Read The Book of Fire Online

Authors: Marjorie B. Kellogg

The Book of Fire (43 page)

BOOK: The Book of Fire
2.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Some rich guy’s paradise, more like,” N’Doch replied. “It’s Blind Rachel’s now, whoever she is.”

“I expect we shall meet that good lady soon enough.”

Repeating rectangles of glass glittered along each level, broken here and there by some duller material. Intricately carved wooden railings alternated with thick rails of natural stone, or in some places, no railing at all. As she collected her senses enough to really study, Erde began to notice the many details of the damage: the rotted newel posts, the sagging lines of the extended terraces, the shattered glass. But the whole, viewed generously as through a veil, was still magnificent.

“Nise, huh?” Stoksie prompted.

“Real nice,” N’Doch agreed, for all of them.

“Gwan up ’n findyu room, na. Putcher stuff in, nobuddy bodda, gotcha? I tell ’em. Den I shoyu roun’.”

Stoksie shepherded them through the lingering curious and around the circular roadway. The crowd called out eager invitations to dinner, more than could ever be honored, then dispersed and went on about their business. At the center of the giant curving edifice, a double set of stairs climbed side by side like lovers to the second level, then turned away from each other to continue their journeys to the third. On the fourth, they met again, and so they continued their meeting and parting until they ran out of levels to climb. Grinning proudly, Stoksie gave his guests another moment at the bottom of the stair to gaze upward with the appropriate awe. Then he led them up the first flight, pointing out the weak spots and rotted treads, and then to the left, along the second level balcony. They passed neatly spaced paneled doors alternating with broad stretches of window, most of which were still intact. Erde had seen this miracle of glassmaking when she was in N’Doch’s home time, but those magical sheets of glistening transparency had all been shielded by metal gratings.

Stoksie saw her slow to touch her fingers to the surface and skim them smoothly along without bump or obstacle for two, three, even four paces. “Good stuff, dat. Latest, ’fore dey stopped.”

“Stopped?” asked N’Doch.

“Makin’ it. Y’know?”

N’Doch nodded. “Yeah. Guess I do.”

Erde absorbed the translation one step behind. “They stopped making glass?” N’Doch passed the query along.

Stoksie’s shrug was more emphatic than usual. “Probby som’weah dey still do. Not roun’ heah. No call fer’t na.”

“He means nobody wants any.”

Erde chewed her lip. “But glass is very precious. At least it is . . . was . . . in my time.”

“And real cheap and necessary, in mine.”

Behind them, Köthen glided his own spread fingertips along the glass. “The Future,” he murmured.

“Not my future,” N’Doch retorted. “Well . . . least, not the one I was looking forward to.”

Stoksie waved them onward. “Be dak soon. Messtime. Don’ wanna missit, na.” He took them past door after door, all of them closed up tight, and past window after window. Erde attempted the occasional covert glance inside these mysterious and threatening spaces, but her view was usually blocked by fabric hanging just inside the glass, or by boards fastened up where the glass was missing. Where there was a crack in a broken door to peer through, or a space between the hangings, she saw heaps of clothing or a bit of crockery, but beyond that, only darkness. She could not help but worry about what the darkness might conceal.

Far along the curve of the terrace, almost to the end, Stoksie stopped in front of a door constructed from mismatched planks. Each had long ago been painted a different color, now faded together into a mere suggestion of variety of hue. “Dis’ll do ya, ha?”

A greenish rectangle of metal, obviously a more recent addition, fastened the door, pinned to a corroded loop in the jamb by what Erde recognized as a crude and diminutive sort of lock. A thin sliver of metal protruded from its bottom end. Stoksie took hold of this and struggled with it for a while, then finally twisted it clear and popped the lock open. He handed the sliver to N’Doch.

“S’all yers. Getchu settled. Back mebbe ten, yucool?”

“Mecool.” As Stoksie turned back toward the stairs, N’Doch called out, “Hey, man . . .”

Stoksie turned.

“Thanks, y’know? Dis real good trade.”

A quick nod. “Gotcha.”

