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THE BLOOD KING
Book Two of the CHRONICLES OF THE NECROMANCER
GAIL Z. MARTIN
By the same author
THE SUMMONER
Book One of the Chronicles of the
Necromancer
SOLARIS
First published 2008 by Solaris
an imprint of BL Publishing
Games Workshop Ltd,
ISBN-13: 978 1 84416 531 5 ISBN-10: 1
84416 531 0
Copyright © Gail Z. Martin 2008
Map by Kirk
The right of the author to be identified
as the author of this
work has been asserted in accordance with
the Copyright,
Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this
publication may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system,
or transmitted, in any
form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying,
recording or otherwise, without the prior
permission of the
copyright owners.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
A CTP catalogue record for this book is
available from the British Library.
Designed & typeset by BL Publishing
Printed in the
For everyone who believed in my dreams and
helped to make them happen.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This book was made possible by the loving
indulgence of my family, who were used to sharing me with Tris and now has
been kind enough to share more of my time with readers and the obligations of
publishing. To my husband Larry, a wonderful first editor and muse. To my
daughters Kyrie and
Story So Far Chapter Twenty-one About The Author
Chapter One Chapter Twenty-two Main Characters
Chapter Two Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Three Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Four Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Five Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Six Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Seven Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Eight Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Nine Chapter Thirty
Chapter Ten Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Eleven Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Twelve Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirteen Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Fourteen Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Fifteen Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Sixteen Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Seventeen Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Eighteen Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Nineteen Chapter Fourty
Chapter Twenty
CHRONICLES OF THE
NECROMANCER prev next contents
IT SHOULD HAVE been an evening of
feasting and court merriment. But on the night of the Yeast of the Departed,
nineteen year-old Prince Martris Drayke's life is changed forever when his
half-brother, fared, kills their father and seizes the throne. Aided by his
dark mage, Foor Arontala, fared murders the royal family—all except
Martris, who barely escapes with the help of a handful of friends.
Tris is now an outlaw, hunted by fared's
assassins. As danger and grief push Tris to his limits, he discovers that he
is the mage-heir of his sorcerer grandmother Bava K'aa, a powerful sorceress
whose spirit magic made her a Summoner, able to intercede among the living,
dead, and undead. In a world where ghosts walk freely and where the undead
vayash moru walk the night, this wild and powerful magic may be the advantage
Tris needs to win back the throne—if he
can keep his newfound power from destroying him first.
Tris flees the palace Shekerishet with
three good friends: Carroway, a master bard; Ban Soterius, captain of the
king's guard; and Tov Harrtuck, a loyal officer. Desperate to find sanctuary in
one of the neighboring kingdoms, the four are pursued by bounty hunters hired
by fared to kill Tris. Harrtuck leads them to Jonmarc Vahanian, a mercenary and
smuggler who can guide them through the dangerous mountain passes to reach
sanctuary in Principality. Taking cover with a traveling caravan, they meet the
healer Carina and her brother
When slavers sent by fared destroy the
caravan seeking Tris and his friends,
On the road, Tris meets Kiara, daughter of
King Donelan of Isencroft, who has gone on a dangerous coming-of-age Journey to
evade a long-ago arranged betrothal to fared of Margolan. Kiara believes that
Arontala is behind the wasting spell that is killing her father. She pledges
herself to Tris's cause. Hounded by the king's troops, Tris and his friends
find sanctuary at the legendary Library at Westmarch. The Library is a
repository of ancient magical lore run by
the eccentric Keeper Royster. At
Westmarch, Tris's training begins with the Sisterhood, a reclusive group of
powerful sorceresses.
Tris learns from the Sisterhood that
Arontala has stolen the orb in which Bava K'aa once trapped the soul of the
Obsidian King, a dark and powerful Summoner who nearly destroyed the Winter
Kingdoms fifty years ago during the cataclysmic Mage Wars. Arontala plans to
free the spirit of the Obsidian King on the night of the summer solstice—the Hawthorn Moon—and permit it to possess him, making that
ancient evil incarnate and assuring fared's power over Margolan and the entire
realm of the Winter Kingdoms.
In spite of the danger, Tris and Kiara
fall in love. When they leave the safety of Westmarch so that Tris can
continue his mage
training ivith the Sisterhood, they are ambushed by
Margolan assassins. Fighting their way free from one ambush, they are captured by
the guards of King Staden of Principality. Expecting to be sent back to
fared in chains, Tris and the others discover that their capture was Staden's
way of bringing them safely to his court, where Soterius and Harrtuck have won
the king's support. Berry, Staden's daughter Berwyn, urged her father to support
Tris's quest. Now, as the last month of the year approaches, Tris finds himself
in exile, struggling to master powerful spirit magic that has the potential to
destroy him. Tris must find a way to take back the throne from fared and defeat
Arontala in order to free Margolan and keep the dark magic of the Obsidian King
from rising again.
CHAPTER ONE prev next contents
Martris Drayke,
Margolan's exiled prince, looked up sharply as the
door to the war room swung open and King Staden of Principality strode into the
council chamber.
"Today, we talk of war," Staden
said as those assembled rose in deference. With him were a stiff-stanced man
whose military bearing made plain his vocation, and another nervous man whose
eyes constantly scanned the room.
"I gave you my word that you'd have
access to my best strategists, Prince Drayke," Staden said proudly.
"Here they are. This," he pointed toward the tall man who, even at rest,
stood at attention, "is General Darrath, and this," he gestured
toward his other companion, "is my chief rat catcher, Hant. If a
successful campaign can be planned, they can do it."
Tris Drayke bowed in acknowledgement.
"Thank you, Your Majesty," Tris
replied. "I'm in your debt." Only a day had passed
since Tris and his companions had been brought to Staden's palace. They had
been captured by the king's guards at the border as they fled an ambush by
assassins sent from Jared of Margolan. At the time, with their weapons
confiscated and transported under heavy guard, Tris was sure they would be
turned over to Jared, like bargaining chips in a high-stakes game of contre dice.
Instead, Staden welcomed them as heroes, grateful for the return of his daughter,
"Nonsense," Staden boomed.
"Let's not get into that again. I'll have your meals sent to you. Take as
long as you like. I've got work to do elsewhere," he bustled, heading for
the massive wooden doors. "Do join me for supper," he invited over
his shoulder as he left, pulling the door closed with a bang behind him.
"So you are Martris Drayke?"
Darrath said in a voice rough enough to sand wood. "I am," Tris
replied.
"Come closer, boy." Darrath
beckoned with a long finger. "I want to see you." Tris stepped
closer, but the general beckoned once more. "Close enough to look in your
eyes. I want to know what you're made of."
Tris stood a head taller than the
sharp-featured general. Darrath regarded Tris coldly through eyes that seemed
as if they could see down to his bones, and for a long, uncomfortable moment,
Darrath's eyes met his. Tris felt as if he were being measured. "You
realize," General Darrath said finally, "that if we support you,
Principality will be at war with your homeland."
"I realize that."
"And you realize," Darrath
continued, "that many men will die to put you on Margolan's throne. Some
might say that's none of our affair."
"It's already Principality's
affair," Tris replied. "Jared sent his troops across your borders to
hunt down Kiara, persecute the Sisterhood, and look for me. He bargained with
slavers who kidnapped your princess, and who took prisoners a day's ride from
the Principality border. Margolan refugees crowd your borders. What Arontala
hasn't taken already, he'll take once The Hawthorn Moon is past. Margolan's
troubles are already Principality's concern."
Darrath regarded him silently for a
moment, then nodded. "Well said, Prince Drayke. Yet you ask an enormous
favor. I wonder: do you have the mettle to stand against King Jared and his
dark mage? You're barely twenty summers old."
"I'm not a boy," Tris replied.
"I'm a mage— and a Summoner. And by the will of the Lady, I'll rid
Margolan of Jared and his sorcerer or die try-ing."
Darrath nodded once more. "You're
willing to give your life. Are you willing to offer up your friends' lives
too?"
"I'd give my life willingly to save
theirs," Tris replied. "I haven't asked them to go with me. They have
reasons of their own to wish Margolan free of its darkness. It's their
choice."
"Tris speaks for all of us,"
Kiara Sharsequin put in. The Isencroft princess, dressed as she had been on the
road in the tunic and trews of a soldier, was unmistakably a warrior in her own
right. "He hasn't asked us to follow him. But none of us can let Foor
Arontala gain the power of the Obsidian King." From beside her, Jae, her
hunting gyregon, hissed. Tris exchanged glances with his companions. Jonmarc
Vahanian, a fighter whose escapades—and lawbreaking—were legend. Ban Soterius,
former captain of the late King Bricen's guard. Tov Harrtuck, Bricen's
armsmaster. Carroway the bard, who together with Soterius and Harrtuck spirited
Tris out of Margolan after Jared's coup. Carina Jesthrata, sworn to Tris's
cause to break Arontala's mage-born curse on King Donelan of Isencroft. Their
faces and their murmured assent made their solidarity clear. They were unlikely
rebels, each brought into the quest for their own reasons, and now, bound by
shared danger and fierce friendship, they were preparing to wage war against
Jared the Usurper to destroy the Obsidian King.
Darrath remained silent for a moment, as
if considering Kiara's words. "Very well," he said finally,
motioning them to sit. "Let's get to it."
Evening found
them still so deeply engrossed in their
discussion that Staden joined them, and bade the servant fetch them dinner.
Mikhail joined them at sundown.
"I trust our kitchen was well-stocked
with fresh deer's blood?" Staden asked Mikhail.
Enough faint color tempered Mikhail's
usual pallor to indicate that the vayash moru had recently fed.
"Your cook has been most generous. I dined very well."
Although his face and form were that of a
young man in his early twenties, Mikhail, one of the undead, had been liegeman
to Tris's ancestor, King Hotten, two hundred years before. Now, Mikhail pledged
his allegiance to the effort to unseat Jared Drayke.
By the evening bells, the group had
reviewed the qualifications of every mercenary company in Principality. Famous
for the paid companies that operated within its borders, Principality more than
compensated for its own relatively small army. Small but wealthy,
Principality's northern gold mines were known for their rich veins. A spoil of
war in conflicts among Margolan, Eastmark and Dhasson over generations,
Principality seized its independence three hundred years before, when the
squabbles of the major powers distracted them as a local warlord rose to power.
Back then, Algor the Tall nurtured
relationships with the best mercenary companies, augmenting the modest army
raised from Principality's own sparse population. In return for the ability to
operate freely, the mercenary companies swore their intent, if not quite their
allegiance, to protect the small country and made an oath that their swords
would never be purchased against Principality. It was an arrangement that
served the kingdom well. The mercenary companies that operated from a
Principality base were among the most trustworthy in an uncertain business, and
the major powers considered the land more trouble than it was worth.
For more than a candlemark, Harrtuck and
Vahanian heatedly argued the merits of one company over another, punctuated by
Soterius's strong opinions and Mikhail's more moderate views. Kiara chimed in
more than once, revealing a knowledge of the mercenary groups and their
fighting tactics which impressed Tris. Carina and Carroway sat at the far end
of the table, insistent in their wish to be present but silent, watching
intently. Royster, the librarian from the Sisterhood's stronghold in Westmarch,
chronicled the debate for history's sake.
Tris leaned forward to catch every word,
acutely aware of how sheltered he had been as King Bricen's second son.
Tiredly, he smoothed back a stray lock of white-blond hair that fell into his
eyes. Anxious to learn, he willingly ceded the discussion to the professional
soldiers. Darrath presided over the arguments with seasoned tolerance, adding
his own impressions of the companies wintering in the area.
They determined that Harrtuck would
command the mercenary troops, and ate their meal embroiled in debate over how
best to contain Jared and his army. Hant said little, observing the discussion
with an uncanny silence, as if he were analyzing the essence of each of the
people at the table. His dark
eyes darted from speaker to speaker.
Finally, Hant held up his hand for silence.
"Have you considered," Hant
began in a tone that clearly said he knew that his suggestion had not, in fact,
occurred to them yet, "that there is an alternative to taking Margolan by
force?"
Harrtuck frowned and sat back in his
chair, crossing his arms. "How do you propose to do that? March in and
ask Jared to kindly step aside?"
A cold smile flickered at the corners of
Hant's mouth. "Something like that, only perhaps less civilly. I
suggest," he said, "that the armies be engaged, but not cross into
Margolan."
"And just what good will that
do?" Soterius demanded, running a hand back through his short-cropped,
russet hair.
"You were the captain of the king's
guard, were you not?" Hant turned his cold stare on Soterius, who nodded.
"Were your troops cold-blooded killers?"
Soterius looked troubled. "Margolan's
army was a disciplined fighting force. But they weren't monsters."
Hant templed his fingers in thought.
"Do you know these men personally?"
Soterius nodded. "Many of them. I'd
recognize even more by sight, although I couldn't put a name to the face."
"Then if they aren't bewitched, might
some of them accept the chance to stop the evil that grows in your homeland, if
they thought they had a chance of winning?" Hant asked.
Soterius paused as he thought, his dark
eyes sober. "I believe so,"
he replied, "unless Jared's killed the good men and replaced them with his own ilk." He was silent
for a moment. "One of the hardest parts will be figuring out which
soldiers have done the killing and looting—either on their own, or on Jared's
orders."
"Orders or
not, every soldier is responsible for his own choices," Vahanian's tone
spoke of bitter experience. "The soldiers you want will be outlaws by
now—if they haven't been hanged. The ones still in uniform are the enemy."
"I have no
desire to see Principality and Margolan locked in a war that may last for
years," Darrath said. "I believe I see where Hant is leading. If you
were to slip into Margolan and recruit its troops against Jared, we may never
have to march paid soldiers against your people. Are you willing to take that
risk?"
Once again
Soterius paused, then looked at Tris and looked back to Darrath. "I
am."
"I'll go
with him," volunteered Mikhail to everyone's surprise. The vayash moru
seemed unperturbed at their reaction.
"I'd be
glad for the company," Soterius replied.
"And what
of the mercs?" Harrtuck demanded.
"The
mercenary companies would hold the borders as a second line of defense,"
Darrath replied, leaning forward as he caught the spirit of Hant's proposal.
"You can contain Jared between Margolan's northern border and the river,
and patrol the border." He paused, looking at the map. "The magicked
beasts Arontala sent to keep Tris from reaching Dhasson should cut Jared off to
the east until they're dispelled."
"We don't
know what is going on in Isencroft," Kiara added. "Carina's brother,
have asked
father to support Tris, but there's no way to know what father will be able to
do."
"Perhaps
there is," said Staden from the doorway, where a page had urgently
beckoned for his attention. He stepped aside to reveal a tattered and dirty
messenger. "This rider arrived from Isencroft not half a candlemark ago.
Whatever news he carries must be important, if it was worth so hard and dangerous
a ride."
Eagerly, Kiara
and Carina sprang from their seats to meet the exhausted rider halfway across
the room. From a pouch under his tunic, the messenger produced a sealed
parchment which Kiara took with trembling hands. "Look," she said to
Carina, "it's in father's handwriting."
"Read
it!"
Kiara read the
missive in silence, her auburn hair falling around her face, framing an expression
growing by turns more serious and then relaxing, until she looked up, her dark,
almond-shaped eyes shining. "The potion the Sisters sent with
"There's
more. He sends his greeting to King Staden," she said, glancing at their
host, "and wishes to give his official recognition to Martris Drayke, son
of Bricen, the rightful king of Margolan." She looked to Tris with
amazement.
"Then we
have him!" Mikhail said, rearranging the small wooden markers on the map
of the Winter Kingdoms that stretched across the table.
"Mercs to
the northeast, the river and Dhasson to the east, Isencroft to the west.
Trevath, to the south, has reason to be wary of interference. Jared will be
bottled up on all sides, while we turn his own army against him."
"Aye."
Harrtuck's voice was sober. "And no small number of refugees will take up
arms as well once they know what's up, I wager. More than once I've seen a
well-trained army fall to a mob of farmers with a cause and a sickle."
"What
you're proposing makes sense," Tris said slowly. "But what would you
have me do? Wait behind the lines until Jared is defeated?" He shook his
head, his green eyes worried. "That won't work."
Darrath
regarded him once more in silence, and Tris thought he glimpsed the faintest
flicker of approval in the hard-bitten man's eyes. "What is it you would
do, Prince Drayke, if not wait?"
"I have to
confront Arontala," Tris replied, meeting Darrath's unyielding gaze.
"I have to return to Shekerishet and finish the matter."
"Alone?" Darrath mocked. "Not alone. I'll go with him,"
Kiara replied. "So will I," Carroway added. "I've got an old
score to settle myself," Vahanian drawled. "Count me in."
"Me too," Carina said.
"Assuming
you could cross Margolan alive," Darrath said. "What then? Will you
march up to the doors of the palace and demand to be let in?"
"No,"
Tris said, shaking his head. "I've gone over this time and again since we
left the palace, and there's only one way in." He paused. "From
above."
Vahanian raised
an eyebrow. "You can fly?"
Tris grinned.
"No. I don't need to. Shekerishet is built out of a steep cliffside. No
one has been able to attack from that angle, so Jared won't expect it
now."
Darrath cleared
his throat. "I don't doubt your prowess as a Summoner, Prince
Drayke," the older man said. "But if no one has scaled Shekerishet's
cliffside walls before, how will you do it now?'
Tris exchanged
knowing grins with Soterius. "Well, it would be a little more accurate to
say 'no one at war with Margolan' ever climbed the cliff successfully. I once
bet Ban that he couldn't do it, and he took the bet on the condition that I
climb with him. He's from the highlands, and they're half mountain goat out
there. We made it to the top and dropped in on the highest parapets, all before
lunch. Neither Jared nor father ever knew, and we didn't say anything about it
ourselves, since father frowned on that sort of thing." He chuckled.
"In all its history, Margolan never was at war with the highlands."
"And you
believe you can do it again?" Hant asked, leaning forward.
Tris shrugged.
"It's the only way in. I'll have to."
"I've
never really liked climbing," Vahanian commented. Kiara elbowed him in
the ribs and glared at him. He rolled his eyes. "I guess I could
learn."
"I'm up
for it," Kiara said gamely. Carina looked uncertain until Carroway spoke
up. "I didn't really picture Carina and me taking the castle by
storm," the minstrel said. "But if we could find some sympathetic
hedge witches and my minstrel friends, I think we could make a diversion, stir
up the mob, incite a riot, that sort of thing. Keep the guards distracted from
the real action."
Hant nodded,
deep in thought. "It might just work. Yes, it just might," he
repeated.
"It's much
too risky," Darrath said, shaking his head.
"Of course
it is," Hant replied with contrary glee. "That's why I like it. Only
a fool would try it."
"I'm not
sure I like the way that sounds," Tris murmured to Kiara.
Hant looked up
sharply, his keen hearing picking up Tris's comment. "That isn't what I
meant." He chuckled at the audacity of the plan. "They'll never
expect it. Too bold. Too risky. They'll be looking for armies on the border,
and while they're busy fending off our phantoms, you'll be dropping in like so
many spiders." He rubbed his hands together. "Oh yes, this does have
promise."
"Easy for
him to say," Vahanian said under his breath. "He's not going."
"Hush," Kiara admonished. Darrath nodded. "I have no better
plan," the general admitted. "And there is an element of surprise
that I must admit I find intriguing."
"Intriguing,"
Vahanian commented dryly. "I'd feel better if you said 'promising' or
'brilliant.'"
Darrath ignored
him. "How long until you plan to depart, Prince Drayke?"
Tris had
debated that question with himself the entire evening. "We have to reach
the palace before the Hawthorn Moon," he said. "That's when Arontala
will try to free the spirit of the Obsidian
King."
Darrath frowned. "Is such a thing possible?"
Tris nodded.
"The Sisterhood believes so. I can't take the chance."
Darrath rubbed
his chin. "That's half a year from now."
"Mikhail
and I can start with the refugees. If we can get a few clusters of fighters in
position, we can make sure Jared doesn't send more soldiers across the border.
The mercs can sweep up after us. The snow is bad here, but it shouldn't be quite
as much of a problem once we get a little further south into Margolan. And
we're moving small groups, not a full army," Soterius said. "We'll
need time to train the rest of you to climb. It will take more than two months
to get from here to the palace in Margolan without taking the main roads."
"It'll
also take time to raise the mercs," Harrtuck added. "They're
wintering here, not looking for hire. They'll need to get provisioned."
It would also
take time, Tris knew, for him to complete even a fraction of his training, to
learn to channel the wild power that was only just beginning to come under his
control. At the Library at Westmarch, Tris had learned that his grandmother,
the great spirit mage Bava K'aa, had given him as much training as she dared,
and then buried those memories deeply to protect him. With the help of the
Sisterhood, Royster the head librarian and the other Keepers, Tris had accessed
those memories and added what training time permitted.
Though he had
been in
Darrath's met
his eyes evenly. "Make no mistake, Prince Drayke. I am not supporting this
out of a love of Margolan. But what you say is true. For Principality to rest
safely, we must put down the evil in Margolan, or lose everything." He
paused. "I don't doubt that if Jared were to secure Margolan and invade
Isencroft, he would eventually turn his eye toward the mines of Principality to
replenish his treasury."
Hant nodded.
"I agree. For now, Margolan's cause is our own."
"Then it's
settled," Staden said from the chair where he had watched the debate for
more than a candlemark, his burly arms crossed across his chest. "Until
then, you and your companions are welcome in my home."
Tris inclined
his head in acknowledgment. "We are in your debt."
Staden waved
his hands in dissent. "Now none of that, or you'll be thanking me and I'll
have to turn around and thank you again, and we'll be here all night. Now that
the decision's made, who'll have a glass of port with me?"
CHAPTER TWO prev next contents
Tris pulled his cloak tighter
around himself as the king's carriage carried him to the citadel of the
Sisterhood. Beside him, Carina looked equally cold. "I'm still
wondering—what kind of training requires a healer?" Carina asked, pulling
her lap robe closer and rubbing her hands together.
Tris managed a
wan smile. "I've been asking myself the same thing. And I can't come up
with any good answers."
Carina frowned.
"Tris—how sure are you that the Sisterhood is on our side?"
Tris shrugged.
"Grandmother always said the Sisterhood was on its own side," he
replied. "I got as much out of Royster last night as I could—he's been the
Keeper of their Library at Westmarch for almost fifty years. What he said—and
he was damn cagey until I pushed him—was that since grandmother's death,
there's been a split in the Sisterhood that goes back to the war with the
Obsidian King.
"According
to Royster, there were so many of the great mages killed in that war that the
ones who lived through it were either badly wounded or very frightened. The
Sisterhood took very heavy losses. Grandmother was nearly killed." He
sighed. "Even after grandmother recovered and became the head of the
Sisterhood, Royster says that the Sisterhood split into two groups: one that
thought the Mage War proved that the Sisterhood shouldn't intervene, and one
that thought careful intervention was the only way to keep the peace."
"What about your grandmother?" Tris looked out the carriage window at
the cold winter dawn. "Grandmother always said that power of any
kind—physical, magical, or political—was a gift from the Goddess to be used for
the good of all."
"That's a
hard balance to strike," Carina said, burrowed so far into her cloak and
lap robe that only her face showed.
"What I
could pry out of Royster makes me think that there have been some heated
arguments about what to do with me," Tris said. "For now, apparently,
the mages who sided with grandmother are winning, and so the Sisterhood has
agreed to train me. But I'm not sure that's the same as giving us their full
support. I don't think we can count on them to come to the rescue if anything
goes wrong."
"But we've
heard that Arontala is hunting down mages! Doesn't that make this war the
Sisterhood's business?"
Tris shrugged.
"Not every mage is one of the Sisterhood. They're a rather elite group.
And the
impression I
got from Royster was that some of them think that the Sisterhood shouldn't be
involved in the outside world at all. They want to study magic and let the rest
of us be damned." He paused. "Although Royster didn't say as much, I
wondered whether the mages who run the Sisterhood now are as powerful as the
Sisters who fought the Mage War. Perhaps they're turning inward because they're
not what they once were," Tris speculated. "Maybe they don't think
they can go up against Arontala—let alone the Obsidian King reborn—and win, so
they don't even want to try."
"But
they'll send you? That's not making me feel any better about this
training." Carina shivered.
Tris chuckled
mirthlessly. "You're not the one being trained."
Carina's
concerns only made him more nervous. Though Bava K'aa said little about the
Sisterhood, what little she did say was usually about Sisters taking sides or
pursuing competing agendas. Now, as the carriage headed for the citadel, Tris
wondered whether, in the Sisterhood's game, he was the king or the pawn.
"You said
Sister Taru sent the message?" Carina's question stirred Tris out of his
brooding.
He nodded.
"That's the one bright spot. After training with her at Westmarch, she's
someone I trust."
"She knew
your grandmother?"
"Taru was
grandmother's assistant."
"I trust
Taru," Carina agreed. "The others, I'm not so sure about."
The carriage turned and Tris saw the citadel, a large gray walled area, almost a city within
the city. The cut stone that made up its outer walls looked older than the
buildings around it, which seemed to keep their distance, giving the citadel a
wide span of open area despite the crowding of the rest of the city. Only a few
high narrow windows broke the citadel's facade, which rose several stories
above the ground. A portcullis opened to admit the carriage, and Tris felt his
stomach knot at the thud of the iron gate falling shut behind them.
A robed figure
waited for them in the snow as Tris helped Carina down from the carriage.
"Welcome," Taru said, pulling back her hood. Taru's chin-length dark
hair framed a round face, and her cloak covered an ample frame. Her broad smile
was a sincere welcome. Tris felt himself relax, just a little.
Tris gave a
courteous bow, and Carina embraced Taru. "Thanks for meeting us,"
Tris said as they headed up the broad, snow covered steps that led into the
citadel. The facade of the citadel was as imposing as any palace, and the
archway over the heavy, iron-bound doors was carved with intricate runes and
interlocking designs.
Even before the
doors opened, Tris could sense old, strong magic. Power seemed to radiate from
the stones of the walls, as if they retained the imprint of the workings done
within. Tris hoped to pick up the lingering sense of his grandmother's magic,
the sense that her rooms at Shekerishet held like old perfume. But there was no
familiar resonance, and Tris found that its absence heightened his
nervousness.
A footman
gathered their bags and followed behind them. "You've come prepared to
stay for at least a fortnight?" Taru questioned.
Tris chuckled.
"We've learned to travel light," he replied dryly. "Since I left
Shekerishet with only the clothes on my back, a whole pack seems like a luxury!"
Carina
shrugged. "I brought my herbs and powders—and some of the books Royster
and I brought from Westmarch.
Taru smiled.
"No dear. We have robes to spare— what you wear underneath them is your
business," she added with surprising mischief.
Inside the
great doors, a high-ceilinged entrance-way made an imposing first impression.
Around the grand entrance room, eight larger than life size marble figures of
the Goddess—four light and four dark—encircled the room on pedestals. Tris
looked to the statues of the Mother and Childe, Margolan's patron Aspects, but
in the kindly gaze of the Mother and the mystical eyes of the Childe, he found
no assurance. It was Istra, the Dark Lady, who drew his attention. Istra,
patroness of the vayasb moru and the outcast, the champion of lost
souls. Tris could not shake the feeling that the eyes of Istra's statue seemed
to follow him.
Carina seemed
preoccupied as they headed deeper into the massive building. Tris looked
around. Tapestries covered the walls from floor to ceiling, and Tris could tell
at a glance that they were even older and more finely woven than any he had
seen in Staden's palace or in his own home at Shekerishet. Everywhere he
looked—at the furnishings, the finely wrought candelabra and torch sconces, at
the scrying basins and leather-bound books—Tris saw evidence of wealth and
power that would impress any king in the Winter Kingdoms.
For a group
that isn't supposed to be involved in mortal affairs, the Sisterhood has done
well for itself, Tris thought.
"This
citadel was built over five hundred years ago," Taru said as they headed
deeper into the building. "It's older than Staden's palace. We can
comfortably house over two hundred Sisters, although only about fifty live here
at most times. Many come and go, staying for a few months and then moving on to
one of our other holdings."
They climbed a
broad, curving staircase that can-tilevered from the walls, seeming to rise of
its own accord. Down through its center hung a massive candelabrum easily as
large as the carriage that brought them to the citadel, and Tris wondered if
its dozens of candles could be lit by means other than magic. The stairs
narrowed as they reached the upper floors, and Taru led them down a long corridor.
Tris felt engulfed by the remnant of old power, as if the lingering tingle of
magic would smother him. Even Mageslayer seemed to respond to the magic that
surrounded him; the ensorcelled blade drew his attention as if awakened.
Taru stopped in
front of two doors that opened off the right side of the corridor. "I've
put you in adjoining rooms—I hope you don't mind," she said. "There's
a sitting room in between. I thought it would give you some privacy—and make it
easier if Carina needs to check in on you."
Tris frowned.
"You seem to be taking it for granted that I'll need serious healing.
What kind of training—exactly—do you have in mind for me?"
Taru motioned
them inside, and gestured to the footman to leave the bags in the sitting room.
A fire already blazed in the large stone hearth, and the sitting room, while
less lavish than the entranceway, was still the equal to the guest rooms in any
palace. A pot for tea and another small cauldron of water simmered in the
coals, and several chairs plus a small couch offered ample seating. There was a
broad study table with a four-candle candelabrum, and one wall was covered with
shelves of books. One glance gave Tris to guess that they were healing tomes,
and his uneasiness increased again.
Taru closed the
door behind them with a quick glance in either direction down the hallway to
assure they were alone. Carina moved to warm herself by the fire, and Tris
stretched their cloaks over two chairs near the fire to dry. "There's only
one kind of training that can build the skills you'll require in the short time
available," said Taru, and Tris could hear concern in her voice.
"Simulated battle—both physical and magical."
Carina gasped.
"Against whom—the entire Sisterhood?"
Taru met Tris's
eyes. "Yes. You'll be led through a series of tests. Some will be quests
past the traps in the labyrinth beneath the citadel. They'll test your cunning
and your ability to use your magic with precision. Others," she said,
"will test your battle skills and your magic for defense and for
attack." Taru watched him, gauging his reaction. "In some tests,
you'll face a Sister—or two—in person. In other tests, you'll face
avatars—golems animated by magic—controlled by Sisters."
Tris looked at
Taru. "There's something you're not saying. Something important."
Taru nodded.
"When you fight the avatars, they will have the face and form of others.
Jared, perhaps. Arontala. And you may find allies—like Vahanian, or
Kiara." She paused again. "The magic and the weapons will be real. In
the most extreme simulations, wardings will be set that cannot be broken except
by completing the task. In the case of a confrontation with Jared's avatar, for
example—" "It's not over until one of us is dead," Tris finished
tightly. Taru nodded.
"Taru, you
can't be serious!" Carina protested. She moved away from the fire to join
them.
Taru met Carina's
gaze. "If he can't stand up to the Sisterhood, what chance has he against
Arontala—or the Obsidian King?"
"And so
you thought to do Arontala's work for him?" Carina demanded.
Taru looked
down, and began to pace again. "There's been a great deal of debate—heated
debate—about whether the Sisterhood should involve itself at all in your
training," she said with a glance at Tris. "I suspect the decision to
bring you here was made more out of fear that some of us would do it,
regardless."
"From the
Sisterhood's perspective—and I'm not saying it's my view—the only thing that
matters is keeping the Obsidian King from rising again, or at
least,
containing the damage if he does." She looked to Tris and Carina.
"The Sisterhood is not concerned with the kingship of Margolan, or with
undoing Jared's damage—or with healing King Donelan by destroying
Arontala." Taru shook her head. "The Sisterhood tends to take a
historic view of such things which can be damnably impersonal." "What
could be worse than the Obsidian King rising and taking over Arontala's
body?" Carina burst out. Even before Taru spoke, Tris knew what she would
say, and that knowledge chilled him to the bone.
"It would
be worse if he arose in the body of a great Summoner," Taru said quietly.
"The Sisterhood agreed to train you because they need to assure themselves
that you will not fail. Above all, they don't wish to face the Obsidian King
again as he once was, with a Summoner's power."
"Then
grandmother was correct—Lemuel was possessed?" Tris said. Taru nodded.
"So if I'm not strong enough to succeed, they want me to fail here, even
if it kills me?" "Yes." "I see."
"You don't
know how much they fear the Obsidian King," said Taru. "You passed
one small test when Alyzza found you in the caravan—"
"Alyzza
was a Sister?" Carina exclaimed, remembering the disheveled old woman who
had traveled with their caravan in Margolan.
Taru smiled.
"Did you really believe she was a hedge witch? Many years ago, Alyzza was
a great sorceress. When Bava K'aa was taken prisoner by the Obsidian King,
Alyzza and King Argus used their magic to enable Lord Grayson to rescue Bava
K'aa from the Obsidian King's stronghold."
She shook her
head. "The effort killed King Argus, and badly injured Alyzza. Her mind
was never the same afterwards. Bava K'aa barely survived.
Outside, the
bells tolled eight times. Taru looked at Tris and Carina apologetically.
"I know you've barely had a chance to get warm and put down your things,
but we're due in the council chambers," Taru said. "You'll be
formally introduced, and Sister Elam will present your first trainers. Your
challenges begin today."
Carina took a
half step forward. "Who will be in the council chamber?" Tris had the
sense, as he had often felt at Westmarch, that Carina and Taru's acquaintance
stemmed from somewhere before this present quest.
Taru gave a
half-smile that did not reach her eyes. "Some friends—and others I'm not
sure about." She paused. "Sister Elam was the same age as Tris's
grandmother. She took over the leadership of the Sisterhood after Bava K'aa's
death."
"Sister
Landis will be
Taru drew a
deep breath. "And then there's Theron."
Carina muttered
something that Tris did not catch.
"Theron
will be one of your trainers," Taru said. "She comes from Eastmark,
and so her style may be similar to what you've learned from Kiara and
Jonmarc." Taru frowned. "You may find that compared to Theron,
Jonmarc's training style is merciful."
Merciful, Tris thought wryly. An odd word to use.
Considering the pounding I've taken in the salle from Jonmarc, that doesn't
bode well.
Tris drew a
deep breath, fighting his fear. Sweet Chenne, what have I gotten myself
into? He knew that his real enemy was time. It was less than a fortnight
before the Crone Moon, the last month of the year. The Hawthorn Moon at
mid-year was just seven months away. There was very little time to prepare.
Tris knew what
his failure would mean. Kiara delivered into Jared's control, a thought that
made his blood run cold. Jonmarc and the others hanged for treason. No relief
for Margolan, and no justice for the wretched souls under Jared's yoke. War, as
Jared and Arontala sought to expand their boundaries among the Winter
Kingdoms. If he could prevent that future, Tris was willing to risk the confrontation—even
if it cost him his life. But Taru raised the thought that death was not the
worst outcome, and the possibility that he might be possessed, his power used
against his will, hardened Tris's resolve. He felt a coldness wash over him
that had nothing to do with the chill in the corridor. Taru was right—there was
no alternative.
The citadel
smelled of candle wax and herbs, with the musty scent of long-unused rooms.
Taru stopped in front of two iron-bound double doors. The sound of raised
voices carried through the heavy doors. While the words were not clear, the
passion of the women's voices was evident. One voice, higher in pitch, sounded
angry. The other voice, low-pitched and measured, seemed resolute. Taru
grimaced and rapped loudly at the door. The voices stopped abruptly, and Taru
gestured for the doors too open.
Creaking
heavily on their hinges, the doors slowly swung backward. Inside, the council
chamber was hung with heavy tapestries, lit by a bank of torches and two
fireplaces which were each the length and height of a tall man. Above the long
table of dark wood hung two multi-tiered candelabra, each holding dozens of
candles. Even that light did not seem to completely dispel the shadows. Despite
the roaring fires, Tris shivered as he stepped into the room.
Four robed Sisters
were seated at the table. At the center, facing Tris, was an old woman,
cadaver-thin and very wrinkled. He guessed that she was
At Landis's
left was a younger woman who watched Tris intently. With dark blonde hair
pulled back into a plain braid, she looked haggard. Tris guessed this was
Alaine, Landis's assistant. To the right of the empty seat was another young
mage, a woman perhaps ten years Tris's senior, whose lean form and strong arms
seemed more fitting for a fighter than a sorceress. Her dark hair was cut short
so that it stood up, brush-like, on her head. She seemed to be sizing Tris up
like a sergeant-at-arms appraising a new recruit. He had no doubt that she was
Theron. The Sisters did not seem to be concerned with Carina. She stepped
behind him, as if relieved to be overlooked.
"Worthy
Sisters," Taru said when they stood before the table. "I bring to you
Martris Drayke of Margolan, and with him, Carina Jesthrata."
"Welcome,"
said a figure at the center of the table. "I am Sister Elam," the old
woman said. Her voice was strong, at odds with how she looked, and Tris knew
better than to judge a sorceress by her appearance.
"Do you
accept our offer of training?"
Tris steeled
himself. "I accept."
At least, not
openly, Tris thought.
From the stony
expressions and stiff postures of some at the table, Tris surmised that
"Taru told
me of your training at Westmarch. When you won Mageslayer from the ghost of
King Argus, you passed one test." A "test" Tris had barely
survived.
"If you
are to be ready to face Arontala—and possibly, the Obsidian King himself—by the
Hawthorn Moon, there is little time,"
"If I die
here at the citadel, it seems rather pointless," Tris countered.
After the
"I wish to
see you fight."
"Very
well," Tris's hand fell to Mageslayer's pommel.
Theron launched
herself at him, moving so quickly that Tris barely had time to draw his sword.
Their blades clashed; Theron's strength was easily equal that of any man Tris
had fought. Parrying took all of his concentration as they traded blows that
could cleave a man shoulder to hip.
Theron swung
into an Eastmark kick, and seemed surprised when Tris blocked her, although the
force of her kick almost knocked him off balance. Sweating hard, gripping
Mageslayer two-handed, Tris saw the ensorcelled blade flare a brilliant green
as Theron's lips moved in the words of a spell. A streak of fire blazed from
her left hand. The blade's warning was all the time Tris had to summon his
shielding, while deflecting another sword stroke that nearly tore the sword
from his grip. Theron's fire bounced away, only to be replaced by darkness so
complete that only Mageslayer's glow enabled Tris to see Theron's attack.
He thought he
saw a glint of approval in Theron's eyes as he cast away the darkness, and
before it cleared he swung into an Eastmark kick of his own, almost knocking
her sword from her hand. As Theron's lips moved once more, Tris felt blinding
pain sear through his body. For an instant, he thought Theron had run him
through.
He staggered,
and Theron scored a gash on his forearm. Reeling, Tris held on to Mageslayer,
gasping as he struggled to counter her magical assault. As he focused his
power to dull the pain, the gash on his forearm began to burn. Wormroot! Tris
thought, managing to deflect the worst of another thrust from Theron's sword.
This time, she scored his thigh, a deep cut that burned with the poison on her
blade.
Tris nearly
fell, swinging his blade wildly to keep Theron at bay as he drew on
Mageslayer's power to neutralize the effect of the poison. Even with the rope
vine, the wormroot was beginning to take effect. Another wave of pain swept
over him, as if he were being burned from the inside with hot coals, and his
eyes stung. But he kept his grip on the sword, battling Theron's press.
The tip of
Theron's blade opened a deep cut on Tris's shoulder and he fought to retain
control of his magic. His heart hammered and his palms sweat as he countered
her blows, slowly losing control of his magic. Theron murmured another spell,
and this time the pain seemed to be crushing his skull. Tris cried out,
resisting the urge to drop his weapon and clasp his head in both hands.
Focusing all of
his remaining power on Mageslayer, Tris saw in his mind an image of blue fire
streaking from the sword's tip, engulfing Theron and ending the pain. A
heartbeat later Mageslayer blazed with light, fire streaking from its tip. He
heard Theron gasp, her shields barely snapping up in time to deflect the
attack.
Tris stumbled.
The wormroot was making it difficult for him to stay on his feet. With a
predator's smile,
Theron whispered another spell. Mageslayer was torn from his hand by an
irresistible force. With the blade's magical protections gone Tris fell, unable
to counteract the wormroot. As the worm-root pushed the magic beyond his reach,
Tris felt his power fail him. Another wave of excruciating pain swept over him,
and he nearly blacked out. Theron kicked Mageslayer beyond his grasp.
"Is that
the best you can do?" she taunted, standing over him. "Without your
magic, you're just a man, and a mage can break a man with a thought." She
whispered and the pain came again, worse this time. Tris's screams echoed in
the stone vault. The wormroot burned in his veins, and his magic was far out of
reach.
Theron raised
her sword over his neck like an executioner, and Tris rolled, scything his legs
and bringing Theron down with him. She hit the ground hard and gasped. Tris
dove for Mageslayer, barely able to keep his concentration against the pain.
But as he struggled to his feet, his wounded leg folded under him. Theron
rolled to her feet and swung her sword at his neck. For an instant, time seemed
to stand still. Tris knew that her blade, if it connected, would kill. It
stopped just short of its mark as he collapsed to the floor.
"That's
nothing compared to what Arontala can inflict," she hissed, laying the
blade across his neck for emphasis. "And with the power of the Obsidian
King, he can torment you past the point of death, past madness, and strip your
soul to shreds."
She might have
said more, but the pain and the wormroot overwhelmed Tris, and darkness took
him.
Tris awoke in a darkened
room, utterly spent. He could still feel the wormroot in his blood, and knew
that his power was out of reach. The void it left was unsettling to the point
of discomfort. He remembered Carina telling him that a mage could be killed or
driven mad by constant dosing with wormroot. He did not doubt it.
Tris shifted, and
revised his assessment. While the torment of Theron's spell was gone, his body
ached of its own accord. Where Theron cut him the deep gashes were expertly
bandaged, but even Carina's healing had not completely removed their pain. He
wanted to retch, and gauging from the taste in his mouth and how sore his
stomach muscles felt, he ruefully gathered that he had probably already brought
up anything he could, and more.
He sank back
against the bed, angry at himself for his failure. I'm sure by now they've reconsidered
training me, he thought. I'll be lucky if they don't just decide to kill
me before Arontala does.
He heard a rap
at the outer door to the sitting room, and the rustle of someone moving to
answer. "You can't go in there," Carina protested. "He's not
ready."
From the sound
of the approaching footsteps, their visitor was undeterred. Tris forced himself
to open his eyes and turn his throbbing head. Theron was approaching in the dim
light. She wore her council robes, and her expression was of sincere concern.
"How long
did it take for him to come around?" Theron asked Carina, who was clearly
unhappy with the intrusion.
"Three
candlemarks," Carina clipped. "Most of the time, I was busy keeping
him from choking on his own vomit. Just how much of this 'training' do you
think he can take?"
Theron looked
closely at Tris. "Just three candle-marks?" she asked. "And he's
only been hit with wormroot once before?"
Tris thought
Carina might explode with the anger that seethed in her voice. "Three
candlemarks is an eternity," she said between gritted teeth. "And compared
to how much wormroot you managed to get into his system, what he had before was
hardly anything."
Theron nodded.
"Exactly. He's adapting. Learning to work around it. The last time—how did
he react?"
"We'd just
been attacked by soldiers. He barely stayed on his horse, and he collapsed when
we got to the cell."
"Um
hum." Theron moved to take Tris's pulse and look into his eyes.
"I'm awake
and alive," Tris managed through parched lips. "You can speak like
I'm here."
"You kept
fighting, after three doses of poison," Theron remarked. "Your
Eastmark kick needs some work, but given your condition, it wasn't bad. Not bad
at all. We've got to work on your control. You didn't effectively counter the
pain spell."
"I
know."
"And your
magic got wobbly after you lost Mageslayer."
"Wobbly?"
Tris echoed hoarsely. "It was out of reach."
"Not
immediately. For an untrained mage, you hung on to it—at least a
little bit—for quite
a while." Theron managed a smile. "I'm glad you weren't at
full strength when you sent that blast my way, or we might have needed a new
trainer."
"I can
teach you to counter that pain spell—and some other nasties that you might
encounter." She chuckled mirthlessly. "You may not choose to use them
on someone else, but it can be damn handy-knowing how to deflect them. And
we've got to build up your tolerance for wormroot." "Build up a
tolerance!" Carina exclaimed angrily. "We know Arontala uses it on
other mages. As a vayash moru, it has no effect on Arontala himself.
It's likely he and Jared will take some kind of precautions, and wormroot
could be part of them." She gave Tris a crooked grin. "It's going to
get worse before it gets better."
Tris swallowed
hard and nodded. "I thought you might say that," he said, surprised
at how spent his own voice sounded.
Theron spared a
glance at his bandages. "Looks like Carina's got you patched up."
"Even with
deep healing, he's not going to be good as new overnight," Carina replied
tersely.
Theron met her
eyes. "Whatever he's got will have to do," she said matter-of-factly.
"We don't have time to wait." She looked down at Tris. "See you
at the salle tomorrow morning. We'll work on that kick." Without another
word, Theron turned away. Carina followed her to the door and might have said
something more to Tris, but as the healer closed the door behind Theron, Tris
felt the world waver around him. He closed his eyes as consciousness once
again slipped out of his grasp.
CHAPTER THREE prev next contents
"You held your own today." Sister
Theron offered Tris a hand up from where
he lay on his back in the salle floor. He smiled ruefully and accepted her
offer.
"If you mean
that I managed to stay on my feet longer and I didn't lose my breakfast right
away, then thank you." He steadied himself, fresh from a dosing of
wormroot and a bad gash on his shoulder. Warm blood trickled down his arm
underneath his sleeve, and the leather cuirass he wore seemed to weigh him down
as he fought the poison in his system. His right leg throbbed from a bad
wrenching after Theron pushed him to practice his Eastmark kick. In all, Tris
could not recall ever feeling worse.
Theron seemed
to guess his thoughts. "Your kick is getting cleaner," she said.
"For a prince, you've picked up some interesting street fighting techniques."
Tris managed a
chuckle. "Thank Vahanian." He tried to take a step and staggered.
Theron caught him, getting under his left arm for support and draping it across
her shoulders as he limped toward the door.
"I know
you won't believe me, but you're learning to handle the wormroot," she
said. Nothing about Theron was coddling. Tris knew that any praise he wrested
from the skilled fighter was hard won.
"It's hard
to remember that when I'm puking my guts out." Tris was leaning far more
heavily on Theron than he wanted to admit.
"I don't
think you understand," she said as they made their way toward the salle
door. "A mage of middling power would be unconscious from the dosing
you've had. Many strong mages take longer to recover their power after they've
been poisoned. In between dosings, your power came back at full strength. And
you've hung on to more control for longer each time."
"I still
feel like shit," Tris muttered as they began the painful climb to the top
of the spiral stairs.
When they
reached the upper floors, a brown-robed sister ran past them, sobbing. A knot
of robed mages huddled in conversation along one wall, and a small crowd had
gathered around the doorway to one of the bedrooms. Tris and Theron exchanged
worried glances.
"Go
ahead," he said, leaning against the wall as she removed his support.
"I'll get there. Looks like something big is going on."
Theron nodded and
made her way through the crowd. Tris limped behind her through the cluster of Sisters, some of whom
were weeping. At the doorway he saw that Carina and Taru were both already in
the room, which was a bedchamber. With a shock he recognized
Carina ran to
him. He waved off her assistance, finding that he could stand if he leaned
against the wall. "What happened?" he asked, trying to take in the
scene through a throbbing reaction headache.
"
Landis was
already in the room. Alaine was cleaning up
Something
familiar tugged at the frayed edges of his power and Tris closed his eyes,
struggling to control his magic through the fatigue and the poison. Carina
laid a hand on his arm, but he shook his head, focusing all his will on the
spirit that was trying to reach him through his fogged mage sense.
He opened his
eyes. "It's
Carina gasped.
"I was
murdered," the spirit said in a voice audible to all. "We have a
traitor within the Sisterhood."
Taru stepped
forward. "
"I don't
know. Something I picked up had a triggering spell. It stopped my heart. Every
mage in this citadel has the power for such a spell. And many had the access to
place the trigger."
The image of
the spirit wavered as Tris felt the wormroot unravel his control. Theron pushed
a chair under him as he began to fall. Tris's power slipped beyond his grasp,
and the visible image of
"Beware
the avatars," she warned in a voice that only he could hear. "Whoever
killed me will come for you next." Her spirit faded completely as the
wormroot pushed even mage sight beyond his control.
Tris opened his
eyes and took a deep breath, willing himself not to pass out. Landis crossed
the room and stood before him, her arms folded. Carina took a half step forward
protectively, putting herself between Landis and Tris. Landis, easily ten years
"
Alaine stood
quietly near the fireplace, awaiting Landis's instruction. Taru walked back to
where Tris sat and looked at Landis.
"What
now?" Tris knew that it was his training, and not the future of the
Sisterhood, which was uppermost in Taru's mind.
Landis drew a
deep breath. "We will complete what
"How can
he train here?" Carina gasped. "He's not safe."
"I wasn't
exactly 'safe' here before." Tris let his head rest against the wall; the
room swam dangerously if he tried to sit upright. "Continue my training
and you'll find your traitor."
"You offer
yourself as bait?" Landis asked with a raised brow.
"I have no
choice. There isn't time to delay the training.
"It's too
dangerous," Carina protested. "Bringing down Jared and Arontala are
more important—and if you don't survive your training, there's no one else to
do it."
"
Landis looked
at Tris in silence for a moment, and he thought he saw approval in her hard
gaze. "All right. Say nothing of this to anyone else. If the killer
doesn't know we've heard from
Back in their suite of rooms,
Tris waved off further assistance, refusing to go to bed.
"I've been
flat on my back for half of the last week," he grumbled. "I'm tired
of passing out and I'm tired of retching and I'm tired of feeling like
shit."
Carina went to
the hearth for a pot of hot water, from which she poured both of them each a
cup of healing tea. She rummaged through her bag, cajoling Tris to sit forward
so that she could bind up the gash on his arm. She was unusually quiet, and
Tris knew she was upset.
"You
haven't been yourself since we arrived at the Sisterhood," Tris said
quietly.
"It's not
important."
"It's
important to me."
Carina was
silent.
"There's
something bothering you," Tris ventured, "and I don't think it has
to do with my training."
Carina let out
a deep breath and nodded. "Do you remember when we were captured as we
entered
"Of
course."
Carina looked
down at her hands. "The general who took us prisoner was the older brother
of a man I was engaged to marry, almost seven years ago. Ric and Gregor were
mercenaries, running one
of the most
successful merc companies in Principality." She bit her lip.
"I was
sixteen when
"
"
"I never
wanted to come back to
"I'm
sorry," Tris said. He had wondered about
Carina wiped
away her tears with the back of her hand. "It doesn't matter. We have a
job to do," she said, swallowing hard. "And you're the one in real
danger."
She dug into
her bag again, pulling out a small velvet pouch. "I almost forgot."
She handed the pouch to Tris, and managed a smile. "Carroway let slip to
Kiara that it would be your birthday on the first of the Crone Moon. Kiara
wanted me to give that to you."
Tris shook the
bag over his palm. A silver pendant on a chain poured like liquid moonlight
into his hand. Two stones, one fiery red and the other a shiny black, were set
into the symbol of the Lady.
"
Tris closed his
hand around the talisman. "I never thought I'd be in exile for my
twentieth birthday," he said quietly. "Mother wanted me to joust this
year at the Winterstide tournaments. Kait was going to fly her falcons. Now
everything's turned upside down. And if I don't make it through the
Sisterhood's
trials at the end of this week, I won't see Winterstide this year."
"Don't say
that. You've got three days to recover. No more training until then—and no
wormroot. You'll be back at full power—like you were in the Ruune Videya, only
stronger."
"I don't
know if it's enough."
Carina laid a
hand on his forearm. "You can do this, Tris."
He opened his
hand to look at the pendant. "I've got one more reason to make it back,
don't I?"
"Kiara's
counting on you," Carina replied. "We all are."
All Tris's preparation could not dispel his nervousness three days later as he and Theron made
their way into the lowest levels beneath the citadel. The last traces of
wormroot were gone, and a few days' rest had done much to restore his strength.
His hand fell to the pommel of his sword. Mageslayer tingled at the edge of his
senses, not quite sentient, but no mere steel, imbued with a power of its own.
Neither he nor Theron spoke as they descended the steps to the maze of rooms where
the trial battle would take place.
If he survived
this encounter, Tris's battles would be fought alone against the avatars. Now
Theron came with him, and he was grateful for her support. They would face one
or more avatars whose motions—and magic—would be controlled by other Sisters
outside of the encounter room. Taru promised Tris that this battle was not
warded to the death as future trials would be. Those battles would come after
Winterstide—if he survived.
They entered
the chamber, and Tris stifled a gasp. The chamber's appearance had been
magically altered to resemble the great room at his home in the palace
Shekerishet, its details exact in every way. The tapestries along the walls,
the carving in the mantle of the huge stone fireplace and the inlay in the
furniture around the edges of the room were perfect. Tris wondered who among
the Sisters was so well acquainted with Shekerishet, and he fought down his
emotions at being back in the familiar surroundings of home.
The door closed
behind him, and Tris and Theron moved forward slowly.
"Guards!"
Theron shouted. Tris turned to see soldiers streaming in from two side doors.
Six soldiers, coming at a dead run. Tris drew his sword, knowing that Theron
was at his back. Tris parried the first soldier's strike, wheeling to deflect a
second guard. He heard the clash of steel behind him as Theron engaged her
attackers. Tris landed a solid Eastmark kick that sent the third soldier
sprawling. He assumed that the soldiers' blades would be tainted with wormroot.
Tris barely
deflected the second soldier's press, but his blade caught the first soldier
unprepared, and cut him down. The third soldier scrambled to his feet and ran
at Tris as the second soldier moved forward. Tris held them off, swinging
Mageslayer with a two-handed grip as the soldiers' blows jarred him hard enough
that his teeth ached. A moment's inattention was all he needed to get inside
the third soldier's guard, and sink his blade deep into the soldier's side.
"Behind
you!"
Tris wheeled,
his blade sliding down his attacker's sword until they stood nearly guard to
guard. Tris heaved the man clear of his sword and palmed the dagger from his
belt in his other hand, circling warily.
Theron
dispatched two of her attackers, but her third assailant dove toward her
relentlessly. Tris took the offensive, surprising his attacker with a loud cry
and a head-on run, their blades clashing so hard that it nearly tore the sword
from the soldier's grasp. Tris dropped to a crouch, brandishing both knife and
sword as Vahanian had taught him. The soldier, taken off guard by Tris's
boldness, gave Tris the opening he needed. He struck first with Mageslayer,
using the blade to push back the soldier's sword. Then he let his momentum
carry him forward, sinking the dagger into the soldier's chest. The soldier
groaned and sank to his knees, a look of surprise on his face as he fell.
Tris cried out
as a dagger buried itself deep in his left arm. He wheeled, blade raised, as
the soldier he had fought slumped to the ground, dead, his objective
accomplished. Already, Tris could feel the wormroot tingle as warm blood
spilled down his arm. From the initial jolt, he knew the dose was sizeable. He
chewed harder on the rope vine wad in his mouth, hoping that the anise-flavored
juice would buy him a few precious moments of control.
Winded, Theron
joined him. The six "soldiers" lay still on the floor. Tris knew that
they were golems animated by magic, but the detail, down to the blood that
flowed from their death wounds, made the simulation deathly real.
"Welcome
home," a voice said from the shadows of the far corner. A chill went down
Tris's spine.
The voice was a
flawless imitation of Arontala's. A thin red-robed figure stepped forward, and
Tris felt his mage sense tingle a warning.
Something was
very wrong, Tris thought as the figure approached. A crystal pendant around
the mage's throat burned a bright red, and the fire captured within that small
orb seemed to seek Tris, glowing more brightly as it fixed on him. He knew the
imprint of the power that radiated from the figure just as surely as he knew
the danger of the fire's red glow.
"Theron—shield!"
Tris cried out in warning, snapping his own shields up in defense. A blast of
red fire streamed from the robed figure's hands, sizzling against Tris's
shields and catching Theron unprotected. Before Tris could move in defense, the
fire hit Theron squarely in the chest, slamming her back into the wall. Tris
heard Theron cry out in pain, smelled the stench of burning flesh, and saw
Theron slump to the floor, dead.
Behind him,
Tris felt a sudden, wrenching shift in the wardings that protected the training
room, and he knew with a sick feeling that a death warding had been set. Tris
turned to face an avatar that had suddenly become dangerously real.
“Something's wrong." Taru's head snapped up abruptly from where she and Carina waited in a parlor
near the encounter room.
Carina looked
worried as Taru sprinted for the door, and ran to catch up. "What do you
mean—wrong?"
"I mean
the magic is wrong," said Taru.
"But you
said Landis was running the trial—that you trusted Landis," Carina
countered, needing to run faster to catch up with Taru.
"I do
trust Landis. But it's not Landis's power— not any more."
Taru and Carina
burst into the room where the training simulation was controlled. Landis lay in
a pool of blood with a dagger in her back.
Carina gasped
and dropped to her knees beside the mage. "She's been dosed with almost
enough wormroot to kill," Carina diagnosed, "and she's lost a lot of
blood. She's barely breathing."
"Can you
help her?"
Carina was
already digging in her pouch for powdered rope vine. She grabbed a pitcher and
a glass from the table nearby, then dissolved the powder in a glassful of
water. Taru held Landis upright while Carina carefully dripped the liquid into
Landis's mouth so that she would not gag. Carina bandaged the wound to stop the
bleeding as Taru carefully set Landis back down on the floor.
"It's all
I can do. The knife didn't hit anything vital—thank the Lady. There's no real
cure but time for either the wormroot or the blood loss." Carina wiped
Landis's blood off her hands and onto her robes. "We can't leave her
alone."
"I'll get
help," Taru replied, disappearing for a few minutes and returning with one
of the other sisters, a plain-faced woman Carina knew was one of the citadel
healers. They moved Landis to a couch near the fire, and Carina gave terse
instructions to the healer. Once Landis was safely settled, Carina looked back
at Taru.
"If Landis
isn't running the trial—who is?"
They headed out
at a dead run for the encounter room, but at the doors, Taru stopped abruptly.
She raised her hands, palms out, and slid them above the doors, a hands'
breadth away from the wood, and then swore.
"What's
wrong?" Carina asked.
"The
wardings are wrong," Taru replied. "Landis promised me she wasn't
going to set death wardings. Not yet. But that's what's in place—and they
weren't set by Landis." She paused. "This warding is tainted with
blood magic."
"Arontala,"
Carina breathed. "Could he be here—within the citadel?"
Taru shook her
head. "Unlikely. The citadel is warded against magical intrusion—we can't
just 'pop' in and out, even if such a thing were easily possible." She
closed her eyes, stretching out one hand toward the encounter room doors.
"There is no avatar. And only two mages are alive inside."
"Theron's
the traitor?" Carina asked. Taru began to stride down the corridor.
"Unlikely.
Although she had the skill to set the spell that killed
Carina caught
up to Taru, breathless, as the Sister raised her hands over the scrying basin
and held them, palms toward the water. Gradually, a mist appeared within the
basin. As the mist cleared, an
image emerged,
as if from a distance, shrouded in fog. Carina gasped. "It's Alaine."
"It is
Alaine's body—but not Alaine's power," Taru said. "We've made a grave
mistake."
"What do
you mean?" Carina asked, unable to take her eyes off the image unfolding
within the scrying basin.
"Alaine
was hand-picked by Landis, and her loyalty was absolute," Taru said
quietly. "But a few months ago, Landis sent Alaine to one of the other
citadels within Margolan, before we understood the extent of Jared's treachery.
While Alaine was at that citadel, Jared's troops attacked. She was the only
survivor." Taru sighed. "We were relieved that she came back to
us—now I see it was a trap. Arontala must have broken her and embedded his own
triggers, hoping that she might encounter Tris. Maybe he has spies in each of
our citadels, on the chance that you'd seek sanctuary."
"What's
that around Alaine's throat?" Carina asked as the image wavered in the
scrying bowl.
"That must
be the portal for Arontala's power," Taru said. "It's not something
easily made."
Carina cried
out as fire streamed from the red gem, blasting against Tris's shielding.
"We've got to help him!"
Taru shook her
head. "No one can enter or leave until one of the mages within the room is
dead. The warding cannot be broken. Tris is on his own."
Within the encounter room, Tris bit down hard on the rope vine, clenching his teeth as he
struggled to hold his shielding against the blast of mage fire that burst from
the red-robed figure's talisman. The hood fell back, revealing not Arontala's
face, but Alaine's, her features twisted in an agonized grimace, her eyes
desperate.
Tris knew the
power of the red fire, and the searching presence that accompanied it. That
fire had nearly killed Kiara in the scrying at Westmarch, and it had sought and
found him when he had attempted a scrying with the caravan.
The fire
battered his shielding, draining his strength as he struggled to hold his protections
in place. Tris felt the presence find him. The glow in the talisman at Alaine's
throat pulsed a deep carnelian.
"See your
future," a voice rasped from Alaine's throat, contorting her features.
Images flooded into Tris's mind, searingly clear. Within Shekerishet's
corridors Tris saw Vahanian lying dead in a pool of blood, pierced through the
chest by a crossbow bolt. The image flickered, and Tris saw a courtyard of
gibbets, and hanging lifeless, Carroway and Carina, their faces blackened,
their bodies twisting. Another image replaced that, of a forest of pikes set
into the ground. Fixed on the stakes, impaled alive, Tris saw Soterius,
Gabriel, and Mikhail, saw the dawn break and saw the agony of the vayash
morn as the daylight burned them, saw Soterius writhe in pain that did not
end with the light of day. Once more the sending pulsed and the image shifted.
This time Tris saw Kiara, battered and drugged, given to Jared for his
pleasure.
"This is
Margolan's future," the voice hissed, seeming to come from both around him
and inside his own head, deafeningly loud, impossible to shut out. The sending
shifted once more, and Tris saw the orb Soulcatcher in Arontala's chambers pulsing with the
same bright fire, saw the maw of the abyss open and the terrible power of the
Obsidian King stream forth, freed from his prison, descending on the red-robed
mage who stood with arms upraised, awaiting his possession.
The power of
the next image nearly drove Tris to his knees. He saw himself in Arontala's
workshop at Shekerishet, saw the Obsidian King in Arontala's body send a
massive blast of power toward him. In the vision, Tris saw his own shields
strain and buckle, saw his body contort in agony, and felt the Obsidian King
strip away his protections and break his will. Tris saw himself, tortured to
the point of death and revived, pushed far past mortal endurance. In the
vision, broken in spirit and body, he begged for death. And he saw himself,
scarred and crippled by Arontala's tortures, blank-eyed, without the will to
resist, his power used as a resource for Arontala's blood magic.
"You have
failed," the voice rasped, deafeningly loud. "And your failure will
be the destruction of all those whom you loved."
The visions
were overwhelming and Tris strained for control, feeling grief and hopelessness
wash over him even as the wormroot threatened to push his power beyond his
reach. Then at the edges of his mage sense, Tris felt something else. As the
air turned cold around him, he realized that he and Alaine were no longer
alone.
"Take your
shot!" Tris heard Theron's voice in his mind as the spirit of the fallen
mage-fighter streamed from her burned corpse. With her was an older presence,
and Tris knew it was
Reeling from
the onslaught of the fiery blast and the sending, Tris saw the spirits howl
toward Alaine. As they descended on Alaine with the fury of the ghosts of the
Ruune Videya, Tris gathered all his remaining power.
With a murmured
word he dropped his shielding and sent an answering blast, drawing on
Mageslayer's power to keep the poison at bay. Sighting down Mageslayer's blade
like an athame, Tris directed his power, borrowing from the blue glow of his
life thread.
Distracted by
the vengeful spirits, Alaine's attention shifted for an instant and Tris sent
the full blast of his power toward her. Alaine screamed as the blue fire lifted
her into the air, slamming her against the rough stone wall and pinning her
against the rock. Unlike the blast that killed Theron there were no real
flames, no charring flesh. The blue mage fire struck at the spirit and the life
force within Alaine's body, evaporating that life force like water beneath a
flame. Alaine screamed once and her body writhed, and then Tris felt the
tortured spirit wrest free of her prison. The orb at her throat, deprived of a
life source on which to draw, went dark.
Tris fell to
his knees, completely spent. Alaine's body tumbled to the ground. He felt his
own life force waver as he fell face-forward onto the bare stone floor. The
illusion of Shekerishet's great room disappeared, leaving him in an empty salle
as the wardings that held the doors winked out. Tris heard the doors slam open,
heard footsteps running in his direction, but the ones who reached him first
were the spirits. Theron and
Tris stood on
the
The figure
stopped in front of him, and Her power overwhelmed his senses. He dared not
raise his head.
Rise. The voice sounded in his mind, in his heart,
and in his soul. Able to do no other, Tris slowly stood. He expected that it
would be the Mother Aspect of the Goddess who came for him, Margolan's patron
Aspect, and the Aspect to whom he had paid tribute all his life. But the face
he dared to look upon was framed with wild long hair the color of
Istra opened
her arms, spreading her heavy cloak. Tris's mage sense could feel the spirits
clustered in the darkness beneath that cloak, spirits that clung to the power
of the Dark Lady like frightened children, sheltered beneath an intricately
woven pattern that shifted as he stared. He knew without a word that he must
step into that embrace, though in the mortal world, fear would have frozen him
in place. Drawn by Her power, Tris stepped forward, wondering what would
become of his soul with no Summoner to make his passage. Istra's cloak folded
around him, smelling of leather and sweet grass, and Tris felt a power beyond
words stream through him as he fell into her embrace. Strong immortal arms
closed around him and the darkness of the cloak covered him.
My soul is
forfeit, Tris made his
confession. I've failed my family, my friends, and my people.
Not yet. Istra's voice sounded in his mind, impossibly
sweet, defying mortal description. You must return.
Tris felt the
spirits that clustered beneath the cloak enfold him as his own strength failed
him entirely. Borne up by the spirits, supported in the arms of the Dark Lady,
Tris surrendered to the darkness.
Tris woke to find himself in
his own room, the darkness lit only by a bank of candles. At first he wondered
if he had truly returned to himself, or whether he might find himself a witness
to his own funeral. But the bed beneath him felt solid, and the bandaged wound
in his shoulder throbbed. When he turned his head, the pain nearly made him
lose consciousness.
In the
near-darkness, Tris could make out two figures near the fire, and realized
that both Carina and Taru were keeping a vigil. He wanted to call out, but he
found he lacked the strength even to do that, and his power felt out of reach
entirely.
Maybe this is
the Lady's judgment, Tris thought,
closing his eyes. Maybe She won't take me until I've lived the visions,
until I've lost everything, and felt the pain. Maybe I'm damned.
Three days
later, after the chills and fever of the wormroot left him and he was able to
leave his bed, Tris sat by the window of his room, huddled in the deep window
frame, looking out at the snow-covered city below. The food on the table beside
him was cold, untouched. Carina had pleaded with him to eat, but he felt no
hunger, and while the gash in his arm was nearly healed and the poison in his
system was gone, the images of the sendings haunted him. He had not slept.
Carina, worried
because he would not speak to her, had finally left him alone. Tris was too
numbed by his own grief and failure to find the words to answer her questions.
He could not look into her eyes without seeing the noose and the gibbet. He was
resolved to neither share his visions nor allow them to come to pass, but how
to stop them from happening he did not know.
The door behind
him opened. Tris did not turn. The worst that can happen is that someone
sinks a shiv in my back, he thought. Perhaps it would be for the best.
He sensed Taru's
power before she spoke. "Carina asked me to come," Taru said, moving
toward him in the darkened room. Tris neither waved her away nor bid her
closer, never taking his eyes off the falling snow beyond the window.
"Something
else happened in that room that Carina didn't heal."
Tris didn't
move. "I don't want to talk about it."
"You have
to."
"I said I
don't want to talk about it!"
"I don't
think Arontala expected to kill you through Alaine. Oh, he could have gotten
lucky— and he certainly came close. But he can sense your power. You've turned
him back before, without training. No," Taru said, "he didn't really
expect to kill you. And at a distance, he couldn't possess you. So it had to be
something else. Something to break your will, make you question your purpose,
lose heart."
Tris kept his
back turned, so that Taru could not see the tears that filled his eyes.
"You saw
something in that room, didn't you?"
Tris nodded
wordlessly, unable to trust his voice.
"A mage of
Arontala's power could project a vision through a vessel like Alaine,"
Taru went on quietly. "A dark sending can take the heart of a strong
man," she said. "Once, I saw a great general throw himself off a
cliff because a dark mage convinced him that his wife, his children, had been
slaughtered."
"Jonmarc,
Carina, Carroway—I saw them die," Tris whispered. "I saw Kiara
taken—" his voice failed him and he bowed his head.
Taru moved to
stand behind him, and placed a hand on his shoulder. "Wormroot poisons the
body," Taru said quietly. "But a dark sending poisons the soul. Tell
me—were the images you saw clear, as if they were happening in front of
you?"
Tris nodded,
swallowing hard as the images came again to him, real and overwhelming.
"Real
scryings of the future are not so clear," Taru said. "A real scrying
sees a future that is always in motion. To see what's happening at the same
instant is one thing, but to see into the future with certainty—that is for the
Lady alone. A clear future vision is not even given to seers, whose gift is the
magic of foresight. Even they get fragments, not sharp images. That's part of
their gift of divination, to know what those pieces mean.
"Arontala
meant the sending to break your will," Taru said gently. "It's a soul
poison, pulling from your own fears. As long as you hold it inside, it will do
its work."
"I can't
tell Carina. I can't—"
"Carina is
a powerful healer, but she's young in her gift," Taru said. "And she
has scars of her own that, until they are healed, limit her power. She isn't
the only healer at the citadel." Taru drew up a chair to sit behind him.
"She is also not yet a mind healer. I am."
Tris wondered
if she saw madness in his green eyes. "I can't sleep," he said,
choking back tears. "I can't close my eyes without seeing the visions.
Last night," he confessed, his voice a tortured whisper, "last night
I reached for Mageslayer. I thought that I might save them if I didn't come
back. I thought that I might end the dreams." He held out his hand that
was clenched against his body, and Taru gasped at the blistered burn on his
palm. "Mageslayer knew. It wouldn't let me draw the blade."
"Show me
the visions." Whatever she saw in his eyes, she did not turn away.
"I've seen more than you can imagine, both of battle and of death. Open
your mind to me, and let me see."
She held out a
hand to him and Tris grasped it in both of his, heedless of the pressure
against his scalded palm. He felt warmth as Taru placed her free hand on his
head, felt that warmth move from her hand into his scalp, through flesh and
bone into his mind, and deeper into his being. Tris could feel Taru's presence
in his thoughts as he could feel the presence of the ghosts on the Plain of
Spirits. He shut his eyes and let the images of the sending wash over him,
hearing himself weep as if from a distance. His shoulders shook and he gasped
for breath. He held back nothing, sparing her none of the details of the deaths
he saw, nor of his vision of the Dark Lady.
Tris felt
Taru's presence shield him, her power absorbing the dark sending, as if the
images were pulled into the light that was her magic. As the images faded he
felt the dread and grief recede, leaving him raw and spent. When the darkness
was gone, Tris felt Taru's power like a balm, washing over him, healing the
wounds of memory. Then he felt the presence fade, until he became aware that he
was rocking back and forth, Taru's hand clasped in a desperate grip.
"I still
remember," he whispered.
"But you
remember a nightmare—not a reality," Taru said. "The danger still
exists—but not the certainty of their fate, or of your own. The poison of the
sending is gone. What remains you can handle without being consumed." She
paused. "The other image, of the Dark Lady—that came after Alaine's
death?"
Tris nodded.
"You
weren't breathing when Carina and I reached you," Taru said quietly.
"For a moment,
Carina thought
you were dead. She pushed against your ribs and breathed into your mouth, and
you came back to yourself. Truly, I hadn't seen the like, though she swore it
wasn't magic, that it was like pushing on a bellows, something she learned from
a battle healer, long ago." Taru paused again, longer this time.
"What you saw of the Dark Lady, that was a true vision. I can feel the
remnant of Her power. And I believe that you've glimpsed Her before."
Tris swallowed
hard and nodded. He dragged his sleeve across his red-rimmed eyes. "Some
hero, huh?"
He could not
read the look in Taru's eyes, but her expression softened. "Only madmen
are unafraid. Even the dead—and the undead—feel pain. Arontala knows that your
love for your friends is your weakness—as your grandmother's love for Lemuel
was hers. He can't understand that it's also your strength."
"I refuse
to believe that I have to sacrifice Kiara and my friends in order to defeat the
Obsidian King," Tris said, raising his head. "I refuse to go into
battle, willing to let them die. I might as well put a knife to their throats.
I'd make Istra's Bargain myself before I'll do that."
Taru smiled.
"That won't be necessary. I believe you are already the Dark Lady's
own." She was quiet for a moment. "Arontala will try to use your
fears against you. Darkness always does. It's as if we're each followed by a
dragon, Tris, made up of those fears and those old wounds. And if you don't
turn and face your dragon and call it by its true name when you're young and
strong, then when you're old and weak, it comes by night and devours you in
your bed. You've faced your dragon," she said quietly. "You know the
price of your worst fears. You know now that the future isn't certain. And as a
Summoner, you know that death itself can't sunder love."
Tris nodded,
feeling his throat tighten. "I know." Tris caught at her sleeve as
she stood and turned away. "Thank you."
Taru nodded in
acknowledgement. "Tomorrow night, you and Carina will return to Staden's
palace until after Winterstide. Then your training will resume."
CHAPTER FOUR prev next contents
The woman's piercing scream ended abruptly as she slammed against the stone wall and slid
limply to the castle floor. Jared Drayke stood, panting and sweat-soaked, his
fists balled and ready to strike again.
"You ought
to know by now that the human neck is a fragile thing," Arontala's comment
sounded from the doorway. Jared wheeled.
"Shut
up." When Arontala made no reply other than a shrug, Jared strode over to
the battered body and hefted it in his arms, then crossed the room with his
burden to fling wide the curtains to the garderobe and dump the body down.
"That's
the third in as many months," Arontala observed acidly. "Not counting
the ones you've given to the guards for their sport when your use is over. At
least they're buried in a trench behind the barracks."
"I don't
want to hear it."
"The common
folk think you're sacrificing maidens to the Crone," Arontala continued
without pause. "Or that you've conjured a demon."
"I'd need
a mage for that, wouldn't I?" Jared shot back. "A real mage, not just
one that promises everything and delivers nothing."
Arontala
shrugged again. Beneath the voluminous red robes that marked him as a Fire
Clan mage he was slightly built, standing a head shorter than Jared. The undead
pallor lightened the duskier complexion of his native Eastmark. He crossed his
arms, and the long, thin fingers of his right hand tapped with boredom.
"You wear the crown. Margolan is yours."
"For now.
My brother's still out there, and every thing you've tried to do about it has
failed." Jared began to pace, running a hand through his long, wavy dark
hair. He had his late mother Eldra's black eyes and an olive complexion that
was a mixture of Bricen's fair skin and Eldra's darker tones. But the high
cheekbones and angular features were all Bricen's, and the family resemblance
between Jared and his hated half-brother Tris was as near as the reflecting
glass. "He slipped right through your slavers' fingers. And Staden of
Principality welcomed him like a hero! You heard the spies." Jared
fingered the null magic charm that hung around his neck. Although it limited
any magical control over him that Arontala might try to wield, Jared did not
trust the charm completely against the dark mage, nor did he underestimate the
power of Arontala's abilities as a vayash moru.
"There's
no cause as romantic... or hopeless... as an exiled prince's," Arontala
said. "There are no Principality troops at the border, and your guards
have burned a swath through Principality to make Staden pay for his
indiscretion."
"You
forgot to mention the Isencroft bitch. The spy said she was with Tris in
Principality. She's defied me, and joined him in treason."
"Then you
can watch her hang for it. You'd most likely have killed her before you could
have sired a brat by her."
"I want
more than promises!" Jared's face was only inches from the vayash moru.
"Summon your great spirit. Secure my throne!"
"Patience
is a virtue." Arontala turned away. "Anyway, it's not mine to decide.
The working can only be done at
Arontala didn't
flinch as Jared hurled a metal pitcher past his head. It clanged against the
wall. "Then try it again. The Hawthorn Moon is months away. I can't wait
forever."
"You can't
wait at all, that's the problem," Arontala observed. "Your army is
deserting because they're sick of burning down their own villages. Your nobles
are close to revolt. I handed you the throne of Margolan on a platter and
you've destroyed it before you've worn the crown a year."
"My only
mistake was trusting you."
In the blink of
an eye, Arontala was across the room, and the display of power only served to
darken Jared's mood further. "A little late for second thoughts, my
king," the vayasb moru said in a voice as smooth as brandy.
"Our fates are joined until we've seen this through." Jared repressed
a shiver, unwilling to let Arontala see how much the undead mage unsettled
him. He was glad that he had reinforced his amulet's power with other null
charms hidden around the room. Arontala never spoke of them, and if he noticed
an effect on his magic, he did not seem to care.
"Once the
snows are gone," Jared said, "and the roads are firm enough to ride,
I want to strike against Staden so that the Winter Kingdoms know that I
am the true king of Margolan."
Even the firelight
could not add color to Arontala's features. "I advise against that."
"Of course
you advise against it!" Jared raged, dashing a platter to the floor.
"You care nothing about my throne. The only thing you care about is that
damned orb and your pitiful spirit king."
"Your
troops are needed here, to keep your loyal subjects from slitting your royal
throat," Arontala continued as if he had not heard. "And as for the
'pitiful spirit king,'" Arontala added with a trace of irony, "he can
assure you the kind of power you crave to hold Margolan and the
"What is
that supposed to mean?" Jared felt a tingle of fear as his anger waned.
"You could
reign as an immortal, with the greatest wizard the kingdoms have ever feared
at your side, reborn to an immortal's body," Arontala said, his eyes
alight.
Jared hand went
to the amulet at his throat. "I want no part of your perversion."
A mirthless
smile touched Arontala's lips. "No? You've already learned that it is the
blood, and not the
act, that satisfies." He glanced pointedly toward the garderobe.
"We have
spies among the Sisterhood, within the families of vayash moru, and soon
in Staden's court," Arontala said smoothly. "A little patience, my
king, and you'll have what you desire."
Whatever Jared
might have said was silenced by the rapping at the door.
"What
now?" Jared shouted.
The door edged
open to reveal a pale guardsman. "Sire, the Nargi emissaries have
arrived."
Jared cursed.
"Seat them in the audience hall. I'll attend when I'm free." He
turned to Arontala. "If I can't have results from you, I'll find an ally
who can honor a promise." He rinsed the last traces of blood from his
hands in the basin near the bed and pulled his stained tunic over his head,
shouting for a valet to assist him. Arontala said nothing during the process,
standing in the shadows near the doorway. When Jared had inspected his image in
the looking glass and called for his circlet crown, he met the vayash moru's
eyes for a moment, then cursed and turned toward the door, giving tacit
permission for the wizard to follow. Four Nargi priests waited in the audience
hall, watching impassively while Jared ascended the throne.
"You may
address the throne," he said with a trace of ennui.
"Why have
you called us?" The speaker was the eldest of the priests, a bent, lined
figure whose face looked more mummified than aged.
"I have a
proposition for your king."
"Go
on."
Jared felt his
mood grow darker at the priest's complete lack of intimidation. "Half a
century ago, your people swore allegiance to the Obsidian King. On the Hawthorn
Moon, he will rise again, and I'm prepared to help Nargi regain the territories
it once held... if," he held up a finger, "you'll prove to me your
good faith and raise your army against one who would usurp the throne."
"How can
this be?" The priest's dry voice was like the death rattle of a corpse.
"The Obsidian King was destroyed."
"Not
destroyed. Bound. What's bound can be loosed. At the Hawthorn Moon he will be
free again, and his power can make Margolan a powerful ally... or a formidable
foe."
"You would
invite the armies of Nargi into Margolan?"
"Help me
crush the usurper, and I'll reward your king richly."
"We will
carry your terms to our king," the priest agreed. His companions whispered
among themselves, their cowls shrouding their faces. "It is his to
decide. Our armies cannot move before the snows melt. The worst of winter is
now upon us."
"I
understood that in Nargi, your king rules at the pleasure of the Crone and
those who speak for Her. Can we not make an agreement now?"
Once more, the
priest turned to his whispering companions, ghostlike in their hushed voices
and hidden features. Finally, he returned his attention to Jared. "We will
convey our endorsement to our king. But even for an ally, the king will not
sacrifice his army. We cannot move until the snows melt."
Jared barely
restrained his anger at the delay. "Then we shall ask the Goddess for an
early spring," he said between clenched teeth.
The old priest
regarded him for a moment. "Our days are in the hands of the Crone. As are
we all."
When the
emissaries had been escorted from the hall, Jared turned to Arontala.
"Come the thaw, the Nargi army will show everyone the full power of my
crown." He rose from the throne. "I don't need the soldiers of
Margolan."
"As you
wish, my king," he said, moving for the doorway. He paused, turning once
more toward Jared. "But are you quite sure of your bargain?"
"What do
you mean?"
"You've
asked them to stop the usurper," Arontala explained. "In the most
literal terms, only one man has usurped the throne of Margolan. You, my
king." He was unconcerned at the rage that filled Jared's face.
"Perhaps you should learn to be more precise in your wording. One should
always be careful what one wishes."
CHAPTER FIVE prev next contents
IN the palace of King Staden, the winter
days quickly fell into routine for Jonmarc Vahanian. Most days, Vahanian was up
before dawn, training in the salle with Kiara. The sessions ran late into the
night when Mikhail was there, and sometimes Gabriel joined them.
In the few
months since Harrtuck had hired him as the group's guide, Vahanian had seen his
world turned inside out. He'd been skeptical at first, unwilling to believe in
Tris's power as a mage and distrustful of nobles in general. But Tris had
seemed unconcerned with rank, willing to accept Vahanian on the merit of his
skill alone, and Vahanian had been grudgingly impressed. After the battle with
the slavers, Tris and Carina had saved his life.
At Westmarch,
Tris had helped Vahanian make peace with his grief and guilt over the death of
his wife. And when Tris went to fight the ghost of King Argus for Mageslayer,
Tris had entrusted his own signet ring and the vouchsafe from King Harrol into
Vahanian's keeping—a small fortune by any standards. As the weeks passed, and
Vahanian came to see that Tris's offer of friendship was real, his objections
to throwing in his lot with the others gradually waned. He had come to
genuinely like Tris. Ten years older and with more combat experience than any
of the others save Harrtuck, Vahanian held no illusions about the odds against
them. He had his own reasons for wanting to see Arontala destroyed. The Fire
Clan mage had been the reason for the death of his wife and for his own rigged
court martial.
But something
else had stirred deep inside him as Vahanian heard the refugees' tales about
plundered farms and murdered villagers. Although he'd proudly been liegeman to
no king before Staden made him lord of Dark Haven, Vahanian was born in
Margolan. And while he was cynical about appeals to flag and kingdom, a love
for that land was in his blood. He'd survived the plunder of his own village,
when marauders had come years before. Those memories would forever haunt his
dreams. Now, the tragedies of his past made the stories of the refugees real
to him, and the chance to help stop the killing was more compelling than he
expected.
And then there
was Carina. Back in the caravan, he'd enjoyed riling Carina, although he
rapidly came to respect her healing talent and her stubborn dedication to her
patients. When they were taken by the slavers and Carina was almost killed,
Vahanian admitted to himself that he cared about
the healer.
Time on the road had only deepened his resolve. While he was unsure whether
Carina returned those feelings, his new lands and title made him bold enough to
pursue her. On saner days, he chided himself for undertaking two hopeless
quests at once. Most of the time, he put those doubts behind him, surprised
that he could believe in anything again.
Vahanian wiped
away the sweat from his forehead with his sleeve as he and Kiara wrapped up
another round.
"You're
good—damn good." Vahanian took a long draught of water from a bucket at
the edge of the room. "I can see why Tris's Eastmark kick has improved, if
he's been training with you on the side."
Kiara, her
tunic wet with sweat, grinned. "Thanks. But the way you put those moves
together still throws me for a loop. My armsmaster in Isencroft wouldn't have
known what to do with you!" The princess's auburn hair was pulled back in
a functional single braid, and she was dressed, as she preferred, in a tunic
and trews. Her dark almond-shaped eyes and the dusky hue of her skin spoke of
Eastmark blood.
Vahanian
chuckled, and held out the dipper. "Alleys and battlefields are a
different kind of salle. Points don't count—just blood." Kiara was the
first real challenge he'd encountered in the Eastmark style of fighting since
his days as a Nargi captive, and he found the purity of her technique an interesting
counter to his own, battle-won skills. They were well-matched. Jae, Kiara's
gyregon, perched high in the salle rafters where he had an excellent view of
the sparring, and hissed at the action.
"Sun's up.
The others will be here soon." Kiara replaced the dipper after a long
drink.
Soterius hailed
them as he and Carroway entered the salle. "Who won today?"
"A tie, as
usual," Kiara laughed. "I beat him once, he bested me once, and we
did enough damage to each other on the third round to agree to disagree!"
"Have you
started yet?"
Vahanian sighed
in jest. "Don't you have lessons or something?"
As they day
wore on, they trained with swords and in hand-to-hand combat. When darkness fell,
Mikhail joined them. Mikhail made a challenging sparring partner, combining the
speed of a vayash moru with battle skills of a style two hundred years
in the past. What Carroway lacked in strength he made up for
in agility and
a true eye for aim. With his blue-black long hair and his long-lashed, light blue eyes,
Carroway was a favorite of the ladies, with good
looks that were almost beautiful. That made his dead-on aim with a dagger even
more unexpected. Jae fluttered down to join Kiara in a practice round, feinting
and flying at her opponent, but careful to draw in his razor-sharp talons. When
the little gyre-gon tired,
"You're
improving," Vahanian said to Soterius as they lowered their swords,
sweating hard after a practice bout.
Soterius
grimaced. "You know, every time you say that, I really want to punch
you."
Vahanian raised
an eyebrow. "You can try. But I've won the last three rounds."
Soterius was
the same height and had the same reach as Vahanian, but where Vahanian was lean
and muscular, Soterius was stocky. That difference gave Vahanian an edge with
agility and Soterius an edge with strength. Vahanian, ten years older and with
more battle experience than either Soterius or Tris, was a master of practical
tactics. Soterius, like Kiara, was largely salle-trained, without Vahanian's
rough-and-tumble experience. Unlike Kiara, Soterius had difficulty leaving
behind the rules.
Soterius
grinned. "Don't forget—we've got climbing practice after this. Your
favorite."
"Don't rub
it in."
The group ate a
cold supper before they undertook the second part of their training. The lower
regions of Principality were gently rolling hills, so they made do with the
tallest thing at hand: the inside of the great bell tower in the castle yard,
and riggings affixed to the tallest beams in the high-ceilinged salle.
Given the snows
that blanketed the countryside nearly thigh-deep, they trained in the salle.
The rough salle walls served for practice, and the rigging that secured Vahanian
across his chest and looped between his legs was attached to a rope that ran
through a pulley affixed to the high beams of the salle ceiling. The rope was
fastened to a winch of Soterius' devising so that they could be secured as they
climbed up or hoisted to the roof and left to climb down with some assurance
that a misstep would not be fatal. Vahanian cursed under his breath as he
secured his riggings, working the stiff rope into tight knots.
