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Authors: Jeffrey Overstreet

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BOOK: The Ale Boy's Feast
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“What’s happening?” he asked a guard.

“One of our watchmen is missing,” the guard replied. “His blood was found at Fraughtenwood’s edge. We suspect Deathweed.”

“Give me a bow and some arrows, and I can help,” said Wynn.

“Why don’t you go to the tent for the Abascar children? Leave the arrows to those trained to use them,” the guard answered.

“Do you know who I am?” Wynn growled.

The guard walked away.

Wynn marched across an avenue and into the stablehouse, flexing his hands into fists. He was already in a sour mood. He hated farewells. He hated ceremonies where others were honored while he was forgotten.

He was even more distressed to think that Obrey would stay here when the company departed. She was pretty, she liked to make trouble, and she was always
up for an adventure. He’d dreamed of luring her out of the camp and telling her stories about life on the merchant roads. He might even give her a kiss on the cheek, if she wanted. Maybe she’d run away with him. Maybe he and Obrey could be like a father and mother to Cortie—merchants in the wild, with no commitment to anybody but themselves.

We could leave. Make a life of our own. Why not? To them, we’re just a story that makes them feel good about themselves
.

As he moved past stacks of grass bales, a breeze brushed his ear. Luci sat above him on a hay bale, swinging her feet as if to show off her painted bark-fold shoes.

“We made it, Wynn,” she said. “No more forests. Tomorrow we’ll find New Abascar, and you and me can explore it together.”

Wynn was dismayed. The triplets had made him feel uncomfortable from the moment he met them among Abascar’s survivors. It had been strange enough to see them compete for his attentions, all three with the same freckled face.

“Madi says hello,” said Luci.

And that was the other problem. When Madi had fallen into a well and never returned, Margi and Luci had started saying that they heard her voice in their heads.

He reached for a harsh retort, but then Obrey peered over the same stack of grass and swung her feet down, wearing the same colorful shoes. She elbowed Luci knowingly.

Why is it Luci who asks to hold my hand? Why not Obrey? Those triplets are stonemasters. Their hands scare me
.

He walked past the girls, trying to adopt the look of grim determination that Captain Tabor Jan always wore. But Luci’s sister Margi came running through the stablehouse, looking grim herself. When she saw her sister and Obrey sitting on the shelf and Wynn standing at their feet, she scowled and reached up to her sister. “Help me up.”

“Brevolo asked me to cheer Obrey up,” Luci replied proudly while Obrey reached down to help Margi up.

“You’re not the third sister,” Margi muttered, deciding to climb up on her own.

“I’ll come back to visit you, Obrey,” said Luci. “I rather like the light here.”

“Yes,” said Obrey. “It tastes like snow.” She handed Margi a pair of bark-fold shoes to match their own. “We made these for you.”

Margi put them on and smiled, all jealousy forgotten, and soon all three girls were swinging their feet.

“Madi tells me we’re getting closer all the time,” said Margi. “And she says we’re being watched over.”

“Shut up with all the pretending,” Wynn snapped. “You’re such children. Madi’s not talking to you, Margi. My mum and papa are dead, and they don’t talk to me. And there’s nobody watching over us. If we aren’t ready to fight, we’ll end up dead as your sister. I’m done with all that pretending. I’m ready to fight the Deathweed. I stopped the Seers and the beastmen in Bel Amica.”

“You didn’t do that all by yourself,” said Obrey in the tone of a condescending adult. “Luci and Margi helped. And Cyndere shot an arrow. And it was Tabor Jan who found the trouble in the first place. You can’t be a soldier yet. We’re not even old enough to be parents.”

“Someday Wynn and I will be parents,” said Luci flirtatiously.

“You should be in the children’s tent with Cortie,” he barked. “We should have left you in Bel Amica.”

“Captain said we had to come,” said Luci. “He needs stonemasters ’til the king comes back.”

“Well … he needs me too.” Wynn cringed even as he spoke, each word making him feel more ridiculous.
I’ll show them
, he thought.

He marched down the path between the many stable stalls. When he reached the vawns of the Abascar company, he began to brush them slowly, keeping himself inconspicuous while Jes-hawk, Brevolo, and Tabor Jan were having a hushed conversation nearby.

As silvery scales fell around his feet, he heard Jes-hawk say, “I don’t like this. We’re already welcoming people into Abascar who haven’t earned our trust. People who haven’t fought for survival beside us.”

“Take another look at her, Jes-hawk,” mumbled Brevolo. “If Milora tried to do us any harm, she’d probably hurt herself.”

“House Bel Amica robs people of their loyalty. I never imagined my sister could give us trouble. But Lynna betrayed us to Ryllion.” He drew an
X
in the dust on the stable floor as if imagining a target on Ryllion’s forehead. “Now he and my sister are out there somewhere laughing at how she humiliated me.”

“Ryllion’s not laughing,” said Brevolo. “He’s running for his life.”

“We can’t punish Milora for something your sister did,” said Tabor Jan. “We’ll accept her pledge of service because we need a strong bond with these miners. They know these mountains much better than we do. Jes-hawk, you have to bury this grudge.”

Wynn moved from the line of vawns to the horses, brushing the mane of a sturdy black colt as he listened.

“Besides,” Tabor Jan was saying, “Milora seems sincere in her desire to support Cal-raven. He’ll need those who respect him. Some of our own people have lost faith.”

“But should we bring the glassworker with us now?” asked the archer. “Maybe someday when New Abascar is ready. But right now she’ll be just another mouth to feed.”

Brevolo scowled, nodding. “Now that’s true. And when we find New Abascar, we’ll need muscle, not pretty windows.”

Tabor Jan did not answer, but he looked suddenly tired.

