Chapter 16 – Stovologard (5047)
They spent
the morning of the next day in their tall house in the rear compound of the inn
Honni had selected for them. The food was not here as the previous inn and the
staff were not quite as friendly, but the top floor of the house offered
excellent views of the town and its surroundings.
They were
waiting for Honni to make arrangements for their journey to the docks and when
they were not admiring the view, they were in the central room at the low
table, eating, drinking and chatting.
As was often
the case they were talking over old times.
‘Me and
Ghene, we were in the Company eight years,’ Meggelaine was explaining to Arrin
and Tankle. ‘We left at the same time. The first four years were the best
though, don’t you agree Ghene?’
‘Yes, in
some sense. We were treated like heroes by the dwarves.’
‘We were heroes,’ put in Broddor.
‘Big fish in
a small pond,’ laughed Roztov. ‘Even now, Kardane numbers only about two
thousand souls. It’s only dwarven tradition that dictates every fortress has a
king.’
‘Regardless
of that,’ said Broddor, ‘we were a king’s company.’
‘What I
don’t fully understand, my lord, is why you left Styke, if you were associated
with a fortress in that country,’ asked Arrin.
‘Well,’
mused Roztov. ‘Once the goblins were dealt with and there was peace, there wasn’t
much need for us. I should clarify that, Styke is a country with a lot of
problems, but none that a company of about fifty dwarves and other hangers on
were suitable solutions to. There were a bit too many of us to bother with
every farmer that had had his goat stolen by an Elbow Mine kobold, but not
enough of us to take on the bigger problems. There is a tower south of Swollow
Wood used by a necromancer cult, I think if we could have cleared it out if we
tried, but it’s protected by the Duke of Glayborne who is an old crony of the
King. You see? It would have lead to putting Kardane into great danger,
probably from the Duke himself. We were a powerful warband by that stage and
while some welcomed the peace and went back to their homes again, most wanted
to reach for further glory. Some had only fairly recently arrived, Floran for
instance, just as the war (if you could call it that) was ending and were still
thirsty for adventure. It seemed more logical to leave the country to slake
that thirst.’
‘It wasn’t
the same though,’ said Meggelaine with sadness in her voice. ‘The places we
went, and the people we helped, it was worth it, but it wasn’t the same. We did
good, but often we would think, and talk about, the reasons we were there. We
went further and further north and east, we were so far away from home. In the
end, most of us began to wonder what we were fighting for.’
‘Especially
after the Moon Marshes,’ continued Ghene. ‘All the evil that lived up there, I
sometimes wonder if we were not just stirring things up. Perhaps all those
undead horrors were best left alone. And all that treasure we brought back, it
was inevitable that half the company left.’
Arrin and
Tankle listened, smiled and nodded. They had heard most of this before, but so
far they had not tired of the repetition of the stories.
‘Well, me
and Ghene went to the Council a while after that,’ said Meggelaine. She poked
at Roztov playfully. ‘And that’s where you should be. I’m sorry Roz, but that’s
where you could do the most good. The threat from the east, no other danger
compares to that. When we entered the Great Forest Council, from that day on it
just looked like you and Broddor were still playing.’
‘I know,’
conceded Roztov. ‘It would be a big step though, and the politics would be…
challenging. I’ll be a Baron of Styke, sort of, one day. I’ll own land. I’ll
have people to look after. The Kingdoms of men respect the druids, but they
don’t trust the Council and their agenda.’
‘You don’t have
to live in the Great Forest,’ suggested Ghene. ‘There are dozens of rings in
Styke, one in Angor even right?’
‘Yes, I
suppose. Don’t misunderstand me, I have given it much thought. One day perhaps,
but right now I’m raising a family. Well, if I survive this, that’s what I plan
to get back to.’
Roztov rose and
walked over to the back door, hit by a sudden wave of homesickness he stared
blankly at the compounds outer wall. Just as he had said the words raising a family he had realised how
close he was to rendering his two beautiful daughters fatherless. Every day
they would be getting a bit bigger, learning new things and making new memories
and he wasn’t there. Their little faces would be bigger and more mature the
next time he saw them, if he ever made it home. Would they even recognise him
when he returned? Would they go running back to Jeb to hide behind her skirts?