"Curse
louder, and it can count for both of us," Kiara groused, struggling to
secure a foothold on the rough wall. It made her fingers bleed, and seemed to
defy a solid toe hold for her boots.
Carroway and
"Tell me
again why you can't just fly us wherever we need to go," Vahanian grumbled
as the rough rock opened another cut on his calloused fingers and he struggled
for a grip.
"For one
thing, it's possible that Arontala has spelled Shekerishet against other vayash
moru." Gabriel stayed in place without any apparent effort as
Vahanian's arms ached from holding onto the
wall.
"It's more likely that he has his own fledglings standing guard, and that
I'll be needed elsewhere, for defense." He smiled, showing his eye teeth.
"And I'm told that mortals find such transport unsettling."
"Try
me." The rock to which Vahanian clung slipped from his grasp and he nearly
lost his footing.
Vahanian heard
a rush of air, saw a blur faster than sight could follow, and then felt two
impossibly powerful arms close around his chest in a crushing grip. Without
warning, they rushed upward so fast that Vahanian felt his rope snap like
twine. They reached the highest peak of the roof and then descended with equal
speed; he fought a primal fear of falling and felt his stomach lurch into his
throat. His feet touched the ground with a gentle thud, and Gabriel released
him.
Soterius and
Kiara barely hid their snickering as Vahanian tried not to be sick.
"You've made your point," Vahanian said thickly, his knees suddenly
unsteady. "I'll take my chances on my own, thank you."
Kiara looked at
Gabriel. "The vayash moru have the strength, the speed, and the
means to kill beyond any war machine. Yet I can't recall hearing of a battle
where the vayash morn fought—except against the Obsidian King. Why is
that?"
Gabriel
answered. "Four hundred years ago, a truce was formed between mortals and
Those Who Walk the Night. Mortals feared us because they knew that although we
were few in number, we had superior strength and speed. Because of that fear,
mortals often turned against us, burning our day resting places and destroying
us at our most vulnerable. We were hunted and murdered, and when the vayash
moru defended themselves or retaliated, it got even worse. So we agreed to
allow mortals to fight their own battles. The mortals agreed to stop trying to
destroy us. Part of that bargain was that we would not intervene in wars of
plunder or expansion. Only for the survival of the Winter Kingdoms, and not the
power of a mortal king, have we set aside that agreement. Such was the peril in
the Mage Wars, when we helped to defeat the Obsidian King. Among ourselves, the
terms of that truce are stringently enforced."
Gabriel went
on. "And so Mikhail and I believe it is again, should Arontala succeed in
raising the Obsidian King from the abyss. But not all of our kind are in
agreement."
Vahanian met
Gabriel's eyes. "So you break the truce. What are they going to do? You're
already dead."
Gabriel's eyes
held something Vahanian could not read. "Death is not the worst
punishment. Pain can continue after death. The penalty for breaking the truce
is destruction. At Winterstide, I must make our case before the Blood Council,
the ruling body of our kind. If we can persuade them, we may gain powerful
allies. If not," he exchanged glances with Mikhail, "we'll deal with
those consequences as they arise."
Under
Soterius's energetic urging, Vahanian and Kiara grew more confident with their
climbing, practicing ascents and descents. They practiced until they had
memorized the other's individual rhythms and skills, and then they rehearsed
even more,
with Soterius devising increasingly difficult trials. On occasion Carroway
joined them for fun. The bard's natural agility annoyed Vahanian, whose own
dislike of heights made the exercise grueling.
After another
candlemark, Carroway took a seat next to
The bard
grinned as the others dished out good-natured ribbing for his departure.
"Sure, sure, you say that now," he grinned at their teasing.
"But when you're enjoying a glorious Winterstide spectacular with the
finest music in the Winter Kingdoms, you'll realize I had my priorities
straight!"
Vahanian and
the others wrapped up their practice in time for a late snack.
"I have to
admit, I enjoy the salle time more than the strategy sessions," Kiara said
as she and the others made their way toward the war room. "Sometimes I
think we'll talk ourselves to death!"
Vahanian
shrugged. "I'd rather hear the arguments now, when there's time to change
the tactics, than later when we've got troops in the field."
Mikhail nodded.
"I agree with Jonmarc. Much better to know your strategy—and your enemy—
going into war than to change directions with troops on the ground."
Some days,
Staden sent military experts from his army to consult on difficult scenarios.
The rest of the time, Vahanian and the others met with leaders of the
mercenaries Tris retained for the war against Jared. Tonight, Staden's spy
chief, Hant, promised to bring them a leader from among the Margolan refugees
who crowded Principality's makeshift border camps.
"Good
night for a warm mug of ale," said Harrtuck as he met them at the door.
"Miserable weather out there."
Vahanian looked
askance at Harrtuck. "Missed you at practice today."
"Yes,
well. Might have stayed up a wee bit too late last night, and had a tad more
ale than I recall," Harrtuck said, rubbing his neck.
"The war
hasn't even started yet, and you're already acting like a merc."
Harrtuck
chuckled. "I'm a bit out of practice. Had a nice comfortable palace job
for too long."
Vahanian,
Kiara, and Harrtuck bantered with Soterius and Mikhail in the war room as they
waited, jokingly taking bets on Soterius's ability to climb a local landmark.
The door opened, and all joking stopped as Hant stepped briskly into the room,
followed by a cowled stranger.
"It's nasty
outside," Staden's spymaster remarked, shaking off the snow from his cloak
as he set it aside. He gestured toward the man beside him. "I'd like you
to meet Sahila." His companion,
a thin man, was
wraith-like in a dark cloak. The hood fell back, revealing Sahila's badly
scarred face.
"You!"
The gasp of surprise came from both Sahila and Vahanian at once.
"We were
told you died," Sahila said to Vahanian, falling into Eastmark's guttural
language.
"I nearly
did," Vahanian replied, in heavily-accented Markian.
"How is it
you're here?"
"Long
story."
Kiara cleared
her throat. "Although Hant and I are following this, perhaps you'd like to
switch back to Common for everyone else?" she prodded in perfect Markian.
Vahanian glanced at Kiara. It was the first time he had heard her speak
Eastmark's language. She spoke it fluently, without an accent.
"What
mystery is this, I wonder," Sahila said, "to have a high-born
swordswoman in Principality who looks and speaks like a daughter of
Eastmark?"
Kiara met his
eyes evenly. "I'm Kiara Sharsequin of Isencroft. Daughter of the late
Queen Viata, who was sister to your king."
Sahila bowed
low, making a gesture of deference. "A thousand pardons, m'lady. We could
never forget the beauty of Princess Viata, nor the tragedy of her loss. May
your days be long, m'lady, and may you favor her in both beauty and
skill."
Kiara inclined
her head in acceptance, then returned her attention to Vahanian. "You two
know each other?"
Sahila spoke
first. "He saved my life, ten years ago, at great cost to himself."
Vahanian shifted uncomfortably as all but Harrtuck leaned forward to hear the
unfamiliar story. Harrtuck exchanged glances with him, and Vahanian drew a deep
breath, then shrugged.
"I'm
Eastmark born," said Sahila, addressing first Hant, then the others.
"I was hoping to live out a quiet life as a farmer in a village called
Chauvrenne. A bad harvest left nothing to pay taxes with. The first time I saw
Jonmarc Vahanian, he brought a troop of Eastmark soldiers to our village,
demanding payment for the king.
"We had
nothing to give, and he went away. But there was a shadow over the land in
those days," Sahila said. "A blood mage named Arontala." He
paused to spit and grind the spittle under his heel as a warding against evil.
"Arontala corrupted a great general among my people, and turned his head
against the king, father to King Kalcen, who now reigns.
"The
general sent the soldiers back, and told them to burn us out. But this man,
their captain, refused." Sahila looked at Vahanian, whose expression had
become unreadable. "The soldiers warned us to flee, so disgusted by their
orders that they buried their uniforms and fled in farmers' clothes with
us."
"What
happened?" Soterius asked quietly, looking at Vahanian as if taking his
measure anew.
"The
general sent more troops to hunt us down," Sahila said in a bitter voice.
"Many were killed. Vahanian and his troops were run to ground and brought
back in chains, as were the villagers, to make an example of us." He met
Vahanian's eyes, sharing an old, painful memory. "They locked us in a
barn, but we could see what they did outside. The general and his mage hanged the soldiers for
treason—all but their captain." His voice became quieter. "They
locked him in the barn with us, and set it afire. I bear these scars." He
turned his head to show the puckered and discolored skin along one side of his
face, and slid the loose sleeve of his robe up to show an equally disfigured
arm.
"Together,
he and I kicked out a portion of the floor, into the caves below. We saved as
many as we could, but there were so many, and the fire was so fast." He
shut his eyes, remembering.
Vahanian looked
down, aware that the others were watching him, uncomfortable with the telling
of the tale, the scenes that had replayed themselves too often in his dreams.
He clasped his hands, sweating.
"When the
fire was out, and the general was gone, those of us who survived dug our way
out," said Sahila. He turned to Vahanian. "You left us, headed south
toward Margolan. We heard you were taken by Nargi. Then we heard no more."
"Wasn't
much to tell," Vahanian said, with a glance toward Harrtuck that quieted
anything the other might have added.
"For a
while, I fought with the resistance in Eastmark," said Sahila. "We
were ten to their hundred. We took a heavy toll and, I believe, stopped
Arontala. I grew tired of war, and made my way to Margolan, perhaps more
luckily than you." He directed a faint smile toward Vahanian. "There
I raised a family and found a living with my plow. Then Arontala returned, and
the fires began again." The pain was fresh in Sahila's voice. "This
time, I was able to get my family to safety, but many could not. And so, I laid
down my plow and raised a sword.
"There are
rumors, among the refugees, that Prince Martris survived the coup. General Hant
tells me the rumors are true. I've seen what Arontala has done in Margolan, and
I've seen how King Jared rules. Hant tells me that Prince Martris intends to
destroy Arontala and win back the crown. If you believe that Prince Martris can
do this, my friend," Sahila said, "then I'll give you what help I
can."
"Believe,"
said Vahanian. "If there's anyone who can defeat Arontala, it's
Tris."
Sahila took his
place at the table, and Hant cleared his throat. "I contacted Sahila
because he has done on a small scale what Soterius and Mikhail plan for
Margolan. Sahila recruited and organized the farmers and townspeople in
Eastmark against Arontala's general. They were able to harry him enough to
stop him from gaining more power." Hant paused. "Sahila can advise
you, connect you to the refugees, guide you through the camps."
"If you
wish to raise an army against Jared and his mage, you'll find a legion waiting
among the refugees," Sahila promised. "I'll take you to the camps and
the hiding places, and they will show you where the others have fled. I'll show
you how we fought in Eastmark, from the forests and marshes, in the mountain
passes and the caves, so that we moved as shadows, and couldn't be driven out
by armies a hundred times our size." He took in Soterius and Mikhail once
more.
"You're
both soldiers?" Sahila asked, and they nodded. "Are you willing to
forget the rules, to
think like a
stawar that stalks his prey, or a falcon that strikes like lightning? There are
no rules in this combat, save honor. Can you fight like a predator without
becoming an animal, without hurting your enemy the way he has hurt you, and
thus becoming him?"
Soterius met
Vahanian's eyes, and for the first time, Vahanian thought he saw true
understanding in the soldier's gaze. "Yes, I believe so," Soterius
said.
Sahila smiled
wolfishly. "Good. Then bring me your maps."
Late that evening, after the eleventh bell, Vahanian slipped out onto one of the small balconies
that overlooked the courtyard. Even now the bakers and grooms bustled back and
forth, their torches and lanterns bobbing in the darkness. For the season the
night was mild, and although Vahanian was glad for his cloak, the brisk night
air was refreshing. He brushed the snow from a stone bench and leaned back
against the wall, drawing a wineskin from beneath his cloak. The wine warmed
him but did little to relax his tired muscles or lift his mood.
Seeing Sahila
again, hearing his recount of the rout at Chauvrenne, brought back old memories
Vahanian preferred to avoid. While Sahila's story seemed to have further
increased Staden's esteem, and possibly won him grudging regard from Soterius,
Vahanian knew it was also likely to replay itself in his dreams for nights to
come. Though eight years had passed, Vahanian doubted he would ever be free of
those memories. The thud of a gallows trap door—common enough since hangings
doubled as public entertainment—or the smell of burning hay could bring the
memories back in full and twist his stomach into a knot. Memories, Vahanian
knew, were just another type of scar.
The sound of
footsteps made him reach for his sword. To his surprise, Kiara stepped out onto
the balcony, raising her cowl around her head once he had a chance to recognize
her. "Mind if I join you?"
Vahanian
offered her his seat, and walked over to the railing to look out over the night
fires of the city. "Be my guest. But if you want another go in the salle,
you're out of luck. I've had it for tonight."
Kiara chuckled,
but it sounded forced. "No thanks. I just came out to get a breath of
fresh air and hoped it would clear my mind."
"Something
bothering you?"
Kiara drew her
knees up and wrapped her cloak more tightly around herself. "Homesick,
mostly. I've never been away from home for Winterstide. I miss father."
Vahanian
offered her his wineskin and she accepted, taking a draught of the warm wine
and handing the container back to him. "I have to admit, before I met you
and Tris and Berry, I never really thought about a king having a family. Kings
were—well, kings. You served them and you paid taxes to them and you died for
them, but I guess I never realized that anyone loved them. It hadn't crossed my
mind they were someone's father." He lifted the wineskin to take another
drink.
Kiara gave him
a mischievous sideways glance. "Or father-in-law?" she asked. It was
worth it, she thought, to see him choke on his wine.
"You know,
since
Vahanian
cleared his throat. "Nice to know. Somehow, I can't imagine her taking it
well to have Cam matchmaking for her."
Kiara chuckled.
"Someone has to. You know, until this journey, Cam and Carina were never
apart, except for the time she got sick. When Ric died.
"Hell, two
or three people could hide behind
"You know
what I mean. So in an odd way, maybe this journey has been good for both of
them.
They were
silent for a moment. Vahanian looked out over the courtyard. "Ric—was
Gregor's brother?"
Kiara nodded.
"I figured you picked up on that, when Gregor captured us." Vahanian
listened in silence as Kiara told the story. When she finished, neither spoke
for a few minutes.
"That
explains a lot," Vahanian said finally, looking away. "But there's
one other thing I wondered about—how come you aren't at the citadel training
too? After all, you're a bit of a spook yourself— aren't you?"
"If you
mean the scryings, like the one that went badly at Westmarch, it's not quite
the same as the type of power Tris has. The kings of Isencroft have a regent
magic that's inherited through the royal line. It's not sorcerer-caliber
power—never has been. It's more for personal protection, and some handy skills
to help protect the kingdom. Like the ability to do scryings."
"Pardon my
saying so, but after what happened at Westmarch, I can't say that it works well
on either count."
Kiara chuckled
dryly. "I have to agree with you. And I've no desire to try another
scrying, maybe not ever. It certainly didn't protect father from Arontala's
wasting spell. Perhaps it wasn't meant to hold off a full mage. I can shield
and scry, and sense the weather, which can be helpful in battle. Certainly not
anything like Tris can do!"
She burrowed
further into her cloak as the wind swirled the snow around them. "I'm
worried about both Tris and Carina," Kiara confessed after a long silence.
"About what kind of training the Sisters are going to put them through.
Father never really trusted the Sisterhood. He said they were too m love with
their grand theories of how the world should be, and didn't mind how many
people died putting those theories into action."
"We've
only got a few months left until the Hawthorn Moon," Vahanian said,
looking out at
the clear night
sky. "That's not a lot of time. Barely enough to hire troops and plan a
campaign. Tris is going to need everything he's got to do that. We only get one
shot."
"I
know," Kiara replied. "It's just a feeling I've got, that something's
wrong." She grew quiet again. "Last night, I had a dream." Her
voice was barely above a whisper. "Tris was fighting a mage in a red robe.
And even though I couldn't see the red mage's face, I heard his voice. I knew that
voice—it was the same voice from the scrying. It was Arontala." She looked
up at Vahanian, and knew he could see worry in her eyes. "In my dream,
Tris destroyed Arontala, but then I saw Tris fall—" She swallowed hard,
trying not to cry.
Vahanian was
completely at a loss for what to say. "Look, you said yourself, magic
doesn't work for you. Maybe you just had a bad dream."
Kiara was
unconvinced. "Maybe. I hope so." She stretched and stood. "It's
almost twelfth bell. I guess I should at least get back to my room." She
paused at the door. "I'm afraid to go to sleep. I'm afraid to dream."
"I know
the feeling."
Kiara
considered his comment, and nodded. "Any suggestions?"
"Well, you
can try getting drunk or staying up all night, but it doesn't work for long.
Everyone's got to sleep sooner or later. Time helps. But not as much as the
healers tell you it does."
"Good
night," she said, heading inside. "Thanks for the wine."
"Sleep
well," Vahanian murmured. When she was gone, he
opened the wineskin and took a long
drink. Though the evening had grown colder, Vahanian did not go inside right
away, waiting until he had finished the wine and was too exhausted to stay
awake. Between the wine and the fatigue, he counted on being too tired to
dream. The dreams still found him.
The constant training and strategizing could not quell Vahanian's growing concern. Tris and
Carina had been at the citadel of the Sisterhood for two full weeks. No one—not
even Staden—had heard from them. As the days wore on, he could tell that Kiara
was worried as well. Her training lost focus and she drew away from them, into
her own thoughts.
There was
little comfort he could offer. While Kiara and Tris were open about their
involvement, his relationship with Carina was much more tenuous. And while
Vahanian finally admitted to himself that he was in love with the dark-haired
healer, he remained unsure about the extent to which Carina returned those
feelings.
So it was with
carefully guarded reserve that he greeted the late evening news of Tris and
Carina's unexpected return from the Citadel. They arrived in a closed carriage,
under the king's guard. Only the companions from the trail and Staden met the
carriage. Vahanian hung back, willing to let the others take the foreground.
His concern deepened as Tris and Carina stepped from the carriage.
Tris's thin
frame was gaunt. When Tris's cowl fell back to expose his face, Vahanian could
see the marks of battle wounds, recently healed. For a moment, Tris's green
eyes met his, and Vahanian felt a shiver
go down his
spine. Tris's gaze
reminded
Vahanian of the look he'd seen before, in the eyes of returned prisoners of
war, men who had endured the unspeakable and would never sleep well again.
Carina leaned
heavily on Tris's arm. Her slight frame was nearly hidden by her heavy cloak
and her face was haggard, with dark-circled eyes and a weary expression. Kiara
rushed forward to greet both of them, and while Vahanian could not hear the
words that were spoken, it was clear from Kiara's expression that Tris had asked
her to look after the healer. Carina nearly stumbled as Kiara took her arm.
Carina looked over her shoulder, and Vahanian thought she looked his way.
Reluctantly, he watched her disappear toward the stairs with Kiara as the
others crowded around Tris.
"I
promise, I'll tell you everything I can—tomorrow." Tris managed a wan
smile that did not reach his eyes. "We've been to the Crone and back, and
I'm afraid I'm a good bit worse for the wear, in spite of all Carina's
help."
"You look
tired, m'lad," said Staden. "Best thing for you is to get some sleep.
Tales will wait until morning."
Tris nodded,
and grinned wearily at Carroway. "I have some more grist for your
stories," he said, clapping the bard on the shoulder. "But I don't
know if anyone will believe them."
"The
drunker they are, the more that sounds reasonable," assured Carroway, but
Vahanian could see the worry in Carroway's face.
"Give me a
day or two to rest, and I'll be back in the salle," Tris said to Vahanian.
"Yeah,
sure thing," Vahanian agreed dubiously.
Early the next
afternoon, Vahanian chanced to encounter Kiara in the upstairs passageway,
bearing a tray with two teapots and plates of cold meats and cheeses.
"Filling in for the kitchen help?" he asked, raising an eyebrow.
Kiara blushed.
"Yes, I guess so. Tris asked for some tea, and I volunteered to bring it
up. It's just—"
Vahanian
chuckled. "I understand." He nodded toward the two pots. "You
must expect him to be thirsty."
"I planned
to stop by and check on Carina." She shot a sly glance toward Vahanian.
After the conversation on the balcony, he was sure that Kiara both recognized
and endorsed his interest in her cousin. "Carina said she'd be working in
the study. I'm late getting up to Tris—would you mind taking the tea to Carina
if you're going that direction? I wouldn't want it to get cold."
"Glad to
help," Vahanian deadpanned, taking the teapot and cup from her tray.
Kiara's eyes
grew serious. "I'm afraid for them, Jonmarc. Both of them looked like
they'd been to battle. I'm not sure how much more either of them
can take."
Vahanian
nodded. "I wondered that myself. I'm the wrong one to ask about magic. But
remind Spook that if he gets his royal ass fried, the rest of us hang. And
personally, I'm counting on doing some damage to Arontala. So... he needs to
stick around for the party."
Kiara smiled at
his irreverence. "I'll remind him— in so many words," she chuckled.
"Go on now, or the tea will be cold. Let Carina know it will be
tomorrow before
the court healer can see her— there was an outbreak in the village and Staden
sent the healers to help." "I'll tell her," Vahanian replied,
heading for the study.
At the study, Vahanian
knocked lightly at the door. When no answer came, he frowned and knocked again,
more insistently. "Carina?" he called quietly. "Kiara asked me
to bring up some tea. It's Jonmarc."
When there was
still no answer, he tried the door. It was unlocked, and swung open at his
touch. Carina lay sprawled on the floor, her book fallen beside her.
Vahanian rushed
inside, and the door swung closed behind him. The tea was forgotten on the
table as he knelt beside Carina, turning her over gently.
Carina was pale
and feverish. A fresh gash bled on her upper arm, and Vahanian guessed that she
had fallen against the edge of the table. From the lump on her forehead, it was
obvious that she had hit the floor hard.
Gently,
Vahanian lifted Carina into his arms and carried her to a small couch. Although
he possessed none of Carina's healing magic, Vahanian had seen enough
battle—and enough battle healers—to make a fair assessment of her injuries.
Carina's breathing was steady and her pulse was strong. Vahanian spotted
Carina's healer's bag near the fireplace, and rifled through it with a
practiced eye. He selected a few herbs and a stretch of cloth, and brought the
small iron pot of water that simmered on the fire. Within a few minutes, he had
fashioned a rough bandage from part of the strip and made a poultice from the
herbs to bind up the gash on her arm. He mixed some powders with the tea to
bring down Carina's fever, and made a compress with a rag and the water on the
washstand.
Carina began to
stir as he patted the cool water against her face.
"Take it
easy," Vahanian instructed. "You had a nasty fall."
"How—"
"Kiara
asked me to stop off with some tea on my way by," Vahanian said, helping
her sit to sip the tea. "She said to tell you that none of the palace
healers could come by until tomorrow—some kind of plague in the village has
them all busy."
"Then
where did the poultice—"
He chuckled.
"As you love to point out, I've been in more than my share of fights. Just
a little battlefield healing, to return the favor."
Carina gingerly
touched the fresh bandage on her arm, and sniffed the air. "Acycla leaves
and cass root, with featherwort. Not a beginner's mixture."
"I spent a
few years helping a hedge witch gather herbs," Vahanian said off-handedly.
"You learn things."
Carina looked
at Vahanian, meeting his eyes as if she were trying to read his thoughts.
"Who are you... really?"
Vahanian recognized
the question. It was the same loaded query he had tossed her way alter the
slavers' rout in the Ruune Videya. Something in her eyes made him take the
question seriously. He ran a hand back through his long, dark hair.
"Why do
you care?" he asked quietly, refusing to look away.
"Because
the answer matters."
"It's a
long story."
"I don't
think I'm going anywhere." She closed her eyes and sank back against the
couch. "I saw you once, when we were at Westmarch, down in the forge. You
handled those blacksmith's tools like you were born to them. For a merc, you've
been a lot of strange places. So I'll ask you again—who are you, really?"
Vahanian took a
long breath and looked toward the fireplace, unsure how to answer. Finally, he
drew up a chair and sat down. "My mother was a weaver and my father a
blacksmith, up in the Borderlands, near enough to the
"But you
didn't stay."
"When I
was fifteen, raiders came. We made too good of a living, I guess. My father
died trying to help hold the gates. I grabbed his sword and tried to protect
the forge, but I was just a kid. First time I got stabbed," he said
ruefully. "When I came around, it was over. The village was looted, half
of it burned. My mother and brothers were dead. I tried to get help in the next
village, but I didn't make it through the woods."
"What
happened?'
"The hedge
witch's daughter was out gathering herbs. She found me and dragged me home.
Guess I gave them a scare," he chuckled sadly. "After I healed up,
they apprenticed me to their village blacksmith. A few years later, I married
the hedge witch's daughter."
Carina said nothing,
but her gaze made him look away, back to the fire. "There was a late
spring that year, and the sea captains didn't stop at our port. Money was
tight. I started pulling old relics out of the cave tombs—gold and jewelry and
rare wood— and selling what I could find to traders just to get by. Then one
night, after Shanna and I had been married about six months, a mage showed up,
and wanted me to find him a relic." "Arontala?"
"Yeah,"
Vahanian said. "Offered a year's wages if I'd bring him back a talisman.
So I went up there, and I found it. Put it on a strap around my neck to keep it
safe."
"The charm
we saw at Westmarch—the one that keeps the magicked beasts away."
Vahanian
nodded. "All these years, I thought that damned thing called the
beasts." He paused for a moment, swallowing hard, until he could find his
voice once more. "The beasts came that night and there was nothing to stop
them. Nothing I did made a difference. They couldn't kill me, but they gave me
this." He tilted his head so that the scar showed from beneath his collar,
a jagged line that ran from his ear down under his shirt.
"Everyone
died—everyone but me," he said quietly. "All these years, I thought
I brought the beasts." He dared to meet Carina's eyes, knowing that she
struggled with her own ghosts. "I didn't believe Royster, didn't believe
Tris. But Tris summoned Shanna's spirit, and I believed her."
His voice
caught, and he looked away. "That's what I meant when I told you that the
dead forgive us. That's how I know.
"I got as
far away as I could, which was Eastmark. Only thing I had to sell was my sword.
I was barely eighteen—younger than Tris is now by a couple of years. Met
Harrtuck there, in a mere troop. He taught me the basics, kept me from getting
killed. But I learned fast, got field promotions, and a general in the Eastmark
army asked me to join them. He was a hero, and I was flattered."
Vahanian's voice was bitter. "Made full captain by the time I was twenty.
It was nice, for a while."
"Kiara
told me... about Chauvrenne."
Vahanian
nodded. "I figured she would. After that, I had the bad luck to get
captured by the Nargi as I was trying to get back to Margolan. Almost drowned
in the Nu River when I escaped. Washed up on the river bank, and a lady named
Jolie took me in, gave me a job, taught me to smuggle on the river. And that's
what I was doing until Harrtuck hired me as a guide."
Any chance I
had with her probably just disappeared, Vahanian thought with a sigh, looking down at his
hands. Why should someone with her gift, her connections, look twice at
someone like me?
Vahanian looked
up, startled, as Carina's hand slipped over his in a weak clasp, warm with
fever. "Thank you." For once, her green eyes did not seem so guarded.
She did not let go of his hand. "Stay with me, please." Her voice was
barely above a whisper, and he daubed her face once more with the cool cloth.
"As you
wish, m'lady," Vahanian said, lightening his tone with a smile, and daring
to kiss the back of her hand. Carina smiled as she closed her eyes.
Vahanian
watched her relax, until her breathing was deep and measured, and she finally
fell asleep. He looked down at her hand, small against his, in amazement.
Maybe, just
maybe Vahanian
thought, an outlaw turned noble has an outside chance with a noble turned outlaw.
He shifted in his chair, careful to make sure that his sword was clear to
draw and that he had a good view of the door. Then he settled in for the rest
of the evening, lost in thought, standing guard until dawn.
CHAPTER SIX prev next contents
SOTERIUS rubbed his newly-grown beard, a reddish
brown complement to his darker brown hair. He brushed back his hair, usually
cropped short for a battle helm, now also grown long. "This is going to
take some getting used to," he said with a glance toward Mikhail.
Mikhail
chuckled. He had also grown a beard and let his dark hair grow long. "I
don't know, it's something of an improvement. Hides your face."
Soterius gave
him a sour look. "You should talk. Took you one night to grow both beard
and hair. And I bet your beard doesn't itch!"
"Being
undead has its rewards," Mikhail commented. "Actually, it's a bit of
a relief. To keep the hair short and beard gone, I had to cut both each
evening. Goes with being vayash moru."
"Let's
just hope that it fools some of the guards we run into. I'd just as soon not be
recognized by every soldier we pass."
"According
to Carroway, you're in more danger being recognized by the
ladies," Mikhail joked.
Sorerius grinned. He stood a hand's breadth shorter than Mikhail, with a trim,
muscular build suited for soldiering. Before the coup, both Soterius's good
looks and his position as captain of the king's guard made him a sought-after
companion for the ladies. And while both Tris and Carroway did their best to
elude the marriage-minded young women at court, Soterius managed to juggle
multiple relationships without entanglement.
By contrast,
Mikhail was as tall as Tris and Carroway, with dark brown hair. He was solidly
built, and even after death his posture and stance made clear his military
background. Like Soterius, Mikhail had been a younger son of a Margolan noble
who took to military service since his father's lands and title went to his
eldest brother. Two centuries and a shortage of heirs meant the lands finally
reverted to Mikhail, another benefit of immortality. Those lands, like the
estate of Soterius's father, were in Margolan's northwestern corner, in the
Borderlands near Isencroft.
Soterius
laughed. "You're just jealous, being dead and all."
Mikhail
shrugged. "You assume that such attractions end. But immortality isn't as
lonely as you seem to think."
Soterius gave
him a sideways look. "You're kidding me—right?"
It was Mikhail's
turn to smile. "On the contrary. Liaisons among my kind can last for
several lifetimes. And mortal loves—while necessarily brief and always
tragic—aren't uncommon."
Soterius
thought about that. "How is that possible?"
Mikhail was
silent for a few moments, until Soterius thought the other might not answer.
"Mortals' lives are urgent and passionate because they are brief,"
Mikhail said finally. "There's a jad-edness that comes with knowing you
have all the time in the world." His smile was sad. "Some among our
kind never look back. Others leave behind a mortal lover and don't want to let
go. Nearly all of us, I think, at one time or another, are drawn back to the
warmth."
"It works
better than you might think—no more difficult than those who overcome a difference
in religion or who fall in love from opposite sides of a war. But for us, your
days are so short—just a few seasons—and the life and light fade. Afterwards,
the cold is worse for having been near the flame."
"I never
knew that being dead had quite so much in common with being alive."
"Being
'dead' doesn't. Being 'undead' is something else entirely."
Tadrie, the farmer Kiara had rescued on her trek across Margolan, met them at the entrance
to the refugee camp. He was as tall as Soterius and lean, with broad shoulders
and calloused hands that spoke of hard work. Soterius guessed that Tadrie was
past his fortieth year, although he looked older. "Good, you're
here." Tadrie bustled toward the two men. "I have a crowd for
you." Soterius brightened. "You found volunteers?" Tadrie
chuckled. "Oh, I found volunteers enough. Had to keep the women and boys
from volunteering, that's the Lady's truth. Everyone in this camp wants to see
that demon Jared off the throne."
"I feel
the same way," Soterius said. "Let's see what you've pulled
together." He gestured to the wagon behind him. "We've brought
supplies for the camp—food and firewood from Prince Martris and King Staden,
and weapons to help with the training." "And blankets?" Tadrie
asked excitedly. "And blankets."
Tadrie
whistled, and the refugees pressed forward. Soterius and Mikhail helped unload
the precious cargo and smiled uncomfortably as the displaced farmers and trades
people thanked them over and over again.
"They're
Margolan people," Soterius said with a lump in his throat, looking at the
ragged refugees. "Our people. Look what Jared's done to them!"
"It will
be better if we can give them hope and purpose, and a share in reclaiming their
lands," Mikhail said. He patted the pommel of his sword. "As refugees,
they have no hope. As soldiers, they have the chance to make a
difference."
Soterius
repressed a sigh of complete hopelessness when he surveyed the "arms"
the refugees bore. Sickles and staves, hoes and rakes made up the bulk of the
weapons. Most of the volunteers carried a knife or two, dull things barely
useful enough to peel a potato, hardly the weapons of an army. They were
completely unready for the swords and quintains in the wagon. It took lesss
effort than Soterius expected to convince the refugees that Mikhail was on
their side. Soterius realized that in the farmlands, extended family remained
close— whether living or vayash moru.
With a
resolution born of desperation, Soterius and Mikhail organized the commoners
into two bands and drilled them on how to swing, parry and fight. Children too
young to join the fray cheered and played as they watched, dueling with sticks.
Looking into
the determined faces of the refugees, Soterius knew that they, too, were aware
of how much preparation was required.
At the end of
the first night's practice, Soterius saw three young men pushing through the
crowd. They were as ragged as the other refugees, but they held themselves like
soldiers.
"Captain!"
one of the men shouted as they grew closer, and Soterius brightened as he
recognized the men from the barracks at Shekerishet.
Handshakes and
hearty backslaps followed as Soterius introduced the three soldiers—Andras,
Tabb and Pell—to Mikhail. As the
crowd dispersed for the night, Andras
invited Soterius and Mikhail to their camp, and the five men picked their
way through the crowded refugees to reach the small square of bare dirt
where the soldiers made their home. They had an army-issue tent, better
shelter than most of the refugees. A neatly-built fire warmed them as they sat
on logs around the fire pit.
"So it's
true, what they say?" said Andras excitedly. "That you helped Prince
Martris to escape?"
Soterius
nodded, and accepted a warm mug of watered ale with thanks. "Harrtuck was
with us, and the bard Carroway."
"Lady be
praised!" Tabb exclaimed. "We were afraid that it was just a rumor,
spread among the
Soterius leaned
forward. "Tell us what happened in the barracks that night, and how you
came to be here."
Pell took a Jong breath, and ran a hand back through
his filthy blond hair. "That's a hard tale, captain." He glanced at
the others. "We were on patrol that night, and we knew something was very
wrong when we reached the city gates. Guards were everywhere, checking
everyone. It was chaos with the parades and the pilgrims, and all of the drunks
celebrating Haunts. But when we reached the barracks, they said the king was
dead."
Andras jumped
in. "The story we heard at first was that Prince Martris had killed the
king—and his family—and that Jared only barely drove him off. They said that
you and the others were traitors, and Jared put a huge bounty on all of
you."
Soterius swore.
"Jared paid slavers to hunt us. They almost got us."
"Even
then," Andras said bitterly, "we didn't believe it for a moment. Oh,
Jared had his friends in the barracks, that's for sure.You know how he used to
come down and talk to the men, filling their heads with dreams of an empire. So
some of them didn't think about it too hard when he blamed the murders on
Prince Martris."
"We knew
better," said Pell, anger coloring his tone. "And as the next days
passed, we saw our worst fears confirmed. Jared sent squadrons out to the
manors of the loyal nobles. He put them under house arrest,
or worse. Palace
staff began to
disappear.
Those who could fled as soon as they realized what had happened. Jared hanged a
dozen of the servants, on charges of aiding the conspiracy."
"He
declared martial law," Tabb said. "Told us that to protect Margolan,
we needed to help him build a war chest. So he sent soldiers in twos and threes
to shake down the merchants, the tradesmen and the farmers."
"That's
how we escaped," added Andras. "We agreed among ourselves that we
wanted no part of Jared's army. But we were fond of saving our necks. Then the
order came to go to the farms outside the city and collect second taxes. No one
questioned when we packed for the road. Once we reached the farmlands we warned
the farmers, who gave us clothes and burned our uniforms. They helped us pass
from farm to farm, and we protected the refugees who went with us." He
spread his hands to indicate the camp. "We came here, and here we've been,
without hope until now." He looked up at Soterius and Mikhail.
"If you
plan to cross Margolan and recruit troops, you'll find an army waiting for you,
captain. We heard tell of other soldiers who also went missing, from outposts
and garrisons, hidden by the people. And we heard tell of others, who didn't
flee, who either did the demon's bidding or were hanged for refusing
orders." He shook his head. "It's been bad, sir, since the coup. When
Prince Martris returns—and I pray to the Lady that he does—he'll have a mess to
clean up."
Soterius
nodded. "That's what we were afraid of." He paused. "By any
chance, did you hear what happened to Lila? I was supposed to meet her after
the celebration at the palace the night of the coup. She promised to save me a
seat down at the Bristle Boar. I stood her up to save Tris."
Andras, Pell
and Tabb exchanged glances and fell silent for a moment. Finally, Andras spoke.
"Aye, we heard. A few days after the murders she came to the barracks,
looking for you. Unfortunately, she didn't come to one of us. She went to
Aeron, and he took her to Jared. No one saw her again."
Soterius looked
down at his hands. Although he had not loved the tavern owner's daughter, Lila
was a lively date and a good dancer. Knowing that she had died because of him
filled him with regret and shame. Mikhail laid a hand on his shoulder.
"You
didn't know, Ban. There was nothing you could have done."
Soterius felt
his regret harden into anger. "It's just one more reason to see Jared
hang."
"Whatever
you need from us, we're your men," Andras said, uncomfortable with the
silence. "We'll help you train the volunteers, and we can help lead the
practices when you can't be here. When you're ready to cross back into
Margolan, we'll go with you. These farmers know the land. We can stay to the
caves and the swamps and forests. Jared's men will never know what hit them,
and they'll be afraid to move."
Pell cast a
look at Mikhail. "If more of your kind are on Prince Martris's side,
Jared's men will even be afraid to sleep."
Mikhail smiled,
his long eye teeth discomforting-ly apparent. "That's the idea."
After two weeks, Soterius and
Mikhail were ready to test the skills of their best recruits from among the
refugees. Sahila's scouts brought news of a small squad of Margolan soldiers
camped just over the border, and gave eyewitness accounts of the Margolan
soldiers making night raids across the Principality border to harry the
refugees. It was good enough provocation for Soterius.
For this first
strike, Soterius chose his best men: Mikhail, Pell, Tabb, Andras, Sahila,
Tadrie, and five others who had shown promise with the sword in training.
Soterius spent a portion of his part of the reward money to buy weapons and
leather armor for the group. He had black woolen outfits and cloaks made that
would allow them to move unobserved in the dark.
Sahila led them
through the low brush toward the border. It was obvious to Soterius that Sahila
knew the land well, and that he had a tracker's instincts for cover and
direction.
"They
cross here—look," Sahila motioned toward the blurred tracks in the snow
where a recent snowfall had not yet obscured the passage of a group of men on
foot. Sahila, Soterius, and Mikhail had conferred at length before heading out
as to the best place for an ambush. Now that they had reached Sahila's
recommended spot, Soterius looked around in the dim light. From the flat area
where the Margolan strike force was camped, the land became hillier the closer
one got to the refugee camps on the Principality side of the border. This trail
ran along the edge of the forest, between the trees and a ridge. The trees and
the rocky outcropping could provide cover for Soterius's refugee-soldiers.
With Mikhail, Soterius was less worried about wolves or other predators in the
forest should they have to run for cover.
"It's
good," Mikhail said of the ambush point.
"Let's get
in position, just like we practiced." The small band of refugee fighters
gathered around Soterius. Within minutes his men were in position, careful to
cover their tracks in the snow. Soterius smiled. Most of these men had been
hunting—or poaching—all their lives, and the same skills that enabled them to
feed their families would now make it possible for them to strike back at the
soldiers who had taken those lands from them.
"You're
sure the soldiers are going to come tonight?" he asked Mikhail under his
breath.
"They were
getting ready to move when I scouted the camp. Looked like they meant to take
prisoners. They had a large box on skis that they could pull behind a horse
team."
Soterius
frowned. "Then all the better we strike tonight."
They did not
have long to wait.
When the moon was
high in the sky, the Margolan soldiers made their move. Mikhail was the first
to hear them, and he gave the silent signal to the watching fighters. The
soldiers moved over the rise and down along the forest's edge. Soterius pursed
his lips. Behind the soliders was a man leading two cart horses through the
snow, and pulled behind the horses was the large box on skis.
"What the
hell is that box for?" Soterius murmured to Mikhail under his breath.
They waited for
the target to move into the most vulnerable point along the ridge, where they
were fully
exposed to both the fighters who waited above them hidden in the brush along
the outcropping, and the archers who lurked in the shadows of the forest.
The Margolan
soldiers were armed and alert. They could have no other purpose than to strike
at the refugee camps, the only cluster of habitation close to the border near
this point. The soldiers were already on Principality soil, an act of war in
itself. Still, Soterius's heart beat faster when he saw the insignia on those
uniforms. He was about to begin the war against his own homeland. He waited to
give the signal for attack until the Margolan troops were in the middle of the
pass.
"Now."
He lifted a branch above the brush where he hid, so that the archers in the
forest could see.
A hail of
arrows burst from the cover of the dark trees, taking down three of the lead
Margolan soldiers before they knew they were under attack. Soterius's fighters
swarmed down the hillside, swords glinting in the moonlight, with a battle cry
that echoed in the night. Soterius realized Mikhail was no longer beside him.
He glimpsed the vayasb moru at the rear of the doomed soldiers, already
discarding a body.
The Margolan
soldiers regrouped quickly, and soon Soterius was parrying blows with the
group's captain, a man he did not recognize, who looked to be only a few years
older than himself. Around him he could hear arrows striking the deep snow. Out
of the corner of his eye he could see Sahila and the other refugee soldiers
wading into the fight.
The Margolan
captain struck hard and Soterius parried, feeling the jolt of the strike down
his arm.
Soterius turned
the momentum into a strike of his own, scoring a deep gash on the soldier's
shoulder. He let his knife fall from its wrist scabbard into his hand. He
circled the soldier warily, his second blade ready.
"We have
no gold for you, brigand." The captain struck again, landing a good blow
against Soterius's sword and leaping back as Soterius nearly scored again with
his knife.
"You're on
Principality land, here to harm your own people." Soterius took the
offensive, landing a series of hard blows that the captain was hard-pressed to
deflect. "And you serve the Usurper."
"We serve
King Jared, the rightful king of Margolan." The captain's strike went
wild. Soterius's left hand slashed with the knife, cutting the soldier's
forearm to the bone.
"You serve
the demon." Soterius doubled his press, forcing the captain backward. The
snow shifted beneath his feet, and Soterius gained the advantage he sought,
using his sword to deflect the captain's blade while he sank his own knife deep
into the man's chest. "Prepare to meet the Crone." Surprise spread
across the captain's face as blood spread across his tunic.
"Behind
you!" Soterius heard the warning and wheeled, barely parrying the wild
attack of a young soldier who made up in ferocity what he lacked in technique.
Around them, Soterius's refugee fighters were holding their own, and the
archers joined them, trading their bows for swords now that the fighting had
begun.
As the horses
shied and whinnied, the soldier nearest to the large wooden box brought his
sword
down on the
lock, cutting through the rope that secured it. He wheeled too late to meet the
sword of one of Soterius's refugee fighters, and the sword took the lieutenant
through the chest.
"Sweet
Chenne," Soterius murmured as the box door flew open, pushed from within.
Bursting from the box were a half a dozen wild-eyed fighters swinging
sledgehammers and axes. With incoherent cries, the ragged fighters streamed
from their prison, as the Margolan soldiers scrambled to get out of the way.
Soterius wasted
no time on his inexperienced opponent. He ran the man through, turning to face
this new threat. He heard a cry from Tadrie to his left; the refugee seemed
frozen in place, a look of horror on his face as one of the rag-tag fighters
advanced. "Pell, Andras, Tabb—I need you!" Soterius cried out as
several other refugee soldiers seemed to lose their focus, staring at the
wild-eyed fighters as if they were spirits from the abyss.
Dimly, Soterius
realized that the few Margolan soldiers who were still alive were running for
the forest, and that Mikhail was nowhere to be seen on the battlefield.
"By the
Whore, what are they?" Pell cried out. Soterius tackled Tadrie to get him
out of the way of the attacking creature's hammer. Now that he was close enough
to see their new opponents, only Soterius's battle training kept him from
staring in shock like the refugee fighters. There was something very wrong with
the fighters who streamed from the wagon, who waded into the battle heedless oi
whom they hit, striking as indiscriminately against the Margolan soldiers
as against Soterius's stealth fighters.
"Find out
if they bleed!" Soterius shouted as he dragged Tadrie to his feet. Pell
and Andras closed ranks in front of him. "Stand your ground!"
"Back from
the dead," Tadrie was murmuring, staring uncomprehendingly at the fighter
who was striking so ferociously that both Pell and Andras were hard pressed to
keep him at bay.
From the
forest, Soterius heard a man's scream, and guessed that Mikhail was cleaning up
the Margolan soldiers who had run for cover beneath the trees.
"You won't come back from the dead," Soterius
shouted at Tadrie, shaking the man. "Fight!"
Soterius heard
one of the rag-tag fighters approach and turned, still shielding Tadrie. Now up
close, Soterius knew these fighters were no common back-up troops. There was
more than rage in their eyes—there was a complete lack of humanity, as if the
soul itself had been replaced with blood madness. Unkempt and unshaven,
smelling of sweat and waste, the rag-tag fighters fought with insane ferocity.
The fighter's wild blow broke Soterius's sword, and Soterius dove aside,
feeling the axe graze his shoulder. Blood streamed down his left arm but he
could still move it, and he had no time to triage his wounds. Snatching up a
sword from one of the fallen Margolan soldiers, Soterius swung two-handed,
knowing that a madman wielding a battle axe could easily best a swordsman
before too many blows were traded.
The wild-eyed
fighter swung again. He was a burly man with the look of a farmer, wide-jawed
and
broad-shouldered, built like a bear. He roared in attack, and Soterius could
see no reason in the man's eyes. There was nowhere to run. Soterius threw his
knife, catching the big man in the thigh. Blood streamed from his leg and into
the snow, but the axe-wielding fighter did not slow, as if pain meant nothing
to him.
Sure he was
about to die Soterius braced himself, looking for an opening. As the man lifted
his axe to swing he stiffened and his head jerked up, blood spurting from his
mouth. With a death rattle, the big man keeled forward, Tadrie's sword through
his back. Soterius realized he was shaking as he met Tadrie's eyes, and saw the
farmer's look of complete horror and revulsion.
There was no
time to ask questions. Snatching up the dead man's axe, Soterius lifted the
heavy blade and went running at full speed toward the attackers that were
driving Pell and Andras back to back. With a wild cry he swung the blade,
cleaving one of the madmen practically in two. Tadrie seemed to have snapped
from his trance, dropping his sword and grabbing a sledgehammer from one of the
dead men. He swung the hammer in wide swaths, closing on Pell's attacker.
Soterius could see that tears glistened on the farmer's face and he could hear
Tadrie murmuring a prayer for the dead. Andras and Soterius made a frontal
strike, rushing at the ragtag fighter with a ferocity that matched his own madness
and striking with sword and axe. Tadrie's hammer fell from behind, taking off
the back of the man's head.
"I want
one of them alive!" Soterius knew as he said it that he was asking a lot
from his own men, who, having neatly routed the Margolan troops, were barely
holding their own against these berserker fighters. Three of the madmen were
still standing, and Soterius could only count half a dozen of his own men on
their feet. The trampled snow was red with blood, and bodies littered the space
between the hillside and the forest.
There was a
rush of air beside him, and a blur of motion. Soterius glimpsed Mikhail as the vayash
moru struck at one of the madmen attacking Sahila and another fighter.
Soterius jerked his head, and Pell and Andras fell behind him at a run,
stopping only for Pell to snatch up the axe from the dead madman's hands.
Sahila swung
his heavy two-handed sword in wide swaths, trying to keep his distance from the
madman who was advancing, completely heedless of the blade. As they grew closer
it was apparent that Sahila's companion was badly wounded, but he attempted to
back up Sahila nonetheless. Soterius watched in horror as Sahila's blade
connected with the advancing fighter, severing his arm at the shoulder. Still
the madman came on, with no hint in his expression that the pain even
registered. Soterius, Pell, and Andras charged from behind. Soterius let his
axe fly when he came into range. The heavy weapon spun handle over blade, until
it hit with a sickening thud in the middle of the madman's back. The big man
dropped to his knees without a sound, and fell face-forward into the snow.
To his left,
Soterius saw Mikhail engage another of the madmen, while across the way, Tadrie
and one of the other refugee fighters were holding their own against the last
of the attackers, keeping him at bay until a third refugee hurled a large rock
at the madman's head. The madman fell and lay still.
Soterius looked
around. From the position of the moon, barely a candlemark had passed since
they attacked the Margolan soldiers. "Check the bodies!" he shouted.
"Don't leave any of our own!" Grimly, the men still on their feet
began to check the fallen, dispatching one or two of the badly wounded Margolan
soldiers who had not yet died with a merciful sword strike.
One of the
fighters was already calming the horses, and after carefully checking the box
that was still hitched to the harness, he waved for his fellows to begin the
grim work of bringing the dead and those too badly wounded to walk into the
wagon.
"A little
assistance, if you please." Mikhail did not even sound winded, although he
pinned the last of the berserker fighters in his grip. Soterius, Pell, and Tabb
ran to help him, grabbing rope from the soldiers' packs. They trussed up the struggling
madman from shoulders to ankles, taking no chances. The man struggled and
bucked with his full might, but where Soterius should have expected a captured
soldier to curse them and spew profanities the berserker raged incoherently. Up
close, the madness in the captured man's eyes was even more disturbing, as if
his humanity had been stripped away, leaving something feral in its place.
Soterius noted as they bound the man that the prisoner was badly wounded, with
deep gashes that would have disabled a normal soldier.
"Let's get
them to the healers," Soterius sighed, wiping the blood off his hands in
the snow. Mikhail lifted the trussed-up madman with immortal ease; the wagon
shuddered when Mikhail dropped his cargo in. Pell counted as they loaded bodies
and wounded men into the wagon, while Sahila took roll among the surviving
fighters. Three of their own were dead. Three more, including Tadrie, were too
badly wounded to walk back to camp.
"Let's get
that arm bound before you need the wagon, too." Mikhail stood next to him,
with strips of cloth Soterius bet the vayash moru had torn from one of
the dead men's shirts. As usual, he had not heard his friend approach. Soterius
let Mikhail bind up his arm, just now becoming aware of how much it throbbed,
and that he could no longer feel his feet in the bitter cold.
"We lost
too many," Soterius sighed, looking over the bloody snow.
"They
fought well against the regular soldiers," Mikhail observed. "But
what came out of that wagon—we didn't train for that."
"What were
they?" Soterius did not expect an answer.
"Ashtenerath."
It was Tadrie
who spoke, from where he sat huddled in the back of the wagon-box, as Pell did
his best to dress the farmer's wounds. Soterius frowned, recognizing the term
from old tales.
"Awakened
dead?" Soterius replied, meeting Mikhail's gaze. "Those are just
stories told to scare children."
"Not
necessarily," Mikhail said quietly.
"That
man... was my brother-in-law," Tadrie said haltingly, shivering with the
cold. Andras stripped cloaks from the dead soldiers and distributed them among
the wounded and survivors. "He was taken by Margolan troops six months ago.
We thought he was dead. Better for him if he had been," Tadrie said, still
obviously shaken by the encounter. "The Lady forgive me. I had no choice
but to kill him, although I don't know how to tell my wife." He shook his
head. "Then again, that... thing... wasn't really him, at least, not in
his right mind."
"What do
you mean, 'not necessarily?'" Soterius looked from Tadrie to Mikhail. Pell
finished binding up Tadrie's wounds and stepped back, closing up the wagon
doors for the slow trip back to the refugee camp. Soterius and Mikhail, two of
the least wounded, led the group. Andras guided the horses with Tabb as guard,
and Sahila and Pell brought up the rear.
"During
the Mage War, the Obsidian King was able to reanimate corpses on the
battlefield," Mikhail said as they walked. "I didn't see it myself,
thank Istra, but I knew men who saw it first-hand. Such fighters were of little
use other than to terrify their comrades."
"So such a
thing is possible?" Soterius remembered the story Carroway had told him,
about the vengeful woman's ghost who had tried to possess Carina as Tris and
the others were fleeing toward Principality. And while Soterius knew that
Carroway was often given to exaggeration to make a tale better, the bard had
sworn to him that in this case, the truth needed no embellishment. In
Carroway's recounting, Tris had fought the dead woman's ghost for control of
Carina's body. In throwing clear the vengeful spirit, he had accidentally cast
it back into
the woman's corpse, momentarily reanimating her until
Vahanian struck her down with a sword.
Mikhail nodded.
"But I don't think that's what we fought tonight. The man I captured was
alive. Although... there was something that didn't feel right. I suspect that
we're dealing with blood magic."
"Prince
Martris is a Summoner," Andras said from behind him. "Perhaps he
could raise us a whole army from the dead."
Mikhail turned.
"I don't doubt that Tris is strong enough to do just that. But no Summoner
who serves the Light would do so, on peril of his own soul."
"But we
need everything we can get to defeat Jared!" Andras argued.
Soterius shook
his head. "I think I know what Mikhail means. And it's the same reason
Bricen forbade his troops to torture, even when we fought the Nargi, and even
when we knew they tortured our captives. Bricen knew that you can't use the
means of the enemy without becoming them. Tris wouldn't do it—and I won't ask
him to."
"Arontala
isn't a Summoner," Mikhail said. "He doesn't have the magic to
reanimate corpses. But if, with his magic and his drugs he could break a man
utterly, tamper with his mind, leaving only pain and anger—then I think it
would be possible to create such a monster."
The unbroken
snow of the countryside was serene in the moonlight. It did not take much
imagination to envision what would happen if more Margolan troops returned,
with greater numbers of ashtenerath.
"How do we
train to fight those things?" Soterius wondered aloud.
"We tell
the refugees that such an enemy is likely. We warn them that it may be their
own family members, enslaved to Arontala, tortured and broken into submission,
doomed to a living hell. We let them know that to kill an ashtenerath is
to free it from torment. It will be worse to encounter a friend or relative who
willingly serves Jared. That will also happen."
"It was
even worse when you fought the Obsidian King, wasn't it?" Soterius asked.
Mikhail's eyes
were haunted. "I saw things that I can't speak of. And it will be like
that again if Tris can't stop Arontala."
Soterius
shivered. "Then we'd better prepare the fighters to come up against their
worst nightmares."
In the refugee camp, Esme the
healer waited for them. Blue-eyed, red-haired Esme was one of the court
healers. Soterius had known her for years. Willowy and tall, Esme was just a
bit shorter than Soterius. She was the daughter of a tin trader, who had risen
to a court position on the merits of her talent alone. Many times, she had come
to the barracks to attend the soldiers' wounds, and Soterius had discovered
the way to win Esme's friendship. Esme respected commanders who kept their soldiers
from preventable injury. Her disdain for those who did not, who considered
their enlisted men to be disposable, could be scathing. Finding her in the
refugee camp was an unexpected boon. After one of Soterius's trips back to
Staden's palace, Carina had gladly helped Soterius provision Esme for battle
healing, to ease the suffering among the refugees.
Esme waited at
the edge of camp for Soterius and the others to return. A cry went up from some
of the waiting refugees as they realized that their loved ones were not among
the soldiers walking back from the encounter. Frightened family members
clustered around the soldiers and the cart, making it difficult for the group
to reach the clearing in the center of the camp. When they stopped, Soterius
and Mikhail went back to unload the wagon, while Tabb and Andras helped Esme
prepare pallets in one of the larger tents and Pell kept the horses still amid
the confusion.
Mourners keened
as Soterius and Mikhail carefully bore the dead to their relatives. Soterius
watched the three men's widows embrace each other, weeping, as frightened
children wailed, clinging to their skirts. And although he assured them that
their husbands died with valor, the words tasted of ash in his mouth.
Soterius
followed to where Esme and her small group of hedge witches and healer trainees
attended the wounded fighters. Already, the healers had made a noticeable
difference in the men's injuries. Soterius waited patiently as the healers
worked, lending a hand as Carina had often required of him, and stopping to
speak to each of his men who was conscious to praise and reassure. Mikhail
stood watch at the makeshift hospital's doorway, keeping the gawkers and family
members at bay until Esme and the healers were finished.
When the last
of the fighters was healed and out of danger, Soterius guided Esme to the back
of the tent.
The trussed-up ashtenerath
lay still, but when he saw them approach, he began once more to buck and
cry out unintelligibly. Esme's eyes widened and she backed up a step at the
ferocity of the man's response.
"Tadrie
called him 'ashtenerath,'" Soterius said. Esme gasped and put a
hand to her mouth.
"Truly?"
"I'd like
you to confirm what he is. And while we don't dare let him loose, he is
wounded. We need to patch him up."
"I'll do
what I can."
Mikhail moved
to secure the ashtenerath fighter, holding him by the shoulders. The
man's eyes glinted with pure madness, and his face was twisted in animal rage.
Esme knelt next to the bound man and laid her hand across his forehead. Almost
immediately the fighter slumped, unconscious.
"That 'trick'
comes in handy with drunks and guys who are spoiling for a fight." Esme
let her hand linger on the man's forehead and frowned, then brought her hands
down over the trussed man's body, assessing his injuries. For nearly half a
candlemark she worked to heal the worst of his wounds. Then she sat back on her
heels.
"Well,
that's a new one." She shook her head, looking at the still unconscious
prisoner.
"What did
you find?" Soterius bent lower, on alert.
The red-haired
healer chewed her lip as she mulled over what her healing senses had told her.
"Mikhail's right—this man isn't dead. There's no decay. And he's not
undead. A vayash moru feels... different. There's actually nothing
different about his body from you or me. But his mind—"
"What?"
Esme stared at
the ashtenerath fighter. "I tried to treat a man once who was
bitten by a dog with the foaming disease. He was like a wild animal, willing to
strike at anything that came near, kill anyone in reach. Almost got myself
killed, and did no one any good," she added ruefully. "That's what he
reminds me of."
"Is it a
disease?" Soterius asked.
"No.
That's not what I meant. I could sense the changes in the brain of the man with
the foaming disease. It had been changed by the sickness—damaged so badly that
I couldn't put it right. That's what's happened here, but it's not a disease
that did it. It was blood magic—I can feel the traces of it."
"So
Arontala did this?"
Esme nodded.
"When I was healing him, I could tell that there were fairly new injuries
that hadn't healed right. He's been tortured, probably to the point of
breaking. Traces of drugs, too—the kind that never really leave the body
completely. There are some strong potions—some of the mystics use them—that can
give a man visions or horrible nightmares that seem real, down to every sense
and smell. But there are also the changes in his brain. Changes somebody meant
to put there."
"I've
tried to heal enough patients with head injuries to know that if you get hit
hard enough in the right places, different things happen. Get hit just so and
you remember what you did ten years ago, but you can't remember what you ate
for breakfast. Take a lump somewhere else, and the sweetest old lady will
become a screaming shrew." Esme looked at the prisoner for a moment, tight-lipped
in anger.
"Someone's
deliberately damaged him, trying to create just what you see—something that
looks like a man but acts like a crazed beast. At least he won't suffer for
long."
"What do
you mean?"
Esme looked up
at Soterius, and he could see in her blue eyes that she was upset. "The
changes are too great to last for long. He's burning himself out. I can feel
him dying—and it's not the injuries from the battle. Those, I healed. But all
the same, he'll be dead by morning." She laid a hand on the madman's
forehead once more, and her lips moved quietly. After a moment, the man's form
relaxed, just a little, though he still tensed and twitched from time to time.
"I've done
what I can for his pain," Esme said. "Part of the madness that made
him attack you was sheer agony from the ways he's been altered. The human part
of his mind is gone—what's left has no more reasoning ability than a stampeding
bull." She looked to Soterius again, and her eyes hardened with anger.
"If this is what Arontala can do—and what Jared permits—then sign me up as
a battle healer. I'm with you."
Soterius
managed a smile. "Carina's shown me what an advantage it is to have a
healer with you in a fight. But you're needed here, Esme. These refugees won't
stop taking sick and having babies just because there's a war on. And the men
will fight better, knowing their kinfolk are as safe as we can make them."
Esme sighed.
"You're right, of course. But just knowing that someone did this to him
deliberately makes me want to knock some heads together!"
Soterius
laughed. "I've seen Carina in a fight. Never underestimate an angry healer
with a quarterstaff!"
The laughter
quickly faded, and Soterius and Mikhail sat down with Esme next to the unconscious
prisoner. "Can you tell how long ago the changes were made to him?"
Soterius asked with a nod toward the ashtenerath fighter.
"The scars
from the torture are several months old. And from the amount of the drugs left
in his system, I'd say he'd been drugged for quite a while. But the changes in
his brain were new—about a month old, no more."
"At that
rate, Arontala can't afford to make too many of these," Mikhail observed.
"Tadrie said his brother-in-law disappeared six months ago. If it takes
five months to capture and break a prisoner and they only survive for a month
after they're turned into a weapon, then we're unlikely to face whole armies of
these things—at least, for long."
Soterius
nodded. "It's like the mage monsters that Arontala called along the
Dhasson border, and the ones that Tris ran into the night they found Kiara.
Those things are horrible killing machines, but Tris says it takes so much
magic to raise them and control them that even a mage as strong as Arontala
can't keep it up for long. And they can't breed on their own. Thank the Lady,
or we'd probably be overrun with the things!"
"Could
Arontala have help?" Mikhail asked.
Soterius
frowned. "In all the years we put up with that cursed mage at Shekerishet,
I never saw him in the company of other magic users. I can't imagine him sharing
any of his
power or secrets
with
anyone. I've
heard tell of other dark mages from time to time. Maybe they're taking
advantage of all the havoc to cause some problems of their own. But I just
can't picture Arontala working with anyone."
"I hope
you're right," Mikhail said.
Soterius looked
back at the prisoner, who twitched and moaned even in his sleep. "Can the vayash
moru help to keep the ashteneratb at bay? You were able to subdue
him a whole lot easier than we could have."
"Had his
axe taken off my head or cut me through the heart, I'd be as dead as the rest
now. We may be undead, but we can still be destroyed. So it's not without risk.
But you're right—assuming we can get close enough, our strength and speed
should give us an advantage in restraining one of these things long enough for
someone else to make a strike. I'll let the recruits among my people know, and
we'll prepare."
Soterius looked
over his shoulder, toward the wounded men who lay on pallets in the makeshift
hospital tent. "We'll have to prepare the fighters as we recruit them. At
least now that we know that the ashtenerath are in pain and won't live
long, maybe our men will see it as a kindness to kill them, especially if it's
someone they knew." He sighed. "By the Whore! This war hasn't even
started yet, and it's already a nightmare."
Mikhail jerked
his head toward the refugee camp outside the hospital tent walls. "When
they find out what Arontala does to his captives, you may have the most
motivated troops in Margolan's history."
"By
Chenne, we're going to need it."
CHAPTER SEVEN prev next contents
Tris resumed his lessons with
Royster within a day of his return to the palace. Although not fully recovered
from his training with the Sisterhood, Tris was driven by the knowledge that
time was passing quickly. It was already the Crone Moon, the last month of the
year, and Winterstide would soon be upon them. And while he had begged off of a
return to the salle and climbing practice for a few days, even that could not
be postponed for long. There was far too much to learn, and too little time.
Tris and
Royster continued their lessons in the palace library. A huge fireplace, easily
the height of a tall man and twice a man's length, held a roaring fire that
barely warmed the room. Royster focused on history and legend, and on the
complex wording of powerful incantations. Tris was physically and mentally
weary, but he knew he could not allow himself the luxury of rest.
"What do
you know of Winterstide?" Royster's voice shook Tris out of his thoughts.
Tris searched
his memories. Bricen had not been overly devout, and Margolan's celebrations
had lacked some of the pious observances of other kingdoms.
"Winterstide
is the winter solstice," Tris said, trying his best to remember.
"The longest night of the year. The spirit realm is closer then, as it is
at the Hawthorn Moon, on the summer solstice. On those nights, the division
between the realms is fragile." He paused. "At Winterstide, the
spirits are closer because the realms are out of balance, and the scales in the
hand of the Lady tip toward the realm of the dead. After the night of solstice,
the days grow longer again, until the balance is restored again in the spring
when day and night become equal. Then, the balance tips once more, until the
Hawthorn Moon."
Royster nodded.
"What do you know of the role of a Summoner on Winterstide?"
Tris tried to
remember the celebrations of his childhood, when Bava K'aa played a prominent
role in his father's court. From the night of the solstice for a fortnight,
Winterstide was one of the most glittering feasts of the year, filled with
candles and torches, banqueting and processions. He had vague memories of his
grandmother welcoming the ghosts of the kingdom to the palace, but for what
purpose, he could not recall.
"I don't
know," he admitted with embarrassment.
"In the
days leading up to the solstice, Summoners help to ease the imbalance created
between the realm of the living and the dead," said
Royster.
"It is very important when the fabric between the realms is thin. You must
learn to hold court for the spirits and ease the imbalance."
"Why?"
Royster closed
his book. "As with the cycle of the rains and the movement of the winds,
the natural way of magic is a balance among the currents of force, and between
the living and the dead. As the gift of Summoning became rarer, so it became
more difficult to maintain that balance.
"When
Arontala works his blood magic, the currents of magic become tainted. You—like
all mages—must draw upon those currents of magic, the river of power that the
Sisterhood calls the Flow, when you confront Arontala. Anything that can be
done to remove the taint and balance the energy of the living and the dead will
strengthen your power. You will confront Arontala when the fabric between
realms is once again thin."
Tris closed his
eyes, feeling a headache coming on. "I used to think that all a mage had
to do was learn a few mysterious rhymes and 'poof,' it would be done." He
ran his hands back through his hair wearily.
Royster gave
him a dry look. "Shows what you knew, doesn't it?" he said
irreverently. "Oh, there are little rhymes a mage might use to remember
the sequence of what must be done, but the words themselves don't do a thing.
You could write every magic 'spell' as high as a man on the barn wall, but if
you don't have the power to start with, all you'd have is a strange rhyme. And
a bad one at that."
"You and
the Sisterhood have told me what a Summoner may and may not do. You've listed
for me every kind of ghost and spirit and made me memorize all the things that
can bind a spirit to this world. And between me and them stands only
death," Tris said quietly. "But what is death?"
Royster pulled
a coin from his pocket. "What's on the front?" He held the gold up in
the firelight so that it glistened.
"The image
of the king."
"And on
the back?"
"The crown
of Principality."
"Can you
cut the coin to separate the front from the back?" Royster handed him the
coin.
Tris took it
and turned it in his fingers, then finally shook his head. "How could I
tell where one stopped and the other started?"
Royster nodded.
"Exactly. So it is with death. On one side of death, a person is alive.
And on the other, only the spirit remains. But death itself? It's only the
somewhere between awake and asleep. For those without your gift, it's a line
that can be crossed only once, and in one direction. But for a Summoner, it's a
doorway that can be entered and exited at will."
Tris turned the
coin thoughtfully in his fingers. "The dead aren't really at rest, are
they?"
"That's
the true purpose of a Summoner," Royster said. "To give rest to
spirits that would otherwise wander, or who cannot find their rest. And to
defend them against those who would hold them against their will, or snuff out
their energy for power's sake, or bind them for evil.
"A land
mage knows the secrets of the world around him, the stories of the birds and
animals, the voices of every living thing. An air mage speaks
to the winds
and the weather. The sea itself answers a water mage, and all the things that
live in it obey his commands. And a fire mage knows the mysteries of the
depths of the world," Royster said. "But only to a spirit mage is it
given to summon the dead and ease their pain and to know the mysteries of life
itself. That's why the Lady permits so few to share the power, and why so often
the power corrupts."
"How can I
know if I'm being corrupted, too?"
"You can
never know for sure. The heart has a hundred ways of telling you all is well.
Power used in anger is already corrupt. Guard against that, and you may be
safe."
Tris looked
toward the fireplace, staring into the embers. "To know what Jared has
done, and the evil Arontala has caused, and not feel angry..."
"There is
a difference between anger and justice," Royster said. "It appears
the Lady's hand is on your quest, and if you reach your goal, it may be that
She is using you as the instrument of Her judgment. But if you go to Arontala
with hatred in your heart, no matter how justly deserved, he will own your
soul."
"I'd
rather be destroyed."
"Pray the
Lady it does not come to that. Bava K'aa couldn't bring herself to destroy the
Obsidian King, and so she was nearly destroyed by him." Royster met Tris's
eyes. "How far are you willing to go to destroy the Obsidian King?"
Tired as he
was, Tris felt his anger rise. "I'm willing to sacrifice myself, and I've
proven that," he snapped. "But if the Sisterhood is looking for me to
offer up Kiara and the others as some kind of loyalty test, then no, I won't
do it. There has to be another way."
"And if
there is no other way?" Royster asked, watching him carefully. "Then
I'll do what I must, even if I go to the Crone."
Tris was pleased to find Kiara
waiting for him in the hallway when he concluded his lessons with Royster for
the evening.
"Royster
promised he'd let you off by the tenth bell," she said conspiratorially.
"I didn't even have to bribe him."
Tris smiled
tiredly. "I'm glad to see you—but I'm hardly up to sparkling
conversation."
Kiara took his
hand. "That's all right."
He took her in
his arms and kissed her. She reached up and touched the pendant on the chain
around his throat, her gift for his birthday. "I didn't get the chance to
thank you," he said, letting his fingers toy with her dark hair.
"I thought
it might be a bright spot in your training." She tilted her head so that
her cheek brushed his fingers.
"The only
one," Tris sighed.
"Since
neither you nor Carina is talking about it, it must be grim."
Tris fought
down the memories of the dark send-ings, and the horror they foretold.
"The Sisterhood isn't much for half measures."
They walked out
onto a loggia overlooking the courtyard. Servants and merchants bustled across the
dark cobblestones, their way lit by the small fires and torches that gave the
guards a measure of light and heat in the cold evening. Kiara shivered. Tris
wrapped his arms around her, letting her lean back against him and enjoying the
moment.
"Do you think
that Jared and Arontala know where we are?"
Tris remembered
the red fire that pulsed from Alaine's orb, and the battle at the citadel.
"I'm sure of it."
She leaned her
head against his shoulder. "How is it that two brothers can be so
different?"
"We're
half-brothers, really. Same father—different mothers. Father was younger than
I am now when he married Eldra—it was an arranged marriage, to keep the peace
with Trevath. I understand that they hadn't even met before their wedding day.
But they fell very much in love.
"Remember
that all this happened before I was born, and it wasn't often spoken of openly,
since father had remarried by then. But Eldra didn't make a good impression.
The ladies at court thought she was aloof and demanding. Her mood could be so
dark that some of the noblewomen said she had a demon. And she had difficulty
producing an heir."
Tris looked out
over the darkened courtyard. "Through it all, father loved her. And when
she died bearing Jared, father was devastated. Bricen had just taken the
throne—my grandfather died suddenly on a hunt—and he had no idea what to do
with a baby. So Jared was left for the servants to raise and father retreated
into his grief for ten years—until he met my mother."
He smiled,
remembering Serae. "Mother was like a spring wind, full of life and
energy. And even though there was talk because she was the daughter of a sorceress,
she gave father a son within the first year they were married. Me. Kait came
along seven years later— they lost three children in the years between.
"I always
thought Jared hated Kait and me for having a mother—and for getting father's
attention. Jared was an awful bully, and he had a pack of noble trash that did
his bidding and liked the way he took whatever he wanted. Jared had Eldra's temper,
and her dark moods. It got worse once he found Arontala—or Arontala found
him."
"I don't
know whether father realized the mistakes he'd made with Jared or whether he
just didn't know what to do about it, but he wouldn't crack down on Jared, and
Jared knew it. Mother and grandmother did their best to keep Kait and me out of
Jared's way, but I don't think they ever realized how often he thrashed
us." He gave a sad chuckle. "I got rather good at stealing herbs out
of the kitchen to mix up poultices to patch us both up. Since Jared had a
penchant for beating the servants, I always wondered whether the kitchen staff
knew what I was doing, and made sure to leave what I needed where I could find
it."
"I'm
sorry," Kiara said, turning in his arms to face him. "I didn't mean
to bring up bad memories."
Tris shrugged.
"Everything we're doing is about unseating Jared. It's hardly as if I can
keep from thinking about him." He closed his eyes and the memory of the
dark sending came again. He struggled to push the thought of Kiara with Jared
from his mind.
She raised a
hand to touch his cheek. "What is it?"
"Nothing,"
he said tightly. He met her eyes. "I want to keep you safe, Kiara. I know
what Jared is like. I'd die before I'd let him hurt you."
"The
Oracle sent me on my Journey for a purpose," she said, and let her right
hand fall to the pommel of her sword. "I fight as well as you do— maybe
even better." There was a hint of challenge in her voice and Tris chuckled
at the dare. "And until Arontala is destroyed, father—and Isencroft— are
in danger. It's my fight too. Don't you dare try to make me into one of those
cosseted noblewomen, spending their days playing tarle and embroidering
handkerchiefs!"
After all the
tension of the last week, it felt as good to laugh as it did to hold her near
him. "I wouldn't dream of it," Tris promised. "I love you,"
he murmured, bending to kiss her. More than yon can imagine, he added
silently as she returned the kiss. More than life itself.
Much later, when Tris found his
way back to his own quarters, he found a warm fire and a fresh bottle of
Cartelesian brandy waiting for him. He kicked off his boots and sprawled in a
chair in front of the fireplace. The brandy, a belated birthday gift from
Vahanian and Soterius, made his aching muscles relax. He let the fire warm him
as he drifted off to sleep in his chair.
Tris, help me! He could hear Kait's voice in the darkness
all around him, and Tris sat bolt upright. The cry rang in his mind, not from a
dream, but from the netherworld itself. Tris closed his eyes and tried to
concentrate.
Focusing his
power, Tris cast his circle and drew his wards, plunging into the darkness
after Kait's cry. In the gray world where only his spirit could travel, he
slipped among the dead and the undead, steeling himself against their cries and
petitions. With all his strength, he focused on the sound of his sister's
voice. As he drew closer he could feel her pain, her fear, even as the image of
her face, trapped in a glass prison, grew clearer in his mind. But before he
could reach her, a wall of cold darkness drove him back.
Free her! Tris shouted to the darkness, but there was
no reply. His feeling of dread grew steadily stronger. Kait's image grew
dimmer, though her hand was pressed against the glass and her eyes begged for
his help.
Show yourself! Tris demanded, but again, no answer came.
He found
himself blinking at the light of Royster's candle as the librarian bent over
him worriedly. The fire in the hearth had died, and Tris knew the night was far
spent.
"You saw
Kait again, didn't you?"
Tris realized
that his hands were shaking. His shirt was wet with sweat, and his heart
pounded. "It was so real. I could see her face pressed against the glass.
I heard her crying for help." Haltingly, he found the words to recount the
rest of the contact. Royster listened intently, frowning.
"It was
real. I'm not a mage, but I'm sensitive to the working of magic. I felt the
magic myself, that's why I came. You say that Arontala laid a spell over the
palace to drive out the ghosts that protected your father?" At Tris's nod,
Royster thought for a moment, then moved to the books that lay on a table in
Tris's room. He set down his candle and paged through the yellowed volumes,
muttering to himself. Finally, he motioned Tris to join him, and
ran his finger
beneath a passage in the diaries of the Obsidian King.
"Look
here," Royster said. "This tells about how the Obsidian King, who was
a great Summoner, started to draw on the spirits of the dead for power. At
first, he drew from them to work magic that helped them. But later, as he
turned to the darkness, he drew from unwilling spirits to enhance his own
magic. At the end, he slaughtered captives, and then bound their spirits so
that he could draw on them for a reserve. He fashioned a great crystal orb in
which to capture souls and hold them until he could draw from their life force
for his power."
"The
Soulcatcher," Tris murmured, remembering the glowing red orb in Arontala's
library that he glimpsed the night of the coup; the same red fire in the
crystal pendant around Alaine's neck in the Citadel.
"When your
grandmother fought the Obsidian King, the Mages of the Light opened a doorway
to the abyss, so that Bava K'aa could drive him into the void, and he would be
trapped in the abyss forever."
"But she
didn't."
"No.
Because of her love for Lemuel, for the mage whose body the Obsidian King
possessed, Bava K'aa could not bring herself to destroy the orb. That orb is
what you call Soulcatcher. Bava K'aa gave it to the sons of Dark Haven—the vayash
moru—to guard. The currents of magic run strong below Dark Haven, and the
Flow runs through the foundation of the great house itself. So the Obsidian
King remained trapped in the orb, in Soulcatcher, on the edge of the Abyss all
these years, waiting to be freed."
"Then
Kait's spirit is in the orb, for the Obsidian King to feed on when he breaks
free?" Tris asked, the horror of it dawning on him as he framed the words.
"The spirits he's trapped in there with him, he's going to feed on them to
get the power he needs—"
"To make
the transfer," Royster finished. "Yes. That is why you must reach
Margolan before the Hawthorn Moon. The Obsidian King was bound on the night of
the Hawthorn Moon, and only on that night can he be set free. And may the Lady
go with you."
CHAPTER EIGHT prev next contents
" GO ON and
have your fun—we'll hold the border." Harrtuck grinned and slugged Soterius in the shoulder. As the time came closer for
Soterius and Mikhail to leave Principality, Harrtuck moved the mercenary
companies to the Principality border. The refugee fighters and the professional
soldiers regarded each other warily. But Soterius's stories of fighting the ashtenerath
fighters had been enough to get the interest of the mercenaries, who
doubled their evening guard.
"Just wait
to open the new casks of beer until we get back!" Soterius rejoined,
making an effort to cover his apprehension.
"Once the ashteneratb
showed up, Staden's council certainly didn't mind deploying the mercs
along the border." Harrtuck said, with a nod toward the mercenaries who
were now camped between the refugee settlement and the Principality border.
"I'm still
hoping we don't need your troops to move onto Margolan soil," Soterius
said.
Harrtuck
quickly sobered. "I'm with you, m'boy. If those fighters of yours kick ass
they way you say they will, then I've got a cozy job coordinating the merc
commanders. While Jared's expecting an attack, we'll keep his troops from
'wandering' into Principality territory."
They both knew
the other half of the "if." If Soterius did not succeed in raising a
large enough band of strike-and-hide fighters from among the deserters and
discontented in Margolan, then it would be up to the mercs to engage Jared's
army, and the effort to put Tris Drayke on the Margolan throne would move from
stealth attack to open war. Should the Principality mercs be needed, Soterius
knew that Isencroft would also deploy its troops, now held in readiness along
its border. Dhasson, bottled up by Arontala's magicked beasts for months, had
its own reasons to wage war against Jared the Usurper should the beasts be dispelled.
Eastmark was unlikely to remain neutral when Kiara was the niece of Eastmark's
king, daughter to his favorite sister. Nargi and Trevath were likely to enter
any war as Margolan's allies. If the gambit to destroy Arontala and depose
Jared by stealth failed, the alternative was war—and the specter of unrestrained
blood magic through the power of a reborn Obsidian King.
In the two
weeks since the last strike, Soterius had trained his refugee fighters hard.
Tadrie and Sahila had recounted the attack of the ashtenerath. After all
they had witnessed of the murders and atrocities committed by Jared's troops,
the refugees believed
Sahila's
account of the ashtenerath without question, and with less terror than
Soterius expected. Esme backed up Sahila's story, and when the healer was
through explaining how Arontala created his ashtenerath, the shift in
the refugees' attitude was palpable. Through their tears and grief at the
thought of missing loved ones being tortured and altered into beast-like
weapons, Soterius had felt a hardening of purpose. Almost overnight, the refugee
camp became a base camp for the war. Any men healthy enough to train—as well as
the strongest and most fit women—came forward to add to the numbers of
Soterius's fighters.
The rest of the
camp organized itself with the help of Sahila's and Tadrie's wives. The two
women, already leaders among the refugees, used their skills to marshal the
refugees. Old women and children mended the armor, tents, and packs Sahila purchased
from the mercs. Others sewed the black tunics, trews, and cloaks that would
provide camouflage. Blacksmiths set to honing the blades of sickles and
knives, or to producing hundreds of razor-sharp arrowheads. Boys too young to
fight made arrows, filling quiver after quiver, or willingly stuffing and
restuffing the targets that the fighters-in-training used in their dawn-to-dusk
training.
"As
strange as this sounds, I think this has been good for the camp," Harrtuck
observed, looking over the bustling tent city of refugees. "Look at
them—they've got a purpose. They're not waiting to die, the way they were when
we got here. By the Whore! All but the suckling babes have something useful to
do—and the hope of going home. That's no small gift you've given them,
Ban."
"If it's a
gift, it's a bitter one. We've got to keep a full scale war from happening,
Tov. I've no desire to see your merc army waging war on Margolan soil."
"Aye,
you're right there," Harrtuck agreed. "I'm happy as anyone to be the
back-up plan. And I hope to the Lover and Whore that we're not needed to step
foot across the border. On the other hand, many a barroom brawl's been
prevented by having the biggest, burliest guards stand where everyone can see
them. That's something I've seen with my own eyes!"
Soterius
grimaced. "You and Vahanian. Spare me the details. My question is: now
that they're paid for and outfitted, can you keep your mercs from spoiling for
a fight?"
Harrtuck
nodded. "Principality mercs are the best disciplined, best led mercenaries
in the Winter Kingdoms. Nothing like the moth-eaten vermin you'll find elsewhere.
Several of the commanders are from Margolan themselves, and no small number of
the troops. They're taking this personally.
"Hell, I
found a couple of the men Vahanian and I fought with ten years ago who have managed
to keep their heads on their shoulders and the rest of themselves in one piece.
Didn't hurt that they remembered Jonmarc and knew what happened at Chauvrenne.
He's a bit of a legend in some quarters. So having Jonmarc on our side won us
points.
"The mercs
who knew us then are commanders now, every bit as sharp as you'll find in the
armies of the Winter Kingdoms, and sharper than a few generals, I'd wager. They
understand the stakes. You won't have any problems with them."
Soterius
couldn't resist a grin as he looked at his old friend. Harrtuck was trimmer
than he'd been in years, having lost some of the girth that came from too much
ale and a comfortable palace job. He was dressed like the mercs in a
quasi-uniform of wool, but where each merc company's heavy cloak bore its
insignia on the shoulders, Harrtuck's sported Tris's coat of arms, the insignia
of Bricen's second son, and now, the mark of the Margolan rebellion.
"Ready to
start the night's work?" Sahila and Tadrie joined them, and down the
hillside, Soterius could see the rest of his fighters finishing their
preparations.
"More than
ready," Soterius replied, and knew that it was true. Despite the stakes,
he loved the work of soldiering, and the physical exertion of the task at hand
kept him from brooding overmuch about the future.
"Keep a
lantern lit for us," Soterius joked, slapping Harrtuck on the shoulder.
"Aye, and
a warm mug of ale, too!" Harrtuck replied. He grew serious. "The
Lady's hand be on you tonight, Ban."
Soterius
nodded. "We'll need the luck of all eight of the Lady's Faces before we're
through."
They set out two candlemarks
later, in the light of the waning afternoon sun. Mikhail would meet them at
sunset, at the inn that was the rendezvous point for their contact. Soterius
and Sahila rode in front. Tadrie, Pell, Tabb, and Andras each rode with their
pods of four fighters. Under their cloaks they wore the leather armor Sahila
had bought from the merc units. Each man carried a sword or a battle axe, but
after the encounter with the ashten-erath, Soterius had insisted on more
distance weapons. So the men now also carried an assortment of crossbows and
long bows, bolos, and heavy-duty sling shots.
"Who's
this contact of yours at the inn?" Soterius asked Sahila as they rode.
"Alle's
from Margolan," Sahila said. "Came east following the rumor that
Prince Martris had survived, dead-set on joining up with a rebellion. Brought
out a group of bards when Jared tried to kill them. The story I heard said Alle
slit a couple of guards' throats when the group was ambushed. Won't say a word
about family, but I'm guessing there's some blue blood, wrong side of the
blanket or not. Joined up with Lemus, the tavern-keeper. The innkeeper's been
running a regular ghost carriage for the last several months."
"Ghost
carriage?"
"It's a
Nargi term." Mikhail's appearance, moments after the sun set, startled
them all with its suddenness. "In Nargi, the Crone's priests persecute and
destroy any who get in their way, or who stray from their idea of 'purity.'
Those with a gift for magic, or for music or art, can find themselves taken for
the Crone's service or dead. Worse if they're found to be vayash moru, or
any of the other things that the priests have decided for the Lady should not
exist," he said with distaste.
"Over the
years, brave souls have taken it upon themselves to spirit away as many of the
persecuted as they can save. It's only a fraction of the ones who are
imprisoned or die, but it's a remnant at least. They operate in secret, using
false names, hiding
their
identities even from each other. It's said that they have way stations all
across Nargi, inns and caves and farmers who look the other way. And so a lucky
few disappear from under the noses of their persecutors, as if they stepped
aboard a ghost carriage and vanished into thin air." Mikhail smiled.
"It's another case where the Blood Council chooses to stick to the letter
of the truce and not mind the small details. And more than one of the Blood
Council has been known to fund such things privately."
"So this
Alle is helping the fighters?" Soterius asked.
"Alle is
one of our best spies," Sahila said with a grin. "Overhears plenty
from the troops that like to get their ale at the tavern. Never supplies a bad
bit of information."
It was barely a
half-candlemark's ride to the inn. Tadrie and the others secured their horses
in a barn behind the inn rather than in the stable to stay beyond the prying
eyes of guests. Sahila and Soterius scouted both the stable and the front of
the inn before they approached the tavern's back door. They could hear raucous
singing in the front room, and the smell of venison and potato pies carried on
the cold winter air.
Cautiously,
Soterius and Sahila approached the back door. Soterius knew that Mikhail
watched from the nearby shadows, ready should there be trouble. Sahila gave a
coded rap on the door, three quick knocks and two slower knocks. The door
opened, and a blonde barmaid stood framed in the light. She motioned them
inside quickly.
"We're
looking for Alle," Soterius said.
Sahila and the
barmaid began to laugh. "You've found me," the barmaid said. She was
close to Soterius's age, with a figure that Soterius did not doubt guaranteed
her good tips from the inn's male patrons. Her blouse was low-cut, offering a
tantalizing view of an ample bosom, and her full skirt fell just to the calf
above low-heeled leather boots. She had shoulder-length dark blonde hair
framing a pleasant face, and Soterius allowed that she might be quite pretty if
she cleaned up from the sweat and stains of the kitchen. He looked at her blue
eyes, and paused. There was something almost familiar about Alle's face, but
whatever association he could make flitted at the edge of his memory and was
gone.
"You're
Alle?" Soterius asked as Sahila and Alle continued to laugh.
"Alyssandra,"
she replied, tossing back her hair. "Alle for short."
Alle gave
Sahila a peck on the cheek in greeting and Sahila elbowed Soterius. "Now
you see what I meant about being our best spy. A few beers, and most men will
tell Alle anything as long as she keeps on smiling!"
Alle sobered
and looked to Sahila. "You've got your fighters in the barn?"
"Just as
we planned."
Alle nodded.
"Let's go then." She reached for a cloak from a peg near the doorway.
Soterius looked
from Alle to Sahila. "She's going to lead us to the target?"
In one smooth
movement, Alle wheeled, and Soterius found the business edge of a large knife
close to his throat. "My home's been burned. My
friends are
dead. I slit the throats of two of the king's guardsmen the night I brought the
bards from Palace City. And every night, I keep the drunks at the bar from
getting what they think they're entitled to. I can handle myself."
