Read Fimbulwinter (Daniel Black) Online
Authors: E. William Brown
night threatened to overwhelm me. It was so tempting to simply say yes, to
whatever this vision of loveliness might ask of me.
But I’d been married long enough to know better than to make major
decisions in this kind of situation. Amanda had done the same thing, offering a
blow job out of the blue and pausing in the middle of it to propose vacation
plans or a new car or whatever else she might want at the moment.
So instead I hugged Avilla against my chest, and sighed.
“I’ll think about it,” I told her. “I’ll want to know a lot more about what’s
involved in a coven-bond and how they work.”
“Of course,” she agreed.
“If there are unbreakable vows involved I want us to think very carefully
about what to include,” I went on. “Something that sounds fine at first glance
could easily end up making us all miserable twenty years from now.”
“I’ve got a bunch of notes we can look over,” Cerise agreed. “I’ve been
trying to work out ideas for years.”
“Thank you, Daniel,” Avilla breathed. “Don’t worry, we’ll find a way to
make this work.”
Then she kissed me, and the time for conversation was over.
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Chapter 8
In the cold light of day, I was sure there had to be a catch.
Seriously, two beautiful young women volunteering to share a guy? Let
alone the thing with the maids, and all the ‘please tell us what to do’ vibes I
was getting from them.
It was too good to be true. They wanted something from me, and they
were trying to dazzle and distract me to keep me from noticing the catch until it
was too late. It was the only explanation that made sense.
Unfortunately, my own ignorance made it impossible to guess what the
truth was. Maybe this ‘coven bond’ ritual was actually going to turn out to be a
mind control spell, or some kind of sacrifice. Maybe they had a way to steal
my magic if I consented. There were a thousand possibilities.
Or maybe they were just desperately scared, and were trying to make
sure I didn’t abandon them. That was the kicker. Just because they were trying
to manipulate me didn’t meant it was for nefarious purposes. Hell, they might
even like me as much as I did them, in which case it would be damned stupid
to throw this away just because I couldn’t let go of my suspicions.
So I resolved to keep my eyes open, learn fast, and play along until I
figured things out. At this point that was really all I could do.
At least I finally had some time to prepare. I’d sandbagged more than a
little on my construction time estimate, but I still needed to spend most of each
day working on the wall. I wanted to make sure the Baron would have no
excuse to interrupt my work or short me on my payment, and besides I was a
little nervous that the giants would make a move before I was finished. The
town had been attacked several times by goblins, trolls and other lesser
threats, so it was only a matter of time.
The first day I spent part of the morning making the rounds of the
injured who’d been under my care, speeding along their healing and making
sure they’d all make a full recovery. They were happy enough about that, and
more than a few of them made inquiries about whether I was hiring. Not having
time to organize that myself, I sent most of them to see Avilla.
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She’d been shocked when I told her I was putting her in charge of
organizing the group I wanted, but she was happy enough when I explained my
reasoning.
“We can’t afford to take a bunch of extra people, and I figure this is
like setting up a minor noble’s household. I’ve got no idea what we actually
need in the way of domestic staff, but I’m sure you can handle that side of it.
We’re also going to need laborers to move supplies around, teamsters to drive
whatever I come up with for transport, probably a blacksmith and some other
craftsmen to support the troops and keep all our gear in order. Keep the group
as small as you can, but I expect we’ll end up with a dozen soldiers and at
least that many support staff.”
“More, if we want to be self-sufficient,” she replied, already
considering the problem. “What about families? The best craftsmen will
mostly be married, won’t they?”
“Probably. We’ll take them, of course. But try to keep the total number
of people down, especially children. Travel is going to be dangerous no matter
how well we prepare, and I’d rather not have a bunch of little kids in the line
of fire.”
I spent an hour enchanting warmth cloaks for Cerise to sell, and
confirmed in the process that I was getting faster at it. It was a pretty simple
enchantment, and practice made a big difference. The last cloak took me barely
ten minutes to make, and I was actually optimistic about improving on that
time. With any luck I’d be able to equip my whole group with them before it
was time to leave.
Unfortunately working on the wall didn’t get any easier. My limit there
was more a matter of power than skill, at least when it came to conjuring up
thousands of cubic feet of earth and stone. The second tower went up a bit
faster than the first, but the fact that I wasn’t bothering to do anything fancy
with the interior was a lot of that. I put on exterior doors of stone, but the
inside was just five identical floors of one big room each.
Things got more complicated when I got to the road I’d noticed running
parallel to the river. Obviously that called for a gatehouse, but how was I
going to make a gate out of stone? Mechanical engineering wasn’t my
specialty, and it would be awful easy to end up making the gates so heavy
they’d be impossible to move.
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Putting in the foundation for a pair of towers with a gatehouse between
them was easy enough, but I was still mulling over the gate problem when I
heard Beri’s voice call down from the top of the wall.
“Master Black? Are you down there?”
“I’m here!” I called. “Wait where you are, I’ll be right up.”
I carefully levitated myself up the face of the wall, and found Beri
waiting at the top. She was wearing one of the new warmth cloaks, which
seemed sensible enough, and awkwardly holding something to her chest.
She gave a startled squeak, and backed away for a moment before she
recognized me.