He took a deep breath. This was not the time for all this sort of carry on, he
thought to himself, I need to keep my head together to get through all this. If
I ever want to see them again then. His son, Cayogen, how old was he now? He
struggled to remember, would he be out of his teens now? Should be bring him up
to Styke? Would Cayogen want to see his father’s lands? Roztov’s distracted
mind drifted off to the last time he had seen his son, aged six, waving from
the docks as Roztov and Broddor sailed out of the port of El-Joppa. It was a
painful memory, but it had seems more sensible to leave him in the care of his
grandparents, Styke had been so unstable back then. Then had had met Jeb and
now he had two small girls to content with... Cayogen would be thirteen he
realised. Roztov could tell from his letters he was an intelligent young man.
What I should do, thought Roztov, was gather all my family together and never
let them go, and never leave them again.
Meggelaine
came and patted him on the leg. ‘We’ll make it home, don’t worry, man,’ she
said easily guessing his thoughts. ‘Honni is back, he’s brought us a bunch of
black cloaks and scarves. He’s got these funny sort of cloth face masks as
well, I think we are leaving.’
‘They are
called niqabs Meg, like they wear in
El-Joppa.’
‘Oh right,
well you’d know more about that than me.’
Their walk
into the heart of Stovologard was a journey into darkness. It was an otherwise
blue-skied and clear spring afternoon, but for the clouds of black smoke that
drifted down from the central tower. They followed a paved road that led from
the town, through desolate ash covered fields where people dressed in heavy
ragged black cloaks scratched a living from the soil.
‘They are
serfs,’ explained Honni. ‘They are property of the dragons directly. They grow
crops these crops to feed themselves.’
‘It looks
like a harsh existence,’ said Floran.
‘It is
considered a great honour to be so close to the dragons.’
After an
hour or so of travel they arrived in the city. Tenement blocks rose six, seven
and sometimes eight stories tall. Most of them appeared empty. The gloom, the
smoke and the quietness of the city gave it an eerie and surreal quality that
made them keep close together. Visibility was poor, down to as little as twenty
yards in the narrower streets and they all felt their lungs getting dirty.
Occasionally a dragon passed overhead, casting a dark shadow. Sometimes a line
of flame would light up the sky for a few seconds, and it had been overhead
then a short while later motes of soot and hot cinders would rain down on the
street. Dragon fire cinders were everywhere, lying in the street or clumped
together in the gutters. Floran picked one up. ‘One this size would cost a
fortune in Hyadna, and here they lie in the street like horse dung,’ he
remarked before putting it in his pocket.
The light
was pale and monochrome, the colour had been stripped from everything. Only
occasionally could the blueness of the sky be seen, when a brief breeze blew
enough of the smoke away, otherwise it was invisible under layers of smoke and
mist.
The temperature
dropped too, their breath came out in clouds of steam, seeming to add to the fug.
‘The top
most of the tenements,’ said Honni pointing upwards. ‘Are where people live,
where the air is a little better. Not many people live in the ground floor rooms.’
Floran
nodded and translated to the others.
‘This place
is hell,’ commented Meggelaine.
Stovologard
was a large city and it took an hour to walk through it to the docks. They
skirted around the base of the central tower, where the streets got busier,
crowded with people going about the business of the dragons, running errands,
delivering messages and moving food stocks. Most were dressed in niqabs, as a form of protection from the
smoke and soot, so that the crowds of people appeared as a mass of flowing
black cloth.
‘Like the
Coal Miner’s Guild on wash day,’ was Broddor’s muttered comment.
There was
enough bustle for them to get lost in the crowd, in the gloom with the hoods of
their cloaks up they went unnoticed. Gendarmes, manhunters and even dragons
walked the streets, but to them they were just another group of serfs,
presumably owned by someone.
As they
neared the coast, the air quality improved a little and by the time they
reached the docks they began to feel as if they could breathe again.
Honni
laughed at them as the coughed. ‘There are some streets in the city, where the
air is so bad it is death to men. Only dragons can go there without being
poisoned.’
Floran
translated this remark over his shoulder to the others in a low whisper.
‘This place
is the worst,’ said Broddor wiping spittle from his lips after a coughing fit.
‘And that’s a dwarf saying it. Even underground, near our ironworks and
armouries, we have better air than this.’
