The Hickory Staff - The Hickory Staff Part 3
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The Hickory Staff Part 3

A sudden change came over the trapped madman. As flames leapt up behind him, Prince Danmark III, monarch of Rona, ran a bloody hand through his hair, pulling the wild, unkempt strands from his pallid face. For just a moment his eyes seemed to focus on the Estrad River in the distance and he appeared to see clearly once again. He took a long, deep breath and stood tall, then he jumped from his window, awkwardly turning in the air until he crashed headlong through the burning roof of the livery below.

Turning to the couple, the horseman said, 'Come. We haven't much time.'

The young woman moved towards him as she pleaded, 'Sir, won't you come with us? I would feel so much-'

'Don't touch me,' the rider commanded, then softened and added, 'You will be fine, but we must go now.'

Prince Draven's body lay in state in the Malakasian capital city of Pellia as thousands of citizens paraded slowly by his ornate, etched-glass coffin in the Whitward family tomb, paying last respects to their ruler.

Draven had collapsed suddenly several days earlier while riding north along the Welstar River. His attendants had rushed the elderly man to the palace doctors, but they had been too late: though the most skilful healers in Malakasia had worked through the night, the prince died at dawn. His body showed no sign of violence or disease, save for a small injury to his left hand. The doctors guessed that Draven had been killed by the same dreadful virus that had taken the Ronan Prince Markon's life.

Draven's body was conveyed in the royal barge from Welstar Palace, then carried from the river in a sombre procession to the city centre. His corpse would lie in state for ten full days, time enough for mourners to make their way to Pellia and bid farewell to the fallen leader.

Many brought gifts, final offerings for their prince: loaves of bread, fruits, tanned hides and wool tunics were left on the casket to ensure Draven's passage into the eternal care of Eldarn's Northern Forest gods.

Marek Whitward, Draven's heir and now Prince Marek, ignored the rumours of unrest and kept silent vigil, standing at his father's side and staring into the distance, day after day. Dressed in black boots, black leggings and a black tunic with the family's golden crest on his breast, Draven's only son looked far too young to take on the challenges he would face in the coming Twinmoons. Sometimes he could not help himself, weeping silently, though it was inappropriate for the Malakasian people to see their new leader shedding tears in public. Across the city, concerned people, commoners, merchants and gentry alike, described what a heart-wrenching experience it had been for them to witness Marek waiting with his father's body, as if he could reanimate the fallen prince by sheer will alone.

On the sixth day, as Marek arrived to continue his lonely watch over the casket, he seemed a little different. Rather than staring straight ahead, as he had previously, Marek watched the parade of mourners filing past the elaborate floral arrangement ringing Prince Draven's coffin. Rumours flew about the village square: the young prince had made sexually inappropriate comments to numerous women in the procession, and had even taken a loaf of bread from the top of his father's coffin and begun eating it. He no longer wore the gold family crest, but he had added black leather gloves to his already dark wardrobe. On the morning of the seventh day, the prince did not appear at his father's side at all.

SUMNER LAKE, COLORADO.

July 1979 Michael Wilson checked the flow of air from his regulator and pulled bulky flippers onto his feet. He waited, but Tim Stafford wasn't ready yet. 'C'mon Tim, hurry up,' he said impatiently as he dangled his feet from the dock. It was hot in the mountains today, but the water would be cold in Sumner Lake; it always was. He was glad to have a full wetsuit. Tim wore a wetsuit as well, but unlike Michael, the younger boy did not wear a hood he said it made his mask flood. Michael always wished he could bear the cold like Tim could, but he couldn't stand the icy temperature against his skin. Although still in middle school, the two boys had been diving since the previous summer when both decided to give up riding the bench week after week at soccer games. Their mothers sat together on the beach near the dock, reading and gossiping.

The lake was one of their favourite dive sites. It was stream-fed and crystal-clear for much of the summer, so a diver could see further than fifty feet, even in the deepest areas, and there were plenty of sites to visit along the bottom. Back in the 1960s a small plane had crashed and had never been recovered from the lake's floor. Michael and Tim didn't know if anyone had been killed, but it was great fun to visit the broken sections of the aircraft. There were several rock outcroppings that were excellent places to find and dislodge lost fishing lures, and periodically they would come across a camera, a pocketknife and other cool items accidentally dropped in the water.

