The Lightning Tree (The Kingkiller Chronicle 2.40) - Page 8

give it to her. River stone works best if

it’s given as a gift.”

Rike nodded, not looking up. “What if

she won’t wear it?” he asked quietly.

Bast blinked, confused. “She’ll wear it

because you gave it to her,” he said.

“What if she doesn’t?” he asked.

Bast opened his mouth, then hesitated

and closed it again. He looked up and

saw the first of twilight’s stars emerge.

He looked down at the boy. He sighed.

He wasn’t good at this.

So much was so easy. Glamour was

second nature. It was just making folk see

what they wanted to see. Fooling folk

was simple as singing. Tricking folk and

telling lies, it was like breathing.

But this? Convincing someone of the

truth that they were too twisted to see?

How could you even begin?

It was baffling. These creatures. They

were fraught and frayed in their desire. A

snake would never poison itself, but

these folk made an art of it. They

wrapped themselves in fears and wept at

being blind. It was infuriating. It was

enough to break a heart.

So Bast took the easy way. “It’s part of

the magic,” he lied. “When you give it to

her, you have to tell her that you made it

for her because you love her.”

The boy looked uncomfortable, as if he

were trying to swallow a stone.

“It’s essential for the magic,” Bast said

firmly. “And then, if you want to make

the magic stronger, you need to tell her

every day. Once in the morning and once

at night.”

The boy nodded, a determined look on

his face. “Okay. I can do that.”

“Right then,” Bast said. “Sit down here.

Prick your finger.”

Rike did just that. He jabbed his stubby

finger and let a bead of blood well up

then fall onto the stone.

“Good,” Bast said, sitting down across

from the boy. “Now give me the needle.”

Rike handed over the needle. “But you

said it just needed—”

“Don’t tell me what I said,” Bast

groused. “Hold the stone flat so that the

hole faces up.”

Rike did.

“Hold it steady,” Bast said, and pricked

his own finger. A slow bead of blood

grew. “Don’t move.”

Rike braced the stone with his other

hand.

Bast turned his finger, and the drop of

blood hung in the air for a moment before

falling straight through the hole to strike

the greystone underneath.

There was no sound. No stirring in the

air. No distant thunder. If anything, it

seemed there was a half second of

perfect brick-heavy silence in the air. But

it was probably nothing more than a brief

pause in the wind.

“Is that it?” Rike asked after a moment,

clearly expecting something more.

“Yup,” Bast said, licking the blood

from his finger with a red, red tongue.

Then he worked his mouth a little and

spat out the wax he had been chewing.

He rolled it between his fingers and

handed it to the boy. “Rub this into the

stone, then take it to the top of the highest

hill you can find. Stay there until the last

of the sunset fades, and then give to her

tonight.”

Rike’s eyes darted around the horizon,

looking for a good hill. Then he leapt

from the stone and sprinted off.

Bast was halfway back to the Waystone

Inn when he realized he had no idea

where his carrots were.

When Bast came in the back door, he

could smell bread and beer and

simmering stew. Looking around the

kitchen he saw crumbs on the breadboard

and the lid was off the kettle. Dinner had

already been served.

Stepping softly, he peered through the

door into the common room. The usual

folk sat hunched at the bar, there was Old

Cob and Graham, scraping their bowls.

The smith’s prentice was running bread

along the inside of his bowl, then stuffing

it into his mouth a piece at time. Jake

spread butter on the last slice of bread,

and Shep knocked his empty mug politely

against the bar, the hollow sound a

question in itself.

Bast bustled through the doorway with

a fresh bowl of stew for the smith’s

prentice as the innkeeper poured Shep

more beer. Collecting the empty bowl,

Bast disappeared back into the kitchen,

then he came back with another loaf of

bread half-sliced and steaming.

“Guess what I caught wind of today?”

Old Cob said with the grin of a man who

knew he had the freshest news at the

table.

“What’s that?” The boy asked around

half a mouthful of stew.

Cob reached out and took the heel of

the bread, a right he claimed as the oldest

person there, despite the fact that he

wasn’t actually the oldest, and the fact

that nobody else much cared for the heel.

Bast suspected he took it because he was

proud he still had so many teeth left.

Cob grinned. “Guess,” he said to the

boy, then slowly slathered his bread with

butter and took a big bite.

“I reckon it’s something about Jessom

Williams,” Jake said blithely.

Old Cob glared at him, his mouth full of

bread and butter.

