Ranger's Apprentice 3 & 4 Bindup

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Ranger's Apprentice 3 & 4 Bindup Page 2

by John Flanagan


  But it was a slim might. He still felt the same surge of bowel-gripping terror with every wave that overtook them. Each time, he felt that this could well be the last. He put both arms around Evanlyn, felt her arms go round his neck in return, her icy cheek pressed against his own. And so the two young people sought, and found, comfort and courage from each other. Evanlyn was whimpering with fear. And so was he, Will realised with some surprise – muttering meaningless words over and over, calling out to Halt, to Tug, to anyone who might listen and help. But as wave followed wave and Wolfwind survived, the blinding terror lessened and nervous exhaustion took its place and, eventually, he slept.

  For seven more days, the ship was driven far to the south, out of the Narrow Sea and into the fringes of the Endless Ocean. And Will and Evanlyn huddled by the mast: sodden, exhausted, freezing. The numbing fear of disaster was always present in their minds but, gradually, they began to believe that they might survive.

  On the eighth day, the sun broke through. It was weak and watery, to be sure, but it was the sun. The violent plunging motion ceased, and once again the ship rode smoothly across the face of the rollers.

  Erak, his beard and hair rimed with salt, hauled tiredly on the sweep, bringing the ship round in a smooth curve to face north once more.

  ‘Let’s head for Cape Shelter,’ he told his crew.

  Halt stood motionless against the massive trunk of an oak tree as the bandits swarmed out of the forest to surround the carriage.

  He was in full view but nobody saw him. In part this was due to the fact that the robbers were totally intent on their prey, a wealthy merchant and his wife. For their part, they were equally distracted, staring with horror at the armed men who now surrounded their carriage in the clearing.

  But in the main, it was due to the camouflage cloak that Halt wore, its cowl pulled up over his head to leave his face in shadow, and the fact that he stood absolutely stock-still. Like all Rangers, Halt knew the secret of merging into the background lay with the ability to remain unmoving, even when people seemed to be looking straight at him.

  Believe you are unseen, went the Ranger saying, and it will be so.

  A burly figure, clad entirely in black, now emerged from the trees and approached the carriage. Halt’s eyes narrowed for a second, then he sighed silently. Another wild goose chase, he thought.

  The figure bore a slight resemblance to Foldar, the man Halt had been pursuing since the end of the war with Morgarath. Foldar had been Morgarath’s senior lieutenant. He had managed to escape capture when his leader died and his army of sub-human Wargals faded away.

  But Foldar was no mindless beast. He was a thinking, planning human being – and a totally warped and evil one. The son of a noble Araluan family, he had murdered both his parents after an argument over a horse. He was barely a teenager at the time and he had escaped by fleeing into the Mountains of Rain and Night, where Morgarath recognised a kindred spirit and enlisted him. Now he was the sole surviving member of Morgarath’s band and King Duncan had made his capture and imprisonment a number one priority for the Kingdom’s armed forces.

  The problem was, Foldar impersonators were springing up everywhere – usually in the form of everyday bandits like this one. They used the man’s name and savage reputation to strike fear into their victims, making it easier to rob them. And as each one sprang up, Halt and his colleagues had to waste time tracking them down. He felt a slow burning of anger at the time he was wasting on these minor nuisances. Halt had other matters to attend to. He had a promise to keep and fools like this were preventing him doing so.

  The fake Foldar had stopped by the carriage now. The black cloak with its high collar was somewhat similar to the one Foldar wore. But Foldar was a dandy and his cloak was immaculate black velvet and satin, whereas this was simple wool, badly dyed and patched in several places, with a collar of crudely tanned black leather.

  The man’s bonnet was unkempt and badly creased as well, while the black swan’s feather that adorned it was bent in the middle, probably where some careless bandit had sat on it. Now the man spoke, and his attempt to imitate Foldar’s lisping, sarcastic tones was spoiled by his thick rural accent and clumsy grammar.

  ‘Step down from the carriage, good sor and mad’m,’ he said, sweeping a clumsy bow. ‘And fear not, good lady, the noble Foldar ne’er harms one as fair as thee art.’ He attempted a sardonic, evil laugh. It came out more as a thin cackle.

