DargonZine | Volume 11, Number 10 |
ren reached up, squinting a little as the last of the day's bright
sunlight hit his eyes. He took a dry shirt from the line, grumbling to
himself as he folded it and placed it in the half-filled basket on the
ground. As far as he was concerned, this was girl's work. Whoever heard
of a boy doing laundry? Then he thought of what he would be doing if
Sian hadn't agreed to let him stay here. He would be cold, filthy and
hungry, and wondering if he would find a dry place to sleep for the
night. Then there was Kerith, his younger sister, who would probably be
dead from fever, or starvation by now. At least here, they both had
clean, warm clothing, and a bowl of broth to warm their bellies each
night before they went to bed. He had to swallow his pride and do this
for Kerith's sake.
"Well, well," a familiar voice made him jump as he reached for the
next shirt. "Isn't this nice? So, what's next Aren, my friend? Down on
your knees to scrub the floor? Or maybe, if you're very good, you'll get
to clean the privvy."
Aren groaned inwardly. This was all he needed.
"Jal!" he turned to greet his friend, forcing a smile. "This is a
surprise!"
He had last seen Jal on the night old Simon had told him to bring
Kerith to Sian's house. Then, Jal had been as filthy and ragged as he
and Kerith, but Aren could see that his friend's circumstances had also
changed for the better. Jal's hair was no longer matted and long, and
crawling with lice, but had been washed and cut, and now shone like raw
black silk in the dying sunlight. His face was clean, his complexion
healthy and the hollows under his eyes and cheekbones were gone. Perhaps
the biggest shock was the way Jal was dressed. Aren had been pleased
enough with the warm woollen clothing Sian had given him, but his friend
looked like a prince in comparison. Jal's tunic and breeches were of a
rich, soft fabric that reminded Aren of a dress his mother used to keep
for special occasions. Tears welled in his eyes as an image of his
mother, wearing that dress, danced into his mind and he blinked hard,
looking down at the ground so Jal wouldn't see.
As he fought the tears, moving a stone around with the toe of his
boot as though that were his real reason for looking at the ground, he
heard the shutter open behind him and turned to find Sian looking out,
her expression unusually stern.
"Aren!" she called. "Come inside, and bring those clothes. There is
much work to be done before supper."
"Go on then Aren," Jal grinned, laughing as Aren's face reddened.
"Do as the nice lady says. You don't want to have to do without supper
do you?"
"It's not like that!" Aren snapped, folding his arms and staying
put. "Sian never makes us do without."
"She makes you work for your supper though doesn't she? You have to
earn every bowl of broth and crust of bread you get. Not like me."
"So what do you have to do for yours?" Aren asked, naturally
suspicious; he had learned quickly on the streets that nothing came
without its price. He was also puzzled. When he had asked Jal to come
with him to Sian's house, his friend had been adamant that there was no
way he would give up his freedom on the streets for the sake of a place
to stay. So what had changed his mind?
"Nothing much really," Jal shrugged casually, although Aren saw a
gleam of self-satisfaction in his friend's eyes. "I just run a few
errands here and there. I get paid too, in coin, and I can come and go
as I please. Why don't you come back with me? They'll let you stay if I
tell them you're a friend of mine. Just think, no more of this skivvying
lark."
"What about Kerith?" Aren asked doubtfully. "Will they let her come
too?"
"It's no place for girls," Jal shook his head regretfully, "but you
could always leave her here."
It was Aren's turn to shake his head, his expression implacable.
"We ran away so that we didn't have to be split up," he said, a
shadow darkening his blue eyes momentarily as another painful memory
surfaced and was banished. "So I'm not going to leave her now that we
have a safe place to stay together."
"I know, but this is different," Jal argued. "Your two aunts were
going to take each of you to opposite ends of the duchy. I only want to
take you to another part of the city. If you come and stay with me you
can visit Kerith every day. You can even bring her presents with the
money you earn."
"No," Aren said firmly. "I won't leave her. I promised her that
we'd stay together and that's what we're going to do. Staying with Sian
isn't all that bad."
"Suit yourself," Jal shrugged as though he didn't care either way,
although Aren noted the glimmer of disappointment in his friend's dark
eyes. "If you change your mind I'll be around."
