Read Origins: A Deepwoods Book - a Collection of Deepwoods Short Stories (Deepwoods Series 0) Online
Authors: Honor Raconteur
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Short Stories & Anthologies, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Coming of Age, #Sword & Sorcery, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Teen & Young Adult, #Raconteur House, #Honor Raconteur, #guilds, #Deepwoods, #origins, #Young Adult, #Short Stories, #YA, #Fantasy, #pathmaking
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?”
“You’re both fools, that’s the problem,” he snarled at her.
Skidding to a stop, he loomed over her, torn between shaking sense into her and
collapsing in relief that no trouble had found them yet.
Grae scrambled to his feet, then shifted from one foot to
another in unease. Siobhan popped up as well, but she met Erik’s enraged
expression head on, not in the least fazed by his temper. “What’s this about?”
He flung a finger toward the gate. “Do you really think that
just because you’re within sight of the gate that you’re safe? That no trouble
will find you here? That just because there’s two of you, you can handle things
if thieves or brigands
do
approach? Siobhan, that’s madness!”
Arms akimbo, she argued, “Well, what do you want us to do?
We have to work! The paths don’t build themselves.”
“YOU’RE SUPPOSED TO CALL ME TO WATCH YOURS BACKS!” he
thundered, a vein throbbing at his temple.
Even Siobhan flinched back, eyes shooting wide. Grae was
about a hair’s breadth from hiding behind her.
Immediately regretting his loss of control, he lowered his
voice to a quieter tone and pleaded, “Siobhan, please. Don’t do this again.
Grae, you as well. If you need to leave the city, even if you need to leave the
Hall,
please
call me. I will happily go with you rather than face
something bad happening.”
Grae and Siobhan shared a glance before Grae ventured, “Then
you were serious? You sincerely want to be our enforcer until you return home?”
“Yes, man, I was serious,” Erik said as patiently as he
could.
They shared glances again, and this time, a multitude of
words and emotions were expressed without them saying a word to each other.
Erik could tell that this time, they knew he was sincere. He would not be
repeating himself again on this topic nor fear them going out without his
knowing.
“Then stay,” Grae invited, not quite meeting his eyes. “Help
us.”
“Gladly.” Erik looked about on the ground, noticing for the
first time where he stood. “Is this near a dry riverbed?”
“Yes, exactly,” Grae confirmed. “We’re harvesting rocks to
build a path with.”
“We only have 5,800 something to go,” Siobhan said
mock-brightly, voice heavy with sarcasm. “I’m so glad you volunteered to help,
Wolf.”
Erik bit back a groan. Digging about in the dirt for pebbles
was hardly a fun way to pass the time, but if it meant getting the job done
faster, he would do just that. Resigned, he turned to Grae. “Show me what to
look for.”
For the first time, Grae’s eyes came up and met his. Those
blue eyes were wide with surprise. “You’re truly going to help us? Not just
guard us?”
“Aye.”
Grae’s lips parted in wonder and what might have been the
beginnings of a smile. “Then,” turning, he bent and scooped up a pile from a
canvas sack before splaying them out on his open palm. “See? About this size.
And if you can get them flat, that’d be best, as they’re easier to work with
that way.”
“No specific color or anything?” Erik asked, bending
slightly to get a better look.
Grae shook his head. “No, that doesn’t matter. The size and
weight of it, that’s what matters.”
The man was the Pathmaker, not him, so he took his word for
it. “Right.” Bending, he splayed his good hand on the ground and started
searching. “Ones like these, then?”
Grae sank into a crouch next to him and tentatively took the
pebbles from his hand. “Yes, these two are good. This one isn’t. See how it’s
cracked down the middle? We want ones that are solid.”
“Got it.”
They all bent down and set to work, sorting through rocks
and tossing anything that looked good into a canvas bag at their feet. Erik
kept a general eye on the area in case of trouble, but no one seemed inclined
to approach them.
The day slowly passed and eventually it got too late to stay
out any longer. They packed up and went back to the Hall. Wolf’s knees were
killing him, his back was aching, and his good hand was dry and dusty. But Grae
was now speaking easily to him, Siobhan had gotten comfortable enough to try
teasing and joking now and again, and he knew them both far better than he had
this morning. And because of that, all of his aches and pains were well worth
it.
