The Bonehunters
Sighing, the blacksmith halted his horse.
'Can you convince him to go home?' Scillara asked.
'Not likely,' Barathol admitted. 'Simple and stubborn – that's a miserable combination.' He slipped down to the ground and walked back to the huge young man. 'Here, Chaur, let's tie your kit to the mule's pack.'
Smiling, Chaur handed it over.
'We have a long way to go, Chaur. And for the next few days at least, you will have to walk – do you understand? Now, let's see what you're wearing on your feet – Hood's breath-'
'He's barefoot!' Cutter said, incredulous.
'Chaur,' Barathol tried to explain, 'this track is nothing but sharp stones and hot sand.'
'There's some thick bhederin hide in our kit,' Scillara said, lighting her pipe, 'somewhere. Tonight I can make him sandals. Unless you want us to stop right now.'
The blacksmith unslung his axe, then crouched and began pulling at his boots. 'Since I'll be riding, he can wear these until then.'
****
Cutter found himself oddly comforted by that notion. Kalam's cousin… assassinations must run in the family. That huge double-bladed axe hardly seemed an assassin's weapon. He considered asking Barathol – getting from him his version of what had happened at Aren all those years ago – but the blacksmith was a reluctant conversationalist, and besides, if he had his secrets he was within his right to hold on to them. The way I hold on to mine.
They set out again, Chaur trailing, stumbling every now and then as if unfamiliar with footwear of any kind. But he was smiling.
'Damn these leaking tits,' Scillara said beside him.
Cutter stared over at her, not knowing how he should reply to that particular complaint.
'And I'm running out of rustleaf, too.'
'I'm sorry,' he said.
'What have you to be sorry about?'
'Cutter, you had your guts wrapped round your ankles – how do you feel, by the way?'
'Uncomfortable, but I never was much of a rider. I grew up in a city, after all. Alleys, rooftops, taverns, estate balconies, that was my world before all this. Gods below, I do miss Darujhistan. You would love it, Scillara-'
'You must be mad. I don't remember cities. It's all desert and driedup hills for me. Tents and mud-brick hovels.'
'There are caverns of gas beneath Darujhistan, and that gas is piped up to light the streets with this beautiful blue fire. It's the most magnificent city in the world, Scillara'Then why did you ever leave it?'
Cutter fell silent.
'All right,' she said after a moment, 'how about this? We're taking Heboric's body… where, precisely?'
'Otataral Island.'
'It's a big island, Cutter. Any place in particular?'
'Heboric spoke of the desert, four or five days north and west of Dosin Pali. He said there's a giant temple there, or at least the statue from one.'
'So you were listening, after all.'
'Since he's now dead,' Scillara asked, 'how do you expect him to do anything like returning power to some statue? Cutter, how do we find a statue in the middle of a desert? You might want to consider that whatever Heboric wanted doesn't mean anything any more. The T'lan Imass killed him, and so Treach needs to find a new Destriant, and if Heboric had any other kind of power, it must have dissipated by now, or followed him through Hood's Gate – either way, there is nothing we can do about it.'
'His hands are solid now, Scillara.'
She started. 'What?'
'Solid jade – not pure, filled with… imperfections. Flaws, particles buried deep inside. Like they were flecked with ash, or dirt.'
'You examined his corpse?'
Cutter nodded.
'Why?'
'Greyfrog came back to life…'