Banewreaker(34)
The Fjeltroll smiled with hideous gentleness. "Lady, I am Hyrgolf of the Tungskulder Fjel, field marshal of the Army of Darkhaven," he said. "And this place is merely a waystation."
"Darkhaven," she whispered. "Why?"
He looked at her a moment before speaking. "Surely you must know."
Cerelinde closed her eyes briefly. "Your master seeks to destroy us."
"Destroy?" The Fjeltroll gave a rumbling snort. "Haomane's Wrath brings destruction upon us. His Lordship wishes to survive it." He rose, extending one horny hand. "Come, lass. Can you travel? I will bear you if you cannot."
"I pray you, Marshal Hyrgolf, do not." Cerelinde took a shallow breath, conscious of the limited air, of the weight of the earth pressing above them. It was a sickening sensation. Her head ached and her heart felt battered within her breast. Her flesh retained a vague, horrible memory of being borne in the Fjeltroll's arms. She had been right; there was risk, too much risk.
Lindanen Dale had been a mistake.
"It is no hardship," Hyrgolf said, misunderstanding her hesitation. His talons brushed her fingertips.
"No!" Cerelinde shrank from his touch. She found the wall of the tunnel at her back and levered herself upright. "If I must walk," she said, summoning her dignity and gathering it around her, "I shall walk."
"Lady." Hyrgolf uttered a few words in the guttural Fjel tongue, and the others shook off their apparent torpor. The light of their torches receded as they began to trot down the tunnel at a steady pace. The other figure, beside the horse, stood unmoving. Hyrgolf gestured for her to precede him. "As you will."
The rocky floor of the tunnel was harsh beneath her feet, clad in the embroidered slippers of her wedding finery. As they passed the motionless figure with the pale hair, she glanced sidelong.
Ushahin the Misbegotten raised his head, his mismatched eyes glittering with unshed tears and hatred. His combined heritage was stamped on his face, as clearly as the marks of violence left by those who had sought to erase his existence.
"Ah, Haomane!" She breathed the word like a prayer, faltering.
"Come, Lady," Hyrgolf said low in his throat. His talons were on her arm, hurrying her past. "Leave the Dreamspinner to his grief."
She went without arguing.
Behind them, she heard the sound of hooves shuffling and stamping, a horse's snort. And then hoofbeats, following in their wake. When she dared glance behind once more, he was there, riding astride with the leather case in his lap. He stared hard at her, his twisted face a parody of Haomane's Children, of almost all she held dear.
And there were no more tears in his eyes, only hatred.
She was alone among the Sunderer's minions.
The Fjel were not swift, but they were steady and tireless. They spoke little, keeping to their pace, and the Misbegotten spoke not at all. Cerelinde walked among them for hours, feeling Ushahin's hatred at her back, as palpable as the heat of a blazing hearth. The tunnel sloped downward, and with each step she felt herself taken further from the surface, from Aracus and her kinfolk, from clean air and the light of Haomane's blessed, life-giving sun. The air within the tunnels was dank and close, growing ever more so the further they went. Only a handful of shafts pierced the stifling darkness, providing barely enough air to keep them alive, to keep the torches alight.
Within the first hour, they passed beneath the Aven River.
The sound, a deep, muffled rushing sound, announced it. The walls of the tunnel thrummed and groaned. Cerelinde started in terror even as the Fjel tramped onward, unperturbed.
"Peace, lass," Hyrgolf rumbled. "It is only the river above us."
"Above us?" Cerelinde echoed the words, feeling ill. The weight of all that water, rushing overhead, was incomprehensible. She knew the river well. Some leagues to the south, Meronil, the white city, sat on its banks.
"Aye, far above." Hyrgolf regarded her. "The Fjel know tunnels, lass. You're safe with us. You've no need to fear."
"Lass!" A despairing laugh escaped her. "Ah, Marshal! So you call me, and yet I have lived long enough for ten score of your generations to toil and die in the Sunderer's name. Have you any idea what it is you do here?"
He gave another shrug, as though her words glanced off his impervious hide. "As you will, Lady. Can you continue?"
"Yes," Cerelinde whispered.
Onward they tramped, and the sound of the Aven River grew louder and more terrifying, then faded and vanished. Cerelinde thought of Meronil, of her home, passing steadily beyond her reach, and fought against despair.
After many hours, they reached a vast, open cavern where Hyrgolf called a halt. Cerelinde stood on battered and aching feet, watching as his Fjel made camp, dispersing the supplies they bore. There were food and water, as well as bedrolls and fodder for horses. Others, it seemed, were anticipated. Only the Misbegotten took no part in the preparations, retreating to a dark alcove and crouching in misery, arms wrapped around the case he carried.