“Yes,” said Keeper Squin, somewhat recovering herself. “And while you’re seeing to welfare, that child ought to be in bed!”
When she had gone, when they made certain she had really gone, Bobly said quietly. “We don’t want to walk past her with a bundle. Even if she doesn’t mention this other, she’d talk of that to anyone.”
Without explanation, she pulled a chair over to the left-hand window, climbed upon the chair, opened the window and thrust the bundle out, swinging it from side to side to make it fall away from the windows that extended in a straight line below. She leaned on the sill to watch it fall to the left, a barely visible blotch upon the dark rock roots of the fortress.
“Bab can get it from there,” she said. “It will take him no time at all.”
She opened the front of her gown to disclose a capacious bag fastened to a belt, and into this she slipped the cider bottle, buttoning her gown up again and pulling her coat closed across it, while smiling innocently at the others.
“And what is that for?” asked the doctor in a stern voice.
Usually, the bag was used for stealing groceries from the market, or pilfering some little thing or other that Bab could sell for a few Holdmarks, enough to buy cloth or whatever else they might need. Not that the doctor didn’t provide. He did, and well, too, but one couldn’t sit underground all day, every day, living on largess!
“Apples,” said Bobly. “When Bab and I go past the orchards. Even though they’re windfalls, you’d be surprised how huffy some growers get.”
“Oh, I can imagine,” he replied.
“Now,” she said, “let’s get back down below, where the four-legged rats are cleaner than the two-legged ones up here.”
They went, the doctor holding Bobly with her head on his shoulder, she humming and sucking her thumb, a ruse they had obviously used before. Dismé paused long enough to give the keeper her thanks and a small reward, which earned her far more regard than she might have supposed possible. One flight down, the doctor moved into less-traveled corridors, and they came to the lower ways quickly after that.
Once inside, when Bobly gave him the bottle, the doctor turned it in his hands, gently sloshing the contents, hearing something like an evil whisper in the movement. “It’s no doubt black stuff, Bobly. I’m going past the clinic when I leave here, to pick up some supplies. I’ll store it away at the clinic, behind lock and key.”
“Can’t you dispose of it?” she said.
“Where? Who knows what vileness is contained in it, what might leach out of it no matter where I poured it. No. I’ll keep it safe until I can burn it to nothing. The demons have a furnace for doing that. They use it to dispose of ancient evils, evoked by old sorcerers, like ash-beast’s toes and sigh-anigh.”
“Who is this woman you’re speaking of?” asked Bab, who had been wakened by their arrival.
“Rashel Deshôll,” said the doctor. “Who knows someone named Hetman Gone.”
“So, that’s who your sister is!” exclaimed Bab, with a sharp look at Dismé. “Well, I saw her enter Gone’s door not long ago, when Bobly and I were visiting Apocanew. Seeing that’s where the weather lies, I think you’d better put the potion in something besides a cider bottle. Something no person in his right mind would think was food or drink.”
Thinking this sensible, Bobly looked among the things she had salvaged here and there, finding a small blue bottle etched on the outside with a skull and crossbones, though the design was almost all worn away. She transferred the stuff from the cider bottle to the blue one and broke the cider bottle to shards. Once Bab returned with the bundle of clothing, the doctor said he saw no reason they should not take the opportunity to sleep until morning.
35
wife and children
Before dawn, Bobly wakened Dismé and helped her dress, insisting that she wear the cloak the doctor had left for her.
“One never knows,” chirruped Bobly. “Any little thing that can be noticed probably will be noticed. Better wear it because likely any sensible woman would wear something like it, out so early. Also, I’ll braid your hair for you.”
“I thought only young girls braided their hair,” said Dismé.
“That’s here in Hold, but out on the road you’ll find it’s best braided. Roads are dusty and hot water’s in short supply.”
