The Lightning Tree (The Kingkiller Chronicle 2.40) - Page 4

loose and shuck free of his pants. He

wore nothing underneath. He tossed them

aside and from the willow came a

squawk of the sort that could have come

from a larger bird. A heron perhaps. Or a

crow. And if a branch shook violently at

the same time, well, perhaps a bird had

leaned too far from its branch and nearly

fell. It certainly stood to reason that some

birds were more clumsy than others. And

besides, at the time Bast was looking the

other way.

Bast dove into the water then, splashing

like a boy and gasping at the cold. After

a few minutes he moved to a shallower

portion of the pool where the water rose

to barely reach his narrow waist.

Beneath the water, a careful observer

might note the young man’s legs looked

somewhat … odd. But it was shady

there, and everyone knows that water

bends light strangely, making things look

other than they are. And besides, birds

are not the most careful of observers,

especially when their attention is focused

elsewhere.

An hour or so later, slightly damp and

smelling of sweet honeysuckle soap, Bast

climbed the bluff where he was fairly

certain that he’d left his master’s book. It

was the third bluff he’d climbed in the

last half hour.

When he reached the top, Bast relaxed

at the sight of a hawthorn tree. Walking

closer, he saw it was the right tree, the nook right where he remembered. But the

book was gone. A quick circle of the tree

showed that it hadn’t fallen to the ground.

Then the wind stirred and Bast saw

something white. He felt a sudden chill,

fearing it was a page torn free from the

book. Few things angered his master like

a mistreated book.

But no. Reaching up, Bast didn’t feel

paper. It was a smooth stretch of birch

bark. He pulled it down and saw the

letters crudely scratched into the side.

I ned ta tawk ta ewe. Ets

emportant.

Rike

Afternoon: Birds and Bees

With no idea of where he might find

Rike, Bast made his way back to the

lightning tree. He had just settled down

in his usual place when a young girl

came into the clearing.

She didn’t stop at the greystone and

instead trudged straight up the side of the

hill. She was younger than the others, six

or seven. she wore a bright blue dress

and had deep purple ribbons twining

through her carefully curled hair.

She had never come to the lightning tree

before, but Bast had seen her. Even if he

hadn’t, he could have guessed by her fine

clothes and the smell of rosewater that

she was Viette, the mayor’s youngest

daughter.

She climbed the low hill slowly,

carrying something furry in the crook of

her arm. When she reached the top of the

hill she stood, slightly fidgety, but still waiting.

Bast eyed her quietly for a moment.

“Do you know the rules?” he asked.

She stood, purple ribbons in her hair.

She was obviously slightly scared, but

her lower lip stuck out, defiant. She

nodded.

“What are they?”

The young girl licked her lips and

began to recite in a singsong voice. “No

one taller than the stone.” She pointed to

the fallen greystone at the foot of the hill.

“Come to blacktree, come alone.” She

put her finger to her lips, miming a

shushing noise.

“Tell no—”

“Hold on,” Bast interrupted. “You say

the last two lines while touching the

tree.”

The girl blanched a bit at this but

stepped forward and put her hand against

the sun-bleached wood of the long-dead

tree.

The girl cleared her throat again, then

paused, her lips moving silently as she

ran through the beginning of the poem

until she found her place again. “Tell no

adult what’s been said, lest the lightning

strike you dead.”

When she spoke the last word, Viette

gasped and jerked her hand back, as if

something had burned or bitten her

fingers. Her eyes went wide as she

looked down at her fingertips and saw

they were an untouched, healthy pink.

Bast hid a smile behind his hand.

“Very well then,” Bast said. “You

know the rules. I keep your secrets and

you keep mine. I can answer questions or

help you solve a problem.” He sat down

again, his back against the tree, bringing

him to eye level with the girl. “What do

you want?”

She held out the tiny puff of white fur

she carried in the crook of her arm. It

mewled. “Is this a magic kitten?” she

asked.

Bast took the kitten in his hand and

looked it over. It was a sleepy thing,

almost entirely white. One eye was blue,

the other green. “It is, actually,” he said,

slightly surprised. “At least a little.” He

handed it back.

She nodded seriously. “I want to call

her Princess Icing Bun.”

Bast simply stared at her, nonplussed.

“Okay.”

The girl scowled at him. “I don’t know

if she’s a girl or a boy!”

“Oh,” Bast said. He held out his hand,

took the kitten, then petted it and handed

it back. “It’s a girl.”

The mayor’s daughter narrowed her

eyes at him. “Are you fibbing?”

