‘He’s just a coward. No shortage of cowards in the world,’ said a grey-bearded man, sitting at a table close by. Bane looked at him. As with most of the men his skin was deeply coal-stained.
The girl was on her knees, gathering the sharp shards of the broken jugs. Bane knelt down and put his hand on her shoulder. She looked into his face and gave a weary smile. Her skin was pockmarked, and a vivid red weal showed on the left side of her face. ‘I am sorry that he hurt you,’ said Bane.
‘He’s done worse,’ she said. ‘And he will again.’
‘Better watch out, boy!’ called the grey-bearded miner.
Bane glanced up. The rear door had opened. Two thickset men, both carrying cudgels, were advancing across the room. The fat man was back in the doorway. He was smiling now. ‘You want to fight someone?’ he shouted. ‘Well, now’s your chance.’
The two men rushed forward. Bane rose, took one step to the right, then lashed out with his foot. His boot hammered into the first man’s knee, just as his weight descended on it. The leg snapped backwards. With a terrible scream the man fell. The second man lashed out, the cudgel catching Bane high on the shoulder. He swayed, then delivered a left hook to the man’s bearded chin. The man stumbled. Bane kicked him in the face.
The fat man was standing framed in the doorway. Bane ran forward, vaulted the bar, grabbed him by his tunic and threw him back against the wall.
‘I’m sorry! I’m sorry!’ wailed the man. Suddenly the sound was cut off. The fat man’s jaw dropped and he sagged down the wall, falling to his knees. Bane tore his dagger from the man’s chest. The dying man’s eyes flickered. ‘Don’t hurt me!’ he whispered. Blood frothed to his lips and he toppled sideways to the floor. Bane wiped his dagger blade on the man’s tunic, then rose, sheathing the weapon. All around him men were sitting in stunned silence. No-one moved, save the serving girl who raised her hand to her mouth as if to stifle a cry.
Bane strode from the Green Ghost. Banouin ran after him. ‘We had better leave this settlement,’ he said. They might decide to hang you.’
‘I did nothing wrong,’ argued Bane.
‘You knifed an unarmed man,’ Banouin pointed out.
‘He wasn’t a man. He struck a woman and he wouldn’t fight. He had no honour. He was a vile thing, no better than vermin.’
‘I warned you, Bane. You kill too quickly,’ said Banouin sadly.
‘And you nag worse than a wife,’ snapped Bane. ‘But you are right. Let’s be gone from this place. Killing him has quite spoiled my day.’
‘Not as badly as it spoiled his,’ said Banouin.
They rode several miles from Sighing Water and camped in a cave overlooking the sea. Banouin lit a fire, but Bane wandered out and sat on the cliff top, watching the moon shining above the dark water. Banouin left him there for a while and tended the fire. Bane was in one of his dark, gloomy moods, and would not appreciate company for a while.
There was little food left, and Banouin ate a stick of smoke-dried meat they had purchased several days before. He leaned back and stared at the cave wall, watching the fire shadows dance upon the grey stone.
Bane did kill too swiftly. The fat man was a bully and a coward, but that was no reason for him to die choking on his own blood. Worse, he knew that Bane had gone to the place seeking trouble. He knew the look that came into his friend’s strange eyes, a kind of glint, a shining that always precipitated violence. And yet Bane had always been kind to him, seeming to understand his hatred of violence and his longing for a life of quiet study. The younger man had protected him, and been willing to be ostracized by his fellow tribesmen rather than give up their friendship.
It was all so baffling. When Bane was happy he could charm the hardest heart, and make friends with anyone. People genuinely liked him. Banouin thought back to the cut-throat river crew, and their fondness for his companion. It was chilling to think that if any one of them had said the wrong word Bane could just as easily have killed them. Would he have been different had Connavar accepted him?