Oathbreakers
Book II: Vows and Honor
by Mercedes Lackey
copyright 1989
version 2.0 spell checked,
compared to original, formatted. Finished October 27, 2003
Dedicated to:
Betsy, Don and Elsie
The real magic-makers
Thanks, folks.
One
It was a dark and stormy night....
:Pah!: Warrl said with disgust so thick Tarma could taste
it. :Must you even think in cliches?:
Tarma took her bearings during another flash of lightning, tried
and failed to make out Warrl's shaggy bulk against watery blackness, then
thought back at him, Well it is, dammit!.
Tarma shena Tale'sedrin, who was Shin'a'in nomad, Kal'enedral (or,
to outClansmen, a "Swordsworn"), and most currently Scoutmaster for
the mercenary company called "Idra's Sunhawks" was not particularly
happy at this moment. She was sleet-drenched, cold and numb, and mired to her
armpits; as was her companion, the lupine kyree
Warrl. The Sunhawks' camp was black as the inside of a box at midnight, for all
it was scarcely an hour past sunset. Her hair was plastered flat to her skull,
and trickles of icy water kept running into her eyes. She couldn't even feel
the ends of her fingers anymore. Her feet hurt, her joints ached, her nose felt
so frozen it was like to fall off, and her teeth were chattering hard enough to
splinter. She was not pleased, having to stumble around in the dark and
freezing rain to find the tent she shared with her partner and oathbound
sister, the White Winds sorceress, Kethry.
The camp was dark out of necessity; even in a downpour sheltered
fires would normally burn in the firepits in front of each tent, or a
slow-burning torch would be staked out in the lee of every fourth, but that was
impossible tonight. You simply couldn't keep a fire lit when the wind howled at
you from directions that changed moment by moment, driving the rain before it;
and torches under canvas were a danger even the most foolhardy would forgo. A
few of the Sunhawks had lanterns or candles going in their tents; but the
weather was foul enough that most preferred to go straight to sleep when not on
duty. It was too plaguey cold and wet to be sociable. For heat, most stuck to
the tiny charcoal braziers Idra had insisted they each pack at the beginning of
this campaign. The Sunhawks had known their Captain too well to argue about
(what had seemed at the time) a silly burden; now they were grateful for her
foresight.
But with the rain coming down first in cascades, then in waterwalls,
Tarma couldn't see the faint glow of candles or lanterns shining through the
canvas walls that would have told her where the tents were. So she slogged her
way through the camp mostly by memory and was herself grateful to Idra for
insisting on an orderly camp, laid out neatly, in proper rows. and not
the hugger-mugger arrangement some of the other mere officers were allowing. At
least she wasn't tripping over tent ropes or falling into firepits.
:I can smell Keth and magic,: Warrl said into her mind. :You
should see the mage-light soon.:
"Thanks, Furball," Tarma replied, a little more mollified;
she knew he wouldn't hear her over the howl of the wind, but he'd read
the words in her mind. She kept straining her eyes through the tempest for a
sight of the witchlight Keth had promised to leave at the front—to distinguish
their tent from the two hundred odd just like it.
They were practically on top of it before she saw the light, a
blue glow outlining the door flap and brightening the fastenings. She wrestled
with the balky rawhide ties (the cold made her fingers stiff) and it took so
long to get them unfastened that she was swearing enough to warm the whole camp
before she had the tent flaps open. Having Warrl pressed up against her like a
sodden, unhappy cat did not help.
The wind practically threw Tarma into the tent, and half the sleet
that was knifing down on their camp tried to come in with her. Warrl remained
plastered against her side, not at all helpful, smelling in the pungent,
penetrating way only a wet wolf can smell—even if Warrl only resembled a wolf
superficially. The kyree was not averse
to reminding Tarma several times a day (as, in fact, he was doing now) that
they could have been curled up in a cozy inn if they hadn't signed on
with this mercenary company.
She turned her back to the occupant of the tent as soon as she got
past the tent flaps; she needed all her attention to get them laced shut
against the perverse pull of the wind. "Gods of damnation!" she spat
through stiff lips, "Why did I ever think this was a good idea?"
Kethry, only just now waking from a light doze, refrained from
replying; she just waited until Tarma got the tent closed up again. Then she
spoke three guttural words, activating the spell she'd set there before
drowsing off—and a warm yellow glow raced around the tent walls, meeting and
spreading upward until the canvas was bathed in mellow light and the
temperature within suddenly rose to that of a balmy spring day. Tarma sighed
and sagged a little.
"Let me take that," Kethry said then, unwinding herself
from the thick wool blankets of her bedroll, rising, and pulling the woolen
coat, stiff with ice, from Tarma's angular shoulders. "Get out of those
soaked clothes."
The swordswoman shook water out of her shortcropped black hair,
and only just prevented Warrl from trying the same maneuver.
"Don't you dare, you flea-bitten cur! Gods above and
below, you'll soak every damned thing in the tent!"
Warrl hung his head and looked sheepish, and waited for his
mindmate to throw an old threadbare horse blanket over him. Tarma enveloped him
in it, head to tail, held it in place while he shook himself, then used it to
towel off his coarse grayblack fur.
"Glad to see you, Greeneyes," Tarma continued, stripping
herself down to the skin, occasionally wincing as she moved. She rummaged in
her pack, finding new underclothing, and finally pulling on dry breeches, thick
leggings and shirt of a dark brown lambswool. "I thought you'd still be
with your crew—"
Kethry gave an involuntary shudder of sympathy at the sight of her
partner's nearly-emaciated frame. Tarma was always thin, but as this campaign
had stretched on and on, she'd become nothing but whipcord over bone. She
hadn't an ounce of flesh to spare; no wonder she complained of being cold so
much! And the scars lacing her golden skin only gave a faint indication of the
places where she'd taken deeper damage—places that would ache demonically in
foul weather. Kethry gave her spell another little mental nudge, sending the
temperature of the tent a notch upward.
I should have been doing this on a regular basis, she told herself guiltily. Well—that's
soon mended.
"—so there's not much more I can do." The sweetfaced
sorceress gathered strands of hair like suntouched amber into both hands,
twisting her curly mane into a knot at the back of her neck. The light from the
shaded lantern which hung on the tent's crossbar, augmented by the light of the
shielding spell, was strong enough that Tarma noted the dark circles under her
cloudy green eyes. "Tresti is accomplishing more than I can at this point.
You know my magic isn't really the Healing kind, and on top of that, right now
we have more wounded men than women."
"And Need'll do a man about as much good as a stick of
wood."
Kethry glanced at the plain shortsword slung on the tent's
centerpole, and nodded. "To tell you the truth, lately she won't heal
anybody but you or me of anything but major wounds, so she isn't really
useful at all at this point. I wonder sometimes if maybe she's saving
herself—Anyway, the last badly injured woman was your scout Mala this
morning."
"We got her to you in time? Gods be thanked!" Tarma felt
the harpwire-taut muscles of her shoulders go lax with relief. Mala had
intercepted an arrow when the scouts had been surprised by an enemy ambush;
Tarma had felt personally responsible, since she'd sent Warrl off in the opposite
direction only moments before. The scout had been barely conscious by the time
they'd pounded up to the Sunhawk camp.
"Only just; an arrow in the gut is not something even for a
Master-Healer to trifle with, and all we have is a Journeyman."
"Teach me to steal eggs, why don't you? Tell me something I don't
know," Tarma snapped, ice-blue eyes narrowed in irritation, harsh voice
and craggy-featured scowl making her look more like a hawk than ever.
Oops. A little too near the bone, I think.
"Temper," Kethry cautioned; it had taken years of
partnership for them to be able to say the right thing at the right time to
each other, but these days they seldom fouled the relationship. "Whatever
happened, you can't undo it; you'd tell me that if the case were reversed. And
Mala's all right, so there's no permanent harm done."
"Gah—" Tarma shook her head again, then continued the
shake right down to her bare feet, loosening all the muscles that had been
tensed against cold and anger and frustration. "Sorry. My nerves have gone
all to hell. Finish about Mala so I can tell the others."
"Nothing much to tell; I had Need unsheathed and in her hands
when they brought her inside the camp. The arrow's out, the wound's purified
and stitched and half-healed, or better. She'll be back dodging arrows—with a
little more success, I hope!—in about a week. After that all I could do that
was at all useful was to set up a jesto-vath around the infirmary
tent—that's a shielding spell like the one I just put on ours. After that I was
useless, so I came back here. It was bad enough out there I figured a jesto-vath
on our tent was worth the energy expense, and I waited for you to get in
before putting it in place so I wouldn't have to cut it. Can't have the
Scoutmaster coming down with a fever." She smiled, and her wide green eyes
sparkled with mischief. "Listen to you, though—two years ago, you wouldn't
have touched a command position, and now you're fretting over your scouts
exactly the way Idra fusses over the rest of us."
Tarma chuckled, feeling the tense muscles all over her body
relaxing. "You know the saying."
"Only too well—'That was then, this is now; the moment is
never the same twice.'"
"You're learning. Gods, having a mage as a partner is
useful."
Tarma threw herself onto her bedroll, rolling over onto her back
and putting her hands behind her head. She stared at the canvas of the tent
roof, bright with yellow mage-light, and basked in the heat.
"I pity the rest of the Hawks, with nobody to weatherproof
their tents, and nothing but an ittybitty brazier to keep it warm. Unless
they're twoing, in which case I wish them well."
"Me too," Kethry replied with a tired smile, sitting
crosslegged on her own bedroll to fasten the knot of hair more securely,
"though there's only a handful really twoing it. I rather suspect even the
ones that aren't will bundle together for warmth, though, the way we used to
when I wasn't capable of putting up a jesto-vath."
"You must be about Master-grade yourself by now, no?"
Tarma cracked her left eye open enough to see Kethry's face. The
question obviously caught the mage by surprise.
"Uh—"
"Beyond it?"
"I—"
"Thought so." Tarma closed her eyes again in
satisfaction. "This job should do it, then. Through Idra we'll have
contacts right up into the Royal ranks. If we can't wangle the property,
students and wherewithal for our schools after this, we'll never get it."
"We'd have had it before this if it hadn't been for that
damned minstrel!" Now it was Kethry's turn to snap with irritation.
"Must you remind me?" Tarma groaned, burying her face in
the crook of her arm. "Leslac, Leslac, if it weren't for Bardic immunity
I'd have killed you five times over!"
"You'd have had to stand in line," Kethry countered with
grim humor. "I'd have beat you to it. Bad enough that he sings songs about
us, worse that he gets the salient points all bass-ackwards, but—"
"To give us the reputation that we're shining warriors of the
Light is too damned much!"
They had discovered some four or five years ago that there was a
particular Bard, one Leslac by name, who was making a specialty of creating
ballads about their exploits. That would have been all to the good, for it was
certainly spreading their name and reputation far and wide—except that he was
also leaving the impression that the pair of them were less interested in money
than in Just Causes.
Leslac had stressed and overstressed their habit of succoring
women in distress and avenging those who were past distress. So now anyone who
had an ax to grind came looking for them—most particularly, women. And usually
they came with empty pockets, or damned little in the way of payment to offer,
while the paying jobs they would rather have taken had been trickling
away to others—because those who might have offered those jobs couldn't believe
they'd be interested in "mere money."
And to add true insult to injury, a good half of the time Kethry's
geas-blade Need would force them into taking those worthless Just
Causes. For Need's geas was, as written on her blade, "Woman's Need calls
me/As Woman's Need made me./Her Need will I answer/As my maker bade me."
By now Kethry was so soul-bonded to the sword that it would have taken a god to
free her from it. Most of the time it was worth it; the blade imparted absolute
weapons expertise to Kethry, and would Heal anything short of a death wound on
any woman holding it. And after the debacle with the demon-godling Thalhkarsh,
Need had seemed to quiet down in her demands, unless directly presented with a
woman in dire trouble. But with all those Just Causes showing up, Need had been
rapidly turning into something more than a bit expensive to be associated with,
thanks to Leslac.
They'd been at their wits' ends, and finally had gone to another
couple of mercenaries, old friends of theirs, Justin Twoblade and Ikan Dryvale,
for advice. They hadn't really hoped the pair would have any notions, but they
were the last resort.
And, somewhat to Tarma's surprise, they'd had advice.
It was the off-season for the Jewel Merchant's Guild, Justin and
Ikan's employers; that meant no caravans. And that meant that the paired
mercenary guards were cosily holed up in their private quarters at the Broken
Sword, with the winter months to while away. They certainly weren't stinting
themselves; they had a pair of very decent rooms, the Broken Sword's excellent
ale—and, as Tarma discovered when she tapped at their door, no lack of female
companionship. But the current pair of bright-eyed lovelies was sent pouting
away when straw-haired Ikan answered their knock and discovered just who it was
that had chosen to descend upon himself and his partner.
One of the innkeeper's quick-footed offspring was summoned then,
and sent off for food and ale—for neither Justin nor his shieldbrother would
hear a word of serious talk until everyone was settled and comfortable at their
hearth, meat and drink at their elbows. Justin and Ikan took their hospitality
very seriously.
"I've figured this was coming," Justin had said,
somewhat to Tarma's shock, "And not just because of that idiot songster.
You two have very unique and specialized skills—not like me and Ikan. You've
gotten about as far as you can as an independent pairing. Now me and Ikan, we
had the opposite problem. We're just ordinary fighting types; a bit better than
most, but that's all that distinguishes us. We had to join a company to get a
reputation; then we could live off that reputation as a pair. But you—you've
got a reputation that will get you high fees from the right mercenary
company."
Tarma had shaken her head doubtfully at that, but Justin had fixed
her with his mournful houndlike eyes, and she'd held her peace.
"You, Tarma," he'd continued, "need much wider
experience, especially experience in commanding others—and only a company will
give you that. Kethry, you need to exercise skills and spells you wouldn't use
in a partnership, and to learn how to delegate if your school is ever going to
be successful, and again, you'll learn that in a company."
"Long speech," Tarma had commented sardonically.
"Well, I've got one, too," Ikan had said, winking a
guileless blue eye at her. "You also need exposure to highborns, so that
they know your reputation isn't just minstrelsy and moonshine. You
haven't a choice; you truly need to join a company, one with a reputation of
their own, one good enough that the highborns come to them for their
contract. Then, once you are ready to hang up your blades and start your
schools, you'll have noble patrons and noble pupils panting in anticipation of
your teaching—and two not-so-noble aging fighters panting in anticipation of
easy teaching jobs."
Kethry had laughed at Ikan's comic half-bow in their direction.
"I take it that you already have a company in mind?"
"Idra's Sunhawks," Justin had replied blandly.
"The Sunhawks? Warrior's Oath—you'd aim us bloody damned
high, wouldn't you?" Tarma had been well taken aback. For all that
they were composed of specialist-troops—skirmishers, horse-archers and
trackers—the Sunhawks' repute was so high that kings and queens had been
known to negotiate their contracts with Idra in person. "Good gods, I
should bloody well think highborns negotiate with them; their leader's of the
damned Royal House of Rethwellan! And just how are we supposed to get a hearing
with Captain Idra?"
"Us," Ikan had replied, stabbing a thumb at his chest.
"We're ex-Hawks; we started with her, and probably would still be with
her, but Idra was going more and more over to horse-archers, and we were
getting less useful, so we decided to light out on our own. But we left on good
terms; if we recommend that she give you a hearing, Idra will take our word on
it."
"And once she sees that you're what you claim to be, you'll
be in, never fear." Justin had finished for him. "Shin'a'in
Kal'enedral—gods, you'd fit in like a sword in a sheath, Hawkface. And you, Keth—Idra's
always got use for another mage, 'specially one nearly Masterclass. The best
she's got now is a couple of self-taught hedge-wizards. Add in Furball
there—you'll be a combination she won't be able to resist."
So it had proved. With letters in their pouches from both Ikan and
his partner (both could read and write, a rarity among highborn, much less
mercenaries) they had headed for the Sunhawks' winter quarters, a tiny hill
town called Hawksnest. The name was not an accident; the town owed its existence
to the Sunhawks, who wintered there and kept their dependents there, those
dependents that weren't permanent parts of the Company bivouac. Hawksnest was
nestled in a mountain valley, sheltered from the worst of the mountaintop
weather, and the fortified barracks complex of the Sunhawks stood between it
and the valley entrance. When the Hawks rode out, a solid garrison and
all the Hawks-in-training remained behind. Idra believed in creating an
environment for her fighters in which the only worries they needed to have on
campaign were associated with the campaign.
Signing with Idra was unlike signing with any other Company; most
Hawks stayed with Idra for years—she had led the Company for nearly twenty
years. She'd willingly renounced her position as third in line to the throne of
Rethwellan twenty-five years earlier, preferring freedom over luxury. She'd
hired on with a mercenary company herself, then after five years of experience
accompanied by her own steady rise within the ranks, had formed the Hawks.
Tarma had been impressed with the quarters and the town; the
inhabitants were easy, cheerful and friendly—which spoke of good behavior on
the part of the mercs. The Hawks' winter quarters were better than those of
many standing armies, and Tarma had especially approved of the tall wooden
palisade that stretched across the entrance to Hawksnest, a palisade guarded by
both Hawks and townsmen. And the Hawks themselves—as rumor had painted
them—were a tight and disciplined group; drilling even in the slack season, and
showing no sign of winter-born softness.
Idra had sent for them herself after reading their letters; they
found her in her office within the Hawks' barracks. She was a muscular,
athletic looking woman, with the body of a born horsewoman, mouse-gray hair, a
strong face that could have been used as the model for a heroic monument, and
the direct and challenging gaze of the professional soldier.
"So," she'd said, when they took their seats across the
scratched, worn table that served as her desk, "if I'm to trust Twoblade
and Dryvale, it should be me begging you to sign on."
Kethry had blushed; Tarma had met that direct regard with an
unwavering gaze of her own. "I'm Kal'enedral," Tarma said shortly.
"If you know Shin'a'in, that should tell you something."
"Swordsworn, hmm?" The quick gray eyes took in Tarma's
brown clothing. "Not on bloodfeud—"
"That was ended some time ago," Tarma told her, levelly.
"We ended it, we two working together. That was how we met."
"Shin'a'in Kal'enedral and outClansman. Unlikely pairing—even
given a common cause. So why are you still together?"
For answer they both turned up their right palms so that she could
see the silver crescent-scars that decorated them. One eyebrow lifted, ever so
slightly.
"Sa. She'enedran. That explains a bit. Seems I've
heard of a pair like you."
"If it was in songs," Tarma winced, "let's just say
the stories are true in the main, but false in the details. And the author
constantly left out the fact that we've always done our proper planning before
we ever took on the main event. Luck plays wondrous small part in what we do,
if we've got any say in the matter. And besides all that—we're a lot more
interested in making a living than being somebody's savior."
Idra had nodded; her expression had settled into something very
like satisfaction. "One last question for each of you—what's your
specialty, Shin'a'in—and what's your rank and school, mage?"
"Horseback skirmishing, as you probably figured, knowing me
for Shin'a'in." Tarma had replied first. "I'm a damned good
archer—probably as good as any you've got. I can fight afoot, but I'd rather
not. We've both got battlesteeds, and I'm sure you know what that means. My
secondary skill is tracking."
"I'm White Winds, Journeyman; I'd say I lack a year or two of
being Masterclass." Kethry had given her answer hard on the heels of
Tarma's. "One other thing I think Ikan and Justin may have forgotten—Tarma
is mindmate to a kyree, and I've got a bespelled blade I'm soul-bonded
to. It gives me weapons expertise, so I'm pretty good at keeping myself in one
piece on a battlefield; that's damned useful in a fight, you won't have to
spare anybody to look after me. And besides that, it will Heal most wounds for
a woman—and that's any woman, not just me."
Idra had not missed the implication. "But not a man, eh?
Peculiar, but—well, I'm no mage, can't fathom your ways. About half my force is
female, so that would come in pretty useful, regardless. But White Winds—that's
no Healing school."
"No, it's not," Kethry agreed, "I haven't the
greater Healing magics, just a few of the lesser. But I've got the
battle-magics, and the defensive magics. I'm not one to stand in the back of a
fight, shriek, and look appalled—"
For the first time Idra smiled. "No, I would guess not, for
all that you look better suited to a bower than a battlefield. About the kyree—we're talking Pelagir Hills
changeling, here? Standard wolfshape?"
"Hai—overall he's built like a predator cat, but he's
got the coat and head of a wolf. Shoulder comes to about my waist, he runs like
a Plains grasscat; no stamina for a long march, but he's used to riding pillion
with me." Tarma's description made Idra nod, eyes narrowed in definite
satisfaction. "He's got a certain ability at smelling out magic, and a
certain immunity to it; given he's from the Pelagirs he might have other
tricks, but he hasn't used them around me yet. Mindspeaks, too, mostly to me,
but he could probably make himself heard to anyone with a touch of the Gift.
Useful scout, even more useful as an infiltrator. But be aware that he eats a
lot, and if he can't hunt, he'll be wanting fresh meat daily. That'll have to
be part of any contract we sign."
"Well, from what my boys say, what I knew by reputation, and
what you've told me, I don't think I need any more information. Only one thing
I don't reckon—" Idra had said, broad brow creased with honest puzzlement.
"If you don't mind my asking what's none of my business even if I do
sign you, why's the kyree mindmate to
the fighter and not the mage's familiar?"
Tarma groaned, then, and Kethry laughed. "Oh, Warrl has a
mind of his own," the mage had answered, "I had been the one
doing the calling, but he made the decision. He decided that I didn't need him,
and Tarma did."
"So besides your formidable talents, I get three recruits,
not two; three used to teamworking. No commander in her right mind would argue
with that." Idra then stood up, and pushed papers across her desk to them.
"Sign those, my friends, if you're still so minded, and you'll be Sunhawks
before the ink dries."
So it had been. Now Tarma was subcommander of the scouts, and Keth
was in charge of the motley crew concerned with Healing and magery—two
hedge-mages, a field-surgeon and herbalist and his two apprentices, and a
Healing Priest of Shayana. "Priestess" would have been a more
accurate title, but the Shayana's devotees did not make any gender differences
in their rankings, which ofttimes confused someone who expected one sex and got
the opposite. Tresti was handfasted to Sewen, Idra's Second, a weathered,
big-boned, former trooper; that sometimes caused Keth sleepless nights. She
wondered what would happen if it was ever Sewen carried in through the door
flap of the infirmary, but the possibility never seemed to bother Tresti.
Tarma and Kethry had fought in two intense campaigns, each lasting
barely a season; this was their third, and it had been brutal from the start.
But then, that was often the case with civil war and rebellion.
Ten moons ago, the King of Jkatha had died, declaring his Queen, Sursha,
to be his successor and Regent for their three children. Eight moons ago
Sursha's brother-in-law, Declin Lord Kelcrag, had made a bid for the throne
with his own armed might.
Lord Kelcrag was initially successful in his attempt, actually
driving Sursha and her allies out of the Throne City and into the provinces.
But he could not eliminate them, and he had made the mistake of assuming that
defeat meant that they would vanish.
Queen Sursha had talent and wisdom—the talent to attract both
loyal and capable people to her cause, and the wisdom to know when to
stand back and let them do what was needful, however distasteful that
might be to her gentle sensibilities. That talent won half the kingdom to her
side; that wisdom allowed her to pick an otherwise rough-hewn provincial noble,
Havak Lord Leamount, as her General-in-Chief and led her to give him her
full and open support even when his decisions were personally repugnant to her.
General Lord Leamount levied or begged troops from every source he
could—and then hired specialists to fill in the skill gaps his levies didn't
have.
And one of the first mercenary Captains he had approached was
Idra. His troops were mostly foot, with a generous leavening of heavy horse—no
skirmishers, no scouts, no light horse at all, other than his own personal levy
of hill-clansmen. The hillmen were mounted on rugged little ponies; good in
rough country but slow in open areas, and useless as strike-and-run
skirmishers.
And by now Idra's troops were second to none, thanks in no small
part to Tarma. The Shin'a'in had seen no reason why she could not benefit her
presumptive clan's coffers, and her new comrades as well; she'd arranged for
the Sunhawks to get first pick of the sale-horses of Tale'sedrin. These weren't
battlesteeds, which were never let out of Shin'a'in hands, but they
weren't culls either, which was what the Sunhawks had been seeing. And when the
Hawks had snapped up every beast she offered, she arranged for four more clans
to bring in their first-pick horses as well.
So now the Hawks were better mounted than most nobles, on horses
that could be counted as extra weapons in a close-in fight.
That fact was not lost on Lord Leamount, nor was he blind to
Idra's canny grasp of strategy. Idra was made part of the High Command, and
pretty much allowed to dictate how her Hawks were used.
As a result, although the fighting had been vicious, the Hawks
were still at something like four-fifths strength; their ranks were nowhere
near as decimated as they might have been under a commander who threw them
recklessly at the enemy, rather than using them to their best advantage.
At Midsummer, Lord Leamount's combined forces had fallen on the
Throne City and driven Lord Kelcrag out. Every move Kelcrag had made since then
had been one of retreat. His retreat had been hard fought, and each acre of
ground had been bitterly contested, but it had been an inexorable series of
losses.
But now autumn was half over; he had made a break-and-run, and at
this point everyone in Leamount's armies knew why. He was choosing to make a
last stand on ground he had picked.
Both sides knew this next battle would have to bring the
war to a conclusion. In winter it would be impossible to continue any kind of
real fight—the best outcome would be stalemate as troops of both sides
floundered through winter storms and prayed that ill-luck and hardship would
keep their ranks from being thinned too much. If Kelcrag retreated to his own
lands, he'd come under seige, and ultimately lose if the besieging troops could
be supplied and rotated. If he fled into exile, the Queen would have to mount
an ever-present vigil against his return—an expensive proposition. She and
Leamount had both wanted to invoke the Mercenary Code ritual of Oathbreaking
and Outcasting on him—but while he was undeniably a rebel, he had
actually broken no vows; nor could Sursha find the requisite triad for the full
ceremony of priest, mage and honest man, all of whom must have suffered
personal, irreparable harm at his hands as a result of violation of sworn
oaths. So technically, he could have been seen by some to be the injured party.
And as for Kelcrag in such a situation, exile would mean
impoverishment and hardship, circumstances he was not ready to face; further,
it would bring the uncertainty of when or even if he could muster enough
troops and allies to make a second try.
Kelcrag had chosen his ground with care, Tarma had to give him
that. He had shale cliffs (impossible to scale) to his left, scrub forest and
rough, broken ground to his right (keeping Leamount from charging from that
direction); his troops were on the high ground, occupying a wide pass between
the hills, with a gradual rising slope between his army and the loyalists—
It was as close to being an ideal situation for the rebels as Tarma
could imagine. There was no way to come at him except straight on, and no way
he could be flanked. And now the autumnal rains were beginning.
Of all of Idra's folk, only the scouts had been deployed, seeking
(in vain) holes or weaknesses in Kelcrag's defenses. For the rest, it had been
Set up camp. Dig in, and Wait. Wait for better weather, better information,
better luck.
"Gah—" Tarma groaned again. "I hope Kelcrag's as
miserable on his damned hill as we are down here. Anything out of the
mages?"
"Mine, or in general?"
"Both."
"Mine have been too busy fending off nuisance-spells to
bother with trying to see what's going on across the way. I've been setting up
wards on the camp, protections on our commanders, and things like the jesto-vath
on the Healer's tent. I haven't heard anything directly from Leamount's greater
mages, but I've got some guesses."
"Which are?" Tarma stretched, then turned on her side.
"The Great Battle Magics were exhausted early on for both
sides in this mess, and none of the mages have had time to regather power. That
leaves the Lesser—which means they're dueling like a pair of tired but
equally-matched bladesmen. Neither can see what the other is doing; neither can
get anything through that's more than an annoyance. And neither wants to let
down their guards and their shields enough to recharge in a power circle or
open up enough to try one of the Greater Magics they might have left. So your
people will be pretty much left alone except for physical, material
attacks."
"Well, that's a blessing, any—"
"Scoutmaster?" came a plaintive call from outside the
tent. "Be ye awake yet?"
"Who the bloody—" Tarma scrambled for the lacings of the
door flaps as Kethry hastily cut the spell about the door with two slashes of
her hands and a muttered word.
"Get in here, child, before you turn into an ice lump!"
Tarma hauled the half-frozen scout into their tent; the girl's brown eyes went
round at the sight of the spell energy in the tent walls, wide and no little
frightened. She looked like what she was, a mountain peasant; short, stocky and
brown, round of face and eye. But she could stick to the back of her horse like
a burr on a sheep, she was shrewd and quick, and nobody's fool. She was one of
the Hawks Tarma had been thinking of when she'd mentioned other ways of keeping
warm; Kyra was shieldmated to Rild, a mountain of a man who somehow managed to
sit a horse as lightly as thin Tarma.
"Keth, this is Kyra, she's one of the new ones. Replaced
Pawell when he went down." Tarma pushed the girl down onto her bedroll and
stripped the sodden black cloak from her shoulders, hanging it to dry beside
her own coat. "Kyra. don't look so green; you've seen Keth in the Healer's
tent; this is just a bit of magic so we sleep more comfortable. Keth's better than
a brazier, and I don't have to worry about her tipping over in the night!"
The girl swallowed hard, but looked a little less frightened.
"Beg pardon, but I ain't seen much magery."
"I should think not, out in these hills. Not much call for
it, nor money to pay for it. So—spit it out; what brings you here, instead of
curled up with that monster you call a shieldmate?"
The girl blushed brilliant red. "Na, Scoutmaster—"
"Don't 'na' me, my girl. I may not play the game anymore, but
I know the rules—and before the Warrior put her Oath on me, I had my moments,
though you children probably wouldn't think it to look at me, old stick that I
am. Out with it—something gone wrong with the pairing?"
"Eh, no! Naught like that—I just been thinking. Couldn't get
a look round before today; now seems I know this pass, like. Got kin a ways
west, useta summer wi' 'em. Cousins. If I'm aright, 'bout a day's ride west o'
here. And there was always this rumor, see, there was this path up their
way—"
Tarma didn't bother to hide her excitement; she leaned forward on
her elbows, feeling a growing internal certainty that what Kyra was about to
reveal was vital.
"—there was this story abaht the path, d'ye ken? The wild
ones, the ponies, they used it. At weanin' time we'd go for 'em t' harvest the
foals, but some on 'em would allus get away—well, tales said they used that
path, that it went all the way through t'other side. D'ye take my
meaning?"
"Warrior Bright, you bet I do, my girl!" Tarma
jumped lithely to her feet, and pulled Kyra up after her. "Keth?"
"Right." Kethry made the slashing motions again, and the
magic parted from the door flaps. "Wait a hair—I don't want you two
finding our answer and then catching your deaths."
Another pass of hands and a muttered verse sent water steaming up
out of coat and cloak—when Tarma pulled both off the centerpole they were dry
to the touch.
Tarma flashed her partner a grin. "Thanks, milady. If you get
sleepy, leave the door open for me, hey?"
Kethry gave a most unladylike snort. "As if I could sleep after
this bit of news! I haven't been working with you for this long not to see what
you saw—"
"The end to the stalemate."
"You've said it. I'll be awake for hours on this one."
Kethry settled herself with her blankets around her, then dismissed the magic altogether.
The tent went dark and cold again, and Kethry relit her brazier with another
muttered word. "I'll put that jesto-vath back up when you get
back—and make it fast! Or I may die of nerves instead of freezing to
death!"
Two
Back out into the cold and wet and dark they went, Kyra trailing
along behind Tarma. She stayed right at Tarma's elbow, more a presence felt
than anything seen, as Warrl, in mindtouch with Tarma, led both of them around
washouts and the worst of the mud. Tarma's goal was the Captain's tent.
She knew full well it would be hours before Sewen and Idra saw their
bedrolls; she'd given them the reports of her scouts just before rumbling her
way to her own rest, and she knew they would still be trying to extract some
bit of advantage out of the bleak word she'd left with them.
So Warrl led them to Idra's quarters; even in the storm-black it
was the only tent not hard to find. Idra had her connections for some
out-of-the-ordinary items, and after twenty years of leading the Hawks, there
was no argument but that she had more than earned her little luxuries. There
was a bright yellow mage-light shining like a miniature moon atop each of the
poles that held up a canvas flap that served as a kind of sheltered porch for
the sentry guarding the tent. Unlike Keth's dim little witchlight, these were
bright enough to be seen for several feet even through the rain. If it had been
reasonable weather, and if there had been any likelihood that the camp would be
attacked, or that the commanders of the army would be sought out as targets,
Idra's quarters would be indistinguishable from the rest of the Hawks'. But in
weather like this—Idra felt that being able to find her, quickly, took
precedence over her own personal safety.
Idra's tent was about the size of two of the bivouac tents. The
door flap was fastened down, but Tarma could see the front half of the tent
glowing from more mage-lights within, and the yellow light cast shadows of Idra
and Sewen against the canvas as they bent over the map-table, just as she'd
left them.
Warrl was already moving into the wavering glow of the
mage-lights. He was a good couple of horselengths in front of them, which was
far enough that the sentry under that bit of sheltering canvas couldn't see
Kyra and Tarma to challenge them—at least not yet. No matter—and no matter that
Warrl's black fur couldn't be seen in the rain even with the glow of the
mage-lights on him. Warrl barked three times out of the storm, paused, then
barked twice more. That was his password. Every man, woman, and
noncombatant in the Hawks knew Warrl and Warrl's signal—and knew that where
Warrl was, Tarma was following after.
So by the time Tarma and Kyra had slogged the last few feet to the
tent, the sentry was standing at ease, the door flap was unlaced, and Sewen was
ready to hold it open for them against the wind. His muddy gray eyes were
worried as he watched the two of them ease by him. Tarma knew what he was
thinking; at this hour, any caller probably meant more trouble.
"I trust this isn't a social call," Idra said dryly, as
they squeezed themselves inside and stood, dripping and blinking, in the glow
of her mage-lights. The mage-lights only made her plain leather armor and
breeches look the more worn and mundane. "And I hope it isn't a disciplinary
problem—"
Kyra's autumnal eyes were even rounder than before; Tarma
suppressed a chuckle. Kyra hadn't seen the Captain except to sign with her, and
was patently in awe of her. "Captain, this is my new scout, Kyra—"
"Replaced Pawell, didn't she?"
"Aye—to make it short, she thinks she knows a way to come in
behind Kelcrag."
"Great good gods!" Idra half rose off of her tall stool,
then sank down again, with a look as though she'd been startled out of a doze.
Well,
that certainly got their attention, Tarma thought, watching both Idra
and her Second go from weary and discouraged to alert in the time it took to
say the words.
"C'mere, kid," Sewen rumbled. He took Kyra's wool-clad
elbow with a hard and callused hand that looked fit to crush the bones of her
arm, and which Tarma knew from experience could safely keep a day-old chick
sheltered across a furlong of rough ground. He pulled her over to the table in
the center of the tent. "Y'read maps, no? Good. Here's us. Here's him.
Report—"
Kyra plainly forgot her awe and fear of magic, and the diffidence
with which she had regarded her leaders, and became the professional scout
beneath Sewen's prodding. The tall, bony Second was Idra's right hand and
more—where her aristocratic bearing sometimes overawed her own people,
particularly new recruits. Sewen was as plain as a clod of earth and awed no
one. Not that anyone ever thought of insubordination around him; he was just as
respected as Idra—it was just that he looked and sounded exactly like what he
was; a common fighter who'd come up through the ranks on brains and ability. He
still dressed, by preference, in the same boiled-leather armor and homespun
he'd always worn, though he could more than afford the kind of expensive
riveted brigandine and doeskin Idra and Tarma had chosen. He understood
everything about the Hawks from the ground up—because he'd served the Hawks
since Idra's fifth year of commanding them. Idra and Tarma just leaned over the
map-table with him and let him handle the young scout.
"So—on the face of it, it bears checking. That's a task for
the scouts," Idra said at last, when Kyra had finished her report. She
braced both hands on the table and turned to her Scoutmaster. "Tarma,
what's your plan?"
"That I take out Kyra and—hmm—Garth, Beaker and Jodi,"
Tarma replied after a moment of thought "We leave before dawn tomorrow and
see what we can see. If this trail still exists, we'll follow it in and find
out if the locals are right. I'll have Beaker bring a pair of his birds; one to
let you know if we find the trail at all, and one to tell you yea or nay on
whether it's usable. That way you'll have full information for Lord Leamount
without waiting for us to get back."
"Good." Idra nodded in satisfaction, as a bit of
gray-brown hair escaped to get into her eyes. "Sewen?"
"What I'd do," Sewen affirmed, pushing away from the
table and sitting back onto his stool. "Them birds don't like water, but
that's likely to make 'em want their coops more, maybe fly a bit faster, hey?
Don' wanta send a mage-message, or Kelcrag's magickers might track it."
"Uh-huh; that was my thought," Tarma agreed, nodding.
"That, and the sad fact that other than Keth, our magickers might
not be able to boost a mage-message that far."
"I need Keth here," Idra stated, "and none of Leamount's
mages are fit enough to travel over that kind of territory."
Sewen emitted a bark of laughter, weathered face crinkling up for
a moment. "Gah, that lot's as miserable as a buncha wet chickens in a
leaky hennery right now. They don' know this weather, an' ev'ry time they gotta
move from their tent, y'd think it was gonna be a trip t' th' end of th'
earth!"
Idra looked thoughtful for a moment, and rubbed the side of her
nose with her finger. "This isn't wizard weather, is it, do you
suppose?"
Both Tarma and her scout shook their heads vigorously. "Na,
Cap'n," Kyra said, cheerful light brightening her round face. "Na, is
just a bit of a gentle fall storm. Y'should see a bad one, now—"
Idra's eyebrows shot upward; she straightened and looked seriously
alarmed until Sewen's guffaw told her she'd been played for an ignorant
flatlander.
"Seriously, no," Tarma seconded, "I asked Keth. She
says the only sign of wizard weather would be if this stopped—that it's
got too much weight behind it, whatever that means."
Sewen lifted his own eyebrow and supplied the answer. "She
meant it's somethin' comin' in the proper season—got all the weight of time an'
what should be behind it." He grinned at Tarma's loose jaw, showing
teeth a horse could envy. "Useta study wizardry as a lad, hadn't 'nough
Gift t' be more'n half a hedge-wizard, so gave't up."
"Good, then, we're all agreed." Idra straightened her
shoulders, gave her head an unconscious toss to get that bit of her hair out of
her face. "Tarma, see to it. Who will you put in to replace you
tomorrow?"
"Tamar. Next to Garth and Jodi, he's my best. and he's come
in from the skirmishers."
"Good. And tell him to tell the rest of your scouts not to
give the enemy any slack tomorrow, but not to get in as close as they did today.
I don't want them thinking we've maybe found something else to concentrate on,
but I don't want any more gutwounds, either."
It was dawn, or nearly, and the rain had slackened some. There was
still lightning and growling thunder, but at least you could see through the
murk, and it was finally possible to keep the shielded torches at the entrance
to the guarded camp alight.
Tarma saw her scouts assembled beneath one of those torches as she
rode up to the sentry. She felt like yawning, but wouldn't; she wouldn't be a
bad example. Cold, ye gods, I'm half-frozen and we haven't even gotten out
of the camp yet, she thought with resignation. I haven't been warm since
summer.
:And then you were complaining about heat,: Warrl replied
sardonically.
"I was not. That was Keth," she retorted. "I like
the heat."
Warrl did not deign to reply.
Tarma was already feeling grateful for Kethry's parting gift, the
water-repelling cape Keth had insisted on throwing over her coat. It's not
magic, Keth had said, I don't want a mage smelling you out. Just
tight-woven, oiled silk, and bloody damned expensive. I swapped a jesto-vath on his tent to Gerrold
for it, for as long as the rains last. I hope you don't mind the fact that it's
looted goods—
Not likely,
she'd replied.
So today it was Keth looking out for and worrying about her. They
seemed to take it turn and turn about these days, being mother-hen. Well, that
was what being partners was all about.
:Took you long enough to come to that conclusion,: Warrl
laughed. :Now if you'd just start mother-henning me—:
"You'd bite me, you fur-covered fiend."
:Oh, probably.:
"Ah—you're hopeless," Tarma chided him. smothering a
grin. "Let's look serious here; this is business."
:Yes, oh mistress.:
Tarma bit back another retort. She never won in a contest of sharp
tongues with the kyree. Instead of
answering him, she pondered her choice of scouts again, and was satisfied, all
things considered, that she'd picked the best ones for the job.
First, Garth: a tiny man, and dark, he looked like a dwarfish
shadow on his tall Shin'a'in gelding. He was one of Tarma's first choices for
close-in night work, since his dusky skin made it unnecessary for him to smear
ash on himself, but his most outstanding talents were that he could ride like a
Shin'a'in and track like a hound. His one fault was that he couldn't hit a
haystack with more than two arrows out of ten. He was walking his bay gelding
back and forth between the two sentries at the sally-point, since his beast was
the most nervous of the five that would be going out, and the thunder was
making it lay its ears back and show the whites of its eyes.
Beaker; average was the word for Beaker; size, coloring,
habits—average in everything except his nose—that raptor's bill rivaled
Tarma's. His chestnut mare was as placid of disposition as Garth's beast was
nervous, and Beaker's temperament matched his mare's. As Tarma rode up, they
both appeared to be dozing, despite the cold rain coming down on their heads.
Fastened to the cantle of Beaker's saddle were two cages, each the size of two
fists put together, each holding a black bird with a green head. Beaker was a
good tracker, almost as good as Garth, but this was his specialty; the
training and deployment of his messenger birds.
Jodi: sleepy-eyed and deceptively quiet, this pale, ice-blonde
child with evident aristocratic blood in her veins was their mapmaker. Besides
that skill, she was a vicious knife fighter and as good with a bow as Garth was
poor with one. She rode a gray mare with battlesteed blood in her; a beast
impossible for anyone but her or Tarma to ride, who would only allow a select
few to handle her. Jodi sat her as casually as some gentle palfrey—and with
Jodi in her saddle, the mare acted like one. Her only fault was that she
avoided situations where she would have to command the way she would have
avoided fouled water.
And Kyra: peasant blood and peasant stock, she'd trained herself
in tracking, bow and knife, and hard riding, intending to be something other
than some stodgy fanner's stolid wife. When the war came grinding over her
parents' fields and her family had fled for their lives, she'd stayed. She'd
coolly sized up both sides and chosen Sursha's—then sized up the mercenary
Companies attached to Sursha's army and decided which ones she wanted to
approach.
She'd started first with the Hawks, though she hadn't really
thought she'd get in—or so she had confessed to Tarma after being signed on.
Little had she guessed that Scout Pawell had coughed out his life pinned to a
tree three days earlier—and that the Hawks had been down by two scouts before
that had happened. Tarma had interviewed her and sent her to Sewen, who'd sent
her to Idra—who'd sent her back to Tarma with the curt order—"Try her. If
she survives, hire her." Tarma had sent her on the same errand that had
killed Pawell. Kyra had returned. Since Pawell had had no relatives, no
leman and no shieldmate to claim his belongings, Tarma gave her Pawell's dun
horse, Pawell's gear, and Pawell's tentmate. Kyra had quickly acquired
something Pawell hadn't—tentmate had turned to shieldmate and lover.
The Scouts altogether approved, as Pawell had been standoffish and
his replacement was anything but. The romance had amused and touched them. Kyra
had begun to bloom under the approval, to think for herself, to make judgment
calls. The Kyra that had joined them would never have come to Tarma with an old
tale and a rumor; Kyra of "now" had experience enough to know
how important that rumor could be, and enough guts to present the information
herself. She was Tarma's personal pick to become a subcommander herself in a
few years.
It was false dawn; one hour to real dawn, and there was a hint
that the sky was getting lighter. No words were needed; they all knew what they
had to do. When Tarma rode gray Ironheart into the waiting knot of Scouts and
horses, those dismounted swung back up into their saddles. Tarma didn't even
slacken her pace; all five of them left the camp in proper diamond formation,
as if they'd rehearsed the whole maneuver. Tarma had point (since as commander
she was the only one of the five with all the current passwords). Garth tail,
Jodi right and Kyra left—Beaker and his precious birds rode protected in the
middle.
They rode along the back of the string of encampments; dark tents
against slowly graying sky to their right, scrub forest and hills stark black
against the sky to their left. The camps were totally dark, since just about
everyone had encountered the same troubles as the Hawks had with lights and
fires in the pouring rain.
They were challenged almost as soon as they left their own camp; a
foot-sentry, sodden, but alert. He belonged to Staferd's Cold-drakes; this was
the edge of their camp. Tarma nodded to herself with satisfaction at his
readiness, and gave him the countersign.
Then came a heavy encampment of regular infantry, whose sentry
hailed Warrl, who was trotting at Ironheart's flank, by name, and called out;
"You're recognized, Sunhawks. Pass on." Tarma felt a
little twitchy about that one, but couldn't fault him. You challenged those
whom you didn't recognize; you could let known quantities by. And there were no
kyree in Kelcrag's forces.
At the next encampment—Duke Greyhame's levy—they were physically
challenged; a fully-armed youth with an arrogant sneer on his lips, mounted on
a heavy, wild-eyed warhorse. He blocked their path until Tarma gave an
elaborate countersign. Even then, he wouldn't clear the path entirely. He left
only enough room for them to ride past in single file, unless they wanted to
desert the firm ground and ride on the mushy banks. And he backed off with some
show of reluctance, and much induced rearing and prancing of his gelding.
"Scoutmaster—"
Garth eased his horse alongside Tarma's and whispered angrily to
her:
"I'd like to feed that little son of a bitch his own damned
gauntlet!"
"Peace," Tarma said, "Let me handle this. Give me
rear for long enough to teach him a lesson."
Garth passed the word; wry grins appeared and vanished in an
instant, and the scout ranks opened and closed so that Beaker had point and
Tarma had dropped back to tail. The scouts squeezed past the arrogant sentry,
one by one, Tarma the last. She didn't move, only stared at him for a long
moment, letting Ironheart feel her ground and set her feet.
Then she dropped her hands, and signaled the battlemare with her
knees.
Black as a nightmare in the rain, the battlesteed reared up to her
full height—and stayed there, as perfectly balanced as only a Shin'a'in trained
warsteed could be. Another invisible command from Tarma, and she hopped forward
on her hind hooves, forefeet lashing out at the stranger-gelding, who, not
being the fool his rider was, cleared off the path and up onto the mucky
shoulder. Then Ironheart settled to all four hooves again, but only for as long
as it took to get past the arrogant sentry. As Tarma had figured he would, he
spurred his beast down onto the path again as soon as they got by. Whatever
he'd thought to do then didn't much matter. As soon as he was right behind them
and just out of range of what was normally an attack move, Tarma gave
her mare a final signal that sent her leaping into the air, lashing out with
her rear hooves in a wicked kick as she reached the top of her arc. Had the boy
been within range of those hooves, his face would have been smashed in. As
it was (as Tarma had carefully calculated), the load of mud Ironheart had
picked up flicked off her heels to splatter all over him, his fancy panoply,
and his considerably cowed beast.
"Next time, boy," she called back over her shoulder, as
her scouts snickered, "best know whose tail it is you plan to
twist, and be prepared for consequences."
The edge of the camps was held by the freefighters—little clots of
scum no good company would take into itself. They were one of the reasons each
levy and company had its own set of sentries; politics was the other. Tarma
didn't much understand politics—scum, she knew. It had been a band of this sort
of flotsam that had wiped out her Clan.
But a sword was a sword, and Leamount was not above paying them so
long as someone he trusted could keep an eye on them. That, thank the
Warrior, is not Idra's job, Tarma thought to herself, wrinkling her nose at
the stench of their huddle of makeshift shelters. Unwashed bodies, rotting
canvas, garbage, privy pits right in the camp—the mix was hardly savory. Even
the rain couldn't wash it out of the air. They rode past this lot (too sodden
with drink or drug, or just too damn lazy to set one of their own to sentry
duty) without a challenge, but with one hand on their knives and shortswords at
all times. There'd been trouble with this lot before—and five were not too many
for them to consider mobbing if they thought it worth their while.
Once out of the camps, they rearranged their order. Now it was
Kyra who had point, and Tarma who took tail. This side of the mountains, danger
would be coming at them from the rear—Kelcrag's scouts, sniffing around the
edges of the Royalist army. All of them had taken care long ago to replace
metal harness pieces with leather where they could, or even carved
wood—anything that wouldn't shine and wouldn't clink. The metal they had to
have was not brightwork; it was dulled and tarnished and left that way.
Shin'a'in horses were trained to neck and knee, so all they needed was a soft
halter with no bit. As for their own armor, or lack of it, their best
protection would be speed on a mission like this—stay out of the way if you
can, and never close for a fight unless you have no choice. So they saved
themselves and their horses the few extra pounds, and dressed for the weather,
not for battle. Tarma kept her short Shin'a'in horsebow strung and under her
cape; if it came to a fight, she would buy the rest time to string theirs.
Warrl ranged all over their backtrail, keeping in steady mindtouch with Tarma.
He would buy them yet more advance warning, if there was going to be trouble.
But the trek west was quiet.
The storm gradually slackened to drizzle as the sky grew lighter;
the landscape was dreary, even without the devastations of warfare all about
them. The hills were dead and brown, and lifeless; the herds of sheep and
gercattle that usually grazed them had gone to feed one or both armies. The
scrub trees displayed black, leafless branches against the gray sky, and the
silence around them intensified the impression that this area was utterly
deserted. Wet, rotting leaves left their own signature on the breeze, a
melancholy, bitter aroma more tasted than smelled, that lingered in the back of
the throat. The track they followed was part rock, part yellow mud, a thick,
claylike stuff that clung to hooves and squelched when it let go.
All five of them rode in that peculiar half-trance of the scout on
his way to something; not looking for anything, not yet—not paying
outward attention to surroundings—but should anything, however small, move—
A crow, flapping up to their right, got exactly the appropriate
reaction; Tarma, ready-armed, had already sighted on him before he'd risen a
foot. Jodi and Beaker had their hands on their bowcases and their eyes to left
and right, wary for possible ambush. Garth had his sword out and was ready to
back Tarma, and Kyra was checking the road ahead for more trouble.
They all laughed, shakily, when they realized what their
"enemy" was.
"Don't think even Kelcrag's taken up with the corbies,"
Tarma said. shaking her head, and tucking her bow back under the oiled silk.
"Still—probably he hasn't got anyone dedicated enough to go mucking around
in this weather, but we can't count on it. Stay alert, children. At least until
we get out of the war zone."
By midday they had done just that—there were herds on the
distant hills, although the shepherds and herders quickly moved them out of
sight when they saw the little band approaching. Tarma saw Garth nodding in
sympathy, lips moving soundlessly in what she rather thought was a blessing.
His people had been all but wiped out when some war had trampled them into their
earth, somewhere down south.
Tarma knew everything there was to know about her
"children"; she had made a point of getting drunk at least once with
each of her scouts. It was damned useful to know what made them twitch. One of
the reasons Garth was with Idra—he was so good a tracker he could have served
with any company, or even as a pampered huntsman to royalty—was because she
allowed no looting of the peasantry (nobles were another matter) and insisted
on the Hawks paying in trade-silver and pure copper ingots for what they
needed. Like Garth, all the Hawks tended to serve their lady-Captain for more
than just coin.
By now they were all fairly well sodden except for Tarma, brown
and black and gray cloaks all becoming a similar dark, indeterminant shade.
Even Tarma was rather damp. Rain that was one scant point from being sleet
still managed to get past her high collar to trickle down her neck, and muddy
water from every puddle they splashed through had soaked through her breeches
long ago. She was going numb with cold; the rest of them must be in worse case.
"Kyra," she called forward, "You in territory you
know yet?"
The girl turned in her saddle, rain trickling down her nose.
"Hmm—eh, I'd say so. Think this's Domery lands, they're kin of my
kin—"
"I don't want to stretch anybody's hospitably or honesty, but
we need to dry off a bit. There any herders' huts or caves or something around
here? Something likely to be deserted this time of year?"
"I'll think on't."
A few soggy furlongs later—as Kyra scanned her memory and the land
around them—
"Scoutmaster," she called back, "'Bout three hills
over there be a cave; used for lambin' and shearin' and never else. That
do?"
"Room for all of us? I mean horses, too. No sense in shouting
our presence by tethering them out, and plain cruel to make them endure more of
this than we do."
Kyra's brow creased with thought. "If I don't misremember,
aye. Be a squeeze, but aye."
Kyra had misremembered—but by underestimating the size of
the cave. There was enough room at the back for all five horses to stand
shoulder to shoulder, with enough space left over for one rider at a time to
rub his beast down without getting trampled on. An overhanging shelf of
limestone made it possible to build a fire at the front of the cave without all
of them eating smoke. And there was wood stocked at the side, dry enough that
there wasn't much of that smoke in the first place.
More to the point, where concealment was concerned, the rain
dissipated what trickled past the blackened overhang.
"How much farther?" Tarma asked, chewing on a tasteless
mouthful of trail-biscuit.
"Not much," Kyra replied. "We better be cuttin'
overland from here if m' mem'ry be still good. Look you—"
She dipped a twig in muddy, black water and drew on a flat rock
near the cave's entrance.
