and slammed on his rump in the mud.

Good thing, too, for the man's partner lunged for Gull's guts with his sword. He missed, pinking Gull's leather tunic. But the other front ranker skipped forward to deliver the deathblow. Gull saw the blade flicker like a snake's tongue, threw up his hands to block it, knowing he'd only lose fingers before being filleted.

But the swordsman staggered back. A stone struck him in the face. Teeth crunched and he howled. More rocks struck the soldiers, who parried with their shields.

Gull kicked the wounded man's knee with his hickory clog, then scurried away on all fours. He scrambled past his father, who directed the attack.

'Get 'em, White Ridgers!' Even half-bent, at half strength, Brown Bear was a powerful man. From the ruins of a house he grabbed a rock in each hand and pitched them against the soldiers' exposed legs. 'Seal, hit 'em in the head! Badger, the legs! Bluebell, throw that beam amidst 'em!'

But the advice went unneeded. Cursing, the soldiers backed away, rocks clanging off their shields. Masked by driving rain, they faded around another ruin and were gone.

For now.

And Sparrow Hawk had circled that way, Gull thought. Had his brother met the soldiers?

A muddy hand lifted Gull by his shoulder. His father propped him up, yet half-hunched, had to twist his head to see his tall son's face. The man looked like Gull, just craggier and gray. 'Good work, son! Good work! I'd have given them the same could I stand straight! You're-'

'Never mind that!' cut in Bittersweet. 'Where did you leave Greensleeves? And have you seen Hawk?'

Gull explained hurriedly about the holes in the thorn hedge, how she'd disappeared, then about Sparrow Hawk-when suddenly the ground rippled underfoot.

A man yelped. 'Aftershock!'

'Not again!' his father griped, as if earthquakes were no more trouble than gut rumbles.

Yet the earth did not snap, nor their teeth chatter, as before. One ripple was all. What did that mean?

After people breathed again, the survivors took stock.

They huddled in the rain amidst the wreckage of their homes. Chipmunk's mother, Feverfew, fussed with his forehead gash. People peeked at Seal's belly cut, but the big man only raised his belt and tightened it over the wound. He puffed out his chest, suddenly a hero. Parents calmed children, wiped noses, hushed crying, wrapped soggy shawls around their shoulders. Others gazed over the ruins of the village, seeking the missing, talked of arming and organizing a search party. Cowslip, her bodice pinned with thorns, her hair flat and lips blue with cold, stood close by Gull's family and watched him intently.

The woodcutter trotted the way the soldiers had gone, hunted for signs of his brother, and found none. He called and received no answer. Where had Hawk gone? Probably adventuring, his brother sighed. Well, he'd have to fend for himself-it was Greensleeves needed finding.

First, though, Gull returned to his family. The elders, they argued about how to proceed.

'We won't have any crops at all this year,' said one man.

'We'll need to live in the woods like outlaws and savages,' said another.

Bittersweet held tiny Cub against her skirts. 'We'll have to move on. This devastation will bring plague. It always follows a wizards' duel, the legends say.'

'Aye,' said Feverfew, 'they might's well plow salt into the ground.'

Half-listening, Gull climbed the heap of rocks that had been Badger's house and craned for a view. Through layers of rain and gaps in the thorn wall, he could see something of the battlefield the valley had become.

Up in the meadow, the two-headed giant was still foot-caught. He rolled and twitched and moaned piteously, a high, wild keening. His right arm was chewed to an elbow stump, and streaming rain washed away his blood. Three-legged, the clockwork beast clumped along the edge of the forest as if it were a fence. Goblins dragged something like a body across a muddy field, fighting and pushing and arguing every inch of the way. Of the hydra there was no sign. A centaur or a horse flashed past a gap in the hedge. Red soldiers hacked something across the river at the north end of the village. More villagers clustered at the far south, almost to the bogs, as if afraid to set foot in the village again. They didn't respond when he waved an arm, and his shouts were drowned by the rain. Only a family of six, Snowblossom and Hedgehog and their children, skulked from heap to heap, coming slowly. Gull waved them on. But where the blazes were Greensleeves and Sparrow Hawk?