‘The Tanner’s
District in Millwood is bad,’ added Meggelaine, never one to forgo the opportunity
to add her opinion. ‘They say if the rich ladies go through there, they feint
from the fumes.’
Roztov, who
was up at the front with Ghene, turned, looked out from his hood and hissed, ‘cut
the chatter. There are gendarmes ahead.’
Broddor
sniggered and Meggelaine shrugged and made a gesture with her hand to suggest
she was buttoning her lip.
It was early
evening and the docks were crowded. Not so much due to any great amount of
shipping, it was more that the air was cleaner than other areas of the city and
people tended to linger here. They stopped at some tables and sat for a while,
warming themselves at a brazier. There was a tavern close by and Honni went to
get them some drinks. Fog rolled in from the sea, cleaner than the smoke but
just as smothering. The masts of the ships were invisible and only the hulls
could be seen, dark shapes against the grey of the water. There was no one else
sat at the other tables so it felt as if they were totally alone.
‘Bleak,’
said Roztov. He nodded thanks to Honni as he took a tankard. ‘I need this, my
throat is as dry as a camel drivers sock.’
He then took
a swig, gagged and nearly spat it out. He then swallowed the liquid and gave
the others a wary smile. ‘A unique bouquet,’ he gasped.
Meggelaine
gave her mug a careful sniff. Broddor shrugged and took three large swallows in
quick succession. ‘Mushroom beer,’ he explained. ‘Like the kobolts brew.’
The other’s
sipped at their drinks, caught between their desires to slake their thirsts and
the unpleasantness of the brew.
Broddor
drained his tankard and put it down noisily on the table. ‘Right, let’s find a
boat and get out of here.’
‘Hold your
horses,’ said Roztov. ‘For now we are just looking.’
Ghene
glanced at Meggelaine then leaned in to speak quietly with the dwarf. ‘And
besides, we should really look in on Dreggen. We need to find out if he or his
message has made it to the ears of King Primus.’
Broddor
looked blank so Ghene leaned further in and whispered, ‘We need to find out
what is going on with you-know-who.’
‘Oh all
that?’ said Broddor rather too loudly. ‘Bloody Old Bones? Who cares? Whatever
happens, it’s bound to be a bunke samleje
and none of our bloody business.’
‘We need to
know,’ hissed the elf.
‘Fanden skyld,’ muttered the dwarf, who
then pulled over Ghene’s untouched beer and drank it down in one long swig.
The mist
began to thin out a bit, chased away by the stiffening sea breeze. They could
now see the other side of the street and the dockside moorings. Left and right
they could see down the street about fifty paces. Off to their left they
witnessed something that left them in stunned silence. A dragon landed on a
group of people about thirty yards away and proceeded to tear them to bits. It
must have killed a dozen people before lifting off into the fog above. People
that had not been close to the slaughter, standing motionlessly with their
heads bowed, stepped forward and began to pick through the victims.
‘No one even
screamed,’ gasped Meggelaine.
The druids
all rushed over to help, using their magic to heal the few victims that were
left alive. After five minutes, Honni said something anxiously, pulling at
their capes.
‘He seems
most distraught at your actions,’ explained Floran. ‘He is concerned we will
draw the attention of the gendarmes.’
The druid’s
didn’t leave until they had helped everyone who needed though. A crowd gathered
to look on in amazement as people who were lying bleeding to death from fatal
wounds one minute were able to stand and walk away the next. More people arrived,
with old injuries and ailments, to plead with the healers for help.
‘I think it
is time to go,’ said Floran who had been keeping an eye out.
They pulled
their cloaks and hood tightly around their bodies and filtered into the crowds
and fog.
‘This is the
easiest city to hide in,’ remarked Roztov from under his black hood. ‘Ten paces
in any direction and we are lost to all.’
Honni was
anxious though, and he led them away from the docks, back towards the tower and
eventually to an abandoned tenement block.
He pushed
open the rotten old front door then took them up to the top floor apartment. It
looked like it had been used as a hideout before, the floor was littered with
the rotten remains of leftover food and there was a bedroll in the corner. The
windows were covered with black curtains.
Roztov
pulled one aside to look out, just as dragon flame lit up the sky nearby. Honni
yelped and pulled the curtain shut then told off Roztov in his language.