The best part about diving in Sumner Lake was the mining equipment that littered the bottom. The lake, created as a reservoir for Denver-area homes, covered an area mined by gold and silver prospectors more than a hundred years earlier. Michael's teacher had told him there were flooded mine shafts too, but the boys hadn't found any yet secretly, Michael was glad: he knew fearless Tim would dive headlong into the flooded shafts, while he would be plagued by thoughts of iridescent spirits, ungainly, crippled fish and thick tangles of slippery weeds that would cling to his ankles and hold him prisoner inside the inky darkness for ever.

Scattered across the lake bottom were the remains of miners' shacks and pieces of abandoned equipment, most far too large for the boys ever to haul to the surface. Sometimes they would find a hand tool, a lost boot or some silverware left behind when the mines were flooded. Along with their visits to the aeroplane and their search for lost fishing lures, the boys combed the lake floor in search of mining artefacts. Mr Meyers, the old man who owned the antique store around the corner from Tim's house, paid them a few dollars for anything of value they brought to his shop.

'Just push the clamp down and you're done,' Michael directed impatiently. Tim, who was small and not very strong, struggled with the clamp attaching his scuba tank to the buoyancy compensator. 'Let me help you,' he said finally, pulling his feet from the water and struggling to stand.

'I can do it,' Tim grunted as he pushed hard to close the clamp around the tank. 'See? Let's go.'

'Okay, where should we head?' Tim had virtually memorised the lake floor.

'Forty feet for sixty minutes,' Tim suggested. 'We'll swim over near the big rocks where those guys are fishing and then cover the flats to the plane. We can head back this way when we hit five hundred pounds.'

'That's cool. Maybe we'll find some lures or something.' Michael spat into his mask to mitigate fogging, then, holding the mask and tank, he rolled from the dock into the water. He tucked his face down onto his chest as he felt the icy water rush into his wetsuit between his hood and the back of his jacket. That was always the worst moment, until his body temperature warmed the thin layer of water between his skin and the neoprene; in just a few seconds he felt quite comfortable, despite the cold. He looked up when he heard a splash and watched as Tim leapt feet-first into the lake, then adjusted his facemask and kicked towards the bottom.

Fifty minutes later, Michael motioned to Tim: five minutes before they needed to head back to the dock. Tim was playing outside the fuselage of the aeroplane, pretending to pilot it like a submarine through the depths of Sumner Lake. They had found two fishing lures and seventy-five cents near the rock outcropping about a hundred yards west of the aeroplane; Tim was thrilled with their discovery and Michael could hear him yelling, even through his regulator. Their find had been followed by a long swim to the crash site across the area Tim called 'the flats', a stretch of barren ground with nothing but sand, rocks and a few plants dotting the brown expanse. Tim waved once and headed out across the flats towards the dock. He was the faster swimmer; Michael put his head down and kicked as hard as he could to keep up.

They were halfway across when something caught Michael's eye. It looked like a starfish half-buried in the sand, glinting momentarily in the sun. Michael stopped and waited for the sand to settle before he reached for the small star-shaped object. It resisted his initial tug and Michael realised the buried item was larger than it first looked. As he pulled harder, the strangely shaped metal object came free in a cloud of silt. He raised his find to his facemask: a spur. He shouted for Tim, but his friend was already out of range. As he polished the edge with his thumb, Michael could make out the letters 'US' etched gracefully onto the side near where the spur attached to a boot heel.

This was a great find, the best treasure the two divers had ever pulled from Sumner Lake. The letters carved into the metal meant it must have come from a soldier or a cavalry rider. Michael could barely contain himself as he continued searching the sandy bottom, hoping to uncover more Mr Meyers would surely give them at least five dollars for the single spur, but if he found its mate they'd be worth much more. He checked his pressure gauge, and saw he had only two hundred PSI left in his tank. Looking around, he made a mental note of the spot: he and Tim would come back the following weekend.

