Part 14 (1/2)
Darak folded the cold hand with its hideously swollen fingers over the boy's chest and rose. When Urkiat unsheathed his dagger, he said, ”He's beyond pain. And blood will only attract predators.”
The odds had always been against the boy-hundreds of miles from his homeland, alone in the forest, probably starving. In the end, a chance misstep had kept him from reaching his destination. It could happen just as easily to them.
When he realized Urkiat was not following him, he glanced over his shoulder and found him crouched beside the boy, carefully slitting open his breeches.
”What are you-?”
Urkiat seized the bulb of the boy's limp p.e.n.i.s and pulled it. His dagger slashed downward, slicing the p.e.n.i.s off at the root. But only when Urkiat thrust the b.l.o.o.d.y member into the boy's half-open mouth did Darak finally recover from his shock.
He strode forward and seized Urkiat's wrist. After a momentary flash of surprise, his features relaxed. ”Don't worry. I'll save the fingers for you.”
Darak backhanded him across the face. The blow flung Urkiat to the ground. Cursing, he stumbled to his feet and slowly backed away, one hand wiping his mouth, the other still gripping the dagger.
”Are you mad?” Darak demanded.
”You attack me and ask if I'm I'm mad?” mad?”
Darak eyed the bloodstained blade pointing at his belly. Urkiat noted the direction of his gaze, but did not lower the dagger. ”This is what your folk would have done if he hadn't escaped. I'm giving them the vengeance they deserve. The vengeance you you deserve.” deserve.”
”The boy's dying. Isn't that vengeance enough?”
Urkiat's fury gave way to bewilderment. ”They stole your son. They killed your kinfolk.”
”Mutilating this boy won't change that. For mercy's sake-”
”What mercy did they show your people? Or mine?” Urkiat's hand fell to his side. ”I don't understand you.”
Because you saw me with the bloodl.u.s.t still burning hot. I wanted to do it then. Would have if Griane hadn't stopped me. Instead, I only broke his fingers. And I enjoyed his pain and fear as much as Morgath enjoyed mine.
When he was sure he could speak calmly, Darak said, ”I'm sorry I struck you.” He waited for Urkiat to nod before adding, ”We'll camp farther down the coast. Pack up our things. I'll be along in a moment.”
After Urkiat stalked away, he pulled the b.l.o.o.d.y stump from the boy's mouth, laid it between his legs, and covered him with the torn flaps of his breeches. With a handful of wet leaves, he wiped the blood from the narrow lips. He didn't bother checking for a pulse; he'd seen enough dead bodies to recognize that the boy's spirit had fled.
He was wiping his fingers when he felt the presence of another. He looked up, expecting to see Urkiat, and caught a flicker of movement among the shadowy trees. He reached for his spear as a form slipped soundlessly through the underbrush.
Wolf padded forward, hackles and ears erect. Her bushy tail was as rigid as her body, but her gaze was directed toward the beach.
”Wolf?”
At the sound of his voice, her ears p.r.i.c.ked forward and her tail relaxed. When she poked him in the chest with her muzzle, he was shocked to feel only the faintest brush of air. It was like touching his father when he'd found him in Chaos. A creature without fur or fangs, she had said. But the fur was still there and the fangs. His father's body had been insubstantial, but Wolf's still looked completely real.
”I was afraid for you, Little Brother. That is why I did not wait for your call.”
”Afraid?”
”I have watched you. With the young one.” A growl rumbled in her chest.
”His name is Urkiat. He goes with me on the hunt.”
”He is not-pack.”
”He's all the pack I have.”
Her ears went back. ”You have me.”
”Aye. Forgive me.”
”The young one is dangerous. He kills for pleasure, not for food, not to defend the pack.”
”He is . . .” How to explain revenge to a creature that did not understand the concept? ”His pack was killed by this boy's. That's why he attacked.”
”The pup was no threat.”
”This is something men do. Hurt another whose pack has hurt them.”
”Even if the other is dying? This makes no sense.”
Darak tried again. ”Foxes. Wildcats. They sometimes play with a kill.”
”Foxes. Wildcats. These are not-pack.”
Her disapproval was so plain he had to smile. ”I need this young one.”
”Then you must teach him the ways of the hunt. Or he will fail you when it is time to make the kill.”
Her tongue slid over his cheek. He missed the warm, wet roughness of it.
”I must leave now. But I will be with you, Little Brother.”
Before he could thank her, she had vanished into the deepening shadows of the forest.
Darak headed back to the beach. He made himself smile at Urkiat whose troubled expression cleared. ”I scouted a little ways down the beach. There's a good place to camp-sheltered from the wind by a cliff.”
”Good work.”
Urkiat looked as pleased as Callie when he praised his flute playing. Darak let him chatter on about the prospects of good weather on the morrow. And all the while, Wolf's warning echoed in his head.
Chapter 12.
COOL STONE INSTEAD OF warm earth beneath his cheek. The scent of burning oil. Men's voices, one loud, the other two softer, uncertain.
Keirith opened his eyes and found himself staring at a neat row of feet, two pairs in boots, two in open-toed shoes. Something nudged him in the back. When he made a feeble movement, the voices broke off. Hands pulled him to his knees. The sudden movement made his head throb. He fell forward, his bound wrists knocking painfully against a stone step. The same hands jerked him upright again, seized his hair, and yanked his head back.
He gasped as much from astonishment as pain. Soaring walls rose four, five times as high as the venthole of their hut. They were brilliantly painted with gold suns, black serpents with crimson feathers, white fish swimming through blue seas. More serpents slithered up the milk-white pillars, tall and broad as oaks, that flanked the stone platform in front of him.
Atop it, a bald man and a white-haired woman sat on a low bench. Another man stood beside them. All three wore robes that bared their left shoulders, the seated man in gold, the younger in red, and the woman in brown. The younger man was also bald, but he sported bracelets and tattoos on his arms. Was he the chief? And the seated couple a priest and priestess?