Aren nodded, although he had no intention of changing his mind. He
watched the other boy go, waving just before Jal moved out of sight,
then sighed and turned to take the last shirt from the line. It would be
nice to earn a little money, to put by for when he and Kerith were
older, but not if it meant leaving his younger sister.
He went inside, stopping to place the basket of clothes on the
floor, before moving to warm his hands by the fire. Despite the bright
sunlight, it had been cold outside. Sian's house was quite homely
really, he mused as he looked around. The kitchen, like the rest of the
house, was sparsely furnished. A well-scrubbed, solid old table and
benches took up most of one wall, and a big old fireplace occupied most
of the other. Over the fire hung a large dented pot, full of simmering
broth. The rug which covered much of the floor was patterned, and had
probably once been full of rich colour. Now, however, it was faded, and
was beginning to wear thin in places. The house was far from being
opulent, but in Aren's mind it was a paradise compared to the meagre
shelter offered by the underside of Dargon's market stalls. Earning his
keep wasn't all that bad either, he supposed. In fact, if he was honest
with himself, it was no worse than the chores he used to have to do for
his mother and father.
A noise made Aren turn to see that Sian had entered the room. He
noted her expression of annoyance with a small sigh of dismay.
"I'd like to speak with you, Aren," she said.
"I'm sorry I didn't come straight in when you called," he offered
hopefully, "but I haven't seen Jal in a long while."
"Jal is the reason I wish to speak with you," Sian said quietly.
"I'm sorry, Aren, but I don't want you to associate with that boy any
more."
"But he's my friend!" he cried, outrage colouring his cheeks
scarlet. "My best friend! I know he lives on the streets, but so did I
-- Kerith too -- and if it hadn't been for Jal we would have both
starved long before we came here."
Sian sighed heavily, stepping forward to put her hands on Aren's
shoulders. "Maybe so," she reasoned, her expression a little less stern,
"and his living on the streets has nothing to do with the fact that I
don't want him coming here. If that were his only fault, I would welcome
him gladly."
"Then what's wrong with him?" Aren shrugged off her hands, glaring
up at her as he moved back towards the table. Sian met his angry stare
with one of calm determination.
"What's wrong with him is the company he keeps," she said. "I have
seen him around Dargon with certain people. People you would not wish to
meet, believe me."
"What people?" Aren was confused. The only people he had ever seen
Jal with were other street children, and Sian had already said that she
didn't object to the fact that he lived on the streets.
"Bad people," Sian said grimly. "People whose notice I don't wish
to gain. People whose deeds would give you nightmares."
"You're wrong!" he argued hotly, fighting the urge to stamp his
foot." Jal looked after Kerith and me when we first took to the streets.
He wouldn't do anything worse than steal his next meal."
"Perhaps not intentionally," Sian agreed, "but as long as he spends
his time with Dargon's sourest dregs, he is not welcome here. And while
you are under my care, you are not to associate with him. Is that clear,
Aren?"
Aren glowered back at her, refusing to answer. Why should he stop
seeing his friend just because *she* said so? She wasn't his mother. She
wasn't even a relative. What made her think that she could order him
around like this just because she let him stay here? He ought to tell
her what she could do with her house and her rules. He ought to take
Kerith and go back to the streets. Jal was right: when you left the
streets you left your freedom too.
The only trouble was that living on the streets had almost killed
his sister. If he took her back there, it wouldn't be long before she
was in the same state again and it would be his fault. He had to stay,
for Kerith's sake, but he wouldn't stop seeing Jal, no matter what Sian
said.
"I said, is that clear Aren?" Sian repeated.
"Yes," he lied sullenly.
"Then you may wash your hands and cut the bread for supper."
Sian watched him slouch across the room to the washbowl, then shook
her head with a sad half-smile as she took an axe from the corner by the
door and went outside. She approached the woodpile and began to work,
swinging the axe with practised ease as she let her thoughts focus on
Aren. She felt badly about having to forbid him to see his friend, but
what else could she have done? She had seen Jal in the market a few days
earlier, and she had recognised his associates. They were men her father
had once pointed out as employees of a man called Liriss, of whom she
had heard rumoured all manner of unwholesome deeds. If she allowed Jal
to come to her house, then people would think that she, too, was
involved with Liriss. Some of her neighbours were disgruntled enough
with the fact that she had opened her doors to street children, and she
could imagine their reaction if they thought she was mixed up with the
less wholesome inhabitants of Dargon. Worse than that was the fear of
attracting the wrong kind of attention to her sanctuary. One of her
strongest motives behind taking in homeless children was to keep them
from people who might take advantage of their situation -- people like
Liriss.