Michael was running his hand through the sand one last time when he saw the key. It didn't look like an ordinary key: it was long and flat, with two differently shaped teeth protruding from both sides of one end. It had the letters BIS etched into one side, the number 17C carved into the other. This would be one for Mr Meyers' key jar, the huge glass jar the old man claimed his great-grandfather had used for making pickles in Austria in the 1800s. Today it held hundreds of keys, many of them fitting antique locks, like those in the cabinets and wooden chests for sale in Mr Meyers' shop. Others were thrown into the jar in exchange for a wish. 'They are the keys to the known world,' Mr Meyers told all who asked. 'If you make a wish when you drop one in, it will always come true.' Michael was too old to believe such fairy stories, but Tim loved to drop keys into the enormous jar.

Michael slipped his latest find inside his wetsuit, gripped the spur like a recovered national treasure and swam hurriedly to the dock.

IDAHO SPRINGS, COLORADO.

Last Fall Steven Taylor walked slowly across Miner Street to the entrance of the First National Bank of Idaho Springs. Steven had few physical characteristics that would make a passer-by take more than a cursory glance in his direction. Slightly shorter than average, he was green-eyed, with a shock of unruly brown hair. He was pale, more from genetics than any aversion to sunlight; rather than tanning he slid gradually from the cold ivory he sported in winter to the alternating blotchy pinks and deep sunburned reds of summer.

His face was a battlefield between worry wrinkles creasing his forehead and laugh lines tugging at the corners of his close-set eyes and surprisingly delicate mouth. He was attractive to the few women who knew him well, more for his wit than his physique, though, as an avid weekend sportsman, he was in good physical condition and this despite his poor eating habits. Steven's clothes appeared to have been borrowed from two people: one a thickset man with low, slat-sided hips and the other a lean athlete with a penchant for overworking his arms, shoulders and upper body.

It was 7.45 a.m. as Steven fished in his coat pocket for keys to the front door. He'd been holding a pile of files in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other and was forced to put the paper cup in his mouth, gripping the edge firmly with his teeth as he dug through the pockets of his wool blazer. Looking up towards the mountains above Clear Creek Canyon he could see the yellow leaves of the intermittent aspens, now fully changed from their spring green. They dotted the hillsides among the hegemonic green expanse of the Ponderosa pines. Autumn came early to the canyon. The coming winter would be another long one. I've got to get out of here I've got to get out of here, he thought, then laughed at himself: I think that every morning I think that every morning.

'Hello, Steven,' Mrs Winter called. She was sweeping the sidewalk in front of her pastry shop next door and stopped to offer a quick wave.

'Good morning,' he answered, his voice muffled by the cup, and burned his upper lip in the attempt. 'Ouch, damnit.' Steven dropped the coffee cup onto the sidewalk, splashing his shoes.

'How's Mark this morning?' Mrs Winter asked, ignoring the coffee accident.

'He's fine, Mrs W,' Steven answered. 'He's teaching the Stamp Act today ... was up late last night working on some way to make it a bit more palatable for the kids.' Mark Jenkins was Steven's roommate; he taught US and world history at Idaho Springs High School.

'Oh, that's exciting: one of the causes of the Revolutionary War. Tell him I said keep up the good work.' Mrs Winter had known Steven since he was a boy, when his family moved to Idaho Springs. Her pastry shop was one of many local businesses kept afloat by tourists stopping for gas off the interstate. Not many people visited Idaho Springs for more than a few hours; the local LATGO and Sidney mines did not draw many from the masses who rushed by on their way to the ski resorts of Breckenridge, Vail or Aspen.