“Wolf, everything fine back there?” Siobhan called from the
front of the caravan.
“Just fine!” he assured her.
The anticipated escorting job of taking a caravan to
Wynngaard had finally arrived. Erik was of two minds about this. He was of
course overjoyed at the thought of finally going home, and seeing friends and
family, but…there was another part of him that hated the idea of leaving
Siobhan, Grae, and Beirly behind. He’d only had a month with them, but that
month was precious. The thought that he might never see them again made his
heart rebel.
They had a prebuilt path outside of Quigg that would take
them to Brevik. Actually, that was why the guild had been in Converse and met
him. They were coming back from a pathmaking trip. Siobhan had taken advantage
of having a job scheduled a month in advance and used the time to build the
paths they needed. So all they had to do was use the path to get to Converse,
cross the Grey Bridges, get through Quigg, and then take the path to Brevik. In
all, it shouldn’t be more than a four day journey. If things went wrong,
perhaps five days.
And then after that, they would travel up to Reske. So in
ten days or less, he would be home.
Erik wasn’t nearly as happy about that as he should be. Really,
all he wanted to do was find ways to delay the inevitable as much as possible.
In terms of caravans, this one was not particularly large.
It was only six wagons, two outriders, and about ten traders and drivers that
belonged to the company. Because of that, they could hire a small guild of four
like Deepwoods to escort and guard them. Brevik was on the western side of
Wynngaard and about a five day journey from his hometown. Erik had been through
there a few times as a child, and while his memory was hazy, he had more
experience with the route than anyone in Deepwoods did.
He chose to guard the back of the caravan, as that way he
could see more problems as they came, and it took a while for him to realize
that there was something going on at the foot of the path. Frowning, he came
around, lengthening his stride so that he quickly came to where Grae and the
caravan boss, Callie, stood.
“What’s the holdup?”
Callie was a tiny woman, whipcord hard with muscle, hair
frizzy and kept up on the top of her head in a messy bun. She moved in sharp,
jerky gestures that always made Erik think that she was about a second away
from exploding into a sprint. At his question, she jerked her chin in an
aggravated motion toward Grae. “This young whelp tells me I have to split the
wagons in half.”
“There’s too much weight,” Grae said with a helpless shrug
of his hands. “If we try to go all at once, the path will fail, and that’s
never pretty when it happens.”
Erik didn’t know what would happen if the path failed while
they were on it. He didn’t want to know, either. Going by path made him a
little nervous as it was. “How much overweight are we?”
“At least two wagons. I’d feel better if we split the
caravan in half though.”
He knew why the caravan boss wasn’t happy about this. It
would take a half hour to get through the path at least, which meant that both
halves of her train would be not as well protected for a full hour before they
could get them back in the same place. Rocking back on his heels, Erik thought
about it for a moment. “Grae, leave two of the wagons with me. I’ll take care of
them. Go ahead with the rest.”
“Leave just you and two of my drivers?” Callie protested.
Grinning at her, he challenged, “You think someone can get
past me?”
Pursing her lips, Callie looked him over from head to toe,
eyes especially lingering over his new iron hand that Beirly had finished for
him last week. “I’d like to see the fool who’d try to take you on. I suppose
the rest of us are enough to protect the other four until you catch up.”
That was his thought exactly. He glanced at Siobhan. She had
been quiet during this exchange, watching how it panned out. From the mulish
set of her jaw, Erik could tell she was less than pleased with this plan, but
they really didn’t have another option. Grae couldn’t very well stop and build
another path that would take the whole caravan.
They organized who would stay and who would go. Grae
activated the path and took the others ahead, the path making a blue, shimmery
pattern in the air like a heat wave over a desert land. Erik watched,
fascinated, as he had never seen a path activated from the outside before. It
was rather pretty, in a strange, alien way.
With them gone, he turned his mind to more practical things
and did a slow rotation around the wagons, looking for potential trouble. On
his second patrol around them, one of the drivers, still sitting up on his
bench, asked, “Don’t think I caught your name.”