"How much wood do you need?" A woman's voice startled her,
interrupting her swing so that the axe, instead of cleaving another log,
became embedded in the dirt at her feet. She looked up angrily, then
smiled weakly as she recognised her cousin Erin.
"What?" she asked, then looked down at the untidy pile of firewood,
grinning ruefully when she saw how much she had cut. "Oh, I see what you
mean. I'm afraid I got a little carried away. Oh well, it will save me a
job tomorrow."
"So what is taking up so much of your mind that you don't know how
much wood to cut?" Erin asked, raising an eyebrow.
"A slight problem with one of the children, nothing much." She
shrugged casually, unwilling to reveal her fears, knowing that she would
get little sympathy.
Erin shook her dark head with a grimace, letting out a heavy,
exaggerated sigh. "I don't know why you bother with those wretches," she
said with a look of contempt. "I told you at the start that they'd bring
you nothing but trouble. Look at you! You're young, and pretty -- well
you would be if you took a little more care of yourself. Look at your
clothes! My mother's servants are better dressed than you are, and as
for your hands, well, they're rougher than any housemaid's. You should
be looking for a husband instead of playing nursemaid to these
beggar-brats!"
"They are *not* brats!" Sian felt the rush of blood to her cheeks
at her cousin's insult, and she tightened her grip on the axe-handle in
her struggle to remain calm. "They're children. Children who have
nowhere else to turn."
"They're trouble," Erin continued, ignoring the flush of annoyance
spreading across Sian's cheeks. "They're eating away at the money your
father left you. Money that would make a handsome dowry."
Sian threw down the axe and pushed a lock of chestnut hair from
eyes that flashed anger. "I don't need a dowry!" she cried. "And I don't
need a husband. These children however, need a safe place to stay."
"So why do you have to be the one to give it to them?" Erin asked
doggedly.
"Because I know how they feel. You seem to forget that I was once
like them, until Mother and Father took me in and raised me as their
own. They gave me a home, and their love, and a life that wasn't full of
pain. If they were here today, they would be overjoyed to know that I
was able to pass on their gift of a home and love to others."
Erin sighed affectedly and placed a gloved hand on Sian's shoulder,
treating her cousin to a look of pained sufferance.
"But my dear," she wheedled, "you don't seem to realise how all
this is affecting your family. Mother is beside herself with grief at
the thought of her dear niece wasting herself -- and her money -- on
these wretches. Not to mention the acute embarrassment we all feel each
day when some person or other asks about your strange situation."
"Strange?" Sian had never heard it referred to as strange before:
foolhardy maybe, even dangerous, but never strange.
"Yes, strange," her cousin continued primly. "Do you not agree that
it is strange for a young woman, unwedded, to take it upon herself to
care for any waif that happens to turn up at her door? Perhaps a married
woman, like your mother, unable to have children of her own, would be
commended for taking one or two orphans into her care. But for a single
woman to ruin her prospects of a good marriage by becoming mother to a
whole horde of beggar-brats is beyond comprehension. When I think of all
the time and money you have wasted it makes me want to weep, mother
too."
"The only thing that makes you and your precious mother want to
weep is the fact that Father left all his money to me!" Sian raged,
unable to hold her temper any longer. "It consumes you both that he left
everything to some *beggar-brat* he took in off the streets!"
"Why Sian Allyn! Of all the ungrateful ..." Erin spluttered. "How
can you stand there and say such things after all my poor mother did for
you? After your father's death, she spent bells and bells at your side,
comforting you, and all you can do now is blacken her name!"
"You mean she sat around like a queen, having me rush around after
her like some skivvy, until she found out she wasn't getting anything
from Father's estate!" Sian ground out, no longer caring what her
haughty cousin thought of her. She bent to pick up an armful of
kindling, and before Erin could speak again she said, "Now if you don't
mind I have to give the children their supper -- good evening cousin."
Then she turned and marched into the house, slamming the door behind
her.
By morning, Aren had almost forgotten his resentment towards Sian,
and it seemed to him that she too had put her anger aside, because she
was all smiles and singing as she went about her work. She even sang as
she raked out the dead ashes from the hearth, a task she had confessed
to disliking above all others. As he approached her for his breakfast of
fresh warm bread and cheese, she ruffled his short sandy curls and
smiled, a smile that he shyly returned before taking his plate over to
the table.
