Read Brotherhood of the Wolf Online
Authors: David Farland
“No one in my family has ever received a Sending,” Averan said.
“And you think you have?” Roland asked.
The girl clutched her hands, wringing them while she held them against her stomach. She trembled in agitation. “I saw something just now. I saw the green woman dead, on the end of a pole, outside the castle walls.”
Roland was not educated, but every child in Mystarria knew lore about Sendings. “If it was a true Sending, then it was only a warning, and you might be able to stop it from happening.”
Baron Poll squinted, knelt down to be closer to the child. “You want to avoid Carris? We could skirt around it, I suppose, but at least one of us must go in.” He considered the possibility only that long, then added more forcefully, “No, the roads won't be safe! We'll be better off if we stay together. I'm pretty sure I can get us through to Carris, but I won't promise anything more.”
Roland knew that Baron Poll really believed his own warning: armies were hiding down on that plain, and Raj Ahten's men had been waylaying messengers all along the roads.
“Leave me somewhere while you carry the message,” Averan begged. “The green woman is following
me,
not
you. She'll stay wherever you put me. Then you could come back for me.”
Baron Poll scratched his chin. Riding so close to Carris would be dangerous enough, but the child was asking him to risk his life going both directions.
Still, the girl was right to be worried for the fate of the green woman. Baron Poll's eyes flickered over Roland, as he considered what to do. “It's too dangerous. I won't allow it.”
He spoke in a tone of authority, as if to end all discussion.
“First you say you won't take me north to Heredon, now you say you won't leave me here! Can't I have any say in the matter!” Averan asked.
“No,” Baron Poll said reasonably. “I may be a fat old knight, but I am a lord and you're not. We're at war. I'm only doing what's best for you.”
“You're only doing what's best for
you,”
Averan cried. “
I
don't matter.”
“I'm only thinking about what's best for
people,
not”âhe waved his hand at the green woman in dismissalâ“some green monster.”
“I know what's best for me!” Averan said.
“Do you?” Baron Poll asked. “Last night you pouted because you wanted to go to Heredon. Now you're in a fit because you want to stay here. So what's best?”
“I can change my mind,” Averan said too loudly.
“True,” Baron Poll said, “but you won't change mine.”
He grabbed Averan roughly by the arm and dragged her to his charger. Averan yelped, and Baron Poll slapped her across the backside.
“Damn you, girl, if you call Raj Ahten's troops with all of your noise, I swear I'll cut your throat before they get me, even if it's the last thing I do.”
Baron Poll leapt up onto his charger, his great strength belying his size, and tried to pull Averan on with him.
“Wait!” Roland said. “Let her ride with me. And I'll not
have you slapping the child, or threatening to slit her throat.”
“What do you care?” Baron Poll asked. Both the Baron and the child stared at him in surprise. Roland was no knight, no warrior who could hope to best Baron Poll in a fight, yet he had spoken harshly.
“I care,” Roland said, gazing at the child. “I was thinking last night, I could petition Paldane to become her guardian, her ⦠father.”
There was a clumsy silence as the child recognized that he spoke not just a statement, but a question. Then she lurched toward him. “Yes!” she cried.
Roland mounted up, taking Averan in the saddle before him. In moments they were thundering down the mountainside, the green woman loping behind, and as they neared the plain, Baron Poll suddenly veered his charger sideways and raced it through the trees, cutting across a spur of the mountain on a game trail. The green woman ran at their back, struggling to keep up. Roland felt amazed that she could do so at all. No human could run with such grace and ease.
The Baron no longer seemed to trust the road, and perhaps his own fear finally touched the girl, for Averan fell silent. He raced the horses down the mountainside, and Roland leaned back in his saddle, gripping Averan before him, afraid that the girth strap on his saddle might slip or break so that he'd go rolling downhill. But Baron Poll never slowed.
After several heart-stopping minutes, they found an old woodcutter's road and raced along it for a while, then they rode the horses hard across a creek and let them leap a farmer's fence and gallop across a pasture.
