Fire Sea (14 page)

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Authors: Margaret Weis

BOOK: Fire Sea
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The dog leapt from the deck to the pier below. Haplo followed, landing almost as silently and lightly as the animal. Alfred remained on deck, dithering nervously, pacing back and forth.

Haplo, exasperated, was on the point of leaving the man when suddenly, with desperate courage, Alfred launched himself into the air, arms and legs flailing, and landed in a confused heap on the rock pier. It took him several moments to sort himself out, looking for all the world as if he were endeavoring to decide which limb went where and making mistakes as he went along. Haplo watched, half-amused, wholly irritated, inclined to assist the clumsy Sartan simply to expedite their progress. Alfred at last pulled himself together, discovered no bones were broken, and fell into step beside Haplo and the dog.

They wandered slowly down the pier, Haplo taking his
time investigating. He stopped once to stare closely at several bales stacked on the docks. The dog sniffed around them. Alfred gazed at them curiously. “What are they, do you think?”

“Raw material of some sort,” Haplo answered, touching it gingerly. “Fibrous, soft. Might be used for making cloth. I—” He paused, leaned closer to the bale, almost as if he were sniffing it, like his dog. He straightened, pointed. “What do you make of that?”

Alfred appeared rather startled at being thus addressed, but he leaned down, squinting his mild eyes and peering distractedly. “What? I can't—”

“Look closely. Those marks on the sides of the bales.”

Alfred thrust his nose nearly into the product, gave a start, paled slightly, and drew back.

“Well?” Haplo demanded.

“I … can't be sure.”

“The hell you can't.”

“The markings are smudged, difficult to read.”

Haplo shook his head, and walked on, whistling to the dog, who thought it had found a rat and was pawing frantically at the bottom of a bale.

The town of obsidian was silent, the silence was ominous and oppressive. No heads peered out of the windows, no children ran through the streets. Yet it had obviously once been filled with life, as impossible as that might seem, so near the magma sea whose heat and fumes must kill any ordinary mortal.

Ordinary mortals. Not demigods.

Haplo continued his scrutiny of the various goods and bundles piled up on the pier. Occasionally, he paused and shot a closer glance at one and when he did this, he often pointed it out silently to Alfred, who would look at it, look at Haplo, and shrug his stooped shoulders in perplexity.

The two moved into the town proper. No one hailed them, greeted them, threatened them. Haplo was certain, now, that no one would. The pricking of certain runes on his skin would have alerted him to the presence of anything living; his magic was doing nothing more than keeping his body cool
and filtering out harmful properties in the air. Alfred appeared nervous—but then Alfred would have appeared nervous walking into a children's nursery.

Two questions were on Haplo's mind: Who had been here and why weren't they here any longer?

The town itself was a collection of buildings carved of the black rock, fronting a single street. One building, standing almost directly opposite the pier, boasted thick-paned, crude glass windows. Haplo looked inside. Several globes of soft, warm light ranged around the walls, illuminating a large common room filled with tables and chairs. Perhaps an inn.

The inn's door was woven out of a heavy, coarse, grass-like substance, similar to hemp. The fiber had then been coated with a thick, glossy resin that made it smooth and impervious to weather. The door stood partially ajar, not in welcome, but as if the owner had left in such haste he'd neglected to shut it.

Haplo was about to step inside and investigate when a mark on the door caught his attention. He stared at it, the doubt in his mind hardening into finality. He said nothing, his finger jabbed at the door, at the mark on the door.

“Yes,” said Alfred quietly, “a rune structure.”

“A Sartan rune structure,” Haplo corrected, his voice grating harshly.

“A corrupted Sartan rune, or perhaps altered would be a better choice of words. I couldn't speak it, nor use it.” Head bobbing, shoulders hunched, Alfred looked singularly like a turtle, emerging from its shell. “And I can't explain it.”

“It's the same as those marks we saw on the bales.”

“I don't know how you can tell.” Alfred wouldn't commit himself. “Those were almost worn off.”

Haplo's mind went back to Pryan, to the Sartan city he'd discovered. He'd seen runes there as well, but not on the inns. The inns of Pryan hung out signs of welcome in human, elven, dwarven. He recalled, too, that the dwarf—what had been that fellow's name?—had known something of the rune magic, but only in a crude and childlike fashion. Any three-year-old Sartan could have bettered the Pryan dwarf in a rune-scrying contest.

This rune structure may have been corrupted, but it was sophisticated, runes of protection for the inn, runes of blessing for those who entered. At last, Haplo had found what he had been seeking, what he had been dreading to find—the enemy. And, if he was to judge by appearance, he was standing in an entire civilization of them.

Great. Just great.

Haplo entered the inn, booted feet padding softly across the carpeted floor.

Alfred crept along behind, looked about in amazement. “Whoever was here certainly left in a hurry!”

Haplo was in a bad mood, not inclined for conversation. He continued his investigation in silence. He examined the lamps, was surprised to see that they had no wicks. A jet of air flowed from a small pipe in the wall. The flame burned off the air. Haplo blew out the flame, sniffed, and wrinkled his nose. Breathe that too long without benefit of magic and you'd quietly cease to breathe.

Haplo heard a noise, glanced around. Alfred had automatically and without thinking carefully righted an overturned chair. The dog sniffed a hunk of meat left lying on the floor.

And all around the Patryn, everywhere he turned his glance, were Sartan runes.

“Your people haven't been gone long,” he observed, noting the bitterness in his voice, hoping it covered the crawling, twisting knot of fear, of anger, of despair.

