13
Surveillance reports must be
studied.
Information must be collated
and acted on. Failure to do so is a punishable offense.
Rule of the Watch
FOR A LONG TIME THEY SAT
SILENT under the trees, cold and utterly dispirited. The sun had
gone; now twilight gathered, smelling of damp fungi. Marco still
shivered, despite his borrowed layers of dry clothes.
They were all thinking the same thing, but it was
Carys who said it. “No wonder they didn’t need to guard the
crossing.”
“Was that an avanc?” the Sekoi wondered. “Never
have I heard of one so far inland.”
“If it was, the spines are new,” Galen growled. He
glanced at Marco. “And the stench.”
They could still smell it, a putrid fishy reek
that brought clouds of gnats and hungry bloodflies out of the dark
undergrowth. Solon slapped one off his face. “This is not a healthy
place to mope, my friends.”
Carys sat up. “Quite right. So here’s what we
do.”
“If you think,” Marco said savagely, “that I’m
going anywhere near—”
“Save your breath. And forget the river. We’re
going over the bridge.”
They all stared at her. Then Galen said, “Go
on.”
She put her fingers together. “For a start,
there’ll be no more than four Watchmen on a crossing this remote.
We’ll need to split them up—a diversion. You can do that, Galen.
Also, there’ll be dogs . . .”
“We can deal with most dogs,” Galen said
briefly.
She nodded. “Right. Say we get them here in the
wood. The other two men will stay on the bridge.”
“Which is double-barred,” the Sekoi
murmured.
“Which is double-barred. So we get them to open
it.”
Solon looked at her as if all this was too fast
for him. “How?”
“A traveler wants to cross. Someone on his own.
Not a keeper. Not on any wanted list. Someone they don’t know.
Unarmed. Harmless.”
There was an uneasy silence.
The Sekoi looked up and saw everyone was looking
at it. “Great,” it said acidly. It scratched its tribemark and
managed a sour smile. “Kind of you to think of me, Carys.”
“You’ve done worse.”
“Oh? And what do you suggest I say to them when I
get through the gate? With a crossbow pointed at each eye?”
Carys smiled sweetly. “I think you should tell
them a story.”
THE TWO WATCHMEN STOOD in silence on the
bridge.
“Can you still see them?”
“The lanterns. Just there.”
Between the trees small yellow lights
flickered.
“What do you think it was?”
The taller man shrugged. “The avanc. You can smell
it. It’s had some riverfox or other.”
Far off, the dogs barked. Deep in the woods the
lanterns were lost for a moment, and a gray owl hooted. Under the
roar of the water the silence was oppressive. Then a whistle blew.
Six short blasts; one long.
Both men relaxed. The signal meant: “Investigating
further. No danger.”
“Riverfox,” the smaller man said, turning away.
“Nothing else screams like that.”
“RIGHT.” CARYS DROPPED THE WHISTLE into her pocket.
“Off you go.”
The Sekoi glared at her, then at the two Watchmen
crumpled in the shadows, their dogs curled up contentedly beside
them. Raffi helped it on with its pack, the creature plucking the
straps into place with its long fingers. It looked nervous and
lanky.
“We’ll be right outside,” Raffi said.
“Small keeper, I’d be happier if you were
inside.”
Galen stood up. “If you don’t want to . . .”
“Of course I don’t want to.” The Sekoi’s voice was
an exasperated snarl. “However, I’ll go. The logic of the choice
was impeccable. It’s just . . .” Its yellow eyes flickered to
Carys. “I just wish someone else had suggested it.”
She tucked her red hair behind one ear and
grinned.
Quietly, they all moved through the wood. On the
edge of the trees the Sekoi stopped, put its hand into its coat,
and made odd wriggling movements. Then it dumped a warm money belt
into Raffi’s hands.
“A few small coins for the Great Hoard. If I don’t
come back, pass them on to any Sekoi.”
Raffi felt the weight of it in amazement. “You’ve
been busy.”
The Sekoi winked.
Then it was loping up the track to the bridge.
Dappled moonlight lit its back, sending three tall shadows into the
trees.
“A brave soul,” Solon muttered, half to himself.
Behind him, Galen nodded.
When the creature got to the bridge it looked
back, once. Through the sense-lines Raffi felt nothing, but the
Sekoi were notoriously hard to reach. It turned and pulled a long
cord.
Somewhere a bell jangled.
Crouching beside Solon under a fallen tree thick
with ivy, Raffi felt rather than saw the Watchman who opened the
grille. They were too far to hear what was said, but the words
“Another one” rang in the sense-lines for a moment, and he knew the
man had been sour, but hardly surprised.