There were three other children staying at Sian's house besides
himself and Kerith, and as each one came down to breakfast Sian gave
them all the same smiling greeting. Aren nodded in reply to their
good-mornings as he chewed his food, while each took their place at the
table. Aren, at fourteen years, was the oldest, and Kerith, at six, the
youngest, as well as the only girl. He watched her as she ate, nibbling
at the bread and cheese as though she were trying to make it last all
day, and he bit his lip as he remembered how she would do exactly that
with every stale crust he could find for her. She still wasn't fully
well: her colour was better and her smile had returned, but she was
still waif-thin and the dark shadows were not quite gone from beneath
her blue eyes.
"Aren?"
He reluctantly tore his gaze from his sister, but not before he had
given her a reassuring wink.
"I said, will you please pass the water jug?" Finn, a wiry,
freckle-faced boy repeated with forced patience.
"Sorry," Aren mumbled, passing him the jug. "I was elsewhere."
"Elsewhere?" the younger boy shook his head with a laugh, his
coppery hair falling forward over mischief-laden hazel eyes. "Off with
the fairies more like!"
Aren laughed and gave Finn a playful punch on the arm, which the
other boy returned, leading to a friendly tussle, which Sian ended by
pulling them apart and giving each a light-hearted tap on the ear.
"I can see that you two need to find something better to do with
your time," she said sternly, although her eyes were merry. "So you,
Finn, can collect and wash the breakfast plates, and you, Aren, can go
to the market and bring me back some flour, or there'll be no fresh
bread tomorrow."
At this Finn groaned, and Aren couldn't help smirking at his own
good fortune. Now it was someone else's turn for drudgery, while he was
afforded the trust of being sent to the market. It suddenly seemed that
things weren't as unfair as he had first thought: at least Sian made
sure everyone had their share of chores they liked, as well as those
they didn't. Folding laundry didn't seem all that bad when balanced
against a trip to the market.
He went upstairs to put on his boots and the heavy woollen cloak
Sian had given him, and when he returned he found her singing again as
she braided Kerith's long sandy hair.
"Here," she said, reaching into the pocket of her apron with one
hand, while she held onto the braid with the other. "There's a Round,
and take the bag hanging on the back of the door. Bring a bag of flour,
a turnip and some carrots. Someone left us a brace of rabbits on the
doorstep this morning, so they'll help make a nice stew."
Aren took the coin, unable to hide a smile of pride at being
trusted. He kissed Kerith, earning himself a smile so bright it stole
his breath, and warmed him in a way that no fire ever could. It had been
a long time since he had seen her so happy, and he grudgingly admitted
to himself that it was mainly thanks to Sian. Then he turned, grabbed
the bag and went out the door, his step light and quick.
The market felt different somehow. All the usual stalls were there,
and it was as busy as ever, with people from every part of the city
pushing past each other in their hurry to get what they needed, but it
was still different. Aren decided that it must be his change of
circumstances. In the days before he and Kerith had gone to Sian's
house, they would spend most of their time at the market. During the day
they would beg, hoping that some kind-hearted stranger would give them a
few Bits so that they might eat, or they would hang around the bread and
fruit stalls to scavenge bits of food considered unfit for sale. At
night, when all else failed, they would make their bed in the dirt
beneath the stalls. Now he had a Round in his pocket, and the underside
of the stalls were no longer his bed.
The people around him treated him differently too. When he and
Kerith lived on the streets, most of them would look at his ragged
clothes and dirty skin with disgust -- occasionally it would be pity,
but mostly disgust -- before continuing on their way. Now they mostly
ignored him, or gave him a quick nod and a smile as they passed, but no
one looked at him as though he was something unsavoury on the bottom of
their shoe. He had hated begging, and the first time he had held out his
hand he had felt shame, but the shame had soon faded to be replaced with
a kind of numb acceptance of the need to survive. Now he felt no shame.
He had done the only thing he could to keep himself and Kerith alive,
and he would do it again if the need arose.
He soon found a stall which sold good, fresh, vegetables and fruit.