'We'll not leave!' Brown Bear's head waggled from side to side. 'We'll rebuild! We'll pack together for the winter. Gull can cut beams, I can saw planks-'

From his perch, Gull gave a shout of surprise. 'What…?'

Snowblossom's family had disappeared-down a hole?

Hefting his axe, Gull called for someone to follow, then jogged toward the spot where Snowblossom's family had vanished.

A gaping hole, round as a well, had caved in not far from the river. From the aftershock? Why not a crack?

A head popped into the rainy gloom below, and Gull knelt at the crumbling edge. He couldn't see who it was. 'Snowblossom? Hedgehog? Grab my hand!' He leaned as far as he dared. Seal grabbed his belt behind.

His hand was ignored. A head covered with dirt rose from the hole as someone climbed with strong fingers sunk in the dirt. The head waggled, shedding dirt, revealing a blue dome with tufts of wiry hair.

Gull snatched his hand back. What…?

The hole boiled. A dozen, two dozen, fifty little goomers spouted from the depths like rats from a flour bin.

It was hard to see them clearly for the mud. They were knee-high, naked, blue or gray, scaly like snakes. Wiry hair sprouted from shoulders and elbows. Jutting ears, huge noses, bigger mouths. They chanted as they spilled from the hole. 'Oi, oi, oi! Watcher! Gonner get 'em, gonner barsh 'em!' Gull couldn't tell if they were true words or not.

Then the things, trolls or whatever, scattered. Gull and the rest shrank back as if from plague rats, but the little goons just swarmed past. Trailing dirt and mud, they flitted everywhere, digging, shifting rocks, burrowing into ruins. Gull saw one troll burst from a ruin with a copper pot, hoisting it like a treasure.

They were scavengers! Conjured by wizards? It must be. The trolls would scour the ruins for valuables. Gull's anger, which he'd thought squelched by the rain, returned hot enough to make his brow steam. Was there nothing sacred to these wizards, that they'd callously destroy a village and then pick the meat from the bones?

Shifting his axe, Gull trotted after a troll who dug like a dog, shooting dirt between his legs. The woodcutter grasped the thing around its thick neck. 'Hey, you! Get away! We've enough trouble-'

He couldn't lift the troll. It might have been made of granite or lead. Gull changed his grip, but the troll shrugged it off. The tiny, almost-comical troll hopped to one side, lifted a big-toed foot, and kicked Gull in the leg- the bad leg.

For once, Gull didn't fall down. But he did gasp and rub his knee. The kick was like a mule's. Beady-eyed, the troll glared around its melon nose and spit, 'Gwan! Goncher gummin gaflin baglit, nosher!'

It resumed digging. Within seconds, it plucked an oilskin pouch and tore it open with its teeth. Silver and copper coins reflected the dim sky. Chuckling, the troll stuffed the treasure into a pouch over its scaly belly. Then it scampered over the heap, big feet flying, vast nose twitching.

It must smell the metal, Gull thought in amazement. So these trolls were perfect scavengers. And there wasn't much Gull could do to stop them. A hundred or more had spilled from the hole. Gull doubted an axe could even dent the pests.

Hobbling, he returned to the hole. A timid cry sounded below. Hedgehog's family. Pulled out and brushed off, they'd been trampled under big dirty feet. Snowblossom reported the tunnel went on and on, the gods only knew how far.

'One more thing to endanger the crops,' Gull groused. 'It'll channel groundwater away.'

They limped back to the main cluster of villagers. But Seal yelped. 'Look there!'

Against the wet vault of sky, a human flew.

The villagers had seen miracles all day, but this seemed the greatest one. What could top a person flying like a bird?

Squinting against rain pelting his eyes, Gull watched the wizard soar, arms outspread like an eagle. It was dark, for dusk approached, but coming from the north, Gull assumed it was the brown wizard, the woman with

Вы читаете Whispering woods
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×