
"I loathe him. But what's a man to do? A small stroke here and there. Like this. One does what he can."
Conrad took the sack from the old man's hand. "I'll carry this," he said. "Later we can put it with Beauty's pack."
"You think the Reaver and his men will follow?" Duncan asked.
"I don't know. Probably not, but one can't be sure."
"You say you hate him. Why don't you travel with us? Surely you do not want to stay with him."
"Not with him. Willingly I'd join you. But I cannot leave the bees."
"The bees?"
"Sir, do you know anything of bees?"
"Very little."
"They are," said Cedric, "the most amazing creatures. In one hive of them alone their numbers cannot be counted. But they need a human to help them. Each year there must be a strong queen to lay many eggs. One queen. One queen only, mind you, if the hive is to be kept up to strength. If there are more than one, the bees will swarm, part of them going elsewhere, cutting down the number in the hive. To keep them strong there must be a bee master who knows how to manage them. You go through the comb, you see, seeking out the extra queen cells and these you destroy. You might even destroy a queen who is growing old and see that a strong new queen is raised…"
"Because of this, you'll stay with the Reaver?"
The old man drew himself erect. "I love my bees," he said. "They need me."
Conrad growled. "A pox on bees. We'll die here, talking of your bees."
"I talk too much of bees," the old man said. "Follow me. Keep close upon my heels."
He flitted like a ghost ahead of them. At times he jogged, at other times he ran, then again he'd go cautiously and slowly, feeling out his way.
They went down into a little valley, climbed a ridge, plunged down into another larger valley, left it to climb yet another ridge. Above them the stars wheeled slowly in the sky and the moon inclined to the west. The chill wind still blew out of the north, but there was no rain.
