Read Shadow Games: The Fourth Chronicles of the Black Company: First Book of the South Online
Authors: Glen Cook
Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction, #General
“Yes, damnit.”
I took a chance. “Frogface. Roll it over. Bring the stuff back.”
A stone hit the barge. Timbers groaned. I staggered and Goblin yelled again.
I said, “Your stuff is back, Lady. Get Shifter and his girlfriend up here.”
“You knew?”
“I told you. I figured it out. Move.”
The old man called Eldron the Seer appeared, but now he wore his true guise. He
was the supposedly slain Taken called Shapeshifter, half as tall as a house and
half as wide, a monster of a man in scarlet. Wild, stringy hair whipped around
his head. His jungle of a beard was matted and filthy. He leaned upon a glowing
staff that was an elongated, improbably thin female body, perfect in its detail.
It had been among Lady’s things and had been the final clue that had convinced
me when Frogface reported its presence. He pointed that staff across the river.
A hundred-foot splash of oily fire boiled up amidst the cypress.
The barge reeled at the kiss of another flat stone. Timbers flew. Below, the
horses shrieked in panic. Some of the crew sang with them. My companions looked
grim in the light of the fires.
Shapeshifter kept laying down splash after splash, till the swamp was immersed
in a holocaust that beggared both of mine put together. The screams of the
pirates became lost in the roar of the flames.
I won my bet.
And Shifter kept laying it down.
A great howling rose within the fire. It faded into the distance.
Goblin looked at me. I looked at him. “Two of them in ten days,” I muttered. We
had heard that howling last during the Battle at Charm. “And not friends
anymore. Lady, what would I have found if I had opened those graves?”
“I don’t know, Croaker. Anymore, I don’t. I never expected to see the Howler
again. That’s for sure.” She sounded like a frightened, troubled child.
I believed her.
A shadow passed the light. A night-flying crow? What next?
Shifter’s companion saw it, too. Her eyes were tight and intense.
I took Lady’s hand. I liked her a lot better now that she had her vulnerability
back.
Willow scowled at the boat. “I’m so thrilled I could shit.”
“What’s wrong?” Cordy asked.
“I don’t like boats.”
“Why don’t you walk? Me and Blade will cheer you on whenever we see you puffing
along the riverbank.”
“If I had your sense of humor, I’d kill myself and save the world the pain,
Cordy. Hell, we got to do it, let’s do it.” He headed out the wharf. “You seen
the Woman and her pup?”
“Smoke was around earlier. I think they’re on already. Low profile. On the
sneak. They don’t want anybody knowing the Radisha is leaving town.”
“What about us?”
Blade grinned. “Going to cry because the girls didn’t come down to drag him
back.”
“Going to cry a lot, Blade,” Cordy said. “Old Willow can’t go anywhere without
bitching to keep his feet moving.”
The boat wasn’t that bad. It was sixty feet long and comfortable for its cargo,
which consisted only of the five passengers. Willow got in his gripe about that
too, as soon as he discovered that the Radisha hadn’t brought a platoon of
servants. “I was sort of counting on having somebody take care of me.”
“Getting soft, man,” Blade said. “Next thing, you be wanting to hire somebody to
fight in your place when you get trouble.”
“Sounds good to me. We done enough of that for somebody else. Haven’t we,
Cordy?”
“Some.”
The crew poled the boat into the current, which was almost nonexistent that far
down the river. They upped a linen sail and swung the bow north. There was a
good breeze. They gained on the current about as fast as a man moving at a lazy
stroll. Not fast. But no one was in a big hurry.
“I don’t see why we got to start now,” Willow said. “We ain’t going where she
wants. I bet you the river’s still blockaded above the Third Cataract. There
won’t be no way we can get past Thresh. That’s far enough to suit me, anyway.”
“Thought you was going to keep on hiking,” Cordy said.
“He remembered they laying for him in Gea-Xle,” Blade said. “Moneylenders got no
sense of humor.”
It took two weeks to reach Catorce, below the First Cataract. They hardly saw
Smoke or the Radisha the whole time. They got damned tired of the crew, as
humorless a bunch of river rats as ever lived, all of them fathers and sons and
brothers and uncles of each other so nobody ever dared loosen up. The Radisha
would not let them put in at night. She figured somebody would shoot his mouth
off and the whole world would find out who was on the river without benefit of
armed guards.
