"I did not desire to kill him," said Shannow.
"What"s done is done. He has family and they"ll hunt for you."
"Best for them that they do not find me."
"I don"t doubt it."
Shannow touched his heels to the horse and moved on. Turning in the saddle, he called back, Tell them to look for Jon Shannow."
"The Jerusalem Man?"
He nodded and pushed the horse into a canter. Behind him the young men dismounted, lifted the dead body of their erstwhile friend and draped it across the back of one of the horses.
Shannow did not glance back. The incident, like so many in his life, was now filed and forgotten. Barkett had been given a chance at life, and had spurned it. Shannow did not regret the deed.
He carried only one burning regret . . .
And that was for a child who had been in the wrong place at the wrong time, and who had touched the orbit of death around the Jerusalem Man.
Shannow rode for an hour and his new horse showed no sign of fatigue. It was a chestnut stallion some two hands taller than his own gelding, and was built for strength and stamina. The horse had been well cared for and grain-fed. Shannow was tempted to run it hard to gauge the limits of its speed, but in hostile country the temptation had to be put aside.
It was coming to nightfall before Shannow saw the lights of Castlemine. There could be no doubt as to the ident.i.ty of the settlement, for it sprawled against the mountains beneath a granite fortress with six crenellated towers. It was an immense structure, the largest building Shannow had ever seen, and below it the shacks and cabins of the mining community seemed puny, like beetles beside an elephant. Some larger dwellings were constructed on either side of a main street that ran to the castle"s arched main gate, and a mill had been built across a stream to the left of the fortress. Lights shone in many windows and the community seemed friendly under the gentle moonlight. Shannow was rarely deceived by appearances, however, and he sat his horse, quietly weighing the options. The young rider had advised him to avoid Castlemine, and in daylight he would have done so. But he was also short on supplies"and from his high vantage point could see the town"s store nestling beside a meeting hall, or tavern house.
He checked his pistols. The h.e.l.l born revolver was fully loaded, as was his own ivory- handled percussion weapon. His mind made up, he rode down the hillside and tethered his horse behind the tavern house. There were few people on the streets, and those who were about ignored the tall man in the long coat. Keeping to the shadows, he moved to the front of the store, but it was bolted. Across the street was an eating-house and Shannow could see it sported around a dozen tables, only half of which were in use. Swiftly he crossed the street and entered the building. The eight diners glanced up and then resumed their meals. Shannow sat by the window facing the door and a middle-aged woman in a chequered ap.r.o.n brought him a jug of cooled water and a pottery mug.
"We have meat and sweet potatoes," she told him. He looked up into her dull brown eyes and detected an edge of fear.
That sounds fine," he told her. "What meat is it?" She seemed surprised.
"Rabbit and pigeon," she said.
"I"ll have it. Where can I find the storekeeper?"
"Baker spends most evenings in the tavern. There is a woman there who sings."
"How will I know him?"
The woman glanced anxiously at the other diners and leaned close.
"You are not with Ridder"s men?"
"No, I am a stranger."
"I"ll fetch you a meal, but then you must move on. Ridder is short of workers since the lung fever ma.s.sacred the Wolvers."
"How will I know Baker?"
The woman sighed. "He"s a tall man who wears a moustache but no beard; it droops to his chin. His hair is grey and parted at the centre - you"ll not miss him. I"ll fetch your food."
The meal was probably not as fine as Shannow"s starved stomach told him it was, and he ate with gusto. The grey-haired woman came to sit beside him as he finished the last of the gravy, mopping it with fresh-baked bread.
"You look as though you needed that," she said.
"I did indeed. It was very fine. How much do I owe?"
"Nothing - if you leave now."
That is kind, but I came to Castlemine for supplies. I shall leave when I have seen Baker."
The woman shrugged and smiled. Years ago, thought Shannow, she must have been strikingly attractive. Now she was overweight and world-weary.
"Do you have a death wish?" she asked him.
"I don"t think so."
The other diners left and soon Shannow found himself alone. The woman locked the door and cleared away the plates and a thin man emerged from the kitchen, removing a stained ap.r.o.n. She thanked him and gave him two silver coins.
"Good night, Flora," he said, and nodded in Shannow"s direction. The woman let him out, then moved around the large room extinguishing the lamps before rejoining Shannow.
"Baker will be leaving the hall around midnight. You are welcome to sit here and wait."
"I am grateful. But why do you do this for me?"
"Maybe I"m just getting old," said Flora, "but I"m sick of Ridder and his ways. He was a good man once, but too many deaths have hardened him."
"He is a killer?"
"No - although he has killed. I meant the mine. Ridder produces silver for the Barta coin.
There is a river sixty miles north that goes to the sea and he ships his silver to many settlements in exchange for grain, iron, salt and weapons - whatever he needs. But that mine eats people. Ridder used to pay for miners, but they died or left. Then he began trapping Wolvers and using them. But they can"t live underground; they sicken and die."
"What are these Wolvers?"
"You"ve never seen them? Then you must have travelled from a far place. They are a little people, covered in hair; their faces are stretched, their ears pointed. It is said that they once looked like us, but I do not believe it."
"And there is a tribe of them?"
"There are scores - perhaps hundreds - of tribes. They tend to gather in small packs within the tribes and are pretty harmless. They live on rabbits, pigeons, turkeys- any small animal they can bring down with their bows or slings. Ridder says they make fine workers while they live. They"re docile, you see, and do as they"re told. But since the lung fever, Ridder has been desperate for workers. Now any stranger will end up in Castlemine. He even has men scouring the countryside. Sometimes we see wagons driven in to the castle with whole families doomed to the shafts and tunnels. It used to be that a man could work his way out in two or three months, but now we never see them."
