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Authors: Christopher Bunn

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BOOK: The Hawk And His Boy
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Liss was raised mostly alone, except for her father, a few servants, and a succession of tutors. She learned needlepoint and the history of Hearne, although facts on this subject became sparse, of course, once one reached the Midsummer War and the reign of Dol Cynehad, the last king of Hearne. She learned to play the spinet and how to figure compound interest, though her father grumbled that compound interest was no suitable pastime for women. She read Harthian poetry in its original form—slowly and with much frowning, of course—and she learned how to run a household. She also became an accomplished gardener and grew the best apples in all of Hearne. This was how Arodilac Bridd met her.

“The best apples you’ve ever tasted,” said Arodilac.

“Get on with your story,” said Ronan, gritting his teeth.

Cypmann Galnes was in the habit of carrying fresh fruit with him wherever he went, said Arodilac. Even to the castle. The regent, who was given to three vices—horses, women, and food—availed himself of some fruit Galnes brought one day, and, after his appetite was piqued with an apple, inquired where the merchant found such delicacies.

“In his garden, of course,” said Ronan, eyeing a pewter pitcher and wondering if beating Arodilac over the head with it would, in any way, speed up the storytelling.

“In his garden,” echoed the youth. “And then, do you know what happened?”

“No, but you’re going to tell me.”

“Uncle pulled me aside after dinner, and said there was something he wanted me to get for him. He wanted apple pie for dessert, the next day, and the best apples were to be had from the garden of Cypmann Galnes. And if he didn’t have his apple pie, he’d be cross.”

“So what’d you say?” asked Ronan, intrigued despite himself by this private side of the regent.

“I told him that, once when I was small, Cypmann Galnes thrashed me for chucking pebbles at his horse.”

“Rightly so. I would’ve done the same.”

“He only laughed and told me to get some of those apples.”

“Which are in that garden.”

“In the garden, yes,” agreed Arodilac. “I pointed that out to him, and he told me to steal them.”

“What?”

“He told me to steal them.”

“So the regent’s muscling in on the Thieves Guild? Let the fruit vendors look to their knives, or they’ll be paying double in protection.”

Arodilac fell into a reverie, gazing out the window. Twilight was falling, and the oak trees that stood alongside the castle wall were dappled with shadow and blurred light.

“The house is at the end of the Street of Willows, and it was one of those trees that I climbed to make my way over the wall. Cypmann Galnes was working at his warehouse down at the docks. I swung over the top and Liss was there, sitting under a tree and doing needlepoint. She didn’t say anything. She just watched me. I figured it’d be best to leave with whatever dignity I had left. Of course, it’s easier to get into that garden than get out. After watching me slip and fall several times in trying to jump for the top of the wall, she brought me a cup of water. It was a hot day.”

“Over such little things have kingdoms fallen,” said Ronan.

Arodilac reddened. “She’s unlike anyone I’ve met before. Not like all the girls at court fawning around me, cooing like pigeons, all beady-eyed over my title and not ever seeing me.”

“You didn’t tell her who you are.”

Arodilac looked away. “Not until her father caught us together. He was angry. He went and told Uncle.”

“And you intend to marry her?”

He looked up. “Yes! We love each other.”

“You’re the heir to the regency of Hearne,” said Ronan. “Who you marry won’t be left up to you. Horses and the nobility. Both bred with an eye for bloodlines. No doubt there’s a duke’s daughter being groomed somewhere. You’ll be foisted on each other, whether you like it or not, for alliance, for blood, and for money.”

“I don’t care about such things,” said Arodilac.

“What you care about doesn’t matter,” said Ronan. “What I care about doesn’t matter. All that matters is that your uncle has hired the Guild to tidy up. So tell me, and with few words, why the regent hired thieves to clean up after his nephew.”

Arodilac’s eyes slid away from him. “Just some letters I wrote to her. That’s all.”

“Letters?”

“I promised we would be wed. My uncle would be embarrassed if—”

“Do you take me for a fool, boy? A letter, no matter how idiotic, is not going to matter a whit to the regent of Hearne. With all the beds and mistresses he’s worn out, he won’t be bothered by his nephew’s indiscretions, even if you ran about the city, naked as the day you were born. Tell me the truth.”

The boy hung his head.

“I gave her my family ring,” he said.

“You did what?”

“I gave her my family ring. I don’t know why I did it! Something came over me, but she doesn’t know what it actually is. She just thinks it an old ring, only dear because it comes from me.”

Wordless for once, Ronan stared at him. The boy winced.

“I know, I know. And it isn’t just my old family estate bound into it. Uncle’s been teaching me the wards of this castle.”

It was customary within the noble families to pass a ring down, from father to eldest son, or whichever heir was to assume the title. All the ward spells guarding the estate were bound into the family ring, so that whoever wore it, anywhere at any time, would always be aware of any dangers threatening the estate. What’s more, whoever bore the family ring could safely pass through the wards.

Possession of the family ring of one of the noble houses of Tormay was every thief’s dream. With such a ring, one could pass unchallenged into the richest estates of the land. But even though the house of Bridd was reputed for its wealth, this ring was much more valuable. It disarmed the ward spells guarding the regent’s castle. Ronan shook his head. He could hardly believe it.

“Are you telling me your uncle’s been teaching you his castle wards and then weaving the spells into your ring as he goes?”

Arodilac nodded.

“And she’s hidden it? Refuses to give it back?”

The boy nodded again.

“She says she wants something in exchange,” he said. “But she won’t tell me what.”

The words hung in the room, like dust glinting in the sunlight. There was irony in the fact the regent had called in the Guild to solve his problem. A missing ring containing his castle wards was bound to turn up. Such things always did.

