tomorrow morning, hoping to draw Bethod into a fight.” He pointed to Poulder’s crimson entourage. “The other half are going up into the trees, and hope to surprise them before they can get away.”
Threetrees nodded slowly to himself. “Sounds like a good plan.”
“Nice and simple,” said the Dogman. West winced. He could hardly bear to look at the man.
“We’d have no plan at all if you hadn’t brought us that information,” he managed to say through gritted teeth. “Are you sure we can trust it?”
“Sure as we can be,” said Threetrees.
Dogman grinned. “Shivers is alright, and from what I’ve scouted up, I reckon it’s true. No promises, course.”
“Of course not. You deserve a rest.”
“We wouldn’t say no.”
“I’ve arranged a position for you up at the far left of the line, at the end of General Poulder’s division, up in the trees, on the high ground. You should be well out of the action there. The safest place in the whole army tomorrow, I shouldn’t wonder. Dig in and make yourself a fire, and if things go right, we’ll talk again over Bethod’s dead body.” And he held out his hand.
Threetrees grinned as he took it. “Now that’s our kind of language, Furious. You take care, now.” He and the Dogman started to trudge away up the slope towards the tree line.
“Colonel West?”
He knew who it was before he turned. There weren’t many women in the camp that would have had much to say to him. Cathil, standing in the slush, a borrowed coat wrapped round her. She looked somewhat furtive, somewhat shamefaced, but the sight of her still somehow brought up a sudden surge of anger and embarrassment.
It was unfair, he knew. He had no rights over her. It was unfair, but that only made it worse. All he could think of was the side of the Dogman’s face and her grunting, uh… uh… uh. So horribly surprising. So horribly disappointing. “You’d better go with them,” said West with an icy formality, scarcely able to bring himself to say anything at all. “Safest place.” He turned away but she brought him up short.
“It was you, wasn’t it, outside the tent… the other night?”
“Yes, I’m afraid it was. I simply came to check if there was anything you needed,” he lied. “I really had no idea… who you would be with.”
“I certainly never meant for you to—”
“The Dogman?” he muttered, face suddenly crunching up with incomprehension. “Him? I mean… why?” Why him instead of me, was what he wanted to say, but he managed to stop himself.
“I know… I know you must think—”
“You’ve no need to explain yourself to me!” he hissed, though he knew he’d just asked her to. “Who cares what I think?” He spat it out with a deal more venom than he had intended, but his own loss of control only made him angrier, and he lost more. “I don’t care what you choose to fuck!”
She winced and stared down at the ground beside his feet. “I didn’t mean to… well. I owe you a lot, I know. It’s just that… you’re too angry for me. That’s all.”
West stared at her as she trudged off up the hill alter the Northmen, hardly able to believe his ears. She was happy to bed that stinking savage, but
Questions
Colonel Glokta charged into his dining room in a tremendous hurry, wrestling manfully with the buckle on his sword belt.
“Damn it!” he fumed. He was all thumbs. Couldn’t get the thing closed. “Damn it, damn it!”
“You need some help with that?” asked Shickel, sitting wedged in behind the table, black burns across her shoulders, cuts hanging open, dry as meat in the butcher’s shop.
“No I do not need bloody help!” he shrieked, flinging his belt onto the floor. “What I need is for someone to explain what the hell is going on here! This is a disgrace! I will not have members of my regiment sitting around naked! Especially with such unsightly wounds! Where is your uniform, girl?”
“I thought you were more worried about the Prophet.”
“Never mind about him!” snapped Glokta, worming his way onto the bench opposite her. “What about Bayaz? What about the First of the Magi? Who is he? What’s he really after, the old bastard?”
Shickel smiled a sweet smile. “Oh, that. I thought everyone knew that. The answer is…”
“Yes!” muttered the Colonel, mouth dry, eager as a schoolboy, “The answer is?”
She laughed, and slapped at the bench beside her.
“The answer is…”
Thump, thump, thump. Glokta’s eyes snapped open. It was still half dark outside. Only a faint glow was coming through the curtains.
Thump, thump, thump. “Yes, yes!” he screeched. “I’m crippled, not deaf! I damn well hear you!”
“Then open the bloody door!” The voice came muffled from the corridor, but there was no mistaking the Styrian note.
Thump, thump.
Thump. “I’m coming, damn it!” He footed his cane on the floor and rocked himself up to standing.
“Shhh,” he hissed, like a parent trying to sooth a wailing child, kneading softly at his ruined flesh and trying to breathe slow. “Shhh.” The convulsions slowly calmed to a more manageable trembling.
“You,” he grunted, hopping to the chair. “You just can’t stay away, can you? What is your fascination with my bedchamber?”
She sauntered through the door, peering around scornfully at the miserable room. “Perhaps I just like seeing you in pain.”
Glokta snorted, rubbing gingerly at his burning knee. “Then you must be wet between the legs right now.”
“Surprisingly, no. You look like death.”
“When don’t I? Did you come to mock my looks, or have we some business?”
Vitari folded her long arms and leaned against the wall. “You need to get dressed.”
“More excuses to see me naked?”
“Sult wants you.”
“Now?”
She rolled her eyes. “Oh no, we can take our time. You know how he is.”