughts well away from the continuous hypnotic rhythm of the paddlers to either side, and, equally, away from the fantasy scenarios thronging his stupid old vosk skull of a head.

  She wore a yellow blouse fastened with bone rosettes through loops of crimson thread. The blouse was almost a bolero jacket, its hem reaching to a point just above her navel. She still wore the scrap of blue loincloth. Her hair had been wound up and fastened with an overlarge stickpin whose head was fashioned into the likeness of a spinyfish, one of the delicacies of the river.

  “Well, my Horkandur! You look mighty pensive!”

  “Just wondering how all this will end.”

  “Do not fret. We are well on our way. Look at my new clothes. Obolya is most kind. Why don’t you go aft and ransack his wardrobe?”

  “Yes, yes, in a mur or two.”

  “You are grumpy, Seg!”

  “I crave your pardon, my lady. It is just — just that — oh! I do not know! I know so little of you, and I was just puzzling if I wanted to know more. There. I’m honest with you.”

  She looked clearly at him, a long and level gaze to which he responded with his own fey blue gaze just as level and straight.

  “Yes, Seg. I also have a family. A single child, not yet full-grown. And I hunger to see her again!”

  Chapter nine

  In which Seg hires on paktuns

  The boat drew into the wooden piers of the wharfside in Nalvinlad. Many craft dotted the brown water, paddles flashed and the shouts of stentors as they guided their vessels joined in the clamor of birds above the fish quays. The slaves from Obolya’s Schinkitree were herded out, chained two and two, and taken off to the slave barracks for the night.

  The city was not overlarge, girded with a stout wooden palisade strengthened with mudbrick. Here and there, particularly at the river gates and the few gates facing inland, the defenses were strengthened with blocks of masonry. Crowds surged about the business of a city, yet as he went ashore Seg noticed that same apathy that afflicted all the folk of the river since the disappearance of their king.

  The palace, built of wood and mud brick, was encircled by its own separate stone wall. The cost of that must have been enormous. King Crox, since he came of age, had bustled about and transformed his kingdom, extending its boundaries up and down the river. He had done nothing about any lateral extension. Kingdoms in this part of South Pandahem stretched along rivers. They were, as Seg put it, as wide as you could reach with your outspread arms, and as long as you could fight your way and win and take territory.

  King Crox, already given the name of the gold piece in customary use around here, had changed the name of his new kingdom. When he’d ascended the throne the realm had been called Nalvindrin. His conquests enlarged his domains enough for him to call the whole lot Croxdrin.

  When the bandits from the Snarly Hills had caused interruption in the regular flow of commerce along his river, King Crox had taken his expedition in to quell them for good.

  Already he had put down piracy on the river, now he wasn’t going to stand still for a miserable bunch of drikingers. Well, he’d run into far more than he could handle in the Coup Blag. Still, the regent carried on the good work of keeping the river free from pirates.

  Seg and the folk rescued with him stood by the Peral Gate and looked up.

  A row of stakes lifted into the brilliance of the suns’ radiance.

  Each stake was crowned with a head.

  “There’s Ortyg the Undlefar,” said Khardun, scornfully.

  “And there and there!” exclaimed others, staring up and recognizing the heads of the people who had escaped with them and who had gone off on the render’s trail with Ortyg.

  “Kov Llipton moves fast,” said Obolya, comfortably. “The moment these rasts were taken, swift boats flew up and down the river, warning us. That is why I hired on extra guards.”

  “The danger is over, I would think,” said Milsi.

  “Probably, my lady Milsi. But I will check with the authorities first, before I discharge my brave paktuns.”

  Khardun turned with his supercilious Khibil nose high.

  “That is bad news for me, then, horter Obolya.”

  “Do not rush upon a leem’s nest, horter Khardun! You are a hyrpaktun. Keep close. I may have great use for a kampeon such as yourself, and Nath the Dorvenhork.”

  Seg had not offered to hire out as a mercenary.

  By rescuing them and landing them safely in civilization, Obolya the Zorca
nim had discharged the duty laid on him by the Laws of the River. He had contracted to take Milsi on to Mewsansmot; nobody else.

  If Seg accompanied Milsi, he’d have to pay his passage, always assuming Obolya cared to find room for him.