He glanced at Solon. “They were expecting
him?”
The Archkeeper looked grave. “They were expecting
someone, my son. I pray we haven’t made a great mistake.”
The gate was opening. Like a shadow the Sekoi
slipped in. The bolts shot to behind it, then the inner gate was
opened; Raffi felt the slow, heavy drag of the wood, deep in the
curved groove it had worn in the floor.
It slammed in his head.
And the river swirled by, breaking the
sense-lines.
Galen leaned his head back against the ivy-covered
tree.
“Now we wait,” he muttered.
IT SHOULDN’T HAVE TAKEN THIS LONG. Restless, Raffi
strapped the belt of coins tighter under his shirt. It felt
strangely heavy, as if it weighed him down. Keepers had no
money—that was one of the Precepts of the Order. Idly he wondered
what it would be like to spend all this.
After a daydream of warm beds and fine food, he
came back to himself to find Solon praying the Litany quietly and
Carys talking to Marco, lying on one elbow. Both had their bows
ready.
“So how did you get yourself arrested?” she was
saying.
The bald man grinned. “Oh, that. Bit of an error
of judgment.” Dropping his voice so Galen wouldn’t hear, he said,
“I had a contract from the Watch. I was a licensed dealer. Any
relics I heard of, I bought up, usually from farmers, and then sold
on to the Watch. The profit was pitiable, but sometimes,” he said
with a wink, “sometimes I found something really juicy and held out
for a good price. And of course, you can always get two castellans
to bid against each other. They’ll do anything to get a
promotion.”
Carys made a face. “You don’t have to tell
me.”
He looked at her. “I’ll bet you were some
spy.”
“The best.”
“And you don’t miss it?”
She winked at Raffi. “I’m still some spy.”
Marco chortled. “Well anyway, I went too far.
Found a pen that memorized what you wrote with it—amazing thing,
still working. I sold it to one Watchhouse, but the sergeant at the
other found out and had my business dealings watched. That was
that. In days I was in the cells.”
“That was where you met Solon?” Raffi said.
Marco glanced over at the older man. “Crazy old
fool was giving away all his food to the others. If I hadn’t looked
after him, he’d be dead.”
There was silence. Then Raffi said, “The Sekoi’s
taking a long time.”
Carys shrugged. “That creature can scam its way
out of anything.”
He knew that. He’d felt the powerful hypnosis of
Sekoi stories himself, the way they dragged you in, so you smelled
and heard and lived the adventure. He wondered what yarns it was
spinning in there. Kalimar and the Wyvern? The Last Stand of the
Sekoi at Hortensmere? A clatter made him jerk suddenly. Galen
leaped up. “Get ready.”
The gate was being unbolted. They crouched, alert,
Raffi suddenly afraid that the Sekoi’s battered body would be
thrown out onto the track.
The gate swung wide. A tall figure stood there
with a lantern.
“Well, Galen?” it said irritably. “Are you
coming?”
Relief soaked Raffi. And scrambling out, for a
second he remembered Tasceron, the blind alley, the screaming,
vicious attack of the draxi.
The Sekoi looked smug. Both gates were open; as
soon as everyone was through, Galen and Marco dragged them shut,
slamming home the bolts and the intricate sliding levers of the
great locks.
“What about the men outside?” Solon
muttered.
“Listen to you!” Marco scowled. “You’re a
softhearted wretch, even for a poor broken-down keeper.”
Solon smiled. “I wouldn’t want them to
freeze.”
“They weren’t so concerned about us. They can
knock, Your Holiness, just like anyone else. Try not to shed too
many tears.”
Raffi looked scandalized.
Carys grinned. She could see the deep affection
under the banter; it must have been all that kept the two of them
sane in the horror of the Watch cells.
The Sekoi led them quickly over the bridge. The
structure was wooden, and through the slits between the rough
planks, Carys glimpsed the swift, dark rush of the water below.
Their footsteps rang loud; coming to the north gatehouse the Sekoi
turned. “Keep as quiet as you can.”
Inside, the guardroom was spartan. Just like every
other Watchpost, she thought acidly, recognizing the rotas and huge
logbooks, the endless Rules painted in red letters down the walls,
the meager fire with its tiny ration of wood. And that smell, so
hard to name, so full of hateful memories.
The two men were near the fire. One was slumped on
a stool, his arms folded on the table. He was staring deeply into
the dull flames. The other stood, to Raffi’s amazement, by the
window looking out into the dark. Both seemed so normal, as if they
were lost in thought and would turn around at once. But neither
did. Their crossbows lay on a huge weapons stack in the corner;
Carys went over and helped herself to a pile of spare bolts.
