Eona didn't complain, but by midday, she winced and whimpered and limped along behind him. He expected sore feet, though not so early in their trip, and her pace only slowed further as her energy ran out. By dusk it was clear she could go no farther and he decided to halt near a copse. There weren't many trees in the rolling plains, but clusters marked the lines between fields belonging to different farmers.
“Shouldn't we see if we can sleep at one of the houses up ahead?” It was the first time Eona questioned any of his choices, though he didn't doubt it would be the first of many.
Morghram squinted at the dim lights of farmhouse windows a mile up the road, grunted, and shook his head. “I don't think you want to walk that far, and I don't think I can carry you that far, either.” It was half jest, but the frown she wore made him uncertain if she realized it. “We'll rest here for tonight and fill our water skins at their well come morning. Don't want to take too much hospitality from strangers when we can camp all right here.”
“Very well.” She wasn't pleased, but she still sank to the ground and sighed in relief when she took off her shoes. They were little more than silk slippers, something she'd kept from her finery. With the soles as thin as they were, he wondered how she tolerated walking at all. “How much farther is it to the mountains?”
“A good ten days, I'd say.” Longer, if her feet blistered. He kept that thought to himself and put down his canvas bag of tools and the bundle of blankets he'd brought to use as bedrolls. Then he trudged between the trees, inspecting the fallen branches beneath them. He'd brought oilcloth to make a tent, but the sky was clear and he didn't want to bother cutting saplings if it didn't look like rain. Not that there were any saplings worth cutting here. He returned to Eona and sat beside her, reaching for the basket of food.
She pushed it toward him and said nothing.
He drew his belt knife to cut pieces from a loaf of bread. “It's a long trip, but even if he's hired a wagon, your Dolbin won't make it there any faster.”
“Don't call him that,” she snapped.
Morghram glanced up as he passed her bread and a sliver of cheese. “He's still your husband, isn't he?”
Her shoulders slumped. “I wish he wasn't. I wish I hadn't met him at all.”
He put away the rest of the food and cleaned his knife. As an afterthought, he unfastened a strap of his lamellar and relaxed when it loosened. He wasn't fat, exactly, but he was softer around the middle than he'd once been, and it was rather snug. “If you don't mind me asking,” he started cautiously, laying his bit of cheese between two pieces of bread, “how did the two of you end up married?”
“Ah,” Eona smiled and turned away. “He was a good pretender. Convinced my family he was someone important, convinced me that he loved me. My parents hoped I would marry well and he seemed to suit what they were looking for. I was all they had, my two elder brothers lost at sea.”
“So it was arranged by your parents?”
“No. I pushed for it, truth be told. My family was hesitant at first, since we were never able to meet any of his relations, but they became more agreeable after they fell ill. The first of Dolbin's crimes.” Her tone turned bitter and she scowled at the earth.
“I'm sorry,” Morghram said between bites, “but I don't understand what that has to do with him.”
“Poison,” she replied simply.
Startled, he lowered his food.
“I knew it was odd. My father had never been ill a day in his life. But I didn't suspect Dolbin until it was too late, and I didn't find the arsenic until after we'd married and my parents had passed.” Shrugging, she made herself eat. “It was part of why I went to speak to my aunt to begin with. I never expected to come home to find everything gone.”
That made sense. It was no wonder she'd left her husband behind, fearing for her own safety. But the thought of it rankled and left a foul taste in his mouth. “I am sure you will find justice after we track him down.” He didn't know what else to say, but she seemed pleased with that.
“I'm sure,” she agreed. “But that's enough of my story. Tell me of yourself, Morghram. It's unusual to see a man your age who lives alone. You never married?”
He licked crumbs from his fingers and shook his head as he finished his sandwich. “I stayed in the army longer than most, until I fell from horseback and broke my leg. Didn't want to risk leaving a widow while I was a soldier. Then it took a long time to heal. Didn't want to burden a woman with a cripple for a husband, either. So I learned my craft while I mended, woke up one morning and realized I was too old. Women my age are spinsters who do fine on their own, no reason for them to wed. I've little to offer younger women, no wealth to my name.” Something that could change once they reached their destination, though he dared not entertain the thought for more than a moment. There was a better chance they wouldn’t even make it that far.
Eona tilted her head and reached for her water skin. “What about love?”
That yielded a hearty laugh. “Because that worked so well for you, did it?” he teased, though he sobered when she flushed. “Well, still not much hope for an ugly old carpenter. Though I suppose that's hard for a young one like you to understand.”
“I'm not so young as you might think,” she murmured. “I’m likely not much younger than you.”
Morghram raised a brow. “You don't look like a mage to me.”
“No, but there's a bit of the old magic in my family. Enough that we stay young for longer than most, though not enough to make us Gifted.”
He grunted and said nothing of it. With the troubles always stirring between the college in Lore and the rest of the Triad, there was little love for magic-users outside the college halls. It would have been foolish to lump her in with them—he didn't know how mages were viewed in Raeldan—but he didn't see it as something in her favor, regardless. If she wasn't young, she was naïve, and that was rarely better. Taking a gulp of water, he shook his water skin to check how full it was. Satisfied, he tightened the stopper before he put it down. “Well, go ahead and roll out your blankets and get comfortable. We'll head out around sunrise. I saw a mulberry bush or two behind us. We can add those to breakfast for a treat.”