Tarma got down on her knees beside her and studied her crude map
carefully. "One, maybe two candlemarks, depending, hmm?"
"Aye, depending." Kyra chewed on the other end of the
twig for a moment. "We got to stick t' ridges—"
"What?" Beaker exclaimed. "For every gossip in the
hills to see us?"
"Oh, bad to be seen, but worse to be bogged. Valleys, they go
boggy this time of year, like. Stuff livin' in the bogs is bad for a beast's
feet. Y' want yer laddy's hooves t' rot off "fore we reach trail's end, y'
ride the valleys."
"No middle way?" Tarma asked.
"Well.... We won't be goin' where there's likely many, an'
most of those'd be my kin. They see me, they know what I was abaht, and they
keep their tongues from clackin'."
"That'll have to do." Tarma got up from her knees, and
dusted the gravel off the knees of her breeches—which were, she was happy to
find, relatively dry. "All right, children, let's ride."
"I dunno—" Garth said dubiously, peering up through the
drizzle at what was little better than a worn track along the shale cliffside.
Tarma studied the trail and chewed at the corner of her lip.
"Kyra," she said, finally, "your beast's the weakest of the lot.
Give it a try. If she can make it, we all can."
"Aye," Kyra saluted, and turned her mare's head to the
trail. She let the mare take her time and pick her own places to set her feet
along the track. It seemed to take forever—
But eventually they could see that she was waving from the top.
"Send the first bird, Beaker," Tarma said, heading
Ironheart after the way Kyra had followed. "We're going to see if this
trail is a dead end or the answer to our prayers."
Twice before sunset they lost the track on broad expanses of bare
rock, and spent precious time trying to pick it up again, all of them combing
the ground thumblength by thumblength.
Sunset was fast approaching the second time they lost, then found
the trail again. Tarma scanned the sky warily, trying to judge, with the
handicap of lowering clouds, how much time they had before darkness fell. They
obviously weren't going to make trail's end by sunset—so the choice was whether
to camp here on this windswept slant of scoured stone, or to press on in the
hope of coming up with something better and maybe instead find themselves
spending the night on a ledge two handspans wide.
She finally decided to press on, allowing just enough time in
reserve that they could double back if they had to.
The track led on through lichen and rubble: treacherous stuff,
except where the wild ponies had pounded a thin line of solidity. Jodi was
mapping as they went along, and marking their backtrail with carefully
inconspicuous "cairns" composed of no more than three or four
pebbles. The drizzle had stopped, at least, and the exertion that was warming
them had driven most of the damp out of their clothing. The pony-track led down
into a barren gulley—Tarma disliked that, and kept watching for water marks on
the rocks they passed. If there was a cloudburst and this happened to be
one of the local runoff sites, they could be hock-deep in tumbling rock and
fast water in the time it took to blink.
But the gulley stayed dry, the track eased a bit—and then, like a
gift from the gods, just before Tarma would have signaled a turnaround point,
they came upon a possible campsite.
Sometime in the not-too-recent past, part of the hill above them
had come sliding down. creating a horseshoe of boulders the size of a house.
There would be shelter from the wind there, their fire would be out of sight of
prying eyes—and it would be easy to defend from predators.
Garth eyed the site with the same interest Tarma was feeling.
"No place to get out of the rain, if it decided to come down again,"
he observed, "and nothing much to burn but that scrub up there on the
wall. We'd have us a pot of hot tea, but a cold camp."
"Huh. The choice is this or the flat back there," Tarma
told them. "Me, I'd take this. Kyra? This is your land."
"Aye, I'd take this; we've slept wet afore," Kyra
agreed. "This 'un isn't a runoff, an' don't look like any more of the hill
is gonna slip while we're here. I'd say 'tis safe enough."
The others nodded.
"Let's get ourselves settled then, while there's light."
The rain began again before dawn and they were glad enough to be
on the move and getting chilled muscles stretched and warmed. They lost the
track once more, this time spending a frustrating hour searching for it—but
that was the last of their hardships, for noon saw them emerging from the hills
and onto the plains on the other side.
Tarma allowed herself a broad grin, as the rest whooped and
pounded each other's backs.
"Send up that damned bird. Beaker; we just earned ourselves
one fat bonus from Lord Leamount."
Returning was easier, though it was plain that nothing but a goat,
a donkey, a mountain pony or a Shin'a'in-bred beast was ever going to make it
up or down that trail without breaking a leg. Tarma reckoned it would take the
full Company about one day to traverse the trail; that, plus half a day to get
to their end and half to get into striking distance of Kelcrag's forces meant
two days' traveling time, in total. Not bad, really; they'd had a setup that
had taken almost a week, once. Knowing Idra as she did, Tarma had a pretty good
idea of what the Captain's suggested strategy was going to be. And it would
involve the Hawks and no one else. No bad thing, that; the Hawks could count on
their own to know what to do.
The rain had finally let up as they broke back out into the
border's country; they were dead tired and ready to drop, but at least they
weren't wet anymore. Tarma saw an outrider a few furlongs beyond the camp; he,
she or it was waving a scarf in the Hawks' colors of brown and golden yellow.
She waved back, and the outrider vanished below the line of a hill. They all
relaxed at that; they were watched for, they need not guard their path—and
there would almost certainly be food and drink waiting for them in the camp.
That was exactly what they'd needed and hoped for.
They hadn't expected Idra and Sewen to be waiting for them at the
entrance to the camp.
"Good work, children. Things are heating up. Maps," Idra
said curtly, and Jodi handed over the waterproof case with a half-salute and a
tired grin. They were all achingly weary at this point; horses and humans alike
were wobbly at the knees. Only Tarma and Ironheart were in any kind of shape,
and Tarma wasn't too certain how much of Ironheart's apparent energy was bluff.
Battlemares had a certain stubborn pride that sometimes made them as pigheaded
about showing strain as—
:Certain Kal'enedral,: Warrl said in her head.
Shut up, she
thought back at him, you should talk about being pigheaded—
"Good work. Damned fine work," Idra said, looking
up from the maps and interrupting Tarma's train of thought. "Tarma, if
you're up to a little more—"
"Captain." Tarma nodded, and sketched a salute.
"The rest of you—there's hot wine and hot food waiting in my
tent, and a handful of Hawks to give your mounts the good rubdown and treat
they deserve. Tarma, give Ironheart to Sewen and come with me. Warrl, too, if
he wants. The rest of you get under shelter. We'll be seeing you all later—with
news, I hope."
Tarma had been too fatigue-fogged to note where they were going,
except that they were working their way deeply into the heart of the
encampments. But after a while the size of the tents and the splendor of the
banners outside of them began to penetrate her weariness.
What in the name—
:On your best behavior, mindmate,: Warrl said. For once his
mindvoice sounded dead serious. :This is the camp of the Lord Commander.:
Before Tarma had a chance to react, Idra was ushering her past a
pair of massive sentries and into the interior of a tent big enough to hold a
half dozen of the Hawks' little two-man bivouacs.
Tarma blinked in the light and warmth, and felt her muscles going
to jelly in the pleasant heat. Mage-lights everywhere, and a jesto-vath
that made Kethry's look like a simple shieldspell.
Other than that, though, the tent was as plain as Idra's, divided,
as hers was, into a front and back half. In the front half was a table, some
chairs and document-boxes, a rack of wine bottles. The curtain dividing it was
half open; on the other side Tarma could see what looked like a chest, some
weapons and armor—and a plain camp cot, piled high with thick furs and equally
thick blankets.
What I wouldn't give to climb into that right now, she was thinking, when her attention was
pulled away by something more important.
"Leamount, you old warhorse, here's our miraclemaker,"
Idra was saying to a lean, grizzled man in half-armor standing by the
map-table, but in the shadows, so that Tarma hadn't really noticed him at
first. Tarma had seen Lord Leamount once or twice at a distance; she recognized
him by his stance and his scarlet surcote with Sursha's rampant grasscat more
than anything else. although once he turned in her direction she saw the two
signature braids he wore in front of each ear, an affectation he'd picked up
among his hillclans. "Lord Leamount, may I present Tarma shena
Tale'sedrin—"
"Lo'teros, shas tella, Kal'enedral," he replied,
much to Tarma's surprise; bowing, making a fist and placing it over his heart
as he bowed.
"Ile se'var Yatakar," she replied, returning his
salute with intense curiosity and sharpened interest. "Ge vede sa'kela
Shin'a'in."
"Only a smattering, I fear. I learned it mostly in
self-defense—" He grinned, and Tarma found herself grinning back.
"—to keep from getting culls pushed off on me by your fellow
clansmen."
"Ah, well—come to me, and you'll get the kind of horses the
Hawks mount."
"I'll do that. Idra has high praise for you, the kyree, and your she'enedra, Swordsworn," he said, meeting her intensely
ice-blue eyes as few others had been able. "I could only wish I had a few
more of your kind with us. So—the bird returned; that told us there was
a path through. But what's the track like?"
Somehow Tarma wasn't overly surprised that he came directly to the
point. "Bad," she said shortly; as Idra spread out Jodi's maps over
the ones already on the table. "It'll be brutal. The only mounts that are
going to be able to negotiate that terrain are the Hawks'. Maybe some of the
ponies your mountain-clan scouts have could make it, but they'd be fair useless
on the other side of those hills. No running ability, and on Kelcrag's side of
the pass, that's what they'll need. Anything else would break a leg on that
track, or break the path down past using."
"Terrain?"
"Big hills, baby mountains, doesn't much matter. Shale most
of the way through, and sandstone. Bad footing."
"Huh." He chewed a comer of his mustache and brooded
over Jodi's tracings. "That lets out plan one, then. Idra—seems it's going
to be up to you."
"Hah—up to me, my rump! If you can't get old Shoveral to move
his big fat arse in time, you'll get us slaughtered—"
Tarma glanced up out of the corner of her eye, alarmed at those
words, only to see Idra grinning like Warrl with a particularly juicy bone.
"Shoveral knows damned well he's my hidden card; he'll move
when he needs to—now. Swordsworn, how long do you reckon it will take all the
Hawks to get from here—" His finger stabbed down at the location of their
camp. "—to here?"
The second place he indicated was a spot about a candlemark's slow
ride from the rear of Kelcrag's lines. As Tarma had figured—striking distance.
"About two days, altogether."
"Huhn. Say you got to trail's start at dawn by riding half
the night. Think you could get that lot of yours up over that trail, make
trail's end by dark, camp cold for a bit of rest, then be within this strike
distance by, say. midmorning?"
"No problem. Damn well better have the rest though. Horses'll
need it or we won't be able to count on 'em."
"Idra, how do we keep the movement secret?"
Idra thought about that a while. "Loan me those hillclan
levies and their bivouac; they're honest enough to guard our camp. We'll move
out in groups of about twenty; you move in an equal number of the clansmen.
Camp stays full to the naked eye—Kelcrag can't tell one merc from another, no
more can his magickers. The people that could tell the difference between them
and us won't be able to see what's going on."
"Hah!" He smacked his fist down into his palm.
"Good; let me send for Shoveral. We'll plan this out with just the three
of us—four, counting the Kal'enedral. Fewer that know, fewer can leak."
The Lord Commander sent one of his pages out after Lord Shoveral,
then he and Idra began planning in earnest. From time to time he snapped out a
question at Tarma; how far, how many, what about this or that—she answered as
best she could, but she was tired, far more weary than she had guessed. She
found her tongue feeling oddly clumsy, and she had to think hard about each
word before she could get it out.
Finally Leamount and Idra began a low-voiced colloquy she didn't
bother to listen to; she just hung on to the edge of the table and tried
enforcing her alertness with Kal'enedral discipline exercises. They didn't work
overly well; she was on her last wind, for certain.
Leamount caught Tarma's wavering attention. The maps on the table
were beginning to go foggy to her eyes. "Swordsworn," he said,
looking a little concerned, "you look half dead, but we may need you; what
say you go bed down over there in the comer—" He nodded in the direction
of his own cot. "If there's a point you need to clarify for us, we'll give
you a shake." He raised his voice. "Jons—"
One of the two sentries poked his head in through the tent flap.
"Sir?"
"Stir up my squire, would you? Have him find something for
this starving warrior to eat and drink."
Tarma had stumbled to the other side of the tent and was already
collapsing onto the cot, her weariness washing her under with a vengeance. The
blankets felt as welcoming and warm as they looked, and she curled up in them
without another thought, feeling Warrl heaving himself up to his usual position
at her feet. As the tent and the voices faded, while the wave of exhaustion
carried her into slumber, she heard Idra chuckling.
"You might as well not bother Jons," the Captain told
Leamount, just before sleep shut Tarma's ears. "I don't think she
cares."
Three
Kethry shifted her weight over her mount's shoulders,
half-standing in her stirrups to ease Hellsbane's balance as the mare scrambled
up the treacherous shale of another slope. They were slightly more than halfway
across the hills; it was cold and damp and the lowering gray clouds looked
close enough to touch, but at least it wasn't raining again. She wasn't too
cold; under her wool cloak she wore her woolen sorceress' robe, the
unornamented buff color showing her school was White Winds, and under that,
woolen breeches, woolen leggings, and the leather armor Tarma had insisted she
don. The only time she was uncomfortable was when the wind cut in behind the
hood of the robe.
She was a member of the last party to leave the camp and make the
crossing; they'd left their wounded to the care of Leamount's hillclansmen and
his own personal Healer. Tresti, the Healer-Priest, had been in the second
party to slip away from the camp, riding by the side of her beloved Sewen.
Oreden and Jiles, the two hedge-mages, had gone two groups later; The herbalist
Kethaire and his two young apprentices had left next. Kethry had stayed to the
very last, her superior abilities at sensing mage-probes making her the logical
choice to deflect any attempts at spying until the full exchange of personnel
was complete.
She felt a little at a loss without her partner riding at her
left. Tarma had preceded her more than half a day ago, leaving before midnight,
as the guide with Idra and the first group. Of all the party that had made the
first crossing, only Jodi had remained to ride with the tailguard group.
Jodi was somewhere behind them, checking on the backtrail. That
was not as comforting to Kethry as it should have been. Kethry knew her
fears were groundless, that the frail appearance of the scout belied a tough
interior—but—
As if the thought had summoned her, a gray shadow slipped up upon
Kethry's right, with so little noise it might have been a shadow in truth.
Hellsbane had been joined by a second gray mare so similar in appearance that
only an expert could have told that one was a Shin'a'in full-blood battlesteed
and the other was not.
That lack of sound was one clue—there was mountain-pony in
Lightfoot's background, somewhere. Jodi's beast moved as silently as a wild
goat on this shifting surface, so quietly that the scout and her mount raised
the hackles on anyone who didn't know them.
Jodi wore her habitual garb of gray leather; with her pale hair
and pale eyes and ghost-gray horse, she looked unnervingly like an apparition
of Lady Death herself, or some mist-spirit conjured out of the patches of fog
that shrouded these hills, as fragile and insubstantial as a thing of shadow and
air; and once again Kethry had a twinge of misgiving.
"Any sign of probing?" the scout asked in a neutral
voice.
Kethry shook her head. "None. I think we may have gotten away
with it."
Jodi sighed. "Don't count your coins before they're in the
coffer. There's a reason why we are running tail, lady, and it's not
just to do with magery, though that's a good share of it."
The scout cast a doubtful look at Kethry—and for the first time
Kethry realized that the woman had serious qualms about her abilities to handle
this mission, if it came to something other than a simple trek on treacherous
ground.
Kethry didn't bother to hide an ironic grin.
Jodi noted it, and cocked her head to one side, moving easily with
her horse. Her saddle was hardly more than a light pad of leather; it didn't
even creak when she shifted, unconsciously echoing the movements of her mare.
"Something funny, lady?"
"Very. I think we've been thinking exactly the same
things—about each other."
Jodi's answering slow grin proved that Kethry hadn't been wrong.
"Ha. And we should know better, shouldn't we? It's a pity we didn't know
each other well enough to trust without thinking and worrying—especially since
neither of us look like fighters. But we should have figured that Idra knows
what she's doing; neither of us are hothouse plants—or we wouldn't be
Hawks."
"Exactly. So—give me the reasons this particular lot is
riding tail; maybe I can do something about preventing a problem."
"Right enough—one—" The scout freed her right hand from
the reins to hold up a solemn finger. "—is the trail. Shale shifts,
cracks. We're riding after all the rest, and we'll be making the last few
furlongs in early evening gloom. This path has been getting some hard usage,
more than it usually gets. If the trail is likely to give, it'll give under us.
You'll notice we're all of us the best riders, and the ones with the best
horses in the Hawks."
Kethry considered this, as Hellsbane topped the hill and picked
her cautious way down the sloping trail. "Hmm-hmm. All right, can we halt
at the next ridge? There's a very tiny bit of magery I can work that might help
us out with that."
Jodi pursed her lips. "Is that wise?"
Kethry nodded, slowly. "It's a very low-level piece of
earth-witchery; something even a shepherd wise's woman might well know. I don't
think any of Kelcrag's mages is likely to take note of it—assuming they can
even see it, and I doubt they will. It's witchery, not sorcery, and Kelcrag's
magickers are all courtly mages, greater and lesser. My school is more
eclectic; we use whatever comes to hand, and that can be damned useful—somebody
looking for High Magick probably won't see Low, or think it's worth
investigating. After all, what does Kelcrag need to fear from a peasant
granny?"
Jodi considered that for a moment, her head held slightly to one
side. "Tell me, why is it that Jiles and Oreden have gotten so much better
since you've been with us?"
Kethry chuckled, but it was with a hint of sadness. It had been
very hard to convince the hedgewizards that their abilities did not match their
dreams. "You want the truth? Their talents are all in line with Low
Magick; earth-witchery, that sort of thing. I convinced them that there's nothing
wrong with that, asked them which they'd rather ride, a good, steady
trail-horse or your fire-eater. They aren't stupid; they saw right away
what I was getting at." She set Hellsbane at the next slope, her hooves
dislodging bits of shale and sending them clattering down behind them. "So
now that they aren't trying to master spells they haven't the Talent to use
properly, they're doing fine. Frankly, I would rather have them with us than
two of those courtly mages. Water-finding is a lot more use than calling
lightning, and the fire-making spell does us more good than the ability to light
up a ballroom."
"You won't catch me arguing. So what's this magic of yours
going to do?"
"Show me the weak spots in the trail. If there's something
ready to give, I'll know about it before it goes."
"And?"
"I should be able to invoke a greater magic at that point,
and hold the pieces together long enough for us to get across."
"Won't that draw attention?"
"It would," Kethry replied slowly, "if I did what a
court mage would do, and draw on powers outside myself—which causes ripples;
no, I have just enough power of my own, and that's what I'll use. There won't
be any stir on the other planes...." But it's going to cost me if I do
things that way. Maybe high. Well, I'll handle that when the time comes.
"You said one reason we're riding tailmost—that implies there's more
reasons."
"Two—we're tailguards in truth. We could find ourselves
fighting hand to hand with Kelcrag's scouts or his mages. They haven't detected
us that we know of, but there's no sense in assuming less than the worst."
"So long as they don't outnumber us—I'm not exactly as
helpless in a fight as Tresti." She caught the cloud of uncertainty in
Jodi's pale blue eyes, and said, surprised, "I thought everybody knew
about this sword of mine."
"There's stories, but frankly, lady—"
"Keth. I, as Tarma would tell you, am no lady."
That brought a glimmer of smile. "Keth, then. Well, none of us
have ever seen that blade do anything but heal."
"Need's better at causing wounds than curing them, at least
in my hands," Kethry told her. "That's her gift to me; in a
fight, she makes a mage the equal of any swordswoman born. If it comes to
magic, though, she's pretty well useless for my purposes—it's to a fighter she
gives magic immunity. But—I'll tell you what, I've got a notion. If it comes to
battle by magery, I'll try and get her to you before I get involved in a duel
arcane; she'll shield you from even a godling's magic. Tarma proved that, once.
She may even be able to shield more than one, if you all crowd together."
There was a flash of interest at that, and a hint of relief.
"Then I think I'll worry less about you. Well—there's a reason three that
we're riding tail: if we find we've ridden straight into ambush at trail's end,
we're the lot that's got the best chance of getting one of us back to tell Leamount."
"Gah. Grim reasons, all of them—can we stop here for a breath
or two?"
They had just topped a ridge, with sufficient space between them
and the next in line that a few moments spent halted wouldn't hamper his
progress any. Jodi looked about her, grimaced, then nodded with reluctance.
"A bit exposed to my mind, but—"
"This won't take long." Kethry gathered the threads of
earth-magic, the subtlest and least detectable of all the mage-energies, and
whispered a command along those particular threads that traced their path
across the hills. There was an almost imperceptible shift in the energy flows,
then the spell settled into place and became invisible even to the one who had
set it. The difference was that Kethry was now at one with the path; she felt
the path through the hills, from end to end, like a whisper of sand across the
surface of her mental "skin." If the path was going to collapse, the
backlash would alert her.
"Let's go—"
"That's all there is to it?" Jodi looked at her askance.
"Magery isn't all lightnings and thunders. The best magery is
as subtle as a tripwire, and as hard to detect."
"Well." Jodi sent her mount picking a careful path down
the hillside, and looked back at Kethry with an almost-smile. "I think I
could get to appreciate magery."
Kethry grinned outright, remembering that Jodi's other specialty
was subterfuge, infiltration, and assassination. "Take my word for it, the
real difference between a Master-class mage and an apprentice is not in the
amount of power, it's in the usage. You've been over this trail already; what
do you think—are we going to make trail's end by dark?"
Jodi narrowed her eyes, taking a moment. "No," she said
finally, "I don't think so. That's when I'll take point, when it starts to
get dark. And that's when we'll have to be most alert."
Kethry nodded, absently, and pulled her hood closer about her neck
against a lick of wind. "If an attack comes, it's likely to be then. And
the same goes for accident?"
"Aye."
It was growing dark, far faster than Kethry liked, and there was
still no end to the trail in sight. But there had also been no sign that their
movement was being followed—
Suddenly her nerves twanged like an ill-tuned harpstring. For one
short, disorienting moment, she vibrated in backlash, for that heartbeat or two
of time completely helpless to think or act. Then nearly fifteen years of
training and practice took over, and without even being aware of it, she
gathered mage-energy from the core of her very being and formed a net of it—a
net to catch what was even now about to fall.
Just in time; up ahead in the darkness, she heard the slide of
rock, a horse's fear-ridden shriek, and the harsh cry of a man seeing his own
death looming in his face. She felt the energy-net sag, strain—then hold.
She clamped her knees around Hellsbane's barrel and dropped her
reins, telling the horse mutely to "stand." The battlesteed obeyed,
bracing all four hooves, far steadier than the rocks about her. Kethry firmed
her concentration until it was adamantine, and closed her eyes against
distraction. Since she could not see what she was doing, this would take every
wisp of her attention—
Gently, this must be done as gently as tumbling a pennybird chick
new-hatched. If she
frightened the horse, and it writhed out of her energy-net—horse and rider
would plummet to their doom.
She cupped her hands before her, echoing the form of the
power-net, and contemplated it.
Broken lines of power showed her where the path had collapsed, and
the positioning of her "net" told her without her seeing the trail
ahead just where her captives were cradled.
"Keth—" Jodi's voice came from the darkness ahead, calm
and steady; no sign of panic there. "We lost a very short section of the
path; those of you behind us won't have any problem jumping the gap. The
immediate problem is the rider that went over. It's Gerrold and Vetch; the
horse is half over on his right side and Gerrold's pinned under him, but
neither one of them is hurt and you caught both before they slid more than a
few feet. Gerrold's got the beast barely calmed, but he's not struggling. Can
you do anything more for them other than just holding them?"
Kethry eased her concentration just enough to answer. "If I
get them righted, maybe raise them a bit, can he get Vetch back onto the
path?"
"You can do that?"
"I can try—"
Hoof sounds going, then returning. Kethry "read" the
lines of energy cradling the man and beast, slowly getting a picture of how
they were lying by the shape of the energy-net.
"Gerrold's got Vetch gentled and behaving. He says if you
take it slow—"
Kethry did not answer, needing all her focus on the task at hand.
Slowly she moved her fingers; as she did she lessened the pressure on one side
of the net, increased it on the other, until the shape within began to tilt
upright. There was a lessening of tension within the net, as horse and rider
lost fear; that helped.
Now, beneath the hooves of the trapped horse she firmed the net
until it was as strong as the steadiest ground, taking away some of the
mage-threads from the sides to do so. When nothing untoward occurred, she took
more of those threads, using them to raise the level of that surface, slowly,
carefully, so as not to startle the horse. One by one she rewove those threads,
raising the platform thumblength by agonizing thumblength.
She was shaking and drenched with sweat by the time she got it
high enough, and just about at the end of her strength. When a clatter of
hooves on rock and an exultant shout told her that Gerrold had gotten his mount
back onto safe ground, she had only enough energy left to cling to her saddle
for the last few furlongs of the journey.
"Right now," Idra said quietly, stretched out along a
hill top next to Tarma, "The old war-horse should be giving them a good
imitation of a tired old war-horse."
The hilltop gave them a fairly tolerable view for furlongs in any
direction; they were just beyond the range of Kelcrag's sentries, and Kethry
was shielding them in the way she had learned from the example of Moonsong
k'Vala, the Tale'edras Adept from the Pelagiris Forest—making them seem a part
of the landscape—to mage-sight, just a thicket of brinle-bushes. In the far
distance was the pass; filling it was the dark blot of Kelcrag's forces.
At this moment—as he had for the last two days—Leamount was giving
a convincing imitation of a commander truly interested in coming to an
agreement with his enemy. Heralds had been coming and going hour by hour with
offers and counter-offers—all of this false negotiation buying time for the
Hawks to get into place.
"Well, it's now or never," Idra said finally, as she and
Tarma abandoned their height and squirmed down their side of the hill to join
her company. "Kethry?"
Kethry, on foot like all the rest, nodded and joined hands with
her two mage-partners. "Shield your eyes," she warned them.
"It'll go on a count of five."
Tarma and the rest of the Hawks averted their eyes and turned
their horses' heads away as Kethry counted slowly. When Kethry reached five,
there was a flare of light so bright that it shone redly through Tarma's
eyelids even with her head turned. It was followed by a second flash, and then
a third.
From a distance it would look like the lightning that flickered
every day along the hillsides. But Leamount's mages were watching this
particular spot for just that signal of three flickers of light, and testing
for energy-auras to see if it was magelight and not natural lightning. Now
Leamount would break off his negotiations and resume his attacks on Kelcrag's
army, concentrating on the eastern edge. That would seem reasonable: Kelcrag
had stationed his foot there; they might be vulnerable to a charge of heavy
cavalry. Leamount's own western flank was commanded by Lord Shoveral, whose
standard was a badger and whose mode of battle matched his token; he was
implacable in defense, but no one had yet seen him on the attack, so Kelcrag
might well believe that he had no heart for it.
He was, one hoped, about to be surprised.
One also hoped, fervently, that Kelcrag's mages had not
noticed that it was mage-light and not lightning that had flickered to their
rear.
:They've no reason to look for mage-light, mindmate,: Warrl
said soberly. :Kelcrag's wizards are all courtly types. They very seldom
think about hiding what they're doing, or trying to make it seem like something
natural. To them, wage-light is something to illuminate a room with, not
something to use for a signal. If they wish to pass messages, they make a
sending.:
"I hope you're right, Furface," Tarma replied, mounting.
"The more surprised they are, the more of us are going to survive
this."
At Idra's signal, the Hawks moved into a disciplined canter; no
point in trying too hard to stay undercover now.
They urged their mounts over hills covered only with scraggy
bushes and dead, dry grass; they would have been hard put to find any cover if
they'd needed it. But luck was with them.
They topped a final hilltop and only then encountered Kelcrag's
few sentries. They were all afoot; the lead riders coldly picked them off with
a few well-placed arrows before they could sound an alert. The sentries fell,
either pierced with arrows or stumbling over their wounded comrades. And the
fallen were trampled—for the Hawks' horses were war-trained, and a war-trained
horse does not hesitate when given the signal to make certain of a fallen foe.
That left no chance that Kelcrag could be warned.
Ahead of the riders, now stretching their canter into a gallop,
was the baggage train.
Kethry and her two companions rode to the forefront for the
moment. Each mage was haloed by one of Kethry's glowing mage-shields; a shield
that blurred the edges of vision around a mage and his mount as well. It made
Tarma's eyes ache to look at them, so she tried not to. The shields wouldn't
deflect missiles, but not being able to look straight at your target made that
target damned hard to hit.
The two hedge-wizards growled guttural phrases, made elaborate
throwing motions—and smoking, flaming balls appeared in the air before their
hands to fly at the wagons and supplies. Kethry simply locked her hands
together and held them out in front of her—and each wagon or tent she stared at
burst into hot blue flame seemingly of its own accord.
This was noisy; it was meant to be. The noncombatants with the
baggage—drovers, cooks, personal servants, the odd whore—were screaming in fear
and fleeing in all directions, adding to the noise. There didn't seem to be
anyone with enough authority back here to get so much as a fire brigade
organized.
The Hawks charged through the fires and the frightened, milling
civilians, and headed straight for the rear of Kelcrag's lines. Now Kethry and
the mages had dropped back until they rode—a bit more protected—in the midst of
the Sunhawks. They would be needed now only if one of Kelcrag's mages happened
to be stationed on this flank.
For the rest, it was time for bow work. Kelcrag's men—armored
cavalry here, for the most part; nobles and retainers, and mostly young—were
still trying to grasp the fact that they'd been hit from the rear.
The Hawks swerved just out of bowshot, riding their horses in a
flanking move along the back of the lines. They didn't stop; that would make
them stationary targets. They just began swirling in and out at the very edge
of the enemy's range, as Tarma led the first sortie to engage.
About thirty of them peeled off from the main group, galloping
forward with what must look to Kelcrag's men like utter recklessness. It
wasn't; they stayed barely within their range as they shot into the enemy
lines. This was what the Hawks were famous for, this horseback skirmishing. Most
of them rode with reins in their teeth, a few, like Tarma and Jodi, dropped
their reins altogether, relying entirely on their weight and knees to signal
their mounts. Tarma loosed three arrows in the time it took most of the rest of
her sortie group to launch one, her short horse-bow so much a part of her that
she thought of nothing consciously but picking her targets. She was aware only
of Ironheart's muscles laboring beneath her legs, of the shifting smoke that
stung eyes and carried a burnt flavor into the back of her throat, of the
sticky feel of sweat on her back, of a kind of exultation in her skill—and it
was all over in heartbeats. Arrows away, the entire group wheeled and galloped
to the rear of the Hawks, already nocking more missiles—for hard on their heels
came a second group, a third—it made for a continuous rain of fire that was
taking its toll even of heavily armored men—and as they rode, the Hawks jeered
at their enemies, and shouted Idra's rallying call. The hail of arrows that
fell on the enemy wounded more horses than men—a fact Tarma was sorry about—but
the fire, the hail of arrows, and the catcalls inflamed their enemy's tempers
in a way that nothing else could have done.
And, as Leamount and Idra had planned, the young, headstrong nobles
let those tempers loose.
They broke ranks, leaders included, and charged their mocking
foes. All they thought of now was to engage the retreating Hawks, forgetful of
their orders, forgetful of everything but that this lot of commoners had
pricked their vanity and was now getting away.
Now the Hawks scattered, breaking into a hundred little groups,
their purpose accomplished.
Tarma managed to get to Kethry's side, and the two of them plowed
their way back through the burning wreckage of the baggage train.
Iron-shod hooves pounding, their mounts raced as if they'd been
harnessed side by side. Kethry clung grimly to the pommel of her saddle, as her
partner could see out of the corner of her eye. She was not the horsewoman that
the Shin'a'in was, she well knew it, and Hellsbane was galloping erratically;
moving far too unpredictably for her to draw Need. At this point she was
well-nigh helpless; it would be up to Tarma and the battlemares to protect her.
An over-brave pikeman rose up out of the smoke before them,
thinking to hook Tarma from her seat. She ducked beneath his pole arm, and
Ironheart trampled him into the red-stained mud. Another footman made a try for
Kethry, but Hellsbane snapped at him, crushed his shoulder in her strong teeth,
shook him like a dog with a rag while he shrieked, then dropped him again. A
rider who thought to intercept them had the trick Tarma and Ironheart had
played on Duke Greyhame's sentry performed on him and his steed—only in deadly
earnest. Ironheart reared, screaming challenge, and crow-hopped forward. The
gelding the enemy rode backed in panic from the slashing hooves, and as they
passed him, his rider's head was kicked in before they could get out of range.
The battlesteeds kited through the smoke and flames of the burning
camp with no more fear of either than of the scrubby shrubbery. Three times
Tarma turned in her saddle and let fly one of the lethal little arrows of the
Shin'a'in—as those pursuing found to their grief, armor was of little use when
an archer could find and target a helm-slit.
Then shouting began behind them; their pursuers pulled up, looked
back—and began belatedly to return to their battleline. Too late—for Lord
Shoveral had made his rare badger's charge—and had taken full advantage of the
hole that the work of the Sunhawks had left in Kelcrag's lines. Kelcrag's
forces were trapped between Shoveral and the shale cliffs, with nowhere to
retreat.
Using her knees, Tarma signaled Ironheart to slow, and Hellsbane
followed her stablemate's lead. Tarma couldn't make out much through the
blowing smoke, but what she could see told her all she needed to know.
Kelcrag's banner was down, and there was a milling mass of men—mostly wearing
Leamount's scarlet surcoats—where it had once stood. All over the field,
fighters in Kelcrag's blue were throwing down their weapons. The civil war was
over.
Kethry touched the tip of her index finger to a spot directly
between the sweating fighter's eyebrows; he promptly shuddered once, his eyes
rolled up into his head, and he sagged into the waiting arms of his
shieldbrother.
"Lay him out there—that's right—" Rethaire directed the
disposition of the now-slumbering Hawk. His partner eased him down slowly,
stretching him out on his back on a horseblanket, with his wounded arm practically
in the herbalist's lap. Rethaire nodded. "—good. Keth—"
Kethry blinked, coughed once, and shook her head a little.
"Who's next?" she asked.
"Bluecoat."
Kethry stared askance at him. A Bluecoat? One of Kelcrag's
people?
Rethaire frowned. "No, don't look at me that way, he's under
Mercenary's Truce; he's all right or I wouldn't have let him in here. He's one
of Devaril's Demons."
"Ah." The Demons had a good reputation among the
companies, even if most of Devaril's meetings with Idra generally ended up as shouting
matches. Too bad they'd been on opposite sides in this campaign.
Rethaire finished dusting the long, oozing slash in their
companion's arm with blue-green powder, and began carefully sewing it up with
silk thread. "Well, are you going to sit there all day?"
"Right, I'm on it," she replied, getting herself to her
feet. "Who's with him?"
"My apprentice. Dee. The short one."
Kethry pushed sweat-soaked hair out of her eyes, and tried once
again to get it all confined in a tail while she glanced around the space
outside the infirmary tent, looking for the green-clad, chubby figure of
Rethaire's youngest apprentice. She resolutely shut out the sounds of pain and
the smell of sickness and blood; she kept telling herself that this was not as
bad as it could have been. The worst casualties were under cover of the tent;
those out here were the ones that would be walking (or limping) back to their
own quarters when they woke up from Rethaire's drugs or Kethry's spell. They
were all just lucky that it was still only overcast and not raining. Sun would
have baked them all into heatstroke. Rain... best not think about fever and
pneumonia.
With no prospect of further combat, Kethry was no longer hoarding
her magical energies, either personal or garnered from elsewhere, but the only
useful spell she had when it came to healing wounds like these was the one that
induced instant slumber. So that was her job; put the patients out,
while Rethaire or his assistants sewed and splinted them back together again.
Poor Jiles and Oreden didn't even have that much to do;
although as Low Magick practitioners they did have Healing abilities, they'd
long since exhausted their powers, and now were acting as plain, nonmagical
attendants to Tresti. That was what was bad about a late-fall campaign for
them; with most of the land going into winter slumber, there was very little
ambient energy for a user of Low Magick to pull on.
Tarma was out with Jodi and a few of Leamount's farriers,
salvaging what horses they could, and killing the ones too far gone to save.
And, sometimes, performing the same office for a human or two.
Kethry shuddered, and wiped the back of her hand across her damp
forehead, frowning when she looked at it and saw how filthy it was.
Thank the gods that stuff of Rethaire's prevents infection, or
we'd lose half the wounded. We've lost too many as it is. That last sortie had cost the Sunhawks
dearly; they were down to two hundred. Fifty were dead, three times that were
wounded. Virtually everyone had lost a friend; the uninjured were tending
wounded companions.
But it could have been so much worse—so very much worse.
She finally spotted apprentice Dee, and picked her way through the
prone and sleeping bodies to get to his side.
"Great good gods! Why is he out here?" she exclaimed,
seeing the patient. He was half-propped on a saddle; stretched out before him
was his wounded leg. Kethry nearly gagged at the sight of the blood-drenched
leg of his breeches, the mangled muscles, and the tourniquet practically at his
groin.
"Looks worse than it is, Keth." Dee didn't even look up.
"More torn up than anything; didn't touch the big vein at all. He don't
need Tresti, just you and me." His clever hands were busy cutting bits of
the man's breeches away, while the mercenary bit his lip until it, too, bled;
hoping to keep from crying out.
"What in hell got you, friend?" Kethry asked,
kneeling down at the man's side. She had to have his attention, or the spell
wouldn't work. The man was white under his sunburn, his black beard matted with
dirt and sweat, the pupils of his eyes wide with pain.
"Some—shit!—big wolf. Had m' bow all trained on yer back,
m'lady. Bastard come outa nowhere n' took out m'leg. Should'a known better'n t'
sight on a Hawk; 'specially since I knew 'bout you havin' that beast."
Kethry started. "Warrl—Windborn, no wonder you look like
hacked meat! Let me tell you, you're lucky he didn't go for your throat! I hope
you'll forgive me. but I—can't say I'm sorry—"
The man actually managed a bare hint of smile, and patted her knee
with a bloody hand. "That's—gah!—war, m'lady. No offense." He
clenched his other hand until the knuckles were white as Dee picked pieces of
fabric out of his wounds.
Kethry sighed the three syllables that began the sleep-spell, and
felt her hands begin to tingle with the gathering energy. Slow, though—she
was coming to the end of her resources.
"But why did you come to us for help?"
"Don't trust them horse-leeches, they wanted t' take the leg
off. I knew yer people'd save it. Them damn highborns, they got no notion what
'is leg means to a merc."
Kethry nodded, grimacing. Without his leg, this man would be out
of a job—and likely starve to death.
"And th' Demons' ain't got no Healers nor magickers. Never
saw th' need for 'em."
"Oh?" That was the root and branch of Devaril's constant
arguments with Idra. "Well, now you know why we have them, don't
you?" She still wasn't ready. Not quite yet; the level wasn't high
enough. Until she could touch him, she had to keep his attention.
"Yeah, well—kinda reckon ol' Horseface's right, now. Neat
trick y' pulled on us, settin' the camp afire wi' the magickers. An' havin' yer
own Healers beats hell outa hopin' yer contract 'members he's supposed t' keep
ye patched up. Specially when 'e's lost. Reckon we'll be lookin' fer recruits
after we get mustered out." He grimaced again, and nodded to her. "'F
yer innerested, m'lady—well, th' offer's open. 'F not, well, pass th' word,
eh?"
Kethry was a little amused at the certainty in his words.
"You're so high up in the Demons, then, that you can speak for them?"
He bit off a curse of pain, and grinned feebly just as she reached
for his forehead. "Should say. I'm Devaril."
Kethry was wrung with weariness, and her mage-energies were little
more than flickers when Tarma came looking for her. She looked nearly
transparent with exhaustion, ready to float away on an errant wind.
The swordswoman knelt down in the dust beside where Kethry was
sitting; she was obviously still trying to muster up energies all but depleted.
"Keth—"
The mage looked up at her with a face streaked with dried blood—
Thank the Warrior, none of it hers.
"Lady Windborn. I think I hate war."
"Hai," Tarma agreed, grimly. Now that the
battle-high had worn off, as always, she was sick and sickened. Such a damned
waste—all for the sake of one fool too proud to be ruled by a woman. All that
death, men, women, good beasts. Innocent civilians. "Hell of a way to make
a living. Can you get loose?"
"If it isn't for magery. I'm tapped out."
"It isn't. Idra wants us in her tent."
Tarma rose stiffly and gave her hand to her partner, who frankly
needed it to get to her feet. The camp was quiet, the quiet of utter
exhaustion. Later would come the drinking bouts, the boasts, the counting of
bonuses and loot. Now was just time to hurt, and to heal; to mourn the lost
friends and help care for the injured; and to sleep, if one could. With the
coming of dusk fires were being kindled, and torches. And, off in the distance,
pyres. The Hawks, like most mercenary companies, burned their dead. Tarma had
already done her share of funeral duty; she was not particularly unhappy to
miss the next immolation.
Two of the Hawks not too flagged to stand watch were acting sentry
on Idra's tent. Tarma nodded to both of them, and pushed her way in past the
flap, Kethry at her heels.
Idra inclined her head in their direction and indicated a pile of
blankets with a wave of her hand. Sewen already occupied her cot, and Geoffrey,
Tamas and Lethra, his serjeants, the equipment chest, the stool, and another
pile of blankets respectively. The fourth serjeant, Bevis, was currently
sleeping off one of Kethry's spells.
"Where's your kyree?"
the Captain asked, as they lowered themselves down onto the pile.
"Sentry-go. He's about the only one of us fit for it, so he
volunteered."
"Bless him. I got him a young pig—I figured he'd earned it,
and I figured he'd like to get the taste of man out of his mouth."
Tarma grinned. "Sounds like he's been bitching at you.
Captain, for a pig, he'd stand sentry all bloody night!"
"Have him see the cook when he's hungry." Idra took the
remaining stool, lowering herself to it with a grimace of pain. Her horse had
been shot out from under her, and she'd taken a fall that left her bruised from
breast to ankle.
"Well." She surveyed them all, her most trusted
assistants, wearing a troubled look. "I've—well, I've had some unsettling
news. It's nothing to do with the campaign—" She cut short the obvious
question hurriedly. "—no, in fact Geoffrey is sitting on our mustering-out
pay. Leamount's been damned generous, above what he contracted for. No, this is
personal. I'm going to have to part company with you for a while."
Tarma felt her jaw go slack; the others stared at their Captain
with varying expressions of stunned amazement.
Sewen was the first to recover. "Idra—what'n th' hell is that
supposed t'mean? Part company? Why?"
Idra sighed, and rubbed her neck with one sunbrowned hand.
"It's duty, of a sort. You all know where I'm from—well, my father just
died, gods take his soul. He and I never did agree on much, but he had the
grace to let me go my own way when it was obvious he'd never keep me hobbled at
home except by force. Mother's been dead, oh, twenty-odd years. That means I've
got two brothers in line for the throne, since I renounced any claim I
had."
"Two?" Kethry was looking a bit more alert now, Tarma
noticed. "I thought the law in Rethwellan was primogeniture."
"Sort of, sort of. That's where the problem is. Father
favored my younger brother. So do the priests and about half the nobles. The merchants
and the rest of the nobles favor following the law. My older brother—well, he
may have the law behind him, but he was a wencher and a ne'er-do-well when I
left, and I haven't heard he's improved. That sums up the problem. The Noble
Houses are split right down the middle and there's only one way to break the
deadlock."
"You?" Geoffrey asked.
She grimaced. "Aye. It's a duty I can't renounce—and damned
if I like it. I thought I'd left politics behind the day I formed the Sunhawks.
I'd have avoided it if I could, but the ministers' envoys went straight to
Leamount; now there's no getting out of it. And in all honesty, there's a kind
of duty to your people that goes with being born into a royal house; I pretty
much owe it to them to see that they get the best leader, if I can. So I'm
going back to look the both of my brothers over and cast my vote; I'll be
leaving within the hour."
"But—!" The panic on Sewen's face was almost funny.
"Sewen, you're in charge," she continued implacably.
"I expect this won't take long; I'll meet you all in winter quarters. As I
said, we've been paid; we only need to wait until our wounded are mobile before
you head back there. Any questions?"
The weary resignation on her face told them all that she wasn't
looking forward to this—and that she wouldn't welcome protests. What Idra
wanted from her commanders was the assurance that they would take care of
things for her in her absence as they had always done in her presence; with
efficiency and dispatch.
It was the least they could give her.
They stood nearly as one, and gave her drillfield-perfect salutes.
"No questions. Captain," Sewen said for all of them.
"We'll await you at Hawksnest, as ordered."
Four
Kethry was in trouble.
A glittering ball of blinding white hurtled straight for her eyes.
Kethry ducked behind the ice-covered wall of the fortifications, then launched
a missile of her own at the enemy, who was even now charging her fortress.
The leading warrior took her return volley squarely on the chest,
and went down with a blood-freezing shriek of anguish.
"Tarma!" squealed the second of the enemy warriors,
skidding to a stop in the snow beside the fallen Shin'a'in.
"No—onward, my brave ones!" Tarma declaimed. "I am
done for—but you must regain our ancient homeland! You must fight on, and you
must avenge me!" Then she writhed into a sitting position, clutched her
snow-spattered tunic, pointed at the wall with an outflung arm, and pitched
backward into the drift she'd used to break her fall.
The remaining fighters—all four of them—gathered their courage
along with their snowballs and resumed their charge.
Kethry and her two fellow defenders drove them ruthlessly back
with a steady, carefully coordinated barrage. "Stand fast, my
friends," Kethry encouraged her forces, as the enemy gathered just outside
their range for another charge. "Never shall we let the sacred palace
of—of—Whatever-it-is fall into the hands of these barbarians!"
"Sacred, my horse's behind!" taunted Tarma, reclining at
her ease in the snowbank, head propped up on one arm. "You soft city types
have mush for brains; wouldn't know sacred if it walked up and bonked you with
a blessing! That's our sacred ground you're cluttering up with your filthy
city! My nomads are clear of eye and mind from all the healthy riding they do. They
know sacred when they see it!"
"You're dead!" Kethry returned, laughing. "You
can't talk if you're dead!"
"Oh, I wouldn't bet on that," Tarma replied. grinning
widely.
"Well, it's not fair—" Kethry began, when one of Tarma's
"nomads" launched into a speech of her own.
It was very impassioned, full of references to "our fallen
leader, now with the stars," and "our duty to free our ancient
homeland," and it was just a little confused, but it was a rather good
speech for a twelve year old. It certainly got her fellow fighters' blood
going. This time there was no stopping them; they stormed right over the walls
of the snowfort and captured the flag, despite the best efforts of Kethry and
her band of defenders. Kethry made a last stand on the heights next to the flag
but to no avail; she was hit with three snowballs at once, and went down even
more dramatically than Tarma.
The barbarians howled for joy, piled their other victims on top of
Kethry, and did a victory dance around the bodies. When Tarma resurrected
herself and came to join them, Kethry rose to her feet, protesting at
the top of her lungs.
"No, you don't—dead is dead, woman!" Kethry had come up
with one of her unthrown missiles in her hands; now she launched it from
point-blank range and got the surprised Tarma right in the face with it.
The never-broken rule decreed loose snowballs only. Tarma enforced
that rule with a hand of iron, and Kethry would never even have thought of
violating it. This was a game, and injuries had no part in it. So Tarma was
unhurt, but now wore a white mask covering her from forehead to chin.
Only for a moment. "AAARRRG!" she howled, scraping the
snow off her face, and springing at Kethry, fingers mimicking claws. "My
disguise! You've ruined my disguise!"
"Run!" Kethry cried in mock fear, dodging.
"It's—it's—"
"The great and terrible Snow Demon!" Tarma supplied,
making a grab at the children, who screamed in excitement and fled. "I
tricked you fools into fighting for me! Now I have all of you at my
mercy, and the city as well! AAAAARRRG!"
It was only when a more implacable enemy—the children's
mothers—came to fetch them away that the new game came to a halt.
"Thanks for minding them, Tarma," said one of the
mothers, a former Hawk herself. She was collecting two little girls who
looked—and were—the same age. Varny and her shieldmate Sania had met in the
Sunhawks, and when an unlucky swordstroke had taken out Varny's left eye,
they'd decided that since Varny was mustering-out anyway because of the injury,
they might as well have the family they both wanted. Though how they'd managed
to get pregnant almost simultaneously was a bit of a wonder. Somewhat to their
disappointment, neither child was interested in following the sword. Varny's
wanted to be a scrivener, and Sania's a Healer—and the latter, at least, was
already showing some evidence of that Gift.
"No problem," Tarma replied, "You know I enjoy it.
It's nice to be around children who don't take warfare seriously."
In point of fact, none of these children was being trained for
fighting; all had indicated to their parents that they wished more peaceful
occupations. So their play-battles were play, and not more practice.
"Well, we still appreciate having an afternoon to ourselves,
so I hope you don't ever get tired of them," one of the other mothers
replied with a broad smile.
"Not a chance," Tarma told her. "I'll let you know
next afternoon I've got free, and I'll kidnap them again."
"Bless you!" With that, and similar expressions of
gratitude, the women and their weary offspring vanished into the streets of the
snow-covered town.
"Whew." Tarma supported herself on the wall of the
snowfort with both arms, and looked over at Kethry, panting. Her eyes were
shining, and the grin she was still wearing reached and warmed them.
"Gods, did we have that much energy at that age?"
"Damned if I remember. I'm just pleased I managed to keep up
with them. Lady bless, I'd never have believed you could get this overheated in
midwinter!"
"You had it easy. I was the one who had to keep leading the
charges."
"So that's why you let me take you out so
easily!" Kethry teased. "Shame on you, being in that poor a shape!
You know, I rather liked that Snow Demon touch—I was a little uneasy with
Jininan's rhetoric."
"Can't teach a child too early that there are folks that will
use him. I just about had a foal when I found out there weren't any
granny-stories up here on those lines. We Shin'a'in must have at least a dozen
about the youngling who takes things on face value and gets eaten for his
stupidity. Come to think of it, the Snow Demon is one of them. He ate about
half a Clan before he was through."
"Nasty story!" Kethry helped Tarma beat some of
the snow out of her clothing, and the powdery stuff sparkled in the
late-afternoon sunlight as it drifted down. "Was there such a creature,
really? And was that what it did?"
"There was. And it did. It showed up in an unusually cold
winter one year—oh, about four generations ago. A Kal'enedral finally took it
out—one of my teachers, to tell the truth. Mutual kill, very dramatic—also, he
tells me, damned painful. I'll croak you the song sometime. Tonight, if
you like."
Kethry raised an eyebrow in surprise. That meant Tarma was
in an extraordinarily good mood. While time had brought a certain amount of
healing to the ruined voice that had once been the pride of her Clan, Tarma's
singing was still not something she paraded in public. Her voice was still
harsh, and the tonalities were peculiar. She sometimes sounded to Kethry like
someone who had been breathing smoke for forty-odd years. She was very
sensitive about it and didn't offer to sing very often.
"What brought this on?" Kethry asked, as they crunched
through the half-trampled snow, heading back to their double room in the Hawks'
barracks. "You're seeming more than usually pleased with yourself."
Tarma grinned. "Partly this afternoon."
Kethry nodded, understanding. Tarma adored children—which often
surprised the boots off their parents. More, she was very good with them. And
children universally loved her and her never-ending patience with them. She
would play with them, tell them stories, listen to their woes—if she hadn't
been Kal'enedral, she'd have made an excellent mother. As it was, she was the
willing child tender for any woman in Hawksnest who had ties to the company.
When she had time. Which, between drill and teaching duties,
wasn't nearly as often as she liked. Somewhere in the back of her mind, Kethry
was rather looking forward to the nebulous day when she and Tarma would retire
to start their schools. Because then, Tarma would have younglings of her own—by
way of Kethry. More, she would have the children that would form the core of
her resurrected Clan.
And bringing Tale'sedrin back to life would make Tarma happy
enough that the smile she wore too seldom might become a permanent part of her
expression.
"So—what's the other part?" Kethry asked, shaking
herself out of her woolgathering when she nearly tripped on a clump of snow.
Tarma snickered, eyes narrowed against the snowglare and the westering
sunlight. Her tone and her expression were both malicious. "Leslac's
cooling his heels in the jail as of last night."
"Oh, really?" Kethry was delighted. "What
happened?"
"Let's wait till we get inside; it's a long story."
Since they were only a few steps from the entrance to their
granite-walled barracks, Kethry was willing to wait. As officers, they could
have taken more opulent quarters, but frankly, they didn't really want them.
Tarma hardly had any need for privacy; Kethry had yet to find anyone in or out
of the Hawks that she wanted to dally with on any regular basis. On the rare
occasions where comradeship got physical, she was more than willing to rent a
room in an inn overnight. So they shared the same kind of spartan quarters as
the rest of the mercenaries; a plain double room on the first floor of the
barracks. The walls were wood, paneled over the stone of the building, there
were pegs for their weapons, and stands for their armor, a single wardrobe, two
beds, one on each wall, and three chairs and a small table. That was about the
extent of it. The only concession to their rank was a wood-fired stove: Tarma
felt the winter cold too much otherwise. They had a few luxuries besides: thick
fur coverlets and heavy wool blankets on the beds, some fine silver goblets,
oil lamps and candles instead of rush-dips—but no few of the fighters had
those, paid for out of their earnings. Both of them felt that since they worked
as closely as they did with their underlings, there was no sense in having quarters
that made subordinates uncomfortable. And, truth to tell, neither of them would
truly have felt at ease in more opulent surroundings.
