Chap. 141 Arson
"By the egg, K'ndar, these are gorgeous," Lizard
said, hefting two of the rough opals.
His caravan was parked in a small meadow ten kilometers from
the weyr. His horses, unharnessed, were taking advantage of the thigh high
grass. Raventh landed a good ways from
them, not wanting to spook them. The horses, after lifting their heads to gauge
his intentions, concluded Raventh was harmless, and went back to grazing.
Lizard had made his way out to where Raventh had landed. His
fire lizards had promptly landed on the brown dragon and, together with Siskin,
began to scratch him in three different spots. Raventh responded with eyes
spinning a blissful blue.
"Careful, you'll put him to sleep," K'ndar said to
the lizards.
I'm already there
Raventh groaned in ecstasy. K'ndar laughed.
Lizard grinned, then turning the rocks over and over, turned
serious.
"Where did you get these?"
K'ndar dropped his eyes, remembering the promise they'd made
to keep the location secret.
Lizard knew immediately that he shouldn't ask.
"Ah, that's not a good idea, lad, to tell me. The less
I know, the safer I'll be," he said.
He handed the opals back to K'ndar.
"I'm glad I parked here," he said, "no one
around save us, no one to see those," he said. K'ndar nodded in agreement.
He appreciated the solitude.
"Done any more braiding? I can always sell your
chokers, they're very popular," the trader said.
"No, sir, I've honestly been too busy. But I was
thinking of having you sell these opals."
Good. That thought had hit his mind within seconds of seeing
them.
"I've not done much trading in gems, I can tell you,
but I do know a good trader who'd likely give you a decent price for these,
especially as they're 'raw' and uncut. I'm assuming you're not interested in a
barter or trade?" Lizard asked.
"No," K'ndar said, gratefully, "I really have
no need of anything right now. Money would be the best, I think."
"I agree, and it will mean a nice commission for
myself," Lizard said.
"It's a deal, then, and please, don't say who and where
you got them."
Lizard grinned. "That's a given, son. I never reveal my
sources if I can at all help it, unless of course it's something like Benden
wine or something readily available. These are definitely NOT readily
available. I think I've seen this type of gem only once before, and not this
big."
He looked K'ndar over.
"You look fit, lad, like you've been outside all
summer," he said.
"I have been, although the last two, three weeks was
involved in harvest. My first day was spent baling hay. I don't think I'd ever
want to do THAT for a living," he said.
Lizard laughed. "Aye, I saw lots of folks in the fields
on my way here. I agree, it's hard, hot work. I saw plenty of dragons parked in
the waysides. First time I ever saw that. Dragonriders doing that sort of work,
that's new," he said.
"No more thread means no excuses to miss the
work," K'ndar said, "but the rest of the time it wasn't bad, I helped
harvest klah bark."
"Ah, working in the forest had to have been cooler than
out in the middle of a hay field, what? Thanks for coming, by the way. I
limped here, the hub broke about five kilometers back. What road there is in
pretty bad shape, and that one wheel, it hit a rock just the wrong way."
He sighed. "It's been a long while since I've been out this way, but I
knew this meadow is left wild and that grass would be high for my team. Everything
else has been harvested or cut," he said.
"Come, want some klah? It's been fresh brewed," he
asked, turning and leading the way to the caravan.
"No, thanks, I'm still smelling the klah bark I cut for
two weeks," K'ndar said.
Lizard laughed. "How's it going with your lizard?"
he asked, as they pushed through the grass towards the caravan parked in the
shade.
'Oh, wonderful. He's just great, I'm really enjoying having
him. He's not a pet, anymore, he's like a little kid, almost," K'ndar
said. "He's smart as a whip, picks up a lot of things quickly. It's handy
to have him, even for more than transmitting messages."
Lizard pulled two
folding chairs from inside the wooden structured caravan, and sat down on one
of them.
"These are nice, where did you get them?" K'ndar
asked. He'd never seen folding chairs before. They were cunningly made, of tree
limbs that somehow seemed to fit or fold without interference.
"Traded for them a couple months ago. Nice, what? Far
more comfortable than sitting on one's arse, no matter how soft the
rocks," he said.
K'ndar looked at the caravan. "This is new, isn't
it?"
"Aye, well, new to me. Lots more room, than my old
wagon, with the canvas cover. Even with a wooden door, it didn't keep the
weather out. This 'un? Keeps me dry in the rain, always a plus," Lizard
said.
"Did you trade the old one off?"
Lizard shook his head.
"Nay, someone torched it out of spite," he said.
"WHAT?"
"Aye, luckily for me, it was empty of anything of
value, pretty much. I had taken a ship to Tillek Sea Hold, with a wagon load of
cheese hoping to sell it to Tillek Hold. Some yokel met me in the seaport, me
right off the ship with my team as they warped the wagon off. He wanted to know
what was in the wagon. I said I was selling cargo on a contract so I had
nothing to trade. Wouldn't tell him what was in the wagon. He was wanting to
see inside, but I wouldn't let him. He insisted we trade, but didn't say what
he had, and there was nothing in his wagon. He kept insisting it was all 'back in camp', didn't I want to follow him
there?"
