The Hob's Bargain
shovelful of dirt on me rather than the fire pit.
By the time Wandel had tied the small shovel behind Torchâs saddle, I was starting to feel better. Mounting was awkward, and Kith gave me a sympathetic glance.
âWell, at least it doesnât hurt you when you do this,â I groused as I found my stirrups.
âYours will pass,â he replied softly.
âYouâre not going to make me feel guilty when I feel so bad are you?â I whined.
He laughed. âLetâs go.â
After the first few miles, my arm subsided to a dull ache that I could ignore. I noticed Kith wasnât nearly as nervous today, and I wondered if the thing that had attacked me had been following us. With it gone, there would be nothing to set off his magicked senses. Maybe, I thought, but it was more likely that the day had relaxed him as much as it had me. It was hard to worry about wildlings with sharp teeth with the sun shining on your back.
It was warmer today than yesterday, and the scents of the early spring wildflowers were almost erotic in their fullness. The horses were feeling it, too; the Lass had managed to bite poor old Duck twice. He, for his part, seemed to take a masochistic interest in her. He kept trying to sneak closer to her when I wasnât paying attention. If he hadnât been a gelding, I would have thought he was courting the mare. Even Torch, the old campaigner, was dancing a bit more than usual.
It was late afternoon when we started down the slopes of the Hob into the valley where Auberg lay, about the same time that weâd made camp yesterday. From our vantage point, the town didnât look nearly as large as I remembered itâbut it had been several years since Iâd been there. As we started down the side of the mountain, I saw the bones of a winter-killed wolf stretched under the green foliage of a wild lilac. The climate was warmer here than it was in Fallbrook, and the lilacs were in full bloom.
The pastureland crept up the sides of the foothills of the Hob, and soon we were traveling along a shepherdsâ track between the rock walls that fenced the pastures. Generations of farmers had combed the rocks from the land and used them for fences and buildings, leaving behind land well-fenced and less rocky. Land that once had been poor had become, over centuries of management, rich and fertile.
The grass in the pastures here were already three times as long as the grasses in Fallbrookâs fields. Even the pastures that had been recently grazed were longer thanâ¦
Torch halted, giving the Lass time to aim a nip at his rumpâthough even she wasnât so bold as to actually bite him.
âWhatâs wrong?â asked Wandel before I could.
âYou tell me,â answered Kith, his gaze drifting around the valley spread below us.
I followed his gaze, looking for somethingâbut there was nothing to be seen.
âFaranâs breath!â I swore, standing in my stirrups for a better view. There was nothing to be seen.
âWhere are the cattle?â asked Wandel. âThese are cattle fields, you can see where theyâve grazedâbut theyâre all gone.â
âNo sheep either,â added Kith softly. âNor any people. We should be able to see the men in the fields and the people going in and out of town. Look down by that little croft. Thereâs laundry hung to dry and half of it swept loose from the pins.â
I knew the others were thinking raiders . It was possible the group harassing Fallbrook was part of a larger raiding party or even an enemy armyâbut a feeling that chilled me down to the bone told me the answer was worse than an army. A feeling and the memory of a vision of men dissolving into ash didnât allow for so mundane an answer.
The quick glimpse Iâd had of the wolf bones became more sinister. I didnât say anything, though, merely sent Duck after the other two horses as they headed down the trail to Auberg. What could I have said?
We passed the croft with the hanging laundry first. There were a few chickens in the yard: small and scrawny, half-grown chicks. The men rode past the trail to the house but, on impulse, I turned in. Kith and Wandel stopped to wait for me.
The grass was knee-deep, so it wasnât until something crunched under Duckâs feet that I realized there were bones scattered here and there throughout the yard. I dismounted and kicked some of them out from
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