Forty-four
A wagon, with a two-horse hitch and tall red wheels, rolled north along Summer Trail where it passed through the marsh at the southern end of the Shades. In winter the trail was impassable. Now the road was still marked by muddy potholes, but the trees were thinner here and the mud had begun to harden. Streaking low across the ground, the morning sun struck the spokes of the tall wheels and cast moving bars of shadow across the driver, across his light brown armor, and across his long bow which stood in a holster beside him. “Big Hands” Gazul.
Three leopards sprawled on straw spread over the open bed of the wagon. Shallow side boards cast a shadow over their sleek, spotted bodies turning them a cool yellow.
Beside Gazul, dangling from an iron hook, were two black cylindrical pouches he had been issued by the high priest of the Kitzakks, Dang-Ling.
The horses slowed as they began the climb up a grassy hill. A crack of the whip, and the animals bolted forward to the crest. There Gazul reined up.
The road moved down the opposite side of the hill and crossed an open spread of grassy ground, then vanished into a black hole of shadows cast by a foreboding rain forest. The dense growth stretched for miles, rising and dipping between mountains and hills, toward the horizon where white clouds filled the sky. Not a sign of a village or anything human, only the sound of wind playing in the grass, and the occasional hoot or roar of a predator looking for breakfast.
Gazul was without expression. His head was square, but he was not young anymore, and his flaccid flesh gave it a long look. His lids drooped over the outside corners of his eyes. His cheeks were sunken, and the muscles and skin hung down over the corners of his mouth. Thin strands of hair drooped from his upper lip and dangled in irregular patches from his jaw.
He felt among the clutter of tiny, colorful totem pouches dangling from his neck and selected a violet stone jar. He uncorked it and poured a thick, translucent glob of sticky, red fluid onto his tongue. Hashradda, an expensive stimulant favored by beastmen who trained animals for warfare. He sucked on his tongue until color blotched his loose flesh, and his eyes brightened, giving him a virile expression.
He looked again at the forest, then flicked the reins. The wagon made a half circle and started back. When it was about to descend behind the hill, the wagon bed lurched and he glanced back. The three cats, tails swishing, were standing with their paws resting on the raised tailgate. Gazul reined up sharply.
A figure had plunged out of the distant hole in the shadowy forest, a short staggering figure with light hair.
Gazul tongued the corner of his mouth thoughtfully, then tied off the reins, climbed down to the ground and removed his waterskin from a hook on the back of the driver’s box. He poured water into a shallow pail, then fed it to his leopards and two horses. By the time he had finished, the figure had reached the back of the wagon and stopped there. It was a disheveled and frightened young girl.
She studied Gazul a moment with wary eyes, then looked at the leopards and instinctively smiled, moved closer. The leopards snarled and purred threateningly.
“It’s all right,” she cooed. “We’re friends… aren’t we?”.
They lowered their small heads with their lithe muscular necks, and sniffed her face and hair. She crooned and scratched their furry jaws.
Gazul watched with puzzled eyes. With a show of mild indifference, he sauntered to the back of the wagon, and stopped at a harmless distance from the girl.
He said, “They’ve never let anyone touch ’em before. That’s weird. Real weird.”
“I like animals,” she said in a tone that explained everything. “And I guess they know it.”
He extended the waterskin. “Got a name?”
She nodded. “Robin.” She took the waterskin. “Thank you.”
“Pretty,” he said, careful to make his comment apply only to her name, not to the parts of her he was thinking about.
She drank deep, returned the waterskin and asked, “Could you tell me where we are? I… I got lost.”
“I’m new to these parts, but some folks back up the way said this road is called Summer Trail.”
She sighed. “Thank goodness.”
Gazul looked past her shoulder at the forest and said, “They told me there would be good hunting out this way, but I’m afraid I’m not good enough for this kind of country. Looks too wild.”
“It is,” Robin said quickly. “They shouldn’t have sent you out here.”
“Well, you know folks,” Gazul said in an easy tone. “Maybe I went farther than they meant me to.” He smiled. “Need a lift?”
“Thank you,” Robin said. “I’d be glad to ride in the back with your cats.”
“No,” Gazul said firmly. “Wouldn’t do. I don’t mind you petting ’em a bit, but, you know, I don’t want ’em gettin’ too friendly with people.” Gazul turned his back on her, moved to the front of the wagon, and climbed into the driver’s box. Staring ahead, he said, “Climb aboard if you’re coming.”
Robin hurried forward, climbed up and sat tiredly on the board seat beside Gazul. Gazul glanced back down the road and frowned. A huge wolf had bounded out of the forest and was plunging through the grass headed his way. A second wolf followed but was limping and falling behind fast. Gazul glanced suspiciously at Robin with the corner of an eye. She had closed her eyes and was catching her breath. He whipped the horses hard and the wagon bolted down the hill with a lunge. Robin grabbed the side boards and held on, gasping.
Gazul chuckled, “Might as well enjoy ourselves.”
He laughed a laughter which he was certain the innocent girl had never heard before. It was vicious, brutal. She shivered slightly and turned to the leopards. They were standing in the wagon bed with their heads right behind her. Their mouths were open, drinking the air as it whipped past.
She looked at Gazul. “They look hungry. Can I feed them?”
“Nope. Got nothing to feed them.”
“I’ve got some bread,” she lifted her satchel.
“Forget it,” he said easily. “They only get the best.”
She half smiled. “What’s that?”
“People,” he said. Then he laughed riotously and whipped the horses forward until the wagon was racing along the dirt road and bounding over rises, almost flying.
Robin, clinging to the wagon, shouted breathlessly, “Could you please slow down?”
“Could,” Gazul hollered. “But won’t. I paid heavy silver for those big wheels, so I use ’em every chance I get.” He chuckled, whipped the horses again, then dropped the reins and held up his big hands laughing. “Look! No hands.”
Robin moaned quietly, and hung on as the road raced past underneath her. Out of the corner of her eye she watched the colorful pouches bounce on his chest. Without looking at her he answered her unasked question, “Got to have a lot of totems in my trade. They’re mostly, you know, teeth and finger bones.” He nodded with the back of his head at the leopards. “Things they don’t eat.”
She frowned with annoyance. “Why are you trying to frighten me?”
“Just answering your questions,” he shouted.
“I didn’t ask you any question,” she shouted back.
“Yes, you did,” he said. Then he reached inside his leather chest armor, and came away with a large padded glove. He slipped it over his right hand, and worked his fingers into it carefully. Then, smiling at Robin, he held up the gloved hand. “Nice, huh?”
She did not reply, then shrugged. He laughed, and made a fist with the gloved hand as he hollered over the racket of the wheels. “Had it made special. I just love hitting women, but I can’t afford to break their skin. It lowers their price.” He laughed again, a wet throaty laughter.
Robin, with sudden panic in her eyes, looked around at the landscape flying past them as if she wanted to jump.
He hollered, “Want me to stop?”
She looked at him with big pleading eyes. He laughed uproariously, then suddenly stopped short, pulling hard on the reins. The wagon skidded to a stop. As it did, Gazul stood up abruptly, and glared with startled eyes past Robin. She turned sharply to see what he saw. Seeing only a clump of bushes, she turned back in time to see his gloved fist coming for her jaw.