The Outcast (Summoner #4)

But there was no time to process his guilt. He pushed the body into a sitting position, pulled the man’s hood up so it appeared he was sleeping, and laid the spear across his lap.

Then Arcturus strapped on his weapons, infused Sacharissa and pulled his own hood over his head to obscure his face. For all any passerby would know, he was a rebel now. At most, he had until morning to save his friends. Or die trying.





CHAPTER

43

ARCTURUS STARED DOWN THE corridor, paralyzed by indecision. He needed to find where the nobles were being held hostage, but how would he navigate the maze of rooms and sleeping rebels?

For a moment he concentrated, trying to smell them using his newfound heightened senses. But the myriad of scents that filled his nostrils were confusing—with hundreds of rebels in the building, there were just too many people. Sacharissa might have been able to make sense of it, but she was infused, and would need to stay that way.

He considered cornering a rebel and interrogating him for information, threatening him with death by fireball. But what if the rebel called his bluff and shouted for help? And even if a rebel did give up information, was Arcturus supposed to somehow knock him unconscious, relying on him staying out cold until Arcturus had escaped? Or tie the rebel up and gag him with his rudimentary knowledge of knots and hope it worked? He didn’t want to think about killing one. It just … wasn’t an option. The image of the man he had murdered floated unbidden to his mind, and his stomach twisted with guilt and revulsion. No. He would not do it again.

The one thing he did know was that he could not stand there forever. If he walked purposefully, he could get away with a simple nod and greeting to any passing rebels, as if he had places to be. But if they found him standing like a plum in the middle of the corridor, they might stop and talk to him.

He needed a friend. For a moment he thought about Rotter, stuck with the Twenty-Fourth in the summoning room. As far as the rebels knew, he was just another soldier in their squad.

If anyone could help him, it was them. The Twenty-Fourth might be massively outnumbered, but with the element of surprise they might just be able to rescue the nobles and escape. The difficulty would be convincing them.

So he walked toward the atrium, his eyes fixed ahead, his face shrouded by the hood. On either side, he could hear conversations, or the clink of metal, but dared not glance into the open doorways. Twice, groups of rebels walked past, but both times they were too deep in conversation to give him a second look.

To his surprise, he reached the balconied floor that overlooked the atrium unnoticed. But that was where his luck ended, and he realized just how harebrained his plan truly was.

Crawley had taken him to the top floor of the eastern stairwell, and had locked him there too; he knew it best, for it was where the servants’ and teachers’ quarters were housed. To reach the summoning room, Arcturus would need to go down the stairs and cross the atrium. Only, there were a hundred or so men lined up against the walls of each floor, ready to step out of the shadows and ambush anyone who walked through the double doors.

That meant a hundred eyes watching him as he walked there, and a hundred crossbows ready to be pointed if the squad left without permission.

He was at a loss. For now, he unslung his crossbow and pressed his back against the wall, standing beside the other silent rebels. Now he looked like just another of them.

From his vantage point, he could see the summoning room door. There were two guards posted outside, their spears crossed in front of it. There was no way he was getting in there, not without being challenged. So he would need to think of another plan.

It was at that moment that he saw him. Ulfr the dwarf, stumbling out of the dining hall at the end of the atrium and heading toward the stairs. He clutched a large tray in his hands, and there were covered dishes piled so high that the dwarf could barely see over the top.

Arcturus waited, hoping against hope that the dwarf would come to his aid. He could smell the food without his new smelling abilities. Bacon and eggs.

The smell grew stronger, and finally he saw Ulfr stomp up the stairs onto his floor, and heard dwarvish curses muttered through his beard.

Arcturus waited until the dwarf walked past, then followed, casually breaking away from his post by the wall and walking after him. He could feel the eyes of the nearby crossbowmen on him then, and it was all he could do to keep going. He had somehow forgotten how to walk normally. How was he supposed to move his arms?

To his relief, he turned down the corridor unchallenged, back the way he had come. Again he walked the gauntlet of open doors, but luckily it was Ulfr who got the attention.

“Is that for me, pipsqueak?” called one rebel. “Let me take some of that load off.”

“It’s for the general, you daft git,” Ulfr growled back.

“Well, bring me another when you’re done with him,” the rebel replied.

But Ulfr had already moved on, his cursing only getting louder. More calls for food followed, but Ulfr ignored them all.

Arcturus blanched at the thought of returning to that area—Crawley and Dorcas might be prowling nearby, and Barcroft and his guards might recognize him too.

His stomach twisted as he stepped by the rebel he had killed, the man still propped up against the wall, his eyes closed, knees drawn up to his chest. Ulfr barely gave the dead rebel a second look, assuming the man was sleeping. It appeared that so had everyone else who had passed by, but Arcturus’s heart still pounded long after they had left the corpse behind.

As he watched Ulfr shuffle down the corridors, he considered how strange the dwarf was. He always treated Arcturus with disdain, and his hatred for humanity seemed to run deep. And yet, he had tried to warn Arcturus when the Twenty-Fourth had come through the door. He had told Crawley to stay away from Arcturus too, and of course he had run to get help when Arcturus was being attacked by the Wendigo.

He was sure Ulfr had a soft spot for him. Better still, he had overheard the dwarf refusing to join the rebels. Perhaps Arcturus could turn him to the right side.

Now they were nearing the provosts’s office, where Barcroft had set up camp. Arcturus stopped, sliding into an empty doorway and watching as Ulfr receded into the gloom. It was not long until he was just a hazy figure—the torches in sconces on the walls here were running on a low flame, and clearly the servants who usually refilled them had other concerns that night.

As Arcturus leaned out, Ulfr continued right past the office. For a moment Arcturus wondered if he had got it wrong—but no, he was sure of it. Groaning, Arcturus scurried after him, his heart pounding in his chest as he passed the ornate doors to Obadiah’s office.

Then Arcturus’s heart stilled. Three large rebels dressed in black cloaks lined the end of the corridor. Ulfr stopped in front of them, and Arcturus was forced to hide in a doorway once more. He concentrated, and the world became louder in his ears. He could hear an endless burble of voices, the opening and closing of doors, and the rasp and jingle of metal. But above all else, the conversation down the corridor won through.

“Stop, dwarf. This area is restricted,” one of the rebels said flatly.

“I’ve brought food,” Ulfr said, and Arcturus could hear the impatience in the dwarf’s voice. “Stand aside.”

“About time, we’re starving,” a second rebel said. “Just leave it here and piss off.”

Arcturus heard Ulfr let out a deep, long-suffering sigh.

“It’s not for you, you idiot,” Ulfr said. “It’s for the prisoners.”





CHAPTER

44