When the braiding was done, Bobly folded the edge of a large head scarf into a band and bound it over Dismé’s forehead, pinning the band at the back and letting the rest fall loosely over Dismé’s neck and shoulders in the manner of the country women of Comador. Taking up their belongings, they went along the corridor to a door which opened easily but was backed by a tightly locked metal gate. Bab lifted out the hinge pins, and when they had gone through, he restored them, smearing mud over the bright scratches he had left. The rude stonework of the fortress wall loomed behind them, the windows reflected the waning moon.
“Softly now,” murmured Bobly, turning down the wick in her lantern so the flame barely lit the cobbles. At this hour, streets were empty and smoldering cressets oozed smoke that lay pooled on walks and gutters. Only insomniac roosters called wakeful into the darkness now and again.
Bab said, “We go down this back lane through the town, just a little way, Mama and her two children. And what do we call you? In case someone overhears.”
“You’d better call me Mother unless we’re alone. If I need a false name at any point, you can call me by my mother’s name, as it’s not one I’d forget. She was called Bahibra.”
“She was a Comador?”
“I’m told she was. She went away when I was a little girl.”
“You and the doctor,” said Bobly. “His mother did the same. Or had it done to her. And Bab and I, also.”
“My friend Michael, too,” she replied. “All motherless.”
“Bahibra it is, then,” said Bab. “We turn here,” and he lifted the lantern to light the entrance to a wider street lined with tall houses, eyes shutter-lidded against the dawn.
“There,” said Bab, pointing. Ahead of them, by a watering trough in a market square, a canvas-topped wagon stood behind a team of four horses who were stamping and shaking their heads as a shadowy form moved about them.
“Who’s he?” asked Bobly, suspiciously.
“It looks like Michael Pigeon,” said Dismé, happily.
“It is Michael Pigeon,” said Bab. “He’s all right. I’ve known him for ages. Now, give me the bundles.” He gathered them together with astonishing strength for one so small and carried them down the street to Michael, returning quickly.
“The doctor will join us later,” said Bab. “Come now. We’ve seen what the wagon looks like and we’ve unburdened ourselves. We turn left again here.”
“Aren’t we going to…” began Dismé, gesturing.
“No, we aren’t,” answered Bobly. “Come along.”
They trudged down the indicated street, coming in a few moments to a slit of descending shadow through a hulking tenement, a steep lane of uneven stone that debouched almost at once at the top of a steep stair leading down to the Holdwall.
Dismé pulled down her hood as they started down the fitfully torch-lit stairs under the eyes of two guards sitting half asleep beside the gate at the bottom. Bobly ran on ahead, taking a small sack from the basket she carried.
“What’s she doing?” whispered Dismé.
“Making friends, or renewing them,” muttered Bab. “She baked sweet cakes early this morning.”
“Good children you have here, Ma’am,” called one of the guards, happily munching as they approached.
“Oh, they are indeed, thank the angels,” chirruped Dismé in a syrupy voice, lifting one hand in a casual wave while keeping eyes down and lantern low to negotiate the uneven cobbles.
“Where you off to, little’uns?” the guard called.
“Farmer down the way,” cried Bab. “He’s got berries for the picking. Got to get there before they’re gone!”
Then they w
ere through the gate and moving down the road, which in the space of half a mile bent itself around a hill and became invisible to the city.
“Now what was all that about?” Dismé demanded.
Bobly replied, “Our things are in the wagon, for berry pickers carry baskets, not baggage. We don’t want to be seen with the wagon inside the city. We don’t want to be seen with the doctor inside the city. The doctor doesn’t want to be seen with us or the wagon anywhere. After the appearance of that mysterious great woman in the cellars, no woman alone should be seen leaving the city. All these matters have been considered.”
“I can see that,” Dismé agreed, looking eastward, where the horizon was limned with pallid light. “There’s the dawn of the new day: summerspan five, threeday, and now what?”
“Now without stressing ourselves a bit we just amble along slowly until we and the wagon coincide at a time when no one is around to observe that fact,” said Bab.