“I’m sorry,” said Brevolo softly. “That was harsh. I know Cal-raven wants to make room for everybody. He’ll think it’s wonderful to welcome a quiet, muddle-headed glassworker just the way he’s been sweet to those poor orphans.”

Jes-hawk elbowed her sharply, and she turned, readying an angry retort, only to see Wynn standing there, frozen.

She laughed, raising a hand to her mouth. “Wynn! Oh, child, I didn’t see you there!”

He did not answer. He just tightened his grip on the brush as if it were a weapon drawn in a challenge.

20
F
IRE IN
F
RAUGHTENWOOD

he glass whistle that knifed the silence brought Jes-hawk leaping from sleep toward the flap of his tent, where his forehead met Tabor Jan’s formidable chin.

“I need an archer,” said Tabor Jan, now on his knees and clutching his bearded jaw.

“I was dreaming,” said Jes-hawk blearily, lying on his back and waiting for his vision to return. “My sister … she attacked us with a shard of glass.”

“Forget Lynna. We’ve a real nightmare.”

Jes-hawk struggled to his feet, pulled on his riding jacket, and shouldered his quiver. “Have the miners turned against us?”

“No. A Bel Amican distress flare. South of here. In Fraughtenwood.”

“Did we leave someone behind?” He moved toward the door.

“Behind?” Tabor Jan snorted. “Jes-hawk, aren’t you forgetting something?”

Cursing, Jes-hawk turned back for his trousers. When he was fully dressed, Tabor Jan took him by the arm and pulled him out into the dim early morning. “You think it’s the king, don’t you, Captain?”

“I don’t know.”

“Who’s riding? You, me … Brevolo?”

“She’s already gone.”

“Ahead of us?”

“Couldn’t stop her,” Tabor Jan growled.

“Nobody should ride into Fraughtenwood without—”

“Don’t tell me what I already know.” The captain was running now, and there was Krawg, holding a torch and leading the horses. “I’ve sent Shanyn to catch her.”

“But why did Brevolo leave?”

Tabor Jan thanked Krawg and mounted the horse. “Wynn, that impossible child. He was listening when the watchman told me they’d sighted a flare. I told the boy to prepare our three best animals. A few moments later he charged out of the stablehouse on that colt he stole from Bel Amica. Frits’s watchmen let him go. He’s off to play hero. Again.” Tabor Jan’s clenched teeth were bright through his beard. “Brevolo found out. I told her to let him go.”

“Why didn’t she?” Jes-hawk was on his horse, and they moved through the settlement, which was coming to life.

“She thinks Wynn wants to prove himself. You’ll remember that she said something last night that kicked him in the arrogance, so she blames herself for this … this foolishness.”

At the torchlit gate, the watchmen waved them through. Tabor Jan reprimanded them for letting the boy pass.

“Where are we going?” Jes-hawk’s forehead throbbed.

“We answer the distress call. And hope we all come back alive.”

They rode up from the valley of fern trees, southwest across the gloom-dark hills, and descended back into Fraughtenwood.

Under dawn’s first flush, Brevolo’s vawn slowed, then skidded in the chalky dust beneath the trees, and stopped beside a tangle of brambles. The light of her torch revealed that something was moving beneath the thorns. It was the colt, collapsed, half-covered as if someone had tried to conceal it.

Keeping one hand on the reins, Brevolo jumped from the saddle and knelt
before the colt, then stood up, sticky with blood that was spreading across the ground. The animal was wheezing and twitching, nearly dead.

Shanyn arrived and rode a circle around the scene. “Tabor Jan is …”

“Furious. I know.” She looked again at the scrap of bramble that lay over the horse’s haunches. “Strange.” She surveyed the clearing, then took cautious steps into the trees. “Did the boy kill the horse and try to cover the evidence before he ran off? I don’t understand.”

Something hot splashed her head. She turned. Two bare feet dangled right before her eyes. Blood poured down on the dust. She looked up.

Wynn was hanging from a tree limb.

At first she thought the colt had slammed him directly into a low-hanging, spear-sharp branch. But then she saw that the boy’s back was to the tree and that the branch had struck him from behind. Even stranger, the limb was raising him slowly into a bundle of sharp branches that were clutching at the air like the legs of some gigantic insect. Wynn stared forward, open-mouthed, hands raised as if he’d been clawing at the back of his head. Then his arms fell limp, and he kicked Brevolo sharply in the mouth. She crouched, blood spilling from her lips, moaning in shock.

Wynn made no sound. There was only the creak of the branches as they lifted him and then the snap of bones breaking.

Shanyn screamed and looked away.

Brevolo leaned forward and lost everything that was in her stomach. Then anger caught fire within her. She roared in a fury, drew an arrow, sparked its tip with her torch, and fired it into the trunk of the tree.

Something curled around her foot. She put another arrow to the string, lit it, and fired it into the slithering root. It recoiled, the tree pulling it back like a whip.

Then all the tree’s roots burst from the ground, tearing themselves off the tree to thrash toward her.

“Get out of here, Brev!” shouted Shanyn. “Go back. I’ll follow you.”

Brevolo turned to answer her, and she saw the brambles that lay over the dead colt slide off like a blanket and begin to crawl in spasms toward her.

Shanyn’s vawn, terrified, threw the rider free and bolted. Shanyn landed, tumbling, and Brevolo caught her by the arm and pulled her away from the advancing branches. “We’ll take my vawn. We have to answer that alarm.”

In the distance Shanyn’s vawn shrieked as if it were fighting something.

“What’s happening?” Shanyn gasped.

“The woods are cursed.” Brevolo caught the reins of her frightened vawn, and she and Shanyn rode together.

BOOK: The Ale Boy's Feast
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