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Werenight

Page 35

by Turtledove, Harry


  Old customs lingered away from the highway, too. Lords’ castles grew scarce; most of the peasant villages held freeholders, men who owed no part of their crop to a baron. Gerin wondered how they’d fared when Trokmê raiders swooped down on them: they had no lords to ride to their defense, either.

  The freeholders measured him and Van with their eyes when the travelers paused in a village to buy a hen before evening caught them. “You’re for the Sibyl, then?” asked the man who sold it to them. His Elabonian had a curious flavor to it, not quite an accent, but old-fashioned, as if currents of speech had swept up the Elabon Way, too, but never reached this little hamlet.

  “That we are,” Gerin answered.

  “You’ve rich gear,” the peasant observed. “Be you nobles?”

  Van spoke first: “Me, I’m just a warrior. Anyone who tries taking this corselet off my back will find out what kind of warrior I am, and won’t be happier for knowing, either.”

  “I can take care of myself, too,” Gerin said. Peasants without lords had to defend themselves, which meant they needed weapons and armor. Robbing people who already had them seemed a likely way to acquire such.

  If that was in the peasant’s mind, he didn’t let on (but then, he wouldn’t, Gerin thought). He said, “Aye, the both of you have that look. Go on, then, and the gods watch over you through the night.”

  As soon as they were out of earshot, Gerin spoke to Van, who was driving: “Put as much space between that village and us as you can. If you find a side road just before sunset, go up it or down it a ways. We’ll want to camp where we can hide our nightfire.”

  “Right you are,” Van said. “I’d have done the same thing without your saying a word, mind, but I’m glad you have the same thoughts in mind as I do. On your watch, sleep with your bow, your sword, and your shield and helm where you can grab them in a hurry.”

  “If I thought I could, I’d sleep in armor tonight,” the Fox said. Van grunted out a short burst of laughter and nodded.

  They traveled until the ghosts began to wail in their ears. Then, setting his jaw, Gerin sacrificed the hen to calm the spirits. A boulder shielded the light of the fire from the little track down which they traveled to get off the main road to Ikos.

  Gerin had the first watch. Nothos and Tiwaz stood close together, low in the east at sunset: both were approaching full, though swift-moving Tiwaz would reach it a couple of days sooner than Nothos. Math would not rise until almost halfway through his watch, and Van alone could commune with Elleb, for the ruddy moon would stay below the horizon till after midnight.

  The Fox moved as far away from the fire and the blood-filled trench near it as the ghosts would allow: he wanted to be sure he could spot trouble coming down the road from the village where he’d bought the chicken. His bow was strung, his quiver on his back and ready for him to reach over his shoulder and pull out a bronze-tipped shaft.

  Sure enough, just about the time when golden Math began peeping through the leaves of the trees, he heard men coming along the road from the west. They weren’t trying very hard to keep quiet; they chattered among themselves as they ambled eastward.

  They all carried torches, he saw when they came to the crossroads. Even so, the ghosts bothered them. One said, “This havering is fair to drive me mad. An we don’t find them soon, I’m for my hut and my wife.”

  “Ah, but will she be for you in the middle of the night?” another asked. The lot of them laughed. They paused at the narrow track down which Gerin and Van had gone. A couple of them peered toward the Fox. He crouched lower behind the bush that concealed him, hoping the light of three moons would not betray him to the peasants. Maybe their own torchlight left them nightblind, for they did not spy him. After some muttered discussion, they kept heading east down the main road.

  Perhaps half an hour later, they came straggling back. Now their torches were guttering toward extinction, and they hurried on toward their village. “Mayhap ’tis as well we found the whoresons not,” one of them said; Gerin recognized the voice of the fellow who’d sold him the hen. “They’d have slain some or ever we overcame them.”

  “We need arms,” somebody answered.

  “Belike, but we need men to wield them, too,” the hen-seller replied. “You were in the fields, and saw them not: a brace of proper rogues, ready for aught. We’d have given the ghosts our own blood had we broiled ourselves with them, I tell you.”

  As the peasants withdrew, the argument got too low-voiced for Gerin to follow. The peasant who’d sold him the chicken was right; he and Van would have sold their lives dear. Even so, he was nothing but glad the farmers or robbers or whatever they reckoned themselves to be hadn’t found him and his comrade. No matter how dearly you sold your life, you could never buy it back.

  The Fox drew back down the path toward his camp. He didn’t think the locals would come out again, and he proved right. When Math had traveled a little more than halfway from the horizon to the meridian, he woke Van and told him what had passed.

  “Expected as much,” the outlander answered, setting his crimson-crested helm on his head and adjusting the cheekpieces. “They had that look to ’em, so they did. Not likely they’ll be back, not so late in the night.”

  “No.” Gerin got out of armor as Van donned it. “Wouldn’t do to count on that, though.”

  “Hardly.” Van’s rumbling chuckle had next to no breath behind it. “Tell you something else, Captain: on the way home, we make sure we roll through this place around noontime, so we’re none too close to it the night before or the night after.”