"Why is he allowed to do this?" asked Shannow. "It is a big settlement - there must be three, maybe four hundred people here."
"You don"t know much about people, do you?" said Flora. "Ridder is the main source of wealth. Those of us who live beneath the castle need have no fear of Brigands or raiders.
We live comfortable lives; we have a school and a church. Life is good."
"A church?"
"We are a G.o.d-fearing people here," she said. The pastor sees to that."
"And how does your pastor react to Ridder"s methods?"
She chuckled. "Ridder is the pastor!"
"You are right, Lady. I do not know much about people."
"Ridder quotes the Bible with every other sentence. The verse that always seems to surface is, "Slaves, obey your masters.""
"It would," said Shannow. His eyes were fixed on the door of the hall, which opened as a tall grey-haired man stepped on to the porch.
"Is that Baker?" he asked.
"Yes."
Shannow removed a shiny Barta coin from his pocket and placed it on the table. "My thanks to you, Lady."
"It is too much," she protested.
"The labourer is worthy of the hire," he told her. Flora let him out through the front door and he crossed the street swiftly, moving up behind the storekeeper. The man was a little unsteady on his feet.
"Good evening, Meneer Baker." The man turned his watery blue eyes towards Shannow.
"Good evening." He blinked and rubbed his eyes. "Do I know you?"
"Only as a customer. Would you be so kind as to open your store?"
"At this time of night? No, sir. Come back when the sun is up."
"I am afraid that will not be convenient, but I shall pay you well for the privilege."
"I suppose you want hunting goods," said Baker, fishing in his pocket for the key to the store.
"Yes."
"I would have thought Ridder would have been well-pleased today."
"How so?"
"With the pair Riggs brought back. I shouldn"t have thought you would need to rush out in the dead of night."
The storekeeper pushed open the door and Shannow followed him inside.
"Well, choose what you need. I"ll put it on Ridder"s bill."
"That will not be necessary. I have coin."
Baker seemed surprised but he said nothing, and Shannow took salt, dried oats, sugar, herb tea and a sack of grain. He also bought two new shirts and a quant.i.ty of dried meat.
"You are a friend of Riggs, I see," said Baker, pointing to the h.e.l.lborn pistol at Shannow"s side.
"He has one of these?"
"He took it from the man they captured today - not the black man, the other one with the forked beard."
Ruth stared from her study window at the students taking their midday break on the wide lawns below. There were thirty-five young people at Sanctuary, all willing to learn and all yearning to change the world. Usually the sight of these young missionaries lifted Ruth"s spirits, gave her renewed belief. But not today.
The evils of men like Abaddon she could withstand, for they could be countered by the love at Sanctuary. But the real dangers to the new world, she knew, were men like Jon Shannow and Daniel Cade - dark heroes, understanding the weapons of evil and turning them on their users, never realizing they were merely perpetuating the violence they sought to destroy.
"You are an arrogant woman, Ruth," she told herself, turning from the window. The parable of Man was there to be seen within the Sipstra.s.si Stones - a gift from the Heavens that could heal, nurture and feed. But in the hands of men, that was never enough; it had to be turned to death and despair.
Ruth could feel herself slipping from harmony so she took a deep breath and prayed silently, drawing the peace of Sanctuary deep into her soul. The bay window disappeared as she closed the study to all intrusion. Pine-panelled walls surrounded her. The carved oak chair shimmered and became a bed. A stone hearth with a glowing log-fire appeared and Ruth lay back and watched the flames.
She felt the presence of another mind, and her defences snapped into place as she sat up and tentatively reached out her thoughts.
"May I enter?" came a voice. Power emanated from the source of the sound, but she could sense no evil there.
She lowered the defensive wall and a figure appeared within the room. He was tall and bearded, with blue eyes and braided hair. Upon his brow was a circlet of silver, at the centre of which sat a golden stone.
"You are Pendarric?" she asked.
"I am, my Lady."
The Lord of the Blood Stones."
"Sadly true." A divan appeared beside him, with braid-edged cushions of down-filled satin.
He lay on his side, resting on one elbow.
"Why are you here?"
"To make amends, Ruth."
"You cannot undo the evil you sired."
"I know that, you are not the world"s only source of wisdom. You are still mortal, Lady. I was overwhelmed by the power of the Stones, and I would argue against judging me. At the end my own strength triumphed, and I saved many thousands of my people. Abaddon is not so strong."
"What are you saying?"
"He is lost to the Sipstra.s.si. Nothing remains of the man you wed; he is not the father of the evil he sires, any more than I was. He has lost the balance, even as you have."
"I am in harmony," Ruth told him.
"No, you are mistaken. In obliterating the desires of self, you have lost in your struggle.
Harmony is balance, it is understanding the evil we all carry, but holding it in stasis by the good we should desire. Harmony is achieved when we have the courage to accept that we are flawed. Everything you have achieved here is artificial. Yes, Sanctuary is pleasant. But even you, when you leave to travel the world, find that your doubts have grown. Then you fly back like a moth to the purifying candle. The truth should remain, even when Sanctuary is gone."
"And you understand the truth?" she asked.
"I understand true harmony. You cannot eradicate evil, for without it how would we judge what is good? And if there is no greed, no l.u.s.t, no baleful desires, what has a man achieved who becomes good? There would then be no mountains to climb."