Read Blackstone (Book 2) Online

Authors: Honor Raconteur

Tags: #Raconteur House, #Deepwoods, #guilds, #adventure, #Honor Raconteur, #fantasy, #pathmaking, #male protagonist, #female protagonist

Blackstone (Book 2) (27 page)

Grae contemplated that for several
minutes. “You don’t believe he’ll turn on us.”

“Nope.”

“Why?”

“Gut feeling.” Beirly let out a
low chuckle. “Don’t glare at me so. Look, lad, if the man had wanted to take
advantage of us, he could have done it a half a dozen times over. He could have
stolen all our money—and we had quite a bit on us in Converse—our guild crests,
our weapons, and made off like a bandit. Even injured as he was, we would have
been hard pressed to stop him. But what does he do? He guards us. He does his
best not to scare us. He treats Siobhan like a precious jewel. It’s not money
or freedom he’s after.”

“So what does he want? Safety?”

“And kindness, aye, I think that
more or less covers it.”

Safety? Kindness? Erik couldn’t
refute the man’s words. That was indeed what he wanted. That and a deeper
connection to these three people which had allowed him to live as a human being
for the first time in seven years. But he didn’t know how to reach them. Grae
he scared just by standing there. Beirly was a little nervous around him still,
in spite of the words he was saying. Only Siobhan seemed able to take him at
face value.

From the depths of the past, he
dredged up memories of what it had been like with his friends and family. And
from them, an idea sprouted. Maybe, instead of waiting for the other three to
reach out to him, it was time he turned the tables and did something first.

Scheming, he silently stood and
retreated back to his room, not leaving behind any sign of his eavesdropping.

Chapter Four

Something about the man just felt
off
.
Erik couldn’t put his finger on what, but he didn’t like the overall feel of
the man. From that cautious expression on Siobhan’s face, she felt the same
way.

Ranton, as he had introduced
himself, looked like a shady trader. His clothes just this side of respectable,
but worn in. One eye squinted slightly every now and again, and there was a
permanent smile etched into his face no matter what Siobhan said. He sounded
like a foghorn, too. The voice grated on Erik’s ears.

“We’d only have two wagons,”
Ranton said, rubbing his hands together in a habitually nervous habit. “So no
need to weigh or measure anything.”

Erik frowned. He’d only been in
the guild two weeks, granted, and he hardly knew more than the basics of pathmaking.
But after helping Grae build three paths, he knew enough to realize that
everything had to be weighed. Grae had to know the weight of everything in
order to properly use the paths.

Siobhan, of course, knew this as
well. A professional smile pinned to her face, she responded, “I’m sorry, sir.
We must weigh everything. It’s impossible to take you on a path otherwise.” She
shifted in her chair, sitting more upright and on the edge, as if ready to move
out of it quickly. Erik also noted that even though they sat in their own
guildhall, she had not offered any food or drink to their guest. In the time
he’d known her, she’d never failed to offer that courtesy.

After seven years in the dark
underworld, Erik knew a bad situation when he saw one. Siobhan clearly saw the
same, as she didn’t trust this man. Of course, right now, all they had to go on
was intuition. Deciding it was time to make or break, Erik cleared his throat
and added, “You said your name was Ranton. What guild?”

Ranton’s smile flinched. “No guild
for this deal. I’m working with a private trading company.”

There was no such thing. Not in
this world. “We’ll need a detailed list of the cargo you have.”

“With providence,” Siobhan said
with a deliberately casual tone. Her eyes watched the man like a hawk, though.

At the word ‘providence’, the
smile ran away from his face. He wasn’t sweating, but Ranton looked as nervous
as a mouse trapped by three hungry cats. “Well, these are all handmade
products, of course there’s no providence—”

“Of course there is,” Siobhan
corrected gently. “A maker’s stamp, a history of the making, and a date. That’s
all I need.”

Ranton cleared his throat, or
tried to, but sounded like a choking duck. “I’m afraid I don’t have that on me.
Well, it looks like we can’t do business today. I’ll take my leave, contact you
later—”

Erik’s patience with the situation
broke at that point and he grabbed the man by the scruff of the neck and
slammed his face against the table’s surface. Of course, the man flailed and
tried to push himself away, but his strength was no match for the
Wynngaardian’s and Erik just leaned against him harder.

Siobhan had leapt out of her chair
when he moved, sending it flying backwards. She had her hand on one of her
hilts, ready to draw at a moment’s notice. Seeing that Erik had the situation
well in hand, she slowly lifted the hand free.

“Ahem. Wolf. He’s a smuggler,
isn’t he?”

“Yes,” Erik growled.

