The Hob's Bargain
âIf you can see so much, why didnât you see the raidersâ attack?â
I remembered the light in my sister Aniâs eyes when she looked at her husband, and pushed aside my grief for a moment. Instead of the embittered, angry man in front of me, I saw the tenderness in his face when he held Ani after Kith brought home our brotherâs body. I saw â¦
â¦my fatherâs slow nod of thanks to Kith as he took Quilliarâs limp corpse and helped lay it on the couch. Ani buried her face against Poulâs shoulder and sobbed silently.
âHis neck is snapped. Must have been a bad fall,â Father said, not looking at Kith.
âHeâs been dead for three days,â said Kith, wearing the uniform of Moreshâs own guard, as he had for two years. He shifted awkwardly away from the family, setting himself apart.
ââ¦evil,â spat Poul. I looked at him and saw only the mountain that rose behind him, the morning light highlighting the high ridges, the west-facing slope in shadows.
âThe hob,â I said numbly.
Poul looked taken aback. âThe Hob? What does the mountain have to do with anything?â
I shook my head. The realization of what I could do began to make my heart pound. âNo, not the mountain.â
Briefly I saw again the face Iâd seen only in visions. I pushed Poul aside and sprinted to the innâs stable, where Iâd been keeping Duck when I wasnât using him for patrolling.
I grabbed his bridle, which Iâd had mended, and slipped it on without bothering to take Duck out of his stall. He accepted the bit with his usual phlegmatic good humor, watching with interest as I scrambled to find a saddle big enough to fit him. The stable boy had been drafted to patrol, so the people who kept their horses here (Wandel and I) had to tend them themselves.
Not knowing how long it would take me to find the hob, I couldnât ride him bareback, as I usually did. Climbing mountains without a saddle would be miserable after a while. I cursed the time it took me to locate the one Iâd used on the trip to Auberg. As I picked it up, the crossbow swung from its usual perch on my back, caught by a swaying stirrup. I was so used to wearing it now, I hardly noticed it, large as it was. But mindful of the task Iâd chosen for myself, I set it in the saddleâs place. Weapons wouldnât further my cause. If I ran into anything unfriendly, I had Duck and my knife.
By the time I mounted and set out of the barn, the eldersâ meeting had broken up and any number of people saw me leave. Duck caught my excitement and arched his neck, blowing like an eager stallion faced with a mare. I had to hold him back to a trot as I wove in and out among the people, ignoring their questions.
No one had said anything about raiders at the town bridge, so I assumed they would be concentrated at the eastern end of the valley for a while. I couldnât explain the urgency I felt, even to myself. It was a desperate conviction that Iâd happened onto the only thing that could keep the tide of fate from turning against Fallbrook.
Duckâs hooves clattered on the cobbles of the bridge as I settled him into a slow, easy trot he could maintain for a long time. Like everyone else, Duck had been honed by the necessity to survive this spring, but unlike many of our horses, he seemed to thrive on it.
The fields were barren of villager or raider, and even the songbirds seemed to have deserted the area. When I looked back from a higher place on the road, I could see a scavenger bird circling just beyond the manor house. Grimly, I turned Duck off the road and onto the narrow track Kith had taken me on this spring. The ground was rougher than the road had been, but Duckâs steady trot didnât falter.
I watched his ears, trusting to his keener senses to let me know if any of the raiders were nearby. When he stiffened and brought both ears up to attention as we passed the spriteâs castle Wandel had been so impressed with, I shifted my weight back to stop him. He didnât like stopping there, and let me know it by snapping his tail and dancing in place.
I took a deep breath because the raiders didnât bathe much. Since Kith had pointed it out to me, Iâd smelled out several scouts whom I wouldnât have seen. Over the scent of hot, sweaty horse and hot, sweaty me, I could smell something sweet and aromatic.
Duck flattened
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