Authors: Paul Collins
Daretor slumped back against the workbench, watching with incredulous horror as the mage shook off the mailshirt and gripped the axeblade. He heaved at it, and began to force the axehead from his chest, inch by bloody inch. Green ichor oozed from the wound, but he would not die.
Behind him a boy came running down the ramp from the loft. The youth picked up a broadsword that the blacksmith had kept on the wall for his own use, ran up behind Thull and swung the blade just as the axe came free in the mage's hands.
The well-kept blade chopped halfway through Thull's tough but scrawny neck. He dropped forward onto his knees, swinging Daretor's axe backhand as he descended.
Jelindel dodged as Zimak had taught her, then swung the sword again with both hands. This time Thull's head was severed from his shoulders.
Jelindel stood panting with the sword held limply in her hands. She watched as though mesmerised by the green blood that dripped from the blade. Terror and indecision whirled about her like a monsoon thunderstorm. Thull's warrior stood before her clutching a terrible sword wound, but did she dare help him?
Thull's mouth was wide open in the severed head. Yellow teeth lined his gums, sharp fangs, the like of which she had never seen.
Daretor acknowledged his saviour with a weary nod then shuffled across the floor, still clutching his wound. He drew the sword from the scabbard at Thull's belt. Jelindel decided to run but could not choose between the loft and the main door. Then she realised that Daretor was watching the body, not her.
Silvery globes emerged from the bloodied green stump of Thull's neck. They coalesced and hung on the air between her and Daretor.
âWe thank thee for freedom,' whispered a voice like rats skittering over dry straw. âWe were forced to do evil as slaves, but we are not evil.'
âYou spared me this afternoon,' said Jelindel. âThank you.'
âKindness spawns the most unlikely of allies,' whispered the globes in reply. âNow we take our leave, to find our proper plane once more. May we use his vitality?'
âHave what you will,' said Jelindel. âMy kindermaid told me never to take anything from strange men.'
Blue threads crackled from the body to the globes, then they floated upwards and dissolved through the roof. The whispering echo of âGoodbye' echoed back to the two mortals who held swords at the ready across the body of the dead Adept.
Daretor dropped his sword and clutched at his wound again as he slid down to the floor.
âOh my â Zimak!' Jelindel gasped. She'd forgotten about him. She rushed up the ramp and stopped when she reached the top step.
Zimak was slowly uncurling, sucking air into his aching lungs.
Even as Jelindel was thanking White Quell, a tower
clock began to clang out the midnight chimes for the benefit of the port city and its shipping. She had killed Thull just in time to disrupt his life-force coils.
âAre you all right?' she asked Zimak, helping him to sit up.
âNo, I'm a mess of cramps and numbness.'
She patted his back reassuringly. âStay there, I'll be back.'
âStop saying that,' Zimak wheezed.
Jelindel walked back down the ramp to the floor of the shop, then froze as she caught sight of Daretor. In spite of his wound he had managed to wriggle into the mailshirt.
âYou're mad,' she cried. âAfter all the bloodshed that mailshirt has caused, all the misery â¦'
âPlease!' Daretor gasped. âThought it might be ⦠my only hope.'
She approached warily, the blacksmith's sword in both hands, but Daretor could barely move.
âDamn! Nothing!' he said. âThat damnable curse-vendor lied ⦠no weapons skills, no healing powers ⦠but perhaps he was deceived, too.'
âAre you his follower?' Jelindel asked.
âHie! I'm his last
victim
. He tricked me, he lied, lied, lied ⦠Never realised how evil â' He began to cough, then wheezed. âPlease help me out of this thing. White Quell may not find my soul if I die enmeshed within it.'
Jelindel hesitated again. He was wounded but still strong, yet he had pleaded in the name of White Quell. As hesitant as a mouse approaching a sleeping cat, she stepped over Thull's body and began working the mailshirt up over Daretor's back and clear of his head and arms. He did not try to seize her.
âWho are you?' he whispered as he lay back against the leg of the bench.
âI'm the blacksmith's dau â son.'
There was a moment's silence. âDoor-son. What's that?'