“I thought so.” Tsking the man,
she bent at the waist to look him in the eye. “Thought to try your luck with a
brand new guild, hoping they didn’t know better? Too bad for you, but the man
leaning on you is a former dark guildsman. He can smell a rat better than I
can.”

For a moment, Erik almost felt
proud of his bad history. All of that experience had certainly come in handy.

Shaking her head, she straightened
and requested, “Wolf, keep him here. I’ll call for an enforcer.”

“Sure, sure.”

When Siobhan had left, Ranton
tried twisting his way free again, breathing hard between clenched teeth. He
looked like a turned over turtle, doing that. Erik found it mildly
entertaining. When he had exhausted himself, he gave up and whined, “You’re not
really from a dark guild!”

“I really am,” Erik assured him,
almost feeling a smidgeon of pity for the idiot. Or at least, he would try to
feel pity for him at some point. Perhaps in the distant future. Leaning in a
little closer, he breathed into the man’s ear, “That woman saved me from being
a slave at a black market. There is not a thing I wouldn’t do to repay her for
that kindness. So if you try to hurt anyone in this guild again, I will cut
your throat and count it was a good deed.”

Ranton swallowed hard and went
about three shades paler.

The would-be smuggler was saved by
Beirly, who chose to come out of his workroom at that moment. He took in the
situation with a startled blink, then asked slowly, “I take it something went
wrong?”

Erik went with the short
explanation. “Smuggler.”

“Ahhhh,” Beirly intoned in
understanding. Then, for some reason, his face furrowed into a disturbed frown.
“Did Shi tell you to do that?”

Glancing down, Erik looked at the
situation from his perspective, but still didn’t understand the question. “Do
what?”

“Pin the man like that. Did she
realize what he was?”

“Not at first. But she saw through
him quickly enough.”

“Not at first,” Beirly repeated,
his frown deepening. Rounding the table, he came in closer, the wheels spinning
in his mind. When he got to Siobhan’s upturned chair, he flipped it back up to
its proper position and then stared down at it for a long moment. “Wolfinsky.”

The tone alone said that whatever
was on Beirly’s mind, it was weighty. So Erik responded cautiously. “Yes?”

“I see now what you meant before,
that it was foolhardy for us to open for business without having an enforcer.
It gives me chills to think that if not for you, Siobhan would have met this
scum alone.”

It gave Erik chills, for that
matter.

“So. I’ll offer you a deal.”
Beirly pointed a finger at his new hand. “That’s nothing more than a block of
wood that you can attach a shield to. I can do much better work than that.”

Better than this? It was
functional, certainly, but Beirly was right in that it was little better than a
block of wood strapped onto his arm. Beirly had in essence created a large cap
for his stump. It was solid, a polished dark wood, with one wide notch in it so
he could slip a shield’s strap into it. Aside from its fighting ability and
using it to protect his stump, it had no other merit. “How much better?”

“I can make it so you can grab
things and lock onto it.”

How he would manage that, Erik had
no idea. But he’d seen this man’s handiwork throughout the Hall. He had no
doubt that if Beirly said it could be done, the man would pull it off somehow.
“In exchange for a better hand, what do you want?”

“You stay until we can find a new
enforcer.” Beirly said this straight forwardly.

Was that all? Erik was inclined to
stay longer anyway, just to work off the debt he’d incurred with Siobhan.
“Deal.”

Beirly relaxed into a grin.
“Didn’t have to think about that, did you? Well, that’s fine.” Dropping into a
chair, he got comfortable. “Well, while we wait for Shi to return, let’s talk
about your new hand.”

ӜӜӜ

“How does it feel? Does it chaff?”

Erik twisted his arm in different
directions, trying out his new wooden hand. It fit like a glove over his stump,
with a leather strap on the forearm keeping it in place. Beirly had carved it
as if the hand was in a closed fist, with only the thumb detached and moveable,
and for something that was supposed to be temporary, it had an amazing amount
of detail whittled in. It actually looked like his hand. “No, no chaffing.”
Whatever the man had lined it with on the inside was soft as butter. Lifting it
closer to his face, he studied it in detail. “This is amazing,” he marveled.
“Have you thought of making these for a living?”

“Not until I started on yours,”
Beirly admitted frankly, beaming. He was pleased his work was so well
appreciated. “But I’m thinking I could make a good sideline business out of it.
This is just temporary, mind, so don’t get attached to it. I figured out how to
make a metal version with moving fingers and thumb so you can latch onto things
with it.”

So this was nothing more than a
mockup of the metal version he’d make later? It seemed too elaborate for that,
but Beirly wasn’t one to do anything in halfway measures.

Curious, he slammed his new hand
into the other, testing how it felt against flesh. A slow smile took over his
face as his real hand tingled in pain. “I could do some damage with this.”

