He saw how that name put fear in them. Their leader began nodding. He half turned to the men behind him and spoke to them in their own tongue.

'What have you decided?' Carnelian demanded.

The Plainsman looked at him and leered. 'We shall keep them alive to give our people something on which to vent their vengeance.'

Carnelian crouched beside Morunasa. He could see from the man's swollen hands and feet how cruelly he had been bound. The Maruli leaned forward towards the embers Carnelian was carrying in a bowl.

The night is cold.'

Carnelian set the bowl down, removed the blanket he had about his shoulders, and threw it over Morunasa, who smiled.

'You're not what I expected from a Master.'

Tell me what you're doing here.'

Without taking his eyes off Carnelian, Morunasa shook his head slowly. Carnelian regarded the man through narrowed eyes.

Morunasa shrugged. 'In time I will speak, but only to the other Master.'

'Before that, you will die at the hands of the people you have wronged.'

Morunasa showed his sharpened teeth in a grin. 'I don't think so. I saw how much you all fear the other Master.'

'He is much more what you expect of a Master.'

That made Morunasa look uncertain but his lips remained firmly closed.

'I could have you tortured.'

Morunasa grinned grimly. 'I have been taught to withstand pain since I was a child. My secrets would die with me.'

It had been an empty threat. Carnelian did not have the stomach for torture. He could wait until Osidian returned. He allowed his gaze to wander away over the shadowy cedars which were here and there lit by the hearths. It was very like the Koppie. He thought of the destruction that lay on the other side of the hill. They had chosen to spend the night on its south side to be as far away as possible from the mutilated mother trees.

'Why did you cut down the cedars?'

'We needed their wood for fires.'

'You must have known these trees were sacred.'

'It is not the trees but what gathers under them that is sacred.'

'Your Darkness-under-the-Trees?'

'Our Lord curls around their trunks like a serpent.' 'But then-?'

'He is malignant when on earth. We coax him back into the sky.' 'How?'

'With man blood.'

Carnelian shuddered at his tone and the glint that came into his eye. Morunasa's teeth seemed ravener sharp. The Maruli gazed up at the starry sky. 'When his blackness hides the sun he returns to the earth as rain. We feed him and he whispers his secrets to us.'

Carnelian did not want to hear any more. He lifted the bowl, and considered taking back his blanket. He left it and walked away. It was indeed cold.

Carnelian came awake to find Krow wide-eyed, shouting something at him that made no sense. He sat up. 'What?'

'He's bitten their throats out.'

'Whose throats?'

The Manila's.'

Anger made Carnelian come fully awake. The Darkcloud agreed not to harm them.' The Manila did it to each other.' Carnelian rose. 'Show me.'

Krow led him to where a crowd of Plainsmen had gathered. Some of the Darkcloud came clamouring towards Carnelian.

'He's cheated us of our revenge.'

Carnelian did what he could to calm them. The crowd let him through to where Morunasa was sitting against a rock, one eye half-closed by a swelling from a blow he had taken to his head. His mouth, nose and chin were thick with gore. The other two Manila lay sprawled beside him. Carnelian crouched to look at them. Under their chins were ragged holes so deep their heads had rolled away at an unnatural angle. A movement under one of the old men's skins made him recoil.

'How can they already have maggots?'

They were Oracles of the Darkness-under-the-Trees,' said Morunasa, as if that were an explanation.

Carnelian turned to look at the man, grimacing as he saw his teeth clotted with dried blood. 'Why?'

'We had a difference of opinion.'

The man's breath stank. 'What're you talking about, you savage?'

Morunasa's grin made Carnelian look for a spear. 'I should kill you now myself.'

The men around him shifted and murmured. Carnelian looked round at them and recognized many of them as Darkcloud. Morunasa grinned again.

'It seems I am precious to the Flatlanders, Master.'

'After what you did to their trees, their women will not be kind to you.'

'It seems I shall live at least until then.' He glanced at the corpses. 'How does the Master intend to dispose of their bodies?'

'You would have us burn them, would you not, Maruli?'

Morunasa looked surprised. Carnelian asked the Plainsmen what they thought of this and saw how angry it made them. He turned back to Morunasa.

'Why do you burn your dead?'

The smoke carries the soul up into the sky.'

'It seems to me, Maruli, you should have shown as much care for their bodies as now you appear to be doing for their souls.'

Morunasa shrugged. 'Once they are ashes, nothing is left behind but dross.' He displayed his arms with their dusty coating.

This revelation on top of the murders made Carnelian back off in disgust. He looked from the Maruli to the Plainsmen then back again.

They will be exposed with all your other dead on the plain for scavengers to gnaw on,' he said, and received nods and smiles of approval from the Plainsmen. Carnelian did not like it that he took pleasure in Morunasa's scowl.

The Plainsmen divided themselves into groups, each with some aquar pulling drag-cradles, and moved across the ferngardens gathering the dead. Once they had fully loaded up, they took the corpses out and dumped them on the plain. After that, Carnelian ordered everyone to rest beneath the cedars, drowsing, squinting at the plain, waiting for the Darkcloud to do what they could to staunch the resin bleeding from their mother trees. In the later afternoon, the Plainsman dead were carried up to a summit of the crags where they were left bleaching on the funerary trestles waiting for the birds to return with the Rains.

At last, when the sun was descending the bronze sky, they set off back to the koppie of the Ochre. They had unhitched the Marula aquar the night before and applied what salves they could find to their wounds. The drag- cradles with the stolen djada and water they hitched to their own beasts, not wanting to burden the wounded. Morunasa, still bound, was lifted into a saddle-chair.

Though their shadows were long, the day still burned and it was with a desperate delight that they reached the first magnolia shade of the Ochre koppie.

Everything was as they had left it. Carnelian went to see the Bluedancing and found they were well enough and thankful for the days of rest his expedition had gifted them. Next he turned his attention to the captive. Morunasa's fingers and toes were swelling black, though he seemed to be indifferent to the pain. Nevertheless, Carnelian ignored the anger of the Darkcloud and had the bonds cut. He answered their fear that the Maruli might escape by exiling him to share the summit of the Crag with the dead on their trestles. The Darkcloud might guard him from the shaded comfort of the porch of the Ancestor House.

Вы читаете The Standing Dead
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