CHAPTER FIVE

The pounding echo trapped inside Druz Talimsir's aching skull woke her. Rough leather bound her hands at the wrists, and she'd lost feeling in most of her fingers. The scent of loamy ground filled her nostrils, threaded through by the thick odor of a cookfire and the stink of meat charred on the outside while grease dripped from the center. Men's voices carried on constant conversations and evidently never-ending arguments.

"There's nothing to fear by letting them know you're awake."

Druz recognized the calm voice as the druid's and opened her eyes. She didn't move. Even if the druid was right, she didn't want him to think she was responding to his voice. He was part of the reason she'd been taken by the slavers. There was no way she was going to believe the slavers had managed to approach him without him knowing, but she had no idea why the elf hadn't warned her.

For one brief moment, she thought that maybe he was working with the slavers. No one knew for certain what the Emerald Enclave's true agenda was in the Vilhon Reach. Most were in agreement that the druids didn't care for cities or further expansion of civilization, but taking up with slavers from Nimpeth was surely something they wouldn't even consider.

"They've settled in for the night," the druid said a moment later.

The cookfires had told Druz that. She opened her eyes and saw the druid sitting next to her. Leather strips bound his hands as they did hers, attached to a padded, heavy chain that lay across the ground. All of the other slaves were bound to the same chain. Druz pulled at the leather with all her strength, but she succeeded only in drawing the attention of one of the guards.

"They caught you, too?" she asked as she pushed herself into a sitting position.

The druid hesitated only a moment. "Yes."

Druz knew at once that the druid was lying. There was no way the slavers would have been able to keep up with him in the forest.

"Why did you stay?" she asked.

He turned toward her and said, "Because I agreed to let you accompany me on the hunt for the rogue wolf."

"Getting captured isn't going to get that done."

Druz struggled to keep the defeat from her voice, but it was hard. She knew what lay in store for all of them-including the druid if he wasn't as good at escaping as he evidently thought he was.

"I didn't want something to… happen to you," the druid replied.

"I'm not going to believe you're concerned about my welfare."

His green eyes regarded her dispassionately as he said, "Would you be concerned about mine?"

"No more than anyone else I don't know," Druz replied truthfully. She held up her hands, dragging the heavy chain up after them. "I wouldn't have wished this on you."

The druid nodded. "Nor I you." He paused for a moment, glancing back at the campsite, then said, "However, if something happened to you, there would be no witness to tell the man who hired you that his son had been avenged. Other hunters would be employed, and more wolves would die."

"And that's what worries you?" Druz didn't even try to keep the sarcasm from her voice.

Shifting his dark gaze back to her, the druid said, "Those men would die, too. Would that concern you?"

Druz considered the possibility only for a moment. Images of other hunters getting picked off one by one in the forest filled her head.

"If you killed those men," she said, "they would put a bounty on your head."

"Yes."

Or maybe there already is one. The thought occurred to Druz in a flash. It wouldn't have been the first time a druid from the Emerald Enclave was marked for death by one of the cities of the Vilhon Reach.

She said, "I don't even know your name."

The druid was silent for a time. He shifted against the tree, uncomfortable, and said, "I am called Haarn Brightoak."

Druz shook her head. Knowing his name now, when they were both captives, somehow made the situation worse. She pushed her breath out and tried to relax.

"You should have escaped."

"I couldn't," Haarn replied.

"Because of me?"

The druid gazed at her and said, "Partly, but if I hadn't surrendered myself, these men might have tried to get away."

A chill spread across Druz's shoulders and ran down her spine. She'd heard terrible stories about druids. Some sages maintained that the druids, including members of the Emerald Enclave, were good and honest men and women whose reverence for nature clouded their judgment and made them do things that didn't fit in with civilized thinking. Others proclaimed the druids as savages, capable of torture and brutal killing.

Most of the other people tied to the slaver chain slept. Druz counted twenty-seven men, women, and children other than herself and the druid. One woman held a small child to her breast. All of the slaves looked hard-used, as if they'd been on the chain for days, perhaps even as much as a tenday. Their skin was sunburned and their clothing, common and homespun at best, hung in rags.

"Where did these people come from?" Druz asked.

"A small village somewhere close by," Haarn answered.

"You don't know where?"

"Some of the outlying villages don't have names. They learn to be autonomous, trading only occasionally with passing merchants or each other. Many of them don't see the need to pay the taxes cities like Alagh?n levy on people who only try to survive." The druid turned to her and added, "Living in such conditions, paying faceless tax agents of Lord Herengar and the Assembly of Stars, isn't much better than living in the servitude they're bound for now."

Druz bridled at the comment. Though she didn't know Lord Herengar personally, she knew of him.

"Lord Herengar is a good man," she said, "a fair man."

"Before he was named as ruler of Turmish, acting on behalf of the Assembly of Stars," Haarn said, "he was a leader of a mercenary band called the Call of Arms. He acted in his own interests then, and he continues to do so now."

"Those taxes you speak out against help make the city safe," Druz insisted.

In the back of her mind, she knew she should be more concerned about escaping, but there was something about the druid that challenged her and made her want to make him see cities the way they really were-as homes and havens. Maybe it was the dismissive way he treated her, and maybe it was because she'd never been around a man so arrogant and confident as the druid. Even here in the midst of the slavers he spoke as if he'd trapped them instead of it being the other way around.

Haarn smiled and said, "So Herengar heads up a new mercenary band and demands tribute for his services-one that pays much better."

"Most people in the city wouldn't know how to fight to defend themselves," Druz argued.

"And they lose themselves because they are not taught to do that," Haarn said bluntly. "Take away a person's ability to protect himself, to know enough to survive on his own, and you only have a slave. A privileged slave, perhaps, but a slave nonetheless." He took up the padded chain. "Maybe you can't see the chains on those 'citizens,' Druz Talimsir, but they are there."

"Cities allow people to raise their children in peace." Druz disliked the way the druid seemed to look down on everything about her. "I've fought, defending towns and cities during time of war."

"Against others who felt certain that whatever it was they were after from the places you defended rightly belonged to them," Haarn stated angrily, "because they decided to own one section of a land or another."

"Territorial wars are the most common-" Druz started to go on, but the druid cut her off.

"The land isn't meant to be owned," Haarn said. "It's meant to be treasured and tended. The land will provide sustenance to creatures that understand its needs and its gifts. Cities are spawning grounds for maggots that reap what they will of the land and leave only a decaying husk behind."


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