“What I heard,” Jake drawled slowly,

smiling as Old Cob tried furiously chew

his mouth clear, “was that Jessom was

out running his traplines and he got

jumped by a cougar. Then while he was

legging it away, he lost track of hisself

and went right over Littlecliff. Busted

himself up something fierce.”

Old Cob finally managed to swallow.

“You’re thick as a post, Jacob Walker.

That ain’t what happened at all. He fell

off Littlecliff, but there weren’t a cougar.

Cougar ain’t going to attack a full-grown

man.”

“It will if he’s all smelling of blood,”

Jake insisted. “Which Jessom was, on

account of the fact that he was baggin’ up

all his game.”

There was a muttering of agreement at

this, which obviously irritated Old Cob.

“It weren’t a cougar,” he insisted. “He

was drunk off his feet. That’s what I

heard. Stumbling-lost drunk. That’s the

only sense of it. ’Cause Littlecliff ent

nowhere near his trapline. Unless you

think a cougar chased him for almost a

mile …”

Old Cob sat back in his chair then,

smug as a judge. Everyone knew Jessom

was a bit of a drinker. And while

Littlecliff wasn’t really a mile from the

&nbs

p; Williams’s land, it was too far to be

chased by a cougar.

Jake glared venomously at Old Cob, but

before he could say anything Graham

chimed in. “I heard it was drink too. A

couple kids found him while they were

playing by the falls. They thought he was

dead, and ran to fetch the constable. But

he was just head-struck and drunk as a

lord. There was all manner of broken

glass too. He was cut him up some.”

Old Cob threw his hands up in the air.

“Well ain’t that wonderful!” he said,

scowling back and forth between Graham

and Jake. “Any other parts of my story

you’d like to tell afore I’m finished?”

Graham looked taken aback. “I thought

you were—”

“I wasn’t finished,” Cob said, as if

talking to a simpleton. “I was reelin’ it

out slow. I swear. What you folk don’t

know about tellin’ stories would fit into

a book.”

A tense silence settled among the

friends.

“I got some news too,” the smith’s

prentice said almost shyly. He sat

slightly hunched at the bar, as if

embarrassed at being a head taller than

everyone else and twice as broad across

the shoulders. “If’n nobody else has

heard it, that is.”

Shep spoke up. “Go on, boy. You don’t

have to ask. Those two just been gnawing

on each other for years. They don’t mean

anything by it.”

“Well I was doing shoes,” the prentice

said, “when Crazy Martin came in.” The

boy shook his head in amazement and

took a long drink of beer. “I ain’t only

seen him a few times in town, and I

forgot how big he is. I don’t have to look

up to see him. But I still think he’s

biggern me. And today he looked even

bigger still ’cause he was furious. He

was spittin’ nails. I swear. He looked

like someone had tied two angry bulls

together and made them wear a shirt!”

The boy laughed the easy laugh of

someone who’s had a little more beer

than he’s used to.

There was a pause. “What’s the news

then?” Shep said gently, giving him a

nudge.

“Oh!” the smith’s prentice said. “He

came asking Master Ferris if he had

enough copper to mend a big kettle.” The

prentice spread his long arms out wide,

one hand almost smacking Shep in the

face.

“Apparently someone found Martin’s

still.” The smith’s prentice leaned

forward, wobbling slightly, and said in

hushed voice. “Stole a bunch of his drink

and wrecked up the place a bit.”

The boy leaned back in his chair and

crossed his arms proudly across his

chest, confident of a story well told.

But there was none of the buzz that

normally accompanied a piece of good

gossip. He took another drink of beer,

and slowly began to look confused.

“Tehlu anyway,” Graham said, his face

gone pale. “Martin’ll kill him.”

“What?” the prentice said. “Who?”

“Jessom, you tit,” Jake snapped. He

tried to cuff the boy on the back of his

head and had to settle for his shoulder

instead. “The fellow who got skunk

drunk in the middle of the day and fell off

a cliff carrying a bunch of bottles?”

“I thought it was a cougar,” Old Cob

said spitefully.

“He’ll wish it was ten cougars when

Martin gets him,” Jake said grimly.

“What?” The smith’s prentice laughed.

“Crazy Martin? He’s addled, sure, but he

a i n’ t mean. A couple span ago he

cornered me and talked bollocks about

barley for two hours.” He laughed again.

“About how it was healthful. How wheat

would ruin a man. How money was dirty.

How it chained you to the earth or some

nonsense.”

