
The room fell silent for a second and then, muffled slightly by the wood of the crate, I heard the door open and imperious footsteps enter.
“Any of these?” demanded a soldier.
“No,” replied a voice I took to be the innkeeper’s.
“Has anyone been in here?”
Muffled negations and murmured inquiries as to what the problem was.
“Open those boxes!”
Blood and sand!
I heard movement and a creaking lid, then another; then I saw daylight, and the irritated face of a soldier peering in at me.
SCENE IV A New Problem
The soldier’s eyes lit up: he drew his sword swiftly and had begun to shout when something stopped him. There was a brilliant flash, yellowish, like firelight, but sudden and stark, so that everything solid went flat and pale, casting hard shadows. I think there was a sound too-a bang? Or a sudden and powerful gust of wind? I wasn’t sure. And there was something else, something like falling asleep after too much beer and coming to again with a raging hangover, except that the entire process lasted no more than a few seconds. It was panic, I supposed, and some kind of weird head rush at being shoved into a crate with an Empire soldier about to drag me off to torture and execution. That had to be it.
But there was more. They were fighting. There was grunting and the unmistakable crash of metal on metal, and then a gasp of pain and the sound of a falling body.
God! I was involved in a murderous brawl with Empire guards: a capital offense if ever there was one. I clambered out of the box and started to crawl away.
Someone stepped over my back. I heard a weapon fall and then what sounded like cracking bone. I closed my eyes tighter till someone stood on my wrist and, with a yell of pain, I looked up. The pale kid who had been called Garnet faced a man who might have been the patrol officer.