They pulled off their snow-caked garments and changed quickly,
hanging the old on pegs by the stove to dry. Kethry noted as she pulled on a
soft, comfortable brown robe and breeches, that Tarma had donned black, and
frowned. It was true that Kal'enedral only wore dark, muted colors—but black
was for ritual combat or bloodfeud.
Tarma didn't miss the frown, faint as it was. "Don't get your
hackles up; it's all I've got left—everything else is at the launderers or wet.
I'm not planning on calling anybody out—not even that damned off-key songster.
Much as he deserves it—and much as I'd like to."
Warrl raised his head from the shadows of the corner he'd chosen
for his own, with a contemptuous snort. The kyree
liked the cold even less man Tarma, and spent much of his time in the warm
corner by the stove curled up on a pad of old rugs.
:You two have no taste. I happen to think Leslac is a fine
musician, and a very talented one.:
Tarma answered with a snort of her own. "All right then, you
go warm his bed. I'm sure he'd appreciate it."
Warrl simply lowered his head back to his paws, and closed his
glowing golden eyes with dignity.
"Tell, tell, tell!" Kethry urged, having as little love
for the feckless Leslac as did her partner. She threw herself down into her own
leather-padded hearthside chair, and leaned forward in her eagerness to hear.
"All right—here's what I was told—" Tarma lounged back
in her chair, and put her feet up on the black iron footrest near the stove to
warm them. "Evidently his Bardship was singing that song in the
Falcon last night."
That song
was the cause for Tarma's latest grievance with the Bard. It seemed that
Leslac, apparently out of willfulness or true ignorance, had not the least
notion of what being Kal'enedral meant. He had decided that Tarma's celibacy
was the result of her own will, not of the hand of her Goddess—
The fact was that, as Kal'enedral, Tarma was celibate because she
had become, effectively, neuter. Kal'enedral had no sexual desire, and
little sexual identity. There was a perfectly logical reason for this.
Kal'enedral served first the Goddess of the South Wind, the Warrior, who was as
sexless as the blade She bore—and they served next the Clans as a whole—and
lastly they served their individual Clans. Being sexless allowed them to keep a
certain cool perspective that kept them free of feuding and allowed them to act
as interClan arbitrators and mediators. Every Shin'a'in knew the cost of
becoming Kal'enedral. Some in every generation felt the price was worth it.
Tarma certainly had—since she had the deaths of her entire Clan to avenge, and only
Kal'enedral were permitted to swear to bloodfeud—and Kethry was mortally
certain that having been gang-raped by the brigands that slaughtered her Clan
had played no little part in the decision.
Leslac didn't believe this. He was certain—without bothering to
check into Tarma's background or the customs of the Shin'a'in, so far as Kethry
had been able to ascertain—that Tarma's vows were as simple as those of most
other celibate orders, and as easily broken. He was convinced that she had
taken those vows for some girlishly romantic reason; he had just recently
written a song, in fact, that hinted—very broadly—that the "right
man" could thaw the icy Shin'a'in. That was the gist of "that
song."
And he evidently thought he was the right man.
He'd certainly plagued them enough before they'd joined up with
Idra, following behind them like a puppy that couldn't be discouraged.
He'd lost track of them for two years after they'd joined the
Sunhawks and that had been a profound relief. But much to their disappointment,
he'd found them again and tracked them to Hawksnest. There he had remained,
singing in taverns to earn his keep—and occasionally rendering Tarma's nights
sleepless by singing under her window.
"That song" was new; the first time Tarma had heard it
was when they'd gotten back from the Surshan campaign. Kethry had needed to
practically tie her down to keep her from killing the musician.
"That's not a wise place to sing that particular
ballad," Kethry observed, "Seeing as that's where your scouts tend to
spend their pay."
"Hai—but it wasn't my scouts that got him," Tarma
chuckled, "which is why I'm surprised you hadn't heard. It was Tresti and
Sewen."
"What?"
"It was lovely—or so I'm told. Tresti and Sewen sailed in
just as he began the damned thing. Nobody's said—but it wouldn't amaze me much
to find out that Sewen set the whole thing up, though according to my spies,
Tresti's surprise looked real enough. She knows what Kal'enedral means.
Hellfire, we're technically equals, if I wanted to claim the priestly aspects
that go with the Goddess-bond. She also knows how you and I feel about
the little warbling bastard. So she decided to have a very public and very
priestly fit about blasphemy and sacrilegious mockery."
That was one of the few laws within Hawksnest; that every
comrade's gods deserved respect. And to blaspheme anyone's gods,
particularly those of a Sunhawk of notable standing, was an official offense,
punishable by the town judge.
"She didn't!"
"She ruddy well did. That was all Sewen and my children had
been waiting for. They called civil arrest on him and bundled him off to jail.
And there he languishes for the next thirty days."
Kethry applauded, beaming. "That's thirty whole days we won't
have to put up with his singing under our window!"
"And thirty whole days I can stroll into town for a drink
without hiding my face!" Tarma looked very pleased with herself.
Warrl heaved a gigantic sigh.
"Look, Furface, if you like him so much, why don't you go
keep him company?"
:Tasteless barbarians.:
Tarma's retort died unuttered, for at that moment there was a knock
at their door.
"Come—" Kethry called, and the door opened to show one
of the principals of Tarma's story. Sewen.
"Are you two busy?"
"Not particularly," Tarma replied, as Kethry rose from
her chair to usher him in. "I was just telling Keth about your part in
gagging our songbird."
"Can I have an hour or two?" Sewen was completely
expressionless, which, to those that knew him, meant that something was
worrying him, and badly.
"Sewen, you can have all of our time you need," Kethry
said immediately, closing the door behind him. "What's the problem? Not
Tresti, I hope."
"No, no—I—I have to talk to somebody, and I figured it had
better be you two. I haven't heard anything from Idra in over a month."
"Bloody hell—" Tarma sat bolt upright, looking no little
alarmed herself. "Pull up the spare chair, man, and give us the
details." She got up. and began lighting the oil lamps standing about the
room, then returned to her seat. Kethry broke out a bottle of wine and poured
three generous goblets full before resuming her perch. She left the bottle on
the table within easy reach, for she judged that this talk had a possibility of
going on for a while.
Sewen pulled the spare chair over to the stove and collapsed into
it, sitting slumped over, with his elbows on his knees and his hands loosely
clasped around the goblet. "It's been a lot more than a month, really,
more like two. I was getting a message about every two weeks before then—most
of 'em bitching about one thing or another. Well, that was fine, that sounded
like Idra. But then they started getting shorter, and—you know, how the Captain
sounds when she's got her teeth on a secret?"
"Hai." Tarma nodded. "Like every word had to
wiggle around that secret to get out."
"Eyah, that's it. Hints was all I got, that things were more
complicated than she thought. Then a message saying she'd made a vote, and
would be coming home—then, right after, another saying she wouldn't,
that she'd learned something important and had to do something—then
nothing."
"Sheka!" Tarma spat. Kethry seconded the curse;
this sounded very bad.
"It's been nothing, like I said, for about two months.
Damnit, Idra knows I'd be worried after a message like that, and no matter what
had happened, she'd find some way to let me know she was all right."
"If she could," Kethry said.
"So I'm figuring she can't. That she's either into something
real deep, too deep to break cover for a message, or she's being
prevented."
Kethry felt a tug on her soul-self from across the room. Need was
hung on her pegs over there—
She let her inner self reach out to the blade. Sure enough, she
was "calling," as she did when there were women in danger. It was
very faint—but then, Idra was very far away.
"I don't dare let the rest of the Hawks know," Sewen was
saying.
Tarma coughed. "You sure as hell don't. We've got enough
hotheads among us that you'd likely get about a hundred charging over there,
cutting right across Rethwellan and stirring up the gods only know what
trouble. Then luck would probably have it that they'd break right in on
whatever the Captain's up to and blow it all to hell."
"Sewen, she is in some sort of trouble. Need stirred
up the moment you mentioned this; I don't think it's coincidence." Kethry
shook her head a little in resignation. "If Need calls—it's got to be more
than just a little difficulty. Need's muted down since she nearly got us both
killed; I hardly even feel her on a battlefield, with women fighting and dying
all around. I don't talk about her, much, but I think she's been changing. I
think she's managed to become a little more capable of distinguishing real
troubles that only Tarma and I can take care of. So—I think Idra requires help,
I agree with you. All right, what do you want us to do? Track her down and see
what's wrong? just remember though, if we go—" She forced a smile.
"—Tresti loses her baby-tender and you lose your Master-class mage."
Sewen just looked relieved to the point of tears. "Look, I
hate to roust you two out like this, and I know how Tarma feels about traveling
in cold weather, but—you're the only two I'd feel safe about sending. Most of
the kids are what you said, hotheads. The rest—'cept for Jodi, they're mostly
like me, commonborn. Keth, you're highborn, you can deal with highborns, get
stuff out of 'em I couldn't. And Tarma can give you two a reason for hauling up
there."
"Which is what?"
"You know your people hauled in the fall lot of horses just
before we got back from the last campaign. Well, since we weren't here,
Ersala went ahead and bought the whole string, figuring she couldn't know how
many mounts we'd lost, and figuring it would be no big job to resell the ones
we didn't want. We've still got a nice string of about thirty nobody's
bespoken, and I was going to go ahead and keep them here till spring, then
sell 'em. Rethwellan don't see Shin'a'in-breds, much; those they do are
crossbred to culls. I doubt they've seen purebloods, much less good
purebloods."
"We play merchant princes, hmm?" Kethry asked, seeing
the outlines of his plan. "It could work. With rare beasts like that, we'd
be welcome in the palace itself."
"That's it. Once you get in, Keth, you can puff up your
lineage and move around in the court, or something. You talk highborn, and
you're sneaky, you could learn a lot—"
"While I see what the kitchen and stable talk is," Tarma
interrupted him. "Hai. Good plan, 'specially if I make out like I
don't know much of the lingo. I could pick up a lot that way."
"You aren't just doing this to ease your conscience, are
you?" Kethry asked, knowing there would be others who would ask the same
question. Sewen had been Idra's Second for years now—playing Second to a woman
had let him in for a certain amount of twitting from his peers in other
companies. Notwithstanding the fact that one quarter to one third of all
mercenary fighters were female, female Company Captains were few, and of
all of them, only Idra led a mixed-sex Company. And Idra had been showing no
signs of retiring, nor had Sewen made any moves indicating that he was
contemplating starting his own Company.
"I won't deny that I want the Hawks," he said, slowly.
"But—not like this. I want the Company fair and square, either
'cause Idra goes down, or 'cause she hands 'em over to me. This—it's too damn
iffy, that's what it is! It's eating at me. And what's worse, it's eating at me
that Idra might be in something deep—"
"—and you have to do something to get her out of it,
if you can."
"That's it, Keth. And it's for a lot of reasons. She's
my friend, she's my Captain, she's the one who took me out of the ranks and
taught me. I can't just sit here for a year. and then announce she's gone
missing and I'm taking over. I owe her too damned much, even if she
keeps tellin' me I don't owe her a thing! How can I act like nothin's wrong an'
not try t' help her?"
"Sewen, if every merc had your ethics—" Tarma began.
He interrupted her with a nonlaugh. "If every merc had my
ethics, there'd be a lot more work for freefighters. Face it, Swordsworn, I can
afford to have ethics just because of what Idra built the Sunhawks into.
So I'm not going to let those ethics—or her—down."
"This is an almighty cold trail you're sending us on,"
Kethry muttered. "By the time we get to Petras, it'll be past Midsummer.
What are you and the Hawks going to do in the meantime?"
"We're on two-year retainer from Sursha; we do spring and
summer patrol under old Leamount around the Borders to keep any of her
neighbors from getting bright ideas. Easy work. Idra set it up before she left.
I can handle it without making myself Captain."
"All right, I've got some ideas. Our people can keep
their lips laced over a secret, so you wait one week after we've left, then you
tell them all what's happened and that we've been sent out under the ivy
bush."
"Why?" Sewen asked bluntly.
"Mostly so rumors don't start. Then you and Ersala
concoct some story about Idra coming back, but fevered. Tresti can tell you
what kind of fever would need a two-year rest cure. That gives you a straw-Idra
to leave behind while you take the Hawks out to patrol. The Hawks will know the
real story—and tell them it might cost the Captain her life if they let
it slip."
"You think it might," he said, soberly.
"I don't know what to think, so I have to cover every
possibility."
"Huh." He thought about that for a long time,
contemplating his wine. Finally he swallowed the last of it in a single gulp.
"All right; I'll go with it. Now—should I replace you two?"
'T think you'd better," Tarma said. "I suggest promoting
either Garth or Jodi. Garth is my preference; I don't think Jodi would be
comfortable in a command position; she's avoided being in command too many
times."
"I'll do a sending; there are White Winds sorcerers
everywhere. You should be getting one or more up here within a couple of
months." Kethry bit her lip a bit, trying to do a rough calculation on how
far her sending would reach. "I can't promise that you'll get anything
higher than a Journeyman-class, but you never know. I won't tell them more than
that there's a position open with you—you can let whoever you hire in on the
whole thing after you take them on. Remember, White Winds school has no edicts
against using magic for fighting, and I'll make it plain in the sending that
this is a position with a merc company. That it means killing as well as
healing. That should keep the squeamish away. Have Tresti look them over first,
then Oreden and Jiles. Tresti will be able to sense whether they'll fit
in."
"I know; she checked you two out while Idra was waiting to
interview you."
Kethry nodded wryly. "Figures; I can't imagine Idra leaving
anything to chance. All right, does that pretty much take care of things?"
"I think so...."
"Well, as cold as the trail is going to be, there is no
sense in stirring up a lot of rumors by having us light out of here with our
tails on fire," Tarma said bluntly. "We might just as well take our
time about this, say our good-byes, get equipment put together—act like this
was going to be an ordinary sort of errand we're running for you. Until we've
been gone for about a week, you just make out like I'm running the string out
to sell, and Keth's coming with me for company."
Sewen nodded. "That sounds good to me. I'll raid the coffers
for you two. You'll be needing stuff to make you look good in the court, I
expect." He rose and started for the door—then turned back, and awkwardly
held out his arms.
"I—I don't know what I'd have done without you two," he
said stiffly, his eyes bright with what Kethry suspected might be incipient
tears. "You're more than shieldbrothers, you're friends—I—thanks—"
They both embraced him, trying to give him a little comfort.
Kethry knew that Idra had been in that "more than shieldbrother"
category, too—and that Sewen must be thinking what she was thinking—that
the Captain's odds weren't very good right now.
"Te'sorthene du'dera, big man," Tarma murmured.
"When we come across someone special, like you, like Tresti, like
Idra—well, you help your friends, that's all I can say. That's what friends are
there for, her'y?"
"If anybody can help her out, it'll be you two."
"We'll do our best. And you know, you can do us
a favor—" Kethry almost smiled at the sudden inspiration.
"What? Anything you want."
"Leslac. I want you to teach him a lesson. I don't care what
you do to him, just get him off Tarma's back."
The weather-beaten countenance went quiet with thought
"That's a pretty tall ord—wait a moment—" He began to smile, the
first smile he'd worn since he walked in their door. "I think I've got it.
'Course, it all hinges on whether he's really as pig-ignorant about Shin'a'in
as he seems to be."
"Go on—I think after that damned song we can count on that
being true."
Sewen's arms tightened about both their shoulders as he looked
down at them. "There's this sect of Spider-Priestesses down south; they
sort of dress like Tarma—deal is, they didn't start out life as
girls."
Tarma nearly choked with laughter. "You mean, convince the
little bastard that I'm really a eunuched boy? Sewen, that's priceless!"
"I rather like that—" Kethry grinned. "—I rather like
that."
"I'll get on it," he promised, giving them a last hug
and closing the door to their room behind him.
Tarma went immediately to her armor-stand, surveying the
brigandine for any sign of weakness or strain, Kethry put another log in the
stove, then approached the wall where Need hung, reaching out to touch the
blade with one finger.
Yes—the call's still there. And I can't tell anything, it's so
faint—but it is Idra. The call gets perceptibly stronger when I think about
her.
"Get anything?" Tarma asked quietly.
"Nothing definite, other than that Idra's in trouble. How
long do you think it will take us to get to Petras?"
"With a string of thirty horses—about a month to cross the
passes, then another two, maybe three. Like you said, it'll be Midsummer at the
earliest."
Kethry sighed. "If I were an Adept, I could get us both there
in an hour."
"But not the horses. And how would we explain
ourselves? We'd make a lot more stir than we should if we did that."
"And stir is not what we want."
"Right." Tarma stood with a sigh, and stretched, then
came back to her chair and flung herself down into it. "I seem to recall
one contact we might well want to make. The Captain didn't talk about her past
much, but she did mention somebody a time or two. The Court
Archivist—" Her brows knitted in thought. "Javreck? Jervase?
No—Jadrek, that's it. Jadrek. Seems like his rather used to keep Idra and her
older brother in tales; paid attention to them when nobody else had time for
them. Jadrek was evidently a little copy of him. She'd mention him when
something happened to bring one of those tales to her mind. And more
important—" Tarma pointed a long finger at Kethry. "—she also
never failed to preface those recollections by calling him 'the only completely
honest man in the Court, just as his father was.'"
"That sounds promising."
"If he's still there. Seems to me she said something about
him being at odds with her father and her younger brother when he took over the
Archivist position. He did that pretty young, since he was younger than Idra or
her brother, and she left the Court before she was twenty. She also said
something about his being crippled, which could cut down on the amount he
sees."
"Yes and no," Kethry replied, more than grateful for
Tarma's remarkable memory. "People who are overlooked often see more that
way. Need I tell you that I'm glad you have a mind like a trap?"
"What, shut?" Tarma jibed. "Now you know I've got a
Singer's memory; if I'd forgotten one verse of any of the most obscure
ballads, I'd have been laughed out of camp. Keth, you're worrying yourself, I
can tell. You're wasting energy."
"I know, I know—"
"Take it one week at a time. Worry about getting us through
the passes safely. I'll get you the avalanche map tomorrow; see what you can
scry out with it. And speaking of snow, do you still want to hear that business
about the Snow Demon?"
"Well... yes!" she replied, surprised. "But I
hardly thought you'd be in the mood for it now."
"I'm just taking some of my own prescribed medicine."
Tarma grinned crookedly, and went to fetch the battered little hand-drum she
used on those rare occasions when she chanted—you couldn't call it singing
anymore—one of the Shin'a'in history-songs. "Trying to remember all
fifty-two verses will keep me from fretting into a sweat. And
hoping," she looked down at her black sleeve, the black of
vengeance-taking, "that this outfit doesn't turn out to be an omen."
Five
"Hai'vetha! Kele, kele, kele!"
Tarma wheeled Ironheart about on the mare's heels in a piece of
horsemanship that drew a spattering of impromptu applause from those watching,
and chivied the last of the tired horses into the corral assigned to them by
the master of the Petras stock market. She controlled them with voice only—not
hand, nor whip. She didn't even call for any encouraging nips at their heels
from Warrl, another fact which impressed the spectators no end.
They were already impressed by the horses. They were not the kind
of beasts that the inhabitants of Petras were used to seeing. These were
Shin'a'in purebreds, and the only reason any of them had been passed over by
the Sunhawks was that they were mostly saddlebreds, not trailbreds. The
Shin'a'in horses bred for trail work were a little rougher looking, and a bit
hardier than the saddlebreds. in the main. There were always exceptions, like
Tarma's beloved Kessira, but the Shin'a'in kept the exceptions for their own
use and further breeding—as Kessira was being bred, pampered queen mare of the
Tale'sedrin herds.
No, these horses were not what the inhabitants of Petras
were used to seeing in their beast-market. Their heads, broad in the forehead,
small in the muzzle, and with large, doe-soft eyes were carried high and
proudly on their long, elegant necks; pride showed in every line of them,
despite their weariness. Their bodies were compact and muscular, the hindquarters
being a trifle higher than these people were accustomed to. Their legs were
well-muscled and slim; they were no longer shaggy with winter growth as they
had been when the trek started. Now their coats were silky despite the dust—and
their manes and tails, the pride of a Shin'a'in mount, were flowing in the wind
like many-colored waterfalls. And they moved like dancers, like birds on the
wind, like music made visible. In short, they were beautiful.
"Good enough to suit a king, eh, she'enedra?" Tarma asked in her own tongue, feeling rather
proud of her charges.
"I should think—" Kethry began, when one of the
onlookers, a man possessed of more than a little wealth, by the cut of his gray
and green clothing, interrupted her.
"What are these beauties?" he asked, in tones
that bordered on veneration. "Where on earth did they spring from?
Valdemar? I'd heard Companions were magnificent, but I'd never heard of anyone
other than Heralds owning them, and I'd never heard that Companions were
anything but white."
"No, m'lord," Kethry replied, as Tarma privately
wondered what on earth a Companion could be. "These are Shin'a'in purebred
saddlemares and geldings from the Dhorisha Plains."
"Shin'a'in!" The man stepped back a pace. "Lord and
Lady—how did you ever get Shin'a'in to part with them? I'd have thought they'd
have shown you their sword-edge rather than their horses."
"Easily enough—I'm blood-sister to the handler, there. I
thought to bring a string up here and try our luck."
"She's—Shin'a'in—?" The man gulped, and eased another
footstep or two away, putting Kethry between himself and Tarma. Tarma wasn't
certain whether to laugh or continue to look as if she didn't understand. The
man acted like she was some kind of demon!
"Oh yes," Kethry answered, "and Kal'enedral."
She must have noted his look of blank nonrecognition, because she added,
"Swordsworn."
He turned completely white. "I—hope—excuse me, lady, but I
trust she's—under control."
"Warrior's Oath, she'enedra,
what in Hell have they heard about us?" Tarma kept to her own tongue, as
per the plan, and was keeping her face utterly still and impassive, but she
knew Kethry could hear the suppressed laughter in her voice.
"Probably that you eat raw meat for breakfast and raw babies
for dinner," Kethry replied, and Tarma could see the struggle to keep her
expression guileless in the laughter sparkling in her eyes.
"Pardon—but—what's she saying?" The man eyed Tarma as if
he expected her to unsheathe her blade and behead him at any moment.
"That she noticed how much you admire the horses, and thanks
you for the compliment of your attention."
Tarma took care to nod graciously at him, and he relaxed visibly.
She then turned her attention back to the horses. The corral seemed sizable
enough to hold them comfortably; she'd been a little worried about that. Let's
see—pump or well for the watering trough? And where would it be—ah! She
spotted a pump, after a bit of looking. Good. One good thing about so-called
civilization: pumps. Think maybe I might see if the Clans would agree to having
a couple installed on the artesian wells....
"Stand," she told Ironheart. The battlemare obediently
locked her legs in position; it would take an earthquake to move her now. Tarma
unslung the sword from her back and looped the baldric over the pommel of the
saddle. "Guard," she ordered. That blade was a sweet one, and had
been dearly paid for in her own blood; she didn't intend to lose it. Ironheart
would see that she didn't.
"You'd better tell your friend to stay clear of 'Heart or
he'll lose a hand," she called to Kethry, then dismounted and vaulted over
the fence into the stockade to water her other charges. That bit of bravado
cost, too, but it was worth a bit of strain to put on a proper show. Tarma
meant to leave these folks with their mouths gaping—for that meant that the
highborns would hear of them that much sooner.
:You're going to hurt in the morning,: Warrl observed. Thus
far, the crowd's attention had been so taken up with the horses that they
hadn't paid much heed to him. He'd stayed in the shadow of Ironheart, who was
so tall that he didn't stand out as the monster he truly was.
And—she couldn't tell, but he might well be exercising a
bit of his own magic to look more like an ordinary herd dog. He'd hinted that
he could do just that on the way here. Which was no bad idea.
Tarma felt the strain of the muscles she'd used, and privately
agreed with his critical remark about hurting. For every scar she bore on her
hide, there was twice the scar tissue under it, where it didn't show—but it certainly
made itself felt. Particularly when she started showing off.
But they were drawing a bigger crowd by the moment; the onlookers
murmured as the loose horses crowded around her, shoving their heads under her
hands for a scratch, or lipping playfully at her hair. She laughed at them,
pushed them out of the way, and got to the pump. As she began to fill the
trough, they pushed in to get at the water, and she rebuked them with a single
sharp "Nes!" They shied and danced a bit, then behaved
themselves.
Tarma had been doing some serious training with them on the
trail—knowing that once they were in Rethwellan she would have to be
able to command them by voice, for if they spooked, she, Kethry, and Warrl
would not be enough to keep them under control. Her ability to keep them in
line seemed to impress their audience no end. She decided to go all out to
impress them.
She picked out one of the herd mares she'd been working with far
more than the others, and called her. The chestnut mare pricked her ears, and came
to the summons eagerly—she knew what this meant; first a trick from her,
and then a treat was in store. Tarma ordered the others out of her way, then
raised her hand high over her head. The mare stepped out away from her about
fifteen paces, then as Tarma began to turn, followed her turn as if she was
being lunged.
Except there was no lunging-rein on her.
At a command from Tarma she picked up to a trot, then a canter;
after traveling all day, Tarma was not going to ask her to gallop. At a
third command she stopped dead in her tracks. At the fourth, she reared—
The fifth command was "Come—" and meant a piece of dried
apple and a good scratch behind the ears. She obeyed that one with eager
promptitude.
The spectators, now thick on the fence, applauded, The horses
flickered their ears nervously, but when nothing came of the noise, went back
to watching Tarma, hoping for treats themselves.
Tarma was pleased—more than pleased. Everything was going
according to the plan they'd mapped out. "Patience, children," she
told the rest. "Dinner should be here soon."
Their ears flickered forward nearly as one at that welcome word,
and they continued to watch her with expectation in their soft, sweet eyes.
And within moments, the beast-market attendants did appear, with the
hay and sweet-feed Tarma had told Kethry to order—and more than that—
She saw carrots poking out of more than one pocket Hmm. This was
gratifying, if it was evidence of the fact that the attendants were taken with
the looks of the string—but it could also be an attempt on the part of
some other horsebreeder to poison her stock.
:I'm checking, mindmate.: the voice in her head told her.
"Keth, tell the younglings over there to hold absolutely still.
I think they just want to treat the children, but Warrl's going to check for
drugging just in case."
Kethry called out the warning, and the attendants froze; the whole
crowd froze when they saw Warrl's great gray body moving toward them. Now
they could see just how huge he was—his shoulder came nearly to Tarma's
waist—and how much like a wolf he looked. Tarma took advantage of the situation
to vault the fence again, and begin relieving the attendants of their burdens.
Warrl sniffed the feed over, then checked the youngsters themselves and the
treats they'd brought.
:They're fine, mindmate,: Warrl told her, cheerfully. :And
about ready to soil themselves if I sneeze.:
Tarma laughed, and patted the one next to her on the head as she
took his bale of hay away from him. "They're all right, Keth. Urn—tell
them to wait until I've finished, then they can give the children their treats
so long as they stay out of the corral. I don't want anybody in there; they get
spooked, and it'll take half a day to calm them down again. And tell them we
won't need any nightwatchers, that Warrl will be guarding them when I'm not
here—that should prevent anybody even thinking about drugging
them."
Warrl sprang over the fence with a single, graceful leap. The
horses, of course, were so used to his presence that they totally ignored him,
being far more interested in their dinner. With a fence between themselves and
Warrl, the attendants calmed down a bit.
Tarma completed her task, and (with an inward wince) vaulted the
fence a third time, to return to where Ironheart still stood, statue-firm.
"Rest," she said, and the battlemare unlocked her legs,
and reached around to nuzzle at her rider's arm. The others were getting fed;
she wanted her dinner.
"Hungry, jel'enedra?" Tarma murmured, letting her
have the handful of sweet-feed she'd brought with her. "Patience, we'll be
at the inn soon enough."
She cast a glance over at Kethry's companion. His eyes were taking
up half of his head.
"Warrl, would you mind staying—"
:If you send me a nice haunch of pig as soon as you get there.:
"And a half-dozen marrowbones already cracked; you
deserve it." She swung up into her saddle, and turned to Kethry, who was
smiling broadly enough to split her face in two. "So much for the
barbarian dog and pony show, she'enedra,"
she said, stifling a chuckle. "Tell these nice people they can go home,
and let's find our inn, shall we?"
"So how barbarian do you want me to look?" Tarma asked
her partner, as they strolled down the creaking wooden stairs of the inn to the
dimly lit common room. "And what kind? The aloof desert princeling, the
snarling beast-thing, what?"
"Better stick with the aloof desert princeling; we don't want
these people afraid to have you near the Court," Kethry chuckled. Tarma
was plainly enjoying herself, willing to act any part to the hilt.
"Brood—that always looks impressive, and you've certainly got the face for
it."
"Oh, have I now!" They were continuing to speak in
Shin'a'in between themselves; it was better than a code. The likelihood of
anyone knowing Tarma's tongue, here in a country where tales of Shin'a'in were
obviously so outlandish that they feared the Swordsworn, was nil.
The common room went absolutely silent as they entered. Tarma
stepped in first, looking around sharply, as if she expected enemies to emerge
from beneath the tables. Finally she gave a quick nod as if to herself, stepped
aside, and motioned Kethry to precede her. She kept a casual hand on the hilt
of the larger of her daggers the entire time. She'd wanted to wear her sword,
but Kethry had argued against the idea; now she was glad she'd won. If Tarma
had worn anything larger than a dagger, she might well have caused a panicked
exodus! As it was, the impression she left was a complicated one; that she was
very dangerous and suspicious of everyone and everything, that she and Kethry
were equal, but that she also considered herself in charge of Kethry's safety.
It was a masterful performance, carefully planned and
choreographed to avoid a problem before it could come up. The people of the
primary religious sect of Rethwellan took a dim view of same-sex lovers, and
the partners were doing their best to make that notion, which was
inevitably going to occur to someone, seem a total absurdity. This
touch-me-not bodyguarding act Tarma was putting on was hopefully going to do
just that—among other things.
They took a table with seats for two in a far corner. Tarma
motioned for Kethry to take the seat actually in the corner, then took the
outer seat so that she would stand (or rather, sit) between Kethry and The Rest
Of The World. Kethry signaled the waiter while her partner turned her own chair
so that the back was up against the wall, and finally sat down. Tarma continued
to watch the room from that vantage, broodingly, while Kethry placed orders for
both of them. Conversation started back up again once they were seated, but
Kethry noted that it was a trifle uneasy, and most of the diners kept one eye
on Tarma at all times.
"They think you're going to start a holy war any second, she'enedra," Kethry said, finally.
"Good," her partner replied, folding her arms, leaning
back against the wall beside their table, and continuing to watch the room with
icy, hooded eyes. "I hope this act of mine gets us prompt service; I'm
about to eat the candle."
"Now, now, I thought you were being princely."
"I am—but I'm a hungry prince."
At just that moment, a serving wench, shaking in her shoes,
brought their orders. Tarma looked at the cutlery, sniffed disdainfully, and
drew the smaller of her daggers, cutting neat bits with it and eating them off
the point. After a look of her own at the state of the implements they'd been
given, Kethry rather wished the part she was playing allowed her to do the
same.
They were nearly finished when the innkeeper himself, sidling
carefully around Tarma, came to stand obsequiously at Kethry's elbow.
She allowed him to wait a moment before deigning to notice his presence. This
was in keeping with the rest of the parts they were playing—
For although they had arrived in dusty, well-worn traveling
leathers—Tarma's being all-too-plainly armor, Kethry's bearing no hint of her
mage-status—they were now dressed in silks. Kethry wore a kneelength robe, of
an exotic cut and a deep green, and breeches of a deeper green; Tarma wore
Shin'a'in style wrapped jacket, shirt, and breeches—in black. With them, she
wore a black sweatband of matching silk confining her short-cropped hair, and a
wrapped sash holding her two daggers of differing sizes, a black silk baldric
for the sword that she had left in the room above, and black quilted silk boots.
Her choice of outfitting had stirred uneasy feelings in Kethry, but Tarma had
pointed out with irrefutable logic that if the Captain was to hear of two
strangers in Petras, and have that outfit described to her, she would know
who those strangers were. And she would know by the sable hue that Tarma was
expecting her Captain to be in trouble—possibly in need of avenging.
Their clothing was clearly the most costly (and certainly the most
outre) in the room, and this was (dubious eating utensils notwithstanding) not
an inexpensive inn. They wanted their presence to be known and commented
on; they wanted word to spread. Ideally it would spread to Idra,
wherever she was; if not, to the ear of the King.
"My lady," the innkeeper said, in tones both frightened
and fawning, tones that made Kethry long for their old friend Hadell of the
Broken Sword, or plain, genial Oskar of the Bottomless Barrel. "My lady,
there is a gentleman who wishes to speak with you."
"So?" she raised an elegant eyebrow. "On what
subject?"
"He did not confide in me, my lady, but—he wears the livery
of the King."
"Does he, then? Well, I'll hear him out—if you have somewhere
a bit more—private—than this."
"Of a certainty, if my lady would follow—" He bowed, and
groveled, and at length brought them to a small but comfortably appointed
chamber, equipped with one table, four chairs, and a door that shut quite
firmly. He bowed himself out; wine appeared, in cleaner vessels than they had
been favored with before this, and finally, the visitor himself.
Kethry chose to receive him seated; Tarma stood, leaning against
the wall with her arms folded, in the shadows at her right hand. Their visitor
gave the Shin'a'in a fairly nervous glance before accosting Kethry.
"My lady," he said, bowing over her hand.
Kethry was having a hard time keeping from laughing herself sick.
The right corner of Tarma's mouth kept twitching, sure sign that she was
holding herself in only by the exertion of a formidable amount of willpower.
This liveried fop was precisely the degree of lackey they had hoped to lure in;
personal servant to the King, and probably a minor noble himself. He was
languishing, and vapid, and quite thoroughly full of himself. His absurd court
dress of pale yellow and green with the scarlet and gold badge of the King's
Household on the right shoulder was exceedingly expensive as well as in
appallingly bad taste. There was more than a little trace of a more careful
toilette than Kethry ever bothered with in his appearance. His carefully
pointed mouse-brown mustaches alone must have taken him an hour to tease into
shape.
"My lord wishes to know the identity of two
such—fascinating—strangers to our realm," he said, when he'd completed his
oozing over Kethry's hand. "And what brings them here."
"I shall answer the second question first, my lord,"
Kethry replied, with just a hint of cool hauteur. "What brings us, is
trade, purely and simply. But not just any trade, I do assure you; no, what we
have are the mounts of princes, princes of the Shin'a'in—and we intend them to
grace the stables of the princes of other realms. The horses we have brought
are princes and princesses themselves—as I am certain you are aware."
"Word—had reached my noble lord that your beasts were
extraordinary—"
"They are creatures whose like no one here has ever seen. It
is only through my friendship with the noble Tarma shena Tale'sedrin, the
Tale'sedrin of Tale'sedrin, that I was able to obtain them."
His glance lit again upon Tarma, who was still standing in the
shadows behind Kethry. She moved forward into the light, inclined her head
graciously at the sound of her name, and said in Shin'a'in, "I also happen
to be the only Tale'sedrin other than you, but we won't go into that,
will we?"
"My companion tells me she is pleased to make the acquaintance
of so goodly a gentleman," Kethry said smoothly, as Tarma allowed the
shadows to obscure her again. "As for myself, I am Kethryveris, scion of
House Pheregul of Mournedealth, a House of ancient and honorable lineage."
From the blankness of his gaze, Kethry knew he'd never even heard
of Mournedealth, much less her House—which, so far as she was concerned, was
all to the good.
"A House of renown, indeed," he said, covering his
ignorance. "Then, let me now tender my lord's words. I come from King Raschar
himself." He paused, to allow Kethry to voice the expected murmurs of
amazement and gratification. "He heard of your wondrous beasts, and wishes
to have his Master of Horse view them himself—more than view them, if what
rumor says of them is even half the truth. And since you prove to be more than
merely common merchants, he would like to tender you an invitation to extend
your visit to Petras in his Court, that he may learn of you, and you of
him."
"And you may end up in the bastard's bed, if he likes your
looks," murmured Tarma from the darkness.
"Tell your lord that we are gratified—and that we shall await
his Master of Horse with eagerness, and will be more than pleased to take
advantage of the hospitality of his Court."
More smooth nonsense was exchanged, and finally the man bowed
himself out. They waited, holding their breaths, until they were certain he was
out of earshot—then collapsed into each other's arms, helpless with stifled
laughter.
"Goddess! 'Tale'sedrin of Tale'sedrin' indeed! That great
booby didn't even know it was a clan name and not a title!" Tarma choked.
"Isda so'trekoth! You know what my people say, don't you? 'Proud is
the Clanchief. Prideful is the Clanchief of a two-member clan!'"
"Laid it on good and thick, didn't I?" Kethry replied,
wiping tears out of her eyes. "Goddess bless, I didn't know I had that
much manure in me!"
"Oh, you could have fertilized half a farm, 'my la-dy.'"
Tarma gasped, imitating his obsequious bow. "Bright Star-Eyed! Here—"
she handed Kethry one of the goblets and poured it full of wine, then took a
second for herself. "We'd better get ourselves under control if we're
going to get from here to our room without giving the game away."
"You're right," Kethry said, taking a long sip, and
exerting control to sober herself. "There's more at stake than just this
little game."
"Hai'she'li. This is just the tail of the beastie.
We're going to have to get into its lair to see if it's a grasscat or a
treehare—and if it's got Idra in its mouth."
"And I just realized something," Kethry told her, all
thought of laughter gone. "We know the new King's name, but we don't know which
of the brothers he is. And that could make a deal of difference."
"Indeed, ves'tacha," Tarma replied, her eyes gone
brooding in truth. "In very deed."
At dawn Tarma relieved Warrl of his watch on the horses, and
amused herself by first going through a few sword drills, then working them,
much to the titillation of the gawkers. Toward noon, Kethry (who had been
playing the aristo, rising late, and demanding breakfast in bed) put in her
appearance. With her was a pale stranger, as expensively dressed as their
visitor of the previous evening, but in much better taste. He, too, wore
the badge of the King's Household on his right shoulder. By his walk Tarma
would have known him for a horseman. By the clothing and the badge, she knew
him for the Master of the King's Horse.
And by the appreciation in his eyes, Tarma knew him for a man who
knew his business. She heaved a mental sigh of relief at that; she'd half
feared he might turn out to be as big a booby as the courtier of the night
before. It would have cut her to the heart to sell these lovelies to an
ignoramus—but if she refused to sell, they'd lose their cover story.
She had been taking the horses out of the corral, one at a time,
and working them in a smaller pen. Most of them she did work on a
lunge—there were only a handful among the thirty she could work loose, the way
she had the chestnut. She had a particularly skittish young buckskin gelding
out when Kethry and her escort arrived, one she needed to devote most of her
attention to. So after taking a few mental notes on the man, she went back to
work.
He spent a long time looking over the herd as a whole, and all in
complete silence.
:This is a good one, mindmate,: Warrl said, from his
resting place under the horse trough. :He smells of soap and leather, not
perfume. And there's no fear in him, nor on him.:
"Kathal, dester'edre," she told the buckskin, who
kept wanting to break into a canter. "What else can you pick up from
him?"
:Lots of horse-scent, and not a trace of horse-fear.:
"For'shava."
After a time the Master of Horse left his post at the corral, and
took up a nearly identical stance at the fence of the pen where she was working
the buckskin. She watched him out of the corner of her eye, appraisingly. He
was older than she'd first thought. Medium height, dark eyes, dark hair, beard
and mustache—his complexion would be very white if not for his suntan—muscles
in his shoulders that made his tunic leather stretch when he moved. His sole
vanity seemed to be a set of matching silver jewelry: fillet, torque,
bracelets, all inset with a single moonstone apiece. He leaned comfortably on
the fence, missing nothing she did. Finally, he spoke to Kethry, who was
standing at his side, dressed for the day in a cleaner and far more expensive
set of the leathers she'd worn to ride in yesterday. Sewen had not spared the
Company coffers when it had come time to outfit them for their ruse.
"I understood that your companion was working the horses
yesterday without a lunge...."
"Only a few of the horses are schooled enough to work that
way at the moment," Kethry said smoothly, "although eventually all
of them could be trained so. Do you wish to see her work one of them now?"
"If you would both be so kind."
Kethry leaned over the fence. "You heard him, she'enedra; is Master Flutterby there
ready to pause?"
The buckskin was obeying now, having tried to fret himself into a
froth. Tarma halted him, then gave him a quick rubdown, and led him out. This
time she called up a gentle dappled gelding—one she was rather glad hadn't been
chosen by a Sunhawk. He was so good-natured—he really wasn't suited to a
battlefield, but he was so earnest he'd have broken his heart or a leg trying
to do what was asked of him.
She didn't even bother to take him into the pen, she worked him in
the open, then mounted him bareback, and put him through a bit of easy
dressage. When she slid off, the Horsemaster approached; she kept one hand on
the dapple's neck and watched as he examined the animal almost exactly as she
would have. The dapple, curious, craned his head around and whuffed the man's
hair as he ran his hands gently down the horse's legs, rear, then front, then
picked up a forefoot. At that, the man grinned—a most unexpected expression on
so solemn a face—and held out his hand for the dapple to smell, then rubbed his
nose, gently.
"Lady," he spoke directly to Tarma, though he must have
been told she didn't speak the language—a courtesy as delicate as any she'd
ever been given, "I would cheerfully sell the Palace to purchase these
horses. For once, rumor has understated fact."
"I think he's rather well hooked, she'enedra," Kethry said, pretending to translate. "How
is he as a horseman? Can you feel happy letting them go to his care?"
Tarma gave that slight bow of respect to him, and allowed a hint
of a smile to cross her face. "I'm pleased, Warrl's pleased, and have a
look at Dust, if you would."
The dapple's eyes were half-closed in pleasure as the Horsemaster
continued to scratch under his loose halter.
"I think it's safe to say that they'll be in good hands. See
if you can wangle a deal with him that will include me as a temporary trainer;
that will give us another excuse to linger."
"My companion is gratified by your praise, my lord,"
Kethry said to him, "and impressed with your knowledge; she says she
believes she could not find one to whose care she would be more willing to
entrust her beasts."
Again, that unexpected smile. "Then, if you would care to
return with me, I believe we can agree to something mutually pleasing. Since
you will be selling into the King's household, there will be no merchant taxes.
And I think—" He gave the dapple's forehead a last scratch. "—I think
perhaps that I shall keep this one out of his Majesty's sight. I have my pick
of the King's stables, but only after he has taken his choice. It is a pity a
mount this intelligent is also so beautiful."
"Do you suppose you can come up with a distractor,
Tarma?"
"Do I? I think so!" She led the dapple back into the
pen, and walked into the center of the herd to bring out the one horse of the
lot that was mostly show and little substance—a lovely gelding with a coat of
gold, a mane and tail of molten silver, and without a jot of brains in that
beautiful head. Fortunately, he was reasonably even of temper as well as being
utterly gentle, or there'd have been no handling him.
He'd been included in the lot sent to the Sunhawks although if
he'd had a bit less in the way of good looks he'd have been counted a cull.
Tarma had gotten the notion that Idra might like a parademount, and had asked
her people to be on the lookout for a truly impressive beast of good temper;
for parade, brains didn't matter. You couldn't have told his beauty though,
except by his lines and the way he carried himself. That was because he was
filthy from rolling in the dust—which he insisted on doing when any
opportunity presented itself.
Tarma went to work on him with brushes, as he sighed and leaned
into the strokes. He was dreadfully vain, and he loved being groomed. Tarma
almost suspected him of dust-rolling on purpose, just so he'd get groomed more
often. As the silver and gold began to emerge from under the dirt, the
Horsemaster exclaimed in surprise. When Tarma was done, and paraded the horse
before him, he smacked his fist into his palm in glee.
"By the gods! One look at him and his Majesty won't
give a bean for the gray! I thank you, my ladies," he bowed slightly to
both Kethry and her partner, "and let us conclude this business as quickly
as may be! I won't be easy until these beauties are safely in the Royal
Stables."
As he and Kethry returned the way they had come, Tarma turned the
gold loose in the stockade—where he promptly went to his knees and wallowed in
the dirt.
"You," she laughed at him, "are hopeless!"
By twilight they were installed, bag and baggage, in the Palace,
in one of the suites reserved for minor foreign dignitaries.
It had all happened so fast that Tarma was still looking a little bemused.
Kethry, who knew just how quickly high-ranking courtiers could get things
accomplished when they wanted to exert themselves, had been a bit less
surprised.
She and the Master of Horse had concluded their bargain in fairly
short order—and to her satisfaction, it had been at his suggestion that
Tarma was retained for continued training. No sooner had a price been settled
on and a writ made out to a reputable goldsmith, than a stream of thirty grooms
and stable hands had been sent to walk the horses from the corral at the
stockyard to the Royal Stables, each horse to have its own handler. The
Horsemaster was taking no chances on accident or injury.
When Kethry returned to the inn, there were already three porters
waiting for her orders, all in the Royal livery. They were none too sure of
themselves; Tarma (still in her barbarian persona) had refused them entrance to
the suite, and was guarding the door as much with her scowl as her drawn sword.
They allowed the porters to carry away most of their belongings,
the ones that didn't matter, like some of that elaborate clothing. Tarma's
armor and weaponry (including a few nasty little surprises she definitely did
not want anyone to know about), Need, their trail gear, and the few physical
supplies Kethry needed for her magecraft they brought themselves, in sealed
saddlebags. They rode Hellsbane and Ironheart; Kethry had no intention of
chancing accidents with a trained battlemare. "Accidents" involving a
Shin'a'in warsteed generally ended up in broken bones—and not the
horse's.
More obsequious servants met them once the mares were safely
stabled, and again, Kethry made it plain to the stable crew that only
Tarma was to handle their personal horses. To enforce that, they left Warrl
with the mounts, provided with his own stall between the ones supplied to the
two mares. One look at the kyree was
all it took to convince the stablehands that they did not wish to rouse the
beast's ire. That was where Tarma and Kethry left their real gear, the things
they would truly need if they had to cut and run, and between Warrl and the
horses, it would be worth a person's life to touch it.
But as they crossed the threshold of the Palace, a curious chill
had settled over Kethry, a chill that had nothing to do with temperature. Her
good humor and faint amusement had vanished. The Palace seemed built of
secrets—dark secrets. Their mission suddenly took on an ominous feeling.
The suite, consisting of a private bathing room, two bedrooms, and
an outer public room, all opulently furnished in dark wood and amber velvet,
had been a good indication that their putative status was fairly high. The two
personal servants assigned to them, in addition to the regular staff, had told
them that they ranked somewhere in the "minor envoy" range. This was
close to perfect: Kethry would be able to move about the Court fairly freely.
Now Tarma was immersed to her neck in a hot bath; Kethry had
already had hers, and was dressing in her most impressive outfit for there
would be a formal reception for them in an hour.
Tarma did not look at all relaxed. Kethry didn't blame her; she'd
been increasingly uneasy herself.
"There was no sign of Gray in the stables, and I looked for
him," Tarma called abruptly from the bathing room. Gray was Idra's
gelding; a palfrey, and not the Shin'a'in stallion she rode on campaign.
"No sign of Hawk tack, either. It's like she's been long gone, or was
never here at all."
Kethry heard splashing as her partner stood; and shortly
thereafter the Shin'a'in emerged from the bathing room with a huge towel
wrapped about herself. They'd turned down an offer of bath attendants; after
one look at Tarma's arsenal, the attendants had seemed just as glad.
"If she's been here, we should find out about it tonight.
Especially after the wine begins to flow. Do I look impressive, or
seducable?" Kethry glided into Tarma's room, and turned so that her
partner could survey her from all angles.
"Impressive," Tarma judged, vigorously toweling her
hair.
"Good; I don't want to have to slap Royal fingers and get
strung up for my pains."
Kethry's loose robes were of dark amber silk, about three shades
darker than her hair, and highnecked, bound at the waist with a silk-and-gold
cord. At her throat she wore a cabochon piece of amber the size of an egg; she
had confined her hair into a severe knot, only allowing two decorous tendrils
in front of her ears. The robes had full, scalloped in edged sleeves that were
bound with gold thread. She looked beautiful, and incredibly dignified.
Tarma was dressing in a more elaborate version of her black silk
outfit, this one piped at every seam and hem with silver; she had a silver mesh
belt instead of a silk sash, and a silver fillet with a black moonstone instead
of a headband confining her midnight hair.
"You look fairly impressive, yourself."
"I don't like the feel of this place, I'll tell you that
now," Tarma replied bluntly. "I've got my Kal'enedral chainmail on
under my shirt, and I'm bloody well armed to the teeth. I'm going to stay that
way until we're out of here."
Kethry rubbed her neck, nervously. "You, too?"
"Me, too."
"You know the drill—"
"You talk and mingle, I lurk behind you. If I hear anything
interesting, I cough twice, and we get somewhere where we can discuss it."
All their good humor had vanished into the shadows of the Palace,
and all that was left them was foreboding.
"I don't suppose that Need..."
"Not a hint. Just the same as back at Hawksnest. Which could
mean about anything; most likely is that the Captain is out of the edge of her
range."
"I hope you're right," Tarma sighed. "Well, shall
we get on with it?"
Closing the door on the dubious shelter of their suite, they
moved, side by side, deeper into the web of intrigue.
Six
Perfume, wine, and wire-tight nerves. Musk, hot wax, and dying
flowers. The air in the Great Hall was so thick with scent that Tarma felt
overpowered by all the warring odors. The butter-colored marble of the very
walls and floor seemed warm rather than cool. Lighted candles were everywhere,
from massed groupings of thin tapers to pillars as thick as Tarma's wrist. The
pale polished marble reflected the light until the Great Hall glowed, fully as
bright as daylight. The hundreds of jewels, the softly gleaming gold on brow
and neck and arm, the winking golden bullion weighing down hems sparkled like a
panoply of stars.
It was not precisely noisy here—but the murmuring of
dozens, hundreds of conversations, the underlying current of the music of a
score of minstrels, the sound of twenty pairs of feet weaving through an
intricate dance—the combination added up to an effect as dizzying as the light,
heat or scent.
Carved wooden doors along one wall opened up onto a courtyard
garden, also illuminated for the evening—but by magic, not candles. But few
moved to take advantage of the quiet and cool garden—not when the real power in
this land was here.
If power had possessed a scent, it would have overwhelmed all the
others in the hall. The scarlet-and-gold-clad man lounging on the gilded wooden
throne at the far end of the Great Hall was young, younger than Tarma, but very
obviously the sole agent of control here. No matter what they were
doing, nearly everyone in this room kept one eye on him at all times; if he
leaned forward the better to listen to one of the minstrels, all conversation
hushed—if he nodded to a lady, peacock-bright gallants thronged about her. But
if he smiled upon her, even her escort deserted her, not to return until their
monarch's interest wandered elsewhere.
He was not particularly imposing, physically. Brown hair, brown eyes;
medium build; long, lantern-jawed face with a hard mouth and eyebrows like
ruler-drawn lines over his eyes—his was not the body of a warrior, but not the
body of a weakling, either.
Then he looks at you, Tarma thought, and you see the predator, the king of his
territory, the strongest beast of the pack. And you want to crawl to him on
your belly and present your throat in submission.
:Unless,: the thin tendril of Warrl's mind-voice insinuated
itself into her preoccupation, :just unless you happen to be a pair of rogue
bitches like yourself and your sister. You bow to your chosen packleader, and
no one else. And you never grovel.:
The brilliantly-bedecked courtiers weren't entirely certain how to
treat Kethry and her black-clad shadow—probably because the King himself hadn't
been all that certain. Wherever they walked, conversation faltered and died.
There was veiled fright in the courtiers' eyes—real fright. Tarma
wondered if she hadn't overdone her act a bit.
On the other hand. King Raschar had kept his hands off the
sorceress. It had looked for a moment as if he was considering chancing
her "protector's" wrath—but one look into Tarma's coldly impassive
eyes, (eyes, she'd often been told, that marked her as a born killer) seemed to
make him decide that it might not be worth it.
Tarma would have laid money down on the odds she knew exactly what
he was thinking when he gave her that measuring look. He could well have
reckoned that she might be barbarian enough to act if she took offense—and
quick enough to do him harm before his guards could do anything about her.
Maybe even quick enough to kill him.
:The predator recognizes another of his kind.:
Tarma nodded to herself. Warrl wasn't far wrong. If this was
highborn life, Tarma was just as glad she'd been born a Shin'a'in nomad. The
candlelight that winked from exquisite jewels also reflected from hollow,
hungry eyes; voices were shrill with artificial gaiety. There was no peace to
be found here, and no real enjoyment. Just a never-ending round of competition,
competition in which the smallest of gestures took on worlds of meaning, and in
which they, as unknown elements, were a very disturbing pair of unexpected
variables.
