“Way? Yes, we fight the same way.”
“But Mordecai said you were the best, didn’t he?” Ethan asked.
Gideon was surprised the boy had been able to hear anything he and Mordecai had been saying. “He did.”
“Well?”
“Well what?” Gideon asked.
“Is it true that you’re the best?”
“Of course not,” Gideon said. How could he say otherwise? It would have been prideful. At any rate, Gideon knew his own skill, but his opinion had always been, that there was always someone better than yourself, even if you had not met them yet.
“I would really like to learn how to fight like you do,” Ethan said. “Do you suppose you could teach me?”
Gideon had hoped to hear the boy say that. “Ethan, I can honestly say, I would be honored to teach you anything I can.”
They heard the snap of a twig in the trees to the left of the road. Both of the young men froze in mid-step. Fear reared its ugly head as they stammered. They tried to identify the sound, praying not to hear anything more.
Leaves crunched beneath a foot somewhere in the darkness. The hairs on their necks stood at attention. Gideon imagined another bear, or worse, staring at them from the murk of the forest-its body full to the brim with a ravenous horde of wicked spirits.
It was difficult to determine whether the cold, night air raised the gooseflesh or simply the sense of impending doom assaulting their senses.
“Could be a squirrel,” Ethan whispered.
“At night?”
“Mouse?”
Two steps this time and a loud snort of air. “Or not a mouse,” Ethan said reluctantly. “Should we run?”
It was not a bad idea exactly. Gideon had thought of the same thing, but pride held him firm to his spot on the dusty, moonlit road. Instead, he pressed Ethan and they began to back down the road keeping whatever was in the woods in front of them. They heard a cacophony of branches snapping, leaves stomped and brushed away.
Something very big rushed through the last layer of foliage-a huge dark mass carrying branches with it as it emerged. “Bear!” Ethan cried and they were off. Like the start of a race, both young men turned and sped down the road as hard as they could.
The thing behind them took up the chase. They heard its heavy footfalls on the packed earth behind them-it was gaining. Then, ahead on the road, another something rushed through the trees. It stood directly in their path, taller than a man. Then it whinnied.
The two young men nearly fell over one another trying to stop. “A horse!” Gideon said. “And not just any horse-my horse!”
Ethan turned. Whistler trotted up behind them with branches sticking out of his saddle in all directions from his tromping through the undergrowth.
“Abigail,” Gideon said to his horse, “You nearly scared us to death, girl.” He patted the spotted mare, never happier to see the horse in all of his life.
Ethan caught hold of Whistler’s rein and doubled over, taking in gulps of air. They both looked at each other and started to laugh aloud. “Aren’t we a couple of ninnies?” Gideon said. Ethan could only nod, trying to catch his breath.
“Well, this is a stroke of blessing from the Almighty if we ever needed one,” Gideon said. He checked Abigail’s saddle and found some provisions left and another sword tucked away in a scabbard wrapped in a blanket. Relief washed over him like a refreshing wave of water. He felt exhausted but happy to be alive.
Ethan pulled small branches and brambles away from Whistler’s saddle as Gideon mounted Abigail. “We’ll certainly make better time now,” Gideon said. “Let’s get moving before we encounter something worth being afraid of.”
Ethan pulled the last briar vine free, then hopped onto Whistler’s back. Whistler bristled and snorted. He was ready to be ridden, glad to have his master back. With a quick snap of the reins, the two young men set off down the road. With hope, they would be able to reach another town before dawn.
TILLEY
By the time Ethan noticed dawn approaching in the east, he could see the distant lamplight of a town. As the boys continued down the road, they came to a sign. Tilley Town, written on the first rung of a multi-post sign. Below that, it read Emmanuel City – 100 days. “I know Tilley Town, or at least I know of it,” Gideon said. “There’s much wickedness here.”
“What sort of wickedness?” Ethan asked.
“For a start, the town was supposedly named for a woman of ill repute, Tilley,” Gideon explained. “She was the mistress of a respected nobleman and shot him when he refused to leave his wife for her. The town began with a brothel back in the days when it was just a miner’s camp. From there it grew and so did its trespasses.
“They have since become a den of thieves and sorcerers. However, the town has expanded down to the sea and that is where we need to go. I have money, but our food is nearly gone along with our drinking water. If we can purchase passage on a merchant vessel to the coast of Emmanuel, then we’ll remove quite a bit of travel time finding your sister.”
“I wonder if we’ll see more spirits in this place,” Ethan said.
“With sin as rampant as it is in Tilley, how could we not?”
Gideon jumped down from his saddle and searched through his saddlebags. “What are you looking for?” Ethan asked.
“It would not do for me to appear in Tilley the way I’m dressed.”
“I don’t suppose they’d care much for having a priest of Shaddai coming into their fair town,” Ethan chuckled.
Gideon produced a cloak and put it on. The garment was a very deep, dark shade of green, almost to the point of appearing black. He covered his priestly apparel with the cloak and left the hood down. “I’m sorry I don’t have one for you, Ethan, but I don’t think you’ll draw any undue attention to yourself with what you’re wearing. At any rate, we know the spirits won’t spot you,” he said.
When Gideon returned to Abigail’s saddle, they started down the road toward Tilley Town. The sun’s first rays began to reclaim the sky. Moisture hung heavy in the autumn air. It would be a beautiful day, at least for those not going to Tilley.
Morning had fully come by the time Ethan and Gideon arrived inside Tilley Town. They passed what appeared to be a separate shantytown on its outskirts. Old run down shacks with thatch roofs stood in long rows on either side of the road. Most had been cobbled together from scraps of lumber and mud bricks.
The sight was dreary enough without seeing the people who lived here, but it was still very early yet. The smell, however, had not retired with the residents. The foul stench had assaulted Ethan and Gideon from well outside the shantytown, only growing worse as they rode through.
The conditions improved when they reached the metropolitan area of Tilley. People bustled about in the early morning sun. The main road traveled through a vast market area where merchants busied themselves setting out the day’s goods. The early birds had already set up their wares and had begun to make their calls to the passersby.
Many different smells ascended from the market place, creating a blend of aromas both delightful and exotic. Cooks prepared food on large, flat iron skillets setting upon mud-brick foundations with fire kindled inside. Others stirred boiling caldrons with spices and various kinds of fish, creating thick gumbos and stews for the many travelers and sailors making port in the city.
This early in the morning, the more unsavory elements of the city still gathered behind closed doors sleeping off the previous night’s debauchery. It would be hours before any of them ventured outdoors again in preparation for another scandalous evening of revelry.
Gideon led them through the market to where the hill crested. Beyond the minor horizon on the road, the boys saw the Azure Sea stretch out beyond their sight. The masts of tall sailing ships jutted into the sky by the dozens along the shoreline like a forest of burnt trees.
The Azure Sea stood in stark contrast to the city of Tilley around them. Seeing the two together reminded Ethan of a sapphire dropped into the mud, its beauty still there but tarnished by the association.