Spoils of War (Tales of the Apt Book 1) Adrian Tchaikovsky (good books to read for teens TXT) đ
- Author: Adrian Tchaikovsky
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We went in next morning, once dawn and a bottle of war-loot wine had emboldened the Wasps. Fael would go first, with Skessi hovering at his shoulder, and then the Wasps with me in armâs reach, in case of funny business. The Imperials had a couple of hissing gas lanterns, one of which was forced on me. If it had been just the two of them, matters would have been easier, but Skessiâs eyes were as good in the dark as mine.
Still, after some searching and shifting, the plan proved its worth by providing a passage into the earth that was only partially choked with fallen stones. It was a sheer drop, but Faelâs wings carried him down there easily enough. Skessi didnât look keen to follow, but a dirty look from Roven convinced him, and he fluttered down after.
âWhereâd you and he hear about this place?â Roven growled, one ear cocked for a report.
âWe turned over a castle crypt where your lot had been. Good business: Empire doesnât know thatâs where the good stuff is, half the time. Only we found clues, there. The nobles had a branch lived over here, âtil they died out. Rich as rich, Fael reckoned, and whoâs been here to dig it up, but us?â
âLocal boys didnât seem so shy,â Roven pointed out. âHowâd you know theyâve not had it all?â
âOh, you wonât find any locals willing to go into a noble familyâs crypts,â I told him lightly. âNot with the curses.â
âYou donât believe that,â nothing but a growl deep in Rovenâs throat.
âOh weâre all civilised sorts from the Spiderlands,â I said. âStill, makes you think, doesnât it?â
âCome on down,â came Skessiâs distant call, and we did so, the Wasps lowered on spread wings, and me hand over hand down the wall. The gaslamps threw guttering shadows across walls made of irregular stones that still fit into each other so tight youâd not get a blade in.
âThis is never just for the dead,â Roven spat. âToo much work. Burn âem or bury âem, but not all this digging and masonry.â
âReckon they took their dead seriously, back then,â I put in. Fael and Skessi were already ahead, but it was so pitchy down there that even they had so stay in the edge of the lantern light. I wasnât sure then that this wasnât just some kind of grain store. Fael was leading strong, but it wouldnât have done to show we werenât sure. I was as much in the dark as Roven right then.
Iâd have been able to pacify the Wasps, I think, had we turned up nothing but a few jars of rice that first day, but some kind of luck was with us - good or bad, your call - because Fael found some gold.
It was in some niches in the wall, and there wasnât much, but it was enough to make us look good. No bodies, mind, just a little trinketry: broaches, rings. I caught Faelâs eye, because of the two plans we were running right then, the first one - the get rich one - had turned out sunny. That stuff weâd read in that other old castle looked to have been true after all, just like I told Roven. Of course, the second plan, the new one, would need a bit of work.
Roven and Merric confiscated all that glittered, although Iâd bet Skessi pocketed a handful as well, and then there was nothing for it but for Fael to press on. Every so often there was a niche, and sometimes there was a piece of loot there, and sometimes there wasnât. Then Fael had yelled out, his wings taking him up so fast he bounced off the ceiling and ended up scrabbling away on his backside as something reared up over him. The Waspsâ stings flashed, blinding bright down here, and then things went quiet. I helped Fael get to his feet, and he looked shaken. It had been a centipede, and living proof of how well you can live eating roaches and pillbugs and silverfish: ten feet long if it was an inch. Not a man-eater, but the poison in those fangs would have finished Fael for sure, and, anyway, centipedes are bad luck in the Commonweal, because of old history.
We went on a bit slower after that. The roof was lower, for a start, and the walls had become oddly slick and nasty to touch. The floor was slippery, and sloping too, and the lanterns didnât seem to be giving out enough light even for me. I could hear the two Wasps breathing harsh and hoarse in my ear, and a lot of other little scuttlings and scrabblings as well. Nobody was much looking forward to stepping on the next centipede, or whatever other venomous residents we might disturb. You didnât get scorpions so much, not in the Commonweal, but my little spider brothers certainly put in an appearance and I didnât have the Art to warn them off. Skessi was sticking close to the light, now. He might not have the fear of the dark that the Wasps had, but he was somewhere he couldnât make much use of his wings. In the Lowlands the Fly-kinden love little tunnels. Their warrens are mazes of chambers and narrow vertical drops and the like that make it impossible for any bigger kinden to get around. I think Imperial Fly-kinden donât like being enclosed so much. Certainly Skessi wasnât at all fond of the experience.
Then came the bad news. The whole thing led to a wall: a dead end.
We argued then, or at least the Wasps threw accusations and we tried to defend ourselves. The loot weâd found already might as well not
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