That hurt Willow’s feelings from a couple different directions.
The First Cataract was an obstacle to navigation only to traffic coming up the
river. The current was too swift for sail or oars and the banks too far and
boggy for a towpath. The Radisha had them leave the boat at Catorce, with the
crew to wait there for their return, and they made the eighteen-mile journey to
Dadiz, above the cataract, on foot.
Willow looked out at river barges coming down, riding the current, and griped.
Blade and Cordy just grinned at him.
The Radisha hired another boat for the passage to the Second Cataract. She and
Smoke stopped trying to stay out of sight. She figured they were too far from
Taglios for anybody to recognize them. The First Cataract was four hundred
eighty miles north of Taglios.
Half a day out of Dadiz Willow joined Cordy and Blade in the bows. He said, “You
guys notice some little brown guys back in town? Kind of watching us?”
Cordy nodded. Blade grunted an affirmative. Willow said, “I was afraid it was my
imagination. Maybe I’ll wish it was. I didn’t recognize the type. You guys?”
Cordy shook his head. Blade said, “No.”
“You guys don’t break a jaw chinning.”
“How would they know to be watching us, Willow? Whoever they are? Only one who
knows where we’re headed is the Prahbrindrah Drah, and even he don’t know why.”
Willow started to say something, decided he should shut his mouth and think.
After a minute, he grunted. “The Shadowmasters. They might know somehow.”
“Yeah. They might.”
“You think they might give us some trouble?”
“What would you do if you was them?”
“Right. I better go nag on Smoke.” Smoke could be the hole card. Smoke claimed
the Shadowmasters didn’t know about him. Or if they did, they had no good
estimate of his competence.
Smoke and the Radisha had made themselves comfortable in the shade of the sail
and were watching the river go by. The river was something worth seeing, Willow
would admit. Even here it was half a mile wide. “Smoke, old buddy, we maybe got
us a problem.”
The wizard stopped chewing on something he had had in his mouth all morning. He
peered at Willow with narrowed eyes. Willow’s style was getting to him.
“Back in Dadiz there was these little brown guys about so high, skinny and
wrinkly, that was watching us. I asked Cordy and Blade. They seen them, too.”
Smoke looked at the woman. She looked at Willow. “Not someone you made an enemy
of coming south?”
Willow laughed. “Hey. I don’t have no enemies. No. There’s nobody like these
guys anywhere between Roses and Taglios. I never saw anybody like them before. I
figure that means it’s not me they’re interested in.”
She looked at Smoke. “Did you notice anyone?”
“No. But I wasn’t watching. It seemed unnecessary.”
“Hey. Smoke. You always watch,” Willow said. “This here’s your basic unfriendly
old world. You better always be on the lookout when you’re travelling. There’s
bad guys out here. Believe it or not, not everybody’s as polite as you
Taglians.”
Swan returned to the bow. “That dolt wizard never even noticed the brownies. The
guy’s got lard for brains.”
Blade took out a knife and whetstone and went to work. “Better sharpen up. Edge
might dull down before the old boy wakes up and sees we’re under attack.”
It was a three-hundred-mile passage to the Second Cataract, where the river
scampered nervously between dark and brooding hills, as though too wary to stay
in one place long. On the right bank the haunted ruins of Cho’n Delor stared
down on the flood, reminding Willow of a heap of old skulls. No traffic had
passed along the right bank since the fall of the Paingod. Even animals shunned
the area.
On the hilltops beyond the left bank were the ruins of the Triplet Cities, Odd
the First, Odd the Second, and Odd the Third. Stories Cordy had heard coming
south said they had sacrificed themselves to bring the Paingod down.
Now people lived only along a narrow strip beside the Cataract, in a walled city
one street wide and ten miles long, perpetually nervous about ghosts from the
wars that were. They called their bizarre city Idon, and had the weirdest bunch
of quirks anyone ever saw. Travellers stayed in Idon only as long as absolutely
necessary. Likewise, many of the people of Idon themselves.
Passing through, keeping his eyes open while pretending to be gawking at the
weirdos, Willow noticed little brown guys skulking everywhere. “Hey. Smoke. You
eagle-eyed bastard. You see them now?”