Blinking in surprise, she lifted her head. The last rosy pinks of the sunset had faded, leaving the darkening sky sprinkled with stars. “With nothing to sleep under?”
Like with her raw feet, Eona didn’t complain, but she did look miserable. The rain was cold and the northward wind driving, though there was no thunder—a blessing, given the lack of places to take shelter. Walking in a thunderstorm while clad in armor wasn’t something Morghram would have done, no matter what his reward might be.
They carried on despite the weather and the rain ceased eventually, though it left them both soaked to skin and squirming in discomfort when the sun peeked out from behind the clouds. The choking humidity was miserable enough without wet clothes to make the swimming sensation worse.
When they stopped for a midday meal, there was still nothing to be seen in any direction, save the narrow road and a few scattered clusters of trees. Morghram took off his armor and laid it in the grass as Eona cut bread and cheese for both of them.
“It’s a good thing you thought to bring that oilcloth,” she said as she offered him half the mulberries left from breakfast. “The bread is dry, even if we aren’t.”
“We’ll be dry soon enough, the way the heat’s climbing.” He took his portion with a murmured thanks.
As soon as her hands were empty, she stood and began unlacing the bodice of her dress. He blinked in confusion, then turned away.
“It’s all right, I’ll still be covered. You’re not the only one wearing two layers, and I think you’re right in the idea we’ll dry out better in one.” She spread her wool dress atop the tall grass and sat down beside him.
He saw the sleeve of her plain linen underdress from the corner of his eye, but he didn’t look to see the rest. Instead, he turned his head to stare back the way they’d come while he ate.
“You have good manners for a commoner,” Eona remarked.
“A man learns manners when in service to the king. Doesn’t often use them, but learns them just the same.” Besides, he knew his place. She was a lady, blue-blooded and regal, even when dressed in regular dyed wool. He was little more than a hired ruffian. If he wanted to be a paid hired ruffian, he'd have to mind his step. More clouds spilled over the horizon. He studied them a while before deciding they wouldn't bring rain. Shadows moving underneath them warned they would bring something else.
Leaning forward, Eona peered at his face and then followed his gaze. “What are you looking at?”
“Not sure yet. People. Or a man and a packhorse, maybe.”
“Why are you frowning?”
Morghram gave her a sideways glance. “Don't know. Jod says I'm always frowning.”
She giggled. “Well you've smiled at me enough to prove him wrong. Though you do look a bit grumpy when you're thinking.”
Unsure how to reply, he didn't. Instead he ate, enjoyed the sunshine and watched the figures that trudged along in the cloud shade. Two men, he decided. Men who had been moving at a brisk pace before they'd come close enough to see the two of them sitting. He glanced to his armor, idly checking to see if it was still wet. His tunic and trousers were still damp, but he slid his gauntlets on anyway.
“Are there many travelers on this road?” Eona asked, nodding toward the men. She didn't hurry, but she retrieved her dress from the grass and pulled it on overhead.
He tugged on his greaves and adjusted his boots. “Farmers, from time to time, but otherwise just men headed to the mountains. The capital is a good ways west of here. East is nothing but the border of the Triad's territories. How much bread is left?”
“There's still a whole loaf, plus the heel of this one. I don't suppose we'll be able to find a baker along the way?” She straightened her sleeves and turned her back to him. “Would you mind doing my buttons? It's harder to twist my arms behind me in a wet dress.”
Surprised, he stared at the row of tiny buttons up her back for a moment before he obliged. His thick fingers felt clumsy trying to work the buttons through their loops, but he tried. “No baker, but I'll see if I can't scrounge up some game for a meal tonight. Some quail, or a rabbit, maybe.”
Eona pulled her ashen hair forward over her shoulder, untangling it with her fingers. “I can't say I've ever tasted either one.”
“They're not bad.” Morghram glanced over his shoulder. The two men were close now, walking slowly and talking between themselves. They were young, wearing scant and mismatched leather armor. They carried bags, but not enough to indicate long travel.
Whatever they talked about, one shrugged and picked up his pace, moving ahead and making his way down the narrow road alone. The other slowed, studying them.
Morghram paused, his eyes narrowing. “Move along.”
Something ugly glinted in the young man's eyes at the command. He squared his shoulders and shifted forward, reminding Morghram of a bulldog trying to intimidate an opponent. But Morghram wasn't a dog. If anything, he was a wolf, and he responded as a wolf might, gritting his teeth and curling his lip in a snarl. He turned away from Eona, shifting the sword at his hip to show the mark and colors on the hilt.
The glint disappeared and the man hurried to catch up with his companion, though he looked back at them twice.
When Morghram turned toward Eona, she was pale. She avoided his eye, dropping her gaze to the grass instead.
He went back to her buttons. “Scoundrels always tuck tail at sight of the king's steel.”
“Did he mean to rob us?” she asked, voice small.
“Not much reason to rob someone who doesn't look to be carrying much. But an old man might be easy pickings. Always worth a glance in their eyes. But they're looking for the easy way out, or they wouldn't be thieves. Sometimes you don't even have to draw a sword to scare them off with it.” He patted her shoulder as he finished, then turned to pick up his lamellar.
She nodded, smoothing her hair and bending to take the basket of food. “Let's hope Dolbin is the same sort of thief.”
Morghram grunted. With the sort of fortune the man had at his fingertips, he doubted it would be so easy.
Comments (0)
See all