Once N’Doch is inside, he knows the place for what it was. No rich man’s paradise after all. The room is an oblong box, low-ceilinged and dull as they come. Once upon a time it probably attempted some more fashionable shade than the ugly salmon it’s graying into. It’s completely empty, but he can see where the beds went, two matching queens, he’s sure, advertised on a big sign outside. A luxury sort of joint. He sees the closet indentations, missing their doors and hanger poles. An archway in the back leads through a dark dressing nook to a tiny square room he knows was the bathroom, even stripped like it is—surprise, surprise—of everything portable, sink, toilets, pipes, even the wall tiles. He reminds himself to ask Stoksie for directions to the privy.

He comes back up front where Köthen and the girl are setting their stuff down reluctantly, like they’re not so sure the floor’s clean enough or something. They both look at him expectantly, like the pressure’s on for him to set some sort of “modern” frame of reference here. But he’s not sure he can oblige. He rubs his palms together. “So. You guys have any idea what a motel is? Nah, guess you wouldn’t. Anyhow, if they don’t turn on us sudden-like and try to murder us in our beds, I’d say we just got real lucky.”

Köthen gazes around the tight, dim space. N’Doch can see he doesn’t trust it much. “Is this an unusual degree of hospitality?”

“Where I come from, any hospitality is unusual, at least to strangers. ’Cept out in the bush.” N’Doch unstraps his pack and leans it against a wall. “Maybe it’s the same thing here as there. When there aren’t so many people around, strangers are useful, y’know? They got stories, they got news. And Stoksie seems to think we got good trade. Hope we don’t disappoint him. For a few days, at least, we’re the entertainment.”

“A few days?”

N’Doch grins at him slyly. “I bought us one. After that, Dolph my man, it kinda depends on just how entertaining we decide to be. Doncha think?”

The girl says quietly, “Is this where we will sleep?”

“I’ve slept in worse places.”

“All of us together?”

“Oh. I get it. Well, tell you what, girl—you can have the bathroom all to yourself.”

Köthen is examining the lock on the door. “All of us, behind one door. That way, one can always watch while the others sleep. Unless, my lady witch, you can offer a few spells to protect us.”

“No problem, man, the dragons’ll . . .”

“My lord of Köthen!” the girl bursts out. “I beg you do not call me ‘witch.’ I am not one, nor never have been!”

Köthen glances up. His hands are full of metal parts, as he studies how to switch the lock from outside to in. “Your pardon, my lady. If it distresses you so, I will desist.”

“It does! Very much! I wonder that you haven’t noticed!”

“Hey, girl,” N’Doch chides, but gently. He sees she’s got tears in her eyes. “Been a long day for all of us.”

Köthen chuckles darkly, deftly reassembling the lock.

“The longest in human memory. Began in 913 and ending God only knows when.”

N’Doch thinks it’s too bad the girl doesn’t find this as funny as they do, but even he’s surprised when she spins away from their laughter, skims out the door past Köthen like a spooked rabbit, and tears off along the balcony. He can hear the clack of her footsteps, hurried and sharp. “Whoa!” he mutters, and follows her into the open. “Hey, girl! Erde! Come on back here!”

She ignores him, clattering all the way around the curve of the building until she’s brought up short by the heavy wooden railing at the other end. She props her elbows on it and buries her face in her hands.

“Aw, jeez . . .” N’Doch leans against the railing behind him and folds his arms. He’s starting to feel bad for the girl and there’s no time like the present to speak up about it. She’s strong and all, but she’s been through a lot lately, and the good baron could just be the final straw. “Listen, Dolph . . . I know you’re mad at her, and hey, I don’t blame you a bit. But you gotta go easier on her, man. Just a little.”

Köthen straightens, dusting wood and metal splinters from his fingers. “Why? It would only encourage her.”

“Well, umm . . . hunh.” N’Doch was ready for huff and attitude. This blunt honesty leaves him kind of without an argument. “Okay, I understand all that, but . . . hey, look, all I’m saying is, we’re all in this together.”

“But I would not be, were it not for her meddling.”

“Yeah, yeah, but . . .”

“I speak but the truth to say she is a witch.”

“How d’you figure that?”

“Who else but a witch has converse with dragons?”

“Huh. So where does that put me?”

Köthen’s glance flicks hard at him and then away, but not quite quick enough. N’Doch has read the sudden doubt in his eyes, and a few of the baron’s assumptions are beginning to piss him off. He wants this dragon business understood for what it is, at least the way he sees it.

