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Authors: Randall Garrett

BOOK: The Well of Darkness
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“We have no idea,” Vasklar answered. “It is better that way, I think. They agree not to communicate with the Fa’aldu again after they have sent back their ‘safe’ sign.”

“Then how do you know they have truly escaped?” Tarani asked.

“By knowing that they have not been recaptured,” Vasklar said. “The Fa’aldu would hear if it happened. No one,” he said proudly, “who has reached Pornon in Chizan has ever been recaptured. Believe me, my friends, the former slaves who have passed through the High Crossing Inn are living now in Omergol or Raithskar, living free lives and, I trust, happier ones than those they left.”

I slipped the leather strip into my pouch. “We will send it back, Vasklar. Thank you for all you’ve done for us.”

He became serious. “You are one of the few who know my feelings about Eddarta, how I detest the slave system. When I say that I see in you the beginning of a welcome change, I am sincere. I am honored to be a part of it through any aid I have been able to offer you.”

There it was again—destiny. It crawled up my spine, flushed my face, and left me absolutely tongue-tied. The admiration of men like Vasklar humbled me and frightened me.

Impulsively and timidly, Tarani stepped up to the Elder and hugged him, then shouted with laughter when he hugged her back with surprising strength.

It seemed a good omen that we were sent into the desert with laughter as our farewell.

17

Vasklar hadn’t been kidding about the Strofaan Desert. I figured that, by now, I could count myself a connoisseur of deserts. On a one-to-ten scale for unpleasantness, the Strofaan rated around fifteen. When Thymas, Tarani, the two sha’um, and I had crossed its edge from Sulis to Stomestad, we had
tasted
the Strofaan, no more than that. It hadn’t been palatable then; as a steady diet, it was even less appealing.

As in most of Gandalara, there wasn’t much wind, so a nearly invisible fog of salty dust particles hung constantly in the air. We wore our scarves face-wrapped every minute, except when Lonna dropped down to us every day.

Knowing we could count on the bird to bring us water, we had stuffed our backpacks with bread, cheese, fruit, and dried meat—every portable foodstuff Vasklar could provide. We rested while the bird was there. We allowed ourselves to drink more than would have been wise, had we been carrying our own water supply, and ate our largest meal of each day. Then we traded Lonna’s full water bags for our empty ones and sent her off again. Other meals, between her visits, were eaten more or less on the run.

We had nothing to do besides cross that desert, so we did it as fast as we could. Zaddorn had taught me a special travel pattern, and Tarani and I followed it, running or walking for four hours, resting for one. The maps I had seen didn’t have the direct distance from Stomestad to Inid, the Refreshment House closest to Chizan. Apparently, it was too rough a trip to consider, if you didn’t have your own private flying water tank.

I had estimated ten to twelve man-days. With our faster travel pattern, and the discomfort of the trip encouragement in itself, Tarani and I made it to Inid in six days.

In spite of the hardship of the desert crossing, I was feeling good when we reached Inid. The physical pain of the surface wounds inflicted by the dralda in Eddarta—little more than an irritation, really—had faded during the trip to Stomestad, but the shivery memory of Obilin popping up out of nowhere had been a constant shadow in my mind. Crossing the desert, devoting every ounce of energy to the simple task of survival, had cleared away the mental dross of guilt and fear, and I was simply glad to be alive and with Tarani.

The crossing hadn’t involved deprivation, and this long run, so soon after the trip to Eddarta from Lingis, honed my body to a fitness level I was sure even Markasset had never matched. I felt strong and clean in a way water could never clean me. It was as if the sand had scoured away the past and left me ready to face the future.

Tarani seemed to share those feelings. Even though the Inid family welcomed us—Lonna had been making her waterruns to Inid since we had passed the midpoint of the desert—we stayed only one night, enjoying the luxury of eight full hours of sleep. Tarani seemed to be untroubled by her dreams. We were grateful for a bath, clean clothes, and more provisions, but we were eager to get on with what we had to do.

