The Lightning Tree (The Kingkiller Chronicle 2.40) - Page 5

the azzie would get me. I couldn’t look

my ma in the eye then. Not if she knew. I

can’t think what that would do to her, if

she knew I was the sort of person that

would kill his own da.”

He looked up then, his face furious,

eyes red with weeping. “I would though.

I’d kill him. You just got to tell me how.”

There was a moment of quiet.

“Okay,” Bast said.

They went down to the stream where they

could have a drink and Rike could wash

his face and collect himself a little bit.

When the boy’s face was cleaner, Bast

noted not all the smudginess was dirt. It

was easy to make the mistake, as the

summer sun had tanned him a rich nut

brown. Even after he was clean it was

hard to tell they were the faint remains of

bruises.

But rumor or no, Bast’s eyes were

sharp. Cheek and jaw. A darkness all

around one skinny wrist. And when he

bent to take a drink from the stream, Bast

glimpsed the boy’s back …

“So,” Bast said as they sat beside the

stream. “What exactly do you want? Do

you want to kill him, or do you just want

to have him gone?”

“If he was just gone, I’d never sleep

again for worry he’d come slouching

back.” Rike said, then was quiet for a bit.

“He went gone two span once.” He gave

a faint smile. “That was a good time, just

me and my ma. It was like my birthday

every day when I woke up and he wasn’t

there. I never knew my ma could sing …”

The boy went quiet again. “I thought

he’d fallen somewhere drunk and finally

broke his neck. But he’d just traded off a

year of furs for drinking money. He’d just

been in his trapping shack, all stupor-

drunk for half a month, not hardly more

than a mile away.”

The boy shook his head, more firmly

this time. “No, if he goes, he won’t stay

away.”

“I can figure out the how,” Bast said.

“That’s what I do. But you need to tell

me what you really want.”

Rike sat for a long while, jaw clenching

and unclenching. “Gone,” he said at last.

The word seemed to catch in his throat.

“So long as he stays gone forever. If you

can really do it.”

“I can do it,” Bast said.

Rike looked at his hands for a long

time. “Gone then. I’d kill him. But that

sort of thing ent right. I don’t want to be

that sort of man. A fellow shouldn’t ought

to kill his da.”

“I could do it for you,” Bast said easily.

Rike sat for a while, then shook his

head. “It’s the same thing, innit? Either

way it’s me. And if it were me, it would

be more honest if I did it with my hands

rather than do it with my mouth.”

Bast nodded. “Right then. Gone

forever.”

“And soon,” Rike said.

Bast sighed and looked up at the sun.

He already had things to do today. The

turning wheels of his desire did not come

grinding to a halt because some farmer

drank too much. Emberlee would be

taking her bath soon. He was supposed to

get carrots …

He didn’t owe the boy a thing, either.

Quite the opposite. The boy had lied to

him. Broken his promise. And while Bast

had settled that account so firmly that no

other child in town would ever dream of

crossing him like that again … it was

still galling to remember. The thought of

helping him now, despite that, it was

quite the opposite of his desire.

“It has to be soon,” Rike said. “He’s

getting worse. I can run off, but ma can’t.

And little Bip can’t neither. And …”

“Fine, fine …” Bast cut him off, waving

his hands. “Soon.”

Rike swallowed. “What’s this going to

cost me?” he asked, anxious.

“A lot,” Bast said grimly. “We’re not

talking about ribbons and buttons here.

Think how much you want this. Think

how big it is.” He met the boy’s eye and

didn’t look away. “Three times that is

what you owe me. Plus some for soon.”

He stared hard at the boy. “Think hard on

that.”

Rike was a little pale now, but he

nodded without looking away. “You can

have what you like of mine,” he said.

“But nothin’ of ma’s. She ent got much

that my da hasn’t already drank away.”

“We’ll work it out,” Bast said. “But

it’ll be nothing of hers. I promise.”

Rike took a deep breath, then gave a

sharp nod. “Okay. Where do we start?”

Bast pointed at the stream. “Find a

river stone with a hole in it and bring it

to me.”

Rike gave Bast an odd look. “Yeh want

a faerie stone?”

“Faerie stone,” Bast said with such

scathing mockery that Rike flushed with

embarrassment. “You’re too old for that

nonsense.” Bast gave the boy a look. “Do

you want my help or not?” he asked.

“I do,” Rike said in a small voice.