‘He says not
to open the curtain,’ said Floran.
‘I gathered
that,’ grunted the druid.
Honni went
to check out the rest of the building. Meggelaine found a broom and began to
tidy up their room. The others sat on the floor, leaning against the wall, the
only light filtering in from behind the curtain. Floran placed a small ball of
magical flame by the door so Meggelaine had enough light to work by.
‘This place
is a whole other world compared to the towns we were in before,’ sighed Roztov
as he leaned his head back on the wall.
‘And yet ten
times more people live here compared to outside the city. The closer to the
dragon tower, the higher the honour, or so says our friend Honni,’ remarked
Ghene.
‘They all
must be dying of black lung. And what we saw when the dragon attacked... What
did he say about that, Tup?’
Floran sat
down beside his friend, neatly folding his robes. ‘This city functions in
service of the dragons only. Honni told me there are any number of reasons why
a dragon may kill the people, or no reason at all. The most common though, is a
dragon killing its own serfs as it no longer has a use for them, or has too
many to feed.’
‘That’s
awful,’ said Meggelaine as she swept past, killing her fear with housework.
‘None of
this makes any sense,’ put in Broddor. ‘The people in the city consider it an
honour to be here? Where is the honour in being treated like cattle?’
‘I’m not
sure he’s telling the truth,’ agreed Ghene. ‘These people are in rags. They act
like slaves. How is this honour?’
‘I’m not
even sure I could make it back to the docks. I get all turned around in this
smog. How about you, Ghene?’
‘I think I
could probably find my way back, if we needed to go there by ourselves.’
A few
minutes later Honni returned and explained that he was leaving them here for
the night. He had a few things to arrange, but assured them that he would take
them back to the docks in the morning.
After half
an hour, despite Honni’s dire warnings they were all wandering about the
tenement and looking out all the windows.
‘We are camped
on the sixth floor?’ asked Roztov.
‘I think
so,’ replied Ghene. ‘Honni said this building is condemned, marked for
demolition and no one lives here, but I wonder why.’
Meggelaine
was stood on tiptoes, looking out of one of the windows. ‘Look, half of these
buildings are empty. We are close to the central tower here. I only see a few
lights.’
It was a
grim view, from where they were, of the tall narrow buildings of the city
rising out of the grey smoke. The cobbles below were hardly visible and even
the windows on the other side of the street were no more than dark smudges. Not
far away the central tower of Stovologard rose up before them. This close it
was like a black wall, blotting out most of the sky. Every so often a flicker
of distant dragon fire lit it up, giving it brief outline against the sky.
‘What a
place,’ said Floran in awe. ‘I could never have imagined a place such as this.’
Later that
evening, Floran provided them with a larger magical fire to keep them warm in
the room they had settled in for the night. They used their black cloaks as
bedding and ate food and drank beer from their supplies, recently stocked up
from their inn visits.
Broddor,
hunting for more drink started sifting through some of the bags.
‘What the
hell is all this stuff?’ he asked pulling out leaves, twigs, and odd shaped
stones.
‘That’s all
mine, Broddor dear,’ said Meggelaine. ‘Just leave it.’
‘I might
have known,’ he grumbled. ‘Souvenirs. I’ve been carrying all this junk around.
What is this?’
The little
fressle looked over. ‘A pine cone from Moletown.’
‘Fanden skyld,’ muttered the dwarf. ‘And
this?’
‘It’s part
of the roof from our hut in Vine Street.’
‘No, Meg. It
is a stick. It is a stick like any other stick. And you have made me carry it
all the way across this bloody... on no, look a beach pebble. Don’t tell me
that’s come all the way from the ship wreck with us?’
‘What of
it?’ said Meggelaine, getting cross. ‘He’s just as bad.’ She gestured at Roztov
who shrugged.
‘I was
getting to that,’ continued the grumbling dwarf as he pulled out several small
canvas packages from the bottom of the bag. He unwrapped one of them, then
muttered, ‘dirt.’
‘Soil
samples,’ explained Roztov tiredly. ‘Don’t throw away any of my botanical
collections.’
‘Dirt.
Packets of dirt,’ said Broddor as he wrapped the package back up and put
everything back in the bag.