  The ‘good lady’ was anything but fair. She was middle aged, overweight and plain in the extreme. But that was no reason why she should be subjected to this sort of terror, Halt thought grimly. She held back, whimpering with fear at the sight of the black figure before her. ‘Foldar’ took a pace forward, his voice harsher, his tone more threatening.

  ‘Get down, missus!’ he shouted. ‘Or I’ll hand you your husband’s ears!’

  His right hand dropped to the hilt of a long dagger in his belt. The woman cried out and cowered further back into the carriage. Her husband, equally terrified and more than fond of his ears where they were, was trying to push her towards the carriage door.

  Enough, Halt thought. Satisfied that no one was looking in his direction, he nocked an arrow, drew and sighted in one economical motion, and released.

  ‘Foldar’, real name Rupert Gubblestone, had a brief impression of something flashing past, just in front of his nose. Then there was an almighty jerk on the raised collar of his cloak and he found himself pinned against the carriage by a quivering black arrow that thudded into the wood. He gave a startled yelp, lost his balance and stumbled, saved from falling by his cloak, which now began to choke him where it fastened around his neck.

  As the other bandits turned to see where the arrow had come from, Halt stepped away from the tree. Yet to the startled robbers, it seemed as if he had stepped out of the massive oak.

  ‘King’s Ranger!’ Halt called. ‘Drop your weapons.’

  There were ten men, all armed. Not a single one thought to disobey the order. Knives, swords and cudgels clattered to the ground. They had just seen a first-hand example of a Ranger’s black magic: the grim figure had stepped clean out of the living trunk of an oak tree. Even now, the strange cloak that he wore seemed to shimmer uncertainly against the background, making it difficult to focus on him. And if sorcery weren’t enough to compel them, they could see a more practical reason – the massive longbow, with another black-shafted arrow already on the string.

  ‘On the ground, belly down! All of you!’ The words cut at them like a whip and they dropped to the ground. Halt pointed to one, a dirty-faced youth who couldn’t have been more than fifteen.

  ‘Not you!’ he said and the boy hesitated, on his hands and knees. ‘You take their belts and tie their hands behind them.’

  The terrified boy nodded several times, then moved towards the first of his prone comrades. He stopped as Halt gave him a further warning.

  ‘Tie them tight!’ he said. ‘If I find one loose knot, I’ll …’ He hesitated for a second, while he framed a suitable threat, then continued, ‘I’ll seal you up inside that oak tree over there.’

  That should do it, he thought. He was aware of the effect that his unexplained appearance from the tree had on these uneducated country folk. It was a device he had used many times before. Now he saw the boy’s face whiten with fear under the dirt and knew the threat was effective. He turned his attention to Gubblestone, who was plucking feebly at the thong securing his cloak as it continued to choke him. He was already red in the face, his eyes bulging.

  They bulged further as Halt unsheathed his heavy saxe knife.

  ‘Oh, relax,’ said Halt irritably. He slashed quickly through the cord and Gubblestone, suddenly released, fell awkwardly to the ground. He seemed content to stay there, out of the reach of that gleaming knife. Halt glanced up at the occupants of the carriage. The relief on their faces was all too obvious.

  ‘I think you can be on your way if you like,’ he said pleasantly. ‘The
se idiots won’t bother you any further.’

  The merchant, remembering guiltily how he had tried to shove his wife out of the carriage, tried to cover his discomfort by blustering.

  ‘They deserve hanging, Ranger! Hanging, I say! They have terrified my poor wife and threatened my very person!’

  Halt eyed the man impassively until the outburst was finished.

  ‘Worse than that,’ he said quietly, ‘they’ve wasted my time.’

  ‘The answer is no, Halt,’ said Crowley. ‘Just as it was the last time you asked.’

  He could see the anger in every line of Halt’s body as his old friend stood before him. Crowley hated what he had to do. But orders were orders and, as the Ranger Commandant, it was his job to enforce them. And Halt, like all Rangers, was bound to obey them.

  ‘You don’t need me!’ Halt burst out. ‘I’m wasting time hunting these imitation Foldars all over the Kingdom when I should be going after Will!’

