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Actually, he was. He reached his hand to where he'd sc.r.a.ped half of the skin of his back off against stone, and touched only flesh. It was overly sensitive, like the skin under a scab that had just come off, but it didn't hurt at all.
"You're a healer?" he asked, as Neterren felt at Jason's wrist.
"A keen eye for the obvious runs in the Cullinane family," Jane Slovotsky said as she moved around to where he could see her. There was something unusually graceful in her walk, something like a warrior in a fighting stance.
He'd only seen that kind of walk a few times before: it was the kind of studied grace possessed by a few of the more prominent members of a traveling acrobatic troupe that had pa.s.sed through Biemestren a few years before. Both men and women always walked with perfect balance.
It was the same kind of grace that Walter Slovotsky had. Balance ran in the Slovotsky family, it seemed.
She was dressed in leggings and a mannish brown cloth tunic, long enough to be more of a s.h.i.+ft, belted tightly at her waist to reveal a slim but definitely female figure. Her light brown hair was cropped short, framing a face with high cheekbones, ever-so-slightly slanted brown eyes, and thin lips bent into a smile that was partly friendly, partly mocking. He knew that she was fifteen, about to turn sixteen, more than a year younger than he was, but her appraising look made him feel like he was being examined by somebody at least five years older.
"When you're done checking me out, maybe we can re-introduce ourselves," she said. "I don't know how well you remember me, but we were kids together ten years ago, I'm Jane Slovotsky."
He reached for something clever to say. "You grew up." That wasn't it.
She laughed again, and he wasn't sure whether she was laughing at him or with him.
Neterren released Jason's wrist. "You'll feel better in the morning; it would be best if you rest for the remainder of the day, though." He turned to the humans. "He could use some more sleep."
Jane shook her head. "I'll be short."
"Just a little time, eh?" Neterren smiled.
"Got a few things to talk over with Hero, Junior, here." She folded a blanket over into a cus.h.i.+on, dropped it to the stone floor next to the bed and seated herself on it, tailor-fas.h.i.+on.
Neterren's eyes twinkled. "Then I'll be sure you don't tire him."
Tennetty shrugged. "We might as well leave." She turned to Durine. "I'll keep an eye on him while you go tell the others, outside."
Durine shook his head as they walked to the door. "I'll be outside, young sir, if you need anything. Tennetty will brief the others." He closed the heavy wooden door behind him.
"How did I do?" Jason asked.
Neterren's brow furrowed for a moment. "Oh. The third fall. Belleren picked you up and slammed you down, in less time than it takes to say it. Bunged you up fairly heavily, too."
"I thank you for healing me, Neterren," he said formally, as he'd been taught to give thanks.
"You can thank him for the use of his room, too," Jane said. "Such as it is."
"I don't need much, Jane," the dwarf said. "The cell serves my needs."
"I mean," Jason went on, "did I pa.s.s the test?"
Jane snorted. "Think it through, hero. You were being tested, among other things, to determine if you're good enough to protect me. You losta"and to an opponent you could have beaten. Maherralen doesn't impress too easily, and that didn't do it."
But the dwarf king had said that if Jason didn't pa.s.s the test the Slovotsky women wouldn't even know that he was there. He said as much.
Neterren smiled. "Jane has run through these warrens for ten years; she knows them as well as any Endell dwarf does. She also knows the hazvarfen, the echo paths, better than anybody else." The dwarf gave her an affectionate pat. "She was listening. The Slovotsky women are free here, young Emperor. We aren't . . . const.i.tuted so as to be willing to hold them here by force. It is still my opinion that you shouldn't go, Jane," the dwarf said.
"To begin," she said formally, in dwarvish, only cheating a little on the gutturals, "I do not rely upon Jason to protect me. That big ox of his looks like he would be better at such a thing. To continue, if he does protect me, it's going to be with a gun, knife, bow or sworda"I do not think that any matters of importance are dependent on his mastery of the art of wrestling, no matter how highly the Moderate People rank that art. To continue further, any issue of danger aside, it seems to me that I must go along. I invite discussion." She waited.
The dwarf nodded. "I respond to your beginning: I am concerned about your well-being. I respond to your continuation: I am concerned about your well-being. I respond to your further continuation: I am concerned about your well-being, anda""
"You are stalling," she said in Erendra. "You won't hold us here by force, but you would prolong the conversation forever." She threw up her hands in exasperation.