‘Soil,
seeds, leaves, pebbles, bones, twigs, it’s all vital knowledge Broddor,’ said
Roztov.
‘It’s me
that carries it though.’
‘You’re the
strongest.’
Broddor
grumbled something in dwarfish then smiled when his groping around in the
bottom of the bag found a bottle of beer. ‘Well, I’ll just have to lighten the
load a bit, won’t I, lad?’ he said as he took the cork out of the bottle.
Later, that
night, they arranged a watch, everyone taking turns to keep an eye out for
trouble.
‘Where did
Meggelaine go?’ said Roztov when Floran came to wake him for his turn and he
noticed her empty bed.
‘She’s
downstairs healing people.’
‘I tell you what,’ sighed Roztov. ‘Wake up
Ghene, he can take my watch. I’ll go take over from Meg and send her back up.
She just can’t help herself.’
On the first
floor there was a small group of people waiting outside one of the rooms.
Roztov walked past them and found Meggelaine looking at the sores on a young
man’s arm.
‘What’s all
this?’ asked Roztov.
‘Does this
look like grey rot to you, Roz?’
He was going
to scold her for setting up whatever this was, some sort of walk-in clinic, but
his curiosity took over. ‘I need more light, my eyes are not good in the dark
like yours.’
Meggelaine
gestured and a girl who was acting as her nurse brought up a small lantern.
Roztov peered at the sores. ‘Nasty, yes. Once healed it may come back. He’ll
need a lot of rest and fresh fruit if such a thing exists in this place.’
The druids
used their magic and the sores were all gone in less than a minute. Meggelaine
made hand gestures to suggest the man went home to bed.
‘Sleep,
sleep, sleep,’ she said.
‘And you
too,’ said Roztov shooing her out of the room, ‘Sleep, sleep, sleep. I’ll take
over here. You could bring the gendarmes down on us doing this.’
Meggelaine
left and Roztov called in the next patient, who was coughing up soot. He looked
into the hall, there were half a dozen other people in it. Word must have got
around that there was a healer in the area. They didn’t look any trouble, but
all it would take would be word getting into the wrong ears that people speaking
a foreign tongue were here. It did appear that Honni’s warnings about them
being seen as devils were exaggerated at least.
As he healed
them, more people kept arriving. It was late at night and raining now. They
shook the icy water from their cloaks as they entered and made their way
upstairs, glancing along the street to make sure there were no gendarmes about.
Then into the room where the others waited, to converse with someone they may
know from the neighbourhood or to sit in silence until they were told it was
their turn. The strange man was friendly and smiled, but didn’t speak. At first
they were nervous, and when he laid his hands on the wound or disease the pain
was sharp and startling. He made friendly sounds though, and held their arm
tightly while the blue light of the magic worked on the wound or disease. In a few
minutes the pain was gone and they were healed. Thanking the strange man,
bowing, smiling and laughing, they pressed some small payment into his hand
which he accepted graciously. They then left the building quietly, probably to
go to some friends house, who was also ill, to tell them where to go for
healing.
Meanwhile
upstairs, with nothing left to clean and no one to help, Meggelaine eventually
had a panic attack. It had been a long time coming.
Ghene was
keeping watch, quietly going from room to room, looking down out of the windows
and listening for trouble. Meggelaine had gone up to where Tankle was sleeping,
a room set aside for the two women, but she did not sleep, instead sitting in
the dark looking at the feint outline of the curtained window.
Tankle was
woken by the sobbing, choking and gasping of Meggelaine’s fear and panic.
‘What’s the
matter?’ asked Tankle with concern.
‘I. Can’t...
Breathe,’ said the little fressle, each word interrupted by a choked breath.
‘I’ll get
help.’ Tankle stumbled as she tried to get up. Meggelaine clutched onto her
like a child.
‘Stay.’
Tankle sat
down, with Meggelaine in her lap, soothing her like a baby until her breathing
settled. After half an hour, when she thought the fressle was asleep,
Meggelaine started talking.
‘It’s this
place, it’s awful. I’m so scared. So many people have died already and in this
place, the dragons just... it’s awful. Aren’t you scared?’
‘Yes,’
admitted Tankle. ‘I’m scared.’
