picked up his bow, looked at us once more, and grimaced. ââLook after the horses,â right.â He gave a nasty laugh. âDamn Tanaka to seven damned hells. Well, you squirts arenât going anywhere.â He started toward the uphill edge of the clearing, and then turned. âDonât you get any ideas!â Almost without aiming he sent an arrow at us that missed my elbow by a handâs breadth.
As soon as he was gone, we started to try to get loose. I was desperately trying to scramble up the bark behind me to take the pressure off, but the more I struggled the tighter the cord was. My hands and wrists were on fire; I could feel blood dribbling down my arms.
I looked at Toumi, who was crying, for which I didnât blame her at all. Blinking at me, she tried to shove the gag out of her mouth. When that failed, she howled in frustration, but began lifting up with her chin and looking upward, as if she were trying to tell me to climb.
Climb? Climb what? I looked up; the branch wasnât that far overhead, but there was no way to climb to itâ
Toumi kicked me, then lifted her chin again, first up, and then to the side. When I didnât respond, she growled and did it again. CLIMB ME!
Ah! I threw my legs around her waist as if she were herself a small pine and shimmied up. Immediately, the pressure on my wrists lessened, and I almost passed out from the relief, sliding back down so that cords began to bite back into my flesh.
Toumi growled, waking me to my purpose again, and, using my legs andâonce Iâd worked my way up just a bitâgrabbing on to the cord itself, I climbed until the cord looped around my wrists fell away and I dropped to the ground.
The relief was so intense that for a second I couldnât stand, but Toumi started kicking dirt on me. I yanked the gag from my mouth. âIâll untie it from the other end. I canât cut it fromââ
She shook her head emphatically, screaming through the rag stuffed in her mouth, then threw her legs up over my shoulders. Realizing what she was trying to do, I did my best to lift her until at last she was able to work her wrists freeâreleasing Toumiâs full weight onto me. I collapsed to the ground beneath her.
We rolled apart, gasping for breath and shaking the blood and feeling back into our hands.
A shadow blocked the sun shining on my sweat-slick face, and I gasped, sure that the bandit had come back to kill us in spite of the ringleader Tanakaâs orders.
âWell done, Risuko -chan , Toumi -chan ,â said a warm, hushed voice.
Mieko -san stood above us, her dagger in her hand, a twig in her hair the only other sign that the situation was at all unusual.
âBut... but...!â spluttered Toumi. âI saw you riding away with the others!â
âDid you?â Mieko smiled mildly. âCome, girls. We must hurry.â
âThe man,â I gasped, standing and brushing myself off. âThe one who tied us upââ
ââis not likely to bother us.â
âReally?â asked Toumi, eyes fierce, staring at Miekoâs knife.
âI cut loose the horses,â said Mieko, pursing her lips. âWhen I last saw him, he was trying to chase them down, and that should take some time.â
âOh,â muttered Toumi.
âBut we need to warn the others. Theyâll have just started back this way from the switchback. If we can warn them...â Mieko frowned. âBut I donât want to risk exposing you to these bandits, or...â Her eyes swept around the clearing, ending on the cedar to which weâd been tied. Her eyes narrowed and she walked toward the tree, plucking the arrow that had nearly pierced my arm from the bark. She turned. âRisuko,â she said, her voice suddenly low, âdo you think it would be quicker for you to scurry through this bramble, or to climb over the top?â
I blinked. âUm. Through the
Amanda A. Allen, Auburn Seal