“What?”
“He don’t,” Blade said. “Better sharpen me a couple more knives.”
“Pay attention, old man. They’re all over like roaches.” Actually, Willow had
seen only eight or nine. But that was plenty enough. Especially if they had the
Shadowmasters behind them.
They had somebody behind them. They made that clear soon after the Radisha found
a boat for the trip to Thresh and the Third Cataract.
They got around a bend in the river, where it flowed through country that looked
like it was left over from the war between the Triplet Cities and Cho’n Delor,
and here came two fast boats loaded down with little brown guys rowing like the
winner of the race got to become immortal.
The crew the Radisha had hired took maybe twenty seconds to decide it wasn’t
their squabble. They dived overboard and headed for the bank.
“You see them now, Smoke?” Willow asked, starting to ready his weapons. “I hope
you’re half the wizard you think you are.” There were at least twenty brown men
in each boat.
Smoke’s jaw went high speed as he chomped whatever he chewed all the time. He
did nothing till the boats began creeping up to either side. Then he stuck out
both hands toward one, closed his eyes and wriggled his fingers.
All the nails and pegs holding the boat together flew around like swarming
swallows, pattered into the water.
Brown men hollered and gurgled. It didn’t look like many of them knew how to
swim.
Smoke took a moment to catch his breath, then turned on the other boat. The
brown men there were turning already, heading for shore.
Smoke took that boat apart, too. Then he gave Willow one dark look and went back
to his seat in the shadow of the sail. He smirked forever afterward whenever he
heard Willow bitching about having to work ship.
“At least we know he’s the real thing now,” Willow grumbled to himself.
The situation in Thresh was exactly what Willow had predicted. The river was
closed to the north. Pirates. The Radisha could find no one willing to hazard
the long run north to Gea-Xle, which is where she was determined to go, to wait.
Nothing she offered would get anybody to risk the journey. Not even her
companions, whom she urged to steal a boat.
She was furious. You would have thought the hinges of the world would lock up if
she didn’t get to Gea-Xle.
She did not get.
For months they hung around Thresh, staying out of the way of little brown guys,
hearing rumors that the merchants of Gea-Xle had gotten desperate enough to try
doing something about the river pirates. Thresh was a snake’s nest of gloom.
Without trade upriver it would wither. Any hope that the northerners would break
through seemed absurd. Everyone who tried died.
One morning Smoke came to breakfast looking thoughtful. “I had a dream,” he
announced.
“Oh, wonderful,” Willow snapped. “I been sitting around here for months now just
praying you’d have another one of your nightmares. What do we do this time?
Storm the Shadowlands?”
Smoke ignored him. He had been doing that a lot, communicating through the
Radisha. It was the only way he could deal with Swan without getting violent. He
told the woman, “They’ve departed Gea-Xle. A whole convoy.”
“Can they break through?”
Smoke shrugged. “There’s a power as mighty and cruel as the Shadowmasters in the
swamps. Maybe greater than the Shadowmasters. I haven’t been able to find it in
my dreams.”
Willow muttered, “I hope the brownies aren’t smoking something, too. They figure
we’re going to connect up they might get more ambitious.”
“They don’t know why we’re here, Swan. I poked around. I found out that much.
They just want you and me and Cordy. Would have done it to us in Taglios if they
caught us there.”
“Comes to the same thing. How long before that convoy gets here?”
The Radisha said, “Smoke? How long?”
The wizard responded with all the steely certitude of his breed. He shrugged.
The lead boat was spotted by somebody fishing upriver. The news reached Thresh a
few hours before the barge. Willow and his group went down to the piers with
half the city to wait for it. People howled and cheered until those aboard began
disembarking. Then a deep, dread silence fell.
The Radisha grabbed Smoke’s shoulder in a grip obviously painful. “These are
your saviors? Old man, I’m about out of patience with you . . . ”
We broke the boom. We headed for the trading city Thresh, which lies above the
Third Cataract. It was a quiet river going down. There might have been no other
human beings in the world outside of us on the barge, But the wreckage that kept
pace was a screaming reminder that we were not alone, that we belonged to a
bleak and bloody-minded species. I was not fit company for man or beast, as they
say.