Soterius raised
both hands. "Calm down. I get the point. Let's go."
It seemed to
Soterius that both Sahila and Alle were still chuckling as Alle led them back
to the barn where the others waited. Covered by the heavy cloak and hood, Alle
was less of a distraction for the fighters, who stood aside when she told them
to move away from a corner of the barn and directed two of the men to lift away
a heavy stone slab that covered a dark entrance leading down into the ground.
Sahila lit a
lantern and gave it to Alle, who partially shuttered it to dim the light.
"Follow me," she said, descending the wooden stairs.
The men
followed her in their marching order. Mikhail brought up the rear, pausing only
to move the heavy stone back into place.
"Where are
we?" Soterius whispered.
"Caves
beneath the barn," Alle replied without glancing backward. "The
barn's pretty old. We figure that the settlers found the caves to hide from
raiders. Since then, they've been used by smugglers, bootleggers, you name
it." She flashed a conspiratorial grin. "Useful thing to have."
The caves were
bitterly cold, and icicles glistened along the cave walls in the dim light of
the lantern. The trail through the cave was well-worn, broad enough in most
places for two men to walk abreast, and in some places, opening into larger
rooms of inky darkness. In the distance, water dripped. From time to time,
something skittered past their boots, and Soterius had the distinct impression
that something—or someone—was watching them.
"Careful,"
Mikhail warned, his vayash moru senses serving him well in the dark.
"There are sheer drops not far on either side—I wouldn't like to bet on how
far down they go."
Soterius's
fighters stayed close together, following the path. After about half a
candlemark, Alle stopped.
"It's
safer to cross the caves than to go through the forest at night," Alle
said. "We have an arrangement with the local vayash moru. They
keep the caves free from squatters and wild things, and they can take refuge
here any time they want."
"A
reasonable bargain," Mikhail replied. "That explains why the vayash
moru we passed didn't try to stop us."
"When we
come up to the surface you'll be in the foothills, behind some trees. Just
beyond the tree line is a camp. I scouted it earlier today. There are
twenty-five Margolan soldiers, plus captives. We think they're the ones who
looted a village about a day's ride from here. Burned most of the houses, ran
off the livestock, and killed the villagers who wouldn't run. From the sound of
it, they've taken a couple of the village girls with them."
"Ashtenerath?"
Soterius asked.
Alle paused.
"We found half a dozen of those things dead in the village. Haven't seen
any in the camp since."
"Fair
enough," Soterius said. "What about getting back?"
"I'll wait
here," Alle said. "Can't be any more miserable than scouting them
earlier." She looked sideways at Soterius as if she anticipated an objection.
"Don't worry—I won't try to be a hero. You can do all the fighting. I
stashed some bandages and supplies when I came earlier. Just get your wounded
back here."
Soterius was
impressed by Alle's matter-of-fact manner. "We'll do our best not to need
them."
He turned, and
Alle grabbed his arm. "Bring the village girls with you," she said.
"We've got a couple of healers standing by back at the inn. If they're
still alive, they've got nowhere else to go."
Soterius
exchanged glances with Sahila. "That's a big 'if,'" he said.
"But if they're alive, you have my word we'll get them out of there."
"Then the
Lady go with you," Alle murmured. She gestured for silence and led them
around a bend, shuttering the lantern completely as moonlight lit the mouth of
the cave. Alle stood aside, motioning for Soterius and Sahila to pass, melting
into the shadows.
Mikhail made a
quick scouting foray, moving silently down through the trees along one side of
the camp. The soldiers had found a small clearing, far enough from the road not
to be bothered. It was bitterly cold, and Soterius's breath steamed in the
night air. He was glad for his heavy woolen uniform and an equally heavy cloak,
and wished for the milder weather of the Margolan plains. He glanced at his
fighters. The professionals—Pell, Tabb, Andras, and Sahila—had an expression of
anticipation, but did not look fearful. The refugee-fighters were doing their
best to hide their fear. They looked grimly resolute, firmly gripping their
weapons. Within a quarter candlemark, Mikhail had returned. Soterius knew that
the vayasb moru not only moved more silently than a human scout, but
could complete his mission without leaving footprints in the snow.
"It's as
Alle said," Mikhail reported in a whisper. "Two dozen soldiers, plus
some horses. I didn't see any ashtenerath, and I couldn't smell any,
either. Wouldn't be surprised if they can only deploy those once—how do you get
them back in the box wagon?" He paused. "I found the bodies of three
of their captives in the latrine trench. We may be too late for a rescue."
"All the
more reason to kill the bastards," Sahila murmured.
"If there
are any captives left, they're in the far tent, over there," Mikhail
added.
"Get them
out and bring them here, then come join the party," Soterius instructed.
Mikhail nodded, and disappeared into the night.
Soterius
gestured, and the fighters spread out to find their assigned positions. Whether
or not there were ashtenerath, Soterius had decided that striking first
and hard from a distance was the best way to reduce his casualties, and so
swords and axes were sheathed in favor of the bows and thrown weapons. Soterius
heard the owl call that was Mikhail's signal. The soldier on night watch was
dead.
"Let's
go!" Soterius whispered, giving his own signal, a creditable imitation of
a wolf's cry.
Before the echo
of the howl faded, arrows rained down on the camp. The long bows and slingshots
picked off panicked soldiers, while flaming arrows
set tents
ablaze and forced their residents to run, half-clad and unarmored into the
snowy night.
Soldiers who
veered too close to the forest fell to the crossbows, or heard the 'snick' of
flying bolos around their neck. Soterius watched his fighters with pride.
Swords were unfamiliar to farmers and herdsmen, but these men had used bows and
slingshots all their lives to hunt vermin, and bolos to round up errant herds.
Striking from the cover of the forest, Soterius's fighters exacted a hefty
price before ever showing their faces. Instead, they echoed Soterius's wolf cry,
until the moonlit clearing rang with the eerie call of the predator.
"Ghost
fighters!" one of the hapless soldiers cried, trying to pull his pants up
as he ran, fleeing his burning tent.
The captain of
the fighters had been drinking with his men around the fire when the attack
began. He called for order as his panicked troops fell, with arrows piercing
their chests or bolos straps strangling their throats. Half of his men rallied
to him, falling into a defensive formation, swords ready.
"Now!
Soterius cried. His best hand-to-hand fighters slung their bows and hefted
their swords or axes, running from the darkness of the forest as they shrieked
a battle cry.
"Demons! Ashtenerath!"
Soterius's fighters waded into the fray. Spurred on by their anger over the
lost village and the dead girls, the refugee-fighters fought like the blood
rage was upon them, giving no quarter and needing none. Any soldier who ran for
the forest was met with a deadly hail of arrows, or was sure to encounter
Mikhail once he reached the darker shadows beneath the trees.
The Margolan
captain and a handful of his soldiers held their positions, launching
themselves at their attackers with desperation born of mortal fear. They set
about with their swords, still sober enough to stay toward the center of the
camp, furthest from the archers.
Close enough
now to see the Margolan captain's face, Soterius startled with recognition.
"Aeron," he hissed. The captain's head jerked up. For an instant,
their eyes met; Aeron recognized him as well.
"The
captain is mine!" Soterius headed at a dead run, sword raised, for the
Margolan leader.
Aeron's face
twisted into a sneer as he met the attack, and their swords clanged loudly as
they parried. All of Soterius's anger and frustration found an outlet in his
sword. He no longer felt the cold of the bitter night.
"Soterius!"
Aeron made the name a curse. "Traitor! What kind of brigand are you?"
"Prince
Martris's brigand!" Soterius wheeled to parry one of Aeron's wild strikes.
Aeron had been drinking. The ale made his strikes less predictable, but the
random blows delivered at full strength were as dangerous as any planned
attack.
"Your
girlfriend's dead." Aeron dealt a sideways blow that almost got inside
Soterius's guard. "Took her to King Jared myself."
Soterius set
his jaw, focusing all his skill on besting Aeron. He scored a deep gash on
Aeron's thigh, and the tip of Aeron's sword opened up a cut on Soterius's
forearm. Aeron dropped and rolled, slicing low, a street move Soterius knew
wasn't taught in the army salle. Vahanian's training served Soterius well. He
evaded the blade, anticipating
Aeron's
momentum and delivering another deep cut, this time to Aeron's thigh. Limping,
Aeron made it back to his feet. Blood coursed down his leg. Soterius closed for
the kill, his sword ready. He brought his sword down two-handed, and the blow
shattered Aeron's blade, knocking him off balance. With one forward thrust,
Soterius sank his blade deep into Aeron's chest, feeling it scrape against bone
and then slide free out the other side of the soldier's body.
"That's
for Lila," Soterius said with a brutal twist of the blade. Aeron's mouth
opened as if to reply, but nothing sounded except a bloody gurgle. The Margolan
captain was dead.
Soterius wiped
his blade clean on the snow and looked around. In the light of the burning
tents, he could see bodies in the snow. The camp was quiet. The snow was
trampled and blood stained. Sahila and Pell moved through the camp, counting
the dead. Tabb and Tadrie set the surviving fighters to stripping the soldiers
of anything useful. Andras sprinted toward him.
"Report."
"Got them
all, sir. Mikhail took out two that ran for the forest, and the archers got
about half. We finished the rest."
Soterius
nodded. "Captives?"
"One girl.
She's in pretty bad shape. Mikhail took her to the cave entrance."
"Casualties?"
"Better
than last time, sir." It was Pell who answered, with Sahila a few steps
behind him. "Two with serious wounds, a few more with minor injuries, none
dead."
"I found
this in the captain's tent," Tabb reported, as he and Tadrie lugged two
burlap sacks behind them. Soterius knew at a glance where the Margolan captain
had acquired such a collection of odd coins, jewelry and small trinkets.
"Spoils
from the village they looted." Soterius felt his anger rise once more.
"Bring it. We'll use it for provisions for the refugee camp. Since we
can't return' it, it's as close to recompense as we can make." Tabb and
Tadrie nodded soberly, tying off the bags and slinging them across their shoulders.
The
refugee-fighters scoured the camp, bundling up the dead soldiers' cloaks and
weapons. Distasteful as looting the dead would be under normal circumstances,
Soterius had seen the conditions in the refugee camps. Even the gold that Tris
and Staden had sent would not fully tend to the needs of so large a crowd. This
time, there were horses to gather as well.
"At this
rate, we're going to need storehouses and stables," Soterius said under
his breath to Sahila, who clapped him on the back.
"A good
problem to have!" Sahila said with a sharp laugh. "You'll need both
horses and weapons if you mean to ride to Shekerishet."
"True
enough."
Alle was
waiting for them at the entrance to the cave, tending to a battered girl who
looked just a few years younger than Soterius. The girl's bruises and torn
clothing left no question as to the soldiers' actions, and when her dark eyes
met Soterius's he saw pain verging on madness. Any guilt he felt about the raid
on his own colors died at the look in the girl's eyes.
"Can she
walk?" Alle shook her head. "I'll carry her." Tadrie stepped up.
He was old enough to be the girl's father, and he squatted down to look her in
the eyes. "You've nothing to fear from me; I've a daughter of my own. Will
you let me help you?" He held out one of the pilfered cloaks, and Alle
helped the girl wrap it around herself.
The girl paused
for a moment, but her injuries won out over her fear, and she nodded. Gently,
Tadrie lifted the girl into his arms. Behind him, Alle murmured a string of
curses, angry at the abuse the girl had taken at the hands of the Margolan soldiers.
Soterius, Alle,
and Sahila field-dressed the worst of the injured fighters' wounds. One man had
taken a bad cut to the bone on his forearm and a deep shoulder gash. Another was
limping badly from a sword stroke that had sliced his hip and thigh. The other
injuries required only splints or minor bandaging.
"There're
healers at the inn. We figured someone would need them," Alle said,
finishing up the bandaging.
"I'd
better stay with the horses." Mikhail's voice broke Soterius from his dark
thoughts. "They're too valuable to drive off, and if we leave them here,
they wolves will get them."
"Lemus is
the innkeeper," Alle said. "He can send his hired men back in the
morning to help with the horses. If you stay up here near the caves, you'll
have shelter before dawn comes, and Lemus's men can be here at first
light."
"Much
obliged, m'lady." In the moonlight, Soterius could see that his friend's
complexion was almost ruddy, a testimony that he had fed well on
the soldiers
who had run for the forest. Alle lit the lantern and led them back through the twisting cavern
passages. The caves seemed even colder than when they had set out, and
Soterius's hands and feet were numb.
It took two men
to lift the stone slab that hid the entrance to the passageway. The barn,
warmed by the horses that waited there and sheltered from the wind, was a haven
from the brutal cold outside. When the last of the soldiers had climbed from
the passageway and the slab was again in place, Alle stood with her hands on
her hips and looked at the group.
"There's
not room for all of you in the inn, so Lemus said he'd send out blankets. We'll
take the girl and the worst injuries inside for the healers, and I'll send a boy
out with some warm food and ale. Mind that you stay quiet. We don't use this
barn for customers, but the inn still gets some guardsmen, and you don't need
their attention!"
Sahila stayed
with the men in the barn while Tadrie, still carrying the injured girl,
followed Alle into the inn. Soterius helped the fighter with the leg wound,
while the other refugee, gingerly supporting his injured arm with his good
hand, declined help.
Lemus met them
in the kitchen. He was a short man with the look of a clerk, whose long face
and brown eyes appeared guileless. A perfect spy, Soterius thought.
"And?"
Lemus asked.
"A
rout!" Alle grinned. She slipped out of her cloak and ran a hand through
her long hair. "Need a room for this one," she said with a nod toward
the girl Tadrie carried. "She was the only one they
could save from
the captives. Have a couple of other injuries to tend, too," she indicated
with a glance toward the wounded fighters.
Lemus nodded.
"Take the back stairs. I kept the third room on the left for you.
Keep your head down. We've got a couple of Margolan guardsmen in the common
room tonight, and one of them took a room upstairs for the night."
"Lovely,"
Soterius murmured.
Alle went ahead
to scout the hallway; the others moved as quietly as they could up the back
stairs. She checked to make sure their room was empty, and then waved them on.
Inside the room, Tadrie set the girl down on the bed. With a whimper, the girl
curled into a ball, wrapping her arms around her knees. Tadrie took a blanket
from a peg on the wall and gently tucked it around her. The two wounded
soldiers found seats on a chair and a bench. Alle lit two lanterns and then she
smoothed down her skirts and straightened her hair.
"I'll send
the healers right up. And I'll bring up some stew and ale. I'd best go have a
look at who's in the common room, so that we don't have problems later. Wait
here. Don't go wandering around."
"I'm too
cold to wander anywhere." Soterius leaned back against the wall and ran
his hands up and down his arms to warm himself. Despite his heavy cloak he was
chilled through. It would take time, even in the warm inn, for him to feel comfortable
again.
"Aye,
everyone but Mikhail was feeling the wind tonight, I wager!" Tadrie
replied.
Alle returned
before long with a thin, hawk-faced woman, a pot of stew, and a pitcher of ale.
Tucked into her belt was a large napkin filled with hard rolls. Alle laid the
food on the small table as the hawk-faced woman looked at the girl and the two
injured men.
"This is
our healer, Kae. She'll take good care of your folks. Help yourself to the
food—it's warm. Lemus has sent more of the same out to the barn, so your men
should be warming up!"
Kae quickly
triaged the wounded, and started on the two soldiers first. Alle motioned for
Soterius to step to the side.
"The
Margolan guardsmen downstairs," she whispered. "I don't like the look
of them. Lemus says they've been throwing their weight around, bullying the
servers and threatening some of the customers. They've taken a room for the
night, just a few doors down. Keep your head down—the older one talks like he's
spent time at Shekerishet. You don't need to be recognized."
Soterius looked
at her, startled. "Oh, I know who you are, Ban Soterius. Captain of
Bricen's guard. And I'll wager I wouldn't be the only one. No one's where
they're supposed to be these days. And even fewer are who they pretend to be.
That beard's not much of a disguise."
Alle moved to
help Kae with the healing, dutifully fetching hot water and whatever
ingredients the healer needed for her poultices. Soterius tore strips of cloth
for bandages from a clean sheet Alle thrust into his hands. Tadrie stayed close
to the village girl, talking to her in low, reassuring tones, like a father
with a sick child. Soterius guessed that Tadrie's wife would find herself with
a new charge once the girl was well enough to travel.
After a couple
of candlemarks, Kae finished her healing. The wounded fighters rested on
pallets on the floor. After much coaxing and reassuring, the wounded girl permitted
the healer to tend her wounds, and drank a mixture of herbs and warm wine that
guaranteed her a peaceful sleep. When Kae finished, she washed her hands in the
basin Alle provided and looked from Alle to Soterius.
"I've been
to the village that girl came from," Kae said sadly. "They were
honest tradesfolk. They did nothing to deserve what happened to them. What
she's been through... I've healed her body, made sure she wasn't with child,
but there are scars I can't fix. She needs a mind healer." Kae's hand
tightened to a white-knuckled fist and shook against her skirt. "I'm glad
you killed the ones that did that to her—saves me from breaking my healers'
vows."
"I killed
their captain myself," Soterius assured her. "He had it coming."
"I'll be
back to check on them before dawn. They should all sleep well tonight, and feel
no pain," Kae looked back at her three charges. "On the other hand,
they're in no shape to flee if we get raided tonight."
"I'll
stand guard," Tadrie volunteered, patting the pommel of his sword.
"Come
downstairs with me," Alle said to Soterius. "Lemus has information
for you from what he's heard in the common room the last few nights."
They were
halfway down the narrow hallway when a loud voice sounded on the front stairs.
The speaker was well into his ale.
"Margolan
officer!" Alle hissed. The door behind her was locked, and they were too
far from the back stairs to run without being caught. As the footsteps
approached the top of the stairs, Alle fell backward against the wall, grabbing
a handful of Soterius's shirt and pulling hard against him. He lost his balance,
bracing himself against the wall with one hand on either side of her shoulders.
Alle reached up and pulled his head down, crushing his lips against hers. Her
leg slid up and wrapped around his hip. She gave a shrug, letting her blouse
fall provocatively from one shoulder.
"Someone's
lucky tonight!" the drunken man chortled as he and his companion started
down the hallway. "How about coming to see us when you're finished?"
Alle thrust out
her hand, rubbing her fingers together as if to ask for coin.
"Poxy
whore!" the man's companion spat as they shoved past. The two made ribald
remarks, laughing at their own jokes, until they reached their room at the end
of the hall and the door closed behind them.
Alle pushed
Soterius away, straightened her blouse, and smoothed her skirt. "Don't let
it go to your head," she warned, and then flashed him a wicked grin.
"I figured it was better than killing them and having to clean up the
blood. And we've all got to make sacrifices for the war—right?"
Soterius gave
her a sour look that made her laugh. "C'mon. Lemus is waiting."
After another
candlemark in the kitchen, Soterius was finally warm once more. His mind buzzed
with the bits of information Lemus shared: overheard
troop
movements, rumors about Jared's interest in an alliance with Nargi, and
unsettling tales about soldiers in the cities sent to round up and eliminate
dissenters. It was almost dawn when Soterius finally made his way back to the
barn, and while he thought he might be too full of thoughts and worries to
rest, exhaustion won out, and sleep found him quickly.
CHAPTER NINE prev next contents
STADEN gave his whole-hearted permission for
Tris to set up a Court of Spirits in the weeks before Winterstide. Word spread
quickly, and Tris was aghast to see how many petitioners, living, dead, and
undead, lined up to receive the blessing of the first Summoner to pass through
the kingdom in years. Tris began the Court of Spirits just a few days
after he returned from the citadel. Within a week, the court was so
crowded that Tris could not see all of the petitioners in a single day. Many
camped outside the palace wherever the guards would permit, awaiting their
place in line. As Winterstide grew closer,
both petitioners and spirits seemed to be filled with a new urgency to
make things right before the solstice. Staden often watched from the back of
the great room, shaking his head in awe at Tris's ability to intercede between
the living and the dead.
Inside the
great hall, many of the revenants could not be seen by anyone except Tris.
These spirits lacked the power to show themselves except on the night of the
Feast of the Departed—"Haunts" as it was called. Other, stronger
spirits made themselves
Winter Kingdoms
expected their loved ones to remain with them after death. In Margolan, most households set
out a plate with a token amount of food at the evening meal, inviting their
departed loved ones to join them. Some of the more devout households even had a
"spirit room," a small box with miniature furnishings and tiny
replicas of personal items to entice family spirits to dwell alongside them in
comfort and respect.
In the Winter
Kingdoms, living with the dead was a daily occurrence; most gave it no more
thought than they gave to fixing their meals or minding their trade. Ghosts and
the undead were a part of life, though it rapidly became apparent to Tris that
many of life's complications and tangled relationships extended even beyond
death.
Women came to
seek the favor of a departed mother or grandmother for advice. Husbands, sons,
and brothers sought to make peace, beg forgiveness, or have a troubling spirit
banished. Ghosts asked Tris to bear messages to their families, or carry word
of some important thing left unsaid before the spirit's death. Restless spirits
sought redress and the help of a Summoner to make the final passage to the
Lady. Even vayash moru came, seeking the spirit of someone from their
mortal past. Living, dead, and undead, they filled the audience chamber and the
hallway beyond, waiting for Tris's help.
It was a good
thing that most spirits did not require the intervention of a Summoner to pass
over, Tris thought. Most of the time, only those souls who wished to stay or
were bound by tragedy or the guilt of the living remained behind. Among the
living, those without an urgent need were content to wait until Haunts to
communicate with the dead. Most made offerings of ale and honey cakes around
the small altar kept in every home, no matter how poor. Tris knew that the
petitioners who were willing to wait for days to see him now were desperate in
their need for reconciliation.
The next
petitioner stepped forward, a man who was very much alive. He was in his middle
years, with work-worn hands. Despite his weathered appearance, the man had a
plain dignity about him as he tugged uncomfortably at his home-spun coat.
"Your Highness," he said awkwardly, attempting a deep bow.
"What is
your need?"
"My name
is Kelse, and I'm a freeman. My family owns a bit of ground a day's ride from
the palace. Please, sire, I need to speak to the ghost of my father."
"And what
is it you seek?" As the man spoke, Tris extended his mage sense, trying to
gain not only the measure of the man, but also to sense whether any spirits
lingered near him.
"My father
was a cautious man. He put away some coins in a safe place, against a bad year.
He was also a stubborn man. Last year, during the troubles—" Kelse's voice
caught. He took a moment to compose himself. "Last year, during the rains,
our village flooded. Father died. We managed to save some of the barn and all
of the livestock, but our planting stock is gone, and there's naught to replace
it. I need to find those coins," he begged. "I've looked everywhere.
Please, sire. I've nothing to feed my family with. If I can't find the coins
I'll have to sharecrop, and I swore to my father I'd never be any man's
servant."
As Tris
stretched out his senses, he felt the tug of a spirit, and used his magic to
enable the spirit to travel to him. Tris reached out his hand to where the
farmer stood and concentrated on the dim pulse of the wraith, focusing his
power to bring it closer and make it visible. Kelse gasped and Tris knew that
he had succeeded.
There in front
of him stood a thin man with a set jaw and a hard-bitten glint in his eye.
Kelse sank to his knees, sobbing. "Your son wishes to ask for your
help," Tris said to the apparition. The old man's ghost looked from Tris
to his son.
"I'm
sorry, Kelse. I should have told you long ago, but I was always afraid someone
would fritter it away." The ghost's voice was distant. Kelse lifted his
head, silent as the tears streaked down his cheeks. "Take the logs out of
the fireplace. Sit where the logs would be, face the hearth, and lift a candle
up above your head. There is a ledge above the fireplace opening. Reach all
the way to the back. You'll find five pieces of gold. It's all I had. The Lady
bless you, son. I didn't plan to leave you like this."
"I know,
father. I know." Kelse rocked back and forth in his grief. "Thank
you," he whispered, both to Tris and to the ghost. "Thank you."
Tris turned
toward the old man's ghost. "Would you go to your rest now?"
The old man
looked at his son, and then back to Tris. "I can do no more to help
him," the ghost replied. "And I've worked the fields since I could
walk. I'm tired. It's time."
Kelse stood
slowly, and took a step toward the wraith. "We didn't get to say
goodbye," he said in a strangled voice. "The Goddess bless you,
father, and hold you in Her arms." He made the sign of the Lady in
blessing.
The ghost
turned back toward Tris, who nodded, and began to murmur the passing over
ritual. As he spoke the words of power, he felt the threshold open, although no
one else but the old man's spirit could see it. In the distance, Tris heard a
voice; the words were beyond his grasp but the sweetness pulled at his soul. He
closed his eyes and felt, not saw, as the old man turned toward that voice and
squared his shoulders, crossing the threshold. When Tris opened his eyes again
he found Kelse staring, wide-eyed, at the place where the apparition had been.
"Thank
you, Your Highness." Kelse backed away, still bowing in respect as one of
the bailiffs led him to the door.
Carroway and
Royster showed up at lunchtime bearing a plate of cheese and meat for Tris, and
pitchers of warm ale. The two retreated to seats near the back of the room, and
Royster withdrew a leather volume from the folds of his heavy robes.
"What
brings you here?" Tris was glad for a momentary reprieve.
Carroway
grinned. "When we heard what was happening, we didn't want to miss
it."
"As I've
told you, your grandmother didn't have a decent chronicler in the lot,"
Royster said. "We intend to fix that. I've already begun your history— I'm
calling it the Chronicles of the Necromancer. Catchy, isn't it?"
"And since
music travels faster than the wind, I figured that I'd get the inspiration for
some tavern songs, the kind that stirs the ladies to tears and make strong men
rise up to arms." Carroway smiled conspiratorially. "Musicians make
the best spies."
Tris chuckled.
Carroway had always seemed to know what was going on anywhere in the kingdom.
Jared viewed traveling bards with distrust; he sought to silence or imprison
those he considered a threat. Since most of the farmers and many of the
villagers could neither read nor write, song, skit, and story were the most
reliable ways to transmit news. Even in matters of faith, the acolytes of the
Lady depended on pictures and symbols to share the rudiments of belief. Kings
and the Sisterhood and the temple priestesses had their libraries, but most of
the people cared only enough about history to share a sense of tribe or have
an excuse to hate their enemies, and about faith to find a good luck charm for
warding off monsters, real and imagined.
"I'm open
to all the help we can get." Tris thought of the ghosts he had seen
earlier in the day. "But if you're going to stay, prepare yourselves. The
tales aren't always easy to hear."
The next
petitioner was a tall, angular woman who smelled of fish. Although she might
have been in her third decade, her face was creased from worry, and her eyes
were troubled.
"By your
leave, m'lord." The woman made an awkward curtsey.
"What is
it you seek?" Tris asked.
"My only
son is dead a year," she said. "We quarreled over a small matter,
but the quarrel became bitter, and my tongue got the best of me. In his
despair, he hanged himself." Tears welled in her eyes. "I'd give all
I possess to have him back with me."
"That
power is not given to me."
"I know
that. But if you can summon him, my lord, please—I wish to beg his forgiveness,
and to tell him that I love him."
"What is
the boy's name?"
"Tabar.
His name was Tabar."
Tris took a
deep breath and let himself slip into the Plains of Spirit. He called for the
ghost of the woman's son, waiting until an answer came. A young man appeared,
bearing the red scar of a noose. Tris used a little more magic, and the spirit
became visible. For a moment, he thought the woman might swoon. She clutched at
her heart and dropped to her knees.
"Forgive
me!" she cried, prostrating herself at the ghost's feet. "Tabar, I
never meant for our quarrel to go so far. I wish you had put a knife through my
heart instead of leaving me this way!"
The young man's
ghost stepped toward her and knelt, taking her into his insubstantial arms.
"I was foolish and angry," the ghost said. "1 didn't mean to
die; I wanted to worry you and win my point. When the breath left me and you
found my body, I saw your pain. Every day I've been with you, although you
couldn't see me. I was wrong—both in the quarrel and for taking my life. I
know it can't be undone. I need your forgiveness before I can rest."
The woman
reached out to touch the dead boy's face. "I didn't know that you were
with me," she said, as tears streaked down her cheeks. "I want you to
stay with me, but I know it's wrong to keep you from your rest. I just couldn't
let you go without telling you how sorry I am, without saying goodbye."
She embraced the spirit, wrapping her arms around the wraith, soaking up one
last moment of contact. She moved as if to kiss the boy's forehead, although
her lips met only air, and the boy returned the kiss.
"I thank
the Lady that you came to us," the woman said to Tris, standing beside the
ghost. "M'lord, will you see him across, so that I know he is safe on the
other side?"
Tris stretched
out his hands and spoke the words of power, feeling the young man's ghost fade
before him and grow stronger on the Plains of Spirit. As Tris made the passing
over ritual, he felt the ghost's turmoil subside, replaced by a sense of peace,
tinged by regret. Then the spirit was gone, and only the woman stood before
him. She bowed low.
"Thank
you, m'lord," she murmured. "May the Lady favor you."
As he waited
for the next petitioner, Tris sipped some of Carina's headache tea. It did
little to ease the throbbing behind his eyes that came with can-dlemarks of
using his magic. He could see a line of supplicants that wound out of the room.
Those were the living who waited for their chance to speak with the dead. In a
room that had become cold even for the season, spirits milled among them,
awaiting their turn. Some of the spirits were strong enough to manifest on
their own, but many were
visible only to
Tris, until he acknowledged them and lent them the energy to take form. It had
been the same every day since he began to hold court for the spirits, and he
was certain that the demand for his help would last until he left Principality.
There was
bitter irony in knowing that he could lay to rest everyone's ghosts except his
own. While he could intercede on behalf of all of his petitioners, the spirits
of his mother and sister remained beyond his reach, trapped in Arontala's orb,
in torment.
Tris looked at
the desperate faces of those who came to beg his help. For him, the inability
to reach Kait and Serae was an aberration, as all the other spirits responded to
his call. But Tris knew that for those who came to seek his intercession, the
silence was unbearable. Try as he might to distance himself from the emotion of
the crowd, his own loss was too fresh for him to be objective. And so he drove
himself to exhaustion, giving closure to others that he could not find for
himself.
He had seen at
least fifty supplicants since morning, and Tris knew he could not go on much
longer before he was exhausted. Tris motioned to the bailiff.
"Please—close the doors and bid them come again tomorrow. I'll hear this
spirit's request, but then I've got to rest."
The spirit who
awaited his attention was the ghost of a man in his fifth decade, with the
tight-jawed look of a merchant. He bowed when he was brought to stand before
Tris. Tris willed for the spirit to become visible to the others in the room,
and the man's spirit took form.
"My lord
Summoner," he said formally. "A petition, if you will."
"What do
you seek?"
"Justice,
m'lord," the ghost replied. "I'm Hanre, the silversmith. For twenty
years, my partner Yent and I built a profitable business. I did not know that
Yent was seducing my wife and that he wanted all the profits of the business
for himself. He put poison in my cup, and told the doctors that it was a weak
heart when I collapsed at my work bench. Within a few months of my death, Yent
married my widow. He stole my life from me. My lord, I beg of you. Let there be
justice done!"
Tris stretched
out his mage sense, but read no falseness in the spirit's words. He gestured,
and one of Staden's guards approached. "Tell your story again to this
guard," Tris instructed. Hanre repeated his tale, and the guard listened
solemnly.
"Bear the
news to King Staden," Tris told the guard. "It's for him to determine
how to deal with the murderer. You can witness that you heard the story
yourself."
"Yes, Your
Highness." The soldier bowed. Hanre watched solemnly as the soldier
departed.
"No
punishment can return my life," Hanre said sadly. "It grieves me to
know that all the work I've done these many years is now to the profit of a
murderer!"
Tris blinked,
trying to focus. His head was pounding so badly that it was becoming difficult
to see. "Would you have me help you make the passage?" he asked
Hanre's ghost.
The silversmith
shook his head. "Not yet, my lord Summoner. I would stay and see justice
be done. Then, perhaps, I can truly rest. Thank you, m'lord. I'm in your
debt." The spirit made a deep bow, and
departed. Tris
signaled to the bailiff to close the doors. He hoped that he could make it up
to his rooms before the headache grew any worse.
A hot bath and a good supper eased both
Tris's headache and the stiff muscles he had from sword practice. He'd wrenched
his neck climbing, and he had still not completely recovered from his injuries
at the citadel. The warm fire sent him to sleep. He dozed in a chair in his
rooms until a sharp knock at the door roused him. A page stood in the hallway.
"Begging
your pardon, Lord Wizard," the boy said nervously, "but the king
wishes you to meet with him in his sitting room."
"I'm
hardly dressed for an audience," he said wearily. "Please give me a
few minutes to get ready." Moving as quickly as he could, Tris tried to
ignore his headache as he dressed to meet with King Staden. The page waited
until Tris emerged. They walked the short distance to the king's doors, and the
guards stood to the side to allow Tris to enter.
Staden took in
Tris's condition. "How long do you think you can go on like this, before
you have nothing left?" Tris gave a courteous bow that made his head
pound.
"Just long
enough, I guess," Tris replied. With Staden was another man, and Tris
frowned, struggling to place the unexpectedly familiar face. The man had white
hair and was dressed well without ostentation. His bearing spoke of nobility.
Tris finally connected the face with a memory, and he recognized Abelard,
Bricen's ambassador to Principality.
Tris stepped
forward to shake Abelard's hand, but the older man bowed low. "Greetings,
my prince," the ambassador said, accepting Tris's hand as Tris bid him
rise. "We thank the Goddess for your safe passage to Principality."
Staden motioned
for them sit near the fire. A servant brought them each a mug of warm mulled
wine.
"Abelard
has been here in
"Is this
official business?" Tris watched the older man closely.
Abelard
chuckled sadly. "There's been no official business since I declined
Jared's demand that I return to Shekerishet. Word of the coup reached me just
before Jared's orders. I was a friend to your father for many years. I could
not serve his murderer. And so I'm an exile, kept by King Staden's kindness,
for which I'm grateful."
"What of
the other ambassadors?" Tris asked. He sipped at the wine, which eased his
pounding headache.
"Much the
same. Cattoril is dead. Drawn and quartered, I hear, for his failure to bring
Princess Kiara back with him from Isencroft."
"And the
others?"
"All, like
myself, are in exile. We remain in touch, hoping that there might be some way
to serve our homeland, not daring to believe the rumors that you had survived.
"We had no
man in Nargi, so from that kingdom I have no news," continued Abelard.
"You've met Mikhail, who brings news from my counterpart in Dhasson now
that magicked beasts have closed the border."
"The beasts
were sent by Arontala to keep me from reaching King Harrol's court."
"That may
well be," Abelard said. "I believe Jared's coup was long-planned.
From Trevath, I hear little, but the last message gave me pause. Their king is
concerned about the events in Margolan, and fears being drawn into war."
"Why?"
"Are you
familiar with Lord Curane?"
Tris nodded.
Curane held lands on Margolan's southern plains. Bricen had considered Curane
self-serving, and of dubious honor.
"Curane's
wife is from a powerful family in Trevath, one that wields much influence at
court. Trevath's king is concerned that Lord Curane's family ties may
compromise Trevath, and bring Jared's army against them."
"Why would
Jared care?"
"Because
it is said that Curane's granddaughter bears Jared's child."
"By
rights, half of Margolan should be Jared's bastards," Tris said dryly.
"But if that's true, it bodes darkly for the future."
"Aye, my
prince. Although you've more pressing threats to deal with, and there are years
before the throne is in danger. The situation will bear watching.
"From
Eastmark, King Kalcen is taking a personal interest in Margolan's troubles.
Princess Kiara's mother, Viata, was his older sister. So Jared's threat to
Viata's daughter is worthy of Kalcen's regard." Abelard smiled knowingly.
"Or perhaps, he thinks history might repeat itself."
"How
so?"
"A little
more than twenty years ago, Donelan of Isencroft met Viata of Eastmark at a
court ball, here in Principality. Eastmark does not give its daughters to wed
outlanders, but the two fell very much in love. They eloped, keeping their
wedding a secret until Viata was with child and the bond was irrevocable.
"Viata's
father, the late King Radomar, was furious. Rumor said he planned to take his
warships across the Northern Sea and strike at Isencroft from its coast. Then
your father stepped in. Margolan, as one of the oldest and most powerful
kingdoms, has always been able to be heard among the rulers of the Winter
Kingdoms. Bricen didn't want war. He offered a betrothal contract to Donelan,
matching the two heirs. His action showed Margolan's support, and King Radomar
backed down. There was no war."
"The
betrothal contract between Kiara and Jared," Tris murmured. "I
wondered how that came to be."
"I have an
awkward question, my prince, but one I must ask, with your permission."
"Go
on."
"Your
interest in Princess Kiara—is it genuine, or is it a calculation to embarrass
the usurper?"
Tris felt
himself color, and struggled to keep his voice neutral. "I fell in love
with Kiara before I knew of the pact. She didn't know who I was when
we first met.
While I'd die before I'd see Jared touch her, that 'calculation' never came
into my thinking."
"So I
hoped, and so I believed knowing what I do of you, Prince Drayke. You received King
Donelan's recognition as the rightful heir to the Margolan throne. Do you
realize that he has, in that recognition, declared you to be Kiara's betrothed
by the terms of the covenant?"
Tris's mouth
went dry.
Abelard
chuckled. "I thought not. That's why your intentions matter. I should hate
to see you gain the throne and begin a war."
"If I
survive the battle for the throne," Tris replied, regaining his composure,
"I hope to ask for Kiara's hand. But there's so much that must happen,
between now and then—"
"I
understand, my prince. These are your judgments to make. But should you choose
to wed in exile, and secure the succession—"
"Out of
the question. Kiara intends to accompany me to Margolan. She's an excellent
swordswoman, and was sent on her quest by the Oracle herself. To do as you
suggest would place her in even greater danger."
Abelard held up
a hand. "I meant no disrespect, my prince. Merely an option."
This is exactly
why I never wanted to be king, Tris thought. Yet he knew that Abelard would not be alone in wanting a
stable line of succession. There would be pressure to produce an heir, especially
if there was truth to the rumor about Jared's bastard. Tris had cherished the
relative freedom of the road. They had been hunted and in danger for their
lives, but these past months had been free from the politics of court. That
would end if he succeeded in winning the crown.
"Thank
you," he told Abelard, anxious to work though this alone. "You've
given me a lot to think about."
"Walk
carefully, my prince." Abelard bowed low, leaving Tris alone with the fire
and his thoughts.
As the days grew shorter, Staden's court
prepared for Winterstide. While Staden welcomed Tris's participation as
Summoner, many at court were curious as to what such participation might add to
the feast day. Tris knew that most residents looked forward to a week of
revelry.
Carroway was
thoroughly enjoying the chance to entertain once more at court. When he was not
practicing in the salle, he was rehearsing with the minstrels. His skills
gained him the respect of Staden's musicians, who, knowing his stay to be
temporary, did not see him as a rival. Carroway commented dryly that perhaps
Staden's minstrels eyed his odds of surviving the return to Margolan, taking
this opportunity to learn his songs and stories in the event of his untimely
demise.
Even Tris
couldn't resist the lure of the festivities. Winterstide was a festival of
light at the year's darkest month, glittering with candles, stuffed with
traditional delicacies, and brimming with ale and merriment. Staden kept the
feast in high style; balls and jousts marked the weeks leading up to the feast
night itself. In Margolan, Tris had often excused himself early from the
revelries, to keep his distance from Jared and the nobles' predatory daughters.
Now, the
prospect of accompanying Kiara heightened his interest tremendously.
Tris had to
admit that his record with the ladies was every bit the disaster Soterius joked
it was. He was realistic enough to know that his title and rank alone would
have gotten him almost any young woman he set his eye on. He'd been told often
enough that he was handsome, though he privately had his doubts. A few early
crushes had gone badly; the girls he'd trusted with his heart had been more
interested in becoming a princess than in the particular prince it took to
achieve that goal. And then there was Jared.
Jared's
reputation for promiscuity was legendary, but beneath that lust ran a fondness
for violence. There were too many retainers at the palace eager to cover
Jared's indiscretions, either to save Bricen from embarrassment or to court
favor with the heir apparent. Perhaps they knew Jared's rages and learned to
fear him. Even before the murders of the coup, Tris had formed a loathing for
his half-brother. He'd vowed to never take after Jared. So while courtiers
bedded each other without a second thought and trysting became the favored
sport of the young nobility, Tris held back. It wasn't piety, and it certainly
hadn't been for lack of interest. He had no intention of having his heart toyed
with, or being a prize for the winning. And while the warmth of a bedmate would
have been pleasant, he had no desire to callous his heart to the casual
partings.
There had been
beautiful girls aplenty at court, though few cared to talk about anything but
tiresome gossip, and fewer
still could engage
in a discussion of ideas, with
convictions and opinions of their own. Tris had despaired of ever finding a
soulmate. He'd witnessed the loveless marriages at court, the travesties of
name and residence that held a tattered mask of propriety over sordid schemes
and affairs. Being alone seemed better than that. Kait, knowing that the blows
she'd taken at Jared's hand were not uncommon even in noble marriages, had resolved
to never marry. Tris often dreamed of the day when he might be permitted to
escape the scrutiny of court and move to Bricen's lodge.
Jared's coup
ended those plans.
The constant
danger of fleeing from Margolan should have pushed any thought of romance from
his mind, but Tris never expected his reaction when he met Kiara on the road to
Westmarch. Before that night, Tris dismissed love at first sight as one of
Carroway's exaggerations. But from the first time he had looked on Kiara, his
heart had been forfeit. She was everything he had hoped to find: smart, strong,
confident, and able to make her way in her own right. He hadn't cared about her
birth or rank, or even that she came from beyond Margolan's borders. All he
had wanted was to gain her favor.
Then reality
hit. While he might unseat Jared and destroy Arontala, surviving was asking a
lot of fate. Worse, there was the old betrothal contract, promising Kiara to
the heir to the Margolan throne. He could not bear to think on that, to imagine
Kiara given to Jared. He would have been willing to fight Jared to the death
just to prevent that from happening, even without so much else at stake. Many
a night he'd been unable to sleep, wrestling with the fear that he would not
survive to marry Kiara.
He'd underestimated
her. Kiara knew enough of war to realize that their gambit to unseat Jared was
up against the odds. But it had been impossible to deny the attraction they
felt for one another, even though Tris knew he should hold back. Kiara did not
seem to care that their romance might cause a scandal, and she shared his
loathing for Jared. And so, in the brief sanctuary of their stay in Westmarch,
they had declared their love. Nothing about his feelings had changed since
then; if anything, the peril at the citadel of the Sisterhood had deepened his
resolve. But at the same time, between the dark sending and his own brush with
death, Tris was torn, not wanting to cause Kiara pain.
Abelard's
revelation forced Tris's hand. While the shift in the betrothal contract
removed the scandal from their relationship, declaring their engagement would
enrage Jared even more. Tris had no illusions that Jared wanted anything beside
Isencroft's lands and satisfaction of his own lust, but he knew his
half-brother well enough to be sure that Jared would see their alliance as a
challenge. Jared would be merciless in his revenge.
Tris rejected
out of hand Abelard's suggestion of a wedding in exile. The phrase "secure
the succession" rang of all the things that made him never want the
crown. He knew that to be the heir meant to be brokered off like a prize race
horse for breeding stock. It was one of the many things he was not looking
forward to if he survived to gain the throne. He could not in good conscience
put a wife and child in that kind of danger. And so he had not slept all night,
arguing with himself over what to do, his heart aching at every option.
Since the
conversation with Abelard a few days before, Tris had found no private moment
to talk with Kiara. This evening, she lingered after dinner, as Carroway
offered a preview of the music for the feast. When the music ended amid
enthusiastic applause, Tris noticed that Vahanian offered to walk Carina back
to her rooms. Carina had accepted with a blush and a smile.
Tris took
Kiara's hand, deliberately falling behind the others. Knowing what he had to
say left him dry-mouthed, and he decided that when it came to talk of marriage,
both princes and plowboys were alike in finding themselves tongue-tied.
The great hall
was garlanded for the feast It was empty for the moment, though the torches and
candles that burned warned that its decorators might return before too long to
finish their chores.
"You've
been quiet," Tris said.
"Just
thinking of Isencroft at Winterstide," she said. "It was always my
favorite time of the year. I thought father knew how to throw a feast, but I'll
admit that Staden puts our feast to shame."
"Kait always
loved the falconing trials that came before the feast. Father kept the feast
well, and I know Carroway is happy to have a real audience once more."
Tris paused. "I've missed you, the weeks I've been at the citadel."
Kiara turned to
him, lifting a finger to touch a newly healed scar on his cheek. "Carina
won't tell me much about what happened there, but I can see it troubles her.
You look so tired. I'm worried about you."
Tris drew her
into his arms and kissed her, taking comfort from the moment, enjoying her
nearness.
She leaned
against him, her arms wrapped around his waist. After a moment, she drew back,
looking at him questioningly.
"What's on
your mind?"
Tris tangled
his fingers in her auburn hair. "I swore to you, back in Westmarch, that
if I take the throne, nothing will be required of you—or Isencroft—by
force."
Kiara kissed
his hand. "I know."
"Abelard
says that when your father sent the letter recognizing me as Margolan's
rightful heir, that it changed the terms of your betrothal contract." The
words just tumbled out. "He says it means that we're already
betrothed."
Kiara gasped.
"I love
you, Kiara. And I am willingly your betrothed." He swallowed hard.
"But I can't—not now, not when it's so unlikely that I'll even live to
take the throne. I can't ask you to be bound to me like that. I don't want to
hurt you."
Kiara stood
completely still. "And that will save my heart? To be betrothed in thought
but not in deed?" The same pain that filled his own heart was in her eyes.
"The weeks you've been at the citadel— every time I heard footsteps
outside in the corridor, I was afraid that Staden was coming to tell me you'd
been killed in the training. It's too late. I love you. It has nothing to do
with that damned covenant, and it never did. My heart's already bound to you.
"If you...
don't take the throne... I won't have time to mourn. Don't you see? I can't—I
won't—let Jared use me to gain Isencroft. I've seen what he's done to Margolan.
And I swear by the Lady, I won't be captured. So we'll be together—one way or
another."
Tris's vision
blurred. "Kiara, I—"
"We have
this time, these days," she said fiercely. "Father and mother thought
they had all the time in the world. They were wrong. Today is all we
ever have. It's too late to protect me. We can deny the covenant, we can
pretend that what's between us isn't here—but it's not going to spare my
heart. I love you, Tris. If these next few months are all we ever have, then so
be it. Just don't make me lose you twice."
Her voice was
firm, although her whole body was shaking. Tris reached for her and she fell
against him, sobbing. He laid his face against her hair, knowing that she saw
his own tears. "I didn't dare to hope that you would feel that way,"
he murmured, stroking her hair, holding her until the shaking stopped. "I
want to marry you, Kiara. I want you with me always."
She pulled back
far enough to look in his eyes, and she raised a hand to touch his tear-stained
cheek. "I accept. And Istra damn the consequences!"
CHAPTER TEN prev next contents
VAHANIAN felt his spirits rise as the preparations
for Winterstide bustled around him at the palace. Principality's Winterstide
celebrations were opulent, and Vahanian was impressed despite himself. Carroway
had already won an esteemed place among the court musicians and entertainers,
letting slip with a wicked smile that he planned to try out a song about their
journeys. Vahanian could only hope that his part would be omitted.
His years of
smuggling had never made him rich, but they had earned him more than a few enemies.
Some of those enemies had the means to settle the score through bounty hunters.
Once the struggle to win back the throne in Margolan was over—assuming he
survived—Vahanian intended to use some of his reward money from Staden to pay
off his remaining debts. He resolved to start fresh with his new holdings in
Dark Haven. Between now and
then, he was
content to keep as low a profile as possible.
Vahanian was
also well aware of just how close Principality lay to Eastmark, where he had
disastrously crossed paths with Arontala ten years before. Although he had
escaped a wrongful court martial and the royal death sentence that claimed his
squadron, Vahanian suspected that the death warrant remained on the books. He
was unwilling to find out, and leery of providing a target to anyone who
thought to claim a bounty by delivering him across the border.
By the eve of
Winterstide, Staden's palace was aglow in banks of candles. Velvet and brocade
pennants with the four light faces of the Goddess fluttered in the cold night
air, and bonfires lit the courtyards. Tempting smells of baking bread and
roasting meats wafted from the kitchen, over the scent of mulled wine and warm
cider. Before the feast came the day of fasting, from sundown the night before
Winterstide through midnight on the evening of the solstice. Staden's court did
not neglect the fast in preference for the revelries to come.
While the
castle prepared, Vahanian sought out Carina. It was more difficult than he
expected. When she was awake, she spent most of her time studying healing lore
with Royster. Even with Kiara Carina seemed withdrawn, and Vahanian wondered
again about the terms of Tris's training with the Sisterhood.
He had glimpsed
Carina in the crowd earlier that evening, when Tris had presided with Staden
over the initial rites of the festival. Tris's presence as a Summoner made it
possible to acknowledge parts of the liturgy that had gone unspoken and ignored for
years, and the crowd was thicker than usual in anticipation. With Tris's help,
Staden accepted the fealty of long-departed nobles whose loyalty or desire made
them remain near the court. Tris stood with Staden as the king gave a
benediction over those who had fallen in battle—no small number given
Principality's popularity as a mercenary haven. Thanks to Tris's power, the war
dead gained the power to make themselves visible, to receive the blessing of
their king and his dismissal, freeing them from their oaths of honor and
sending their spirits to rest. Other spirits whose tie to the palace outlasted
life itself came to the ceremony, drawn by Tris's power. Staden was shaken to
receive the blessing of long-dead members of the royal family, who had chosen
to remain and watch over their descen-dents.
At the tenth
bell, a large crowd gathered in the courtyard. Staden had ordered his servants
to build a dais, and on the dais there were life-sized statues of the Lady, one
for each light Aspect, and on its reverse, its dark face. In the center of the
dais was an altar covered with a cloth of midnight blue, decorated in a
complex pattern of silver embroidery. Banked high around the large dais were
rows of unlit candles. Vahanian waited in the throng, near the front but
slightly to the side, out of old habit so that he might have the best view of
any approaching trouble. He spotted Kiara in the crowd, and Carroway with the
bards. Carina was with Kiara, in the front row. Vahanian wondered if Carina's
position was out of reverence, or if she was on hand should Tris collapse from
the exertion.
A red carpet
defined a walkway through the crowd. Staden sat on a throne in a tall viewing
box with the queen and Berry. But here, everyone had come to see the Summoner.
A hush fell
over the crowd, and Vahanian turned. Tris stood at the far end of the walkway.
He was dressed in gray with a heavy gray cloak, looking the part of a Summoner
and, Vahanian had to admit to himself, every inch a king. Tris's long blond
hair stirred in the wind as he strode toward the altar on the dais. Slowly,
Tris climbed the steps and knelt in front of the altar. Vahanian saw Tris's
lips move. The banks of candles burst into flame, lighting the night. From
beneath the altar cloth, Tris removed a large honey cake and a tankard of ale,
the traditional gifts to the Lady. And, on behalf of the vayash moru which
were more numerous than usual in this night's crowd, he also set a flagon of
goat's blood on the altar.
"Lady of
Many Faces, hear me!" Tris began in a voice loud enough for all to hear.
"Tonight, the veil is thin between our world and the next. Accept these
gifts from your children, the living, the dead, and the undead, and show your
favor."
The night
seemed to grow even colder. All around Vahanian spirits gathered, far more
numerous than before. Many found a place with someone standing in the crowd: an
elderly man's ghost next to an old woman, a young mother's ghost beside a
harried-looking young man holding a small child. Some of the vayash moru stood
apart, while others were joined by the spirits. Tris was making it possible this
night for the spirits that had chosen to remain with the living to be seen and
to take part in the festival. In the crowd,
Vahanian saw a vayash
moru man who looked to be his own age in mortal years standing with an
elderly woman who was very much alive. They were holding hands, and the woman
inclined her head against the man's shoulder. Vahanian realized with a start
that it was the gesture of a wife, not a mother. He could not look away. If
they had been together when the young man was brought across, then decades
would have passed, during which the young man remained unchanged and the years
did their slow damage to his wife. Vahanian did not realize that Gabriel had
slipped up beside him until the vayash moru spoke.
"Some of
us choose to remain among mortals much longer than others," Gabriel said.
"I just
never thought—"
"Here in
Principality, and especially in Dark Haven, such things may be done openly. In
many other places we must watch over our families from a distance, to protect
them from those who fear us."
Vahanian
realized that Kiara was no longer alone. The spirit of a beautiful, sad-eyed
woman stood with her, a woman whose unmistakable resemblance to Kiara must
mean she was the late Queen Viata. With the king stood the spirits of several
men, each clad in the formal robes of bygone days, the dead kings of
Principality. Vahanian saw Carina startle, and noticed that she had gone quite
pale. He followed Carina's gaze toward a spirit on the edge of the crowd.
Hanging back in the shadows stood the ghost of a young man in his mid-twenties,
dark-haired, in the uniform of an Eastmark mercenary. Vahanian knew by the
resemblance to General Gregor that it was Ric, Carina's lost betrothed. He felt
a stab of jealousy. Ric's memory, and Carina's guilt over Ric's death, were
implacable rivals for her affection. The ghost stepped back into the shadows
and vanished.
On the dais
Tris stood, his arms outstretched toward the four figures of the Lady.
"Thank you, Lady Bright, for the bounty of the fields and the vineyards,
the health of our livestock, and the rains that sustain us. We ask your
blessing on this kingdom, and we beg you to give succor to the spirits who do
not rest and to Those Who Walk the Night, showing your mercy on us, the living,
dead, and undead."
Tris lowered
his arms. The candles dimmed, but did not go out. Around them, some of the
spirits lost their distinctive form. Tris bowed his head as he turned toward
the crowd. The cowl hid his face from view, but Vahanian could tell his friend
was near exhaustion.
"He can't
keep pushing himself like that—not if he's going to live long enough to
challenge Jared," Vahanian murmured to Gabriel.
Gabriel
followed Tris's exit. "He feels the burden of the Lady," the vayash
moru replied. "There's nothing heavier."
Vahanian hoped for a chance to see Carina alone. He decided that the chapel was the place
to wait after the ceremony in the courtyard, as the twelfth bells approached.
As guests of the king, the palace's chapel was opened to Tris and his friends.
It was there that Vahanian waited, expecting the opportunity to encounter
Carina.
Vahanian staked
out a shadowed corner of the chapel, watching as a steady stream of courtiers
brought their
gift of honey cakes and ale and lit candles in remembrance of a loved one.
Finally, near the twelfth bells, when most in the castle assembled in the great
hall in anticipation of the feast, he spotted a lone figure in green. Carina
brought her offering to the crowded alter, made the sign of the Lady, and
murmured the words of dedication, lifting a wavering taper to light a candle.
Vahanian fell
into step beside her as she left the chapel. "Heading up to the
feast?"
Carina shook
her head. "Not tonight. Maybe tomorrow."
"You've
been pretty busy helping Spook with the witch biddies at the citadel."
Vahanian's
irreverence made Carina smile. "You really are incorrigible," she
murmured.
"Completely,"
he said, grinning. From a distance, Vahanian could hear the music begin in the
great hall. "Come on. At least get some food. And who knows—Carroway said
he was going to try out a new song he'd written about the last couple of
months. You might be famous."
Carina blushed.
"I hope not." She let Vahanian steer her toward the great hall, where
they found food and ale set out to break the fast. She seemed to relax. From
where they stood near the back of the room, they could see the succession of
musicians, jugglers, acrobats, and parlor magicians begin the all-night
revelries.
Although Carina
demurred when the dancing began, the music seemed to lift her mood, and she did
not press to leave. For his part, Vahanian enjoyed the long-overdue opportunity
to talk with her. He had no doubt that Berry's endorsement had won him his
initial acceptance in Staden's court, and that Tris's friendship along with his
new title and lands made him more acceptable to the purists. But as the weeks
wore on, he found himself included in the plans for battle and the
preparations for war. He credited Staden with the rare genius to create a
court where talent and ability counted at least as much as bloodlines. Some of
that success emboldened him now, as he attempted to draw Carina out in
conversation.
Carroway did
debut his song, a spirited ballad about the caravan and its valiant defense
against weather, bandits, and raiders. The crowd loved it, even as it became a
moving lament. Vahanian saw emotions flicker in Carina's eyes that hinted at a
more melancholy reception.
"I think
it's really time for me to go," she murmured, stifling a yawn.
"Let me
walk you back," Vahanian offered. "There's quite a crowd here
tonight," he added before she could turn him down. "Staden can't know
all of them personally. I'd feel better if I saw you safely to your room."
His hand fell to the sword at his belt. At Berry's request, and in acknowledgement
of their unusual circumstances, Staden permitted Vahanian the great honor of
wearing his sword in the presence of the king.
Carina looked
as if she might refuse, and then smiled. "Thank you. I'm a bit too tired
to bash anyone with my staff tonight. Besides, I left it in my room," she
joked.
The outer
corridors were nearly empty as they worked their way from the public chambers
of the
palace. Carina
slowed as they crossed an outdoor palazzo. Below them in the courtyard burned
one of many huge bonfires that were part of the evening's celebrations. They
could feel its heat and smell the rising smoke.
Carina was
beginning to shiver, and he offered her his cloak. "I miss Winterstide in
Isencroft," she said quietly. "It was always wonderful. I don't know
if it will ever be like that again."
"Maybe
not." Vahanian looked out over the courtyard, where the songs and
merriment from within the palace were beginning to spill outside. "Things
change. Sometimes, maybe even for the better."
Vahanian
reached out and gently tipped Carina's chin up. Her expression was open,
unguarded. "Something's been bothering you since we got here. Whatever
happened, happened a long time ago. Forgiving yourself is hard. But the people
who care about you would like to help you try." Her eyes filled with tears
and she turned away, but she did not shrug off his arm from around her
shoulders as they walked the length of the palazzo in silence. They stopped at
the door to the rooms she shared with Kiara, and Carina slipped out of Vahanian's
cloak.
"You'll
need this; it's cold outside." Carina handed the cloak back to him.
"Thank you."
"I enjoyed
the company. I haven't celebrated Winterstide in years." He reached out
for her hand and kissed the back of it. To lighten the moment, Vahanian made an
exaggerated bow and clicked his boot heels together. "Sleep well,
m'lady."
He could not
read her smile or her expression, or the emotion in her eyes. "You too,
m'lord," Carina slipped through the doorway and closed the heavy door
behind her.
CHAPTER ELEVEN prev next contents
ON the feast day of Winterstide, Staden's
court outdid itself with merrymaking. Through Tris's efforts with the Court of
Spirits, some of the balance between the restless spirits and the living had
been reconciled. Tris could sense a change in the currents of magic. Even after
the festival was over, Tris suspected that his Court of Spirits would remain
in high demand for as long as he stayed in Principality.
A highlight of
the feast was Staden's announcement of Tris's betrothal to Kiara. Tris
wondered whether any of the nobility at court knew of the old arrangement
between Donelan and Bricen; wags would quickly discover a hint of scandal. On
the other hand, there was scandal enough for the gossips in Tris's status as
an exiled prince, in Vahanian's reputation, and in the friends' journey
unchaperoned for months on the road together.
After the death
mark Jared set on his life and on Kiara's, Tris cared less about the loose talk
of court than ever before.
This night,
Tris was resolved to push aside any forebodings and enjoy the moment. Kiara
seemed equally determined to enjoy the evening, and Tris was happy just to have
her beside him. He looked around at the greatroom, bustling with guests. At the
far end of the room, Royster was surrounded by a cluster of adoring ladies, who
indulged the white-haired librarian and his tales of the chivalry of ancient
heroes.
Soterius and
Harrtuck, resigned to appearances at court, joined Tris and Kiara in good
spirits, well into their ale. Berry, seated nearby, was radiant in her gown of
midnight blue Mussa silk, her hair twisted into a high braid. Berry's
appearance made it difficult to remember the tomboy they had rescued on the
road north. She was Carroway's most enthusiastic patron, and beamed at the
announcement of Tris and Kiara's betrothal as if she had brokered it herself.
Once again,
Staden's palace staff had outdone themselves in outfitting Tris and his
friends. Tris's tunic and trews were in charcoal satin, with a contrasting
wine-colored brocade doublet and a matching dark gray velvet cloak. Kiara's
gown picked up the dark claret of Tris's doublet perfectly; Tris was sure Berry
had had a say in the choice of their wardrobe. The rich dark hues complemented
Kiara's complexion and her auburn hair, with a headpiece of fine gold chain
that matched the thin gold collar on Jae's throat. The little gyregon preened
and posed on Kiara's shoulder as if he knew he was on display.
Soterius wore a
simple but elegant ensemble of hunter green, with straight, almost military
lines that complemented his bearing. Harrtuck looked chagrined but resigned to
his dark brown outfit, with a velvet vest and a finely spun shirt that did not
strain at his broad, barrel chest. Carroway, as usual, was resplendent in a
fashionable mix of silks, with deep plum, bright green, and gold accents.
Seated at the front of the greatroom with the other musicians, Carroway was reveling
in his return to giving court performances.
Mingling among
the crowd, a mix of mortals and vayash mom, Mikhail wore a steel-gray
doublet of opulent brocade. Mikhail moved through the crowd comfortably, and
Tris wondered how many lifetimes it might take to feel so at ease. Across the
room, Tris spotted Gabriel wearing an exquisitely cut dark blue doublet, his
flaxen-colored hair loose around his shoulders, every inch an aristocrat.
Tris nudged
Kiara as Carina and Vahanian entered, with the healer lightly taking Vahanian's
arm. Carina's gown was of emerald silk, with a high waist and a slim fit that
accentuated her petite frame and set off her dark hair. At her throat, a
necklace of green turquoise and onyx glittered, and Tris wondered from where
Berry had procured such a beautiful complement to Carina's dress.
Beside Carina,
Vahanian seemed in exceptionally good spirits, dressed head to toe in black as
was his preference when ceremony demanded that he dress for court. The outfit
set off Vahanian's dark brown hair and brown eyes. He wore no other adornment
than his sword belt with its expertly-forged and well-used blade.
"Still
taking bets?" Tris whispered.
Kiara chuckled.
"Now that Berry has us taken care of, I'm sure she'll double her efforts
to match them up."
"They
might not need her help," Tris observed, grinning as the others joined
them. "Glad you could make it," Tris greeted Vahanian, who seemed
quite pleased to have Carina as his companion for the evening.
"Nice to
know the witch biddies let you have the night off," Vahanian quipped.
"I understand congratulations are in order." In the busy greatroom,
the press of guests jostled them as a new group of musicians took the stage.
Kiara's smile
was wistful as she took Tris's arm. "There are a few technicalities to
take care of," she murmured, "but thank you."
"Good
evening to you all," a familiar voice greeted, and they turned to see
Gabriel behind them, though there was no noise at the vayash moru's approach.
The flaxen-haired vayash morn bowed to Kiara and Carina, then greeted
Vahanian and Tris with a nod.
He turned to
Tris. "Are you ready for our appointment with the Blood Council?"
Vahanian looked
askance at Gabriel, then at Tris. "Call me superstitious, but coming from
him, that doesn't sound good."
Gabriel
regarded Vahanian with faint amusement. "You're welcome to join us,"
Gabriel said smoothly. "As Lord of Dark Haven, it would be appropriate. At
some point, you must also meet the Council."
"Why
me?"
"Because
Dark Haven is the traditional sanctuary for the sons and daughters of
darkness," Gabriel's faint smile showed his disquietingly long eye teeth.
"And you are the Lord of Dark Haven."
"That was
something Staden didn't exactly make clear when he gave me the title,"
Vahanian replied. Carina giggled.
"Nonetheless,
the matter does, in a way, concern you directly. The members of the Blood
Council are the ruling noble houses of Dark Haven."
"Just how,
exactly, can you have a hereditary nobility among vayash moru?" Vahanian
asked, raising an eyebrow.
"It would
be more accurate, perhaps, to say there is an aristocracy of age and wealth,
more by the dark gift than by mortal birth," Gabriel replied. "Many
have served on the Council for well over two hundred years."
"So you're
planning to walk Tris into a room full of vayash moru, and you want me along for what—an
appetizer?"
"When the
Obsidian King fell, the orb that held his soul on the edge of the abyss,
Soulcatcher, was given to the sons of Dark Haven to protect. It was secured
beneath Dark Haven, where a great river of power runs. When Arontala wrested
the orb from its resting place, the last Lord of Dark Haven died, and the great
house itself was damaged. The river of power has been tainted, and not even the
Sisterhood has been able to purify its flow. That history makes the present
problem Dark Haven's concern. Tonight, we meet with the Council to present
Tris as Summoner and the rightful king of Margolan."
"Why does
this Blood Council care?" Vahanian asked warily.
"Because
Arontala is vayash moru," Gabriel replied. "There are old and
binding rules among my people that govern how we may act—toward mortals and
toward our brethren of the dark gift. This is necessary to keep the truce. It's
forbidden for vayash moru to side with mortals to destroy another vayash
moru. I believe I can receive the Council's permission to make an
exception.
"Before
this is over," Gabriel continued, "we'll likely need the
assistance—or at least the forbearance—of those vayash moru who remain
in Margolan. Such things are better done through proper channels."
"As much
as this doesn't sound like my kind of party," Vahanian said grudgingly,
"maybe I'd better come along to watch Spook's back."
"As you
wish," Gabriel said with a low bow. "I'll return for you at the
twelfth bell. Until then, I'll take my leave. There are preparations to be
made."
The vayash
moru seemed to vanish into thin air. "I hate it when he does
that," Vahanian muttered.
"Thanks
for the support," Tris said. "I have to admit, the whole idea makes
me nervous."
"You hold
court for ghosts all day and a couple of vayash moru make you
nervous?" Vahanian joked. "Aren't you officially Lord of the Dead and
Undead?"
"In the
case of the vayash moru," said Tris, "I have the distinct
impression that the title is ceremonial."
Partygoers
jostled as the guests, crowded shoulder to shoulder, moved for a better view
of the musicians,
who struck up a lively tune. Vahanian turned toward the music. In that instant,
he saw torchlight glint off steel behind Tris.
"Get
down!" Vahanian shouted, pushing hard against Tris as the dagger fell.
The dagger
struck just below his shoulder as he shoved Tris out of the way. He staggered,
reaching for his sword. Carina screamed. Jae gave a shriek, diving toward the
assassin. A streak of blue mage fire burned past Vahanian, striking the
attacker. Vahanian heard the whirr of a blade flying through the air. The
attacker fell to the ground, a small blade lodged between his shoulders.
Vahanian glanced up, expecting one of the guardsman, and instead saw Berry,
standing on her chair, a look of surprise and self-congratulation on her face.
"You're
hit," Carina said, guiding Vahanian to the floor as the room began to
spin. Guardsmen shoved their way through the screaming crowd, forming a circle
around Vahanian and Carina. The guards tried to whisk Tris and Kiara out of the
room, but Tris jerked away and Kiara would not be moved. Vahanian could hear
Carroway shouting above the screams of the crowd, attempting to shift the
partygoers away from the incident.
"Coming
through!" he heard Soterius shout as he and Harrtuck barreled their way
through the guardsmen's line.
"How
bad?" Harrtuck asked, taking in Vahanian's condition with a practiced eye.
A servant
handed Carina a fistful of rags. She applied pressure through Vahanian's
bloodsoaked shirt and felt around the wound. "Not as bad as it could be,"
she appraised, looking
worriedly at Vahanian. "The
knife hit a rib, or it might have had you in the heart." Blood stained her
green gown and covered her hands. "We've got to get it out."
Vahanian felt
the room swim around him. He turned to one side, and retched.
"I'm
betting the blade was poisoned," Carina assessed. "Wormroot, to
disable a mage." She laid a hand on Vahanian's shoulder, steadying him.
"Since you don't have magic, it's just going to make you throw up."
She looked up, and saw Berry, ashen and scared, just within the circle of
guardsmen. "Nice aim," she said, and Berry nodded, too concerned to
smile.
"Problem
is, we won't know who sent the assassin, because he's dead," Soterius
clipped.
Vahanian saw
Tris glance past the guardsmen, to where the assassin lay. "Not
necessarily," said Tris. "Let's get Jonmarc taken care of, and then
we'll deal with the assassin."
Vahanian became
aware of a growing stiffness that started in his legs and rapidly worked its
way up his body. It was getting harder to breathe, as if iron bands encircled
his ribs. He grabbed Carina's wrist.
"Can't...
breathe..." he rasped.
"Tris—I'm
going to need help!" Carina shouted, and Tris knelt beside them.
"There
must have been another poison on the blade," Carina said. Vahanian fought
his own rising panic and pinpricks of light danced before his eyes. "He's
not breathing—Tris, I need time to counter the poison!"
Vahanian had
the disquieting sensation that he was watching from outside himself, Tris
clutching his arm,
Carina trying
to push a wad of rope vine between his own clenched teeth. He felt disoriented,
as if he were drunk with strong wine, and then a familiar presence brushed
against his mind, something that he knew was Tris's power, closer than thought.
Abruptly,
Vahanian felt himself back in his body, starved for air. Panic filled him in
the darkness, the memory of nearly drowning in the cold water of the Nu River,
his lungs burning. And then Vahanian felt his chest rise, awkwardly at first,
then in smooth, regular rhythm. He gasped, and his lungs filled with sweet,
fresh air.
Carina, her
face wet with tears, struggled with the knife. Berry stood behind her, clinging
fearfully to Kiara. "Please don't die," Carina whispered as she tried
to free the knife. "Please don't die."
"I've got
him," Tris said. "And at least for now, his heart and breathing are
stable."
"By the
Dark Lady!" It was Staden's voice, somewhere behind them. "How is such
a thing possible?"
"I could
bind soul to body because he wants to live. That is permitted to a
Summoner." Tris replied, and Vahanian guessed that Tris was also supplying
Carina with energy. "As for the heart and the lungs, they're like a
bellows and pump—if he can't move them, it's a small thing to make them move on
their own."
"A small
thing," Staden replied, awestruck.
Vahanian felt a
sharp pain as Carina pulled the knife free and pressed a rag into the wound to
staunch the blood. Two grooves marked each side of the blade. "I've never
seen a knife like this," she mused, holding up the blood-covered weapon.
"It's a
Mussa knife," Vahanian heard Gabriel say, as the vayash moru walked
up behind Carina. "The grooves hold thin vials of poison that shatter when
the blade enters the body."
Carina looked
at Tris grimly. "There was even more wormroot on the knife than what the
Sisterhood used on you. If the assassin had hit you—"
"My magic
would have been out of reach, with no one to do for me what I did for Jonmarc.
I'd be dead."
"How long
does the poison last?" Staden asked. "You can't breathe for him
forever."
Carina shook
her head. "There are antidotes I can try, but I don't know—this poison
works so quickly, the victim is usually dead long before it can wear
off." She looked up sharply. "Tris—what will you do? You were to meet
with the Blood Council tonight."
"The
Council does not reconvene lightly," Gabriel observed. "From their
perspective, being dead is not an excuse."
Tris looked
down at Vahanian, who was unable to so much as nod in recognition. "Call
for Taru," he said. "The soul-binding will hold. I've set the
breathing spell so that a mage of her power could monitor it, even add to the
magic if necessary." He looked at Gabriel. "We won't be long, I hope."
Staden sent a
servant to the citadel for Sister Taru. Carina finished her makeshift bandage.
"Let's get Jonmarc off the floor and somewhere quieter," Carina
ordered She wiped the blood and tears away with her stained sleeve. Soterius
and Harrtuck picked him up, one at his shoulders and one at his
feet, and
hefted him onto a couch in a nearby sitting room.
"T'will
have to do—he's too blasted heavy to carry up the stairs!" Harrtuck
exclaimed.
"What
about him?" Kiara asked. The assassin still lay in a pool of blood on the
floor of the great-room.
"Let me
get Jonmarc settled," Tris said. "Then, with your permission, Your
Majesty, I'd like to interrogate the assassin and see if we can get some
answers."
"But he's
dead," Staden began to protest, letting his voice trail off as he realized
the implications. "Yes, yes, interrogate him. I have to see this. I'll
bring Hant with me. He's the best one for this if we've rats to catch."
"I'll sit
with Jonmarc," Carina said, and looked to Kiara. "Please, can you
bring my bag from my room? And water—I'll need a kettle and a basin, along with
fresh rags. He's lost a lot of blood." Kiara nodded, but before she could
move, Berry bolted for the door.
"I'll get
them," the princess assured Carina as her running footsteps grew distant.
"I'd best
leave you to your healing," Staden said, turning for the door. "I'll
see you in the greatroom at the tenth bell, to see what you can make of the
assassin."
"Tris,"
Carina said quietly, her voice faltering, "are you sure... sure he's
alive? Your power is so strong... I was thinking about that time, by the
well—"
Tris shuddered.
Vahanian remembered the ghost who tried to possess Carina and how in throwing
the spirit free, Tris accidentally reanimated her corpse. "I'm sure,"
Tris said. He sounded exhausted. "Although we'd better hope the poison
wears off before too long, since he'll have to eat."
Vahanian could
not see Carina's face, but her voice was ragged. "There's an insect, in
the forests of Eastmark, whose sting can make a man lose the feeling in an arm
or leg for a day if he's bitten. I'll start with that antidote, see if I can
concentrate it. Royster will help me. There has to be something."
Tris laid a
hand on Carina's shoulder. "If anyone can figure it out, it will be you
and Royster."
Carina found
the pulse in Vahanian's neck. Her fingers lingered on his skin, and her eyes
had a haunted look. Although Vahanian called out to her with his thoughts, he
could not force his lips to form the words, or his body to make any movement at
all.
There was a
knock on the door. Sister Taru entered. Berry and Royster followed, bearing
Carina's satchel, clean rags and both a large kettle and a basin. Tris and Taru
conferred in low tones for a few minutes, casting glances in Vahanian's
direction, but he could not hear their conversation.
"Show me
what you've done," Taru said as she moved to stand beside Vahanian.
"I thought
about what you said, back at the citadel—how Carina got me to breathe
again," Tris replied. "She said the lungs were like a bellows. And I
thought about the spell that stopped Elam's heart. If it can be stopped, it can
be kept going." Tris took Taru's hand. The Sister shut her eyes, and Tris
moved her hand above Vahanian's chest. "Can you feel the spells I've set?
Those don't require a Summoner's magic."
"I can
also feel the soul-binding, although I can't make such a working myself."
"It will
hold." Vahanian was not sure that the look in Tris's eyes matched the
certainty of his voice. "As for the other spells, now that they're set,
you should be able to make sure they remain. I should only be gone for a few
candlemarks."
"I can do
that," Taru replied. She looked at Tris with concern. "Be careful,
Tris. Very few mortals are called before the Blood Council. Few that are,
return."
"Gabriel believes
he can protect me. I hope he's right." With a worried glance in Vahanian's
direction, Tris left to interrogate the assassin and ready himself for the
Blood Council.
Taru stepped
closer to Vahanian, and touched his forehead lightly with her fingertips. She
closed her eyes in thought, and then looked over to where Carina watched
worriedly from the fireplace. Berry had appointed herself Carina's apprentice.
Royster set out two worn leather volumes he withdrew from under his coat.
"Whatever
you need, Carina, we're here for you," the white-haired librarian
promised.
Carina squared
her shoulders and drew a deep breath. "Then let's get started. It's going
to be a long night."
CHAPTER TWELVE prev next contents
Alone in his rooms, Tris
leaned back against the door and closed his eyes. He was far more spent than he
had let on to Kiara, perhaps even more than Carina realized. Blinding headaches
came less often in reaction to strong magic as Tris grew more adept with his
power, but Tris resigned himself to a continual dull throb behind his eyes. His
body ached from the grueling pace of sword practice and climbing drills.
Although the night's commitments made it likely he would be awake until dawn,
Tris wanted nothing so much as a long soak in a very hot tub and an uninterrupted
night's sleep.
Giving up that
fantasy, he pushed away from the door. A fresh outfit lay on his bed. His own
shirt and doublet were stained with Vahanian's blood. Not something I want
going into a council of vayash moru, Tris thought as he loosed his ruined
vest and pulled his tunic over his head.
He was too
tired to pick up the discarded items. He moved wearily to the pitcher and basin
at the bedside, steeling himself for the splash of cold water as he washed
Vahanian's blood from his hands. My own blood will be distraction enough for
the Council.
Tris poured a
glass of port, and realized his hands were shaking. It was the first
opportunity he'd had to think about what happened. Saving Vahanian's life had
crowded out everything else in the moment. Now, Tris realized that the knife
had been meant for him. Clearly, the attacker had considered how best to strike
a mage. Tris did not relish the task of interrogating the assassin.
He remembered
Abelard's warning. Even here, amid Staden's protections, neither Tris nor his
friends were completely safe. Yet another reason I never wanted to be king.
No one tries to kill second sons. Normally, we're riot important enough to
assassinate.
Tris sat for a
moment beside the fire, letting it warm his chest and shoulders as he sipped
the port. Oh, Kait, he thought, how did we ever get so far away from
home? Her spirit did not answer him. He remembered the glitter of
Winterstide in Bricen's court, with Bricen and Serae presiding over the
well-feasted crowd of nobles, and Kait, showing off shamelessly at the
falconing trials. Serae had been pressuring Tris to enter the jousting
competition. Now they were all dead. Even if he succeeded in taking back the
throne, Margolan's celebration would never be the same again.
Tris stared
into the fire, watching the dancing flames as the port warmed his blood.
Vahanian's
injuries
worried him. Tris had been able to anchor his friend's spirit and compensate
for the paralysis, but all would be in vain unless Carina could purge the
poison before lasting damage occurred. His own gratitude was tempered by guilt.
I've got to be on guard, all of the time, Tris chastened himself. / can't
depend on Jonmarc or anyone else to watch over me. It's my risk, my
responsibility.
Reluctantly, he
set aside the empty glass and stood, stretching to ease his tired muscles. He
dressed in the fresh clothing and tried to smooth his hair into a reputable
queue. There was a knock at the door just as Tris finished adjusting his
collar. With one hand near his sword, Tris opened the door, relieved to find
Gabriel outside. While Gabriel maintained that vayash moru could not
truly read mortals' minds, Tris found that their enhanced hearing often gave
the illusion of telepathy. The trait was unnerving.
"King
Staden and General Hant will meet us in the greatroom, my prince," Gabriel
said. "After that, by your leave, we'll go to the Council."
Tris fell into
step beside the vayash morn, who slowed his stride to accommodate mortal
speed. The evening's merrymakers had fled the palace after the attack. In the
greatroom, only the king, Hant, and a half dozen guards awaited them.
Apparently
Staden is feeling a bit vulnerable too, Tris thought.
The dead
assassin lay in a pool of congealed blood on the floor. His back bore a burn
from the blue mage lightning Tris had cast, and Jae's talons had left six long
tears where the gyregon had struck the assassin's shoulders. The hilt of a
small dagger protruded from the man's chest, testimony to
"So it's
true... you intend to summon this brigand for questions, even now?" Hant
asked, his eyes narrowing.
"Have the
guards determined anything from the body?"
Hant shook his
head. "By the look of him, he could be from Margolan—or from Isencroft or
Dhasson, for that matter. No identification on him, but he had Margolan gold in
his pocket, and these." Hant nudged the body with his boot to reveal a
variety of short darts.
"He had a
Mussa knife," Gabriel observed. "Not a common weapon."
Tris bent
closer, and pulled the dead man's shirt to one side. Around his neck on a strap
was an amulet. Tris sensed its dark power. Tris pushed Hant's hand aside when
the general moved to touch the talisman. "It was spelled by Arontala, I'm
sure of it. Don't touch it."
"What does
it do?" Hant asked, fearlessly crouching closer for a better look.
"I won't
know without probing it, and I don't want to probe it without wardings set. But
I have a few suspicions."
Staden looked
at Tris. "While this one is beyond punishing, if you can summon him and
find who sent him, Hant can take it from there."
Tris took a
deep breath and closed his eyes, finding his center. He raised a warding,
first around the body on the floor, and then a second one separating
himself from
the group of onlookers. Finally, he raised a third warding over the entire
group, remembering the way Arontala had sought and found him on the spirit
plains during the ill-fated scrying at Westmarch.
Tris was aware
of the living men in the room, of the curious emptiness that signaled a vayash
moru, and of the body on the floor. It was toward that corpse that Tris
stretched out his power, seeking its soul on the Plains of Spirit.
The spirit
rushed up at him, rising so quickly that Tris took a step backward, raising his
hands to keep the angry ghost at a distance. The spirit lunged at the wardings,
trying to tear through with both teeth and nails, wild-eyed in its ferocity.
When it found it could not break the wardings, it keened a high-pitched wail of
sheer frustration.
The guards
cried out and pointed in frightened awe. Staden drew back a pace. Hant did not
move, his thin body coiled as if to spring, his flinty eyes narrowed and intent
on the target.
"Why have
you called me?" The spirit spoke with the accent of the Margolan plains.
"Who are
you, and why did you try to kill me?" Tris countered, adding power to his
wardings.
"I am
Hashak, and I serve King Jared!" The ghost drew back, no longer charging
at the wardings but still wary, his fists balled at his sides.
"Who sent
you?" Tris pressed. "Someone acquired the knife and the poisons for
you. Who was it?"
"I thought
you were a Summoner," the ghost taunted. "If you want that
information, take it from me. Why should I tell you?"
"No Light
Mage will harm a spirit, although perhaps your master's mage won't be so
forgiving. But no, I don't need your statement. A Summoner of power can read
the last thoughts of a fresh corpse. From that, we'll know who sent you."
The spirit
looked surprised, and his bluster tempered. "Then why call me here?"
"I can
offer you something Jared can't. I can pass you over to the Lady." Tris
gestured to the amulet around the corpse's neck. "When Jared gave that to
you, did he tell you what it does?"
"He said
it would protect me. Obviously, he lied."
A slight,
bitter smile reached the corners of Tris's lips. "Of course he lied. His
blood mage made that amulet. In the palace, Shekerishet, there's an orb that is
the portal to the abyss itself. In that orb, the spirit of the Obsidian King
waits to be reborn. Before he can be reborn, he must feed. On souls," Tris
added, watching the treachery of Jared's gift dawn on the spirit.
"You mean
he plans to pull me into his bloody orb?" the spirit shouted. "Feed
me to his monster?"
Tris nodded,
feeling the amulet gather power as they spoke. Any moment now it could trigger,
and if it sensed Tris's magic close at hand, Tris was not sure his wardings
would hold. "Do you know which Aspect of the Lady comes for
murderers?" Just beyond his mage sight, he could feel the approach of the
Crone, her dark, cold, death embrace awaiting the guilty one. Nervously, the
spirit glanced around him, as if he, too, felt the Crone's approach.
"Not the
Crone!" he cried out. "By the Dark Lady, I don't want to be eaten,
and I don't want to go to the Crone!"
The Crone's
imminent approach and the gathering power of the amulet made the hairs on the
back of Tris's neck prickle with primal dread. "You don't have much
time," Tris said, hoping his voice was steady. "I can save you from
the amulet and I can plead your case with the Lady, but I'd need a reason to
care."
The ghost's
blustering was gone. He threw himself to the floor, just beyond Tris's
warding. "I'll tell you everything!" the assassin sputtered. "I
got into some trouble in Margolan, and the guards were going to hang me. I've
lived a bad life—no one's going to tell you otherwise. Been a thief and a cutthroat
and a snitch. No one deserved a noose more'n me, to tell the honest
truth." The spirit looked back into the shadows again, and spoke even more
rapidly, fearing the Crone's approach.
"I was in
the dangler's cell in the jail, where they hold the next men to be hanged. A
strange man in a red robe came. The guards were right afeared of him, and they
did whatever he said. He called for me, said he had a job, and that if I did
it, he would make sure I didn't hang." The ghost's words poured out, his
accent blurring them together.
"Well, of
course I took the job. And when he said it was a bit of blade work, I wasn't
squeamish— done that kind of thing before. He gave me the gold and a horse to
get to Principality, told me who it was I should look for." He dared a
glance in Tris's direction. "Said I'd have the best chance in the feast
crowd at Winterstide. I saw you straight away, with that white hair of yours.
Waited for the biter to move away," he said with a disdainful look at
Gabriel, "and then I took my chance. Didn't think your friend would be so
keen to take the blade for you."
Tris's anger
flared, and he struggled to keep his emotions in check. "Did he say
anything else, the man who hired you?" Tris pressed. They had very little
time. The amulet was gaining power rapidly, and the Crone hovered just beyond
sight, as if she, too, listened to the ghost's tale.
Panic was
rising in the ghost's voice. "He said that if I couldn't get to you, that
I should kill the king, that he deserved to die for taking you in, that anyone
who opposed King Jared deserved to die." He glanced around himself in fear
as the amulet on the corpse began to glow. "Please, m'lord wizard, don't
let them take me!"
"There's
something else you haven't told me," Tris said, acting more on hunch than
certainty. "You're running out of time."
The ghost
shrieked, terrified of the glowing amulet and the nearness of the Crone.
"If I could strike and escape, I was to meet a groomsman in the stable, a
man named Turas. We were to watch for a time when Princess Kiara went riding,
and use a dart to drug her. If I brought the princess to King Jared, the man
promised that not only would the king keep me from hanging, but he would make
sure I had honor beyond measure." The assassin nearly wept in fear.
Tris wrestled
with his feelings at the ghost's casual malice. "He promised you wouldn't
hang because he was fairly sure you'd be killed in the
attempt. If he
promised you honor beyond measure, it's as a sacrifice to the Obsidian
King."
Tris could feel
the power radiating from the amulet as it searched for the assassin's ghost,
and began to draw the spirit into its red glow.
"Please,
m'lord! You promised!"
"So I
did." Tris was sorely tempted to leave the unrepentant assassin to his
fate. Tris stretched out his hand, focusing his power, and sent a blast of
energy toward the amulet. A red flare rose in answer. The onlookers gasped and
stepped back again, against the outer edges of the wardings.
Tris knew the
imprint of Arontala's power. Even at this distance, behind his wardings, he
could feel the pull of the Soulcatcher. Tris was braced for the red fire that
erupted from the amulet, as it had from the scrying orb at Westmarch and from
Alaine's amulet. Only this time, his shields held and the blue fire he sent in
answer slowly forced the red fire backward, until the flames consumed the
corpse and filled the greatroom with the stench of burning flesh.
"You
burned my body!" the ghost cried out. The red flames flared and faded,
leaving only a charred corpse.
"You won't
be needing it," Tris said, his thoughts elsewhere. That the brigand told
the truth about his past and about his mission Tris had no doubt, sensing the
spirit's complete lack of remorse. He deserves everything he was going to
get, and more, Tris thought bitterly, struggling and failing to find
neutrality. I could let him go to the Crone. It would be so easy to just
step aside...
In his mind, he
could hear Sister Taru's voice. Such power is reserved for the Lady alone, Taru
had warned. The Obsidian King became the judger of souls, and would have
made himself a god.
Swallowing
hard, Tris turned his attention to the presence he felt in the shadows, the
Aspect of the Crone, come to take Her prize. "Lady most powerful, giver
of souls and taker of breath, hear me." It was half prayer, half
supplication, and he knew he was on dangerous ground. There was no response,
but Tris sensed that the Crone was listening.