“Then I want a river stone.” Bast

pointed back at the stream. “You have to

be the one to find it,” he said. “It can’t be

anyone else. And you need to find it dry

on the shore.”

Rike nodded.

“Right then.” Bast clapped his hands

twice. “Off you go.”

Rike left and Bast returned to the

lightning tree. No children were waiting

to talk to him, so he idled the time away.

He skipped stones in the nearby stream

and flipped through Celum Tinture,

glancing at some of the illustrations.

Calcification. Titration. Sublimation.

Brann, happily unbirched with one hand

bandaged, brought him two sweet buns

wrapped in a white handkerchief. Bast

ate the first and set the second aside.

Viette brought armloads of flowers and

a fine blue ribbon. Bast wove the daisies

into a crown, threading the ribbon

through the stems.

Then, looking up at the sun, he saw that

it was nearly time, Bast removed his

shirt and filled it with the wealth of

yellow and red touch-me-nots Viette had

brought him. He added the handkerchief

and crown, then fetched a stick and made

a bindle so he could carry the lot more

easily.

He headed out past the Oldstone bridge,

then up toward the hills and around a

bluff until he found the place Kostrel had

described. It was cleverly hidden away,

and the stream curved and eddied into a

lovely little pool perfect for a private

bath.

Bast sat behind some bus

hes, and after

nearly half an hour of waiting he had

fallen into a doze. The sharp crackle of a

twig and a scrap of an idle song roused

him, and he peered down to see a young

woman making her careful way down the

steep hillside to the water’s edge.

Moving

silently,

Bast

scurried

upstream, carrying his bundle. Two

minutes later he was kneeling on the

grassy waterside with the pile of flowers

beside him.

He picked up a yellow blossom and

breathed on it gently. As his breath

brushed the petals, its color faded and

changed into a delicate blue. He dropped

it and the current carried it slowly

downstream.

Bast gathered up a handful of posies,

red and orange, and breathed on them

again. They too shifted and changed until

they were a pale and vibrant blue. He

scattered them onto the surface of the

stream. He did this twice more until there

were no flowers left.

Then, picking up the handkerchief and

daisy

crown,

he

sprinted

back

downstream to the cozy little hollow

with the elm. He’d moved quickly

enough that Emberlee was just coming to

the edge of the water.

Softly, silently, he crept up to the

spreading elm. Even with one hand

carrying the handkerchief and crown, he

went up the side as nimbly as a squirrel.

Bast lay along a low branch, sheltered

by leaves, breathing fast but not hard.

Emberlee was removing her stockings

and setting them carefully on a nearby

hedge. Her hair was a burnished golden

red, falling in lazy curls. Her face was sweet and round, a lovely shade of pale

and pink.

Bast grinned as he watched her look

around, first left, then right. Then she

began to unlace her bodice. Her dress

was a pale cornflower blue, edged with

yellow, and when she spread it on the

hedge, it flared and splayed out like the

wing of a great bird. Perhaps some

fantastic combination of a finch and a

jay.

Dressed only in her white shift,

Emberlee looked around again: left, then

right. Then she shimmied free of it, a

fascinating motion. She tossed the shift

aside and stood there, naked as the moon.

Her creamy skin was amazing with

freckle. Her hips wide and lovely. The

tips of her breasts were brushed with the

palest of pink.

She scampered into the water. Making a

series of small, dismayed cries at the

chill of it. They were, on consideration,

not really similar to a raven’s at all.

Though they could, perhaps, be slightly

like a heron’s.

Emberlee washed herself a bit,

splashing and shivering. She soaped

herself, dunked her head in the river, and

came up gasping. Wet, her hair became

the color of ripe cherries.

It was then that the first of the blue

touch-me-nots arrived, drifting on the

water. She glanced at it curiously as it

floated by and began to lather soap into

her hair.

More flowers followed. They came

downstream and made circles around

her, caught in the slow eddy of the pool.

She looked at them, amazed. Then sieved

a double handful from the water and

brought them to her face, drawing a deep

breath to smell them.

She laughed delightedly and dunked

under the surface, coming up in the

middle of the flowers, the water sluiced

her pale skin, running over her naked

breasts. Blossoms clung to her, as if

reluctant to let go.

That was when Bast fell out of the tree.

There was a brief, mad scrabbling of

fingers against bark, a bit of a yelp, then

he hit the ground like a sack of suet. He

lay on his back in the grass and let out a

low, miserable groan.

