the same man, could they? How long ago had this Brecc ruled, and how old would that make Xenos? But, then again, we were talking about a magician.
"She
do
be as stupid as she looks," the guy with the bucket said.
"I be liking her," Grimbold argued. "She does na know nothing, but I na be going to hold that against her."
"So what do that be meanin'?" the other man asked.
"We shall be letting her live," Grimbold said.
That was a relief.
Grimbold said, "We shall be demanding the crown as ransom for her."
The other gave a dismissive snort. "What makes you be thinkin' they be payin' a ransom for her, useless thing that she be?"
I couldn't help but mentally agree. They were going to ask my family to trade something—presumably of value—for me? This opened up a whole new batch of possibilities for public humiliation.
Grimbold stroked his beard pensively as though his companion had presented a new thought. "We can always be killing her later," he said.
Which I guess showed he wasn't all
that
emotionally attached to me.
"Set a guard on her," Grimbold ordered, "and send a envoy to the castle to be demanding the returning of my crown in exchange for the life of their new king."
I couldn't even use my ring on Grimbold. If I said, "Here, take this ring," and he put it on, and then started doing everything I said, then surely this other guy would catch on that something was wrong.
Nor could I use it on my guard: Grimbold had given his orders. There were too many men in this camp who would question why those orders were being ignored if I got this guy to release me.
The barbarian guard got a length of chain and some shackles—not promising an easy escape at all—then he brought me to a tree in the midst of their campground, and he fastened me there, by my left ankle. All in all, they were being more considerate than I had reason to expect from enemy barbarians. The shackle wasn't tight, and the chain was long enough that I could sit, stand, He down, or walk around the tree—choosing shade or sunlight as I pleased. But I still felt like a leashed dog.
From the position of the sun, I guessed that it was midafternoon. The last meal my stomach remembered was a breakfast of hard bread and salted fish back in St. Jehan—a menu the real me had to keep from dwelling on or I would have gagged. I felt hungry, and these guys would have already had their midday meal and wouldn't be thinking about supper for another several hours.
A guard was posted to watch me. He was given the key to the shackles, which I found reason enough to try to strike up a friendship. It was hard to tell if he didn't speak English, or if he simply didn't want to talk.
There were some women in the camp, and one of them brought me a cup of water.
"Thank you," I said. "Any chance of any leftovers from lunch?"
She looked at me quizzically and said something that sounded like, "
Doe naado?
"
"Food?" I said. I pantomimed eating, but she shook her head. I thought she meant she didn't understand rather than that I couldn't have any, but there was no way to know for sure. My guard certainly didn't offer any commentary.
There were even a few kids. Some of them seemed curious, some seemed to be playing a game of dare—approaching, then running away. When I didn't chase after them, a few got bolder and took up a new game of throw-clumps-of-dirt-at-the-prisoner. My guard napped obliviously in the shade of his own tree.
I didn't even know if my royal family was planning to rescue me. Should I be patiently waiting for them to come swooping in, or was I supposed to be working on some plan of my own?
Of course, it would help if I had even the beginnings of a plan of my own to get me started in the right direction.
Knowing how difficult it is to judge the passing of time when you're bored, I think I waited about an hour and a half, maybe two. The sun
did
lower a bit in the sky.
This can't be right,
I told myself. If anyone was going to rescue me, it was probably
Daniel Abraham
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Unknown
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