"This soul
fears his due," Tris said honestly. "And I'm a poor advocate, since
he has harmed my friend and would have killed my betrothed. But I gave him my
word that I'd ask for mercy if he told his story. And so I keep that word, and
know that it is given to the Lady alone to be the judge of souls. If there is a
way for him to go to an Aspect other than yourself, m'Lady, hear my
prayer."
Tris could feel
the presence of the Aspect, though his mortal eyes could not see it. Behind
him, he heard Gabriel whisper a blessing, and to the side he saw both Staden
and Hant make the sign of the Lady. The guards dropped to their knees.
I hear your
plea, Summoner, as I have heard his story. The rasping voice of the Crone sounded in his mind,
and his soul shrank within himself. I'll give him to the Aspect he deserves
the most.
The guards
cried out in panic, and Staden cursed in fear. A yawning darkness opened up,
like a potent stew of nightmares, revealing visions too terrifying to
comprehend. Tris knew, without doubt, that it was the Formless One who came for
the cringing assassin. The most terrible of the Aspects, this Face of the Lady
was known to the old religion, but disavowed now in the Winter Kingdoms. The
Formless One
reached out a shadowy tendril toward the shrieking spirit, and drew him into
its maw.
Then as quickly
as it came the Aspect was gone, and the ghost's cries abruptly fell silent.
Wearily, Tris
released his wardings and slumped forward, caught by Gabriel's strong grasp.
"By the
Whore!" Staden cried, looking at Tris with a mixture of fear and
admiration. "Never have I seen such a thing!"
"And never
again do I want to," added Hant fervently. Tris noted that it was the
first time he had seen Hant look rattled. The guards regained their feet,
looking at Tris as if he had just transformed into a dragon.
"I didn't
call the Lady," Tris said as Gabriel helped him to a seat. "I don't
presume to have that kind of power."
"We
heard," Gabriel said, pressing a mug of warm, mulled wine into Tris's
hand. Tris took a pinch of Carina's headache powder from a pouch at his belt
and added it to the wine, swirling it until it dissolved.
Hant turned to
the guardsmen. "You heard the assassin. Go find the man Turas. Strip him
of all his clothing and any jewelry. Search even his hair. Then give him to me.
We'll see if there are more rats to catch." He turned to Staden and bowed.
"If there are others, we'll find them, Your Highness."
Staden nodded
stiffly and Hant left with several of the guardsmen, leaving two soldiers
behind as an escort. The king looked from Tris to Gabriel. "It seems Jared
has a longer reach than I imagined," Staden mused.
"It's been a
generation since anyone's been
bold enough to strike at court. We'll make provision." He looked at Tris
soberly. "My complacency nearly cost your life. I won't make the same
mistake again."
Tris inclined
his head in acknowledgement. "We've placed you and your court in great
danger."
Staden
dismissed his comment with a gesture. "I'm too old to start running from
upstarts. You're welcome for so long as it serves your purpose." He
paused. "It's late. I suggest you find some rest, if you think you can
sleep."
"Thank
you, Your Majesty. But we have business with the Blood Council."
"May the
Bright Aspects ride with you," Staden said, raising a hand in blessing.
With the guards at his back, Staden strode from the greatroom, leaving Tris and
Gabriel alone.
"After all
this," Tris said, "I hope you're not expecting fireworks and some
show of power at the Blood Council. I'll be doing well if my head quits hurting
enough for me to ride."
"We have a
candlemark before we must leave," Gabriel said. "Mikhail will be
joining us. Between us, you'll have nothing to fear from any mortal."
Tris gave him a
sideways look and drained the last of his mulled wine. He stretched out on the
bench. "It's not the mortals I'm worried about."
CHAPTER THIRTEEN prev next contents
The horses' hooves crunched through the hardened snow as Tris, Gabriel, and Mikhail made
their way across the rolling foothills of Principality by moonlight. Even with
his heavy cloak, the bitter wind chilled Tris; neither of his companions was
affected by the cold. His horse snickered and fidgeted in protest against the
wind and the nearness of the vayash moru. Ice glinted on the road,
forcing them to ride slowly. Tris pulled his cloak closer around himself.
They left the
plank road just beyond the city gates. For a time, the road was wide,
hard-packed dirt well worn by wagons and travelers to the palace. Gabriel turned
from the main road, and the forest seemed to close in around them, blotting out
the moonlight and the distant silhouette of the high, sharp mountains. This was
an ancient forest. Tiis could sense the stirrings of primal magic, old and
powerful, in its shadowed depths. Nearby, a wolf howled. Another answered. Tris
shivered, though Gabriel and Mikhail were more than a match for any wolf. More
likely, he thought, the wolves were known to the vayash moru, and
announced their coming.
"Who
formed the Blood Council? How did it come to exist?" Tris asked Gabriel as
they rode, their shadows sharp on the snow in the moonlight. "I meant to
ask you earlier, but we got a bit busy."
"Four
hundred years ago, there was no Council, and no truce." Tris noticed that
his guide's breath did not steam in the bitter cold. "I was newly brought
across. I ran from the hunters, the mortals who broke into our day resting
places, seeking to destroy us. I saw my kind burned and dismembered. Many
mortals used that fear for their own purposes, and not all of the victims were vayasb
moru.
"In time,
my kind retaliated, and many mortals were killed. Others of my kind sought to
stop the killings by taking control, ruling behind the throne as Arontala seeks
to do. It couldn't go on. So the King of Eastmark brought together the rulers
of the Winter Kingdoms and made an offer to the vayasb moru.
"In
exchange for an end to the mortals' attacks, we agreed to stop trying to
control mortal kingdoms. He gave us Dark Haven, in the disputed lands between
Margolan, Eastmark, and Dhasson, as our sanctuary. Principality was not yet a
kingdom in its own right. In return, we formed the Blood Council, a ruling
body among ourselves, to punish
those of our kind who broke the truce, and to enforce the truce with honor.
"Then the
unexpected happened. The Dark Lady appeared to the King of Eastmark in a dream.
She told him that Dark Haven must have a mortal lord, one She would choose
herself, lest we grow to think ourselves as gods. Many of the elders of my kind
also dreamed that dream. The Dark Lady is our patroness. So the King of
Eastmark named the first Lord of Dark Haven, and Dark Haven has had a mortal
lord ever since."
Tris rode in
silence for a moment, thinking through the implications of Gabriel's story.
"You knew of Jonmarc even before I met you. And now he's the new Lord of
Dark Haven. How do you know him?"
"On the
eve of the Feast of the Departed, the Dark Lady appeared to me in a dream. She
asked me to guide Her chosen. I am Her most humble servant."
"And
Jonmarc is the Dark Lady's chosen?" Tris asked. "Does he know
this?"
Gabriel
chuckled. "My Mistress warned me that Jonmarc could be difficult. He will
sleep better if some things are revealed when the time is right." He
sobered. "But I fear that I may have failed in my duty. I didn't
anticipate what happened this evening."
"Jonmarc
is rather difficult to keep safe," Tris observed wryly. "What does
the Council require of me?"
"We go to
the Council tonight to seek their approval—or at least their neutrality—to
strike against Arontala."
"Why do we
need their approval? And why should they withhold it? Arontala is killing as
many vayash moru as he is mortals."
"That's
true. Yet there is a strict code of conduct among my kind, and infractions are
severely punished. Vayash moru are forbidden to wage war against each
other."
"Arontala's
already declared war on the vayash moru of Margolan."
"True
again. But there's a difference between having him found guilty by the Council
and executed as a traitor to our kind, and permitting vayash moru to
join with mortals to overthrow both Arontala and a mortal king. Such rules are
necessary to keep my kind from meddling overmuch in the affairs of mortals. You
can, no doubt, understand the need for that."
"So what
does the Council's ruling mean? If they decline, will you change your mind
about traveling with me to Margolan?"
Gabriel was
silent for a moment. "I've committed myself to seeing you on Margolan's
throne, my prince. And for that, I'll pay the necessary price. But we will be
more successful if we can gain the Council's approval for vayash moru to
strike with impunity against Jared's men. They destroy not only our kind, but
make Margolan a place of misery for mortals as well."
"Very
well. Now what of the Council themselves?"
"There are
five on the Council," Gabriel said. "Rafe is even older in the dark
gift than I. He comes from a noble family in Eastmark. In his mortal life, he
managed his holdings well. Rafe may prove to be an ally. He is swayed only by reason, and he
is given to logic.
"Riqua is
also of great age in the dark gift, though younger in it than Rafe. She was the
wife of a wealthy trader; even now, she drives a hard—but fair—bargain. She
also may be an ally. Then there is Astasia." His tone became carefully
neutral. "Astasia was the daughter of a wealthy landholder. She was
brought across against her will by a poorly chosen lover. Astasia is wild, and
she listens to her heart as often as she does to her head. She can be more
astute than one might guess, and she can be treacherous. But there are times
when she will choose wisely and stand by her choice. She must be handled
carefully.
"Finally,
there is Uri," said Gabriel. "In life he was a thief and a
highwayman, brought across as the penalty for a deal gone wrong. He found the
dark gift to be an asset to his pursuits, and his fortunes have been amassed
by questionable means. He. is dangerous. He alone among the Council is
skeptical of the truce. He questions why we, with greater speed and strength,
should not rule over mortals, as he believes our gift intends. When the truce
is broken, it will be most likely at the hands of one of Uri's brood."
Tris looked at
Gabriel. "You said there were five on the Council. You've only named
four." Gabriel turned toward Tris, his blue eyes unreadable. "I'm the
fifth member of the Council. I seek to preserve the truce."
Tris digested
that last piece of information slowly as they rode through the bitter night.
How much wealth could one
accumulate, over several lifetimes? And when, in the
accumulating, would material goods cease to matter? Yet even as he asked the
question, Tris could guess the answer. Wealth bought security, not just
baubles. Great wealth could assure privacy, buy off authorities, bend
problematic rules. Yes, the privileges of wealth might be very attractive to
the vayash moru, even though they were beyond partaking of many of its
indulgences.
He chanced a
look at Gabriel. The flaxen-haired vayash moru was handsome, appearing
to be in his third decade. Only his blue eyes disclosed his true age. Gabriel,
who never made any reference to his own lands, position or wealth, who seemed
to show up at the most opportune times, and who pledged his personal support to
overthrowing Jared. Just when I get some answers, I find out I wasn't asking
the right questions. He knew he would be thinking about the Blood Council
long after this evening was over. Assuming that he lived through the night.
Gabriel and
Mikhail turned their horses between the wrought-iron gates of an estate. Dark,
bare trees loomed over the long carriage road that led to an elegant stone
home. A sense of foreboding nagged at Tris, although the windows of the estate
glowed brightly with candlelight. From the shadows, grooms appeared without a
sound to take their horses. Tris's mount whinnied nervously. Tris shared the
horse's uneasiness.
The three men
dismounted and headed up the sweeping, grand stairway. Gabriel led the way.
Mikhail followed Tris, who had the strong sense that the group had been watched
from the time
their horses
became visible in the carriage drive. He stretched out his mage sense,
searching for signs of danger, but felt only the odd emptiness that signaled
the presence of vayash moru. That sense of emptiness was more
encompassing than he had ever felt it—broken neither by the warm tingle of a
living soul, nor the resonance of departed spirits. Tris assumed that meant
that the grand chateau teemed with vayash moru, and that the few he
might meet in the council chamber were not the only undead present.
It took all of
Tris's willpower to keep his mortal fear at bay. Although they encountered no
one as they walked down the long, dimly-lit hallway, something deep and primal
within Tris urged him to flee.
"We have
arrived." Gabriel swung open two wide, double doors. Inside, torches lit a
formal dining room decorated in the most current style. Rich brocade curtains
hung from the tall windows, completely covering the openings. A fireplace the
height and length of a tall man sat empty and unlit along one wall. Along the
walls, candles glittered in recesses. In the center of the room, a heavy
mahogany table with rich, Noorish inlay was circled by velvet-upholstered
chairs. The inlay was cunningly designed. For a mage, such complex patterns
could serve as the focal point for a working, or a way to calm the mind in
order to open oneself to power. It was said that some pieces could take a
single master craftsman a lifetime to complete. The oldest and most convoluted
of such pieces were prized by powerful mages for their help in producing
trance and focusing magic.
"My
fellows of the Blood Council," Gabriel said, making a low, formal bow.
"I present to you Prince Martris Drayke, son of Bricen of Margolan,
Summoner and mage-heir of Bava K'aa."
Tris stepped
forward at the introduction and made a ceremonial bow. "Most honored
members of the Blood Council, I bid you greetings."
Tris knew the vayasb
moru, with their sharp senses, could hear and smell the blood that pounded
in his chest. In the silences of their ride, Tris had searched for the right
phrases for this meeting. So many mortal pleasantries would not do. He could
hardly wish them continued good health and long life, he thought wryly, and he
hoped fervently Gabriel had not lied about the vayasb moru's ability to
read minds.
"We have
been awaiting you, Prince Drayke." The speaker was an angular man with
finely-chiseled features and precisely cropped sandy-colored hair. He had a
short, perfectly manicured beard and dark eyes that glittered with
intelligence. "I am Lord Rafe, speaker of the Council. We bid you
enter." Rafe gestured to the young man who stood behind him to close the
chamber doors, and Tris stifled a shudder at the sound of the latch.
Gabriel took a
seat to the right of Rafe, and Mikhail went to stand behind him. Tris noted
that the Council sat on the opposing side of the table. Tellingly, there were
no empty seats. It was clear that he had been invited to be seen, interviewed,
and possibly heard, but the offering of a seat at the table—both literally and
figuratively—was being withheld, at least for now.
I've had
mortals trying to kill me for half of the last year, Tris thought, drawing a deep breath and
remembering all of his court protocol. As long as I leave alive, it's a win.
He looked down the table from Rafe, trying to match the Council's members
to Gabriel's description. A woman who looked to be in her mid-fifties, with
elaborate, upswept dark blonde hair sat to Gabriel's right. Riqua, Tris
guessed, noting that the woman's gown was one that his mother, Queen Serae,
would have found quite acceptable for court. The design of the fabric and the
cut of the dress were of the most fashionable style. The rich brocade bodice
was daringly low, with a narrow waist and a full skirt that would accentuate
the vayash moru's preternatural gliding walk. Dark burgundy satin
heightened Riqua's pallor. The effect was beautiful and unsettling.
Behind Riqua
stood a younger woman with long blonde hair, dressed in a simple but elegant
gown, as if she had stopped by on her way to a court party. Tris noticed that
each of the Council members had a second with them, and wondered what service,
beyond errands, these attaches provided.
To Rafe's left
was a beautiful, dark-haired woman with chestnut-colored hair. She looked to be
no older than her mid-twenties, though her eyes told of centuries of
experience.
Astasia, Tris guessed. She met his eyes, simultaneously
taking his measure. While her figure was provocative and her face was
coquettish, her eyes were shrewd and calculating. She's used to getting what
she wants, Tris thought, unable to completely ignore her plunging
decolletage, and the full breasts it barely hid. A handsome young man with red
hair stood behind Astasia. While he had a pleasant face and a fit form, he
looked barely out of his teens. Consort? Tris wondered. Plaything? There
was a coldness to the young man's eyes when he met Tris's gaze that made him
wonder even further about what relationships vayash moru formed—or continued—after
death.
Next to Astasia
sat a man with hair as black as coal, and the dark eyes of a Nargi native.
Unlike the others there was no sign of fine breeding in his features. He was
good-looking in an unsavory way, and had an air about him of a man who spent
too much time in card parlors. His wine-colored doublet accentuated his broad
shoulders and stocky build, with an extravagantly cuffed white silk shirt that
spilled from beneath its sleeves. Gold glittered in the candlelight, on his
fingers, at his throat, and in the lobe of one ear. His dark eyes regarded Tris
with unabashed contempt. Uri, Tris thought, daring to meet the vayash
moru's gaze and not look away.
Behind Uri was
a young man whose beauty might even have surpassed Carroway's, marred only by a
cruel upturn of his full lips. Sinewy, clad in a form-fitting black velvet coat
and brocade pants, with a full frilled white lace collar and foppish, costly
lace cuffs, Uri's assistant reminded Tris of a poisonous lizard waiting to
strike.
"To what
do I attribute the honor of the Council's invitation?" Tris asked,
deciding to cut through the pleasantries.
Rafe inclined
his head slightly, as if he recognized and appreciated directness. "We
have heard much of you, Prince Drayke, both from Lord Gabriel, and from... others.
Already, your power as a Summoner
is becoming
legendary. They say you dispelled the revenants from the Ruune Videya."
"My
companions and I had been captured by slavers. It was necessary to
survive."
"Living is
vastly overrated," Uri commented with affected boredom, eliciting a cold
half-smile from the young man behind him and no response at all from the rest
of the Council.
"We have
also heard of your Court of Spirits," Rafe went on. "And while this
Council would question your authority to settle matters between vayash
moru, it is clear that your power is as formidable as it appears."
"I'm a
Summoner, heir to the power of my grandmother, Bava K'aa."
"Several
of the Council knew Bava K'aa," Gabriel said. "We remember her battle
against the Obsidian King, and the binding of the orb, Soulcatcher, in the
foundation of Dark Haven."
"That
worked well, didn't it?" Uri remarked.
"We have
convened at the request of Lord Gabriel," Rafe continued, ignoring Uri's
jibes. "The Blood Council determines what is law among the vayash moru of
the Winter Kingdoms. And it is we who punish transgressors, even noble
ones," he said, with a glance toward Gabriel, whose expression gave no
clue as to his thoughts.
"We are
aware of the usurpation of the crown of Margolan by Jared the Tyrant,"
Rafe went on. "We know he and his mage, Arontala, have broken the truce,
hunting down vayash moru."
"If you
know those things," Tris said, "then you understand why Jared must be
unseated and Arontala must be stopped."
"For four
hundred years," Rafe replied, "we of the Blood Council have stood
apart from mortal kingmaking. This was desired by the mortals, who feared we
might reign over them, and by the oldest and wisest among our own kind, who
knew the danger and the truth of that fear."
"If that
is the case," Tris challenged, "then look no further than Arontala.
Ten years ago, he tried— and failed—to gain power in Eastmark. Arontala pinned
my father, King Bricen, with his magic while Jared stabbed him. It was on
Jared's order that my family was murdered. Now, at Arontala's behest, Margolan
troops terrorize both vayash moru and mortals alike, destroying any who
dare to object."
"Yet you
don't come here tonight asking us to discipline one of our own, do you, Prince
Drayke?" It was Uri, whose mellifluous voice had a knife-edge just below
the surface. "You come requesting aid for your revolution, an endeavor
that will, in the end, be of greatest benefit to Margolan's mortal residents."
"There is
precedent," Gabriel responded with irritation. "Two hundred years
ago, when your own people of Nargi tried to drive our kind from cover and kill
them all, this Council gave its permission for vayash moru to defend
themselves and aid their mortal defenders."
"Nargi
hardly remains a welcoming place to our kind," Uri rejoined.
"The mass
burnings stopped in Nargi and have not resumed," Gabriel replied, leaning
forward. "There will always be unfortunate incidents, driven by mortal
fear and those who use that fear for their own greed. But what Jared of
Margolan is doing
goes beyond
'incidents.' I have traveled Margolan, and so has Mikhail. We've seen whole
villages burned at the stake, people's heads severed from their bodies, left on
a pile with a warning sign that said, 'Thus so to all blood stealers.'"
Out of the
corner of his eye, Tris saw in Riqua's expression a shadow of remembered fear.
Tris felt his
gorge rise at the description, nauseated at Jared's cruelty, shamed by the
stain it brought on the memory of his father and the honor of his family name.
Unbidden, the images of the dark sending—and the fate it threatened for Gabriel
and Mikhail—rushed to mind and he forced the nightmare vision away.
"What do
you seek, Prince Drayke?" Astasia purred, and Tris sensed the danger in
her voice. "Do you wish to recruit vayash moru as killing machines
for your army? Send us by night to make Jared's soldiers vanish in the
darkness?" She paused, shifting slightly in her seat, a move Tris was sure
was calculated to better display her figure. "What would become of our kind,
after you take the throne—assuming that you can? Will you protect us, you—a
boy-king and newly minted mage?"
She was being
deliberately provocative, both in manner and in words. He struggled with his
emotions to avoid giving her the victory she sought. "I'm the only
surviving direct heir of King Bricen, other than Jared the traitor," Tris
said, keeping his voice carefully neutral. "I realize that I'm young— both
in years and in mage training. But my power is strong. Even the Sisterhood
couldn't dispel the wraiths of the Ruune Videya. But I did. As for my age—what
is the alternative? Should I live in exile for a decade or two while those in
Margolan—both living and undead—are slaughtered and oppressed by Jared and his
mage?"
He looked at
each Council member in turn. "At the Hawthorn Moon, Arontala will awaken
the Obsidian King from his exile in Soulcatcher, and free him from his prison.
The Sisterhood believes he's powerful enough to do this.
"When that
happens, the Obsidian King will possess Arontala's body, infusing him with his
power. Think of it. A dark Summoner of immense power, combined with the power
of a Fire Clan mage in an immortal's body. Who'll stop him then? Who will dare
to stand against him?"
Uri leaned
forward, his dark eyes glittering. "Perhaps it's as it should be," he
baited, watching Tris closely. "Perhaps the age of mortals is at an end.
Perhaps the Obsidian King's rising is an omen, that the age of Those Who Walk
the Night is come at last. After all, I've been told that the new Lord of Dark
Haven may not even live to see his holdings. Perhaps that's an omen, too."
Tris felt his
temper rise, and he thought he saw a glint of anger in Gabriel's eyes as well.
Mikhail's posture made his anger clear, though he said nothing.
"You speak
rubbish," denounced Riqua sharply, targeting Uri with her ire. "I
remember before the truce. We all remember what it was to be hunted, to live
off the blood of rats because we dared not venture out to find livestock or
human criminals to feed our hunger. I don't want to go back to those
days."
"No one
wishes to survive such a purge again," replied Rafe carefully. "But we have yet to hear from Prince Drayke what
he proposes." Rafe turned his attention to Tris. "Forgive my stating
the obvious, but your cause—however noble—seems unlikely to succeed. What do
you offer to offset the risk of our backing should you fail?"
"If I
fail, I'll be in no position to offer anything, as I'll be food for the
Obsidian King," Tris replied, a morbid smile tugging at the corners of his
mouth. "I know my challenge to Jared's throne—and Arontala's power—is up
against steep odds. But there's no one else to raise a challenge, no one else
who can legitimately take the throne, no one else with a Summoner's power to
challenge Arontala and the Obsidian King. I'm the only chance you've got."
Tris hoped he appeared as coolly confident as Vahanian in this high stakes
bluff.
"I don't
ask for your help en masse; I ask only that the Council permit the vayash
moru of Margolan—as individuals—to follow their hearts. Let them act
against Jared and his followers without fear of the Council's judgment. Let
them protect themselves and their kin."
"A mortal,
asking us to loose the vengeance of our kind against other mortals?" Rafe
asked, watching Tris closely. "Is that what you really want? Do you think
you can stop that force once it's turned loose?"
"I don't
know. But as it is the truce will shatter one day. The vayash moru will
take their vengeance against all mortals, innocent and guilty, and the bloodshed
won't end at Margolan's borders. Reprisal will follow reprisal. You'll see your
precious truce dissolve, and all hope of peace with it. x\nd behind it all will
be the Obsidian King, growing bloated on the blood, increasing his power in an
immortal body with no one to challenge him—perhaps for generations."
"I've
already made my choice," said Gabriel, rising from his seat. "I am
resolved to see Martris Drayke on the throne of Margolan, or be destroyed in
the attempt."
Mikhail stepped
forward. "And I, likewise," he said, raising his head to meet the
gaze of the Council. "I served King Hotten two centuries ago. Now, my
kingdom and my people require my service once again. I stand with Lord Gabriel
and Prince Drayke."
Rafe looked at
the three men in silence for a moment. "You realize that you are in
defiance of the Council's truce, for which the penalty is destruction?"
Gabriel
returned his stare. "We're within Council chambers, within the borders of
my lands, surrounded by my brood. Neither you nor the Council can act against
us here. To do so would trigger reprisals, both from my family and from the
King of Principality. Either way, the truce ends. Prince Drayke has spoken
truly. The only way to preserve our freedom to move safely among mortals is to
give our support to Martris Drayke, and trust the Dark Lady that She will give
her blessing in our endeavor."
Rafe stood.
"The Council will adjourn to deliberate. Lord Gabriel, you will join
us," he said. Mikhail moved to stand beside Tris. The Council filed from
the room, leaving their seconds behind. Tris was immeasurably glad for
Mikhail's company.
"So it's
really true what they say, that you can speak with the spirits?" asked the
blonde woman who stood behind Riqua. "I'm Elana. She held out out a
fine-boned, ice-cold hand in greeting.
"Yes, it's
true," Tris said, taken aback at the jarring incongruity between the
formality of the Council meeting and this casual small talk.
"I
remember Bava K'aa," said Rafe's second. He had the look of a scholar or a
priest, with eyes tired from too much reading in dim light. Tris guessed that
even in life, the young man had been pale from time spent indoors. "My
name is Tamaq. I fought against the Obsidian King in his first rising,"
"Then the
Council permitted intervention before?" Tris asked.
Tamaq shook his
head. "I was mortal at the time," he said sadly. "I would have
died on the battlefield, had not Rafe found me and brought me across."
There's more
that's not being said, Tris thought. The Council maintains its neutrality, but what, then,
was Rafe doing harvesting the battlefield on the side opposed to the Obsidian
King?
More to the
point, Tris wondered, does
any of this matter once you're no longer afraid of death? When you're able to
outlive kings and petty mortal politics, wealthy enough to buy your safety,
superior in abilities to outmaneuver all but the luckiest or most concerted
efforts against you, why should you care?
The real
question, Tris realized, was not whether he could sway the Council to support
his quest for the throne. The true question was why they should care at all.
"I'm more
interested in this new Lord of Dark Haven." The speaker was the beautiful
young man who stood behind Uri. "Is it really the smuggler Vahanian—the
one with the royal death warrant in Eastmark?"
"Leave it
alone, Malesh." The warning came from Astasia's second.
Malesh regarded
the challenge with a smirk. "Go back to bed, Cailan. Stay out of the
discussion, and I won't feel obliged to damage anything your mistress plays
with."
"I'll let
Jonmarc make his own introductions," Tris said, feeling distaste for
Malesh. "My business tonight is with the Council."
Elana smiled at
him and licked her lips. A shudder ran down Tris's spine. Elana was quite
beautiful, even by mortal standards. "I'm told you announced your
betrothal tonight," she said in a coquettish voice that, together with her
posture, gave Tris to understand she considered him fair game.
"Congratulations, Prince Drayke." She slid a half step closer.
"You're
the Lord of the Dead and Undead," she said teasingly. "And while a
mortal bride may be necessary for heirs, do consider the alternatives once that
obligation has been fulfilled." She gave a look that left nothing to his
imagination.
Tris blushed,
seeing in Elana's eyes a spark of triumph. Even dead, she was a damnably
attractive woman, and while her offer had no appeal to him, it was impossible
to completely ignore her sensuality. He made a courteous bow.
"I'm
flattered, m'lady, but this betrothal is an affair of the heart. I'm spoken
for."
Elana gave him
a knowing smile. "In fifty years, or in one hundred, my offer will remain
the same, and my gifts to match. Can your mortal lover say the same?"
"That's
enough, Elana," Mikhail said firmly.
Tris met
Elana's eyes. "I know how transient this mortal body is, and how brightly
the spirit glows within. It's true that our bodies fade and die, but a Summoner
can extend that union beyond death. On the spirit plain, there is no fading,
and no dying. Even vayash moru are not eternal."
Something in
his words touched a nerve, Tris thought with satisfaction, or perhaps, Elana
was unused to being spurned. Pouting, she withdrew to the edge of the group,
turning her conversation to Cailan instead.
Malesh took the
opening. "It will be most interesting to have a lord once again in Dark
Haven," he said, with a dangerously smooth tone. "Though it is said
that the Dark Lady Herself chooses, we have had some... turnover... in the
lords of late. I hope the hand of the Lady rests on Lord Vahanian." Malesh's
voice only thinly veiled his malice. "It sounds like he'll be a breath of
fresh air," he added, watching Tris closely.
He knows about
the poisoning, Tris thought,
forcing down his anger at Malesh's baiting. And if the knife hadn't been
meant for me, I'd wonder if he or his master had a hand in it.
"I'll pass
along your sentiments to Lord Vahanian," Tris replied carefully.
The doors
opened and the Council filed back in. Mikhail and the others returned to their
places. Tris felt as if he had just run a very dangerous gauntlet.
He looked at
Gabriel, but he could read nothing in the vayash moru's face.
"The
Council has reached its decision," Rafe said, when the others took their
seats. Tris glanced at the Council members. Gabriel appeared as tense as Tris had
ever seen him. Riqua looked angry. Uri was positively furious, with a barely
controlled rage that roiled behind his dark eyes as he looked away from the others.
Astasia seemed annoyed, her beautiful features clouded by a dark mood. Rafe
betrayed little, but Tris thought the Council spokesman looked tired.
"After
much discussion, it is the will of,, the Council that we rule in favor of
Prince Drayke, permitting the participation by individual vayash moru in
the matter of the Usurper on the basis of conscience," Rafe declared.
"One more
example of why the truce is a flawed, idealistic mirage," muttered Uri.
Rafe ignored
Uri's interruption. "Prince Drayke, do not regard this as an endorsement
by the Blood Council. We agree that Foor Arontala must be removed, and that
your efforts may present the best hope of doing so. But be clear on this
point—it is to preserve our freedom that we act, not out of interest in any
mortal kingdom."
Tris gave a
shallow bow. "I'm grateful to the Council for your ruling. I give you my
pledge that should I live to take the throne of Margolan, I will restore the
truce and bring to justice those mortals who have broken it in malice."
"If you live to take the throne," Uri
repeated quietly. The very stillness of his voice chilled Tris. "Right
now, Prince Drayke, that is a very large 'if.'"
CHAPTER FOURTEEN prev next contents
Carina watched
The notches on the candle burn down as the night wore
on. It was well past
The partygoers had fled after the
assassination attempt. Carina, Kiara,
Taru, and
Carina looked over to where Jonmarc lay.
Although he was breathing, his body was unnaturally still. He was much paler
than usual, and where they had stripped away his shirt and waistcoat, a large
bandage covered the wound left by the knife. It took all of Carina's willpower
to force back tears. Once again, someone she cared about was going to die, and
once again, it would be her fault. Knowing that Jonmarc was in love with her
only made it that much worse. This was exactly what she'd feared if she let
herself care about someone again. And while she had berated herself for
responding to Jonmarc's advances, admitting those feelings to herself scared
her even more. A healer can't do her job if she lets feelings get in the
way, Carina told herself. I'm no good to anyone if I can't heal. What if
Tris can't win back the throne, can't stop Arontala, because I'm not able to
heal Jonmarc? The entire fate of the Winter Kingdoms is riding on this, and I'm
failing the test. But as frightening as that thought was, there was
another, even more terrifying fear that loomed in the back of her mind, one she
refused to allow herself to dwell on.
What if I've returned to
"Maybe you should rest," Kiara said
gently, laying a hand on Carina's shoulder.
Carina shook her head stubbornly. "No.
Not yet. We don't know how much time we have."
Kiara frowned. "Tris bound Jonmarc's
spirit to his body. He set the magic to keep Jonmarc's heart
and lungs working. Perhaps by morning the
poison will begin to wear off. You said yourself you don't know how long it
will last."
Carina brushed back a strand of dark hair and
secured it behind her ear. "I don't know if it will wear off at all,"
she said tiredly. "That's what scares me. Do you remember what I told you
about Maynard, the man who led the caravan we traveled with? He used to take a
bit of Mussa poison each day to build up a tolerance, so that he would be
harder to kill. I healed him once. I could feel the poison in his body, in his
muscles. It didn't wear off—it just took a much stronger dose to really hurt him."
"The body is a complex set of humours.
Breath and blood are part of it, but not all. I don't know if Tris compensated
for everything—if he even could—or if that's in the hand of the Lady herself.
The longer this lasts, the more damage there could be."
Sister Taru walked over to join them,
checking on Vahanian as she passed.
"He's asleep," Taru said, and took
a seat beside Carina. "As far as I can tell, he's in no pain. But you're
correct—the magic Tris set won't hold indefinitely. Jonmarc will need
nourishment. Even if we could magic a way to sustain him, if we can't heal him,
Tris will be obliged to free his spirit. A man like Jonmarc wouldn't want to
remain like this forever."
"I haven't had any luck with what I've
tried so far. I can't heal around the poison; there's too much of it in his
blood. The wormroot has begun to wear off—it doesn't last as long in a
non-mage, and all it did was make him throw up. It isn't nearly the problem it
is when I'm healing Tris. It's the other poison that worries me."
Carina balled her fist in frustration.
"So far, none of the antidotes I've tried have worked. From what Royster
could find in his books, it's closest to snake venom, but I don't know from
which snake. If I had to bet, it would be one Royster found that is native to
Trevath, down on the southern plains. It's a sandsnake, and it kills with one
bite. But there's no antidote—there isn't time for one. Sweet Chenne— you saw
how quickly it took him."
Carina fiddled nervously with the pendant
that hung around her neck. "What I need is a filter," she said.
"If there were a way I could isolate the poison and drain it off—"
"Can you do that?" Kiara asked
worriedly.
Carina grimaced. "Taru and I tried two
candle-marks ago, when you went to see if Tris was back yet. I hoped that if I
could pull the poison away from Jonmarc, Taru could purify it in the Flow, a
big river of magic energy."
"The Flow is all that and more,"
said Taru, "but my power isn't sufficient to use the Flow in that way, and
we dared not try it with the unknown poison unless we could make it work with
the wormroot. We couldn't."
Royster looked up suddenly, as if he only
just heard the conversation. "Did you say, 'filter?'" he asked.
Carina nodded. Kiara pressed a mug of tea
into her hands, and she drank the warm liquid mechanically, utterly exhausted. Jonmarc's
going to die and it's going to be my failure, Carina thought. Just like
Ric.
"A filter," Royster repeated,
humming a little ditty to himself. "What do you make a filter from, I
wonder?" He mused aloud, reaching from one book to another to flip pages.
"Cheesecloth."
"It's not on the outside of his
body," Carina protested.
"A fine metal strainer."
"Too big, and we can't get to the
poison, it's in his blood," said Kiara.
"Rock."
"Rock?"
Royster nodded without looking up. "Ever
been in a cave? Water filters down through rock. So do other things. Not just
any rock..." He flipped pages, then glanced up at Carina and smiled.
"Turquoise," he said, eying the
large, flat stone in Carina's necklace, "and onyx. Healing stones. Stones
to remove impurities from the body. Ward off poison. Filter."
Carina fumbled with the clasp on her
necklace, and Kiara reached over to help. "Do you really think it will
work?" she asked.
"If it doesn't, you're no worse off than
you are now."
They all turned as the door opened behind them, and
Tris entered. Carina thought he looked worried and exhausted, but Kiara
brightened at his return.
"Looks like Gabriel made good on his
promise not to let them eat you," Kiara joked wearily. Tris bent to kiss
the top of her head and sat down next to her.
"Your meeting with the Blood Council—was
it successful?" Carroway asked. Near the fireplace,
Tris shrugged. "Gabriel thought so.
We've won their neutrality, and with that group, I guess that's a lot." He
looked at Vahanian. "How is Jonmarc?"
Carina peered over Royster's shoulder at a
thick, old tome. Her necklace lay on the book and they were both noting
passages in the text. Carina looked up. "No better. Royster thinks we
might be able to filter out the poisons with the gemstones, but I don't want to
risk it alone. Taru can lend me power and help with deep healing, but she can't
anchor Jonmarc's spirit. You can. He's fading. I need your help."
"Let's see what you've got."
Carina carried over the gemstones that
Royster had pried from their setting. There was a large, flat piece of
turquoise and a smaller, black onyx disk. "If Royster is right, I should
be able to pull the poison through the stone. If we can do that, then I can
heal the other damage. Right now, I can't get through the poison."
"Let's do it," Tris said, moving to
sit beside Vahanian. Carina moved a stool to the other side, and nodded to
Tris. He gripped Vahanian's arm with his right hand and let himself slip onto
the Plains of Spirit.
The soulbond he had set was still in place,
but despite his intervention, the blue thread of Vahanian's life was growing
dimmer. Tris focused his power on sustaining that glow, something Taru could
not do. Carina removed the bandage from the wound on Vahanian's chest. It
looked red and sore, proof that the poison blocked Carina's ability to heal.
Carina bit her lip as she slid the turquoise
disk over the wound and laid the piece of onyx beside it. Then she placed her
fingertips around the edge of the two stones with her palm raised and closed
her eyes in concentration.
For a moment, nothing happened. Then Tris
felt a stirring in the currents of power, as if distant clouds on the horizon
were becoming lighter. He looked at the stones beneath Carina's hand and saw
beads of a black, vile-looking ichor beginning to ooze up through the smooth
surface of the stones. As the ichor seeped through the stone, a tremor
shuddered through Vahanian's body. It grew stronger, until he was shivering so
hard that Tris and Kiara had to grab him by the shoulders to keep him still
enough for Carina to hold the stones in place.
"It's working!" Kiara cried.
"Keep going, Carina. It's working!"
With agonizing slowness, bead after bead of the
thick, dark liquid struggled through the stone. Taru rushed to contain the
ichor in a small vial from Carina's bag, taking care not to touch it with her
bare skin. Finally, when nearly a quarter dram of ichor had been extracted, no
more beads rose from the stone. Carina slumped in exhaustion.
Tris retreated to his mage sense and reached
for Vahanian on the spirit plain. There was a definite clearing, Tris thought,
as if a heavy fog had lifted. He opened his eyes to see Carina, her eyes bright
with tears, with a look of triumph. "We did it! The poison is gone.
Without it, he should be able to move again. Do we dare see if he can breathe
on his own?"
Tris nodded and closed his eyes, following
the traces of his magic. With a silent prayer to the Lady, he loosed the spell
that kept Vahanian's heartbeat and breathing functioning. Vahanian gasped
sharply, and his whole body convulsed. He shuddered, then drew another deep
gasp, and his fingers flexed. After a ragged breath, he opened his eyes.
Vahanian blinked several times.
"Hooray!"
"Huzzah!" Carroway chimed in from
the other side of the room. Kiara and Taru clapped their approval.
Tris laid a hand on Vahanian's uninjured
shoulder. "Glad you're back. And thank you," Tris said soberly.
"If you hadn't gotten between me and that knife, I'd be dead."
Vahanian gave a tired, lopsided smile.
"It's what I do best," he rasped, and Carina brought him a glass of
water, helping him sit to drink. He laid back, his struggle clear in his face.
"I could hear most of what went on, but I couldn't do a damn thing about
it." He looked at Tris. "I don't know how you did it, but thank
you."
Vahanian glanced at Carina, who hastily
dabbed at the corners of her eyes, and he held out his hand to her. "Thank
you, too."
Carina squeezed Vahanian's hand. "The
next time I let you escort me to a fancy ball, I'm going to wear red so the
blood doesn't show." Vahanian realized she still wore the ruined ball gown
from the night before.
"Tris's coronation. You'll look lovely
in red," Vahanian murmured, closing his eyes.
Carina blushed. "All right," she
said, resuming her best healer's tone. "We've all had a rough night. I'll
stay 'til dawn. Whoever is eager for an early morning can take a shift, but
let's get some sleep."
Carina watched the others file from the room,
and then took the two cloaks Tris and Taru had left near the door. She wrapped
one around herself as she dragged a chair near the fire. She slipped the other
cloak over Vahanian, who was already asleep.
Carina meant to settle in for her watch, but she
found that the nervous energy from the evening wouldn't let her relax. So she
paced, with the cloak wrapped around her, as the fire burned down. On one hand,
she felt relief. Tris's quest wouldn't fail because of her. Jonmarc was alive.
She hadn't let him down the way she'd failed Ric. Despite her best efforts to
keep Jonmarc at a distance, he was undeterred in pursuing her. She was as
flattered as she was uneasy at his pursuit. In the caravan, she'd been
impressed by his ability as a fighter, but even more by his loyalty, although
what he did was often at odds with his carefully maintained appearance of not
giving a damn about anything. Even that intrigued her. While Jonmarc looked
nothing like Ric, that rebelliousness was a characteristic they shared, as was
Jonmarc's willingness to break the rules for a good cause, and his foolhardy
courage.
She remembered how it felt to dance with
Jonmarc at
The odds of any of them living through this
quest were very slim, she knew, even if they were able to win their goal. Tris
and Kiara seemed to have found the courage to acknowledge their feelings for
one another despite those odds. Perhaps their love was stronger because it
might be wrested away at any moment. Jonmarc already knew what it was to lose a
lover to fate, and yet he had decided to act on his feelings. Here she was, too
fearful to make the commitment, more afraid of losing him than of never
knowing where their story might lead, despairing over either alternative. When
they reached Principality, Jonmarc had decided his future, whether to take his
reward and go back to the river, or to throw in his lot with Tris and the
others. Carina knew that the same moment of decision would come for her in
matters of the heart. She hoped that when it did, her courage wouldn't fail
her.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN prev next contents
Despite the
assassination attempt on Tris, Staden's court resumed its
merrymaking in short course. Festival days were filled with jousts and
entertainment, and glittering banquets and feasts kept most of the courtiers
awake until dawn. Winter fell much harder on Principality than on the palace cities
in either Isencroft or Margolan. Despite themselves, Tris and his friends could
not resist the unfamiliar spectacles.
"I thought I knew what winter was in
Isencroft, but the cold here is something completely different!" Kiara
exclaimed, her breath steaming in the bitterly cold air. Carina nodded, almost
completely buried in a borrowed fur coat that hid everything but her eyes.
"I'd forgotten what Principality winters were like. That's one reason the
merc troops winter here—the snow is too deep for anyone to attack them, and
they're likely to get a decent rest!"
Vahanian shrugged, seemingly unconcerned with
the cold. He wore a plain coat of wolf hide, with the leather side out and the
fur turned in. What the cloak lacked in opulence, Tris bet it made up for in
warmth. "Eastmark's worse. The army has to clear away enough snow to
practice. Come spring, the floor of the practice field can be packed snow
waist-high above the real ground."
"Mother always said that Isencroft's
winter was Eastmark's high summer," Kiara chuckled. "And while she
made me bundle up when I was a child, I always marveled that she went about
with just a woven wrap most of the time."
Tris laughed. "By comparison,
Shekerishet must seem like endless summer. We're further south than any of
this, even the Borderlands. Our snows get deep, but not for most of the winter.
I don't ever remember it getting quite this cold! Carroway looks like he's
frozen solid." He looked toward where the bard played his lute with the
other minstrels. Even with short gloves that left their fingers exposed, the
musicians looked uncomfortably cold. They stood as close to the fire as they
could without damaging their instruments.
"When all this is over, I want to buy
one of those sleighs and have it sent to father," Kiara said, with a
glance toward the large, graceful troikas that slid across the snow
effortlessly behind a team of massive horses. Come winter, Principality nobles
traded their carriages for ornately decorated sleighs, and even the merchants
replaced the wheels on their wagons with runners. "But for now, let's beg
another ride!"
Tris smiled as Kiara left them to find an
accommodating driver. All around them, sleighs coursed
through the deep snow, and men raced each
other with snowshoes over thigh-deep drifts. Daredevils skied down steep
slopes, and artists carved complex figures from huge blocks of ice. Groups of
soldiers staged mock battles with armaments of snow and ice. The children
followed suit; no one was safe from pelting snowballs. Huge bonfires lit the
long nights, providing warmth against the bitter cold and making the icy
decorations sparkle like the gems for which Principality was famous. All around
them, nobles and villagers took comfort in a reminder of light and life during
winter's darkest days.
"I don't think I've ever seen so many
people dressed in fur," Tris commented. Women snuggled beneath heavy fur
coats and blankets in their sleighs; men wore thick fur hats. Carroway confided
that it was almost impossible to sing outside for more than a brief chorus or
two without his lungs burning and his head pounding from the chill.
"Fur is only one way to stay warm,"
Vahanian said with a grin. He produced a small flask from a pocket, downing a
gulp. Even from a distance, Tris could smell the potent liquor. The chill was a
boon to the vendors who hawked wassail, mulled wine, and steaming mugs of warm
ale. The crowd, warmed by the alcohol, did not seem to mind the cold.
"Were you watching?" Soterius puffed as
he and Harrtuck trudged toward them through the snow. They came from the
direction of the mock battle, and their hands and faces were reddened from the
cold. "We trounced the other side! A complete rout!"
"Glad to see you've gotten into the
festival spirit." Carina laughed, but Tris could see that the joviality
did not reach her eyes. As guests of the king, Tris and the others felt obliged
to visibly participate in the festivities. But the guards that surrounded them
were a constant reminder of the danger. Vahanian in particular chafed at having
a bodyguard. Knowing that even here Jared was a threat overshadowed the party
spirit. While Tris and his friends could not help enjoying the opulence and
beauty of the festival, the companions often withdrew early from the parties,
keeping their own company in one of the upstairs rooms, as they had on the
road. This night was an exception.
As darkness fell on the longest night of the
year, the vayash moru joined the festival. They moved through the crowd
unconcerned with the bitter cold; they wore no greatcloaks. No breath steamed
as the vayash morn spoke. They kept their distance from the bonfires,
and were indifferent to the carts that sold food and ale. Ghosts milled among
the partygoers. They were dressed in fashions ranging over several hundred years.
They seemed drawn by the music and the crowd. The spirit of one young man had
the power to move objects, and he enjoyed playing pranks on festival goers who
had had too much ale, deliberately moving their tankards and pulling out their
chairs from beneath them. A few of the ghosts looked on with bittersweet
longing from the edges, swaying with the tempo of the minstrels' ballads. One
young couple, invisible to all but Tris, lingered just behind Carroway. They
held hands, lost in the music. All the spirits, visible or not,
bowed as Tris passed them, paying their respects to the Lord of the Dead.
Vahanian nodded toward the other side of the
courtyard. "Sahila's back," he said with a glance toward the refugee
spokesman, jarring Tris from his thoughts. "I don't think he's here for
the sleigh rides."
Tris sobered. "Probably not. Staden and
I sent blankets and provisions to the refugee camps, but it's still going to be
a miserable winter for them. There's no way to get them enough shelter, even
with the old army tents we found. I think Sahila's been making the rounds of
the merc troops, using some of the gold I gave him to haggle with them for
their worn out tarpaulins and field shelters. Since we've been paying gold to
hire the troops' services, it seems the mercs are buying new equipment for the
spring march. Sahila's a tough bargainer. He's managed to get wagon loads of
castoffs that're better than what his people had before."
Tris received reports now almost nightly from
Sahila and the refugees. So many soldiers had deserted from Jared's army that
the remaining loyalists had begun capturing men and boys from the villages and
conscripting them into service, threatening to destroy their families and
villages if they refused. One village had hidden their boys in a secret cellar
under a barn, but the soldiers burned the barn in retaliation for the
villagers' refusal to give up their sons. The boys had perished, roasted alive
in their hiding place. More than one of the mothers had thrown herself on the
flaming heap, mad with grief.
It was no longer an isolated incident to hear
of Jared's troops harvesting the battlefields, taking away the wounded and
dying from both sides of the conflict. The wounded would be used to create more
ashtenerath, while Arontala would trap the dying men's souls for his Orb
to feed the Obsidian King, and his blood magic would grow stronger on their
pain and death.
One refugee, a servant Tris remembered from
Shekerishet's kitchen staff, recounted the death toll of Jared's lusts. Many of
the servants in the palace served as whole families, in positions of honor that
were handed down from generation to generation. Bricen had prided himself on
his generosity to the servants, who ate nearly as well as the nobles and who
received more than adequate clothing and shelter. Bricen's servants were
freemen, and the king's openhandedness created bonds of loyalty far stronger
than any indenture. Tris knew first-hand that the servants recognized Jared's
brutality, and that Jared availed himself of every young girl who came to serve
in the castle. Nearly every family had suffered from Jared's vile tempers, his
willingness to thrash any servant who displeased him, and his brutality toward
the palace animals.
But now, according to the former servant, the
girls Jared called for did not return. Their bodies were found in the tunnels
beneath the garderobe, or buried behind the barracks. Jared believed himself to
be above any law or precedent. The retelling of his atrocities, both from
refugees and from ghosts, unsettled even Gabriel and Mikhail. Once again, Tris
wondered whether the kingdom would survive Jared, and what it would require of
him to put things right should he
live through his bid for the throne.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN prev next contents
A fortnight
after Winterstide, Tris and Carina returned to the citadel of the
Sisterhood. Carina did her best to cover her concern, but Tris could tell that
she was worried. After his close call during the last training session, he
shared her apprehension.
Vahanian recovered from the assassin's attack more
slowly than Carina would have liked, a side effect of the poison. Royster could
find no other recorded instances of survival from the poison that was used, so
he eagerly wrote up the process by which Carina and Tris were able to save
Vahanian. Tris took his leave of Kiara with regret. As a betrothal token and a
gift for Kiara's birthday later that same month, Tris had a ring made for her
of Margolan gold. It bore his crest as Bricen's second son set with precious
stones from his portion of the reward Staden gave them for
Kiara worried more about Tris's return to
training when he and Carina refused to share details, and so Tris finally told
her about
Despite Taru's healing, those images still
haunted his dreams. Though they lacked the certainty of the sendings, the
nightmares woke him more often than he cared to admit, bathed in sweat, his
heart thudding. The memory of those dreams pushed him to master his power. And
while Tris saw his growing skills as a way to assure his friends' survival, he
told no one that he held very little hope of surviving the confrontation
himself.
It was the first month of the new year, and
Principality lay under heavy snow. Tris, who thought that he was colder at
Winterstide than ever before in his life, discovered that the gray weeks of the
Birth Month were colder still. He shivered despite his heavy cloak, mentally
calculating just how much further south Shekerishet was, and what the weather
there might be at this season. The heavy gray skies and the frigid wind seemed
to dampen everyone's mood now that the festivities were over. Even the
gathering the night before with Tris and his friends seemed subdued, despite
Carroway's bawdy songs and good-natured joking. As the days slipped by, the
reality of their quest loomed. There was very little time left for preparation.
At the citadel, even Taru seemed reserved
when she met their carriage. She led Tris and Carina back to the same suite of
rooms, where a platter of cold meat and cheese awaited them after their
journey, and a pot of tea whistled on the hearth.
"How are things with Landis in
charge?" Carina asked as she shook the snow from her cloak and hung it
near the fire to dry.
"Landis is an able administrator—I've
never doubted that. But her focus is on the present, not the future, as
Tris realized that Taru's close relationship
with
Taru smiled. "Thank you. But I
understand—you had a few other things on your mind at the time." She
paused. "I don't have your power with spirits, but I can sense
"Would you like me to try?" Tris
asked as he hung his cloak near Carina's and shook the last of the snow from
his boots.
"I'd be grateful if you would."
"Let's do it now—I may not be in such
good shape later." He raised his hand and closed his eyes, stretching out
along the Plains of Spirit.
"We miss you," Taru said to the
spirit.
"And what do you believe? You were
closer to her than anyone except Grayson."
"How will Landis's opinion of
Grandmother affect my training?"
Tris thought about the assassin at Staden's
palace, and his charge to attack Kiara had he survived the attempt on Tris's
life. "He already has."
"Landis isn't as scrupulous about such
things as I was,"
Tris stiffened. "I'm not afraid to die. But
my friends aren't game pieces. They're not expendable. I don't accept that as
the only way to win. If I did, how would I be any different from Arontala?"
"I agree," the ghost replied.
"But Landis thinks differently. Your trials may resemble the sendings more
than you care to think. Prepare yourself."
Tris swallowed hard. "I
understand," he said, avoiding Carina's gaze as the healer looked at him
questioningly. "Would you go to your rest?"
"Thank you," Tris said. He let the
spirit fade, knowing that
Taru sighed. "I'm afraid I agree with
Elam's opinion of Landis. She has a tendency to interpret what is 'light' and
what is 'dark' by what profits her own viewpoint. And she wants the destruction
of the Obsidian King, no matter
what."
"How can you send Tris into training
knowing that?" Carina demanded.
"Because without the training, I won't
be strong enough to find that other alternative," Tris said quietly.
"The stronger I am, the more choices I'll have, and the more chance
there'll be for everyone else."
Taru nodded. "I agree." She managed
a smile. "Enough of this talk. Eat something, and get some rest. Tomorrow
morning, we start your new lessons. You'll have over a week to train—and
recover. Late next week you'll face another trial. This one will use avatars.
And it will be warded."
Tris hoped his nervousness did not show in
his eyes. "I'll be ready."
Tris's new battle
trainer Laisren, a vayash moru hand-picked by Gabriel for
unquestionable loyalty, pushed Tris's fighting skills and reaction time to
their limits. It was unsettling to fight an opponent that could regenerate from
everything except all-consuming fire, decapitation, and a clean strike through
the heart; Tris found that his nightmares now had a whole new quality of
realism. The worst of the wounds from their skirmishes were healed, but the
scars remained to keep the lessons fresh in his mind.
Sometimes, Laisren wore a null magic charm,
forcing Tris to hold his own with fighting skills alone. The null amulet
dampened his magic, pushing it out of reach. Fortunately, the charm's
influence was limited and its power dropped off
completely outside of the immediate presence
of its wearer.
When Tris wasn't skirmishing with his undead
opponent, Taru's lessons in defensive magic pushed him to exhaustion. Tris
learned to counter the pain spells that Theron used against him, and to sense
and deflect spells like the one that stopped Elam's heart. Tris guessed that
Taru went well beyond the usual boundaries of acceptable gray magic to test him
against an array of magical attacks. Tris was grudgingly proud of the fact that
he managed to survive, and to send back counter spells that appeared to strain
even Taru's defenses.
A week and a half after his return to the
citadel, Tris stood before Landis, ready to go into the catacombs for his
trial.
"What is the task?" Tris asked,
hoping his voice was steady.
"The task is always the same,"
replied Landis. "Overcome the traps. Best the avatars. Defeat a mage and
wrest the Orb from his possession. And, if possible, live through it."
"Your penchant for self-sacrifice is
noble, but impractical. You must be willing to pay whatever price success
demands. You may find that your own death is not the dearest coin." Landis
flicked her wrist, and the door opened behind him to the catacombs.
"Now go. And may the Lady in all Her
Faces look with favor on your battle."
Tris descended the stone stairs carefully,
and felt the death warding snap into place behind him. Although he had expected
it, the tingle of its magic was unsettling. Tris listened in the shadows with
both hearing and mage sense. He knew that he was not alone.
Deep in the catacombs beneath the citadel,
Tris stepped warily from the shadows. The dark, damp stones carried the imprint
of old and powerful magic. At intervals, mage-fire torches lit the corridor,
but between them stretched dangerous shadows. The tunnels formed a convoluted
maze, with hidden rooms and real peril.
A rush of air was the only warning.
Tris pivoted, Mageslayer ready in his grip.
Immortally strong hands seized him from behind. Tris could feel the chill of
the vayasb moru's grip even through his tunic. "What now, Lord of
the Dead?" Laisren's voice taunted near his ear, close enough to the blood
pulsing through his neck that Tris fought the urge to shiver. While the other
opponents he would encounter would be avatars, the vayash moru, exempt
from the death warding, was very real.
"Lethyrashem!" Tris spoke
the word of power, and the vayash moru dropped his grip as if burned.
Tris turned, placing Mageslayer between them. The ensorcelled sword's faint
glow lit the shadows. He had barely raised his sword when the vayash moru vanished
from sight.
Tris swung with Mageslayer and felt the blade
connect; his opponent withdrew to the shadows with a hiss. Mageslayer,
possessing its own version of sentience, "understood" to blunt its
magic against the vayash moru trainer. Laisren, in turn, agreed not to
use his superior speed and strength to kill Tris. And while Tris believed that
his Summoner's magic would make it unlikely for him to
be brought across against his will, he did not want to find out how much blood
he could lose before those magical protections set in.
Moving faster than mortal sight, the vayash
morn pinned Tris from behind, and threw him sideways into the damp stone
wall. Before Tris could find his feet, the vice-like hands tossed him into the
air again. He landed hard enough to feel his collar bone snap and ribs crack,
felt blood start along his side and face as he scraped along the rough wall.
Laisren struck again, avoiding Tris's swing
with Mageslayer. Flung backward against the chamber's wall, Tris's head swam.
He gasped for breath as impossibly strong arms lifted him and pinned him.
"Hurry, Lord of the Dead," the vayash
moru whispered. The vayash moru's breath was cold against his neck,
and Tris felt mortal fear fill him as teeth sank against his skin. Dizziness
washed over him.
Tris fought panic and closed his eyes. He
felt himself weakening, struggling to find the center of his •power. On the
Plains of Spirit, he could see the vayash moru clearly, though darkness
blocked his mortal sight. Tris summoned his power, and with the magic came a
rush of spirits, called like moths to flame. The magic bore him up as his
mortal body weakened. In his mind's eye, he saw his power fill him, saw it glow
and burn through his skin and eyes, white-hot.
Laisren hissed sharply, lifting his teeth from
Tris's neck and loosening his grip. Reeling, Tris relied on mage sight to swing
Mageslayer, running his attacker through the belly. Tris staggered as the vayash
moru's weight fell against the sword. Laisren's face came into focus, an
ironic smile on his lips.
"Next time I shall make it more
difficult," he said, falling still as Tris withdrew his sword.
Alone again in the darkness Tris gasped for
breath, feeling his injuries fully. Left collar bone cracked or broken, at
least one rib on the same side likewise. Blood trickled from the punctures in
his neck, evidence that he had truly surprised his attacker, who had the means
to leave a bloodless bite. Tris looked at the vayash moru's still form,
and wondered whether his attacker would feel any worse for the wear after he
regenerated.
Tris started forward again as soon as his
heart slowed and the vertigo passed, alert for traps both magical and mundane.
His Summoner's power meant that many traps that often protected magical places
and items would not deter him. In winning Mageslayer, he had proved his ability
to wrestle with hostile spirits, quell reanimated fighters, and dispel a
demi-demon. But magic, he knew, posed only one threat. Even powerful mages were
constrained by the limits of their bodies. Traps to ensnare mortals could just
as easily kill an unwary mage. Tris moved forward cautiously into the darkness.
Tris's mage sense prickled a warning, and he
tested the steps ahead of him with his power. At his touch a section of the
floor gave way, yawning into blackness. Tris tested the other side of the chasm
carefully. He used his newly-honed climbing skills to find toe holds in the
rough stone wall and cross the gap. As he reached the other side, Tris heard
wind roar up from the pit. Mageslayer brightened at the danger. Tris stepped
backward against a solid rock wall. Trapped.
Rising from the chasm, a vortex of wind
swirled with storm power, buffeting him against the wall. From the depths of
the darkness it brought with it shards of stone and bone, blinding dust, and
stinging grit. Tris flung up shielding, and struggled to hold it against the
force of the storm.
His skin burned with the grit that swirled in
the air around him as his shields snapped into place. The wind was powerful,
and the close quarters seemed to double its force. Such a storm could rage for
days, far longer than he could hold his shields. Around him the wind howled,
full of debris that could strip skin from bone. Despite Mageslayer's glow, it
was almost impossible to see.
The winds were not sentient, so his spirit
magic was of no help. The storm surged, threatening to break through his
shields; Tris knew he could not hold out forever. Even if the wind storm
doesn't kill me, it can make enough of a mess of me that it will take forever
for Carina to put back the pieces, he thought.
The winds howled louder. Tris seized on a
slim hope.
He threw his cowl over his head and took a
deep breath, tightening a two-handed grip on Mageslayer. He let his shields
fall.
As the storm howled toward him, Tris focused
on Mageslayer, willing his energy and power to become one with the blade. Firel
he willed, letting his magic thrum along the blade until the metal glowed
hotter than forged steel. The winds reached him and the grit and shards began
to tear at his clothing and exposed skin. The force of the storm threatened to
sweep him off his feet into the pit, but Tris closed his eyes, willing his
power through the blade.
With a roar, fire erupted from Mageslayer's
blade, so hot that Tris felt his breath leave him. A blast of concentrated
flame struck at the heart of the winds. Long ago, the palace smithy told him
that fire burnt air; a fire in a closed place will take the air until there is
none left to breathe. As the heat rose, Tris held firm to Mageslayer's grip,
though the metal burned his hands and the buffeting of the storm strained his
outstretched arms. The air filled with the smell of scorched rock, but Tris felt
the wind weaken, dropping its lethal cargo of grit and shards. Arms aching,
Tris held on to the sword. A reaction headache was beginning to pound in his
temples. Then with a rush, the winds died.
Sweat-soaked, bleeding from tiny cuts, and
heaving for breath in the thin air, Tris dropped to his knees. Mageslayer
gradually dimmed to a faint blue light.
I'm alive! Tris thought,
lightheaded from the scorched air. Just as quickly, he remembered that he was
trapped against a sheer stone wall, with the pit between him at the cool, sweet
air of the passage.
Aching in every muscle, Tris reached for a
flask at his belt and took a drink. Carina swore that the herbed water would
sustain him from minor injuries and fatigue. While it did nothing for the pain
in his ribs, Tris felt the pounding of his headache recede. The sting of his
cuts and burns faded. Still dizzy from the loss of blood and the thin air, Tris
searched a pouch at his belt for a wad of pummeled rope vine, about as thick as
the tip of his thumb. He pushed the wad between his back teeth, and
bit down hard, hoping it would help to clear his head. After a few moments he
felt strong enough to stand, Mageslayer held warily against any surprise from
the pit.
When nothing stirred from the blackness, Tris
turned his attention to the rock wall at the back of the passage. He felt his
way toward the magic that tingled in the rocks. As Tris slid his free hand
across the rough stone, he also let his mage sense play across the wall until
both touch and magic located a loose stone. With Mageslayer gripped in his
right hand Tris carefully felt the edges of the stone with his left, finding
that it would neither pull nor push, but could be rotated with effort.
The stone clicked into place and the wall
gave way, sliding very slowly backward. But before Tris could withdraw his
hand, a whirring noise buzzed from within the hole and a sharp pain in his palm
made him jerk back his hand.
A tiny dart was embedded in his palm. Tris
pulled it free, but already the wormroot burned through his veins. He staggered
into the newly opened corridor, falling against the cold stone wall.
He clenched his fist around Mageslayer,
drawing from its power to fight the poison. Tris chewed harder on the rope
vine, letting its bitter juice course down his throat.
Sweet Chenne, Tris thought,
willing himself not to be sick. I'm barely in one piece, and I've yet to
face the avatars!
With the help of Mageslayer and the rope
vine, Tris clung to his power. He was flushed with fever and the headache
pounded, but he willed himself forward.
Although his palm
burned from the poison, he reached for a dirk from his
belt. The corridor turned and he saw pale red light glowing from an open
doorway.
The Soulcatcherl Tris thought,
remembering the deadly orb in Arontala's study, the prison of the Obsidian
King. It took conscious effort for Tris to keep his power within his grasp as
he made his way carefully down the corridor, Mageslayer gripped white-knuckled
in his hand.
Tris reached the doorway. Inside the stone
room, Soulcatcher lit the vaulted ceilings of the chamber, glowing like a
captured sun on a pedestal in the center of the floor. A cowled, red-robed
figure stood, arms upraised over the orb, his back to the door. Tris heard
Arontala's cold chuckle from an avatar that looked to be a perfect replica. But
unlike in his confrontation with Alaine, neither the orb nor the avatar
radiated the imprint of Arontala's power.
"Come to join your sister?"
Arontala baited with a smile that showed his long eye teeth.
Tris loosed a burst of power toward Arontala
and the Fire Clan mage brushed aside the assault without raising his shields.
His counterstrike nearly tore Mageslayer from Tris's grip.
"Come now. You'll have to do better than
that."
The mage's next strike almost broke through
Tris's shields. Tris could feel the poison in his veins growing stronger,
eroding his control, making his magic a wild and unpredictable force.
Tris clasped Mageslayer tighter, drawing from
the spelled blade against the poison, and he ground his teeth on the rope vine.
His ribs throbbed and his head pounded, making it difficult to focus his
vision.
"I have the offering," a familiar
voice said. Tris's blood ran cold. Straight from his nightmares, Jared stepped
into the room from a side door, dragging with him a battered and bound Kiara.
They're just avatars, Tris struggled
against the anger and instinct that boiled up in him. It's not really him,
not really her. Not real. Can't be real.
"We have a visitor," Arontala
purred, inclining his head.
Jared's familiar leer twisted his handsome
features. "Hello, Tris." He intentionally pulled on the ropes that
bound Kiara's wrists, eliciting a groan. Her eyes were closed, one cheek
bruised, and her tunic was smudged and bloody. The gash on Jared's sleeve and
his torn shirt told of the fight that victory had required. "My mage
assures me that once we feed her soul to the orb, what remains will be sufficient
for my... needs."
A cold, rational corner of Tris's mind
calculated his odds. The battle with the vayash morn, his injuries .from
the storm, and the wormroot had already taken a toll, pushed further by the
exchange with Arontala. He would have one chance, if his magic would obey his
will at all. Although he stood equally close to Arontala's avatar as to
Jared's, a move toward either would bring a counter from the other. And there
was Kiara. Avatar or not, he would not accept her sacrifice.
"Bring her," Arontala ordered.
Jared dragged the Kiara-double forward, forcing her to kneel beside the glowing
orb.
In the back of Tris's mind, one possibility
presented itself.
Tris plunged onto the spirit plains and found
the glow that was Mageslayer's power. His magic was waning as the poison worked
its way through his blood. Drawing on Mageslayer for support, Tris hurled the
dirk in his left hand, catching Jared in the chest.
With Mageslayer as an athame, Tris sent a
blast of power toward Arontala, using the orb as a lens to magnify the effect.
Spent to the point of exhaustion, Tris sent the last of his power toward Kiara,
covering her with a fragile shield. The explosion at Westmarch when Tris forced
power back through the scrying ball did not compare to the firestorm that
erupted from Soulcatcher, incinerating Arontala and blistering Tris's skin.
Everything in his sight turned to black, and Tris collapsed.
First came pain, then
consciousness. In the darkness Tris heard voices, but whether the lightless
space was in a room or inside his own mind he did not know.
"He failed," snapped one voice.
"Tsk, Tsk," chided another.
"Define failure. He made it through the traps, past the wormroot. And his
solution worked—after a fashion."
"He has his grandmother's
weakness," said a third. "He might have survived the explosion if he
had been willing to let her go. If he dies in the attempt, we are no better
served. Jared's bastard will become the rightful king."
"If you're so worried about the girl,
keep her from accompanying him," said the first voice.
"Have you forgotten? It was the will of
the Oracle," argued the second. "She may be in greater danger of
being taken—or turned—if she is alone,
or if they wed and she stays behind to bear
his child. This is the will of the Lady."
"I've found," noted the third voice
dryly, "that the will of the Lady is always clearer in retrospect. He did
what we required—destroyed the orb, Jared, and Arontala. Landis seemed intent
that he be willing to sacrifice someone. He sacrificed himself. We did not
actually say he must survive the encounter."
"It was implied," sniffed the
second. "Bava K'aa's foolish sentiment endangered us all, and now, his
weakness will do so again."
"Perhaps he'll learn from his
recovery," noted the first voice, growing faint in the darkness. "It
won't be pleasant."
The voices might have said more, but the darkness
and fever took him. He did not remember anything else.
When he found the strength to
open his eyes, Tris could make out only shadows in the dim light. I'm a
Summoner, so I should know if I were dead, he thought. It doesn't look
like the spirit plains. But maybe they look different from the other side.
"Don't even think about moving," a
familiar voice instructed. The shadow came closer in the twilight, bringing a
cool rag for his forehead and a cup of water. "Slowly," she
cautioned, lifting the water to his parched lips as she helped him rise from
his pillow. The water tasted of herbs and medicines. Even the slightest
movement hurt, and he realized he was wet with sweat.
"Where—"
The shadow gently laid him back and wiped his
face with the rag. "You're still in the citadel," the voice said.
Tris realized the shadow was Carina, though he could not see her face in the
darkness.
"Why so dark?" He was barely able
to form the words. Excruciating pain radiated from behind his eyes. His whole
body seemed on fire.
"Shh," Carina hushed gently.
"It's been three days. They weren't expecting what you did back there.
They barely shielded you in time. Sister Taru has been helping me. It was too
close, Tris. It was just an avatar, dammit! You shielded her instead of
yourself, and it wasn't even a real person!"
"It was the right thing to do,"
Tris managed, finding his throat sore and his lips cracked.
"There was so much wormroot in your
system it took a day before we could even begin to heal," Carina said.
"I saw everything you did," she reached out to take his hand.
"You were amazing."
"Not good enough," Tris murmured.
"You were amazing," Carina
repeated. "But we need you to live through the real thing, do you
understand? It's not complete unless you live to take the crown."
Tris wanted to respond, but her potion drew
him back into the respite of the darkness.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN prev next contents
A little
more than a week later, Tris and Carina returned to Staden's palace in
time to see Soterius and Mikhail off on their journey back into Margolan.
"Now that Ban's an outlaw hero, he'll
probably have twice the number of ladies vying for him," Carroway teased.
He set his lyre down. The group was still chuckling at the off-color ballad
he'd dedicated to the high points of Soterius's upcoming ride into Margolan to
inspire dissent. Even Staden dabbed a tear from his eye as the laughter
subsided.
"I figure you advised him on the
high-born ruffian look," Tris rejoined, grinning. "The hair and the
beard, the leather cloak; I just assumed it was all for the benefit of the
village girls!"
"Mikhail's done the same, so it must be
in fashion," Kiara added. She gave
a sly grin in Tris's direction. "We're waiting for you and Jonmarc to pick
up on the trend."
Soterius rolled his eyes, taking the ribbing
good naturedly as the small group laughed. "I doubt we'll have much time
for trysting," he observed. "Although I'm hoping that we won't be
completely without good ale."
The friends were assembled in Staden's
private dining room. Servants cleared away the dishes from a sumptuous farewell
dinner in honor of Soterius and Mikhail. Only the companions from the road,
plus Royster, Staden, and Berry attended, and everyone seemed committed to
keeping the conversation light.
"Keep your ale—I'm hoping the forests
haven't been hunted clean of deer." Mikhail said.
"Actually, I thought Carroway might
volunteer to go with us," Soterius returned the teasing. "I suspect
we'll raise enough of a ruckus to make a few good stories."
Carroway gave him a skeptical look. "And
I imagine you think sneaking Tris back to the palace won't be exciting
enough?" Tris watched the others as the servants brought the dessert
course. Soterius professed full confidence in his mission, but Tris knew his
friend well enough to see his worry. Tris didn't blame Soterius for being
nervous. While the idea itself was brilliant, it was another thing altogether
to slip into a land at war, recruit its army against its king and live to tell
the tale. Even Mikhail seemed preoccupied.
Staden cleared his throat. "I can't help
you with the ladies—not that either of you seem to need assistance," he
said with a raised eyebrow. "But
you'll find two excellent horses ready for
you in the stable, and all of the provisions you'll need. I've instructed my
groom to leave the horses unkempt so that they don't look like they've come
from my stable."
"We're in your debt, Your Majesty,"
Soterius said.
"And there's Isencroft tack for both of
you," Kiara added.
Mikhail looked at her. "How did you
manage to come by that out here? Isencroft tack doesn't usually stay long on
the shelf."
"
Tris reached into his pocket and pulled out a
small pouch, which he slid across the table to Soterius. "There'll be gold
for your journey in your packs," Tris promised. "But this will either
convince doubters that you really are on my side—or it'll get you hanged
faster if you're caught. I suggest you keep it well hidden."
Soterius emptied the pouch into his hand. A
golden ring tumbled out, a replica of Tris's own signet with the crest of
Bricen's second son. Soterius weighed it in his hand for a moment, then slipped
it back into the pouch and nodded.
"Wouldn't be surprised if that tack
Kiara's talking about doesn't have a few secret compartments for something just
like this."
Gabriel reached into the breast pocket of his
doublet and withdrew a similar pouch, which he handed to Mikhail. "It may
not be an original gift," he said with a dry smile, "but it might
help if you encounter some of our kind who have not heard the Blood Council's
ruling." Mikhail withdrew a signet like the one Gabriel wore on his left
hand, with a crest Tris now recognized as the mark of the Blood Council.
"If we're handing out gifts,"
Carroway said, "then I've got something for both of you." He reached
into a small pack under the table and withdrew two bundles. The larger bundle
he handed to Soterius, and the smaller one to Mikhail. "Well— open
them!"
"We ought to take on harebrained stunts
like this more often if it conies with dinner and gifts!" Mikhail joked.
He was first to open his bundle. Inside was a small set of pipes. Mikhail
lifted them to his lips and played a few bars of a popular tavern ditty.
"You've already memorized all the songs
I've written to stir up trouble," Carroway added. "And I've heard you
play when you didn't think anyone was listening. Not bad... for someone who's
not a bard, that is."
Soterius tore the paper from around his
bundle. A bandolier of stawar leather tumbled out, complete with a set of
throwing knives. Soterius raised the leather belt appreciatively. "Now that
is beautiful."
Carroway grinned. "You can thank Jonmarc
for the leatherwork.
Soterius gave him a sour look that sent the
rest laughing. Harrtuck reached
behind him for
his pack, and emptied it out
unceremoniously onto the table. Out fell a collection of small weapons—daggers,
shivs, darts, and metal knuckle guards. Few of the items were considered legal;
they were the equipment of a mercenary or a brawler rather than a regulation
soldier.
"I'd rather not explain my
sources," Harrtuck said with a sideways glance at Staden, who laughed.
"But I took up a collection from the boys in the company. They decided
that if you're going to act like mercs you should be outfitted like them."
When the group finally stopped laughing,
Carina reached under the table for her gift. "This may not be as much help
for Mikhail, since he doesn't need my services," she said as Soterius
unpacked the cloth bag. "But it's got enough herbs and powders to patch
you up a few times at least. Try not to need more."
"I'll make it up to Mikhail with
this," Royster said, and withdrew a leather-bound book from beneath his
chair. "It's by King Argus's court scribe; it has a full recounting of the
king's best military battles. Rather engrossing, if you ask me. Perhaps there's
something in the strategies you can use."
Mikhail smiled as he weighed the book in his
hands. "Argus was a friend of mine. And although I couldn't join him in
his ale, he was a man with an appetite for good times."
Tris shuddered, remembering the crypt beneath
the Library at Westmarch. "Since I met him after he was already dead, I
wouldn't know. He was determined at the time to take me with him."
Mikhail chuckled. "Argus had a temper.
And he could hold a grudge. But he was one of your grandmother's most loyal
supporters. Like everyone else, I suspect he had a bit of a crush on her. For
a sorceress, she had more than her share of admirers."
When the dessert was finished and the plates
were cleared, an awkward silence fell over the group. Staden cleared his throat
and stood.
"I suspect that you'll be getting your
nights and days turned around if you intend to ride together," Staden said
with a glance between Soterius and Mikhail. "But since I'm guessing that
we're into the early bells of the morning, perhaps we'd best let you get some
rest before you set out." He bid them rise, and stood in front of Soterius
and Mikhail.
"Tis not an easy thing you set off to
do," the king said gravely. "But from what I've seen, there's no one
more likely to make it happen. May the Goddess ride with you." He clapped
a large hand on each man's shoulder with a force that might have felled a frail
person. Tris and the others crowded around them.
Kiara whispered a blessing and kissed
Soterius on the cheek in parting as Jae hopped from foot to foot on her
shoulder. Carroway shook Soterius's hand and made his exit quickly after
leaving them with a bawdy rhyme. Vahanian slapped Soterius soundly on the back
and wished him well. Harrtuck embraced him until Soterius cried out for
release, and then parted with a ribald prayer for the Lady's favor.
"I'll get the horses ready,"
Mikhail said, bowing slightly to Tris. "If the Lady's hand is on us, we'll
see you again at Shekerishet. May the Dark Lady favor you." He made the
sign of the Lady. Tris and Soterius were silent until after Mikhail closed the
door behind him.
"If there's something formal I'm
supposed to say," Tris said, "I don't know what it is."
"The only reasonable thing would be to
try to talk me out of it, but we both know it's too late for that."
"I know."
"Hey, quit acting like it's my funeral.
We're going to drink about this at your coronation, where you can amply reward
me with some high-flying title."
"You, on the Council of Nobles. I
shudder to think."
"We'll shake them up a little,"
Soterius promised. ."Show them how to have a good time." He fell
silent. Tris could see the stress in his friend's face.
"Ban, if you're having second thoughts—"
"Not on your life," Soterius
answered a bit too quickly. "I mean, hey, we've all got a part to play in
this, right? After all, I helped get us into this. If we hadn't been snooping
around Arontala's window like houseflies—"
"We'd be dead."
Soterius grimaced. "Well, yes, I guess
so." He rested one foot on the bench of the table and leaned forward,
picking the last traces from the meat platter. "You know, Tris, Carroway
is right. They'll be singing about this in the taverns for generations.
Martris Drayke, the Summoner King of
Margolan." He shot a sly look in Tris's direction, "And his noble
queen, Kiara of Isencroft."
"That's enough of that," Tris said,
rolling his eyes. They were silent again for a few moments.
"Well," said Soterius awkwardly.
"I guess I'd better be going."
"I guess so. I'll see you back at
Shekerishet, right?"
"I might even beat you there,"
Soterius said, managing a grin. "I'll be watching your back, just like
always."
"Be careful, Ban," Tris said,
clasping his friend in a tight farewell embrace.
Soterius stepped back. "You too. I think
the Lady really does have Her hand on you, Tris, but be careful anyway."
Tris murmured a blessing and then turned
away, steeling himself against looking back, and closed the heavy door behind
him. But it took him many candlemarks that night to fall asleep, and dreams,
when they came, left him restless.
Tris found that nearly as many
petitioners waited for him after his return from the citadel as were there
before Winterstide. He balanced his duties as a Summoner against the growing
list of decisions that demanded his attention as the time for their return to
Margolan grew closer. Even the training with Vahanian took on new urgency, and
Tris ached from the candlemarks spent trying to perfect the difficult Eastmark
fighting style that required both agility and full concentration. He despaired
of ever matching Vahanian's skill, although he secretly took
pride in the complicated moves he had mastered. And after the salle came more
study with Royster, until Tris's eyes blurred. He had fallen asleep at his desk
more nights than he wished to remember, adding a stiff neck to his list of
injuries.
Tris held his Court of Spirits in the
evening, so that he could also serve the petitions of vayash moru. Gabriel
and Vahanian took turns guarding him at all times. Tris accepted the protection
ruefully, though he declined Staden's offer of more guards, fearing that
soldiers might scare away too many petitioners.
It was early in the second month, the Hunger
Moon, when Tris found himself more homesick than usual. Outside snow fell
heavily, covering the Principality hills in drifts higher than a horse's hocks.
"Didn't anyone tell you?" Tris
joked with Vahanian as the fighter pulled his cloak closer around himself.
"We hold the Court of Spirits inside. You're dressed for a ride through
the snows."
Vahanian grimaced. "Every time one of
those spooks shows up, the temperature in here drops another notch. Can't draw
a sword if I can't feel my fingers."
Tris chuckled. "If you mind the cold,
make sure you mention it to Gabriel before you head to Dark Haven. It's in the
foothills, and given that the caretakers are all... unconcerned... about
the cold, it may take a bit to ready the fireplaces for a mortal
resident."
"You make it sound absolutely charming,"
Vahanian muttered.
A group of petitioners ventured forward. Tris
looked up. It was unusual for a group to come all at once.
One man stepped forward. "Hail, Prince
Martris," he said, bowing low. He spoke Margolense with a midlands accent,
from the area near Shekerishet. His blond hair was dirty, and he had the raw-boned
look of a farmer. Though he appeared to be only a decade older than Tris, his
hands were already broadened from hard labor.
"If it please Your Highness, hear my
petition."
"Tell me what you seek."
"My name is Nascha. We've come to ask
for your help," said the man. "We are the families of the scirranish,
the vanished ones." The word he used, "scirranisb," was
from the old tales, where it meant "taken by monsters." Tris saw that
Vahanian was paying close attention.
People crowded behind Nascha, a group of at
least twenty ragged men and women, their expressions etched with sadness. From
their soiled and torn clothing, Tris guessed that they were refugees. Most were
badly underdressed for the frigid weather, their faces and hands reddened with
the cold.
"We're camped three days' ride from
here, just over the Principality border from Margolan," said Nascha.
"We come from every corner of Margolan, but our stories are the same. King
Jared's soldiers came to our villages and dragged us from our beds. Some, they
burned as vayash moru, even though they were mortal. Some of the men
they executed as spies, for the crime of possessing a sword. Our boys they took
for their army, our young women for their lust, and our winter crops for their
bellies.
They left the rest of us to starve."
Beside Tris, Vahanian muttered a potent curse.
"How can I help you?" asked Tris,
struggling with the anger that rose inside him against Jared.
"You're a Summoner," said Nascha.
"We don't know what happened to the Scirranish. We don't know
whether to mourn their passing and make their gifts to the Lady, or whether
they still live, and might, through some miracle, return to us. We beg you,
Prince Martris, show us their fate, so that we can make our peace."
Every face in the group watched him with
desperate hope. Tris rose, and walked out among the refugees. Vahanian fell
into step behind him, and the crowd parted. "I will show you what I
can," Tris said.
Tris breathed a prayer to the Lady as he
raised his wardings and opened himself to the Plains of Spirit. He let his
thoughts focus on each petitioner's face by turn. As he did so, he called out
to the lost and wandering spirits. Each of the supplicants whispered the names
of their missing ones. Gradually at the edge of his mage sight, like clouds
heavy with impending snow, Tris could feel the spirits heed his call. He
struggled with his own feelings as the ghosts presented themselves: men bearing
the wounds of war and torture, boys barely old enough to lift a sword marked by
battle, girls not old enough to wed whose wraiths showed the evidence of their
disgrace and death.
"Crone take Jared's soul," Vahanian
swore as Tris focused his power, making the spirits visible. Around him there
were shouts, cries, and the high-pitched keening of mourners as the living
claimed their dead. Tris pushed aside his feelings so that he could focus his
power more clearly. The spirits' images became more solid, and Tris lent them
the power to speak aloud so that he did not have to bear tidings for each one.
In groups of twos and threes the refugees welcomed
their dead, tearful over the violence of their passing and the certainty of
their death, and relieved at the finality of the knowledge. The emotions of
the living Tris could shield from his consciousness, but the strong feelings of
the dead washed over him like pounding waves. Gradually, the room grew quiet.
Tris looked to the refugees and their dead.
"Would you go to the Lady now?"
"By your leave, Lord of the Dead,"
answered one spirit, a burly man whose throat bore the marks of a noose.
"We are agreed. We're not ready to rest until Jared and his mage be
destroyed."
"What would you have me do?"
The ghosts moved forward, leaving their
mortal loved ones behind, and formed a solemn row in front of Tris. "Is if
true that you mean to challenge King Jared?" asked the burly ghost.
"It is."
"Then we wish to fight," said the
ghost. "Lord of the Dead, grant us this request. Let us return to the
places were we're buried. Give our spirits the power to show ourselves to the
living and to be heard. Our bodies lie along the roads and in the ditches. When
Jared's soldiers pass, our spirits will rise up and take our vengeance."
"Seems to me we met a whole forest like
that once," Vahanian murmured under his breath.
"What word do you give that only the
guilty will be punished?" Tris asked. "My friends and I were nearly
killed by the spirits of the Ruune Videya. Those ghosts were also slaughtered
by an unjust king. They came to hate every living soul."
The burly ghost knelt in fealty, and the
other spirits silently followed suit. "You're the Lord of the Dead, and
the rightful king of Margolan," said the ghost. "We are yours to
command. We want to make Jared's soldiers pay for what they stole from us. May
my soul go to the Formless One if I punish the innocent," he pledged, and
the other spirits murmured their assent. Tris felt a chill go down his spine,
remembering the approach of that dark and fearful Aspect.
They might forget their vow and harm the
innocent, thought Tris, weighing the choices. But so
might any living soldier, and I've sent Soterius and Mikhail out to raise an
army of malcontents and outlaws. They could also harm the living. He
remembered the anger, the longing, and the loss he had sensed in the spirits of
the Ruune Videya, long denied their vengeance, unable to take their revenge
upon those who had unjustly ended their lives. Finally Tris nodded solemnly,
and stretched out his hands in blessing and commission over the kneeling
spirits.
"Go then, to the places where you rest,
with the power to make your spirits visible to the living. Take your vengeance,
but stay your hand against the innocent, even if he wears the colors of the
crown. Do you swear?" Tris asked. Power filled him as he raised his hands
in benediction.
"We swear it, Lord of the Dead," said the
ghosts, in voices that sounded like the winds of a distant storm.
"Rise then, and fight. When this war is
over, return to me, and I will give you passage to the Lady."
"So it shall be." The spirits
turned to their loved ones with a final parting gesture, their images growing
less solid until they disappeared, leaving only the weeping of the refugees.
"Thank you, my prince," said
Nascha, and the refugees surged forward, thanking Tris through their tears.
"There are others who await your
help," Nascha said, "more families of the Scirranish. Perhaps,
Prince Drayke, we'll have our answers, and you'll find your army." He
bowed low once more, and the group made their way toward the door. Tris retreated
to his seat, emotionally spent. Vahanian's face made his feelings plain.
"If the rest of the people in that outer
room are here for the same reason," Vahanian said, "it's going to be
a very long night." He looked at Tris. "I should probably worry that
watching you do this kind of thing doesn't seem strange any more. But ghosts,
attacking soldiers—are you sure about that?"
Tris shrugged. "No more than I'm sure
about any of the plans. Mercenaries, ready to invade Margolan if I give the
signal. Vayash moru, freed to protect themselves outside the truce. Ban
and Mikhail, rallying deserters and turning them against the army. Those ghosts
are of Margolan blood, just as surely as the deserters and the vayash moru. It
seems to me that we're going to need all the help we can get." He paused.
"Since the meeting with the Blood Council, Gabriel's carried word of the
ruling
to the vayash moru houses in Margolan.
He says many of them will fight against Jared."
"We have to ride back through Margolan
to get to Shekerishet," Vahanian said. "Let's just make sure that
everyone's clear about whose side we're on."
True to Nascha's word, the
petitioners who filled the outer room were the families of Scirranish, some
from Margolan's plains and some from the Borderlands, some from the southern
lands near Trevath and some from the mountains, but all came with the same
story and the same plea. After the ninth bell, Gabriel came to replace
Vahanian.
As the night wore on, group after group told
of atrocities that shook Tris to his core. One of the men who came to Tris's
court told of searching for his missing daughter and finding a heap of bodies
dumped with Shekerishet's refuse, bodies of those Arontala had captured and
tortured to discover the Sisterhood's weaknesses. The man's voice broke as he
described the mangled bodies, each bearing the torturer's mark. Some with
crushed feet or limbs dipped in boiling oil, from which the flesh peeled and
shredded. Others burned by molten lead, or blinded with hot pokers. A few, he
said, had been crushed by heavy rocks, with the weight gradually increased as
the victim refused to give up his secrets, until the boulders snapped through
bones and suffocated the unfortunate beneath.
