figures. Nor did any sounds emanate from within. It was as if the keep had been abandoned to the gloom and the peddlerâs ghosts.
The three travelers walked their horses back into the trees some distance away and dismounted. They stood close together as the night descended and the darkness deepened, watching and waiting for something to reveal itself. It was a futile effort.
Jair stared at the keepâs forbidding bulk with certain knowledge of what waited within and felt his skin crawl.
âYou canât go in there,â Kimber said to him suddenly, her voice thin and strained.
âI have to.â
âYou donât have to do anything. Let this go. I can smell the evil in this place. I taste it on the air.â She took hold of his arm. âThat peddler was right. Only ghosts belong here. Grandfather, tell him he doesnât have to go any farther with this.â
Jair looked at Cogline. The old man met his gaze, then turned away. He had decided to leave it up to the Valeman. It was the first time since they had met that he had taken a neutral stance on the matter of the Ildatch. It spoke volumes about his feelings, now that Dun Fee Aran lay before them.
Jair took a deep breath and looked back at Kimber. âI came a long way for nothing if I donât at least try.â
She looked out into the rain and darkness to where the Mwellret castle hunkered down in the shadow of the mountains and shook her head. âI donât care. I didnât know it would be like this. This place feels much worse than I thought it would. I told you beforeâI donât want anything to happen to you. Thisââshe gestured toward the fortressââlooks too difficult for anyone.â
âIt looks abandoned.â
She gave him a withering look. âDonât be stupid. You donât believe that. You know whatâs in there. Why are you even pretending it might be something else?â Her lips compressed in a tight line. âLetâs go back. Right now. Let someone else deal with the Ildatch, someone better able. Jair, itâs too much!â
There was a desperation in her voice that threatened to drain him of what small resolve he had left. Something of the peddlerâs fear reflected now in her eyes, a hint of dark places and darker feelings. She was reacting to the visceral feel of Dun Fee Aran, to its hardness and impenetrability, to its ponderous bulk and immutability. She wasnât a coward, but she was intimidated. He couldnât blame her. He could barely bring himself to consider going inside. It was easier to consider simply walking away.
He looked around, as if he might be doing exactly that. âItâs too late to go anywhere tonight. Letâs make camp back in the trees, where thereâs some shelter. Letâs eat something and get some sleep. Weâll think about what to do. Weâll decide in the morning.â
She seemed to accept that. Without pursuing the matter further, she led the way into the woods, beyond sight and sound of the fortress and its hidden inhabitants, beyond whatever might choose to go abroad. The rain continued to fall and the wind to blow, the unpleasant mix chasing away any possibility of even the smallest of comforts. They found a windbreak within a stand of fir, the best they could expect, tethered and unsaddled their horses, and settled in.
Their stores were low, and Jair surprised the girl and her grandfather by bringing out an aleskin he told them he had been saving for this moment. They would drink it now, a small indulgence to celebrate their safe arrival and to ward against bad feelings and worse weather. He poured liberally into their cups and watched them drink, being careful only to pretend to drink from his own.
His duplicity troubled him. But he was serving what he perceived to be a greater good, and in his mind that justified far worse.
They were asleep within minutes, stretched out on the forest
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