Neterren chuckled. "Very well, little one. I'll be back to check on you later, Jason."
The dwarf left, shutting the door behind him.
"So," Jason said, "you're going back to Holtun-Bieme with Ellegon?"
"That's what I wanted to talk to you about." She shook her head. "No." She swallowed heavily. "Mom and Dorann are going there. I'm going with you."
There was something Father had once said about what he called his "command voice," about how if you said something, if you gave an order with perfect and complete faith that it would be obeyed, then it would be obeyed.
I will be obeyed; she will do what I say. "You are not," he said, willing himself to believe that he would be obeyed. "You will go to Holtun-Bieme on Ellegon's back. With the others."
She pursed her lips for a moment, then took a quick chew on her lower lip, and just for a moment he thought she was going to give in.
But then she shook her head. "Look, I don't like it any more than you do. Lessa"I'd much rather stay here, shooting blanks. Buta""
"You willa""
"You will hear me out, s.h.i.+thead." She slammed her hand down, hard, on the bed. "Noa"I'm sorry. Wrong approach." She closed her eyes and formed her hands into fists, then relaxed them and her whole body. "Let's try it this way: hear me out, please?" she said, softly, her eyes resting on his eyes, her hand resting on his hand.
It couldn't hurt to listen. "Go ahead."
"You're going under the a.s.sumption that the three of thema"both our fathers and Ahiraa"are alive and carving a swath through the slavers, heading this way. Sort of like that last run thing he used to talk about, except that it's an announcement that your father's alive. Correct?"
He nodded. "It's just an a.s.sumption."
She returned his nod. "But it makes sense. There's a lesser probability that this is some scheme of the Slavers' Guild to get you out of Holtun-Bieme and chasing after ghosts, but if that had been the case they would have been ready to jump you in Enkiar.
"It sounds a lot like your father. I've been re-reading his letters; Karl Cullinane has been champing at the bit for years, wanting to get out from under that crown. This is just the sort of thing he'd try to pull, particularly since he'd know he'd have to settle down after it."
"But what does that have to do witha""
"Listen to me! Think it through, d.a.m.n it," she said. "Who do you think's running the operation? Your father? Look, I've been raised to think highly of the great and powerful Karl Cullinane, but if they've survived this long, it's because they're doing something tricky. A lot of tricky thingsa"you think the slavers looking for them are all idiots? You think that they can't track a team consisting of a dwarf, a big man and a bigger man with seven fingers? It has to be something tricky.
"And tricky isn't something your father is. Or was. Ahira can be subtle, but this whole thing smells of craftiness." She dipped two fingers into her belt pouch and produced a copper coin. "Look," she said, slipping the coin into her right fist, then holding both fists out in front of her. "Quickly, which hand is it in?"
He shrugged. He'd seen the sleight before. If it had been done wella"and it hada"there was no way that he could tell which hand held the coin.
"The right," he said, picking one at random.
"Nope," she said, as she opened her first, revealing an empty right hand. "Guess again."
"The left," he said, then realizing that since she was letting him guess again, it couldn't be ina"
"Wrong again." She held up an empty left hand. She picked the coin out of her lap. "You think like your father. I think like mine.
"This is my father's show. If you haven't latched onto that by now, it's because you don't think enough like Dad. There are only two people I know who can follow his thinking, convoluted as it is. One of them's Ahira; he and the dwarf have been working together since before I was born." She shrugged.
"And the other one's you?"
"Good guess, Jason. Have Ellegon drop us off outside Elleport and we'll hire a boat and find them. Trust me, I'll find them for you. There's just one thing I want you to do."
"Yeah?"
"Keep me alive while I'm doing it," she said. She swallowed, hard. "You may not understand about this, but I've got to tell you that I'm scared s.h.i.+tless."
He knew something about being scared. He knew a lot about being scared. But it wasn't something he was yet brave enough to admit to a pretty girl, not if he didn't have to.
She stuck out a hand. "We got a deal, Cullinane?"
He took it. "We've got a deal, Slovotsky."
CHAPTER 16.
Elleport.
All the rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full.
a"Ecclesiastes 1:7.
There just isn't any pleasing some people. The trick is to stop trying.
a"Walter Slovotsky.
Ellegon dropped them off before dawn, near the Orduin just north of Findarel, a small riverfront village less than a day's ride from Elleport and the Cirric. They were too close to the dock area to risk a light, so it took longer than usual to unload their gear from the dragon's back, and then get Kirah, little Dorann and Kennen aboard again.