One method seemed to have particularly caught
Arontala's fancy, the man reported, so shaken by his own tale that even a glass
of brandy did not steady his voice. For Arontala's special victims, those whom
he suspected had important information, Arontala did not need his magic; all he
required was a couple of starving rats, a solid bucket, and a shovel of hot
coals. With the victim immobilized, Arontala placed the rats in the bucket and
upended the bucket over the victim's belly, placing the hot coals atop it. As
the temperature within the bucket became unbearable, the rats sought their only
escape route—by gnawing through the body of the victim. He wept as he described
how he had found the body of his daughter, a minor mage with the Sisterhood,
eviscerated, her skull crushed. Tris felt tears hot on his own cheeks as he
called forth the dead girl's spirit. The young mage corroborated her father's
story, and gave details of Arontala's tortures that Tris knew would haunt his
dreams.
Sweet Chenne, Tris thought,
as the enormity of Jared's crimes became clear, I knew fared was a monster,
but I thought even he had limits. What would he do, if Arontala gains the
powers of the Obsidian King? But deep inside, Tris knew the answer to his
question. Jared would seek to extend his power over the Winter Kingdoms,
beginning a war that would embroil all seven kingdoms in a disastrous
conflict. The Obsidian King in Arontala's body would feed on the souls and
blood of that conflict, obliging the surviving mages to band together against
him, opening up the cataclysm of magicked war. I never wanted to he king,
let alone have the fate of the Winter Kingdoms rest on my actions. But there
isn't anybody else to do this—and there may never be.
When the midnight bells tolled Tris motioned
for the guards to shut the doors, although the outer room was still filled with
petitioners. Carroway and
Royster, who had faithfully scribed the
stories of the dead, wiped at their eyes as they packed up their parchments and
pens and slipped from the room. That left only Tris and Gabriel.
Tris became aware of a ghostly presence, and
turned toward the fireplace.
"Show yourself," Tris commanded. In
the shadows near the hearth, the spirit of a dark-haired young man appeared.
He was dressed in the uniform of an independent soldier—a merc—and a dark
stain marked the death wound in his side. But it was the young man's eyes that
looked familiar, and Tris searched his memories. A little older, harder,
yes, that's it. The ghost resembled General Gregor, the soldier who had
captured them when they crossed Gibbet Bridge. He remembered Carina's story
about her lost lover, Gregor's brother, and knew who the spirit was.
"Ric?" Tris asked, bidding the
spirit come closer. He was a handsome young man, with the confi-. deuce of
an accomplished swordsman
and the bearing of a
professional man of war.
"Lord of the Dead, a word with you, if I
might," Ric said, bowing low.
"Why have you come?" Tris watched the
young man closely. He remembered Carina's tearful confrontation with Gregor
when she pled their cause, seeking their release. Two of a kind? Gregor
had taunted Carina in their cell, when Vahanian had come to her defense. Though
Ric and Vahanian looked little alike, Tris could see a certain resemblance in
their manner. Carina's lost one lover to the sword. No wonder she's skittish
around Jonmarc.
"My lord," said Ric. "Seven
years ago this night, I died in the arms of my betrothed. I couldn't sever the
bond between us, and it almost killed Carina. Since your return to
Principality, Pve watched over her, but I can't show myself in my own strength."
"What would you have me do?"
"I never wished to see her grieve for
me. Perhaps, my lord, if you can let her see me, I might convince her to let me
rest, and she could live without guilt."
"I'll warn you," said Tris.
"I'm rather protective of Carina. She's kinswoman to my own betrothed, and
soon kin to me. She's been though a lot, and she's worn ragged by the training
we've been doing. If you can give her peace by making yourself known, then do
it. But if you'll only bring her grief, leave her to those among the living who
love her."
Ric looked pained. "I would never wish
to bring her grief. I swear it by the Lady on my soul. Carina blames herself
for my death, when I know it was in the hands of the Lady. I want to free her
to move on, and take my rest."
Tris looked at Ric in silence for another
moment. Then he turned to Gabriel. "Send for Carina."
Though it was late, Carina arrived quickly,
giving Tris to guess that she had still been up studying the old healing tomes.
"Are you ill? Is there a problem?" Carina rushed to where Tris
stood. Then she froze, sensing a presence in the room. Before she could turn,
Tris took Carina gently by the shoulders.
"There's someone who wants to talk with
you," Tris said carefully, seeing a mixture of fear and pain in Carina's
eyes. "He swears he wishes you well. If you don't want to see him, I'll
send him away."
"No." Her voice was tight.
"It's all right."
Squaring her shoulders, Carina turned slowly
toward the shadows near the fireplace. From their depths, Ric stepped forward.
Tris lent him the power to make himself visible without his death wound, hoping
to spare Carina.
"I didn't think you would ever come
back," Ric said.
Carina did not try to brush away the tears
that slid down her cheeks. "I didn't want to. Gregor was right. It was my
fault you died. I didn't have the right to live when I couldn't save you."
Ric moved closer. "Gregor's an ass. I
tried to push you clear, when my spirit left my body, but... it's all a little
strange. I couldn't get you untangled, and I didn't want to pull you with me. I
stayed with you, at the citadel, but you couldn't see me. Then Cam came and
took you, and I didn't know what became of you until I felt you cross into the
city."
"I'm so sorry—"
Ric reached out to touch her cheek.
"Enough of that now, love. I've watched over you since you crossed
"I wanted to be faithful to you."
Ric smiled sadly. "And you have been.
Long enough, my love. Your guilt binds me to this place, and I want to rest.
You have to let me go."
"How can I let you go, when I love
you?"
"Keep my memory," Ric said, touching her
hair. "But you're too young to pine for the dead. Especially when there is
another worthy brother-at-arms who loves you."
Carina blushed. "I don't—I mean, we
haven't—"
Ric chuckled, and took her hands. "You
owe me neither apologies nor explanations, love. I came back to give you my
blessing, because I fear that without it, from my own lips, you'll continue to
punish yourself. Follow your heart, Carina. Whatever you decide, do it because
of what you feel, not out of imagined duty to me."
Carina squeezed her eyes closed against the
tears. Though insubstantial, Ric reached out for her, folding his arms around
her. "Had I been a little faster with my sword, we might have had the
future we dreamed about," Ric said. "But that's closed to us. Will
you give me your promise that you'll let me go?" He smiled sadly as Carina
wiped away her tears. "Even in the arms of the Lady, I'll see, and I'll
know."
"If that's what you want."
"I want it because I love you
still," said Ric. "I don't want you to be lonely. So tonight,
perhaps, we are both set free?"
"I'm never going to stop loving you, you
know that."
"I know. But there is room in your heart
for more than one love."
Tris stretched out toward Ric's spirit and
felt a sense of completion, of peaceful resignation, settle over the ghost.
One more small task, m'lord, before you send
me to my rest, the spirit asked as Tris began the passing
over ritual. Give me the power, I ask of you, to make myself visible to one
more person.
Tris paused on the Plains of Spirit, and
understood. I'll help you, Tris promised. When you're ready, return
to me, and I'll give you rest.
Carina stood in silence, still staring at the
spot where Ric's ghost had vanished.
Tris put his arms around her and let her sob
against his shoulder. "Why don't you let us walk you back to your room?
I'll get Kiara to stay with you."
"Thank you," she murmured, and
looked up at Tris. "Thank you from both of us."
It had been a very long
day. Vahanian threw his cloak across a chair in his room and poured himself a
glass of brandy. Between the Court of Spirits and the bitter wind that howled
outside, he did not think he would ever feel warm again. Sipping the brandy,
Vahanian edged closer to the fire.
The air in the room took on a sudden chill,
and Vahanian recognized the prickle at the back of his neck. He had felt it all
evening, when he stood guard over Tris in the Court of Spirits.
"Who's there?" Vahanian challenged,
his hand .falling from habit to his sword.
Just beyond the edge of the fire's glow, a
ghost began to grow solid, until the image of a young man dressed in the
uniform of an Eastmark mere stood before him. It was the same ghost he had
glimpsed in the crowd at Winterstide. Vahanian took in the man's uniform, the
stain of his death wound, and the uncanny resemblance to Gregor. He felt a mix
of apprehension and jealousy.
"You know who I am?" The spirit lifted
his hands, palms up and open in a gesture of truce.
"Yes."
"Take good care of Carina. Watch over
her, and keep her from harm." The ghost raised a hand in farewell and,
to Vahanian's astonishment,
faded without another word.
Gradually the fire warmed the room, removing
the only evidence of the ghost's presence. But Vahanian sat staring at the
embers, brandy untouched, long into the night.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN prev next contents
AT the
palace, preparations continued for the beginning of the assault on
Margolan. Tris, Vahanian, and Kiara met more frequently with the mercenaries
and Staden's military advisors. Carina and Carroway found a lull in their own
schedules. Tris's practice at the Sisterhood still consumed part of his time.
But as his skills in magic and defense sharpened, Carina's talents were needed
less intensively, which gave her an opportunity to recover from the strain.
With the end to the Winterstide festivities, Carroway found respite from the
holiday parties and the constant demand for entertainment. Carroway and Carina
kept each other company in the sitting room near the dining hall, where Carina
prepared her potions and powders. Carroway took advantage of the lull to work
on new songs, intending to create several haunting ballads and stirring tunes
that would help to inspire his listeners to action. Royster often joined them,
working with Carroway on both song and history. Some evenings Berry dropped in
for a game of tarle, but she had turned in early this night, leaving Carina and
Carroway alone.
For several candlemarks, Carina worked on her
powders, grinding up freshly dried leaves and roots with a mortar and pestle
and heating them in the fire. Carroway's tunes were lively, and made the
candle-marks pass quickly. Later, his songs grew pensive. One, a haunting tune,
told of a beautiful musician with her silver flute, who played so perfectly
that the spirits took her. Carina found herself drawn into Carroway's newest
ballad, a sad tune about a spirited young girl killed by brigands. Only at the
end did she realize that it was an ode to Tris's sister, Kait.
Ready for a break from her work and
stretching to relieve her aching back, Carina drew up a chair and watched
Carroway as he tinkered with the fingering on the lute. He tried one chord and
then another, with different embellishments, until he found the perfect match.
Not for the first time, Carina was deeply impressed with the bard's talents as
a musician.
She clapped when he finished, and Carroway
grinned sheepishly. "You're very kind." Carroway tilted back in his
chair. "But the songs are still too rough for a real performance."
Carina leaned forward against the table and
rested her chin on her folded arms. "You know, I realized as you were
playing that you and Ban are still the mysterious ones."
Carroway chuckled. "Mysterious? My, that
sounds quite romantic."
Carina smiled. "I mean it. I've learned
a lot about Tris and Jonmarc, but you and Ban have said very little, except
about your escape the night of the coup." She looked from the lute to
Carroway's eyes. "I'm not surprised that a bard of your talent would be at
court. And Ban is a good soldier and a loyal captain at arms. But you're both closer
to Tris than your roles would suggest. So tell me, what's your story?"
Carroway set his lute aside and took a sip
from a glass of port, silent for so long that Carina wondered if she said
something amiss. "My story isn't very important," Carroway said
finally. "Ban likely feels the same."
He ran a hand back through his long,
blue-black hair. Carina wondered why the handsome young man seemed so
completely unattached, when the ladies of the court vied for his attention. On
the road, disheveled and dirty, Carroway had charmed uncounted serving wenches
out of dinner and ale and bartered his music for shelter for the group and food
for their horses. Carroway stood as tall as Tris but he was thin by comparison,
though Carina knew the bard was much stronger than he looked. Fine-boned and
long-fingered, he cut a handsome figure in the opulent court clothes that he so
obviously enjoyed wearing. Light blue eyes under long lashes were as pretty as
any maiden's, and his classic, even features reminded Carina of the sculptures
of the Lady's companions of legend. Yet for all his talent and beauty, Carina
sensed a vulnerability in Carroway that intrigued her.
"Ban's father was a general under King
Bricen. He was injured and left the army to go to his manor house up in the
high country. Not quite as far north as the Borderlands, where Jonmarc is from,
but well into the northern mountains. Bricen and Lord Soterius were famous for
their hunts together. I don't know that Ban ever had much thought of a career
other than the guard.
"Ban was fostered out to Bricen's court
as soon as he was old enough to squire. Tris knew him from the hunts—Bricen had
a hunting lodge a candle-mark's ride north of Shekerishet, and both Ban and
Lord Soterius used to join the king there." Carroway smiled sadly.
"Tris and Kait spent as much time at the lodge as they could. Tris kept
his dogs there away from Jared; truth be told, he and Kait preferred the lodge
because it kept them away from Jared, too. Jared never had the patience for the
hunt, although he relished the kill."
Carroway sighed, remembering a life now gone
forever. "My father's lands were in between Bricen's lodge and Lord
Soterius's holdings. I was the eldest of six. My father realized early on that
my gifts lay with music. So he fostered me to court early, asking Bricen for an
apprenticeship with the court minstrels. I was only ten when I went to live at
court, and I was quite lonely. Bit of a lost soul, really."
He looked toward the fire, and sipped his
port. "Tris and I hit it off immediately. Looking back, I guess Tris
needed a friend as much as I did. Jared was an awful bully, and Tris and Kait
often took a thrashing from him. Tris was always trying to protect Kait; he
got between her and Jared and took her beating more times than I care to
remember. All except for the last time."
Carina touched his hand, trying to draw him
away from the dark memories of the coup. "Tell me more
about what it was like when you came to court."
"Bricen always seemed larger than life,
hale and in good spirits most of the time. Queen Serae was so beautiful, so
elegant. I think she felt sorry for me, because she 'adopted' me from the
start. Tris and Kait and I were inseparable, and whenever Ban could be free of
his squire's duties, he joined us, too."
"Tris said that Bava K'aa trusted you to
help with his training," Carina supplied.
Carroway nodded. "I liked Tris's
grandmother, even though there were kings and armies that feared her. She was
always kind to me, and she doted on Tris. So when she offered to let us help
her, we jumped at the chance. Funny thing," Carroway said, rubbing his
forehead, "is that I don't clearly remember very much of what we did,
other than that I liked being there." He chuckled. "Maybe Tris is
right, that Bava K'aa hid those memories—for both Tris and me."
Carroway paused, longer this time, and Carina
saw his eyes darken with sadness. "I'd go home during the summer, because
many of the nobles who frequented the court during the winter months left to
see to their own holdings, and there was less call for minstrels. Although my
parents and my brothers and sisters visited Shekerishet often, it was wonderful
to be back home with them.
"The summer of my twelfth birthday I
hadn't heard from my parents in a long time. They had always sent for me at the
end of the spring feasts, but this year there was no word at all. Then one day,
Queen Serae came to find me. She told me that a plague had broken out at
father's manor, a plague so terrible that no one survived. A servant was on his
way to Shekerishet with a letter to me, but the soldiers wouldn't let him pass.
They were afraid that he carried the plague, and he did. He died in a cave by
the road; they burned his body and the letter with it. And so my family was
gone." Carroway looked down.
"I'm sorry," Carina said, touching
his sleeve.
"Bricen and Serae did their best by me.
They took me in. I've always been grateful for that. Oh, I inherited father's
title, and the lands, but lands have no value with no one to work them and a
title means nothing when the wealth to go with it mold-ers in a plague-ridden
manor. So in truth, I had no means and no family. Without Bricen's kindness,
I'd have been a beggar. The court whispered at first, but I was determined to
earn my way. By the time Tris went for his fostering to Dhasson, I was in
demand as a musician.
"I did especially well with the older
ladies, who enjoyed the attention of a pretty young boy," Carroway said
with a self-deprecating smile. "Lady Eadoin, especially, was a great
patron. Gradually, I found that the noble houses were willing to pay handsomely
to have me entertain when I was free of obligations at court."
"And did you leave someone behind when
you left Margolan so suddenly?"
Carroway blushed. "Yes and no. Tris and
I seemed to spend more time outrunning the girls at court than wooing them, if
you want to know the
Lady's truth. We were Margolan's most
eligible bachelors. Tris and I were so good at eluding their clutches that one
rumor had Tris taking vows as an acolyte to the Lady. Other rumors suggested
that perhaps we'd pledged to each other." Carroway chuckled. "Either
way, the rumors deterred the more persistent and ambitious of the nobles' daughters,
so we weren't inclined to set the record straight.
"But to your question—not exactly.
Soterius stood up a date the night of the coup, but he never stayed long with
any girl. Me, I fancied a pretty flute player named Macaria. Her talent, Lady
bless her, is truly magic, and not earned with bleeding fingers like my
own." Carroway sighed, and Carina thought it was only partly exaggerated.
"What's she like?" Carina asked
with a smile.
Carroway rested his chin on his hand and
looked off into space. "Hair like
"And with all that, talent and magic
besides. Oh, I can do a little magic myself—less than a hedge witch, even—but
it makes for dramatic effects when I tell my stories. Nothing of use to anyone
but a storyteller—the ability to make smoke into figures and shapes." He
paused. "Macaria, on the other hand, has magic in her music. Not like Tris,
not a sorcerer. But the very best entertainers—whether they're musicians or
bards or acrobats—have magic in
their talent. My
music was earned
the old fashioned way—with
lessons and practice. Hers, on the other hand, is from the Goddess. When she
plays her flute, even the ghosts come to listen.
"But what's a bard without unrequited
love?" he asked. "Alas, m'lady never gave me a glance or showed the
slightest interest in anything other than my music."
Carroway sobered. "Perhaps it's just as
well. I've heard from the musicians we've met along the way that Jared took
revenge on the palace entertainers after we escaped. We changed into their
costumes, although they knew nothing of it, but I'm sure Jared would never
believe that. So in saving ourselves, we unknowingly placed them in peril. I'm
told that many of the entertainers disappeared, either to protect themselves,
or at Jared's hand.
"I fear what I'll find, when we reach
the palace. Hearing the tales of the families of the Vanished Ones who've come
to Tris's Court of Spirits made me worry. I know nothing can ever be as it was,
but I hope to find a few familiar faces. I'd like to go on believing that
Macaria found safety, and that maybe, once Tris is secure in his throne, I'll
have another chance to court her.
"I haven't had the courage to ask Tris
to call for her among the dead. I need to believe that she lives. I don't think
I could handle it right now, if she..." He paused, swallowed. "And so
I tell myself that she's clever enough to have found a way to get by, and that
things will be different when I return. Maybe if I'm a hero as well as a bard,
she might notice me.
"Of course," he went on, "planning
the entertainment for both a coronation and a royal wedding
might also get her attention." Carroway gave Carina a sly glance.
"For a small retainer, I'm willing to travel. To Dark Haven, perhaps, to
plan a handfasting?"
Carina, to her chagrin, flushed scarlet.
"You have quite an imagination!" Carina knew Carroway meant no
offense, but hearing the possibility said aloud filled her with a strange
mixture of feelings.
"Really?" Carroway laughed.
"The castle gossips have had you and Jonmarc paired off for months
now."
"I thought Kiara and Berry were the only
ones matchmaking around here!" Carina exclaimed. She felt flattered and
pressured, exposed and oddly pleased all at once, in a heady mixture that was
new.
"I'll give you a special rate."
"I just hope there is an 'after,'"
she said with a sigh. "The closer we get to the trip into Margolan, the
more unlikely this whole thing seems. I never really expected to get caught up
in a revolution, you know. Cam and I went looking for a cure for Donelan's
illness."
"I know the feeling. Tris and Ban and I
were just celebrating Haunts, and by midnight we were wanted men. It may sound
romantic in the ballads, but it didn't seem that way when we were outrunning
the guards."
"I'm glad that Cam was able to take back
an elixir from the Sisterhood to help Kiara's father bear up under the wasting
spell. But King Donelan won't be cured until we destroy Arontala. He's the mage
who caused the sickness. Cam and I had only been apart once before. I miss him
terribly." She managed to grin.
"Although without me around, he's probably taking the opportunity to woo
the ladies. He always said he intended to marry the daughter of a tavern
keeper, so that he would never lack for fresh ale and good food!"
Carroway chuckled. "Funny, that's
Harrtuck's idea of an ideal girl, too. Now if we found an innkeeper with two
daughters, they'd be set!"
"Well," Carina said finally, rising
from her seat. "I'd better get back to making some powders for us to take
with us on the road. It won't be too much longer before we head for Margolan.
Gabriel might not need the potions and remedies, but I'll sleep better knowing
that the rest of us have them handy."
Carroway went back to his lute and soon he
was strumming softly and singing to himself, working on a difficult bit of
fingering. Carina returned to her potions, but she found her thoughts straying
back to Isencroft and to Cam until the midnight bells tolled and she finally
headed for bed.
That evening,
Tris walked Kiara back to her rooms after a grueling
session in the war room. For a time they walked in silence, holding hands, content
with each other's company, deep in thought over the conversations of the day.
Tris could feel a looming pressure as the winter days passed and the time for
their departure into Margolan grew closer. Fear, excitement, dread, and purpose
all rolled together in anticipation.
"Skrivven for your thoughts," Kiara
teased as they walked along the palazzo. They had taken the long route back to
her rooms, content for a few moments to be alone. The guards who were their
new constant companions hung back, permitting
them some privacy.
"I was thinking about my dogs, to tell
you the truth," he admitted. "Two wolfhounds and a bull mastiff. I
didn't dare keep them at the palace— Jared had a way of making animals
disappear. Father owned a hunting lodge, up near Soterius's father's lands.
Kait and I spent as much time up there as mother would allow, escaping from
Jared, and court. I kept the dogs at the lodge.
"You wouldn't believe how many times
I've thought about them since we left Shekerishet," Tris said.
"Father's retainers lived at the country house and kept it up, but with
Jared on the throne, who knows what happened to them? Kait's falcons were in
the mews at Shekerishet; they were something even Jared wouldn't touch. They
seemed to know what Jared was like, and they'd peck and swoop any time they saw
him. I'd love to know that they've survived—it would be like having a little
bit of Kait left." His voice drifted off, and Kiara squeezed his hand.
"The lodge sounds nice," she said.
"Maybe we can keep it as a sanctuary, just you, me, the dogs—and
Jae!" she added as the little gyregon flew in a circle around them and
came back to land on her shoulder. "Back in Isencroft, he always joined on
the hunts with the falcons. They seemed to have some kind of arrangement—it was
as if they could understand each other. The falcons and Jae would work as a
team. The falcons harried the prey—they were faster—and Jae usually made the
kill, since he was larger and a bit heavier. Quite a spectacle!"
Tris turned to her, and took her other hand
so that she faced him. "These past few months, I've been the closest I'll
ever be to knowing what life would be like without the crown. One of the reasons
I never wanted to be king was that I wanted the freedom to make my own
decisions.
"I've always thought that the king was less
free than anyone in the kingdom," Tris said quietly. "Council,
pressuring for one decision or another, always driven by the self-interest of
the nobles. Gossip and intrigue at court. Retainers, crowding for favors. So
many people who want to be your friend, so long as you give them what they
want."
Tris smiled sadly. "I always counted
myself fortunate to be the second son. I wasn't required to be at Council, and
no one cared about my comings and goings. I was just a spare, in case something
happened to the heir." He paused again, longer this time.
Tris sighed. "I used to dream that when
I married—if I ever found someone—we could go off to the lodge, out of sight
of the court and the gossips and Jared." He met Kiara's eyes. "More
than anything, I don't want the court and the crown to taint what we have,
Kiara. I want to find some little corner where we can still be the way we were
on the road, two nobodies from nowhere, without the crown and the throne
looming over us."
Kiara stepped forward and reached up to kiss
him. Tris folded her into his arms. "Another nearly died bearing me, so
there were no other children," Kiara said quietly. "I always knew the
scrutiny of being the heir. And as Abelard told you, my parents' romance was
something of a scandal, but there was more than that."
"If Eastmark was unhappy about losing
its princess to a foreign kingdom, there were many in Isencroft who were even
less happy to have a foreign queen," Kiara said wistfully. "Over the
centuries, Isencroft was overrun by every nation on its borders—and even by
some on the far side of the Northern Sea. So we're fiercely independent. Mother
could never rid herself of her Eastmark accent, though she spoke Croft
fluently. And she never gave up her devotion to the Lover, while Isencroft
worshipped Chenne."
"While she and father were very much in
love, that love wasn't shared by many in the kingdom. The ladies at the court
were merciless. Nothing father did seemed to help. So mother made sure that
there was nothing they could say about her daughter." Kiara laughed
bitterly. "I had to be more thoroughly Isencroft than anyone. I had to
excel with the sword, because that was the Isencroft way. I had to make public
devotion to Chenne, so that no one could say I was a heretic. Mother fought
teaching me Markian, because she wanted me to speak Croft without any accent.
"The betrothal contract with Margolan
was always in the back of her mind," Kiara went on, leaning against Tris's
shoulder. "I learned to speak Margolense as a child, from Margolan tutors,
so that I'd have no accent. I made devotion to Chenne in public, and to the
Lover in private, with mother. My tutors taught me the ways of the Mother and
the Childe, so that when the time came I'd make a proper queen for
Margolan." Kiara smiled sadly. "Mother didn't want anyone to be able
to say a word about my suitability. I'm afraid she kept me quite protected.
And it ruled out
suitors, being betrothed from
birth."
"So I was your rebellious fling on the
road?"
"Even a princess can dream," Kiara
said. "But father might have sent the guards after me if I'd taken off
with a tent rigger from a caravan."
"Do you think your mother would
approve—of your tent rigger?"
Kiara smoothed back a lock of his white hair.
"She'd approve that I followed my heart. That was one thing she always
did. And if we can add horses to the menagerie at the hunting lodge, I know
she'd approve. Mother loved horses. That's how she died—out riding."
"She's proud of you, you know," Tns
said. Kiara looked at him oddly for a moment, and then understood. "She's
with you, just out of sight. Even on the road I could sense a presence near
you, a guardian spirit."
"I've seen her on Haunts. She loved me
fiercely, and I knew she would be near. So you've met her?"
"Not formally," Tris said. "I
try not to intrude on other people's ghosts without permission."
"Even with all of the intrigue at court,
she and father never stopped being in love." Kiara touched his cheek.
"Perhaps we can carve out something of the same for us."
"We will." Tris promised, bending
to kiss her. "I promise."
In his mage sense, Tris felt the strong
presence of a spirit, and saw the ghost of the beautiful Isencroft queen.
Viata's ghost extended her hands in blessing. Tris drew back from his kiss with
Kiara, feeling oddly embarrassed, as if someone had walked in on
their embrace. He had the strong sense that
Viata wished to be seen.
"About that introduction—"
"She's here, isn't she?"
"I think she'd like to speak with
you."
"I'd like that, too."
Tris stepped back. He let himself stretch out
onto the Plain of Spirits and lent his power to Viata's ghost until the queen
stood before them. Tris saw an immediate resemblance between Viata and Kiara.
Kiara took a half step forward, and the ghost moved to embrace her.
"You're as pretty and clever as I knew
you would be," Viata smiled.
"Father says I take after you."
"I was afraid Donelan would be joining
me before his time," Viata replied, growing more serious. "But at
least for now, the wasting spell is halted. While I want our spirits to be
together eventually, there is no hurry."
Viata looked past Kiara to Tris, who felt
himself suddenly color. "And this is your young man?"
Kiara wiped away her tears and reached out to
take Tris's hand. "I'd like you to meet Tris—Martris Drayke of Margolan,
Bricen's second son. My betrothed."
Viata nodded solemnly. "I was grateful
that Bricen intervened with the marriage pact because I didn't want war. But I
worried as I came to know more about what kind of man Jared Drayke had become.
I'm pleased that you've found a more desirable solution."
Viata's ghost met Tris's eyes. "I've
seen your training, and I'm most impressed. You have my blessing to wed Kiara,
and my prayers to the Lady that your quest will be successful."
Tris gave a courteous bow. "I'm honored,
m'la-dy."
"Kiara," Viata said, and Kiara
turned toward her mother's ghost. "Even when you can't see me, never doubt
that I'm watching over you. I've resolved not to go to the Lady until Donelan
can join me and you are safely established. Death doesn't end love."
"Thank you," Kiara whispered.
"I love you, too."
Tris bade Viata's ghost farewell and the
spirit faded from view. Kiara leaned against him, letting him hold her in
silence, until the bells sounded midnight.
CHAPTER NINETEEN prev next contents
"HOW
do you like my garden?" Jared of
Margolan asked the middle-aged noble at his
side. It was early in the second month. The day was cold but clear. A light
snow no deeper than a horse's fetlock covered the ground. Jared and the noble
stood outside Shekerishet, next to the pattern of long, sharpened stakes that
from above made the crest of the House of Margolan.
Thirty stakes, and on each of them, a body.
Some were impaled through the back, others
face down through the gut. Vayash moru were staked facing east, so that
Jared might see whether they burst into flames at dawn. Others, around the
perimeter, were either coated alive in wax or soaked in oil, making human
torches that burned as night fell.
Jared's favorite punishment, however, he
reserved for those from whom he truly wished to exact the greatest revenge. A
sturdy, sharpened pole impaled the victim between the legs, on a stake just
tall enough that the victim could remain on his toes for several candlemarks,
until his strength failed, and he finally sank low enough for the stake to
pierce vital organs. Jared found the death dance mesmerizing. Today the moans
of his dying victims sounded like a distant wind.
Lord Curane's expression was neutral.
"Your parties are always memorable, Your Highness."
"It's been a good day," Jared said
amicably, taking another deep draught from his flask. He had been drinking
Tordassian brandy since early in the day, even before the show trials of a
dozen deserters, tracked down by faithful officers and brought back in chains.
The deserters had been hanged at
The real event, however, was the trial and
execution of General Lothe. Jared felt his mood darken just thinking about
Lothe, who claimed to be loyal to Margolan, and apolitical when it came to
kings. Whether Lothe was a convincing liar who remained loyal to Bricen or
whether he had a change of heart, Jared neither knew nor cared. What mattered
was that Lothe had tried—and failed—to poison him, and for that, Lothe had paid
dearly.
Broken on the rack, his skin seeping with
fresh burns from the torturer's irons, what was left of Lothe was poisoned with
the same tincture that Lothe had tried to use on Jared. Jared found it particularly
satisfying to watch Lothe writhe in pain as the
slow poison worked, and then, finally, to have Lothe's body burned in the
public square.
The executions were well attended, and a
party mood filled the air as the sun set. Musicians played lively tunes, but
remained circumspect in their choice of ballads and songs, taking caution from
the disappearance of a few of their fellows who had the poor judgment to sing
of Bricen and his victories in battle. The smell of roasting sausages mingled
with the odor of burning flesh from the human torches, and ale flowed freely.
Jared knew that one maiden already awaited his pleasures inside the castle, a
girl he had chosen from the crowd and pointed out to his guards. Yes, he
thought, it was a good day, a very good day indeed.
"A fine party, Your Majesty,"
Curane agreed, snapping Jared out of his thoughts. "But I wonder, my king,
if I might have a word with you."
"Speak." Jared took another long
draught of his brandy.
"I bear tidings from my wife's uncle,
Lord Monteith," said Curane. His voice dropped. "As you may recall,
my king, the Monteith family is one of the oldest noble houses in Trevath, and
quite well-regarded by their king. They have significant influence on the
opinions of the Trevath crown."
"And?" Jared interrupted. Curane was
useful, and was one of Jared's staunchest supporters. Curane did not even
flinch when Jared had demanded a dalliance with his granddaughter, though she
was barely of marriageable age. Curane willingly supplied the girl, drugged and
pliable, for Jared's pleasures, and just as willingly made her disappear when
Jared tired of her. What became of her, Jared neither knew nor cared. Now,
Jared imagined, Curane was going to expect some reward.
"I understand from Lord Monteith that
the King of Trevath is most impressed with Your Majesty's resolve in securing
the throne. Most impressed. It's also known in Trevath that you have made
alliance with Nargi, a frequent trading partner with Trevath."
"Get to the point," Jared snarled.
The brandy was taking much too long to reach his head, and he felt far too
sober.
"As you wish, my king. Lord Monteith
believes that the King of Trevath might be approachable for a similar alliance.
Such an arrangement could be quite profitable, and might serve to deter some of
the other kingdoms, which may not have yet seen the advantage in allying with
your power."
"Not seen the advantage?" Jared
roared. "Isencroft, Principality and Dhasson have recognized my traitor
brother. I consider that a declaration of war. Only Eastmark has 'not seen the
advantage.' But their silence to our approaches is an answer in itself."
Now Jared could feel the brandy rising in his blood, filling him with a
boldness which, of late, seemed more and more elusive.
"A thousand pardons, my king,"
Curane said, bowing low. "I hoped to bring you good tidings from Trevath.
They are a wealthy and powerful nation, with an esteemed army. Such an alliance
might show the others the error of their ways."
And it certainly wouldn't hurt your standing
with their king, either, Jared thought cynically. "All of this is
speculation," he snarled. "When their king is ready to sign a treaty,
then he'll have my interest."
"Of course, my king," Curane said.
His obsequiousness both pleased and annoyed Jared, and the king only barely
restrained his temper, reminding himself of Curane's usefulness.
"And while you're in Trevath,"
Jared said, his words slurring as he finished the last of his flask. "Tell
them to send better brandy. This year's batch was pig slop!" He hurled his
empty flask into the fire.
"Of course, my king, as you wish,"
Curane said, with the same imperturbable smile he always wore. He backed away,
bowing low, and made his exit. Alone, except for the guards that now always
accompanied him, Jared watched the partygoers with detachment, feeling an odd
mixture of disdain and jealousy. Disdain, for the trivial intrigues and the
self-absorbed interests of the courtiers, and jealousy, because they bore none
of the weight of the crown, nor the dangers of kingship.
Both disdain and jealousy were doubled when
it came to Tris. Just the thought of his half-brother made Jared want another
brandy. Tris, whose life had been as charmed from birth as Jared's had been
cursed. Queen Serae could do no wrong in the eyes of the court, while even
after Eldra's death, dark rumors persisted about Bricen's first wife. Jared had
taken care of that. He'd noted since childhood who among the noblewomen had
been uncharitable toward his mother's memory. They had been the first to die
when he gained the power to make things right.
Eldra had been avenged, but it didn't bring
her back. But a Summoner could, a Summoner who wasn't chained by weak concepts of rules
and ethics. When the Obsidian King returned, adding his power as a
Summoner to Arontala's magic, Arontala promised Jared that Eldra would return
to take her rightful place beside him. Together, they would rule Margolan.
That was something Tris could never
understand. Jared grabbed a tankard of ale from a passing vendor who bowed low
and scurried away. He downed the ale in one long swallow, wishing it would go
to his head. No, Tris never got passed from one servant to another, servants
who barely noticed a small boy's existence. Tris had both mother and father;
Bricen had doted on his second family the way he had never had time to do with
his first. But Serae and Kait would both pay. Arontala had locked them away in
the Orb. They would experience the torment they deserved.
Now Tris was the darling of the Winter
Kingdoms. Jared spat to one side. He pushed his way through the crowd, and the
partygoers scattered to clear a path for him as he strode through the throng.
Staden had received Tris like a real king, instead of a boy with delusions of
grandeur. Word had it that King Harrol of Dhasson and King Donelan of Isencroft
had also recognized Tris as Margolan's rightful king—a travesty, considering
that Jared was the first born and heir.
Tris had even inherited magic. Bava K'aa had
always kept a watchful eye on Jared, and Jared had hated the old crone witch
for it. He'd assumed it was because Serae was Bava K'aa's daughter and Tris her
grandson. He'd stayed out of her way, hating how uncomfortable he felt around
her, as if she could read his mind. That Bava K'aa let Tris and Carroway
help in her study never bothered Jared at the time. He'd assumed the old witch
was just using
the two for free labor. Now, he understood.
All those years, Bava K'aa had been training Tris, right under Jared's nose.
Training him to seize the throne, to acquire immense power, to push Jared aside
as Jared had always been pushed aside. Even then, they'd been plotting.
And then there was Kiara. Jared's fists
clenched. She was his by right, by covenant. Kiara had been promised to him
twenty years ago, when she was born. But Bricen had stalled, refusing Jared's
demands to claim his bride when she turned sixteen, easily of marriageable
age. Bricen had invented one reason after another to keep Jared from visiting
Isencroft, keep Kiara from coming to Margolan, although by the betrothal
contract, they were as good as wed already. Bricen had kept Kiara out of reach
the same way he had always dangled the crown. Jared came to realize that
something had changed in his father, that Bricen did not intend for his
first-born son to take the throne. That was when Jared had decided to seize his
own destiny.
Kiara and Tris added another humiliation,
announcing their betrothal in defiance of the covenant. By ancient law, Jared
now had the right— the duty—to have both of them put to death for treason and
adultery. You got the childhood I never had. You got a mother—and
father's attention. But I'll be damned if you think you'll steal what belongs
to me!
"Careful that you don't take a chill, my
king," a familiar voice said from behind him. Arontala's approach, as
always, was completely silent.
"What do you want?" Jared snapped as
Arontala fell into step beside him. Arontala's presence parted the crowd around
them. Even the guards kept their distance. In the midst of the throng, they
were utterly alone.
"I bring news, my king, from
Principality."
"And?"
"Our assassin did not find his
mark," Arontala reported. "He nearly killed one of the ruffians who
accompany your brother, a smuggler who is not unknown to me. Sadly, the
encounter was not fatal."
Jared wheeled on the mage, staggering from
the brandy. "You promised results."
"And results we have, my king,"
Arontala replied. "Your brother—and King Staden—now realize that they are
not safe from our reach."
"Not enough."
"There is more," Arontala remarked,
almost off-handedly. "I understand, through a very reliable source, that
the Blood Council convened in Principality for the purpose of determining
whether vayash moru would be granted permission to fight against you.
The majority of the Council gave their assent." Arontala held up a hand,
staving off Jared's irate response. "This is in our favor."
"How?" Jared roared. Nearby
partygoers shuddered, though none dared to look toward the angry king.
"Because, my king, it legitimizes what
we have told the people about the vayash moru. When the people see vayash
morn attacking mortals, we will not need to urge them to take their
revenge. Yes,"
Arontala said with an unsettling smile.
"This is a very good thing."
"The only good thing will be when my
brother dangles from that noose." Jared pointed at the gibbet.
"Patience, my king. We're closer than
ever to the Hawthorn Moon. Whatever grandiose dreams your brother may have,
there is no time for him to move against us. In just a few months the Hawthorn
Moon will be upon us, and we'll seize power that will last for generations to
come."
"Unless you fail—again," Jared
sneered. "One of my platoons disappeared, near the Principality border.
They brought the lone survivor to me, a raving madman who swore that vengeful
ghosts had ripped his comrades to shreds before his very eyes."
Jared leaned toward Arontala. The brandy made
it possible to ignore the smell of stale blood. "Such a thing could be
done by a Summoner." Jared made the word a curse. "But of course, my
mage has assured me that my brother could never gain such power so quickly."
"When the Obsidian King is freed, you
will have your own Summoner, my king. The greatest Suinmoner who ever lived,
hosted in my body and combined with my power as a Fire Clan mage. Your brother
stands no chance against that power." Arontala smiled, his sharp teeth prominent.
"When I took the Orb from its hiding
place in the foundation of Dark Haven, it did more than damage the great house
and kill the lord. Bava K'aa meant to use the power of the Flow, one of the
great rivers of energy, to contain the Obsidian King. But in wresting the Orb
from its mooring, I altered the balance of the Flow. The imbalance in the Flow
changed the timbre of magic in the Winter Kingdoms. It makes me stronger, and
it makes the Light mages weaker." He licked his lips. "That power is
increased by blood magic. And once the Obsidian King is free to combine his
spirit magic with my fire magic, the altered energies of the Flow will give us
even more power."
"Power? Your blood magic couldn't even
produce useful fighters from the wretches they captured for you. They turned on
our own troops so often that the captains don't want them. And the troops that
did use them had to kill them when they were done because they wouldn't go back
in their damn wagon!"
"The troops lack patience,"
Arontala replied dis-missively. "Powerful magic takes time."
"Spare me your talk of magic,"
Jared said. "I want results!"
"You'll have your revenge,"
Arontala promised. "When I'm a Summoner, I can help you question your
brother. I can bind his soul to his body, so that you can enjoy his questioning
for as long as you want. Think of it. I can keep him from dying. How many times
do you want to kill him? How far past mortal endurance do you want to push him?
Force the Isencroft bitch to watch, so that she appreciates your power. Is that
sweet enough for you?"
"It's only sweet if it happens,"
Jared said, his eyes narrowing. "You've made a lot of promises. I'm
expecting to see them come to pass."
"Very soon, my king, very soon. You'll
have everything you desire, and more, at the Hawthorn Moon."
CHAPTER TWENTY prev next contents
"What's on
your mind, Ban?" Mikhail V V asked as they rode.
The early spring weather was unseasonably cold, and the steady rain pelted
their cloaks and soaked their horses. The rain made the night seem even darker.
The roads were deep in mud that splattered with each step their mounts took.
Soterius wanted nothing so much as a warm fire and a dry bed.
Soterius shrugged. "I just can't shake
the feeling that we should be further along, I guess."
Mikhail chuckled. "Impatience does get
easier with immorality," he said. "Let's see. We've trained sixty
fighters in the refugee camp, and sent out six teams to seal off the roads
around the border to Principality and the
"I know. Anybody else would probably
think we'd made a great start. But we've still seen too many soldiers on the
roads for my taste. There's little reason for soldiers to be patrolling this
far out in peacetime—except to steal from the farmers and the
townspeople."
"It would be nice if they would do
something about the brigands and cutpurses while they're out here,"
Mikhail added. They had passed at least a dozen Margolan soldiers in pairs and
small groups over the last few days, backtracking to go around a contingent of
fifty soldiers camped by the side of the road the night before. Despite the
soldiers' presence, nothing seemed to deter the highwaymen that lurked along
even the best-traveled roads.
"I used to travel this way often in the
old days," Soterius said. "Even alone, I had nothing to fear of
thieves while Bricen ruled."
"We made short work of the two who
wanted our horses," Mikhail chuckled.
"And the three before that, who wanted
our money," Soterius said. "If the rest of Margolan is like this, I
hope Tris has a kingdom left when he gets here."
"We'll reach the citadel none to early
for my liking," Mikhail said, shaking his shoulders to get some of the
rain off his cloak.
"I didn't think you minded the cold and
the rain. Isn't that one of the advantages of being dead?"
Mikhail snorted. "Shows what you know.
Cold is one thing—soaked to the skin is another. Just because I'm not alive
doesn't mean I like being uncomfortable."
"At least we haven't gone hungry. I
think I've actually had my fill of deer meat since I've traveled with you.
Remind me to invite you to the next King's Hunt!"
"I used to love the hunt, before I was
brought across. Now, I'm afraid my senses are too sharp. I can find the deer on
smell alone. There's no challenge anymore. But it does keep both of us well
fed—you with meat and me with drink."
They fell silent for a while. Reading a vayash
morn's body language was not easy, but Soterius had the distinct feeling
Mikhail was worried about something he had not put into words. "There's
something you're not saying."
"Just a feeling. We've passed too many
soldiers headed in the same direction. It could mean word has reached Jared
that some of our first groups have cut off main roads. Or they could be
planning something else. That's what worries me."
"You're sure the citadel we're headed
for will take us in? I'd hate to find out we're not welcome."
"I've known Sister Fallon for many
years. We'll be welcome—and safe."
They reached their destination just before dawn.
The citadel of the Sisterhood was a walled enclave atop a hill with a village
clustered at the foot of its high, ancient stone walls. Sister Fallon greeted
them at the gate.
"Welcome," Fallon said with a
perfunctory bow that Soterius and Mikhail returned. "You're lucky to have
arrived when you did. Soldiers are on their way, and it's nearly
daylight."
"Why?" Soterius asked.
"They've been sent by King Jared to hunt
down and destroy the Sisterhood."
Soterius let out a low whistle. "Jared
is taking on the Sisterhood? Can he harm you?"
"Strong as we are, we do bleed and
die," she said ruefully.
"Can you hold them off?"
"Oh yes, at least, long enough. The
villagers worry me the most. Once, before we realized what was happening, a
group of soldiers destroyed a whole village on the rumor that one of our
Sisters was among them." She gestured at the citadel's walls. "I've
sent Sisters to gather the villagers into the citadel. Most of them are already
here. We'll try to keep them safe, until the soldiers can be turned away."
"I don't understand," Soterius
pressed. "How can the soldiers hope to win? After all, they're only regular
men, against mages!"
Soterius thought he glimpsed sadness in her
eyes. "King Jared, I fear, knows our weakness, that the Sisterhood abhors
the taking of life if it can be avoided. Arontala knows we will try to turn the
soldiers back, not destroy them outright. He's gambling that in the process,
the troops will overcome the odds."
Mikhail scratched his stubbled chin.
"But why?" he asked. "Why does Jared even want to fight the
Sisterhood, let alone destroy it?"
"Because of Bava K'aa."
"Bava K'aa is dead."
"A mage of her power does not simply
cease to exist," she said. "After all, any soul with a purpose can
remain among us. That's even truer for a spirit mage.
"King Jared fears the spirit of Bava
K'aa will take revenge for what he's done. Even more, he fears that she might
transfer her power to another mage who would rise up against him. Arontala cast
a spell over Shekerishet to banish the spirits that guard the king. Only then
was he able to kill Bricen." She paused, worry clear in her eyes.
"Jared may fear that his brother is a greater threat than he
expected."
"But why is Jared attacking the
Sisterhood if none of you can stop Arontala?" Mikhail pressed.
Fallon folded her hands in frustration.
"Because he believes that Bava K'aa's body is buried in one of our
citadels," she replied. "He thinks that if he .finds it, and destroys
it, that he will end her power and influence."
"Can he? I mean, would it?"
Soterius asked.
"Who can say?" she replied.
"Bava K'aa was the greatest mage of her generation, save the Obsidian King
himself. I don't know whether a mage of that power is governed by the rules
that limit lesser mages. There are ways to desecrate the body that also bind
the spirit."
"If the Sisterhood knows what's
happening in Margolan, then why in the name of the Crone don't they do
something to help?"
"The Sisterhood never quite recovered
from the Mage Wars. We feared that Bava K'aa was the last of the great
mages. The mages that survived the war—and the ones born since then—have not
equaled the power of the mages who fought that war. We haven't seen another
mage of her power— until now. Until Martris Drayke."
"So while my Sisters have many fine
words to talk all around the issue, the Sisterhood does not get involved
because many of the Sisters are afraid. They don't think they have the power to
stand up to Arontala, or to the Obsidian King. The Sisterhood has always walked
a fine line between intervention and meddling—not everyone would agree on the
difference. Now, I'm afraid their fear has turned them inward. Those of us who
are willing to put ourselves at risk— like myself and Sister Taru—are
distinctly in the minority. You understand that you will not be able to leave
this citadel until the soldiers are defeated."
"I don't claim to understand magic or
mages," Soterius said, "but I understand the oath I swore to Tris.
And I'm doing a poor job of it locked up in a tower!"
"I understand. But a large force is
headed this way, with siege machines. We can't permit you to leave until the
confrontation is over—else, I fear, you will find yourselves captured by
Margolan troops."
"We can't just sit here," Mikhail
objected. "We have a job to do."
Fallon looked quietly at the two men, as if
she were making up her mind. "Yes, you do," she agreed. "And
perhaps, for that reason, the Lady has brought you to us."
"So we just wait? I don't like
this." Soterius began to pace. "A siege could take months! We don't
have that kind of time."
"Perhaps," Fallon interrupted
gently, "events will take their own course. But today, and for a while to
come I fear, this will be your home. Rest. You look like you've traveled all
night. One of our Sisters will show you to your rooms and bring you food. Your
rooms are in the levels below ground where no daylight will intrude."
She turned. "Before you came, I was
headed for a Council meeting. We must get ready for the attack."
"We're grateful for the shelter,"
Soterius said, with a glance at Mikhail. "But we're both soldiers, and we
have no love for Margolan troops. Give us a way to help."
She seemed to consider his offer. "Yes,
you may indeed be here for a purpose." Fallon signaled for a Sister to
take Soterius and Mikhail to their rooms.
Soterius and Mikhail found themselves in two
adjacent sparse rooms, with a small sitting area between them. Another Sister
arrived with a platter of salt pork and a bowl of boiled eggs for Soterius, and
a carafe of fresh goat's blood for Mikhail. In the weeks since they had left
Principality, Soterius found that the vayash moru's choice of
nourishment no longer bothered him. He did not watch the dark red liquid being
poured, or think too hard about its source.
"I don't think I like the way she said
that, about being here for a purpose," Soterius grumbled.
"I've always believed," Mikhail
said, "that the Lady keeps her
hand on those
who do for themselves. So if we do what we can
here, where the Lady has led us, perhaps we can change the course
of what happens later."
"Maybe," Soterius said
thoughtfully. "Who here would know Margolan tactics better than you and I?
If anyone can find the troops' weakness, we should be able to do it."
"You have a point there."
"We've got to get into the Sisterhood's
strategy meetings. We don't even know how this citadel is situated, or where
it's vulnerable. I'd rather fight than sit around waiting on the Sisters to
save us."
Fallon needed no convincing. As
the evening bells began to toll, Soterius and Mikhail found themselves on their
way through the windowless twisting corridors to join a war council of the
Sisterhood. Soterius felt the heady, fear-edged anticipation that always
surged through him on the eve of battle. Mikhail, usually imperturbable, looked
nervous as a cat.
Fallon led them through the corridors with a
ball of blue mage light carried in her hand, and stopped before a great wooden
door. Iron-bound and ancient, it swung open to reveal a large, circular room,
lit by brilliant torches and a fire that roared in a massive hearth. Along the
stone walls, tapestries recounted battles whose names were lost to time. In
the center sat a great table, a massive scrying orb fitted at one place. At
the table sat eight brown-robed Sisters.
"Come in," a Sister gestured for
them to enter. Her face was lost in the shadow of her cowl, and her voice
sounded ancient. Fallon stepped back for
them to pass, and closed the door behind
them. "We have heard your tale from Sister Fallon," the cowled Sister
continued. "And we know that you are swordsmen." She pointed a
gnarled finger at Soterius and Mikhail. "You have both served the armies
of Margolan. Within a day, those troops will be at our door. Where does your
allegiance lie?"
Soterius stepped forward and made an awkward bow.
"My lady," he began, "we are the liegemen of King Bricen. At his
death, we swore our vows to his son, Prince Martris. We will not serve the
traitor Jared. His armies are our enemies."
"You have spoken well, swordsman,"
she said. "Come closer." It was eerie, Soterius thought, to hear the
rasping voice from beneath the brown cowl, but see no face. On the far side of
the table were two empty chairs. "Please sit down." The other Sisters
watched them in silence, giving Soterius cold shivers down his back.
"Fallon tells us that you have
volunteered to serve the Sisterhood in this matter. Is that true?"
Soterius hoped he looked confident. "I
was King Bricen's captain at arms."
"And in my mortal lifetime, I was
liegeman to King Hotten," Mikhail said.
"I trained Margolan troops and I know
their tactics," said Soterius. "If you can tell us more about this
citadel, and the terrain around it, perhaps we can find a way to turn their
attack."
"This citadel stands on the Plains of
Marccam, built by King Lwelyn more than five hundred years ago. It can support
several hundred troops for many months with its own water supply and a more
than ample stockpile of food. We can protect our villagers, but not
indefinitely." She paused. "The tower rises as high as five buildings
atop each other, and has withstood fire, battering rams and siege."
"What of the troops from Margolan?"
Soterius said, frowning.
"Jared may send several hundred
soldiers. It is not, however, the number that I find of concern," the
cowled woman said, "it is their tactics. Arontala has prepared each group
with specific knowledge about our strongholds. Some his mages burned, setting
so many fires and speeding them with pitch that we had no choice but to abandon
the structure. Even mages have their limits. We were unprepared. At another,
his mages diverted a river, sweeping the building away.
"In each case, the mages could have
saved themselves. But Arontala knew we would protect the villagers, and in
doing so, be unable to fully protect ourselves. We lost many villagers and
Sisters, and abandoned several of our strongholds. We have also lost libraries,
artifacts, and magical items which can't be replaced." She spread her
gnarled hands, palms up, in a gesture of frustration. "Each attack grows
stronger. In the last two, Jared sent dark mages with the troops. Disarming
their magic kept the Sisters busy while the siege troops did even greater
damage."
"How can we help?" Mikhail asked.
The Sister inclined her head. "This
citadel has many defenses of its own, and we have trained our villagers. But
dark mages can play havoc with simple things. In one tower, the defenders were
prepared to pour down boiling oil on the attackers, only to have the pot
wrested from their hands by
magic and poured upon their own people. We
know his mages will find ways to challenge our protections. The battle must
not be our villagers against the troops while the Sisters fight the mages. We
have to find a way to stop his mages, and then rout his troops."
"I'm all for that," Soterius agreed.
There was a dry chuckle from beneath the cowl.
"Good. Then you can help us plan."
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE prev next contents
A heavy
fog lay over the land the next evening. Soterius and Mikhail watched
from the citadel's highest point while the Margolan troops took their places.
Soterius wrapped his own cloak tighter around himself against the cold winds.
As Fallon had predicted, several hundred soldiers were encamped against the
citadel.
"I don't like this." Soterius
looked down at the ring of soldiers. He had made that comment more times in the
last few candlemarks than he could remember.
"They've got to be relying on their
mage," he added, surveying the soldiers. "It's as if they're waiting
for us to come out."
"They have a plan."
Within a candlemark, one of the Sisters had
returned with news that the citadel's water was tainted. "We
protected the ground
around the tower," she
explained, "but the water springs from a river beneath the ground. A water
mage could easily have caused it to be fouled before it ever reached our
protections."
"That cuts down our time," Soterius
said soberly.
The Sister shook her head. "It's bad,
but not hopeless. We've stored some water, wine and ale. Two of our water mage
sisters are trying to purify water from the pump. They can't extend their powers
far enough to cleanse the spring where it has been fouled. It will be a
hardship, because they can only purify a few barrels at a time. And it diverts
their powers from other uses."
Just then, another Sister joined them. Her
robes were stained with mud and smelled of the stables; dirt streaked her face
and hands. "There is madness among the animals," she reported.
"None have seen its like. It is, I fear, mage sent. Two villagers were
killed before we realized what was wrong. Sittra is there now to see what can
be done. We can barely contain the beasts, and we don't dare slaughter any for
food."
"They've made the first strike,"
Soterius grumbled.
"Our land mage has been busy himself. Do
you hear that?" Fallon asked, leading Soterius over to the thick wall.
He concentrated, straining to hear beyond the
citadel's heavy fortifications. Then he heard it, a constant, steady cawing of
crows. "Crows?" he asked, frowning. "How many crows does it take
to make that much racket?"
Fallon smiled. "The ground is black with
crows. They are clever
birds; they elude
the soldiers'
arrows. They will foul the tents with their
droppings, and their noise will be a constant annoyance."
"Why don't you just call down wolves and
be done with them?" Soterius asked disparagingly.
"We won't call the wolves to their
slaughter. Although I believe you'll hear them, beyond archers' range. And come
dusk, our guests may see a cloud of bats like never before."
"Your mage talks... to bats?"
Soterius said dubiously.
"A land mage can 'speak' to all things
living, and persuade them to aid his cause."
"Persuade?" Soterius questioned.
"He gives the bats a choice?"
"That's the difference between a mage
that serves the light, and one that serves darkness. A Light mage doesn't force
any living thing to act against its will, or take from the land and seas what
can't be given back."
. "When you're done asking the bugs for
permission," Soterius replied, "We'll be down teaching the villagers
to fight."
Soterius and Mikhail found the villagers in the
enclosed courtyard milling about nervously, several dozen in all, their few
belongings tied up in sacks. The villagers greeted them heartily. Every
able-bodied person who was not needed to suckle a child or tend an elder heeded
the call to arms. For several candlemarks, Soterius and Mikhail trained them in
the basics of castle defense. They separated those who could serve best as
lookouts from those strong enough to help defend the gates. Together they
worked with the villagers until the late evening bells tolled.
As the sound of the bells faded, Soterius
paused. At first, he took the distant humming for the constant noise of the
birds. But within a few seconds the hum became a roar, a force battering
against the double wooden doors of the courtyard. "There's something out
there trying to get in!" one of the villagers cried.
Once again, the wind roared and something hammered
again at the doors. "Quiet everybody!" Soterius shouted above the
din. "Quiet!"
"We're going to move for higher
ground," Soterius explained in his calmest voice. "Let's start to
move quickly to the stairs—"
The doors gave way.
A rush of freezing air swept through the
courtyard, nearly taking men off their feet. As screaming villagers scrambled
over each other to reach the stairs, the air began to swirl, growing colder and
colder. "I don't know what it is, but I'm not staying to find out!"
Soterius shouted above the din as Mikhail struggled to herd the last of the
villagers into the main citadel building. Soterius signaled frantically to a
few stragglers who were attempting to lug their packs with them.
The swirling wind caught up the debris in the
courtyard like the tornados that sometimes laid waste to the Margolan plains.
Bits of straw, splinters of wood, and shards of broken glass were hurtling
through the air, embedding in the wooden posts.
"Come on!" Soterius urged, hanging
onto the door. The two stragglers, realizing their folly, began to run, their
path blocked by the swirling wind that kept even Mikhail from intervening.
Soterius's eyes grew wide as the icy spiral
seemed to anticipate the stragglers' lunge for freedom. He threw up an arm to
protect himself as the vortex enveloped the stragglers. Their screams filled
the air; blood spattered the courtyard walls as the violent wind cut them to
ribbons. Soterius threw his weight into closing the massive inner door, praying
to the Goddess that it might withstand the onslaught. Mikhail joined him,
adding his supernatural strength. Together, they managed to seal the door and
throw the bolts just as the wind slammed into it.
"What was that?" Soterius asked
breathlessly. Beyond the door, the vortex howled. In the hallway, babies
screamed and children shrieked in terror, while the villagers, still clinging
to their weapons, flattened themselves against the opposite wall, their faces
pale with fright.
"An Elemental." They turned to find
Fallon behind them,
"A what?" Soterius breathed, still
feeling his heart thud.
"An Elemental," Fallon repeated.
"Called by a mage." She sighed. "Perhaps we can be thankful that
it's not a fire Elemental."
"Will the door hold?" Mikhail
asked, still braced against the force.
"It's spelled to resist magic from the
outside. We didn't spell the common gate because there had never been a
need." She looked pained. "An oversight."
"Then we're trapped," Mikhail said,
looking lev-elly at Fallon. "Water fouled, our escape cut off, our source
of food limited. Unless there's a way to stop that thing."
"There's a way, but it isn't easy. An
Elemental, once called, can only be destroyed by the one who called it, or by
breaking the concentration of the mage that cast it. I imagine," she said,
her dark eyes weary, "that the mage is out there, among the soldiers. And
our only way out, with the stable blocked, is through the archers' slits, too
narrow for any man or child, or from the roof of the tower itself."
Soterius's eyes lit with inspiration. "If
someone could get down there, how could the warding be broken?"
"A mage could do it with a word. Or a
mage might put the spell on a small chit, a piece of pottery that bears her
wizard's mark, to send it with someone else." She frowned. "But no
one here can fly. And if we send a mage closer or try to move the chit by
magic, their mage will surely detect it."
Soterius exchanged glances with Mikhail.
"Either of us, by our own means, can get to the ground. I come from the
high country, where climbing up and down cliffs is as natural as breathing.
I've climbed the walls at Shekerishet many times. Give me cover, hand me the
chit, and find me some rope and the leather to make a climbing harness. I'll
get it there." He looked thoughtful. "And a few other ingredients our
friend Carroway used for distractions might be useful, too."
"Absolutely not," Mikhail said.
"I'll go." He held up a hand to stay Soterius's argument. "I'm
faster. I'm stronger. I have more natural defenses," he said. "And
I'm already dead."
Fallon shook her head. "We've already
tried. The Margolan mage placed a warding that drove the vayash moru back.
They were unable to cross."
"Then send me," Soterius argued.
"Anything's better than waiting here to be cut to ribbons or starve to
death."
Fallon was silent for a moment, then nodded
reluctantly. "They sensed our mages as quickly as they sensed the vayash
moru. We have no other experienced soldiers. There is no other
choice."
"If I can't go, then let me get Ban
safely to the ground," Mikhail cut in. "I can fly. I can have
him at the tower base in a fraction of the time it would take to climb, and
without the exposure."
Soterius remembered Gabriel's demonstration
back in the salle in Principality City. "I'm willing."
Fallon folded her arms. "Then it's
settled. In the meantime, rest. We'll provision you." It took Soterius
much of the next morning to mix, by trial and error, smoke and light pellets
like the ones that Carroway had used to highlight his songs and tales. He
rested for the afternoon, rising at the supper bells to get ready for the
night's work. As he finished, Fallon appeared with a thin, angular woman.
"This is our land mage, Latt," Fallon said. "She'll raise a fog
at moonrise and call the creatures of the wood to give you cover."
"I'm ready." Soterius looked at
Latt. "You can talk to the bats about that cover."
Fallon smiled at the characterization.
"Our mages have been doing a great deal more than conversing with bats and
wolves," she said as they climbed the twisting stairs to the top of the
citadel. "Our fire mage attempted to strike, but there's a powerful
warding which let a direct hit bounce away harmlessly. Our water mages have
called on the springs to bog down the ground, making it a sea of mud, which
should hamper their use of war machines. Latt's spell to spoil their food may
have worked, in which case, you may find them... indisposed."
"I used to think a mage would just look
at someone the wrong way and 'poof,' they'd be gone, or burned to a
cinder," Soterius said. Mikhail joined them at the third landing, climbing
with them in silence. "After hanging around with Tris, I get the idea that
it might not be quite that easy."
"It's taking a considerable amount of
our mages' energy to avoid going 'poof when their mage sends something our
way." Fallon replied. "Which I'm sure is why Arontala added the
mages."
They reached the top of the tower. The moon
was full and bright. Soterius frowned, wishing for clouds to dim its light.
"I wish you well," Fallon said. "Wait until the twelfth bell.
Then listen for the bats. They will be your cue."
"I was kidding about the bats,"
Soterius said with an anxious glance. "Never really liked bats," he
added beneath his breath.
"Latt also called a fog, which should
help to hide your movements," Fallon added. She handed him a folded cloak.
"This cloak has been spelled to be magic-neutral. It will hide the spelled
chit from detection, and may protect you from magic directed at you."
"May?"
"We don't know the skills of the mage
Arontala has sent. The cloak should shield you, but it can't protect you from
everything. Use caution."
"Thanks a lot."
"Don't forget this," Fallon said.
She stretched out her palm, and her opened hand revealed a
plain-looking piece of buff pottery, stamped
with an intricate design that seemed to blur and move. "It's a wizard's
mark. This chit has been spelled to break the mage's warding and destroy his
Elemental. You must be within an arm's length of him for it to work, and it
must touch his body."
"What if he has some sort of, I don't know,
protections or something?"
"You'll have to improvise."
"Great. Anything else I should
know?"
"The cloak will let you pass among our
mage's traps without harm," Fallon told him. "You need fear nothing
from the wolves, or the bats. But beware of the Elemental."
Soterius raised an eyebrow at her tone.
"The way you say that makes me worry."
Fallon
frowned. "Elementals are
unpredictable. They're a temporary creation, wholly created from the
will and power of the maker. I can't predict what will happen when you break
the wizard's warding."
"Meaning what?"
"Meaning that the Elemental may
dissipate or—"
"Or what?"
"Or it may return to its maker before
its energy is spent."
"And I have to be within reach of its
maker."
"I've not seen many Elementals," Fallon
said. "Because of the danger they pose to the maker, wizards of the Light
rarely call such things. I have no way to know how spent its fury may be if it
returns to its source. It could destroy the wizard alone—or the entire camp.
Even the cloak can't protect you completely from the energy of an
Elemental," she cautioned. "I suggest you escape quickly."
"I'll keep that in mind," Soterius
retorted. Beneath him, the bells tolled eleven times. "I'd like to study
the lay of the land from here," he said. It wasn't the first time that day
Soterius had climbed to the tower's top to survey the enemy. But in moonlight,
the terrain took on a different look. He wanted to prepare, knowing there would
be no time once he reached the ground.
"Goddess go with you," Fallon said,
making the sign of the Lady. "I'll leave you now."
"Thanks," Soterius said, as she
moved to the door. "Keep a watch out. I'll need someone to let me back
in."
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO prev next contents
THE candlemarks
slipped away, and soon the bells tolled
tunic in a pouch on a strap around his neck.
His sword hung ready and his dagger belt crossed shoulder to hip.
Just then, Soterius heard the velvet rustle
of a thousand bat wings.
Soterius stepped up to the edge of the wall.
He tried to quiet a primal panic as the vayash moru stepped up behind
him, encircling his chest with inhumanly strong arms. In one smooth motion,
Soterius felt his feet leave the ground. Then they were aloft, over the top of
the crenellations and descending so quickly it made Soterius's stomach flip.
They touched down lightly, and Mikhail released his
hold, seeming to vanish in the next heartbeat.
The night air was cold enough to frost
Soterius's breath, and he was grateful for his heavy cloak. He looked up. Just
as long as I don't have to climb back in, he thought, adding a short,
fervent prayer to the Goddess.
The cool mist of a thick ground fog greeted
him, and Soterius dropped to a crouch. He lifted the spelled cowl over his
head. He made his way through the mud, silently cursing the effectiveness of
that particular spell. The cloak shielded him from the worst of the chill.
Ahead, the fires of the camp burned brightly, their light diffused by the fog.
From the woods beyond the camp, Soterius heard the howl of a wolf, and the
answering cries of the pack. A shiver ran down his spine, despite Fallon's
assurances that the wolves had been warned of his approach. He had met up with
wolves on campaign more times than he liked to remember, and the flash of their
teeth and hunger of their snarls were clear in his memory.
Heart thudding, Soterius approached the camp,
careful to skirt the rim of firelight, staying well into the shadows. How do
I tell which one is the mage? The troops wore the livery of Margolan, he
noted bitterly. Close enough to see their faces, he watched the soldiers move
about their camp, looking for anyone he recognized, surprised at how cold he
felt inside at the thought of making war on men he once trained. The officers'
tents were close to the center of the camp, while the enlisted men's tents circled
the periphery. Soterius could spot the cook tent and the latrine, and a small
wooden enclosure that served as a temporary stockade. There were more than
enough soldiers to keep the citadel imprisoned
for quite some time. To his relief, the siege
engines and catapults appeared to be mired in deep mud. It was obvious that the
commanders were prepared to play a waiting game.
Soterius had made nearly a full circle before
he spotted the mage, a solitary figure near the center of the camp. His shadow
was outlined by the light inside his tent, his arms raised, a scrying ball silhouetted
beside him. Soterius smiled coldly, his target in view. This part of the job he
understood completely.
It was joyous to do the work of a soldier
once more, and he rose to the challenge. With a practiced eye Soterius set a
course for himself, making use of what little concealment the camp provided. He
took a deep breath, steeling himself to walk purposefully across the camp as
if he belonged there.
Behind him the wolves howled louder. The
bats, nearly wingtip to wingtip in the dark sky, squealed and fluttered
overhead, diving at the soldiers, too -fast and small to fear the swords. The
bats took most of the idle soldiers' attention, enabling Soterius to slip past
the guard.
Soterius closed the distance to the tent,
moving silently, Carroway's pellets in one hand and the spelled chit in the
other. He reached the shadows at the back of the tent and knelt. He was ready
to slip beneath the back edge of the tent when he heard a crunch on the ground
behind him, and the sound of a crossbow being drawn.
"Throw down your weapon and stand
up."
Soterius stiffened, and held out his sword
hand as if to surrender the blade. His wrist jerked and the pellets went
flying, blinding the guard with red and green fire as they struck the ground
and giving Soterius enough cover to throw a small shiv that sank hilt-deep into
the guard's chest. Knowing he was about to lose his chance completely, Soterius
dove beneath the tent and flung the chit at the startled mage, grazing his
leg.
There was a clap like thunder, and then the
howl of a distant storm. As the camp erupted into chaos, Soterius ran for his
life toward a trench along the perimeter. He huddled in the bottom of the
ditch, flattening himself against the ground with the cloak pulled over his
head. In the distance he heard terrified screams as the hum of the Elemental
grew louder. The winds battered him, pulling at his cloak with such force that
he thought they might lift him from the trench and hurl him into the air.
Soterius tried to make himself as small as possible, curling into a tight ball.
Above the shriek of the wind, Soterius heard
screams in the darkness. He felt the power of the storm sweep over him. Even on
the edge of the camp, as far away as he could get from the mage's tent, the
wind beat against his magicked cloak. He held on to its fabric until his hands
cramped and his fingers bled. Debris pelted him, and from that the cloak gave
no reprieve. Soterius stifled a cry as wood and rock slammed against him; he
prayed to the Lady that none of the debris would rend his cloak. Soterius
closed his eyes, prepared to die.
The wind stopped, and the camp fell silent.
His heart pounding in his throat, Soterius
rose slowly. Tents, set afire by scattered coals from the camp's fires, blazed
out of control. The Elemental had carved a path through the heart of the camp.
Where the mage's tent had been, the ground
was bare and burned.
Soterius ran for his life. His breath steamed
in the cold air. He zigzagged his way back along the lines, using the wreckage
as cover to elude the remaining soldiers who tried to round up their panicked
comrades. As Soterius hid behind a ruined wagon, waiting for two soldiers to
pass, a streak of color in the mud caught his attention. Tattered by the
Elemental and sullied by the campaign, the banner he pulled from the mud was
still recognizable. It brought a lump to his throat and stung his eyes.
Soterius held the banner of Margolan clenched in his fists.
He did not have to worry about having to
scale the citadel tower to regain entry; Mikhail waited at the base of the
watchtower to welcome him back. Joyous peasants spilled into the bailey.
Soterius passed among them, oblivious to their glee, managing a smile only
when they pressed around him and hoisted him onto their shoulders, carrying him
in victory.
He left as soon as the opportunity presented
itself. Mikhail followed him when he made his way back up to the tower roof.
"You're the hero," Mikhail said.
"Your party is downstairs."
Soterius struggled with his memories.
"You didn't hear the soldiers die, when the Elemental came."
"You've been to battle before, Ban. You
know it for what it is."
"They never had a chance."
"Did the villagers in the outer
bailey?" Mikhail replied. "The mage who called the Elemental didn't
mind starving us out, or driving the villagers mad with thirst."
"It was slaughter," Soterius said
quietly. Overhead, the winter constellations burned brightly. He pulled the
shreds of flag out of his cloak pocket, and looked out over the plain once
more, the ruined soldiers' camp just a silhouette of tumbled tents and nearly
spent fires.
"You saved those villagers down there,
and the Sisters, and their citadel. That's something to be proud of,"
Mikhail said. "They're from Margolan, too."
"I feel as proud as if I'd knifed those
soldiers in their sleep. They were Margolan troops, Mikhail." He shook his
head. "Fallon told me that the Elemental could return to the camp. She
warned me it would be dangerous. But being there, hearing it... It's hard to be
proud of winning if it isn't a fair fight."
"The soldiers made their choice when
they swore allegiance to a murdering pretender. They obeyed Jared's orders to
kill their own people. Jared's not worthy of that flag. And the troops that do
his bidding aren't worthy of your pity."
"I want to drive the bastard out,"
Soterius said. "I want to go home."
"So do I. But not until a king I trust
sits on the throne. We have to put Tris there, Ban."
Soterius looked across the plain at the
burning camp. "I know. I know."
"Come on. Give the villagers a hero to
celebrate. Lady knows they've had little enough cause for happiness lately. And
afterwards, Fallon's got a bottle of Cartelesian brandy waiting for you in
your room. Seems our good Sisters partake,"
he said with a grin. "Then to bed with you. We've got a ride ahead of us
tomorrow night."
Soterius took a deep breath, knowing Mikhail
was right; the villagers needed a symbol and a hero more than he needed the
luxury of quiet grief. The men wound their way down the stairs toward the
bailey, where the sound of revelry and music echoed throughout the ancient
fortress.
Soterius attempted his best show of lighthearted
gaiety, obliging the village girls who waited for a dance with the evening's
hero, embarrassedly accepting the heaping trenchers of food brought to him by
village matrons, and washing them down with tankards of ale that the farmers
and townsmen kept filled. It was well past mid-morning before the celebration
began to wind down, and the sun hung in the afternoon sky before Soterius was
free to find his bed. The morrow would come too quickly, Soterius knew. And
while it would not be the first time he rode with a throbbing head; it was just
as 'well that he would have something to take his mind off his memory of the
night's work, and what it truly meant to raise steel against his own flag.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE prev next contents
The LAST of the spring rains ended late in the
fourth month, the Lover's Moon. When the roads were dry enough to ride without
bogging down, Tris and his companions prepared for the final campaign into
Margolan.
Their departure was unheralded, with only Staden,
He had promised to meet up with Tris and the
others once they reached Margolan.
The group would make the best time on the
journey south traveling the river Nu, whose deep, swift course would save them
a dangerous overland passage. Staden sent them with a letter to his friend
Sakwi, the land mage who had helped Kiara on her journey north. The letter
asked for Sakwi's assistance and his help in securing a boat for both them and
their horses. That letter waited safe in the breast pocket of Tris's tunic.
Though both Staden and Kiara attested to
Sakwi's trustworthiness, Tris was worried about the river journey itself. The
river was the best way to avoid a dangerous passage through Margolan's northern
mountains, but it would be wild and swift from the melted snows. The only other
land route ran through Dhasson, but Tris had no reason to believe that
Arontala's spell to call the magicked beasts had lost its potency. They would
stay close to the Margolan banks when they passed along the Dhasson stretch.
The river would let them bypass the mountains to reach the southern plains and
Shekerishet more quickly. Once they left the banks of Principality, they would
be back in hostile territory, and closer than ever to Jared and Arontala.
"I hope the weather holds," Kiara
said. She lifted her face to the wind, and let it rustle back through her thick
hair. She looked up, scanning the clouds. "It can change without warning
on the river."
"Here's hoping the Lady's with us all
the way," Tris said. "I was thinking the same thing."
They reached the village where
Staden had said they would find Sakwi near dusk. It smelled of fish and wood
smoke. It was just far enough from the banks of the river that the yearly
floods would not sweep it away. The village housed only a handful of families.
Nets were hung from the trees to dry and skiffs were pulled up on the banks.
The streets were deserted as Tris and his friends rode up, but once they passed
the first small house, Tris could feel that they were being watched.
"We seem to be leading a parade,"
Carroway said from behind them, as their horses splashed down the muddy road.
Tris glimpsed a silent congregation of ill-clad villagers slip from their homes
to keep a watchful eye on the strangers.
When they reached the center of the small
town, Vahanian stopped, and turned in his saddle to look back at the villagers
who followed them. "We're looking for a traveling mage," he called to
the group. "A land mage named Sakwi."
A bearded man stepped forward. "What do
you want?"
"We were told this mage could help us
navigate the river on our journey south," Vahanian replied. "We have
a letter of introduction from a friend."
"I'm Sakwi." They turned to see a
thin, slightly stooped mage whose racking cough silenced him for a moment after
he spoke.
"Sakwi!" Kiara called in greeting.
She slid from her horse and ran to the mage.
"Please, come inside," Sakwi said,
gesturing for them to tether their horses and follow him into a small house.
"If I'm to be of help, I must understand your journey. You'll be safe
here," he said, with a nod to the villager who first intercepted them. The
fisherman nodded in return. In the dim light, Tris caught the glint of a dagger
in the man's hand. Tris looked around at the group of villagers, noting that
each was well-armed by common standards. This might be the last safe haven
they would have for quite some time, he thought. He would enjoy it while it
lasted.
"Sakwi gave me the key to Westmarch, and
introduced me to Grayfoot the fox," Kiara explained once the door was
closed. Briefly, she told Sakwi of her trek northward, and of the magicked
beast she encountered and Grayfoot's sacrifice.
"I believe Grayfoot had some idea of
what might befall him," Sakwi said. "He was a bit of a mystic."
"The fox?" Vahanian asked
incredulously. Kiara glared at him.
"I'm not sure what he was, but he wasn't
your average fox," Kiara reproved.
"Actually," Sakwi said, "he
was quite average. The fox are very intelligent... for those who know how to
speak with them." Sakwi turned his attention to Tris. "I doubt
you've come to reminisce. How can I help you?"
Tris pulled Staden's note from his pocket,
and waited as Sakwi read it over.
"We need safe passage for ourselves and
our horses down the river. I'm Martris Drayke, son of Bricen of Margolan. My
friends and I go to unseat Jared the Usurper and his mage." He paused.
"And we would like to travel as quietly as possible."
Sakwi looked from Tris to Kiara and back
again. "King Staden is a good friend. I'll do as he requests. I've seen
what is going on in Margolan, and I've
tried to bring some relief to the refugees.
Speaking of which, there is someone I'd like you to meet," Sakwi said. He
leaned outside the door and spoke a word to a boy waiting there. After a while,
a bent, haggard man appeared.
"Come in, my friend," Sakwi greeted
him, ushering him toward a seat. The newcomer regarded Tris and the others
suspiciously. "These travelers will have a great interest in your story,"
Sakwi said, "I know it's difficult for you to speak of it, but I ask you
to tell your tale once more."
The stooped man wrung his gnarled hands for a
moment; the lines that etched his face seemed to deepen in the firelight.
"I canna sleep," he admitted, staring down at his hands. "I
might as well tell the story since it won't leave me 'til the day I die."
Tris heard the thick accent of the Margolan farm country in the man's rough
voice.
"I worked the land my father worked, and
his father before him," the farmer said, looking not at Trfs but at the
wall over Tris's shoulder. "And until the last harvest, I cared nothing of
what happened in the city, or ought what the palace folk did. Then the riders
came."
"Riders?" Tris prompted gently,
leaning forward.
"Aye, the guardsmen of the king," the
farmer replied, still looking at the wall, as if he were replaying the scene in
his mind. "At first, they wanted gold. Then, when there was no more gold
to give, grain and pigs. When those were gone, they took our daughters."
His eyes were hopeless and haunted. "Like the grain and the gold, we never
saw them again."
Beside him, Tris felt Kiara stiffen.
"What happened then?"
"The village in the next shire refused
to give up their women. We found the menfolk hanging in the forest, cut open
like deer, their hands and tongues cut off.
"We had nothing left to lose," he
went on, his voice flat. "They came for our women and stayed to take our
boys in chains to train for soldiers. It was too much." He turned his
haunted gaze on Tris. "Dark Lady take my soul, I know 'tis treason to
raise a sword against the king's men. But it was too much to bear. We rose
against them with whatever we had at hand, our poor hoes and axes against their
swords.
"We should have known that more would come
when the first never returned." As he spoke, a lad of a half-dozen summers
slipped into the room and sidled up beside him. Tris felt his throat tighten as
of the firelight revealed the boy's face. A scar ran from the boy's collarbone
to his severed ear, leaving the side of his face puckered and discolored.
Carina reached out reflexively for the boy, who shrank back into the shadows.
"When they came back, they brought
demons with them. Out of a box wagon, they came. Like dead men walking they
were, blind with rage, striking everything in sight. We didn't know what to
make of them, and they killed so many. They left my boy for dead," the
farmer went on. "Burned the village, and took our women and boys anyway.
Of one hundred souls, only my boy and I escaped. We wandered the woods like vayash
moru until Sakwi found us and brought us here." He looked back at
the hands he twisted in his lap, hands
stained from a lifetime of working the soil and broadened by the plow.
"Thank you," Sakwi said quietly. He
pressed a chunk of meat and a loaf of bread into the man's hand, and enticed
the boy from the shadows with a wedge of cheese so that Carina could heal his
wounds. She worked for over a candlemark to restore the boy's hearing, relieve
the pain of the badly healed wound, and lessen the scarring that marred his
face. When she was finished, after profuse thanks, the farmer led the boy to
the door, then turned and looked back to Tris and the others.
"Stay clear of Margolan," he
warned. "'Tis the demon's own now, mark my words."
Tris was silent after the farmer and his boy
disappeared into the night. Vahanian muttered a potent curse. The mix of anger
and grief that welled up inside Tris was too strong to put into words. His
loathing for Jared deepened, and the pain he felt for .his homeland, for all
the deaths and destruction, swayed him dangerously toward overwhelming anger.
Kiara laid a hand on his arm, sensing his struggle. Tris could hear the
Sisterhood's warnings in his mind, but every attempt to dispel the hatred he
felt fell short. It was several moments before he could even trust himself to
speak, before his eyes cleared and he could let the desire to destroy Jared
drain from his body.
"The story is unfortunately a common
one," Sakwi said, pausing while a coughing fit took his breath. "This
winter was harsh, and the soldiers left little for the people to eat. They will
starve come summer, before the next crops are in."
"What did he mean, 'dead men
walking?'" Vahanian asked.
"Probably the same ashtenerath fighters
Ban ran into," Tris replied. "Arontala can't do spirit magic, so he
can't reanimate corpses. But his blood magic and torture could bend a man to
his will."
"There are plants and mixtures that will
produce visions—or nightmares," Carina added. "Absinthe, for one.
Certain mushrooms, and strange plants from the southland deserts. The
priestesses use them in rituals to see the Lady. Without the proper
precautions, they can drive a man mad."
"Yeah, well if they're the same madmen
Ban fought, then they die off quickly. That's one good thing." Vahanian
replied.
"Esme showed me the body of the fighter
they brought back from the border. I could sense the blood magic," Tris
said. "But Arontala can't make too many of them without depleting himself.
They require a good bit of power to control. And Esme says that because of how
badly they're broken before Arontala can make fighters of them, they're already
dying—the pain is part of the madness." Tris balled his fists as he
struggled to control his anger and re-channel its force. "By Chenne, I'll
bring Jared down—and Arontala with him."
Sakwi regarded him silently. "I hope
so." He rose to stir a pot on the fire. "There's much to do if we're
to head downriver. But first, we eat."
Sakwi boiled water for tea and readied a meal
of hard cheese, bread and meat. Vahanian, Carina, and Carroway warmed
themselves by the fire, their sodden cloaks raising a fine mist in the warmth.
Tris answered Sakwi's questions about his
training and their preparations for the journey. On the hearth, Jae picked at a
wedge of cheese. Sakwi reached out a hand to the little gyregon, who hopped
toward him without reservation. Jae fluttered his wings and hopped up to perch
on the land mage's shoulder. Absently, Sakwi reached up to scratch the little
gyregon under its chin. The land mage made a murmuring noise, and Jae answered
with a similar gurgle.
"I think I've seen everything now,"
Vahanian muttered. "You're talking to that gyregon?"
Sakwi looked up. "Of course. It's the
polite thing to do. He's a bit put out that we have no chickens to spare."
The gyregon preened and headed back toward the warmth of the fire.
"I haven't seen such a pretty gyregon in
a long time," Sakwi said to Kiara. "They're native to Eastmark, you
know. The royal family there doesn't like to let them out of the country. He's
quite a prize."
"He was a gift from my uncle,"
Kiara murmured, reaching out to stroke the small hunting dragon. Jae, seeming
to sense he was momentarily the center of attention, made a trilling sound and
rolled onto his back, inviting a belly rub.
Sakwi pulled a large leather traveling pack from a
cupboard and began to fill it with necessities for the trip. "The stories
of monsters along the Dhasson border are not the inventions of men with too
much ale," Sakwi said as he packed, and paused, taken by a coughing fit
that shook his thin form. Carina started forward, but Kiara shook her head,
warning her not to intercede.
Tris saw that for as frail as Sakwi
might be in some ways, the rest of his slight body was well muscled and
whipcord strong. "I've heard the witness of the foxes and the wolves, who
have seen the monsters," Sakwi went on when the fit passed. "I've
also heard that 'things' infest the river, and even the northern sea. We'll
need to travel carefully."
Sakwi paused, as if pondering a question to
himself. "The horses make it a little more challenging," he said
finally. "I assume you wouldn't be comfortable if I just instructed the
horses to meet us and sent them on their way?"
"Did I just hear him right?" Vahanian
said in amazement. "He wants to talk to the horses?"
Sakwi raised an eyebrow, but did not turn
toward the fighter. "Horses are quite reasonable creatures. And amazingly
forgiving, which is why they put up with people the way they do. They're very good
with directions, and they can make much better time when they're not hauling us
around on their backs."
Tris smiled at Vahanian's obvious vexation,
and Kiara barely hid a chuckle. "I think we'd rather keep the horses with
us if we can," Tris said diplomatically. "Just in case we can't take
the river the whole way to Margolan."
"Suit yourself. I think I know of a boat
that can take us all, and a pilot, but it will take me a while to find him and
obtain provisions." Sakwi stood. "Make yourselves comfortable. It
should take me about two candlemarks to make arrangements."
"I'll be glad to come with you,"
Vahanian offered.
"Very well. Come if you like."
Sakwi took down a moss-colored cloak from a peg near the door. Vahanian
followed him with a glance to the others that made it clear that his intention
was to keep an eye on the mage.
"I can't say I much fancy a river ride m
this weather," Carroway said, pulling up a chair beside Carina, close to
the fire.
"Can we trust Sakwi?" Carina asked,
looking to Kiara.
"He had no reason to hide me from the
guards at the camp, but he did, and the refugees trusted him. Staden trusts
him. And I don't see much choice, if we're going down the river."
"I don't like the sightings of
'monsters' in the river and the Northern Sea," Tris said as they finished
the tea Sakwi had made for them. "If those things spread, travel and trade
in the Winter Kingdoms will be impossible."
Jae gratefully accepted a bit of the dried
meat from Kiara, and left the hearth for Carina's lap near the fire. The little
gyregon picked at his tidbit for a moment, lifted his head to gobble it down,
and then stretched, circling once before settling in a contented ball.
Carroway found a small lyre in the corner of
Sakwi's room, and absently began to strum it, humming to himself. Other than
the bard's quiet singing the group waited in nervous silence, their weapons
close at hand, waiting for Sakwi to return.
"I found
THE pilot," Sakwi announced a few candlemarks later, shaking the
rain from his cloak. "He's getting the boat ready now. It'll be tight with
all of us and your gear and the horses, but it's a sturdy ship. It'll do."
Vahanian entered a step behind Sakwi and
stamped the mud from his boots. "It's as good as we're going to get."
Sakwi moved to the hearth and put out the
fire. "It's a day's trip downriver to the next village. We'll need to
provision there for the next several days. We won't be able to stop again
before Margolan."
Kiara frowned. "Surely there are
villages between there and Margolan?"
"Nargi villages," the land mage
replied.
"I'd really rather not stop there, if
it's all the same to you," Vahanian said.
Sakwi looked at Vahanian. "You sound as
if you've met our Nargi neighbors."
"On several occasions. Did a great
business, but the priests weren't real impressed. I only heard part of what
they were shouting when I left, but they got rather descriptive, and most of
the details had to do with after they killed me."
"We'll do our best to avoid them,"
Sakwi said. "I doubt Tris and I would fare better. Nargi priests are
rather jealous of their power."
"Lovely," Carroway grumbled.
"Monsters in the river, now Nargi priests. And the only thing Nargi
priests like less than mages are bards."
"I hate to say it," Kiara said,
"but we could end up with a Margolan honor guard if we don't get going
soon."
