Raoden turned to the other noblemen. As usual, the newcomers stood in a small, apprehensive cluster around the cart they had unloaded. Now it was Rao-den's turn. He approached with a smile, introducing himself and shaking hands-mostly against the owners' wills. However, their tension began to wane after just a few minutes of mingling. They could see that there was at least one Elantrian who wasn't going to eat them, and none of the other food distributors had fallen to the Shaod, so they could dismiss their fears of infection.
The clot of people relaxed, falling to Raoden's affable proddings. Acclimatizing the nobles was a task he had taken upon himself. It had been obvious on the second day that Sarene had nowhere near as much influence with most aristocrats as she did with Shuden and the others of Raoden's former circle. If Raoden hadn't stepped in, that second group would probably still be standing frozen around the cart. Sarene hadn't thanked him for his efforts, but she had nodded in slight appreciation. Afterward, it had been assumed that Raoden would help each new batch of nobles as he had that second one.
It was odd to him, participating in the event that was singularly destroying everything he had worked to build in Elantris. However, beyond creating an enormous incident, there was little he could do to stop Sarene. In addition, Mareshe and Karata were receiving vital goods for their "cooperation." Raoden would have to do a great deal of rebuilding after Sarene's Trial finished, but the setbacks would be worth the effort. Assuming, of course. he survived long enough.
The casual thought brought a sudden awareness of his pains. They were with him as always, burning his flesh and eating at his resolve. He no longer counted them, though each one had its own feeling-an unformed name, a sense of individual agony. As far as he could tell, his pain was accelerating much more quickly than anyone else's. A scrape on his arm felt like a gash running from shoulder to fingers, and his once-stubbed toe blazed with a fire that ran all the way to his knee. It was as if he had been in Elantris a year, and not a single lonely month.
Or, maybe his pain wasn't stronger. Maybe he was just weaker than the others. Either way, he wouldn't be able to endure much longer. A day would soon come. in a month or maybe two, when he would not awaken from his pain, and they would have to lay him in the Hall of the Fallen. There, he could finally give full devotion to his jealous agony.
He pushed such thoughts away, forcing himself to start handing out food. He tried to let the work distract him, and it helped a little. However, the pain still lurked within, like a beast hiding in the shadows, its red eyes watching with intense hunger.
Each Elantrian received a small sack filled with a variety of ready-to-eat items. This day's portions were much like every other-though, surprisingly, Sarene had found some Jindoeese sourmelons. The fist-sized red fruits glistened in the crate beside Raoden, challenging the fact that they were supposed to be out of season. He dropped one fruit in every bag, followed by some steamed corn, various vegetables, and a small loaf of bread. The Elantrians accepted the offerings thankfully but greedily. Most of them scurried away from the cart as soon as they received their meal, off to eat it in solitude. They still couldn't believe that no one was going to take it away from them.
As Raoden worked, a familiar face appeared before him. Galladon wore his
Elantris rags, as well as a tattered cloak they had made from dirty Elantris scavangings. The Dula held out his sack, and Raoden carefully switched it for one filled with five times the regular allotment: it was so full it was hard to lift with one weakened Elantrian hand. Galladon received the sack with an extended arm, the side of his cloak obscuring it from casual eyes. Then he was gone, disappearing through the crowd.
Saolin, Mareshe, and Karata would come as well. and each would receive a bag like Galladon's. They would store what items they could, then give the rest to the Hoed. Some of the faIlen were abIe to recognize food, and Raoden hoped that regular eating would help restore their minds.
So far, it wasn't working.
THE gate thumped as it shut, the sound reminding Raoden of his first day in Elantris. His pain then had only been emotional, and comparatively weak at that. If he had truly understood what he was getting into, he probably would have curled up and joined the Hoed right then and there.
He turned, putting his back to the gate. Mareshe and Galladon stood in the center of the courtyard, looking down at several boxes Sarene had left behind-fulfillment of Karata's most recent demands.
"Please tell me you've figured out a way to transport those," Raoden said, joining his friends. The last few times, they had ended up carrying the boxes back to New Elantris one at a time, their weakened Elantrian muscles straining at the effort.
"Of course, I have." Mareshe said with a sniff. "At least, it should work."
The small man retrieved a slim metal sheet from behind a pile of rubble. All four sides curved up slightly, and there were three ropes connected to the front.
"A sled?" Galladon asked.
"Coated with grease on the bottom," Mareshe explained. "I couldn't find any wheels in Elantris that weren't rusted or rotted. but this should work-the slime on these streets will provide lubrication to keep it moving."
Galladon grunted, obviously biting off some sarcastic comment. No matter how poorly Mareshe's sled worked, it couldn't be any worse than walking back and forth between the gate and the chapel a dozen times.
In fact, the sled functioned fairly well. Eventually, the grease rubbed away and the streets grew too narrow to avoid the patches of torn-up cobblestones-and, of course, dragging it along the slime-free streets of New Elantris was even more difficult. On the whole, however, even Galladon had to admit that the sled saved them quite a bit of time.
"He finally did something useful," the Dula grunted after they had pulled up in front of the chapel.
Mareshe snorted indifferently, but Raoden could see the pleasure in his eyes. Galladon stubbornly refused to acknowledge the little man's ingenuity; the Dula complained that he didn't want to further inflate Mareshe's ego. something Rao-den figured was just about impossible.
"Let's see what the princess decided to send us this time," Raoden said, prying open the first box.
"Watch our for snakes," Galladon warned.
Raoden chuckled. dropping the lid to the cobblestones. The box contained several bales of cloth-all of which were a sickeningly bright orange.
Galladon scowled. "Sule, that has to be the most vile color I have ever seen in my life."
"Agreed." Raoden said with a smile.
"You don't seem very disappointed."
"Oh, I'm thoroughly revolted," Raoden said. "1 just enjoy seeing the ways she finds to spite us."
Galladon grunted, moving to the second box as Raoden held up an edge of the cloth, studying it with a speculative eye. Galladon was right; it was a particularly garish color. The exchange of demands and goods between Sarene and the "gang leaders" had become something of a game: Mareshe and Karata spent hours deciding how to word their demands, but Sarene always seemed to find a way to turn the orders against them.
"Oh, you're going to love this," Galladon said, peering into the second box with a shake of his head.
"What?"
"It's our steel," the Dula explained. Last time they had asked for twenty sheets of steel. and Sarene had promptly delivered twenty plates of the metal pounded so thin they almost floated when dropped. This time they had asked for their steel by weight.
Galladon reached into the box and pulled out a handful of nails. Bent nails. "There must be thousands of them in here."
Raoden laughed. "Well. I'm sure we can find something to do with them." Fortunately, Eonic the blacksmith had been one of the few Elantrians to remain true to Raoden.