“And when we’ve coincided, we stay inside the wagon for the first day’s travel,” said Bobly. “Because it’s nobody’s business who’s in that wagon. You may be sure the doctor won’t be, for he went another way entirely, and what has any of that to do with a mama and her two little ones, going berry picking?”
Dismé accepted all this obfuscation as being in keeping with the rest of the languid and dream-wrapped world. Soft-fingered dawn woke to pat the cloud-pillowed mountains and smooth the mist-blanketed valleys; the first rays of sunlight tiptoed among the hills like careful house-guests, not to disturb sleeping copses. Even the birdsong was drowsy.
Dismé yawned. “That’s why we left so early? So we could be out of town before others left?”
Bab said, “Exactly. We didn’t sneak, lurk, or skulk, any of which would have attracted notice. But we left very, very early, which nobody noticed at all.”
“The doctor says late night doings are universally suspect,” commented Bobly. “But rising early is staunch and meritorious, provoking only admiration from the capable, or aloof distaste from those who are slugabeds.”
They had gone some way into the sunlit morning before the horse-drawn wagon, which had left the city through another gate, caught up with them and passed them by. A little farther on they entered a narrow strip of forest, where they found the horses browsing while Michael reclined in the wagon, waiting.
Bab greeted him like an old friend.
“Where do you know one another from?” Dismé demanded.
“Oh, Bab’s been very helpful to me, now and again,” said Michael. “Both in Hold and in Apocanew. Finding out things.”
“People pay very little attention to children,” said Bab, giving Dismé a level look. “Including your sister.”
Dismé’s brows went up. “Rashel? How do you know her?”
“Do you know of a Hetman Gone?” asked Michael.
Startled, she said, “I never heard of him, or it, until last night. Who or what is he?”
Michael replied, “We’ve never laid eyes on him or it, but Rashel, it seems, serves the creature, whatever he is.”
Bobly nodded. “The keeper of Dismé’s corridor heard Rashel invoke the Hetman’s name when she planted poison in Dismé’s room.”
“Poison!” cried Michael, horrified.
“Which I cannot understand,” murmured Dismé. “She was eager enough to drive me mad, but she never threatened my life.”
“This stuff might have left your body quite alive, but without the will to oppose her,” Bobly reminded her. “So the keeper overheard, and so the doctor thought. At any rate, he took the stuff away to the clinic with him early this morning.”
“Is this Hetman in Apocanew?” asked Dismé, thoughtfully.
“He is at least some of the time,” Michael said, going on to tell them all about the summons that had arrived at Faience after she had gone, and about Rashel’s subsequent visit to Hetman Gone.
“Ah,” Dismé said. “Then there is a connection…” and she in turn told them of the time, years before, when Rashel had arrived home in the care of her mother, obviously injured. “It’s the only time I ever saw her like that, not in control of the situation.”
As the grazing horses tugged the wagon along the verges and the sun rose higher, they had time to speculate, fruitlessly but at length, before the doctor’s voice came from among the trees.
“Miss Dismé. Bobly and Bab…” A bay horse with white leggings emerged from the woods bearing a corpulent farmer with wide suspenders, a full beard, and a squashed hat.
“Now who would have known that’s our friend the doctor?” cried Bobly, clapping her hands.
“Ah, yes,” said the doctor. “Farmer Hypocky Rateez, an olden name from an olden time. Call me Hypock.”
“You’re late,” said Michael. Since hearing Dismé was in danger, he was not amused by this raillery.
The doctor made a face. “I had a devil of a time evading the scrutiny of good Captain Trublood. When I went out the northeast gate, toward Praise, there he was behind an inadequate tree, all eyes-on-horseback, set to follow me to the ends of the earth, or a goodly way toward Praise, whichever came first. My good horse made sure to kick up considerable dust, which a helpful headwind laid upon him by the bushel. Several miles out he decided too much was enough and turned back. I couldn’t change identities or horse markings until he was gone. Luckily, the horse moves more quickly than I would have managed on foot. And how is Miggle, our driver?”
Michael bowed to him, still frowning.
“…and you are, Ma’am?”
