to the Dawn Lands. The dinghy must have reached the river a day or two after they were set adrift. All the time he was telling the poth he could get them to Yness, they were probably passing it, heading into oblivion.
He thinks he might be on Gladsend, an island that shows up on few maps because few are sure where it is and fewer believe it exists. It was supposedly a pirate refuge long ago, but why refuge here when prey is so far away and Yness so accommodating?
He cleans his pan and dish, making a weak soap of some ash, water, and the hot olive oil, and rests them against the lean-to to dry. He overturns the cup and pitcher on little posts. He rakes his house with a leafy frond. When all is in order, he tucks in his shirt and rubs his chin. He hates his stubble. His knife isnât up to the task of shaving, preferring to slice instead. Hopefully a dragonbone blade will do a better job. He picks up a spear and his knife and sets out.
Along the stream heâs erected stakes to hold bamboo cups. There are also supplies of spears in case the blue crabs decide theyâre sick of frogs.
When he reaches the dragon hollow, the crabs are swarming over the hill beyond it and heading toward the gray column of rock to the south. Have they given up on the dragon? Are they chasing something?If the poth found the stakes and blazes along the path, he realizes, they might not lead her to the beach. They might lead her here.
Jeryon slides down the hill and shadows the crabs up the wooded slopes surrounding the column, a wide green collar around a headless stone neck. The crabs climb at an angle and Jeryon moves to their side so he can see what theyâre pursuing. He hears it bounding and breaking through the brush, sounds drowned in the furious clacking of crab claws, but he canât see what it is.
The crabs slow. Do they have their quarry trapped? Did they catch it and kill it? If so, it didnât put up much of a struggle. With a spear in each hand he edges closer. Just a glimpse is all he needs. He hopes itâs not her, as much as he wants it to be her. The crabs eddy in a pool of shell and claw, several clicks responding to each interrogative clack, as if theyâre discussing what to do. Some are looking his way. Jeryon hides behind an oak. If he climbed it, he might be able to see, but if they saw him, he would be trapped. He has to chance it.
He leans his spears against the tree, pulls himself onto a low branch, and it snaps. He falls on his face. The spears clatter over him.
Dozens of eyestalks waggle as one in his direction.
Jeryon jumps up, grabs the spears, and leaps away like a fat black frog.
Halfway to the next hill he realizes he wonât be able to climb the slope quickly enough to stay ahead of the crabs, so he veers north. The trees grow thicker. All he has to do is pace the crabs and eventually theyâll forget about him, just as theyâve forgotten about their original quarry. He might even be able to spear a few in the end.
Theyâre catching up, though. The crabs, large as they are, can slip between the trees more easily than him, and a few are jumping over branches and bushes he has to avoid. Three leap at him just as he bursts between two trees into a meadowâexcept there is no meadow. The sky he saw through the trees heralds a fifty-foot drop where the wind has stripped the hill down to its rock, a cliff above the cliffs.
Jeryon grabs a branch, swinging it aside like a door on a hinge astwo crabs fly past him. They and his spear plummet to the scree below. One foot follows them while the other scrambles for purchase. His hand slips down the branch. His knee finds the edge, he finds his balance on it, and his other spear comes up just in time to find the belly of a third leaping crab, catapulting it over his head. It slides off the spear, scrabbles at his shirt, caroms off his heel and falls.
The rest of the crabs spread out as he stands so he canât escape. Their
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