
He was a tough buzzard. He had taken the Dragon's Teeth more easily than most, and those are the roughest mountains the gods ever raised.
"Toamas. You okay?" I asked. Chenyth hunkered down beside me. Fetch scooted up, laid a hand on each of our shoulders. Brandy and Russ and the other Kaveliners came over too. Our little army clumped itself into national groups.
"Think it's my ribs, Will. She got me in the ribs." He spoke in little gasps. I checked his mouth.
"No blood. Good. Lungs should be okay."
"You clowns going to talk about it all week?" Fetch snapped. "Help the man, Will."
"You got such a sweet-talking way, Fetch. We should get married. Let's get him up, Chenyth. Maybe he's just winded."
"It's my ribs, Will. They're broke, sure."
"Maybe. Come on, you old woods-runner. Let's try."
"Lord Hammer says carry him if you have to. We've still got to cover eight miles today. More, if the circle isn't alive." Fetch's voice went squeaky and dull, like an old iron hinge that hadn't been oiled for a lifetime. She scurried back to her master.
"I think I'm in love," Chenyth chirped.
"Eight miles," Brandy grumbled. "What the hell? Bastard's trying to kill us."
Chenyth laughed. It was a ghost of his normal tinkle. "You didn't have to sign up, Brandy. He warned us it would be tough."
Brandy wandered away.
"Go easy, Chenyth. He's the kind of guy you got to worry when he stops bitching."
"Wish he'd give it a rest, Will. I haven't heard him say one good word since we met him."
"You meet all kinds in this business. Okay, Toamas?" I asked. We had the old man on his feet. Chenyth brushed water off him. It froze on his hand.