“Don't call them that!” Alfred protested. Was he trying hard not to build his hopes too high? Or did he sound as frightened as Haplo? “There's no other evidence—”

“Like hell! Could humans, no matter how advanced in magic, live long in this poisonous atmosphere? Could elves? Dwarves? No! The only people who could survive are your people.”

“Or yours!” Alfred pointed out.

“Yeah, well, we all know
that's
not possible!”

“We don't know anything. Mensch might live here. Over time, they might have adapted …”

Haplo turned away, sorry he'd brought it up. “It's no use
speculating. We'll probably find out soon enough. These people, whoever they are, haven't been gone long.” “How can you tell?”

In answer, the Patryn held up a loaf of bread he'd just broken. “Stale on the outside,” Haplo said, poking at it. “Soft in the center. If it'd been left out long, it would be stale all the way through. And no one bothered to put runes of preservation on it, so they expected to eat it, not store it.”

“I see.” Alfred was admiring. “I never would have noticed.”

“You learn to notice, in the Labyrinth. Those who don't, don't survive.”

The Sartan, uncomfortable, changed the subject. “Why do you think they left?”

“My guess is war,” Haplo answered, lifting a filled wineglass. He sniffed at the contents. The stuff smelled awful.

“War!” Alfred's shocked tone brought the Patryn immediately to attention.

“Yes, come to think of it, that
is
odd, isn't it? You people pride yourselves on peaceful solutions to problems, don't you? But”—he shrugged—“it sure looks that way to me.”

“I don't understand—”

Haplo waved an impatient hand. “The door standing ajar, chairs overturned, food left uneaten, not a ship in the harbor.”

“I'm afraid I still don't understand.”

“A person who leaves his property expecting to come back generally shuts his door and locks it, to keep that property safe until his return. A person who flees his property in fear for his life just leaves. Then, too, these people fled in the middle of a meal, leaving ordinarily portable goods behind them—plates, cutlery, pitchers, bottles—full bottles at that. I'll wager that if you went upstairs, you'd find most of their clothes still in their rooms. They were warned of danger, and they got the hell out of here.”

Alfred's eyes widened in sudden horror, realization dawning on him with a sickly light. “But … if what you say is true … then whatever is coming down on them—”

“—is coming down on us,” Haplo finished. He felt more cheerful. Alfred was right. It couldn't be Sartan.

From what he knew of their history, the Sartan had never made war on anyone, not even their most feared enemies. They had shut the Patryns into prison, into a deadly prison, but—according to the records—that prison had been originally designed to rehabilitate, not kill, the prisoner.

“And if they left in such a hurry, it must be quite close by now.” Alfred peered nervously out the window. “Shouldn't we be going?”

“Yeah, I guess so. Not much more to be learned around here.”

Clumsy footed as he was, the Sartan could move fast enough when he wanted to. Alfred reached the door ahead of any of them, including the dog. Bursting out into the street, he was halfway down the pier, running awkwardly for the ship, when he must have realized he was alone. Turning, he called to Haplo, who was heading in the opposite direction, toward the edge of town.

Alfred's shout echoed loudly among the silent buildings. Haplo ignored him, kept walking. The Sartan cringed, swallowed another shout. He launched into a trot, stumbled over his feet, and fell flat on his face. The dog waited for him, on orders from Haplo, and eventually Alfred caught up.

“If what you say is true,” he gasped, breathing heavily from his exertion, “the enemy's bound to be out there!”

“They are,” said Haplo coolly. “Look.”

Alfred glanced ahead, saw a pool of fresh blood, a broken spear, a dropped shield. He ran a shaking hand nervously over his bald head. “Then … then where are you going?”

“To meet them.”

CHAPTER
12
SALFAG CAVERNS,
ABARRACH

T
HE NARROW STREET HAPLO AND HIS RELUCTANT COMPANION
followed dwindled down and eventually came to an end among gigantic stalagmites thrusting upward around the base of a slick-sided obsidian cliff. The magma sea churned sluggishly at its feet, the rock gleamed brilliantly in the lurid light. The top of the cliff reared upward until it vanished in the steamy darkness. No army was advancing on them from this direction.

Haplo turned, gazed out over a large flat plain behind the small seaside town. He could not see much, most of the land was lost in the shadows of this realm that knew no sun except that within its own heart. But occasionally a stream of lava branched off from the main flow and wandered out onto the vast rock plains. By its reflected light, he saw deserts of oozing, bubbling mud; volcanic mountains of jagged, twisted rock; and—oddly—cylindrical columns of immense girth and width vaulting upward into darkness.

“Man-made,” Haplo thought and realized, too late, that he'd spoken the thought aloud.

“Yes,” Alfred replied, looking upward, craning his neck until he nearly fell over backward. Recalling what Haplo'd said about tumbling into a puddle, the man looked down, regained his balance hastily. “They must reach straight up to the ceiling of this vast cavern but… for what reason? The cave obviously doesn't need the support.”

Never in Haplo's wildest imaginings had he envisioned himself standing on a hell-blasted world, calmly discussing geological formations with a Sartan. He didn't like talking to Alfred, he didn't like listening to the high-pitched, querulous voice. But he hoped, through conversation, to lull Alfred into a sense of security. Lead him into discussions that might cause him to slip up, reveal whatever he was concealing about the Sartan and their plans.

“Have you seen pictures or read accounts of this world?” Haplo asked. His tone was casual, he didn't look at Alfred when he spoke, as if the Sartan's reply mattered little to him.

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