“I’m not just here along for the ride, y’know. The blue dragon is mine. Yeah, that got your attention. Mine. I didn’t ask for it, but that’s how it is. So does that make me some kind of warlock? I can tell you, I ain’t one of them.”

Köthen’s jaw settles stubbornly. He says nothing.

“You wanna know what I think?”

“You’ve shown little inclination to guard your tongue so far . . .”

“Yeah, and you’re not as much of a jerk as I thought, ’cause you keep letting me talk. Must be you like the challenge.”

They stare each other down for long cool seconds, and then Köthen rewards him with a sigh and a weary twist of his mouth that is almost a grin. “Presumptuous whelp. Go on. I’m listening.”

“Really? Well, that’s progress now, ain’t it?”

“Don’t . . .”

“. . . I know. Don’t press my luck.” N’Doch lets out a breath. “Okay, here it is: you
hope
she’s a witch, if there even is such a thing, ’cause it’s easier to bust her ass for the mess you’re in than it is the dragons’. Am I right?” He starts to pace a little, like a little engine’s fired up inside him. It’s not only that he’s saying this personal sort of stuff to a man proven to be armed and dangerous. What’s most
amazing is that he’s thinking it at all, like, of his own accord. “And that’s because you won’t accept that you’ve been part of this since long before you got yourself dragon-napped.”

“This being . . .?” Köthen asks with a look of distaste.

“This being some kind of, well, plan . . . that’s a lot bigger than all of us. I thought it was bullshit, too, just like you do.”

“And now you don’t?”

“Less than I did.” N’Doch notices he’s the one moving around abruptly, nervously, and Köthen who’s steady and still. “Listen, man, what you gotta see is we’re here and we’re stuck with it. Neither me nor the girl has any real power over this situation, ’cept what we can ask from the dragons.” He halts his pacing by pressing his back hard against the balcony railing, willing the little engine to stop its frantic revving. He’s not used to acting like somebody’s big brother. “Look, I can’t give you the technical explanation for all this weird shit, but I do know I ain’t no warlock and she ain’t no witch. So give it a rest, whadda ya say? Save your revenge for later, so we can all concentrate on keeping each other alive.”

And then he can’t help himself. He just has to add, “And maybe later, it won’t look all that important anyway.”

“You mean, when I’ve become properly committed to the quest?”

“I didn’t say that, but hey, stranger things have happened. Like to me, for instance.”

“You are welcome to your quest, friend N’Doch. I remain respectfully unconvinced.”

N’Doch uncrosses his arms. Now this
is
progress. His actual name out of the man’s mouth, rather than “hey, you” or some epithet. “Okay. Whatever. Look on it as a kind of working vacation. But if you could just . . .”

The baron lifts a warning finger. “Your point is taken. Enough.”

“You got it, man.”

Köthen looks away, as if something in the treetops has caught his interest. “One thing more. If I am to believe myself part of this ‘plan,’ as you call it, I have a question.”

“Yeah, what’s that?”

Köthen turns back to him deadpan. “Where’s
my
dragon?”

N’Doch’s thoughts shoot off in several directions, but he’s saved from having to settle on one of them when Stoksie comes limping briskly around the curve with the girl firmly in tow.

“Doncha be lettin’ huh run roun’ lone, na.”

“Why? Brenda’ll think she’s spying or something?” N’Doch slings one arm lightly around her shoulders. He wonders if the little man’s concern is for the girl’s safety or for his own reputation in the camp. He hopes it’s both.

“Sumpin li’ dat. Giv’er a nexcuse, an’ she’ll make it hard fer yus.”

“Gotcha. Thanks, man.”

“No prob.” And like it really isn’t, Stoksie beckons the men to lean over the railing while he maps out the camp for them. A circling gesture marks the bustling tree-shaded area nestled within the sweep of the building. “All dat’s da Mall.”

BOOK: The Book of Fire
2.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Crush by Nicole Williams
just_a_girl by Kirsten Krauth
Obsession by Debra Webb
Sculpting a Demon by Fox, Lisa
Dark Secrets by Husk, Shona
Wanting Him by Kat Von Wild
Mortlock by Jon Mayhew
Favorite Socks by Ann Budd