Steven had started working in the bank after completing his MBA at the University of Denver. He was a bright, successful graduate student, and he'd been headhunted by a number of investment firms from San Francisco, New York and Chicago but he had procrastinated too long and lost out on several lucrative positions. He put it down to fate and bad luck and climbed back up Clear Creek Canyon to take the assistant bank manager's job for a year; he planned to accept the next decent offer that came his way. That was three years ago. Now he couldn't remember why he had hesitated to accept the jobs when they had been offered. He didn't love the bank business or investment fields, certainly not the way Mark loved teaching. He studied business because he knew it would pay well, but it didn't inspire him to study further, or to explore the nuances of financial theory in action. Actually, he could remember very little that inspired him that much so he wasn't really surprised when he found himself still here, still home, after three years. Steven never actively sought inspiration; he expected it to come one day, in a great metaphysical epiphany. He would wake one morning and find his calling waiting for him with the morning paper. It hadn't shown up yet, and here he was, as usual, opening the bank at 8.00 a.m., although this time with no coffee and stained shoes.

To make matters worse, today was going to be especially dismal. His boss, the estimable Howard Griffin, had directed him to oversee a complete audit of all open account files some going back as far as the bank's original customers in the 1860s. Steven had started the job the previous day; he anticipated a great deal of tedious secretarial work with little reward.

'You've got leadership potential, Steven. I want to see you taking on more projects like this in the future,' the bank manager had told him with enthusiasm.

But Steven was finding the assignment was disillusioning him even further, increasing his distaste for a career in finance.

'Who could be inspired by this this?' he said to himself as he switched on the lights and crossed the lobby floor to the aged pine window and counter top.

Pushing the stack of files through his window, he re-crossed the lobby and switched on the illumination for the display case hanging on the opposite wall. It held grainy photographs showing mine workers, and some hand tools found in the LATGO mines on the northern wall of Clear Creek Canyon, as well as the original ownership papers for the bank, a photo of Lawrence Chapman, the founder, and several pages of accounting ledgers from the original books. Steven rarely considered the items, but he was glad customers had something to look at while they waited in line.

The condition of his shoes this morning made him pause and consider one photo, of Lawrence Chapman and a bank employee. The man wore a uniform with awkward-looking boots, a frilly white shirt, suspenders and a large belt buckle with the letters BIS clearly visible on the front.

'Well, my shoes may be wet and smell of cappuccino, but at least I'm not wearing that get-up,' Steven said, wandering towards his office.

Checking his e-mail, Steven found a message from Jeffrey Simmons, the doctoral student in Denver who shared Steven's only real passion, abstract mathematics concepts.

'You work in a bank, dress like a philosophy professor from the '50s, and you love abstract maths. I'm surprised you don't have to beat the women away with a slide rule,' Mark would tease him.

Even though his roommate couldn't appreciate the beauty of calculus or the genius of a good algorithm, Steven liked Mark immensely; the two had shared an apartment ever since Steven had returned to Idaho Springs. To Steven, Mark Jenkins was the perfect history teacher: he possessed an enormous body of knowledge and had a razor-sharp wit. He thought Mark was the most knowledgeable and quick-thinking person he knew not that he would ever admit that to Mark.

Jeff Simmons, on the other hand, fully understood the joy of a complex equation: the mathematician often sent Steven problems to consider and solve in an infuriatingly uncomfortable deductive paradigm. This morning's message was no exception. It read: 'You use them both every day but probably have never considered why the numbers on your cellular telephone and your calculator are organised differently.' Steven was about to pull a calculator from his desk drawer when he heard the bell above the lobby door chime as someone entered the bank.

'Stevie?' Howard Griffin, at only 8.10 a.m.? He was early this morning, which meant he hadn't taken time to exercise on his Stairmaster before leaving for work. Steven smiled at the irony of anyone owning a stair machine while living in Idaho Springs: the entire city was constructed on an incline at 7,500 feet above sea level, with mountains on either side of Clear Creek Canyon rising to over 12,000 feet. He liked to think Griffin had lost some sort of bet with the Devil and had to climb his eternal stairway, a corpulent, baby-boom Sisyphus, rather than just go outside for a walk each morning, but he knew better. Griffin had moved to Boulder from New Jersey in the 1960s. When he discovered the decade would not last for ever, he enrolled in the University of Colorado, completed his degree and moved to Idaho Springs to become manager of the small town's bank.