It was a stall he had visited many times over the six months he and
Kerith had been on the streets. The stallholder, a stout, grizzled man
with kind brown eyes, had sometimes beckoned him over and given him
wrinkled or bruised apples. As Aren approached the stall, the man seemed
to recognise him, and frowned, as though puzzled by something. Then he
shrugged and smiled, shaking his head as if he was dismissing an idea.
"What can I get you, young fellow?" he asked cheerfully.
Aren picked up the largest turnip he could see and held it up in
both hands, turning it over as he checked to make sure it was good. Then
he held it out to the stallholder.
"And I'll have six of your nicest carrots," he said proudly,
holding out the roughly woven bag Sian had given him.
The man took the bag and placed the turnip inside, then began
counting out the carrots. Aren fumbled in his pocket for the Round. He
pulled it out and handed it to the stallholder in exchange for the
goods, unable to suppress a grin. For every spoiled apple he had taken
from this man he had given a little of his pride. He knew the man had
meant only kindness, but it had still made him feel worthless. Now he
could look the man in the eye as he gave his thanks and received his
change. Now he felt warm inside instead of wretched.
In less than a bell, he had bought everything Sian had asked for,
and had a few Bits left over. As he passed a pie-stall, the aroma of
meat and spices made his mouth water, and he was sorely tempted to buy a
small pie to eat on his way back to Sian's house, but he resisted. Sian
had trusted him with the money, and he would take all the change back
with him to repay that trust. Besides, he had eaten more for breakfast
than he would have had in several days on the streets. He wasn't really
hungry -- just tempted by the smell. He turned away from the stall and
began to walk in the direction of Sian's house, stopping every now and
then when something caught his eye.
He was watching a juggler, mesmerised by the ease and speed in
which the colourfully dressed man was throwing and catching five
brightly painted wooden batons, when he caught sight of a familiar
figure strolling past the gathered crowd. For a moment he only stared as
he wondered whether or not he should call out to Jal. Sian had forbidden
him to see his friend, and whether he liked it or not he sensed that she
would not have lied to him about Jal's associates. He didn't want to
anger Sian and jeopardise his and Kerith's new life. Then again, Jal
*was* his friend, and even if he was mixed up with a bad lot, it didn't
mean that he, too, was bad. Jal had helped him when no one else would,
shown him where to find food and helped him gain acceptance with the
other street children. He couldn't just cut him off now that he no
longer needed his help.
"Jal!" he called, standing on tiptoe and waving above the crowd to
catch the other boy's attention. "Jal! Over here!"
Jal saw him and grinned, raising a hand in greeting as he hurried
to where Aren was standing.
"What's this? Has the lady slaver let you out?" he teased, laughing
as Aren's cheeks reddened almost immediately.
"She's not that bad, I told you," Aren retorted. "In fact you'd
like her once you got to know her."
"Just as I'd get to like pig-slop once I'd eaten enough of it?" Jal
laughed again, although there was a harshness to the laughter, the
reason for which Aren knew only too well. They had both eaten more than
their fair share of pig-slop when things were at their worst, and Aren
knew that it was a taste to be endured rather than acquired.
"So what are you up to?" Jal asked, eyeing the packages Aren
carried.
"Just fetching a few things for Sian," Aren shrugged, pointedly
ignoring Jal's grimace.
"So, do you fancy a walk? Tag along with me while I run an errand?"
Aren looked doubtful. He had already spent a good while watching
the juggler and wandering around the stalls, so added to the time he had
spent shopping he guessed that he had been out for a couple of bells
already. Sian would already be wondering where he was, and he supposed
he should get back before she started to worry.
"I don't know," he began, "I should really be taking this lot
back."
"Oh come on!" Jal urged. "It'll only take a little while, and it
will give you a chance to see what your life would be like if you came
with me. Come on, we'll find somewhere to hide your packages so you
won't have to carry them around."
Aren chewed his lip. It wouldn't do any harm for just a little
while, he supposed, and he could always tell Sian he had lost track of
time while watching the entertainers. Jal looked so eager and earnest
that he found it hard to say no.
"All right," he grinned at last, "but just for a little while,
mind. Sian'll have my eyeballs for earrings if I'm gone all day."
"We'll be back before you know it, I promise," Jal agreed solemnly.
"Now come on, let's find somewhere to hide your things."
They hid Aren's purchases in Spirit's Haven's stables, behind a
stack of hay bales in a dark corner. Aren felt uneasy in the stables: he
and Kerith had slept there several times, sneaking in before the doors
were locked and hiding themselves in that same corner until morning.
