13th of Fall, 499 AV The captives sprawled against the silvered birches, shivering as the rainwater trickled around their vacant eyes, mingling with the tears that already soaked their filthy rags. Their captors didn’t fare much better. The patched canvas awning provided scant protection from the storm. Ulric was eager to get back on their way, the Pig didn’t want to risk any of the horses sliding in the muck and breaking a leg. There wasn’t anything to do but wait. He gave Kell a nudge, disturbing the mercenary’s slumber. “How long before we head back to Ravok?” “How the petch should I know?” Kell closed his eyes again, leaning back against the downed tree. Ulric scowled, casting a glance at the slaves. “I was just wondering.” “Not enjoying yourself?” Aleta, the slaver seated on Ulric’s other side, gave him a faint smirk. “You could always give the Pig a piece of your mind. Let him know it’s time to leave.” “I’m young, not stupid.” “If that was true, you’d keep your trap shut.” “He just wants you to spread your thighs for him,” Kell sneered, causing Ulric’s ears to turn a vivid shade of crimson. Fortunately, the gloom cloaked his shame. Aleta was a striking woman, his elder by no more than a decade, but she also scared him. Like the others of the party, she didn’t seem to have any remorse. Not when she was bringing a rider down with one of her javelins, not when beating one of the slaves for trying to escape, not even when one of them was too sick to keep walking. Ulric wasn’t callous enough for this sort of work. He could barely look any of the slaves in the eye. He only beat them when it was expected, aware that he was only here because Kell had vouched for him with the Pig. “So you fancy a tumble, do you?” Aleta raised an eyebrow. “You couldn’t handle me.” “That’s why you think,” Ulric retorted. Aleta gave a dubious snort, leaving him to curse his clumsy bantering. He kept his mouth shut after that, passing the time by sneaking glances at the other slavers. Jord, the Pig, was a squat, corpulent man with beady eyes, clad in an old, faded crimson tunic that had contributed to his dubious moniker. He wore a pair of knives on his belt, his double-headed axe stashed beneath folds of greased canvas to protect it from the weather. While not much to stare at, the Pig was cunning, deceptively strong. He was flanked by Cobb, the Spider. His enforcer. Cobb was a spindly man, his face angular and seamed with scars, but he wielded his curved swords with a ferocity that seemed to defy his stature. Pig had also hired Aleta, a pale eyed, flaxen haired mercenary from Zeltiva, and Ibros, the Mute. He was a spare, dusky-skinned tracker whose talent with a recurved bow far exceeded that with his clumsy falchion, clad in buckskins and scraps of red cloth. He was also staring back. Ulric tore his eyes away, making a hasty count of the captives. Seven, eight, nine. They were all there. No crying, no whispering… just misery. Kell and Aleta weren’t happy, either. There wasn’t enough dry wood for a fire, and rations, cut once already, were being swiftly depleted. Many of the provisions the Pig arranged for in Ravok had gone bad shortly after the change of season. There were also too many mouths to feed. The prisoners, already deprived of half their meager ration, were starving. Ibros hadn’t brought back any game for days. Aleta complained that he was holding out on them, but the Pig, who had worked with Ibros before, told her to get petched. The gloom deepened, yet the storm continued to rage. The trees swayed violently, leaves thrashing, branches cracking. Ulric’s boots sank deeper and deeper into the muck. He clenched his teeth to keep them from chattering, but there wasn’t anything he could do to about his shivering. Just picture a roaring fire. He closed his eyes but his efforts were in vain. His fingers and toes were already numb, sodden trousers clinging unpleasantly to his thighs. Aleta was also shivering, her shoulders shaking where they pressed against his, strands of hair plastered to her face. “You know, we could always huddle together for warmth.” He smiled thinly. Aleta stared at him for a long moment, then shrugged. “Don’t get amorous on me,” she said, leaning onto his chest. Ulric slid an arm around her back, resting his cheek on the top her head. “I won’t stab you if you promise not to stab me.” “Enough of your euphemisms, whelp.” Ulric rankled at the epithet, but he tried to shrug it away. Working with the Pig meant he had to put up with that sort of thing. Whelp, Legs, Ugly, and Mute, all answering to the Pig and the Spider. “Fair enough.” He leaned back, looking skyward. Kell was already snoring away beside him. Ulric didn’t want to give Kell the satisfaction of hearing him say so, but he was completely awed by the man. How many men could sleep through a storm, yet wake at the sound of a distant footstep? There was something surreal about him. Ulric remained sitting for a long time, his muscles shrieking out as they stiffened and finally grew numb. He could have walked around, but it wouldn’t have made a difference. The world was reduced to cold, rain, muck, and the hollow eyes of the slaves. He kept dozing, catching a few moments of sleep before a particularly fat drop of rain landed on his face, waking him from fitful slumber. Always, he woke with a dry mouth. No matter how long he kept his mouth parted, sucking the moisture from his lips, the feeling never went away. He felt vaguely sick. After a while, Aleta’s weight began to crush his ribs, and though he wanted to shove her away, he couldn’t bring himself to do it. He kept willing her to move, his resentment growing with every passing moment, but she didn’t wake. Not even when he exhaled rapidly. There was something comforting about being close to a woman that wasn’t, well, a dockside whore. Eventually, the rain subsided to mist. Ulric scarcely noticed it because of the shroud of darkness, not the mention the dulling of his senses. It was only later, when the sky faded from black to gray, that the Pig’s beady eyes opened. He clambered unsteadily to his feet, letting the Spider, who’d he’d been sleeping back to back with, slide into the muck. “Rise and shine, Whelp.” He winked, drawing his cock out for a piss. “Mornin’, Pig.” “Mornin’, Whelp.” “Mornin’, Spider.” “Where the petch is the Mute?” With a cackle, he directed his pale stream toward Spider, forcing the man to scrabble away. Aleta, roused by the ruckus, also rose to her feet, followed by Ulric. Kell kept sleeping, even after the Spider kicked at his boots. “Hunting,” the Spider chuckled. “He told me last night.” “That’s only the fifth time you’ve tried that jest,” Aleta said, her legs wobbly as she moved to tend to the horses. “Think you’ve got another one in you?” Cackling again, the Pig gestured at Ulric. “Whelp, see how the slaves are doing.” Ulric stamped his boots on the ground, also chafing his hands as he tried to restore circulation to his limbs, then went reluctantly about his task. Four, fiv- His eyes widened. “Pig, one of them’s dead.” “What d’you mean he’s dead?” Pig moved astonishingly fast for a man of his bulk, shouldering Ulric aside. He crouched in the muck, seizing the slave’s hair and hauling his pallid face from the puddle. The others stared on like automatons, not showing the slightest trace of emotion. Finally, Pig released the head, running pudgy fingers through his thinning auburn hair. “Never would’ve thought the bastard would drown himself,” he murmured. |