"You're right." Sakwi took two
leather pouches from the cupboard, and tucked them safely beneath his tunic.
"For my cough," he said apologetically.
"Perhaps I—" Carina started, but
Sakwi shook his head.
"I'm sure you are a fine healer, my
lady," Sakwi said, "but there is nothing that can be done. It can no
more be changed than the color of my eyes. I believe the Lady left me with it
to keep me humble."
Carina looked askance at him, but said
nothing more. Jae fluttered to join them, rising from Carina's lap. The gyregon
gave a squawk of protest before alighting on Kiara's shoulder.
"Let's get moving," Vahanian said.
The rain made the trail to the riverbank
slick with mud. Their cloaks were soon heavy and damp in the steady drizzle.
Whinnying disapproval, the horses protested as Tris and the others led them
down the pathway. "There it is," Sakwi said as they reached the edge
of the dark, swift water.
A boat lay at anchor just off shore, with a
sturdy gangplank ready for them. They could hear the rush of the river and the
lapping of the water against the boat, but in the darkness, the other shore
could not be seen. Vahanian led the way, coaxing his restless horse toward the
walkway.
"Come on, be reasonable," he urged
the frightened animal, to no avail. The stallion stopped at the edge of the
gangplank and planted its hooves firmly. "Come on," Vahanian
muttered between gritted teeth. "We haven't got all night."
"Let me," Carina said, slipping in
front of him.
"Be my guest."
The healer stood in front of the stallion,
reaching up to gently stroke its face. At her touch, the horse relaxed
visibly. Its ears pricked up at her words, murmured so softly that none of the
others could hear. The horse whinnied once more. It took a step forward, onto
the planking, and then another and another until, backing up the gangplank in
front of the horse, Carina led him safely onto the ship and turned his reins
over to Vahanian.
"How did you do that?"
"Finesse. It's the opposite of brute
force."
"Funny," Vahanian muttered.
"Very funny."
On shore, Sakwi repeated Carina's effort with
Tris's mount, while Carina turned her attention to Kiara's. Before long, all
the horses were safely secured in a small corral in the center of the ship.
"This is our pilot," Sakwi said, as
a burly, dark-haired man stepped up. The pilot's eyes were nearly hidden
beneath his broad-brimmed hat, and he wore a voluminous cloak that made his
immense proportions seem even larger.
"I'm Nyall." The man's voice was loud
enough to carry over the water's roar. "Take these." He thrust two
long poles toward them. "We need to get out into the channel."
Once they were away from the bank, the swift
current caught them quickly. Nyall ordered Tris and Vahanian to use the long poles
to push clear debris and keep them out of shallows. The drizzle continued,
making visibility almost impossible and soaking them through. Jae chattered his
disapproval from his perch on Kiara's shoulder where the other three huddled
near the horses. Sakwi seemed unaffected by the journey's discomforts, his face
raised to the storm as if he were listening to a song. Carroway huddled in his
cloak, saying nothing but
obviously unhappy with the circumstances of
their trip. Carina clung to Kiara, looking ill.
"Don't tell me you're going to be
sick," Vahanian said with concern.
In response, the healer dodged to the railing
at the edge of the ship and threw up. Kiara stood beside her, holding her
shoulders and steadying her against the rise and fall of the waves.
"I never really expected her to do
that," Vahanian said abashed.
"I don't like boats," Carina
retorted, still keeping a white-knuckled grip on the rail. "I've never
liked boats. Boats move too much."
Sakwi stirred from his thoughts to join them,
reaching into one of his many pouches for a rubbery leaf. "Chew
this." He pressed the leaf into Carina's palm. "It will help."
Carina nodded her gratitude, and Sakwi
returned to his position in the center of the ship.
"What's your friend doing, listening to
the frogs?" Vahanian asked Kiara.
Kiara glanced back at Sakwi and shrugged.
"No idea. Maybe he's feeling the storm."
"I'm feeling the storm myself,"
Vahanian muttered, shoving a tree limb away from the boat with a poke of his
pole. "It's going to be a long trip if this keeps up."
"What you said about the Nargi, you were
serious back there?"
"Dead serious, pardon the
expression."
"What in the name of the Lady were you
smuggling?"
"Silks and brandy," Vahanian said,
pushing more debris away from the hull. "Ask Tris. He met some of the
priests back in Ghorbal. They're a friendly bunch."
"They wanted to flay him alive,"
Tris confirmed. "We barely outran them."
"Barely?" Vahanian shouted back.
"Barely? We were way ahead of them. What do you know? You were buried in a
pile of silk. They were way behind us."
"They seemed a lot closer to the back of
the wagon," Tris said.
"Is that how you learned to speak
Nargi?" Kiara asked. Carina, ashen, leaned back over the railing and was
sick once more.
"Nope," Vahanian replied. "I
learned that the hard way. Got captured by some raiders. After a couple of
years, you pick it up."
Kiara frowned. "No one lives that long
as a Nargi captive." .
Vahanian leaned on his pole. "I took
down three of them when I was captured. When the bastards finally got me, their
captain made me a deal. Fight in their betting games, or die right away."
He shrugged. "Didn't look like I had much of a choice."
"I've heard about those betting
games," Kiara shuddered. "Loser dies."
"Uh huh," Vahanian said, turning
away to push loose more debris from the swiftly flowing water.
"And you survived, for how long?"
"Two years," he said. "Long
enough."
"How did you get away?" Carina's
voice barely carried above the wind. Tris glanced over to see the healer,
looking pale and nauseous, hanging onto the railing.
"The captain who owned me made a few enemies.
He got called to the palace one day, and didn't expect to come back. He let me
escape, then blamed a rather nasty lieutenant who had it coming. I got away,
the flunky got the blame, and the captain managed to do his double-crossing
little second-in-command out of the hottest betting game champion in
Nargi." "Owned?" Carina asked quietly. Vahanian's dark eyes lost
their bantering glint. "Yeah. Owned. I told you, I don't like Nargi."
"Hard to port!" Nyall shouted, and
the ship lurched, knocking Kiara off her feet and making Carina and Vahanian
cling to the railing for support. Tris stumbled backward into Carroway, who
grabbed at his cloak with one hand and held onto the corral rail with the
other. Sakwi barely moved, his concentration unbroken, and it was then that
Tris guessed the land mage's purpose. The horses in the corral, while restless,
displayed none of the panic Tris expected. He looked from the quiet horses to
the mage and back again in awe.
"What was that?" Vahanian shouted
above the wind.
"Rocks," Nyall clipped. "Hard
to see. Less talk and more work with the poles if you don't want to swim."
"Look!" Kiara shouted, pointing
toward the churning waters. Vahanian followed her gesture, then cursed, jumping
aside as a sodden mass washed onto the deck.
"What is it?" Tris called over the
storm. "Looks like a piece of one of those 'magic monsters' Sakwi was talking about," Vahanian said,
poking at the fleshy pile with his pole. Kiara drew her sword and Carina
stepped back. Even from the other side of the boat, Tris could tell that the
tentacle belonged to no creature he had ever seen.
"If that's a finger, I don't want to see
the rest of it," Vahanian muttered, probing at the thing with his pole.
Jae squawked from where he crouched on Kiara's shoulder, partially shielded
from the storm by her cloak.
Sakwi left the horses with a warding gesture
and moved closer. When he stood next to the tentacle, he closed his eyes and
stretched out his hand, palm down, just above it. Sakwi recoiled, his eyes opening
wide. "Fascinating." "What?" Carina asked.
"I can't explain entirely," Sakwi
replied, "but it doesn't feel natural. It's tainted with blood
magic."
"Great. Can you tell if it has
teeth?" Vahanian snapped as he pushed the boat away from a rock.
"Such things are made to kill,"
Sakwi said, pushing the severed tentacle back into the swift waters.
"Keep a sharp eve out. Whatever lost that might still be alive—or have
friends."
Tris and Vahanian kept their posts on either
side of the boat for the rest of the night. At daybreak, Carroway and Kiara
relieved them, and Tris and Vahanian lashed themselves to the side of the
corral for what troubled sleep they could find. Carina, ashen and miserable,
clung to the corral, trying to help Sakwi keep the animals quieted when she was
not making dry heaves over the boat's rail. Jae found a perch on Kiara's horse
and settled, his wings folded and his head down.
The rain lasted all day, with a cloud cover
that made noon as dark as twilight. Even their heavy cloaks were no match for
the constant rain. By midday, Tris found it impossible to stay warm, resigning
himself to numbed hands and a constant shiver. By the looks of them, Kiara,
Carroway, and Vahanian were equally miserable. Carina looked truly wretched,
her face drawn from lack of sleep, unable even to watch the others eat.
Although Carina bore it stoically, Tris had no doubt that she longed for dry
land.
"You know, I haven't seen a fish this
whole trip," Vahanian mused as they headed through a quiet stretch of
water.
"Neither have I," Tris agreed.
"Maybe it's not a good fishing
area," Carina said.
"Or maybe something's eating them all. I
saw a few deer carcasses on the shore that didn't look like they'd been eaten
by any wolf I've ever seen. I don't like it," Vahanian muttered. "The
sooner we're on dry land, the better."
They docked at dusk against a rickety
platform in a floating city. On both sides of the river, a fleet of houseboats
bobbed and swayed. Some were hardly more than tents on rafts. Others looked to
be true ships, moored and used as dwellings until their captains decided to
raise sail once more. Some were solid floating cabins, hard used and smelling
of fish.
Tris had heard talk of these floating cities, temporary
boat-villages that came and went with the seasons and the fish—and sometimes,
the interest of local authorities. At the core were a half-dozen larger boats.
Those were permanently moored—traders' ships that served as
a provisioning stop
for river travelers.
Swinging bridges linked these trading ships
to dozens of other boats down the Margolan side of the river. Fishermen might
leave their village for the season and tie up with such a floating city,
bringing each day's catch to a broader market. Provisioners of all types tied
up for the duration—food sellers, tavern-keepers, hard-bitten men and women
selling clothing and tools, fishing gear, and baubles.
Across the water Tris could hear music, and
bet that more than one of the garishly decorated boats served as brothels. On
the decks of the boats men drank and gambled. Dirty-faced children scampered
sure-footedly from boat to boat, and worn-looking women rested babies on their
hips and talked in clusters. Metal stove boxes set on slabs of slate provided
for both cooking and warmth. A month from now, all but the provisioners' ships
might be gone, moved to better fishing areas. The floating cities were as
lawless as they were temporary, and were reputed to be a haven to many whose
reputations made them less welcome in the caravans and towns.
Nyall waved for them to follow him ashore.
Carina held Vahanian's arm as they disembarked, looking miserable.
"This way," the river pilot said.
Nyall walked so quickly that they had to run to keep up. They worked their way
down the maze of intersecting docks while dodging the ropes and jugs, fish
bones and nets that littered the rickety structures.
The denizens of the floating city called out
their greetings to the river captain in a thick patois that made it difficult
for Tris to catch their comments. Vahanian appeared perfectly at home,
countering
some of the comments with rejoinders in the
same thick accent.
"I get the feeling Jonmarc's been this
way before," Carroway commented.
"He said something about having traded
on the river," Tris said, ducking under a clothesline. The docks were a
hazardous gathering place, jumbled with small cook stoves and drying nets.
Ragged children ran between the nets and grizzled old women sat atop the
pylons, smoking their pipes. Jae fluttered and squawked as Kiara bent low
beneath the ropes that criss-crossed the narrow walkway. She jumped as a cat
squealed and dove in front of her. Tris kept his hand near his sword, and he
noted that Kiara and Vahanian did the same. Carina leaned heavily on her staff,
looking as if she longed for nothing so much as dry clothes and a solid footing.
Unfortunately, the docks themselves floated on thick logs, so that the whole
city undulated with the currents of the river.
"In here," Nyall said. He stood
aside for them to walk up the short gangplank of a large, dusky yellow
houseboat. Its smoky interior hung heavy with the smell of burned lard and
onions. "A good tavern. They'll have something to fix you up," he
said, nodding to Carina, "and Mama will take good care of you while I get
us provisioned for the next leg of the trip."
Mama was a gargantuan woman. She grinned at
them toothlessly. "Welcome," she said in the thick river accent.
"You're friends of Nyall's and Jonmarc's. Sit. I'll get you
something."
Tris and the others exchanged uneasy glances
and sat down. Vahanian stood near the
bar, leaning with feigned casualness where he could watch the door. Mama
looked back at them from the small table where she was chopping vegetables and
dropping them into a well-used pot.
"Miserable day, wasn't it?" Mama
asked, not expecting an answer, and went back to her work humming tunelessly.
She squeezed her bulk through the doorway and bustled down the gangplank with a
pronounced limp. She re-emerged after a few minutes, dusting her hands against
her stained apron. Mama frowned, looking at Carina, and dug in a bin beneath
the table, rising with a handful of hard crackers.
"Here, dearie, eat these," she
said. "You look like you've lost your supper all the way down the
river." Mama's tone was matter-of-fact. "Make you some tea, too.
There's a window back there if it won't stay down."
Pale and cold, Carina accepted the gift
gratefully and began to nibble on the cracker. Mama gathered their sodden
cloaks and hustled them away, replacing them with threadbare but dry blankets
or shawls. Tris watched through the porthole as Mama loaded the soaked garments
over her arm and headed for a large wood stove that burned on a piece of metal
in the center of the docks. A makeshift tarpaulin fluttered over it, giving
some shelter. Mama carefully arranged the cloaks as best she could around the
stove to dry them. She surveyed her work critically, and then with a nod,
walked determinedly back to her charges, stopping to check the stew and pour
tea into a chipped mug.
"Feeling better, dearie?" she asked
Carina. "Owner of the place should be back soon. He'll be
glad to see some customers for once, paying
or not." Mama headed back to her work, laughing heartily at her own joke.
From his spot near the doorway, Vahanian
asked a question in the unpronounceable patois. Mama threw back her head in
laughter, then shot back a rapid-fire answer which seemed to suffice.
"What's going on?" Tris asked,
hoping that he would soon stop shivering. The tavern boat was warmer than the
raft, but its sole heat was a small metal firebox on a flat stone in the middle
of the table. Its thin walls and shuttered portholes offered little true
protection against the storm.
"Just getting an idea of how much
traffic has been by here recently," Vahanian replied. "It's a good
way to tell whether the Nargi are feeling obnoxious."
Mama went behind the bar and took down a
large flagon from which she began to pour liberal draughts, offering the first
to Vahanian, who tossed it back effortlessly. Tris was chilled through enough
to gratefully accept the libation, as did they all except Carina. Tris took a
small mouthful, struggling to keep from spewing it out as his tongue and lips
caught fire. Kiara and Carroway were having the same difficulty, which sent
Mama into a seizure of laughter. She poured Vahanian another draught.
"My friends are from the city,"
Vahanian said in the Common tongue, with a sidelong glance to let the others
know he had intentionally let them understand his jibe. Mama laughed even
harder, until her sizable form shook, and she clapped Sakwi on the back so hard
the mage inadvertently swallowed his mouthful, resulting in another extensive
coughing fit. Mama looked alarmed, but Sakwi managed to hold up his hand to
stave off her ministrations.
"No, really, I'm all right," he
gasped, clutching the back of a chair. "Just a little cough."
Mama looked at him with the skepticism of her
vast experience. "Harmmph," she said, narrowing her eyes. But she did
not press the matter, and busied herself fixing dinner. Tris found that, once
he persuaded his throat to accept the potent liquor, it warmed him rapidly. He
would not have cared for a second helping. Vahanian did not appear to be
affected by the liquor, although Tris noted that the next time Vahanian spoke
to Mama, his river accent more closely matched hers.
From outside, the sounds of a commotion
reached them. Through the tavern boat's slatted windows, Tris glimpsed a stout
man bustling through the chaos on the docks.
"By the Whore!" a man shouted
heavily climbing the gangplank, "do I have to do everything myself?"
The man strode into the room and ripped his
cloak over his head, stopping dumbfounded in amazement. "Jonmarc?" Maynard
Linton, owner of the ill-fated caravan that sheltered Tris and his friends on
their flight from Shekerishet, looked at Tris and the others as if he were
seeing ghosts.
"Maynard!" Carina cried, starting
from her seat. Tris, Carroway, and Vahanian slapped the sturdy trader on the
back and crowded around him.
"What happened?" Tris asked as
Linton made his way to the bar and poured himself a draught of Mama's liquor.
"The slavers told us you were dead."
Linton tossed back two shots of the strong
whiskey before he thumped his chest and cleared his throat. "Nearly
was," he said in a raw voice. He shook his head to clear the last of the
drink from his throat. "Miscalculated the dose and slept for three
days."
"Mussa poison," Vahanian said.
"But I've sworn off it now, by the
Whore," Linton said with a grin. "Stuff gave me the damnedest
headache when it finally wore off."
"You're just lucky the bastards didn't
slit your throat to make sure you were dead," Vahanian said.
"Calculated risk, m'boy," Linton
said. "When I woke up, there was no one left. So I salvaged anything that
might be of use and took off for the river. I had a few coins hidden about.
Enough to set me up with this," he added with an expansive sweep of his
arm to indicate the tavern, "and here I've been."
Carroway told the story of their escape from
the slavers, with more than one poetic flourish that made Tris wince and caused
Vahanian to roll his eyes. Linton listened intently. At Carroway's sus-penseful
retelling of the battle at the Ruune Videya, the caravan master glanced from
Tris to Vahanian and back again to assure himself of the truth of the fantastic
tale. Mama hunched over the bar, spellbound. By the time Carroway had
recounted their journey to the Library, their reunion with Soterius and
Harrtuck in Principality, and the word from Isencroft of Cam's safe arrival,
Linton grinned and slapped his thigh.
"Goddess True, that's a tale for the
bards!" he exclaimed, motioning for Mama to bring another round of drinks.
Tris and Carroway waved away anything but ale, while Vahanian joined Linton in
another of the throat-numbing whiskey.
"So you're the ones who put up with his
mangy hide before he came here," Mama sniped good-naturedly as she brought
the drinks. "Well if you be a mage, then magic away those monsters what
swim in the river before they eat up every last fish. Fishermen can't make a
decent living no more, with those things in there. Every so often they
eat up a sailor what falls in, too." She waddled back out of earshot and
busied herself at the bar.
"That's only a slight exaggeration,
m'boy," Linton said seriously. "It's been edgy on the river since the
thaw. There are things in the river that aren't born of nature, and
there's more than one old hand has seen them. There've been Nargi on the move,
too, but we don't know why." Linton glanced toward Vahanian on the last
comment. Vahanian frowned but said nothing.
Kiara and Carina joined them at the table.
Mama hustled back up the gangplank with a steaming stewpot and distributed
enough chipped, mismatched bowls for each of them. She ladled out a generous
amount of fish stew, pungent with onions and garlic. Coarse, crisp flatbread
accompanied it, together with ample portions of salty butter.
"Someone was through here not long ago
that might interest you, though she didn't tell the full tale of where she'd
been, I see. Alyzza turned up, looking a little worse for the wear, two moons
ago," Linton reported. "Cagey as hell when I'd asked where she'd been
or what had happened with the slavers. Now I know why. Said she was bound
for Margolan," he added. "Something
about old business to finish at the Hawthorn Moon."
"You're sure she said the Hawthorn
Moon?" Carina asked.
Linton nodded. "Certain. Didn't think
much of it, an old hedge witch wanting to be somewhere for a witches' moon.
Why?"
Tersely, Tris recounted what they knew of
Arontala's plans, and of Alyzza's past with the Sisterhood. "Damn my
soul," Linton swore when Tris was through. "I never thought to see
the likes of that." He looked at Vahanian. "Picked a hell of a
guide's job on this one, didn't you?"
"You know me, Maynard. Never a dull
moment."
"Watch your step, Tris," Linton
cautioned. "There've been more than a few guardsmen through these parts
with as heavy a Margolan accent as you'll ever hear. They might be a little
more interested in your travels than you'd like."
They talked until
mid-afternoon, much of it Linton and Vahanian catching up on river news.
Tris cradled the steaming bowl of stew in his hands for a while before he ate,
appreciating its heat. The others did the same, to Mama's amusement. She
called out something to Vahanian, punctuated by a sharp laugh, and he turned to
them with a grin.
"She said to tell you that she hopes you
aren't trying to pass for river folk," he translated. "River folk
have ice for blood."
"They must," Carroway said, earnestly
eating his stew. "I'm never going to be warm again."
When she could force no more stew or bread on
her guests, Mama plied them with hot tea and some small, caramelized nuts. Then
she withdrew the flask again and offered more of its contents, but this time,
even Vahanian declined to join her. She fixed him with a scornful look and
muttered a pointed remark that elicited a shrug in return.
"I think she just called you
something," Kiara jibed.
"She did," Vahanian said, with a
wink at their hostess. "But out of respect to the healer here, I can't
repeat it."
Mama pushed past them to dig through a box of
jumbled belongings. From it, she withdrew a half-moon pendant of carved bone on
a leather strap, which she brought on an outstretched hand to Carina.
"Please, m'lady, if you would," Mama said earnestly in the Common
tongue, "a blessing for an old woman."
Carina took Mama's stained hand in hers.
"I don't think I'm qualified to bless anything," she said. Mama
looked crestfallen. "But perhaps I can help that limp if you like,"
she added quickly.
Mama brightened and tucked the pendant into a
pocket of her ample apron. "A healing is twice as good as a blessing. What
do you think I wanted it blessed for?" She laughed raucously. The others
made room for Carina to examine the woman, trying not to watch as Carina let
her hands move slowly over Mama's hips and legs. Finally, Carina stood,
brightening for the first time since they left Principality.
"I can fix that," Carina said
confidently. "Just sit down while I work." For the next half
candlemark,
Carina worked as Carroway kept Mama diverted
with stories. It seemed to lift the minstrel's dark mood, and had Mama clapping
in delight. Sakwi looked on with interested approval.
"Try standing," Carina urged Mama.
The river woman struggled to her feet, then
cautiously took a step. Slowly, her bulk settled onto her forward foot. She
relaxed with a look of wonder, taking another step and then a third, until she
made a hop of joy that rocked the houseboat
"Oh, dearie!" she exclaimed,
running to clasp Carina in a bear hug. "That leg has hurt me for more
years than I can count. The Lady was good to me today," Mama said.
"You're welcome here any time."
"Nyall's coming," Vahanian called
from the doorway. Mama bustled to meet him.
"Nyall," she shrilled. "Nyall.
Come look what your healer's done. She fixed my leg, good as a little
baby's!" Mama exclaimed joyfully. She made a giddy pirouette for the river
pilot, who smiled indulgently.
"I told you they were good folks,"
the pilot man said. He sobered as he turned back to Tris and the others.
"Boat's ready. Like as not, you'll want to get going. Got a break in the
storm, but no telling what'll come next. Wind's blowing like more rain."
"Wonderful," Carroway muttered as
he reached for the dry cloak Mama proffered.
"Here, take these with you," Mama
said, rummaging around the small houseboat in a frenzy as her guests prepared
to leave. She tossed items into a bag. "Some crackers, dearie, for your
stomach," she said with a nod to Carina, "and some of those sugar
nuts for that cough," she said to Sakwi. "A little tea for all of you
tonight—Nyall never remembers to take enough tea. A little dried fish to keep
up your strength and this," she said, withdrawing a second small flask and
lifting it in salute to Vahanian, who grinned. "To warm you up."
"Now off with you," Linton said
with mock gruffness, "before she gives away my profits for the
month." He paused, and laid a hand on Tris's shoulder. "Goddess go
with you. Good luck."
"Off with you!" Mama protested,
waving them away. "And Goddess be with you." She reached into her
pocket to finger her pendant, watching them from the gangplank. Nyall led them
into the maze of docks once more, and the houseboat disappeared from view.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR prev next contents
The rain held off until late
afternoon, when the clouds rolled in once more and began a steady downpour.
Vahanian's mood became decidedly worse once the floating city was behind them
and they headed downriver, into Nargi territory. His banter disappeared, and
his replies, if he spoke, were terse. He was clearly alert for trouble, and his
jumpiness made a noticeable difference in all of their moods.
Despite Mama's crackers Carina once more looked
sick. Kiara was troubled, foregoing her rest breaks and joining Carroway in
watching the river-bank for danger. Nyall, too, wore an expression that made it
clear that the pilot looked forward to completing the passage. His unruly black
beard and brows were like storm clouds, and his piercing black eyes harbored an
unspoken worry. Even the horses seemed affected, and it took all of Sakwi's and
Carina's skills to quiet them.
"I never thought I'd feel safer in
Margolan," Carroway grumbled as Tris leaned past him to clear debris from
their path with his pole. "But the sooner we're off this river, the
better. Something feels wrong."
"I've had a bad feeling since we left
Mama's," Tris agreed, looking along the gray forests of the riverbanks and
seeing nothing but shadows. "I don't like it either." He had sensed
the spirits of the river ghosts after they left the houseboat village. The
ghosts kept their distance, watching them in silence. Tris had a distinct
feeling of uneasiness from them, and sensed a foreboding that made him wish for
shore.
"What's that?" Kiara called. Tris
and Carroway came at a run. Jae took to the air and flew ahead of the boat,
circling and squawking.
"What's what?" Carroway asked,
scanning the river.
Kiara shook her head. "It's gone."
She squinted for a better look. "Something in the water, something
big."
"Maybe a log," Tris suggested
hopefully, scanning and seeing nothing.
Kiara shook her head. "Logs don't move
like that."
"Look there." Vahanian pointed, and
they swiveled starboard just as something dark and large dipped below the
river's surface. "That was no log. I don't like the look of it." He
turned to Nyall. "Can this thing go any faster?"
The river pilot gave him a withering look.
"This isn't a little smuggling skiff," he replied. "We put up a
sail in this wind and we'll be capsized in a moment. You ever see horses
drown?"
"You've made your point," Vahanian
said. "But I—"
His words were lost as something crashed hard
into the bottom of the boat.
"Hang on!" Nyall shouted, throwing
his bulk into turning the rudder. Everyone but Sakwi and Carina rushed to the
rails, poles in hand, watching the turbulent, dark waters. The horses squealed
and reared in panic. Sakwi and Carina struggled to restore calm, but the
frightened animals shied, lifting their heads as if they smelled danger on the
wind.
"There's something out there!"
Sakwi shouted.
"No kidding," Vahanian shot back,
anxiously scanning the waters.
"I can feel it," the land mage
returned. "Something big."
"Tell it to go away," Vahanian
said.
Sakwi's eyes squeezed closed in
concentration, then opened wide in alarm. "It's not listening," the
thin mage reported, as Carina turned to him worriedly. "Something's very
wrong. Whatever's out there... shouldn't be. It's not a living thing."
Kiara and Tris exchanged worried glances.
"Magemonster," they said at once. The river erupted around them,
hitting them with a wall of water. The deck of the ship suddenly pitched,
sending them all into the black water of the raging Nu.
An unnatural shriek pierced the night and a huge,
scale-covered tail thrashed out of the water, shattering the ship and sending
beams and boards flying amid the terrified horses that flailed for their lives
in the swift current. Tris felt something brush his leg and he lashed out an
arm to grab for Kiara, who was struggling toward shore.
"Hold onto this!" he shouted,
thrusting a bit of decking toward her He felt something grab onto his leg,
dragging him under.
Mud churned in the cold water, making sight
impossible. Tris knew he had only moments to break free before he was doomed by
either the chill or the current. He grabbed for the knife on his belt and slashed
at the thing which held his leg. His blade, sharp enough to slice a thin leaf
to ribbons, bounced off harmlessly. Tris was growing lightheaded, his chilled
body barely responding as he pulled at the heavily muscled tentacle.
Something streaked past him in the water.
Tris felt pressure, then a sudden release. The tentacle jerked free, releasing
a cloud of ichor that burned his skin. A strong hand grabbed at the front of
his tunic and pulled upwards.
Around them, the water churned and more tentacles
reached for them. Tris jabbed and slashed with his blade as he and his rescuer
struggled to evade the slippery river creature. Tris knew they were both fading
fast. His lungs ached for air; pinpricks of bright lights danced in the
darkness before his eyes. As he began to lose consciousness, Tris stretched out
with his power in one urgent cry for help. His rescuer stopped struggling, and
the dark form began to sink. His hand closed around a thin, strong wrist. Kiara,
he thought, making one last, futile push toward the surface.
The waters stirred. Expecting to feel the
monster's grip, Tris instead was borne up on hands strong but insubstantial. As
he slipped toward unconsciousness, he could sense the spirits rallying around
him, driving back the creature in response to his
summons before he blacked out.
Tris sputtered,
and spat river muck out of his mouth. "If I hadn't
seen it with my own eyes, I'd have never believed it," Nyall was saying
over and over again, pounding Tris on the back to clear the water from his
aching lungs. "Never in all my life. Dark Lady save me. I've known there
are ghosts on a river's bed, poor souls, but never in my life have I seen the
dead bear up the living and deliver them nice as that onto the bank." He
stopped his pounding when Tris could finally wave his arms in protest.
"Kiara," Tris managed, still
spitting grit from his mouth.
"Over here," she called in a weak
voice. Tris turned, his ears ringing painfully, and saw his bedraggled
companion a few paces down the river-bank. Jae strutted on the wet bank next to
Kiara, hissing his concern. "Whatever that was," she said shakily,
"I don't want to meet another one."
"How did you..." Tris began, and
Kiara produced a small dagger with a golden hilt from her belt.
"The Sisters gave me it when I began my
Journey. They told me it would turn the undead, and in the hands of a mage,
destroy their soul. I wasn't sure it-would work on a magemonster, but I thought
it was worth a try."
"Lady be," Nyall swore. "What are
ye, that you've got mage-made daggers and talk of the Sisterhood?" The
river pilot made the sign of the Lady in warding.
"Well, whatever it was," Tris said,
sidestepping the captain's question, "it worked. Thank you."
"Don't mention it." Kiara managed a
grin. Jae perched on her shoulder and nuzzled her ear. "Be pointless if we
get to Margolan without you, now wouldn't it?"
"That's all the horses," Vahanian
said, striding up. Tris looked downriver to see Sakwi secure one of the
panicked beasts to a tree, stroking the animal's neck to soothe it. "Glad
to see you're breathing," he said curtly to Tris and Kiara. "Looks
like you had a few friends down below. You know, after traveling with you, I'm
starting to think there's a body under every rock. Nice work, Spook," he
said to Tris. Abruptly, Vahanian stopped and looked worriedly at Nyall. Where
are the others?"
"I thought they were with you,"
Nyall replied.
"What's wrong?" Kiara asked, still
wiping grit from her face. Jae hopped from foot to foot on the riverbank,
hissing and squawking. Sakwi sat nearby on a fallen log, shivering and
coughing.
"Carroway and Carina," Vahanian
replied, starting out at a brisk pace down the riverbank. Nyall followed him.
Tris and Kiara, still lightheaded from their near drowning, waited nervously
for the two men to return.
A candlemark's search turned up nothing.
Vahanian planted his hands on his hips and surveyed the dark, swift water.
"They're not here."
"I never saw them after we went
over," Nyall said. "Maybe they floated further downriver. The
current's swift."
Vahanian shook his head. "Not alive,
they didn't. Water's too cold. We were lucky to get out. There wasn't time to
go further."
"Can you call for them?" Kiara
asked Tris, struggling to keep her voice steady. Tris felt a lump in his
throat, understanding the assumption implicit in her request.
"I'll try," he said. Ignoring
Nyall's open-mouthed astonishment, he closed his eyes and slipped into a
trance. He could sense the river spirits, to whom he sent warm thoughts of
gratitude. Up and down the river, he felt the flickers of restless ghosts. But
to his great relief, neither Carina nor Carroway answered his call.
"They're not dead," Tris said,
opening his eyes.
Kiara exhaled in relief. "Thank the
Lady."
"You're a Summoner," Nyall said in
an awed voice. "By the Dark Wench, you're a spirit mage, aren't you?"
Tris nodded.
"We've got to get some shelter,"
Sakwi said. The land mage's lips were blue.
Vahanian stared down river at a distant
building cantilevered over the water. He turned to Nyall. "Wait a minute.
I know where we are. That's Jolie's Place down there, isn't it?"
"Yes, but—" Nyall began.
Vahanian gestured impatiently. "Come on. We've
got a place to stay." He headed through the brush. Tris refused help,
although his lungs ached from the water that he had coughed up. Sakwi leaned
heavily on a makeshift staff he had made from a fallen branch. Tris slipped an
arm around Kiara's waist, steadying her when she looked as if she might fall.
"I really don't think—" Nyall
started, then shook his head and gave up, following them through the tangle of
branches as they made their way downriver.
The sounds of raucous music reached them
above the rush of the river, along with the scent of spicy roasted fish. They
could hear laughter and a jumble of voices as they climbed the twisting wooden
steps toward the door, Vahanian leading the way. A burly man blocked their
path.
"You're not welcome here," he said
roughly, taking in their bedraggled appearance. "Off with you."
"I have a message for Jolie,"
Vahanian said in the Common tongue, then repeated it for emphasis in the river
patois.
"What message is that?"
"Tell her Jonmarc is here. Tell her
now."
The guard gave him a skeptical glare, but
shuffled off toward the doorway. He called aside a passing man whom he dispatched
with the message. They waited in silence, chilled and shivering in the wind,
for what seemed like forever. Then, from inside, came quick footsteps.
"What are you using for brains, river
sludge?" a strident woman's voice sounded. "You kept them outside, in
this weather? Move, move, I'm in a hurry." With a flash of crimson, Jolie
burst through the door. "Jonmarc!" she exclaimed, embracing the
smuggler. "Come in, come in," she welcomed them, with a glare to the
burly guard, who shrugged his innocence.
One of Jolie's servants brought an armful of
blankets, which Tris and the others gratefully accepted. Jolie and Vahanian
dropped into a barrage of the
river talk, punctuated by Jolie's flamboyant
gestures. Walking a step behind the pair, Tris sized up their new host. Jolie
was in her middle years, with the figure of a young woman and wild, flame-red
hair that cascaded to her shoulders. Her gown, Tris noted, was in fashion
several years ago at court, its fabric expensive and opulent. Gold glittered at
her throat, on her fingers, and stacked in bracelets up her thin arms. Heavy
gems danced in her earrings. A dusky perfume clung to her, like incense for the
Dark Lady, permeating the room.
"Where are we?" Kiara asked under
her breath. Gaming tables packed the room filled with foppishly dressed men
and revealingly clad young women. Minstrels played raucous tunes, with an
impromptu chorus from several of the guests who were well into their ale. In
the back of the room, a tavern master did a brisk business, slipping patron's
drinks around the shapely young woman perched on the bar who sang along with a
minstrel.
"Someplace Jonmarc thinks is safe,"
Tris replied. "Question is, safe from what?"
"Your friend must have connections,"
Nyall said from behind him. "Jolie doesn't let just anyone in." They
followed Vahanian and Jolie through the bustle of the gamers, toward the back
of the crowded room. Jolie talked continuously to Vahanian or to the players
and their ladies who jostled together in the crowd. Finally they reached a
small door in the rear of the noisy gaming area, which Jolie opened with a key
she withdrew from her bodice. They filed inside and she shut the door behind
them. Jolie locked it and replaced the key with a pat.
"Now, Jonmarc, tell me what brings you
here looking like a river rat."
"I was taking a group down the river to
Margolan when something tossed us into the water. We made it to shore with our
horses, but we're missing two of our party."
Jolie eyed him for a moment. "Water's
ice cold. They're dead by now."
"They're not dead," Kiara said.
"Swordswomen aren't common on the
river," Jolie drawled in heavily accented Common. "And that
one," she said pointing to Sakwi, "is a mage, or I'm a virgin. That
was a nice start to the story, Jonmarc," she said, her accent softening
the consonants into a deceptively lazy blur. "Now the rest, cheche, if
you please."
"It's not my story," Vahanian said
ill-humouredly. "Ask them if you want it." Tris glanced at Vahanian
for a signal. You can trust Jolie," Vahanian said and their hostess
glowed. "If she couldn't keep a secret, she'd have been dead a long time
ago."
"Secrets are my business, cheche"
Jolie said in a throaty voice that spoke of strong liquor. "People
leave them with me, and I keep them safe. Now what could you possibly have
offered Jonmarc to bring you through Nargi territory?"
"Jonmarc is guiding us back to
Margolan," Tris replied evenly. "I'm Martris Drayke, Bricen's
son."
"You're going to challenge the
king?" Jolie asked skeptically.
"And his mage."
"A mage called Arontala?" Her
accent made the sorcerer's name a purr.
"Yes."
"Bold words for one so young."
Jolie looked at Vahanian. "But Jonmarc, I thought you swore off hopeless
causes years ago."
"He's a Summoner, ma'am," Nyall
spoke up, wide-eyed. "Saw it myself I did. Called spirits from the river
to save himself and the lady here."
Jolie returned her scrutiny to Tris. "A
true Summoner?" Tris nodded, and her light-brown eyes regarded him from
beneath heavy lids. "And you?" Jolie said, looking now to Kiara and
appraising her carefully. "You've said little, swordlady. What is your
role?"
Kiara drew herself up tall. "I'm Kiara
Sharsequin of Isencroft," she answered. "Jared Drayke and his mage
have threatened my lands. I go with Tris to set things right."
"Um hmm," Jolie looked back to
Vahanian, who was clearly impatient with her questioning. "You've got your
own little revolution brewing here, Jonmarc. That's not like you."
"There are two people out there we can't
find," Vahanian snapped. "Damn the reason we're here. We've got to
find them. If they're alive, and they're not on our side of the river—"
"Then they're as good as dead
already," Jolie retorted coldly. "They're in Nargi hands. Give them
up." "No!" Kiara said. "We can't!" "Jolie, I need
your help," Vahanian entreated. "To commit suicide? No, cheche,"
she said, shaking her head. "I won't do that."
"We need a safe place to stay until the horses
are ready to ride," Vahanian continued, undaunted. "Dry clothes.
Provisions for the ride."
"You're not thinking of going after
them, are you?"
"I have to."
"Have you forgotten everything?"
She turned to Tris and Kiara. "Jonmarc came to us eight seasons ago,
running from the Nargi. He managed my gaming tables, tended my bar, and was
the best 'peacekeeper' I ever had. I will not support you if you want to kill
yourself, cheche. No. Not Jolie."
Her tirade had no effect on Vahanian.
"It's a healer and a bard," he said tersely. "A woman
healer."
Tris saw a flicker of something in Jolie's
eyes. "So? They're in the Lady's hands. Leave them to Her."
Vahanian's jaw clenched, making the cords on
his neck stand out in anger. "Damn you! You know the Nargi. You know what
happens to prisoners."
"You seem to have forgotten," Jolie
said. "You're not talking about a smuggling run, Jonmarc, in and gone.
They haven't forgotten you. You won't come back if you go marching into one of
their camps."
"Let me worry about that," he
retorted, only a hand's breadth from Jolie's face. "Will you give
sanctuary?"
Jolie's eyes narrowed. "What is this
woman, that you would die for her?"
Vahanian looked away. "They're
friends."
"And for these 'friends' you would
sacrifice yourself?"
"She saved my life. What would you have
me do?"
"I taught you to survive," Jolie
snapped. "I took you in when you ran from shadows, taught you to smuggle,
gave you the contacts you needed to live on this river."
"And what did you expect for that? Or
did you think you owned me, too?"
"No," she said in a deep, bitter
rasp. "Nobody is owned here. Not in my house. Not while I live." The
rage drained out of her. "Go then, if you must. Your friends will be safe
here. When Arontala is done hunting mages and vayash morn, he'll come
for my kind. They always do."
"Thank you," Vahanian said
raggedly.
"Sometime, the fledgling flies, hmm, cheche?"
Vahanian gave her a peck on the cheek.
"You're first class, Jolie."
"Damn right," she rejoined, and
turned her attention back to Tris and Kiara. "Don't mind the little
family spat. Jonmarc is used to my temper. Come. There are rooms upstairs where
you can sleep safely." She eyed Kiara. "Unless you've got objections
to an upstairs room at my house."
"I've marched with an army and camped
with mercs," the Isencroft princess replied, settling her hand on the
pommel of her sword. "I doubt your house will rival that."
Jolie threw back her head in throaty laughter.
"At last! Someone else with a proper attitude!" She slipped an arm
around Kiara. "I think we're going to get along just fine. Come with
me."
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE prev next contents
Daybreak found
Jolie's place altogether different. The gaming
tables stood silent in the morning sun. Where the musicians had played two
servants slept in chairs, while a third gathered debris into a basket. Jolie's
girls, so elegantly dressed and festive the night before, came to the long
breakfast table dark-eyed and yawning, dressed in simple shifts with their hair
in plain braids.
Nyall and Kiara sat with the girls, already eating
breakfast. Jae perched on the table beside Kiara, much to the girls' delight,
eagerly accepting bits of food from any hand that would offer. Even without
her armor Kiara could never be mistaken as one of them, Tris thought as he
joined them, the smell of breakfast luring him from his sleep. Tanned and lean,
Kiara's stance and walk revealed her training even before her sword came into
view.
He noted that her sword hung at her belt this
morning, a reminder that she felt only somewhat at ease here. Tris guessed that
worry had kept her from getting much sleep. She looked haggard and preoccupied.
Beside her, Jae nudged a roll toward Kiara's hand as if entreating her to eat,
but she ignored the gyregon.
"You don't look like you got much
sleep," Tris said as he sat down.
"Hardly any. Not with Carina out
there," she said, looking toward the river.
"We'll figure out something. Jonmarc
won't have to go after her alone."
"I'd already decided to go with him.
Thank you."
"That's out of the question." They
turned to see Vahanian.
"We're in this together. We're
going," Tris replied.
"No you're not," Vahanian repeated,
as Jolie forced a plate into his hands. "For one thing, the only mages in
Nargi are priests. They'd spot you and Sakwi before we even crossed the river.
And princess, don't take this too hard, but women don't carry swords in
Nargi." He swung one leg over a chair and sat. "They've got too many
brats clinging to their skirts."
"What about the vayash moru? Kiara
asked. "Can they help?"
"Nargi hate vayash moru almost as
much as they hate mages. Got magical protections set up all around their camps
to keep them away. We wouldn't get within spitting distance of the camp without
bringing the Nargi down on us." "You can't go alone," Tris
protested.
"I'm safer that way. You don't speak
Nargi. You don't know the Nargi. You couldn't pass for one even if the only
Nargi you met was deaf and blind. Trust me. I can get in, find them, and be out
before you know it. No problem."
Jolie's angry glare made her opinion clear.
At the end of the table her girls said nothing, intent on their food. Nyall,
too, gave no opinion, looking so determined to stay out of the discussion that
he might have built a wall around himself.
"If we can't go with you," Tris
said, "then I guess we'll just keep watch to make sure you don't get any
unexpected company. We'll help Nyall get the horses and packs ready."
"We'll be on our way in the
morning," Vahanian promised, though his voice showed more confidence than
his eyes. "Just watch."
By sunset, Jolie's place was crowded once
more. Jolie's girls, like finely plumed birds, flitted through the room
welcoming the guests. Gaming masters called out numbers, while a bard told
bawdy stories to an appreciative audience near the tavern master's table. In
the back room, Tris and Kiara watched Vahanian make his final preparations to
cross the river.
"I think that's it," Vahanian said,
checking his weapons for the fifth time. He wore the uniform of a Nargi
soldier, thanks to Jolie, who mentioned something about it having been left
behind in haste by its previous owner. Hidden over his body was an assortment
of daggers, and his sword hung in its scabbard. He wrapped the dark uniform
headpiece expertly, finishing with a trailing piece that covered his face.
"You're lucky the Nargi are in their
winter uniforms," Jolie observed from where she leaned against the
fireplace. "That scarf hides your face. Good thing. You look as much like
a Nargi as I do the Goddess."
"Any other useful comments?"
Vahanian asked.
"Jonmarc, take this." In Kiara's
open palm lay a pottery chit on a leather strap, stamped with an intricate,
strange rune.
Vahanian regarded it suspiciously. "What
is it?"
"The Sisters gave it to me, when I left
on my Journey. They said that I could use it if I ever needed to escape and
there was no other way out. Snap it in half; it can transport a short distance.
Concentrate on getting back to Tris. But you must be together, actually
touching."
"The Sisters gave you this?"
Vahanian said with a hint of skepticism. "Those witch-biddies? Can they do
magic like that?" For a moment he turned the chit in his fingers as if
debating whether to accept the gift, then finally slipped the strap around his
neck.
Sakwi appeared at the back door, slipping off
his cloak. "Thank the Goddess you haven't left yet."
"What were you doing, talking to the
owls?"
Sakwi accepted the remark without offense.
"In a way, yes. When you go, I'll call to the animals of the forest to
protect your path. If they can help you, they will. They'll regard you as one
of their pack. You need fear nothing but men."
"That's usually enough," Vahanian
replied. "Thank you."
"This type of magic is very
draining," Sakwi warned. "It will take me a while to recover."
"So if you can't do more, and Tris shouldn't
for fear of calling Arontala to our doorstep, you're telling me I'm really on
my own," Vahanian summed up, dropping the chit down his tunic.
"Jonmarc," Kiara said. "Thank
you. May the hand of the Lady be on you." She made the sign of the
Goddess.
"Be careful," Tris added, fixing
Vahanian's gaze. "You've got a score to settle."
"More than one."
Jolie unlocked the back door to a path
leading down to the river. She followed him outside, closing the door behind
them. "You know what I think about this."
"I can guess."
"This healer—you love her?"
Vahanian stopped and drew a deep breath. He
did not turn. "Yes."
"And she cares for you?"
"Doesn't matter. She saved my life. I
can't let them die."
"I laid out Jalbet cards last night, to
see what the fates said about this. The omens were dark."
"The omens are dark without the cards. I
know what I'm doing."
"I hope so."
"Don't wait up for me."
A chill
wind swept down the river's course as Vahanian paddled silently across,
making him glad Nargi troops dressed adequately for the weather. He had much
less confidence about the prospects for success than he had admitted to Tris
and Kiara. Carina and Carroway had already spent one night in Nargi hands.
Unless they had been deemed useful, their chances of surviving many more were
slim.
Worse might be the use found for them.
Carina's healing gifts would be dismissed because she was a woman, making her
useless for healing men. While she might assist in childbirth, the Nargi's
penchant for multiple wives made surviving that ordeal less urgent. He closed
his eyes, trying to forget what he had seen happen to other women captives.
Carroway's lot was hardly better than
Carina's in Nargi hands. Bards were outlawed, as were the taverns and gaming
rooms where they tended to work. Bards also carried news, something the Nargi
priests liked to control themselves. Artists, unless dedicated to the Crone
cult, were viewed witn suspicion.
Going after Carina and Carroway would be the
easy part, Vahanian thought, dragging his small raft up on the bank and hiding
it in the bushes. Getting back out was the challenge.
Vahanian made one quick pass up and down the
bank, looking for signs of his companions. Upstream, almost across the river
from where he and the others had come ashore, he found a sodden leather pouch
like the ones Carina carried on her belt. There were boot prints on the muddy
shore. The river plants bore signs of a recent struggle, with broken and
trampled branches lying along a freshly made path.
Vahanian had the sudden feeling that
something was watching him, and he glanced up sharply, sword already in hand.
On the path ahead of him stood a large gray wolf, a mature male, well-fed and
strong. Vahanian froze as the creature's blue
eyes fixed him with a knowing stare. To his surprise the animal made no sign of
aggression, neither baring its teeth nor advancing. Instead it sat down, doglike,
and wagged its tail. Then it jumped to its feet, trotted down the path, and
returned, tilting its head at a curious angle as if to ask a question.
Sakwi, Vahanian
thought. Dark Lady take my soul. No wolf alive acts like that, unless it's
been sent. Damnedest thing I've ever seen. He took a hesitant step forward.
The wolf seemed to approve, bounding ahead and then returning, signaling him to
follow.
"I don't know where you're taking me,
but I'm hoping it's to the camp." He stopped and shook his head.
"Wolves. I'm talking to wolves. Too damn much time around Spook." The
wolf waited impatiently for him and he followed, closely watching the woods
around them for danger.
Twice, the wolf laid its ears back and
growled a warning, in time for Vahanian to hide himself in the thicket as Nargi
soldiers passed by. Overhead the owls hooted an "all clear" when the
danger passed. His guide kept its speed and choice of pathways to those
Vahanian could follow with relative ease. If wolves are this smart, Vahanian
thought, no wonder they're so damn hard to shake once they're hungry for
you.
He sheathed his sword in favor of a small
crossbow, which worked better than a sword in tight spaces. Vahanian and the
wolf traveled for at least half a candlemark, and Vahanian noted that the wolf
was leading him to high ground, taking a wide circle around a center point.
Finally, after scrambling up a hillside muddy from recent downpours, the wolf
led him to a protected spot on an outcropping with a view of the land below. It
waited, as if inviting Vahanian to come and look.
Below them was the Nargi camp. It was only a
small camp, but home to at least two or three dozen Nargi soldiers. From the
permanence of its structures, the round, canvas-covered baled straw constructs
the Nargi favored, Vahanian surmised that the camp was a river garrison. Probably
making sure none of the "faithful" cross over to Jolie's place.
The wolf sprang to its feet and its ears
pricked, listening intently. It moved a few paces to its right, indicating a
path, then dashed back, urging Vahanian to move. Vahanian needed no additional
prompting. He crouched and followed the wolf as quickly as he could without
noise. A heartbeat later, two Nargi soldiers came into view, patrolling the
perimeter. Vahanian waited in the shadows, watching as one of the soldiers
noted his tracks on the wet ground. But before the soldier could take a step,
Vahanian heard a wolf howl, and realized that his guide was no longer behind
him.
The Nargi stopped abruptly, glancing around
nervously. The wolf howled once more and was answered by another, summoning the
pack. The lead Nargi made a brusque command and motioned the other to follow
him, beating a quick retreat. Vahanian breathed a sigh of relief and looked up
to see his guide wolf padding back toward him. That's the most satisfied
looking wolf I've ever seen. He resisted the urge to laugh.
"Thank you," he said in a hushed
voice. The wolf cocked its head once more and then padded off,
making no invitation for Vahanian to follow.
Vahanian watched his guide leave, and then turned his attention to the camp
below once more, memorizing the layout and guessing at the purpose of each
circular structure.
The horses were tethered together at one side
of the encampment, while a trench at the other side marked the latrine. A
cluster of structures were barracks; a larger, separate one was the captain's
quarters. A cook fire in front of another building indicated a kitchen. In the
center was the practice ground with its quintain, hard used from many
practices. Vahanian caught his breath. Next to the practice ground, just beyond
the barracks, was a sturdy cage made of hewn logs. Even from this distance, he
could make out the two figures imprisoned inside.
Still, Vahanian
thought, not impossible, as he surveyed the layout. If the horses
didn't scare, he might be able to approach from that side, along the barracks'
walls, shielded partially from view. But the cage was out in the open. Any
approach would require a dive across an open area, and exposure for as long as
it took to open it. Not good. Resolute, he started a cautious descent.
Fog began to roll in half way down the slope.
He watched it rise from nowhere, slipping toward the camp, thicker and thicker
until the fires twinkled in its haze. Sakwi, he thought. Has to be.
Nothing natural brews up a fog like that so fast. A little more assistance
like this and I might just get to like spooks after all.
Vahanian waited more than a candlemark until
the camp's priest rang the bells for late prayer, and the guards made their
devotion to the Crone. By then, Vahanian had crept close enough to hear the
prayers. He took a place at the very back of the assemblage, his face hidden by
the uniform's scarf. The words of the prayer came back with eerie ease,
something he had heard every night of his long captivity. His stomach knotted
as he mouthed them with the others. Finally, the devotion made, the soldiers
broke formation. Vahanian slipped away, getting as close to the cage as he
dared before the last of the fires were banked and the lamps in the barracks
went dark.
From here, he had a clear view of the
stockade. Inside it, Carina and Carroway huddled together against the cold,
still in the muddied clothing they wore when they went into the river. Vahanian
could glimpse no blanket or shelter to give any comfort to the captives. His
anger, already white hot, grew stronger still. His finger twitched on the
trigger of his crossbow.
"You there," said a voice behind
him. "Why are you out of barracks?"
Vahanian moved the hand with the small bow
down and into the folds of his cloak before he turned. "Going to the
latrine, sir," he replied in perfect Nargi.
"I gave no such permission."
"My abject pardon," Vahanian
replied, giving the deep bow Nargi custom required.
"What is that in your hand?" the
Nargi lieutenant asked, stepping closer. His eyes widened. "That's not a
standard bow." Vahanian stepped into his path, raising the bow against the
lieutenant's chest. The arrow discharged soundlessly, and the astonished
lieutenant sagged against him.
"Useful for hunting vermin,"
Vahanian said against his ear, supporting the dying man. He steeled himself not
to turn as footsteps approached.
"Explain."
Vahanian looked into the piercing stare of a
thickset sergeant. "He's sick, sir. I'm helping him to the latrine."
The sergeant nodded. "Very well.
Straight back when you're through."
"Yes, sir." Vahanian moved off in
the direction of the trench until no one was in sight, and then dragged the
lieutenant behind the cookhouse. He stashed the body behind the garbage bins.
That wasn't going to fool anyone for long, Vahanian thought, his heart racing.
But the fog held, and with each moment he escaped detection, the camp became
quieter.
Two guards usually kept patrol on a Nargi
camp this size. Crouching, Vahanian lay in wait behind the cookhouse. Before
long, his quarry came into view. A young recruit shivered against the cold.
Vahanian did not wait to be intercepted. Springing from the shadows, he leapt
into a perfect Eastmark kick, the heel of his boot connecting solidly with the
man's chest, knocking the wind from him and driving him to the ground. In a
flash, Vahanian was astride the guard, drawing his knife across the man's
throat with one seamless movement. Vahanian dragged the body to lie beside the
lieutenant, returning to scuff away the blood.
The second guard came around the corner. With
cold precision, Vahanian notched an arrow into his bow and sent the shaft
flying. Caught in the throat, the guard fell with only a gurgle. Vahanian
sprinted toward the stockade, making no effort to hide the last body.
"Wake up!" Vahanian hissed
urgently. He tried his knife on the lock without success, then turned his blade
on the ropes binding the stockade together. Carroway startled, and laid a hand
over Carina's mouth as the healer struggled awake.
"Lady bless!" Carroway swore under
his breath.
"Can you walk?" Vahanian
questioned.
"We're all right," Carroway
replied, although Vahanian doubted it was completely true. He had only the
barest glimpse of their faces, but it looked to him as if both the healer and
the bard had been roughed up. Their captors had not wasted effort on gentle
handling, Vahanian thought angrily, hacking at the ropes.
"Where are the others?" Carina
whispered, as she and Carroway crawled toward him.
"Back across the river," Vahanian
said as one of the ropes gave way beneath his knife. He passed knives to
Carroway and Carina, who began sawing away at the ropes in earnest.
"Jonmarc, behind you!" Carroway
cried. Vahanian heard the boot steps and spun, kicking high.
"Intruders!" the guard shouted as
he fell. Vahanian drew his sword and slashed downward, silencing the Nargi guard.
"Here." Vahanian wrested Kiara's
chit from around his neck and thrust it through the bars of the stockade to
Carina. "Grab Carroway's hand and keep hold of my cloak. Break the chit in
two. Concentrate on reaching Tris. It's our way out of here." He turned to
face the soldiers that were
coming at them at a dead run. He felt Carina
clutch his cloak and heard the snap of the clay chit, sensing a tingle as a
blue light came from nowhere.
Several of the soldiers dropped back at the
mage light. But one ran onward, sword raised, fearless of the otherworldly
glow. Vahanian stepped forward to parry the falling blade and felt his cloak
pull free of Carina's grip. Light flared behind him and disappeared in a
heartbeat. The cage was empty.
Vahanian turned to face the Nargi.
"We
shouldn't have let him go alone," Kiara said, pacing in
the back room at Jolie's place. Jae fluttered from the tabletop to land on
Kiara's shoulder. Jolie watched from her seat on the edge of a table. Across
the room, Tris paced. Sakwi knelt by the fire, deep in trance, holding the fog
that gave cover for the escape and maintaining his link with the wolves and
bats to provide distraction.
"Jonmarc has always done as he
pleases," said Jolie.
"What's to keep the Nargi from barging
in here after us?" Kiara asked. "It's hardly a fortress."
"Astir," Jolie called. The
dark-haired man who stood guard outside the doorway appeared immediately.
"Yes, m'lady?"
"Our guest raised a concern about our
security. Can you reassure her?"
There was a sound of rushing air. Without
appearing to have moved, Astir stood next to Jolie. "What did you want to
know?" Fast as thought he was again at the doorway. Jolie tossed a poker
from the fireplace at
the guard. He caught the iron
implement and twisted it off-handedly, dropping it aside like crumpled
parchment.
Jolie turned back to Kiara. "Astir only
works at night. He has many friends here. They're always welcome in my
home." Astir made a little bow and ducked outside the door once more.
"Their reputation makes this a very civil house."
"How many?"
"They come and go. The heat of so many
people together at night draws them. Why do you think I slaughter so many
goats? We've never had an incident with a guest that wasn't deserved. We're
all predators," Jolie added, "of one sort or another. Or else we're
prey. Personally, I prefer the first choice. Why don't you go out front and
forget about it for a little while?"
Kiara glanced over to Tris, standing against
the wall, and at Sakwi, who sat in silent concentration. "No thanks."
"You ought to know a thing before you
judge it."
"I'll pass."
"You think this is just another type of
jailhouse, don't you, checbe?"
"That's exactly what I was thinking. I
don't understand how you can do it to those girls."
"Who's safer? The people outside the
jail, or the one in the cell?" Jolie walked around Kiara apprais-ingly.
"A jail can be a haven, if you've just escaped from hell."
"Do you know the choices a woman has out
here, away from the palace, Lady Princess? Not many. Marry whoever is chosen
for you, and die birthing one brat after another, if your husband doesn't beat
you dead first. Go to the Lady and serve an oracle.
never leaving the temple. Not much better
than death, but they might teach you to read. You might be able to apprentice
for a trade, if they'll take a woman and if you have the money to buy your way
into the guild. Or you come to a house like this, where you earn a living with
the only skill they've let you learn."
She held up a hand. "Hear me out. My
house is different from the others. No one stays here against her will. No one
may be harmed in any way. My guards make very sure of that. And once my girls
have learned to read and write, made a purse full of coins and found another
skill, they leave. There are no guarantees they will succeed. But most of them
would rather die trying than take their other choices."
"I hadn't thought of it that way,"
Kiara said, not quite ready to concede. Tris was sure Kiara was thinking about
the arranged marriage she had fled, and what desperate lengths she might go to
in order to avoid such a union.
Sakwi stiffened and gave a strangled cry, his
eyes snapping wide open. A haze twinkled in the center of the room, glowing
brighter and brighter until it flared too brilliantly to watch. Jae fluttered
and hissed, beating his leathery wings. When Tris dropped his arm from across
his eyes, Carina and Carroway stood in the middle of the room, dazed and
shaken.
Tris dashed to help Sakwi as the land mage slumped.
Kiara rushed forward to greet Carroway and Carina, but Carina resisted her
embrace. "Where's Jonmarc?" the healer cried, looking around them in
panic. "He was with us an instant ago."
Tris eased Sakwi onto a low bench. "I'll
be all right," Sakwi said in an exhausted voice. "Something went wrong.
Only two," he said as a cough stole his breath. "Only two." Tris
helped him free one of the herb pouches from his belt for a remedy, watching
as Carina collapsed sobbing against Kiara. Jolie met his eyes with an accusing
glare, not needing to put her venom into words. His friends were safe, almost
certainly at the cost of Vahanian's life.
Sakwi waved him away. Tris stepped over to
Carroway, who stood silently beside Carina, watching as she sobbed on Kiara's
shoulder. "What happened?" Tris asked, bringing them cloaks from a
peg on the wall and guiding Carroway to a chair. Some of Carroway's ordeal
showed in the bruises on his face and in the bloodied tunic that hung in
tatters.
"I had a hold of Jonmarc's cloak,"
Carina said brokenly, "but my hands were so numb, I could barely make my
fingers move. Just as Carroway broke the disk and the light began to glow, the
soldier came. Jonmarc stepped forward and I lost my grip." She covered
her face with her hands, and Kiara pulled her close.
"We barely made it out of the water last
night," Carroway said tonelessly, looking at his hands. "We weren't
there long before the guards came. They found us and dragged us off before we
had a chance to think about finding the rest of you.
"I don't speak Nargi, so I have no idea
what they said, but they aren't very gentle. There was no question as to who
had the upper hand. The one time Carina tried to speak, one of the guards
cuffed her so hard I thought she'd passed out.
"They took us to a tribunal, maybe a
priest. He sentenced us, and they put us in the stockade. All day, the soldiers
stopped by. It didn't take a translator to get the gist of some of the
ideas."
"They'll kill Jonmarc," Jolie said
in a cold voice. "He's struck at their pride, taking captives out from
under their noses. And he used magic to do it." It was clear from Jolie's
eyes that she did not consider the two prisoners' safe return worth the cost.
"It won't be a quick death. And if any recognize him for what he was, it
will be worse." She walked defiantly to face Tris. "Prove to me
you're what you claim," she challenged. "Save him."
"Sweet Chenne!" Carroway exclaimed.
"Do you want Arontala and the Margolan army on your doorstep? We're close
enough that Arontala will know if Tris uses magic."
"Only the Dark Lady Herself could get
him out of there," Carina murmured. "They'll be on high alert for the
next year."
"If only the Dark Lady can save
him," Tris mused, "then let's send the Dark Lady."
"You're mad," Jolie told him.
"Even you can't summon the Goddess."
"Maybe I won't have to," he said,
with a meaningful look at Carroway. The bard looked puzzled for a moment, and
then brightened.
"What are you talking about?" Carina
asked. Her eyes were red-rimmed from crying and showed the strain of her
ordeal. "There's no way to get back in there." She looked from Tris
to Carroway. "Is there?" She dragged a torn sleeve across her face.
"Whatever you're thinking, count me in."
"And me," Kiara added, standing and
laying a hand on Tris's shoulder.
"And me," Sakwi murmured from where
he lay. "If I have strength to help, I'll do whatever you ask."
Jolie gave Tris a long, measuring glare.
"If there's a chance, I'll help," she said finally. "And so will
any of my people." She crossed to a shaded window and looked out onto the river.
"Do it soon, or it's a corpse you'll bring home."
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX prev next contents
Vahanian barely
parried the Nargi's blow as his
attacker launched a frenzied onslaught. But the flare behind him told him all
he needed to know. The magic had taken the others to safety. He was alone, and
in Nargi hands.
Instinct drove him on against the odds.
Before the first attacker hit the ground, two more rushed to take his place. By
then, the whole camp was roused so that no escape was possible. The Nargi commander
barked an order and a soldier with a crossbow stepped up, training the cocked
weapon at Vahanian's chest.
"Drop your sword," the captain
snapped.
Trapped, Vahanian had no choice but to
comply.
"Kneel, and place your hands on your
head," the captain ordered. Two soldiers rushed up as Vahanian obeyed,
binding his wrists with leather straps. The captain stepped closer, and the
soldier kept the crossbow leveled at Vahanian. The captain reached out and tore
the headgear away, exposing Vahanian's face.
"What are you, outlander?" the
captain asked. "You dress like a Nargi and fight like a Nargi."
"Go screw the Goddess," Vahanian
retorted in Nargi. The captain cuffed him so hard it nearly knocked him over.
"I wonder," the captain said,
grabbing a handful of hair and yanking Vahanian's face up. "I heard
stories, once, of an outlander who could fight like that. Many years ago. But
he'd be too clever to come back, wouldn't you think?"
"You're the one with all the answers.
You tell me."
"Interesting," the captain said
thoughtfully. He turned to a soldier behind him. "Fetch the commander.
Tell him we have a captive I think he'll find most interesting."
The soldier acknowledged the order with a low
bow and ran off to the horses, setting off at a gallop. Just then, another
soldier ran up from the direction of the cookhouse.
"Captain," the soldier shouted.
"We found three bodies behind the cookhouse, and a guard dead along the
perimeter. We lost Lucan, Cashel, Piaras, and Newry."
The captain regarded the soldier
dispassionately. "Burn the bodies," he ordered. He returned his
attention to Vahanian. "You'll die for what you've done."
"I figured that out already."
This time the captain's blow sent Vahanian
sprawling, his ears ringing.
"Quick death is an honor," the
captain said. "You'll have time to reflect on your mistakes." He
turned. "Take him away. Go over the stockade pole by pole to see what he's
done to it, and post two guards at all times. If the prisoner escapes, those
guarding him will share his death."
"Yes, sir," the second-in-command
replied. Two soldiers yanked Vahanian to his feet and shoved him toward the
stockade. He staggered into the cell. The other soldiers filed back to their
barracks, except for the one who began earnestly inspecting and mending the
stockade, and the two sharp-eyed soldiers who stood guard.
Vahanian rested his head in his bound hands. You
sure picked a bad time to lose your luck, he thought. What in the world
possessed you to try a stunt like this? But he knew. The others were more
important to the effort to destroy Arontala and unseat Jared Drayke. They would
go on. The quest could continue without him. If they succeeded, he would
finally have his vengeance against the dark mage. More than that, Carina was
safe. And while he might never have been able to earn her love, he could at
least repay the many times she had saved his life. Maybe it's time. You
always knew it was going to happen, sooner or later.
The approach of a swift horse woke him from an
uneasy sleep. Vahanian rose warily to his feet as the captain ran to meet the
rider. The two men spoke for a moment, silhouetted in the moonlight, then
strode toward the stockade. By the walk and carriage of one silhouette,
Vahanian could identify the rider even before the man's face became clear in
the dim light. What little hope he held vanished.
"Well done, captain. Bring him to your
quarters. I'll question him myself."
"Hello, Dorran." The guards opened
the door and roughly maneuvered Vahanian out of the cage. "I figured you
for buzzard food long ago."
"Just as I remembered," Dorran
said, a cold smile touching his thin lips. "We have some catching up to
do. Bring him inside."
Forced to kneel while one guard kept a crossbow
trained on him, Vahanian watched the thin commander lay aside his cloak.
"Amazing. You caused me no end of trouble with your... escape. When
the general let you go free, he thought it would discredit me." Dorran
circled Vahanian as he spoke.
He stopped and reached out, a dagger in his
hand, to tilt Vahanian's face up until their eyes met. "I would have been
a general myself by now, without your little ruse. I've thought a long time on
just how you might make that up to me."
"What about his companions?" the
Nargi captain asked.
Dorran shrugged. "Riffraff. There's no
time to chase petty smugglers down the river. Ready your men for
Margolan."
"Expanding your horizons?" Vahanian
baited.
Dorran regarded him coolly. "I've spent
almost a decade rebuilding the career you damaged. This will reclaim my honor.
We've made an alliance with the new king of Margolan to remind some insurrectionists
about the power of a king."
"I thought Margolan had an army for that
kind of thing." Vahanian tried to keep his interest from seeming too
apparent.
"His army is soft. They lack the will of
their king. We'll teach them. And for that, I'll be handsomely rewarded."
Vahanian said nothing more; the point of the
dagger pricked into his throat. Dorran twitched the blade, tracing the thin
pair of parallel scars that showed where a slave collar had left its mark years
ago.
"This time, no one will arrange your
escape," Dorran said, returning his knife to his belt and beginning to
turn up the sleeves of his uniform. "I intend to enjoy myself quite
thoroughly." Without warning, Dorran wheeled, landing a kick on the side
of Vahanian's head that sent the smuggler sprawling. "Get ready to see the
Lady. Your luck has just run out."
The beating continued until Dorran, panting
and winded, could do no more. His uniform was spattered with Vahanian's blood.
Vahanian lay sprawled on the floor of the Nargi captain's barracks, unable to
drag himself to his feet, his wrists still bound in front of him. Blood
trickled from the corner of his mouth, and one eye was swollen shut. He could
taste more blood in his mouth, and the pain in his chest assured him that
several ribs were broken.
"Take him to the healer," Dorran
commanded, wiping his hands on a towel. He looked down at Vahanian. "You
know the ways of Nargi healers. They're quite efficient. If I've done any real
damage, they can set it right."
"Why bother?" Vahanian asked
thickly.
"I haven't finished my sport yet.
Tomorrow, I'm going to let the garrison have a private audience with the
general's great champion fighter. Only this time, it won't matter if you win or
lose. Either way, you'll still die. I've been looking forward to this for a
long time, Vahanian." Dorran stepped over the fallen fighter and strode
into the night. The guards dragged Vahanian to his feet and pushed him, staggering,
toward the priests' quarters.
Back in the stockade, Vahanian watched the
dawn come with a leaden feeling in his stomach. True to Dorran's word, the
Nargi priests had reversed the worst damage. Vahanian spat blood and nursed his
split lip. The priests, ascetics as they were, did not bother with any wounds
which might not threaten his life or his ability to fight. Vahanian awoke from
a restless sleep with the feeling that he had been ridden over by a wagon
team. He replayed Dorran's boasts in his mind. Nargi, ready to march into
Margolan. Tris would be cut off from behind, and the influx of expert
fighters might be all Jared needed to turn the game.
Vahanian strained against his bonds. There
was no way to reach Tris with the crucial information. His sacrifice to save
the others would mean nothing. All the wishing in the world wouldn't get him
out of here; Tris would walk right into Jared's trap. With the Nargi on the
march into Margolan, Tris's quest was doomed.
It took all of his will to rise impassively
when his captors came for him. The practice ground was full of Nargi soldiers
and Vahanian was led into their midst. A soldier cut the strap that bound his
wrists. Vahanian rubbed his numb hands. Dorran watched from a chair on the
side.
"I've highlighted your accomplishments
as the general's champion for those who don't remember,"
Dorran said. "I told them what a
privilege it is to fight you. As you can imagine, there have been many
volunteers."
"And if I refuse to fight?"
Vahanian asked.
Dorran' eyes narrowed. "Fight, and
you'll die a warrior's death. Refuse, and I'll have you burned alive with the
bodies of the men you killed. Any other questions?" At Vahanian's silence,
Dorran clapped twice to call the troops to order. "Let the first
contestant come forward."
Vahanian faced a Nargi soldier almost twice
his size. The two began to slowly circle, each looking for an opening. As in
the days of the betting games, neither carried a weapon. That, Vahanian remembered
grimly, was part of the sport the Nargi so enjoyed. Barehanded combat. Winner
lives. The big man lurched, surprisingly fast for his bulk, and swung at
Vahanian with fists the size of melons. Vahanian dodged, ducking and coming up
beside the man, then executed a flying pivot and landed a kick that sent the
big man reeling. The crowd cheered as Vahanian's attacker roared in rage and
lumbered back at a dead run, murder in his eyes. Vahanian narrowly evaded the
man again and scored another kick, but the attacker wheeled and caught his leg,
bringing them both to the ground.
The big man jerked Vahanian's arm behind him
sharply enough to pull it from its socket. Bucking desperately, Vahanian threw
the man off balance and scrambled out of the big man's hold, swinging wide with
his free hand and connecting his knuckles with the giant's nose, driving the
power of his blow up and in. The soldier staggered, dropping his grip on
Vahanian. He gave
a deep rattle
then slumped and lay still. Vahanian staggered to his feet. The soldiers
who ringed the practice area cursed him and called for his blood.
"Very good, Jonmarc. Nicely done,"
Dorran praised cynically. "You're doing us a tremendous service, showing
us which of our soldiers are inferior. You may now test the training of
another soldier." He made an abrupt gesture, and a second soldier entered
the ring. Setting his jaw, Vahanian moved to meet his opponent.
He bested three of Dorran's men before he
could no longer fight. The contest became a free-for-all, and might have ended
there if Dorran hadn't shouted for order and sent guards into the fray to pull
Vahanian from the angry mob. They dragged him back to the priests for healing.
This time, it took longer for the priests to repair the worst of the damage.
When the priests were finished, Vahanian was
led to a post in the middle of the practice ground. A guard tore away what
remained of Vahanian's shirt, and lashed his wrists around the post. Vahanian's
heart thudded as he saw Dorran approaching with the quartermaster, who held a
knotted whip in his hands. He had seen Nargi martial discipline meted out
during his captivity. Forty lashes could leave a strong fighter incapacitated.
More than forty at one time were likely to kill. He hoped his expression was
impassive as Dorran and the quartermaster stopped in front of him. A Nargi
priest stepped up beside the quartermaster.
"Offenses in a military camp are subject
to military law," Dorran announced as the camp began to assemble in
a circle around
the post. "For
the
crimes of murder, theft, trespass,
impersonation, and blasphemy, I sentence Jonmarc Vahanian to death."
The crowd roared its approval. Vahanian
watched balefully as Dorran basked in the spectacle, then held up a hand for
silence. "I'll mete out the final punishment myself," Dorran added,
to the cheers of the group. "But first, it is only fitting that he pay
fully for his crime."
Dorran looked at Vahanian. "I could have
you flogged to death. You've seen it done."
Dorran turned back to the crowd. "Forty
lashes," he pronounced, and the crowd cheered for more. Dorran looked to
the priest. "Keep him alive. I don't want to be cheated out of the
satisfaction of killing him myself."
Vahanian closed his eyes, bracing himself. He
clenched his jaw as the whip snapped, and the first lash fell.
NIGHT had
fallen when the guards returned Vahanian to his cell, throwing him in to
land face down on the hard-packed dirt.
"Wben I call for you the next time, I'll
kill you." Dorran said from outside the stockade. "You can't know how
much I enjoyed this afternoon. You truly are the best fighter I've ever seen.
Pity. I've had the healers patch you up to keep it from being too easy. I do
enjoy a challenge. Sleep well, Jonmarc. Perhaps tomorrow, if you beg, I might
cut my pleasure short."
"Go to the demon," Vahanian
managed, tasting dirt in his mouth.
"Not this time. You'll see Her first."
The only way out of this one is in the arms
of the Dark Lady, Vahanian thought. Thanks to the healers his
mind was clear, although his body barely moved at his command. By their work,
the priests denied him the respite only shock and unconsciousness could bring.
The camp was silent when Vahanian heard the
call. It roused him from a distressed sleep, barely audible over the snoring of
his guards. A child's voice, calling his name. Sure he was hallucinating from
the pain, Vahanian raised his head. The camp lay in a heavy shroud of fog, so
thick that he could not see the banked fires across the practice area. As he
watched, the door to his prison swung open. In the doorway stood the
transparent image of a young girl, beckoning him to come.
"Come, Jonmarc," the apparition
said. "It is time."
Vahanian had passed the point of fear.
Already resigned to death, the vision made him catch his breath. "Are you
the Childe?" he rasped, his swollen lips barely able to form the question.
"Come," the vision repeated
impatiently. "It is time."
Vahanian crawled toward the open door, stopping
part way to glance back, expecting to see his own crumpled form behind him.
"It's time to go," the ghostly child urged, standing with an outstretched
hand just beyond the stockade. In the distance, Vahanian could hear the thunder
of a horse riding at full gallop, and heard the guards rouse. But he dragged
himself to stand, clinging for support to the posts of the stockade. He was
unprepared for the sight that burst through the fog. A
cloaked rider on a white horse, riding at
demon speed. Beneath the heavy cowl, eyes burned like fire.
"The Dark Lady!" Vahanian
whispered, sure now that he was dead.
The Nargi soldiers pointed at the specter in
terror. Half of the them fell to their knees, prostrating themselves before the
rider with a babble of desperate prayer as the priests begged the apparition
for mercy. The other soldiers, frightened but dubious, held their ground,
freeing a hail of arrows at the rider that bounced harmlessly off its cloak.
With strangled cries, the archers dropped their weapons and fled.
Heedless of the confusion, rider and horse bore
down directly on Vahanian, never breaking speed. The cloaked figure reached
down, grasping Vahanian's arm and tossing him like a broken doll across its
lap.
Borne into the fog, Vahanian lost
consciousness.
When the rear door opened at
Jolie's place, the room erupted into chaos. Nyall took the body of the
unconscious fighter from the arms of the cloaked figure and carried him to a
cot. Sakwi looked up from stirring a cauldron of healing herbs. Carroway and
Carina rushed forward to help Nyall.
The cloaked figure shrugged back the cowl to reveal
Tris's face. The illusion of the Dark Lady blinked out of sight, leaving only
the theater makeup Carroway had improvised. Kiara handed Tris a moist towel to
wipe away the last vestiges of the night's work.
"You found him," she exulted,
helping Tris out of the heavy cloak, exposing a breastplate of leather and ring
mail.
"Thank you for insisting on the armor.
Nargi are quick archers." Tris released the buckles on the armor, and set
it aside. "And thank you for the cloak." He handed her the
magic-shielding cloak from the Sisterhood. "I felt a little less like a
beacon for Arontala, even though it didn't require much actual magic."
"The river ghost, did she come?"
Tris chuckled. "She thought it was a
great game. I hate to imagine what Jonmarc made of it."
"When he finds out he's still alive, he
may forgive you." Kiara planted a quick kiss on his cheek. She took his
hand and they approached the cot where Carina worked.
"Sweet Chenne," Carina swore under
her breath, surveying the damage. Vahanian's face was purpled and swollen
almost past recognition, and the gashes and deep bruises on his chest and arms
bore mute witness to his ordeal. "Let's see what we're dealing with on the
back," Carina replied, her growing anger clear in her clipped
instructions. Carroway complied, gentling Vahanian onto his side.
Carina blanched. Welts criss-crossed
Vahanian's back, evidence of a thorough lashing. Red and angry, they already
bore signs of infection. Reflexively, Carina laid her hands over them. Some of
the marks immediately began to fade, losing their color and puffiness. She
signaled Carroway to ease Vahanian back down.
"How bad is it?" Tris asked. Jolie
stood behind him, her expression making it clear that she would
have no difficulty taking the lives of those
responsible for Vahanian's injuries.
"He's been healed several times—deep
healing. Damn them!"
"I don't understand," Kiara said.
"They didn't heal to end the pain, they
healed to prolong it. They fixed just enough so that he didn't die too quickly
and spoil their game."
"Can you help him?" Jolie asked.
Carina nodded. "Whoever healed him
before knew what they were doing. What's here is bad, but not life-threatening.
Some broken bones, a lot of deep bruises, some torn muscles and tendons, deep
cuts—his back is a mess," she listed dispassionately, attempting to
distance herself enough to work her gift. "They must have been striking to
maim, not kill, because they obviously had the opportunity to do
otherwise."
Tris moved to stand beside her. "Draw
energy from me, if it will help."
"Can you do that without alerting
Arontala?"
Tris shrugged. "I've never sensed him
when I've helped you heal—I'm not sure it's enough power for him to read.
And you've pulled from both Cam and Carroway for energy, and they aren't mages.
It's a chance I'm willing to take."
Sakwi appeared at Carina's side with the cauldron
of steaming herbs and a fresh cloth. For the next two candlemarks Carina worked
in silence, easing her way down Vahanian's body, first healing as best her
strength would allow, and then applying Sakwi's poultices and binding the
wounds that remained. Any materials the healer required needed only Jolie's
terse word to the guards outside the door, who returned with the desired
articles in minutes.
Nyall hunched near the fire, clearly
overwhelmed by the company in which he found himself. The others stood ready to
respond to Carina's increasingly ill-humored commands, as the fatigue of
healing coupled with her anger. Jolie stood silent sentry near the foot of the
cot, her hard eyes unreadable. Carina worked for more than three candlemarks,
until she was pale with the exertion and both she and Tris wavered from the
strain.
Finally, Sakwi intervened, taking Carina's
shaking hands in his own. "You're exhausted. There's nothing more you can
do tonight."
Carina shrugged free with a glare.
"There's always more to do."
"I'm still too spent from the spells I
wove to help you." Sakwi laid a hand on her arm. "But I can feel what
you've done. He's in no danger now, and he rests as comfortably as is possible.
Now, you must rest."
Unwillingly, Carina let herself be led away
from the cot. Kiara gave Tris's shoulder a squeeze in farewell, and sprang up
to slip an arm around her cousin. "I'll take her back to our room,"
Kiara said, frowning at Carina when the other began a faint protest. Carroway,
too, looked ready to drop from his ordeal, and made his way to a chair by the
fire.
"Astir," Jolie summoned the vayash
moru from where he stood silently by the door. "Take Jonmarc to the
room I've readied for him upstairs. Anjela will show you. He can rest
undisturbed there."
"Someone should sit with him,"
Carina said. "He shouldn't be alone."
"Nyall can spend the night in a
chair," Jolie decided, and the river pilot made no protest. "The
rest of you look worse than when you dragged yourselves out of the river. Off
with you, to bed. Wake when you will. There'll be food enough for you whenever
you rise." The others fell tiredly into line for the journey upstairs. The
gaming house was silent, its patrons and its ladies asleep, and the barkeeper
was just finishing up his sweeping. With all the night's excitement, Tris doubted
that he would quickly find sleep, but his exhausted body decided otherwise as
he stretched out on his bed, and sleep overtook him.
Kiara guided her cousin into
their room like an overtired child. "Let me help you dress for bed,"
she said solicitously, but Carina shook her head.
"Not yet. I need to clear my head from
the working." Her voice was ragged. She hadn't bothered to heal her own
bruised cheek. The purple of the wound made the dark circles beneath her eyes
more pronounced.
Kiara stooped beside the fireplace to pour a
cup of hot tea from the boiling kettle Jolie's people had readied. She pushed
the warm cup into Carina's hands, and the healer paced over to the window,
looking out across the moonlit river, toward the darkness on the banks of the
other side.
"Jonmarc had to know what would happen
if they caught him," Carina said after a long silence.
"He knew."
"Then why did he come after us?" Carina
turned from the window. Her hands trembled as she raised the steaming cup to
her lips, and sipped the hot liquid like elixir.
Kiara kicked away from the wall and ambled
slowly over, resting against the back of a chair. "He told Jolie it was
because you saved his life, because you were his friends. Jolie tried to talk
him out of it. I thought they might come to blows."
"I might have liked to see that. I'd put
my money on Jolie."
"Not on this one. The Lady herself
couldn't have stopped him."
Carina looked down, as if she sought the
answers to her questions on the surface of her tea. "I wasn't frightened
when we went into the water. It was so cold. I knew that if we didn't reach
shore, it would be over quickly, like falling asleep. Carroway's a strong
swimmer. He pulled me out."
"I guessed where we were when the
soldiers came. But I don't think I was frightened until the next day, after the
tribunal, when the soldiers kept stopping at the stockade. I knew what they
thought should be done with us, just by their gestures." She shivered.
"Some things don't need words."
"Carroway was frightened, but he tried
to take care of me. I think we'd both given up hope. And then, when Jonmarc
came..." She shook her head. "It's my fault they captured him. If I'd
kept a proper hold on him, he would have come through with us."
"It was an accident," Kiara
protested. "You can't blame yourself."
Carina shook her head. "I tried to hold
on, but we had been outside all night, still wet from the river, and my hands
were too numb. Mother and Childe, Kiara, how did we ever get mixed up in
this?"
Kiara laid a strong arm around her shoulders,
hugging Carina tightly. "Blame the Lady. I know you'd give anything to be
getting ready for the Hawthorn Moon back in Isencroft."
"But that's not possible, is it? If Tris
doesn't succeed, we'll never be able to celebrate like that again. I never
wanted to make history, Kiara. I just wanted to heal my patients and not worry
about the rest."
"I don't think any of us bargained for
this," Kiara said reassuringly. "No one but the Goddess could have
put together such a group of misfits. Look at the bright side. The healings
you've worked on Jonmarc alone should qualify you to open the best healer's
school in the Winter Kingdoms."
Carina smiled. "You may be right. But
wouldn't I have to have him stuffed and mounted to display?" Tired as she
was, the absurdity of that image made her chuckle.
"I'll remember to tell him you've
finally found a use for him, once he wakes up."
Carina looked away. "What's wrong?"
Kiara asked.
"I'm so afraid, Kiara. After what
happened with Ric, I've been afraid to let Jonmarc get too close. But all day
yesterday, not knowing whether we could get to him in time, I can't pretend anymore.
Goddess help me, Kiara, I love him," she said, tears streaming down her
face. "I can't help loving him, but I'm so afraid I'll lose him,
too."
Kiara wrapped her arms around her cousin.
"Have you noticed how often Tris starts a sentence, 'If I live to take the
throne?' Every time he says that, I think my heart will break.
But he's right, of course. We both know the odds. This whole
thing is an awful gamble—and I'm not sure I'd place bets on us."
"Jonmarc has lost so much. I don't know
how he has the courage to try again."
"Jonmarc is a soldier. Soldiers know
better than anyone that you can't take tomorrow for granted. All you have is
today. I guess that's all we ever have, but most of the time, we're not aware
of it. It's not too late. Stop running away, and let him catch you."
"Maybe I should let him recover a
little, so the shock doesn't do him in." Carina gave Kiara a hug. She
slipped out of her healer's robes, pulled her chemise close around her against
the chill, and crawled tiredly into bed. "If I don't get some sleep, I'll
be done in. There's more to do before Jonmarc's going to be able to go
anywhere."
"I'll sit up for a while, in case you
need me," Kiara offered.
"Thank you." Carina yawned, but she
was asleep before Kiara could reply.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN prev next contents
C'ARINA woke
AT dawn. She shook her head, —-trying to separate the reality of the
night before from the dreams that had made her sleep sparse and fitful. Her
bare feet had hardly touched the cold floorboards before she tore her shift
over her head and slipped her robes in place. Her stomach growled but she
ignored it, intent on checking her patient.
Nyall sprawled snoring in a chair near the
fire in Vahanian's room, rousing as she entered. She motioned for him to be
quiet and indicated with a jerk of her head that he was free to join the others
for breakfast. Gratefully, the river pilot abandoned his post.
Carina approached Vahanian hesitantly. She
and Tris had worked until exhaustion on the healing, but there had been much
left undone. She drew a chair up beside
the cot and
looked silently at Vahanian, afraid to discover whether he
slept or had not yet regained consciousness. Carina closed her eyes and
stretched out her hand, running it lightly just above his face and chest to
ensure that she had overlooked nothing vital. A hand locked around her wrist
with an iron grip, and her eyes snapped open to find Vahanian looking at her.
"Are you dead, too?"
"I'm not dead," she said gently.
"Neither arc you. You're at Jolie's place. You're safe."
Vahanian dropped his hand, and closed his
eyes. "How?" he managed with a dry mouth.
Carina fetched a glass of water from a
pitcher on the nightstand and helped him sit enough to take a drink.
"Tris bent a few rules to go after
you," she said, settling him again.
"Arontala—"
"Tris managed to do it without much
magic. With some help from Sakwi and Carroway."
"The Goddess," Vahanian murmured.
"I saw—"
"You saw one of the river ghosts,"
Carina explained, wetting a cloth and laying it across his forehead. She
checked his bandages as she spoke, then nudged him onto his side to assure
herself that the welts on his back were healing nicely. "The rider was
Tris. Sakwi managed the fog, and Carroway handled the disguise. I wouldn't be
surprised if Sakwi sleeps for a week, after what we've put him through."
"I didn't think... anyone would
come."
Carina bit her lip as tears filled her eyes
unbidden. "Did you really think we'd leave you there?"
"It was too much of a risk."
"And what you did wasn't a risk?"