Jelindel bit her lip. âIt's sort of an apprentice â it's a local term. The mage had my friend Zimak trapped in the loft with a binding word.'
Her eyes picked out a box with a red circle embla-zoned on its side. She reached up to the bench above Daretor and pulled it down. She had watched the healers at work at their stalls in the marketplace, and had even helped them a few times. She hoped that she had absorbed enough of their skills. She opened the box before Daretor.
âI'm not a magical mailshirt, but I may be able to help,' she said tersely.
âDo it. I'll die anyway.'
She swabbed his wound with essence of spirits and rubbed in oils that she recognised by smell rather than name. Using pronged ratclips she closed the edges of the wound, then threaded a needle, rubbed it with spirits and oils, and began to sew Daretor's skin like soft leather.
âNot as much blood as there might have been,' she said as she worked. âYou may be lucky.'
Only seven stitches were needed to close the wound, then she bandaged him with strips of his cloak.
âIf he hadn't robbed me of my swordsmanship, I would have taken him easily,' Daretor said as Jelindel began packing the healing kit back into the box.
âHe was toying with you,' said Jelindel impatiently. âHad you beaten him with a sword he would have bound you with the blue coils of a binding word.'
Injured pride silenced Daretor for a moment. He gestured to the mage's body. âYou must search him.'
âSearch
him
? Not for all the known gods,' Jelindel protested, staring at the headless body covered in green blood.
By now Zimak was slowly climbing down the ramp to the loft. âI'll do it,' he volunteered.
âAnd this one?' Daretor enquired.
âZimak,' said Jelindel. âIt's all you need to know.' Zimak staggered over to the mage's body, forcing movement into his numb limbs.
Jelindel picked up the sword and stood ready as Zimak rummaged.
âI'm good at this; robbed a few corpses in my time,' Zimak explained. He soon held up a gold medallion and two purses.
Jelindel took the medallion and angled it to read its inscription. âIt's a rare crest. The script is highly stylised.'
She read the scroll lettering with difficulty. â
Mage ⦠highest
, or perhaps
most supreme ⦠to the ⦠most learned Preceptor â¦
'
âYou can read?' Daretor said suspiciously. âA blacksmith's apprentice?'
âHe's actually a runaway monk,' Zimak explained. âHe's my personal tutor in language arts.'
Daretor waved the explanation away. âThe Preceptor,' he panted. âAll this time Thull was working for him. The Preceptor must want the mailshirt beyond cost and life, yet it has no power. I don't understand.'
Jelindel handed the medallion to Daretor and picked up the mailshirt. As he stared blankly at the script, she examined the mailshirt closely.
âThere are seven rows of double-linking on the left shoulder, but only six and a half rows of double-links on the right,' she pointed out. âLinks are missing from the mailshirt. Perhaps it has to be complete before it can work.'
âQuite likely,' whispered Daretor, letting the medallion fall to the floor. âThull said the mailshirt confers weapons skills on the wearer, but ⦠I felt nothing, not even my own skills with a sword. Aye, perhaps it has to be whole before it can do that.'
Jelindel put the mailshirt down again and sat thinking as Zimak counted the coins in Thull's two purses.
âEleven gold oriels in one and fifty silver argents in the other,' Zimak reported. âWe'll split the money. What do you say? He owes us that much for the pain of this day past.'
âAgreed,' said Jelindel as if in a trance. âBesides, I have to flee from D'loom this very night.'
âWhat? Why?'
âCertain ⦠religious authorities wish to find me.'
âAh ha, so you don't want to become Brother Jaelin again.'
âYou have it, more or less.'
âI ⦠have to go, too,' whispered Daretor.
âYou're not fit to travel,' Jelindel said at once. âYou've got a wound that would have killed most people.'
âDamn that! Thull murdered Fa'red tonight when he torched his house. I was with him and I'll be held accountable if the constables chance upon me. If you want to leave here, leave with me. Saddle a horse from the back of the shop. Take me to the stables at the Boar and Bottle.'
âRiding's going to rip your wound right open,' Zimak ventured, feeling oddly left out.
âWhere are you bound?' asked Jelindel.
âFor the other dragonlinks. I must track them down, then rid the world of such abominable devices that rob years of skill and training from honourable warriors such as myself.'