  As for the rest of them, they would have to fend for themselves. They were penniless, with the scraps of clothing found for them from Obolya’s wardrobe chests, without occupations. They could easily be taken up again as slaves — vagrants, no-goods, people without visible means of support. This Kov Llipton sounded like your stiff and upright guardian of the laws, such as many Kovs when assuming the regency became in a twinkling.

  Cautiously, Seg inspected the condition of his purse. The gold he’d taken from the Coup Blag had been in his estimate enough to last him a long time, given that copper and silver were the more common metals of currency. He could hand out three gold pieces per person, and leave himself with ten. H’m... Once you’d been a noble yourself you tended to forget about a lot of the more unpleasant aspects of money, as he’d explained to the two dinkus.

  He still would not think too hard of what Milsi had told him of her child. Well, of course she had a child!

  Didn’t that make sense? She was a married woman. Of course she was. She had said that her husband was dead; she did not specify how or the circumstances.

  Seg didn’t want to know. Nothing had changed in his estimation. He still determined to carry on with what he had sworn.

  The mercenaries hired by Obolya congregated in a group under the staring eyeless heads on their stakes.

  They wrangled with one another, and their talk was hard and bitter. Most were local lads, trying to get into the mercenary trade; there was just the one paktun with the silver mortil-head at his throat. He had assumed command.

  The burden of their complaints could be summed up by: “Since King Crox cleaned up the river there is little employment for us. It is hard to find work for an honest mercenary.”

  The paktun, Norolger the Arm, said: “Since the great wars finished all paktuns have seen lean times.

  There must be work for us up in the plains. I heard from my twin recently who is in North Pandahem. He said there was plenty of work there, although he did not or could not say whose army was recruiting.”

  “Then let us go there! You will lead us, Norolger the Arm, and be our Deldar!”

  “And who will pay our passage?”

  The Chulik Nath the Dorvenhork interrupted to say: “If you wish to sail around Pandahem to the north, you will sail render-infested seas. You will find ready hire among the masters of the merchant ships, or even in the swordships if you are very skilled.”

  Two of the mercenaries, little more than coys, said they were going home, and although they gave the reason as a longing to taste once more the delights of their mothers’ cooking, Seg, for one, suspected other motives. Being a paktun on Kregen, an honest profession, was not an easy life to lead.

  The other mercenaries wandered off still wrangling about what best to do.

  Seg looked hard at Khardun. The Khibil would be the toughest. Once he had accepted, the others would follow. Khardun the Franch, as his cognomen suggested, was a very bright spark indeed who thought a great deal of himself.

  “Khardun! What is your hire fee these days?”

  Khardun had no need to explain that while Chuliks might be trained up from birth to be exemplary fighting men, any Khibil was worth at least as much, if not more. By reason of his smartness, of course ...

  This was not a generally held opinion. Chuliks and Pachaks looked to be paid at least a third more than a Khibil. This general opinion was stated, with a firmness that held severe protocol in the address, by the Dorvenhork.

  Seg kept the exasperation out of his face and voice. He’d thought he’d handled this giving of gold to the dratted Khibil cleverly, and instead had raised a howling argument.

  “When mercenaries are hiring on in times of short supply,” Khardun snapped out, intemperately, “many cherished opinions are shattered.”

  “Here there is an oversupply of mercenaries.”

  Seg butted in. “Dratted good pay for a mercenary is a silver piece a day. You’d get a lot less here. A Chulik can look, as Nath well knows, for twelve a week. A Khibil will take nine.”

  “And an apim will take seven!” flared Khardun.

  “Oh,” said Seg. “I’d stand out for eight.”

  The Rapa, Rafikhan, fluffed up his feathers and said morosely: “We Rapas are paid the standard one silver piece a day, six a week. I have been paid nine, once, when I went for a varterman and — well, never mind that.”

  During this conversation Diomb stood, first on one leg, then on the other, listening avidly. He had slung his blowpipe over his back, broken down into four pieces.

  “Listen to me,” said Seg, and at his tone they all swiveled to regard him, silently. “I intend to give three gold pieces to each of the party with us. That will help them on their way home.” He glared at the fighting men in the party, well-knowing that the rest would accept his offer gladly and with thanks. “As for you paktuns, I need to hire on a bodyguard. I shall pay you each three gold pieces. I leave it a paktun’s honor for each of you to decide just how long you will serve for that amount. Is that understood? Then Queyd-arn-tung!” [1]

  They goggled at him for a bit, surprised — yet the Chulik, remembering their first meeting and the ominous steadiness of Seg’s bow on him in the boat, gave a salute with due punctilio.