  ‘The King has made Foldar our number one priority,’ Crowley reminded him. ‘Sooner or later, we’ll find the real one.’

  Halt made a dismissive gesture. ‘And you have forty-nine other Rangers to do the job!’ he said. ‘For God’s sake, that should be enough.’

  ‘King Duncan wants the other forty-nine. And he wants you. He trusts you and depends on you. You’re the best we have.’

  ‘I’ve done my share,’ Halt replied quietly and Crowley knew how much it hurt the other man to say those words. He also knew that his best reply would be silence – silence that would force Halt further into the sort of rationalisation that Crowley knew he hated.

  ‘The Kingdom owes that boy,’ Halt said, with a little more certainty in his tone.

  ‘The boy is a Ranger,’ Crowley said coldly.

  ‘An apprentice,’ Halt corrected him and now Crowley stood, knocking his chair over with the violence of his movement.

  ‘A Ranger apprentice assumes the same duties as a Ranger. We always have, Halt. For every Ranger, the rule is the same: Kingdom first. That’s our oath. You took it. I took it. And so did Will.’

  There was an angry silence between the two men, made all the uglier by the years they had lived as friends and comrades. Halt, Crowley realised, was possibly his closest friend in the world. Now here they were, trading bitter words and angry arguments. He reached behind him and straightened the fallen chair, then made a gesture of peace to Halt.

  ‘Look,’ he said in a milder tone, ‘just help me clear up this Foldar business. Two months, maybe three, then you can go after Will, with my blessing.’

  Halt’s grizzled head was already shaking before he’d finished.

  ‘In two months he could be dead. Or sold on as a slave and lost forever. I need to go now while the trail is still warm. I promised him,’ he added after a pause, his voice thick with misery.

  ‘No,’ said Crowley, with a note of finality. Hearing it, Halt squared his shoulders.

  ‘Then I’ll see the King,’ he said.

  Crowley looked down at his desk.

  ‘The King won’t see you,’ he said flatly. He looked up and saw the surprise and betrayal in Halt’s eyes.

  ‘He won’t see me? He refuses me?’ For over twenty years, Halt had been one of the King’s closest confidants, with constant, unquestioned access to the royal chambers.

  ‘He knows what you’ll ask, Halt. He doesn’t want to refuse you, so he refuses to see you.’

  Now the surprise and betrayal were gone from Halt’s eyes. In their place was anger. Bitter anger.

  ‘Then I’ll just have to change his mind,’ he said quietly.

  As the wolfship rounded the point and reached the shelter of the bay, the heavy swell died away. Inside the small natural harbour, the tall, rocky headlands broke the force of both wind and swell so that the water was flat calm, its surface broken only by the spreading V of the wolfship’s wake.

  ‘Is this Skandia?’ Evanlyn asked.

  Will shrugged uncertainly. It certainly didn’t look the way he had expected. There were only a few small, ramshackle huts on the shore, with no sign of a town. And no people.

  ‘It doesn’t seem big enough, does it?’ he said.

  Svengal, coiling a rope nearby, laughed at their ignorance.

  ‘This isn’t Skandia,’ he told them. ‘We’re barely halfway to Skandia. This is Skorghijl.’

  Seeing their puzzled looks, he explained further. ‘We can’t make the full crossing to Skandia now. That storm in the Narrow Sea delayed us so long that the Summer Gales have set in. We’ll shelter here until they’ve blown out. That’s what those huts are for.’

  Will looked dubiously at the weathered timber huts. They looked grim and uncomfortable.

  ‘How long will that take?’ he asked and Svengal shrugged.

  ‘Six weeks, two months. Who knows?’ He moved off, the coil of rope over one shoulder, and the two young people were left to survey their new surroundings.

  Skorghijl was a bleak and uninviting place of bare rock, steep granite cliffs and a small level beach where the sun and salt-whitened timber huts huddled. There was no tree or blade of green anywhere in sight. The rims of the cliffs were scattered with the white of snow and ice. The rest was rock and shale, granite black and dull grey. It was as if whatever gods the Skandians worshipped had removed all vestige of colour from this rocky little world.