Well, I know THAT old trick. I might look stupid but I
surely am not, so I just let him talk as I set out. He just wanted to help me,
you know? Said he pegged me as a Southerner, and didn't I know how badly the
folks in the area would cheat me for being one?
Best to trade with him, you know, 'brotherhood of traders' and all that
rot. Just follow him to his camp, he had plenty of room and good ale, he'd make
it worth my while.
I just said I'd take my chances, it's not possible that
EVERYONE in Northern is a cheat. He kept
working on me until he realized I was headed for Tillek Hold, then he peeled
off and disappeared."
He took a long pull at his mug.
"But…you're not a southerner, not..well, you don't talk
like us. You have a northerner's accent." K'ndar said.
"With YOU? Aye. You're right. But with him? I saw him right away as a shyster." His
accent suddenly changed to one that sounded like he was from somewhere
Southern. "Accents, K'ndar, are useful. I can turn it on, and I can turn
it off." He switched to a far Northeast accent, sounding Bitran with a
miner's tinge to it. "Best to not let a shyster know anything more about
me than what I want him to know." Lizard said.
K'ndar laughed, clapping his hands in appreciation.
"Now, ordinarily, I just might have gone with him,
but…my gut…he talks to me. Minute I laid eyes on him I knew he was a wrong
'un. That and…well, he didn't know it,
but not only had I spent many years in
the Tillek Holdings, but after a few kilometers, I recognized his wagon, from a
man I knew years back when I was a kid transporting wine casks for Tillek Hold.
I didn't know if that man had sold the wagon to him, but it just felt bad, and
I've always trusted my gut when it says something's not right here. I had a
feeling that wagon had been stolen and what happened to the owner, I don't
know. I hoped I'd find out when I got to Tillek Hold.
By the time I got everything harnessed up and headed out, it
was getting dark. And things are dicey, these days, after dark. So I stopped at
a fairly large cothold about ten kilometers from Tillek Hold. I used to deliver
wine to the cotholders. I was lucky, K'ndar. They remembered me. Even as late
as it was, they insisted we unload the cheeses. I didn't argue. I've learned to
listen to the locals, no matter how remote a hold, or how small, the locals
know more about what's going on in their own locale than someone passing
through.
So we unloaded the cheeses into one of his caverns, then they invited
me in for dinner, a shower, and a real bed. Of course I put my team up in their
stable with a good feed and fresh water. Had to leave the wagon out a ways from
their cavern, there wasn't any room for it, what with their own wagons still
needed for harvest.
I came out the next morning to find my wagon had been
torched. Right down to the axles, which, if they'd been wood, would have been
ash, too. If I'd been lazy, they would have stolen the cargo first, or maybe
the whole wagon, but I've taken to chaining up the wheels when I'm not going to
be around the wagon.
Some traders don't
bother to unload their cargo, especially if they're out in the wild instead of
at a hold. But as it was, all the arsonist got was the stuff I'd left, some
clothes, some harness, tools, that sort of thing, then they burned it to let me
know I'd pissed them off.
I was left with the cargo, my team, my lizards, and the
clothes on my back, so I didn't lose much. I had plenty of money, I never leave
that in my wagon. Never. Still, it
grinds my soul," he said.
K'ndar shook his head. "Any idea who did it? That
shyster?"
"No idea, K'ndar, but I'd bet a weeks feed it was, or
his partners. Because, the same shyster shows up the next day, just 'happened'
to be driving past the cothold when he sees me next to the smoking pile. He just
stunk of guilt but was smirking.
Oh, that's a shame, you poor lout, he says to me, but it just so happens I want to sell this
here wagon, now that you don't have one, won't be cheap, though," he said,
just as brassy as can be. The cotholder came up and ran him off, saying,
"can you prove yours isn't stolen?" That made the shyster back off,
had a "real trade down the road".
Then the
cotholder told me that there'd been a
man in the area who'd had his wagon stolen and him beaten pretty bad. Never
caught the thieves, and he didn't have any idea where that man was, now.
"We loaded my cheeses up on the cotholder's wagon and
took it to Tillek Hold and sold them all. I cut the cotholder in on the deal
for his kindness, gave him one of the smaller cheeses. He was so embarrassed
about my wagon being burnt, but he did right by me. The folks at Tillek Hold,
they remembered me, too, and after gulling me for what I'd done years before,
still, they spotted me a cask of their second best wine. That I gave to the
cotholder, too.
So I had a pouch full of marks and no wagon. I was suddenly
sick of North, so I turned around, rode my horses back to Tillek Sea Hold, found
a ship that was loading for Southern, and came right back."
1 comment:
Lizard doesn't lead a boring life... I'd like to hear the rest of the tale.
Post a Comment