The only members of this gathering that seemed to be enjoying
themselves in any way were a scant handful of folks, who, by the look of them,
were not important enough to worry the power-players; a few courting couples,
some elderly nobles and merchants—and a pair of men over in one corner,
conversing quietly in the shadows, garbed so as to seem almost shadows
themselves, who stood together with winecups in hand. They were well out of the
swirl of the main action, ignored for the most part by the players of this
frenetic game. When one of the two shifted, the one wearing the darkest
clothing, Tarma caught a good look at the face and recognized him for the
Horsemaster. He had donned that impassive mask he'd worn when he first looked
the horses over, and he was dressed more for comfort than to impress. Like
Tarma he was dressed mainly in black—in his case, with touches of scarlet. His
only ornaments were the silver-and-moonstone pieces he'd worn earlier.
The other man was all in gray, and Tarma could not manage to catch
a glimpse of his face. Whoever he was, Tarma was beginning to wish she was with
him and the Horsemaster. She was already tired to the teeth of this reception.
Although Tarma usually enjoyed warmth, the air in the Great Hall
was stiflingly hot even to her. As she watched the men out of the corner of her
eye, they evidently decided the same, for they began moving in the direction of
one of the doors that led out into the gardens. As they began to walk, Tarma
saw with a start that the second man limped markedly.
"Keth, d'you see our friend from this afternoon?" she
said in a conversational tone. "Will you lay me odds that the fellow with
him is that Archivist?"
"I don't think I'd care to; I believe that you'd win."
Kethry nodded to one of the suddenly-tongue-tied courtiers as they passed, the
very essence of gracious calm. The man nodded back, but his eyes were fixed on
Tarma. "Care for a breath of fresh air?"
"I thought you'd never ask."
They made their own way across the room, without hurrying, and not
directly—simply drifting gradually as the ebb and flow of the crowd permitted.
They stopped once to accept fresh wine from a servant, and again to exchange
words with one of the few nobles (a frail, alert-eyed old woman swathed in
white fur) who didn't seem terrified of them. It seemed to take forever, and
was rather like treading the measures of an intricate dance. But eventually
they reached the open door with its carvings and panels of bronze, and escaped
into the cool duskiness of the illuminated gardens.
Tarma had been prepared to fade into the shadows and stalk until
she found their quarry, but the two men were in plain sight beside one of the
mage-light decorated fountains. They were clearly silhouetted against the
sparkling, blue-glowing waters. The Archivist was seated on a white marble
bench, holding his winecup in both hands: the Horsemaster stood beside him,
leaning over to speak to him with one booted foot on the stone slab, his own
cup dangling perilously from loose fingers.
The partners strolled unhurriedly to the fountain, pretending that
Kethry was admiring it. The Horsemaster saw them approaching; as Tarma watched,
his mouth tightened, and he made a little negating motion with his free hand to
his companion as the two women came within earshot.
But when they continued to close, he suddenly became resignedly
affable. Placing his cup on the stone bench, he prepared to approach them.
"My Lady Kethryveris, I would not have recognized you,"
he said, leaving his associate's side, taking her hand in his, and bowing over
it. "You surprise me; I would have thought you could not be more attractive
than you were this afternoon. I trust the gathering pleases you?"
"A... remarkable assemblage," Kethry replied, allowing a
hint of irony to creep into her voice. "But I do not believe anyone
introduced me to your friend—?"
"Then you must allow me to rectify the mistake at once."
He led her around the bench, Tarma following silently as if she truly was
Kethry's shadow, so that they faced the man seated there. The fountain pattered
behind them, masking their conversation from anyone outside their immediate
vicinity.
"Lady Kethryveris, may I present Jadrek, the Rethwellan
Archivist."
For some reason Tarma liked this man even more than she had the
Horsemaster, liked him immediately. The mage-light behind them lit his features
clearly. He was a man of middle years, sandy hair going slightly to silver, his
face was thin and ascetic and his forehead broad. His gray eyes held an echo of
pain, and there were answering lines of pain about his generous mouth. That was
an odd mouth; it looked as if it had been made expressly to smile, widely and
often, but something had caused it to set in an expression of permanent
cynicism. His gray tunic and breeches were of soft moleskin, and it almost
seemed to Tarma that he wore them with the intent to fade into the background
of wherever he might be.
This is a man the Clans would hold in high esteem—in the greatest
of honor. There is wisdom in him, as well as learning. So why is he unregarded
and ignored here? No matter what Idra said—I find it hard to understand people
who do not honor wisdom when they see it.
"I am most pleased to make your acquaintance, Master
Jadrek," Kethry said, softly and sweetly, as she gave him her hand.
"I am more pleased because I had heard good things of you from Captain
Idra."
Tarma felt for the hilts of her knives as inconspicuously as she
could, as both men jerked as if they'd been shot. This had not been part
of the plans she and Kethry had discussed earlier!
The Archivist recovered first. "Are you then something other
than you seem, Lady Kethryveris, that you call the Lady Idra 'Captain'?"
Kethry smiled, as Tarma loosened the knife hidden in her sleeve
and wished she could get at the one at the nape of her neck without giving
herself away.
Damn—I can't get them both—Keth, what the hell are you doing?
"In no way," her partner replied smoothly. "I am
all that I claim to be. I simply have not claimed all that I am. We hoped to
find the lady here, but strangely enough, we've seen no sign other."
Keth—Tarma
thought, waiting for one or both of the men to make some kind of move,—you
bloody idiot! I hope you have a reason for this!
The Horsemaster continued to stare in taut wariness, and Tarma had
a suspicion that he, too, had a blade concealed somewhere about him. Maybe in
his boot? The Archivist was eyeing them with suspicion, but also as if he was
trying to recall something.
"You... could be the chief mage of the Sunhawks. You seem to
match the description," he said finally, then turned slightly to stare at
Tarma. "And that would make you the... Scoutmaster? Tindel, these
may well be two of Idra's fighters; they certainly correspond with what I've
been told."
The Horsemaster pondered them, and Tarma noted a very slight
relaxation of his muscles. "Might be... might be," he replied,
"But there are ways to make certain. Why does Idra ride Gray rather than
her warhorse when not in battle?" He spoke directly to Tarma, who gave up
pretending not to understand him.
"Because Black enjoys using his teeth," she said,
enjoying his start of shock at her harsh voice, "and if he can't take a
piece out of anything else, he'll go for his rider's legs. She's tried kicking
him from here to Valdemar for it, and still hasn't broken him of it. So she
never rides him except in a fight. And if you know about Black, you'll also
know that we almost lost him in the last campaign; he took a crossbow bolt and
went down with Idra on his back, but he was just too damned mean to die. Now
you tell me one; why won't she let me give her a Shin'a'in saddlebred to ride
when she's not on Black?"
"Because she won't start negotiations with clients on a bad
footing by being better-mounted than they are," the Archivist said
quietly.
"I taught her that," the Horsemaster added.
"I told her that the day she first rode out of here on her own, and wanted
to take the best-looking horse in the stable. When she rode out, it was on a
Karsite cob that had been rough-trained to fight; it was as ugly as a mud
brick. When did she lose it?"
"Uh—long before we joined; I think when she was in Randel's
Raiders," Kethry replied to the lightning-quick question after a bit of
thought.
"I think perhaps we have verified each other as
genuine?" Tindel asked with a twisted smile. Jadrek continued to watch
them; measuringly, and warily still.
"Has Idra been here?" Kethry countered.
"Yes; been, and gone again."
"Keth, we both know there's something going on around here
that nobody's talking about." Tarma glanced at the two men, and Tindel
nodded slightly. "If we don't want to raise questions we'd rather not
answer, I think we'd better either rejoin the rest of the world, or drift
around the garden, then retire."
"Your instincts are correct; as strangers you're
automatically under observation. It's safe enough to mention Idra, so long as
you don't call her 'Captain,'" Tindel offered. "But I should warn you
that we two are not entirely in good odor with His Majesty—Jadrek in
particular. I might be in better case after tomorrow, when he sees those
horses. Nevertheless it won't do you any good to be seen with us. I
think you might do well to check with other information sources before you come
to one of us again."
Tarma looked him squarely in the eyes, trying to read him. Every
bit of experience she had told her he was telling the truth—and that now that
the approach had been made, it would take a deal of courting before they would
confide anything. She looked down at Jadrek; if eyes were the "windows of
the soul" his had the storm shutters up. He had identified them;
that didn't mean he trusted them. Finally she nodded. "We'll do
that."
"Gods!" Tindel swore softly. "Of all the
rabbit-brained—women!" He didn't pace, but by the clenching of his hand on
his goblet, Jadrek knew that he badly wanted to. "If anybody had been
close enough to hear her—"
"If they're what they say they are, they wouldn't have
pulled this with anyone close enough to hear them," Jadrek retorted,
closing his eyes and gritting his teeth as his left knee shot a spasm of pain
up his leg. "On the other hand, if they aren't, they might well
have wanted witnesses."
"If, if, if—Jadrek—" Tindel's face was stormy.
"I still haven't made up my mind about them," the
Archivist interrupted his friend. "If they are Idra's friends, they're
going about this intelligently. If they're Raschar's creatures, they're being
very canny. They could be either. We haven't seen or heard of the pretty one so
much as lighting a candle, but if she's really Idra's prime mage, she wouldn't.
Char surely knows as much about the Hawks as we do, and having two women, one
of them Shin'a'in Swordsworn, show up here after Idra's gone off into the
unknown, must certainly have alerted his suspicions. If the other did something
proving herself to be a mage, he wouldn't be suspicious anymore, he'd be
certain."
"So what do we do?"
Jadrek smiled wearily at his only friend. "We do what we've
been doing all along. We wait and watch. We see what they do.
Then—maybe—we recruit them to our side."
Tindel snorted. "And meanwhile, Idra..."
"Idra is either perfectly safe—or beyond help. And in either
case, nothing we do or don't do in the next few days is going to make any
difference at all."
"Next time just stop my heart, why don't you?" Tarma
asked crossly when they reached their suite. She shut the door tightly behind
them and set her back against it, slumping weak-kneed at having safely attained
their haven.
"I acted on a hunch. I'm sorry." Kethry paused for a
fraction of a second, then headed for her bedroom, the soft soles of her shoes
making scarcely a sound on the marble floor. Her partner followed, staggering just
slightly as she pushed off from the door.
"You could have gotten us killed," Tarma
continued, following the mage into the gilded splendor of her bedroom. Kethry
turned; Tarma took a good look at her partner's utterly still and sober
expression, then sighed. "Na, forget I yelled. I'm a woolbrain. There were
signs you were reading that I couldn't see, is that it?"
Kethry nodded, eyes dark with thought. "I can't even tell you
exactly what it was," she said apologetically.
"Never mind," Tarma replied, reversing a chair to sit
straddle-legged on it with her arms folded over the back and her head resting
on her arms, forcing her tense shoulder muscles to relax. "It's like
trailreading for me; I don't even think about it anymore. First question; can
you find other sources?"
"Maybe. Some of the older nobles, like that old lady who
talked to us; the ones who weren't afraid of you. Most older courtiers love to
talk, have seen everything, and nobody will listen to them. So—"
Kethry shrugged, then glided over to the bed, slipping out of the amber robe
and draping it over another chair that stood next to it. Fire and candle light
glinted from her hair and softened the hard muscles other body. "—I use a
little kindness, risk being bored, and maybe learn a lot."
"I guess I'll stick to the original plan then; work the
horses, play that I don't understand the local tongue, and keep my ears
open," Tarma wasn't sure anymore that this was such a good plan, certainly
not as certain as she had been when they first rode in. This place seemed full
of invisible pitfalls.
"One other thing; there's more than a handful of mages around
here, and I don't dare use my powers much. If I do, they'll know me for what I
am. Some of them felt pretty strong, and none of them were in mage-robes."
"Is that a good sign, or a bad?"
"I don't know." Kethry unpinned her hair and shook it
loose, then slipped on a wisp of shift—supplied by their host—and climbed into
her bed. The mattress sighed under her weight, as she settled under the
blankets in the middle: then she sat up, gazing forlornly at her partner. She
looked like a child in the enormous expanse of featherbed—and she looked
uncomfortable and unhappy as well.
Tarma knew that lost expression. This place was far too
like the luxurious abode of Wethes Goldmarchant, the man to whom Kethry's
brother had sold her when she was barely nubile.
Kethry plainly didn't want to be left alone in here. They also
didn't dare share the bed without arousing very unwelcome gossip. But there was
a third solution.
"I don't trust our host any farther than I could toss
Ironheart," she said, standing up abruptly, and shoving the chair away
with a grating across the stone floor. "And I'm bloody damned barbarian
enough that nothing I do is going to surprise people, provided it's
weird and warlike."
With that, she stalked into her bedroom, stripped the velvet
coverlet, featherbed and downy blankets from the bedstead, and wrestled the lot
into Kethry's room, cursing under her breath the whole time.
"Tarma! What—"
"I'm bedding down in here; at the foot of your bed so the
servants don't gossip. They've been watching me bodyguard you all day, so this
isn't going to be out of character."
She stripped to the skin, glad enough to be out of those over-fine
garments, and pulled on a worn-out pair of breeches and another of those flimsy
shifts, tossing her clothes on the chair next to Kethry's.
"But you don't have to make yourself miserable!" Kethry
protested feebly, her gratitude for Tarma's company overpowering her
misgivings.
"Great good gods, this is a damn sight better than the
tent." Tarma laughed, and laid her weapons, dagger and sword, both
unsheathed, on the floor next to the mattress. "Besides, when the servants
come in to wake us up, I'll rise with steel in hand. That ought to give 'em
something to talk about and distract them from who we were associating with
last night. And—"
"And?"
"Well, I don't entirely trust Raschar's good sense if his
lust's involved; for all we know, he's got hidden passages in the walls that
would let him in here when I'm not around. Hmm?"
"A good point," Kethry conceded with such relief that it
was obvious to Tarma that she had been thinking something along the same lines.
"Arc you sure you'll be all right?"
Tarma tried her improvised bed, and found it better than she'd
expected. "Best doss I've had in my life," she replied, wriggling
luxuriously into the soft blankets, and grinning. "You'd better find out
what happened to Idra pretty quick, she'enedra.
Otherwise, I may not want to leave."
Kethry sighed, reached up for the sconce beside her, and blew out
the candle, leaving the room in darkness.
The following day Tarma managed to frighten the maids half to
death, rising from the pile of bedding on the floor with sword in hand at the
first sound of anyone stirring. The younger of the two fainted dead away at the
sight of her. The other squeaked and ran for the door. They didn't see that
maid again, so Tarma figured she had refused to go back into their suite;
defying any and all punishments. The other girl vanished as soon as Kethry
revived her, and they didn't see her again, either, so she probably had
done the same. The next servants to enter the suite were a pair of haglike old
crones with faces fit to frighten fish out of water; they attended to the cleaning
and picking up of the suite, and took themselves out again with an admirable
efficiency and haste. That was more like what Tarma wanted out of servants; the
giggly girls fussing about drove her to distraction at the best of times, and
now—well, now she wasn't going to take anything or anyone at face value. Those
giggly girls were probably spies—maybe more.
Kethry heaved a sigh or two of relief when they saw the last of
the new set of servitors.
Hell, she's an old campaigner; she knows it, too. Gods, I hate
this place.
After wolfing down some bread and fruit from the over-generous
breakfast the second set of servants had brought, Tarma headed off to oversee
the further training of the horses, concentrating on the gold and the dapple.
The gold she wanted schooled enough that he wouldn't cause his rider any
problems; the dapple she wanted trained to the limits of his understanding. She
hoped that might sweeten the Horsemaster's attitude toward them.
She kept her ears open—and as she'd hoped, the stable folk were
fairly free with their tongues while they thought she couldn't understand them.
Besides several unflattering comments about her own looks, she managed to pick
up that Idra had gone off rather abruptly, but that her disappearance had not
been entirely unexpected. Her name was coupled on more than one occasion with
the words "that wild-goose quest." She learned little more than that.
Of the other brother. Prince Stefansen, she learned a bit more.
He'd run off on his brother's coronation day. And he'd done something worse
than just run, according to rumor, though what it was, no one really seemed to
know. Whatever, it had been enough to goad the new king into declaring him an
outlaw. If Raschar caught him, his head was forfeit.
And that was fair interesting indeed. And was more than
Tarma had expected to learn.
"That doesn't much surprise me, given what I've heard,"
Kethry remarked that evening, when they settled into their suite after another
one of those stifling evening gatherings. This one had been only a little less
formal than their reception. It seemed this sort of thing took place every
night—and attendance was expected, even of visitors. "I'd gathered
something like that from Countess Lyris. It was about the only useful thing to
come out of this evening."
"I think I may die of the boredom, provided the perfume
doesn't kill me off first," Tarma yawned. She was sprawled on the floor of
Kethry's room on her featherbed (which the maids had not dared move.) Her eyes
were sleepy; her posture wasn't. Kethry knew from years of partnering her that
no one and nothing would move inside or near the suite without her knowing it.
She was operating on sentry reflexes, and it showed in a subtle tenseness of
her muscles.
"The perfume may; I don't think boredom is going to be a
problem," Kethry replied slowly. She leaned back into the pillows heaped
at the head of the bed, and combed her hair while she spoke in tones hardly
louder than a whisper. The candlelight from the sconce in the headboard behind
her made a kind of amber aura around her head. "There is one hell
of a lot more going on here than meets the eye. This is what I've gotten so
far: when Idra got here, she supported Raschar over Stefansen. The whole idea
was that Stefansen was going to be allowed to exile himself off to one of the
estates and indulge himself in whatever way he wanted. Presumably he was going
to fade away into quiet debauchery. Raschar was crowned—and suddenly Stefansen
was gone, with a price on his head. Nobody knows where he went, but the best
guess is north."
Tarma looked a good deal more alert at that, and leaned up against
the bedside, propping her head on her hands. "Oh, really? And what came of
the original plan? Especially if Stefansen had agreed to it?"
Kethry shrugged, and frowned. It was a puzzle, and one that left a
prickle between her shoulderblades, as if someone were aiming a weapon for that
spot. "No one seems to know. No one knows what it was Stefansen did to
warrant a death sentence. But Raschar was—and is, still, according to
one of my sources—very nervous about proving that he is the rightful
claimant to the throne. There's a tale that the Royal Line used to have a sword
in Raschar's grandfather's time that was able to choose the rightful heir—or
the best king, the stories aren't very clear on the subject, at least not the
ones I heard. It was stolen forty or fifty years ago. Idra apparently
volunteered to see if she could find it for Raschar, the assumption being that
the sword would pick him. They say he was very eager for her to find
it—and at the moment everyone seems convinced that she took off to go looking
for it."
Tarma shook her head, slowly. Her mouth was twisted a little in a
skeptical frown. "That doesn't sound much like the Captain to me. Sure,
she might well say she was going off looking for it, but to really do
it? Personally? Alone? When the Hawks are waiting for her to join them and it's
nearly fighting season? And why not rope in one of Raschar's tame mages to help
smell out the magic? It's not likely."
"Not bloody likely," Kethry agreed. "I could
see it as an excuse to get back to us, but not anything else."
"Have you made any moves at old Jadrek?"
Kethry sighed. Jadrek had been exceptionally hard to get
at. For a lame man, he could vanish with remarkable dexterity. "I'm
courting him, cautiously. He doesn't seem to trust anyone except Tindel.
I did find out why neither Raschar nor his father cared for Jadrek or his.
The hereditary Archivists of Rethwellan both suffered from an overdose of
honesty."
"Let's not get abstruse, shall we?"
Kethry grinned. This part, at least, did have a certain
ironic humor to it. "Both Jadrek and his father before him insisted on
putting events in the Archives exactly as they happened, instead of tailoring
them to suit the monarch's sensibilities."
"So what's to stop the King from having the Archives altered
at his pleasure?"
"They can't," Kethry replied, still amused in spite of
her feelings that they were both treading an invisible knife edge of danger.
"The Archive books are bespelled. They have to be kept up to date, or, and
I quote, 'something nasty happens.' The Archives, once written in, are
protected magically and can't be altered, and Raschar doesn't have a mage
knowledgeable enough to break the spell. Once something is in the
Archives, it's there forever."
Tarma choked on a laugh, and stuffed the back of her hand into her
mouth to keep it from being overheard in the corridor outside. They had
infrequent eavesdroppers out there. "Who was responsible for this
little pickle?"
"One of the first Kings—predictably called 'the Honest'—he
was also an Adept of the Leverand school, so he could easily enforce his
honesty. I gather he wasn't terribly popular; I also gather that he didn't much
care."
Tarma made a wry face. "Hair shirts and dry bread?"
"And weekly fasts—with the whole of his Court included. But
this isn't getting us anywhere—"
Tarma nodded, and buried one hand in her short hair, leaning her
head on it. "Too true. Ideas?"
Kethry sighed, and shook her head. "Not a one. You?"
To her mild surprise, Tarma nodded thoughtfully, biting her lip.
"Maybe. Just maybe. But try the indirect approach first. My way is either
going to earn us our information or scare the bird into cover so deep we'll
never get him to fly."
"Him?"
Again Tarma nodded. "Uh-huh. Jadrek."
Three days later, with not much more information than they'd
gotten in the first two days, Tarma decided it was time to try her plan.
It involved a fair amount of risk; although they planned to be as
careful as they could, they were undoubtedly going to be seen at some point or
other, since skulking about would raise suspicions. Tarma only hoped
that no one would guess that their goal was Jadrek's rooms.
She waited for a long while with her ear pressed up against the
edge of the door, listening to the sounds of servants and guests out in the
hall. The hour following the mandatory evening gathering was a busy one; the
nightlife of the Court of Rethwellan continued sometimes until dawn, and the
hour of dismissal was followed by what Kethry called "the hour of
scurrying" as nobles and notables found their own various entertainments.
Finally—"It's been quiet for a while now," Tarma said,
when the last of the footsteps had faded and the last giggling servant
departed. "I think this is a lull. Let's head out before we get another
influx of dicers or something."
As usual, Kethry sailed through the door first, with Tarma her
sinister shadow. There was no one in the gilded hallway, Tarma was pleased to
note. In fact, at least half the polished bronze lamps were out, indicating
that there would be no major entertainments tonight in this end of the Palace.
I hope Warrl's ready to come out of hiding, Tarma thought to herself, a little
worriedly. This whole notion of mine rests on him.
:Must you think of me as if I couldn't hear you?: Warrl
snapped in exasperation. :Of course I'm ready. Just get the old savant's
window open and I'll be in through it before you can blink.:
Sorry,
Tarma replied sheepishly. I keep forgetting—damnit, Furface, I'm still not
used to mind-talking with you! It's just not something Shin'a'in do.
Warrl did not answer at once. :I know,: he said finally. :And
I shouldn't eavesdrop, but it's the mindmate bond. I sometimes have to force
myself not to listen to you. We've got so much in common; you're Kal'enedral
and I'm neuter and we're both fighters. You know—there are times when I wonder
if your Lady might not take me along with you in the end—I think I'd like that.:
Tarma was astonished; so surprised that she stopped dead for a
moment. You—you would? Really?
:Not if you start acting like a fool about it!: he snapped,
jolting her back to sense. :Great Horned Moon—will you keep your mind on
your work?:
To traverse the guests' section they wore clothing that suggested
they might be paying a social call; but once they got into the plainer hallways
of the quarters belonging to those who were not quite nobility, but not
exactly servants—like the Archivist and the Master of Horse—they stepped into a
granite-walled alcove long enough to strip off their outer garments to reveal
their well-worn traveling leathers. In the dim light of the infrequent candles
they looked enough like servants that Tarma hoped no one would look at them too
carefully. They covered their hair with scarves, and folded their clothing into
bulky bundles; they carried those bundles conspicuously, so that they were
unlikely (Tarma hoped) to be levied into some task or other as extra hands.
The corridor had changed. Gone were the soft, heavy hangings, the
frequent lanterns. The passage here was bare stone, polished granite, floor and
wall, and the lighting was by cheap clay lanterns or cheaper tallow candles
placed in holders along the walls at long intervals. It was chilly here, and
damp, and the tallow candles smoked.
"Well, this explains one thing about that sour old
bastard," Tarma muttered under her breath, while Kethry counted doors.
"Seven, eight—who? What?"
"Jadrek. Why he's such a meddlar-face. Man's obviously got
bones as stiff as I'm going to have in a few years. Living in this
section must make him as creaky as a pair of new boots."
"Ten—never thought of that. Remind me to stay on the right
side of Royal displeasure. This should be it."
Kethry stopped at a wooden door set into the corridor wall, a door
no different from any of the others, and knocked softly.
Tarma listened as hard as she could; heard limping footsteps; then
the door creaked open a crack, showing a line of light at its edge—
She rammed her shoulder into it without giving Jadrek a chance to
see who was on the other side of it, and shoved it open before the Archivist
had time to react. Kethry was less than half a step behind her. They were
inside and had the door shut tightly behind them before Jadrek had a chance to
go from shock to outrage at their intrusion.
Tarma put her back to the rough wood of the door and braced
herself against it; no half-cripple like Jadrek was going to be able to move
her away from the door until she was good and ready. The rest was up to
Kethry's silver tongue.
Jadrek glared, his whole attitude one of affronted dignity, but
did not call for help or gibber in helpless anger as Tarma had half expected.
Instead every word he spoke was forceful, but deadly cold, controlled—and
quiet.
"What, pray, is this supposed to mean?" The gray eyes
were shadowed with considerable pain at the moment; Tarma hoped it was not
because of something she'd done to him in getting the door open. "I have
come to expect a certain amount of cavalier treatment, but not in my own
quarters!"
"My lord—" Kethry began.
"I," he said bitterly, "am no one's lord. You may
abandon that pretense."
Kethry sighed. "Jadrek, I humbly beg your pardon, but we were
trying to find a way to speak with you without drawing undue attention. If you
want us to leave this moment, we will—but damnitall, we are trying to
find out what's become of our Captain, and you seem to be the only source of
reliable information!"
He raised one eyebrow in surprise at her outspokenness, and looked
at her steadily. "And you might well be the instrument of my execution for
treason."
Tarma whistled softly through her teeth, causing both of their
heads to swivel in her direction. "That bad, is it?"
His jaw tightened, but he did not answer.
"Believe or not, I've got an answer for you. Look, I would
assume you are probably the most well-read man in this city; that's what the
Captain seemed to think," Kethry continued. "Do you know what a kyree is?"
He nodded warily.
"Do you know what it means to be mindmated to one?"
"A little. I also know that they are reputedly incapable of
lying mind-to-mind—"
At Kethry's hand signal, Tarma stood away from the door, crossed
the room at a sprint and flung open the casement window that looked out over
the stableyard. She had seen Jadrek at this window the night before, which was
how she and Kethry had figured out which set of rooms was his. Warrl was ready,
in the yard below; Tarma could see him bulking dark in the thin moonlight.
Before Jadrek could react to Tarma's sudden movement, Warrl launched himself
through the open window and landed lightly in the middle of the rather small
room. It seemed that much smaller for his being there.
The kyree looked at
Jadrek—seemed to look through him—his eyes glowing like topaz in the
sun. Then he bowed his head once in respect to the Archivist, and mindspoke to
all three of them.
:I am Warrl. We are Captain Idra's friends; we want to kelp
her, but we cannot if we do not know what has happened to her. Wise One, you
are one of the few honest men in this place. Will you not help us?:
Jadrek stared at the kyree,
his jaw slack with astonishment. "But—but—"
:You wonder how I can speak with you, and how I managed to
remain concealed. I have certain small powers of magic,: the kyree said, nearly grinning. :You may
have heard that the barbarian brought her herd dog with her. I chose to appear
somewhat smaller than I am; the stablehands think me a rather large wolf-dog
cross.:
The Archivist reached for the back of a chair beside him to steady
himself. He was pale, and there was marked confusion in his eyes.
"I—please, ladies, sit down, or as a gentleman, I cannot—and I feel the
need of something other than my legs to support me—"
There were only two chairs in the room; Tarma solved the problem
of who was to take them by sinking cross-legged to the floor. Warrl curled
behind her as a kind of backrest, which made the room look much less crowded.
While Kethry took the second chair and Jadrek the one he had obviously (by the
book on the table beside it) vacated at their knock, Tarma took a quick, assessing
look around her.
There were old, threadbare hangings on most of the stone walls,
probably put up in a rather futile attempt to ward off the damp chill. There
was a small fire on the hearth to her right, probably for the same reason.
Beside the hearth was a chair—or rather, a small bench with a back to it—with
shabby brown cushions. This was the seat Jadrek had resumed, his own brown
robes blending with the cushions. Beside this chair stood a table with a single
lamp, a book that seemed to have been put down rather hastily, and a half-empty
wineglass. Across from this was a second, identical seat; To Tarma's left stood
a set of shelves, full of books, odd bits of rock and pieces of statuary, and
things not readily identifiable in the poor light. At the sight of the books,
Tarma felt a long-suppressed desire to get one of them in her hands; she hadn't
had a good read in months, and her soul thirsted for the new knowledge
contained within those dusty volumes.
In the wall with the bookcase was another door, presumably to
Jadrek's bedchamber. In the wall directly opposite the one they had entered was
the window.
Pretty barren place. This time Tarma was thinking directly at the kyree.
:He has less—far less—respect than he deserves,: Warrl said
with some heat. :This man has knowledge many would die for, and he is looked
upon as some kind of fool!:
"I... had rather be considered a fool," Jadrek said
slowly.
The kyree raised his
head off his paws sharply, and looked at the man in total astonishment. :You
hear me?:
"Yes—wasn't I supposed to?"
Tarma and the kyree
exchanged a measured glance, and did not answer him directly. "Why would
you rather be considered a fool?" Tarma asked, after a moment of
consideration.
"Because a fool hears a great deal—and a fool is not worth
killing."
"I think," Kethry said, leaning forward, "you had
better begin at the beginning."
Some hours later they had a full picture, and it was not a
pleasant one.
"So the story is that Stefansen intended some unspecified
harm to his brother, and when caught, fled. In actuality, Tindel and I
overheard some things that made us think Raschar might be considering assuring
that there would be no other male claimants to the throne and we warned
Stefansen."
"Where did he go?" Kethry asked.
"I don't know, I don't want to know. The less I know, the
less I can betray." His eyes had gone shadowy and full of secrets.
"Good point. All right, what then?"
"Have you had a good look around you?"
"Raschar's pretty free with his money," Tarma observed.
"Freer than you think; he supports most of the hangers-on
here. He's also indulging in some expensive habits. Tran dust, it's
said. Certainly some very expensive liquors, dainties, and ladies."
"Nice lad. Where's the money coming from?"
Jadrek sighed. "That's the main reason why I—and my father
before me—are not in favor. King Destillion began taxing the peasantry and the
merchant class far too heavily to my mind about twenty years ago;
Raschar is continuing the tradition. About half of our peasants have been
turned into serfs; more follow every year. Opposing that was a point
Stefansen agreed with me on—and one of the reasons why Destillion intended to
cut him out of the succession."
"But didn't?" Kethry asked.
Jadrek shook his head. "Not for lack of trying, but the
priests kept him from doing so."
"Idra," Tarma reminded them.
"She saw what Raschar was doing, and began to think that
despite Stefansen's habit of hopping into bed with anything that wiggled its
hips at him, he might well have been a better choice after all. He certainly
had more understanding of the peasantry and how the kingdom's strength depends
on them." Jadrek almost managed a smile. "Granted, he spent a great
deal of time with them, and pretty much with rowdies, but I'm not certain now
that his experience with the rougher classes was a bad thing. Well, Idra wanted
an excuse to go after him—I unearthed the old story of the Sword that Sings.
Raschar has one chink in his armor; he's desperate to prove he's the rightful
monarch. Idra took Raschar the old Archive books and got permission to look for
the Sword. Then—she vanished."
The fire crackled while they absorbed this. "But she'd
intended to go after Stefansen?" Kethry asked, finally.
Jadrek nodded. "It might well be that she decided to just go,
before Raschar could change his mind—"
Tarma finished the sentence. "But you aren't entirely certain
that something didn't happen to her. Or that something didn't happen right
after she set out."
He nodded unhappily, twisting his hands together in his lap.
"She would have said good-bye. We've been good friends for a long time. We
used to exchange letters as often as her commissions permitted. I... saw the
world through her eyes...."
There was a flash of longing in his face, there for only a
instant, then shuttered down. But it made Tarma wonder what it must be like, to
have dreams of adventuring—and be confined to the body of a half-lame scholar.
She stood up, suddenly uncomfortable with the insight. The tiny
room felt far, far too confining. "Jadrek, we'll talk with you more,
later. Right now you've given us plenty to think on."
"You'll try and find out what's happened to her?" He
started to stand, but Kethry gently pushed him back down into his chair as
Tarma turned abruptly, not wanting to see any more of this man's pain. She
turned the latch silently, cracked the door open and checked for watchers in
the corridor beyond.
"Looks clear—" Kethry and Warrl slipped out ahead of
her, and Tarma glanced back over her shoulder soberly. The Archivist was
watching them from his chair, and there was a peculiar, painful mixture of hope
and fear on his face. "Jadrek, that was why we came here in the first
place. And be warned—if anything has happened to Idra, there might not
be a town here once the Hawks find out about it."
And with that she followed her partner back into the corridor.
Seven
Jadrek tried to return to his book, but it was fairly obvious that
he was going to be unable to concentrate on the page in front of him. He
finally gave up and sat staring at the flickering shadows on the farther wall.
His left shoulder ached abominably; it had been wrenched when the door had been
jerked out of his hands. This would be a night for a doubledose of medicine, or
he'd never get to sleep.
Sleep would not have come easily, anyway—not after this evening's
conversation. Tindel had been after him for the past several days to talk to
the women, but Jadrek had been reluctant and suspicious; now Tindel would
probably refrain from saying "I told you so" only by a strong
exercise of will.
What did decide me, anyway? he wondered, trying to find a comfortable position as he rubbed
his aching shoulder, the dull throb interfering with his train of thought. Was
it the presence of the kyree? No, I don't think so; I think I had made
up my mind before they brought him in. I think it was the pretty one that made
up my wind—Kethry. She's honest in a way I don't think could be counterfeited.
I can't read the Shin'a'in, but if you know what to look for, Kethry's an open
book.
He sighed. And let's not be fooling ourselves; it's the first
time in years that a pretty woman looked at you with anything but contempt,
Jadrek. You're as susceptible to that as the next man. More....
He resolutely killed half-wisps of wistful mightbe's and
daydreams, and got up to find his medicines.
Tarma left Warrl watching the Archivist's door from the corridor,
just in case. His positioning was not nearly as good as she'd have wished; in
order to keep out of sight he'd had to lair-up in a table nook some distance
away from Jadrek's rooms, and not in direct line of sight. Still, it would have
to do. She had some serious misgivings about the Archivist's safety, especially
if it should prove that he was being watched.
Creeping along the corridors with every sense alert was unnervingly
like being back with the Hawks on a scouting mission. Kethry had hesitantly and
reluctantly tendered the notion of using her powers to spy out the situation
ahead of them;
Tarma had vetoed the idea to her partner's obvious relief. If
there was any kind of mage-talented spy keeping an eye on Jadrek, use of magic
would not only put alerts on the Archivist but on them as well. Their own
senses must be enough. But it was tense work; Tarma was sweating before
they made it to the relative safety of the guesting section.
They slipped their more ornate outfits back on in the shelter of
the same alcove where they'd doffed them, and continued on their way. Now was
the likeliest time for them to be caught, but they got back to their rooms
without a sign that they had been noticed—or so Tarma thought.
She was rather rudely disabused of that notion as soon as they
opened the door to their suite.
Moonlight poured down through one of the windows in the right-hand
wall of the outer room, making a silver puddle on a square of the pale marble
floor. As Tarma closed the door and locked it, she caught movement in that
moonlight out of the corner of her eye. She jerked her head around and pulled a
dagger with the hand not still on the latch in the automatically defensive
reaction to seeing motion where none should be. The moonlight shivered and
wavered, sending erratic reflections across the room, and acting altogether
unlike natural light.
Tarma snatched her other hand away from the latch, and whirled
away from the door she had just locked. Her entire body tingled, from the crown
of her head to the soles of her feet—with an energy she was intimately familiar
with.
The only time she ever felt like this was when her teachers were
about to manifest physically, for over the years she had grown as sensitive to
the energies of the Star-Eyed as Kethry was to mage-energies. But the
spirit-Kal'enedral, her teachers, never came to her when she was within
four walls—and doubly never when she was in walls that were as alien to them as
this palace was.
She sheathed her blade—little good it would do against magic and
spirits—set sweating palms against the cool wood of the door. She stared
dumbfounded at the evidence of all she'd been told being violated—the shadow
and moonlight was hardening into a man-shaped figure; flowing before her eyes
into the form of a Shin'a'in garbed and armed in black, and veiled. Only the
Kal'enedral wore black and only the spirit Kal'enedral went veiled—and
here, where no one knew that, it was wildly unlikely that this could be an
illusion, even if there were such a thing as a mage skilled enough to
counterfeit the Warrior's powers well enough to fool a living Kal'enedral.
And there was another check—her partner, who had, over the years,
seen Tarma's teachers manifesting at least a score or times. Beside her, Kethry
stared and smothered a gasp with the back of her hand. Tarma didn't think it
likely that any illusion could deceive the mage for long.
To top it all, this was not just any Shin'a'in, not just any
spirit-Kal'enedral; for as the features be came recognizable (what could be
seen above his veil) Tarma knew him to be no less than the chief of all her
teachers!
He seemed to be fighting against something; his form wavered in
and out of visibility as he held out frantic, empty hands to her, and he seemed
to be laboring to speak.
Kethry stared at the spirit-Kal'enedral in absolute shock.
This—this could not be happening!
But it was, and there was no mistaking the flavor of the energy
the spirit brought with him. This was a true leshya'e Kal'enedral, and
he was violating every precept to manifest here and now, within sight of
non-Shin'a'in. Which could only mean that he was sent directly by Tarma's own
aspect of the four-faced Goddess, the Warrior.
Then she saw with mage-sight the veil of sickly white power that
was encasing him like a filthy web, keeping him from full manifestation.
"There's—Goddess, there's a counterspell—" Kethry
started out of her entrancement. "It's preventing any magic from
entering this room! He can't manifest! I—I have to break it, or—"
"Don't!" Tarma hissed, catching her hands as she
brought them up. "You break a counterspell and they'll know one of
us is a mage!"
Kethry turned her head away, unable to bear the sight of the
Kal'enedral struggling vainly against the evil power containing him. Tarma
turned back to her teacher to see that he had given up the effort to speak—and
she saw that his hands were moving, in the same Shin'a'in hand-signs she had
taught Kethry and her scouts.
"Keth—his hands—"
As Kethry's eyes were again drawn to the leshya'e's figure,
Tarma read his message.
Death-danger, she
read, and Assassins. Wise one.
"Warrior! It's Jadrek—he's going to be killed!" She
reached behind her for the door, certain that they were never going to make it
to Jadrek's rooms in time.
But Warrl had been watching her thoughts, probably alerted through
the bond they shared to her agitation.
:Mindmate, I go!: rang through her head.
At the same moment, as if he had heard the Kyree's reply the leshya'e Kal'enedral made a motion of
triumph, and dissolved back into moonlight and shadow.
While Kethry was still staring at the place where the spirit had
stood, Tarma was clawing the door open, all thought of subterfuge gone.
She headed down the corridor at a dead run, and she could hear
Kethry right behind her; this time there would be no attempt at concealment.
Warrl's "voice" was sharp in her mind; angry, and
tasting of battle-hunger. :Mindmate—one comes. He smells of seeking death.:
Keep him away from Jadrek!
There was no answer to that, as she put on a burst of speed down
the corridor—at least not an answer in words. But there was a surge of great
anger, a rage such as she had seldom sensed in the kyree, even under battle-fire.
Then Tarma had evidence of her own of how strong the mindmate
bonding between herself and the kyree
had become—because she began to get image-flashes carried on that rage. A man,
an armed man, with a long, wicked dagger in his hand, standing outside Jadrek's
door. The man turning to face Warrl even as Jadrek opened the door. Jadrek
stepping back a pace with fear stark across his features, then turning and
stumbling back into his room. The man ignoring him, meeting the threat of
Warrl, unsheathing a sword to match the knife he carried.
Tarma felt the growl the kyree
vented rumbling in her own throat as she ran. Felt him leap—
Now they were in the older section—running down Jadrek's corridor.
Kethry was scarcely a step behind her as they skidded to a halt at Jadrek's
open door.
There was blood everywhere—spilling out over the doorsill,
splashed on the wall of the corridor. The kyree
stood over a body sprawled half-in, half-out of the room, growling under his
breath, his eyes literally glowing with rage. Warrl had taken care of the
intruder less than seconds before their arrival, for the body at his feet was
still twitching, and the kyree's mind
was seething with aggression and the aftermath of the kill. His hackles were
up, but he was unmarked; of the blood splashed so liberally everywhere, none of
it seemed to be Warrl's.
"Goddess—" Tarma caught at the edge of the doorframe,
and panted, her knees weak with relief that the kyree had gotten there in time.
"Jadrek!" Kethry snapped out of shock first; she slid
past the slowly calming kyree into
the room beyond. Tarma was right behind her, expecting to find the Archivist in
a dead faint, or worse; hurt, or collapsed with shock.
She was amazed to find him still on his feet.
He had his back to the wall, standing next to the fireplace behind
his chair, a dagger in one hand, a fireplace poker in the other. He was pale,
and looked as if he was likely to be sick at any moment. But he also looked as
if he was quite ready to protect himself as best he could, and was anything but
immobilized with fear or shock.
For one moment he didn't seem to recognize them; then he shook his
head a little, put the poker carefully down, sheathed the dagger at his belt,
then groped for the back of his chair and pulled it toward himself, the legs
grating on the stone. He all but fell into it.
"Jadrek—are you all right?" Tarma would have gone to his
side, but Kethry was there before her.
Jadrek was trembling in every nerve and muscle as he collapsed
into his chair. Gods—one breath more—too close. Too close.
Kethry took his wrist before he could wave her away and felt for
his pulse.
He stared at her anxious face, so close to his own, and felt his
heart skip for a reason other than fear. Damnit, you fool, she's just
worried that you're going to die on her before you can help her with the
information they need!
Then he thought, feeling a chill creep down his back; Gods—I
might. If Char has had a watcher on me all this time, it means he's suspected
me of warning Stefan. And if that watcher chose to strike tonight only because
I spoke to a pair of strangers—Archivist, your hours are numbered.
Kethry checked Jadrek's heartbeat, fearing to find it fluttering
erratically. To her intense relief, it was strong, though understandably
racing.
"I—gods above—I think I will be all right," he managed,
pressing his free hand to his forehead. "But I would be dead if not for
your kyree."
"Who was that?" Kethry asked urgently. "Who—"
"That... was a member of the King's personal guard," he
replied thickly. "Brightest Goddess—I knew I was under suspicion, but I
never guessed it went this far! They must have had someone watching me."
"Watching to see who you talked to, no doubt," Tarma
said grimly, her lips compressed into a thin line. "And the King must have
left orders what was to happen to you if you talked to strangers. Hellfire and
corruption!"
"Now I'm a liability, so far as Raschar is concerned."
He was pale, and with more than shock, but there was determination in the set
of his jaw as he looked to Tarma. "Char has only one way of dealing with
liabilities... as you've seen. Lord and Lady help me, I'm under a death
sentence, without trial or hearing! I—I haven't got a chance unless I can
escape. Woman, you've got to help me! If you want any more help with finding
Idra, you've got—"
Kethry had angry words on her tongue, annoyed that he should think
them such cowards, but Tarma beat her to them.
"What kind of gutless boobs do you think we are?" Tarma
snapped. "Of course we'll help you! Damnit man, it was us coming to
you that triggered this attack in the first place! Keth, clean up the mess. Go
ahead and use magic, we're blown now, anyway."
Kethry nodded. "After the visitor, I should say so—even if
there wasn't anyone 'watching,' he'll have left residue in the
trap-spell."
"Did you pick up any 'eyes'?"
She let her mage-senses extend. "No... no. Not then, and not
now. Evidently they haven't guessed our identity."
"Small piece of Warrior's fortune. Well, I'm getting rid of
the body before somebody falls over it; it's likely this bastard was the only
watcher. Archivist, or you'd have been caught out before this." She paused
to think. "If I hide him, they may wait to check things out until after
he was due to report. Hell, if they can't find him, they may wait a bit longer
to see if he's gone following after one of Jadrek's visitors; that should buy
us a couple more hours. Jadrek, are there any empty rooms along here?"
"Most of them are empty," he said dully, holding his
hands up before his eyes and watching them shake with a kind of morbid
fascination. "Nobody is quartered along here who isn't in disgrace; this
is the oldest wing of the palace, and it's been poorly maintained and repaired
but little."
"Gods, no wonder nobody came piling out to see what the
ruckus was." Tarma's lip curled in disgust. "Bastard really gives you
respect, doesn't he? Well, that's another piece of good luck we've had
tonight."
And Tarma turned back to deal with the corpse as Kethry began
mustering her energies for "clean-up."
* * *
Tarma bundled the body into its own cloak, giving Warrl mental
congratulations over the relatively clean kill; the kyree had only torn the man's throat out. The man had been
relatively small; she figured she could handle the corpse alone. She heaved the
bundle over her shoulder with a grunt of effort, trusting to the thick cloak to
absorb whatever blood remained to be spilled, and went out into the corridor,
picking a room at random. The first one she chose didn't have its own
fireplace, so she left that one—but the second did. It was a matter of moments
and a good bit of joint-straining effort to stuff the carcass up the chimney;
by the time she returned, a little judicious use of magic had cleaned up every
trace of a struggle around Jadrek's quarters, and Kethry and the Archivist were
in the little bedroom that lay beyond the closed door in his sitting room. The
mage was helping Jadrek to make a pack of his belongings, and Jadrek was far
calmer now than Tarma had dared to hope. Warrl was stretched across the
doorway, still growling under his breath. He gave her a gentle warn-off as she
sent him a thought, his blood-lust was up, and he didn't want her in his mind
until he had quieted himself.
Jadrek had lit a half dozen candles and stuck them over every
available surface. The bedroom was as sparse as the outer room had been, though
smelling a little less of damp. There was just a wardrobe, a chest, and the
bed.
"Jadrek, how well do you ride?" Tarma asked, taking over
the bundle Kethry was making and freeing her to start a new one.
"Not well," he said shortly, folding packets of herbs
into a cloth. "It's not my ability to ride, it's the pain. I used to ride
very well; now I can't stand being in a saddle for more than an hour or
so."
"And if we drugged you?"
He shrugged. "Drugged, aren't I likely to fall off? And you'd
have to lead my beast, even if you tied me into the saddle; that would slow you
considerably."
"Not if I put you on 'Heart. Or—better yet, Keth, you're
light and you don't go armored. How about if I take all the packs and 'Bane
carries double?"
Kethry examined the Archivist carefully. "It should be all
right. Jadrek doesn't look like he weighs much. Put him up in front of me, and
I can hold him on even if he's insensible."
The Archivist managed a quirk of one corner of his mouth.
"Hardly the way I had hoped to begin my career of adventuring."
Tarma raised an eyebrow at him.
"You look surprised. Swordlady, I did a great deal of my
studying in hopes of one day being able to aid some heroic quester. After all,
what better help could a hero have than a loremaster? Then," he held out
one hand and shoved the sleeve of his robe up so they could see the swollen
wrists, "my body betrayed me and my dreams. So goes life."
Tarma winced in sympathy; her own bones ached in the cold these
days, enough that rough camping left her stiff and limping these days for at
least an hour after rising, or until she finished her warming exercises. She
didn't like to think how much pain swollen joints meant.
"Have you any plan?" the Archivist continued. "Or
are we just going to run for it?"
Tarma shook her head. "Don't you think it—Running off blindly
is likely to run us right into a trap. We came out of the south, the Hawks are
to the south and west—I'd bet the King's men'll expect us to run for familiar
territory."
"So we go opposite?" Jadrek hazarded. "North? Then
what?"
Tarma folded a shirt into a tight bundle and wedged it into the
pack. "North is where Stefansen went. North is where Idra likely went. No?
So we'll track them North, and hope to run into one or both of them."
"I know where Stefansen intended to go," Jadrek said
slowly, "I did tell Idra before she went missing. But frankly it's
some of the worst country to travel in winter in all of Rethwellan."
"All the better to shake off pursuit. Cough it up, man, where
are we going?"
"Across the Comb and into Valdemar." He looked seriously
worried. "And winter storm season in the Comb is deadly. If we're caught
in an ice storm without shelter, well, let me just say that we probably won't
be a problem for Raschar anymore."
"This is almost too easy," Tarma muttered, surveying the
empty court below Jadrek's window. "Keth, is there anything you can't live
without back in the room?"
The mage pursed her lips thoughtfully, then shook her head.
"Good, then we'll leave from here. Nobody's been alerted yet,
and evidently Jadrek's in poor enough condition that nobody has even considered
he might slip out his window."
"With good reason, Swordlady," Jadrek replied, coming to
Tarma's side and looking down into the court himself. "I can't imagine how
I could climb down."
"Alone, you couldn't; we'll help you," Kethry told him.
"I can actually make you about half your real weight with magic, then
we'll manage well enough."
The Archivist looked down again, and shuddered, but to his credit,
did not protest.
They'd sent Warrl for a short coil of rope from the stables; there
were always lead-ropes and lunges lying around, and any of those would be long
enough. He returned just as Kethry completed her spell casting; they tied one
end around Jadrek's waist, then Kethry scrambled out of the window and down the
wall to steady him from below as Tarma lowered him. Before they were finished,
Tarma had a high respect for the man's courage; climbing down from the window
put him in such pain that when they untied him they found he'd bitten his lip
through to keep from crying out.
All their gear was still with the mares. When they'd left
Hawksnest, they'd chosen to use a different kind of saddle than they normally
chose, one meant for long rides and not pitched battles. Like the saddles Jodi
preferred, these were little more than a pad with stirrups, although the pad
extended out over the horse's rump. When Tarma carried Warrl pillion, he had a
pad behind her battle-saddle to ride on; there was just enough room on the extended
body of this saddle for him to do the same. So Kethry had no trouble fitting
Jadrek in front of her, which was just as well—
Jadrek had mixed something with the last of his wine and gulped it
down before attempting the window. He was fine, although still in pain, when
they started saddling up. But by the time the mares were harnessed and all
their gear was in place, he was fairly intoxicated and not at all steady.
They did manage to get him into the saddle, but it was obvious he
wouldn't be staying there without Kethry's help.
Warrl?
Tarma thought tentatively.
:All is well, mindmate,: came the reassuring reply. :There
is no one in sight, and I am distracting the gate guards. If you go swiftly,
there will be no one to stop or question you.:
"Let's move out now," she told her partner, "while
Furface has the guards playing 'catch-me-if-you-can' with him."
Kethry nodded; they rode out of the palace grounds as
quietly—they'd signaled the mares for silence, and now Hellsbane and Ironheart
were moving as stealthily as only two Shin'a'in bred-and-trained warsteeds
could. They managed to get out unchallenged, and waited outside the palace for
Warrl to catch up with them, then put Ironheart and Hellsbane to as fast a pace
as they dared, and by dawn were well clear of the city.
"Any sign of tracking?" Tarma asked her partner, reining
Ironheart in beside her as they slowed to a brisk walk.
Kethry closed her eyes in concentration, extended a little tendril
of energy along the road behind them, then shook her head. "My guess
would be that they haven't missed the spy yet. But my guess would also be, that
with all the mages I sensed in Raschar's court, they'll be sending at least one
with each pursuit party."
"Anything you can do about that?"
"Some." She reformed that tendril of energy into a
deception-web that might confuse their backtrail. "Listen, we need
supplies; how about if I lay an illusion on you and 'Heart and you go buy us
some at the next village we hit?"
"How about if you spell all three of us right now? Say—old
woman and her daughter and son? Nobody knows Shin'a'in battlemares out here,
and 'Heart and 'Bane are ugly enough to belong to peasants: you needn't spell
them."
"Huh; not a bad thought. What about Warrl?"
:I can seem much smaller if I need to.:
Kethry started. "Furface, I wish you wouldn't just
speak into my mind like that—you never used to!"
:My pardon. I grow forgetful of courtesy. How does the Wise One?:
Jadrek was three-quarters asleep, slumped forward in Kethry's
hold, his head nodding to the rhythm of Hellsbane's hooves. Kethry touched his
neck below his ear lightly enough not to disturb him. "All right; his
pulse is strong."
:If you would have my advice?:
When the kyree tendered
his opinion, it was worth having. "Go ahead."
:Rouse him up and make him speak with you. He will do his body
more harm by riding unconscious.:
"On that subject," Tarma interrupted, "how long can
you keep our illusions going? What kind of shape are you in?"
Kethry shrugged. "I've been mostly resting my powers so far.
I can keep the spell up indefinitely. Why?"