Three sennights ago he would have been overjoyed to find himself there,
knowing that it would be one night they wouldn't have to worry about the
cold and rain. Now it only brought back memories of their suffering.
"Come on," he urged Jal, who was busy making sure the packages
could not be seen from the door. "I have to get back soon."
"All right!" Jal laughed. "Didn't realise you were so eager to see
what I do."
"I'm not," Aren replied, although he knew that wasn't entirely
true. He *was* curious to see what Jal did, if only to be able to tell
Sian that she was wrong about his friend. He was also curious to see how
Jal could afford such fine clothes from running errands.
They left the stable and Jal led him through the city towards the
docks. As they walked further and further away from the market and
Sian's house on Murson Street, Aren began to grow more and more uneasy.
There was no way he would be able to get back in time to stop Sian
worrying, yet if he turned back now his friend would scorn him. He had
no choice but to follow.
"Where are we going?" he asked as Jal turned along Tanner Street.
"Not much farther," his friend replied, "I just have a small
package to deliver to a man down here and then we can get back."
"And how much will you get paid for this?"
"Depends on how much the package is worth," Jal shrugged, "Anything
from a couple of Bits to a Round, maybe more if this fellow's generous
enough to give me a tip."
"And how many errands do you have to run in a day?"
"This is my second and last for today," Jal answered, frowning at
the question. "Why do you want to know so much?"
"Just curious."
"About what?"
"About the fact that you can afford such finery on a couple of
Rounds a day."
"Oh that," Jal grinned, pausing to rummage under his cloak. After a
moment he produced a heavy gold ladies bangle, which glittered in the
weak autumnal sun as he held it up before Aren's astonished eyes.
"Where did you get that?" Aren wasn't sure that he wanted to know.
"Let's just say that I acquired it," came the smug reply.
"You stole it?" Aren was aghast. "When? At the market? How could
you be so foolish? What if you'd got caught? What if ..."
"Hey! Slow down!" Jal laughed, holding up his arms as if to ward
off a blow. "First of all I didn't steal it at the market. I wouldn't
risk attracting such attention to myself."
"So where did you get it?" Aren was unconvinced.
"When we met I had just finished an errand to a jeweller," Jal
explained. "He had a box of knick-knacks on a shelf behind the counter,
probably things he was going to melt down and make new, and when he went
into the back to get me my tip I took advantage of the opportunity,
that's all. He probably didn't even know what was in the box."
"It's still stealing!" Aren refused to be swayed. In all his time
on the streets he had never resorted to stealing things of worth. Of
course, there had been times when he had taken food from the market when
a stall-holder's back was turned, and he had once taken a cloak from a
washing line for Kerith, but that was out of desperation. This was
different: Jal obviously didn't need to steal anything anymore.
"Stop looking at me as though I'd just crawled out of a cesspool!"
Jal snapped, thrusting the bangle back into his clothing. "I didn't set
out to steal, I never do, but if he was stupid enough to leave a box of
gold unattended then he deserved to lose a little. It's not as though I
took something that someone really needed. I'd never do that."
"So what are you going to do with it?" Aren saw that it would be
futile to argue the matter further. "You can't exactly spend a bangle."
"I know some people who will pay handsomely for such a trinket,"
Jal replied casually. "People who won't be too interested in where it
came from."
Aren remained silent. Jal was probably talking about the people
Sian had spoken of the previous night. It hurt him to know that he had
been so wrong about his friend, more than he had thought possible. Jal
had been so good to him, how could he have changed so much in a few
sennights?
"I think I'd better go," he said after several awkward moments.
"Suit yourself," Jal retorted sullenly. "It's your loss."
"Yes," Aren nodded sadly. "I think it probably is."
He turned and walked away, his steps as heavy as his heart. He
still couldn't believe that he had been so wrong about his best friend.
He and Kerith had spent the best part of six months with Jal, and in all
that time he had never seen the other boy do anything worse than steal
enough food to keep starvation at bay. Yet here he was, stealing for
gain -- for excitement even. It didn't make sense. Perhaps it was the
influence of his new friends; Aren didn't know. What he did know was
that he couldn't be Jal's friend anymore, and that hurt more than
anything.