The dwarf didn't like any of it, and while they were unloading he stood by, explaining to all and sundry how much he didn't like it.
He loathed riding on dragonback, he abhorred the idea of Kirah going to Biemestren, he found idiotic the idea of Doria Andrea going to Biemestren, he thought the idea that he was going to Biemestren was detestablea"
Why not just tell him to shut up or you won't take him to Biemestren?
*Because I wouldn't mean it,* the dragon said, *and I don't like making phony threats. If I don't take Kennen to Biemestren I would have to leave him with you. Either that, or abandon him. Abandoning him would not sit well with King Maherralen, and I'd prefer not to be met with a hail of bolts the next time I stop off in Endell. So I'll just bear up bravely under the weight of the irritation.*
And be a fine, fine example to me, Jason thought.
a"and Kennen very particularly was not fond of the idea of Jane going off into who-knew-what kind of trouble with a bunch of spindly humans, and he loathed the fact that the saddles were rigged for these oversized excuses for persons, and he was angry that the lap-belt chafed him, and he thought it was absolutely ridiculous that it was taking so long to get everybody and everything unloaded and then get the three of them reloaded, anda"
*Shut up, Kennen.*
The dwarf took a long look at the dragon and started complaining again.
a"and it was incredibly stupid that Kethol couldn't work any faster than that, how thea"
*Shut up or I'll roast you,* the dragon said, slightly parting his reptilian jaws, letting just a whisper of flame escape from between his teeth.
The dwarf shut up.
Oh. I didn't think of that. I should have said, "Try threatening to burn him."
*Sarcasm ill becomes you.* There was a distant, draconic chuckle that held the sharpness that meant it was only for Jason.
But, finally, Jane's mother, Kirah, and her sister Doria Andrea were strapped back into their places on the dragon's back, and so was the dwarf. All of the goods for Jason and the company had been unloaded, while both the Slovotsky family possessions and the trade goods destined for Biemestren were safely lashed into place.
They were done. It was none too early, either; the blackness of the eastern sky was turning into dim darkness, threatening to brighten into a new day, and the dragon had to be away.
Jane's mother called down a last urging to be careful, her voice carefully balanced between her own fear for her older daughter's safety and the need to continue to rea.s.sure her younger daughter that there was nothing to worry about, and wasn't the ride on Ellegon's back fun? And wasn't it just wonderful that they were going to get to do it again now!
*Three tendays,* Ellegon said. *On Pefret. I'll be there; I hope you are. Preferably all of you, and our three friends.*
"Preferably." Just keep things quiet.
Ellegon shrugged. *We don't have much longer until word reaches Biemestren, but even when it does, we'll keep it from your mother, just as long as we can.*
"Please," Kirah called down, "be careful."
His pounding wings sending leaves and sticks and dust flying about, the dragon leaped into the air, leaving behind Kirah's gentle words to her daughter, Dorann's shouts of excitement, and a few stray oaths from Kennen.
Tennetty already had her rucksack on her back. "Saddle up, people," she said. "I want us to catch the first barge out of Findarel."
She could have pa.s.sed as a trader, if you didn't know her. She had her gla.s.s eye in the empty socket, and it could pa.s.s a cursory inspection. Jason hoped she would pa.s.s; her ident.i.ty was too good a clue to his own. The charm that the Spidersect cleric had placed on the eye kept it moist in appearance, and slaved it to the motion of her real eye.
Her sword was stowed with the common geara"women wearing swords were enough of a rarity to be suspiciousa"but she could protect herself somewhat with the oversized bowie at her waist and with the two pistols she carried, one in a holster under her left armpit, the other tucked into the top of her right boot.
"Move it, people," she said.
Durine looked at her, long and hard, as though to say that she wasn't running things here, and that as far as he was concerned she'd never run things; but Kethol must have caught Jason's headshake out of the corner of his eye, and nudged the bigger man, who subsided.
Jason swapped a trade knife for pa.s.sage for all six of them, and got the chief bargeman to throw in two meals and the use of his tent. Durine, Kethol and Bren Adahan were tired; they hadn't gotten much sleep the day before.
Tennetty was unimpressed. If she had been negotiating, the bargeman would have thrown in some local coin, and thanked them smartly for the bargain. Or so she said.