R1 - Rusalka

R1 - Rusalka by C. J. Cherryh Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: R1 - Rusalka by C. J. Cherryh Read Free Book Online
Authors: C. J. Cherryh
clearer and clearer where the road was going.
     
    He was sure there were bandits and worse things beyond: travelers who came to The Cockerel told of forest-devils and things that snatched and clutched, evil spirits which misled a man, and left him to ghosts and wild beasts. He mentioned these to Pyetr, but Pyetr said they were granny-tales, and scoffed, as Pyetr would.
     
    Sasha kept his fears to himself thereafter. He had never
seen
a forest, but he knew the worst of it, and this one looked less and less savory, winter-barren across a winter-ravaged meadow.
     
    There would be snow remaining in that shade, he was sure. There would be all too much of shade in a place like that, there would probably be drifts still standing, and there would be cold. Their thin clothes were scarcely enough to keep warmth in their bones while the sun was shining on their backs and the wind was still.
     
    "I think we should stop," he said to Pyetr, while there was still daylight, "and rest, and not go in there until morning. I can find us grain, still. I think we ought to go in with some in our pockets. And I can make us a bed of straw tonight."
     
    They were at the top of a brushy slope, where the road was completely overgrown, and below was the last of the meadow and the first of the forest. Pyetr stopped there, and gave a great sigh and leaned on the sword he had begun to use as a walking stick. "Good lad," he said, hard-breathing. "Yes. I think that's only prudent."
     
    There was a fair good stand of wild grain about the scattered thickets and rocks, there was the standing brush, and they might at least, Sasha thought, pulling heads of grain for their supper, sleep relatively secure tonight.
     
    Except by twilight, as he was cutting straw with Pyetr's sword, he heard a distant sound that might be horses coming, and he looked up in alarm.
     
    It came again, with a flash of light on the northwestern horizon, above the rolling hills.
     
    The straw was the best hope, Sasha had said, any they could gather, however wet and half-rotten, and Pyetr sat with Sasha's coat around him, clenching his teeth against the cold, binding handfuls with straw twists to tie it around stalks of brushwood, the way Sasha had shown him—very much like thatch, Pyetr saw, once they laid the brushwood sticks down on a rough frame, into a roof, poor though it was and full of gaps, on a frame laid up against a boulder and a leafless clump of brush. The thunder muttered and they built, handful by handful, row by row, Sasha hacking handfuls of straw and bringing it back, building up a bed of brush and a layer of straw, in a nook he had hacked out between the large gray boulder and a berry thicket.
     
    "You're very resourceful," Pyetr was moved to say, teeth chattering, when Sasha joined him in the roof-making. "Sasha my lad, I don't know a gentleman in Vojvoda I'd have in your stead."
     
    "I should have brought the clothes," Sasha said, and flinched as the thunder boomed. His hands were white while they tied knots of twisted grass. Came a second terrible crack, lightning throwing everything into unnatural clarity in the growing dark. "I'm
sorry
, Pyetr Illitch."
     
    "We were rather hurried at the time, both of us. And if we had them they'd only get wet tonight."
     
    Another peal of thunder.
     
    "I'm a jinx!"
     
    "Yesternight it was 'wizard.'"
     
    Sasha scowled and looked hurt at that gibe. "Maybe my wishes only work when it's going to go wrong. Maybe that's the curse on me. Maybe that's why the wizards wouldn't take me."
     
    "Wouldn't take you."
     
    "My uncle brought me to them. After my parents died. There was talk. He asked them might I be a wizard, and they said no, I wasn't. They didn't find anything in me. But they said I was born on a bad day."
     
    "Garbage.".
     
    "I'd think they'd know."
     
    Crack and boom. Sasha flinched again.
     
    "They're fakes. Every one of them."
     
    "I don't know about that."
     
    "I do. Jinxes and wizards are a hoodwink.

Similar Books

Midnight Exposure

Melinda Leigh

Timeless Desire

Gwyn Cready

Last Kiss (Hitman #3)

Jen Frederick, Jessica Clare

Nothing but Trouble

Allegra Gray

Thunder in the East

Mack Maloney