Helga: Out of Hedgelands - Rick Johnson (a court of thorns and roses ebook free TXT) š
- Author: Rick Johnson
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āAnd that will be my father!ā Helga hollered. The news threw Helgaās mind into turmoil. In the shadows cast by the firelight on the cave walls, Helga seemed to see the stricken ship, with shadowy bands of Wrackshee slavers flickering all around them.
Trembling in every nerveāpassionate fear, terrifying memories, and excitement mingling in a potent outburst of enthusiasmāHelga suddenly leaped up and ran to the cave opening, beckoning for the others to follow. āCome on! Why do we wait? Hurry! There is no time to waste!ā Seeing that her friends just stared at her as they continued to lounge around the fire, rage and astonishment surged through Helga. āAre you dead? Senseless? Do we plan to let our friends become slaves? Come with me, or I will go alone! We must act without delay!ā Helga exploded. āThe sailors need our help and all of them are in the greatest danger!ā
āWhoa nā wait a bit,ā Christer said slowly, ājust hold on while we figure a bit. Thereās no time to waste, thatās for certain, and Iām fully agreed with you thereābut thereās room for figuring to even up the odds a bit, if you ask me.ā Christer paused, clucking his tongue happily, as if he had just told a joke no one else understood.
āWhatās first,ā Christer continued, ā...whatās first, is that you can go the way the Snāakers go and beat the Wrackshees at their own game. The Snāakersā business is to elude the Wrackshees and no one does it better. A party of Snāakers stops near here tonight to pick up our snakeskin bales and take them to Port Newolf. If you donāt mind riding with the bales of skins, they can carry you, too! Thatād be the fastest and safest way to get to the wrecked ship. If theyāve got room in one of their litters, the Snāakers will gladly take you with themāthey hate the Wrackshees and will be happy to help.ā
āYar!ā Roolo cheered. āNow weāll be out of here and off to help our mates! When will the Snake-takers be here?ā
āHold on partner,ā Christer replied, āyouāre not going anywhere fast. Only Helga can go with the Snāakersātheir litters will be pretty full as it is and they wonāt have room for you all. And only the Snake-takers can run swift, but silent in the darkātoo many is too much in Wrackshee country. So you just settle down with your Wheeze and rest a spell.ā
āWhat!ā Roolo cried. āStay here, while our mates are in danger and send Helga out to face the Wrackshees alone? Thatās crazy!ā
āJust hear whatās second,ā Christer replied. āHelga going with the Snake-takers will get her to the ship and maybe to her father. So, while Helga takes the faster route to the ship, you and Bomper can take a longer route around and meet her there. Youāll be plenty safe skirting around the Wrackshee areas and youāll still be at the ship in good time. So thatās my two thoughts.ā
Although everyone wanted to continue the journey together, they also saw the wisdom in Christerās plan.
āAye,ā Roolo said, āthereās no reason to run unnecessary risk and Helga has the most to gain from going on ahead. Weāll meet again at the ship.ā
āHeh-heh-heh,ā Christer chuckled, āso itās settled. An hour after the twilight turns to dark, we leave to meet the Snake-takers.ā
Scrodderās Tattoo
Christer and Helga picked their way across a rough, scree slope, carefully following an old minerās track that cut downward across a mountainside. They moved as quietly as possible through the intense dark of a clear, but moonless night, with Christer padding along in the lead. His keen night vision astonished Helga, as he pointed out objects she was completely unable to see in the darkness until they had moved considerably closer. Christerās confidence in the dark allowed him to move quickly, despite being loaded with large bundles of snake skins strapped to a willow-frame carrier on his back.
Christer trotted along lightly, almost soundlessly, his heels hardly touching the ground. Helga struggled to keep up, stumbling along noisily, often tripping over rocks or losing her footing on the scree.
āArrgh!ā Helga fumed, losing her balance again and nearly taking a long slide down the slope.
āChristerāhow much further?ā Helga whispered, picking herself back up. āIām afraid that all the racket Iām making with draw the Wrackshees down on our heads!ā
āShat, Helga!ā Christer replied, āweāre nearly at the bottom, and anyway, canāt you see them? Canāt you hear them?ā Motioning for her to stop, he cupped his ear as if listening. Helga stopped and strained her own ears, but noticed nothing unusual. The smile spreading across Christerās face, however, told her that whatever it was that had caught his attention was good news.
āSnake-takers,ā Christer said, grinning.
With that hint, more because she could see some shadowy forms ahead then because she could hear anything distinctly, Helga realized that they had, indeed, rendezvoused with the Snake-takers. As she and Christer drew nearer, Helga could make out brawny figuresāsome with arms and legs like logsālounging and resting in every imaginable position.
Christer started downward again, following the track to the spot where the scree ended and the troop of Snake-takers had halted. Helga followed, overjoyed to think that the long nightās journey might at last be ending, stumbling and sliding behind Christer as fast as she could, no longer concerned about her noisy advance. She paid a price, however, for her haste and once again lost her balance, pitching forward and dancing and leaping the rest of the way down the slope to keep from falling hard.