A ward-bound object attracted certain kinds of people who came near it. The problem was that most people attuned to such things tended to use their knowledge in illegal activities. Many of them worked for the Guild. Others worked alone. The regent’s decision to hire the Guild to find the ring—some of the people who would be most tempted to use it against him—was a clever move. Bound by their own honor code, the Guild would not be able to use that which they had been hired to recover.

“What does it look like?”

“A gold band carved in the shape of a hawk, with rubies for eyes.”

“The mark of the wind,” said Ronan.

“My family has always honored the wind lord and the sky.” His head came up, proud once more.

“Tales for old women.”

“Don’t hurt her,” said Arodilac.

“What do you take me for? The Guild doesn’t turn its hand against children.”

An image of the boy sprang unbidden to his mind, falling down the chimney into darkness. Ronan got up and pushed through the door, past the two Guardsmen, wooden at their post, and then down a hallway and out into the gloomy evening. The air smelled like wood smoke and coming rain.

 

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

WHAT THE TRADERS FOUND

 

Murnan Col hailed from Averlay in Thule. He was a trader who worked the coastal route of villages down to the duchy of Vomaro and all places of interest in between, including, of course, Hearne. Once in Vomaro, he always turned inland to Lura to acquire more expensive items for the return north. That spring, however, a bag of pearls bought off a fisherman convinced him to venture south, down through the desert to the city of Damarkan in Harth.

Harth made him nervous. He wasn’t sure why. Perhaps the desert stretching on forever and ever into heat-shimmered distances. Perhaps the odd beauty of the Harthians themselves with their dark skin and their bone-white hair bleached by relentless generations of sunlight. Or maybe it was their courtly grace, their politeness, and the liquid cadence of their speech—all so different from the rougher customs of the north.

He grimaced, shifting in the saddle. Shadows, but it was a long road up from Damarkan. He’d be glad to get back to Averlay and his own bed. Cwen. How long had it been since he’d seen her? Four months? Much too long to leave a good woman idle. No telling what she had gotten up to in his absence. He smiled to himself.

Damarkan had been profitable. The pearls had brought the court chamberlain of Oruso Oran IX stalking through the marketplace, attendants scurrying along at his side. A cold man serving an even colder master, if the stories were true, but he had been fair in his dealings with the trader and he knew good pearls when he saw them.

Murnan turned in his saddle. The pack train straggled out behind him. Four heavily laden mules and the giant Gavran twins bringing up the rear, smiling as ever and singing one of their endless ballads. The sea and death and the melancholy of unrequited love, no doubt. They were young and didn’t seem to think about much else.

An hour would see them down into the valley of the Little Rennet River. They had stopped there on the way south. The villagers had been friendly, eager for news and a chance to trade for his iron, wool, and the small kegs of salt so dear to inland folks. He’d promised to buy some cheap silk in Damarkan for the miller’s wife. She’d be pleased with the bolt of ivory-colored cloth he’d found—smooth to the touch and full of light. There was to be a wedding in the family. A daughter. He frowned. Perhaps it was high time he married his Cwen.

They smelled the village before they saw it. Faintly at first but then stronger and stronger—the sickly sweet odor of rotting flesh warmed by the sun. The trader’s horse shivered under him.

Murnan loosened his old sword in the saddle sheath. “Gann, tie up the mules and stay with them. Loy, come with me.” His hand flexed on the sword handle. Not that he was any good with the thing, but you had to try. That was what life seemed to be about.

The stench grew as they rode down the trail into the valley. With each step, the horses grew more restive, trying to sidle off the path and head back up the incline. They came around a bend and a stand of pine. The village lay before them. Murnan reined in.

“The birds,” he said.

Below them, among the houses standing together beside the stream, crows rose and settled in flurries of wings. Dark blots clumped into bigger masses as if huddling together for intimate meetings. Here and there, buzzards were visible, waddling about the ground or stooped over the awkward, broken-looking shapes littering the earth.

“Shadows!” cursed Loy.

They galloped down the slope. The birds rose at their approach, sluggish and slow as if so heavy with their meals that they could only struggle up into the uncertain support of the air. Murnan could see Loy turning green beneath his sunburnt skin. Bile burned up inside his own throat. The dead were everywhere: lying in the clay and stone of the pathways between the cottages, sprawled across doorways, crumpled against walls.

They had been dead for perhaps a day, he reckoned. He swallowed, trying to calm his stomach. Even though the bodies were torn by bird beaks, there was enough definition left to suggest recent death. Perhaps even less than a day.
And if we had not tarried another day in Damarkan?
He shuddered.

His horse twisted and he caught a glimpse of a panicked white eye. He soothed the beast with soft words and touch. The horse shuddered and subsided under him.

Loy exclaimed. Murnan turned to look. Further down a path between two cottages stood a girl. She was a skinny little thing, no bigger than a shadow and with white hair tangled around her head. For a moment she stared at them, and then whirled to run. Loy jumped off his horse. It took only several steps of his huge strides to catch her, for the girl ran awkwardly. She screamed once when he scooped her up and then her body went limp.

“What shall we do?” asked Loy. His jaw was clenched in anger. The girl was tiny in his arms. She dangled there like a child’s broken doll.

“She’s unconscious?”

“Aye. Skin’s burning. She’s got fever.”

“We’re four days’ ride from Hearne. If we push the mules. Back with her to your brother, and I’ll do a quick scout through the rest of the village. Perhaps there are others still alive.”

But there weren’t any other survivors.

Murnan stood for a while over the body of the miller. The man’s eyes were gone, pecked away by the birds, no doubt, and his sockets stared up at the sky. There would be no wedding for his daughter. He turned away.

 

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

BOOK: The Hawk And His Boy
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