"Now we're even," he replied
weakly. "Truce?"
"Truce." She broke the awkward
pause by standing. "Well," she said professionally, "you need
to sleep. I'll just go downstairs—"
Vahanian held out a hand to her. "Stay
with me. Please."
She moved a step closer and reached out to
take his hand. He said nothing, but his whole form relaxed. Within moments, the
regular pattern of his breathing told her that he was asleep. She looked down
at his hand, cut and bruised from his ordeal, and beneath those wounds, older
scars. Maybe we're not quite so different after all, she thought,
placing her other hand gently atop his. She settled down in the chair, resting
his hand in her lap, and dozed in the warmth of the fire.
Vahanian woke with a start some candlemarks
later, and Carina laid a reassuring hand on his shoulder. She glimpsed fear in
his eyes, enough to tell her that his sleep had been uneasy, his dreams haunted.
"You're safe. No one can harm you here."
"Get Tris," he said urgently. He
tried to sit up, discovered his folly, and lay back again. "I have to tell
him something important."
"You need to rest."
"This is important. Nargi... in
Margolan..."
"All right. I'll get him—if you promise
not to move."
"Promise," Vahanian replied, his
voice lacking its usual timbre. "You have my word."
Carina found the others in the back room,
readying gear for the rest of the march south. Kiara and Tris were mending
some leather armor that Jolie had "found" for them. Carroway had just
returned from tending the horses. Nyall made himself useful reprovisioning
their packs with dried meats, fruits, and cheese, together with the other
necessities they would need for the ride. Sakwi dozed in a chair near the fire,
his sleep interrupted by deep coughs.
"How's Jonmarc?" Tris asked. Kiara
rose to ladle out a bowlful of warm porridge from a pot on the fire and bring
it to her cousin.
"He's awake. And I think he's out of
danger. He'll be sore for a while, and it will probably be a few days before
he's ready to ride, but he'll be all right after I do some more healing
today." Carroway poured a cup of steaming kerif from a kettle on
the hearth for himself and brought a cup to Carina, which she accepted eagerly.
"He says he has to see you, Tris. Something about Nargi in Margolan."
Tris and Kiara exchanged worried glances.
"Will it hurt anything if I go up to see him now?" Tris asked.
Carina shook her head. "Please go. I'm
afraid he'll try to drag himself down here if you don't."
Sakwi stirred in his chair. "I would
like to hear what he has to say," the land mage said, looking only
slightly recovered. "Perhaps I can help." Kiara gave the thin mage a
hand up from his chair, but he waved off further assistance. Carina followed
Tris up the stairs.
Vahanian had managed to prop himself up. In
daylight, the bruises and cuts that marred his face looked as prominent as they
had the night before. Only Carina's memory of how swollen and painful they had
truly been made her able to meet his eyes without wincing.
"Rough night?" Vahanian greeted
them.
Tris grinned and drew up a chair next to
Vahanian's bed. "Leave it to you to give us a real challenge."
"Thanks for getting me out of there. I
didn't think I was going to beat that one." Vahanian managed a wry grin.
"You put on one hell of a show."
Tris chuckled. "Too much time around
Carroway. Now, what did you want to tell me so you can go back to sleep?"
"Ran into that lieutenant I told you
about from the betting games. Only he's a commander now. Might not have been in
for quite such a bad time of it if he hadn't recognized me," Vahanian
said, wincing. "Name's Dorran. A real son of the Demon.
"Dorran figured on killing me, so he did
some bragging. Told me he was going to salvage his military career, which my
'escape' back then derailed, by doing a job for the Margolan king. Something
about taking troops into Margolan to put down a rebellion." Vahanian gave
a mirthless smile. "Sorry. I didn't catch more details, but he had just
walloped me on the head."
"That's quite enough." Tris glanced
at Kiara.
"Doesn't do much for our odds, does
it?" she said grimly.
"Sounds like even Jared might have
pushed too far, if the army can't keep the peace."
"Maybe the army is the problem,"
Kiara observed, putting one boot up on the foot of Vahanian's bed and leaning
forward onto her knee. "Maybe Ban found a good audience."
"Nargi, marching into Margolan," Tris
repeated. "There'll be nothing left."
"There may be a way to stop them,"
Sakwi said thoughtfully, and they turned to look at him. "I'm from
Eastmark, and my travels have taken me to the palace there many times. My king
has no love for the Nargi. It would be of great interest to him to know that
they stood ready to invade Margolan. It's my duty to tell him. If he were to
launch an offensive, it would force the Nargi to withdraw their southern troops
to guard their flank."
"I'll help," Kiara added.
"King Kalcen was my mother's younger brother. They were quite close, I'm
told. Let me send a letter with you, explaining the situation. He may decide he
has a personal stake in not seeing me married off to Jared."
"And how do you propose to get to
Eastmark?" Vahanian asked Sakwi skeptically.
Sakwi smiled. "The forest will find a
way. I'll be ready to go by afternoon."
No amount of argument would dissuade the
mage. Carina saw little choice if Tris's gambit were to succeed. Sakwi took his
leave of them to get ready.
"I think we'll let you get some rest,
too," Tris said, standing. "Now that you're awake, Jolie will have
food sent up. You've still got a real beauty of a lip there. I'll tell her to
make sure whatever she sends is soft."
"Better phrase that carefully in a place
like this," Vahanian replied with a wink. "You might not get what you
thought you asked for."
Tris glanced at Carina. "He'll live.
Sounds like he's back to his old self."
Carina watched the door shut behind Tris and
Kiara. "Now, that's quite enough," she said in her
healer's tone. She crossed to Vahanian's bed
and gently slipped the extra pillow from behind him so that he could lay flat.
That he permitted it gave her some indication of how he was feeling, but he
caught her sleeve as she turned to go.
"I never got the chance to ask,"
Vahanian said, meeting her eyes. "Did they hurt you?" He raised a
finger gently to the still-visible outline of the bruise on her cheek.
"I'm all right," Carina said, but
she could tell from his eyes that he knew she was lying.
"Never bluff someone who's made a living
gambling," Vahanian said. "You don't always have to be the one with
the answers, you know. The healer can need healing, too."
His acknowledgment of her ordeal, coupled
with the strain of the past days finally overwhelmed what remained of her
reserve. She turned away as tears began to streak down her face, finding that
her will was no longer sufficient to hold them at bay.
"I'll be all right," she said
again, swallowing hard. "It's just going to take a little time." And
then, her resolve crumbling, the tears came in earnest, for the near
drowning, the Nargi, as cold and enveloping as the swift waters of the river.
She covered her face with her hands, her shoulders shaking as deep, racking
sobs shook her.
How he managed to stand she never knew, but
Vahanian stepped up behind her, turning her gently and folding her against him.
He let her sob like a child, wordlessly stroking her hair. She dragged a sleeve
across her eyes, aware of what a spectacle she had made of herself.
"I'm sorry," she managed, her voice
cracking.
"No one's invincible. Trust me, I
know."
"There isn't time for this. There's a
job to be done..."
"Let someone else do it for a
while." He pulled her with him to sit on the edge of the bed, his strength
fading. He slipped his arm around her shoulder, drawing her close to him, and
she did not shrug away "You've carried your share. Stop running for a
while."
"What makes you think I'm running?"
"We have that in common," Vahanian
replied.
"We're not that much alike."
"No? Let me see. Stubborn, willful,
driven, self-sufficient, arrogant, and damn good at what we do." His lip
twisted wryly. "You're right. Nothing in common."
"Was that supposed to make me feel
better?"
Vahanian shook his head, wincing at the
effort. "No. That takes time. But as you're so fond of telling me,
you have to let the healer close enough to heal."
"Sakwi isn't up to any more than he's
done already."
"I wasn't thinking of Sakwi,"
Vahanian murmured, close enough now that she could feel his breath.
"There was something I promised myself in the Nargi camp, if I lived
through it."
"What was that?" Carina murmured.
"This," he said, lowering his mouth
to hers. For an instant she hesitated. Then she leaned into him, surprised at
herself even as she returned the kiss with gentle fervor. A moment later he
drew back, and she thought he looked both pleased and a little astonished.
"I love you, Carina," Vahanian
said, tilting her chin up to look her in the eyes. "Last night, in the
camp, I didn't want to go to the Lady, leaving it unsaid."
Carina felt tears start down her cheeks, but
she did not look away. "I love you, too," she whispered, her voice
choked. "I've wasted so much time, being afraid—"
He kissed her again, cutting off her words,
reluctant to draw away until he began to sway as his strength failed.
"I really ought to be going back
downstairs," she stammered, completely at a loss.
Vahanian made no attempt to hold her back,
but his eyes searched hers. Carina had the uncomfortable feeling that he could
see right past her defenses. She helped him lay back down.
"Come back soon. Don't be afraid,"
he murmured, looking as if he were about to pass out. "Your virtue is
quite safe."
Carina blushed. "Considering where we
are, that's saying something. Now get some sleep, before I have to re do what I
did last night. When I come back up, I'll see what I can do about the damage
that's left."
Vahanian took her hand and pressed the back of it
against his lips. "As you wish, m'lady," he said, his eyes closed.
She sat with him until he fell asleep again, and while her heart was still
thudding, she found that the sense of relief at the confession seemed to push
her fears far away, at least for today.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT prev next contents
Everyone but
Vahanian and Carina gathered in the back room late
that afternoon to bid the Goddess's blessing to Sakwi. Outfitted for a long
ride, the thin mage accepted their well-wishing graciously, politely
disagreeing with Tris about resting longer before striking out on the dangerous
trek to Eastmark.
Tris watched the mage with mixed emotions. He
was grateful for the possibility that Sakwi might be able to persuade the
Eastmark king to ally against Jared. Yet he knew with Sakwi's departure,
the burden of the success of the journey fell even more heavily on his own
shoulders. I'm not ready. There's so much left to learn.
Sakwi stepped to the edge of the brush along
the river. In the dimming sun, Tris saw a large stag among the bushes, a
powerful animal with antlers that
spoke of a
long and cunning
life. Sakwi murmured something
that Tris did not quite hear and the stag moved closer, awaiting the mage's
needs. With a wave of farewell, Sakwi hoisted himself onto the stag's back.
Making the sign of the Goddess, he leaned forward and clung tightly to the
beast as it bounded off.
"You know," Kiara said to Tris,
"every time I think I've seen it all, I get another surprise. There's
never a dull moment."
"Stick around. The fun's just
starting." He looked around them. "Has anyone seen Carina?"
"Jolie brought a note down from Carina
asking that someone sit with Jonmarc tonight." Kiara shrugged. "I
imagine Carina's finally getting some sleep. Goddess bless, she deserves
it."
"It'll be a few more days until Jonmarc
can even think about sitting a horse. I guess we might as well make ourselves
comfortable."
Kiara's expression made it clear that she did
not consider the delay unacceptable. "We could all use the rest.
Especially you. Although I know what you're thinking. Every day that goes by
makes it closer to the Hawthorn Moon."
They followed the others back into Jolie's
place. The back room had become a place for Tris and his companions to make
their plans and preparations in private, avoiding the curiosity of the gamers
and guests in the front rooms. That they had not already been carried away in
chains bound for Shekerishet gave Tris confidence in Jolie's repeated
reassurance of her discretion. He still found it impossible to relax.
Nyall, too, seemed uneasy with the delay.
Tris imagined that the river pilot's anxiousness lay in his
wish for his part in the adventure to be at
an end. Nyall spent his days testing and improving the new boat Jolie had
helped him secure, building a corral for the horses and checking the boat's
maneuverability in the swift river. He went to bed early, looking for any
excuse to flee from the back room after dark. Now that the river ghosts' early
reticence was gone, they sought Tris's intercession on a nightly basis. Even
Jolie seemed taken aback at the spirits that came to Tris for his help in
resolving old business or making the passage to the Lady.
Although the Sisterhood had assured Tris that
his mediation would not draw Arontala's attention and would help to ease the
imbalance in the currents of magic, Tris still felt vulnerable. He woke each
morning surprised and grateful to find no Margolan troops waiting outside their
door.
"If Sakwi isn't here, I guess we're on
our own to pick a safe path across Margolan," Kiara nibbled on some fruit
and bread.
. "Looks that way," Tris agreed. He
rested a boot on the bench across from her and leaned forward to take a wedge
of cheese from the bowl Jolie kept well-filled. "Here's hoping Ban can
recruit some deserters, and that Harrtuck can bring a little pressure on the
northern border. I'll feel better thinking that Jared's attention is on
something other than me."
Kiara chewed thoughtfully. "Do you think
Jared expects you to challenge him?"
"He went to a lot of trouble hiring
assassins. Having me dead would give him one less reason to watch his
back."
"You've certainly got Arontala's
attention."
"That's more than enough to worry me.
Now the question is—can we drop out of sight long enough for them to get
careless?"
"It's a risky thing to count on."
Tris grimaced. "It's all risky."
A day
later, Vahanian made his way down the stairs to join them. It was more
bravado, Tris thought, than an indication that the fighter was truly ready for
action. Two days later, against Carina's strident protests, Vahanian proclaimed
himself ready to ride if not to fight. He would hear no more of going back to
bed to recuperate.
Although Tris chafed at the delay, he had to
admit that the rest had made a visible difference in Carroway, who looked to be
himself again. Something had also changed between Carina and Vahanian in the
wake of Vahanian's close call. The two were now clearly a couple. Tris was glad
for them. While the road afforded no real privacy and few enough opportunities
for conversation, he knew how much it meant to him to have Kiara.
By the Dark Lady, Tris thought
tiredly, I guess the journey is getting to all of us. Only a complete fool
would be unafraid.
At sundown on the day they were to leave, an
insistent rapping sounded at the door to the back room. "There's a visitor
for you," Jolie called, and stood aside to reveal a thin, flaxen-haired
man in a dark cloak.
"I'm glad I reached you before you
left," Gabriel said as he swept past Tris, foregoing any kind of greeting.
"I received the message Sakwi sent with
the wolf only yesterday. It was a
considerable distance to cover in such a short time."
From his seat at the table, Vahanian shook
his head. "Sure, no problem," he murmured. "A land mage rides
out of here on a stag and sends a wolf to fetch a vayash moru. What's so
strange about that?"
"Stop that," Carina chided.
"So glad to see you survived your
encounter with the forces across the river," Gabriel said. "You had
merely a taste of what my kind have experienced for centuries at their
hands."
"You and I almost had being dead in
common," Vahanian quipped darkly.
"The Lady guards her servants
well." He returned his attention to Tris. "I intended to meet you
downriver to help you cross Margolan. I've been successful in securing a
promise of safe passage through the holdings of my fellows on the Blood
Council. Many vayash moru are sympathetic to your quest. They're joining
up with Soterius's fighters. Some have offered to escort us on the road. We've
lost a great deal to Arontala's forces. With or without the approval of the
Blood Council, they were ready to take up your cause."
"jonmarc found out that Jared made an
alliance with the Nargi," Tris told Gabriel. "He intends to use Nargi
troops to make up for the desertions in the Margolan army."
"How interesting," the vayash
moru mused. "My people hate the Nargi even more than they despise
Jared. It might be most helpful to have vayash moru patrol this side of
the Nu River. It should pose an effective deterrent to having Nargi cross over
into Margolan. Not all of their charms and wardings work as... consistently...
as the Nargi like to think."
"I've been hearing the tales from the
river ghosts for days now. The ones that didn't drown by accident died fleeing
the Nargi, or were dumped into the river after the Nargi killed them. Many of
the ghosts have asked for a way to help with the coming battle. If the ghosts
were to help the vayash moru hold the river border, we might be doubly
protected." Tris paused. "I'll speak to the spirits that didn't want
to go to their rest."
"And I'll make arrangements immediately
with the vayash moru," Gabriel said in agreement. He looked around
at the preparations for the road. "It appears you're ready to leave. I'll
join you."
Nyall's eyes were big as saucers. "Don't
worry, Nyall," Vahanian cracked. "Gabriel finds his own provisions on
the trail."
"Dark Lady take my soul," the river
pilot swore.
Gabriel fixed the uneasy boat master with a
stare. "Pray that she does not." He turned back to Tris. "We
have little time, and a great distance to cover. Let's go."
Jolie waited for them at the river. She had
already gifted them with fresh cloaks and clothing, and seen to it that Nyall
had all the provisions he required. Now she huddled in her woolen wrap on the
bank, watching their preparations as if her attentiveness might ensure their
success. She bid each of them farewell as they boarded Nyall's boat, kissing
Vahanian on both cheeks and admonishing him to take care, although her voice
and expression made it plain she did not expect to be obeyed. Jolie also
gave Carina a peck on the cheek and said
something the others did not hear, something that made the healer flush
scarlet. Jolie looked toward Vahanian with a motherly smirk.
Tris, the last to board, stopped and took
Jolie's hand in both of his. "Thank you for everything," he said
gratefully. "It was a risk for you, taking us in."
"The day I start worrying about risk is
the day I should get out of the business. The Lady's hand be upon you."
The unlikeliness of that luck lay unspoken between
them. "Get going," Jolie urged, breaking the silence. "I'll be
looking for news of you. I'll hear. Jolie hears everything."
Nyall pushed the gangplank away. Tris and the
others took their places, long poles in hand, as the river pilot guided them
out into the swift waters. The lights of Jolie's place remained visible for
quite a distance, until the river changed its course, whisking them along in
its current, deeper into Margolan.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE prev next contents
Near dusk on the first day
they glimpsed a dozen soldiers riding together not far from the river. The
well-armed men lacked both flag and livery, raising Tris's suspicions. Tris and
Vahanian poled their raft toward the shallows and waited in the thin cover of
dead reeds and overhanging branches until the guardsmen were gone. They traveled
the rest of the night in silence, scanning the riverbanks. Though they saw no
more guards, the camps of ragged sojourners dotted the forest's edge, more
refugees fleeing Margolan for whatever the road might offer. By night Gabriel
traveled with them, his enhanced sight aiding Nyall through the shallows and
rocks of the swift river. By day Gabriel disappeared, leaving them to their
wits to navigate the difficult river.
The deeper they traveled into Margolan, the
more Tris felt the ghosts of his homeland tugging at his senses. Their
restlessness became mirrored in his own. The rivers' ghosts drifted near the
raft, substantial enough that the others glimpsed them through the spring fog.
Fearing the dreams that plagued him nightly, Tris slept little, pushing himself
until Carina chided him and exhaustion gave him no choice. But he could not
evade the dreams, the sound of Kait's plaintive call in his mind, the memory of
the desperate look in her eyes. Worse, the images of the dark sending haunted
him most nights. He finally let Carina use her healing magic to put him into a
deep sleep while Gabriel stood watch. It was the first dreamless rest he could
remember in a fortnight.
They beached the raft on the
banks of a deserted fishing village in the waning light of the moon. A feeling
of dread settled over Tris as he helped Carroway wrestle the heavy boat far
enough onto the beach that the horses could be unloaded safely. Without Sakwi,
Carina had been preoccupied for the journey keeping the horses calm on the
raft. Now she led the animals one by one down the gangplank and onto dry land,
working in relay with Vahanian until the horses were safely ashore.
The wind changed, and a foul smell drifted
down toward the river. Nyall waited nervously near the raft, making it clear by
his stance that he would go no further. Tris dug into the pouch he carried
beneath his tunic for gold, and added half again to what was promised to the
river pilot.
"Thank you for your trouble," Tris
said, pressing the coins into the boatman's hand. With a mumbled word of
blessing and a nervous glance in Gabriel'-.
direction, the river pilot sprinted across
the gangplank, pulled the boards up behind him, and poled back into the
current.
"He certainly didn't waste any
time," Kiara said.
Tris shrugged. "Why should he? He
already got a lot more than he bargained for."
"You could say that," Carroway
observed.
"What happened to this place?"
Carina said, heading toward the ruins of the village.
"Smells like someone left all of last
year's catch out in the sun," said Vahanian. The others held their scarves
over their noses as the foul smell returned, stronger now. What remained of the
small cabins and stone houses was gutted by fire, so that only portions of the
walls still stood, open to the sky. Abandoned nets hung from the trees and bushes
where they had been stretched to dry, swaying in the wind like ghostly moss.
Even without consciously stretching out his
senses, Tris could feel the restless dead. Their anger washed over him like a
cold wave, and he struggled for control against the unseen presences that
buffeted him. Without warning an image of the slaughter came to him, then
another and another, the testament of eyewitnesses sent with a fury that
battered his control.
Soldiers, in the livery of the King of
Margolan, wielded swords and battle axes against villagers armed with hoes and
sickles. No quarter given, even as women and children begged for their lives.
Terror, as the soldiers took their pleasure of the village's young girls
before casually slaughtering them. On the Plains of Spirit, the ghosts'
emotions washed over him, as hungry for vengeance as the spirits in the Ruune
Videya. Tris staggered and clutched his head, closing his eyes. He dropped to
his knees, overcome, reinforcing his war dings. The brutal images continued,
and the ghosts cried out for justice.
"Tris!" Kiara cried. Tris opened
his eyes to see Kiara and Vahanian with swords drawn, ready for a cautious
advance.
"I can feel what happened here," he
said, struggling for composure.
"Look there." Carroway pointed. In
the twilight, a man's ghost stood ahead of them.
Tris, Kiara, and Vahanian stepped forward to
follow the beckoning ghost, swords unsheathed and ready. Tris saw the glint of
a dagger in Carroway's hand, and noted that Carina gripped her walking staff a
bit more tightly. Jae flew on ahead, his leathery wings making the only sound
as the ghost led them toward the large common barn. Gabriel took the rear.
"Wait for us!" Kiara hissed at Jae
as the ghost vanished. With the others just a pace behind, Tris swung open the
barn door and recoiled. The smell was overpowering. Inside, barely visible in
the dim light, hung what remained of dozens of villagers, their corpses
suspended by nooses from the barn rafters.
Tris called hand fire to his palm and used it
to light their way as he and Vahanian pushed forward, swallowing hard against
the stench. A sword thrust up from the barn floor and from it hung a bit of
cloth: the royal standard of House Margolan.
"Nice touch," Vahanian said acidly.
"Just in case someone didn't get the message."
"Such messages have become common in
recent days," Gabriel said from behind Carina. The vayash moru seemed
unaffected by the carnage, though he had unsheathed his sword. "Arontala
has grown bolder, and the list of crimes that prompts such vengeance grows by
the candlemark. Come. We must find sanctuary."
"Not yet," Tris said. "Not
until I've given them their peace."
"Do it fast," Vahanian muttered.
"I don't want to meet up with those guards on their return trip, if it's
all the same to you."
It took two candlemarks to cut down the
corpses and carry them to a nearby cave. When the bodies were laid out and
covered with makeshift shrouds, Tris lifted his hands in farewell as the ghosts
once more made themselves visible.
"I can't give you your lives," Tris
said, "but I bid you rest. I am oath-bound to the Lady to destroy the one
who caused your deaths."
A bearded man who bore himself with the dignity
of a village elder stepped forward from the silent line of specters. "We
don't want to rest yet," the elder said. "We want to fight. Give us
the power, Lord Summoner, and let us hold this ground and this river crossing
so that none of the usurper's soldiers can pass."
Tris nodded, and stretched out his hands in
blessing. "By the crown of my father, King Bricen, I honor your service.
Take your vengeance on Jared's troops, but let no harm come to innocent
travelers who pass this way."
The elder bowed in acceptance. "Your word is a
bond upon us, m'lord. We'll do as you command."
Gabriel and Vahanian moved a large boulder
into place to block the entrance, burying the unfortunate villagers in a rough
cairn.
"Can we go now?" Vahanian
asked. Carina opened her mouth as if to chastise Vahanian, but at the look on
his face, she said nothing. Tris guessed that it was the memory of Vahanian's
own village, destroyed by the magicked beasts, which loomed in the fighter's
mind.
No one spoke as they retraced their steps to
where the horses were tethered. Tris looked over to Vahanian, trying to
appraise his companion's condition. While Vahanian had made a valiant effort
aboard the raft to keep up, it was apparent that he had not yet fully recovered
from his injuries.
"Ready to ride?" Tris asked.
"Never felt better," Vahanian lied
blatantly. To prove his point, he swung up into his saddle. Tris saw him wince
as pain flickered across his face. So did Carina, who made sure that she rode
where she could keep an eye on him.
"Welcome back to Margolan,"
Carroway said as they rode. They kept a brisk pace, alert for any signs of
patrols.
"This way," Gabriel directed.
"We must hurry."
Tris rode in silence in the darkness. The
story they heard from the old man in Sakwi's village, the murdered villagers
in the fishing town, and the desolation they saw along the road wore heavy on
him. Margolan, so prosperous and peaceful under Bricen, had been reduced to
starvation in less than a year. Tris's anger against Jared warred with Alyzza's
warning about power used in hatred, and as they rode, Tris bowed his head,
letting his cow;
hide the tears that streaked down his face
for his homeland and his people.
Kiara rode up beside him, and he was grateful
that she did not try to talk. She seemed resolved to comfort him just by her
silent presence. He doubted she could guess just how much that gesture meant.
His heart was long past breaking for his land, his people, his lost family. He
knew that he must quiet his anger, master his hatred, or risk being turned by
the Obsidian King. Tris focused on the pathworkings that Alyzza had taught him,
the small magicks for bringing calm and clearing the mind. Gradually, he felt
some of the tension ease, although the fresh grief he felt still ached.
They finally slowed to a stop; silhouetted in
the moonlight were the ruins of a temple. Tris felt a tingle of old sorcery as
they approached. One look at Kiara confirmed that she, too, sensed that ancient
and powerful magic had been worked here long ago, the traces of it dimmed by
years.
•"Want to put in a few prayers for
luck?" Vahanian jibed, and Carina gave him a withering glare.
Gabriel secured their horses in the shelter
of a ruined stable, out of sight of casual passers-by. "This way,"
the vayash moru beckoned, leading them amid the ruins. In the gray just
before the dawn, it was almost possible to imagine those broken arches soaring
toward the sun, buttressing high stone walls, awash in the brilliance of
stained and beveled glass. Nothing remained of that former splendor, save some
of the marble flooring and broken walls.
At the very front of the ruins, Gabriel
pushed aside a heavy
stone altar. Underneath,
steps descended into darkness. "Here," fee indicated, standing
aside.
Kiara gave him a skeptical look and Jae
squawked in agreement. "You want us to just... go down there?"
"You'll be safe. Hurry. The sun is about
to rise."
Vahanian moved to lead the way, drawing his
sword.
"That won't do you any good,"
Gabriel said.
Vahanian glanced over his shoulder. "For
luck," he said, stepping carefully into the darkness.
Tris, Carina, and Carroway followed, then
Kiara, with Gabriel behind them to pull the heavy stone back into place. Tris
conjured hand fire, which lit the tight corridor with a blue glow. The darkness
smelled of mold and rotting cloth, and the metallic-sweet tang of fresh blood.
Even without a conscious effort, Tris could sense other beings near them, not
living but not dead, restless spirits neither mortal nor at peace. He raised
wardings around the group, unsure what he would do should Gabriel's estimation
of their hosts prove incorrect.
Tris felt a rush of wind, heard the scuff of
leather on stone. Carina gasped and Vahanian cried out as something lunged for
them in the darkness. Gabriel moved faster than sight, blocking the creature
that grabbed for Tris. Tris sent fire to flare in the torches on the walls
around them. A door at the end of the corridor opened, and more torchlight
flooded into the corridor. Framed in the doorway stood Riqua, and behind her,
dozens of vayash moru.
"Hail, Riqua," Gabriel said, making
a low, courteous bow. "I have
brought you the Lord of the
Dead and the new Lord of Dark Haven. We seek
sanctuary for the night."
Reluctantly, Tris and the others followed
Gabriel into the next room, a large vault with a catafalque in one corner.
Although the crypt was freezing cold, it was otherwise appointed like a fine
salon, with comfortable chairs, rich tapestries, and fine furnishings in the
most current fashion. Riqua returned Gabriel's bow, and held out her hand in
greeting to Tris. Without hesitation, he took it and kissed the back of her ice
cold hand, making a courtly bow.
"Our deepest gratitude, Lady Riqua, for
your welcome and sanctuary," Tris said. The deference seemed to please
Riqua.
"Hail, Lord of the Dead," she said
in a tone that walked an indistinguishable line between true respect and
sarcasm. "And which of you, might I inquire, is the Lord of Dark
Haven?"
"I am," Vahanian answered, stepping
up behind Tris, his hand still near his sword. The move seemed more for Tris's
defense than as an indication of comfort with his new title.
"Well, well," said Riqua as she
circled Vahanian, taking his measure. "A long way from Chauvrenne and
Nargi, aren't you, Lord Vahanian?"
"It's been an interesting road."
Riqua exchanged glances with Gabriel.
"So it is always with the will of the Lady."
She looked at the others, who stood in
silence, alert and still braced for an attack. Riqua paused for a moment in
front of Kiara, staring intently at the Isencroft princess. Even Jae seemed to
shrink at the inspection. "I knew your mother in the court of
Eastmark," Riqua said,
watching for Kiara's reaction. "Her spirit was as
wild as the stallions she rode. Welcome, Viata's daughter. You'll be safe
here."
Whatever Kiara's misgivings, her court
training served her well. She made a gracious courtesy. "Your hospitality
is most appreciated, m'lady Riqua." Kiara's hand never strayed far from
the pommel of her sword.
Riqua's attention moved to Carroway.
"I've seen you in Bricen's court," Riqua said with a faint smile.
"You're far from home, Bard Carroway."
"Thank Jared," Carroway replied.
"Until Tris takes back the throne, I'm where I should be—at his
side."
Riqua looked at Carroway a few seconds more
in silence, and Tris wondered again whether Gabriel had told him the whole
truth about vayash moru's ability to read mortal minds. While he
suspected that his own power as Summoner afforded him unique protections and
Vahanian seemed to have unusually good shielding for a non-mage, Tris wondered
if the same was true for the others.
"When this is over, Bard Carroway, look
again to Glynnmoor, and your lands. The plague that took your family is gone.
My brood has watched over the manor house, as a favor to your father these ten
years past. It is free to be claimed again by mortals."
Carroway tried and failed to cover his
astonishment at Riqua's knowledge of his past, something Tris himself had not
heard Carroway speak of in years. But before he could say anything, Riqua's
attention turned to Carina.
"And who are you, lady healer?"
Riqua asked.
"Carina Jesthrata," Carina replied.
Riqua's eyes narrowed as she struggled to
place her. "King Donelan's court healer, yes? I heard some time ago that
you went to the Sisterhood to find a cure for Donelan's sickness. Yet here you
are."
Carina gave Riqua a defiant look. "Foor
Arontala is the cause of the king's illness. Until Arontala is destroyed,
Donelan won't fully recover. This is my proper place."
"Well, well, well," Riqua said,
directing her comment this time to Gabriel. "You've certainly assembled
the players. I can say we've not seen the like here, at least, not alive. You
are most welcome here. These are my lands. In better days, I would have
received you in the manor house, but it burned. So here we are."
"Is it true, that you are a spirit
mage?" a young man barely out of his teens asked Tris. When Tris met the
eyes of the vayash moru, he saw centuries, not decades, in the dark
gaze.
."A Summoner," Gabriel replied.
"The Blood Council itself promised him sanctuary among our kind."
"All but Uri." Tris turned to see
Elana, the blond vayash morn who had been with Riqua at the Council
meeting.
A faint glimmer of annoyance crossed
Gabriel's face. "As usual, our esteemed colleague takes a somewhat
different view of circumstances. But the Council has ruled." Together,
they walked into the midst of the other vayash moru, who watched Tris
and the others with barely concealed hunger.
"You may rest here until nightfall,"
promised Riqua. "I give my word you'll be safe."
Although none of his companions spoke, Tris
knew that they shared the same skepticism. Riqua's offer looked good only
compared to the certain dangers outside.
"Thank you," Tris replied with a
slight bow. "We're grateful."
A cold smile touched her lips. "If you
can stop Arontala, it is we who will be in your debt, son of Bricen."
Riqua turned abruptly. "Kolin," she said to the young man behind her,
"bring extra cloaks to warm them. Fetch wine from the casks. Make them
comfortable." She turned back to Tris, clearly acknowledging him as the
group's leader. "We have no need of your food here," she said, her
sharp, white teeth clear in her smile. "But there is old wine in the
cellar you might find acceptable."
Tris nodded. "We brought provisions with
us."
"Elana," Riqua called.
"At your service, m'lady." The
blonde vayash moru might have appeared demure had it not been for the
complete lack of innocence in her blue eyes.
"Show our guests to the inner chambers.
They've traveled far. We must make them as comfortable as we can."
"Of course," Elana answered.
"Follow me."
She led them down a narrow corridor, from
which branched dozens of rooms filled with shrouded and mummified dead. The
corridors of the necropolis reeked of decay. Carina put a hand to her face,
covering her nose and mouth with part of her shawl.
"These look like the tunnels underneath
Isencroft's palace," Kiara said.
"You've been there?" Elana
inquired.
Kiara and Carina exchanged glances.
"Yes, many times."
Elana glanced back at Kiara over her
shoulder. "I've taken refuge there more times than I can count. It is a
well-known sanctuary."
"I never knew," Kiara murmured.
"There's much your kind does know about
us." Elana opened the doors to two empty crypts that branched off the
corridor. Carved into the stone, they were furnished as comfortable bedrooms,
with stone slabs where beds might have been. "Here are your rooms."
"For the ladies." Elana gestured to
the smaller crypt off the main hall. "It was built for two," she said
with an unsettling smile. She turned to the men, "And you may sleep
here." She pointed to the larger crypt across and down the corridor.
"We have no other rooms that are not... occupied."
Her gaze lingered a moment longer than necessary
on Tris. "Kolin will bring anything you need. You won't be disturbed. We
too, will rest until nightfall. Then, we go hunting." And with that the vayash
moru left them, no longer troubling to move at mortal speed, disappearing
in the blink of an eye.
"If we ever travel together again,"
Carroway mumbled, "I'm choosing where we stay." He moved to the
doorway of the second crypt, and shuddered. "Forgive me for not being grateful,
but this wasn't what I had in mind when I thought of a safe place to
sleep."
"Where's Gabriel?" Kiara asked,
looking for their guide.
"He stayed behind with Riqua,"
Vahanian replied, positioning himself so that he could look down the corridor.
"I'm not crazy about being split up like this."
"Neither am I," Carina agreed.
"I'd feel better if we could stay together."
"So would I," Tris agreed,
"but the rooms are too small for all of us, and I don't have the feeling
we've been given permission to wander around."
"You're the Lord of the Dead,"
Vahanian tossed back. "Aren't they supposed to listen to you?"
"Royster was a bit obscure on that
point. As far as the vayash moru go, I have the distinct feeling it's an
honorary title," Tris replied.
"They're bound by the Blood Council's
ruling, aren't they?" Kiara asked, pulling her cloak more tightly around
her.
"So I'm told. Let's hope Gabriel is
reading his people correctly."
They gathered in the larger crypt, which was
barely big enough for them all to find a seat. Tris lit the torches. Here
beneath the ground, it was cold enough that Carina began to shiver, gratefully
accepting Vahanian's offer to share both his seat and his cloak. Kiara also
drew close to Tris. After a while, body heat together with the torch fire
helped to warm the small room.
Carroway distributed food for them out of the
packs from their horses. Kolin delivered extra cloaks and wineskins filled with
an old, sweet vintage, then left them to their meal. Jae was quiet, picking at
the bits of meat and cheese Kiara put out for him. The group ate in silence,
each deep in thought. Or perhaps, Tris mused, the uncertainty of how close
their hosts might be lingering and how well the undead could hear. He was sure
that each
of them was putting off sleep just as long as
their exhausted bodies could remain awake.
He knew his own opportunity to rest would
have to wait. Here among the bones of the dead, the restless spirits clustered
around him, so thickly that he was amazed his companions could not see them. He
couldn't resist their pleas for intercession and release, and so he worked
until his head throbbed and he could no longer fend off sleep.
Tris's companions waited until finally
fatigue won out over fear. Carroway took the first watch.
"Sleep with one eye open, all
right?" Kiara joked nervously.
"I don't think you need to worry about
that," Tris assured her, seeing the uneasiness in her eyes as he kissed
her forehead. From the moment they had approached the ruined temple, the
whispers of the dead brushed his mind, like a hushed conversation just beyond
hearing. The presence of the ghostly watchers was likely to keep him from
getting any restful sleep, even if he could banish the memories of the murdered
villagers from his thoughts.
Kiara and Carina disappeared into their
crypt, and Carroway took up his post at its door. Just then, Riqua appeared
from the shadows of the corridor. "I see you haven't yet gone to your
rest," she said to Tris.
"Forgive me, but that sounds a bit
ominous, given where we are," Tris said with a thin smile.
"Come with me, Prince Drayke. I have
something for you, a gift from Bava K'aa."
Tris exchanged a glance with Vahanian. "Get
some sleep, Jonmarc. You need it more than any of us."
"I don't sleep well in crypts,"
Vahanian said. "And I'm sworn to keep your royal hide in one piece. So if
it's all the same to you, wherever you're going—I'm going."
"As you wish," replied Riqua. She
led them down a maze of corridors. Tris called hand fire to light their way,
and Vahanian carried a torch from their crypt, pushing back some of the tomb's
darkness. They followed Riqua to an older part of the necropolis where dust
and the smell of death permeated the air.
Riqua stopped at a mausoleum wall, where the
dead were laid to their rest in stone drawers behind intricately carved slabs
that depicted their likeness and the dates of their life. Vahanian hung back,
keeping watch on the entrance to the corridor. Riqua moved to one of the
plainer slabs and effortlessly opened a heavy drawer that might have taken
three strong men to close. She reached inside, undeterred by the old corpse
that lay shrouded inside. From beneath the body, she drew a small, thin book.
Tris felt his heart begin to pound as he
recognized the binding.
"Do you know what this is, Lord
Summoner?" Riqua asked, handing him the slim volume book-marked with a
yellowed, thick envelope.
"The missing diary of the Obsidian
King."
Riqua gave a short, harsh laugh.
"Missing? Is that what the Sisterhood told you? It's never been missing.
Bava K'aa gave it to me, years ago, for safekeeping. Do you know why? Why she
chose to keep its location secret, even from the Sisterhood?"
"Because it contains something so
powerful, with such a great potential for misuse, that she couldn't trust it to
anyone else."
"Because it holds a secret of life and
death," Riqua said. "It's time for you to hear the whole story about
your grandmother, and why her love nearly cost the Winter Kingdoms their
freedom. But first, pay heed to that envelope, and the page it marks. You hold
in your hands something beyond the wealth of kings, beyond the greatest spoils
of war. Tell me what's written on the page—mind that you do not speak the words
aloud."
Tris read over the yellowed handwriting. His
hands began to shake as he realized the meaning of what he saw. He looked at
Riqua, ashen. "It's a spell to separate the soul from the body," he
said quietly. "Gray magic, if it belongs at all to the light."
Riqua took the fragile envelope from his trembling
hands, and withdrew a sturdy vial on a strong leather strap. Riqua slipped the
strap over Tris's head, so that the vial hung around his neck. "What could
equal the importance of the spell?" Tris asked,
"Before her death, Bava K'aa made one
final potion. Doing so weakened her, and hastened her passing. What you hold in
your hand was created at the peril of Bava K'aa's very soul, because its working
is indeed gray magic. It's a potion capable of curing a mortal wound. Such a
potion requires the power of a very great sorcerer, and drains the maker of
such power that those few powerful enough to create it can only do so once in
their lifetime. Think, Prince Drayke. How much would a dying man pay for such
an elixir? How many people would a desperate man kill?"
"I don't understand," Tris said,
staring at the vial as if it might burn him. "What does the combination
mean?"
"There's one more item you have not
seen," Riqua said. Tris realized that there was a sealed note slipped into
the back of the book. He was shaken to see his own name written on the envelope,
in the unmistakable hand of his grandmother.
"Read it."
Within the envelope was a small sheet, and on
it, one sentence: "You must do what I could not, because you have what I
did not," he read in a voice just above a whisper.
"Before his fall, the mage who became
the Obsidian King was in love with your grandmother." Riqua said.
"His name was Lemuel, and he was one of the most gifted Summoners of his
age. Like your grandmother, he rose on his gifts alone, without a noble name
or a wealthy family. And like your grandmother, he became the advisor to kings
and almost without peer in mortal influence."
"And that power corrupted him. He
presumed to the rights of the Goddess."
"That's what the Sisterhood told you,
and it's true—in part. Lemuel pushed the boundaries of knowledge within that
gift farther than anyone— even Bava K'aa—had ever gone. But something went
wrong when Lemuel attempted a very old working. Bava K'aa, who was with him
when it happened, believed that an ancient, evil spirit took possession of
Lemuel. She blamed herself for not being able to intervene. That spirit called
himself the Obsidian King,
although the Sisterhood believes that he has been known by many names
throughout the ages, taking and abandoning human hosts as it suits him."
"Possessed by the Obsidian King, Lemuel
took Bava K'aa prisoner," Riqua continued, "and the Obsidian King
used him to inflict great suffering, trying to get Bava K'aa to give up the
secret of this elixir. Lord Grayson, a great warrior who was friend to both
Lemuel and Bava K'aa, risked everything to free her from the prison of the
Obsidian King. Bava K'aa never spoke of those dark days, and neither did
Grayson nor the Sisters who took Bava K'aa in and healed her. Grayson, who had
secretly loved Bava K'aa but stood aside because of his friendship with Lemuel,
wed Bava K'aa in private during her recovery. Before long, her only
daughter—your mother—was born.
"Even after all the pain that the
Obsidian King— in Lemuel's body—inflicted on her, Bava K'aa couldn't destroy
him," Riqua said, remembering. "She believed to the end that Lemuel's
spirit remained a prisoner within his own body, tortured by the evil the
Obsidian King forced his body to perform."
"That was why she imprisoned him in
Soulcatcher," Tris murmured, thinking of the deadly red orb.
"Because she believed that somewhere Lemuel might still exist. There was
no way to kill the Obsidian King without also destroying Lemuel."
"After the binding, Bava K'aa discovered
this journal. She knew it must be hidden. Maybe she anticipated that the
Obsidian King would rise once more, and that you, her mage heir, would fight
anew the battle. Make no mistake, son of Bricen— the first war very nearly
killed your grandmother. Some say it was the Lady herself who spared Bava K'aa.
I've found it... unwise... to count on divine intervention."
"If the Obsidian King existed before he
possessed Lemuel, then who was he?"
Riqua shook her head. "Even the
Sisterhood isn't sure. Bava K'aa knew more than anyone, having been his
prisoner. She said the Obsidian King was a spirit willful enough to defy death
itself, a mage who wanted immortality and unchallenged power."
"Thank you," Tris said.
"Guard the vial well. There's no mage
strong enough to make it again, and the way of its making went to the grave
with your grandmother."
In the distance, they heard a scream.
CHAPTER THIRTY prev next contents
Kiara awoke with a start to find
a cold palm pressed across her nose and mouth and a firm grip pinning her to
her bed. The reed torch had burned down to embers, just enough for Kiara to
make out the silhouette of a woman poised above her.
"You can hear me?" Elana whispered
close to her ear. Silently, Kiara nodded. "Good. Someone has been looking
for you, Kiara of Isencroft."
Kiara struggled against the seduction of that
voice, like a warm blanket of honey enveloping her, draining her will.
Instinctively, she glanced toward the other bed, where Carina slept soundly,
her back to them.
"Your friend can't help you. My kind have certain...
talents... to make sure we're undisturbed." As if in answer to Kiara's
unspoken question, a bundle of cloth tumbled and squirmed on the floor.
"Your pet will be no help," Elana
added condescendingly. "Lord Gabriel and the others are resting. They
won't hear."
Elana smiled coldly. "Don't blame Riqua.
Her welcome was sincere. But she's not my maker," the blonde vayash
moru said with a hint of bitterness. "I have no choice." Her eyes
glinted with old pain.
"Come."
Elana drew Kiara to her feet and Kiara stood,
panicked that her body seemed incapable of obeying her will, captivated by
Elana's voice. She took one step, and then two toward the hallway. Once into the
corridor, she would be lost. She had no doubt who Elana's master was. Arontala
had summoned his creations, and once delivered to the dark mage, Kiara had no
illusions about her fate.
As she moved toward the door, she brushed
against her sword belt where it lay on the foot of the slab, sending it and her
dagger clattering to the floor.
Elana gave a hiss of anger and wheeled,
grabbing Kiara by the throat with a hand strong enough to crush her neck. The
pressure on Kiara's throat made her gasp.
"Kiara?" Carina called. Seeing the
silhouette of Elana with her hand gripping Kiara's throat, Carina screamed.
Elana whirled as Carina dove for the fallen sword.
With a desperate cry Carina lunged, plunging
the blade through Elana's belly. Elana struck back, tossing Carina against the
stone like a rag doll. The distraction was all Kiara needed as Elana loosened
her grip. Kiara twisted, using her legs to knock her attacker to the floor. A
cold hand closed on her leg
as Kiara struggled to get away. Boot steps
pounded in the distance.
Carina struggled to her feet and dove at the
attacker with her full might. Elana hurled Carina away and released her
prisoner as a cold wind swept through the room. Kiara, pushed backward against
the wall, had the barest glimpse of her own dagger glinting in the dying light
of the torch. She heard the sickening thud of dagger's blade meeting flesh.
Carroway burst into the room, sword drawn, a
torch aloft in his grip. An instant later, Tris and Vahanian joined him. They
stopped in utter astonishment. Riqua stood over Elana's motionless form. In
Elana's chest, buried hilt deep, was Kiara's spelled dagger and, protruding
from both sides of Elana's body, Kiara's sword. Carina, thrown hard enough
against the crypt wall to have the breath knocked out of her, was struggling
to her feet, her expression a mix of determination and terror.
"What the hell happened?" Vahanian
demanded.
Kiara shook her head, trying to clear the
last of the vayash moru's influence. "She was going to take me to
her master," Kiara said. "I... I couldn't resist her."
"I gravely miscalculated," Riqua
said coldly, looking down at Elana's body. "I believed that I knew who had
made Elana. It appears that I did not. What did she tell you?"
"That she had no choice, that she had been
told to bring me to him. She didn't have to say his name."
"Arontala," Tris supplied.
"Great. Just great," Vahanian
snapped, with an accusing glare at Riqua. "Are the rest of your brood
coming after us now, too?"
"You have nothing to fear from them. They
are my creations. This one," she said, with a disdainful look at Elana's
remains, "came to us a few months ago. Perhaps Arontala has planted his
own among all the families, watching for you."
"Does he know we're here?" Tris
asked.
"Doubtful. Elana wasn't strong enough to
alert him. More likely, she'd been given orders to watch for you, in case you
showed up."
"The dagger," Kiara said, looking
down at the hilt in Elana's corpse. "It can turn the undead or destroy the
soul." She reached down and withdrew the blades, cleaning them on the hem
of Elana's dress before resheathing them.
Carina sat down on the slab, visibly shaken.
"I didn't even realize that I grabbed a sword," the healer murmured,
"I just knew someone was taking Kiara away."
"You picked a good time to get over
using a blade," Vahanian said.
"Elana was sure the rest of you couldn't
interfere," Kiara said.
Vahanian glared at Carroway. "You were
supposed to be on guard duty."
"I was. I didn't see anything,"
Carroway said, appalled. "I swear by the Lady."
"You couldn't have prevented what
happened," Riqua said. "We're skilled at passing unnoticed."
Gabriel joined them, and Tris thought he saw
uneasiness in the vayash moru's face. Riqua looked at Gabriel. "I
thought you were sleeping."
"I've learned to sleep lightly."
Kolin and Keir joined them and, at Riqua's
word, pushed their way in to gather up Elana's body. "Place it outside,
where it will catch the sun. She doesn't deserve burial."
When they were gone, Riqua turned to Gabriel.
"If Arontala has his fledglings planted among our houses," she said,
"you can't be safe among any of our kind you didn't make yourself."
"I'll revise my plans," Gabriel
said.
"Do we get a vote on that?"
Carroway muttered.
"We can't lose more time," Tris
said. "The Hawthorn Moon is only a few weeks away."
"You'll reach Shekerishet by the
Moon," Gabriel vowed. "You have my word."
"Cross your heart and hope to die?"
Vahanian asked.
"Now, despite this... misfortune,"
Gabriel said, "you need to rest, and so do I."
"I don't feel very tired right
now," Kiara replied, rubbing her neck where Elana had gripped her.
"I think we should stay together,"
Carina added.
"I'll watch over you personally,"
Riqua said. "I have eternity to rest and, unlike Gabriel, I don't have to
save my strength for the journey. I assure you, none of mine will harm you
while I'm your protector."
Vahanian looked as if he were about to make
another comment, then saw the ice in the vayash moru's eyes and thought
better of it. "Let's get to it, then," he said.
What Vahanian lacked in diplomacy, Kiara
thought as they filed out, he made up for in voicing the sentiments of them
all. She fastened her sword belt and walked to the door, where Tris waited to
follow her.
Riqua led them to her own quarters, a
sumptuous tomb obviously intended for one of noble birth. It had been
transformed to a well-appointed boudoir, with one significant difference. In
the center stood an ornate catafalque, and atop it an alabaster image of Riqua.
Exhausted, Kiara and the others made impromptu beds of couches and pillows,
choosing to stay close enough together that no one could pass among them
without waking the others.
Kiara gave Carina's hand a grateful squeeze.
"Have I ever told you how happy I am that you're a light sleeper?"
"I'm glad I was able to stop her. But I
can't believe I used a blade."
"What exactly do your healer rules
say?" Vahanian asked from where he had stretched out, blocking the doorway
with his body. He closed his eyes, trying to relax.
"The taking of life or the shedding of
blood in anger with a knife or blade is forbidden."
"Then you're clear."
"What?"
Vahanian opened one eye. "Elana was
already dead. Undead. You didn't take her life. And whatever that stuff was on
the floor, it wasn't her blood."
Kiara chuckled. "He's got a point,
Carina. I like his logic. And admit it—it wouldn't be the first time healers
have split hairs on some obscure rule."
"I'll have to think about it
tomorrow," Carina said, settling in next to Vahanian and sharing his
cloak. "That just might make sense in the morning."
Kiara smiled, finding a spot beside Tris,
glad for the arm he slipped around her shoulders and the warmth of his heavy
cloak.
When the others were quiet, Tris turned
toward Kiara. "I have something I want you to carry for me."
"Not another magic dagger, I hope?"
Tris carefully withdrew the precious vial of
Bava K'aa's elixir from where it hung on the strap around his neck. He slipped
it over Kiara's head. "Wear this for me, please."
"What is it?" She looked at the
vial, which glowed a faint violet through the thick glass.
"It's a potion. Grandmother left it for
me with Riqua. Quite literally worth a king's ransom." He reached out to
touch her cheek, and kissed her. "It will cure a mortal wound." She
gasped, looking at the vial with renewed respect. "Keep it safe, please?
If it's needed—and I hope it isn't—you're more likely to be able to do
something with it than I will."
"I don't like it when you say things
like that," she said, suppressing a shiver as she carefully slipped the
vial down the throat of her tunic.
Tris put his arm around her. "I have
every reason to want to live through this," he said, tangling his fingers
in her hair, glad for her nearness. "You know that."
"I know. But it doesn't make me worry
less."
Tris kissed her gently, and she leaned back against
his shoulder. "I've thought a lot about what you said, back in
Principality, about being the 'hound of the Goddess.' Coming when the Lady
calls and doing as She bids. I only wish I were a fox hound, and not turned out
after a beast."
"But look at your pack," she said.
"A good pack can bring down a very large bear."
"Have I mentioned, recently, how much I
love you ?
She nestled closer. "Yes, but tell me
again." Tris let his kiss answer her, and then folded her close. They shared
the warmth of his cloak in the crowded room, content for the company as they
fell asleep in what might be the last safe night before the Hawthorn Moon.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE prev next contents
Ban Soterius
shivered and gathered his cloak tightly around him in
the harsh winds of northern Margolan. It was the fourth month, the Lover's
Moon, but the winds had turned unseasonably cold, even for the unpredictable
weather of the north. Rain fell, mixed with sleet, in a last winter storm.
Soterius had ridden a candlemark since leaving the shelter of the village
where he raised his most recent cluster of fighters, and had yet another
candlemark to ride before reaching his destination. Although it was not yet
dusk, the heavy gray clouds made it seem much later. Soterius found himself
wishing for sundown, when Mikhail promised to join him.
The trek across northern Margolan had been successful
so far. He had gathered thousands of volunteers and deserters into the ranks of
his militia, seeding small groups of rebels to harry Jared's troops.
It had started with the refugees and the
three deserters from the Margolan army in the Principality camp. Soterius knew
there was plenty of bottled up rage against Jared, but he had no idea just how
deep the feelings went, or how broadly they were shared. Once his purpose
became known, the number of volunteers swelled. He and Mikhail were moved from
village to village, protected by ties of kin and marriage, hidden in barns and
wagons, caves and sheds.
Many a tavern keeper welcomed them by the
back door, tired of Jared's troops busting up their inns and taking liberties
with the women. Soterius and Mikhail slept in crypts and barrows, watched over
by ghosts and the undead. Out in the villages one's kin included the living,
dead, and undead. Those ties of kinship were as binding as any blood oaths;
Soterius found that many of the families were linked from village to village
all along the Borderlands. When multiplied by many generations with the
inclusion of kin who were vayash morn or ghosts, Soterius came to see
the villages as a tightly woven net of families, similar to the nobility at
court.
Opportunities to test the skills of their
trainees were readily available. Both Soterius and Mikhail led skirmishes
against Jared's troops that heightened their renown and drew volunteers to
their cause. As the successful strikes grew more numerous, Soterius amassed a
better store of uniforms and weapons, wagons and horses. These he hid in the
caves that pock-marked the foothills, until the time was right to march an army
of his own toward the palace.
The villagers who volunteered were men old
enough that Jared's troops had not conscripted them and women who had been
subjected to the lusts of Jared's soldiers, or who had lost daughters and sons
to Margolan's army. Those who could leave their villages Soterius and Mikhail
trained to fight, helping them understand how to turn the land itself into a
weapon. Those who could not leave became spies, passing along information as
valuable as ammunition. Willing tavern masters became important gatekeepers in
the resistance, noting the movement of troops and the number of soldiers
passing through an area. Mikhail, a reasonably skilled musician, made sure to
teach Carroway's defiant songs to the minstrels he met. He added stories of
Tris's prowess as a Summoner to the bards' tales. Thanks to Mikhail, Soterius
did not doubt that Carroway would find all the minstrels and bards he needed to
create chaos in the palace city on the night of the Hawthorn Moon.
The courage of the rebels increased with
every victory against Jared's army. After a few months, Soterius noted that the
army did not venture north without large numbers. By then, the rebels were
well-trained enough to harry the intruders, decimating their numbers and
keeping them off balance and in constant fear. Soterius showed the village
militias how to appear more numerous than they were. Mikhail taught them how to
move silently and hide themselves.
From the villagers' web of family ties came
another unexpected boon. Soterius knew that Tris had given his blessing to the
ghosts of the Scirranish to avenge themselves and their families. Tris
had also lent his power to make those ghosts visible. As the spirits of the scirranish
returned to the places of their slaughter they called to the ghosts of
their ancestors, until the forests and passes of the north-lands were too
dangerous for even the most intrepid of Jared's troops. Soterius heard tales of
the encounters between the spirits and the Margolan army. If they resembled
even a fraction of the truth, the murdered villagers had fully avenged themselves.
Even without Tris's magic, Soterius was more aware of spirits around him than
ever before, especially since he almost always rode by night to accompany
Mikhail and avoid detection.
Vayash moru were more
numerous than Soterius expected among the volunteers, until he heard the
stories of how relentlessly Jared's troops had persecuted the undead, hunting
them to their day crypts and burning them in the sun while they were vulnerable.
Those vayash moru were kin to the villagers, and had remained part of
the lives of their families and villages even after they had been brought
across into the Dark Gift. And so the fear that Jared hoped to instill of the vayash
moru became loathing for the usurper king who severed bonds of family and
marriage that even death had not sundered.
Feeling the barely suppressed rage of the villagers,
the anger of the spirits, and the cold resolve of the vayash moru, Soterius
felt like he was watching storm clouds brewing on the horizon. The storm's
center would be Shekerishet, and its fury would fall on the night of the
Hawthorn Moon. Until then, he and Mikhail had a kingdom to lead into
revolution.
Although Gabriel had given Soterius the names
of Margolan nobles likely to aid the rebellion, those holdings were further
south. So it was the villagers and farmers who offered shelter and hiding places,
as well as provisions and safe passage. But now, just a few candlemarks from
his father's lands, Soterius felt the need to go home and see how his own family
fared.
Soterius passed an inn but did not stop. It
was unlikely that anyone would recognize him, Soterius thought wryly, dressed
as he was in a worn leather riding cloak with a full beard and his hair grown
long. He was more likely to be taken for a brigand than the captain of Bricen's
guard, but there was still no sense in tempting fate. He rode on, though a mug
of ale and a few moments by the fireside would have warmed him.
Once he passed the inn, the road grew quiet.
Soterius rode on high alert, wondering if he had been wrong about insisting on
riding alone. But these were the roads he knew from his childhood, and he had
never before felt in danger here. Now, in Jared's Margolan, Soterius wondered
if he had beer, reckless. Again he wished for dusk to come, so that he would
have Mikhail's company. Something felt wrong, very wrong. Soterius thought
about going back to the inn, but decided that it would take longer to go back
than to go forward. Besides, he argued with himself, Mikhail would be looking
to meet him at Huntwood, the Soterius family manor. Chilled to the bone,
Soterius decided to continue forward.
The sleet fell harder, glazing the wet ground
and covering the bare branches of the trees so that they looked spun from
glass. Soterius came to a rise in the road and saw Huntwood in the distance, a
dark shape against the horizon. Only then did he realize the source of his
sense of foreboding. The road to the manor, usually well-traveled, lay covered
with an unbroken skin of ice, marked neither by hoof prints nor wagon tracks.
The fields to either side of the road, usually home to cattle, goats, and
sheep, were empty. No lights flickered from the manor house windows, and no
smoke rose from its chimney.
Soterius urged his horse on, as fast as he
dared to go on the icy roads. Within a few moments, the turn to the manor house
came into view, as dark and undisturbed as the road itself. Feeling a rising
panic, Soterius galloped up the long approach, hearing his horse's hoof beats
pounding in the silence. He reached the great entrance and stopped, feeling his
heart rise to his throat.
Huntwood was a ruined shell. The dim light of
evening was visible through the upper floor window casings, where the roof had
been burned away. The manor's windows had been shattered, their casings
blackened by fire. The front door was splintered. From the overgrowth of the
bare shrubbery, it appeared as if no one had tended the gardens for many
months.
Soterius lightly tethered his horse to a
hitching post and drew his sword, advancing toward the steps warily. In the
distance an owl hooted, but there were no other sounds of life. Heart pounding,
Soterius realized he was holding his breath as he approached the doorway,
stepping over the broken pieces of what had been massive oaken doors.
The smell of smoke and charred wood still lingered.
Little remained of the manor's furnishings. What had not been destroyed by fire
appeared to have been slashed or hacked to bits. Icy rain fell from the gaping
hole in the ceiling. Leaves swirled around Soterius's boots in the ravaged
front hallway.
Numbly, he made his way through the ruin of
the familiar manor, but found neither life nor any sign of recent habitation.
He slipped from the back entrance into the terraced yards of which his mother
had once been so proud. The gardens with their carefully tended hedge mazes and
roses had been ridden down, and parts of them had burned.
Soterius found it difficult to breathe. He
looked down over the sloping yard, toward the barns that were now charred
timbers, and toward the fields that appeared to have been torched instead of
harvested. Gone, all of it gone, he thought in shock. All gone—
- He heard a crunch of ice behind him, and
then a cry. Soterius could not see his attacker, but the man had to be at least
double his bulk and a good bit taller; he easily crushed Soterius to the
ice-covered ground and pinned him with his knee. He grabbed for Soterius's
sword hand and slammed Soterius's knuckles against the ground until he could
pry the sword away and throw it well out of reach.
"There's nothing left to take,
thief," a man's voice rasped near Soterius's ear. "Your kind has
taken it all. Give me one reason I shouldn't slit your whore-spawned
throat!"
Soterius felt the blade of a knife press against
his skin. He struggled in his shock to place the voice.
"I'm not a thief!" Soterius said.
"I'm Lord Soterius's son."
He heard a rush of air and a strangled cry
from his attacker, who was suddenly lifted from off his back. Soterius
scrambled to turn over and saw Mikhail, holding a burly man aloft with one hand
so that the man's feet dangled a few inches off the ground.
"You!" the man gasped. "I should
slit your throat! It's because of you they're dead—they're all dead!"
Shaken, Soterius regained his feet. Mikhail
returned the attacker to the ground but did not remove his hand from the
assailant's neck. Although the man was unkempt and an unruly growth of beard
altered his appearance, Soterius recognized his brother-in-law, Danne. Danne's
words gave him no doubt as to the fate of his sister, Tae.
"Danne, what happened?"
"Soldiers came just after the Haunts.
When your father met them at the door, they ran him through. Your mother, your
brothers, the children, Tae—the soldiers chased them down, through the house,
into the fields and killed them. Even the servants. All but Anyon, who hid in
the well. I was gone to market with Coalan. When we came back, the fires were
still smoking. Everything was gone."
Soterius staggered, and fell more than sat on
the remnant of the garden wall.
"Anyon said that as your father lay
dying, the soldiers told him that you were a traitor, that you had helped to
kill King Bricen and then fled like a coward."
Soterius closed his eyes for a moment, unable
to speak. It was Mikhail who broke the silence. "Is that what you still
believe?" the uayash mom asked. He released Danne's throat, but
stood between Danne and Soterius, blocking the big man's way.
Danne glared at Soterius; his shoulders
sagged as the fight left him. "At first, we knew nothing else. But it made
no sense, none at all. Ban had no reason to kill the king, and no profit from
it." Danne's pain was clear in his eyes.
"I've known Ban since we were boys. I
feared he might die for the king, but betray him—never." He took a heaving
breath that shook his large form. "Since then, since Jared took the
throne, we heard rumors... that Prince Martris survived, that he was spirited
out of the palace, that his friends had gotten him to safety. I wanted to
believe that. I wanted to believe you saved the prince, and that he might
return. But seeing you, here, alive—you didn't see how they died, Ban. You
didn't have to bury them. You didn't have to bury them." He covered his
face with his hands.
"Tris and I saw Jared stab Bricen,"
Soterius said tonelessly. "We had climbed down the outside wall, trying to
break into Arontala's workshop. We saw the king die. We found Serae—and
Kait—dead by the sword. It was all Carroway and I could do to get Tris out of
there alive. Harrtuck joined us, and we headed east." The full moon cast
blue shadows across the ice-covered landscape. He was so chilled by the cold
and so numb from grief that the words seemed to belong to someone else.
"That's why I'm here. To help Tris take back the throne. To bring Jared to
account. To destroy Arontala."
"Can he do it?" Danne asked.
"He's no older than you are."
"He's a Summoner, Danne. Bava K'aa's
mage heir. He's got the backing of three kings and the Blood Council. He'll
take the throne—or die trying." He stopped, feeling his throat close
again. "I wish father could have known the truth."
"Perhaps he does," Danne said.
"They say the dead are watching." He looked toward the old kitchen
house, and Soterius saw a thin wisp of smoke rising from its chimney.
"Come on. Anyon and Coalan have a fire started. I'm sorry what I
said—about slitting your throat. I swear to you on Tae's grave, I'll cause you
no harm."
"Accepted. But first," Soterius
said, "first, show me where they're buried. Please."
Danne hesitated, and then nodded. "All
right. Follow me."
Soterius and Mikhail followed Danne down
through the ruins of the garden, toward a stand of tall trees near the broken
fence line. Under the massive oak trees was a large cairn. Soterius gave a
strangled cry and fell to his knees, weeping.
"We did the best we could, the three of
us," Danne recounted quietly. "Those that didn't die in the fire we
bathed and shrouded and brought out here. We wrapped the others, what we found
of them, and then we raised a cairn because the ground was too cold to dig.
There was no one but ourselves to send them to the Lady, but we gave them our
blessing." In the moonlight, Danne looked tired and old, though he was
only a few years Soterius's senior. "By the Whore, no man should have to
do that. Many's the night I wish I'd gone with them."
"I'm so sorry," Soteiius said.
"I don't mind the cold, but perhaps we
should take shelter or you may have your wish," Mikhail said gently.
Soterius struggled to his feet, following silently as Danne led the way back to
the kitchen house.
Inside were a man in his third decade and a
boy who looked about five years younger than Soterius. They looked up as Danne
entered. Soterius recognized the man as Anyon, his father's grounds keeper,
and Danne's son, Coalan. Anyon moved with a limp that was new, and Soterius saw
a deep scar slashed across his cheek. Coalan's light brown hair and hazel eyes
looked so like his mother that it almost made Soterius weep for his lost
sister. Coalan regarded the two newcomers with suspicion, his eyes glinting
with loss and fear.
This time, it was Danne who told Anyon and
Coalan of Soterius's tale. Soterius saw questions in the eyes of the two men,
but to his great relief, neither seemed inclined to doubt the story.
The kitchen house was filled with the
remnants of what could be salvaged from the manor, bits of charred furniture,
cookware, a few books that still smelled of smoke, and lanterns. Pieces of
heavy tapestries covered the windows, keeping any passers-by from seeing the
light within.
"We've made do off the land," Anyon
said, setting a piece of roasted venison and some leeks in front of Soterius,
along with a wineskin. Mikhail raised a hand to forestall a similar offer.
"Deer and game from the forest, some fish from the stream, and what was
left in the fields that didn't burn. Some of the stores in the cellars weren't
ruined, so we've had wine and dried fruit and cheese. Enough to get by."
"What will you do, now that it's almost
planting season?" Soterius asked.
Danne met his eyes. "I guess that's up
to the lord of the manor." Soterius's eyes widened as he took Danne's
meaning. With his father and older brothers dead, the title and lands now fell
to him. It was a windfall as undesired as it was unexpected.
"There isn't a future, until Martris
Drayke holds the throne," Soterius said. "Maybe after that, I can
think about it. But I'm oath-bound to raise rebellion against Jared. That has
to come before anything else."
Danne stroked his beard thoughtfully,
listening as Soterius told them of the rebels he and Mikhail had trained and
the deserters they recruited. "You can't house your soldiers here,"
Danne said when Soterius finished. "Margolan troops come by every so
often—maybe to see if you've returned."
"I have a suggestion of a place that
might be ideal for a base camp, if you dare," Mikhail said. He gratefully
accepted a tankard of deer's blood, which Anyon had drained from the carcass
hanging at the back of the kitchen. "The Carroway manor house, Glynnmoor,
is barely a candlemark's ride from here. It's near the main roads south, which
we will need to secure as we head toward Shekerishet."
"The plague house? Are you mad?"
Coalan exclaimed.
Mikhail held up a hand. "The ill humours
that caused the plague have long since gone. Mortal squatters and vagrants have
taken refuge there over the years with no ill effects. Some of my kind, out of
friendship with Lord Carroway, chased off the squatters and cleaned out the
manor, burning the bodies and their intimate goods that might have carried
plague. While it's not as it once was, it's habitable and in much better shape
than Huntwood. And as you say, even those living nearby stay clear. So we may
be spared the interest of passing soldiers."
Soterius struggled to focus on Mikhail's
words, using all of his battle training to center on the task at hand, and step
back from the grief that threatened to overwhelm him. "If we can survive
there without taking sick, it might be perfect," Soterius agreed. He
looked to Danne and the others. "If you'll shelter us tonight, we'll leave
tomorrow. I don't want to add to your pain, and we have a job to do."
Danne looked to Anyon and Coalan, who met his
eyes, and nodded in silent agreement. "If you'll have us, we're of a mind
to go with you," the big man said. "There's nothing for us here but
to starve. We're none of us soldiers, but after what happened here I'll have no
problem killing Jared's troops."
"Nor I," swore Anyon,
straightening. "There's vengeance due."
"Count me in," said Coalan.
Soterius started to object that his nephew, only fifteen summers old, was too
young for battle. But the look in Coalan's eyes, the anger and pain and loss
that Soterius saw there, silenced his objections.
"We would welcome you," Soterius
said. "I'd be honored."
When the others had gone to bed Soterius was
still awake, staring into the small fire. He stood and walked to the door,
letting himself out into the cold moonlit night. After a time, he felt
Mikhail's presence, though the vayash moru's approach was silent.
"Ban, I'm sorry about your family."
Soterius looked up at the full moon. "I
was thinking about Tris, the night we left Shekerishet. How he seemed to move
in a fog. We were running for our lives, and he didn't seem to share the same
urgency the rest of us felt. I was so impatient with him that night. I needed
him to make decisions, to tell us what to do. I didn't know what to do with his
grief. And I was so proud of how battle-calm I was, so unruffled. Such a
perfect soldier."
Soterius kicked at the ice, and looked out at
the shadow of the ruined manor house. "I feel like that deer in there—like
I've been gutted and left to bleed dry. I guess that's how Tris felt, too. Only
I was too busy playing soldier to understand. And when we met Jonmarc, I was so
sure he couldn't be trusted, that anyone who sold his sword would be a turncoat."
He looked up at the moon, and the silent
tears tracked down his cheeks. "But Jonmarc understood. I didn't realize
then, but I know now what he went through, what he lost. I've been such an ass.
Playing the hero while the people I loved were dying because of it. Danne was
right. They died because of me. And while—Goddess help me!—I couldn't have done
anything differently, Father died, thinking me a traitor. I wish I could make
that right."
For the first time in their acquaintance,
Soterius glimpsed old pain in the vayash moru's eyes. "Even if you
hadn't saved Tris that night, Jared would
have sent his troops. Your father was one of
Bricen's closest friends. The same has befallen any who didn't have the good
luck to hear of the coup and go into hiding before the soldiers could come.
Without your sacrifice, there would be no hope of unseating Jared, no one to
defeat Arontala."
"I know that," Soterius said.
"Maybe when all is settled, Tris would
come to Huntwood, and let you make your peace," Mikhail suggested.
"He's done so for strangers—would he do less for you?"
Soterius swallowed hard, and shook his head.
"You're right, of course. It's just that tonight, it seems so far out of
reach."
Mikhail gave a sad smile. "One of the
things I miss most about being mortal is the ability to get drunk. I've seen
much that I wish I could forget, even for a little while. But perhaps, my
friend, you can take some solace in wine and find your rest. You need fear
nothing—I'll stand watch."
Soterius nodded, but paused as he turned to
go back into the kitchen house. "Does it get better— with time?"
He saw the centuries in Mikhail's eyes. "All
things fade in time," the vayash moru replied. "But even
faded, there are those things that death itself cannot erase."
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO prev next contents
"Why
so glum, Carroway?" Carina nudged
her horse onward through the unseasonably
cold rain.
The bard gave her a sour look. "Because
it's nearly dusk, and every nightfall seems to bring us to a place to stay
that's even more dreadful than the last." Their horses splashed through
the water-filled ruts as they trudged down the muddy roads. "Crypts.
Basements. Abandoned buildings. What I wouldn't give for an inn with a
fireplace!"
Kiara chuckled. "I understand
completely. Last night, I think I saw the biggest rat in Margolan in that
basement!" Jae, snuggled for warmth in Kiara's lap, gave a gurgle of
agreement.
"All I know is that the next time I go
somewhere with Tris, I'm going to be in charge of where we stay," Carroway
said. "I may never be warm again!"
Vahanian, who was riding point, stopped to
let the others catch up. "Can't say I disagree," he said, flexing his
cold hands, nearly numb from holding his reins. We're still a good ways from Shekerishet.
Perhaps a warm place to stay and a hot meal would do us all good."
"Do you remember the inn we stayed at on
our way to Ghorbal?" Tris asked the bard. "The one with the young
man's ghost?"
"Is that the way you remember all the
places you've stayed—by what haunts them?" Vahanian turned his horse to
avoid the worst of the rain that ran down his leather cloak and dripped from
its hem.
"Lately, yes."
Carroway stood in his stirrups to get his
bearings. "We should be close. Why?"
Tris looked out over the horizon. "It
would be a safe place for us—I'm sure of it."
Carroway nodded. "The innkeeper was
willing to hide us—even before you sent away the ghost. He's unlikely to turn
us in now."
"Whatever we're doing, can we decide
before I freeze?" Carina put in.
Tris and Carroway conferred on the roads, and
the group headed out with considerably lighter spirits at the prospect of a
night in a real inn. A steady flow of traffic passed them, bound for the palace
city and the upcoming festival. Still, Tris noticed that the travelers seemed
shabbier than in years past, and the carts of provisions less full than before.
It was a marvel that the people of Margolan had the will to celebrate at all
under Jared's yoke.
When they reached the Sparrow's Roost Inn,
Tris and Carroway exchanged glances. "Looks like getting rid of the ghost
was good for business," the bard remarked. The inn, which had been in need
of repair and nearly empty on their flight from Shekerishet now had a freshly
painted sign, a tidy exterior, and a stable filled to capacity with guests'
horses.
"Apparently so," Tris said.
"Let's go around back."
Tris gave his reins to Carroway and bade the
others stay back a few paces as he approached the kitchen door. He gave a few
sharp knocks, and the stout innkeeper's wife came to the door. "Go 'round
to the front if you need something," she said. "But mind that we've
got no rooms left tonight." She started to close the door and Tris caught
it, letting his hood fall back in the rain. The woman caught her breath and
brightened, throwing her arms around Tris in a hug that nearly took him off his
feet.
"Bless the Lady—you're back!" she
cried. "Lars, Toby, come quickly!"
The innkeeper and his son came to the door,
and puzzled looks quickly changed to broad grins of welcome. "Come in,
come in," the innkeeper said, looking beyond Tris to where his friends
waited. "But tell me, sir mage, why do you come to the back door like a
beggar?"
Tris extended his mage sense, feeling no
threat in the presence of the innkeeper and his family. While he was glad of
their welcome, he did not wish to put them in danger. He thought it best to
tell a limited version of their story. "We'd still prefer to stay clear
of the king's troops," Tris said honestly. The others secured their horses
in a copse of trees a little way from the crowded barn and joined him in the
kitchen. "Not everyone is as glad as yourself to see a mage these
days."
Lars, better fed and less harried than he had
been, nodded. "Aye, there's many in the land today have a reason to stay
clear of the king's troops, that's for sure. Have no love for them myself, as
you know. Bust up the place, and then charge a fee if I want to keep them from
busting it up again.
"But since you sent that young man to
his rest, folks will stay the night again—and I don't lose so much ale spilled
for no reason. We're in your debt, m'lord mage. Thought we would starve to
death until you came along." Lars welcomed the others into the crowded
kitchen, which smelled of roasting venison, cooked leeks, and the dark, rich
ale for which Margolan's southern plains were famed.
"Come in, come in. I'll give you my best
table, and all the food and ale you want," Lars said.
Tris smiled, knowing the welcome was genuine.
"We're grateful for your kindness, but we'd like to keep a low profile.
We'll be happy to eat in the kitchen."
Carroway lifted his head, listening. "Do
I hear a bard in the common room?"
Lars nodded. "Had more than a few
musicians traveling through with the festival. You're welcome to go join
them—don't think we've ever had the like of you since you left."
Carroway grinned at the compliment. "My
fingers are too frozen to play, at least right now," he said, flexing
his hands. "But
there's something
familiar in that voice. I'd like to see who's
out there."
"Keep your head down," Vahanian
cautioned.
"You know me," Carroway tossed back
with a grin. "I blend into the crowd."
Carina and Kiara chuckled. Even in drab
riding clothes, with his long black hair pulled back and soaked, Carroway cut a
handsome figure. The bard disappeared through the kitchen doors and the
innkeeper's daughter motioned the group to a work table in the back of the
kitchen. She and Toby began to bring out the first hot food the group had
enjoyed in several days.
"Perhaps I risk my neck by saying
this," Lars began with a nervous glance at the doors, "but since
you've got no love of the king's troops, I'll wager I'm safe. Since King Bricen
died—the Lady rest his soul—this year has been the demon's own. Got plenty of guests
tonight, but people aren't traveling the way they used to—scared of the
highwaymen, and the guards, too. And what's to travel for anymore, I ask you?
Half the farmers ran away—can't blame them, being burned out by the guardsmen.
The others can't eke out enough to feed their own families, what with the
looters and all, let alone take more to trade in the city. Don't see so many
merchants either. And there hasn't been a caravan through here since slavers
got one group up near the pass last Fall.
"We've fixed the inn up since you took
care of the ghost, and it's been good for business. But many's the night
there's no one at all on the road to stay anywhere. And it wouldn't do to look
like we turn much of a profit—would just invite the guardsmen to double what they
charge me to keep them from busting up the place."
Lars shook his head. "Never was like
this under King Bricen. How he had such a rotter for a son, I don't know, but
King Jared"—he paused to spit on the floor at the name—"belongs to
the Crone herself. Guess those are hanging words, and I ought to be more
careful. But it's gotten bad, m'lord mage. I don't go nowhere, but I hear
everyone who does." He leaned forward. "It's worse in the city.
King's got his guardsmen, and they make anyone who dares speak against the king
disappear. Leave the bodies in the street the next day, as a warning. I imagine
they'll be watching the festival this year, to keep things from getting out of
hand. Now that's the demon's own, ain't it?"
Vahanian cursed, and Kiara laid a hand on
Tris's arm. Tris had gone pale at the innkeeper's story, and it was only with
great effort that he held back his anger and sorrow. "Perhaps the Lady
will show pity," Lris said. "Maybe She will give favor to a champion."
Lars glanced nervously over his shoulder.
"She didn't favor that general who tried to poison King Jared, that's for
sure. Drawn and quartered he was."
Lars leaned closer. "But I've heard that
to the north, the spirits are restless. I've heard that some of the king's
troops were set on by the ghosts of the poor bastards they've killed, and that
none but the horses survived. They say that there's bands of deserters stalking
the king's troops on the main roads. Got so the army won't even go to the highlands
no more, because they don't come back. Just last
week, heard tell that on the plank road, the one that leads north of Ghorbal, a
whole unit of guardsmen just disappeared." Lars snapped his fingers with
a malicious smile.
"Maybe your spirits can tell you
true," Lars added with a glance at Tris. "But that's what I hear,
anyhow."
Carroway returned to eat with them, and then
went back to the greatroom with a promise to be their eyes and ears. Carina
noticed a burn on Lars' daughter Lara's arm. She smiled gratefully as Carina
healed it to a faint, pink scar. Tabethe, the innkeeper's wife, prevailed on
Carina for help with a bad back. In return, she brought the group food and ale
until they could eat no more.
"Picked a good night to be inside—it's
still raining out there," Vahanian observed from his post near the door.
Tris sat toward the corner, out of the way of the busy kitchen staff. Jae lazed
near the hearth, much to Lara's amusement, who dropped bits of venison near the
little gyregon until it finally fell asleep, completely sated. "What's got
you so deep in thought?"
Tris looked up from the diary of the Obsidian
King. "Just looking for anything I can in the diary. I was hoping we could
get an early start," he said with a glance toward Tabethe, who was
bustling near the fire, "but our business has to start and end on the main
night."
Beside him, Kiara dozed in a chair until it was her
turn on watch. Carina slipped into the great-room with Carroway. Tris immersed
himself in the small, tight handwriting that crowded the precious diary.
What he found troubled him. Tris hoped to
find a way to approach Arontala before the Hawthorn Moon, destroying the orb
and the dark mage before Arontala could even begin his working to free the
Obsidian King's spirit. But as Tris studied the journal, it became clear that
the only way magic worked on a witches' moon could be dispelled was on that
same eve of power. An advance strike was doomed to fail. Only on the night of
the working could he intervene and destroy both the orb and the one who sought
to escape it. Their opportunity for victory was much smaller than he had hoped.
"Do you think Riqua was right about
Lemuel?" Vahanian asked. He kept a wary eye on the rear window and leaned
against the wall near the door, his hand close to his sword.
Tris put the book down and blinked to ease
his tired eyes. "That he got trapped and taken along for the ride, so to
speak?" he asked, being deliberately vague because of the innkeepers'
family within earshot. "Yes. It makes sense with what I heard from... 'my
sisters,'" he added, thinking it unwise to refer to the Sisterhood by
name.
Vahanian caught the evasion and chuckled.
"I like that. Your sisters." He sobered. "Poor guy, if that's
what happened to him. So he's been a prisoner—all these years—in that big ball
you talk about?"
Tris cast a glance toward Tabethe and Lara,
but they seemed wholly unconcerned with the conversation, bustling about the
front of the kitchen to serve their festival-bound guests. "Grandmother
apparently thought so. Who knows if he even exists anymore? I know that's where
Kait is—and possibly
mother, too. When this is over, if their
spirits survived, I hope I can send them to their rest."
Just then, there was a tap at the door. Kiara
roused from her nap and straightened. Vahanian moved quickly, his hand on his
sword as the door opened. Gabriel stepped in, shaking the rain from his cloak.
"So this is where you are," the vayash moru said. "Tired
of my accommodations?" Tris feared the innkeeper's wife might run
screaming from the room, but Tabethe merely afforded Gabriel a nod.
"Good evenin', m'lord," she said,
as Lara went for a mug. "Deer's fresh today, if you want a nip."
Gabriel smiled and gave a shallow bow in
greeting. "I would be grateful, dear lady. Many thanks."
Tabethe refused Gabriel's gold when she
realized he was with Tris and the others. With all that Jared had done to
foster fear of the vayash moru among the people, Tris gave Tabethe
credit for her matter-of-fact greeting; a sign, he thought, that at least some
in Margolan saw through Jared's fear-mongering.
When the last of the greatroom patrons had
departed, Carroway and Carina came through the door from the outer room,
followed by three musicians whom Tris immediately recognized as Carroway's
inner circle at court. First through the door was a man just a little older
than Carroway, with touseled, short blond hair framing a youthful face with
mischievous blue eyes. Next was a slip of a girl who looked barely more than
sixteen summers old, carrying a flute. She had lank, dark hair, and cynical
brown eyes. Beside Carroway was a tall young woman with short dark hair and
violet eyes. She had a lyre over her shoulder.
"Look who we found!" Carroway
grinned, and the musicians looked from the bard to Tris as if they had seen a
ghost. "You remember Helki, Paiva and Macaria—from back home?"
"By the Lady, can it be?" asked
Helki with a gasp. "My prince!" he exclaimed. Carroway made hushing
gestures. To Tris's chagrin, the three minstrels bowed low.
Lars came through the door just then, with a
small bag of coins for the minstrels. "I have your pay, unless you're of a
mind to leave without it," the innkeeper said, stooping to pick up a coin
that fell. He froze, looking at Jared's image on the gold piece, and then rose
slowly, looking from the coin to Tris and back again as if the coin might burn
him.
"M'lord mage," the innkeeper
croaked. "I mean no disrespect, but 'tis
the Lady's truth that there is a powerful
resemblance between you and the king."
"The minstrel called him 'my prince,'
just now,"
Tabethe said, nervously edging toward Lars.
Resigned, Tris stood and spread his hands.
"I didn't mean to deceive you," he said to the innkeeper, who looked
pale with fear. Vahanian and Gabriel moved closer to him, and Kiara stood, her
hand near her sword. "I wanted to spare you the burden of dangerous
knowledge. You're correct. I'm Martris Drayke."
The innkeeper gasped and then elbowed his
wife, who stood with her mouth open. "Curtsey, you fool," Lars
whispered as he made an awkward bow. Tabethe, after a moment, found the
presence of mind to attempt an equally unpracticed curtsey, and nearly lost her
footing. Lara and Toby stared wide-eyed from near the wall.
"The rumors are true then!" Lars
exclaimed, finding his voice. "By the Goddess! Prince Martris lives! Oh
me, and what I've said, please, my prince, take no offense—"
Tris smiled at the innkeeper's flustered
apology. "None taken. We're grateful for your shelter, both before, when
we fled for our lives, and now, when we're still in danger. I don't wish to put
your family at risk. If you'll keep the secret of our passing, we'll
leave."
"On a night like this?" the
innkeeper cried. "My prince, we're honored to have you under our root. Oh
my, what am I thinking? There's royalty in the inn, and we've got them in the
kitchen!"
Tris burst out laughing. "Good
sir," Tris said, "believe me when I tell you that yours are the best
accommodations we've had in many a fortnight."
Lars brightened, blushing with pride.
"Truly? We're honored, Your Highness. You're welcome to sleep in our own
rooms, humble as they are, rather than here in the kitchen."
"We're quite comfortable here, near the
fire, with some bedding if there's any to spare," Tris said. He was
grateful for the man's offer, but preferred the quick exit of the back door.
"But I beg of you, for your own sakes, tell no one that you've seen
us."
Lars looked shrewdly at Tris and the others. For
the first time, the innkeeper took in their swords and the manner of both Kiara
and Vahanian, which clearly spoke of battle training. "I take your meaning.
There can be but one reason you've returned, my prince. And if there's aught
that we can do to help you, just ask. All we have is at your service."
With that pledge, Lars knelt, and his family also.
"Please, rise," Tris said. "Tonight
we're happier than you can know with a warm meal and a roaring fire. But now
you know why I welcome your news and your rumors from the city—and why I'm
anxious to hear what these minstrels have to tell us."
"We'll leave you to your business,"
said Lars, motioning to his family. "If you need aught, just call. No one
will bother you in here. I'll stay in the greatroom myself, to make sure."
"Thank you," Tris said. "We're
in your debt."
"The prince himself, in my inn!"
Lars murmured as he turned toward the door. He was still talking to himself in
amazement as he left the kitchen. Tris sat, bidding the others to do the same.
Vahanian took up a post at the greatroom door, while Gabriel moved closer to
the outer door.
"Can we trust him?" Kiara asked.
She sat next to Tris as he motioned for the minstrels to gather round.
Tris looked toward the door through which
Lars had gone. "We have no reason not to, and every reason to believe him.
He's right—where would we go, in this weather, that would be safer?"
"You can trust Lars, my prince,"
said Helki. "If you want to know the truth of it, he's run something of a
resistance out of this inn. It hasn't been safe for us to stay near the palace.
Lars took us in— glad for the entertainment, no doubt, but watchful that when
guards came, we could make ourselves scarce. Many times, Lars and his family
have hidden people fleeing King Jared. Some of the palace staff, and not a few
deserters from the army, have passed this way. They spread the word among themselves as to which are the
safe houses, and they are spirited away, as if on a ghost carriage."
Helki looked at his companions, whose expressions
still reflected their utter amazement at seeing Tris and the others. "By
the Mother and Childe! It's good to see you well, my prince."
"What can you tell us about Shekerishet
since we left?" Tris pressed.
"Nothing good, Your Highness." It
was Macaria who spoke up. Tris suppressed a smile, knowing that the dark-haired
musician caught Carroway's eye. She seemed to be completely unaware of
Carroway's attention, even now, when the minstrel watched her with unabashed
joy. "I don't know how far news travels, or what you've heard, but it's
been terrible."