By the time he got back to the market, after retrieving his goods
from Spirit's Haven -- which had taken much longer than he would have
wished, because May, the owner, had caught him and asked lots of
questions before she was satisfied that the goods were really his --
people were beginning to pack up their stalls, and his heart sank ever
further when he realised how long he had been gone. Sian was going to be
angry with him, and he didn't know if he could face that on top of
everything else. He had to, he knew that, but thoughts of the reception
he would get when he walked through the door would make the rest of his
walk home even more miserable. As it was, he didn't have to wait that
long to find out how Sian would react to his lateness, because as he
walked between the half-empty stalls she appeared before him, her
expression causing him to bite his lip and hang his head.
"Do you have any idea how worried I've been, Aren Greythorn?" she
asked angrily as she strode towards him. "What have you been doing all
this time?"
"I ... I went for a walk," he gulped.
"With that friend of yours I'll wager!" she snapped, snatching the
bag of flour from him with one hand and grasping the edge of his cloak
with the other. When he didn't deny her accusation she continued. "I
meant what I said Aren. I will not have my house brought into disrepute,
for you or anyone."
"I'm sorry. I ..." Aren began, but Sian was in no mood to listen.
"I don't care! Now you have two choices. You can either come with
me now and forget about your friend, or you can turn around and never
set foot through my door again. Which is it to be?"
Aren felt a stab of resentment. He had been about to tell her that
his decision had already been made, that he had already turned his back
on Jal, but she hadn't let him finish. Now she would just think he was
making it up to get himself out of trouble, so why should he even
attempt to explain? He was tempted to walk away. Kerith was happy enough
with Sian -- yes, she would miss him, but she would be well cared-for
and she would forget him through time -- but where would he go? To Jal?
No, he couldn't do that: his innate sense of honour would not allow him
to turn a blind eye to Jal's stealing. Nor could he work for people who
encouraged wrongdoing. He could always go back to the streets; he could
survive well enough without Kerith to worry about. The trouble was that
he didn't want to survive. He wanted to live.
He was about to reply when he became aware of a commotion in the
street beyond the next stall, and he turned, startled by the sudden
noise. A man was holding Jal by the hood of his cloak and shouting.
"You little brigand! I know it was you! Now give it back before I
turn you in to the guard!"
Aren hadn't seen the man before, but he guessed it to be the
jeweller, either that or Jal had stolen again. As he watched, Jal
slipped the clasp on his cloak and ran down the street. The man chased,
still shouting, his language becoming more and more vulgar. Aren saw a
cart and horses moving towards them from the opposite end of the street.
He called out a warning, but Jal didn't hear. He was looking back at the
jeweller as he ran, dodging this way and that to avoid the man's
attempts to grab him. He was still looking behind him when he collided
with one of the horses, and Aren closed his eyes and put his hands to
his ears to try to block out the agonised scream as his friend was
trampled. The scream ended abruptly, and ignoring Sian's cry, Aren
dropped the bag with the carrots and the turnip and ran as fast as he
could towards the cart and the gathering crowd. As he approached he
heard the jeweller cry out in triumph.
"I knew it! See! I knew the little bastard had it!"
Then another voice, one Aren didn't recognise. "Well the poor
little bugger won't be stealing nothing else. His neck's broke."
Aren stopped on the edge of the crowd. Part of him didn't believe
that his friend was dead and wanted to push through to find Jal sitting
there, rubbing his bruises and grinning his grin. Another part, which
had seen his mother lying so still and cold after the fever, didn't want
to see. He began to cry. Tears streamed down his face, and the tears
turned to loud, choking sobs that sent him to his knees in the dirt, his
arms wrapped around his body as if to try to comfort himself. Then he
felt other arms around him and he turned his head to find Sian kneeling
beside him, her own eyes moist.
"He ... was ... my ... best ... friend!" he sobbed. "He ... wasn't
bad. He ... just made ... a mistake!"
"I know," Sian soothed, stroking his hair. "I know."
"You hated him!" he accused angrily, struggling against her, but
she held him fast.
"No, I didn't hate him," she sighed. "I would have helped him if I
could, but he was already lost. The people he was with would not have
let him go. If he hadn't been caught today it would have been some other
time, either that or he would have crossed his masters and paid with his
life. I only forbade you from seeing him because I didn't want you to be
lost too. One child's death through Liriss and his fiends is one too
many."
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