Now, at fifty-five, Griffin was bald and had a burgeoning paunch that he battled every morning as he climbed Colorado's highest peak, the Mount Griffin Stairmaster. His commitment to exercise was admirable, but he had a weakness that regularly bested his determination to regain the thinness of his youth: Howard Griffin loved beer, and most afternoons would find him propping up the bar at Owen's Pub on Miner Street. Steven sometimes accompanied him, and Mark would join them for a few beers or the occasional dinner.

'Stevie?' the bank manager called again, and Steven moved into the lobby to greet his boss.

'Good morning, Howard. How are you?'

'Never mind that. I'm fine, thanks, but never mind that,' Griffin often thought faster than he could speak. 'Myrna called last night and can't be in today. She's sick or something. So I've had to come and cover. How's the audit coming?'

'It's fine. I have all the active accounts pulled. There are thousands of them, by the way. I'll get through many of the oldest today, because most of those haven't had much in the way of transactions since they were opened. They've made enough interest to cover the monthly fees, so the cash just sits there.'

'Great. Stay on it. I'll work the window and we can check in over lunch later. How's Owen's for you?'

'That'll be fine, Howard. I'll appreciate the break.' Steven returned to his office, retrieved the keys to the basement and braced himself for a long, tedious morning.

'Take a look at these.' Steven had brought several pages of notes to lunch. 'We have twenty-nine accounts that haven't had a single transaction in the past twenty-five years. Most of them are forgotten accounts, people who have died. Thankfully, I have information on next of kin from the original applications. But eight of them appear to be accounts for single men killed in the Second World War, and, get this, five accounts date back to the late 1800s one of which had one deposit and no additional transactions.'

'I'm not surprised,' Griffin said between long draws on an enormous draught beer. 'It was probably some miner who went back to work and got himself killed, got his claim jumped or something. It was a rough time back then. But those assets are among the reasons this bank survived the depression those and the molybdenum mines.'

'That's not the worst of it, Howard,' Steven interrupted. 'This account had only one deposit, but it was a deposit of more than $17,000. That was nine hundred pounds nine hundred pounds of refined silver. The bank made a bundle on the silver sale alone, because they screwed the guy for over ten cents an ounce off the market price.' Steven paused to take a bite of a thick Reuben sandwich. Continuing with his mouth full, he added, 'This is the part that doesn't make sense. What mining company sends a guy in with nine hundred pounds of silver, lets him take a loss of ten cents an ounce, and then never comes back for the cash? To top it off, he wasn't even from the Springs. This guy was from Oro City. I don't even know where that is.' of refined silver. The bank made a bundle on the silver sale alone, because they screwed the guy for over ten cents an ounce off the market price.' Steven paused to take a bite of a thick Reuben sandwich. Continuing with his mouth full, he added, 'This is the part that doesn't make sense. What mining company sends a guy in with nine hundred pounds of silver, lets him take a loss of ten cents an ounce, and then never comes back for the cash? To top it off, he wasn't even from the Springs. This guy was from Oro City. I don't even know where that is.'

'Was, Stevie, was. Oro City was Leadville, but they changed the name in 1877. You're right, though, something's crooked. There were banks in Oro City then, so what was this guy doing over here?' Griffin finished his beer and motioned for Gerry, the bartender, to draw him another. 'You want one more?'

'Jeez, no, Howard. It's only 12.20; I have to go back to work.'

'Well, I often question my own behaviour, but I'm still having one more before we go. Anyway, this account, what's the big deal? Some miner hits it big huge drops off most of his haul at the bank, takes a handful of silver with him to the pub, flashes it around, drinks too much hooch and gets himself killed. It happened all the time, I would guess.' Griffin rubbed a French fry around his plate, sopping up hamburger grease.