Reaching the bottom of the slope, Helga bounded past Christer, arms windmilling wildly, as her momentum carried her on. Finally coming to a stop, breathing hard, she slowly made her way back to where Christer stood with a strongly-muscled, burly Climbing Lynx. Giving them a big, yellow-toothed smileācheeks bulging out like balloons, a dirty straw hat pushed to the back of her head, belly hanging over a large silver belt buckle, crumpled jeans, lizard-skin bootsāthe Lynx pulled a leather pouch out of her pocket and opened it. Pulling several dried weevils out and tossing them into her mouth, the Lynx crunched the hard dried husks with gusto, offering the pouch to Christer and Helga.
āGo on now, beasties, theyāre shurāin not a-gonna bite you,ā the Lynx laughed. āThese crunchy little guys help to keep you awake, travelinā all night, and they stick to your ribs right well!ā
Helga watched the Lynx toss probably two dozen of the hard-dried weevils into her mouth as she talked. As she looked around, Helga could make out others of the Snake-takers also eating and drinking, taking advantage of the break to nourish and refresh themselves. They were clearly a lean and hardened lot, tough and seasoned by years of running the snake-taking routes through the mountains. Although she had always heard stories about the strenuous life and legendary stamina of such mountain traders, she had never really wondered what such active beasts ate to keep up their strength.
But now, observing the first Snake-takers she had ever seen, it was clear that Snake-takers were not fussy. Pouches holding every type of dried insect and bug were being passed from beast to beast, with the loud Crunch-Crack-Crunch of hard cockroach nuts being eaten making a faint staccato amidst the laughter and talk of the relaxing beasts. Here and there other beasts gnawed on huge crystallized knobs of pine pitchāwhich, to Helga, looked like they were chewing on the heel of a boot. Still other beasts were scoffing on great wads of pine branch tips, putting one sweet, woody shoot after another in their mouths and grinding them fiercely with their teeth, cheeks puffing out with gobs of pulverized material sucked on for nutrients. And, regardless of the favored snack, every beast drank from the lakeāflattening on their bellies, sticking mouths in the water, and slurping deep draughts.
āHelga, meet Darnt,ā Christer said, introducing the Lynx. āSheās the trader who deals with the Snake-takers in these partsāknows the mountains well and will see that the Snake-takers get you through safely to the coast. She says the mountains are crawling with Wrackshees now.ā
āYash, Christer! Wrackshees everywhere! No one moves except in great danger now. Even you may not get out alive if you return the way you came. Snāakers say they must keep movingāstop only for brief restāthey must keep moving, travel lightāno heavy food or water packsāonly what they can carry. They must keep movingātravel by night only. The Snāakers must go now. You must go with them! Wrackshees are just behind!ā
āMe?ā Christer exclaimed. āI canāt go with themāthere is no way I could keep up with their pace. I would delay them too muchāIāll go my own way back.ā
āNash! There is no way back tonight!ā Darnt replied. Then, she pointed toward the night sky, calling Christerās attention to various constellations, talking rapidly all the while. āYash there, Christer!ā she said, pointing towards an area of the western sky. āYash! Scrodderās Tattoo! The Heart of Ink guides the Snāakers through the Dismal Draināthatās the only way passable and safe. Thereās Wrackshees swarming down behind you across the ridges now. They nearly caught even me a while back, except that I was hunkered down behind a crag, and in the pitch black, wind blowing away from me, they missed me. Had they caught my scent, Iād be a slave now.ā
āThe Dismal Drain! Youāre out or your mind, Darnt! Iāve known more beasts to go in there than to come back out,ā Christer exclaimed. āThe Drainās a wastelandāsolid, barren sandstone, and fierce wind blowing all the timeāthereās no way to follow a track. Even if there were a bit of dust to follow a track, the wind erases it in minutes. Iāve heard of lots of beasts that go in there and never come out...they say the mirages in the daytime trick beastsāmaking them think they see a way out, but they really just wander and wander, day after day, following mirage after mirage, until they run out of water and die. Iād rather face the Wrackshees than just leave my bones to bleach out in the Drain.ā Christer knew that the Draināmade of dazzling white sandstone polished to a mirror-like surface by the constant wind carrying fine particles of the eroding sandāwas a death trap.
āYash, Christer,ā Darnt replied, āthatās why you must go with the Snāakersāthey follow the Heart of Inkāthatās the only wayāand travel only by night. In the daytime, even if you ignore the miragesāwhich most beasts canātāthe sunlight dazzles so brightly off the white sandstone of the Drain that you canāt find directions anyway. Nashātravel only by night. The Snāakers set their course on the Heart of Ink, the brightest star in Scrodderās Tattoo, and keep moving by night and hiding by day. Iāve made arrangements for them to take you and Helga through to the coastāand thatās your only way out now. Take it or die a slave at Tilk Duraow!ā
Pointing toward Scrodderās Tattoo, Darnt continued, āThere, you see itāthe Heart of Ink is almost at the center of the Tattoo, but hangs almost by itself in the blackness around it.ā Darnt paused briefly, then repeated, āSnāakers find their way by the Heart of Ink. Hide and sleep during the day, travel only at night. That will take you across the Dismal Drain in safety. Tonight is the most dangerous portion of the tripāby morning you will be across the mountains and beyond the main Wrackshee areas, still dangerous but the worst will be over.ā
āI reckon youāre about right, Darnt,ā Christer replied with a smile, ābut I donāt want to slow them down, and I canāt keep up the paceāespecially in the
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