  “Can’t argue with you.” Gerin yawned enormously. “Haven’t the wit to argue with anything right now. I just want to sleep. If I get killed while you’re on watch, I’ll never forgive you.”

  “Nor have the chance, either,” Van said, chuckling again. Gerin crawled under the blanket, conceding him the last word.

  He awoke unmurdered the next morning to the savory smell of toasting sausage. Van had built the fire up from embers and was improvising breakfast. The flames sputtered and hissed as grease dripped down into them. Gerin accepted a sharp stick with a length of hard sausage impaled on it, burned the roof of his mouth when he tried to take a bite while it was still too hot to eat, swore, and then did manage to get the meat down.

  Van finished before he did, and harnessed the horses while he was getting into his cuirass and greaves. A jay perched on a branch of a spruce seedling screeched at the outlander all the while. He pointed at it. “You’d best be quiet—some lands I’ve been through, the folk reckon songbirds good eating.” As if it understood him, the jay shut up.

  “Elabonians eat songbirds now and again,” Gerin said. “We catch ’em with nets, usually, not with bow and arrow.”

  “Aye, that makes sense,” Van said. “They’re so small and swift, you’d need to be a dead shot to hit ’em, and you’d waste a slew of arrows.” He fastened a last strap. “Come along, Captain. Let’s be off.”

  The forest deepened and took on a new aspect as they rolled on toward Ikos. Perhaps, Gerin thought, taking on an old aspect was a better way of describing it. Elabonian traders and explorers, back in the days before Ros the Fierce brought the northlands under imperial control, described them as almost unbroken forest from the High Kirs to the Niffet and all the way west to the Orynian Ocean.

  Around the Sibyl’s shrine at Ikos, that ancient forest survived undisturbed. Some of the gnarled oaks and deep green pines might have been saplings when the men round what would become the City of Elabon were still unlettered barbarians. Some of them might have been saplings before the Kizzuwatnans in their river valleys scratched the world’s first letters onto clay tablets and set them in an oven to bake.

  Maybe the shaggy beards of moss hanging from many of those trees helped muffle sound, or maybe some lingering power clung to the forest: some of the trees that grew there, at any rate, Gerin had never seen outside these confines. Whatever the reason, the woods were eerily still. Even th
e squeak and rattle of the wagon’s ungreased axles seemed diminished. Far above the roadway, branches from either side interlaced, cutting off a good part of the daylight and turning the rest cool and green and shifting.

  “If we could drive the wagon under the sea, it might look like this,” Gerin said.

  “Maybe so.” Van kept craning his neck, looking up, down, all around. “I don’t like this place—and I don’t think it likes people, either. It wishes we weren’t here, and so do I.”

  “I’d argue with you, if only I thought you were wrong.” Gerin kept not quite hearing things pacing alongside the road as if tracking the wagon, not quite seeing them no matter how quickly he turned his head toward what he hadn’t quite heard.

  Van mused, “I wonder what would happen if, come a dry summer, some lord sent his peasants in here with axes and torches.”

  Gerin wondered if the forest and the things that dwelt in it understood Elabonian. He feared they did, for all at once the cover of branches over the road grew thicker and lower, while most of those branches suddenly seemed full of thorns. The very roadway narrowed, with trees—many of them full of thorns, too—crowding close, as if ready to reach out and seize the intruders. Once or twice he was sure he saw eyes staring balefully at him from behind the leaves, but he never got a glimpse of the creatures to which they were attached.

  Nervously, he said, “You were just joking there, weren’t you, my friend?”

  “What? Oh, aye.” Van was more than bold enough against any human foe, but how could even the boldest man fight a forest? Eyeing the growing number of encroaching branches, he went on, “All this lovely greenery? In truth, it would be a dreadful shame to peel even one leaf off its stem.”

  For a long moment, nothing happened. But just when Gerin was about to grab for his sword and start slashing away at the aroused trees and bushes, everything returned to the way it had been. The sun played through breaks in the overhead canopy, the road widened out again, and the trees went back to being just trees. Whatever had been moving along with the wagon went away, or at least became altogether silent.

  “Whew!” Van muttered under his breath. “Place must have decided I was just joking after all—which I was, of course.” He added that last in a much louder voice.

  “Of course you were,” Gerin agreed heartily. Then his voice fell: “All the same, we’ll spend tonight in one of the lodgings round Ikos, not in this wood. That will further prove we mean no harm to the powers here.”

  Van’s eyes met his. The two men shared one thought: It will also keep anything in the forest that’s still angry from coming down on us. The words hung unspoken in the air. Gerin didn’t want to give any of those possibly angry things ideas they didn’t have already.

  The sun was low in the west behind Gerin and Van when they topped a rise and looked down into the valley wherein nested Biton’s gleaming white marble shrine and, leading down from within it, the rift in the earth that led to the Sibyl’s chamber.

  “Last time we came this way, we camped in the woods,” Van said. “As you say, though, better to pay the scot at one of the inns down there tonight.” A little town had grown up in front of the Sibyl’s shrine, catering to those who came to it seeking oracular guidance.

