"Fine. We just talk. Let's get out of this forest before we try it. You're going to be a bit worse for wear after the spell, and I'd rather not chance being attacked by something else while you aren't up to fighting."
"Decided I'm useful, have you?"
"Sure. You make an excellent diversion."
As they resumed their trek, Jassion glanced one final time at the hut they left behind. For an instant, on the clearing's far side, he saw a pair of eyes-a large squirrel, or perhaps a rabbit, the first he'd seen in this wretched place-peering at him, unblinking, from amid the trees. But even as he considered drawing Kaleb's attention to it, the creature was gone, leaving nothing but waving grass in its wake.
Jassion shrugged once, castigating himself for letting his nerves affect him so, and followed Kaleb back into the woods.
Chapter Six
THE WEEKS PASSED in an unending march, and the byways of Rahariem grew ever more crowded. This was, in part, accounted for by the soldiers, extra patrols assigned to the streets since a captive noblewoman and her entire household had vanished into the night, leaving a trail of corpses in their wake.
But only in part. Most of the newcomers were Imphallian, not Cephiran: citizens of the many hamlets and towns that sprouted throughout the region, wild toadstools of expanding civilization. As the invading forces advanced, conquering community after community, it simply made sense to arrange their captives and forced laborers into fewer, larger groups. Thus did Rahariem receive a constant influx of newcomers, prodded along at Cephiran swordpoint.
And with these new arrivals, like camp followers straggling behind, came news and rumors.
Cerris sat in a small office in one of Rahariem's great halls, hunting some of those wild rumors. He wore nondescript tans and greys, and his chin was newly shorn. Without the concealing growth of beard, his cheeks looked hollow, his flesh deeply etched with lines. He looked… Well, much as it galled him to acknowledge it, he was starting to look old.
Maybe even old enough to justify his presence on the streets, rather than as a laborer in a work gang. So the beard was well lost, no matter how much he missed it.
'Of course you miss it. Never were one for showing your true face to the world, were you, "Cerris"?'
Across from him, a flimsy writing table bowed beneath the weight of heaps of parchment and an array of inkwells. Faint impressions in the old carpeting suggested that a much larger, sturdier desk had stood here not long ago, but it, like so much else of value in Rahariem, was now beautifying the chambers of some Cephiran officer. And behind that desk, chatting on in his infamous drone that could likely have put an erupting volcano to sleep, stood the fellow Cerris had come to see.
"… fortunate we permitted you entry at all," he was saying, one hand tugging absently at the autumn-red bottlebrush mustache that was his most distinguishing feature-and also the only hair on a head otherwise as bald as a cobblestone. "I almost failed to recognize you without the beard."
"That's sort of the point, Yarrick," Cerris said with a forced grin. "I really don't want a lot of people recognizing me just now."
Yarrick, head of the Rahariem division of Imphallion's Merchants' Guild, nodded sagely. "Yes, I can certainly understand why anonymity might be advantageous under the present circumstances." He sat and offered Cerris a shallow smile, which was about as affable as his expression ever got. "What can I do for you, my friend?"
"Well…" Cerris decided to work his way up to it. "First off, I was wondering if you'd heard anything from outside." He frowned, idly tapping his fingers on the armrest. "I know the Cephirans must keep a pretty close watch on you…"
Again Yarrick nodded. "On everyone whom they permit to remain active in governing Rahariem. They require our aid to keep the city functioning, but they trust us no more than they must."
"Right, but you're in charge of the largest Guild still operating. You must have some contact with the newcomers they've been herding into the city."
"Some," the bald merchant admitted. "Alas, I've heard nothing to suggest that anyone shall be coming to our aid anytime soon."
The old wood of the armrest cracked as Cerris's grip clenched. "What the bloody steaming hell is wrong with them, Yarrick?" he demanded. "This is a godsdamn invasion they're ignoring!"
"If I knew anything for certain," Yarrick said with a shrug, "I would tell you." He leaned forward and lowered his voice. "I'd not even reveal this much, were you not a member in high standing of my own Guild…"
"Yes?" Cerris, too, found himself leaning forward.
"A portion of it may, of course, be the standard jockeying for position that's ensnared our government for years now. The Guilds will not commit themselves without consensus, and the nobles are reluctant to relinquish to the Guilds what little authority they have remaining. But it's more than that. I've heard no details, but rumor has it that a number of nobles and Guildmasters were lost recently. I cannot speak to the nature of the attack, or accident, or whatever it may have been, but Imphallion may be facing threats from within as well as without."
"Perfect." Cerris grunted, falling back in his chair. "That's all we need, isn't it?"
'Ah, if only,' that inner voice taunted, 'there was someone in charge who knew what he was doing…'
"Indeed. It almost makes one long for the days of Audriss the Serpent. At least then we understood the threat we faced."
"Not really," Cerris muttered under his breath.
"But surely, Cerris, you've not come to me merely seeking gossip and rumor." Yarrick chewed thoughtfully on the bristles overhanging his lip. "You've your own contacts among Rahariem's merchants and vendors, you could have learned this much on your own."
"Not as quickly. But you're right, there is something else I need." It was Cerris's turn to glance nervously around the room, as though he could somehow spot any prying ears that had so far gone unnoticed. "As part of the Cephiran puppet government-um, no offense…"
"None taken. It's an apt enough description."
"Then you must have some insight into their schedules. Specifically, you'd know when their next major supply caravan is due."
Yarrick's expression soured, as though he'd just discovered lemon juice in his mustache. "That's a dangerous question, Cerris. You're not preparing to cause any trouble, are you?"
"I'm trying to avoid trouble," Cerris lied. "Frankly, my friend, I'm planning to get the hell out of here-sooner rather than later-and I want to make sure I don't run into a few hundred Cephiran soldiers on the road. A few sentries or a single patrol, I can avoid, but a caravan…" He left it hanging, concluding the sentence with a sickly grin and a shrug.
"All right," Yarrick said after a few more moments of mustache chewing. "But if anything goes awry, you didn't hear this from me." "… FIVE DAYS FROM NOW," Cerris explained to the crowded, smelly workshop that evening. Irrial stood beside him, pressing close, while the others sat on scattered benches or empty barrels. "It's not coming from Cephira, but from some of the outlying Imphallian villages that they've already taken. Consolidating supplies, that sort of thing. There's no certainty as to what time they'll arrive, but I imagine it'll be early in the day. They'll probably make close camp the night before."
"We're not going to have a lot of options." It was Andevar who spoke, rising and striding toward the front of the room. Ludicrously squat and thickly bearded, he looked rather as though the gods had stuck a lion's head atop an enormous link of sausage and called it life. But he was also the former bodyguard of a local aristocrat who hadn't survived the Cephiran siege. Andevar possessed considerable tactical acumen, and had taken his failure to protect his lord as a personal affront. When Irrial had introduced Cerris to the various leaders of the burgeoning resistance, he'd not been at all surprised to find Andevar among them.