Jelindel picked up the two purses. âWe should divide these between us now.'
âOh, I've already taken a few argents as my share,' said Zimak. âYou two take the purses.'
Jelindel frowned, then shook both purses. âThey both jingle like argents,' she declared. âGold has a different ring.'
Zimak's confident smile collapsed.
âI â I, ah, thought we would be staying in the city, so I, ah, decided to guard the gold, that is, being the most able-bodied of the three of us â under the circumstances.'
Jelindel's eyes widened with anger. âGive them back, Zimak.
All
of them.'
Zimak returned the gold oriels to Jelindel, who snatched them from his hand and turned back to the warrior. He was staring at her, his eyes proud but pleading.
âSo do you really want to leave D'loom tonight?' he said.
âYes,' she said firmly, the scene in the temple library's reading room flashing before her eyes for a moment.
âGood. We must cover our trail, else we'll be tracked and run to ground. Do as I bid you.'
Daretor got to his feet with difficulty, but he was strong and determined, and was able to manage a shuffling walk in spite of the agony from his wound and the pints of blood that he had lost.
Zimak saddled a horse while Jelindel helped Daretor pack a pair of saddlebags with things from the shop.
When the horse was ready, Daretor scraped a few live coals out of the hearth and flicked them into the straw where they began to smoulder. Almost as an afterthought he stuffed the mailshirt into a coal sack and asked Jelindel to secure it to the saddle.
It took both Jelindel and Zimak's combined strength to get Daretor up into the saddle. Having done that, Zimak led the horse down the narrow street towards the Boar and Bottle while Jelindel set the blacksmith's other horses free.
The smithy was well alight in the distance as they reached the tavern. Shouts and clanging bells roused the citizens of the port to fight the second fire of the night.
âSlowly now,' Daretor directed from the horse. âWe shouldn't appear to be in a hurry.' Louder, he called, âWhere's my friend Thull?' Daretor had learned Thull's lesson on leaving false trails.
âPox take your friend,' the huge landlord bellowed back as he handed out frame pails to the men and women gathered there. âTo the beach now, all of ye! Form a pail chain to the fire!'
Daretor waited outside on the stolen horse as Zimak and Jelindel ran up to his room and threw the gear there together. They descended the stairs, saddlebags and bedrolls in their arms.
Ellien appeared from the kitchen. She had been left to guard the tavern against looters while all others were at the fire.
âEllien, what are the accounts of those two strangers Thull and Daretor?' Jelindel demanded urgently, loading Daretor's saddlebags and bedroll onto Zimak and pushing him towards the door.
âAccounts? I don't know. The landlord can work them out from his register, but I can't read ⦠I only serve in the taproom â'
âHere!'
Jelindel spilled a handful of argents onto the nearest table.
âJaelin! That's ten times what they could possibly owe!'
âThen the rest is for your dowry,' said Jelindel, taking the girl by both shoulders and looking into her eyes. âEllien, I am about to leave D'loom and I shall never, never see you again. Please, find a brave, gentle boy and marry him, but
never
think of me again.'
âWhat? Have I offended you by what I did in the taproom? Am I too coarse of manner to â'
âNo! You are lovely, far too lovely for â for what I am. There
are
brave and gentle youths in the world, Ellien. You don't have to marry an oaf. Now goodbye, goodbye forever.'
Jelindel threw her arms around the girl and hugged her tightly for a moment. Ellien was kissing Jelindel on the cheek when Zimak put his head through the open door.
âJaelin, will you tell me what the fradork is happenâ you filthy swine, Brother Jaelin, and after all that talk about chastity and self-control, too.'
âShut up, Zimak! Go to the nearest stables and saddle two horses. Daretor won't get far without us.'
â
Us
? What do you mean, us? I'm staying in D'loom. I've got a job, I've got a licence with the Guild of Alley Gangs, I've got friends and family, I've got a
bank account
â'
âMove, damn you!' Jelindel shouted, snatching up a tankard and flinging it at the doorway. âYou carried
messages for both Thull and Fa'red today and they're both dead. Do you think that Fa'red's servants will not mention your name to the constables?'