'The big deal, Howard, is that a $17,000 deposit made in our bank in October of 1870 is now worth more than 6.3 million dollars. It's just sitting there, and the guy didn't list any family or next of kin. So I can't call anyone to say their ship has just come in and docked here in the Rocky Mountain foothills.' He was about to continue when he was distracted for a moment by an attractive young woman who entered the pub and joined a group of friends in a booth near the back. He shook his head wryly and turned back to his boss. 'Anyway, the thing I have to ask you is that this guy, this William Higgins, well, he-'

As Steven lost track of his question, Griffin interrupted, 'Go say something to her. You don't get out enough. She's a pretty girl and you aren't getting any younger. How old are you now, twenty-seven? Twenty-eight? Soon you'll be old and ugly like me, and I'll be fried and eaten before I see you get old and ugly like me.'

'No, maybe another time.' Steven paused. He hadn't been seriously involved with a woman since university. He dated from time to time, but had never found anyone he felt was the right match for him. He grinned at his boss. 'Well, anyway, this guy had a safe deposit box, number 17C, in the old safe. I was thinking, if we looked in his drawer, we might find some clue as to who his family is or was and we could let them know this account exists.'

'No way.'

'Why not? It may be the only way to get this resolved.'

'No. It's bank policy. They put it in there. They pay the rent on the drawer. We leave it alone until they get back.'

'Yeah, I understand, but think about this for a minute. What do you put into a safe deposit box?' Steven asked rhetorically. 'Something you expect to retrieve in your lifetime. You certainly don't put anything in there that you don't plan on your grandchildren or even your great-grandchildren ever having. This guy meant to come back for this stuff, whatever it is. Anything we don't plan on retrieving for a hundred and thirty-five years, we throw in the trash. We don't ensure its safety in a bank.'

'No way. They put it in there in good faith. We take the $12.95 a month from his account. The drawer stays locked in good faith. It's good business practice, Stevie. Our customers have to trust us.'

'Trust us? This guy is deader than disco, and if he has any family they might want to know that they're worth a fortune in accumulated interest.'

'Sorry.' Griffin finished the last of his beer, a light foam moustache outlining his upper lip. 'I don't write the policies,' he said wryly, 'but I will buy lunch.'

Dusk came early to Idaho Springs as the sun disappeared behind the mountain peaks lining the west end of Clear Creek Canyon. It was 5.15 p.m., and already Steven could see its last rays shining in tapered rectangles across the floor. He switched on his desk lamp and took one last look through William Higgins's account ledger. Monthly deductions for rent of the safe deposit box were the only noted transactions since the day Higgins opened the account in October, 1870. Although fees for the deposit box had increased over time, the compounded interest was more than enough to cover the cost. It was a forgotten account, the fees deducted as a matter of course without anyone checking to see if Higgins or his heirs had ever done business with the bank again. Steven looked up from his desk. A doorway led through to Griffin's office and beyond that to the bank lobby. On the far wall, a collection of safe deposit keys, more museum artefacts than tools, hung on a small rack. There were three rows of twenty drawers in the old safe, though only forty-seven keys remained. Thirteen had been lost in the years since Lawrence Chapman brought the Bowles and Michaelson safe from Washington, D.C. in the 1860s, and twelve of those drawers now sat empty.

The safe had come from an English steamship that had piled up on a muddy shoal several miles downriver from Chapman's Alexandria home. Chapman, ever the entrepreneur, had bought salvage rights, stripped the ship to the beam supports and sold much of her rigging to a local shipwright. He hadn't been able to part with the old safe, however, so he arranged to bring it along as he worked his way west to open the first Bank of Idaho Springs.

As Steven stood examining the remaining keys he wondered about William Higgins. Had he met Lawrence Chapman that day in 1870? Had Chapman been the one to convince the miner to deposit his silver rather than taking it to the assay office? And what was in that safe deposit box? Steven, angry at Griffin's intransigence, was certain it held information that would lead to Higgins's family; he was determined to see it opened.