"Because I want to stay under roofs at night for as long as
we can. Rough camping is going to be hard on our friend at best—be a helluva
note to save him from assassins and lose him to pneumonia."
Kethry nodded, thinking of how much pain the Archivist was already
in. "What kind of roofs?"
"In order of preference—out-of-the-way barns, the occasional
friendly farmer, and the cheapest inns in town."
"Sound, I think. Pull up here, I might as well cast this
thing now, and I can't do it on a moving horse."
"Here" was a grove of trees beside the road; they got
the horses off and allowed them to browse while Kethry concentrated.
Warrl flung himself down into the dry grass, and lay there,
panting. He was not built for the long chase. Before too very long, Tarma would
have to bring him up to ride pillion behind her for a rest.
Kethry got Jadrek leaning back against her, then spread her hands
wide, palms facing out. A shell of faint, roseate light expanded from her hands
outward, to contain them and their horses. Tarma could see her lips moving
silently in the words of the spell. There was a tiny "pop" like a
cork being pulled from a bottle; then Tarma felt an all-too-familiar itching at
the back of her eyes, and when she looked down, she saw that she was wearing a
man's garb of rough, brown homespun instead of her Kal'enedral-styled black
silks. So Keth was going to disguise her as a young man; good, that should help
to throw off nonmage spies.
Jadrek was now an old, gray-haired woman with a face like a
wrinkled apple, and a body stooped from years of hard work. Behind him, Kethry
was a chunky, fresh-faced peasant wench; brown-cheeked, brown-haired and quite
unremarkable.
"Huh," Tarma said. "This's a new one for you.
You look like you'd make some dirt-grubber a great wife."
Kethry giggled. "Good hips. Breed like cow, strong like bull,
dumb like ox. Hitch to plow when horse dies." As Tarma stifled a chuckle,
she turned her attention to her passenger. "Jadrek, wake up, there's a
good fellow." She shook his shoulder gently. "Open your eyes slowly.
I've put an illusion on us all and it may make you dizzy at first."
"Huhnn. I... thought I heard you saying that...." The
Archivist raised his head with care, and opened eyes that looked a bit dazed.
"Gods. What am I?"
"A crippled-up old peasant woman. Warrl says you'll do
yourself more harm than good by riding asleep; he wants you to talk to
me."
"How... odd. I thought I heard him speaking in my head again.
I seem to remember him saying just that...."
The partners exchanged a startled look. Evidently Jadrek had a
mage-Gift no one had ever suspected, for normally the only folk who heard
Warrl's mindvoice were those he intended to speak to. That Talent might
be useful—if they all lived to reach the Border.
"Let's get on with it," Tarma broke the silence before
it went on too long, and glanced at the rising sun to her right. "We need
to get as far as we can before they figure out we've bolted back there."
They stopped at a good-sized village; there was a market going on,
and Tarma rode in alone and bought the supplies they were going to need. By
mercenary's custom, they'd kept all their cash with them in moneybelts that
they never let out of their sight, so they weren't short of funds, at least. Tarma
did well in her bargaining; better than she'd expected. Even more encouraging,
no one gave her a second glance.
Poor Jadrek had not exaggerated the amount of pain he was going to
be in. By nightfall his eyes were sunken deeply into their sockets and he looked
more than half dead; but they found a barn, full of new-cut hay, dry and warm
and softer than many beds Tarma had slept in. The dry warmth seemed to do
Jadrek a lot of good; he was moving better the next morning, and didn't take
nearly as much of his drugs as he had the day before.
And oddly enough, he seemed to get better as the trip progressed.
Kethry was wearing Need at her side again, after having left the ensorcelled
blade with her traveling gear in the stables. Tarma was just thanking her
Goddess that they hadn't ever brought the blade into their quarters—no
telling what would have happened had it met with the counterspell on their
rooms. Of a certainty Raschar would have known from that moment that they were
not what they seemed.
Fall weather struck with a vengeance on the sixth morning. They
ended up riding all day through rain; Rethwellan's fall and early winter rains
were notorious far and wide. Jadrek was alert and conversing quietly and
animatedly with Kethry; he seemed in better shape, despite the cold rain, than
he'd been back at the palace. Now Tarma wondered—remembering the enigmatic
words of Moonsong k'Vala, the Tale'edras Adept—if Need was working some of her
magic on Jadrek because Kethry was concerned for him. It would be the first time
in Tarma's knowledge that a male for whom Kethry cared had spent any
length of time in physical contact with the mage while she was wearing the
blade.
As for Kethry caring for him—they were certainly hitting it off
fairly well. Tarma was growing used to the soft murmur of voices behind her as
they talked for the endless hours of the day's ride. So maybe—just maybe—the
sword was responding to that liking.
As the days passed: "Keth," she asked, when they'd
halted for the night in the seventh of a succession of haybarns. "Do you
remember what the Hawkbrother told you when we first met him—about Need?"
"You mean Moonsong, the Adept?" Kethry glanced over at
Jadrek, but the witchlight she was creating showed the Archivist already rolled
up in a nest of blankets and hay, and sound asleep. "He said a lot of
things."
"Hai—but I'm thinking there's something that might be
pertinent to Jadrek."
Kethry nodded, slowly. "About Need extending her powers to
those I care for. Uh-huh; I've been wondering about that. Jadrek certainly
seems to be in a lot less pain."
Tarma snuggled into the soft hay, sword and dagger within easy
reach. Behind her, Warrl was keeping watch at the door, and Ironheart and
Hellsbane were drowsing, having stuffed themselves with fresh hay. "He's
not drugging himself as much, either. And..."
Kethry settled into her own bedroll and snuffed the witchlight.
"And he's not the bitter, suspicious man we met at the
Court," she said quietly in the darkness. "I think we're seeing the
man Idra knew." Tarma beard the hay rustle a bit, then Kethry continued,
very softly, "And I like that man, she'enedra. So much that
I think your guess could be right."
"Krethes, ves'tacha?"
"Unadorned truth. I like him; he treats me as an intellectual
equal, and that's rare, even among mages. That I'm his physical superior...
doesn't seem to bother him. It's just... what I am. He'll never ride 'Bane the
way I do, or swing a sword; I'll never be half the linguist he is, or beat him
at chess."
"Sounds like—"
"Don't go matchmaking on me, woman!" Kethry softened the
rebuke with a dry chuckle. "We've got enough on our plate with tracking
Idra, the damned weather, and the mage we've got on our backtrail."
"So we are being followed."
"Nothing you can do about it; my hope is that when he hits
the Comb he'll get discouraged and turn back."
Tarma nodded in the dark; this was Keth's province. She wouldn't
do either of them any good by fretting about it. If it came to physical battle,
then she'd be able to do some good.
And for whatever the reason, Jadrek was able to do with less of
his drugs every day, and that was all to the good. They were making about as
good a headway with him now as they would have been able to manage alone. And
maybe...
She fell asleep before she could finish the thought.
Now they were getting into the Comb, and as Jadrek had warned, the
Comb was no place to be riding through with less than full control of one's
senses.
The range of hills along the Northern border called the Comb was
among some of the worst terrain Tarma had ever encountered. The hills
themselves weren't all that high—but they were sheer rock faces for the most
part, with little more than goat tracks leading through them, and not much in
the way of vegetation, just occasional stands of windwarped trees, a bit of
scrub brush, rank grasses, and some moss and lichen—enough browse for the
horses—barely, and Tarma was supplementing the browse with grain, just to be on
the safe side.
It had been late spring, still winter in the mountains where
Hawksnest lay, when they'd headed down into Rethwellan. It had been early fall
by the time they'd made it to the capital. It had been late fall when they
bolted. Now it was winter—the worst possible time to be traveling the Comb.
Now that they were in the hills the rains had changed to sleet and
snow, and there were no friendly farmers, and no inns to take shelter in when
hostile weather made camping a grim prospect. And they no longer had the luxury
of pressing on; when a suitable campsite presented itself, they took it. If there
wasn't anything suitable, they suffered.
They'd been three days with inadequate camps, sleeping cold and
wet, and waking the same. Kethry had dropped the illusions two days ago; there
wasn't anybody to see them anymore. And when they were on easy stretches
of trail, Tarma could see Kethry frowning with her eyes closed, and knew she
was doing something magical along the backtrail—which probably meant she
needed to hoard every scrap of personal energy she could.
Jadrek, predictably, was in worst case. Tarma wasn't too far
behind him in misery. And sometimes it seemed to her that their progress was
measured in handspans, not furlongs. The only comfort was in knowing that their
pursuers—if any—were not likely to be making any better progress.
Tarma looked up at the dead, gray sky and swore at the scent of
snow on the wind.
Kethry urged Hellsbane up beside her partner when the trail they
were following dropped into a hollow between two of the hills, and there was
room enough to do so. The mage was bundled up in every warm garment she owned;
on the saddle before her the Archivist was an equally shapeless bundle. He was
nodding; only Kethry's arms clasped about him kept him in the saddle. He had
had a very bad night, for they'd been forced to camp without any shelter, and
he'd taken the full dosage of his drugs just so that he could mount this
morning.
"Snow?" Kethry asked unhappily.
"Hai. Damnitall. How much more of this is he going to
be able to take?"
"I don't know, she'enedra. I don't know how much more
of this I'm going to be able to take. I'm about ready to fall off,
myself."
Tarma scanned the terrain around her, hoping for someplace where
they could get a sheltered fire going and maybe get warm again for the
first time in four days. Nothing. Just crumbling hills, overhangs she dared not
trust, and scrub. Not a tree, not a cave, not even a tumble of boulders to
shelter in. And even as she watched, the first flakes of snow began.
She watched them, hoping to see them melting when they hit the
ground—as so far, had always been the case. This time they didn't. "Oh
hellfire. Keth, this stuff is going to stick, I'm afraid."
The mage sighed. "It would. I'd witch the weather, but I'd do
more harm than good."
"I'd rather you conjured up a sheltered camp."
"I've tried," Kethry replied bleakly. "My energies
are at absolute nadir. I spent everything I had getting that mage off our
trail. I'd cast a jesto-vath, but I
need some kind of wall and ceiling to make it work."
Tarma stifled a cough, hunched her shoulders against the cold
wind, and sighed. "It's not like you had any choice; no more than we do
now. Let's get on. Maybe something will turn up."
But nothing did, and the flurries turned to a full-fledged
snowstorm before they'd gone another furlong.
"We've got to get a rest," Tarma said, finally, as they
gave the horses a breather at the top of a hill. "Jadrek, how are you
doing?"
"Poorly," he replied, rousing himself. The tone of his
voice was dull. "I need to take more of my medicines, and I dare not. If I
fell asleep in this cold—"
"Right. Look—there's a bit of a corner down there."
Tarma pointed through the curtaining snow to a cul-de-sac visible just off the
main trail. "It might be sheltered enough to let us get a bit warmer. And
the horses need more than a breather."
"I won't argue," Kethry replied. "I can feel 'Bane
straining now."
Unspoken was the very real danger that was in all of their minds.
It was obvious that the snow was falling more thickly with every candlemark; it
was equally obvious that unless they found a good campsite they'd be in
danger of death by exposure if they fell asleep. That meant pressing on through
the night if they didn't find a secure site. This little rest might be the
closest to sleep that they'd get tonight.
And when they got to the cul-de-sac, they found evidence of how
real the danger was.
Huddled against the boulders of the back was what was left of a
man.
Rags and bones, mostly. The carcass was decades old, at least.
There were no marks of violence on him, except that done by scavengers, and
from the way the bones lay Tarma judged he'd died of cold.
"Poor bastard," she said, picking up a sword in a
half-rotten sheath, and turning it over, looking for some trace of
ownership-marks. "Helluva way to die."
Kethry was tumbling stones down over the pitiful remains, Jadrek
was doing his best to help. "Is there any good way to die?"
"In your own bed. In your own time. Here—can you make
anything of this?"
Jadrek dug into his packs while the women were occupying
themselves with the grisly remains they'd found. He was aching all over with
pain, even through the haze of drugs. Worse, he was slowing them down.
But there was a solution, of sorts. They didn't need him now, and
if the weather worsened, his presence—or absence—might mean the
difference between life and death for the two partners.
So he was going to overdose. That would put him to sleep. If they did
find shelter, there would be no harm done, and he would simply sleep the
overdose off. But if they didn't—
If they didn't, the cold would kill him painlessly, and they'd be
rid of an unwieldy burden. Without him they'd be able to take paths and chances
they weren't taking now. Without him they could devote energy to saving
themselves.
He swallowed the bitter herb pellets quickly, before they could
catch him at it, and washed away the bitterness with a splash of icy water from
his canteen. Then he pressed himself up against the sheltered side of Kethry's
mount, trying to leech the heat from her body into his own.
Kethry took the sword from her partner, and turned it over. The
sheath looked as if it had once had metal fittings; there were gaping sockets
in the pommel and at the ends of the quillions of the sword that had
undoubtedly once held gemstones. There was no evidence of either, now.
"Poor bastard. Might have been a merc, down on his
luck," Tarma said. "That's when you know you're hitting the downward
slide—when you're selling the decorations off your blade."
Kethry slid the sword a little out of the sheath; it resisted,
with a grating sound, although there was no sign of rust on the dull gray
blade. Tarma leaned over her shoulder, and scratched the exposed metal with the
point of her dagger, then snorted at the shiny marks the steel left on the
metal of the sword.
"Well, I feel a little less sorry for him,"
Kethry retorted. "My guess is that he was a thief. This was some
kind of dress blade, but the precious metal and the stones have been stripped
from it."
"Have to be a dress sword," the Shin'a'in said in
disgust. "Nobody in their right mind would depend on that thing. It
isn't steel or even crude-forged iron. You're right, he must have been a
thief—and probably the pretties were stripped by somebody that came across the
body."
Tarma turned back to her inspection of her mare's condition, and Kethry
nodded, shoving the blade back into its sheath. "You're right about this
thing," she agreed. "Metal that soft wouldn't hold an edge for five
minutes. Damn thing is nearly useless. That pretty much confirms it. The
departed wasn't dressed particularly well, I doubt he'd have much use for a
dress-sword." She started to stick the thing point-down into the cairn
they'd built—then, moved by some impulse she didn't quite understand, put it
into her pack, instead.
There was something about that sword—something buried below the
seeming of its surface, something that tasted of magic. And if there was magic
involved, Kethry thought vaguely, it might be worth saving to look into later.
Neither Tarma nor Jadrek noticed; Tarma was checking Ironheart's
feet. and Jadrek was pressed up against Hellsbane's side with his eyes closed,
trying to absorb some of the mare's warmth into his own body.
Tarma straightened up with a groan. "Well, people, I hate to
say this, but—"
Kethry and Jadrek sighed simultaneously.
"I know," Kethry replied. "Time to go."
Darkness was falling swiftly, and the snow was coming down thicker
than ever. They'd given up trying to find a campsite themselves; Tarma had sent
Warrl out instead. That meant they had one less set of eyes to guard them, but
Warrl was the only one who stood a chance of finding shelter for them.
Tarma was leading both horses; on a trail this uncertain, she
wanted it to be her that stumbled or fell, not the mares. She was cold to the
point of numbness, and every time Hellsbane tripped on the uneven ground, she
could hear Jadrek catching his breath in pain, and Kethry murmuring
encouragement to him.
Tarma was no longer thinking much beyond the next step, and all
her hopes were centered on the kyree.
If they didn't find shelter by dawn, they'd be so weary that no amount of will
could keep them from resting—and once resting, no amount of foreknowledge would
keep them from falling asleep—
And they would die.
Tarma wondered how many ghosts haunted the Comb, fools or the
desperate, lured into trying to thread the rocky hills and falling victim to no
enemy but the murderous weather.
She half-listened to the wind wailing among the rocks above them.
It sounded like voices. The voices of hungry ghosts, vengeful ghosts, jealous
of the living. The kinds of ghosts that showed up in the songs of her people,
now and again, who sought only to lure others to their deaths, so that they
might have company.
How many fools—how many ghosts—
A white shape loomed up out of the dusk before them, blocking the
path. A vague, ivory rider on an ethereal silver horse, appearing suddenly and
soundlessly out of the snow, like a pallid harbinger of cold death.
"Li'sa'eer!" Tarma croaked, and dropped the reins
of both horses, pulling the sword slung at her back in the next instant, and
wondering wildly if Goddess-blessed steel could harm a hungry ghost.
:Mindmate, no!:
Warrl jumped down from the hillside to her right to interpose his
bulk between her and the spirit. :Mindmate—this is help!:
"Peace upon you, lady." The voice of the one astride the
strange white beast was not that of a spirit; nor, when Tarma allowed a corner
of herself to test the feel of him, was there any of the tingle she
associated with magic. The man's voice was not hollow, as a spirit's normally sounded;
it was warm, deep, and held a tinge of amusement. "Your fourfooted friend
came looking for aid, and we heard his calling. I did not mean to startle
you."
Tarma's arms shook as she resheathed the blade. "Goddess
bless—warn a body next time! You just about ate six thumbs of
steel!"
"Again, your pardon, but we could not tell exactly where you
were. Your presences seem rather... blurred."
"Never mind that," Kethry interrupted from behind Tarma,
her voice sharp. "Who are you? What are you? Why should we trust
you?"
The man did not seem to be taken aback by her words. "You're
wise not to take anything on appearance, lady. You don't know me—but I do
know you; I've talked to your friend mind-to-mind, and I know who you are and
what you wish. You can trust me on three counts." He and his horse moved
in to stand nose to nose with Ironheart. Tarma saw with no little surprise that
even in the fading light the beast's eyes were plainly a bright and startling blue.
"Firstly—that you are no longer in Rethwellan; you crossed the Border some
time back, and you are in Valdemar. The enemy on your backtrail will not be
able to pass the Border, nor would I give you to him. Secondly, that the man
you seek, Prince Stefansen, is Valdemar's most welcome guest, and I will be taking
you to him as quickly as your tired beasts can manage. And thirdly, you can
trust me because of my office."
"Look—we're tired, we don't know anything about your
land, and our friend, who might, is not even half-conscious."
So that was what was making Keth's voice sound like she was
walking on glass.
"I seem to be making a mess of this," the man replied
ruefully. "I am Roald, one of the Heralds of Valdemar. And you may believe
your large, hairy friend there, that any Herald is to be trusted."
:They are, mindmate,: Warrl confirmed. :With more than
life. There is no such creature as a treacherous Herald.:
All right,
Tarma thought, worn past exhaustion. We've got no chance out here—and you've
never been wrong before this, Furface.
"Lead on, Herald Roald," she said aloud. And wearily
hoped Warrl was right this time, too.
Eight
Tarma clasped her blue-gray pottery mug in both her hands and
sniffed the spicy, rich aroma of the hot wine it contained a trifle warily. The
stuff was too hot to drink; not that she minded. The heat of it had warmed the
thick clay of the mug, and that, in turn, was warming her hands so that they no
longer ached in each separate joint. And the heat gave her an excuse to be
cautious about drinking it.
She blinked sleepily at the flames in the fireplace before her,
trying to muster herself back up to full alertness. But she was feeling the
heat seeping into her bones, and with the heat came relaxation. The fire cast
dancing patterns of light and shadow up into the exposed rough-hewn beams of
the square common room, and made the various trophies of horns and antlers hung
on the polished wooden walls seem to move. She didn't want to stir, not
at all, and that had the potential for danger.
She was wearing, bizarrely enough, some of Roald's spare clothing,
all of her own too thoroughly soaked even to bother with. A Kal'enedral in
white—Warrior bless, now that's a strange thought. Roald was the only one
of them near to her size; off his horse he was scarcely more than a couple of
thumblengths taller than Tarma, and was just as rangy-thin. He was exceedingly
handsome in a rugged way, with a heavy shock of dark blond hair, a neat little
beard, and eyes as blue as his horse's.
I thought I'd never be warm again. She settled a little more down into her
chair and the eiderdown they'd given her to wrap around herself, and blinked at
the kyree stretched out between her
and the flames. Warrl was fast asleep on the red-tiled hearth at her feet,
having bolted a meal of three rabbits first. He trusts them. Especially
Roald. Dare we?
Her chair was set just to one side of the fireplace, practically
on the hearthstone. Directly across from her, Kethry was curled up in a second
chair, wrapped in eiderdown, looking small and unwontedly serious. She'd been
summarily stripped of her wet gear, the same as Tarma, but opted for one of
Lady Mertis' soft green wool gowns. Jadrek had been spirited away as well, and
regarbed in Stefansen's warmest—heavy brown wool breeches and tunic and knitted
shirt.
If Roald hadn't come when he did—Star-Eyed, we came perilously
close to losing him. If I'd known he'd taken enough of that painkilling stuff
to put him out like that—
Jadrek was pacing the floor beside the two chairs and within the
arc of heat and light cast by the fire. He limped very badly—walking slowly,
haltingly, trying to shake the fog of his medicines from his head so that he
could talk coherently again. He was moving so stiffly that Tarma hurt just
watching him.
I wonder; he knew we were in bad trouble when we stopped that last
time. I wonder if he didn't dose himself on purpose, figuring that we'd either
find shelter and he'd be all right, or that we wouldn't, and while he was
unconscious the cold would kill him painlessly and get him out of our hair.
That's something a Clansman might do. Damnit—I like this man! And he has no
reservations about Stefansen and this Herald. But I do. I must.
Stefansen's wife, Mertis (that had come as a shock to
Jadrek, that Stefansen had actually wedded), was seated in another chair a bit
farther removed from the fire, nursing their month-old son. I like her, too.
That's a sweet little one—why do I have to distrust these people?
Stefansen, who resembled Idra to a startling degree, (except that
on a man's face the features that had been harsh for a woman were strong, and
those that had been handsome were breathtaking) was talking quietly with Roald,
the two of them sitting on a pair of chairs they'd pulled up near to Mertis. A
most domestic and harmonious scene, if you could ignore the worry in everyone's
eyes.
Good thing we had Jadrek to vouch for us, or Stefansen might have
left us to freeze, and be damned to his Herald friend. He did not like the fact
that we'd come looking for him out of Rethwellan. He's still watching me when
he thinks I'm not paying any attention. We're both like wary wolves at first
meeting, neither one sure the other isn't going to bite.
This turned out to be Roald's own hunting lodge, which, since it
was not exactly a small dwelling, told Tarma that whatever else he was,
the Herald was also a man of means. It was now the "humble" abode of
the Prince-in-exile, his bride of ten months, and their infant son. Valdemar
had given Stefansen the sanctuary he needed, but it was a secret sanctuary; the
King and Queen of Valdemar dared not compromise their country's safety, not
with Rethwellan sharing borders with both themselves and their hereditary
enemy, Karse.
The wine was cool enough to drink now, and Tarma had decided she
couldn't detect anything dangerous in it. She sipped at it, letting it soothe
her raw throat and ease the cold in the pit of her stomach. While she drank,
she scrutinized Mertis again over the edge of the mug.
Tarma watched the gentle woman rocking her son in her arms,
studying her with the same care she'd have spent on the reconnoitering of an
enemy camp. Mertis was not homely, by any means, but not a raving beauty,
either. She had a sweet, soft face; frank brown eyes that seemed to demand
truth of you; wavy, sable-brown hair. Not the kind of woman one would
expect to captivate an experienced rake like Stefansen. Which meant there was
more to her than showed on the surface.
Then again—Tarma hid a smile with her mug as she thought of the
moment when Roald had brought them stumbling up to the door of the lodge.
Mertis had been everywhere, easing Jadrek down from his grip on Kethry's
saddle, helping him to stumble into the warm, brightly lit lodge, building up
the fire with her own hands, issuing crisp, no-nonsense orders to her spouse,
the Herald, and the two servants of the lodge, without regard for rank. That
just might have been her secret—that she had been the only woman to
treat Stefansen like a simple man, a person, and not throw herself at his feet,
panting like a bitch in heat.
Or it might have been a half dozen other things, but one
was a certainty; Tarma knew love well enough to recognize it when those two
looked at each other. And never mind that Mertis was scarcely higher in birth
than Kethry.
"Jadrek?" Stefansen called softly, catching Tarma's
attention. "Have you walked yourself out yet? I'd rather you got a
night's sleep, but Roald seems to think we need to talk now."
"Not just you two—all of us, the mercenaries included,"
the Herald corrected. "We all have bits of information that need to be put
together into a whole."
Stefansen is looking wary again. I'll warrant he didn't expect us
to be included in this little talk. Ah well, duty calls. "Just for the record," Tarma
said, unwinding herself from the eiderdown, "I'd tend to agree. And the
sooner we get to it, the less likely one of us will forget some triviality that
turns out to be vital. My people say, 'plans, like eggs, are best at the
freshest.'"
Kethry nodded, and got up long enough to turn her chair in a
quarter-circle so that it faced the room rather than Tarma; Tarma did the same
as the men pulled theirs closer, and Roald brought in a third chair for Jadrek.
Mertis left hers where it was, but put the babe back in the cradle and leaned
forward to catch every word.
Tarma watched the Prince, his spouse, and the Herald as
covertly—but as intently—as she could. Warrl trusted them, and she'd never
known the kyree to be wrong. He
trusted them enough that he'd eaten without checking the food for tampering,
and was now sleeping as soundly as if he hadn't a worry in the world. Still,
there was a first time for everything, even for the kyree being deceived.
There's no sign of the Captain here, either. But that might not
mean anything.
Jadrek spoke first, outlining what Raschar had been doing since
Stefansen's abrupt departure. Tarma was surprised by the Prince's reactions; he
showed a great deal more intelligence and thoughtfulness than rumor had given
him credit for. He seemed deeply disturbed by the information that Raschar was
continuing to tax the peasantry into serfdom. He looks almost as if he's
taking it personally—huh, for that matter, so does Mertis. And I don't think
it's an act.
Then Tarma and Kethry took up the thread, telling the little
conclave what they'd observed in their week or so at the Court, and what they'd
noted as they passed through the southern grainlands of Rethwellan.
The Prince asked more earnest questions of them, then, and seemed
even more disturbed by the answers. He plainly did not like Kethry's report of
the mages lurking in the Court—and the tale of the attack on Jadrek shocked him
nearly white.
And that is not an act, Tarma decided. He's more than shocked, he's angry. I wouldn't
want to be Raschar and in front of him right now.
And finally all three spoke of Idra—what Jadrek knew, and what the
partners had heard before she'd vanished.
That changed the anger to doubt, and to apprehension. "If she
headed here, she didn't arrive," Stefansen said, unhappily, the firelight
flaring up in time to catch his expression of profound disturbance. "Damn
it! Dree and I had our differences, not the least of which was that she voted
for Char, but she's the one person in this world that I would never wish any
harm on. Where in hell could she have gotten to if she didn't come here?"
Tarma wished at that moment that she could have Warrl's
thought-reading abilities. The Prince seemed sincere, but it would have
been so very easy for Idra to have met with an accident once she'd crossed into
Valdemar, particularly if Stefansen hadn't known about her change of heart. He
could be using his surprise and dismay at learning that to cover his guilt.
At the same time all her instincts were saying he was speaking
only truth—
If only I knew!
She turned her attention to Roald. He seemed to be both holding
himself apart from the rest, and yet at the same time vitally concerned about
all of them. Goddess—even us, and he just met us a few hours ago,
Tarma realized with a start. And there was a knowledge coming from somewhere
near where her Goddess-bond was seated that told her that this Herald was, as
Warrl put it, someone to be trusted with more than one's life. If Stefansen
murdered Idra, he'd know, she thought slowly. I don't know how, but
somehow he'd know. And I bet he wouldn't be sharing hearth and home with
him. I can't see him giving hearth-rights to a murderer of any kind, much less
a kin-slayer. Now I wonder—how much of his worry is for us two, and how much is
about us?
After a long silence, Jadrek said: "This is not something I
ever expected to hear myself saying, but whatever has happened to Idra, I fear
her fate is going to have to take second place to what is happening to the
Kingdom." Jadrek turned to the Prince, slowly, and with evident pain.
"Stefan, Raschar is a leech on the body of Rethwellan." Tarma could
see his eyes now, and the open challenge in them. "You never retracted
your oath to your people as Crown Champion. You still have the responsibility
of the safety of the Kingdom. So what are you going to do about the
situation?"
"Jadrek, you never were one to pull a blow, were you?"
The Prince smiled thinly. "And you're still as blunt as ever you were.
Well, let me put it out for us all to stare at. Do you think I should try to
overthrow Char?"
"You know that's what I think," Jadrek replied,
eyes glinting in the firelight. He looked alert and alive—and a candlemark ago
Tarma would never have reckoned on his reviving so fast. "You'd be a
thousand times better as a king than your brother, and I know that was the
conclusion your sister came to after seeing him rule for six months."
"Roald?"
"You've matured. You've truly matured a great deal in the
time you've been here," the Herald said thoughtfully. "I don't know
if it was fatherhood, or my dubious example, but—you're not the witling
rakehell you were, Stefan. The careless fool you were would have been a worse
king than your brother, ultimately—but the man you are now could be a very good
ruler."
Stefansen turned to Mertis, and stopped dead at a strange,
hair-raising humming. Tarma felt the tingling of a power akin to the Warrior's
along her spine; she glanced sharply at Kethry in startlement, only to see that
the mage wore an equally surprised expression. The humming seemed to be coming
from the heap of saddlepacks and weaponry they'd dumped just inside the door,
after Mertis had extracted their soiled, soaked clothing for cleaning.
Stefansen rose as if in a dream, as the rest of them remained
frozen in their seats. He walked slowly to the shadowed pile, reached down, and
took something in his hands.
A long, narrow something.
Bits of enshrouding darkness began peeling from it, and light
gleamed where the pieces had fallen away. The thing he held was a sword—not
hers, not Kethry's—a sword in a half-decayed sheath—
As the last of the rotten sheath flaked off of it, Tarma could see
from the shape of it that it was the dead man's sword that they'd found—and no
longer the lifeless, dull gray thing it had been. In Stefansen's hands it was
keening a wild song and glowing white-hot, lighting up the entire room.
Stefansen stood with it in both hands, as frozen for a moment as
the rest of them were. Then he dropped it—and as it hit the wooden floor with a
dull thud, the light died, and the song with it.
"Mother of the gods!" he exclaimed, staring at
the blade at his feet. "What in hell is that?"
Jadrek shook his head. "This is just not to be believed—Idra
pretends to go haring off after the Sword That Sings—then we just happen to
stumble on it on a remote trail, and just happen to bring it with
us—"
"Archivist, I hate to disagree," Tarma interrupted,
"but it's not so much of a coincidence as you might think. Idra wanted an
excuse to go north. If she'd wanted one to go south, I would bet you'd have
found a different legend, but the Sword's legend says it was stolen and taken
north, so that's the one you chose. There's only one real road through the
Comb. No thief would take that, and no fugitive—well, that left this goat-track
we followed. I know it's the closest path to the real road, and I'll bet
it's one of the few that go all the way through. No great coincidence there. As
for the coincidence of us finding the dead thief, and of Keth taking the
sword—I'll bet he was found a good dozen times, or why were the goldwork and
the gems gone from the sheath and the pommel? But nobody in their right mind
would bother taking a blade that wouldn't cut butter. And we've been stopping
in every likely sheltered spot, so it's small wonder that we ran across him and
his booty. But I would be willing to stake Ironheart that no mage ever ran
across the body. Mages can sense energies, even quiescent ones; right,
Keth?"
"That's true," Kethry corroborated. "I knew there
was something about it, but I didn't have the strength to spare to deal
with it right then. So I did what most mages would do—I packed it up to look
into it later, if there was a later. Besides, knowing how these
mage-purposed things work, I would say that the sword might well have known
where it was going. It could well have 'told' me to bring it here."
"And the sword, once it sensed you were wavering on making a
bid for the throne, made itself known," Mertis concluded wryly.
"It appears," Stefansen said ruefully, "that I
don't have any choice."
"No more than I did, my friend," Roald replied with a
chuckle, and a smile. "No more than I did."
But Stefansen sagged, and his face took on an expression of
despair. "This is utterly hopeless, you know," he said. "Just how
am I supposed to get back the crown when my only allies are a baby, an
outlander, three women, a—forgive me, Jadrek—half-crippled scholar, an outsized
beast, and a sword that's likely to betray me by glowing and singing every time
I touch it?"
"I really don't see why you're already giving up," Roald
chided. "Thrones have been overturned with less. What do you really need
for a successful rebellion?"
"For a start, you need someone who knows where each and every
secret lies," Jadrek said, sitting up straighter, his eyes shining with
enthusiasm. "Someone who knows which person can be bought and what his
price is, which person can be blackmailed, and who will serve out of either
love or duty. I haven't been sitting in the corners of the Court being ignored
all these years without learning more than a few of those things."
"We could infiltrate the capital disguised,"
Kethry said, surprising her partner. "Magical disguises, if we have to. No
one will know us then; Jadrek can tell me who are the ones he wants contacted;
if we can get one of us into the Court itself, we could pass messages, arrange
meetings. I know Tarma could go in as a man, with an absolute minimum of
disguising, all physical."
So we've thrown in with this lot, have we, she'enedra? Is it the
cause that attracts you, or the fact that it's Jadrek's cause? But, since Kethry had added herself to
the little conspiracy, Tarma added her own thought, in spite of her better
judgment. "Huh, yes—if we can figure something that would put me
into the Court without suspicion."
"Challenge the current champion of the King's Guard to
combat," Mertis put in, surprising Tarma considerably. "That's anyone's
right if they want to get in the Guard. Free swords do it all the time, there's
nothing out of the ordinary about it. If you do well, you've got a place; if
you beat him, you automatically become head of the Guard. That would put
you at Raschar's side every day. You couldn't get any closer to the heart of
the Court than that."
Stefansen looked doubtfully at the lean swordswoman.
"Challenge the champion? Has she got a chance?"
Still not sure you trust us, hmm, my lad? I can't say as I blame
you. I'm still not entirely sure of you.
But Mertis smiled, and Tarma sensed that the gentle-seeming lady
had a good set of claws beneath her velvet. "If half the tales I've heard
about the Shin'a'in Swordsworn are true, she'll have his place before he can
blink. And right at Raschar's side is the place we could best use you,
Swordlady."
It became evident to Tarma that guileless Mertis was no stranger
to intrigue as the evening wore on, and the plan began to look more and more as
if it had a strong chance of success. In fact, it was she who turned to Roald,
and asked, bluntly, "And what is Valdemar prepared to grant us besides
sanctuary?"
Roald blinked once, and replied as swiftly, "What will
Valdemar get in return?"
"Alliance in perpetuity if we succeed," Stefansen said,
"My word on that, and you know my word—"
"Is more than good."
"Thank you for that. You know very well that you could use an
ally that shares a border with Karse. You also know we've stayed neutral in
that fight, and you know damned well that Char would never change that
policy. I will; I'll ally with you, unconditionally. More—I'll pledge Valdemar
favor for favor should you ever choose to call it in. And I'll swear it on the
Sword—that will bind every legal heir to the pledge for as long as the
Sword is used to choose rulers."
Roald let out his breath, slowly, and raised his eyebrows.
"Well, that's a lot more than I expected. But you know we don't dare do
anything openly. So that means covert help..." His brow wrinkled in
thought for a moment. "What about this—every rebellion needs finances, and
arms. Those I think I can promise."
Kethry looked rather outraged; Tarma was just perplexed. Who
exactly was this Herald?
Kethry took the question right out of her mouth.
"Just what power is yours that you can fulfill those
promises?" Kethry asked with angry cynicism. "It's damned easy to
promise things you know you won't have to supply just to get us off your
backs and out of your kingdom!"
Stefansen looked as if Kethry had blasphemed the gods of his
House. Mertis' jaw dropped.
I think Keth just put her foot in it, Tarma thought, seeing their shocked
reaction to what seemed to be a logical question. Something tells me that
"herald" means more than "royal mouthpiece" around here—
"He—Roald—is the heir to the throne of Valdemar," Mertis
managed to stammer. "Your Highness. I am sorry—"
Tarma nearly lost her own jaw, and Kethry turned pale. Insulting a
member of a Royal House like that had been known to end with a summary
execution. "It's I who should beg pardon," Kethry said, shaken.
"I—I've heard too many promises that weren't fulfilled lately, and I
didn't want Jad—my friends, I mean, counting on something that wouldn't ever
happen. Your Highness—"
"Oh, Bright Havens—" Roald interrupted her, looking
profoundly embarrassed. "'Highness,' my eye! How could I have been
insulted by honesty? Besides, we aren't all that much sticklers about rank in
the Heraldic Circle. Half the time I get worse insults than that! And how were you
to know? You don't even know what a Herald of Valdemar is!" He
shrugged, then grinned. "And I don't know what a Swordsworn is, so we're
even! Look, the law of Valdemar is that every Monarch must also be a Herald;
our Companions Choose us, rather like that musical sword of Stefan's. Both
Father and Mother are Heralds, which makes them co-consorts, so until they seek
the Havens—may that take decades!—I'm not all that important, and I act pretty
much as any other Herald. The only difference is that I have a few
more powers, like being able to make promises in the name of the throne to my
friend, and know my parents will see that those promises are met. Now, about
those arms—"
Tarma was profoundly troubled; Kethry had thrown herself in with
these people as if she had known them all her life, but it was the Shin'a'in's
way to be rather more suspicious than her oathsister—or at least more than
Kethry was evidencing at the moment. She needed to think—alone, and
undisturbed. And maybe ask for some advice.
She let the folds of the eiderdown fall to her sides, and stood
up. Four sets of eyes gave her startled glances, Kethry's included.
"I need to clear my head," she said, shortly. "If
you'll excuse me, I think I'd like to go outside for a little."
"In the dark? In a snowstorm?" Jadrek blurted, astounded.
"Are you—" He subsided at a sharp look from Kethry.
"Swordlady," the Herald said quietly, but looking
distinctly troubled, "you and the others are guests in my home; you are
free to do whatever you wish. You will find a number of cloaks hanging in the
entry. And I am certain an old campaigner like you needs no admonitions to take
care in a storm."
She followed the direction of his nod to the darkened end of the
hall; past the door there, she found herself in an entryway lit by a single
small lantern. As he had said, there were several cloaks hanging like the
shadows of great wings from pegs near the outer door. She took the first one
that came to her hand, one made of some kind of heavy, thick fur, and went out
into the dark and cold.
Outside, the storm was dying; the snow was back to being a thin
veil, and she could see the gleaming of the new moon faintly through the
clouds. She was standing on some kind of sheltered, raised wooden porch; the
snow had been swept from it, and there was a open clearing beyond it. She paced
silently down the stairs and out into the untrampled snow, her footsteps making
it creak underfoot, until she could no longer feel the lodge looming so closely
at her back. Trees and bushes made black and white hummocks in front of her and
to both sides; fitful moonlight on the snow and reflected through the clouds
gave just enough light to see by. She felt unwatched, alone. This spot would
do. And, by sheer stroke of fortune, "south" lay directly before her.
She took three deep breaths of the icy, sharp-edged air, and
raised her head. Then, still with her back to the building, she lifted her eyes
to the furtive glow of the moon, and throwing the cloak back over her
shoulders, spread her arms wide, her hands palm upward.
She felt a little uncomfortable. This wasn't the sort of thing she
usually did. She was not accustomed to making use of the side of her that, as
Kal'enedral, was also priestess. But she needed answers from a source she knew
she could trust. And the leshya'e Kal'enedral would not be coming to her
here unless she called to them.
She fixed her gaze on that dimly gleaming spot among the clouds;
seeking, but not walking, the Moonpaths. Within moments her trained will had
brought her into trance. In this exalted state, all sensation of cold, of
weariness, was gone. She was no longer conscious of the passing of time, nor
truly of her body. And once she had found the place where the Moonpaths began,
she breathed the lesser of the Warrior's true names. That murmur of meaning on
the Moonpaths should bring one of her teachers in short order.
From out of the cold night before her came a wind redolent of
sun-scorched grasslands, or endless, baking days and nights of breathless heat.
It circled Tarma playfully, as the moonglow wavered before her eyes. The night
grew lighter; she tingled from head to toe, as if lightning had taken the place
of her blood. She felt, rather than heard the arrival of Someone, by the
quickening of all life around her, and the sudden surge of pure power.
She lowered her hands and her eyes, expecting to see one of Her
Hands, the spirit-Kal'enedral that were the teachers of all living Kal'enedral—
—to see that the radiant figure before her, glowing faintly within
a nimbus of soft light, appeared to be leshya'e Kal'enedral, but was
unveiled—her body that of a young, almost sexless woman. A woman of the
Shin'a'in, with golden skin, sharp features, and raven-black hair. A
swordswoman garbed and armed from head to toe in unrelieved black—and whose
eyes were the featureless darkness of a starry night sky, lacking pupil or
iris.
The Star-Eyed Herself had answered to Tarma's calling, and was
standing on the snow not five paces from her, a faint smile on Her lips at
Tarma's start of surprise.
*My beloved jel'enedra, do you value yourself so little that you
think I would not come to your summons ? Especially when you call upon Me so
seldom?* Her voice
was as much inside Tarma's head as falling upon her ears, and it was so musical
it went beyond song.
"Lady, I—" Tarma stammered,
*Peace, Sword of My forging. I know that your failure to call upon
Me is not out of fear, but out of love; and out of the will to rely upon your
own strength as much as you may. That is as it should be, for I desire that My
children grow strong and wise and adult, and not weakly dependent upon a
strength outside their own. And that is doubly true of My Kal'enedral, who
serve as My Eyes and My Hands.*
Tarma gazed directly into those other-worldly eyes, into the deep
and fathomless blackness flecked with tiny dancing diamond-points of light, and
knew that she had been judged, and not found wanting.
"Bright Star—I need advice," she said, after a pause to
collect her thoughts. "As You know my mind and heart, You know I cannot
weigh these strangers. I want to help them, I want to trust them—but how much
of that is because my oathsister comes to their calling? How much do I
deceive myself to please her?"
The warm wind stirred the black silk of Her hair as She turned
those depthless eyes to gaze at some point beyond Tarma's shoulder for a
moment. Then She smiled.
*I think, jel'enedra, that your answer comes on its own feet, two
and four.*
Two feet could mean Kethry—but four? Warrl?
Snow crunched behind Tarma, but she did not remove her gaze from
the Warrior's shining face. Only when the newcomers had arrived to stand
shoulder to shoulder with her did she glance at them out of the tail of her
eye.
And froze with shock.
On her right stood—or rather, knelt, since he fell immediately to
one knee, and bowed his head—the Herald, Roald, his white cloak flaring behind
him in Her wind like great wings of snow. On Tarma's left was the strange,
blue-eyed horse.
Tarma felt her breath catch in her throat with surprise, but this
was only to be the beginning of her astonishment. The horse continued to pace
slowly forward, and as he did so, he almost seemed to blur and shimmer, much as
Tarma's spirit-teachers sometimes did—as if he were, as they were, not entirely
of this world. Then he stopped, and stood quietly when the Warrior laid
Her hand gently upon his neck. He gleamed with all the soft radiance of the
hidden moon, plainly surrounded by an aura of light that was dimmer, but not at
all unlike Hers.
*Rise, Chosen; it is not in Me to be pleased with subservience,* She said to the Herald, who obeyed Her at
once, rising to stand silently and worshipfully at Tarma's shoulder. *Vai
datha—so, young princeling, your land forges white Swords that fit the same
sheath as My black, eh?* She laughed, soundlessly, looking from Roald to
Tarma and back again. *Such a pretty pair you make, like moon and cloud, day
and night, bright and dark. How an artist would die for such a sight! Two such
opposites—and yet so much the same!*
It was only then that Tarma saw that the white clothing she had been
wearing had been transmuted to the Warrior's own ebony, as was proper for
Kal'enedral.
*And you. My gentle Child—* She continued, caressing the white horse's shining neck, *—are
leshya'e Kal'enedral of another sort, hmm? Like My Hands, and unlike. Perhaps
to complete the set I should see if any of My Children would become as you.
What think you, should there be sable Companions to match the silver?* The
look the horse—no, Companion—bent upon Her was one of reproach. She laughed
again. *Not? Well, it was but a thought. But this is well met, and well met
again! This is a good land, yours. It deserves good servants, strong
defenders—vigilant champions to guard it and hold it safe as My Hands hold
Mine. Do we not all serve to drive back the Dark, each in his own fashion? So I
cry—well met. Children of My Other Self!*
She turned that steady regard back to Tarma. *Are you answered.
My cautious one?*
Tarma bowed her head briefly, filled with such relief that she was
nearly dizzy with it. And filled as suddenly with an understanding of exactly
what and who this Herald and his Companion were. "I am answered, Bright
Star."
*Then let white Sword and black serve as they are meant—to cleave
the True Darkness, and not each other, as you each feared might befall.*
There was another breath of hot wind, a surging of power that left
Tarma's eyes dazzled, and She was gone.
The Herald closed his eyes briefly, and let out the breath he had
been holding in a great sigh. As the horse returned to stand beside him, he
opened his eyes again, and turned to face Tarma.
"Forgive me for doubting you, even a little," he said,
his voice and the hand he extended to her trembling slightly. "But I
followed you out here because—"
"For the same reason I would have followed you had our
positions been reversed," Tarma interrupted, clasping the hand he
stretched out. "I wasn't expecting Her when I called, but I think I know
now why She came. Both of us have had our doubts settled, haven't
we—brother?"
His hold on her hand was warm and steady, and his smile was
unwavering and equally warm. "I think, more than settled, sister."
She caught his other hand; they stood facing each other with hands
clasped in hands for a very long time, savoring the moment. There was nothing
even remotely sexual about what they shared in that timeless space; just the
contentment and love of soul-sib meeting soul-sib, something akin to what Tarma
had for Kethry—
—and, she realized, with all the knowledge that passed to her from
her Goddess in her moment of enlightenment, what this Herald shared with his
Companion. For it was no horse that stood beside Roald, and she wondered now
how she could have ever thought that it was. Another soul-sib. And—how
odd—even the Heralds don't know exactly what their Companions are—
It was Roald who finally sighed, and let the moment pass. "I
fear," he said, dropping her hands reluctantly, "that if we don't get
back to the others soon, they'll think we've either frozen to death, or gotten
lost."
"Or," Tarma laughed, giving his shoulders a quick embrace
before pulling her cloak back around herself, "murdered each other out
here! By the way—" She stretched out her arm, showing him that the tunic
she wore was still the black of a starless night. "—I wonder how we're
going to explain what happened to the clothing I borrowed?"
He laughed, long and heartily. "Be damned if I know. Maybe
they won't notice? Right—not likely. Oh well, I'll think of something. But you owe
me, Swordlady; that was my second-best set of Whites before you witched
it!"
Tarma joined his laughter, as snow crunched under their boots.
"Come to the Dhorisha Plains when this is over, and I'll pay you in
Shin'a'in horses and Shin'a'in gear! It will break their artistic hearts, but I
think I can persuade some of my folk to make you a set of unadorned Kal'enedral
white silks."
"Havens, lady, you tempt my wandering feet far too much to be
denied! You have a bargain," he grinned, taking the porch steps two at a
time and flinging open the door for her with a flourish. "I'll be at your
tent flap someday when you least expect it, waiting to collect."
And, unlikely as it seemed, she somehow had the feeling that he
would one day manage to do just that.
Nine
It was difficult, but by no means impossible, to pull energies
from the sleeping earth in midwinter. All it took was the skill—and time and
patience, and Kethry had those in abundance. And further, she had serious need
of any mote of mage-energy she could harbor against the future, as well as any
and all favors she could bank with the other-planar allies she had acquired in
her years as a White Winds sorceress. She had not had much chance to stockpile
either after the end of the Sunhawks' last commission, and the journey here had
left her depleted down to her lowest ebb since she and Tarma had first met.
So she was not in the least averse to spending as much time
in the hidden lodge with Stefansen and Mertis as the winter weather made
necessary; she had a fair notion of the magnitude of the task awaiting them.
She and Jadrek and Tarma might well be unequal to it—
In fact, she had come to the conclusion that they would need
resources she did not have—yet.
On a lighter note, she was not at all displeased about being
"forced" to spend so much time in Jadrek's company. Not in the least.
She was sitting cross-legged on the polished wooden floor next to
the fireplace, slowly waking her body up after being in trance for most of the
day. Jadrek was conversing earnestly with Roald, both of them in chairs placed
where the fire could warm him, and she could study him through half-slitted
eyes at her leisure.
Jadrek seemed so much happier these days—well, small wonder.
Stefansen respected him, Mertis admired him, Tarma allowed him to carry her off
to interrogate in private at almost any hour. She was willing to answer most of
his questions about the "mysterious" (at least to the folk of
Rethwellan) nomad Shin'a'in. Roald did him like courtesy about the equally
"mysterious" Heralds of Valdemar. Both of them accorded him the
deference due a serious scholar. Warrl practically worshiped at his feet
(Jadrek's ability to "hear" the beast being in no wise abated), and
he seemed to share Tarma's feeling of comradeship with the kyree. Being given the respect he was (in all sober truth) due had
done wonders for his state of mind. As the days passed, the lines of bitterness
around his mouth were easing into something more pleasant. He smiled, and
often, and there was no shadow of cynicism in it; he laughed, and there was no
hint of mockery.
Physically he was probably in less pain than he had been for
years—which Kethry was quite sure was due to Need's Healing abilities. Need was
exerting her magic for a man because he was important to Kethry. For
Kethry had no doubt as to how she felt about the Archivist. If there was
ever going to be one man for her, Jadrek was that man.
All the men I've known, she thought with a touch of wry humor, and all the men I've
been courted by—it boggles the mind. Mages, fighters—some of them damned good
looking. Good lord, if you were to count Thalhkarsh, I've even been
propositioned by a godling! And who is it that attracts me like no one else
ever has? A scholar half again my age, who I could probably break in half if I
put my mind to it, with no recourse to Need required.
"…Like all those weirdling things out of the Pelagirs,"
Roald finished, "Except that this thing seems impossible to kill."
"The Pelagirs?" Jadrek exclaimed, perplexed.
"But I thought you said this thing was seen north of Lake Evendim?"
"It was—right in the heart of the Pelagir Hills."
"Wait a moment," Jadrek said, rummaging in the pile of
clutter under his chair, and hunting up a piece of scraped vellum and a bit of
charcoal. "All right—here's the lake—your Pelagirs are where?"
"Up here." The Herald took the charcoal from him and
sketched.
"Huh." Jadrek studied the sketch thoughtfully. "We
have a range of hills we call the Pelagirs, too—here."
"Well! I will be dipped for a sheep—"
"Fairly obvious, now that we have the information, isn't
it?" Jadrek said with a grin. "Your Pelagirs and ours are the same;
except that your inland sea cuts off the tail of the range, leaving it isolated
from the rest up in your northwest corner. And now that I know that's
true, I think I know what your 'man-beast' is, assuming I've got the
description right. Four arms, twice man-height, face like a boar and taloned
hands? No sign of genitals, nipples or navel, and the color of clay?"
"That's it."
"It's a krashak, a mage-made construct. Virtually
immortal and indestructible."
"You can name it; can you tell us how to get rid of it?"
Roald pleaded.
"Oddly enough, yes; it's a funny thing, but High Magick seems
curiously vulnerable to Earth Magick, and with all the mages hanging about Char
I took to looking for spell-breakers. It will take courage, but if you can get
in close to the thing without it seizing you, and throw a mixture of salt, moly
and Lady's Star into its eyes and mouth, it will literally fall apart." He
coughed, coloring a little with embarrassment. "I know it sounds like a
peasant superstition, but it does work. I found a mage I could trust,
and asked him. Now I—I always carry some with me...."
Roald only looked impressed. "Havens, how long did you have
to look before you found that out?"
Jadrek flushed, this time with pleasure. "Well, I got the
first hint of it from a translation of Grindel's Discourses on Unnatural
History."
"The Orwind translation, or the Quenta?"
"The Orwind...." Their voices sank again and Kethry lost
the thread of their conversation. It didn't much matter; she was more interested
in watching Jadrek in an unguarded mood. Oh, that mind! I don't think
anything ever escapes him. And, for all that he's been treated badly, he so
enjoys people—such a vital spirit in that flawed body. He's so alive. And damn
it, I—Windborn, he makes me so shameless that I feel like a cat in heat around
him. I want to purr and cuddle up against him—gods, I am bloody well
infatuated. If he so much as raised an eyebrow in invitation at me, I'd warm
his bed in a minute!
Unfortunately, he seemed blissfully unaware of that fact, so far
as she could tell. Oh well....
As for Tarma, from the moment she had reentered the hall arm in
arm with Roald, Stefansen and Mertis accepted her without reservation. And that
meant that Mertis was only too happy to let her play nursemaid to little
Megrarthon whenever she wished. Which was most of the time.
And which was precisely what she was doing at this very moment.
She's as happy as Jadrek, Kethry mused. For that matter, so is the babe. Just look at
her—
Tarma was cuddling the happily cooing child in her black-clad
arms, her expression a soft and warm one that few besides Kethry had ever seen.
The hands that had killed so often, and without remorse, were holding the
little one as gently as if he were made of down and spun glass. The harsh voice
that had frightened many an errant fighter into instant obedience was crooning
a monotonous lullabye.
