Hurl eyed her — the shamaness had hated them from the start. Named them an abomination. She'd never asked what she'd meant by that exactly. But after having spent some time with them she knew in her gut that she'd felt it all along. ‘You still have the trail, Liss?’
‘Yes. He's had his fill for one night. Heading north.’
‘Good. We'll follow for as long as it takes.’
‘Agreed,’ Rell said. ‘He's a menace to all.’
Hurl urged her mount on.
Shadow was damned monotonous. Such was the conclusion Kyle was drawing. They walked and walked and then walked some more. It occurred to him that he ought to be tired, or hungry, but so far nothing like that came upon him. What he felt instead was a kind of draining lassitude, a strange feeling of eternal waiting — not despair — no, not hopelessness, but rather a sensation of time suspended, of eternity. Just how long had the five of them been walking? Who was to know? Their bizarre guide would presumably let them know once they'd reached Quon. No sun rose, no day, or night, came. Eternal dusk. He felt like a ghost walking he knew not where.
All of them, Jan, the Lost brothers, seemed to have fallen beneath the same spell, as conversation stopped and all walked apart, alone with their thoughts. For a time they drew abreast of a large lake. Figures fished it from boats, casting nets; they appeared huge, inhuman. Their guide swerved them away from the coast. The ground became rougher. Steep-sided canyons rose to their right, cutting through flat-topped hills of layered rock. The Shadow priest Hethe led them around the canyons and out on to a level desert-like landscape of broken rock and thick, sword-like clumped grasses.
Jan, it seemed, had finally had enough and he jogged ahead to take hold of their guide's frayed robes to pull him to a halt. ‘Where are we?’ he demanded.
Hethe's hood fell back revealing his wild, kinky black hair like a thin halo around his bumpy skull. His tangled brows rose. ‘Wearwy?’ he said. ‘No, my name is Hethe.’
‘No,’ Jan snarled. ‘Where… are… we… going?’
The man looked insulted. He pulled his robes from Jan's grip. ‘That's rather personal!’ and he stormed off.
‘Where are you taking us!’ Jan yelled after him.
‘Wartegenus?’ he called back. ‘I know of no such place.’
Jan pressed a hand to his brow, hung his head. Coming abreast of him, Stalker urged him on with a hand. They continued on. This desert, or what resembled a desert, extended for leagues. Ruins dotted it: no more than scattered fragments of wind-gnawed worked stone.
After a time all but their guide halted as the calls of more than one hound echoed across the bleak landscape. They exchanged uneasy glances. Some unknowable time later Jan suddenly let out a surprised gasp. His hands went to his neck. The rest of them, but for the guide, halted. The man stared ahead into the distance, amazement in his eyes. Kyle looked to Stalker and the scout shrugged, at a loss. A moment later Jan staggered, caught himself from falling and glared around at the empty landscape. ‘We're close,’ he said, and he set off at a faster pace leaving the four of them to eye one another in complete confusion. Finally, Stalker shrugged again and set off. The brothers followed.
Kyle refused to move. The thought came to him: what difference would it make? Why should they walk on and on forever like this? He sat down on the gritty, pebbled desert plain. Why return to Quon, to where the Guard was, when they'd just kill him? Unless Jan was who he thought — but could he trust his life to a chance like that?
Footsteps crunched on the wind-scoured dirt around him. He looked up to see the four of them peering down at him — their guide was nowhere to be seen. Stalker bent down on his haunches in front of him. ‘You comin’?’
‘Maybe.’
The scout glanced up to the others, puzzled. ‘Maybe?’
‘If this guy comes clean,’ and he tossed a stone to Jan's feet.
Stalker gave a long thoughtful nod, looked up at Jan. ‘Well, how about it?’
The old man pushed back his hair, long and thin enough to be blown by the feeble wind that seemed to haunt the warren. He gave a quick nod of consent, motioned Kyle up. ‘Very well, Kyle. From what I understand, you deserve better.’ Kyle stood, brushed off the dust. Jan fished out the object he carried around his neck, broke the thong, and put what was a ring on his finger. ‘As you suspect, Kyle. I am K'azz D'Avore. Jan, by the way, is part of my full name.’
‘I knew it all along!’ Badlands exclaimed, elbowing Coots. ‘Didn't I say so?’
‘You didn't say.’
‘But you're-’ began Kyle.
‘Old?’
Kyle shrugged, sheepish. ‘Yeah.’
‘I wasn't when I made the Vow, Kyle. Since then, though, I have aged. But I don't think ageing is the right word for it. I find that I am toughening up, losing flesh, so to speak. I eat little, hardly sleep. It is as if I were transforming somehow.’
‘Into what?’ Stalker asked, his gaze narrowed.
‘I don't know for certain. I suspect that something in the Vow is transforming me, perhaps all of us Avowed, preserving us. Sustaining us so long as it should hold. Until we complete it.’
The brothers shared shocked glances, Stalker scowling. ‘That's impossible.’
A shrug from K'azz invited Stalker to come up with his own explanation. The news meant nothing to Kyle. All it did was confirm that something strange was going on — as though he needed to be told that!
‘Where's the little rat?’ Coots asked.
Everyone glanced around. K'azz pointed, ‘There.’
Kyle squinted: a tiny dark dot out on the unrelentingly uniform wind-scoured waste.
‘For the love of the Infinite,’ Badlands breathed, ‘doesn't he even know we've stopped?’
K'azz set out at a jog, waving them on, ‘C'mon. We mustn't lose him.’
They all set out at a jogging run. At first they seemed to make no progress; the tiny dot seemed to get no larger. Kyle already knew distances and proportions were strange here in Shadow. They trotted for a time, then set out at a run again; they were gaining ground. Kyle's lungs burned, his feet and thighs ached. None of the others evidenced any signs of exertion. He bit down on the pain and kept going. Quite suddenly, they caught up. The man had stopped and was waiting for them, an irked expression on his wrinkled, hairy face.
‘Yes?’ he demanded.
They halted. Kyle bent over to pant, hands on his knees. Stalker faced the fellow, ‘Well? Is this it?’
Hethe cupped a hand to his ear. ‘What? What was that? You think I can't hear? Well I can! Perfectly!’ He turned around and set off again in his awkward bowed-legged walk.
‘I swear I'm gonna kill ‘im,’ Coots ground out.
K'azz waved them forward. ‘Let's go.’
They continued on. Coots muttered darkly about strangulation and torture, then, louder, ‘I swear he's leadin’ us in circles!’
‘We have no choice,’ K'azz answered tiredly.
Kyle shifted to walk alongside K'azz. The man caught him studying him sidelong. ‘Yes?’
Wetting his lips, Kyle ventured, ‘So — you're really him?’
An amused smile. ‘Yes, Kyle.’
He'd done it! Actually found him! But they were a long way from Quon. ‘I knew Stoop.’
The smile broadened. ‘Yes, Stoop. I learned a lot from him when I was a lad.’
‘Are you really a Prince?’
K'azz tilted his head aside, thinking. ‘Some call me that. I was a Duke. During the wars I defended a principality for a time. But that fell too…’
Kyle glanced away. Oaf! Reminding him of all that.
Coots shouted, pointing ahead: ‘Look there! There's some poor bastard he led out here to die before.’