“What story was it?” Galen asked, amused.
The Sekoi looked embarrassed. “These are crude
men. It wasn’t easy. Frankly, keeper, it isn’t fit for your
ears.”
Marco sniggered.
“Let’s go,” Carys said.
“Wait.” The Sekoi glanced swiftly at her. “I took
the chance to search the place. On that wall are messages. Take a
look.”
Carys felt Galen crowd behind her.
The board held brief reports, probably brought by
post-riders from the nearest Watchtower. Each one told of the same
thing—Sekoi movements; small bands of the creatures, lone
travelers, even whole tribes, all heading west on every road.
“What does it mean?” Galen turned.
The Sekoi bit its nails. “It must be a
Circling.”
“Which is?”
“A gathering. For something important.”
“You knew nothing of it?”
“Galen, I’ve been on Sarres all winter.”
Carys put her hand up to the board. In the top
lefthand corner a larger notice had been torn off. The pin was
still there, but only a fragment of white paper was left under it,
with a few numbers that she stared at curiously. “I wonder where
this went?”
“Why?” Galen looked at it.
“The numbers are the end of a code sequence. It
was important—priority intelligence. Maybe direct from Maar.”
“Don’t you think we should go?” Raffi asked
nervously.
“I agree.” Solon was watching the men in
fascination.
“This is most strange. Will they remember seeing
us?”
“They can’t see or hear us.” Galen dragged back
the bolts in the opposite door. “They’re deep in some sordid story.
They’ll only remember one Sekoi. Come on.”
Once through both gates, they jammed the outer one
with a fallen branch, hoping it would slow any pursuit. Then,
without stopping, they ran. Galen led them straight off the road
and up a steep track; they climbed high into the woods, hurrying in
the dark along trails and paths that only keepers could sense,
always up, out of the valley.
Breathless, Carys scrambled and climbed, wondering
again at the Order’s reckless way of travel, the way the group was
strung out, Marco and Solon far behind. They had no discipline, she
thought hotly, at least not the right kind. And yet Galen had his
own defenses, and even she could almost feel his mind’s deep
entanglement with the wood, sensing far into its roots and soil and
streams.
Finally, on the skyline among a high stand of
sheshorn, they crouched and looked back.
The bridge was silent, the firelight a dim glow in
the guardroom window.
“How long will it last?” Marco asked.
The Sekoi shrugged in elegant disdain. “With such
feeble imaginations, maybe only an hour.” It turned suddenly.
“Galen, listen to me now. I think I must leave you. I need to go to
this Circling and find out what troubles my people.”
Galen looked hard into the creature’s yellow eyes.
Then he stood up. “If you must.”
“I should.” It hesitated a moment, then said, “In
fact, I’ve thought since before we left Sarres that I should speak
to my people. We have many sources of information. Someone may know
something of the Coronet.”
“You’ll be discreet?” Solon said anxiously.
The Sekoi gave a mew of scorn. “We have no Watch
among us, Archkeeper. But yes, I will.”
“You can’t go alone,” Raffi said.
“Ah.” The Sekoi looked awkward. It scratched its
furred face. “I could. But then I would be out of touch with you.
Even the . . . Even Galen could not reach me.”
Galen nodded. “Then we split up. One of us comes
with you. The rest go on to the observatory and wait for you there.
Agreed?”
“Agreed.”
“I think you should take—”
“I want Carys to come with me.”
There was a moment of surprise. The scarred moon,
Pyra, came out among the trees, glinting on the Sekoi’s sly
eyes.
“Great,” Carys said. “Kind of you to think of me.
Is this some sort of revenge?”
“Call it a challenge. A chance to learn something
of the Sekoi.”
She looked at it narrowly. Then she nodded. “All
right. If you’re sure.”
The Sekoi smiled. “I am.”
Galen said, “Get to the observatory as soon as you
can. If plans change I’ll . . . let Carys know.”
Solon smoothed his silver hair. “I fail to see
how.”
“There are ways.” Galen’s eyes were dark. He
gripped the Sekoi’s shoulder. “Take care. Both of you.”
The creature nodded. Then it turned to Raffi.
“I’ll take my belt now,” it said with a grin.
Two miles on, they separated.
The Sekoi slipped into the trees and Carys
followed. Before the darkness swallowed them she turned and made a
face, waving at Raffi.
“Cheer up,” she called.
Uneasy, he waved back.