  “So be it, by Likshu the Treacherous.”

  “By Horato the Potent! So be it!”

  “By Rhapaporgolam the Reiver of Souls! So be it!”

  Seg nodded, brusquely.

  The others in the party crowded round, jabbering away, excited, filling the air with clamor, all thanking horter Seg for his munificence. Seg felt around for his belt pouch and the purse within. The latch was already undone and he hauled out the purse, heavy with gold.

  Umtig stepped a little forward, the eight-armed spinlikl, Lord Clinglin, draped around his neck and shoulders. The Och smirked pridefully.

  “I thank you most sincerely for your most generous gesture in presenting me with three gold pieces, horter Seg. I shall, of course, repay you.” He laughed that high, almost giggling Och laugh. “Oh, and horter Seg, you have already paid me.” In his supple fingers three gold croxes glowed.

  “What!” Seg looked into his purse, looked at the Och, saw the gold — and he laughed. He laughed with his head thrown back and his huge chest expanded, his shock of black hair dancing.

  “You hulu!”

  “Aye!”

  Khardun looked down his foxy nose at the Och.

  “And if you were a mercenary, Umtig, you would receive a mere three or four silver pieces a week.”

  “Four or five!” spluttered Umtig, cackling with his own ingenuity at his trade. Seg hadn’t felt a thing.

  Now Diomb stepped forward, bright and expectant.

  Seg sighed.

  “I do not know, good Diomb. I really do not know.”

  “But, Seg, I wish to earn my hire. If I need money so that Bamba and I may eat, well, then—”

  “You will not go short while I still have gold.”

  “That is not the same thing, as I now understand.”

  The Khibil laughed. “A copper ob a day, doms?”

  The Chulik polished up his tusk with his thumb.

  “Mayhap. It is no concern of mine.”

  “Now,” said Seg, lifting his voice, “as we all have gold in our pockets let us go out and put some wine and meat into our bellies.”

  “Aye!”

  He felt disappointment when Milsi indicated that she and Malindi would be staying within the accommodation offered in the wharf area for paying guests. She offered no explanation apart from a disinclination to venture into the city away from Obolya’s boat. He caught the impression that she imagined the rapscallion section of the party with Seg would riot all their money away in a low-class tavern and
be thrown out, arrested for drunken and disorderly, or in some way offend the laws. The shadow of Kov Llipton hovered unseen over them.

  Many of the main streets possessed wooden sidewalks raised on stilts, and some had decorative arcades and papishin-leaved roofs. When the rains came, it appeared, the good folk of Nalvinlad took care of themselves.

  As his comrades started off out of the wharf area, some of them danced little jigs upon the boardwalk.

  Seg stared after them and turned back to Milsi. “Truly is it said by San Blarnoi, my lady, that a human person is like an onion, layer of secrets wrapped within layer. I shall, of course, not accompany those rogues—”

  “Oh, do not be silly, Seg! Go if you want to.”

  Diomb looked back, waving farewell to Bamba, for the first time since they had left their homes in the forest. Bamba stood with Malindi. Milsi looked cross.

  “I do not want you saying that I kept you from all your enjoyments.”

  “It will not be much of an enjoyment if you are not there to share it.”

  “A noisy tavern, no doubt a foul dopa den, dancing girls, caff, all manner of spectacles put on called entertainment?”

  “I am not in the habit of frequenting dopa dens. Dopa is a liquor so fiery as to make anyone a fighting fool, and, I think you imagine I am enough of that already — my lady.”

  The movement of her chin would have, in a less composed woman, been a toss of the head. She bit her lip and looked away.

  “Go, Seg. Your friends will leave without you.”

  “They are all our friends, surely?”

  “After you have paid them gold — most surely!”

  “I only did—”

  “Quite! Now Malindi and I are off to the little clothing arcade just over there, where we will outfit ourselves, and Bamba, too. Remberee, Seg.”

  And she turned with Malindi and Bamba following and walked off with that superb lithe swing of her hips.

  Seg did not swear aloud. But, to himself, using one of the Bogandur’s favorites, he said: “By the disgusting diseased liver and lights of Makki Grodno! — What a woman!”

 

‹ Prev