Barker, Clive – Imajica 01 – The Fifth Dominion. Part 6

At last, the mystif gave up its search and retraced its steps down into the secure streets of Beatrix. Gentle didn’t break cover, however. He waited another quarter of an hour until his aching eyes discovered a motion on the opposite slope. The watcher was giving up his post, it seemed, moving around the back of the hill. Gentle caught a glimpse of his silhouette as he disappeared over the brow, just enough to confirm that the other had indeed been human, at least in shape if not in spirit. He waited another minute, then started down the slope. His extremities were numb, his teeth chattering, his torso rigid with cold, but he went quickly, falling and descending several yards on his buttocks, much to the startlement of dozing doeki. Pie was below, waiting at the door of Mother Splendid’s house. Two saddled and bridled beasts stood in the street, one being fed a palmful of fodder by Efreet.

“Where did you go?” Pie wanted to know. “I came looking for you.”

“Later,” Gentle said. “I have to get warm.”

“No time,” Pie replied. “The deal is we get the doeki, food, and coats if we go immediately.”

“They’re very eager to get rid of us suddenly.”

“Yes, we are,” said a voice from beneath the trees opposite the house. A black man with pale, mesmeric eyes stepped into view. “You’re Zacharias?”

“I am.”

“I’m Coaxial Tasko, called the Wretched. The doeki are yours. I’ve given the mystif some supplies to set you on your way, but please. . . tell nobody you’ve been here.”

“He thinks we’re bad luck,” Pie said.

“He could be right,” said Gentle. “Am I allowed to shake your hand, Mr. Tasko, or is that bad luck too?”

“You may shake my hand,” the man said,

“Thank you for the transport. I swear we’ll tell nobody we were here. But I may want to mention you in my memoirs.”

A smile broke over Tasko’s stern features.

“You may do that too,” he said, shaking Gentle’s hand. “But not till I’m dead, huh? I don’t like scrutiny.”

“That’s fair.”

“Now, please . . . the sooner you’re gone the sooner we can pretend we never saw you.”

Efreet came forward, bearing a coat, which Gentle put on. It reached to his shins and smelled strongly of the animal who’d been born in it, but it was welcome.

“Mother says goodbye,” the boy told Gentle. “She won’t come out and see you.” He lowered his voice to an embarrassed whisper. “She’s crying a lot.”

Gentle made a move towards the door, but Tasko checked him. “Please, Mr. Zacharias, no delays,” he said. “Go now, with our blessing, or not at all.”

“He means it,” Pie said, climbing up onto his doeki, the animal casting a backward glance at its rider as it was mounted. “We have to go.”

“Don’t we even discuss the route?”

“Tasko has given me a compass and directions.” The mystif pointed to a narrow trail that led up out of the village. “That’s the way we take.”

Reluctantly, Gentle put his foot in the doeki’s leather stirrup and hoisted himself into the saddle. Only Efreet managed a goodbye, daring Tasko’s wrath to press his hand into Gentle’s.

“I’ll see you in Patashoqua one day,” he said.

“I hope so,” Gentle replied.

That being the full sum of their farewells, Gentle was left with the sense of an exchange broken in midsentence, and now permanently unfinished. But they were at least going on from the village better equipped for the terrain ahead than they’d been when they entered.

“What was all that about?” Gentle asked Pie, when they were on the ridge above Beatrix, and the trail was about to turn and take its tranquil lamp-lit streets from sight.

“A battalion of the Autarch’s army is passing through the hills, on its way to Patashoqua. Tasko was afraid the presence of strangers in the village would give the soldiers an excuse for marauding.”

“So that’s what I heard on the hill.”

“That’s what you heard.”

“And I saw somebody on the other hill. I swear he was looking for me. No, that’s not right. Not me, but somebody. That’s why I didn’t answer when you came looking for me.”

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