For several miles they rode this way, never trusting a road, often peering off to either side. The green woman ran just behind.
They reached a large village and raced through it, let the horses stop for rest just outside. A number of walnut trees lined the lane, the nuts just beginning to split open from
their green pouches, and Averan, still huddled in her robes, looked up at them longingly. “Are we going to eat today?”
“When we reach the castle, you might get some dinner,” Baron Poll said.
“You gave me nothing more than hope for dinner last night, and now I shan't even have that to chew on for breakfast. They've done with breakfast at the castle and won't eat again until tonight. I didn't get any food yesterday at all.”
“Well,” Baron Poll said, “all the better to help you maintain a dainty figure.”
“You should try it yourself sometime,” Averan groused. “Your horse would like you better if you did.”
The Baron shot Averan a warning glare. The child had an endowment of brawn, but Baron Poll had more than one, and he knew he could beat her soundly.
Roland thought him a hard man, to starve a child that way. “I'll get you some walnuts,” Roland offered, and he leapt from his horse.
The green woman had been lagging behind for several moments, and now she stood, sweat pouring off her, as she gasped for air.
Baron Poll seemed to fear that the child would ride off, so he nudged his horse toward Averan, grabbed her and hefted her onto his own saddle.
Sweat drenched Roland's horse and it breathed like a bellows. Several cottages clustered together here at the north end of the village, and there was little forage for the mounts. Sheep had eaten down the grass near the road. Roland could see no sign of the sheep now. They had probably been driven off to the castle. With little else to eat, the mount went over to a window box outside a cottage and began to chew voraciously on some white geraniums, eating as quickly as only a horse with endowments of metabolism can.
Meanwhile, Roland looked in vain for walnuts on the ground, but pigs rooted there, and they'd taken the nuts. He ended up climbing the tree to pick a few.
“I have to relieve myself,” Averan said, squirming in the saddle where Baron Poll held her firm.
“Hold it for another hour,” Baron Poll commanded her. “A girl with an endowment of brawn can hold her bladder all day.”
“I've been holding it since last night,” Averan apologized.
Baron Poll rolled his eyes. “Go then. There should be a privy behind the cottage.”
Averan dropped from the horse and scurried away. The green woman followed at her heels like a faithful dog.
Roland climbed into the crook of a walnut tree and began filling his pockets. He'd been at it only a minute when he glanced back down the road to the south.
Dust rose from the road in the direction they'd just come. The dust clouds were back a couple of miles, so trees and houses obscured it. Still, at the speed a force horse could race, those riders would be on them quickly.
“Riders, coming fast,” Roland warned Baron Poll. His heart hammered. If he'd not been standing in the tree, he'd not have seen them.
“What colors?”
He saw a flash of yellow. “Raj Ahten's, they're close on our tails.”
He leapt from the tree, landed hard enough to jar his ankles.
“Averan,” Baron Poll shouted. “Stop peeing and get over here now!”
He spun his charger and raced around the corner of the cottage, shouting and cursing. Roland leapt onto his own mount, circled the cottage, just in time to see Baron Poll kick over a weathered privy in the backyard. No one was inside.
“The damned girl ran off!” the Baron shouted.
Roland bit his lip, struggled against panic. He did not want to lose the child or see her harmed. He wanted to help her, yet he understood her fears, and applauded her desire to do what she knew was right.
Stone fences divided the land behind this cottage from the yards and gardens behind. Roland searched nervously. He saw no sign of Averan or the green woman.
“They couldn't have gotten far,” Roland said. But he knew that it didn't matter. Even if the girl hid nearby, he couldn't take the time to search for her.
“Leave her!” Baron Poll said. “The girl wanted to stay, let her stay!”
The Baron wheeled his mount, but Roland was slow to follow. He feared to leave the green woman and Averan there alone. He cared about them more than he'd dare admit.
He rose up in his saddle, searching for the child, vainly hoping to spot the green woman, as Baron Poll raced away. Moments later, he began to hear the thunder of hooves on the far side of town.
