response, inviting a fall. Ringil kept his balance with an effort, waited until everything settled again, and then started down the sloping cobbles, one jolting, jelly-legged pace at a time.
Get to the harbor. Get aboard the Marsh Queen s Favor.
By now, Eril would have been back to the tavern they were lodged at, would have seen to the selling of the horses, for whatever price could be had at such short notice and time of night. And by the time the sun came up and they were missed at the Dappled Gate, Marsh Queen s Favor would be standing well out to sea, beyond pursuit and the need for any more fugitive planning.
A cabin, a bunk, departure at dawn while he slept.
It was like a beacon, pulling at him.
Ringil Eskiath!
He lurched around. Realized too late the trap the name implied.
Stupid, stupid, stupid fucking
Well, well, well. Venj the axman, there on the corner of a cross-street alley, teeth bared in a savage grin. Bulky figures at his back, half a dozen or more. Thought that was a dodgy fucking Yhelteth accent, if ever I heard one. Thought I knew the face from somewhere.
The war, the war, the fucking war. Was he ever going to run out of people who knew his face from some blood-soaked skirmish or other?
Look, he fumbled.
Look nothing. Venj spat on the ground. I got family in Trelayne still, I hear the stories. Ringil Eskiath turned black mage, turned on his own family. Price on his head, for loosing slaves and killing merchants. And now there s some northern swordsman sorcerer down here raiding slave caravans. Doesn t take a lot of brain to put that together.
Lucky for you then, Ringil said faintly.
He thought it got a couple of guffaws from the men at Venj s back. Didn t think it would help much, come the crunch. He held himself upright, tried to look like some kind of credible threat.
You sure you want to do this, skirmish ranger?
Sudden flinch in the axman s eyes. That was a long time ago.
Wasn t it just. I can let this go, Venj, and so can you. Just walk away.
Walk away. The axman s tone was light, mock-reasonable, as if he were seriously considering the idea. Ringil felt something plummet in his guts at the sound. Yeah, we could do that, couldn t we, boys? Just walk away from a twenty-five-thousand florin reward. Yeah, why not?
It s fifteen.
Venj grinned. Either fucking way, it ll do us.
Growl of approval at his back like surf. No way out, then. Ringil flexed his right hand at his side. Reckoned angles, but groggily hopelessly numb. Recall of the fight at Snarl s encampment only that morning, now faded like some impossible dream of speed and power, some old soldier s tale of a youth and glory that never was. He d have to get the Ravensfriend drawn; the dragon dagger wouldn t cut it against men like these. Not this many, not this type. But they were in so fucking close
Venj watched it all going through his head and nodded.
So, you going to come quietly, or do we have to hamstring and drag you?
Fuck that. Make them kill you.
But he knew they wouldn t have to. Not in his current state, not with these numbers. And with the promise of a reward that high, Venj s men would take whatever risks and gashes they needed to bring him down alive. They d bracket him, they d crowd him, and sooner or later
He went for the Ravensfriend.
Fevered flash grab as fast as he could make his body do it.
Knew instantly he d fucked it up.
It was there in the fumbled grip he got on the pommel, the jagged, grudging tug as he tried to clear the blade. Weary inelegant the motions of a man who did not want to fight. Venj must have seen it all, spotted the move even as it bloomed. He leapt in with a yell, grabbing for Ringil s sword-arm before it could swing down. Ringil twisted awkwardly aside, lashed out with a boot and felt it connect. The axman yelped and went over, sprawling and tangled. He lay in a cursing heap on the cobbles as his men rushed in. Their weapons glinted in the gloom.
Ringil got the Ravensfriend around in a soggy arc, managed to block the first opposing blade of the night. Chime of steel, but he staggered from the impact. Turned it into a backward lurch, tried for some fighting space. No fucking chance they pressed in on him like excited dogs. He swept his blade low, trying to scare them back, but they were a hard-bitten crew and they just grinned, and skipped the feint, and surged back in. Ringil parried as best he could. Behind the mob, Venj was back on his feet, ax drawn, bawling encouragement.
Something steel got through, he never saw what or how the flat of it clouted him across the left knee with numbing force. His leg buckled, he could not brace it up. The Ravensfriend wavered. He saw a face full of scars, leering. Hands grappled and grasped, someone got to his wrist and bore it up; someone else ducked in and punched him hard and fast once! twice! under the chest. He might have ridden the first one out, but the second dropped him to his knees like a slingshot buck. He swayed there a moment, had time to notice he d lost the Ravensfriend, and then he keeled over on his side, breath creaking in his starved lungs. Someone kicked him in the head for good measure; someone else laughed and spat on the cobbles near his face. He heard Venj s voice again, distantly, berating them about something or other.
Do I look like a fucking slave to you?
No, that wasn t Venj. It was hollow and toneless, and it seemed to come out of the air right beside Ringil s ear. He twisted his head up. Saw nothing. But he thought the others had heard it, too, because the excited surf of their voices rolled suddenly back into quiet.
The fuck? said someone.
Do I look like a fucking slave to you?
Something moved in the gloom of the nearest side alley. Ringil, still struggling to breathe, could not get enough of an angle to see clearly.
Oi! Venj trod forward. Ringil got a worm s-eye view of his boots. This ain t your fucking business, chum, so put that blade up, and clear off while you still can.
Do I look like a fucking slave to y
Stop fucking saying that!
Better run, said another voice, from the other side of the street. Ringil felt a chill smoking off him as he heard the words, though in his fuddled state he could not work out why. Better run.
Right, that s it, said Venj grimly.
You were fucking warned.
Out on the marsh, said a third voice, as cold and empty as the other two. Salt in the wind.
Footfalls, impossible to tell from where. The swish of a sword blade making passes in the night air. One of Venj s men jerked out a string of curses, but there was a waking terror in his voice. Ringil twisted his head frantically, trying to see something, anything. Thought he made out a solid black figure standing in the shadows to his left.
Fuck them all, said the third voice, and Ringil remembered, with a sudden, gut-deep jolt, where he d heard those words before.
Venj roared. Come on then, you motherfucking
Dark rush of motion. Something like a whirlwind, closing from three corners.
Wrenched screams. Venj s bellow, turned suddenly castrated.
And a hot, wet pattering through the air, like a rainy-season downpour back home in Trelayne. As it fell on his face and the cobbles around him, he realized vaguely that it was blood.
Ringil came round with the stench of someone s voided bowels clogging his throat. He coughed and turned over on the cobblestones, rolled up against the familiar bulk of a still-warm corpse. His knee throbbed painfully and, somewhere not far off, he heard the sea. For a couple of moments he was confused, tangled in old memories, thought he was still lying hidden among the slain at Rajal Beach. Panic-stricken, he froze the cough in his throat. His pulse pounded. If the Scaled Folk were still prowling the breakwaters, looking for survivors