An empty hook hung from the rack under 17C. Steven thought for a moment about picking the lock it surely couldn't be that difficult but he would have to do it quickly, because Griffin would see him disappear into the safe on the security screens in his office. He could claim to be cleaning the inside of the safe, dusting or sweeping it out. Yes, that was it; that was his ticket in. He would just have to find time to study the locking device first. He could stay late one night, slip in, open the drawer and be out before Griffin was any wiser. It would work. He just needed a bit of time to- Steven caught himself. 'My God, Steven, what are you thinking?' He ran a hand across his brow and felt beads of perspiration emerging from above his hairline. 'Let this go. You're going to be the only overqualified, maths-loving MBA ever to get fired from an assistant manager's position at a small town bank.'

He pursed his lips, reached out and turned the hook marked 17C one hundred and eighty degrees and said, 'There, now nothing would hang from it, anyway.' Steven donned his jacket, grabbed his briefcase and left the bank thinking about telephones and calculators. William Higgins's account was safe, and his deposit box would remain locked in good faith.

THE FORBIDDEN FOREST.

Last Twinmoon Garec Haile stalked the deer from downwind. He had tethered his mare, Renna, near a pool in the Estrad River, two hundred paces south of the meadow. Despite the thickness of the underbrush, he made little sound and the deer continued feeding peacefully among the tall grasses growing along the edge of the field. He had already nocked an arrow, but his chances of making a shot from this position were slim. He needed to get closer without spooking the animal: another ten or fifteen paces would be enough. Garec was lean and tall, and had to work to stay low enough, avoiding the sharp brambles. His strong legs and lower back, toughened by Twinmoons of hard riding, helped him hug the ground as he noiselessly approached his unsuspecting target.

The morning sunlight illuminated most of the meadow, but Garec's copse remained dark. A few moments more and he would have a clear shot. He was still some forty paces from the edge of the meadow, but that range meant a certain kill for the skilled bowman. He practised often, far more than Sallax or even Versen: that's how he had earned his nickname, the Bringer of Death with avens and avens of practice. Few bowmen in Eldarn could match the young archer for speed and accuracy. A breeze blew from behind the deer and he was reminded the southern Twinmoon was coming soon. Far in the distance he imagined he could hear the sound of huge waves crashing into the Ronan coast.

Garec grinned, despite his efforts to remain still. He was in his element: Sallax would eat his words tonight when Garec served up fresh venison tenderloin. Sallax was convinced no hunter could penetrate the forbidden forest south of the river and actually bring out a deer without being captured by Malagon's forces, but Garec had been crossing into the forest for much of his life: he knew knew he could. he could.

He had considered everything as he planned for this morning's hunt, even memorising the patrol schedule along the north bank of the river. He was sure the Malakasian soldiers knew Ronan locals regularly made their way into the forbidden region; periodically they hanged a poacher as an example, but a lot of the occupation officers frequently looked the other way. This morning's problem was not getting into the forest, but getting out with a large deer strapped across Renna's back. Garec reckoned if he could cross below the cliffs at Danae's Eddy, he could be back at the tavern by the midday aven. He stretched out long under a low-hanging branch and for a moment lost sight of the deer. As he rose on the other side, he found his quarry and took aim along the shaft of the arrow. He drew a slow, shallow breath and steadied for the kill. He could not afford to be tracking a wounded deer all over the forbidden forest; this had to be a clean shot.

The attack was sudden, and came from three sides. Grettans! Garec gasped and dropped face-first onto the ground in the thicket. Grettans this far south, that was impossible impossible! He fought the urge to turn and run back the way he had come, and silently promised himself he would never again approach any quarry except from downwind. The closest grettan had been crouching in the underbrush just a few paces away: if Garec had approached from the southern side of the field, he would be dead already. Now he had to get back to Renna he prayed to all the gods of the Northern Forest she was still alive. There was no way he could outrun a grettan, even over the few hundred paces back to his horse.

Garec stole a quick look towards the meadow where several of the beasts were tearing into the deer's corpse. As large as farm horses, grettans had powerful legs, enormous paws spiked with deadly claws and huge mouths with razor-sharp fangs, perfect for gripping their prey while they tore away strips of flesh with their forelegs. Their dense fur was black. Small ears jutted from their large heads, and their broad faces had horse-like nostrils and small black eyes set wide apart. Grettans rippled with thick muscle: they had few predators in the wild.

