Fool’s Fate (Tawny Man Trilogy Book Three)

‘One blast can do the work of ten men with shovels. Trust me on this, Fitz. I know what I’m doing.’ He now seemed as enthused to blast Icefyre free as he had earlier been to blow him up. How hard had Tintaglia’s command hit him? With the force of a Skill-command, that one must unquestioningly obey, regardless of one’s own judgment? Was the Fool Forged yet? Dead? The sudden thought broke abruptly over me like a wave of cold water, dashing me from my present worry. I staggered with the impact of it. I had done what the Fool had hoped I would do. I had wakened the dragon and now all our forces were turned to freeing him and uniting him with Tintaglia. It had even felt like the right thing to do, at the moment when I did it. But now my soul scrabbled at the remorselessness of time. I could not go back and change the decision, yet it suddenly seemed far too heavy and sharp a thing to carry for the rest of my life. His fingerprints burned briefly cold on my wrist.

Still my feet carried me on with the rest of them. When we reached the excavation, we discovered that all the dragon’s struggles had done little. The ice over his back was cracked and starred from beneath, and he had collapsed part of the tunnel that had been dug above his neck and head. The Wit-coterie had already attacked the cracks in the ice with much enthusiasm and little manpower. As I arrived, the Hetgurd men joined them. For the first time, every man at the camp was united in the task of unearthing the dragon alive. But no amount of excitement could make the work any less arduous.

Chade berated me for being an idiot when we all discovered I had left the powder pot behind when I had fled the tunnel. He put two men to work re-opening the tunnel, and then completely confused the suspicious Wit-coterie by putting them to work digging deep, narrow holes alongside the dragon. ‘We’ll put smaller loads of powder along the edge of that crack he’s made. It won’t be enough to harm him, just enough to break the ice up so we can haul it away in larger chunks. Fitz, I’ll need you with me to help me measure and package the powder. Dutiful, you too, and bring Longwick. We’ll need more vessels suitable for holding the fires. It will be tricky to set them off, but I’m convinced that near-simultaneous blasts will serve us best.’

Chade was in his element, organizing and improvising. He burned with a fierce joy at putting his thoughts into action. I realized then that in his own way, he would have been a fine soldier and strategist, much as Verity had been. The times in my life when he had seemed most alive had been when he had finally flung aside all constraints to transform his thoughts into deeds.

Burrich had come with us when we returned to Chade’s tent, for he could be of little help with the digging. It was sad to know that he realized that. He reminded me somewhat of an old dog that knows he can no longer keep up with the pack on the scent, and so holds his place at his master’s stirrup in faith that he will be there for the kill. I glanced up at him as he sat attentively on Chade’s pallet. Chade was opening another small cask of his powder. I knelt on the floor, a clean hide stretched out before me, measuring powder into piles that were approximately the same size as the example that Chade had heaped for me. The consistency of the powder troubled me; it was not a uniform colour, and some seemed ground finer than the rest, but Chade had already shrugged aside my questions. ‘In time I will perfect it. But for now, it will work, and that is all that counts, boy. Where is the Prince? I sent him to scavenge tight containers from any of the tents. He should be back by now. And Longwick, with the kettles. It’s going to be a mix and match that we must do, and the sooner we begin, the better.’

‘I’m sure he’ll be here soon,’ I said, and then to Burrich, ‘You’re very quiet. It is because you came here to kill the dragon, and now we all struggle to save it?’

He knit his dark brows at me. ‘You thought I came here to slay a dragon?’ He gave a snort of amazement and then shook his head. ‘I didn’t believe in this dragon. I thought it a girl’s bad dream, and so it was easy for me to assure Nettle that I’d protect her from it. I took her to Buckkeep and there I learned that there might be some vestige of a dragon here. But when I came here, I came to bring you home, you and Swift. Because, regardless of what it might cost you, or me, that is where you belong.’ He gave a sudden sigh. ‘I’ve always been a simple man, Fitz, seeking simple answers to my problems. And here I am, trying to see how to untangle the mess you and I have made of things, and how to protect Nettle from a dragon that knows her name and how to talk sense to Swift about beast-magic. I’d thought that you had died of the Wit, you know. The Queen tried to give me what she knew of that tale, how a Forged one came to be wearing a shirt I’d sewn for you, with King Shrewd’s pin still in the collar … When I think of the anguish I felt as I buried that wretch …’

But his thoughts were interrupted abruptly by Dutiful bursting into the tent. ‘They’ve gone! I can’t find them anywhere!’

‘Containers to put the powder in?’ Chade demanded singlemindedly. ‘What, all gone?’

‘No! The Narcheska and Peottre! They are gone, their beds left empty. I do not think they returned to them after we spoke last night. I think they left then and if they did –’

‘Then there is only one place they could have gone.’ Despite Chade’s earlier assurances that it didn’t matter, he was now scowling and poking at the piles of more finely ground powder. ‘They went to the Pale Woman. And told her that Fitz had come back to us, and that we now knew the true stakes of the game.’ He suddenly scowled. ‘And we spoke of Web’s gull in front of them, and Tintaglia coming here. They will have told her. She will now know of our thoughts of her, and what our vulnerabilities are. The Pale Woman will know that if she wishes to move against us, she must act swiftly. Our only recourse is to be even swifter than she is. We must get that dragon out of the ice.’

‘But why would Elliania and Peottre do that? Why would they turn on us, when they knew I was willing to kill the dragon for them?’ The Prince was agonized.

‘I don’t know.’ Chade was implacable. ‘But it’s safest for us to assume treachery, to assume that everything we spoke of last night is now being told to the Pale Woman. And we must now see how that leaves us vulnerable.’

‘But it’s all changed since last night! Last night, Fitz and I plotted to do her bidding, to give way to her will. Why go to the Pale Woman to tell her that, why not wait until the deed was done?’ Dutiful scowled. ‘When they left us last night, Peottre did not look like a man about to cower before an enemy.’

‘I don’t know.’ Chade’s concentration didn’t waver. ‘Make the piles only this size when the powder is this fine, Fitz.’ Then, ‘I don’t know, Dutiful. But it is my duty to assume that they mean you harm, and try to think of what move we could make to forestall them.’ With a scraper, he corrected one of my piles. ‘After the dragon is freed,’ he added, almost to himself. He lifted his eyes back to Dutiful. ‘We still need those containers.’

‘I’ll get them,’ the boy replied faintly.

‘Good. Set the girl and Peottre out of your mind for a time. If they slipped away last night, they are long gone, and too far away for us to be able to do anything about it. Let us deal with the crisis at hand, and then move on to the next one.’

Dutiful nodded distractedly and left. My heart was heavy for him. ‘Do you really believe they went to report to her?’