  “Aye, you’re right.” Gerin sighed. He didn’t like silver going without good cause. Come to that, he wasn’t over-fond of paying silver even with good cause. But he did not want to spend a night in these uncanny woods; they were liable to shelter worse things than ghosts. He twitched the reins and urged the horses forward.

  When he’d visited Ikos before, the town in front of the shrine had been packed with Elabonians from both the northlands and south of the High Kirs, Sithonians, Kizzuwatnans, Trokmoi, Shanda nomads, and other folk as well. A big reason Gerin had preferred to camp in the woods then was that all the inns had bulged at the seams.

  Now, as the wagon rolled into town, he found the dirt streets all but empty. Several of the inns had closed; a couple of them, by their dilapidated look, had been empty for years. The innkeepers who survived all rushed from their establishments and fell on him and Van with glad cries. Gerin hardly needed to haggle with them; they bid against one another until he got his lodging, supper, and a promise of breakfast for half what he’d expected to pay.

  The taproom in the inn was all but deserted. Apart from Gerin and Van, only a couple of locals sat at the tables, drinking ale and telling stories they’d probably all heard a thousand times. The innkeeper brought ale and drinking jacks to his new guests. “And what would your pleasure for supper be?” he asked, bowing as low as if the Fox had been Hildor III, Emperor of Elabon.

  “Not chicken,” he and Van said, much as they had at Ricolf’s.

  “You’ve traveled some way, then, and spent nights in the open.” The innkeeper pursed his lips to show he sympathized. “I killed a young pig this afternoon. I was going to smoke and salt down the flesh, but I do some lovely chops flavored with basil and thyme and wild mushrooms. It’s a splendid dish, if I say so myself, and one I don’t have the chance to prepare as often as I’d like these days. True, the cooking of it takes a while, but where have you gentlemen to go in the meantime?”

  Gerin and Van looked at each other. They nodded. The Fox said, “Your trade has fallen off since the Trokmoi swarmed over the Niffet and the Empire shut the last passage up from the south.”

  “Good my sir, you have no idea.” The innkeeper rolled his eyes. “Sometimes I think all of us left here make our living by taking in one another’s washing. The shrine has fallen on hard times, that it has, and every one of us with it.”

  “Does the old Sibyl still live?” Gerin asked. “I’d not expected to find her breathing when I was last here five years ago. Now nothing would surprise me.”

  “No, Biton took her for his own last year,” the innkeeper answered. “The god speaks through a younger woman now. Tis not that the quality of oracle has suffered that’s cost us trade”—he made haste to reassure the Fox—“only that fewer folk now find their way hither.”

  “I understand.” Gerin drained his jack dry. The innkeeper hastened to refill it. Gerin drank again, sighed with something close to contentment. “Good to relax here, away from the ghosts, away from robbers in the night, with only the worries that brought me here to carry on my shoulders.”

  “That my humble establishment is able to ease your burdens does my heart good,” the innkeeper declared.

  “To say nothing of your coin hoard,” Gerin said dryly.

  The innkeeper turned his head to one side and coughed, as if mention of money embarrassed him. Then he paused, plainly listening over again to what Gerin had said a moment before. “Robbers in the night, good my sir? So men begin to hold the ghosts at bay and the gods in contempt?”

  “Men on the very road that leads here,” the Fox said, and told of the free peasants who’d looked to arm themselves at his and Van’s expense. “They didn’t come on us, for which Dyaus be praised—and Biton, too, for watching over us—but they weren’t out there in the darkness just for the journey. I heard them speak; I know what I’m talking about.”

  “Sometimes I think the whole world is guttering down toward darkness, like a candle on the last of its tallow,” the innkeeper said sadly. “Even my dreams these days are full of monsters and pallid things from the underground darkness. At night in my bed I see them spreading over the land, and poor feeble men powerless to do aught against them.”

  Gerin started to nod: here was another man who shared his gloomy view of the world. Then he gave the innkeeper a sharp look. “I too have had dreams like that,” he said.

  “And I,” Van put in. “I tell you the truth—I mislike the omen.”

  “Maybe the Sibyl will shed light on it.” Gerin did his best to sound hopeful, but feared his best was none too good.

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  About the Author

  Harry Turtledove is an American novelist of science fiction, historical fiction,
and fantasy. Publishers Weekly has called him the “master of alternate history,” and he is best known for his work in that genre. Some of his most popular titles include The Guns of the South, the novels of the Worldwar series, and the books in the Great War trilogy. In addition to many other honors and nominations, Turtledove has received the Hugo Award, the Sidewise Award for Alternate History, and the Prometheus Award. He attended the University of California, Los Angeles, earning a PhD in Byzantine history. Turtledove is married to mystery writer Laura Frankos, and together they have three daughters. The family lives in Southern California.

  All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  The parts of this novel have been published separately, in substantially different form, as Werenight (1979) and Wereblood (1979).

  Copyright © 1994 by Harry Turtledove

  Cover design by Mauricio Díaz

  ISBN: 978-1-5040-0946-1

  This edition published in 2015 by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

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