Garec counted eight of the beasts in and around the meadow, the largest of which was a bull looming over the deer carcase. The unfortunate animal was stripped clean in a matter of moments; bloody, steaming entrails had been cast about the thicket.

How could he possibly have missed grettan tracks had he been too busy planning his escape from the forest? Forcing the questions from his mind, Garec focused on the problem at hand. He had to remain calm while he made his way, as silently as possible, back to Renna. She was fast: they had a good chance of escape if he could actually get to her.

He painstakingly backed out of the thicket, careful not to break any dry branches or rustle the early autumn leaves already strewn beneath his feet. He was sweating hard despite the cool morning breeze and the stinging sweat irritated his eyes. His legs and lower back tightened, near to cramping, and he was forced to stop for several moments, awkwardly tucked beneath the branches of a wild raspberry bush, while he waited for his muscles to relax. It was fear. He knew it. He took several deep breaths and willed his heart to stop pounding and to fall back into place somewhere beneath his throat. Rutting whores: grettans here here? What in all demonpissing nightmares were they doing here?

Garec was soon free of the thicket and forced himself to walk, not run, through the forest towards the river. Ahead he could see Renna still tethered near the shallow pool, her nostrils flaring: she sensed the grettans nearby. Impatient with Garec's tediously slow return, she pawed nervously at the ground.

'Easy girl, easy,' Garec soothed. 'We're going to be fine.' He was less than twenty paces from her when Renna let out a sharp whinny. The young hunter felt his blood freeze. A demon scream echoed from the meadow, followed by the sound of the grettan pack crashing through the underbrush.

'Rutting dogs,' he yelled, sprinting the last few paces and leaping into the saddle, 'let's go, Rennie, let's get out of here.'

Danae's Eddy was a short distance east, near a lazy bend in the Estrad River. The cliffs there might provide an escape, if only Renna could outrun the grettan pack for a few moments.

Garec had only seen grettans once before, on a hunting trip to northern Falkan; he'd never tried to outrun one. He knew they were fast: there were stories of the largest grettans easily chasing down horses on the Falkan plains. Renna was galloping flat out now, and it took all Garec's concentration to help guide her along the riverbank. The sun was fully out, but the heavy morning dew had yet to dry from ferns and tree limbs along the trail and Garec's boots and leggings were soaking wet. Looking down at his soggy legs, Garec suddenly had an idea if they could make it to Danae's Eddy before Renna was hamstrung.

The fastest grettans were close on her heels now; Garec could hear their hungry snarling behind the thud of the mare's hooves. Praying Renna could keep up her pace without his guiding hand, he turned halfway in the saddle and fired an arrow at a large bull that was snapping viciously at her flanks. It struck the beast in the neck, but didn't appear to slow him at all. Garec nocked and fired again, and again pierced the large bull's throat but even with two arrows in its neck, the enormous creature was still making up ground against the tiring horse.

It was a heroic flight as Renna pounded through the brush, but Garec could feel her slowing beneath him. A smaller grettan came up fast and, leaping, managed to get a paw onto Renna's hindquarter. The horse screamed a desperate whinny but maintained her stride, though blood was flowing from her torn hide. Garec briefly felt rage eclipse his terror. He looked ahead, hoping to spot any low-hanging branches, but, seeing none, he stood in the stirrups, turned nearly all the way around and fired at the smaller grettan. The arrow took the snarling monster in the head just above one eye. Garec spared a moment to thank the gods he had brought his longbow rather than the smaller forest bow, otherwise he'd never have got through the animal's thick skull. The arrow sank deep in the grettan's head and stopped it dead in mid-stride. Four of the slower grettans abruptly gave up the pursuit when they saw one of their own collapse; the coterie of fangs and claws fell upon the still-twitching corpse and began tearing away large pieces of its flesh. Scratching and clawing at one another with blood-soaked paws, the cannibal beasts vied for position over the mangled carcase of their fallen brother.

There were still two grettans continuing the pursuit, and Garec began to despair of reaching the cliffs.

Then he saw them through the trees, perhaps two hundred paces out.