Ruein: Fires of Haraden: Action/Adventure Necromancy Series (Books of Ruein Book 2) G.O. Turner (top 20 books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: G.O. Turner
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He pointed with his lantern hand. âThere.â
âWhat?â Liv squinted into the dark. âThe clump of pines?â
Clipping the compass shut, Leafar repocketed. âIfân youâre looking for the sun, itâs about a gobtillian leagues off that direction. We wonât be seeing it again.â
With a rustle to Livâs side, Twigs sat up. âAh, Leafar on rounds? Must be the morrow.â
Leafar surveyed the three. âClose enough. Is everyone up for a good word then?â
A couple Nurskers came behind the resting carrybou. They prodded with sticks, prompting them to rise and shed their accumulated snow. This also dropped Ceerâs fur encasement, since heâd been propped against one.
Thick half-orc arms stretched out as he uprighted himself. His tusked jaw rounded over as he chewed at his morning breath. Still seated, he looked down on the lantern-wielding gnome.
âYes. Well.â Leafar thumped his mitten against his thigh. âWeâre just half a day away now. Thatâs good, right?â
Liv got to her feet. She stretched and offered a half-hearted, âYay.â
Ruein eyed her sister. Guess the cold was having its way with her as well. Ruein said to Leafar, âGood words are often couched in something. Thereâs more?â
âYes, well. From here on out, everythingâs going to be all white. Ha! Literally. Ya see, I set camp here for a reason. This is as close as we get before the north turns against travelers. Once we get underway, weâll be entering the âWandering White.â Wind and snows so heavy youâll not be able to tell earth from sky.â
A Nursker approached Leafar. Behind the shoreman, two lengths of shipping rope ended in harness clamps. The gnome dismissed him with a wave toward the oil wagon before continuing, âHells, even the carrybou donât know what way to go. Itâs why we tether together, and why Iâm here. Behold, the only gnome whatâs got the path to Haraden.â
âIâm not sure I follow,â said Ruein.
âWell, you better.â Leafar thumbed at himself. âAt least me. Thereâs a reason Haraden is not on a map. The Wandering White is a perfect ward. It surrounds the Realm. Outside of a hand before your face, or maybe the wagon before you, itâs an unending blizzard. Try and chart the vastness of white on white. Itâs not going to happen.â
Twigs scratched at his scalp. âSo then, what would you have us do?â
âOutside of outfitting wagon sleds? Pretty much nothing. All you really gotta do is hold on and not fall off. Thatâs gonna be kinda important, if ya think about it, you being on the ass-end of things. Get separated from the caravan and thatâs it. Youâre lost. Might as well just bury yourself. Nothing comes out of the White.â
Ceer leaned. âNothing?â
âWellâŠso long as you have the good sense to stick with our caravan. We will.â
âIâve a question.â Livâs headdress reaffixed, she lifted her coat hood. âWhat sort of Stygian hell is HaradenâŠto be founded way the fuck out here?â
Leafar smiled back. âYes. Well, some questions are best self-answered.â
âUrgh?â Ceerâs jaw went askew.
Twigs pat at the half-orc. âHeâs saying, âYouâll see.ââ
With a heel-to-toe sway, Leafar addressed everyone. âSo, whoâs the lucky one to have my guidance on how to properly sleigh their wagon?â
âSlay?â Ceerâs brow bunched.
âYouâve me.â Ruein stepped forward. She glanced over Liv, Twigs, and Ceer. âEnjoy what time you have by the fire. Sounds like itâll be a while before weâll have warmth again.â
âSmall blessings.â Liv smirked at the flames. She lowered onto her knees, settling into her reverent position. Taking the cue, Ceer and Twigs went about bundling their bedding.
Ruein began her drudge back to the wagon, Leafar following in her wake. She peered ahead to the busywork of the Nurskers; even the stout one lent aid. Hardened faces grimaced through the cold, hitching up carrybou and tethering wagons together.
Odd, their relationship to Leafar.
Yet now these stern people made more sense. There was a hesitancy against riling their diminutive guide. Without him, theyâd lose trade with the only wealthy state in the region. It gave him a unique position for this place.
Ruein called over her shoulder, âHow is it youâve garnered such a task, leading a caravan across the end of the earth?â
Leafar huffed, keeping pace. âOh, skills. Iâve unique skills. Without me, Haraden wouldnât have acquired such refined appetites. Harvests of the seas may be a way of life for Nursk. To them, itâs just fish. To HaradenâŠfish are luxury. Iâve plenty to profit in bridging that difference.â
âSo youâre not from Haraden?â
âNo. Happened upon the right circumstances. Saw the opportunity and just the right nook to call my own.â
The two paused before the oil wagon. The Nurskers departed with respectful waves to their guide. He acknowledged with a nod and motioned for Ruein to follow.
After passing under the deer, Leafar popped back out the other side. He raised an upturned thumb. âSâall good. Those two ropes tie the whole caravan together. Even if one should give out, youâll still have the other as backup. Now we just need you to lighten the load off these wheels.â He directed his lantern to illuminate just under the wagon racks. âSee those long planks with the curved heads? Yank those on down, and Iâll show ya how best to situate.â
Ruein unwound the cord holding the first clasp. Leaving the wood seated within the open bracket, she made her way to the back of the wagon. Already the thawed moisture within her was stiffening. Her snowed boot-crunch provided cover enough.
She began to unwind the second cord.
Then sensed it again.
DistantâŠhoveringâŠeyes upon her.
Ruein focused in, honing to everything around. Shut out the gusts, the grunts of deer. Was there more? It came as a faint squinch. A compacting drift from behind. She turned and stared.
There were no trees on the trail. Hell, there was no trail. The full night of blanketing snow and winds had erased their tracks. Yet, something did move on the verge of her senses, a vague whiteness against the distant blank. That, and a black smudge just above the snowâs surface.
It roved there for a moment.
The whiteness
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