“Well done,” Ragen said, and Arlen beamed. “You plotted the vertices masterfully. I couldn’t have woven a tighter web myself, and you did all the equations in your head, no less.”
“Uh, thanks,” Arlen said, though he had no idea what Ragen was talking about.
Ragen caught the boy’s pause. “You did do the equations, didn’t you?” he asked.
“What’s an equation?” Arlen asked. “That line”—he pointed to the nearest ward—“goes to that ward there.” He pointed to the wall. “It crosses these lines”—he pointed to other wards—“which crisscross with those here.” He pointed to still others. “It’s as simple as that.”
Ragen was aghast. “You mean you just eyeballed it?” he demanded.
Arlen shrugged as Ragen turned back to him. “Most people use a straightstick to check the lines,” he admitted, “but I never bother.”
“How Tibbet’s Brook isn’t swallowed by the night, I have no idea,” Ragen said. He pulled a sack from his saddlebag and knelt at the cave mouth, sweeping Arlen’s wards away.
“Dirt wards are still foolhardy, however well drawn,” he said.
Ragen selected a handful of lacquered wooden ward plates from the sack. Using a straightstick marked with lines, he spaced them out quickly, resealing the net.
It hadn’t been dark for more than an hour when the giant one-armed rock demon bounded into the clearing. It gave a great howl, sweeping lesser demons aside as it stomped toward the cave mouth, roaring a challenge. Keerin groaned, retreating to the back of the cave.
“That one has your scent now,” Ragen warned. “It will follow you forever, waiting for you to drop your guard.”
Arlen looked at the monster for a long moment, considering the Messenger’s words. The demon snarled and struck hard at the barrier, but the wards flared and knocked it away. Keerin whimpered, but Arlen rose and walked up to the mouth of the cave. He met the coreling’s eyes and slowly raised his hands, bringing them together suddenly in a loud clap, mocking the demon with his two limbs.
“Let it waste its time,” he said as the demon howled in impotent rage. “It won’t get me.”
They continued on the road for almost a week. Ragen turned them north, passing through the foothills of the mountain range, ascending ever higher. Now and again Ragen would stop to hunt, felling small game from great distances with his thin throwing spears.
Most nights they stayed in shelters noted in Graig’s log, though twice they simply camped in the road. Like any animal, Ragen’s mare was terrified by the stalking demons, but she did not try to pull free from her hobble.
“She deserves a name,” Arlen said, for the hundredth time, pointing at the steady horse.
“Fine, fine!” Ragen finally conceded, ruffling Arlen’s hair. “You can name her.”
Arlen smiled. “Nighteye,” he said.
Ragen looked at the horse, and nodded. “It’s a good name,” he agreed.
CHAPTER 9
FORT MILN
319 AR
THE TERRAIN GREW STEADILY ROCKIER as the tiny lumps on the horizon rose higher and higher. Ragen had not exaggerated when he said a hundred Boggin’s Hills could fit in just one mountain, and the range stretched as far as Arlen could see. The air grew cooler as they climbed; strong gusts of wind whipped through the hills. Arlen looked back and saw the whole world spread out before him like a map. He imagined traveling through those lands with only a spear and a Messenger bag.
When they finally caught sight of Fort Miln, Arlen couldn’t believe his eyes. Despite Ragen’s tales, he had still assumed it would be like Tibbet’s Brook, only larger. He nearly fell from the cart as the fortress city rose up before them, looming over the road.
Fort Miln was built into the base of a mountain, overlooking a broad valley. Another mountain, twin to the one Miln abutted, faced the city from across the valley. A circular wall some thirty feet high surrounded the city, though many of the buildings within thrust still higher into the sky. The closer they got to the city, the more it spread out, the wall going for miles in each direction.
The walls were painted with the largest wards Arlen had ever seen. His eyes followed the invisible lines connecting one ward to another, forming a web that would make the wall impervious to corelings.
But despite the triumph of achievement, the walls disappointed Arlen. The “free” cities weren’t really free at all. Walls that kept the corelings out also kept the people in. At least in Tibbet’s Brook the prison walls were invisible.
“What keeps wind demons from flying over the wall?” Arlen asked.
“The top of the wall is set with wardposts that weave a canopy over the city,” Ragen said.
Arlen realized he should have figured that out without Ragen’s help. He had more questions, but he kept them to himself, his sharp mind already working on probable solutions.
It was well past high sun when they finally reached the city. Ragen pointed out a column of smoke farther up the mountain, miles above the city.
“The Duke’s Mines,” he said. “It’s a village in itself, larger than your Tibbet’s Brook. They’re not self-sufficient, but that’s how the duke likes it. Caravans come and go most every week. Food goes up, and salt, metal, and coal come down.”
A lower wall branched out from the main city, running in a broad swath around the valley. Arlen could make out wardposts and the top of neat green rows. “The great gardens and the Duke’s Orchard,” Ragen noted.
The gate was open wide as workers came and went, and the guards waved as they approached. They were tall, like Ragen, and wore dented metal helms and old boiled leather over thick woolens. Both carried spears, but they held them more like showpieces than weapons.
“Ay, Messenger!” one cried. “Welcome back!”
“Gaims. Woron.” Ragen nodded at them.
“Duke expected you days ago,” Gaims said. “We were worried when you didn’t arrive.”
“Thought the demons got me?” Ragen laughed. “Not a chance! There was a coreling attack in the hamlet I visited on the way back from Angiers. We stayed on a bit to help out.”
“Picked up a stray while you were there?” Woron asked with a grin. “A little gift for your wife while she waits for you to make her a Mother?”
Ragen scowled, and the guard drew back. “I meant no offense,” he said quickly.
“Then I suggest you avoid saying things that tend to offend, Servant,” Ragen replied tightly. Woron paled, and nodded quickly.
“I found him out on the road, actually,” Ragen said, ruffling Arlen’s hair and grinning as if nothing tense had just passed.
Arlen liked that about Ragen. He was quick to laugh, and held no grudges, but he demanded respect, and let you know where you stood. Arlen wanted to be like that one day.
“On the road?” Gaims asked in disbelief.
“Days from anywhere!” Ragen cried. “The boy can ward better than some Messengers I know.” Arlen swelled with pride at the compliment.
“And you, Jongleur?” Woron asked Keerin. “Like your first taste of the naked night?”
Keerin scowled, and the guards laughed. “That good, eh?” Woron asked.