Too many had fallen, their bodies never to be recovered, Direfang knew. How many had been suffocated by the ash? he wondered. How many had been burned to death? A good leader would have worked his way back along the column of goblins, boosting everyone’s morale and keeping a list of the names of the dead so they could be honored in a proper ceremony.
So Direfang did not consider himself to be a good leader. But he was their leader nonetheless, and he served them by shuffling along and not stopping. If he let exhaustion claim him, if he stopped, the ones behind him would stop also. And if they all stopped, they might not ever move again.
He guessed it was night by the time they came down a cliff side and stood at the base of one more mountain. The air was definitely better there, and only a little ash covered the ground. The clouds were thinner overhead, stars glimmering through wisps and giving some hope to the dazed army. The goblins spilled out into a narrow valley and miserably looked up at the next mountain Mudwort intended for them to climb.
Direfang slumped against a stone outcropping, took a few deep breaths, and collapsed. Around him, other goblins fell. Even Mudwort surrendered to her tortured muscles and dropped down next to an already-snoring Spikehollow. Within minutes, not one of the surviving goblins and hobgoblins were awake.
33
Grallik still raged against sleep, though. He searched the recesses of his mind for the spell that would let him brush away his overwhelming fatigue and feel as if he’d rested well for a long night. It was there in his memory … almost. He couldn’t quite recapture the words and the gestures. He again cursed the loss of his spell tome.
“Horace,” the wizard rasped. “Water. Call upon the blessed sea goddess to quench our thirst. The water the goblins had, the food, it’s all gone. They lost it or ate it, and I am so terribly thirsty. I’d give you all the gold I’ve ever owned or will own for the smallest drink of water.”
Indeed, Grallik’s lips were dry and cracked. The skin on his arms and face not covered by the old fire scars was pocked from hot ash. He raised his fingers and discovered that his eyebrows were burned off. “Water, or we’ll die … as surely as if we’d been caught in one of those rivers of lava.”
Horace was on his knees, swaying and trying hard to stay awake. His tongue was just as swollen and cracked, and he worked with parched lips to form words that refused to emerge. His fingers fumbled at his rope belt and he pulled the jug loose. Uncorking it, he finished the spell, then took a long pull from the jug, letting precious water run down his chin and neck before passing what was left to Grallik.
The wizard drank greedily, though he had intended to leave a little for the red-skinned goblin. He needed her to survive. If she died of thirst or from the heat, he was certain that all of his misery and suffering-leaving the Order and Steel Town, dragging Horace and Kenosh and Aneas on his treacherous path-would be for nothing.
Grallik turned to see Mudwort soundly sleeping. She wouldn’t mind being woken up for a little refreshing water. He shuffled toward her, taking one more drink from the jug. Just one more tiny swallow, he told himself. Without thinking, however, he drained the last of the pure, sweet water, sucking on the lip of the jug to extract the final droplets.
Then he stoppered the jug and placed it near Horace. The water restored some of his energy, so he spent the next several minutes padding around the sleeping goblins in search of the two missing members of his talon. He found Kenosh, recognizing him only because he was a human amid a swarm of goblins. The hair Kenosh had left was in clumps, the places where his scalp was bare were burned. There were more burns on the man’s chest, and little of his tabard was left.
At first Grallik thought he was dead because the knight was barely moving, but then he watched Kenosh’s chest rise and fall faintly. He knelt and put his mouth to Kenosh’s ear. “Brother Kenosh, my heart leaps to find you alive.”
Kenosh opened one eye and tried to raise his head.
“No, no. Don’t move. Just rest. Horace sleeps, and when he awakes, I’ll have him tend your wounds.” Grallik gingerly touched a gash on Kenosh’s neck and sadly shook his head, looking around for the other. “Aneas … where is he?”
Kenosh opened his mouth and spit out grit. Wet ash was caked around his gums. “Dead one day ago, Guardian. He slipped on the trail, went over the side. He didn’t even scream, Guardian.” Kenosh coughed, closing his eyes. “He suffers no more.”
The sky opened up sometime during the night, rain pounding down on the goblins, waking most of them up and rat-a-tat-tatting harshly against the surrounding stone and rocks. The rain refreshed Mudwort, pummeling her but washing away her coat of ash. She tipped her face up and opened her mouth, gulping as much water as she could and not caring that the force of the hard downpour was almost painful.
The waking goblins made joyful hoots and raised their arms and hands to the sky. They hugged each other and carried on, all of them drinking as much as they could with open mouths and filling their empty skins and jugs. Even the three surviving Dark Knights reveled in the intense summer storm. A rare smile played at the corners of Grallik’s lips.
“Fair Zeboim, daughter and mother of the seas, we thank you for this gift of life-giving water,” Horace prayed. When he was finished, he bathed in the puddles around him while uncorking his jug and letting the storm fill it to overflowing.
Direfang leaned against a natural stone column, wrapping his arms around it and feeling the water flow over him and the rock. He stuck out his tongue and took as much water as he could into his dry mouth. It didn’t taste good, flavored with ash and stone dust that still clung to the clouds that hung overhead. But he and the others needed the water so badly, they drank and drank until their stomachs nearly burst.
“Hungry,” he heard Spikehollow grumble.
“Later,” Direfang said. “Find food later. Just drink and be happy that the Maws of Dragons did not eat everyone.” As they had consumed so many in his army, he added mentally. So many dead and gone.
“Not all dead to the volcanoes,” Spikehollow returned. “Hurbear’s clan headed southwest, where the trail broke away. That clan took the wide trail, and some other goblins followed. Perhaps Hurbear’s clan took the better way.”
“Perhaps.” Direfang shook his head and pointed to the peak that loomed above them. “Mudwort wants to go there now.”
Spikehollow scratched at a spot on his cheek that had been burned from ash or rock. “Why climb another mountain, Direfang? Only climb up one side to go down the other. It would be easier just to go around mountain. Yes, going around is a better thing. Tell Mudwort. Make her understand.”
Direfang closed his eyes and drank in some more rain. He listened to the goblins talking about lost friends and clan members, about being hungry, about the incredible displays of lava and steam that were still going on to the north. Some talked about being glad they were alive and away from Steel Town, saying they would continue to follow Direfang.
“Stay together and stay strong,” Direfang answered Spikehollow. “Mudwort wants to climb this mountain, so we climb.”
“Direfang leads the goblins, not Mudwort.” Spikehollow snorted contemptuously. He, too, continued to drink in the rain.
The steady patter of rain muted the usual chatter of all the goblins. All the sounds swirled together pleasantly, as far as Direfang was concerned. Spikehollow continued to talk to him, but he only half listened. And he tried, once more, to look around the survivors and pick out familiar faces. The rain had washed the ash and dirt away, but everything was still a mix of grays and browns and scars and burns.