She'd be happiest surrounded by a dozen small ones, or two or
three dozen. And they know it; children know it, somehow. I've never seen one
run from her, not even in the midst of a house-to-house battle. More often than
not, they run to her. And rightly; she'd die to protect a child. When this is
over—when this is over, I swear we'll give this up. Win or lose, we'll refound
her Clan for her, and to the nether hells with my school if that's what it
takes. I'll spend the rest of my life as a hedgewizard and Shin'a'in
horsebreeder if I have to.
While she watched, Tarma put the now-slumbering child back in his
cradle; rose, stretching like a cat, then began heading for the fire. The two
men at hearthside turned at the soft sound of her footstep, and smiled as one.
She saw the smiles, and returned their grins with a good-natured shake of her
head.
"And what are you two smirking about?" she asked,
clasping her hands behind her and detouring slightly to stroll over to them,
her lithe, thin body seeming almost to move fluidly, bonelessly.
The rest has done her good, too. She's in better shape than she's
been in months—years—
"Trying to imagine you as a man, Darksib," Roald teased,
using the pet name he'd invented for her. "Put a youngling around you, and
you'd give yourself away in a breath."
"Hah. I'm a better actor than that. But as to that," she
paused before them, crossed her arms, and frowned a little, "you know, we
really ought to be getting on with it. Raschar isn't sitting back, not likely.
He's consolidating his power, you can bet on it. We had better be safely in
place before he gets himself so ensconced on the throne that there'll be no dislodging
him without an army."
Kethry felt the last of her muscles emerge into wakefulness, and
began uncoiling from her position in the hearth-corner.
"The sleeper awakes," Roald noted.
"Not sleeper," she corrected, imitating Tarma's long
stretch. "I've been listening while I was coming out of trance. And, loath
though I am to leave, in agreement with Tarma. I'm at full power now; Tarma and
Jadrek have recovered. It's time to go."
She half expected Jadrek to protest, but he, too, nodded. "If
we don't go now," he opined, gravely, "Stefan won't have a kingdom to
come back to. But I do have one excellent question—this plan of ours calls for
Tarma to replace the champion, and you can bet that Char won't let a Shin'a'in
within a spear's cast of him now. So to truly ensure her safety, that means a
full magical disguise. With all the mages in the Court, how are you going to
hide the fact that Tarma's bespelled? They won't let anyone with a smell of
magic on him compete with the King's champion, you know."
Tarma raised an interrogative eyebrow at her. "The thought
had occurred to me, too," she said. "Every trial-by-combat that I've
ever seen has specifically forbidden any kind of magic taint, even lucky
amulets."
"Well, I'll answer that in an hour," Kethry replied.
"Why in an hour?"
"Because that's how long it will take me to try a full Adept
manifestation, and see if it succeeds or fails."
Kethry didn't want an audience, not for this. Not even Tarma. So
she took one of the fur cloaks and went out into the snow-laden scrub forest
until she found a little clearing that was far enough from the lodge that she
couldn't see or sense the building or the people within it. The weather was
beautiful; the air was utterly still, the sky a deepening blue, the sun
beginning its downward journey into the west. There would be no better time
than now.
A mage of the White Winds school was tested by no one except
himself, with a series of spells marking the rise in ability from Apprentice to
Journeyman, from Journeyman to Master, and from Master to Adept. A mage could
attempt these spells whenever he chose, and as many times as he chose. They
would only work when he was truly ready. The series was constructed so
that the power granted by each was used to fuel the spell for the next.
A little like priming a pump, I suppose; and if you don't nave
faith that you're ready, you can't bear to waste the power. I feel ready, Kethry decided. Well—
She initiated the Journeyman spell, gathering her own, strictly
personal power about her like a cloak, and calling the Lesser Wind of Fire and
Earth, the Stable Elements. It chose to come out of the south, always a good
omen, and whirled about her three times, leaving more power than it took to
call it. She fairly glowed with energy now, even to normal eyes.
Next—the Master Spell, and the Greater Wind of Air and Water, the
Mutable Elements—the Mutables were much harder to control than the Stable
Elements.
She raised her hands high over her head, and whispered the words
of the spell as she formed the energy left by the first with her will into the
mageshapes called the Cup and the Mill—concentrating with all her soul—calling,
but not coercing.
This time the wind came from all four directions and melded into a
gentle whirlwind around her, a wind that sang and sparkled with unformed power.
When it, too, had circled her three times, she was surrounded by a shell of
light and force that shifted and changed moment by moment, opalescing with
every color that the mind could conceive.
She drew a deep breath and launched herself fearlessly into the
Spell of Adept Manifestation—calling the White Wind itself—the Wind of the Five
Elements.
It required the uttermost of any mage that dared it; she must take
the power granted her by the first two spells and all of her own, and weave it
into an intricate new shape with her will—and the power fought back, resisting
the change to itself, twisting and twining in her mental "hands."
Simultaneously, she must sing the words of the spell, controlling tone, tempo,
and cadence to within a hairsbreadth of perfection. And she must keep her mind
utterly empty of all other thought but the image of the form she strove to
build. She dared not even allow a moment to contemplate failure, or fail she
would. One mistake, and the power would vanish, escaping with the agility of a
live thing.
She finished. She held her breath. There was one moment of utter
quietude, as time and all time governed ceased—and she wondered.
Had she failed?
And then the White Wind came.
It fountained up out of the ground at her feet as she spread her
arms wide, growing into a geyser of power and light and music that surrounded
her and permeated her until all she could see and hear and feel was the light
and the force. She felt the power fill her mind and give her soul great wings
of fire—
It was sundown when she stepped back through the door; Tarma had
plainly expected her to be exhausted, and was openly astonished to see that she
wasn't.
"It worked," she said with quiet rapture, still held by
the lingering exaltation—and just a little giddy with the intoxication of all
that power flowing through her.
"It did?" Tarma asked, eyebrows arching toward her
hairline, as Jadrek and Roald approached with avid curiosity plain on their
faces.
"I'll prove it to you." Kethry cupped her hands
together, concentrating on the space enclosed there. When the little wisp of
roseate force she called into her hands had finished whirling and settled into
a steady glow, she began whispering to it, telling it gently what she asked of
it in the ancient language of the White Winds sorcerers.
While she chanted, Stefansen and Mertis joined the little group,
surrounding Kethry on all sides. She just smiled and nodded, and continued
whispering to her sorcerous "captive."
Then she let it go, with joy, as a child releases a butterfly, and
no longer with the wrench of effort the illusion-spell used to cause her. She
was an Adept now, and forces that she had been incapable of reaching were hers
to command from this moment on. Not carelessly, no—and not casually—but never
again, unless she chose to, would she need to exhaust her own strength to cast
a spell. With such energies at her command, the illusion-spell was as easy as
lighting a candle.
The faintly glowing globe floated toward Tarma, who watched it with
eyes gone round in surprise. The Shin'a'in's eyes followed it, although the
rest of her remained absolutely motionless, as the powerglobe rose over her
head.
Then it thinned into a faint, rosy mist, and settled over the
swordswoman like a veil.
The veil clung to her for a moment, hiding everything but a vague
shape within its glowing, cloudy interior. Then it was gone.
And where Tarma had been, there stood a young man, of no
recognizable racial type. He had a harsh, stubborn, unshaven face, marked with
two scars, one running from his right cheek to his chin, the other across his
left cheek. His nose had been broken in several places, and had not healed
straight at any time. His hair was dirty brown, shoulderlength, and curled; his
eyes were muddy green. He was at least a handsbreadth taller than Tarma had
been, and correspondingly broader in the shoulders. And that was a new thing
indeed, for before this Kethry had never been able to change size or general
shape in her illusion spells. Even Tarma's clothing had changed, from her
Shin'a'in Kal'enedral silks, to rough homespun and tattered leather. The only
similarity between Tarma and this man was that both carried their swords slung
across their backs.
"Bright Havens," breathed Roald. "How did
you do that?"
Tarma studied her hands and arms, wonder in her un-Tarmalike eyes.
Tiny scars made a lacework of white across the hands and as far up the arms as
could be seen beneath the homespun sleeves. They were broad, strong hands, and
as dissimilar to Tarma's fine-boned, long ones as could be imagined.
Kethry smiled. "Magic," she said.
"And how do you keep Char's mages from seeing that
magic?" Stephansen asked.
Kethry just smiled a little more. "What else? More
magic. The spell only an Adept can control, the spell that makes magic
undetectable and invisible even to the best mage-sight."
Tarma was back to looking like herself again, and feeling a good
deal happier as a result, as they rode out the next morning. Jadrek had his own
horse now, a gentle palfrey that had belonged to Mertis, a sweet-tempered bay
gelding with a gait as comfortable as any beast Tarma had ever encountered. He
also had some better medicines; more effective and far less dangerous than his
old, courtesy of a Valdemaren Healer Roald brought to the lodge himself after
Jadrek had had a particularly bad night.
Kethry had augmented the protection of his traveling cloak with
another spell she had not been able to cast until she reached Adept level.
Jadrek would ride warm now no matter what the weather.
Tarma had turned down Kethry's offer to do the same for her; she
wanted no spells on her that might betray her to a magic-sniffing mage if she
needed to go scouting. But Roald had managed to round up enough cold-weather
gear for all of them to keep them protected even without spellcasting. They
were far better prepared this time for their journey as they rode away from the
lodge on a clear, sparkling dawn just before Midwinter.
They felt—and to some extent, acted—like adolescents on holiday.
If the weather turned sour, they simply put up their little tent, Kethry cast a
jesto-vath on it, and they whiled
away the time talking. When the weather was fair, while they never completely
dropped vigilance, they tended to rely mostly on Warrl's senses while they enjoyed
the view and the company. Beneath their ease was the knowledge that this
"holiday" would be coming to an end once they broke out of the Comb,
and there was a definite edge of "cherish the moment while you have
it" to their cheer.
An ice storm had descended on them, but you'd never have known it
inside their little tent. Outside the wind howled—inside it was as warm as
spring sunshine. This was a far cry from the misery of their earlier journey on
this same path.
Jadrek was still not capable of sitting cross-legged on the tent
floor the way the two women were doing, but they'd given him more than enough
room to stretch out, and the bedrolls and packs to use as cushioning and props,
and he was reasonably comfortable.
Better than I've been in ages, he thought wonderingly. Better than—than since I took that
fever as a child, and started having trouble with my poor bones afterward.
That's been twenty, almost thirty years....
He watched his quest companions through slitted, sleepy eyes,
marveling how close he had come to them in the space of a few short weeks. Tarma—the
strong arm, so utterly without a conscience when it comes to certain choices.
Brave, Lady bless, braver than anyone I could have imagined. As honor-bound as
anyone I know. The outside, so cold—the inside, so warm, so caring. I'm not
surprised, really, that once she and Roald got the measure of each other, they
hit it off so well that they began calling each other "Darksib" and
"Brightsib." There's a great deal about her that is like the Heralds
I've known.
The kyree at Tarma's
back sighed, and flicked his tail.
Warrl—if for no other reason than to have come to know something
about his kind, I'd treasure this quest. If all kyree are like him, I don't wonder that
they have little to do with humankind. There aren't many around like Tarma, and
I can't imagine Warrl mind-mating to anyone that didn't have her sense of honor
and her profound compassion.
Kethry was unbraiding and combing out her amber hair; it caught
the light of the jesto-vath on the
tent walls and glowed with the warmth of a young sun. Jadrek felt his heart
squeeze. Keth, Kethry, Kethryveris—lady, lady, how is it you make me feel
like a stripling again? And I have no hope, no right to feel this way about
you. When this mad scheme of ours is over, some stalwart young warrior will
come, and your eyes and heart will kindle, and he'll carry you off. And I'll
never see you again. Why should you find a mind attractive enough to put up
with a crippled, aging body? I'm half again your age—why is it that when we're
talking you make me feel no age at all? Or every age? How is it that you
challenge my mind as well as my heart? How did you make me come alive again?
He stifled a sigh. Enjoy it while it lasts, old man, he
told himself, trying not to be too bitter about it. The end is coming all
too soon.
As it happened, the end came sooner than they had anticipated.
Kethry frowned, and broke off her teasing in mid-sentence.
"Keth?" Tarma asked, giving Ironheart the signal to
slow.
"There's—oh Windborn! I thought I'd thrown that bastard
off!" Kethry looked angry—and frightened. A gust of wind pulled her hood
off and she didn't even bother to replace it.
"The mage," Tarma guessed, as Jadrek brought his horse
up alongside theirs.
"The mage. He's better than I thought. He's waiting for us,
right where the path breaks out of the hills."
"Ambush?"
Kethry frowned again, and closed her eyes, searching the site with
mage-senses. "No," she said finally. "No, I don't think so. He's
just—waiting. In the open. And he's got all his defenses up. He's challenging
me."
Tarma swore. "And no way past him, as he probably damn
well knows."
Kethry looked at her soberly, reining in Hellsbane.
"She'enedra, you
aren't going to like this—"
"Probably not; what if we charge him? You mages seem to have
a problem with physical opposition to magical defenses."
"On that narrow path? He could take us all. And in no way are
we going to be able to sneak past him, not with Jadrek. I'm going to have to
challenge him to a duel arcane."
"What?"
"He's an Adept, I can tell that from here. If I issue Adept's
challenge he'll have to answer it, or lose his status."
"And you've been Adept how long? He'll eat you for
lunch!"
"Better he eats me alone than all of us. We can't just think
of ourselves now, Stefan is depending on us. If—Tarma, he won't take me without
a fight, and if I go down, it won't be alone. You can find another mage to
disguise you. Once we get into Rethwellan, I become the superfluous member of
the party."
"You're not going down!" Tarma choked, as Jadrek
tightened his mouth into a thin line.
"I don't plan on it," Kethry said wryly. "I'm just
telling you what to do if it happens. Contract, my love."
Tarma's face went cold and expressionless; her heart stopped.
"This is professional, right?" They lived by the mercenary code and
would die by it, probably—and by that code, you didn't argue with the terms or
the contract once you'd agreed to it.
Kethry nodded. "This is the job we've contracted for. We're
not being paid in money—"
"But we've got to do our jobs." Tarma nodded. "You
win. I stopped trying to keep you wrapped in wool a long time ago; I'm not
going to start up again. Let's do it." And she kicked Ironheart into a
canter, with Kethry, Warrl and Jadrek following behind.
I've got to do this, Kethry thought, countering her fear with determination. If I
don't, he'll kill them. I might escape, but I could never shield all four of
us, not even at Adept level. I haven't tapped into enough of the shielding
spells to know how, yet. But he doesn't know I'm Adept, and there aren't that
many White Winds mages around. I might well be able to surprise him with a
trick or two.
She kicked Hellsbane and sent her galloping past Tarma, up the
slope of the barren hill before them, knowing that she would have to
reach the waiting magician first and issue her challenge before he caught sight
of the others. Otherwise he would blast first, and ask questions after.
Her move took both Tarma and the mage by surprise, for she was
able to top the rise and send up the challenge signal before either Tarma or
her foe had a chance to react.
The mage waiting below her was one of the ones she'd seen
wandering about Raschar's court; a thin man, dark of hair and eye. He was
clean-shaven, which made it all the easier to note his sardonic expression, and
he wore his hair loose and shoulder length. Now he wore his mage-robes;
whatever his school was, it was one Kethry didn't recognize. The robes were a
dull red, and banded and embroidered in dark brown. Like hers, they were split
front and back for ease in riding. The chestnut gelding he straddled appeared
tired and drained, and stood quietly with head down as he sat with his reins
loose.
"A challenge?" he called incredulously. "You'd
challenge me? Why in the Names of the Seven should I even bother with
you, girl?"
As answer, she called up her Adept Manifestation. From her body
rose the misty golden form of a hawk, twenty feet tall, with fiery wings; a
hawk that mantled at him and opened its beak in a silent screech of defiance.
"I challenge you, Adept to Adept," she called coldly. "You will
answer such a challenge; you have no choice."
He called up his Manifestation; a winged snake, with scales and
wing membranes that glistened in shades of green and blue. Calling it was his
formal answer to her formal challenge; now they were both bound to the duel.
"You're a fool, you know that," he said matter-of-factly,
dismounting, and letting his Manifestation fade away. "You can't have been
an Adept for very long; I've been one for ten years. You can't hope to beat
me."
By this time Tarma, Jadrek and Warrl had reached her on the crest
of the hill. Kethry unbuckled Need, feeling strangely naked without the blade,
and passed her to Tarma. "Hold her for me. Nothing's allowed in the circle
but ourselves," she said, watching as the other mage took up a stand near
the center of the tiny, barren, windswept valley and put up his half of the
magical dome that would only be dispelled by the death or defeat of one of
them. Then she allowed her Manifestation to dissipate, and leapt down from
Hellsbane's saddle, striding purposefully to take her stand opposite him.
"That remains to be seen," she answered him, locking all emotion
down, and replying with absolute calm. "So—let it begin!"
With those words, the dome of mage-power sealed, leaving the
others helpless witnesses outside.
For a long moment, the combatants stood, simply watching each
other. Tarma took advantage of the lull to order Jadrek to station himself and
Warrl on the dividing line between the two mages, and on the side of the dome
opposite hers. "Warrl has some tricks—I expect you might, too," she
said distantly, trying to think like a mage. "I don't trust this bastard
not to cheat. Well, Keth won't either; I don't doubt she's expecting something.
But if anything should happen—"
"I'll do what I can," Jadrek promised anxiously, taking
out his little bag of herbs and salt from his pocket, then replacing it.
"It—it isn't likely to be much, but—"
"Jadrek, I've seen a slung stone bring down a king." She
frowned in thought. "We should split up; if something does go bad,
you and Warrl go for Keth, I'll go for the mage. He can't know how Need works,
he can't know that in my hands she protects from sorcery. I'll be safe
from anything he can throw, and I'll keep him off your tail. Now, quick, before
they start to do anything—"
He limped to the opposite side of the dome; Tarma could see him
dimly through the red energy-haze. Warrl crouched beside him, ready to spring
in an instant.
Tarma unsheathed the bespelled sword called Need and took her own
stance; blade point down in the earth, both of her hands resting on the pommel,
feet slightly apart. She was ready.
Just in time, for within the dome of hazy red, the battle was
joined in earnest.
From the body of the stranger came a man-sized version of his
Manifestation, flying upward to the top of the dome; Kethry's met it halfway.
Serpent struck at hawk and was deflected; hawk tried to seize serpent in its
talons, but the serpent wriggled free, then the snake tried to wrap itself
around the hawk's body and neck. The hawk struck with beak and talon; the
serpent let go. Both buffeted each other with punishing wing-blows. The battle
rained glowing scales, feathers, and droplets of fluid, all of which vanished
before they touched the ground.
Both Manifestations froze for an instant, then plummeted
groundward; hawk with eyes glazing and fang marks in its chest, serpent with
one wing ripped from its body.
Both thinned to mist and were gone before either struck the
ground. Round one: a draw, Tarma thought to herself, shifting her weight
to relieve muscles that had tensed, and feeling a tiny pebble roll out from
under her foot.
Within the dome appeared two smaller domes, each covering a mage.
Then all the fury of all the lightning storms Tarma had ever witnessed rolled
into one broke loose within the greater dome. Lightning struck again and again
on the two shields, seeking weak spots; it crawled over the surface of the
little domes or rolled itself into balls that circled the perimeters without
finding entrance. And all in complete silence; that was the truly frightening
and eerie part. Tarma's eyes were dazzled to the point of having trouble seeing
when the lightning finally died to nothing, and the lesser domes vanished. As
Tarma blinked away the spots interfering with her vision, she tried to assess
the condition of both Kethry and her erstwhile rival. They both seemed equally
tired.
Round two; another draw.
Kethry might have looked tired, but she also looked slightly pleased.
Maybe a draw is good—Warrior bless, I hope so—
Even more encouraging, the other mage looked slightly worried.
Kethry initiated the next round; throwing (literally) daggers of
light at the red-robed sorcerer, daggers which he had to deflect, dodge, or absorb.
He returned in kind, but he was not as good in this contest as Kethry; his
blades tended to go awry. Hers never failed to reach their mark, and frequently
hit.
Where they hit, they left real wounds, wounds that smoked and
bled. The red mage managed to keep from being hit anywhere vital, but the
daggers were taking a steady toll.
After being hit one too many times, he suddenly threw up his
hands, and a wall of flame sprang up in front of him, a wall that devoured the
daggers when they reached it.
The fire grew until it reached the top of the dome, cutting him
off from Kethry. Arms of flame began to lick from the wall, reaching toward
her.
Fighting fire with fire might not work, here, Keth, Tarma thought, biting her lip a little. You
could both end up scorched by your own powers—
But Kethry chose not to fight with fire, but with air; a
whirlwind, a man-high tornado of milky white sprang up in front of her, sucking
in those reaching arms of flame. And every time it ate one of those arms, it
grew a little larger. Finally, it reached nearly to the top of the dome—and it
began to move on the red-robed mage and his fiery protective wall.
Star-Eyed! If it got bigger just by eating a couple of licks of
flame, what'll it do when it hits the fire-mother?
Evidently the same thought occurred to the mage, for his eyes had
gone white-rimmed with panic. He backed into the restraining wall of the
protective dome, then began shouting and waving his hands wildly.
And a twice-man-sized thing rose from the barren earth behind
Kethry.
No—oh no—that bastard, he had that thing hidden there; he's had
this planned from the start! Tarma recognized the krakash, the mage-construct, from
Jadrek's descriptions. She started to sprint for the edge of the dome, even
knowing she wouldn't be able to pass it.
Kethry turned to meet it, first making frantic motions with her
hands, then groping for a blade she did not have. The thing reached for her
with the two upper arms, missing, but raking her from neck to knee with its
outsized talons. She collapsed, clutching herself with pain; it seized her as
she fell with the lower two of its four arms. It lifted her as she fought to
get free—and broke her back across its knee, as a man would break a dry branch.
"No!"
Tarma heard her own voice, crying the word in anguish, but it
didn't seem to belong to her.
The whirlwind died to a stirring of dust on the ground; the dome
thinned to red mist, and vanished.
Tarma's mind and heart were paralyzed, but her body was not. She
reacted to the disaster as she had planned, charging the mage at a dead run,
while Jadrek sprinted fearlessly for the thing.
The startled wizard saw her coming, and threw blasts of pure
energy at her—spheres of blinding ball-lightning which traveled unerringly
toward her, hit, and did nothing, leaving not even a tingle behind as
they dissipated. The mage had just enough time to realize that she was
protected before she reached him.
While part of her sobbed with anguish, another part of her coolly
calculated, and brought Need about in a shining, swift arc, as she allowed her
momentum to carry her past him. She saw his eyes, filled with fear, saw his
hands come up in a futile attempt to deflect the sword—then felt the shock
along the blade as she neatly beheaded him, a tiny trail of blood-droplets
streaming behind the point of the sword as it finished its arc.
Before his body had hit the ground she whirled and made for
Jadrek, cursing the fate that had placed mage and construct so many paces
apart. The old man hadn't a chance.
As she ran, she could see that the Archivist had something in his
hands. He ducked under the grasp of the horrid creature's upper two arms with
an agility Tarma never dreamed to see in him. And with the courage she had
known he possessed, came up in the thing's face, casting one handful of powder
into its eyes and the second into its mouth.
The thing emitted a shriek that pierced Tarma's ears—
Then it crumbled into a heap of dry earth before she had made more
than a dozen steps in its direction. As it disintegrated, it dropped Kethry
into the brown dust like a broken, discarded toy.
Tarma flung herself down on her knees at Kethry's side, and tried
to stop the blood running from the gashes the thing's talons had left.
Uselessly—for Kethry was dying even as she and the Archivist knelt in the dust
beside her.
Jadrek made a choking sound, and took Kethry into his arms,
heedless of the blood and filth.
Tarma rumbled the hilt of Need into her hands, but it only slowed
the inevitable. Need could not mend a shattered spine, nor could she Heal such
ghastly wounds; all the blade could do was block the pain. It was only a matter
of time—measured in moments—before the end.
"Well..." the mage whispered, as Jadrek supported her
head and shoulders in his arms, silent tears pouring from his eyes, and sobs
shaking his shoulders. "I... always figured... I'd never... die in
bed."
Tarma clenched both of her hands around the limp ones on Need's
hilt, fiercely willing the blade to do what she knew in her heart it could not.
"Damn it, Keth—you can't just walk out on us this way! You can't
just die on us! We—" she could not say more for the tears that choked her
own throat.
"Keth—please don't; I'll do anything, take my
life, only please don't die—" Jadrek choked out, frantically.
"Don't... have much choice..." Kethry breathed, her eyes
glazing with shock, her life pumping out into the dust. "Be brave... she'enedra... finish the contract. Then
go home... make Tale'sedrin live... without me."
"No!" Tarma cried, her eyes half-blind with tears.
"No!" she wrenched her hands away, leaping to her feet.
"It's not going to end this way! Not while I'm Kal'enedral! By the
Warrior, I swear NO!"
Thrusting a blood-drenched fist at the sky, she summoned all the
power that was hers as Kal'enedral, as priestess, as Swordsworn warrior—power
she had never taken, never used. She flung back her head, and screamed a
name into the uncaring, gray sky, a name that tore her throat even as her heart
was torn.
The Warrior's Greater Name—
The harsh syllables of the Name echoed and reechoed, driving her
several paces backward, then sending her to her knees in the dust.
Then—silence. Silence as broodingly powerful as that in the eye of the
hurricane. Tarma looked up, her heart cold within her. For a moment, nothing
changed.
Then everything ceased; time stopped. The very tears
on Jadrek's cheeks froze in their tracks. Sound died, the dust on the breeze
hung suspended in little immobilized eddies.
Tarma alone could move; she got to her feet, and waited for Her—to
learn what price she would be asked to pay for the gift of Kethry's
life.
A single shaft of pure, white light lanced into the ground,
practically at Tarma's feet, accompanied by an earsplitting shriek of tortured
air. Tarma did not turn her eyes away, though the light nearly blinded her and
left her able to see nothing but white mist for long moments. When the mist
cleared from her vision, She was standing where the light had been, Her face
utterly still and expressionless, Her eyes telling Tarma nothing.
They faced one another in silence for long moments, the Goddess
and her votary. Then She spoke, Her voice still melodious; but this time, the
music was a lament.
*That you call My Name can mean only that you seek a life,
jel'enedra,* She said. *The
giving of a life—not the taking.*
"As is my right as Kal'enedral," Tarma replied, quietly.
*As is your right,* She agreed. *As it is My right to ask a sacrifice of you for
that life.*
Now Tarma bowed her head and closed her eyes upon her tears, for
she could not bear to look upon that face, nor to see the shattered wreck that
had been her dearest friend lying beyond. "Anything," she whispered
around the anguish.
*Your own life? The future of Tale'sedrin? Would you release
Kethry from her vow if I demanded it and have Tale'sedrin become a Dead Clan?*
"Anything." Tarma defiantly raised her head
again, and spoke directly to those star-strewn eyes, pulling each of her words
out of the pain that filled her heart. "Keth—she's worth more to me than
anything. Ask anything of me; take my body, make me a cripple, take my Fife,
even make Tale'sedrin a Dead Clan, it doesn't matter. Because without Kethry to
share it, none of that has any meaning for me."
She was weeping now for the first time in years; mostly when she
hurt, she just swallowed the tears and the pain, and forced herself to show an
impassive face to the world. Not now. The tears scalded her cheeks like hot
oil; she let them.
*Do you, Kal'enedral, feel so deeply, then?*
Tarma could only nod.
*It—is well,* came
the surprising answer. *And what price your obedience?*
"I put no price on obedience, I will serve You faithfully,
Lady, as I always have. Only let Kethry live, and let her thrive and perhaps
find love—and most of all, be free. That's worth anything You could ask of
me."
The Warrior regarded her thoughtfully for an eternity, measuring,
weighing.
Then—She laughed—
And as Tarma stared in benumbed shock. She held out Her hands,
palm outward, one palm facing Tarma, one Kethry. Bolts of blinding white light,
like Kethry's daggers of power, leaped from Her hands to Tarma, and to the mage
still cradled in Jadrek's arms.
Or, possibly, to the ensorcelled blade still clasped in the mage's
hands.
Tarma did not have much chance to see which, for the dagger of
light hit her full in the chest, and suddenly she couldn't hear, couldn't see,
couldn't breathe. She felt as if a giant hand had picked her up, and was
squeezing the life out other. She was blind, deaf, dumb, and made of nothing
but excruciating pain—
Only let Keth live—only let her live—and it's worth any price, any
pain—
Then she was on her hands and knees, panting with an agony that
had left her in the blink of an eye—half-sprawled in the cold dust of the
valley.
While beside her, a white-faced Jadrek cradled a dazed,
shocked—and completely Healed—Kethry. Only the tattered wreckage of her
traveling leathers and the blood pooled beneath her showed that it had not all
been some kind of nightmare.
As Tarma stared, still too numb to move, she could hear the
jubilant voice of the Warrior singing in her mind.
*It is well that you have opened your heart to the world again, My
Sword. My Kal'enedral were meant to be without desire, not without feeling.
Remember this always: to have something, sometimes you must be willing to lose
it. Love must live free, jel'enedra. Love must ever live free.*
Ten
Jadrek blinked, trying to force what he had just witnessed into
some semblance of sense. He was mortally confused.
One moment, Kethry is dying; there is no chance anyone other than a god could
survive her injuries. Then Tarma stands up and shrieks something in
Shin'a'in—and—
Kethry stirred groggily in his arms; he flushed, released her, and
helped her to sit up, trying not to stare at the flesh showing through
the rents in her leather riding clothing—flesh that had been lacerated a moment
ago.
"What... happened?" she asked weakly, eyes dazed.
"I don't really know," he confessed. And thinking: Tarma
was here, and now she's over there and I didn't see her move, I know I didn't!
Am I going mad?
Tarma got slowly to her feet, wavering like a drunk, and staggered
over to them; she looked drained to exhaustion, her face was lined with pain
and there were purplish circles beneath her eyes. It looked to Jadrek as if she
was about to collapse at any moment.
For that matter, Keth looks the same, if not worse—what am I
thinking? Anything is better than being a heartbeat away from death!
Tarma fell heavily to her knees beside them, scrubbing away the
tears still marking her cheeks with the back of a dirty hand, and leaving dirt
smudges behind. She reached out gently with the same hand, and patted Kethry's
cheek. The hand she used was shaking, and with the other arm she was bracing
herself upright. "It's all right," she sighed, her voice sounding raw
and worn to a thread. "It's all right. I did something—and it worked.
Don't ask what. Bright Star, I am tired to death!"
She collapsed into something vaguely like a sitting position right
there in the dust beside them, head hanging; she leaned on both arms, breathing
as heavily as if she had just run an endurance race.
Kethry tried to move, to get to her feet, and fell right back into
Jadrek's willing embrace again. She held out her hand, and watched with
an expression of confused fascination as it shook so hard she wouldn't have
been able to hold a cup of water without losing half the contents.
"I feel awful—but—" she said, looking down at the shreds
of her tunic with astonishment and utter bewilderment. "How did you—"
"I said don't ask," Tarma replied, interrupting
her. "I can't talk about it. Later, maybe—not now. It—put me through more
than I expected. Jadrek, my friend—"
"Yes?"
"I'm about as much use as a week-old kitten, and Keth's worse
off than I am. I'm afraid that for once you're going to get to play man of
muscle."
She looked aside at him, and managed to muster up a half grin.
There wasn't much of it, and it was so tired it touched his heart with pity,
but it was real, and that comforted him.
Whatever has happened, she knows exactly what she's doing, and it
will be all right.
"Tell me what you want me to do," he said, trying to
sound just as confident.
:There's still myself,: Warrl's dry voice echoed in their
thoughts. :I have no hands, but I can be of some help.:
"Right you are, Furface. Oh gods," Tarma groaned as she
got back up to her knees, and took Kethry's chin in her hand, tilting it up
into the light. Jadrek could see that Kethry's pupils were dilated, and that
she wasn't truly seeing anything. "What I thought—Keth, you're
shocky. Fight it, love. Jadrek and Warrl are going to find some place for us to
hole up for a while." Tarma transferred her hold to Kethry's shoulder and
shook her gently. "Answer me, Keth."
"Gods—" Kethry replied, distantly. "And
sleep?"
"As soon as we can. Fight, she'enedra."
"I'll... try."
"Warrl, get the horses over here, would you? Jadrek, you're
going to have to help Keth mount. She's got no more bones right now than a
sponge." He started to protest, but she cut him off with a weary wave of
her hand. "Not to worry, our ladies are battlemares and they know the
drill. I'll get them to lie down, you watch what I do, then give Keth a hand,
and steady her as they get up. No lifting, just balancing. Hai?"
"As long as I'm not going to have to fling her into the
saddle," he replied, relieved, "I don't see any problem."
"Good man," she approved. "Next thing—Warrl will go
looking for shelter; I want something more substantial than the tent around us
tonight. You'll have to stay with us, keep Keth in her seat. I'll be all right,
I've ridden semiconscious for miles when I've had to. When Warrl finds us a
hole, you'll have to help us off, and do all the usual camp duties."
"No problem there, either; I'm a lot more trail wise than I
was before this trip started." Aye, and sounder in wind and limb, too.
Warrl appeared, the reins of Jadrek's palfrey in his mouth, the
two battlemares following without needing to be led. Jadrek watched as Tarma
gave her Ironheart a command in Shin'a'in, and was astounded to see the mare
carefully fold her long legs beneath her and sink to the dusty ground,
positioning herself so that she was lying within an arm's length of the
exhausted swordswoman. Tarma managed to clamber into the saddle, winding up
kneeling with her legs straddling the mare's back. She gave another command,
and the mare slowly lurched to her feet, unbalanced by the weight of the rider,
but managing to compensate for it. Tarma glanced over at Jadrek, "Think
you can deal with that?"
"I think so."
Tarma repeated her command to Hellsbane; the second mare did
exactly as her herd-sister had. Jadrek helped Kethry into the same position
Tarma had taken, feeling her shaking from head to toe every time she had to
move. Tarma gave the second command, and the mare staggered erect, with Jadrek
holding Kethry in the saddle the whole time.
Warrl flicked his tail, and Jadrek felt a wave of approval from
the kyree. :I go. packmates. You
go on—it were best you removed yourselves from the scene of combat.:
"Spies?" Jadrek asked aloud.
:Possible. Also things that feed on magic, and more ordinary
carrion eaters. Shall we take the enemy beast?:
Tarma looked over her shoulder at the weary gelding, which was
still where the mage had left it, off to one side of the trail. "I don't
think so," she replied after a moment. "It's just short of foundering.
Jadrek, could you strip it? Leave the harness, bring anything useful you find
in the packs, then let the poor thing run free."
He did as she asked; once free of saddle and bridle the beast
seemed to take a little more interest in life and moved off at a very slow
walk, heading deeper into the hills. Warrl trotted down the trail, and vanished
from sight once past the place where it exited the valley. Jadrek mounted his
own palfrey with a grunt of effort, and rode it in close beside Kethry, so that
he could steady her from the side.
"You ready, wise brother?" Tarma asked.
"I think so. And not feeling particularly wise."
"Take lead then; my eyes keep fogging. Ironheart knows to
follow her sister."
They headed out of the little valley, and the trail became much
easier; the hills now rolling rather than craggy, and covered with
winter-killed grass. But after a few hundred feet it became obvious that their
original plan wasn't going to work. Kethry kept drifting in and out of
awareness, and sliding out of her saddle as she lost her hold on the world.
Every time she started to fall, Jadrek had to rein in both Hellsbane and his
palfrey to keep her from falling over. The gaits and sizes of the two horses
just weren't evenly matched enough that he could keep her steady while riding.
He finally pulled up and dismounted, walking stiffly back toward
the drooping Shin'a'in. Tarma jerked awake at the sound of his footsteps.
"What? Jadrek?" she said, shaking her head to clear it.
He looked measuringly at her; she looked awake enough to think.
"If I tethered Vega's reins to the back of your saddle, would that bother
'Heart?" he asked.
"No, not 't all" Tarma replied, slurring her words a
little. "She's led b'fore. Why?"
"Because this isn't going to work; I'm going to put the packs
on Vega and ride double with Keth, the way you carried me up here, only with me
keeping her on."
Tarma managed a tired chuckle. "Dunno why I didn' think of
that. Too... blamed... tired...."
She dozed off as Jadrek made the transfer of the packs, then put a
long lead-rein on Vega's halter and fastened it to the back of Tarma's saddle.
He approached Hellsbane with a certain amount of trepidation, but the mare gave
him a long sniff, then allowed him to mount in front of Kethry with no
interference—although with his stiff joints, swinging his leg over 'Bane's neck
instead of her back wasn't something he wanted to repeat if he had any choice.
He would have tried to get up behind Kethry, but he wasn't sure he could get
her to shift forward enough, and he wasn't certain he'd be able to stick on the
battlemare's back if she broke into anything other than a walk. So instead he
brought both of Kethry's arms around his waist, and loosely tied her wrists
together. She sighed and settled against his shoulder as comfortably as if it
were a pillow in her own bed.
He rather enjoyed the feeling of her snuggled up against his back,
truth be told.
He nudged Hellsbane into motion again, and they continued on down
the trail. The sky stayed gray but showed no signs of breaking into rain or
sleet, and there was no hint of a change in the weather on the sterile, dusty
air. The horses kept to a sedate walk, Tarma half-slept, and Kethry was so limp
he was certain she was completely asleep. It was a little frightening, being
the only one of the group still completely functional. He wasn't used to having
people rely on him. It was exciting, in an uneasy sort of way, but he
wasn't sure that he liked that kind of excitement.
Warrl returned from time to time, always with the disappointing
news that he hadn't found anything. Jadrek began to resign himself to either
riding all night—and hoping that there wasn't going to be another storm—or
trying to put up the tent by himself. But about an hour before sunset, the kyree came trotting back with word that
he'd found a shepherd's hut, currently unused. Jadrek set Hellsbane to
following him off the track, and Ironheart followed her without Tarma ever
waking.
She did come to herself once they'd stopped, and she seemed a bit
less groggy. She got herself dismounted without his help, got their bedrolls
off Vega, and carried them inside with her. She actually managed to get their
bedding set up while Jadrek slid the half-conscious mage off her horse, then
assisted her to stagger inside, and laid her down on the bedding. With a bit of
awkwardness at the unaccustomed tasks, he got the horses bedded down in a shed
at the side of the little building.
By the time he'd finished, Kethry was sound asleep in her bedroll,
and Tarma was crawling into her own. "Can't... keep my eyes open..."
she apologized.
"Then don't try, I can do what's left." I think,
he added mentally.
But his trail skills had improved; he managed to get a fire
going in the firepit, thought about making supper, and decided against it,
opting for some dried beef and trail biscuit instead. With the fire dimly
illuminating their shelter, he made a quick inspection of the place, thinking: It
would be my luck to come upon a nest of hibernating snakes.
But he round nothing untoward; in fact, it was a very well built
shelter, with stone walls, a clean dirt floor, and a thatched roof. It was a
pity it didn't have a real fireplace—a good half of the smoke from the fire was
not finding the smokehole in the center of the roof, and his eyes were
watering a bit—but it was clean, and dry, and now growing warm from the fire.
He watched the moving shadows cast by the fire onto the wall,
chewed the leathery strip of jerky, and tried to sort himself out.
Warrl came in once to tell him that he'd hunted and eaten, and was
going to stand guard outside; after that, he was alone.
What kind of a fool have I shown myself to be? he thought, still confused by the events
of the last few hours. Did anyone even notice?
He watched Kethry as she slept, feeling both pleasure and pain in
the watching. How much did Tarma see? Gods above, I'm afraid. I've gone and
fallen in love, like a greensick fool. At my age I should bloody well know
better.
Still—given the state they'd all been in—
Tarma probably hadn't been in a condition to notice much of
anything except her oathsister's plight.
And I would give a great deal to know how she managed to bring
Kethry back from Death's own arms. Because she's as much as admitted it was all
her doing. And I can only wonder what it cost her besides strength and
energy—maybe that's why she didn't want to talk about it. Still and all, she
really isn't acting as if it cost her nearly as much as if whatever had
happened shook her down to her soul. I think perhaps she learned something she
didn't expect to. Whatever it was—I think perhaps the outcome is going to be a
good one. She almost seems warmer somehow. More open. Would she ever have put
all her safety and Keth's in my hands before? I—I don't think so.
He stretched, taking pleasure in the feel of joints that weren't
popping, and bones that didn't creak. He was sore from the unaccustomed work,
but not unbearably so.
Although—Lady of Light, I've been working like a porter all
afternoon, and not had so much as a twinge in the old bones! Now was that just because
I was keyed up, or was it something else? Well, I'll know tomorrow. If I ache
from head to toe, I'll know I was not privileged to be the recipient of a
miracle!
And meanwhile—the fire needs feeding.
So he watched Kethry, huddled in his own blankets while he fed the
fire, and waited for the morning.
Carter's Lane in the capital city of Petras was living up to its
name, even this close to the time for the evening meal. The street was wide
enough for four wagons moving two abreast in each direction, and all four lanes
were occupied by various vehicles now. The steady rumbling of wheels on
cobblestones did not drown out the equally steady hum of voices coming from all
sides. Carter's Lane boasted several popular taverns and drinkshops, not the
least popular of which was the Pig and Potion. This establishment not only had
an excellent cook and an admirable brewmaster, but in addition offered various
forms of accommodation—ranging from single cubbyholes (with bed) that rented by
the hour, to rooms and suites of rooms available by the week or month.
It was from the window of one of the latter sorts of lodging that
a most attractive young wench was leaning, her generous figure frequently
taking the eyes of the cart drivers from their proper work. She was, in fact,
the inadvertent cause of several tangles of traffic. She paid this no heed, no
more than she did the equally persistent calls of admiration or inquiries as to
her price. She was evidently watching for something—or someone.
And to the great disappointment of her admirers, she finally
spotted what she watching for.
"Arton!" the brown-haired, laughing-eyed wench called
from her second-floor window. "I've waited days for you, you
ungrateful beast!"
"Now, Janna—" The scar-faced fighter who emerged from
the crowd to stand on the narrow walkway beneath her looked to be fully capable
of cutting his way out of any fracas—except, perhaps, this one.
"Don't you 'now, Janna,' me, you brute!" She
vanished from the window only to emerge from a door beside it. The door let
onto a balcony and the balcony gave onto a set of stairs that ran down the
outside of the inn. Janna clattered down these stairs as fast as her feet could
take her. "You leave me here all alone, and you never come
to see me, and you never send me word, and—"
"Enough, enough!" the warrior begged, much to the
amusement of the patrons of the inn. "Janna, I've been busy."
"Oh, busy! Indeed, I can guess how busy!"
She confronted him with her eyes narrowed angrily, standing on the last two
stairs so that her eyes were level with his. Her hands were on her hips, and
she thrust her chin forward stubbornly, not at all ready to make peace.
"Give 'im a rest, lass," called another fighter lounging
at an outside table, one wearing the same scarlet-and-gold livery as Arton.
"King's nervy; keeps 'im on 'and most of th' time. 'E 'as been
busy."
"Oh, well then," the girl said, seeming a bit more
mollified. "But you could have sent word."
"I'm here now, aren't I?" he grinned, with just a touch
of arrogance. "And we ought to be making up for lost time, not wrangling
in the street."
"Oh—Oh!" She squealed in surprise as he picked
her up, threw her over his shoulder, and carried her up the stairs.
He pulled the door open; closed it behind him.
Silence.
One of the serving girls paused in her distribution of ale mugs,
sighed, and made calf eyes at the closed door. "Such a man. Wisht I
'ad me one like 'im."
"Spring is aborning, and young love with it," intoned a
street minstrel, hoping that the buxom server would take notice of him.
"Young lust, you mean, rhymester," laughed the
second fighter. "Arton's no fool. That's a nice little piece he brought
with him out of the country—and cheap at the price of a room, a bit of feeding,
and a few gewgaws. One of these days I may go see if she's got a sister who
wants to leave the cowflops for the city."
"If you can get any girl to look at your ugly
face," sneered a third.
The mutter of good-natured wrangling carried as far as the
second-floor room, where the young fighter had collapsed into a chair,
groaning. The room's furnishings were simple; a bed, a table, a wardrobe and
three chairs.
And an enormous wolflike creature on the hearth.
"Warrior's Oath, Keth—you might make yourself lighter
next time!" the warrior groaned. "My poor back!"
"If I'd known you were going to play border-bridegroom, I'd
have helped you out, you idiot!" the brown-haired girl retorted, closing
the shutters of the room's single window, then snatching a second chair and
plopping down into it. "Tarma, where the hell have you been these past few
days? A note of three words does not suffice to keep me from having
nervous prostrations."
:I told you she was all right,: the kyree sniffed. :But you wouldn't believe me.:
"Warrl's right, Keth. I figured that he'd tell you if anything
was wrong, so I wasn't going to jeopardize my chances by doing something
marginally out of character. And I've been busy, as I said," Tarma
replied, rubbing her eyes. "Damn, can't you do something about the way
these spells of yours make my eyes itch?"
"Sorry; not even an Adept can manage that."
Tarma sighed. "Char has gotten the wind up about
something—maybe he's even getting some rumors about our work, who knows?
Anyway, he's been keeping me with him day and night until I could find somebody
he trusts as much as me to spell me out. How is the conspiracy business
going?"
Kethry smiled, and ran her hands through her hair. "Better
than we'd hoped, in a lot of ways. Jadrek will be giving me the signal as soon
as he's done with his latest client, so why don't we save our news until we're
all together?"
"Fine by me; I don't suppose you've got anything to eat
around here?"
"Why? Don't they feed you at the palace?"
"Having gotten leave to go, I wasn't about to stick around
and maybe get called back just so I could feed my face," Tarma retorted.
Kethry raised one eyebrow. "Char's that nervy?"
Tarma spotted half a loaf of bread and a chunk of cheese on the
table behind Kethry and reached forward to seize both. "He's that
nervy," she agreed, slicing bits off the cheese with her belt-knife and
alternating those tidbits with hearty bites of bread. She would have said more,
but a gentle tapping came from the wall. Kethry jumped up out of her chair and
faced the wall, holding both palms at shoulder height and facing it. The wall
itself blurred for a little, then the door that had been hidden by Kethry's
illusion swam into view. Jadrek pushed it open and stepped into the room.
There had not been a door there when they'd taken these two rooms;
Jadrek's suite opened only into the inn, and Kethry's had two doors, the
exterior and one like Jadrek's, opening on the inn corridor. But what could be
done by hands could also be done by magic, and within one day of Kethry's
taking possession of this room, she had made, then concealed, the door in their
common wall. It was a real door and not a magic portal, just in case Jadrek
ever needed to make use of it when Kethry was not present, for Kethry had set
the spell of concealment so that he controlled it on his side of the wall.
"And how does the Master Astrologer?" asked Tarma,
genially.
"Better than when he was Master Archivist," Jadrek
chuckled. "I think I shall have Stefan find a successor. Astrology is a
more lucrative profession!"
"Why am I not surprised?" Tarma asked sardonically.
"Gentle lies always cost more than the truth. I take it none of your
'clients' have recognized you?"
"It wouldn't be likely," he replied mildly, taking the
third, unoccupied seat around the little table. "Most of my 'clients' are
merchants' wives. When would of them have seen the Court
Archivist?"
"Or given your notable ability to fade into the background,
noticed him if they'd seen him?" added Kethry. "All right—Tarma,
love, you first."
"Right. Jadrek, I managed to deliver all but one of your
messages; the one to Count Wulfres I left with Tindel. Wulfres wouldn't let me
get near him; I can't much blame him, since I have been building quite a
formidable reputation as Char's chief bullyboy."
"Is that why he trusts you?" Kethry asked.
"Partially. Don't worry, though. That reputation is actually
doing me more good than harm. If anyone notices when I take somebody aside for
a little chat, it doesn't do them any benefit to tell the King, because Char
assumes I'm delivering threats!" She chuckled. "Keth, that Adept we
took out was the only one Char had; the rest of his mages are Master and
Journeyman class. So don't worry about this disguise continuing to hold."
Kethry heaved a sigh of profound relief. "Thank the gods for
that. That did have me nervy. How are you getting on with Char? You said
far better than we'd hoped—"
"That's a good summation; he doesn't trust any of his
native Guards, and he doesn't trust his nobles. That leaves him with me, a
couple of other landless mercs, and a handful of outland emissaries. Since I'm
trying to give an imitation of a freefighter with a veneer of civilization and
a range of interests slightly beyond 'food, fornication and fighting,' he seems
to be gravitating more and more toward me."
"And needless to say, you're encouraging him."
:Idra taught you well,: Warrl commented. :You encourage
familiarity with the King while never going over the line of being social
inferior. That takes a delicate touch I did not suspect you had, mindmate.:
"Having you coaching me in my head hasn't hurt, Furball.
Thanks to you, I've never once been even remotely disrespectful; been pounding
heads when some of the Guards go over the line, in fact. And as a result Char's
slowly taking me as cup-companion as well as bodyguard."
"That's certainly far better than we hoped!"
Jadrek exclaimed.
"Tarma, what about Idra?" Kethry asked, both elbows on
the table, chin in her hands. She looked unwontedly sober.
Tarma sighed, and rubbed one temple. "Keth, we both know by
now she's got to be dead."
Kethry nodded, reluctantly, as Jadrek bit his lip. "I just
didn't want to be the one to say it," she replied sadly. "Need's pull
just hasn't been strong enough for her to have still been alive."
:I, too, have suspected the same.:
Tarma sighed. "I think I realized it—I mean, really believed
it—a couple of days after—" She stopped for a moment, and looked squarely
at Jadrek. He's an outClansman—she thought, weighing him in her mind.—but—why
not? No reason why he shouldn't know; if Keth has her way, he won't be an
outClansman for long. "—after I called one of the leshya'e and
got the Star-Eyed Warrior instead, that night in Valdemar. You know, the
evening when Roald and I came back as best of friends? He saw Her, too—and She
made it clear to both of us that we were all on the same side. D'you remember
how She turned the set of his Whites I was wearing black?"
Kethry nodded slowly, then real enlightenment dawned.
"Black... is for vengeance and blood feud...."
"Right," Tarma nodded. "She could have left my
clothing alone; She could have changed it to brown, if She was truly offended
at me being out of Kal'enedral colors, which I think is rather unlikely. She
doesn't get that petty. But She didn't leave the Whites white—and She'd already
convinced me that Roald and Stefansen were on the side of the righteous. She
can be very subtle when She chooses, and She was trying to give me a subtle
message, that I was back on blood-trail. So who would be the logical one for me
to avenge—and who would be the logical target for vengeance?"
"Idra—and Char."
"Right and right again. My only questions now are—was
it accident or premeditated, and how he did it." She tightened her jaw,
and felt very nearly murderous at that moment. "And the closer I get to
him, the likelier I am to find the answers to both."
She let the sentence hang for a long moment, then coughed
slightly. "Jadrek? Your turn."
"I've been approached by three of those nobles you contacted
for me, via their wives," he said, visibly shaken by Tarma's
assertions—and yet, unsurprised by them, as if her words had only confirmed
something he had known, but had not wished to acknowledge that he knew.
"They were already planning some sort of action on their own, which, given
their temperaments, was something I had thought fairly likely. In addition, I
have been approached by those I did not expect—prelates of no less than
five separate orders. It seems they had already spoken quietly with my
chosen highborn—"
"And went on to you. Logical." Tarma nodded
thoughtfully. "And what prompted their dissatisfaction?"
"Oh, a variety of causes—from the altruistic to the
realistic." He wrinkled his brow in thought. "Mind you, I don't
personally know as much about the clergy as I do the Court, but they seem to be
appropriate responses given the personalities of those I spoke with and the
philosophies of their orders."
"Huh. When we start to get clergy on our
side...." Tarma propped her feet up on the table, ignoring Kethry's frown
of disapproval, and sat in thoughtful silence for a long time. "All
right," she said, when the silence had begun to seem unbreakable,
"It's time for some hard choices, friends. We're getting the support, and
not only are we moving a bit ahead of schedule, but we're getting some
unexpected help. So which of the plans are we going to follow?"
She tilted her head at Jadrek, who pursed his lips thoughtfully.
"I'd rather not run a full-scale uprising, frankly," he said.
"It's too unwieldy for this situation, I think; your commanders really
have to be in the field for it to succeed. Tarma, you are the most militant of
us, and we need you here—so that would leave me or Kethry."
"Not me," Kethry objected. "Fighters don't like
following a mage, and I don't blame them. I'm no strategist, either."
"And I am neither fighter nor strategist," Jadrek replied.
"Stalemate," Tarma observed, flexing her shoulders to
try and relax the tense muscles there. "Not that I don't agree with you
both. Warrl?"
:I, also. It is too easy to lose a civil war.:
"All right, we're agreed that rousing the countryside is out,
then?"
The other two nodded, slowly.
"Assassination."