“I am to be called Mother, or Bahibra,” said Dismé, “though I cannot truthfully answer your question.”
“Not quite sure who you are, eh?”
“Not quite, though this morning I seem to be mostly myself. Enough so that I’m worrying a good bit about Rashel finding me.”
“If Captain Trublood is true to Regimic form, Rashel has been or will soon be forestalled. As for your name, while Bahibra is very nice, I shall never think of you as anything but Dismé or Dezmai. Your proper costume is in the wagon, in case.”
“In case of what?” she asked, taking off the scarves, which made her head ache.
“What in the name of all the angels…” cried Michael, catching a glimpse of her forehead.
“You didn’t tell him,” she said almost sulkily, clapping her hand over her brow.
“No,” breathed the doctor. “Quite true. I didn’t tell him, and it must be done on the way, for more recent happenings make this journey even more urgent than I thought it was!”
He hitched his horse to the rear of the wagon and got onto the driver’s seat beside Michael. Dismé and her guides climbed into the wagon through the rear curtains, onto two fat and comfortable mattresses that lay atop their belongings. The airy interior was hidden from view by an arched canvas cover stout enough to provide shade and protect them from the weather. While they lay at their ease inside, the doctor proceeded to tell Michael about the general’s declaration of war and also about the Council of Guardians.
“So she’s one of them!” said Michael, awed.
“We don’t even know if there is a them!” Dismé cried. “So far all we have is a book, and a costume, and a…a myth.”
“It’s like being an emperor,” said Bab, entranced. “You have nothing to say about it. If you’re born one, you’re just born one, and they start feeding you the myth along with your breast milk, then as soon as you stop wetting yourself, they costume you, drop the crown on your head, and you’re it!”
“I’m not at all sure I’m it,” she said.
“You were it yesterday,” said the doctor. “I heard it in your voice.”
“Well, it’s faded,” she said, a bit angrily. “Or she’s gone. Or something.”
“Maybe just retreated a bit,” offered Michael. “To let you catch your breath.”
She had nothing to say about that, and her manner warned them to stop talking about it. Farmer Rateez fell silent and concentrated on the
surroundings while Dismé stretched out to watch the road through a crack in the back curtain. Bobly and Bab amused themselves by singing a part song, in which, to their surprise, first Dismé joined and then Michael.
The doctor sat up straight and paid attention to the sound. Bobly and Bab carried a tune well, but they had children’s voices. Dismé’s voice was already known to him, but Michael…both their voices might have belonged to Praiser festival singers, especially here, among the trees, where Dismé let her full voice be heard. The two of them…together…were quite remarkable, which did not totally please Jens Ladislav.
Hold was at the center of Bastion, with the three counties spread about it like clover leaflets, separated one from the other by ranges of hills that approached closely from the west, northeast, and southwest. The separating hills became higher the farther one went, ascending at last into the great mountain ranges that surrounded Bastion on all sides. The wagon was traveling on the road that ran between the shires of Comador to the left and Turnaway to the right, and far ahead of them were the ever-ice peaks of the Western Wall.
By noon they were well into the rumple-lands, those uppish and downish hills that were home to small villages, farmers, and herders. Hayfields lay along the creeksides, interspersed with gardens and orchards, and an occasional village sprawled on a sunny hill, where a keg on a pole indicated the presence of a tavern, an oversize hammer betokened a smithy, and similar totems told of wheelwrights, coopers, or sawyers, even a thatcher, his trade betokened by a reed bundle cut from the swamps along the rivers. The houses were long, low shelters dug half into the sunny sides of hills, then built up of rammed earth or earth-brick or even daub and wattle, all back ditched and steep roofed, thatched heavily with long overhanging eaves that protected the walls from wet.
By afternoon, they came to a split in the road, the right leg of which wound on upward to the Westward Pass and Ogre’s Gap, a way often taken by the army and still used by raiding bands. It was a way no one else used much, and the road’s sapling grown appearance indicated a lack of traffic.