Bast blinked at the girl, then laughed.

“Why would you believe me the first

time and not the second?” he asked.

“I could tell she was a magic kitten,”

Viette said, rolling her eyes in

exasperation. “I just wanted to make

sure. But she’s not wearing a dress. She

doesn’t have any ribbons or bows. How

can you tell if she’s a girl?”

Bast opened his mouth. Then closed it

again. This was not some farmer’s child.

She had a governess and a whole

closetful of clothes. She didn’t spend her

time around sheep and pigs and goats.

She’d never seen a lamb born. She had

an older sister, but no brothers …

He hesitated; he’d rather not lie. Not

here. But he hadn’t promised to answer

her question, hadn’t made any sort of

agreement at all with her. That made

things easier. A great deal easier than

having an angry mayor visit the

Waystone, demanding to know why his

daughter suddenly knew the word

“penis.”

“I tickle the kitten’s tummy,” Bast said

easily. “And if it winks at me, I know it’s

a girl.”

This satisfied Viett

e, and she nodded

gravely. “How can I get my father to let

me keep it?”

“You’ve already asked him nicely?”

She nodded. “Daddy hates cats.”

“Begged and cried?”

Nod.

“Screamed and thrown a fit?”

She rolled her eyes and gave an

exasperated sigh. “I’ve tried all that, or I

wouldn’t be here.”

Bast thought for a moment. “Okay.

First, you have to get some food that will

keep good for a couple days. Biscuits.

Sausage. Apples. Hide it in your room

where nobody will find it. Not even your

governess. Not even the maid. Do you

have a place like that?”

The little girl nodded.

“Then go ask your daddy one more

time. Be gentle and polite. If he still says

no, don’t be angry. Just tell him that you

love the kitten. Say if you can’t have her,

you’re afraid you’ll be so sad you’ll

die.”

“He’ll still say no,” the little girl said.

Bast shrugged. “Probably. Here’s the

second part. Tonight, pick at your dinner.

Don’t eat it. Not even the dessert.” The

little girl started to say something, but

Bast held up a hand. “If anyone asks you,

just say you’re not hungry. Don’t mention

the kitten. When you’re alone in your

room tonight, eat some of the food you’ve

hidden.”

The little girl looked thoughtful.

Bast continued. “Tomorrow, don’t get

out of bed. Say you’re too tired. Don’t

eat your breakfast. Don’t eat your lunch.

You can drink a little water, but just sips.

Just lie in bed. When they ask what’s the

matter—”

She brightened. “I say I want my

kitten!”

Bast shook his head, his expression

grim. “No. That will spoil it. Just say

you’re tired. If they leave you alone, you

can eat, but be careful. If they catch you,

you’ll never get your kitten.”

The girl was listening intently now, her

brow furrowed in concentration.

“By dinner they’ll be worried. They’ll

offer you more food. Your favorites.

Keep saying you’re not hungry. You’re

just tired. Just lie there. Don’t talk. Do

that all day long.”

“Can I get up to pee?”

Bast nodded. “But remember to act

tired. No playing. The next day, they’ll

be scared. They’ll bring in a doctor.

They’ll try to feed you broth. They’ll try

everything. At some point your father

will be there, and he’ll ask you what’s

the matter.”

Bast grinned at her. “That’s when you

start to cry. No howling. Don’t blubber.

Just tears. Just lie there and cry. Then say

you miss your kitten so much. You miss

your kitten so much you don’t want to be

alive anymore.”

The little girl thought about it for a long

minute, petting her kitten absentmindedly

with one hand. Finally she nodded,

“Okay.” She turned to go.

“Hold on now!” Bast said quickly. “I

gave you what you wanted. You owe me

now.”

The little girl turned around, her

expression an odd mix of surprise and

anxious embarrassment. “I didn’t bring

any money,” she said, not meeting his

eye.

“Not money,” Bast said. “I gave you

two answers and a way to get your kitten.

You owe me three things. You pay with

gifts and favors. You pay in secrets …”

She thought for a moment. “Daddy

hides his strongbox key inside the mantel

clock.”

Bast nodded approvingly. “That’s one.”

The little girl looked up into the sky,

still petting her kitten. “I saw mama

kissing the maid once.”

Bast raised an eyebrow at that. “That’s

two …”

The girl put her finger in her ear and

wiggled it. “That’s all, I think.”

“How about a favor, then?” Bast said.

“I need you to fetch me two dozen

daisies with long stems. And a blue

ribbon. And two armfuls of gemlings.”

