The monastic simultaneously ducked the swing of a scimitar, rattled off a rhyme, and swirled her hand through a mystic pass. The floating knife blinked out of existence like a puffed-out candle flame.
She then shifted in close to the Red Axe with the scimitar, grabbed him by the sword arm, pivoted, and flung him at the row of windows. The outlaw crashed through one of the panes and plummeted out of sight
Kesk had been maneuvering frantically, trying to bull his way past his own men and get at Sefris. When she tossed the swordsman through the glass, she finally cleared a path. The tanarukk charged in and swung his axe. Nicos was sure that if the weapon connected, it would kill her, her sorcerous and combat skills notwithstanding. Even a warrior in plate armor couldn't have withstood that mighty chop.
Her expression as calm as ever, Sefris swayed backward like a reed in a breeze, and the stroke missed. She hooked Kesk's ankle with her foot and jerked his leg out from under him, staggering him for a moment. She used the time to scurry to the broken window, where a few triangular shards of glass still hung around the frame. She dived through the opening headfirst. Nicos assumed that, agile as she was, she managed a safe plunge into the river below.
For a second, the Red Axes and the wizard in green simply stared at the shattered window as if unable to believe Sefris had truly succeeded in escaping.
Kesk roared, "Useless! Useless, the lot of you!"
Spit flew from his mouth. His men quailed before his anger-or rather, most of them did. Sefris had kicked one skinny fellow in the head early on, after which he'd lain insensible on the floor. That one lifted himself up on one elbow and rubbed his temple.
"What?" he mumbled, drooling a little. "What happened?"
"You let her get away!" Kesk replied. "Just like Aeron! Just like everybody!”
He charged. The battle-axe hurtled down and split the human's pinched, petulant-looking face from scalp to chin.
The tanarukk wrenched the weapon free, spattering blood and brains in the process.
"Find them!" the tanarukk commanded. "Aeron sar Randal and that monk-bitch, too!"
Most of the Red Axes, even those still dazed or in pain from Sefris's attacks, hastily exited the room.
"It's unfortunate the monastic escaped," said the man in green, "but the important thing is that we kept our partnership from foundering."
Kesk spun around to face him and grumbled, "You miserable… You're supposed to be a wizard, but you were just as worthless as the rest of them."
"I'm sorry about that, but I'm not a battle mage. Just a dilettante, when you get right down to it I don't have any experience fighting other spellcasters, whereas Sefris manifestly does. She dispelled my sending before I could, ah, send it. If need be, I'll do better next time. Meanwhile, we mustn't lose sight of the fact that our objective is still to lay hands on the Bouquet, not chase a Shar worshiper around town."
"I wish I'd never heard of the cursed book. Or you."
"You won't say that when it makes you the richest, most powerful outlaw in the Border Kingdoms. Sefris's gems were just a fantasy, but the joyous tomorrow you and I are going to share is quite real."
"It had better be." Short and burly as he was, the tanarukk only had to stoop a little to stick his wild-boar face close to Nicos's. "Now, old man, you're going to learn a lesson about speaking out of turn. What Sefris put you through is nothing compared to what I'm going to do."
Nicos was pleasantly surprised to discover that, for whatever reason, he wasn't frightened.
He sneered back at his captor, "Go ahead. It's like the Shar cultist told you. I won't have to endure it for long. My heart will give out under the strain."
Kesk backhanded Nicos across the face. But only once, then he wrenched himself away.
CHAPTER 12
"I keep worrying about the hobgoblin," Miri said.
Aeron asked, "How's that?"
He scanned the crowd in the street ahead. Many folk had covered up their heads against the drizzle, which made the task of spotting Kesk's henchmen more difficult. Still, it appeared that all the people in the immediate vicinity were law-abiding sorts scurrying off to their jobs, and that made sense. Most of Oeble's outlaws slept in the morning. In fact, Aeron looked forward to doing the same, but he and Miri had one more stop to make first.
"Will the creature really help the other slaves run away," she said, "or will it betray them? It is goblin-kin, after all. I'm sure it has no love for the civilized races."
Miri had stayed awake as long and worked as hard as Aeron, but she still seemed relatively fresh. It was as if the rising of the sun, which generally made him yawn, had infused her with fresh vitality.
He snorted and said, "Goblin-kin. Of course. I bet your fingers were just itching to shoot the creature, and never mind that it risked its neck to help me fight the mantis."
"I didn't say it was inconceivable that it would keep its word. Nor do I relish killing, whatever you think. I certainly took no joy in shooting your friends."
"I'm sure you didn't," he said sardonically.
They swung around a mule-drawn wagon heaped with bags of flour, the product of one of the mills upriver.
"I didn't," she insisted, "and… I'm sorry I didn't try to rescue your father when the Red Axes were kidnapping him. I shouldn't have let Sefris talk me out of it. It's this place. It makes me doubt my instincts. It even makes it hard to know right from wrong."
He shook his head in puzzlement and asked, "Is Oeble truly so much fouler than other towns?"
"You've never visited another?"
"Not a big one, just little villages hereabouts."
Miri took a long stride to avoid stepping in a puddle.
"Well," she said, "Oeble is the worst I've seen. I'll admit, though, I've never visited a city that didn't make my skin crawl. They all have their dirt, crowds, and stenches. That's why I'm a scout."
"Because cities spook you?"
"Because as a ranger, you spend most of your time in the parts of the world that are worth living in: forests, mountains, rivers, the prairies, and the sea."
He grinned and said, "Without a soft bed or a mug of beer to be had for leagues in any direction."
She smiled back.
"You don't miss easy living once you lose the habit," she said. "Not that I ever had it much, growing up on a little farm on the edge of the wilderness. Haven't you ever wanted to roam, and see wonders you could never even have imagined?"
"Everything I want is right here in Oeble."
It was true, but just for a moment, Aeron wondered whether he might discover something more to desire if only he opened up his eyes.
Ombert Blackdale's thick-built brownstone drum of a tower came into view around the next bend, and the sight banished the peculiar, wistful thought from his mind.
"That's it," he said, pointing.
Miri peered at it and said, "I don't see any sentries."
"I don't either, yet, but Ombert will have somebody keeping an eye out. He always does. Not that it matters."
"True, considering that we're proposing to serve ourselves up to him on a platter."
"You know," Aeron said, "you don't need to come inside. I can do this by myself."
"I'll stick with you."
"To help me fight my way out again if necessary?"