“Oh! Sorry, sir, I didn’t realize that was you for a moment. Miss Avilla
sent me with lunch. Unless you were coming back to the tower?”
“No, I need to make as much progress as I can today. What have you
got there?”
She smiled. “It’s pretty clever. She made minced meat rolls, but they
would have gone cold long before I could get them to you in this weather. So
Miss Avilla collected stones from the river and heated them on the stove. Then
we filled the bottom of a pot with them, put the rolls on top, and wrapped it in
towels so I could carry it without getting burned.”
She set the pot down as she explained, and spread a blanket in the lee
of the parapet so we could sit out of the wind. Then she produced a small
decanter of water, and a cup.
I shook my head. “That girl is a miracle worker with this domestic
stuff, isn’t she? Well, you may as well have a seat. How are you doing?”
She seemed a bit surprised at the question, but recovered quickly.
“Well enough, sir. I’ve been helping Miss Cerise run errands all morning.
We’ve traded off two of the cloaks already, and we’ve been procuring all sorts
of supplies for Miss Avilla. Mind you, no one wants to part with food.”
“I’m not surprised,” I sighed. “I suppose we’ll have to do something
creative to stock up for the trip. Bribe an official with magic items, or maybe
go find a lost granary to recover. I notice the Baron has salvage teams going
out to the surrounding farms already.”
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“Yes, sir. Um, do we really have to leave?” She looked out over the
frozen landscape around the town. “That seems awful dangerous.”
“We’re going to be in danger no matter what we do,” I pointed out.
“Don’t worry, we’ll be a lot better prepared this time. We won’t be on foot,
and I’ve got some ideas for magic weapons to discourage any monsters that try
to bother us.”
“If you say so, sir. I’ll miss the tower, though. I wish we could just
close the doors and stay behind those walls until this is all over. The thought of
going out there again...”
She huddled in on herself, clearly terrified at the idea. Poor girl. I
suppose I couldn’t blame her for that. I put a comforting arm around her, and
she curled up against me.
“Tina and I are lucky you came along when you did,” she said softly.
There wasn’t much I could say to that, so I occupied myself with eating.
The food was excellent as usual, but hungry as I was it didn’t last long.
“Master Black?” Beri asked. “Does it take a special talent to learn
magic? Or can anyone do it?”
“Are you interested?”
She shrugged. “I don’t know. The stories all say bad things happen to
people who tamper with dark forces. But I can’t help thinking that if Miss
Cerise ran into some terrible monster in a dark alley, the monster would run
away screaming. I’d give a lot to be like that.”
“Hmm. Well, there’s more than one kind of magic,” I said, repeating
what Cerise had told me just a few days before. “Some you have to be born
with, but others anyone can learn if they’re willing to put in the work.
Unfortunately it takes years to get to where you can do anything impressive.
Cerise and Avilla have both been practicing since they were children, and
they’re just starting to blossom.”
“I see.” She shifted, her hand slipping under my cloak to rest on my
chest. “I suppose I’ll just have to stay close, then. Is there anything else I can
do for you, sir?”
Was she trying to flirt with me? Well, this was hardly the place for
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that.
I let her go, and set the lid back on the pot. “No, I’m good. I’d better get
back to work now.”
Conjuring metal took easily a hundred times more energy than stone,
but in the end it was the only feasible solution. I hung each leaf of the gate on
an iron post set deep into the stone, with a counterweight that would be hidden
inside the wall. That let me build each door out of a framework of iron bars
several inches thick, covered with a two-inch facing of iron plate studded
liberally with spikes. The inner surface got a much thinner layer of iron plate,
and I was able to fuse all of it together into a single seamless mass with a bit
of effort. The whole thing took a couple of hours to build, including the iron
beams that could be dropped across the inside of the gate to hold it shut. But
the end result was light enough for a couple of men to open and close, albeit
with difficulty.
A few men from the current gate garrison wandered out for a look
while I was working on it, and their sergeant offered some shrewd advice on
details like where to put vision slits and the door into the gatehouse. I ended up
installing a portcullis, along with quite a few arrow slits and murder holes
covering the approach to the gate.
They also pointed out some of the practical problems inherent in living
in such a structure, which convinced me to go ahead and install fireplaces on
each floor and a few privies in discreet locations. It was far from ideal, but
that way they’d be able to get by if I never got a chance to put in magical
heating or plumbing.
Later that afternoon, once I’d finally finished the gatehouse and started
on the next stretch of wall, I got my next visitor. This time it was a burly fellow
with graying hair and a scraggly beard, carrying a weathered-looking spear
and bundled up in a coat and cloak that seemed quite well-used. He was
accompanied by a couple of younger men, also armed with spears, but from the
way they focused on surveying the snow-covered fields around us I surmised
they were here as his bodyguards.
I was raising a new stretch of wall when I noticed them, and dropped
back to ground level to see what they wanted. As the older man approached I
noted that he wore a large silver amulet outside his cloak, bearing an odd
knotwork symbol that looked sort of like three overlapping crescent moons.
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“Any idea who that is?” I asked the leader of my current bodyguard
squad. What was his name, again? I’ve never been good with names, and there
was so much coming and going it was getting hard to keep track.
“That’s Holger Drakebane,” the soldier explained in a low tone. “He’s