Viette’s face puckered in confusion.

“What’s a gemling?”

“Flowers,” Bast said, looking puzzled

himself. “Maybe you call them balsams?

They grow wild all over around here,”

he said, making a wide gesture with both

hands.

“Do you mean geraniums?” she asked.

Bast shook his head. “No. They’ve got

loose petals, and they’re about this big.”

he made a circle with his thumb and

middle finger. “They’re yellow and

orange and red …”

The girl stared at him blankly.

“Widow Creel keeps them in her

window box,” Bast continued. “When

you touch the seedpods, they pop …”

Viette’s face lit up. “Oh! You mean

touch-me-nots, ” she said, her tone more

than slightly patronizing. “I can bring you

a bunch of those. That’s easy. ” She

turned to run down the hill.

Bast called out before she’d taken six

steps. “Wait!” When she spun around, he

asked her. “What do you say if somebody

asks you who you’re picking flowers

for?”

She rolled her eyes again. “I tell them

it’s none of their tupping business,” she

said. “Because my daddy is the mayor.”

After Viette left, a high whistle made

Bast look down the hill toward the

greystone. There were no children

waiting there.

The whistle came again, and Bast

stood, stretching long and hard. It would

have surprised most of the young women

in town how easily he spotted the figure

standing in the shadow of the trees at the

edge of the clearing nearly two hundred

feet away.

Bast sauntered down the hill, across the

grassy field, and into the shadow of the

trees. There was an older boy there with

smudgy face and a pug nose. He was

perhaps twelve and his shirt and pants

were both too small for him, showing too

much dirty wrist at the cuff and bare

ankle below. He was barefoot and had a

slightly sour smell about him.

“Rike.” Bast’s voice held none of the

friendly, bantering tone he’d used with

the town’s other children. “How’s the

road to Tinuë?”

“It’s a long damn way,” the boy said

bitterly, not meeting Bast’s eye. “We live

in the ass of nowhere.”

“I see you have my book,” Bast said.

The boy held it out. “I wann’t tryin’ to

steal it,” he muttered quickly. “I just

needed to talk to you.”

Bast took the book silently.


“I didn’t break the rules,” the boy said.

“I didn’t even come into the clearing. But

I need help. I’ll pay for it.”

“You lied to me, Rike,” Bast said, his

voice grim.

“And din’t I pay for that?” the boy

demanded angrily, looking up for the first

time. “Din’t I pay for it ten times over?

Ent my life shit enough without having

more shit piled on top of it?”

“And it’s all beside the point because

you’re too old now,” Bast said flatly.

“I aren’t either!” the boy stomped a

foot. Then struggled and took a deep

breath, visibly forcing his temper back

under control. “Tam is older’n me and he

can still come to the tree! I’m just taller’n

him!”

“Those are the rules,” Bast said.

“It’s a shite rule!” the boy shouted, his

hands making angry fists. “And you’re a

shite little bastard who deserves more of

the belt than he gets!”

There was a silence then, broken only

by the boy’s ragged breathing. Rike’s

eyes were on the ground, fists clenched

at his sides, he was shaking.

Bast’s eyes narrowed ever so slightly.

The boy’s voice was rough. “Just one,”

Rike said. “Just one favor just this once.

It’s a big one. But I’ll pay. I’ll pay

triple.”

Bast drew a deep breath and let it out

as a sigh. “Rike, I—”

“Please, Bast?” He was still shaking,

but Bast realized the boy’s voice wasn’t

angry anymore. “Please?” Eyes still on

the ground, he took a hesitant step

forward. “Just … please?” His hand

reached out and just hung there aimlessly,

as if he didn’t know what to do with it.

Finally he caught hold of Bast’s

shirtsleeve and tugged it once, feebly,

before letting his hand fall back to his side.

“I just can’t fix this on my own.” Rike

looked up, eyes full of tears. His face

was twisted in a knot of anger and fear.

A boy too young to keep from crying, but

still old enough so that he couldn’t help

but hate himself for doing it.

“I need you to get rid of my da,” he said

in a broken voice. “I can’t figure a way. I

could stick him while he’s asleep, but my

ma would find out. He drinks and hits at

her. And she cries all the time and then

he hits her more.”

Rike was looking at the ground again,

the words pouring out of him in a gush. “I

could get him when he’s drunk

somewhere, but he’s so big. I couldn’t

move him. They’d find the body and then

Tags: Patrick Rothfuss The Kingkiller Chronicle Fantasy
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