Part 27 (1/2)
'A clever innovation.' Klarm pa.s.sed the wallets to the handler. 'We must do business. Lost messages are one of our greatest problems.'
'You may have as many crystals as you want,' said Gilhaelith. 'With my compliments.'
Klarm bowed. They watched the skeets released, with an interval between each so they would not attack one another, then returned to the front terrace, Gilhaelith walking bent over.
'It will not be easy to find her,' said Klarm, 'nor to carry her and the construct away if we do. Vithis's spies and informers are everywhere.'
'I shouldn't wonder. Whoever finds this flying machine, and can crack its secrets, will win the war.'
'Whoever finds it and tells me,' said the scrutator, 'will bathe in a solid-gold tub for the rest of his life.'
'I wish I had it!' Gilhaelith forced a smile. 'Mine is of humble rhyolite.'
'You haven't done so badly.' Klarm ran his eye along the length of the villa.
'It's taken me a long time.'
'And all could be lost so quickly,' said Klarm.
'Indeed,' Gilhaelith sighed, ignoring the ever-so-subtle threat. 'In the twinkling of an eye.'
'On a different matter entirely, isn't your brimstone contract up for renewal soon?'
'It is, but if you don't want to renew it ...'
'Of course we do,' said Klarm, 'though many considerations have to be weighed up. The war, other suppliers ...'
'I'm sure we can satisfy each other, Klarm. As you know, I am the most flexible of men. And if there's any other way I can help the scrutators '
'Do you have anything specific in mind?' Klarm feigned disinterest, not entirely successfully. Gilhaelith had developed a rare ability to read people, even the trained impa.s.sivity of the scrutators.
'One rumour has it that the construct disappeared in the northern part of Worm Wood. I am doing everything I can to find it, and if I do ... well, I have no need of such a device.'
'Any merchant who had it would make a fortune,' said Klarm.
'But he wouldn't keep fortune or construct for too long,' said Gilhaelith. 'Nor his head! I prefer to stay attached to mine. If I hear anything, I will send word at once, by skeet.'
'Thank you,' said the dwarf, draining his tankard. 'As always, it's a pleasure doing business with you.'
'Another porter, my friend?'
'Not this time. The Council runs us harder than ever. I must go.'
Tiaan lay in her room, trying to hear, though she caught only a sentence or two. The air of controlled power the little man gave off frightened her, but better him than Vithis.
The door opened. Gilhaelith came in. 'Scrutator Klarm is a dangerous man. A good friend, as long as you don't cross him, which I have just done, but a deadly enemy.'
Tiaan closed her eyes. Two deadly enemies, and both were hunting her. 'You're going to give the thapter to him, of course?' She held her breath for the answer.
'No.'
'Why not?'
Gilhaelith scowled. Clearly he was not used to being questioned by inferiors. 'I need the amplimet, so I cannot give up the thapter either.'
'But it's vital to the war!'
'There's always a war somewhere. The amplimet may hold the key to the great game.'
She could not believe anyone could be so greedy or stupid. 'You fool!' she cried. 'What use will your precious secrets be if there is no one alive to see them?'
TWENTY-FIVE.
Nish scanned the flame-shot darkness. A solitary figure ran along the wall but nowhere did he see a family group. He risked a shout. 'Colm! Oinan, Tinketil! Ketila! Fransi!'
No reply. Perhaps a lyrinx had circled around the palisade and got them. More likely they had dared wait no longer. He could not blame them. In this race, the stragglers would be eaten. He was sorry, though. They had risked their lives for him and he would have liked to thank them.
Taking up his mallet, Nish slid like a spectre into the darkness. Which way? In the field of war you could never tell. Even if you guessed right, an hour later it might become the wrong way.
He was skidding down the gully when something crashed through a thicket to his left. It was probably another refugee as miserable as himself, but Nish was taking no risks. He crouched down so that he would not show against the glowing skyline. Someone hurtled out of the bushes, straight for him. Nish tried to get out of the way and the man it was was a man, by the size swung something at him. Nish thought it was a sword, and that he was going to lose his head. a man, by the size swung something at him. Nish thought it was a sword, and that he was going to lose his head.
Foolishly, he threw up his arm. A piece of wood snapped against it, just a brittle stick, luckily. Nish swung the mallet hard and low, into the fellow's midriff. He went down without a sound. Nish fled along the reedy gully until he smelt salt water. The Sea of Thurkad lay ahead.
To go right would take him in the direction of Nilkerrand, which was still burning, and the enemy. He turned left. The coastline curved west here and, as he reached the sh.o.r.e, Nish saw flames reflecting on the water. Such a pretty sight, from this distance.
As he continued on sand that squeaked underfoot, it began to grow light. Making out a low promontory, Nish broke into a trot. A flying lyrinx would easily spot him on the beach or in the dunes behind it.
He reached the promontory as the sun rose. The headland was layered sandstone, as grey as the water. A rock platform, weathered into rectangular blocks, surrounded it. Sullen waves crashed over the edge. Picking his way across, he came upon a band of oyster sh.e.l.ls. His mouth watered. Nish pounded an oyster with the mallet and sh.e.l.l fragments flew everywhere, one catching him in the corner of the eye.
The oyster was just a smear on the rock. Nish found a pebble in one of the tidal gutters and attacked another sh.e.l.l, more carefully. He managed to crack it in half and picked out the oyster. It was not very big, nor did it look appetising, but he was too hungry to care.
He ate about thirty of the little creatures, only stopping because they were salty and he had nothing to drink. Nish climbed the sandstone stack at the back of the promontory to look for a stream.
From the top he could see the towers of Nilkerrand, still burning. The westerly wind drifted a greasy brown plume across the landscape. Smoke trailed upwards from several parts of the refugee camp and lyrinx circled in the air over it.
To the south a long curving beach extended as far as he could see. Behind the beach were dunefields and salt marsh, country difficult to cross, easy to get lost in. There were hundreds of boats on the water, from majestic barges to little dinghies with sc.r.a.ps of sail. All were heading away from Nilkerrand, well out to sea where the lyrinx would not dare attack. He waved in the faint hope that one might come to his aid. None did.
To the east Nish saw a road crowded with refugees. It offered the safety of numbers and the possibility of begging for food. Further on, a meandering line of trees appeared to mark a creek. Nish set off in that direction.
Two hours later he was sitting in the shrubbery next to the road, thirstier than ever, watching the refugees go by. He had not reached the creek. His leg throbbed after the long walk through the dunes and he did not think he could go much further.
The refugees comprised every kind of humanity imaginable. Pa.s.sing him now was a fat merchant or lawyer, staggering under bags of silver plate and precious metal chains. His fine clothes were tattered and soot-stained; he was drenched in sweat and scarlet of face. He would not last long, nor his equally plump and beringed wife.
Behind them trudged a mother and four young children, the youngest a babe-in-arms. They were dressed in peasant's drab, coa.r.s.e brown cloth that hung in baggy folds. They would not last long either. Then Nish saw the knife in the woman's belt, the fixed look in her eye, and was not so sure. He would not want to get between her and her cubs.
A farmer's cart followed, a rickety affair with a wheel that squealed at the top of every rotation. The mournful nag looked as if it wanted to lie down and never get up again. An aged woman and her equally weathered man sat on top.