  Unconsciously, without the need to battle the constant backward set of the waves, the rowers slackened their pace. The ship glided across the bay to the shingle beach. Erak, at the tiller, kept her in the channel that ran deep right up to the water’s edge, until the keel finally grated into the shingle and the wolfship was, for the first time in days, still.

  Will and Evanlyn stood, their legs uncertain after days of constant movement.

  The ship rang with the dull thuds of timber on timber as the oars were drawn inboard and stowed. Erak looped a leather thong over the tiller to secure it and prevent the rudder banging back and forth with the movement of the tide. He glanced briefly at the two prisoners.

  ‘Go ashore if you like,’ he told them. There was no need to restrain them or guard them in any way. Skorghijl was an island, barely two kilometres across at its widest point. Apart from this one perfect natural harbour that had made it a refuge for Skandians during the Summer Gales, Skorghijl’s coast was an uninterrupted line of sheer cliffs, dropping into the sea.

  Will and Evanlyn moved to the bow of the ship, passing the Skandians, who were unshipping barrels of water and ale and sacks of dried food from the sheltered spaces below the centre deck. Will climbed over the gunwale, hung full length for a few seconds then dropped to the shale below. Here, with the prow canted up as it had slid up the beach, there was a considerable drop to the stones. He turned to help Evanlyn, but she was already dropping after him.

  They stood uncertainly.

  ‘My God,’ Evanlyn muttered, feeling herself sway as the solid land beneath her seemed to roll and pitch. She stumbled and fell to one knee.

  Will was in no better state. Now that the constant movement had ceased, the dry land beneath them seemed to heave and lurch. He placed one hand against the timbers of the boat to stop himself from falling.

  ‘What is it?’ he asked her. He stared at the ground beneath his feet, expecting to see it forming and rolling into hummocks and hills. But it was flat and motionless. He felt the first traces of nausea gathering in the pit of his stomach.

  ‘Look out down there!’ a voice from above warned, and a sack of dried beef thudded onto the pebbles beside him. He looked up, swaying uncertainly, into the grinning eyes of one of the crew.

  ‘Got the land-wobbles, have you?’ he said, not unsympathetically. ‘Should be all right again in a few hours’ time.’

  Will’s head spun. Evanlyn had managed to regain her feet. She was still swaying, but at least she wasn’t assailed by the same nausea that Will was feeling. She took his arm.

  ‘Come on,’ she said. ‘There are some benches up there
by those huts. We might be better off sitting down.’

  And, lurching drunkenly, they stumbled through the shingle to the rough wooden benches and tables that were set outside the huts.

  Will sank gratefully onto one, holding his head in his hands and resting his elbows on his knees for support. He groaned in misery as another wave of nausea swept over him. Evanlyn was in slightly better shape. She patted his shoulder.

  ‘What’s causing this?’ she said in a small voice.

  ‘It happens when you’ve been on board ship for a few days.’ Jarl Erak had approached behind them. He had a sack of provisions slung over one shoulder and he swung it down to the ground outside the door of one of the huts, grunting slightly with the effort.

  ‘For some reason,’ he continued, ‘your legs seem to think you’re still on the deck of a ship. Nobody knows why. It’ll only last a few hours and then you’ll be fine.’

  ‘I can’t imagine ever feeling fine again,’ Will groaned in a thick voice.

  ‘You will be,’ Erak told him. ‘Get a fire going,’ he said brusquely. He jerked a thumb towards a blackened circle of stones a few metres from the nearest hut. ‘You’ll feel better with a hot meal inside you.’

  Will groaned at the mention of food. Nevertheless, he rose unsteadily from the bench and took the flint and steel that Erak held out to him. Then he and Evanlyn moved to the fireplace. Stacked beside it was a pile of sun and salt dried driftwood. Some of the planks were brittle enough to break with bare hands and Will began to stack the slivers into a pyramid in the middle of the circle of stones.

  Evanlyn, for her part, gathered together bunches of dried moss to act as kindling, and within five minutes they had a small fire crackling, the flames licking eagerly at the heavier pieces of firewood they added now to the blaze.

 

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