:That, I favor,: Warrl replied, raising his head from his
paws. :It would be an easy thing for me. Wait until he is in the garden with
a wench—over the wall—: He snapped his jaws together suggestively. :It
would give me great pleasure, and I could easily be gone before alarm could be
effective.:
"Not clear-cut enough," Jadrek asserted. "There
will always be those wanting to make a martyr out of Char. It's amazing how
saintly a tyrant becomes after he's dead. We want Stefan firmly on the
throne, or this country will be having as many problems as it already has, just
different ones."
Warrl sighed, and put his head back down.
"Sorry, mindmate—I sympathize. That leaves the small-scale
uprising; here, in the city. Can we pull that off?"
"Maybe. By Midsummer we'll have the working people solidly
behind us; those that aren't losing half their incomes to Char's taxes are
losing half their incomes because the others have less to spend," Kethry
said, nibbling at her thumbnail. "What I've been working with are the
merchants, and they are vastly discontent with the way things are going. If
there's an uprising, they will be on our side of the riot. The problem is that
these are not people used to fighting."
"Maybe not, but I'll bet most of them have a few hired
fighters each, either as guards for themselves, or for their goods," Tarma
pointed out. "If there were some way that we could promise that their
property would stay safe, I'll bet they'd turn those fighters over to us
for—say—two days. Assuming that they are professional enough to fight together
as a force instead of a gaggle of individuals."
"I'll work on that." Kethry replied.
"I suspect we'll have most of the clergy, too, by
Midsummer," Jadrek offered. "And for many of the same reasons. And I
know of at least two militant orders within the city walls. Those warriors will
fight as a single unit."
"Good. What about the highborn? Don't they have
retinues?"
Jadrek shook his head with regret. "No, not inside the city walls.
That was one of Destillion's edicts; no noble can have more than four armed
retainers when at Court. And you know the size of Char's guard
force."
"He's got a small army, not even counting his personal
guard," Tarma agreed ruefully. "Still—maybe I can come up with a
notion. I might be able to work a bit of subversion in Char's forces, who
knows? Let's stick with the local uprising plan. I think we're all agreed it's
got the best chance of success."
She swung her feet down off the table, and noticed with surprise
that the light coming through the closed shutters was red. "Damn! Sunset
already? I've got to be getting back. Char's got another drunken orgy he's
holding tonight, and wants his back safe."
Kethry mussed herself artistically, pulling one sleeve of her
blouse so far down that a generous portion of breast was exposed. She stood up
at the same moment as Tarma, followed her to the door, and let her out. For the
benefit of anyone watching, they gave a well-acted imitation of a passionate
farewell.
When Kethry finished locking the door behind Tarma, she turned to
see that Jadrek was still sitting at the table, looking broodingly at a stain
in the wood. She was not at all unhappy about that, because she had just about
decided that certain other things were going to have to come to a head—one way
or another.
"Still worried?" she asked, returning to her seat, and
reaching out to touch her index finger to the wick of the candle standing in
the middle of the table. It promptly ignited.
Jadrek had looked up as she had taken her chair, and watched her
light the candle with rapt fascination. "I never get tired of seeing you
do things like that," he said. "It's just—so—magical."
She laughed, and dispelled the illusion on herself. He relaxed
visibly.
She raised an eyebrow, and he shrugged.
"I like you better this way," he confessed shyly.
"The other—seems harder, somehow."
"Oh, she is; she's taking Arton for everything she can
get," Kethry replied.
"To answer your question—yes, I'm still worried. But I also
know that all three of us are doing the best that we can, so worrying isn't
going to make a great deal of difference, one way or the other." He stood
up, with visible reluctance. "I probably should leave you...."
"Why?" Kethry asked, frankly. "Are you expecting
anyone tonight?"
"Well, no, but—"
"Neither am I." She glanced at Warrl, who took the hint,
padding through the still-open door between their rooms, shutting it behind him
with a casual kick. Kethry moved closer to Jadrek before he could move away,
not touching him but standing so near that their faces were within inches of
each other.
"Jadrek, I want you to know that I find you very, very
attractive."
His eyes registered his complete surprise as she deliberately held
his gaze.
He licked his lips, nervously, and seemed utterly at a loss for
anything to say.
"I also want you to know that I am not a virgin, and I'm
perfectly capable of dealing with attentions that I don't welcome. You,"
she finished, "do not come under that category."
"I—you never stop surprising me. I hardly know what to
say...."
"Then don't say, do. Unless you don't find me
attractive—"
Slowly he lifted one hand, and cupped it against her face.
"Kethry—" he breathed, "Kethry, I find you very attractive.
Almost unbearably attractive. But I'm not a young man—"
She echoed his gesture, his cheek warm beneath her hand. "If
I wanted a young man, there's a tavern full downstairs. It's you I
admire, Jadrek; the mind, the person. You're something special—something those
pretty bodies downstairs aren't, and probably never will be."
Very hesitantly, he leaned forward and kissed her. She returned
the kiss as passionately as she dared, and suddenly he responded by embracing
her and prolonging the kiss until she was breathless.
When they broke apart, his gray eyes were dark with confusion.
"Kethry—"
"There are more comfortable places to be doing this,"
she said, very softly. "Over there, for one." She nodded at the
curtained bed, half-hidden in the shadows.
He blushed. He blushed even harder when she led him there by the
hand, and all but pushed him down onto it. "I—" he stammered, looking
past her, "Kethry, I'm not—very experienced at this sort of—"
"You were doing just fine a moment ago," she interrupted
him gently, then prevented further protests by embracing him and resuming the
kiss where it had been left off.
He seemed to hesitate for a moment, then seemed to make up his
mind all in an instant, and returned her embrace with a fervor that at least
equaled her own. He pulled her down beside him; she did not resist in the
least, that being exactly what she wanted from him.
For a very long time, all they did was kiss and exchange halting,
hesitant caresses, almost like a pair of naive youngsters. But when she
returned every tenderness with more of the same, he grew braver, daring to undo
the lacings of her dress, daring to touch her with fingers that slowly grew
bolder.
He frequently stopped what he was doing for long moments, just to
look at her, his eyes full of wonder, as if this was something more magical for
him than all the exercising of her powers as a sorceress. As if he couldn't
believe that she was returning touch for touch and emotion for emotion. When he
did that, she had to fight to keep back the tears of sympathy—the only way she could
was to keep a little corner of her mind free to concentrate on the hatred she
felt for the women who must have treated him with coldness or indifference, so
that this experience was such an unexpected revelation for him.
He stroked her with hands so gentle that she could hardly credit
it. He was by no means the best lover she'd ever had; he was, perhaps, a little
clumsy, and as he had confessed, not at all practiced—but his gentleness made
up for that, and more.
And besides, she rather figured that she had experience enough for
both of them.
When they finally joined together, it was like nothing she'd ever
dreamed of, for her heart was as involved in the act as her body.
"Kethry—" he whispered hoarsely as he started to sit
up—whispering into the darkness, for the candle had long since burned out. She
could hear the beginnings of an apology in his voice, and interrupted him.
"Don't you dare," she replied, reaching up for
him and pulling him toward her so that his head rested on her shoulder.
"Don't you dare spoil this with any of your nonsense about being
old!"
"Then I—didn't make a fool of myself?" he asked shyly.
"You don't want me to go?"
"You weren't making a fool of yourself any more than I
was," she told him. "If showing how you feel is so very foolish. I
don't think it is. And no, please, don't go. I want you to stay. I've
had my fill of nights spent alone."
He sighed, and relaxed into her arms. "Kethry—I care for you,
maybe more than I should."
She reached into the darkness, and brushed strands of damp hair
from his forehead. "Don't think you're alone in caring more than you
should." She let him take that in for a moment, then laughed, softly.
"Or did you think I was only after you for your book collection?"
"Gods—Keth—" He who was usually so glib was once again
at a loss for words, then he joined in her laughter. "No—I didn't; Tarma,
on the other hand—"
They held each other for another long moment, until he spoke
again. "Kethry, what we've got ahead us—"
"—makes promises foolish," she interrupted him.
"We've already made all the promises either of us dare to for now. Let's
just enjoy what times we have, and worry about staying alive, shall we?"
"That's probably wise," he replied, with a reluctance
that made her heart race.
He raised himself on his elbow for a moment, and cupped her face
in both hands, and kissed her—kissed her in a way that made his words about not
making promises a lie.
And eventually he fell asleep with his head cradled on her
shoulder.
Kethry held him, her heart full of song.
Oh Windborn, this is the one, she thought, before she joined him in slumber. He's—he's like
something I've always missed, and never known I missed it until now. But now—I
could never be content with anyone but him.
Not ever again.
Eleven
Kethry sighed, rose from her chair, and went once more to the
window. She stood there restlessly, leaning on the sill, with her chin in her
hand, watching the street below; a dark silhouette against the oranges and reds
of a spectacular sunset.
More than a hint of weariness in that sigh, Jadrek thought sympathetically, rubbing
his tired eyes. Last night was yet another late night, with both of us too
exhausted at the end of it to do anything other than sleep. Tonight looks to be
the same. There's never a moment to spare for simple things like food and
sleep, much less anything else. I want to tell her how I feel—that I—I love
her. But there never seems to be any time, much less the right time.
He studied the way she was holding herself, the sagging shoulders,
the way she kept turning her head a little to ease the stiffness he knew was in
her neck because he had loosened those muscles for her far too many times of
late. His own neck felt as stiff, and he felt echoes of those same aches in his
own shoulders. Gods. We're both tired, mentally and physically. She's spent
more hours cajoling stubborn, suspicious merchants than I care to think about;
I've spent almost the same number of hours dancing around the touchy
sensibilities of priests and highborn. Not the way I would have chosen to spend
our time, and both of us return from meetings so—completely drained. Conspiracy
is for the young. Combining it with a love affair is insanity!
Warrl gave an amused snort from where he lay curled on his chosen
spot on the hearth. :You manage well enough, wise one,: the rough voice
in Jadrek's mind said.
That is solely, I suspect, because our opportunities have numbered
far less than our wishes,
Jadrek thought at him, feeding a little more revived just by the casual contact
with the kyree's lively mind. I
fear that even the supposed wisdom of accumulated years fails to keep my desire
from outstripping my capabilities. The only difference between my youth and my
age is that now I am not ashamed to admit the fact.
The kyree snorted
contemptuously again, but Jadrek ignored him and continued. Furthermore, I
shudder to think what Tarma is likely to say about this liaison when she learns
of it.
:You know less about her than you think,: was the kyree's enigmatic reply. Suddenly the
great beast raised his head, and stared in the direction or the palace. :A
message—:
"What?" Jadrek asked aloud, as Kethry turned to look
sharply at the lupine creature.
:Tarma sends her regrets, but Char requires her presence, and
she seems to think that the tran-dust he intends to abuse this evening
might make him talkative. Needless to say, she does not intend to miss her
opportunity.: The kyree turned
warm and glowing eyes on the Archivist. :She asks me to come to the stable
at dark, so that she can return here afterward without worrying about spies on
her backtrail. I would suggest, given your earlier plaint about not having any
time to yourselves, that you might take advantage of the occasion that has been
presented to you... unless you have other plans.:
Jadrek nearly choked on a laugh at Kethry's indignant blush.
"I think we can find some way of filling in the time,"
he said aloud, as she glared at both of them.
* * *
The hour grew late; the candle burned down to a stub, and Kethry
replaced it—and still no sign of Tarma. Jadrek regretted—more than once—that
his ability to communicate with Warrl was sharply limited by distance.
Kethry suddenly dropped the candle end she was about to discard,
and her whole body tensed.
"What?" Jadrek asked, anxiously, wondering if she had
sensed some sort of occult probing in their direction.
"It's—anger," she replied, distantly. "Terrible,
terrible anger. I've never felt anything like this in her before."
"Her? Her who?" She didn't answer him, and he said, a
little more sharply. "Who, Keth? Keth?"
She shook her head as if to clear it, and resumed her seat at the
table, but he could see that her hands were trembling before she clasped them
in front of her on the table to conceal the fact.
"Keth?" he repeated gently, but insistently.
"It's—it's the she'enedran bond between us," she
said at last. "We each can feel things the other does, sometimes. Jadrek,
she's in a killing rage; she's just barely keeping herself under control! And I
can't tell why."
She looked up at him, and he could see fear, the mirror to his
own, in her eyes. "I've never felt anything like this out of her; she's
usually so controlled, even when I'm ready to spit nails. It has to be
something Char said or did—but what could bring her to the brink like
this? There's enough rage resonating down the bond that I'm half
prepared to go kill something!"
"I don't know," he said slowly. "And I'm almost
afraid to find out."
They stared at each other helplessly, until finally he reached out
and laid his hand over her clenched ones, offering what little comfort he had
to give.
After that, it was just the deadly waiting.
Finally, after both of them had fretted themselves into a state of
nervous exhaustion, they heard Warrl's nails clicking on the wooden steps
outside. Tarma's presence was revealed only by the creaking of the two trick
boards, one in the fifth step, one in the eighth—otherwise she never made a
sound. Kethry jumped to her feet, ran to the door and flung it open.
Tarma/Arton stood in the light streaming from the door, so very
still that for a moment Jadrek wasn't entirely certain she was breathing. She
remained in the doorway for a long, long moment, her face utterly
expressionless—except for the eyes, which burned with a rage so fierce Kethry
stepped back an involuntary pace or two.
Warrl came up from behind her and nudged Tarma's hand with his
nose; only then did she seem to realize where she was, and walk slowly inside,
stopping only when she came to the table.
She did not take a seat as she usually did; she continued to
stand, half-shrouded in shadows, and looked from Jadrek to Kethry and back
again. Finally she spoke.
"I've found out what happened to Idra."
"...so once Char had downed a full bottle of brandy to
enhance the tran, he'd gotten himself into a mood where he was
talkative, but wasn't really thinking about what he was saying."
Kethry tensed, feeling Tarma's anger burning within her, a
half-mad fire at the pit of her stomach.
Tarma spoke in a tonelessly deadly voice, still refusing to seat
herself. "Alcohol and tran have that effect in combination—connecting
the mind to the mouth without letting the intellect have any say in what comes
out. And as I'd been hoping, his suspicious nature kept him from wanting to
confide in any of his courtiers. And there was good old Arton, so sympathetic,
so reliable, always dependable. So he threw his rump-kissers out, and began
telling me how everybody abused him, everybody turned on him. Especially his
sister."
She shifted her weight a little; the floorboard creaked beneath
her, and Kethry could feel the anger rising up her spine. Channel that—she
told herself, locking her will into Adept's discipline. There's enough pure
rage here to bum half the city down, if you channel it. Use the anger—don't
let it use you!
With that invocation of familiar discipline came a certain amount
of relief; the fires were partially contained, harvested against future need.
It wasn't perfect; she was still trembling with emotion, but at least the
energy wasn't being all wasted.
And there will he future need—
"Then he told me about how his sister had first supported
him, then betrayed him. How he had known from the first that the hunt for the
lost sword had been nothing more than a ruse to get her across the border and
into contact with Stefan. He carried on about that for long enough to just
about put me to sleep; what an ungrateful, cold bitch she was, how she deserved
the worst fate anyone could imagine. He was pretty well convinced she was she'chorne,
too, and you know how they feel about that here—I had just about figured that was
all I was going to get out of him, when suddenly he stopped raving,"
Kethry felt a prickle of fear when the bond of she'enedran between herself and Tarma transmitted sent another surge
of the incredibly cold rage her oathsister was feeling. I've never known
anyone who could sustain that kind of emotion for this long without berserking.
Had Tarma been anything other than Kal'enedral—someone, or several someones,
would be long dead by now, hacked into many small pieces....
"'I fixed her,' he said. 'I fixed her properly. I
planned it all so beautifully, too. I had Zaras bespell one of his apprentices
to look like me, and sent the apprentice off with the rest of the Court on a
threeday hunt. Then Zaras and I waited for the bitch in the stables; I
distracted her, he hit her from behind with a spell, and when she woke up, her
body belonged to Zaras. He had her saddle up and ride out just as if it were
any other day, but this time her destination was my choice. We took her
to the old tower on the edge of Hielmarsh; it's deserted, and the rumors I had
spread about hauntings keep the clods away.'"
From there, what Tarma told them horrified even Kethry, inured to
the brutality of warfare as she was. And she, of the three of them, had been
the least close to the Captain; Tarma's own internal torment was only too plain
to her oathsister, who was continuing to share in it—and Jadrek's expression
could not be described.
Idra's torture and "punishment" had begun with the
expedient most commonly used to break a woman—multiple rape. Rape in which her
own brother had been the foremost participant. Char's methods and means when
that failed became more exotic. Jadrek excused himself halfway through the
toneless recitation to be audibly sick. When he returned, pale, shaking and sweating
with reaction, Tarma had nearly finished. Kethry's stomach was churning and her
throat was choked with silent weeping.
"His own sister—" Kethry shuddered, her eyes
burning and blurring with her tears. "No matter how much he hated her, she
was still his sister!"
Tarma came closer, looming over the table like a dark angel. She
took the dagger from her belt, and held it out into the light of the
table-candle. She held it stiffly, point down, in a fist clenched so tightly on
the hilt that her knuckles were white.
"Oathbreaker, I name him," Tarma said, softly, but with
all the feeling that she had not given vent to behind the words of the ages-old
ritual of Outcasting. "Oathbreaker he, and all who stand by him.
Oathbreaker once—by the promises made to kin, then shattered. Oathbreaker
twice—by the violation of king-oath to liegeman. Oathbreaker three
times—Oathbreaker a thousand times—by the violation of every kin-bond
known and by the shedding of shared blood."
"Oathbreaker, I name him." Kethry echoed, rising to
place her cold hand over Tarma's, taking up the thread of the seldom-used
passage from the Mercenaries' Code, She choked out her words around a knot of
black anger and bleak mourning, both so thick and dark that she could barely
manage to speak the ritual coherently through the chaos of her emotions. She
was still channeling, but now she was channeling the emotion through the words
of the ritual. Emotion was power; that was what made a death-curse so
potent, even in the mouth of an untutored peasant. This may well once have been
a spell—and it was capable of becoming one again. She knew that even though she
was no priest, channeling that much emotion-energy through it had the
potential of making the Outcasting into something more than "mere
ritual."
"Oathbreaker I do name him, mage to thy priest. Oathbreaker
once—" She choked, hardly able to get the words out, "by the
violation of sacred bonds. Oathbreaker twice—by the perversion of power granted
him for the common weal to his own ends. Oathbreaker three times—by the
invocation of pain and death for pleasure."
Somewhat to her surprise, she saw Jadrek stand, place his
trembling, damp hand atop hers, and take up the ritual. She had never guessed
that he knew it. "Oathbreaker, I name him, and all who support him,"
he said, though his voice shook. "Oathbreaker I do name him, who am the
common man of good will, making the third for Outcasting. Oathbreaker once—by
the lies of his tongue. Oathbreaker twice—by the perversion of his heart.
Oathbreaker three times—by the giving of his soul willingly to darkness."
Tarma slammed the dagger they all had been holding into the wood
of the table with such force that it sank halfway to the hilt.
"Oathbreaker is his name;" she snarled. "All oaths to him are
null. Let every man's hand be against him; let the gods turn their faces from
him; let his darkness rot him from within until he be called to a just
accounting. And may the gods grant that mine be the hand!"
She brought herself back under control with an effort that was
visible, and turned a face toward them that was no longer impassive, but was
just as tear-streaked as Kethry's own. "This is the end of it: he couldn't
break her. She was too tough for him, right up to the last. He didn't get one
word out other, not one—and in the end, when he thought his bullyboys had her
restrained, she managed to break free long enough to grab a knife and kill
herself with it."
The fire-and-candle light flared up long enough to show that the
murderous rage was still burning in her, but still under control. "I damn
near killed him myself, then and there. Warrl managed to keep me from painting
the room with his blood. It would have been suicide, and while it would have
left the throne free for Stefan, I'd have left at least two friends behind who
would have been rather unhappy that I'd gone and gotten myself killed by the
rest of Char's Guard."
"'Unhappy' is understating the case," Jadrek replied
gently, slowly resuming his seat. "But yes—at least two. Good
friend—sister—please sit." Kethry could see tears still glinting in his
eyes—but she could also see that he was thinking past his grief;
something she and Tarma couldn't quite manage yet.
As Tarma lowered herself stiffly into her accustomed chair, he
continued. "Our plans have been plagued by the inability to bring a force
of trained fighters whose loyalty is unswervingly ours into the city. Now I ask
you, who served under Idra—what would her Sunhawks think to hear this?"
"Gods!" Kethry brought her fist to her mouth, and bit
her knuckles hard enough to break the skin. "They'd want revenge, just
like us—and not just them, but every man or woman who ever served as a
Hawk!"
Jadrek nodded. "In short—an army. Our army. One that
won't swerve from their goal for any reason, or be stopped by anything short of
the death of every last one of them."
Now, for a brief time, they fought their battle with pen and
paper. Messages, coded, in obscure dialects, or (rarely) in plain tradespeech
left the city every day that there was someone that they judged was trustworthy
enough to carry them. Tarma, from her position as trusted insider, was able to
tell them that the few messages that were intercepted baffled Char's adherents,
and were dismissed out of hand as merchant-clan warring. The rest went south
and east, following the trade roads, to find the men and women who wore (or had
once worn) the symbol of the Sunhawk.
The answers that returned were not of paper and ink, but flesh and
blood—and of deadly anger.
The last time Justin Twoblade and his partner had entered Petras,
it had been with a feeling of pleasant anticipation. Petras had been the
turnaround point for the caravan they'd been guarding, and it was well known
for its wines and its wenches. He'd had quite a lively time of it, that season
in Petras.
Now he entered the city a second time, again as a caravan guard.
Three things differed: he would not be leaving, at least not with the traders
he was guarding; his partner was not Ikan Dryvale—
And his mood was not pleasant.
He and his partner parted company with the caravan as soon as
their clients had selected a hostelry, taking their pay with them in the form
of the square silver coins that served as common currency among the traders of
most of this part of the world. Then, looking in no way different than any
other mustered-out guards, they collected their small store of belongings,
loaded them on their horses, and headed for a district with a more modest
selection of inns.
And if they seemed rather heavily armed and armored, well, they
had been escorting jewel traders, it was only good sense to arm heavily when
one escorted such tempting targets.
"What was the name of that inn we're looking for?"
Justin asked his new partner, his voice pitched only just loud enough to be
heard over the street noise. "I didn't quite catch it from the
contact."
"The Fountain of Beer," Kyra replied, just as quietly,
her eyes flicking from side to side in a way that told Justin she was watching
everything about her without making any great show of doing so.
"I suspect that's it ahead of us." His hands were full;
reins of his horse in the left, pack in the right, so he pointed with his chin.
The sign did indeed sport a violently yellow fountain that was apparently
spouting vast quantities of foam.
"If you'll take care of the lodgings, I'll take care of the
stableman," Kyra offered. "We've both got tokens; one of us should
hit on a contact if we try both."
"Good," Justin replied shortly; they paused just at the
inn gate and made an exchange of packs and reins. Kyra went on into the
stableyard with their horses, as he sought the innkeeper behind his bar.
Justin bargained heatedly for several minutes, arriving at a fee
of two silver for stabling, room and meals for both; but there was a third coin
with the two square ones he handed the innkeeper—a small, round, bronze coin,
bearing the image of a rampant hawk on one side and the sun-in-glory on the
other. It was, in fact, the smallest denomination of coin used in
Hawksnest—used only in Hawksnest, and almost never seen outside of the
town.
The innkeeper neither commented on the coin, nor returned it—but
he did ask "Justice Twoblade?" when registering them on
his rolls.
"Justice" was one of the half-dozen recognition words
that had come with Justin's message.
"Justin," the fighter corrected him. "Justin of the
Hawk."
That was the appropriate answer. The man nodded, and replied
"Right. Justice."
Justin also nodded, then stood at the bar and nursed a small beer
while he waited for Kyra to return. The potboy showed them to a small, plain room
on the ground floor at the back of the inn.
"Stableman's one contact for certain sure," Kyra told
him as soon as the boy had left. "He wished me 'justice,' I gave 'im
m'name as Kyra Brighthawk, and then 'e tol' me t' wait for a visitor."
"Innkeeper's another, gave me the same word. Always provided
we aren't in a trap." Justin raised one laconic eyebrow at Kyra's
headshake. "My child, you don't grow to be an old fighter without
learning to be suspicious of your own grandmother. I would suggest to you that
we follow 'enemy territory' rules."
Kyra shrugged. "You been the leader; I'll live with whatever
ye guess we should be doin'."
Justin felt of the bed, found it satisfactory, and stretched his
lanky body on it at full length. "It is a wise child that obeys its
elders," he said sententiously, then quirked one corner of his mouth.
"It is also a child that may live to become an elder."
Kyra shrugged good-naturedly.
A few moments later, the boy returned with a surprisingly good
dinner for two, which he left. Justin examined it with great care, by smell and
by cautious taste.
"Evidently we aren't supposed to leave," Justin guessed,
"And if this stuff has been tampered with, I can't tell it."
Kyra followed his careful inspection of the food with one of her
own. "Nor me, an' my grandy was a wisewoman. I don' know about you,
friend, but I could eat raw snake."
"Likewise. My lady?" Justin dug a healthy portion out of
the meat pie they'd been served, and handed it to her solemnly.
She accepted it just as solemnly. It might have been noted, had
there been anyone else present, that neither partook of anything the other had
already tried. If any of the food had been "tampered with," it would
likely be only one or two dishes. If that were the case—one of them would still
be in shape to deal with the consequences.
When, after an hour, nothing untoward happened to either of them,
Justin grinned a little sheepishly.
"Well—"
"Don't apologize," Kyra told him. "I tell ye, I
druther eat a cold dinner than find m'self wakin' up lookin' at the wrong end
'f somebody's knife."
They demolished the rest of the food in fairly short order—then
began another interminable wait. After a candlemark of pacing, Kyra finally dug
a long branch of silvery derthenwood out other pack, as well as a tiny knife
with a blade hardly bigger than a pen nib. She sat down on the floor next to
the bed and began the slow process of turning the branch into a carved chain.
Justin watched her from half-closed eyes, fascinated in spite of himself by the
delicate work. The chain had only a few links to it when the wait began; when
it ended, there was scarcely a fingerlength of branch remaining.
Then, without warning, a portion of the wall blurred and Kethry
stepped through it.
Kethry just held out her arms, welcoming both of them into an
embrace which included tears from all three of them.
"Gods, Keth—" Justin finally pulled away, reluctantly.
"It has been so damned hard keeping this all inside."
"I know; none better—Windborn, I cannot tell you how glad I
am to see you two! You're the first to come; may the Lady forgive me,
but there were times I wondered if this was going to work."
"Oh, it's working all right; better than you could
guess." He wiped his eyes and nose on the napkin from their tray and
locked his emotions down. "All right, lady-mage, we need information, not
waterfalls."
"First—tell me how you got here so fast."
"We weren't about t' let anybody beat us here,"
Kyra replied. "Not after that message. Sewen sent me on ahead t' tell ye
that Queen Sursha give us leave t' deal with this soon's we get some of her new
army units in t' replace us. The rest of the Hawks'll be here in 'bout a
month."
"Ikan's out rounding up all the former Hawks we can track
down," Justin continued. "We'll be trickling in the same as the Hawks
will—no more than two or three at a time, and disguised. One of the merchant
houses is going to let some of us use their colors; Ikan took the liberty of
taking your name in vain to old Grumio. We have the support of Sursha's Bards,
and half a dozen holy orders. We'll be everything from wandering entertainers
to caravan guards. You've got a plan, I take it?"
"Tarma has; she's worked it out with a couple of highborn we
can trust," Kethry told him. "All I really know about is my part of
it, but generally we're hoping to accomplish the whole thing with a minimum of
bloodshed."
"Specific blood," Kyra replied, with a smoldering anger
Justin shared.
"Oh, yes. One of the lot we've already taken
out—Raschar's Adept. But the others—" Kethry allowed her own anger to
show. "—Tarma's identified every person that had a hand in the deed. And
they will answer to us."
Justin nodded, slowly. "What about arms? There's going to be
at least half of us without much, given the disguises."
"Being smuggled in to us from an outside source, so that Char
won't be alerted that something's up by activity in forges and smithies. We're
getting everything Tarma could think of; bows, arrows with war-points, various
kinds of throwing knives, grapnels, climbing spikes, pikes, swords—the last is
the hardest, that, and armor, but we're hoping most of you will manage to bring
your own. Do either of you have a guess how many there might be that we can
count on?"
"Six hundred at an absolute minimum," Justin said with
grim satisfaction. "That's four hundred Hawks and the two hundred that
either retired to Hawksnest or that Ikan knows for a fact he can get hold of
and will want in."
"Gods—that's better than I'd hoped," Kethry said weakly.
"There're four hundred regular troops here. about a hundred and fifty
assorted militia, and fifty personal guards belonging to Char. There're some
other assorted fighters, but Tarma tells me they won't count for much; there're
Char's adherents, and their private guards, but we don't know but that they
won't turn their coats or hide if things look chancy. That means we'll be going
pretty much one-on-one; all the professionals starting the fight even."
"Even with his mages?" Justin asked dubiously. Kethry
raised her chin, her eyes glinting like emerald ice in the light from the
window beside her. "He hasn't a mage that can come close to me in ability,
and I have more power at my disposal than any of them could hope for."
"Where are you getting that kind of power?"
Justin asked in surprise. "I mean—you're alone—"
"You—and the Hawks. Your anger. I can't begin to tell you how
strong a force I've already tapped off just you two; when I start to think
about six hundred Hawks, it makes my head reel. It's the kind of
power a mage sees perhaps once in a lifetime, and if I weren't an Adept I'd
never be able to touch it, much less control it."
"You're Adept class now?" Justin said
incredulously. "Great good gods—no wonder you aren't worried!"
"Not with power like that at my disposal. I can channel all
that anger, harvest it, and save it for the hour of striking. We're the
attackers, this time. I can set up as many spells as it takes as far in advance
as I need to, spells specifically designed to take out each mage; and wait
until the moment of attack to trigger them. I'm assuming only half of those
will work. The rest will probably be deflected. But the mages will be
off-balance, and I can take them out one at a time. I know how mages think—when
they're under magical attack they tend to ignore anything mundane, and they
seldom or never work together. White Winds is one of the few schools that
teaches working in concert. I think we can plan that they will be concentrating
on me and not on anything nonmagical. And that they won't even think to
band together against me."
Justin nodded, satisfied. "Sounds like you people have a
pretty good notion of what you're about. Now comes the hard part."
"Uh-huh," Kethry nodded. "Waiting."
Singly, or by twos and threes, the Hawks came, just as Justin had
told Kethry they would. Each of them arrived in some disguise, some seeming
utterly harmless—a peasant farmer here, a party of minstrels there, a couple of
merchant apprentices. Day by day they trickled into Petras, and no one seemed
to notice that they never left it again. Each went to one of the dozen inns
whose masters had bought into the conspiracy, carrying with them a small bronze
coin and a handful of recognition words. Each was met by Kethry, or by one of
the other "official greeters"—Justin, Kyra or Ikan, who had arrived
within days of the first two.
From there, things got far more complicated than even most of
these professional mercenaries were used to.
Beaker coughed, scratched his head, and turned his weary donkey in
to what passed for a stableman at the Wheat Sheaf inn. The stableman here was,
like most of the clients, of farm stock; and probably had never even seen a
warhorse up close, much less handled one. Beaker's dusty donkey was far more in
his line of expertise. The "stable" was a packed-earth enclosure with
a watering trough and a pile of hay currently being shared by three other mangy
little donkeys and a brace of oxen. Beaker had serious second and third
thoughts about this being the contact point for a rebel force, but the
instructions had said the Wheat Sheaf and specified the stableman as the
contact.
"Ye wanta watch that one," Beaker drawled, handing the
wizened peasant the rough rope of the donkey's halter with one hand, and four
coins with the other—three copper pennies and one bronze Hawkpiece.
"She'll take revenge if she even thinks ye're gonna lay hand to
'er."
"Oh, aye, I know th' type," the fellow replied,
grinning, and proving that a good half of his teeth had gone with his lost
youth. "Ol' girl like this, she hold a grudge till judgment day,
eh?" He pocketed all four coins without a comment.
Well, that was the proper sign and counter. Beaker felt some of
his misgivings slide away, and ambled on into the dark cave of the rough-brick
inn.
Like most of its ilk, it had two floors, each one large room. The
upper would have pallets for sleeping; the lower had a huge fireplace at one
end where a stout middle-aged woman was tending an enormous pot and a roast of
some kind. It was filled with clumsy benches and trestle tables now, but after
the inn shut down for the night, those that could not afford a pallet upstairs
would be granted leave to sleep on table, bench, or floor beneath for half the
price of a pallet. Opposite the fireplace was the "bar"; a stack of
beer kegs and a rack of mugs, presided over by the innkeeper.
Beaker debated looking prosperous, when his stomach growled and
made the decision for him. He paid the innkeeper for a mug of beer, a bowl of
soup and a slice of roast; the man took his money, gave him his drink and a
slice of not-too-stale bread. Beaker slid his pack off his back, rummaged his
own bowl and spoon out of it, then shrugged it back on before weaving his way
through the tables to the monarch of the "kitchen."
Rather to his surprise—the inn staff of places like this one were
rather notorious for being surly—the woman gave him a broad smile along with a
full bowl, and put a reasonably generous slice of meat on his bread. Juggling
all three carefully, he took a seat as near to the door as possible, and sat
down to eat.
The food was another pleasant surprise; fresh and tasty and
stomach-filling. And the inn was cool after the heat and dust of the road. The
beer was doing a respectable job of washing the grit out of his throat. Beaker
was about halfway through his meal when her heard someone come up behind him.
"How's the food t'day, sojer?"
Beaker grinned and turned in his seat. "Kyra, when are you
gonna get rid of that damn accent?"
"When cows fly, prob'ly. Makes me fit in here though."
She straddled the bench beside him a mug and bowl of her own in hand. "Eat
here ev'ry chance I get. Ma Kemak, she sure can cook. Pa Kemak don' water the
beer, neither. Finish that up, boy. We gotta get you off th' street soon's we
can." She set him a good example by nearly inhaling her soup.
From the inn Kyra led Beaker on a rambling stroll designed to
shake off or bore any pursuit, bringing him at last to the stableyard entrance
of a wealthy merchant. A murmured word with the chief stableman got them
inside; from there they slipped in the servant's door and climbed a winding
staircase to the attic of the house. Normally a room like this was crowded with
the accumulated junk of several generations, now it was barren except for a
line of pallets. There were only two windows—both shuttered—but there was
enough light that Beaker could recognize most of those sprawled about the room.
"Beat you, Birdbrain," Garth mocked from a corner;
looking around, Beaker could see that a good half of the pallets were
occupied—and that evidently, he was the last of Tarma's scout troop to arrive.
"Well, hell, if they'd given me somethin' besides a half-dead
dwarf donkey t' get here on—"
"No excuse," Jodi admonished. "Tresti and I were
Shayana mendicants; we came here on our own two feet."
"Beaker, what have you got in the way of arms?" asked
someone off on the opposite side of the room;
peering through the attic gloom. Beaker could make out that the
speaker was a skirmisher he knew vaguely, a Hawk called Vasely.
"One short knife, and my sword," he replied. "And
I've got my brigandine under this shirt."
"Get over here and pick out what you want, then. Take
whatever you think you can use, we aren't short of anything but swords and
body-armor."
Beaker crossed the attic, picking his way among the pallets, and
sorted through the piles of arms. Shortly thereafter he was being caught up on
the developments by his fellow scouts.
He learned that they hid their faces by day, slipping out only at
night to meet in the ballrooms and stableyards of the great lords who had also
joined the conspiracy. There they would hear whatever news there was to hear,
and practice their skills.
Each night, as the Hawks gathered to spar, Kethry would siphon off
the incredibly dangerous energy of their anger and hate. Dangerous, because the
energy generated by negative emotions was hard to control—and attracted some
very undesirable otherplanar creatures. But it was a potent force, and one
Kethry was not going to let go unused. She channeled what she accumulated each
night into the dozen trap-spells she was building, one for each of Char's
mages. She was beginning to think that she might well be able to carry this
off—for despite her brave words to Justin, she had no idea if what she planned
was going to work, nor how well. She was just too new at being Adept to be
certain exactly what her capabilities were.
"I wish you'd tell me what you're going to do," Jadrek
said plaintively. He'd been watching her as she traced through the last of the
parchment diagrams, laying in the power she had acquired that night. There were
times his patience astounded her still....
"I didn't realize you'd want to know," she replied,
sealing the new layer of power in place, and looking up at him with surprise as
she finished. "Come around here behind me and have a look, then."
He rose, moved to her right shoulder, and bent over the table with
his expression sharp with curiosity. "Well, you know I'm not a
mage, but I do know some of the mage-books—and Keth, what you've been
doing doesn't even look remotely familiar."
"You know what a trap-spell is. That's this part." She
leaned over the parchment and pointed out the six tiny diagrams encircling the
last mage's Name, as he looked over her shoulder with acute interest she could
feel without even seeing his face.
"That's just the part that's like a trigger on a physical
trap, right?"
"Exactly, except that what will activate the trigger won't
be something the mage does, but something I do—a kind of a mental twist to
release the rest of it."
He examined the elaborately inscribed sheet with care, leaning on
the back of Kethry's chair, and not touching the page. "That looks
familiar enough from my reading—but what's all the rest of this?"
"That's something new, something I put together. There's a
mind-magic technique called a 'mirror-egg' that Roald told me about," she
said, sitting back. He responded to her movement by beginning to massage her
neck as she talked. "It involves surrounding someone with an egg-shaped
shield that is absolutely reflective on the inside. It's something you do, he
told me, when you've got a projective that refuses to lock his mind-Gift down,
or is using it harmfully. Everything he projects after that gets flung straight
back into his face—Roald says it's a pretty effective way of teaching someone
when admonishment fails."
"I would think so," Jadrek agreed.
"Ah—" his gentle hands hit a particularly tense spot,
and Kethry fell silent until he'd gotten the muscles looser. "I thought
about it, and it occurred to me that there was no reason why the same kind of
thing couldn't be applied to magical energy. So I found a spell to make a
mirrored shield, and another to shape a shield into an egg shape, and combined
them. That's this bit." She traced the twisted patterns with her finger
above the diagram. "When Jiles got here, he agreed to let me throw one on
him as a test."
"It worked?"
"Better than either of us had guessed. Scared him white. You
see, with most other trap-spells if you have the patience to work your way
through it, you can find the keypoint and get yourself loose by cutting it. Not
this one—because everything you do reflects back at you. There're only two ways
to break this one—from the outside, or to build up such pressure inside
that the spell can't contain it."
Jadrek pondered that in silence for a moment, while Kethry let her
head sag and reveled in the relaxation his hands were leaving in their wake.
"What's to keep the mages from building up that kind of
pressure?" he asked at last.
"Nothing—if they can. But if they try—and they don't
figure out that they're going to have to shield themselves within the
shield—they'll fry themselves before they free themselves."
Jadrek spoke slowly, and very quietly. "That—is not a
nice spell...."
"These aren't nice people," Kethry replied, recalling
all the soul-searching she'd done before deciding that this was the thing to
do. "Frankly, if I could call lightnings down on all of them, I would, and
take the guilt on my soul. I agree, it isn't a thing one should use lightly,
and just before I trigger the traps, I intend to bum the papers. I won't need them
any more at that point, and I'd rather that the knowledge didn't get into too
many hands just yet."
"And later? How do you keep someone else from finding out how
you did it? What if—"
"Gods—Jadrek, love, once a thing's been thought of—it gets
out, no matter what. So once this is all over with, I'm going to arrange for
the information to be sent to every mage school I know of, and spread it as far
and wide as I can."
"What?" Jadrek asked, so aghast that he stopped
massaging.
"You can't stop knowledge; you shouldn't try. If you do, half
the time it's the wrong people that get it first. So I'm doing the best thing
you can do with something like this—making sure everybody knows about
it. That way, if it's used, it will be recognized. Mages trapped inside one of
these eggs will realize what's happened and get outside help before they hurt
themselves, ones outside will know the counter."
"Oh," he said. resuming what he'd broken off. There was
silence for a while as he plainly pondered what she'd said.
One more thing to love about him. He doesn't always agree with me,
but he hears me out, and he thinks about what I've said before making up his
own mind.
"Huh," he said, when she'd begun to drowse a little
under his gentle ministrations. "I guess you're right; if you can't
guarantee that something harmful stays out of the wrong hands—"
"And I can't; there's no way."
"Then see that all the right hands get it."
"And that they get the antidote. I don't know that this is
all that moral, Jadrek, I only know that the alternative—taking the chance that
someone like Zaras figures out what I did first—is less moral." She
sighed. "I never thought that becoming an Adept would bring all these
moral predicaments with it."
He kissed the top of her head. "Keth, power brings with it
the need to make moral judgments; history proves that. You have no choice but
to make those decisions."
She sighed again, and reached up to lay one of her hands across
his where it rested on her shoulder. "I just hope that I always have
someone around to keep reminding me when something I'm thinking about doing
'isn't nice.' I may still do it—but I'd better have good reasons for
doing so."
He squeezed her shoulder, gently. "Don't worry. As long as
I'm around, you will."
That's what I hoped you'd say, she thought to herself closing her eyes and leaning back. That
is exactly what I hoped you'd say.
Twelve
"Tarma—"
Tarma looked up from the maps spread before her to see Jadrek
nudging his way into the knot of fighters she was tutoring. She'd had ample time
to learn every twist and turn of the maze within the Palace, and she was
endeavoring to make sure every person of the secret army knew every corridor
and storeroom before the planned coup. She felt a twinge of excitement when she
saw that Jadrek's expression was at once tense and anticipatory.
She excused herself and turned her pupils over to Jodi. "What
is it?" she asked him quietly, not wanting to raise hopes that might be
dashed in the next moment. "You look like you've swallowed a live fish,
and you're not certain if you're enjoying the experience."
He raised an eyebrow. "You aren't far wrong; that's about how
my stomach is feeling. Stefan's in Petras."
"Warrior's Oath!" She bared her teeth in a feral grin as
those nearby glanced at her in startlement. Although they had been planning for
this very moment, suddenly she felt rather as though the fish was
wriggling about in her stomach.
"When? How long ago did you make contact? Where is he
now?"
"About three candlemarks ago, and he's with Keth at the inn; it
seemed the safest place for him."
"All right—this is it. He's here, we're ready. Let me get
Sewen and Ikan, and I'll meet you at Kethry's." She turned on her heel and
began making her way across the crowded, dimly lit ballroom. She kept sight of
Jadrek as he slipped back out the door, and she noticed that he was
slump-shouldered and limping slightly.
Poor devil, he looks like warmed-over death. All this is giving me
energy, but it's sapping his. Keth, too. Talk all day, plot all night,
spellcast when you aren't plotting—
:Chase one another around the bedroom when you aren't
spellcasting—: Warrl broke into her thoughts.
Still at it, are they? Tarma thought at him. Well, if the liaison has survived this
much stress for this long, Keth's right about him being The One. Good. I'd
welcome Jadrek as Clanbrother with no reservations. He's the closest thing I've
seen since Keth to a Shin'a'in.
:And he has more sense than both of you put together. Yow know,
he still thinks you don't know about the love affair,: Warrl chuckled. :Keth
hasn't enlightened him. I can't read her as easily as I can him, what with all
her mage-shields, so I don't know why she hasn't told him that you knew about
it from the first. She might assume he knows you know—or she might be waiting
to see how he handles the situation.:
I suspect the latter, given Keth's devious mind. Hmm. If anyone
would know about Jadrek's condition, you would; you're practically in his
pocket most of the day. He was limping—how's he doing, physically?
:Extremely well; his bones only bother him when he's very
tired, like tonight, or very chilled. Need knows how Kethry worries about him,
so Need takes very good care of him.:
Good enough to make the Palace assault with us? We need his
knowledge.
:I would judge so. He'll have every fighter of the Hawks
watching out for him, after all.:
Hai. He'll probably come out better than the rest of us will.
Well—back to business.
She had reached Sewen and Ikan by the end of that mental
conversation, which had all taken place in the space of a few heartbeats. They
looked up at her approach, and knowing her as well as they did, she reckoned
they would have no trouble reading the news in her eyes.
"Time, is it?" Sewen straightened, and rolled up the map
they'd been working with.
She nodded. "He's here." No need to say who
"he" was—not when all they lacked for the past several days to put
the plan into motion had been Stefansen's physical presence. "Keth's room.
Ready?"
Both nodded; Ikan signaled Justin, who came to take his place,
Sewen did the same with the scout Mala. Within moments the three of them,
darkly cloaked and moving like shadows through the ill-lit streets, were on
their way to Kethry's room.
Warrl, as always, told the others of their approach; Kethry was at
the door before they set foot on the staircase, and held it open just enough
that they could slip inside.
Jadrek was already there, seated at the table; beside him, looking
somehow far more princely than Tarma had remembered, was Stefansen.
It was Stefansen the ruler who rose to greet them; to clasp the
hands and shoulders of both Ikan and Sewen with that same ease and frank
equality Idra had always shown, and thank them for their presence and help with
a sincerity that none of them doubted. The meeting was, in some ways, rather
unnerving for Sewen and Ikan; Tarma knew how much like his sister Stefansen
looked, but the others hadn't been warned. And in the soft light from their
candles the resemblance was even stronger. Tarma could almost hear their
thoughts—shock, a touch of chill at the back of the neck—
Then they shook themselves into sense.
Kethry gestured, bringing three more chairs into abrupt existence,
as Jadrek unrolled the first of a series of maps on the table. All six of them
seated themselves almost simultaneously; Stefansen cleared his throat, and the
odd note in the sound caught Tarma's attention—and by the way the other two
looked up at him in startlement, Sewen's and Ikan's as well.
"Jadrek has kept me appraised of what's been going on,"
he said, with a kind of awkward hesitation that he had not displayed before.
"So I know the reason all you Sunhawks are here. I don't—I don't deal well
with emotion, it's hard for me to say things that I feel. But I just want you
to know that I—understand. I have half a dozen reasons for wanting to roast
Char over a slow fire, and that one is at the top of the list. But I think all
of you have a prior claim on his hide. I was never as close to Idra as even the
lowliest of her Hawks. So—if it's possible—when this is over, he's yours."
Sewen's eyes lit at those words. "The Hawks thank you for
that. Highness—an' I'll tell you true, they'll fight all the better for the
knowing of the promise."
"It only seemed fair...." He looked straight into
Tarma's eyes, as if asking whether this had been the wise choice. She nodded
slightly, and he looked easier.
"Very well, gentlemen, ladies—" he said after a moment
of silence. "All the pieces are on the game board. Shall we begin?"
It was Midsummer's Night, and folk in carnival garb thronged the streets.
Among the mob of wildly costumed maskers, who would notice six hundred-odd more
celebrants ?
Who would notice masks on a night of masking? Who would note six
hundred-odd sets of phony weaponry among so many thousand tawdry pieces of junk
like them? Who would take alarm from another merchant or peasant playing at
warrior?
Except that beneath the cheap gilding and pasted-on glass jewels,
beneath the paper and the tinsel, the arms and armor of this lot was
very real.
This was the night of all nights that the rebels had hoped to be
able to use—in part because of the ability to move freely, and in part because
of one aspect in particular of the Midsummer's Night celebrations of
Rethwellan. Though the folk of Petras were mostly long since severed from any direct
ties to the farms that formed a good third of Rethwellan's wealth. Midsummer's
Night was still the night which ensured the fertility of the land. There
would be reveling in the streets right up until the stroke of midnight—but at
midnight, the streets would be deserted. Every man and woman in Petras would be
doing his or her level best to prove to the Goddess in Her aspect as Lover that
the people of Rethwellan still worshiped Her in all the appropriate ways. This
Midsummer's Night they would be trying especially hard, because over the past
three months the priests of the city had been doing their best to
encourage exactly that behavior tonight. Some of them had even unbent
themselves enough to admit that—on this one night—perhaps it didn't
altogether worry Her if your partner did not happen to be your lawfully wedded
spouse. And that if one felt guilty after being infected with Her sacred
desires and fulfilling same—well, for a case of indulgence after Midsummer's
Night, penances would be few and light, and forgiveness easily obtained.
For all but six hundred-odd, who would not be fulfilling Her
desires as Lover, but as Avenger.
Tarma picked her way through the thinning crowds, still wearing
her guise of Arton. It was that guise that was going to give the Hawks the
entry to the Palace grounds. From all directions, she knew, the Hawks were
converging on the Palace; she would be one of the last to arrive. Kethry was
already in place, waiting to spring her trap-spells. If they didn't work, she
would be in a position to guide Hawks to the mages to deal with them physically
while she kept them occupied magically. If they did work, she would be a most
welcome addition to their arsenal.
And just in case Char somehow slipped through their fingers—Warrl?
:Here, mindmate.:
Got the horses in place ?
Warrl's duty was to work with Horsemaster Tindel; the fastest of
the Shin'a'in-bred mounts she'd sold Char the year before were to be saddled
and kept at the ready, in a cul-de-sac just outside the Palace gate, with Warrl
and Tindel guarding them. If Char got away from them, Tarma and the best riders
among the Hawks would be hot on his heels—
:Saddled, bridled, and ready to ride.:
Good. Let's hope we don't have to use them.
:Devoutly.:
Tarma approached one of the side gates, that gave out onto a
delivery area. Tonight the gate stood open for the convenience of servants, and
the courtyard beyond was dark and deserted. And there was Kethry—still in her
own disguise, and looking angry enough to bite a board in two. Tarma altered
her walk, swaying a little, as if drunk. She was carrying what looked like a
jug loosely in her right hand. As it happened, it wasn't a jug; it was
her sword, magicked with another illusion.
Kethry spotted her; Tarma put a little more of a stagger into her
step.
"There you are, you beast! And drunk as a
pig!" she shrilled, to the amusement of the two gate guards.
"J-janna?" Tarma slurred uncertainly, coming to a halt
just before the gate.
"Of course it's Janna, you brute! You asked me to meet you
here, you sot! I've been waiting for hours!"
"Don't you believe her, Arton," snickered the right-hand
gate guard. "She ain't been here more'n half a candlemark—an' she showed
up with a big blond lad on one arm, too. Reckon she's been playin' more'n one
game tonight, eh?"
"You—damned—slut!" Tarma snarled, feigning that she had
suddenly gone fighting-drunk. She advanced on Kethry, brandishing the jug.
Kethry backed up until she was just inside the gate itself, giving every
evidence of genuine and absolute fear. "I'm gonna beat you bloody, you
fornicating little bitch!"
Kethry whirled, and threw herself on the lefthand guard, begging
his protection, distracting both guards for the crucial moment that it took
Tarma to get within arm's length of the right-hand guard.
Then Tarma pivoted, and took her guard out with the pommel of her
sword, just as Kethry executed a neat right cross to the point of her target's
chin. Both went down without a sound. Within heartbeats the Hawks were swarming
the gate—as two of their number, already bespelled into looking like the two
guards they were replacing, dragged the bodies into the gatehouse, trussed and
gagged them, and took up their stations. The fighters filled the courtyard on
the other side, hidden in the dark shadow of the Palace, waiting for Tarma and
Kethry to make the next moves.
Kethry stood in frozen immobility for a single moment; sensitized
to stirrings of energies by her own status as Kal'enedral, Tarma actually felt
her spring her trap-spells.
"Well?"
Kethry's eyes met hers with incredulous shock. "They're
holding—all of them!"
"Lady with us, then, and let's hope they keep holding. New
body, Keth,"
"Right," the mage answered, and Tarma waited impatiently
as the figure of "Janna" blurred, became a rosy mist, and the mist solidified
into a new guise—a very ordinary looking female fighter in the scarlet-and-gold
livery of Char's personal guard.
"All right, Hawks," Tarma said, in a low, but carrying
voice. "This is it—form up on your leaders—"
She marched up to the unlocked delivery door, Kethry beside her,
and pushed it open. The halfdrunk guard beyond blinked at her without alarm,
and bemusedly; he was one of Char's own personal guards and Tarma (in her guise
of Arton) had ordered him to stand duty tonight on this door for a reason. He
was one of the men that had participated in the rape and torture of Idra.
She swung once, without a qualm, cutting him down before he had a
chance to do more than blink at her. Her only regret was that she had not been
able to grant him the lingering death she felt he deserved. She and Kethry
hastily dragged his body out of the way; then she waved to the waiting shadows
in the court behind her.
And the Sunhawks poured through the door, a flood of vengeance in
human shape, a flood which split into many smaller streams—and all of them were
deadly.
"No luck," Tarma said flatly, as her group met (as
planned) with Stefan's, just outside the corridor leading to the rooms assigned
to the unattached ladies of the court. "He wasn't in his quarters, and he
wasn't with the mages."
"Nor with any of his current mistresses," Stefansen
reported. "That leaves the throne room."
