‘Don’t know,’ Cartheron answered. He glanced to Surly at the bar. ‘They disappeared again.’ She stood leaning against the counter, arms crossed, glaring at the air ahead of her. ‘So,’ he prompted, ‘what do we do?’
‘Carry on with the repairs,’ she said.
‘Are we gonna go?’ Urko asked. ‘He won’t want us takin’ his ship.’
Surly cast him her searing glare. ‘It’s
Urko shrugged. ‘Yeah. But we promised to work for him.’
Surly’s lips turned down even further. ‘We’ll work for him from far away. Anyway, he’s gone again, isn’t he? Disappeared. Maybe gone for ever. We have to just assume—’
Grinner came thumping down the stairs.
‘How is he?’ Cartheron asked.
He nodded his assurances to everyone. ‘He’ll live. Just some kind of shock. Our, ah, patron’s magery doesn’t agree with him, apparently.’ He turned to Surly. ‘May I?’
She gestured him off. ‘Of course. Go ahead.’
He hurried out the door.
Shrift rose and went to the door as well. ‘I’ll take watch,’ she said, and stepped out.
‘Crust,’ Surly said from the bar.
‘Yes?’
She was still staring off ahead of her. ‘You have another moon.’
Cartheron nodded. Damned straight – after
Surly just stared ahead, thinking furiously perhaps about what this latest revelation meant for her long-term plans.
‘Don’t know,’ Urko answered. ‘The locals say no one and nothing ever comes
Cartheron emptied his earthenware mug and sighed. Well, they had plenty of work to do, regardless.
* * *
Dancer found himself in darkness. Not the dark as of a moonless night, but a complete and utter black, as if he swam lost within a sea of elemental night.
‘Where are we?’ he asked of the blackness.
‘I’m not sure,’ Kellanved answered, sounding reassuringly close, but also completely spent and wrung out.
‘No. Too dark.’
‘Well – make some light. Do your hocus-pocus magery.’
‘Can’t. There are no shadows here.’
‘You can’t make us a plain light?’ Dancer felt almost betrayed. ‘What kind of a mage are you?’
‘Not that kind. Ah!’ Above, a door had opened casting weak watery light, as of a sickle moon, down a set of stone steps. The feeble light was occluded, however, by the lumbering gigantic shape of an armoured colossus who came thumping down the steps.
Dancer drew his heavy parrying gauche once more, thinking,
‘We are within,’ Kellanved called out. ‘Why dispute this now?’
The giant did not answer from within its obscuring full helm. It drew a blade fully as large as a two-handed sword, and held it in one gauntleted hand. It swung ponderously. Dancer and Kellanved evaded the blow. The blade rang on the stone-flagged floor.
‘Do something,’ Dancer hissed to his partner.
Kellanved held up his open hands. ‘I have nothing left.’
Snarling his frustration, Dancer threw himself at the colossus, striking low, but his blade rebounded from the giant’s mailed leggings. He evaded another sluggish blow and called, ‘This is not my strong suit!’
‘I have a plan,’ Kellanved answered, throwing a finger in the air. Dodging a straight up and down cut, the clashing iron raising sparks from the stones, Kellanved ran for the stairs.
Dancer watched him go almost with disbelief. ‘That’s your plan? Run away?’
Topping the steps, Kellanved called down, ‘A time-honoured tradition.’
Dancer easily evaded the ponderous guardian to follow his partner up the stairs. He found an empty hallway. From below came the heavy thumping of the giant, pursuing.
A panicked yell from Kellanved brought Dancer running up the hall to a small parlour, or salon, where flames crackled in a fireplace. Dim dirty windows hinted at early morning outside. Kellanved writhed on the floor, fighting something small and furry that was wrapped round his head yanking at his hair.
Dancer let his arms fall. ‘It’s that nacht thing. Your pet.’
Kellanved stopped wriggling. He struggled to his feet, dragged the thing round to study it. ‘Demon! Bad Demon!’
The thing let out an enormous belch and Kellanved flinched.
Dancer looked to the thick, soot-blackened log rafters above. ‘Change its damned name, would you?’
A crashing footfall announced the entry of the giant, blade readied. Kellanved froze, gaping up at it, as did the nacht in his hands, its arms wrapped round his neck. It seemed to Dancer that both wore the exact same expression of stunned consternation.
The armoured colossus lowered its blade, its shoulders falling, as if in disappointment, then it turned and trudged away down the hall.