Arlen ignored him, walking to the barn and opening the doors. Missy looked thoroughly unhappy, still hitched to the cart, but she would make it to Town Square.
A hand grabbed his arm as he led the horse out. âAre you trying to get yourself killed?!â Jeph demanded. âYou mind me, boy!â
Arlen tore his arm away, refusing to look his father in the eye. âMam needs to see Coline Trigg,â he said.
âSheâs alive?â Jeph asked incredulously, his head snapping over to where the woman lay in the mud.
âNo thanks to you,â Arlen said. âIâm taking her to Town Square.â
âWeâre taking her,â Jeph corrected, rushing over to lift his wife and carry her to the cart. Leaving Norine to tend the animals and seek out poor Mareaâs remains, they headed off down the road to town.
Silvy was bathed in sweat, and while her burns seemed no worse than Arlenâs, the deep lines the flame demonsâ talons had dug still oozed blood, the flesh an ugly swollen red.
âArlen, I â¦â Jeph began as they rode, reaching a shaking hand towards his son. Arlen drew back, looking away, and Jeph recoiled as if burned.
Arlen knew his father was ashamed. It was just as Ragen had said. Maybe Jeph even hated himself, as Cholie had. Still, Arlen could find no sympathy. His mother had paid the price for Jephâs cowardice.
They rode the rest of the way in silence.
Coline Triggâs two-storey house, in Town Square, was one of the largest in the Brook, and filled with beds. In addition to her family upstairs, Coline always had at least one person occupying her sickbeds on the ground floor.
Coline was a short woman with a large nose and no chin. Not yet thirty, six children had made her thick around the middle. Her clothes always smelled of burnt weeds, and her cures usually involved some type of foul-tasting tea. The people of Tibbetâs Brook made fun of that tea, but every one of them drank it gratefully when they took a chill.
The Herb Gatherer took one look at Silvy and had Arlen and his father bring her inside. She asked no questions, which was just as well, as neither Arlen nor Jeph knew what they would say if she did. As she cut at each wound, squeezing out sickly brown pus, the air filled with a rotten stench. She cleaned the drained wounds with water and ground herbs, then sewed them shut. Jeph turned green, and brought his hand to his mouth suddenly.
âOut of here with that!â Coline barked, sending Jeph from the room with a pointed finger. As Jeph scurried out of the house, she looked to Arlen.
âYou, too?â she demanded. Arlen shook his head. Coline stared at him a moment, then nodded in approval. âYouâre braver than your father,â she said. âFetch the mortar and pestle. Iâm going to teach you to make a balm for burns.â
Never taking her eyes from her work, Coline talked Arlen through the countless jars and pouches in her pharmacy, directing him to each ingredient and explaining how to mix them. She kept to her grisly work as Arlen applied the balm to his motherâs burns.
Finally, when Silvyâs wounds were all tended, she turned to inspect Arlen. He protested at first, but the balm did its work, and only as the coolness spread along his arms did he realize how much his burns had stung.
âWill she be all right?â Arlen asked, looking at his mother. She seemed to be breathing normally, but the flesh around her wounds was an ugly colour, and that stench of rot was still thick in the air.
âI donât know,â Coline said. She wasnât one to honey her words. âIâve never seen anyone with wounds so severe. Usually, if the corelings get that close â¦â
âThey kill you,â Jeph said from the doorway. âThey would have killed Silvy, too, if not for Arlen.â He stepped into the rooms, keeping his eyes down. âMy son taught me something last night, Coline,â Jeph said. âHe taught me fear is our enemy, more than the corelings ever were.â Jeph put his hands on his sonâs shoulders and looked into his sonâs eyes. âI wonât fail you again,â he promised.
Arlen nodded and looked away. He wanted to believe it was so, but his thoughts kept returning to the sight of his father on the porch, frozen with terror.
Jeph went over to Silvy, gripping her clammy hand in his own. She was still sweating, and thrashed in her drugged sleep now and then.
âWill she die?â Jeph asked.
The Herb Gatherer blew out a long breath. âIâm a fair hand at setting bones,â she said, âand delivering children. I can chase a fever away and ward a chill. I can even cleanse a demon wound, if itâs still fresh.â She shook her head. âBut this is demon fever. Iâve given her herbs to dull the pain and help her sleep, but youâll need a better Gatherer than I to brew a cure.â
âWho else is there?â Jeph asked. âYouâre all the Brook has.â
âThe woman who taught me,â Coline said, âOld Mey Friman. She lives on the outskirts of Sunny Pasture, two days from here. If anyone can cure it, she can, but youâd best hurry. The fever will spread quickly and if you take too long, even old Mey wonât be able to help you.â
âHow do we find her?â Jeph demanded.
âYou canât really get lost,â Coline said. âThereâs only the one road. Just donât turn at the fork where it goes through the woods, unless you want to spend weeks on the road to Miln. That Messenger left for the Pasture a few hours ago, but he had some stops in the Brook first. If you hurry, you might catch him. Messengers carry their own wards with them. If you find him, youâll be able to keep moving right until dusk instead of stopping for succour. The Messenger could cut your trip in twain.â
âWeâll find him,â Jeph said, âwhatever it takes.â His voice took on a determined edge, and Arlen began to hope.
A strange sense of longing pulled at Arlen as he watched Tibbetâs Brook recede into the distance from the back of the cart. For the first time, he was going to be more than a dayâs journey from home. He was going to see another town! A week ago, an adventure like that was his greatest dream. But now all he dreamed was that things could go back to the way they were.
Back when the farm was safe.
Back when his mother was well.
Back when he didnât know his father was a coward.
Coline had promised to send one of her boys up to the farm to let Norine know they would likely be gone a week or more, and to help tend the animals and check the wards while they were away. The neighbours would throw in, but Norineâs loss was too raw for her to face the nights alone.
The Herb Gatherer had also given them a crude map, carefully rolled and slipped into a protective hide tube. Paper was a rarity in the Brook, and not given away lightly. Arlen was fascinated by the map, and studied it for hours, even though he couldnât read the few words labelling the places. Neither Arlen nor his father had letters.
The map marked the way to Sunny Pasture, and what lay along the road, but the distances were vague. There were farms marked along the way where they could beg succour, but there was no way to tell how far apart they were.
His mother slept fitfully, sodden with sweat. Sometimes she spoke or cried out, but her words made little sense.