‘I don’t
know how you humans do it,’ gabbled Meggelaine. ‘Keeping it together I mean. We
torms, we are a strong willed people, I think I am just weak. I feel so
responsible though, if it hadn’t been for me, none of us would be here, none of
this would have happened. Poor Ophess. And I’m sick of always looking up in the
sky, looking for danger. It’s a constant, oppressive fear. I swear, when I get
home, I’m not going to be happy until I’m a hundred feet under a mountain like
a dwarf. I used to have a terrible fear of wide open places, that’s back I can
tell you. Back in spades. Sometimes it just gets too much for me sweetie. It’s
all just too much. You’re a good girl.’
‘Uh,
thanks,’ said Tankle with a smile that was lost in the dark. When the fressle
didn’t go on Tankle said, ‘I suppose I’ve just always thought that you, Roztov
and the others would get us out of this. That’s what keeps me going. I’m just
taking it a day at time. The towns where we stayed in and all those inns were
nice. We just need to get out of the city.’
‘Yes, if we
can just get out of this place, I’ll feel a lot better.’
Meggelaine
shifted over to her own bed, dragged it as close as she could and curled up
beside the big woman.
‘We’d better
sleep I suppose,’ said Meggelaine eventually. ‘We’ll probably be glad of the
rest tomorrow morning. It’s cold tonight isn’t it? I’ll just cuddle in if you
don’t mind.’
Tankle didn’t
mind.
Just before
dawn Ghene entered the room of Meggelaine and Tankle and gently shook them
awake.
‘We’d better
go,’ he said. ‘There are gendarmes in the street.’
As the
others gathered on the top floor, Roztov came running up the stairs. ‘There are
a couple of dozen gendarmes coming towards the building. Honni is with them, I
think he must have sold us out.’
‘Down the
stairs or out the window?’ asked Broddor who had slept in his armour and was
ready to go.
‘The
window,’ said Ghene as he ripped the curtain down. They all blinked as the
light of the sun shone strait in through the broken glass. It was a weak light,
but the rain had washed away the smoke and now the clouds were clearing. It was
the most natural light they had seen since arriving in the city.
Roztov went
to the other side of the building and looked down.
‘They are on
their way up,’ he said when he returned. ‘There are some in the street as well.’
‘This side
is clear,’ said Ghene from another room. ‘Tup, you have a spell that can help
us?’
‘Yes,’ said
the wizard as he raised his hands. They all glowed briefly as the spell was
cast. Once it was done, Ghene nodded and climbed out over the windowsill and
was gone.
‘Just step
out,’ Floran explained to the sailors, ‘you will float down to the street like
a feather.’
Arrin leapt
out fearlessly, but Tankle hesitated. She turned to look inside and realised
she was all alone. Hearing loud footsteps on the stairs she said a prayer and
jumped out of the window.
Once they
were all gathered on the ground they headed into the darkest and most smoke
choked street they could find. There was no escape to be had by flying, the
morning skies were clear and full of dragons stretching their wings to soak up
the sunlight. Down in the smoke and fog they at least stood a chance of escape.
Ghene led
the way, but everywhere they went was blocked by gendarmes, who stood shoulder
to shoulder across the entrances to the alleys and side streets.
‘Etruna
curse it,’ said the elf when he realised he had taken them into a cul-de-sac.
He looked up, all the building around them were at least six stories tall. It
was like being trapped in a canyon.
He turned to
see Honni, with a group of gendarmes approaching them. He spoke.
‘He says to
surrender,’ translated Floran. ‘He says he is very sorry, but he was captured
and forced to reveal our location. He also says that it is a grave sin to defy
the dragons... he may be saying this for the benefit of the gendarmes. He goes
on to say it is for the best and that they will treat us kindly.’
‘Not when
they find out how many manhunters we killed south of the chasm they won’t,’
muttered Roztov.
‘He’s just
repeating the demand to surrender now,’ said Floran. ‘We don’t surrender
though, I assume? I assume we fight?’
‘Well...’
mused Roztov folding his arms and stroking his beard.
‘Of course
we fight!’ said Broddor. He threw his black cloak off, revealing his holy
armour and sword. He took he took Gronmorder
from his back and held it aloft.
‘Hvem vil dø i dag?’ he bellowed and
charged the startled squad of gendarmes.
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