He heard a splashing, and then

Emberlee appeared above him. She held

her white shift in front of her. Bast

looked up from where he lay in the tall

grass.

He’d been lucky to land on that patch of

springy turf, cushioned with tall, green

grass. A few feet to one side, and he’d

have broken himself against the rocks.

Five feet the other way and he would

have been wallowing in mud.

Emberlee knelt beside him, her skin

pale, her hair dark. One posy clung to her

neck—it was the same color as her eyes,

a pale and vibrant blue.

“Oh,” Bast said happily as he gazed up

at her. His eyes were slightly dazed.

“You’re so much lovelier than I’d

imagined.”

He lifted a hand as if to brush her

cheek, only to find it holding the crown

and knotted handkerchief. “Ahh,” he said,

remembering. “I’ve brought you some

daisies too. And a sweet bun.”

“Thank you,” she said, taking the daisy

crown with both hands. She had to let go

of her shift to do this. It fell lightly to the

grass.

Bast blinked, momentarily at a loss for

words.

Emberlee tilted her head to look at the

crown; the ribbon was a striking

cornflower blue, but it was nothing near

as lovely as her eyes. She lifted it with

both hands and settled it proudly on her

head. Her arms still raised, she drew a

slow breath.

Bast’s eyes slipped from her crown.

She smiled at him indulgently.

Bast drew a breath to speak, then

stopped and drew another through his

nose. Honeysuckle.

“Did you steal my soap?” he asked

incredulously.

Emberlee laughed and kissed him.

A good while later, Bast took the long

way back to the lightning tree, making a

wide loop up into the hills north of town.

Things were rockier up that way, no

ground flat enough to plant, the terrain

too treacherous for grazing.

Even with the boy’s directions, it took

Bast a while to find Martin’s still. He

had to give the crazy old bastard credit

though.

Between

the

brambles,

rockslides, and fallen trees, there wasn’t

a chance he would have stumbled onto it

accidentally, tucked back into a shallow

cave in a scrubby little box valley.

The

still

wasn’t

some

slipshod

contraption bunged together out of old

pots and twisted wire, either. It was a

work of art. There were barrels and

basins and great spirals of copper tube.

A great copper kettle twice the siz

e of a

washbin, and a smolder-stove for

warming it. A wooden trough ran all

along the ceiling, and only after

following it outside did Bast realize

Martin collected rainwater and brought it

inside to fill his cooling barrels.

Looking it over, Bast had the sudden

urge to flip through Celum Tinture and

learn what all the different pieces of the

still were called, what they were for.

Only then did he realize he’d left the

book back at the lightning tree.

So instead Bast rooted around until he

found a box filled with a mad miscellany

of containers: two dozen bottles of all

sorts, clay jugs, old canning jars … A

dozen of them were full. None of them

were labeled in any way.

Bast lifted out a tall bottle that had

obviously once held wine. He pulled the

cork, sniffed it gingerly, then took a

careful sip. His face bloomed into a

sunrise of delight. He’d half expected

turpentine, but this was … well … he

wasn’t sure entirely. He took another

drink. There was something of apples

about it, and … barley?

Bast took a third drink, grinning.

Whatever you care to call it, it was

lovely. Smooth and strong and just a little

sweet. Martin might mad as a badger, but

he clearly knew his liquor.

It was better than an hour before Bast

made it back to the lightning tree. Rike

hadn’t returned, but Celum Tinture was

sitting there unharmed. For the first time

he could remember, he was glad to see

the book. He flipped it open to the

chapter on distillation and read for half

an hour, nodding to himself at various

points. It was called a condensate coil.

He’d thought it looked important.

Eventually he closed the book and

sighed. There were a few clouds rolling

in, and no good could come of leaving

the book unattended again. His luck

wouldn’t last forever, and he shuddered

to think what would happen if the wind

tumbled the book into the grass and tore

the pages. If there was a sudden rain …

So Bast wandered back to the

Waystone Inn and slipped silently

through

the

back

door.

Stepping

carefully, he opened a cupboard and

tucked the book inside. He made his

silent way halfway back to the door

before he heard footsteps behind him.

“Ah, Bast,” the innkeeper said. “Have

you brought the carrots?”

Bast

froze,

caught

awkwardly

midsneak. He straightened up and

Tags: Patrick Rothfuss The Kingkiller Chronicle Fantasy
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