Amber and Iron - Margaret Weis [113]
Mina.
ightshade left the grotto with a heavy heart—a heart that was too heavy to stay properly in his chest but sank down to his stomach, where it took offense to the salt pork and gave him a bellyache. From there, his heart sank still further, adding its weight to his feet so they moved slower and slower, until it was an effort to make them move at all. His heart grew heavier the farther he went.
Nightshade’s brain kept telling him he was on an Urgent Mission to save Rhys. The problem was his heart didn’t believe it, so that not only was his heart down around his shoes, flummoxing his feet, his heart was in an argument with his head, not to mention the salt pork.
Nightshade ignored his heart and obeyed his head. The head was Logic, and humans were impressed with Logic and were always stressing how important it was to behave logically. Logic dictated Nightshade would stand a better chance of rescuing Rhys if he brought back help in the form of monks of Majere than if he—a mere kender—stayed with Rhys in the grotto. It was the Logic of Rhys’s argument that had persuaded Nightshade to leave, and this same Logic kept him moving ahead when his heart urged him to turn around and run back.
Atta stayed close at his heels, as she’d been commanded. Her heart must have bothered her as well, for she kept stopping, drawing severe scoldings from the kender.
“Atta! Here, girl! You’ve got to keep up with me!” Nightshade admonished. “We don’t have time for lollygagging about.”
Atta would trot after him because that was what she’d been told to do, but she was not happy, and neither was Nightshade.
The walking itself was another problem. Solinari and Lunitari were both in the sky this night. Solinari was half-full and Lunitari completely full, so that it seemed the moons were winking at Nightshade like mismatched eyes. He could see the ridgeline up above where he walked and he calculated—logically—that on top of this ridge he would find a road, and that road would lead to Flotsam. The ridge didn’t look to be that far away—just a hop, skip, and a jump over some sand dunes, followed by a scramble among some boulders.
The sand dunes proved difficult to navigate, however. Hop, skip, and jump failed utterly. The sand was loose and squishy and slid out from underneath his boots that were already slick from the salt pork. He envied Atta, who pattered along on top of the sand, and wished he had four feet. Nightshade floundered through the sand for what seemed forever, spending more time on his hands and knees than he did on his feet. He grew hot and worn out, and whenever he looked he found the ridge appeared to be moving farther away.
All things do come to an end, however, even sand dunes. This left the boulders. Nightshade figured boulders had to be better than dunes, and he started climbing the ridge with relief.
Relief that soon evaporated.
He didn’t know boulders came in such immense sizes or that they would be this sharp, or that climbing them would be this difficult, or that the rats living among the boulders would be this big and nasty. Fortunately, he had Atta with him, or the rats might have carried him off, for they weren’t in the least afraid of a kender. They did not like the dog, however. Atta barked at the rats. They glared at her with red eyes, chittered at her, then slunk away.
After only a short sojourn among the boulders, Nightshade’s hands were cut and bleeding. His ankle hurt from where he’d slipped and wedged it in a crack. He had to stop once to throw up, but that at least took care of the salt pork problem.
Then, just when it seemed like these boulders must go on forever, he reached the top of the ridge.
Nightshade stepped out on the road that would take him to Flotsam and the monks, and he looked up the road and he looked down the road. His first thought was that the word “road” was paying this strip of rocky wagon ruts a compliment it did not deserve. His