The Books of the South: Tales of the Black Company (Chronicles of the Black Company)

The Books of the South: Tales of the Black Company (Chronicles of the Black Company) by Glen Cook Page A

Book: The Books of the South: Tales of the Black Company (Chronicles of the Black Company) by Glen Cook Read Free Book Online
Authors: Glen Cook
estimate of the reactions of the newer men. We had encountered no sorcery directly yet, but the Company has a way of stumbling into its path. They seemed no more uncomfortable than the old hands.
    Glances at Lady. I wondered if what seemed inevitable on the one hand and foredoomed on the other would ever cease crackling between us. So long as it did it would distort everything else in our relationship. Hell. I liked her fine as a friend.
    There is nothing so unreasonable and irrational and blind—and just plain silly-looking—as a man who works himself into an obsessive passion.
    Women do not look as foolish. They are expected to be weak. But they are also expected to become savage bitches when they are frustrated.

 
    13
    Willow’s Last Night Little
    Willow, Cordy Mather, and Blade still had their tavern. Mainly because they had the countenance of the Prahbrindrah Drah. Business wasn’t good now. The priests found out they couldn’t control the foreigners. So they put them off limits. A lot of Taglians did what the priests told them.
    “Shows you how much sense people have,” Blade said. “They had any, they would take the priests to the river and hold them under an hour to remind them they drone like termites.”
    Willow said, “Man, you got to be the sourest son of a bitch I ever seen. I bet if we hadn’t dragged you out, those crocs would of thrown you back. Too rancid to eat.”
    Blade just grinned as he went through the door to the back room.
    Willow asked Cordy, “You reckon it was priests that throwed him in?”
    “Yeah.”
    “Good house tonight. For once.”
    “Yeah.”
    “Tomorrow’s the day.” Willow took a long drink. Cordy’s brew was getting better. Then he stood up and hammered the bar with his empty mug. In Taglian he said, “We who are about to die salute you. Drink and be merry, children. For tomorrow, and so forth. On the house.” He sat down.
    Cordy said, “You know how to cheer a place up, don’t you?”
    “You figure we got anything to be cheerful about? They’ll screw it up. You know they will. All those priests mucking about in it? I tell you right out, I get my chance there’s a couple accidentally ain’t going to come back from out there.”
    Cordy nodded and kept his mouth shut. Willow Swan was a lot more bark than bite.
    Swan grumbled, “Up the river if this works out. I’ll tell you something, Cordy. These feet get to moving that direction they’re just going to keep on shuffling.”
    “Sure, Willow. Sure.”
    “You don’t believe me, do you?”
    “I believe everything you tell me, Willow. If I didn’t, would I be here, up to my neck, wallowing in rubies and pearls and gold doubloons?”
    “Man, what do you expect of someplace nobody ever heard of six thousand miles past the edge of any map anybody ever seen?”
    Blade came back. “Nerves getting you guys?”
    “Nerves? What nerves? They didn’t put no nerves in when they made Willow Swan.”

 
    14
    Through D’loc Aloc
    We moved out as soon as there was a ghost of light. It was an easy downhill trail with only a few places where we had trouble with the coach and Lady’s wagon. By noon we reached the first trees. An hour later the first contingent were aboard a ferry raft. Before sundown we were inside the jungle of D’loc Aloc, where only ten thousand kinds of bugs tormented our bodies. Worse on our nerves than their buzzing, though, was One-Eye’s suddenly inexhaustible store of praises and tales of his homeland.
    From my first day in the Company I had been trying to get a fix on him and his country. Every lousy detail had had to be pried out. Now it was everything anyone ever wanted to know, and more. Except specifics of why he and his brother had run away from such a paradise.
    From where I sat swatting myself the answer to that seemed self-evident. Only madmen and fools would subject themselves to such continuous torment.
    So which was I?
    For all there was a route through, we spent almost two months

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