Their combined group, which included Jadrek (who had accompanied
Stefan) and both the other Sunhawk mages, now numbered some fifty strong. The
new force surged down the pristine white marble of the Great Hall to their goal
of the throne room, all of them caught up in battle-fever. The Hawks had met
with opposition from Char's fighters, some of it fierce. The bodies lying in
pools of spreading scarlet on the snowy marble of the halls were not all
wearing Char's livery. Sewen had been hurt, and Ikan. Garth was dead, and more
than fifty others Tarma had known only vaguely. But the Hawks had triumphed,
even in the pitched battle with the seasoned troupers of Char's army, and all
but a handful of those who had murdered their Captain were now making their
atonements to her in person.
But among that handful—and the only one as yet uncaught—was
Raschar.
Those in the lead shouted as they reached their goal—the great
bronze double doors of the throne room—first in triumph, and then in anger, as
they attempted to force those doors open. The sculptured doors to the throne
room were locked, from the inside.
Justin and Beaker and a half dozen more battered at
them—futilely—as the rest came up. Their efforts did not even make the
glittering doors tremble.
"Don't bother," Stefansen shouted over the noise,
"Those damned doors are a handspan thick. We'll have to try to get in from
the garden."
"No we won't," Kethry snarled, audible in her rage even
over the frustrated efforts of those still trying to batter their way in.
"Stand back!"
She raised her hands high over her head, her face a mask of fury,
and Tarma felt the surge of power that could only mean she had summoned some of
that terrible anger-energy she had channeled away but not used in the
trap-spells. This was the best purpose for such energies, Tarma knew—anything
destructive would do—
Kethry called out three piercing words, and a bolt of something
very like scarlet lightning lanced from her hands to the meeting point of the
double doors. There was a smell of hot metal and scorched air, and a crash that
shook every ornament in the hall to the floor. The fighters around her cringed
and protected their ears from the thunder-shock; the doors rocked, but did not
open.
"Fight it down, girl," Tarma cautioned her, and Kethry
visibly wrestled her own temper into control; if she lost to it, she had warned
Tarma, she would be prey to the stored anger.
Kethry closed her eyes, took three deep breaths, then faced the
obstacle again. "Oh no," she told the doors and the spell that was on
them, "you don't stop me that easily!"
Again she called the lightning, and a third time—and on the
fourth, the doors burst off their hinges, and fell inward with a crash that
shook the floor, cracked the marble of the walls of the Great Hall, and rained
debris down on all their heads from the ceiling. None of which they
particularly noticed, as they stormed into the throne room—
To find it empty.
Jadrek cursed, with a command of invective that astounded Kethry,
and pointed to where a scarlet and gold tapestry behind the throne flapped in a
current of air. "The tunnel—it was walled off years ago—"
"Figures that the little bastard would have it opened
up," Stefan spat. "Think, man—where does it come out?"
Jadrek closed his eyes and clenched both hands at his temples, as
Kethry tried to will confidence and calm into him. "If the records I
studied are right—and I remember them right," he said finally, "it
exits in the old temple of Ursa, outside the city walls."
Tarma and her chosen riders had already spun around and were
sprinting for the door, and Kethry was right behind them. Because she had
already laid most of the spell on them, it was child's play to invoke the
guises she'd set for just this eventuality—even while pelting down the hall as
fast as her legs could carry her. They were exceedingly simple illusions,
anyway—not faces, but livery, the scarlet and gold livery of Char's personal
guards, exactly as the guise she wore was garbed.
They didn't have far to run; and Hawks now held the main gate and
had forced it open, so there was nothing to bar the path to their allies. As
they pounded into the torch-lit court behind the main gate, a dozen Shin'a'in-bred
horses, driven by Warrl, and led by Tindel, galloped past that portal. Their
iron-shod hooves drew sparks from the stones of the paving, and they tossed
their heads as they ran, plainly fresh and eager for an all-out run.
Which was exactly what they were going to get.
As the horses swirled past the Palace door, the Hawks ran to meet
them, not bothering to give Tindel the time to bring them to a halt. Instead
they mounted on the run, as Tarma had taught them. Even Kethry, the worst rider
of all, managed somehow, grabbing pommel and cantle and getting herself in the
saddle of the still-cantering gelding she'd singled out without really thinking
about what she was doing.
"Where?" Tindel shouted, over the pounding of hooves as
they thundered out the gates again, leaving a panting Warrl to collapse behind
them. This was no race for him and he knew it.
"Temple of Ursa—" Tarma yelled in reply, and Tindel cut
anything else she was about to say off with a wave of his hand.
"I know a quicker way," he bellowed.
He urged his gray into the fore, and led them in a mad stampede
down crazy, twisting alleys Kethry had never seen before, a good half of which
were just packed dirt. Festival gewgaws and dying flowers were pounded to
powder as they careened through; once a tiny hawker's cart—thankfully
unattended—was knocked over and kicked aside; reduced to splinters as it hit a
wall. Kethry's nose was filled with the stench of back-alley middens and
trampled garbage; she was splashed with stale water and other liquids best left
nameless. Her eyes were dazzled by sudden torchlight that alternated with the
abyssal dark valleys between buildings. She got only vague impressions of walls
flying past, half-seen openings as they dashed by cross streets; and the
pounding of hooves surrounding her throbbed like the pounding of the power at
her fingertips.
Then, a startled shout, a wall that loomed high against the stars,
and an invisible wall of cooler air and absolute blackness that they plunged
through—still without a pause—
Then they were outside the city walls, continuing the insane
gallop along the road that led to a handful of old, mostly deserted temples,
and beyond that, to Hielmarsh.
The moon was full; it was nearly as bright as day, without a
single cloud to obscure the light. The fields and trees before them were washed
with silver, and the horses, able now to see where they were going, increased
their pace.
Kethry urged her beast up to the front of the herd, until she rode
just behind Tarma and Tindel. She gripped her horse with aching knees and tried
to see up the road. The temple couldn't be far—not if it was to be reached by a
tunnel.
It wasn't. The white marble of a building that could only be the
temple in question stood out clearly against the dark shadows of the trees
behind it—at this pace, hardly more than a breath or two away.
Just as they came within shouting distance of the temple,
moonlight reflecting from a cloud of dust on the road ahead of them told them
without words that Char had already started the next stage of his flight. This
road led almost directly to Hielmarsh, Kethry knew. He was heading for his
little stronghold, or perhaps the mazes of the marsh. There would be no
pulling him out of there.
But Hielmarsh was hours away, and that dust cloud a few furlongs
at most. And their horses were Shin'a'in, not much exhausted by the race
they'd run so far, scarcely sweating, and still on their first wind.
The little party ahead of them knew they were coming, though, they
had to; they had to hear the rolling thunder of two dozen pairs of hooves. They
also had to know there was no escaping—
But the Hawks didn't want a pitched battle if they could help it.
The dust was settling, which meant the quarry had turned at bay.
Kethry saw Tarma give the signal to pull up as they came within sight of Char
and his men. The knot of fighters ahead of them huddled together on the
moon-drenched road, swords glinting silver as they held them at ready. Kethry
and the rest of the Hawks obeyed their leader, and slowed their horses to a
walk.
The King's party numbered almost forty—putting the Hawks at a
two-to-one disadvantage if they fought. Tarma's contingency plan, as Kethry
knew, called for no such fight. That was the reason for the magical disguises.
"Majesty!" Tarma called, knowing Char would see the
Arton he trusted. "Your brother's stormed and taken the Palace; he's
holding the city against you. I got what men I could and tried to guess which
way you'd be heading."
Raschar dug his spurs into his gelding's sides and rode straight
to his "faithful retainer." "Arton!" he cried, panic
straining his voice, "Hellfire, I heard you'd gone down at the gates! I
have never been so glad to see anybody in my life!"
As he pulled up beside Tarma, Kethry could see his skin was pale
and he was sweating, and his eyes were hardly more than black holes in his
head.
"Rein in, Majesty; I've got you some help. Here—" she
called up at the mixed group of guards and common soldiers still milling about
uncertainly up ahead, "—you lot! Get back to the temple! Split yourselves
up, I don't much care how. Half of you head back down to hold the road for as
long as you can, the rest of you lay a false trail off to Lasleric. Come on,
move it out, we haven't got all night!"
There hadn't been a single officer among them, and the mixed
contingent was obviously only too happy to find someone willing to issue orders
that made sense—unlike the frantic babbling of their King.
They obeyed Tarma without a murmur, sending their nervous beasts
around the clot of Hawks blocking the road. Within moments they were out of
sight, returning back toward the temple and beyond.
Tarma waited until they were completely out of sight before giving
Kethry a significant look.
Kethry nodded, and dropped the spell of illusion she'd been holding
on their company.
Char stared, his jaw sagging, as what appeared to be his guard was
revealed as something else entirely.
Then he paled, his face going whiter than the moonlight, as he
recognized Tindel, Tarma and Kethry.
"What—" He started to stutter, then drew himself up and
took on a kind of nervous dignity. "Just what is this supposed to mean?
Who are you? What do you want?"
"You probably haven't heard of us before, your Majesty,"
Tarma drawled, as two of the Hawks closed in on the King from the rear, coming
up on either side. "We're just a common mercenary troop. We go by the name
of Idra's Sunhawks.'"
When she spoke the name, he choked, and rowled his horse savagely.
Too late; the Hawks were already within grabbing distance of his reins. He tried
to throw himself to the ground, but other hands caught him, and held him in his
saddle until he could be tied there.
"Should take us about three candlemarks to get him
back—" Tindel began.
A growl from the ranked fighters behind Tarma interrupted him, and
he stopped, looking startled.
"Stefan promised him to us, my friend," Tarma said
quietly. "He goes back only when we're finished with him."
"But—"
"We called the Oathbreaking on him," Kethry pointed out.
"He's ours by the code, no matter how you look at it."
Tindel looked from face to stubbornly set face, and shrugged.
"Well, what do we do with him?"
"Huh. Hadn't thought that far—" Tarma began.
"I had," Kethry said, firmly.
There was still a vast reservoir of anger-energy for her to draw
on, and while the coercion of innocent spirits was strictly forbidden a White
Winds sorceress, the opening of the gates of the otherworld to a ghost that had
a debt to collect was not.
And Idra most certainly had a long, bitter debt owed to her.
"We called Oathbreaking on him—that's a spell, partner. I do
believe we ought to see that spell completed."
Tarma looked at her askance; so did the rest of the Hawks. Char,
gagged, made choking sounds. "How do you propose to do that? And just what
does it mean to see it completed?"
Kethry shifted in her saddle, keeping Char under the tail of her
eye. "It only takes the priestess and the mage to complete the spell, and
I know how. Jadrek found the rest of it in some of the old histories. As for
what it does—it brings all the broken oaths home to roost."
"Does that mean what I think it does?"
Kethry nodded, and Tarma smiled, a bloodthirsty grin that sent a
chill even up her partner's backbone.
"All right—where?"
"The temple back there will do, I think; all we need is a bit
of sanctified ground."
With Char's horse between them, they led the mystified mercenaries
toward the white shape of the temple on their backtrail. It was, fortunately,
deserted. Kethry did not especially want any witnesses to this besides the
principals.
The temple was in a state of extreme disrepair; walls half fallen
and crumbling, the pavement beneath their horse's hooves cracked and uneven.
Tarma began to look dubious as they penetrated deeper into the complex.
"Are we far enough in, do you think? I don't want to chance
one of the horses falling, and maybe breaking a leg if there's any help for
it."
"This will do," Kethry judged, reining in her mount, and
swinging a little stiffly out of the saddle.
The rest dismounted as well, with several of them swarming the
King's mount to pull him roughly to the ground. The horses, eased of their
burdens, sighed and stamped a little, pawing at the weathered stone.
"Now what?" Tarma asked.
"Tindel—you and Beaker and Jodi stand here; you three hold
Char." She indicated a spot on the pavement in the center of a roughly
circular area that was relatively free from debris. "Tarma, you stand
South, I'll stand North. The rest of you form a circle with us as the
ends."
The Hawks obeyed, still mystified, but willing to trust the
judgment of the mage they'd worked so closely with for three years.
"All right—Tarma, just—be Kal'enedral. That's all you need to
do. And hold in mind what this bastard has done to our sister and
Captain."
"That won't be hard," came the icy voice from across the
circle.
Kethry took a deep breath and brought stillness within herself,
for everything depended now on creating a channel from herself for the anger of
the others. If she let it affect her—it would consume her.
When she thought she was ready, she took a second deep breath,
raised her arms, and began.
"Oathbreaker, he stands judged; Oathbreaker to priestess,
Oathbreaker to mage, Oathbreaker to true man of his people. Oathbreaker, we
found him; Oathbreaker in soul, Oathbreaker in power. Oathbreaker in duty.
Oathbreaker, we brought him; Oathbreaker in thought, Oathbreaker in word,
Oathbreaker in deed. Oathbreaker, he stands, judged, and condemned—"
She called upon the power she had not yet exhausted, and the
rising power within the circle.
"Let the wall of Strength stand between this place and the
world—"
As the barrier had been built between herself and the dark mage
for the magic duel, so a similar barrier sprang up now; one pole beginning from
where she stood, the other from where Tarma was poised. This wall was of a
colorless, milky white; it glowed only faintly.
"Let the Pillars of Wisdom stand between this world and the
next—"
Mist swirled up out of the ground, just in front of Char and his
captors. Kethry could see his eyes bulging in fear, for the mist held a light
of its own that augmented the moonlight. The mist formed itself into a column,
which then split slowly into two. The two columns moved slowly apart, then
solidified into glowing pillars.
"Let the Gate of Judgment open—"
More mist, this time of a strange, bluish cast, billowed in the
space between the two Pillars. Kethry felt the energy coursing through her; it
was a very strange, almost unnerving feeling. She could see why even an Adept
rarely performed this spell more than once in a lifetime—it wasn't just the
amount of power needed, it was that the mage became only the vessel for the
power. It, in a very real sense, was controlling her. She spoke aloud
the final Word of Opening, then called with thought alone to the mist-shape
within the Pillars, and fed it all the last of the Hawks' united anger in a
great burst of unleashed power.
The mist swirled, billowed—grew dark, then bright, then dark
again. It glowed from within, the color a strange silver-blue, Then the mist
condensed around the glow, forming a suggestion of a long road, a road under
sunlight—and out of the center of the glowing cloud rode Idra.
Char gave a strangled cry, and fell to his knees before the rider.
But for the moment she was not looking at him.
She was colorless as moonlight, and as solidly real as any of
Tarma's leskya'e Kal'enedrel, When Kethry had decided to open the Gate,
she had faced this moment of seeing Idra's face with a tinge of fear, wondering
what she would see there. She feared no longer. The long, lingering gazes Idra
bestowed upon each of her "children" were warm, and full of peace.
This was no spirit suffering torment—
But the face she turned upon her brother was full of something
colder than hate, and more implacable than anger.
"Hello, Char," she said, her voice echoing as from
across a vast canyon. "You have a very great deal to answer for."
Tarma led two dozen bone-weary Hawks back into Petras that
morning; they made no attempt to conceal themselves, and word that they were
coming—and word of what they carried—preceded them. The streets of Petras
cleared before their horses ever set hoof upon them, and they rode through a
town that might well have been emptied by some mysterious plague. But eyes were
watching them behind closed curtains and sealed shutters; eyes that they could
feel on the backs of their necks. There was fear echoing along with the sounds
of hoofbeats along those streets. Fear of what the Hawks had done; fear of what
else they might do—
By the time they rode in through the gates of the Palace, a nervous
crowd had assembled in the court, and Stefansen was waiting on the stairs.
The Hawks pulled up in a semicircle before the new King, still
silent but for the sound of their horses' hooves. As the last of the horses
moved into place, the last whisper coming from the crowd died, leaving only
frightened, ponderous silence, a silence that could almost be weighed and
measured.
There was a bloodstained bundle lashed on the back of Raschar's
horse, a bundle that Tindel and Tarma removed, carried to the new King's feet,
and dropped there without ceremony.
The folds of what had been Char's cloak fell open, revealing what
the cloak contained. Stefan. though he had visibly steeled himself, turned
pale. There was just about enough left of Raschar to be recognizable.
"This man was sworn Oathbreaker and Outcast," Tarma said
harshly, tonelessly. "And he was so sworn by the full rites, by a
priest, a mage, and an upright man of his own people, all of whom he had
wronged, all of whom had suffered irreparable loss at his hands. We claim
Mercenary's Justice on him, by the rights of that swearing; we executed that
Justice upon him. Who would deny us that right?"
There was only appalled silence from the crowd.
"I confirm it," Stefansen said into the silence, his
voice firm, and filling the courtyard. "For not only have I heard from a
trusted witness the words of his own mouth, confessing that he dishonored,
tortured and slew his own sister, the Lady Idra, Captain of the Sunhawks and
Princess of the blood, but I have had the same tale from the servants of his
household that we questioned last night. Hear then the tale of Raschar the
Oathbreaker."
Tarma stood wearily through the recitation, not really hearing it,
although the murmurs and gasps from the crowd behind her told her that Stefan
was giving the whole story in all its grimmest details. The mood of the people
was shifting to their side, moment by moment.
And now that the whole thing was over, all she wanted to do was
rest. The energy that had sustained her all this time was gone.
"Are there any" she heard Stefansen cry at last,
his voice breaking a little, "who would deny that true justice has been
dispensed this day?"
The thunderous NO! that followed his question satisfied
even Tarma.
Quite a little family party, Tarma thought wryly, surveying the motley individuals draped in
various postures of relaxation around the shabby-comfortable library of
Stefansen's private suite.
:Enjoy it while you can,: Warrl laughed in her mind, :It
won't be too often that you can throw cherrystones at both a King and a Crown
Prince when they tease you.:
It was only Roald, and he was asking for it—
Stefansen had been officially crowned two days ago, and Roald had
arrived as Valdemar's official representative, complete with silver coronet on
his blond head—and with a full entourage, as well. The time between the
night of the rebellion and the day of the coronation had been so hectic that no
one had had a chance to hear the full story of the rebellion from either Tarma,
Kethry or Jadrek. So Stefansen had decreed today that he was having a secret
Council session, had all but kidnapped his chosen party and locked all of them
away. Included in the party were himself and Mertis; and he had taken care that
there was a great deal of food and drink and comfortable seats for all. And
once everyone was settled in, he had demanded all the tales in their
proper order.
The entire "Council" was mostly Sunhawks or ex-Hawks;
Sewen and Tresti; Justin and Ikan; Kyra, Beaker and Jodi. Tarma herself, and
Kethry, of course. Then the "outsiders"—Tindel, Jadrek, and Roald.
It had taken a long time to get through the whole story—and when
Kyra had finished the last of the tales, telling in her matter-of-fact way how
Idra had ridden out of the cloud of mist and moonlight, you could have heard a
mouse sneeze.
"What I don't understand is how you Hawks took that so
calmly," Tindel was saying. "I was as petrified as Char, I swear—but
you—it was like she was—real."
"Lad," Beaker said in a kindly tone (to a man at least a
decade or two his senior!), "We've ridden with Idra through things you
can't imagine; she's stood by us through fear and flood and Hellfire itself.
How could we have been afraid of her? She was only dead. It's the living
we fear."
"And rightly," Justin rumbled into the somber silence
that followed Beaker's words. "And speaking of the living, you will never
guess who sauntered in two days ago, Shin'a'in."
Tarma shook her head, baffled. She'd been spending most of her
free time sleeping.
"Your dear friend Leslac."
"Oh no!" she choked. "Justin, if I've ever
done you any favors, keep him away from me!"
"Leslac?" Roald said curiously. "Minstrel, isn't
he? Dark hair, swarthy, thin? Popular with women?"
"That's him," groaned Tarma, hiding her face in her
hands.
"What's it worth to you," he asked, leaning forward, and
wearing a slyly humorous expression, "to get him packed off to Valdemar?
Permanently?"
"Choice of Tale'sedrin's herds," she said quickly,
"Three mares and a stallion, and anything but battlesteeds."
"Four mares, and one of them sworn to be in-foal."
"Done, done, done!" she replied, waving her hands
frantically.
"Stefan, old friend," Roald said, turning to the King,
"Is it worth an in-foal Shin'a'in mare to force a swordpoint marriage by
royal decree on one motheaten Bard?" Roald's face was sober, but his eyes
danced with laughter.
"For that, I'd force a swordpoint marriage on Tindel!"
Stefansen chuckled. "Who's the lucky lady?"
"Countess Reine. She's actually a rather sweet old biddy,
unlike her harridan sister, who is—thank the gods!—no longer with us. I'm
rather fond of her, for all that she hasn't the sense of a new-hatched
chick." Roald shook his head, and sighed. "A few years back, her
sister went mad during a storm and killed herself. Or so it's said, and nobody
wants to find out otherwise. I'm supposed to be keeping an eye on her, to keep
her out of trouble."
"How delightful."
"Oh, it isn't too bad; she just has this ability to attract
men who want to prey on her sensibilities. They are, of course, all of honorable
intent."
"Of course," said Stefan, solemnly.
"Well, Leslac seems to be another of the same sort. It's
common knowledge in my entourage that the poor dear is absolutely head over
heels with him. And his music. He, naturally, has been languishing at
her feet, accepting her presents, and swearing undying love when no one else is
around, I don't doubt. I can see it coming now; he figures that when I find
out, I'll confront him—he'll vow he isn't worthy of her, being lowborn and all,
I'll agree, and he'll get paid off. But I actually have no objection to
lowborn-highborn marriages; I expect Reine's family will be only too happy to
see the end of the stream of vultures that's been preying on her, and I can see
a way of doing two friends a favor here. I'm certain that the threat of royal
displeasure if he makes Reine unhappy will keep the wandering fancy in line
once I get him back with me."
"I," Tarma said fervently, "will be your devoted
slave for the rest of your life. Both of you."
Stefan shook his head at her. "I owe you too much, Tarma, and
if this will really make you happy—"
"It will! Trust me, it will!"
"Consider it ordered, Roald. Now I have a question for you
two fellow-conspirators over there. What can I do for you?"
"If you're serious—" Kethry began.
"Totally. Anything short of being crowned; unless the Sword
sings for you, even I can't manage that. Titles? Lands? Wealth—I can't quite
supply; Char made too many inroads in the Treasury, but—"
"For years we have wanted to found a joint school," Kethry
said, slowly. "'Want' is actually too mild a word. By the edicts of my own
mage school, now that I'm an Adept I just about have to start a branch
of the White Winds school. What we need, really, is a place with a big enough
building to house our students and teachers, and enough lands to support it.
But that kind of property isn't easily come by."
"Because it's usually in the hands of nobles or clergy. I'm
disappointed," Stefan said with a grin, "I thought you'd want
something hard. One of Char's hereditary holdings was a fine estate down
in the south, near the border—a large manorhouse, a village of its own, and an
able staff to maintain it. It is, by the by, where I was supposed to end my
days in debauchery. It has an indoor riding arena attached to the stable
because Char hated to ride when it rained, it has a truly amazing library; why
it even has a professional salle, because the original builder was a
notable fighter. Is that just about what you're looking for?"
Tarma had felt her jaw dropping with every word, until, when
Stefan glanced over at her with a sly smile and a broad wink, she was unable to
get her voice to work.
Kethry answered for her. "Windborn—gods, yes!
I—Stefan, would you really give it to us?"
"Well, since the property of traitors becomes property of the
crown, and since I have some very unpleasant memories of the place—Lady
Bright, Fm only too pleased that you want it! Just pay your taxes promptly,
that's all I ask!"
Tarma tried to thank him, but her voice still wouldn't work.
Kethry made up for her—leaping out of her chair and giving the King a most
disrespectful hug and kiss, both of which he seemed to enjoy immensely.
"Furthermore, I'll be sending my offspring of both sexes to
you for training," he continued. "If nothing else, I want them to
have the discipline of a good swordmaster, something I didn't have. Maybe that
will keep them from being the kind of brat I was. This will probably scandalize
my nobles—"
"Oh, it will, lover," Mertis laughed, "But I agree
with the notion. It will do the children good."
"Then my nobles will have to live with being scandalized.
Now, I want the rest of you to decide what you'd like," he said when
Kethry had resumed her seat, but not her calm. "Because I'm going to do my
best by all of you. But right now I fear I do have a Council session,
and there are a lot of unpleasant messes Char left behind him that need
attending to."
Stefan rose, and gave his hand to Mertis, and the two exited
gracefully from the library. The rest clustered around Tarma and her partner,
congratulating them—
All but Jadrek, who had inexplicably vanished.
* * *
The partners made their weary way to their rooms. It had been a
long day, but for Tarma, a very happy one.
But Kethry was preoccupied—and a little disturbed, Tarma could sense
it without any special effort.
"Keth?" she asked, finally, "What's stuck in your
craw?"
"It's Jadrek. He hasn't said anything or come near me since
the night of the rebellion." She turned troubled and unhappy eyes on her
partner. "I don't know why; I thought he loved me—I know I
love him. And this afternoon—just disappearing like that—"
"Well, we're official now. He's reverting to courtly manners.
You don't go sneaking around to a lady's room; you treat her with
respect."
"Courtly manners be hanged!" Kethry snapped.
"Dammit Tarma, we'll be gone soon! Doesn't he care? If he doesn't say
something—"
"Then you'll hit him over the head and carry him off, like
the uncivilized barbarian mercenary I know you are. And I'll help."
Kethry started laughing at that. 'T hate to tell you this, but
that's exactly what I've been contemplating."
"Go make wish-lists of things you think you'll be needing for
this new school of ours," Tarma advised her. "That should keep your
mind occupied. I have the feeling this is going to sort itself out before
long."
She parted company with her she'enedra
at Kethry's door. They had rooms inside the royal complex now, not in the
visitors area. Stefansen was treating them as very honored guests.
She knew she wasn't alone the moment she closed the door behind
her. She also knew who it was—without Warrl's helpful hint of :It's
Jadrek. I let him in. He wants to talk.:
"Tarma—"
"Hello, Jadrek," she said calmly, lighting a candle
beside the door before turning around to face him. "We haven't been seeing
a lot of you; we've
missed you."
"I've been thinking," he said awkwardly. "I—"
She crossed her arms, and waited for him to continue. He
straightened his back and lifted his chin. "Tarma shena Tale'sedrin,"
he said, with all the earnest solemnity of a high priest, "Have I your
permission to pay my court to your oathsister?"
She raised an eyebrow. "Can you give me a good reason why I
should?"
Her question wilted him. He sat down abruptly, obviously
struggling for words. "I—Tarma, I love her, I really do. I love her
too much to just play with her, I want something formal binding us,
something—in keeping with her honor. She's lovely, you know that as well as I
do, but it isn't just her exterior I care for, it's her mind. She
challenges me, like nobody I've ever known before. We're equals—I want to be
her partner, not—not a—I don't know, I want to have something like Mertis and
Stefan have, and I know we'll give each other that! I want to help you with
your schools, too. I think it's a wonderful dream and I want to make it real,
and work alongside of both of you to make it more than a dream."
"We're something more than partners, she and I," Tarma
reminded him. "There's certain things between us that will affect any
children Kethry may have."
"I took the liberty of asking Warrl about that," he
said, blushing. "I don't have any problem with—children. With them being
raised Tale'sedrin. Everything I know about the Shin'a'in, everything I've
learned in working with you—I would be very, very proud if you considered my
blood good enough to flow into the Clans. Tarma, this is probably going to
sound stupid, but I've come to—love—you. You've done so much for me, more than
you guess. What I really want is that what we've built with the three of
us in the last few months should endure—the friendship, the love, the
partnership. I never had that before—and I'd do anything right now to prevent
losing either of you."
Tarma looked into his pleading eyes—and much to his evident shock and
delight, she took both his hands, pulled him up out of his chair into her arms,
hugged him just short of breaking his ribs, and planted a kiss squarely in the
middle of his forehead before letting him go again.
"Well, outClan brother," she laughed, "while
I can't speak for the lady, I would suggest you trot next door and ask her for
her hand yourself—because I do know that if you don't, you're going to
find yourself trussed hand and foot and lying over Hellsbane's rump like so
much baggage. You see, we happen to be barbarians, and we will do
anything to prevent losing you. He shala?"
His mouth worked for a moment, as he stared at her, his eyes
brightening with what Tarma suspected were tears of joy. Then he took her face
in both his hands, kissed her, and ran out her door as if joy had put
wings on his back.
"Better get Stefan to pick your successor," she called
after him. "Because we're going to keep you much too busy to putter
about in his Archives."
And so they did.
Appendix
One
Dictionary of Shin'a'in Terms
PRONUNCIATION:
' : glottal stop, a
pause, but not quite as long a pause as between two words
ai: as in air
ay: long "a" as
in way
ah: soft "a" as
in ah
ee: long "e" as
in feet
ear: as in fear
e: as in fend
i: long "i"
as in violent
oh: long "o" as
in moat
oo: as in boot
corthu: (cohr-thoo)—one
being
dester'edre: (destair
ay-dhray)—wind(born) sibling
dhon: (dthohn)—very
much
du'dera: (doo
dearah)—(I) give (you) comfort
for'shava: (fohr
shahvah)—very, very good
get'ke: (get
kay)—(could you) explain
gestena: (gestaynah)—thank
you
hai: (hi)—yes
hai shala: (hi
shahlah)—do you understand?
hai'she'li: (hi
she lee)—surprised "yes," literally "yes, I swear!"
hai'vetha: (hi
vethah)—yes, (be) running
her'y: (hear
ee)—(is this not) the truth
isda: (eesdah)—have
you (ever) seen (such)
jel'enedra: (jel
enaydrah)—little sister
jel' sutho'edrin: (jel
soothohaydthrin)—"forever younger siblings," usually refers to horses
jostumal: (johstoomahl)—enemy,
literally, "one desiring (your) blood"
kadessa: (kahdessah)—rodent
of the Dhorisha Plains
Kal'enedral: (kahl
enaydhrahl)—Her sword-brothers or Her swordchildren
Kal'enel: (kahl enel)—the Warrior aspect of the
fourfaced Goddess, literally, "Sword of the Stars." Also called
Enelve'astre (Star-Eyed) and Da'gretha (Warrior).
kathal: (kahthahl)—go
gently
kele: (kaylay)—(go)
onward
kestra: (kestrah)—a
casual friend
krethes: (kraythes)—speculation
kulath: (koolahth)—go
find
leshya'e: (layshee-ah
ee)—spirit; not a vengeful, earthbound ghost, but a helpful spirit
Liha'irden: (leehah
eardhren)—deer-footed
li'ha'eer: (lee hah eeahr)—exclamation, literally,
"by the gods"
li'sa'eer: (lee
sah eeahr)—exclamation of extreme surprise, literally "by the highest
gods!"
nes: (nes)—bad
nos: (nohs)—it
is
pretera: (praytearah)—grasscat
sadullos: (sahdoolohs)—safer
se: (sy)—is/are
ske'chorne: (shay
chornah)—homosexual; does not have negative connotations among the Shin'a'in.
ske'enedra: (shay
enaydrah)—sister by blood-oathing
sheka: (shaykah)—horse
droppings
shena: (shaynah)—of
the Clan, literally 'of the brotherhood'
shesti: (shestee)—nonsense
Shin'a'in: (shin
ay in)—the people of the plains
so'trekoth: (soh
traykoth)—fool who will believe anything, literally, "gape-mouthed
hatchling"
staven: (stahven)—water
Tale'edras: (tahle
aydhrahs)—Hawkbrothers, a race who may or may not be related to the Shin'a'in,
living in the Pelagiris Forest
Tale'sedrin: (tahle
saydhrin)—children of the hawk
te'sorthene: (tay
sohrthayne)—heart-friend, spirit-friend
Vai datha: (vi
dahthah)—expression of resignation or agreement, literally "there are many
ways."
var'athanda: (vahr
ahthahndah)—to be forgetful of
ves'tacha: (ves
tahchah)—beloved one
vysaka: (visahkah)—the
spiritual bond between the Kal'enedral and the Warrior; its presence can
actually be detected by an Adept, another Kal'enedral, and the Kal'enedral
him/herself. It is this bond which creates the "shielding" that makes
Kal'enedral celibate/neuter and somewhat immune to magic.
vyusher: (vi-ooshear)—wolf
yai: (yi)—two
yuthi'so'coro: (yoothee
soh cohr-oh)—road courtesy; the rules Shin'a'in follow when traveling on a
public road.
Appendix
Two
Songs and Poems
SUFFER
THE CHILDREN
(Tarma: Oathbreakers)
These are the hands that wield a sword
With trained and practiced skill;
These are the hands, and this the mind,
Both honed and backed by will.
Death is my partner, blood my trade,
And war my passion wild—
But these are the hands that also ache
To hold a tiny child.
CH: Suffer,
they suffer, the children,
When
I see them, gods, how my heart breaks!
It
is ever and always the children
Who
will pay for their parents' mistakes.
Somehow they know that I'm a friend—
I see it in their eyes,
Somehow they sense a kindly heart—
So young, so very wise.
Mine are the hands that maim and kill—
But children never care.
They only know my hands are strong
And comfort is found there.
Little enough that I can do
To shield the young from pain—
Not while their parents fight and die
For land, or goods, or gain.
All I can do is give them love—
All I can do is strive
To teach them enough of my poor skill
To help them stay alive.
OATHBREAKERS
CH: Cursed
Oathbreakers, your honor's in pawn
And
worthless the vows you have made—
Justice
shall see you where others have gone,
Delivered
to those you betrayed!
These are the signs of a mage that's forsworn—
The True Gifts gone dead in his hand,
Magic corrupted and discipline torn,
Shifting heart like shifting sand;
Swift to allow any passion to run,
Given to hatred and rage.
Give him wide berth and his company shun—
For darkness devours the Dark Mage.
These are the signs of a traitor in war—
Wealth from no visible source,
Shunning old comrades he welcomed before,
Holding to no steady course.
If you uncover the one who'd betray,
Heed not his words nor his pen.
Give him no second chance—drive him away—
False once will prove false again.
These are the signs of the treacherous priest—
Pleasure in anyone's pain,
Abuse or degrading of man or of beast,
Duty as second to gain,
Preaching belief but with none of his own,
Twisting all that he controls.
Fear him and never face him all alone,
He corrupts innocent souls.
These are the signs of the king honor-broke—
Pride coming first over all,
Treading the backs and the necks of his folk
That he alone might stand tall,
Giving himself to desires that are base,
Tyrannous, cunning, and cruel.
Bring him down—set someone else in his place.
Such men are not fit to rule.
ADVICE
TO YOUNG MAGICIANS
(Kethry)
The firebird knows your anger
And the firebird feels your fear,
For your passions will attract her
And your feelings draw her near.
But the negative emotions
Only make her flame and fly.
You must rule your heart, magician,
Or by her bright wings you die.
Now the cold-drake lives in silence
And he feeds on dark despair
Where the shadows fall the bleakest
You will find the cold-drake there.
For he seeks to chill your spirit
And to lure you down to death.
Learn to rule your soul, magician,
Ere you dare the cold-drake's breath.
And the griffon is a proud beast
He's the master of the sky.
And no one forgets the sight
Who has seen the griffon fly.
But his will is formed in magic
And not mortal flesh and bone
And if you would rule the griffon
You must first control your own.
The kyree is a creature
With a soul both old and wise
You must never think to fool him
For he sees through all disguise.
If you seek to call a kyree
All your secrets he shall plumb—
So be certain you are worthy
Or the kyree—will not
come.
For your own heart you must conquer
If the firebird you would call
You must know the dark within you
Ere you seek the cold-drake's hall
Here is better rede, magician
Than those books upon your shelf—
If you seek to master others
You must master first yourself.
OATHBOUND
(The Oathbound, Tarma & Kethry)
CH: Bonds
of blood and bonds of steel
Bonds
of god-fire and of need,
Bonds
that only we two feel
Bonds
of word and bonds of deed,
Bonds
we took—and knew the cost
Bonds
we swore without mistake
Bonds
that give more than we lost,
Bonds
that grant more than they take.
Tarma:
Kal'enedral, Sword-Sworn, I,
To my Star-Eyed Goddess bound,
With my pledge would vengeance buy
But far more than vengeance found.
Now with steel and iron will
Serve my Lady and my Clan
All my pleasure in my skill—
Nevermore with any man.
Kethry:
Bound am I by my own will
Never to misuse my power—
Never to pervert my skill
To the pleasures of an hour.
With this blade that I now wear
Came another bond indeed—
While her arcane gifts I share
I am bound to woman's Need.
Tarma:
And by blood-oath we are bound
Held by more than mortal bands
For the vow we swore was crowned
By god-fires upon our hands.
Kethry:
You are more than shield-sib now
We are bound, and yet are free
So I make one final vow—
That your Clan shall live through me.
ADVICE
TO WOULD-BE HEROES
(Tarma)
So you want to go earning your keep with your sword
And you think it cannot be too hard—
And you dream of becoming a hero or lord
With your praises sung out by some bard.
Well now, let me then venture to give you advice
And when all of my lecture is done
We will see if my words have not made you think twice
About whether adventuring's "fun!"
Now before you seek shelter or food for yourself
Go seek first for those things for your beast
For he is worth far more than praises or pelf
Though a fool thinks to value him least.
If you've ever a moment at leisure to spare
Then devote it, as if to your god,
To his grooming, and practice, and weapons-repair
And to seeing you both are well-shod.
Eat you lightly and sparingly—never full-fed—
For a full belly founders your mind.
Ah, but sleep when you can—it is better than bread—
For on night-watch no rest will you find.
Do not boast of your skill, for there's always one more
Who would prove he is better than you.
Treat swordladies like sisters, and not like a whore
Or your wenching days, child, will be few.
When you look for a captain, then look for the man
Who thinks first of his men and their beasts,
And who listens to scouts, and has more than one plan,
And heeds not overmuch to the priests.
And if you become captain, when choosing your men
Do not look at the "heroes" at all.
For a hero dies young—rather choose yourself ten
Or a dozen whose pride's not so tall.
Now your Swordmaster's god—whosoever he be—
When he stands there before you to teach
And don't argue or whine, think to mock foolishly
Or you'll soon be consulting a leech'
Now most booty is taken by generals and kings
And there's little that's left for the low
So it's best that you learn skills, or work at odd things
To keep food in your mouth as you go.
And last, if you should chance to reach equal my years
You must find you a new kind of trade
For the plea that you're still spry will fall on deaf ears—
There's no work for old swords, I'm afraid.
Now if all that I've told you has not changed your mind
Then I'll teach you as best as I can.
For you're stubborn, like me, and like me of the kind
Becomes one fine swords-woman or -man!
THE
PRICE OF COMMAND
(Captain Idra)
This is the price of commanding—
That you always stand alone,
Letting no one near
To see the fear
That's behind the mask you've grown.
This is the price of commanding.
This is the price of commanding—
That you watch your dearest die,
Sending women and men
To fight again,
And you never tell them why.
This is the price of commanding.
This is the price of commanding,
That mistakes are signed in red—
And that you won't pay
But others may,
And your best may wind up dead.
This is the price of commanding.
This is the price of commanding—
All the deaths that haunt your sleep.
And you hope they forgive
And so you live
With your memories buried deep.
This is the price of commanding.
This is the price of commanding—
That if you won't, others will.
So you take your post,
Mindful of each ghost—
You've a debt to them to fill.
This is the price of commanding.
THE
ARCHIVIST
(Jadrek)
I sit amid the dusty books. The dust invades my very soul.
It coats my heart with weariness and chokes it with despair.
My life lies beached and withered on a lonely, bleak, uncharted
shoal.
There are no kindred spirits here to understand, or care.
When I was young, how often I would feed my hungry mind with tales
And sought the fellowship in books I did not find in kin.
For one does not seek friends when every overture to others fails
So all the company I craved I built from dreams within.
Those dreams—from all my books of lore I plucked the wonders one
by one
And waited for the day that I was certain was to come
When some new hero would appear whose quest had only now begun
With desperate need of lore and wisdom I alone could plumb.
And then, ah then, I'd ride away to join with legend and with
song.
The trusted friend of heroes, figured in their words and deeds.
Until that day, among the books I'd dwell—but I have dwelt too
long
And like the books I sit alone, a relic no one needs.
I grow too old, I grow too old, my aching bones have made me lame
And if my futile dream came true, I could not live it now.
The time is past, long past, when I could ride the wings of
fleeting fame
The dream is dead beneath the dust, as 'neath the dust I bow.
So, unregarded and alone I tend these fragments of the past
Poor fool who bartered life and soul on dreams and useless lore.
And as I watch despair and bitterness enclose my heart at last
Within my soul's dark night I cry out, "Is there nothing
more?"
LIZARD
DREAMS
(Kethry: Oathbound)
Most folk avoid the Pelagir Hills, where ancient wars and battles
Were fought with magic, not with steel, for land and gold and
chattels.
Most folk avoid the forest dark for magics still surround it
And change the creatures living there and all that dwell around
it.
Within a tree upon a hill that glowed at night with magic
There lived a lizard named Gervase whose life was rather tragic.
His heart was brave, his mind was wise. He longed to be a wizard.
But who would ever think to teach their magic to a lizard?
So poor Gervase would sit and dream, or sigh as sadly rueing
That fate kept him forever barred from good he could be doing.
That he had wit and mind and will it cannot be debated
He also had the kindest heart that ever gods created.
One day as Gervase sighed and dreamed all in the forest sunning
He heard a noise of horse and hound and sounds of two feet
running.
A human stumbled to his glade, a human worn and weary
Dressed in a shredded wizard's robe, his eyes past hope and
dreary.
The magic of his birthplace gave Gervase the gift of speaking.
He hesitated not at all—ran to the wizard, squeaking,
"Hide human, hide! Hide in my tree!" he danced and
pointed madly.
The wizard stared, the wizard gasped, then hid himself right
gladly.
Gervase at once lay in the sun until the hunt came by him
Then like a simple lizard now he fled as they came nigh him.
And glowered in the hollow tree and hissed when they came near him
And bit a few dogs' noses so they'd yelp and leap and fear him.
"Thrice damn that wizard!" snarled his foe. "He's
slipped our hunters neatly.
The hounds have surely been misled. They've lost the trail
completely."
He whipped the the dogs off of the tree and sent them homeward
running
And never once suspected it was all Gervase's cunning.
The wizard out of hiding crept. "Thrice blessing I accord
you!
And is there somehow any way I can at all reward you?"
"I want to be a man like you!" Gervase replied
unthinking.
"A wizard—or a man?" replied the mage who stared,
unblinking.
"For I can only grant you one, the form of man, or power.
What will you choose? Choose wisely, I must leave within the
hour."
Gervase in silence sat and thought, his mind in turmoil churning.
And first the one choice thinking on, then to the other turning.
Yes, he could have the power he craved, the magic of a wizard
But who'd believe that power lived inside a lowly lizard?
Or he could have the form of man, but what could he do in it?
And all the good he craved to do—how then could he begin it?
Within the Councils of the Wise there sits a welcome stranger
His word is sought by high and low if there is need or danger.
He gives his aid to all who ask, who need one to defend them
And every helpless creature knows he lives but to befriend them.
And though his form is very strange compared to those beside him
The mages care not for the form, but for the mind inside him.
For though he's small, and brightly scaled, they do not see a
lizard.
He's called by all, both great and small, "Gervase, the Noble
Wizard."
He's known by all, both great and small, Gervase the Lizard
Wizard!
LOVERS
UNTRUE
(Tarma: "Swordsworn")
"I shall love you till I die!"
Talasar and Dera cry.
He swears "On my life I vow
Only death could part us now!"
She says "You are life and breath
Nothing severs us but Death!"
Lightly taken, lightly spoke,
Easy vows are easy broke.
"Come and ride awhile with me,"
Talasar says to Varee,
"Look, the moon is rising high,
Countless stars bestrew the sky.
Come, or all the hours are flown
It's no night to lie alone."
This the one who lately cried
That he'd love until he died.
"Kevin, do you think me fair?"
Dera smiles, shakes back her hair.
"I have long admired you—
Come, the night is young and new
And the wind is growing cold—
I would see if you are bold—"
Is this she who vowed till death
Talasar was life and breath?
Comes the dawn—beneath a tree
Talasar lies with Varee.
But look—who should now draw near
Dera and her Kevin-dear
He sees her—and she sees him—
Oh confusion! Silence grim!
Till he sighs, and shakes his head—(pregnant pause)
"Well, I guess we must be dead!"
THE
LESLAC VERSION
(Leslac and Tarma)
Leslac: The warrior and the sorceress rode into
Viden-town
For they had heard of evil there and
meant to bring it down
An overlord with iron hand who ruled
his folk with fear—
Tarma: Bartender, shut that minstrel up and bring
another beer.
L: The
warrior and the sorceress went searching high and low
T: That
isn't true, I tell you, and I think that I should know!
L: They
meant to find the tyrant who'd betrayed his people's trust
And bring
the monster's power and pride to tumble in the dust.
L: They
searched through all the town to find and bring him to defeat.
T: Like
Hell! What we were looking for was wine and bread and meat!
L: They
found him in the tavern and they challenged him to fight.
T: We found
him holding up the bar, drunk as a pig, that night.
L: The
tyrant laughed and mocked at them, with vile words and base.
T: He
tripped on WarrFs tail, then took exception to my face.
L: The
warrior was too wise for him; his blade clove only air!
T: He swung,
I ducked, he lunged—and then he tripped over a chair.
L: With but
a single blow the warrior brought him to his doom!
T: About
that time he turned around—I got him with a broom.
L: And in a
breath the deed was done! The tyrant-lord lay dead!
T: I didn't
mean for him to hit the fire iron with his head!
L: The wife
that he had kept shut up they freed and set on high
And
Viden-town beneath her hand contentedly did lie.
T: I went to
find his next-of-kin and to the girl confess—
"Your
husband wasn't much before, but now he's rather less—"
T: "He
was a drunken sot, and I'll be better off," she said.
"And
while I can't admit it, I'm not sorry that he's dead.
So here's a
little something—but you'd best be on your way—
I'll claim
it was an accident if you'll just leave today."
L: In
triumph out of Viden-town the partners rode again
To find
another tyrant and to clean him from his den—
The scourge
of evil and the answer to a desperate prayer!"
T: Don't you
believe a word of it—I know, 'cause I was there!
WIND'S
FOUR QUARTERS
(Tarma: "Swordsworn")
CH: Wind's
four quarters, air and fire
Earth
and water, hear my desire
Grant
my plea who stands alone—
Maiden,
Warrior, Mother and Crone.
Eastern wind blow clear, blow clean,
Cleanse my body of its pain,
Cleanse my mind of what I've seen,
Cleanse my honor of its stain.
Maid whose love has never ceased
Bring me healing from the East.
Southern wind blow hot, blow hard,
Fan my courage to a flame,
Southern wind be guide and guard,
Add your bravery to my name.
Let my will and yours be twinned,
Warrior of the Southern wind.
Western wind, stark, blow strong,
Grant me arm and mind of steel
On a road both hard and long.
Mother, hear me where I kneel.
Let no weakness on my quest
Hinder me, wind of the West.
Northern wind blow cruel, blow cold,
Sheathe my aching heart in ice,
Armor 'round my soul enfold.
Crone I need not call you twice.
To my foes bring the cold of death!
Chill me. North wind's frozen breath.
THE SWORDLADY, OR:
THAT
SONG"
(Leslac)
Swordlady, valiant, no matter the foe,
Into the battle you fearlessly go—
Boldly you ride out beyond map and chart—
Why are you frightened to open your heart?
Swordlady, lady of consummate skill,
Lady of prowess, of strength and of will,
Swordlady, lady of cold ice and steel,
Why will you never admit that you feel?
Swordlady, mistress of all arts of war,
Wise in the ways of all strategic lore,
You fear no creature below or above,
Why do you shrink from the soft touch of love?
Swordlady, brave to endure wounds and pain,
Plunging through lightning, through thunder and rain,
Flinching from nothing, so high is your pride,
Why then pretend you hold nothing inside?
Swordlady, somewhere within you is hid
A creature of feeling that no vow can rid,
A woman—a girl, with a heart soft and warm,
No matter the brutal deeds that you perform.
Swordlady, somewhere inside of you deep,
Cowers the maiden that you think asleep,
Frozen within you, in ice shrouded womb
That you can only pretend is a tomb.
Swordlady, all of the vows you have made
Can never make your heart die as you've bade.
Swordlady, after the winter comes spring;
One day your heart will awaken and sing.
Swordlady, one day there must come a man
Who shall lift from you this self-imposed ban,
Thawing the ice that's enshrouded your soul,
On that day swordlady, you shall be whole.
SHIN'A'IN
WARSONG
(The old
tradition holds that the Shin'a'in—now forty-odd Clans in all—originally came
from four: the Tale'sedrin (Children of the Hawk), the Liha'irden (Deer-sibs),
the Vuysher'edras (Brothers of the Wolves), and the Pretera'sedrin (the
Children of the Grasscats). Hence the monumental seriousness of the threat of
declaring Tale'sedrin a dead Clan in Oathbound.)
Gold the dawn-sun spreads his wings—
Follow where the East-wind sings,
Brothers, sisters, side by side,
To defend our home we ride!
Eyes of Hawks the borders see—
Watchers, guard it carefully
Let no stranger pass it by—
Children of the Hawk, now fly!
CH: Maiden,
Warrior, Mother, Crone,
Help
us keep this land our own.
Rover,
Guardian, Hunter, Guide,
With
us now forever ride.
Speed of deer, oh grant to these—
Swift to warn of enemies,
Fleeter far than any foe—
Deer-child, to the border go!
Cunning as the Wolf-pack now,
To no overlord we bow!
Lest some lord our freedom blight,
Brothers of the Wolves, we fight!
Brave, the great Cat guards his lair,
Teeth to rend and claws to tear.
Lead the battle, first to last,
Children of the Cat, hold fast!
Hawk and Cat, and Wolf and Deer,
Keep the plains now safe from fear,
Brothers, sisters, side by side,
To defend our home, we ride!
SHIN'A'IN
SONG OF THE SEASONS
(Although
Tarma seldom mentioned the fact, her people have a four-aspected male deity to
compliment the female. This song gives Him equal time with Her.)
The East wind is calling, so come ride away,
Come follow the Rover into the new day,
Come follow the Maiden, the Dark Moon, with me,
The new year's beginning, come ride out and see.
Come follow the Rover out onto the plains,
Come greet the new life under sweet, singing rains,
Come follow the Maiden beneath vernal showers,
For where her feet passed you will find fragrant flowers.
The South wind, oh hear it, we ride to the call
We follow the Guardian, the Lord of us all,
We follow the Warrior, the strong to defend,
The New Moon to fighters is ever a friend.
With summer comes fighting, with summer, our foes;
And how we must thwart them the Guardian knows.
The Warrior will give them no path but retreat,
The Warrior and Guardian will bring their defeat.
Come follow the West wind, the wind of the fall,
The Mother will cast her cloak over us all.
Come follow the Hunter out onto the plain,
Return to the Clan with the prey we have slain.
For now comes the autumn, the time of the West,
The season of Full Moon, of harvest, then rest.
So take from Her hands all the fruits of the fields,
And thank Him for all that the autumn-hunt yields.
The North wind, the cold wind, the wind of the snow,
Tells us, it is time winter pastures to go.
The Guide knows the path, and the Crone shows us how—
The Old Moon, and time for returning is now.
And if, with the winter, should come the last breath,
And riding, we ride out of life into death,
The Wise One, the Old Moon, will ease our last load,
The Guide will be waiting to show the new road.
THREES
(Leslac)
Deep into the stony hills, miles from keep or hold
A troupe of guards comes riding with a lady and her gold—
Riding in the center shrouded in her cloak of fur,
Companioned by a maiden and a toothless, aged cur.
Three things see no end, a flower blighted ere it bloomed,
A message that was wasted, and a journey that is doomed.
One among the guardsmen has a shifting, restless eye,
And as they ride he scans the hills that rise against the sky.
He wears both sword and bracelet worth more than he can afford,
And hidden in his baggage is a heavy, secret hoard.
Of three things be wary, of a feather on a cat,
The shepherd eating mutton and the guardsman that is fat.
From ambush, bandits screaming charge the packtrain and its prize,
And all but four within the train are taken by surprise,
And all but four are cut down as a woodsman fells a log,
The guardsman, and the lady, and the maiden, and the dog,
Three things know a secret—first, the lady in a dream,
The dog that barks no warning and the maid who does not scream.
Then off the lady pulls her cloak, in armor she is clad,
Her sword is out and ready, and her eyes are fierce and glad.
The maiden gestures briefly and the dog's a cur no more—
A wolf, sword-maid and sorceress now face the bandit corps!
Three things never anger or you will not live for long,
A wolf with cubs, a man with power and a woman's sense of wrong.
The bandits growl a challenge and the lady only grins,
The sorceress bows mockingly, and then the fight begins!
When it ends there are but four left standing from that horde
The witch, the wolf, the traitor, and the woman with the sword!
Three things never trust in, the maiden sworn as "pure,"
The vows a king has given and the ambush that is "sure.
They strip the traitor naked and they whip him on his way
Into the barren hillsides like the folks he used to slay.
They take a thorough vengeance for the women he cut down
And then they mount their horses and they journey back to town.
Three things trust and cherish well, the horse on which you ride,
The beast that guards and watches and the sister at your side!
For further
information on these songs, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to:
FIREBIRD
ARTS AND MUSIC
(formerly
Off-Centaur Publications)
PO Box 424
El Cerrito, CA 94530