Erik glanced up at him. The man looked seasoned, and hard,
like leather that had been abandoned in the sun too long. “Erik Wolfinsky.
What’s yours?”
“Ayan. Rob Ayan. You look Wynngaardian, am I right? Thought
so. How’d you end up here?”
“It’s quite the story,” Erik responded, not really feeling
like getting into it or explaining everything to a relative stranger.
“I bet.” Ayan seemed to realize he wouldn’t get that full
story, as he let it lie. “I got that we needed to split, but why?”
“Too much weight, is what Grae said.”
Growling, Ayan spat over the side of the wagon. “I told
Callie not to pick up all those glass jars. I know they sell for a pretty penny
over there, but they’re as heavy as two bulls. If we’d left those behind, we’d
have been at the right weight. Say, if we’re having trouble here, you think
we’ll have this problem again outside of Quigg?”
A question that hadn’t occurred to him yet, but Erik thought
that Grae had built the same type of path outside of Quigg as he had here. So
yes, they might well run into this problem again. Only it would be more
dangerous outside of Quigg. That was a city that didn’t have a ruling guild
over it, so there were no laws enforced at all. Brevik wasn’t nearly as
dangerous by comparison. At least, by his memories it wasn’t. But he’d been
through Quigg fairly recently and that…was not a good city. “I hope not. I
don’t know what type of path he built over there.”
“I’d take it as a kindness if you’d ask. Either way, we’ll
have to make do, but I’d like a little warning.”
Erik mentally seconded that. He’d also like some warning.
Grae came back before trouble could find them, and Erik
loaded up on one of the benches so that they could go through. He was relieved
to find on the other side that no one had attacked the first part of the
caravan while he was away from it. Callie and Siobhan were equally relieved,
although for entirely different reasons.
With the group back together, they fell back into formation
and passed through Converse, then arrived on the Grey Bridges. Erik had only
been on these once, when he was taken from Wynngaardian soil to Robarge. They
were as wide and impressive as last time, not a thing having changed in the
past seven years. Even though the bridges were wide enough that eight wagons
could travel side by side, they stayed in a single line formation, clattering
across on the grey stone. He also stayed in the very back, not wanting
something to sneak up behind them.
For a full day they traveled over the bridges passing other
caravans heading the opposite direction. No one tried to give them trouble, and
they didn’t offer any, so it was a peaceful trip. Erik learned more about his
fellow traveling companions as they traded stories and jokes back and forth. It
was, all in all, a far better experience than the last time he’d travelled
across the bridges. In fact, it was all smooth sailing right up until they
reached Quigg. That was when their luck ran out.
One of the gate guards, who managed the traffic coming off
of the Grey Bridges, recognized him. Granted, Erik was the type of man to stand
out. Never mind his height, the missing hand alone would stick in people’s
minds. So when he tried to walk off the bridge and into Quigg’s city limits, he
was abruptly checked with a spear across his chest.
“Wait a minute,” the guard growled at him. He was a foot
shorter, shoulders and arms impressively wide with muscle. Erik sized him up
and realized quickly that this was not a man he would take lightly in combat.
“I know you. You came through here two months ago as a slave.”
Erik glanced up and found that the caravan had kept going,
not realizing he was caught and detained. It might be some time before someone
realized that there was a problem and then even longer to figure out where he
had disappeared to. Groaning to himself, he tried to explain, “I was, yes. I
was bought and freed by a guildmaster from Robarge. I have my guild crest, if
you want to see it?”
“Robarge,” the man said dubiously. “I don’t care what you
are registered there as. Here, in Wynngaard, you are a slave. The records will
say as much. You’ll have to follow me down to holding.”
He cursed a blue streak in his head. This was why Quigg was
not a good city. The only law they recognized was the law of gravity.
Everything else was up to interpretation. Erik knew good and well why the guard
wouldn’t even try to see him as something other than a slave—a sizeable reward
came from capturing escaped slaves. Unless Siobhan could miraculously prove
that he belonged to her, he would be labeled as an escapee and resold.
Panicked at the thought, he did the only thing he could do.
He raised his head and bellowed at the top of his lungs, “SIOBHAN!”
