Fistandantilus Reborn - Douglas Niles [81]
Moving at a fast walk, he gradually realized that he could, in fact, discern the path better than before. Looking upward, he saw a patch of the eastern sky between two conical evergreens; the rosy tint of dawn was already reaching toward the zenith.
Still making good time, Danyal focused his attentions on locating a good place for them to hide during the day The copse of woods they traversed ended soon, and the small party broke into a jog as they crossed a meadow of tall grass and drooping, dew-laden flowers. The stream was out of sight to the left, running through a channel that was slightly deeper than ground level. Soon the enclosing arms of the pines were around them again as they entered a much larger grove.
“It looks like this woods goes some way up the side valley,” Danyal noted as the four travelers paused to catch their breath. “Maybe we should get off this trail and try to hide ourselves up there, at least until dark.”
“Are we running from something?” Emilo asked. His eyes no longer lacked focus, but he asked the question with obvious sincerity.
“Some men-evil men. I’ll tell you all about it when we find shelter,”
Mirabeth said. “Until then you’ll just have to trust us.”
“I do,” the kender agreed, chewing on the trailing end of his topknot.
“But why don’t I remember anything? Even my name?”
“I told you, you’re Emilo Haversack,” the kendermaid declared sternly.
“And you’re our friend, and you’ll just have to be satisfied with that for now.”
Silently accepting, Emilo mouthed the clearly unfamiliar sounds of his name several times. Danyal, meanwhile, ducked under the low branches of an evergreen and found a small clearing giving passage through the woods.
“Go on ahead,” he told Mirabeth as she followed with Emilo and Foryth. “I’ll brush our tracks off the trail to cover our route if we’re followed.”
“Good idea!” the historian agreed, absently grinding his heel into the ground as he tried to adjust his bootlace. “Would you like me to help?”
“Urn, no,” the lad demurred. Foryth followed the two kender while Danyal followed their backtrail to the edge of the meadow. The grass was trampled flat and would undoubtedly mark their passing for some hours to come, so he decided to concentrate on masking their route through the woods.
In several places, he could see footprints, mostly from the historian, in the soft loam of the needle-covered ground. He brushed these with a branch, starting to back carefully along the route they had taken.
Abruptly he was taken with an idea. He stepped into the meadow at the end of the trail the companions had made. Moving at a right angle to their path, he took low, sweeping steps toward the bank of the stream.
Trampling the grass, he stepped firmly, holding his feet in place to leave clear marks.
When he reached the edge of the water, he saw that the banks of the streambed were slightly taller than his own height. A short distance below, the water babbled cheerfully along a flat, graveled bed, the flowage no more than a foot or two deep. At the lip of the tall bank, Danyal skidded downward, intentionally leaving a gouge in the dirt and a footprint at the very edge of the water. Next he rinsed his feet free of mud, then climbed across several boulders until he reached the fringe of the wood. Seizing a root of pine, he pulled himself into the shelter of the trees. Here he stepped lightly as he returned to the original backtrail and continued to sweep away their tracks until he reached the place where the trio had turned toward the deep woods.
Danyal took care to obliterate every sign of their passage, feeling a strange thrill at the thought that he was deceiving Kelryn Darewind, Zack, and the other bandits. Of course, a stern and practical part of him was afraid that they might be