The Zantro Pass wasn’t an easy crossing—too high to breathe easily;
lots
of wind and rock and dust—but we didn’t have much trouble. Lonna, no longer carrying her waterbags, rode inside Tarani’s tunic. The bird had worked harder than either one of us during the desert crossing, and she showed it in thinness and shortness of breath. She deserved a little cuddling, and I didn’t begrudge Tarani’s solicitousness toward Lonna.

But their closeness, as always, reminded me of an uncross-able distance.

I could be happy right now
, I thought,
if Keeshah were with us, or even if I could talk to him. It still feels like an essential part of me is numb and useless.

We reached the slope that overlooked Chizan at nightfall. The lights and the smell of the city were equally noticeable.

“Can we not go past?” Tarani asked.

“You remember what the Zantil was like,” I said. “We’ll need rest, and a fresh supply of water, before we tackle the higher crossing. And we did promise Vasklar to send word back through Pornor.

“Don’t worry,” I said, putting an arm around her shoulders. “Rika isn’t here to identify me, and your headfur doesn’t show through the scarf. With our faces wrapped—” I sniffed the air. “—which is a survival tactic in Chizan, so no one will wonder about it—we’re indistinguishable from any of a hundred other travelers.”

Tarani sighed and nodded agreement. She pulled her water pouch from her belt, poured a little water into her cupped hand, and let Lonna dip some out. She drank some and splashed the rest on her face. The bird flew off to hunt as Tarani and I walked down into Chizan.

The city hadn’t changed noticeably from the time when Molik was running things. Water was still outrageously expensive; we bought some with the money Zefra had given to Tarani in Lord City which had been, through the generosity of our Fa’aldu friends, totally useless until now. I had retained my gold-filled belt through all the clothing changes, but those coins were too dangerous to spend here.

In Raithskar, though,
I thought,
they won

t be as noticeable. They

re a fair fortune, enough to build a house … one with room for several kids and at least one sha

um.

Domestic bliss. I wonder
if that‘s
anywhere in my “destiny”?

The High Crossing Inn was easy to find—it was a three-story building made of mud-brick and stone located close to the eastern edge of the city. Like all other such establishments, it had a vlek pen for a back yard.

We’ll sleep with the windows closed,
I promised myself. Remembering the flea-infested pallets we’d found in Chizan on our last visit, I added:
and on the bare floor.

We went in the front door, past an opening on our left that led to the inevitable bar/dining room. A rickety table rested at the foot of the stairs across the smallish lobby, with a man seated behind it, draped over it, and snoring loudly.

“On second thought,” I whispered to Tarani, “we’ve got our water. Why don’t we move on tonight, and sleep just this side of the pass? We can cross early in the morning.” A daylight crossing of the Zantril had been bad enough; I had no desire to try it at night.

Tarani smiled. “I wonder that the plan did not occur to me,” she said. “But since we have come this far, let us at least deliver the message to Pornor.”

It did seem that we owed it to Vasklar. I walked over to the man asleep on the desk and poked his shoulder. He came awake quickly, and I stepped back from the dagger that appeared in his hand.

“We don’t want trouble, friend,” I assured him. “We’re looking for Pornor.”

He put away the dagger. “You found him. Sorry about pulling the knife; guess I knew falling asleep out here was risky.” He stretched and yawned, displaying broad shoulders. He was younger than I had first thought, and in good shape.

I took another step backward, and dug in my pouch for the leather strip.

“Vasklar sent this—” I began, holding it out to him.

He had taken it from me before I finished, and was holding it close to the lamp, reading it. When he looked up, he was smiling.

“I’ve been expecting you,” he said loudly. “Rooms and meals are on the house.”

“We won’t be staying,” I said, edging Tarani toward the door. She was going willingly. Something felt funny; she sensed it too. “Just send the message to Vasklar.”

I heard a brutal sound, and Tarani’s arm slipped out of my hand. When I looked around, she was on the floor, unconscious. A small man, thin and wiry, stood behind her.

Except for his size and the fact that he was holding Rika, I doubt if I would have recognized Obilin.

His face and neck were crisscrossed with healed scars; he wore a patch over his left eye. When he spoke, his voice grated out in a vicious whisper.

“This is what you left me to,” he said, making it clear that he was shouting inside. “But even dralda couldn’t kill me. Not
me.