“Luck to you!” Roland called to Averan. “I'll come back for you, daughter!” he promised. He turned and sped for Carris.
Four cottages away from Baron Poll, Averan huddled behind a lilac bush by a stone fence and watched Roland and the Baron gallop north. She had taken off the green woman's bearskin cloak, so that now her skin blended in with the lilac bush, concealing her.
Averan clutched the green woman tight and cooed softly, to keep her from moving.
She could not explain to Roland and Baron Poll why she needed to leave. The men would never understand. But Averan had had a strange feeling growing in her since yesterday.
It had made her nervous to look at the campfire last night, and the morning sun hurt her eyes, made them burn. And this morning, when she'd knelt over the corpse of Raj Ahten's assassin, pretending to eat, Averan had craved the taste of the man's blood.
Now, she thought she knew what the green woman
needed, probably understood it better than the green woman did herself.
She needed the Earth. She needed to be renewed by its power.
So Averan huddled with the green woman while Baron Poll cursed and Roland promised to return. Averan fought to keep tears from her eyes.
She'd been surprised that he asked to be her father, surprised and delighted. She wanted someone to take care of her, to be a friend. But right now, she had to put her own wants aside.
She dared whisper, “Come back for me then, Father, when you can.”
Moments later, twenty of Raj Ahten's knights went racing past along the tree-lined lane, armor rattling, the hooves of their warhorses thundering on the hard road.
The green woman did not move, leaned into Averan's embrace until the Invincibles had passed. Then she lifted her nose in the air like a hound trying to catch a scent, and asked, “Blood, yes?”
“Blood, yes,” Averan promised, glad that the green woman had recognized the scent of Raj Ahten's soldiers. “But not now. You must rest now. I know what you need.”
Averan had seen it in a vision, she felt sure. She didn't understand what she saw, but she felt a need driving her, a craving that went to the bone. The green woman was a creature of the Earth, and right now, she needed its embrace.
Still, Averan felt afraid to move. A morning breeze sighed through town, stirred the lilac bush. The green woman stared up at the leaves, as if in terror of this ominous force.
“It's nothing,” Averan said. “Only the wind. Wind.”
She held up the green woman's hand, let her feel the wind flow between her fingers. But the green woman jerked her hand back in terror.
“Wind, no!” she said. She looked about desperately, as if searching for a place to hide.
The Invincibles had been gone long enough, Averan decided. She led the green woman to a walled garden behind a cottage. The soil was deep and well tended, but the owners had fled. Before doing so, they'd dug up all of their carrots and turnips.
Averan tasted the rich soil, and approved. She found a mattock in a shed, and in a few minutes was able to dig a shallow trench.
Without any coaxing, the green woman stepped into the trench and lay down, spreading herself outânaked, luxuriating, delighted to feel the soil on her bare skin.
Averan stood over her, prepared to heap the dirt on the green woman, bury her there. But right now she felt a craving of her own, an itching. The sun shone fiercely on her neck, and when she glanced up, it hurt her eyes.
Her robe seemed too thin to protect her from its rays. She looked down at her fist where the green woman's blood had touched her yesterday while Averan had tried to clean her after the fall.
Dark green blotches still stained her hand. The green spots had not gone awayânot even when she washed them or tried to rub the skin away. Instead, the dark green blood had merely seeped down lower, into her skin. Now it looked as if she had been tattooed with ink. The blotches would likely never go away, she realized. Or maybe someday the green woman's blood would just seep down farther into her, until it fused with her bones.
“The same blood flows through us now,” Averan said to the green woman. “I don't even know what you are, but you and I are one.”
Having said that, Averan stripped off her own clothes and climbed into the shallow trench beside the green woman. She used her hands to pull mounds of dirt over her feet and body, to hide her skin from the sun, but she could not bury herself properly.
On a sudden inspiration, she hugged the green woman tightly and commanded the soil, “Cover me.”
The soil responded, flowing over her like water.