Beguilement

Beguilement Read Free Page A

Book: Beguilement Read Free
Author: Lois McMaster Bujold
Tags: sf_fantasy
Ads: Link
see Razi and Utau. I can barely see you.
    You’re like an ember under a handful of ash.”
    “I can track Razi and Utau. Mari holds us all in her head, you don’t have to.
    You only have to track me.” He slipped behind the youth and gripped his right shoulder, massaging. He wished he could do both sides together, but this touch seemed to be enough; the flaring tension started to go out of Saun, both body and mind. “Down. Down. That’s right. Better.” And after a moment, “You’re going to do just fine.”
    Dag had no idea whether Saun was going to do well or disastrously, but Saun evidently believed him, with appalling earnestness; the bright anxiety decreased still further.
    “Besides,” Dag added, “it’s not raining. Can’t have a debacle without rain.
    It’s obligatory, in my experience. So we’re good.” The humor was weak, but under the circumstances, worked well enough; Saun chuckled.
    He released the youth, and they continued their climb.
    “Is the malice there?” muttered Saun.
    Dag stopped again, bending in the shadows to hook up a plant left-sided. He held it under Saun’s nose. “See this?”
    Saun’s head jerked backward. “It’s poison ivy. Get it out of my face.”
    “If we were this close to a malice’s lair, not even the poison ivy would still be alive. Though I admit, it would be among the last to go. This isn’t the lair.”
    “Then why are we here?”
    Behind them, Dag could hear the men from Glassforge topping the ridge and starting down into the ravine out of which he and the patrol were climbing.
    Second wave. Even Saun didn’t manage to make that much noise. Mari had better land her punches before their helpers closed the gap, or there would be no surprise left. “Chato thinks this robber troop has been infiltrated, or worse, suborned. Catch us a mud-man, it’ll lead us to its maker, quick enough.”
    “Do mud-men have groundsense?”
    “Some. Malice ever catches one of us, it takes everything. Groundsense.
    Methods and weapon skills. Locations of our camps… Likely the first human this one caught was a road robber, trying to hide out in the hills, which is why it’s doing what it is. None of us have been reported missing, so we still may have the edge. A patroller doesn’t let a malice take him alive if he can help it.”
    Or his partner. Enough lessons for one night. “Climb.”
    On the ridgetop, they crouched low.
    Smoothly, Saun strung his bow. Less smoothly but just as quickly, Dag unshipped and strung his shorter, adapted one, then swapped out the hook screwed into the wooden cuff strapped to the stump of his left wrist, and swapped in the bow-rest. He seated it good and tight, clamped the lock, and dropped the hook into the pouch on his belt. Undid the guard strap on his sheath and made sure the big knife would draw smoothly. It was all scarcely more awkward than carrying the bow in his hand had once been, and at least he couldn’t drop it. At the bottom of the dell, Dag could see the clearing through the trees: three or four campfires burning low, tents, and an old cabin with half its roof tumbled in. Lumps of sleeping men in bedrolls, like scratchy burrs touching his groundsense. The faint flares of a guard, awake in the woods beyond, and someone stumbling back from the slit trenches. The sleepy smudges of a few horses tethered beyond. Words of the body’s senses for something his eyes did not see nor hand touch. Maybe twenty-five men altogether, against the patrol’s sixteen and the score or so of volunteers from Glassforge. He began to sort through the life-prickles, looking for things shaped like men that… weren’t.
    The night sounds of the woods carried on: the croak of tree frogs, the chirp of crickets, the sawing of less identifiable insects. An occasional tiny rustle in the weeds. Anything bigger might have been either scared off by the noise of the camp below, or, depending on how the robbers buried their scraps, attracted.
    Dag felt around

Similar Books

Step Across This Line

Salman Rushdie

Flood

Stephen Baxter

The Peace War

Vernor Vinge

Tiger

William Richter

Captive

Aishling Morgan

Nightshades

Melissa F. Olson

Brighton

Michael Harvey

Shenandoah

Everette Morgan

Kid vs. Squid

Greg van Eekhout