The shock of seeing him was beginning to take hold, and I fought it off.
He hit Tarani
, I reminded myself, and let the anger burn away any sympathy for the mangled man.
And hell do worse, if I let him.

“Sharam, of course, is dead,” Obilin continued. “Indomel finally figured out that you and the girl had escaped together; when the High Guard came looking for you, they found me. They took me to the High Lord, who accused me—much too late, of course—of having deliberately misled him.”

The ravaged man stepped over Tarani‘s inert body and came slowly toward me. I backed away, trying to assess what I saw. There were a lot of scars, but they looked to be shallow, and cleanly healed.
His face might look like a sandflea track
, I thought,
but he seems to move easily enough. A slight limp on the right

not enough to slow him down much. His hands

scarred, too, maybe some loss of strength in the fingers? But Obilin never counted much on strength. It was his agility and quickness that made him a fighter to be reckoned with.

I don

t think that

s changed much.

How the hell did he know about this place? How did he get here so fast? In the name of conscience, what does it take to kill this man?

Obilin swaggered, the familiar movement confirming his identity, complete with the danger factor.

“You’ll be happy to know, Rikardon, that I confessed everything to the High Lord. Who you are. Who she was, and is. The illusionist. The whore. Indomel might have killed me, just for knowing how powerful she is. But I had a strong bargaining point.

“I knew where you were going.
Exactly
where you were going.”

I backed further, glancing over my shoulder to see how much more room there was before I hit the wall beside the stairway. Behind Obilin, a small crowd had clustered in the doorway to the bar. They were watching, fascinated, not even betting on the outcome of the imminent fight.

“Of course, I had to admit to Indomel that I’d been stealing useless slaves and selling them for a profit,” he said. “In order to explain that I had
also
been selling the ones who thought they were escaping safely with the aid of the Fa’aldu. They
all
come here, you see. On my last visit to Eddarta—the one during which the lady’s talent captured my fascination—Pornor approached me about the scarcity of
his
trade, and we struck a deal. At that time, Jaris was the only Fa’aldu agent in the mines. Now, thanks to my encouragement, there is one in every single mine.

“They send slaves here through the Fa’ladu system. Pornor sends back their silly coded messages, and the mine agent is paid. Meanwhile, Pornor acts as
my
agent and turns them over to Molik—Worfit, now—who, um, uses them in any way he sees fit.”

I thought of Yoman and Rassa, the two escaping Eddartans whose places we had taken. They had thought themselves safe, following the Fa’aldu instructions. I thought of Vasklar, of the people he thought he had saved.

“And what happens if Worfit doesn’t want them?” I demanded, letting the rage grow in me, waiting for the right time to move.

“He kills them,” Obilin answered with a shrug. “But he pays well for the ones he takes, and Pornor and I split the fee. It is a profitable venture.”

Why is he letting me keep him talking?
I wondered, suddenly suspicious.

Too late, I saw the men on the stairway. They lunged at me, grabbed my arms, knocked away my sword, held me pinned. Obilin smiled, and seemed no more ugly now than at any other time I had seen that smile.

“No chances this time,” Obilin grated. The light mood vanished. The chatter was gone now; he let the hatred show. “Thanks to you, Rikardon, I’ve lost a very comfortable position in Eddarta. Oh, Indomel still thinks I work for him—that I came here on his behalf, looking for the lady. But I didn’t come all this way only to take you back to Eddarta. Oh, no. Not at all.”

He moved closer.


This
,” Obilin said, stabbing the air for emphasis “is
private.
I knew when I left that I wouldn’t be going back. That’s why I brought
this
along.”

He turned the sword; lamplight gleamed against its silvery edges.

“Worfit isn’t a selfish man,” Obilin continued. “In fact, I find him quite easy to work with. When he saw me, and heard my story, he agreed that I had at least as fair a claim on your death as he does.

“Do you want to hear the bargain, Rikardon?” he asked, his voice getting hoarser and rougher as he approached me. “I had the sword. I traded it to him for your life, on condition that I could first kill you with it. And it
is
a bargain, Rikardon. Your life isn’t worth a fleabite. Especially right now.”

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