The prentice dropped his voice and

hunched his shoulders a bit, widening his

eyes and doing a passable Crazy Martin

impression. “You know? ” he said,

making his voice rough and darting his

eyes around. “Yeah. You know. You hear

what I’m sayin? ”

The prentice laughed again, rocking

back on his stool. He had obviously had

a little more beer than was good for him.

“People think they have to be afraid of

big folk, but they don’t. I’ve never hit a

man in my life.”

Everyone just stared at him. Their eyes

were deadly earnest.

“Martin killed one of Ensal’s dogs for

growling at him,” Shep said. “Right in

the middle of market. Threw a shovel

like it was a spear. Then gave it a

kicking.”

“Nearly killed that last priest,” Graham

said. “The one before Abbe Leodin.

Nobody knows why. Fellow went up to

Martin’s house. That evening Martin

brought him to town in a wheelbarrow

and left him in front of the church.” He

looked at the smith’s prentice. “That was

before your time though. Makes sense

you wouldn’t know.”

“Punched a tinker once,” Jake said.

“Punched a tinker? ” the innkeeper

burst out, incredulous.

“Reshi,” Bast said gently. “Martin is

fucking crazy. ”

Jake nodded. “Even the levy man

doesn’t go up to Martin’s place.”

Cob looked like he was going to call

Jake out again, then decided to take a

gentler tone. “Well yes,” he said. “True

enough. But that’s ’cause Martin pulled

his full rail in the king’s army. Eight

years.”

“And came back mad as a frothing

dog,” Shep said.

Old Cob was already off his stool and

halfway to the door. “Enough talk. We

got to let Jessom know. If he can get out

of town until Martin cools down a bit

…”

“So … when he’s dead?” Jake said

sharply. “Remember when he threw a

horse through the window of the old inn

because the barman wouldn’t give him

another beer?”

“ A tinker?” the innkeeper repeated,

sounding no less shocked than before.

Silence descended at the sound of

footsteps on the landing. Everyone eyed

the door and went still as stone, except

for Bast, who slowly edged toward the

doorway to the kitchen.

Everyone breathed a huge sigh of relief

when the door opened to reveal the tall,

slim shape of Carter. He closed the door

behind him, not noticing the tension in the

room. “Guess who’s standing a round of

bottle whiskey for everyone tonight?” he

called out cheerfully, then stopped where

/>

he stood, confused by the roomful of grim

expressions.

Old Cob started to walk to the door

again, motioning for his friend to follow.

“Come on Carter, we’ll explain on the

way. We’ve got to find Jessom double

quick.”

“You’ll have a long ride to find him,”

Carter said. “I drove him all the way to

Baden this afternoon.”

Everyone in the room seemed to relax,

“That’s why you’re so late,” Graham

said, his voice thick with relief. He

slumped back onto his stool and tapped

the bar hard with a knuckle. Bast drew

him another beer.

Carter frowned. “Not so late as all

that,” he groused. “I’d like to see you

make it all the way to Baden and back in

this time, that’s more’n forty miles …”

Old Cob put a hand on the man’s

shoulder. “Nah. It ain’t like that,” he

said, steering his friend toward the bar.

“We were just a little spooked. You

probably

saved

that

damn

fool’s

Jessom’s life by getting him out of town.”

He squinted at him. “Though I’ve told

you you shouldn’t be out on the road by

yourself these days …”

The innkeeper fetched Carter a bowl

while Bast went outside to tend to his

horse. While he ate, his friends told him

the day’s gossip in dribs and drabs.

“Well that explains it,” Carter said.

“Jessom showed up reeking like a rummy

and looking like he’d been beat by

twelve different demons. Paid me to

drive him to the Iron Hall, and he took

the king’s coin right there.” Carter took a

drink of beer. “Then paid me to take him

to Baden straight off. Didn’t want to stop

off at his house for his clothes or

anything.”

“Not much need for that,” Shep said.

“They’ll dress and feed him in the king’s

army.”

Graham let out a huge sigh. “That was a

near miss. Can you imagine what would

happen if the azzie came for Martin?”

Everyone was silent for a moment,

imagining the trouble that would come if

an officer of the Crown’s Law was

assaulted here in town.

The smith’s prentice looked around at

him, “What about Jessom’s family?” he

asked, plainly worried. “Will Martin

come after them?”

The men at the bar shook their head in

concert. “Martin is crazy,” Old Cob said.

“But he’s not that sort. Not to go after a

woman or her wee ones.”

“I heard he punched the tinker because

Tags: Patrick Rothfuss The Kingkiller Chronicle Fantasy
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