The guard jumped at having that yelled right in his ear. “
Myrkr!
What are you yelling for!”
Erik ignored him, eyes peeled toward the direction the
caravan had disappeared to. It took a minute, but both Siobhan and Beirly
appeared from the crowd of people, pushing their way roughly to him. Siobhan’s
eyes darted between him and the guard, taking in the spear still pointed at his
chest, and her brows snapped together, a dark thundercloud crossing over her
face. Well, it didn’t take her long to put the pieces together.
Nearly stomping, she marched directly to him, grabbed the
spear, and yanked it away from him, throwing the guard off balance. Taking
advantage, she shoved it toward him, and he fell back a step, giving her enough
space to stand between him and Erik. “What is going on here?” she demanded of
the guard. “Why do you detain my guildsman?”
The guard pointed a self-righteous finger at him. “This man
is a slave, I recognize him—”
“He
was
a slave, I bought him, he’s now an enforcer
in my guild,” Siobhan snapped.
Erik looked down at her in astonishment. It had been years
since anyone was so angry and defensive on his behalf. He could swear that the
look in her eyes alone was enough to turn a man into stone.
The guard drew himself up, slamming the butt of his spear
against the ground. A smirk was tugging at his lips as he said to her, “Unless
you can somehow prove that, this man will come with me.”
Siobhan tapped her fingers against her upper arm, eyes
narrowed to a lethal degree. Then she said, “Fine.” The word was not an agreement.
Fine? Erik blinked at her. She could prove that? How?
From her vest pocket, she drew out a leather wallet, which
held several folded pieces of paper. Erik recognized one of them as the map she
had of Wynngaard. Shuffling through the pile, she found the one she wanted,
unfolded it with a snap, then held it up in the air so the guard could read it.
“Bill of sale.”
The guard’s smirk drooped and his jaw tightened in
aggravation. Any other documentation he would have been able to argue against,
as one city was not liable to hold true to another city’s laws. But a bill of
sale was universal and no one would dare to discount it. The only thing that
every city and continent respected was trade. Erik grinned in appreciation.
Satisfied she had made her point, Siobhan folded it and
tucked it away again. Then she stepped directly into the man’s space, her nose
practically touching his. In a tone of pure menace, she breathed, “We won’t
have this discussion again. Will we. Because no one here will make this mistake
again.”
Not once before had Erik ever found Siobhan threatening, but
a chill raced up his spine in that moment. He made a mental note to never, ever
cross her.
“My apologies,” the guard gritted out, more angry than
cowed.
“Good enough.” Grabbing Erik’s hand, she collected Beirly
with nothing more than a jerk of the head, then spun on a heel and dove onto
the main street with a quick stride.
Seeing that she was in no mood to talk, Erik wisely directed
his questions to Beirly, who was struggling to keep up with them. “She kept my
bill of sale on her?”
“Takes a while to get a man’s name cleared after he’s been
black listed,” Beirly explained, puffing slightly. “She was worried something
like this would happen at Island Pass, but none of us expected it here.”
Made sense. Usually if a man could go through Island Pass,
he didn’t get any questions at the next city. They were much stricter than
anyone else about who went through their territory.
“Shi, slow down,” Beirly pleaded.
Siobhan slowed her steps an nth degree. “The
gall
of
that man, thinking he could take Wolf and resell him! I’m going to hunt down
his guildmaster and have a good talk with the man on the way back. Otherwise,
after Wolf’s home, he won’t be able to leave Reske at all without worrying
about this.”
Oh. He hadn’t thought of that, but yes, he would land in
this situation again unless it was straightened out now. Only he wouldn’t be so
handily rescued next time because Siobhan wouldn’t be with him and no one would
have proof he was a free man.
Grae had taken charge of the caravan, while Siobhan dealt
with matters, and had led them to an inn up ahead. They met up with the caravan,
the drivers still dealing with unhitching their teams and settling them into
the stable yard for the night. Even though Erik had felt his heart drop into
his stomach because of the whole situation, it hadn’t actually taken more than
five minutes, and most of the caravan didn’t seem to even be aware that
something had gone on.