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'Don't make any sudden movements,' said Ohio, 'or you'll excite friend Blackwood here. I've lost his leash, so I'll have the devil of a job restraining him if he tries to eat you.'

The young man cringed.

'What's your name, boy?' said Hearst, with raw-nerve violence in his voice. Ohio chuckled.

'Peace, friend Hearst. We've no need to beat him to his bones for information. I've seen his friends – five hunters, camped downstream just a little. This rabbit here was strutting round the countryside with a slingshot. His rope-soled shoes and the splicing on the belt holding up his pantaloons betray him as a sailor-boy, probably a cabin boy.'

'I'm no cabin boy,' said the young man, suddenly recovering his voice and his nerve. Mine is an Orfus blade. I'm a blooded blade of the free marauders.'

'Really,' said Ohio. T wonder if his captain knows his cabin boy thinks himself a full-fledged reaver.'

'My captain's Abousir Belench,' said their captive. 'He's captain three-five prime under our sealord Menator.'

'Menator?' said Ohio. 'I've heard of a famous pimp by that name, and a famous thief – but never a sealord.'

'You'll know him well enough when he has the skin flayed off your backs. We've five ships anchored at Lorford to do Menator's work. He's the sword from the north, you know. You must have heard of him.'

'Is he a bald man with a broken nose and a blue rose tattooed on his left cheek?' said Ohio.

'Yes,' said their captive. 'You know him, then?'

'He's my brother,' said Ohio.

'Sure,' said the young man, 'and the skua gull shits gold and silver. Tell me another one.'

'Believe what you like,' said Ohio. T don't care. So this Menator rules the Orfus pirates now, does he?'

'Yes,' said the young man, now getting positively stroppy. 'He's lord of the Greater Teeth. He'll have you torn to bits. Nobody can stand against him. He's made us conquerors. This winter we took Stokos. Next, Runcorn: then there'll be no power in all of Argan strong enough to hold us.'

'Bold words, my sprig,' said Ohio.

'True words,' said the young man. 'You made a mistake taking me prisoner.'

'You gave me no chance to hide,' said Ohio. 'If I hadn't taken you prisoner, your fellows might be hunting me by now.'

'They'll hunt you anyway, come the morning. They'll know I'm missing.'

Hearst got to his feet.

'Blackwood. Ohio. Miphon. And you, boy – on your feet. Gather wood. Lay fires, each fire twenty paces apart. I want each of us to lay ten fires.'

Blackwood began to protest: 'But that's ridiculous, we should -'

'No, Blackwood,' said Ohio sharply, 'We're not going to let you eat the boy. Not unless he tries to run away.'

Ohio saw Hearst's plan – and so, as they set to work, did Blackwood. After a lot of labour, the fires were laid. They lit them. Then, with burning brands, they set fire to half a dozen trees as well. From a distance, there would be so much light in the forest that one would have to guess that an army was camping there.

***

Morning dawned grey and cold, with a light rain falling; the sunlight of the day before was just a memory. They broke camp and moved cautiously west, until they could see Lorford in the distance. There were no ships there. The pirates had left.

'They've gone!' said their captive.

'What did you expect?' said Hearst. 'Did you think they'd worry about you when they had the safety of five ships to think about?'

'You see?' said Ohio. 'A cabin boy isn't that important.'

'I'm not a cabin boy!'

'Maybe not,' said Ohio, 'But in any case it doesn't matter. Blackwood, I've changed my mind. We'll let you eat him after all.'

At that, their captive bolted and ran. Ohio laughed to see him sprinting away; the last they saw, he was jogging along beside the river in the direction of the sea.

'That wasn't very kind,' said Blackwood quietly.

'Kind!' roared Ohio. 'Other pirates would have raped him then cut him up for fish bait.'

Blackwood – briefly – contemplated the idea of delivering an extended lecture on ethics, then – wisely -abandoned the notion.

***

When they reached the first stonemade ground, Hearst started to count out paces. He wanted to know how much ground the death-stone commanded; that knowledge might one day mean the difference between life and death.

They climbed Melross Hill and crossed the drawbridge: wooden beams, iron nails and steel chains now rendered in stone. Inside the castle, the wealth of gold, weapons, tapestries and precious stones had been similarly affected; they found the mad-jewel itself, a useless chunk of rock lying near a stonemade skeleton.

There was no sign of Elkor Alish.

'Perhaps he slipped when he tried to climb the castle walls,' said Miphon. 'Perhaps he fell.'

T doubt it,' said Hearst.

They spent two days searching the castle for a sign, a clue or a message – finding nothing. Ohio was awed by the size of this wizard fortress; Argan had always been the place for wizards, and there were no such castles in the Ravlish Lands. But Miphon told him that Castle Vaunting was nothing compared to the Castle of Controlling Power by the flame trench Drangsturm, on the border between the Far South and the Deep South -to which they must now make their way, to alert the Confederation of Wizards to the disasters which had befallen them.

CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

South, then.

Spring rains and wasting winds; the everlast road outlasting daylight. Gaunt ruins of a fallen temple. The mountain of Maf looming in the east. In the hamlet of Delve, sour-faced peasants with stories of marauding Collosnon deserters, bandits and inland-seeking pirate bands. Further south, the Rohm Mountains rearing abrupt battlements against the horizon. The sea, and a tricky hot-mud crossing of a gently respiring flame trench.

From the coast of Dybra, a view of the cliffbuilt islands of the Greater Teeth; Ohio talked of seeking passage to the pirate islands, but there was no boat to take them there. Besides, the closer he got to his brother Menator, the more he seemed to doubt the wisdom of trusting to his brother's mercy.

In Nerja, capital city of Dybra – in truth, a small town of a thousand souls – a dying king wasting away in a deserted castle spoke of a hero who had stolen away his men, inflaming their hearts with rhetoric which promised power, glory, women and wealth. In Chorst, the hero had recruited all the able men in Guntagona.

Nearing Runcorn, the travellers heard that the city had surrendered to a rag-tag army led by the reaver from the west, the Rovac warrior Elkor Alish. Closer to Runcorn, they came upon a battlefield littered with the stonemade bodies of men and horses: Elkor Alish had used the death-stone, doubtless sheltering his own men in the red bottle while he commanded that power against his enemies.

The travellers did not approach Runcorn directly, but camped in hills outside the city. Ohio, guising himself as a Galish merchant, travelled into Runcorn on his own, bearing as trade goods quantities of siege dust and arachnid silk recovered from the depths of the green bottle.

He returned to bring them a detailed account of the activities of the conqueror of Runcorn, Elkor Alish. After defeating that city's army with the death-stone, Alish had installed his motley army of peasants and fishermen in the city. He was now busy recruiting cavalry and infantry from the Lezconcarnau Plains, otherwise known as the Plains of the Wild Horses, rich grazing lands between the Rohm Mountains and the Spine Mountains, occupying the hinterland of Runcorn.

Once Alish had gathered together an army sufficient to garrison the cities of the Harvest Plains, he would doubtless march south: he had already sent envoys to demand the surrender of those southern lands.