The dogs abandoned him a few hundred paces beyond Waytown and the captain found himself alone on the road. The trader track would fade before long, he recalled, the dyke on his right dwindling, the road itself becoming a sandy swath humped with ant nests, bone-white driftwood and yellow knots of grass, with floods wiping the ruts away every spring. There was no chance of getting lost, of course, so long as one kept Catlin River within sight to the south.
He came upon the corpses less than a league further on. The highwaymen had perfectly positioned their ambush, emerging from a deeply cut, seasonal stream bed and no doubt surrounding their victim's carriage in moments. The precise planning hadn't helped, it seemed. Two or three days old at the most, bloated and almost black under the sun, their bodies were scattered to both sides of the track. Swords, lance-heads, buckles and anything else that was metal had all melted under some ferocious heat, yet clothing and leather bindings were unmarked. A number of the bandits wore spurs, and indeed there would have been no way of getting out this far without horses, but of the beasts there was no sign.
Dismounted and wandering among the dead, Gruntle noted that the tracks of Keruli's carriage — they too had stopped to examine the scene — were overlying another set. A wider, heavier carriage, drawn by oxen.
There were no visible wounds on the corpses.
I doubt Buke had to even so much as draw his blade.
The captain climbed back into his saddle and resumed his journey.
He caught sight of his companions half a league further on, and rode up alongside the carriage a short while later.
Harllo gave him a nod. 'A fine day, wouldn't you say, Gruntle?'
'Not a cloud in the sky. Where's Stonny?'
'Took one of the horses ahead. Should be back soon.'
'Why did she do that?'
'Just wanted to make certain the wayside camp was … uh, unoccupied. Ah, here she comes.'
Gruntle greeted her with a scowl as she reined in before them. 'Damned stupid thing to do, woman.'
'This whole journey's stupid if you ask me. There's three Barghast at the wayside camp — and no, they ain't roasted any bandits lately. Anyway, Capustan's bare days away from a siege — maybe we make the walls in time, in which case we'll be stuck there with the whole Pannion army between us and the open road, or we don't make it in time and those damned Tenescowri have fun with us.'