She hoped so. He might be able to persuade these people to let the four of them go—or at least to negotiate for a ransom.
Their captor and the leader spoke at some length, with a great many gestures and hand signals. The leader went silent for a moment, then barked an abrupt command, and hangings behind him parted. Another warrior entered, with two more prisoners, similarly collared and leashed.
Shana’s eyes nearly popped out of her head with surprise as soon as she saw them, and the other three had similar reactions.
Elves? They have elves as prisoners?
So it seemed, since there was no mistaking elves for anything else. Slender bodies, pale porcelain skin, white-gold hair, long, pointed ears, and those green, cat-pupiled eyes… the new captives couldn’t be anything else. Both of them wore the clothing of their captors, and neither of them seemed to be suffering any mistreatment, though Shana could not think if that was a good sign or a bad one.
But what were elves doing here—and more important, how had these people managed to capture them?
Like us, maybe? Could it be possible these two came out here without human fighters to protect and guard them?
One of the prisoners ignored them, but the other’s eyes widened as he took in the sight of them. “Ancestors!” he exclaimed. ‘Tell me you aren’t what I think you are!” Then he shook his head sardonically. “Never mind. You couldn’t be anything but halfbreeds. To think I’ve fallen to this—”
The leader of their captors interrupted him with a barked command. He shut up immediately, bowed soberly and with every outward evidence of humility, and turned back to Shana.
“It seems we’re to be your translators, wizard,” he told her, with a sour twist to his mouth. “Count yourselves damned lucky; we didn’t have anyone to translate for us, and we had to learn everything the hard way.” His expression was a strange mixture of sardonic amusement and distaste. “Much as I hate to admit this to a wizard—you are at least half-civilized, and it has been so long since I have seen a civilized creature, I would be prepared to befriend even a bondling slave at this point. Now, bow nicely to Jamal. He’s the Chief of these barbarians, and he is very important They call themselves the Iron People, by the way.”
Shana and the others bowed, as gracefully as they could, encumbered as they were by their collars and chains. Their translator took a certain amount of amusement out of that; the silent one ignored it all.
“You might as well call me Kelyan. My titles, such as they were, hardly mattered a bean back home and they’re nothing here. My sullen companion is Haldor.” He poked the other with an elbow; Haldor looked up at them briefly and grunted.
“Shana, Keman, Mero, and Kalamadea,” Shana introduced, pointing to each of them in rum, and watching Jamal out of the corner of her eye. He was listening, and she didn’t think that much got past those sharp eyes without being noted.
“Jamal wants to know where you come from,” Kelyan continued. “That’s his first question.”
Shana thought fast; she didn’t want to inadvertently lead these warriors anywhere near the Citadel! “North,” she said briefly, waving in that general direction. “The river.” That was a lot of territory—vague enough to be useless as a direction, specific enough that if these Iron People did trade with Collen, the direction might ring a bell.
Kelyan translated; Jamal pondered the answer, and barked another question. “He wants to know why you were here.” A sardonic smile. “He assumes that you are spies, of course. He’s a War Chief; it’s his job to be suspicious.”
The truth would serve the best. “Looking for people to trade with,” she said, trying to look clever and harmless. “We aren’t warriors—well, look at our hands if you don’t believe me; there’re no scars or sword-calluses. We trade; that’s how we get what we need, and we’re always looking for new people to trade with.”
:Laying it on a bit thick, aren’t you?: Kalamadea asked.
Kelyan snorted disbelief, but translated anyway.
Jamal made a bark of equal disbelief and said something else, something long and complicated. Kelyan nearly choked; his companion Haldor looked completely disgusted. “He wants to know why you paleskin demons have taken to trade instead of warfare!” Kelyan said. “Unbelievable! He thinks you halfbreeds are really elves!”
Before Shana could say anything, Kelyan turned back to Jamal, chattering at high speed, apparently just as eager to convince the Iron Chief that they were not elves as Shana was. Jamal, however, was not going to be convinced. He kept pointing at Shana’s ears and eyes, and no matter what Kelyan told him, he clearly didn’t believe it. Finally he shook his head and rattled out a series of orders.
“You’re going to be imprisoned with us,” Kelyan said with resignation, as Haldor looked even more disgusted than before. “He wants the Iron Priest to have a look at you—meanwhile you’re going in with us. Ah well, at least you’ll be someone to talk to—”
Before he could finish, two more warriors came from outside the tent and picked up the chains to lead them all away. Kelyan and Haldor were taken out first; the second warrior led out Shana and her group.
A spectacular sunset painted the western sky in colors as vivid as the colors of the clothing about them, as the warriors took them all to another wagon-tent, this one just outside the innermost circle, one that bore no decorations at all. At the entrance, the warriors suddenly dropped the chains and walked off, leaving the six of them alone.
Haldor turned his back on all of them and climbed into the tent; Kelyan seemed disposed to continue talking to them, at least.
“Pick up your chain,” he directed, “and come on inside. We’ve got food and water, and the Chief’s servants will be bringing more later. And don’t even bother to think about using that as a weapon and making a run for it—” he added, as Shana hefted her chain experimentally. “These people all learn to fight with chain-weapons from the time they can crawl. They’ll have you before you get more than two circles away. By leaving you here, they’ve signified that you are on your own recognizance and you have the freedom of the camp, but if you try to escape, believe me, you’ll regret it”
“Sounds as if you learned from experience,” Mero ventured, as Kelyan climbed the narrow stairs into the wagon. Kelyan waited until they were all inside before answering.
“Let’s just say that I’ve seen what they can do,” he said, as Haldor flung himself down on a pallet with his back to them.
The inside of this wagon was furnished simply, but with surprising comfort: pallets, cushions, and piles of blankets and spare clothing in baskets, all arranged around the edge of the round tent. A lantern (iron, of course) hung from the center, and there was an iron brazier in a flat box of sand in the middle of the tent below it.
Kelyan helped himself to a cushion and sat down on it, inviting them with a gesture to do the same. Mero was the first to take the invitation, sitting himself down next to the elven lord with a defiant air. “You seem very friendly towards us,” Mero said with heavy irony. “I have to wonder what your motive is. There’s not a lot of love between your kind and mine. I’d give a great deal to know how you ended up out here.”
Kelyan shrugged. “It hardly matters whether you lot are wizards or elves, does it? It doesn’t matter what I am, either. We’re not home, any of us. We’re all prisoners—and if you have half the powers your type is supposed to, at least you can take some of the burden of entertaining these barbarians off the backs of myself and my companion.”
Haldor grunted, but kept his back to them.
“Entertaining?” Keman asked, puzzled. “How? We aren’t musicians or anything—”
“Follow us later and you’ll see.” Kelyan advised, and turned back toward Mero. “I’ll tell you the truth, because I don’t have a thing to gain by lying to you. We’re both useless second sons of hangers-on. The most we can do is make pretty illusions. We went off looking for something to make our fortunes with, and this is what we found.” He gestured at his collar and chain. “We’ve been prisoners here for decades. No one knows where we are, and if they knew, they wouldn’t care.”
“Speak for yourself,” Haldor growled, the first time he’d actually said anything.
“You can live in a constant daydream of being rescued by an army, but I have better things to do,” Kelyan snapped, and turned back to Mero. “Right now, I’m just happy to see someone with a veneer of civilization, someone who might be able to tell me what’s been going on without me back home.” He glanced over his shoulder at Haldor. “Someone who can speak my tongue—and is willing to do so.” His expression took on an unmistakable air of hunger. “I want news. I’m starved for news of home.”