Beirly looked up at him
uncertainly. “Come again?”

“It’s a useful weapon you’ve given
me.” He tried to explain it so the man wouldn’t think he’d try the new hand out
on
him
next. “Even without the sword, if danger approaches any of you, I
can combat it with the help of this hand.”

The shorter man sank back onto his
work stool and just stared at Erik for a long moment. No one else was in the
workroom and Beirly seemed to realize he could take advantage of this privacy
to probe. (Neither man seemed brave enough to try it in front of Siobhan.)

“Wolfinsky. You seem dead set on
acting as an enforcer for us. But Siobhan clearly didn’t ask you to do that. So
why are you?”

Erik was not a man of words. He
fumbled for a moment, trying to find the right way to explain. “I’m not good at
many things. But fighting, protecting someone, that I excel at. It’s the only
way I have of repaying you.”

Beirly lowered his head and stared
at the floor for a long moment. “Is that why.”

“I was standing at the edge of an
abyss,” he said softly. “You and Siobhan and Grae saved me from that. I should
be doing something more, something grander to repay the grace you’ve given me.
But I can’t think of anything else I can do for you.”

After letting out a long breath,
Beirly looked back up, his beard lifted up in a smile. “I’ve misjudged you,
Erik Wolfinsky. You are a good man.”

Erik blinked at him. Had something
he said struck a chord in the man?

“Now, finally, I get it. I
understand what Siobhan saw when she looked at you.” Shaking his head at
himself, Beirly muttered under his breath, “It’s borderline magic, those eyes
of hers.”

“Is she truly never wrong?” Erik
couldn’t help but ask.

“Not once since we were children.
Boggles my mind how she does it. Gives me grey hairs sometimes, too.” A twinkle
appeared in his eyes. “Like when she insists on buying former dark guildsmen
off a black market slave train.”

Erik snorted, seeing the humor in
the situation now. “Aye, I still think she’s crazy for doing that. Even if it’s
me she bought.”

“You set a bad precedent,” Beirly
mock complained, half-seriously. “Since she succeeded with you, now she’ll
think she can do it again.”

His eyes went wide with horror as
his imagination conjured up future scenarios. “Please tell me you’re joking.”

“I’m not. I’m dead certain she’ll
do this again. It might be years later, but she will. I’ll bet my beard on it.”
Already resigned, Beirly put his hands against his knees and pushed himself to
his feet. “Well, regardless, the hand fits you well. Now, I suppose I’ll start
in on your true hand.”

Not about to stop the man, Erik
waved him on and headed out. In the doorway, he paused and turned back to ask,
“I haven’t seen Siobhan or Grae all morning. Where are they?”

“Oh, them? They left early this
morning. Grae spends his spare time building paths so we can take on more
clients. Siobhan decided to help him today.”

The blood drained out of Erik’s
face as the full meaning of that sank in. “You mean to tell me that those two
are outside of Goldschmidt’s walls, on their own, building pathways?”

“Right,” Beirly confirmed, puzzled
by Erik’s reaction. “Is there a problem?”

“Wind and stars, man, that’s
dangerous work to do without any protection!” Erik felt like swearing, only
couldn’t think of any words strong enough. “Which way? Which way were they
going?”

“Ah?” Beirly looked toward the
ceiling as he tried to recall. “South side. I think Grae wanted to build a path
towards Winziane.”

Now knowing everything he needed
to, he spun on his heel and sprinted out of the Hall. The street outside was
busy with mid-morning traffic, so he had to pay attention to avoid running into
something or plastering himself against the side of a wagon. As he ran, a
steady stream of curses ran through his head. Seriously, what were those two
thinking?! Being inside of a city was bad enough, but if true danger broke out,
the city guild enforcers would step in. Outside of the city, there were
absolutely no rules or anyone to turn to for safety.

Even as he ran, he knew what had
happened. Siobhan was worried about Grae going out on his own, so to safeguard
him, she’d gone along. And true, two were safer than one. But it probably
didn’t occur to her to call Erik, because he was still too new in her life. Out
of sheer habit, she took on the burden of protecting her friend. He was going
to have to break this way of thinking with her, and with Grae, or they’d get
themselves into serious trouble when he wasn’t around.

It took precious minutes to get
out the south gate, and then another minute for him to find the two. They were
several hundred yards out past the gate, off the beaten highway, kneeling on
the ground with their heads buried in their work. Neither of them paying the
slightest bit of attention to their surroundings.

They did this
regularly?
 The
idea terrified him. “Siobhan! Grae!” he called, not slacking his pace.

Both looked up, Grae having to
shield his eyes to see who approached. Siobhan had her back toward the sun, so
saw him and waved in greeting. “Wolf! Is there a problem?”

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