"Some of the bards have gone missing
altogether," Macaria said. "Though whether dead or in hiding, I
don't know. I've heard that Lady Eadoin is hiding some of the court musicians,
the ones Jared particularly disliked. Eadoin's brother's family was killed for
harboring fugitives. We managed to keep out of Jared's sights, but I've heard
tell of minstrels who have been hanged for singing tales about King Bricen, or
telling a story that raised Jared's ire. In the city, the king's guards are
always prowling around, looking for someone to make an example of. They've
beaten men in the street for telling jokes about the king, and dragged others
out in the middle of the night for one 'crime' or another. No one ever sees
the poor blokes again."
"How is it you're here?" Carroway asked,
and Tris noted that Carroway never took his eyes off Macaria as he spoke. She
didn't seem to notice.
"We left the city during the
winter," Paiva said. "One step ahead of the guards. Since then, we've
made what living we could singing for our keep in taverns, playing for our
supper at the baker's and butcher's, and begging, if you want to know the truth
of it." She sighed. "But there's been talk all Spring that something
would be afoot at the Hawthorn Moon, and so we thought that with the crowds and
all, we'd chance going back." Paiva grinned, and elbowed Carroway good-naturedly.
"Looks like our pretty bird here has landed himself smack in the middle of
a revolution!"
"You don't know the half of it!"
Carroway said. "But if you're game, and you're tired of Jared on the
throne, there's a part you could play."
"We're in," Helki said.
"Anything to be rid of that bloody tyrant!"
The group huddled around the table.
"While Tris and the others do what they need to do," Carroway said,
"I thought that perhaps Carina and I—with your help—could stir up a little
riot or two in the city. There's another friend of ours, a hedge witch named
Alyzza, who's headed this way as well. What do you think—can we work up a
mob?"
Macaria grinned wickedly. "Like that's a
hard thing, with all the ale that'll be flowing?" The other bards laughed.
'"Tis the Lady's truth—the only ones getting rich from Jared's rule are
the barley growers and the rum smugglers, since any that haven't left the
country drink to drown their sorrows."
"Out here in the country, the songs I
get the most requests for are the ones they'll hang you for in the city—the
stories of King Bricen's battles, and of
King Hotten's victory, and about the
sorceress Bava K'aa," said Helki. "I dare say that might get a crowd
going."
Paiva snorted. "I can do you one better
than that. Remember the songs we heard up in Ghorbal, the ballads about the
maidens taken by the king's men, and the empty village with its ghosts? Had the
biggest men in the room dabbing their eyes as they swilled their ale. I wager
we could write a few more like that, to remind them what's been stolen from
them and get them in an ugly mood." The girl's lip curled into a devious
smile. "I'll get to work on it."
Helki looked at Tris. "My prince, you've
got to be careful. King Jared's sorcerer is a demon. He's grown strong on blood
these many months, like a big red spider. Even if you can take Shekerishet, how
will you stop Arontala?"
"He's a Summoner, he is," said
Toby. Tris and the others looked up to see the innkeeper's son, who had been
watching wide-eyed from near the fireplace. "Saw it myself, I did. Talked
to the ghost that was busting up the place, and made him plain for all to see.
Had a conversation with him, he did. Got robbed, poor bloke, and so I took word
to his family the next day, to help him to his rest. He's a Summoner, by the
Lady, he is!"
"Really?" Macaria asked.
"Do you remember the ballad we used to
sing, about the ghosts of the Ruune Videya?" Carroway asked.
Macaria gasped. "There were wild stories that
the forest is no longer haunted. You mean they're true? How?"
"You wouldn't really want to know,"
Vahanian said from his post near the door. "Trust me on that."
"Tris did it—we were there. And that was
before Tris trained with the Sisterhood," Carroway added. "He can
handle Arontala."
"My prince," Helki said.
"We're honored to help with your return. We'll do as Carroway bids, and
help you raise your diversion. I'd rather die fighting than spend the rest of
my life running away."
Macaria and Paiva murmured their agreement.
"You may help to win the night,"
Tris said with a tired smile. "Carroway taught me a long time ago never to
underestimate a bard!"
"I don't mean to spoil the
reunion," Kiara said, nudging Tris, "but it'll be daylight soon, and
I think we might ride better with a little rest."
"By your leave, my prince, we'll keep
watch in the outer room," Helki offered. With Tris's nod, the minstrels
took their leave.
"I'll go with them," Carroway said,
standing. "We have a lot of catching up to do."
Tris looked at the others after the bards
were gone. "Every time I hear us say aloud what we intend to do, it sounds
too far-fetched to be possible. The damndest thing is, I haven't come up with
a better idea."
"That's what makes it brilliant,"
Kiara said. She found a chair with a back and drew it up near the fireplace,
where the banked embers made a warm red heap in the center. "No one else
will think we're crazy enough to pull off a stunt like that."
"I really wish you wouldn't put it quite
that way," Vahanian objected. He gladly gave up his post for
Gabriel to stand watch, and stretched out on
one of the empty tables with his cloak over him. Carina and Tris found tables
or benches of their own, and drew up close to the hearth.
"I've found that the Lady blesses the
most unlikely of heroes," Gabriel observed from near the door.
"Let's hope that Her blessing is on equally unlikely tactics."
Tris echoed that hope as he drifted off to sleep,
resolutely determined to enjoy a last night of warmth and safety before they
reached the outskirts of the palace city.
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE prev next contents
BY mid-morning,
Tris and his friends left the Sparrow's Roost, with the innkeeper's
pledge of secrecy and saddlebags full of wine and provisions. Helki and the
minstrels promised to meet up with Carroway and Carina by the fourth bell on
the night of the Hawthorn Moon in the Bristle Boar Inn, a favorite with local
musicians. They set out, blending with the festival crowd, heading for Shekerishet.
The rain was over, and the early summer days warmed considerably as the skies
cleared. To avoid being conspicuous, Tris and the others split up the party as
they rode. Tris and Carroway rode together ahead of the others. Kiara and
Carina rode behind. Kiara bound up her long hair and secured it beneath a cap.
She wore a man's tunic and pants that hid her figure well and made it unremarkable
for her to carry a sword. Vahanian rode rear guard, on alert for trouble. They
stuck to the
back roads as much as they could. There were
more travelers on the road than they had seen in other parts of Margolan, but
not the crush of people Tris had expected so near the city just before a major festival.
Trouble
found them a
day's ride outside
the palace city. "Look there," Carroway noted under his breath
as they rode, and Tris froze in his saddle. Six Margolan guardsmen rode toward
them in the livery of the king, boisterously taking up more than their half of
the road and crowding other travelers into the ditch. Tris struggled to relax
as the guardsmen rode closer, dropping his head and turning his face to the
side as the soldiers passed without a second glance.
"What have we here?" one of the
guards said as they rode toward Carina and Kiara. Without turning, Tris and
Carroway slowed their mounts to narrow the gap between them and the women. When
neither of Tris's companions replied the guard captain drew closer, matching
the women's pace.
"A pretty lady," another soldier
said, sidestepping his horse to block Carina's path.
Tris steeled himself not to turn. He let his
mount slow further so that he could catch every word. Out of the corner of his
eye he could see that Carroway gripped his reins white-knuckled, anticipating a
fight. "I'm a healer," Carina returned haughtily. "I've been
summoned by a merchant in the city and I must not delay. Please move
aside."
"You've strange tastes in escorts, if
you pick a beardless one like that," the third soldier said, still
blocking the road.
"We've been on duty for a long
time," the captain said, moving closer to Carina. "The company of a
lovely lady would be very much appreciated."
"Move aside," Carina repeated, but
the guards now blocked their way completely.
"That's no soldier with her," one
said suspiciously. "They're both wenches."
The captain chuckled. "There's a
clearing over there. Let's go." He drew his sword.
Kiara's draw was lightning quick, blocking
the captain's sword. Jae, on his way back from hunting, descended with a
shriek, raking his talons across the soldier's face. At the sound of drawn
steel, Tris and Carroway wheeled their horses. Vahanian galloped in from the
rear, standing in his stirrups, sword aloft.
"Ambush!" the captain cried,
turning to deflect Tris's advance. Kiara battled the first soldier, and
Vahanian drove at another hard enough to topple him from his horse as he
struggled to parry. Carina pulled free her stave and went after Kiara's opponent
from behind, beating at his head and shoulders. Carroway sank a throwing knife
hilt deep into a guard's chest. Vahanian ran his opponent through and
dispatched him with a slash across the throat.
Vahanian made short work of a fifth guard
just as Kiara's attacker was thrown from his panicked mount, trampling the
downed soldier in its hurry to escape. Tris's opponent bore down on him with
single-minded focus, fighting for his life now that his companions had fallen.
With a two-handed swing, Tris maneuvered past the soldier's parry, scoring a
blow that cleaved through the soldier's neck. The last guard launched himself
at Tris with a wild cry. Tris barely got his blade up in time to block the
strike. Tris knocked the blade aside and swung into a clean Eastmark kick,
sending the guard stumbling into the path of Vahanian's sword.
"Someone's bound to be by soon,"
Carroway hissed. "Let's get this mess cleaned up."
Kiara was already dragging a body into the
thicket at the edge of the road. Tris sent Carina to watch the road for danger
as he and the others dragged the remaining bodies out of sight.
"Not a bad kick," Vahanian
commented as he wiped blood from his hands. "Not bad at all."
Winded and sweating, Tris calmed his nervous
horse. "A little too much practice lately, but thanks."
Carina, shaken and pale, drove off the guardsmen's
horses. Kiara, her expression grim, cleaned her sword and resheathed it.
Carroway cut down a tree branch and began obscuring the blood on the road,
masking the signs of struggle.
"Those bodies won't stay hidden
long," Vahanian said, resting his hands on his hips.
"If we strip off the uniforms and take
their purses, no one may think much of it," Carina said practically.
"There're always bandits on the road when there's festival traffic."
Vahanian looked at her and grinned.
"You're starting to think like a cutpurse. I like that in a woman."
Carina ignored the jibe and began pulling off
the dead guards' livery. Kiara and Tris joined her as Vahanian and Carroway
stood guard. Within a few
minutes, nothing remained to identify the
dead men as soldiers.
"That might buy us a little time,"
Carroway said. Carina stuffed the torn tunics into one of her saddlebags.
"It would be a shame to hang for killing
a soldier when we came to kill a king," Vahanian said dryly. "Come
on. Let's get out of here."
The group grew quiet as the day passed. They ran
into no more problems as they neared the palace, doing their best to blend in
among the crowds headed for the feast day. Tris's mood swung between anger and
sadness as they rode. Under Bricen's rule, Margolan had been prosperous.
Margolan boasted a large population of trades-people and merchants whose
industry and income lifted them—if not up to noble standards of living—then
well above the means of their counterparts in Isencroft, Trevath, and Nargi.
Most of Margolan's farmers were freemen, taking pride in the small plots of
lands and healthy herds they owned for themselves. Margolan had fewer
sharecroppers and indentured servants than in either Trevath or Nargi, where
such arrangements were often corrupt and indistinguishable from slavery. That
meant that the debtors' prisons were relatively empty; those unfortunates who
landed in jail could work their way free if they had the will and health to do
so. Margolan's prosperity had also meant that its roads were generally safe
from brigands and free of beggars. Bricen's disciplined troops had weeded out
the highwaymen and cutpurses, while the acolytes of the Mother and Childe
tended to the mendicants, taking in those who had nowhere else to go.
For as long as Tris could remember, the
closer one got to Shekerishet, the more prosperous the surroundings had looked.
The city was full of wealthy merchants and tradesmen who did a thriving
business. Their homes and shops reflected their prosperity. The city had
bustled with taverns, shops, and theaters, offering tempting diversions and
trinkets for wealthy and poor alike.
All that had changed. As the roads grew more
familiar, Tris grieved at the differences he saw. Once-thriving inns were
empty. Broken windows went unmended. Farm fields stood abandoned, either burned
or still in the remnants of the last season's crops, when they should have
been plowed and well into new growth. Some villages were populated only by
ghosts, old people, and cripples, those who could not or would not flee.
Beggars lined the roads. Even more disturbing
were the reasons for their begging. Before, the beggars might have been old
blind men or cagy urchins looking for a few coins. Now the beggars were men and
women of every age, bearing the scars of war and violence. Children missing
limbs, their faces marred by fire. Disheveled women with small children at
their skirts, clutching their tattered shawls around them like the remnants of
their dignity as they begged for food. War-crippled men whose eyes reflected
horrors of which they could not speak, discarded by an army that took them by
force, and then sent back to villages that no longer existed. Tris felt the
beggars' eyes on them as they passed. While he knew that the ragged villagers
did not recognize him for who he was, he felt the responsibility of
the crown more heavily than before. Tris's gambit was the only hope these
wretched souls had; he was well aware of how uncertain the chance of success
remained.
The city, when they reached it, was even
worse.
The palace city had been well known for its
welcoming, easy feel. Travelers came from all over the Winter Kingdoms to
experience its theaters, music gardens, and the taverns that sold Margolan's
famous dark, rich ale. Trade flowed from all corners of the realm, with festivals
and caravans stopping on the green outside the city's edge. Before the coup,
the city had been filled with languages from every kingdom, from across the
Northern Sea or the far-away realms of the Southern Kingdoms, below Trevath's
borders. Acolytes and pilgrims came from throughout Margolan to make homage at
the Childe's sacred grove and the great shrine to the Mother Aspect.
Now, the streets were sparsely populated.
Although Tris and the others stayed away from the heart of the city, the
outskirts were bad enough. Residents avoided eye contact, and seemed to skitter
for shelter like bugs in bright light. Guards roamed the streets in groups of
twos and threes, some with snarling dogs on chains. Those without dogs carried
quarterstaffs, bouncing them against their hands with casual malice. In less
than a year the city's vibrant spirit had disappeared, and the people on the
streets looked hard-worn, dressed in muted colors as if they feared to draw
attention to themselves. Shops were boarded up. "Traitor to the
crown" was scrawled on the door to one pillaged shop. In the green along
the edge of town, where musicians once played and caravan tents used to
flutter stood a huge gibbet. Ten fresh bodies still hung from their nooses,
twisting in the summer breeze. Tris had to close his eyes, remembering the dark
sending at the citadel. Hanging from posts along the green were other bodies,
tarred and encased in a form-fitting wire cage to keep the vultures away. It
was clear that in King Jared's Margolan, fear reigned with as strong a hand as
the king.
Only a day remained before
the Hawthorn Moon. Tris knew there would be no second chances. He brooded over
strategy, considering every scenario. Kiara seemed to sense Tris's mood, riding
alongside him in silence. She neither pressed him for conversation, nor
avoided it when he sought her out as a respite from his own dark thoughts. She
gave no hint to her own fears. Jae was restless, flying on ahead of them then
doubling back, as if they could not travel quickly enough to suit the little
gyregon. Carroway juggled obsessively any time they were not riding. Carina and
Vahanian resumed their verbal sparring. Of them all, only Gabriel did not
appear concerned.
"We shouldn't go further tonight,"
Gabriel announced. The roads had grown increasingly familiar. Tris recognized
the rutted highway as the same route along which they had fled nearly a year
ago.
"I can't wait to see today's
accommodations," Carroway murmured under his breath.
"Our lodging is just around the
corner," Gabriel said, nudging his horse onward. Gabriel was the
first to clear the bend. When the others
joined him, they reined in their horses to stare at the tumbledown building.
"It's the same bloody ghost inn we
started at," Carroway said.
The burned-out remains of the Lamb's Head Inn
hulked in the shadows. But unlike the night of their escape it now appeared to
be no more than it was, the ruined shell of an old tavern, unfit for even beggars.
"My liege," a man's voice called in
a hoarse whisper from the shadows of the ruins. From the shadows stepped Comar
Hassad, the swordsman's ghost who had led them away from the city on the night
of Jared's coup.
"Hello, old friend," Tris said,
expending the small bit of power necessary to make the ghost visible to the
others.
"We've been awaiting your return, my
liege," Hassad's ghost said, bowing. "Much evil has been done."
"I know."
"Follow me," Hassad said, beckoning them
to lead their horses to the back of the ruined inn. There, enough of a stable
remained to both hide and shelter the horses. When the horses were tended,
Hassad showed them to an opening in the inn's foundation that led down into the
cellars. Tris longed in vain for a fire, but they ate a cold supper from the
supply of dried meats and fruits, fresh cheese and wine that Lars had provided
for their journey. Gabriel took his leave, returning a few can-dlemarks later
with a satisfied smile, his pallor lessened.
"The spirits will watch over you,"
Hassad said. Other ghosts appeared from the mist to join him, standing silent
and indistinct in the shadows. "The palace ghosts are still banished from
Shekerishet," the slain soldier cautioned. "They've grown angry and
impatient for vengeance. I don't know if even so strong a mage as yourself, my
liege, can control their fury once Arontala's spell is broken."
Tris could feel the ghosts that swirled
unseen around them. They were familiar, ghosts he had known since childhood,
the ghosts of Shekerishet. This time the spirits did not come to him seeking
intercession. These were the ghosts of his ancestors, of loyal family
retainers, and of oath-bound guards who had died long ago in the line of duty.
The ghosts came to him offering their support and condolences. If he was able
to break the spell that banished the ghosts from the palace, Tris knew they
would swarm back on their own accord to seek vengeance against Jared and
Arontala. If so, they might help to turn the odds. Just knowing that the
spirits supported his quest and pledged their fealty was enough to lift his mood
from the fears and nightmares that had troubled his sleep.
"I'll stand guard," Gabriel said.
"I'll leave you now," Hassad said,
his form growing less distinct. "The castle ghosts are watching over you.
You'll be safe tonight." In the blink of an eye, the spirit was gone.
"Somehow, knowing that many ghosts are
hovering over me just doesn't make me feel any better," Vahanian muttered
as they picked their way through the littered cellar. Gabriel took up a post near
the entrance, just beyond where the moonlight turned to shadow.
"How can it still be this cold in
Margolan and it's nearly the Hawthorn Moon?" Carina muttered, wrapping her
cloak around her. "I thought only Isencroft was cold this late in the
year."
"Let's go over things again," Kiara
suggested. "Having a plan makes me feel better." Tris conjured faint
hand fire in the windowless basement, enough for them to see each other's
faces.
Carroway leaned back against one of the thick
foundation timbers and took a bite of his dried meat before he replied.
"All right. Once we get some rest, Carina and I leave for the city, using
the festival crowd for cover. I don't think we'll have any trouble finding help
from the hedge witches. We'll meet up with Helki and the others, and see who
they've recruited. That gives us most of the day to look for Alyzza and get the
crowd going. We'll be in position before you head for Shekerishet."
"Once we're in the city, we raise as
many diversions as we can," Carina chimed in. "If we do our job, the
city garrison will be so busy they won't have time to worry about what's going
on up at the castle."
"While we drop in on them from
above." Tris double-checked the climbing ropes they had brought with them
and Vahanian made a final inspection of their cuirasses. Kiara honed their
weapons. Vahanian carefully counted the arrows for his crossbow, adjusted the
bow's string, and assured himself that each arrow was sharp and straight.
"Let's hope they're not watching the moon when
we scale the cliffs," Kiara added edgily.
"Gabriel and Jae can help with a
diversion there," Tris replied. "Assuming Arontala doesn't sense me
coming before we set foot inside the castle."
Kiara stopped what she was doing to rummage
in her pack. She withdrew the spelled cloak and offered it to Tris.
"Take this," she said. "Maybe
it will hide your magic just long enough to slip by Arontala."
When they were certain that their
preparations were complete, they settled down to rest. Carroway stretched out
on a board that gave him some protection from the damp dirt of the cellar
floor. Vahanian offered to share a stone slab and his cloak with Carina. Kiara
slipped close to Tris on a ruined door that kept them off the hard ground,
nestling in his cloak while Jae slept at her feet.
Before long, Tris could hear the measured
breathing that told him his companions were soundly asleep.
Gabriel left them at dawn for the deeper
reaches of the cellar. When Tris was certain he would not wake Kiara he slipped
away, covering her carefully with his cloak. He walked to the wall, where a
chink in the foundation permitted the sun to send a weak shaft of light into
the basement.
You have done well, Tris, a voice sounded
in his mind. Tris recognized his grandmother's voice and wheeled. In the
shadows of the cellar he could see the robed woman's outline, one hand upraised
in greeting.
Grandmother, he said,
falling to one knee. I've missed you.
The sorceress' face softened into a smile. You've
learned the lessons required of you.
Will they be enough? Tris asked.
Bava K'aa's spirit gazed at him, her eyes
both wise and stern. No one can see that. It's for you to determine. Beware
the orb. It is the doorway to the abyss. The spirit of the Obsidian King is
strong and terrible. I hope that when the spirits are freed, if they survive,
that Lemuel may be among them. Serae and Kait as well.
She paused, her outline growing more and more
diffuse as she made a sign of blessing. The Lady keeps Her own. And with
that her form disappeared, but her words lingered in Tris's mind.
Still kneeling, Tris looked up at the rotting
timbers overhead. "Lady Bright," he murmured, "I've sworn my
sword to you to bring Jared and his mage to account. Take my life if you must,
but let me free Margolan from this evil."
Nothing stirred, not even the rats that
infested the cellar. Tris looked at his sleeping companions and felt his throat
tighten. It would be a miracle of the Lady's own working if they all lived
through this campaign. He had told no one, but the dreams of the dark sending
had returned to him, making his sleep fitful. They would need the blessing of
the Lady and more than a little luck to live to tell about their adventure.
Mid-morning, Carina and Carroway made ready
to head into the city. Carroway checked the pouches at his belt one more time
for his fireworks.
"It's time," Carroway said,
managing a reckless grin. "Come on Carina, let's give them a performance
to remember."
Carina hugged Kiara. Tris clapped Carroway on
the shoulder, at a loss for what to say. In turn, Vahanian bid him farewell and
wished him the blessing of the Lady.
"Watch your back," Vahanian warned
Carina as he kissed her goodbye. "Good luck."
Even in the dim light, Tris could see the
healer blush. "The Lady's hand be on you as well," she murmured. She
took Carroway's hand and made her way out of the cellar.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR prev next contents
CARROWAY and
Carina made their way into the palace city, hidden by the crowds that
came to celebrate the Hawthorn Moon. Above them on the cliffside, the castle
Shekerishet loomed dark and watchful. But today the city's attention was not on
the palace and its king, but on the revelry that marked the coming of the
solstice.
The streets were a solid press of people,
crowding to see curbside shows or buy sweetmeats from the vendors that hawked
their wares along the thoroughfares. It was obvious that this year, the
festival-goers planned to spend as little time in the city with its guards as
possible. They arrived in droves late in the day just before the festival's
start, and Carroway bet that the crowds would clear out very quickly once the
festivities were over. It was a stark contrast to the nearly empty streets just
days before. The smells of roasting meat and hearty ale wafted from the
makeshift booths, and pilgrim and villager alike eagerly pressed around the
carts. The crowd was in a festival mood, despite the guards who lingered at the
edge of the town square. Whether the guards expected trouble or merely meant to
make their presence felt Carroway did not know, but the feeling of being
watched made him anxious for the night's work to begin.
Carroway and Carina made their way through
the crowded streets, toward the small tavern where they had arranged to meet
Macaria, Helki, and Paiva. Carina hoped that Carroway's friends had been able
to recruit more minstrels to their cause. She relaxed, just slightly, when they
passed an unfamiliar bard whose song she recognized. It was one of the new
songs Carroway and his friends at the inn had been practicing, songs designed
to spread dissent. Quickly, Carina glanced over her shoulder, but the guards
were on the other side of the square, breaking up a fight between two drunks.
Before the guards returned, the dissident bard vanished into the crowd.
"I know them!" Carroway whispered
to Carina.
"The guards?"
Carroway shook his head. "The
'drunks.'" They're bards. I'll bet ten skrivven the fight was staged to
distract the guards."
Carina smiled. "Sounds like the party is
starting without us."
They rounded a corner and found a storyteller
surrounded by a small crowd. Two guards lingered at the edge of the group,
waiting for the storyteller to say something out of line. But before he reached
the climax of his tale, a burst of flame and a puff of
smoke started from a merchant's cart at the
far end of the block. The two guards sprinted toward the disturbance, where a
hunched old woman in a tattered robe was muttering and wringing her hands,
talking to herself. The guards tried to extinguish the fire, which seemed to
grow larger the more the old woman tried to help. Finally, the guards shooed
the woman away. Meanwhile, the storyteller's tale had veered into a dramatic
recounting of a peasant uprising, a bloody tale of a corrupt king brought to
justice. By the time the guards put out the fire, the storyteller was gone.
"Look there," Carina said, pointing
into the crowd at a short, robed figure that ducked around a corner and
disappeared from view.
"What?" Carroway asked, peering
over the crowd. "I don't see anything."
"Come on," Carina said, grabbing
him by the wrist. They pushed their way through the crowd, past a trio of
puppeteers and their bawdy show to follow the robed figure. It was the old
woman who had been with the burning cart. They caught up half way down the
street, and Carina broke into a broad smile.
"It is you!" she cried, as
the stranger glanced up.
The cowl fell back to reveal Alyzza. The old
hedge witch smiled a wide, broken-toothed grin and clasped Carina into a hearty
embrace.
"By the Lady, I knew you'd come!"
Alyzza exclaimed, greeting Carroway with equal heartiness. "I knew if you
were still alive, you'd be in Margolan for the Hawthorn Moon." Her eyes
narrowed. "Will the deed be done tonight?"
Carina nodded, glancing around them.
"We're to make sure there's enough of a ruckus in the city that the guards
are distracted," she whispered. "There's not much time."
Alyzza clapped in glee. "Oh that's fine
with me!" the old hedge witch exclaimed. "I haven't raised a real
fuss since before you were born. Just tell me what you need, and I'll keep them
hopping." Once Carroway told Alyzza about the plot to enlist the
minstrels' help, she motioned for Carina and Carroway to follow her, leading
them through the feast day crowds toward the Bristle Boar Inn where Macaria and
the others waited.
Helki was waiting for them at the bar. When
they entered, he rose and walked toward a private room in the back. Without a
word of greeting, Carroway and the others followed him, remaining silent until
the minstrel closed the door behind them.
"Are you sure we're safe here?"
Carina asked.
Helki nodded. "The innkeeper's daughter
disappeared when she went up to the palace after the coup. She'd been seeing
your friend Soterius. When she went looking for him, she was never heard from
again." Helki's expression made clear his distaste. "Our innkeeper
bears no love for the crown."
Macaria and Paiva greeted both Carroway and
Carina with embraces, and Carroway was heartened to see a dozen other bards
and musicians packed into the small room. "This isn't all of us, not by
half," Paiva said. "We've been recruiting since we left you at the
Sparrow's Roost. There must be five score of us, or more. We've been playing
all over town for the last few days." She grinned wickedly.
"Saving our best songs for this evening,
naturally. But Lady True! What a reaction there's been, even
to the ditties we've sung so far—mark my
words, the crowd is angry. With enough ale, they'll be spoiling for a
fight!"
"Our innkeeper enlisted a few of his
friends around town," Macaria said. "Especially the ones near the
guards' posts. The later the night gets, the more they'll fill the glasses,
without extra charge. By the Crone! We should have the town drunk and fighting
by tenth bells." Macaria laughed as Carroway pulled her close and kissed
her on the cheek in glee.
"So it's true what they've told us?
Prince Martris is returned to win the throne?" asked one of the minstrels,
a dark haired boy who held a fiddle in one hand. Carina looked from the boy to
Carroway, and then to the other musicians crowded into the small room.
Carroway stood and nodded. "It's
true," he said, all mirth gone. "It's going to be a hard fight. Tris
is a Summoner now—maybe the strongest spirit mage since Bava K'aa. But Arontala
is powerful, and he'll be drawing on the power of the Obsidian King. It's going
to be a battle."
The boy met Carroway's eyes defiantly.
"I'd rather die a free man than live like we have been, under Jared's
rule. We can't go on like this. If there's a chance to be rid of Jared, then
I'm in, and Istra damn the consequences!"
"Istra aside, there are still the guards to
contend with. We've been pretty successful at creating diversions so that we
can draw off the guards, but it doesn't always work. Kason lost a couple of
teeth when the guards roughed him up for the song he sang about Bricen. He was
lucky it wasn't worse."
Macaria gave a dangerous smile. "But I
could feel how angry the crowd was when the guards broke them up. A little more
ale, and I think we can turn this our way."
Carroway nodded. "Don't start anything
unless you've got a clear exit. With luck, the crowd will figure out that there
are more of them than there are of the soldiers, but the guards still have
their clubs and dogs. Let's not get anyone hurt if we can help it."
"Except for the guards," Paiva
supplied.
Carroway grinned. "Yeah. Except for the
guards."
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE prev next contents
After Carroway
and Carina left their basement hiding place, the
candlemarks passed at a crawl. Tris paced, too tense to rest. They waited out
the remainder of the day until evening gave them cover to move. There was no
way of knowing whether Carroway and Carina had worked their plan in safety, or
whether they had been captured and the venture betrayed. Tris could see the
same tension in his companions' faces, though none of them spoke their
thoughts. Dusk on the night of the Hawthorn Moon finally approached, leaving
only a few candlemarks until midnight. Tris checked his weapons again. Gabriel
joined them at sundown.
"It's time," Gabriel said, stepping to
the door as the ninth bells rang in the city below. The summer night was
windless and unseasonably cool. High above, clouds obscured the moon.
Good, Tris thought. The
darker it is, the more likely we can drop in unnoticed.
Hassad's ghost awaited them. "I can't
take you the entire way, my liege, because of the banishing spell. But I can lead
you to the best pathway up the mountain."
"I'll take them up the mountain,"
Gabriel said.
"I want Jared alive, to pay for what
he's done," Tris said. "If any hand slays him, it should be
mine."
Gabriel bowed his head in acknowledgment.
"As you wish, my liege. You may find my... talents... useful in reaching
your goal." Even in near darkness, the pallor of his face was a
noticeable contrast. "I hunger."
They fell silent, making their way in the
shadows at the edge of the roadway. Twice they dodged into the bushes to escape
patrols, narrowly evading a confrontation. As the path began a steep incline
up the mountain behind the palace, the roadway became less traveled and more
difficult. At the road's end, still a candlemark's climb from the peak, Hassad
stopped.
"I can't go further," the spirit
said. "May the blessing of the Goddess be with you, my liege." He
dropped to one knee in fealty.
Tris gestured for the ghost to rise.
"You've served this kingdom faithfully. If tonight's workings don't
release you, I'll return, by the grace of the Lady, and set your spirit to
rest."
Hassad inclined his head in gratitude.
"What I served in life I serve willingly in death. Go, and may the hand of
the Lady be upon you."
Tris led the others up the rocky slope where
no road marked their way. Gabriel picked out safe
passage when the moonlight failed them,
guiding the party to the peak. Finally they stood overlooking the palace city.
Below them, partially carved from the mountain itself, was Shekerishet.
"Here's where it gets interesting,"
Tris murmured as they unpacked the climbing gear. In silence, Tris, Kiara, and
Vahanian secured themselves into their sturdy harnesses and anchored their
climbing ropes. Then, with a glance among the three companions and nods to indicate
completion, Tris lowered himself over the edge and began to carefully make his
way down the cliff face. Below them in the mews Tris could hear the cry of
Kait's falcons. Jae circled in kinship, hissing to the captive birds of prey.
Gabriel signaled silently to them, descending
to a shadowed place out of sight of the guards. They watched as a small noise
attracted the attention of the two guards beneath them. The doomed soldiers
approach Gabriel's hiding place. The only sound that traveled up to them was a gasp
of astonishment. Moments later, Gabriel appeared from the shadows and signaled
them to descend.
"You're one hell of a scout,"
Vahanian muttered to Gabriel as they reached the stone walkway and rapidly
detached themselves from the harnesses.
Kiara moved quickly to the mews and gently
set Jae down near the caged falcons. The gyregon hissed and the falcons
responded with an answering cry. Carefully Kiara opened the cages and stood
back as Jae flew into the air. Tris joined her. They each took up the gloves of
the falconers that lay nearby, carefully removing each bird and its hood and
launching the falcons into the air from their gloved forearms. The birds soared
up to where Jae circled. Most fell in behind him. A few decided to challenge
the newcomer, but the sparring was brief and decisive and the gyregon emerged
dominant. Kiara and Tris removed the gloves, and Kiara smiled. "I think we
can be sure that the roof is secure," she
murmured.
Gabriel stepped forward, beckoning for them
to follow him. Even by moonlight, Tris noted that the vayash moru's pallor
had decreased, and his lips seemed more full and red.
"Come. The hunt is on," Gabriel
said.
By the ninth bell on the day
of the Hawthorn Moon, Carroway and Carina had made the rounds of the city,
finding that word of the uprising had preceded them among the other minstrels,
who had added ideas of their own.
Already, the mood of the revelers was
beginning to shift. The minstrels'
songs took on a harder edge, replacing the
maudlin love songs with ballads of heroes who
threw off tyrants' yokes, and the great warriors
of Margolan's past. Groups of wandering actors
played out their skits, but now the tales told of
villagers defying corrupt soldiers and maidens rescued
from defilement. Guards set their dogs on the
crowd, but one of the cart vendors tossed his
load of meat pies in the opposite direction,
drawing off the snarling
dogs, who ran
like puppies to snatch up
the fallen treats. Angered, the guards started
to beat the vendor, but the crowd closed around
them, and one man who was as broad as both
guards together and a head taller than either of
them hefted one of the guards in both hands and hurled
him against a nearby wall. The other guard began to run, and the crowd pelted
him with garbage as he fled.
By the tenth bell the crowd grew restless,
then belligerent. Tales of hardship and oppression resonated within the
audience. A dozen villagers climbed the bell tower and tore down the royal banner,
setting it ablaze. Cries of outrage against the palace grew more strident.
"Now let's really get their
attention," Carroway hissed. He headed toward the guardhouses just beyond
the city gates, below the palace. A crowd milled there, mostly alesmen and
whores tending to the needs of the guards. Positioning Carina and Alyzza for an
easy escape, Carroway strolled among the crowd, ostentatiously juggling several
flaming batons.
"You there, let's see you juggle!"
called the captain at arms, leaning away from the strumpet beside him.
Carroway obligingly came closer, sending the
fiery batons high into the night air. The soldiers gathered around, cheering
and clapping. The whore withdrew a coin from her bodice and tossed it at
Carroway's feet.
On the pretense of glancing at the coin,
Carroway dropped one of his batons into the haystack nearest the guardhouse.
The other two flaming batons went flying, one landing on the thatched roof of
the outpost, the other landing so close to the drunken guardsman that he and
his strumpet were obliged to jump out of its way.
"Stop him!" the captain cried.
"Now!" Carroway shouted. Alyzza
flung a handful of pellets onto the ground between Carroway and his pursuers.
The pellets exploded into puffs of colored smoke, startling the guards. With a
touch of her own, Alyzza summoned a ball of mage fire, giving the smoke an
eerie glow and setting the guards back a pace. It was enough of a diversion for
Carroway and Carina to lose themselves in the crowd as the fire raged and the
guards' attention turned to salvaging their post.
The flames were the signal the rowdy crowd
needed. Soldiers tried in vain to keep back the revelers as the mob surged
forward. Wielding whatever came to hand, whether broken boards or broom
handles, the surly crowd pressed toward the soldiers. The captain waved his
sword in vain. More shouts sounded a few streets over. In the distance, another
guard house went up in flames.
One of the guards sent an arrow flying. It
struck a man at the front of the mob, taking him through the heart. Like a
spark to tinder, the crowd's rage ignited. A wave of rioters swept forward.
There was the sound of glass shattering as men smashed wine bottles to use as
weapons. The night smelled of sweat and ale and of burning straw. To the
soldiers' horror, the angry revelers advanced with a howl and did not stop,
even when more men fell to the archers' arrows.
Alyzza's hand moved, hidden by the press of
bodies around them. The stable doors flew open and a loud noise sent the
guards' horses stampeding out the back, fleeing in panic down the streets. She
chuckled as her hand traced a sigel in the air. "I've fused the blades
together in the armory," she called to Carina. "Let them try to use
those!"
Rocks crashed through the windows of the
guard house. One of the guards fell with a hunting knife
protruding from his chest. The panicked
soldiers rushed the crowd, brandishing swords. The mob advanced, beating back
the soldiers with staves and walking sticks. Two men came running with the
spoils from a looted blacksmith's forge. The rioters took up a cry as metal
bars replaced walking sticks and horseshoes flew with deadly aim at the
soldiers. Three more guardsmen fell to the ground as the crowd rushed forward,
dragging their own dead and wounded out of the way.
The hapless guards, faced with several
hundred drunken and increasingly well-armed festival goers, abandoned their
burning post and fled. The crowd cheered and pelted the fleeing soldiers with
rocks.
"I thought this was just supposed to be
a diversion," Carina said as they watched the fire from afar.
"I think there's more loose tonight in
the crowd that some ale," Carroway said. "Looks like we touched a raw
nerve."
"Aye, but can you control what you've
started?" Alyzza cackled as the flames grew higher.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX prev next contents
Carefully, Tris,
Kiara, Vahanian and Gabriel made their way into
Shekerishet. Outside the tenth bell chimed, reminding Tris that within two
candlemarks' time their quest must be successful or lose everything. Gabriel
slipped ahead of them to clear their path and disappeared into the shadows.
Tris felt for the pouch at his belt and took a wad of rope vine from it,
holding the bit of dried leaves clenched in his teeth as a precaution against
wormroot-tainted traps.
Tris stretched out his senses. The absence of
castle ghosts left an uneasy void. In their place was a new, dark presence
that chilled him.
Arontala, Tris thought, and
the orb. The dark magic permeated the castle, although Tris could not
pinpoint any single place as its locus. He headed for the throne room with
every mortal and mageborn sense on high alert, his sword in hand, Kiara and
Vahanian behind him.
Tris found his way through the corridors of
Shekerishet easily, memories returning as he wound through the darkened
hallways. Twice they pressed themselves into the shadows as a servant passed
by. Around one corner, they found the still-warm bodies of half a dozen
guards, the corpses unmarked except for the bloodless punctures on their necks.
Three more guards happened upon them from the opposite direction. Vahanian's
crossbow silenced one before he had time to realize he was under attack. Kiara
made short work on the second, running him through. Tris swung into a clean
Eastmark kick, sending his opponent sprawling, and finished the third with a
single sword stroke. They did not bother to hide the bodies, but their pace
increased. Tris hoped that Gabriel had made a clean sweep of the area in front
of them.
Tris moved carefully, mindful of the traps he
had encountered in his training at the citadel. Surely Jared has protections
in place, Tris thought. There are enough of his subjects who want to
kill him. Mortal guards could be easily removed by Gabriel without the sound
of a scuffle. But the further into Shekerishet they got without springing any
traps, the more concerned Tris became.
He's expecting me. He knows I'm coming for
the orb. Like a spider with a web. All he has to do is wait.
"I don't like this," Vahanian muttered
under his breath. "I don't trust anything that's this easy."
"Do you think we've been betrayed?"
Kiara whispered.
Tris shook his head. "Jared doesn't need
a spy to guess that we'd come for the Hawthorn Moon. Arontala probably thinks
it's too far gone for us to turn it around. Jared figures he'll sit back and
let Arontala do the fighting, and come in for his fun once we're beaten."
"It still means we're being set
up," Vahanian said, his grip tight on his crossbow. "The question is—
when does the trap spring?"
Just before they reached the throne room,
Vahanian put up a hand for caution and moved ahead slowly, his attention drawn
to a dark pile on the floor. He ventured ahead a step or two, and then waved
for the others to follow. Four men in the livery of the king's personal guard
lay dead in a heap.
"Gabriel's going to need a week to sleep
this off." Vahanian shivered as he looked at the punctures in the dead
men's throats.
A few more steps and the doors to the throne
room stood before him. Tris paused, stretching out his senses once more. He
felt the blood magic that wrapped itself around Shekerishet like a moist
shroud, so strong that it seemed to come from everywhere at once. He focused
his senses on Mageslayer, and felt the spelled blade thrum with power. The
sword itself seemed to pulse, sensing their mission. Tris glanced at Kiara and
Vahanian. They nodded, their weapons ready. Trap or not, the night's work would
begin in earnest as soon as they found Jared.
Sword in hand, Tris pushed open the great doors. As
his hand touched the door a light flared, pulling him into the room through an
invisible curtain of power. Behind him, Kiara and Vahanian vanished.
As he crossed the threshold, Tris felt a
gut-wrenching lurch. Mageslayer, so full of power a moment before, became dead
steel in his hands, its magic gone. Fearing for the others, Tris looked behind
him but the corridor was empty. And as he reached out to ward himself, he
realized that in this room, his magic was suddenly out of reach.
"I hope
Tris has everything under control up there," Carroway breathed as
they watched the crowd. The revelers tumbled out of the heart of the city,
moving up the hill toward the palace itself. Rioters took up staves and bricks,
shouting curses and threats as they backed the overwhelmed garrison toward the
city gates.
The bells in the tower at the heart of the
city tolled eleven.
"Tris is running out of time,"
Carina fretted, looking toward the dark shape on the cliffside. Lights burned
within Shekerishet's many windows, but nothing hinted of unrest within the
great, silent castle.
Carroway shared her worry. There was no
middle ground. Come morning, Martris Drayke would be King of Margolan, or he
and the others, if still alive, would surely hang.
"We've certainly kept the guards out of
the way," Carroway observed as soldiers from the palace streamed toward
the city gates and the fire at the garrison. At the approach of the soldiers,
the mob drew back, and then surged forward again.
"Disperse!" the captain-at-arms
cried. Behind him, a dozen soldiers armed with longbows took the field.
"Disperse now, or risk the consequences!"
But the crowd, riled by the minstrels and
made foolhardy by ale, pressed forward. A dozen men at the front fell to the
flying shafts, and a roar went up from the mob in fury. Before the archers
could ready their bows again, the crowd lurched toward them like an angry wave,
trampling the guards.
Carroway lifted his head. "Do you hear
something?"
"No. What—?"
The sound of hoof beats thundered louder. Alyzza's
curse told Carroway that the old witch heard it as well. As they watched,
fighters on horseback streamed toward the city gates at a gallop.
"Welcome
home," Jared Drayke said to Tris. "What took you so
long? Planning to use grandmother's magic to just wink me out of
existence?" Jared moved from his place near the tall window, and fingered
an amulet beneath his robes, a null magic charm. "Your magic won't work on
me, boy. I've a few protections in place, and a sorcerer in my employ. I've
spent the better part of a year trying to find you, brother dear. And then I
realized that in time, you'd come to me. All I had to do was wait.
"The doorway was spelled for you alone.
As for your friends," Jared shrugged. "My mage has use of them.
Tonight, we raise the Obsidian King."
"I have no intention of letting that
happen," Tris said, advancing steadily, his sword ready. "I came to
kill you—and destroy Arontala and his orb." With or without magic, he
added silently.
"Still the dreamer. How pathetic."
Jared took a step toward Tris. "In
here, without your magic, you're just the same boy I've thrashed before. I
could always whip your ass."
"I've seen what you've made of Margolan,
how many people you've killed to get a throne that would have been yours in
time."
"In time," Jared spat back.
"In time. Only if Bricen couldn't find a way to have me removed from the
succession. He threatened that, you know. He threatened to set me aside, and
pass the crown to you. And if he'd known you'd become a mage he would have certainly
done it. I couldn't allow that." Jared drew his sword. "And so I took
matters into my own hands."
"You've destroyed Margolan. You have to
be stopped."
"By you, little brother?" Jared
gestured toward the window to the courtyard below. "Did you see my
garden?" Tris was close enough to see what lay below; it made his stomach
churn. Stout, sharpened pikes, braced in the ground, stood in an obscene
tracing of the crest of House Margolan. Impaled on each pike was the corpse of
a victim.
"It's full now, but there'll be a place
for your friends, I guarantee," Jared said smoothly, madness glinting in
his eyes. "Some—the strong ones—are able to remain aloft and keep from
piercing anything vital for more than a day. Quite fascinating, the dance-like
motions, up on their toes—"
"You're a demon, just like
Arontala."
Jared shrugged. "Arontala understands
the power in death. I see the beauty. And speaking of beauty... I suppose I
should thank you for bringing back my bride."
Tris felt his blood rise. "She'll never be
yours."
"Oh, I'll take what's mine. Maybe
I'll leave your body in the room the first time—just to relish the
victory." His voice hardened and his face contorted with anger. "And
every time I have her, I intend to make her pay for loving you." A smile
twisted the corner of his mouth. "Of course, the first brat she whelps
will have to die. Can't have a question of paternity when the throne is at
stake."
"You're not going to live that
long."
Jared raised his sword. "If you want the
throne of Margolan, then win it, if you can. The only way to claim your
inheritance, boy, is to take it over my dead body." Jared lunged in
attack, swinging his heavy sword for Tris's head.
Tris countered the powerful blow, though it
nearly tore Mageslayer from his grasp. Jared scythed a dagger dangerously
close with his left hand as Tris parried two-handed, beating back Jared's
advance. The clang of steel echoed in the throne room as the brothers circled,
their swords glinting in the torchlight. Jared's blows fell with the wild strength
of madness. A fierce press drove Tris toward the open fireplace. The heels of
his boots crunched on the burning embers and he felt the heat at his back.
Tris held Jared off, struggling to remember
every trick Vahanian had taught him. Jared let up just for an instant and Tris
dove, rolling, with a wicked slash at Jared's heel that scored a deep cut and
barely missed hamstringing the king. Jared howled in rage and dove after Tris,
delivering a pounding set of strikes that Tris was hard-matched to counter.
"You've been practicing, little
brother."
Tris regained his feet and launched the
offensive, anger fueling his
strength. He delivered
great, hacking blows that drove Jared back toward the open window.
The point of Jared's dagger connected with
Tris's forearm, slashing deep and giving Jared the opening he needed to turn
the attack. This time it was Jared who delivered a sequence of sword blows that
forced Tris against the wall by the window, breathless. The stench from the
bodies beneath made the night air sickly sweet. Tris felt familiar warmth
radiating from the gash on his arm; Jared's blade was tainted with worm-root.
He clenched his teeth on the rope vine. While Jared's null charms had already
put his power temporarily beyond reach, the wormroot threatened to slow his
reactions, something he could not afford. Whiskey had never blunted Jared's
skill with a sword; Tris knew from bitter experience that Jared was more
vicious drunk than sober.
"You've had an apt teacher," Jared
taunted. "Your mercenary friend? No matter. You've shown far more
potential than I ever dreamed—challenging the throne, raising an army against
me, bedding my bride-to-be."
"I have no desire to kill you,"
Jared assured him, driving the point of his sword closer, so that Tris pressed
against the cold stone of the wall, "at least, not yet. Tonight, the
Obsidian King returns to Margolan. He'll need a body to inhabit. Arontala will
be that vessel, one with powers already in place. You can be the final meal for
the Obsidian King's spirit before he returns in all his power. Perhaps he'll
let some bit of you remain to witness the grand event."
Tris worked his fingers up inside of his
sleeve for the dagger concealed in a sheath above his wrist. It
fell into his palm, and he flicked his hand
just as Jared shifted. The dagger embedded itself in Jared's shoulder, not his
chest as Tris intended. Jared roared with pain and anger, slashing at Tris with
all his might. Tris managed to deflect his wild blows— barely—but the force of one
strike tore Mageslayer from his grip and shattered Jared's sword. Tris felt the
full effect of the wormroot hit him as the blade skittered out of reach to lie
beneath the window. Jared yanked the knife from his shoulder and threw it to
the ground. His eyes burned with pain and madness, heedless of the blood that
stained his tunic.
Tris dodged as Jared dove for him, upending a
table to put distance between them. Jared seized a poker from the fire and
swung it wildly, keeping himself between Tris and the fallen sword. Tris looked
about for anything he could use as a weapon. He grabbed a pitcher of water from
the table and hurled it at Jared's head as Jared vaulted over the table. Tris
tried to duck out of the way of the poker, but its glowing tip seared into his
left shoulder. He cried out and dove under Jared's swing with a vicious kick to
Jared's groin. His foot connected, and Jared howled with pain and rage.
Tris reached the hearth first, grabbing a
bucket of ashes from beside the fireplace. He threw the hot ash at Jared as his
brother headed toward him at a dead run. Jared narrowly missed the heavy
bucket, but the ashes formed a smothering cloud. Jared cried out, throwing his
arms up to shield himself.
Tris used the diversion to run for his sword,
but something hard clipped him on the side of the head and he
fell, blood starting
from his temple.
A candlestick clattered to the ground beside him. Blinded by the blood
that flowed from the gash on his brow, Tris struggled to his feet. Barehanded,
Jared dove for Tris and tackled him, landing on Tris's back. Tris felt ribs
crack and gritted his teeth as the world around him swam red with pain. Jared,
taller and heavier, had the advantage hand-to-hand. Tris gasped as Jared's
dagger plunged into his side just below the edge of his cuirass. Jared shifted
and a cord jerked around Tris's throat, the belt of Jared's robe. Tris
struggled for breath as it tightened.
"Speak, Lord of the Dead," Jared
taunted. "Where are your spirits to save you? Where are your mighty
spells?" Tris fought for air, trying to gain enough leverage to buck Jared
from his back. Jared only laughed, the same cold laugh Tris knew too well from
the beatings of his childhood.
"This is too easy," Jared said.
"I can't see your face. I want to watch you die, and remember just how you
looked when the last breath slipped beyond your grasp."
Keeping the noose taut Jared dragged Tris to
his feet, pulling him up against the wall beside the grisly courtyard garden.
He closed his hand around Tris's throat. Tris could smell the whiskey on
Jared's breath as his brother leaned closer, his dark hair framing his face and
his eyes alight with triumph. Jared tightened his grip. "You may see the
spirits of the dead," he whispered. "But I can see the soul leave the
body. It's in the eyes."
As the world around him began to darken, Tris
brought his hand up sharply, wrenching at the amulet around Jared's neck. It
burned his hand like
fire, but he hung on and the strap snapped.
Tris hurled the amulet away, feeling the magic that the null amulet had pushed
out of reach grow just a bit closer. Jared howled with anger and twisted his
wrist sharply, tightening the cord around Tris's neck.
"You think that's the only null charm in
this room, boy?" Jared snarled. "I've got more protection than
that!"
Tris's vision blurred and pinpricks of light
danced in his sight. Jared slammed him against the wall just to the side of the
window, and Tris felt something against his boot. Mageslayer, he realized as he
struggled to remain conscious. A tendril of power was almost within his grasp.
He shifted his boot onto Mageslayer's blade, and felt a tingle of power, faint
but present. Tris gasped for air, focusing on Mageslayer. Protect!
A burst of fire glowed around him, a blue
aura that sapped the small amount of magic he could reach. It crackled around
Jared like lightning, throwing him clear with a jolt.
It was all the opening Tris needed. The heel
of his boot swung up and connected hard with Jared's chest. The force of the
blow took Tris to the floor, still gasping for air. Jared staggered backward,
and the low sill of the open window caught him below the knees. Flailing, Jared
fell from the window with the full force of the kick, and Tris grimaced as he
heard the sickening crunch of Jared's body landing atop his sharpened pikes. He
pulled himself to his feet and looked down. Jared's body, impaled by three of
the spikes, contorted and bucked as he slipped lower with the weight of his
fall. But the spike that took Jared through the back ended his struggles. As
Tris watched he saw Jared's spirit writhe free of his broken body, flickering a
sullied light. Tris felt the Formless One's approach even before the dark
presence appeared, so close this time that Tris threw up an arm reflexively to
shield his face, his soul shrinking back within him in instinctive fear.
From everywhere at once a cloud descended on
Jared Drayke, as if the shadows themselves were fluid. From within the
whirlwind Jared's spirit gave one wrenching scream of terror and pain. Then, as
quickly as it came, the shadows were gone. And with them, Jared's soul.
Tris slumped against the throne room wall and
tore the cord from his neck. I've got to find Kiara and jonmarc—and
Arontala, he thought, staggering toward where Mageslayer lay on the floor.
He fought the urge to pass out, weakened by both the poison and the pain of the
wound in his side. He wiped the blood from his face with his torn sleeve. His
left arm ached where the poker had burned him, a deep burn that made it
agonizing for him to move his arm or clench his fist. With Jared's charm gone,
Tris could sense more of his magic returning, slipping in and out of his grasp
as he struggled against the wormroot that coursed through his veins. He picked
up Mageslayer and felt its power buoy him, lessening the poison's effect. He
found that he could control his magic—just barely.
Outside the throne room, Tris felt the magic
more strongly, a clue that Jared's charm had not been the only power-dampening
talisman in that chamber. Using every
trick he had
learned from the
Sisterhood, Tris fought to lessen the wormroot's
effect. He let Mageslayer's power strengthen him, hoping that the sword's
protections might also stay the damage from his wounds. Tris felt at the edge
of his cuirass, where his tunic was sticky with his own blood. The odds, never
favorable, appeared to be getting worse.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN prev next contents
AT the entrance
to the throne room Vahanian and Kiara hung back a pace, their weapons
ready, as Tris approached the heavy double doors. Kiara's sword was ready in
her hand. Vahanian notched a quarrel into his crossbow. Tris touched the doors,
and the world around them seemed to turn inside out. In a heartbeat, Tris and
the throne room were gone and Vahanian was falling through total darkness, into
a hole so deep it had no bottom. Somewhere in the darkness, he heard Kiara cry
out. Then, just as quickly as it began, the wrenching shift was over. Vahanian
found himself tumbled out onto a hard stone floor, his crossbow still notched
and ready in his hand. An instant later, Kiara appeared from nowhere beside
him. A sense of foreboding filled Vahanian as he took in the room around them—a
room that could be nothing other than a wizard's study.
Tapestries covered the walls. Thick candles
and torches illuminated the room. One wall was lined with books from floor to
ceiling. Scattered over tables and on shelves were a hodgepodge of vials and
bowls, stoppered bottles, and unfamiliar tools. Over the mantle, above a
darkened fireplace, a nearly life-sized portrait of Jared Drayke glared down
with a haughty disdain. As dark as Tris was fair, Jared Drayke still bore a
striking likeness to his younger brother. They shared the same high cheekbones,
fine nose, and wild mane of hair, though Jared's hair fell in a dark cloud
around his face, making the cruel turn to his lips even more pronounced.
Vahanian and Kiara climbed to their feet,
weapons ready. At the far side of the large room, laughing at their folly,
stood a dark-haired man in the red robes of a Fire Clan mage. Beside him, on a
pedestal worthy of the Goddess, was a large crystal orb that pulsed like a
living heart.
Moving on instinct, Vahanian leveled his
crossbow and sent its arrow flying. With a muttered word, Arontala plucked the
quarrel from midair. The mage gave a flick of his wrist; unseen hands slammed
Vahanian across the room and against the stone wall, pinning him above the
floor. Vahanian cried out as the bones in his right wrist snapped, forcing him
to drop the bow. With a sound of dry sticks cracking, his right arm and right
leg broke as well. Satisfied Arontala released him. Vahanian fell to the floor,
gasping in pain.
Kiara lunged toward the mage with an oath,
her heavy sword wielded in both hands. Clucking disdainfully, Arontala
gestured and Kiara's sword flew
from her grasp. Her spelled dagger fell from
her belt, clattering to the floor.
"You've saved me the effort of hunting
you down," Arontala greeted them. He looked at Kiara and smiled coldly.
"I told Jared we'd find you, in time."
"Go to the demon."
"My dear," he replied with a smile
that revealed his sharp eye teeth, "I am the demon." He
gestured once more, and Kiara struggled against a force that pushed her to her
knees. "I think a proper attitude is the place to start."
"Leave her alone," Vahanian
growled, struggling to reach his bow where it lay below the large mul-lioned
window.
Arontala twitched his finger, and the
crossbow slid just out of reach. "Ah," he said, glancing over his
shoulder. "My tomb robber—and my Eastmark captain. Once again, you have
the very bad luck to cross my path."
"Go screw the Goddess." .Arontala
turned back to the orb. "You're about to
witness history. Tonight,
the Obsidian King returns!"
"He'll destroy everything in the Winter
Kingdoms," Vahanian said, desperate to stall for time. Their plan had gone
horribly awry. Without Tris, his fate—and Kiara's—appeared sealed.
Arontala shrugged. "I think not. But if
so, the kingdoms will be ours to remake as we desire."
"Tris isn't going to let that
happen," Kiara said, struggling against the mage force to hold her head up
defiantly.
A mirthless smile twisted Arontala's lips.
"Don't be too quick to trust in your champion," he said, turning his
icy gaze back to Kiara. "He's likely dead already—or will be, soon."
"I'm going to enjoy your
education," Arontala said, taking a step toward Kiara. "You have much
to answer for. We've heard about your little... escapade on the border.
And it's no secret that you've aligned yourself with the traitor," he
reached out to stroke her cheek, "in more ways than one."
Kiara spat and the mage grabbed her chin
roughly, forcing her eyes to meet his. "By ancient law, a royal betrothal
is as binding as wedding vows," he said in a low, cold voice.
"Treason and adultery are both punishable by death. But there is an
alternative." He jerked her closer to the orb.
"Before he can emerge, the Obsidian King
must feed," Arontala said, his fingers brushing against the orb that was
only inches from Kiara's face. "I've sent many spirits into the orb for
him to draw upon, until they're too spent to be of use. Your will, your spirit,
and that arrogant pride will do quite nicely. Oh, he'll leave a remnant, enough
that Jared can sire his brats by you, enough to remember what you once were.
Enough to suffer for the rest of your natural life. And perhaps, I shall extend
that life forever so that you can ponder your loss for eternity."
Arontala seized Kiara by the hair, forcing
her to stare into the orb. She shut her eyes, and the mage muttered words in a
language that sounded like wind against sand. Against her will, Kiara's eyes
slowly opened, unable to avoid the orb's glow. "Enter the abyss,"
Arontala said, as the miasma within the orb swirled and brightened. "The
time has come to feed the master."
"They're in
the king's livery," Carroway observed tersely.
Hundreds of horsemen were now at the gates, forcing their way through into the
crowd. The insurrectionists stood their ground.
"Stop them before they escape!"
shouted the beleaguered garrison commander. "We've got an uprising!"
The captain of the mounted troops lifted his
helm and archers leveled their weapons, their aim on the soot-streaked garrison
instead of the panicked mob. "There's an uprising all right," Ban
Soterius said. "We ride in the name of Martris Drayke of Margolan.
Surrender, and we'll guarantee your safety. Otherwise, we're prepared to fight
you to the last man." Beside him, Mikhail lowered his hood and drew back
his lips to show his eye teeth, making it plain just what a fight that would
be.
A cheer went up from the crowd. Carroway
swept Carina up in his arms, dancing in a little circle and planting a kiss on
her forehead. The garrison commander, his provisions and guardhouses in
flames, looked from the drunken crowd to the horsemen, and then to his weary
command. With an oath, he gestured for surrender. Soterius's soldiers rushed
forward to secure their prisoners.
Carroway grabbed Carina's hand and began to
fight his way through the unruly crowd, intent on reaching Soterius.
"Ban!" he shouted above the din.
"Ban, Mikhail—over here!"
Soterius began to search the crowd. At the sight of
them, he swung down from his horse and ran to greet them, clapping them both
into a hearty embrace. Mikhail joined them, grinning broadly.
When Alyzza reached them, the old hedge witch
looked approvingly at Soterius.
"Well, well," she said. "So
this is what you are. Tent rigger indeed. You wear that armor as if it were
made for you."
"Stolen, actually," Soterius said
with a lopsided smile. "Stole the whole lot—horses, weapons, soldiers,
and livery. Learned it from Jonmarc. Nice touch, don't you think?"
"I gather you found some discontented
troops?" Carroway asked. He, Carina, and Soterius stood arm in arm,
watching Soterius's soldiers secure the last of the garrison prisoners.
"More than I imagined," Soterius
said. "I'll tell you all about it later." He glanced toward Shekerishet.
"Tris is up there?"
"With Jonmarc and Kiara," Carina
said. "And Gabriel."
"Where now?" Carroway asked as
Soterius swung back up on his mount.
"To Shekerishet," Soterius replied,
reining in his horse. "Between the soldiers and the mob, we should give the
palace guard something to think about."
"To Shekerishet!" The mob took up
the cry. The garrison commander looked on haplessly. Soterius's horsemen urged
their mounts forward, through the boisterous crowd that cheered their passing
and closed ranks behind them. Up the hill toward the palace the mob followed,
torches aloft.
At the palace gates the soldiers stopped.
Behind them, the mob came to a halt.
"Open the gates!" Soterius shouted,
the banner of the Royal House of Margolan fluttering above him
in the breeze. "We come in the name of
Prince Martris, to overthrow the tyrant!"
To their amazement, the gates swung open.
Soldiers and servants poured out, waving white cloths in makeshift flags of
surrender. The palace soldiers threw down their arms, and the fear-stricken
servants surged toward the mob.
"Save us!" they cried, yielding
willingly.
"There's demons loose in there!"
one man cried, white-faced in panic. "Naught but the Dark Lady can save
you if you go there."
"At least we know Gabriel's been hard at
work," Carroway observed dryly. Carina looked around for Alyzza, but the
hearth witch had disappeared into the crowd.
"Let's take the castle, men!"
Soterius shouted, gesturing forward with his sword. "Prince Martris is in
there. Are we with him?"
A resounding chorus of "aye" echoed
from the stone walls of the bailey. The crowd surged forward in a cloud of
torch smoke, smelling of sweat and horses and ale. The rearguard attempted to
quiet the mob and set them to work securing the outbuildings and the outer bailey,
leaving the true night's work for the trained soldiers. Some soldiers remained
behind to keep the mob under control, while the others began to infiltrate the
palace.
"You're safest here," Soterius
said, turning back to Carina and Carroway. He held up a hand to still Carina's
ready protest. "I know Kiara and Jonmarc are in there, and that both you
and Carroway have seen more battles that many a seasoned fighter. But if it's a
trick, if Jared and Arontala are waiting for us..." He paused, looking
toward the upper floors of the castle cautiously and shook his head. "I'd
rather know you two were down here, to lead the last charge."
Carina looked as if she intended to argue
with him, but then relented. "All right," she conceded. "Just
warn your bow-happy archers that the vayash tnoru are on our side,
huh?"
Outside, the city bells began to toll
Carina and Carroway exchanged worried
glances. "Time's up," she whispered. "We've either won or
lost... everything."
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT prev next contents
With A BURST of
magic to smash the binding spells, Tris slammed open the doors to Arontala's
workroom.
"Turn them loose."
Arontala only turned a fraction, as if the
intrusion did not merit his interest. Gabriel slipped into the workroom behind
Tris.
"I've been waiting for you to join
us." Arontala jerked Kiara's head up. "You're just in time. My
offering will be given to the Master for one last meal before his reemergence.
It's over," he said triumphantly. "We've won."
Tris advanced on the mage, his sword held
ready, his eyes only on Arontala. "By the Lady, I won't let you do
this." The orb was between Tris and Arontala, with Kiara to one side and
Vahanian on the other, against the wall. Tris had no clear shot. Anything he
did stood a good chance of hitting the orb or one of his friends, and the
wormroot made him doubt the precision of his aim.
"The Lady has nothing to do with
this," Arontala laughed. "I am the supreme power in Margolan. My will
controls its destiny."
Tris searched with his mage sense. Arontala
was well shielded, and Tris knew his own strength was fading quickly. He
searched for a weapon, anything he could use to turn an advantage, and he felt
a glimmer of power radiating from a wax tablet on Arontala's worktable. The
tablet was on a stand, covered with a glass dome. Carved into its surface were
runes and glyphs traced in fire. Tris stretched out his power and knew the
tablet for what it was— the anchor of Arontala's spell to banish the ghosts of
Shekerishet. Never taking his eyes off Arontala, Tris sent a burst of power
toward the tablet, shattering the glass and igniting the wax. The tablet
exploded into flame.
Arontala cursed and sent a streak of red fire
sizzling in Tris's direction. Tris hurled himself out of the way before the
red fire struck. The temperature in the room suddenly plummeted, cold enough
for him to see his breath. With a gust so powerful that it slammed the window
open, the banished ghosts of Shekerishet streamed home, released from
Arontala's spell. The windows shattered, sending shards of glass flying against
the stone walls. In the fireplace, the flames guttered and danced crazily as
the freezing wind swept through the room.
Angry at their banishment, the
exiled ghosts of Shekerishet streamed back into the room in a torrent, thick
as the spirits in the Ruune Videya forest.
Tris struggled to his feet, trying to hold
onto his control as the spirits swept over him and through him.
A... ron... ta... la! the spirits
howled, knowing the one who banished them from their home. Tris knew that Kiara
and the others could see the spirits; Arontala's face twisted in a hateful
grimace. The ghosts swirled around the red-robed mage in a wild vortex.
Tris seized the chance while Arontala was distracted
and drew on Mageslayer's power. As he had done in the citadel when he fought
Alaine, Tris sought the soul within the dark mage, using all of his power to
capture and extinguish that spark. But where Alaine had been mortal, Arontala's
undead soul had no blue life thread. On the Plains of Spirit, Tris could feel
the dark wizard's soul as he reached for it. But within the undead body,
animated by the Dark Gift, the soul was shielded by powerful magic. He
stretched out, sure that he could grasp the fleeting spark, and felt a wave of
cold raw power throw him back, physically and psychically. Tris slammed against
the wall, his head reeling, his senses screaming from the assault.
Arontala's shielding glowed so brightly that
Tris's eyes hurt to look at the mage. The angry ghosts threw themselves against
Arontala's shields to no avail. Arontala's lips worked, casting a spell that
wrote itself in fiery letters on the rock of the castle wall.
Tris could sense the power of the banishment
spell; he sent his waning power to counter it. As the spirits howled around
them the letters of fire wavered, etching into the ancient stones, burning
without smoke or ash. With a terrible smile, Arontala met Tris's eyes. Tris
knew that Arontala was gauging how much more he could take.
Arontala gestured and the orb flared with a
red light that enveloped Kiara. She arched backward and screamed.
With Arontala's attention focused on the
ghosts and the orb, Vahanian's left hand slipped to the knives on his belt. He
palmed them, and in quick succession sent three daggers flying toward Arontala.
Arontala's attention wavered just for an instant as he struck down the daggers,
buying Tris a slim opening.
Blue fire streaked from Tris's left hand to
intercept the red glow of Arontala's spell. Tris's aim wavered with the
wormroot; instead of striking Arontala, his mage fire struck the growing aura
of the orb. The orb pulsed once, almost too bright to behold. Tris had scarcely
enough time to dive between the orb and Kiara. He flung up his battered
shielding to protect them both as the orb flared like a crimson sun and with a
roar, exploded into a thousand scarlet fragments.
Gabriel shielded Vahanian from the explosion
that seemed to rock the foundation of Shekerishet itself. Tris held on to
Mageslayer, fighting the wormroot in his blood to hold his shielding over
himself and Kiara. The blast took him off his feet, and the psychic recoil
almost blacked him out. Fresh blood started from beneath his cuirass, and
Tris's broken ribs made it difficult for him to breathe as he dragged himself
to his feet. Kiara, suddenly released from Arontala's control, slumped to the
floor.
Tris felt his shields strain dangerously
beneath the waves of power that surged from the shattered orb. Old, raw power
washed over him, tainted by Arontala's blood magic. Tris could feel the press
of spirits rushing toward freedom—Arontala's victims and the Obsidian King
himself—joining the angry palace ghosts that swirled around them.
Arontala cried out. Closer to the orb, he
staggered from the blast. The fire of the explosion drove Arontala backward.
As he redirected his power to contain the spirits of the orb, his shielding
wavered. Tris seized the advantage, striking with Mageslayer.
The blade thrummed with power as it hit
Arontala's shielding. Tris hung on with all his strength, gasping as his broken
ribs protested. Arontala screamed as the blade reached him, blasting his power
against Tris's shields. Tris staggered, his strength fading from the wormroot
and the warm rush of blood that oozed from his side.
Instinctively, Tris brought his full power to
bear on the sword, drawing on the wavering blue life thread within him, holding
on as the pommel of the sword became searingly hot. Suddenly the blade broke
free. Tris poured all of his will and strength and magic into the sword's
downward motion, cleaving Arontala from shoulder to hip through the heart.
An inhuman shriek tore from Arontala's throat. The
mage's body burst into flame. Mageslayer began to melt and Tris dropped the
pommel, his hands burned and red. The fire was gone as quickly as it came,
leaving a cindered corpse and blackened, twisted sword. Bells began to toll the
Hundreds of shadows swirled in a whirlwind
around Arontala's corpse. Spectral visages gathered in the darkness around
Arontala's spirit open-mouthed and angry, their gaping eyes and toothy jaws
eager for vengeance.
This time the Formless One came as a vortex,
a maelstrom that plunged down into infinity beneath Arontala's charred body.
Tris felt the pull of its winds and heard its roar. A gust of power raged from
the heart of the abyss, seizing Arontala's soul in its inexorable grasp and
drawing it into the darkness. The last thing Tris glimpsed was the abyss,
folding in upon itself. Then it snapped shut and disappeared into thin air.
Tris struggled to stay conscious. He dropped
to his knees, his shielding wavering without Mageslayer's power. He saw the
spirits stream from the shattered globe, swirling thickly as heavy fog
descended around him. The spirits washed over him, grateful for release,
brushing against his mind. By Vahanian's gasp, Tris knew that the spirits were
visible beyond his mage sight. Kiara caught her breath sharply as the Orb lost
its hold on her and her own shields snapped into place.
From the still-glowing shards of the Orb came
a spirit of red flame so bright Tris had to shield his eyes and dampen his mage
sight. The Obsidian King rose from the splintered glass. Tris could sense its
triumph in release, its anger at being denied its chosen vehicle, its
desperation to find a host. He knew that the spirit must have a mage's body to
inhabit or die. Tris remembered the vision of the dark sending, of what it
would mean should he be taken. He sent
all his waning
power into his wardings, resolved not to permit that
vision to come to pass.
The Obsidian King's power slammed against
Tris's shielding. It was a bet, Tris knew, as to which of them was the closest
to death. Tris threw all of his power into his shields, resolved to die rather
than be possessed. He drew power from the blue glow of his own life thread,
though it flickered dangerously; he knew that the Obsidian King was weakening
fast. Tris could feel the Obsidian King's panic.
Just when Tris thought that his opponent was
at the breaking point, the Obsidian King streaked toward Kiara. Weakened from
her ordeal within the Orb, Kiara's shields buckled and dissolved. Tris could
hear her soul cry out as the invader forced himself into her mind.
"I... am... back!" a voice rasped
from Kiara's body, a mixture of wonder and hideous satisfaction molding her
features into a visage not quite her own. Four... five... six... The bells
continued their mournful toll, announcing that all had been lost.
Tris staggered as he summoned his power for a
final salvo. The struggle with Arontala had drained him badly. Without
Mageslayer, the wormroot's poison went unabated. In moments his power would be
beyond his control. Blood loss made him lightheaded. He knew that the blue
thread of his own life energy was dimming. He looked at Kiara, her face twisted
by the spirit that possessed her body, her eyes desperate, and he remembered
the torment Alaine and Lemuel endured when their bodies had been seized against
their will. The vision of his own
possible fate foretold
by the dark sending, of a blank-eyed and crippled
shell twisted to the will of the Obsidian King, made up his mind. He knew that
there was only one way to free Kiara.
You must do what I could not, because you
have what I did not.
Bava K'aa's words rang in Tris's mind and he
clove toward Kiara, snatching up her fallen spelled dagger. The spell to
separate a spirit from the body from the hidden journal of the Obsidian King
was clear in his mind. Tris murmured the spell of separation as he hurtled
forward, knowing that he could not—must not—think about what he had to do. Tris
felt Kiara's soul wrench free from her body and he sheltered it within himself,
plaiting her life thread with his own. Weakened as they both were, he could not
sustain them both long. Tris listened, heartsick, to the toll of the bells.
Seven... eight...nine...
"Forgive me," he whispered as he
turned the knife in his hand, and as tears streaked down his face, he sank the
blade deep into Kiara's chest.
Dimly, he heard Vahanian cry out and Gabriel
gasp. Tris threw all of his remaining power into his shields, holding on to the
blade as Kiara's blood soaked his hand and her body sagged against him. It was
her scream that pierced the night, as her body convulsed in his arms. The
spelled blade, wielded by a mage against both a mage's body and a mage's
spirit, struck at the only soul remaining within—the soul of the Obsidian King.
In the Plains of Spirit, Tris heard the death scream of the Obsidian King as
the dagger rent the soul. Tris felt the ancient life force sunder, saw the
dying soul tear free from Kiara's open mouth as her head fell back.
In one last burst of magic, the Obsidian King
enveloped them in flames. Tris flung his shields around himself and Kiara, his
power and life force strained to the breaking point. An acrid stench rose as
the stone floor blackened in a circle around his shields. Gabriel, still
shielding Vahanian, cried out as the flare burned his cloak. Then the remnants
of the Obsidian King's soul dimmed and went dark, destroyed beyond even the
vengeance of the Formless One. Tris sank to his knees, cradling Kiara's body.
Tris sagged forward, too drained to move.
Sure he was dying, Tris heard a voice in his mind, close by, as if someone
leaned down to his ear. I will sustain you, he heard a man's voice say,
and he glimpsed the image of a tall man with golden hair and green eyes like
his own. Tris felt no fear; he was too weakened from the fight to argue. He
gratefully accepted the stream of life energy that made it possible to move
again.
"What have you done?" Vahanian
cried. Tris tore at the throat of Kiara's tunic, desperate to find the vial on
the strap around her neck.
"What his grandmother could not
do," Gabriel said. Tris lifted the vial, his hands slick with Kiara's
blood, and carefully pulled free the stopper.
"Please," he whispered to the fates
as he lifted Kiara with one arm and tilted back her head, carefully forcing
the vial between her lips. "Please."
There was no time for second chances, Tris
knew. No time to find Carina. The attack and Kiara's struggle with the Obsidian
King had drained both of them. Supporting Kiara's life force with his own was
burning his waning energy even faster. Tris could feel that he was pulling
heavily from the strange mage's power. Only a few moments were left for Tris to
return Kiara's soul. Tris knew he could not last much longer. His side was wet
with blood, and he felt a growing coldness that had nothing to do with the
night air.
It wasn't at all like he thought dying would
be. One part of Tris's consciousness watched from afar, growing sleepy as death
drew near, knowing that he had never really expected to survive the confrontation.
There was no fear, no pain; only regret, and even that was dulled by the
knowledge that with Arontala's destruction, Kait's spirit and the other
prisoners were free. I will sustain you, the stranger's voice came
again. Tris felt old, strong power bearing him up.
As the final bell tolled
"That potion... You gambled with Kiara's
life?" Vahanian accused.
"No. With his own," Gabriel said.
"He couldn't have held on to her much longer."
Tris watched, barely daring to breathe, as
Kiara's eyes opened. She raised a hand to touch his face.
Tris could only nod wordlessly, overcome from
the physical strain, the fight, the victory, the loss, and the restoration.
"By the Dark Lady, look!" Vahanian
gasped, pointing behind Tris.
The doors to the throne room burst open. Two
dozen armed men in the livery of the House of Margolan streamed into the room,
their weapons drawn.
Tris staggered to his feet, placing himself
between the soldiers and Kiara. Not like this, Tris thought. Dear
Lady, not so close just to fail. Against the wall, Vahanian reached for his
crossbow with his left hand. Tris saw that Gabriel was ready to strike,
although the odds were against him.
The victorious shout of the soldiers'
commander jerked Tris's head up as the captain came running toward him.
"By the Lady, you've done it!" a
familiar voice cried. The soldier lifted his helm and Tris saw Soterius,
beaming in triumph. He thought that Soterius would clap him in a hearty embrace,
but instead, the soldier stopped a pace in front of him and went down on one
knee.
"Honor your king," Soterius called
out to his men. One by one, they also dropped to their knees in fealty.
"Hail King Martris of Margolan."
Tris looked out over the group with a mixture
of awe and astonishment. His head still reeled from the battle. The reality of
Soterius's proclamation, after months of struggle, hit him like a dousing of
cold water. Arontala lay dead at his feet. The crown of Margolan was his. Outside
the palace walls, he could hear the cries of the mob. He knew that he should
feel more, that he should feel something, but the battle coldness still
gripped him. He could feel neither relief nor triumph. Now, more urgent concerns
took his attention. Tris knew how dim the glow of his own lifethread had
become. He drew more heavily on the strange mage's power, struggling to remain
on his feet.
"Rise," Tris said, his throat
tight. He reached out his hand to Kiara, who inclined her head, too unsteady
yet even to kneel. Gabriel made a low bow.
"Don't mind me," Vahanian quipped
from against the wall. "But I don't kneel well on a broken leg."
Soterius rose. At his gesture, two soldiers ran to improvise a stretcher for
the wounded fighter. Vahanian protested, and then resigned himself with a
sigh.
Tris leaned heavily on Soterius as the
soldier guided him to the windows. He flung them open, stepping with Tris onto
the balcony, and the crowd cheered below them.
"Hail, King Martris! Long live King
Martris!" the crowd cheered from the bailey. Tris lingered for a moment,
long enough for the crowd to see him and for him to acknowledge their cheers.
Then he turned, stepping back into the room and out of sight of the crowd. He
felt the last of his strength falter and the stranger's power slipped out of
reach as the floor rushed to meet him and everything around him turned to
black.
Gabriel caught
Tris before he hit the floor.
"The king is down!" Soterius cried
out, rushing to Tris's side. Tris was pale, his eyes were shut, and his
breathing was shallow. The hair on one side of his head was matted with blood
from a gash that swelled on his temple, and the contrast made Tris seem even
paler.
"Stay with us," Soterius urged,
shaking him gently. "Tris, stay with us!" There was no response.
Soterius looked up at Gabriel.
"Find Carina," Soterius told the vayasb
moru. "She's in the courtyard, with Carroway. Get her up here as fast
as you can."
Gabriel nodded, looking at Tris with a sober
expression that only fed Soterius's panic. Then the vayasb moru stepped
to the balcony, and disappeared. When Gabriel returned in a few moments, he
had Carina with him. The healer looked slightly shaken as she stepped off the
balcony, away from Gabriel. She glanced around the room, confused over who
needed her most. Kiara's clothes were covered with blood, but she waved Carina
away. Vahanian, his leg at an unnatural angle and his sword arm badly broken,
shook his head. Then Carina spotted Tris. With a gasp, she ran to kneel beside
him.
Soterius stripped off Tris's tunic, revealing
the knife gash on Tris's upper arm and the seeping burn where the poker had
struck. But when he lifted away Tris's cuirass, Soterius caught his breath.
Beneath the bloodied shirt was a deep side wound.
"Sweet Mother and Childe," Carina
said to Soterius. "What happened?"
"Tris put up one hell of a fight with
Arontala and the Obsidian King," Vahanian supplied. He turned to the
soldier who was trying to move his stretcher. "I'm not going anywhere—not
until Tris is patched up." Kiara likewise refused their assistance, moving
behind Carina where she could see. She put a hand over her mouth to stifle her
cry.
"The energy from the blast when the orb
exploded—and the battle—would have been a significant drain," Gabriel
observed. Soterius realized that the back of Gabriel's coat was burned and
tattered. Gabriel's skin, which had been blackened in places and covered with
cuts and gashes when Soterius first entered, was healing before their eyes. As
the skin healed, it pushed out the bits of broken glass from the orb. They fell
to the floor with a crunch at the vayash moru's feet.
"Speaking of that—thank you,"
Vahanian interjected. "I don't heal nearly as quickly as you do; I'd be a
very dead pincushion by now if you hadn't put yourself between me and that
bloody ball!" Gabriel inclined his head in acknowledgement, and returned
his attention to Tris.
Carina looked at Soterius. "I'm going to
need to draw from someone. We don't have time to wait for
Carroway."
Soterius met her gaze. "Use me. Take
whatever you need—my life if you must—only tell me what you require."
"Do you trust me?" Carina asked.
"Completely."
"Then
open your mind to me, and I'll have what I need."
Soterius closed his eyes and laid his hand on
Carina's shoulder. She connected with him and he swayed, then regained his
balance. Carina frowned and moved her hands over the knife wound in Tris's
side. "Dear Goddess," she murmured. "He's lost so much
blood."
Carina slipped into a healing trance, drawing
on the energy Soterius lent her. The side wound had pierced no vital organs,
but the blood loss was substantial. Wormroot made the healing more difficult.
Worse was the drain Carina could sense in Tris's life force, from the injuries,
the poison, and the strong magic he had worked despite the wormroot. She could
feel his life thread flickering. Tris's skin was gray, and his breathing
shallow. A rapid, irregular pulse sounded in Carina's mind and she threw her
energy into the healing. Tissue knit and sinews repaired under her touch, but
replenishing blood would take time. Carina knew she was racing death.
There was something else, there in the
darkness of the healing trance. Another presence, old and strong and essential,
a Summoner who was not Tris. The image of a man with golden blond hair and
green eyes like Tris's own came to her mind: older, saddened, with a haunted
look in his eyes. His power was helping to sustain Tris's life. Carina was sure
of it, just as she was certain that Tris was very close to death.
"Don't let go," she whispered,
unsure whether she was talking to Tris or to the stranger. "Just don't let
go."
Tris saw himself on the Plains
of Spirit but the spirit realm felt different, more solid. Tris looked
backward, toward his own body. As if from a far distance, Tris heard the cries
of the soldiers. Tris saw Soterius, panic-stricken, grasping his unresponsive
body by the shoulders, shaking him and calling to him. He wanted to respond,
but the power to do so failed him. I'm dying, Tris thought. Or
perhaps, I'm already dead. He felt the palace ghosts, newly freed from
their exile, swirling past him and through him, bearing him up with their
power, rallying around him.
Do you want to live? The question
came in the stranger's voice, and Tris saw the man again, walking toward him.
His green eyes bored into Tris's soul. Tris met those eyes, and knew.
Lemuel, Tris said, and
the tall man bowed. So grandmother was right—the Obsidian King did
possess you, but he didn't destroy your soul.
Tris could see the weight of that horror in
the man's eyes, and Lemuel nodded. I foolishly thought I could control power
that I should never have sought. The price I paid was possession, and the
torment of seeing my own body used for the working of one abomination after
another.
Tris found the courage to ask the question
that lay between them. How is it that your eyes are so like my own?
I can answer that. Another spirit
joined them, and Tris knew his grandmother's presence. He was surprised to see
her, not as the old woman he had always known, but much younger, still in her
second decade, determination and character in her features.
Bava K'aa's spirit stood beside Lemuel on the
Plains of Spirit, and Tris could sense the bond between the two. In the last
days of the Great War, I was captured by the Obsidian King. 'The armies of
three kingdoms and the Sisterhood laid siege to his castle. The Obsidian King
wanted to knoiv hoiv to make the elixir that would extend his life. He wanted
to be immortal.
Why didn't he become vayash moru?
Tris asked.
Because vayash moru are
beholden to their makers for many lifetimes, until the fledgling gains the
strength to survive the destruction of its maker. The Obsidian King didn't want
to answer to anyone— not even to the Lady Herself.
During my imprisonment, the Obsidian King did
everything he could to force the secret from me. He thought that if he broke my
spirit, and my body, that I would tell him. And he used every weakness that he
could exploit. Including rape.
Can you even imagine what it was like, Lemuel said,
his expression pained, to have your body used, against your will, to inflict
pain on the woman you love? I had no choice but to witness everything, knowing
that it was my body used as his instrument. It made the act that much worse
because of it.
I believe the Obsidian King also hoped to
break Lemuel, and destroy him, if from grief alone, Bava K'aa said
gravely. Yet all the while, even during the worst, I knew that it was not
Lemuel.
Lord Grayson rescued me—we three
had been friends all our lives. I knew that Grayson loved me and stepped aside
for Lemuel. But he would not let me die. When
Now do you understand? I couldn't free
Lemuel's soul, but I couldn't destroy him, knowing how greatly he had suffered.
Bava K'aa met Tris's eyes. I knew that
magic often skipped a generation. When Serae showed no power, I knew you would
be my mage heir—you, whose blood descended from the two strongest
Summoners of their age.
You haven't answered my question, said Lemuel. Do
you want to live?
In the distance, on the Plains of Spirit,
Tris could already hear the soulsong of the Lady, the sweetest thing he had
ever heard, pulling him toward his rest. Here in the realm of the dead the pain
of his wounds was gone, and he knew the freedom of pure spirit. Below, as if in
a distant dream, he saw Carina rush toward his body, felt her power stretch
out, struggling to heal him. Holding his spirit to his body was a thin blue
thread, sustained not by his own life force, but by Lemuel.
Do you wish to live?
Tris looked to his grandmother, and
reluctantly toward the song of the Lady, then back to Lemuel. Yes, Tris
replied. I want to live.
Lemuel nodded, and raised a hand in farewell.
Then this is my gift to you, Lemuel said. I will sustain you, until
the healer's work is through.
Tris felt himself return to his body, and
darkness.
"How is he?" It was Soterius's voice Tris heard, though he
lacked the energy to open his eyes. Every muscle ached. His head throbbed as if
it might explode. His side, where Jared stabbed him, felt like it had been
filled with hot coals. Lemuel's presence was gone.
"He's resting," Tris heard Carina
answer, the strain of the healing evident in her voice. "Alyzza helped me
make two more healings. I don't know how long it will be until he comes around.
We
almost lost him, Ban. I thought we had—and
then, I can't explain it. It was like the time Tris helped me hang onto
Jonmarc, when he almost died in the slaver's camp. There was something—someone—
there with us, holding on to Tris while I healed."
Tris wanted to reply, wanted to open his eyes, but
his strength was gone. He surrendered to the blackness that engulfed him in
its nurturing folds, content to be alive.
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE prev next contents
IT took
Two days and several more healings for Tris to awaken. He found himself
stretched out on a bed, Carina asleep in a chair beside him.
"Welcome back," Gabriel said,
moving from the shadows near the wall. "We weren't sure you'd be joining
us."
Tris managed a weak smile. Carina awoke and
moved to bring him water. "I wasn't too sure myself," he managed.
"Thank you."
Carina shook her head. "Someday, you'll
have to explain what happened," she said, taking his hand. "But right
now, I'm glad to have you back."
"Kiara—and Jonmarc?" Tris asked,
closing his eyes.
Gabriel chuckled. "Neither one would let
anyone touch them until they knew whether you would live. Ban's battle healers
took care of them. Kiara is exhausted, but unhurt. Jonmarc is going to take a
little longer—I fear you'll have a house guest for the rest of the summer. It
will be a while before he can think of using a sword, longer until he can
ride."
Tris smiled. "Tell him he can stay as
long as he wants."
"Soterius and Mikhail are out rounding
up Jared's troops and freeing the prisoners in the dungeons. They've had the
help of the palace ghosts. Seems that when your power was out of control, you
managed to summon every spirit within a league of the palace—not few of whom
were Jared's victims. Between the victim's relatives and the angry ghosts,
Jared's soldiers are turning up dead faster than Soterius can hunt them
down." Tris looked at Gabriel. "Will the truce hold?"
"Between my people and yours?" Gabriel asked. "It should.
Nothing will be won by breaking the peace, now that those who hunted us have
been punished."
Carina cleared her throat. "There's
someone waiting to see you." She stepped aside, revealing Kiara in the
doorway.
Gabriel made a courteous bow. "Until
later," he said, addressing both Tris and Kiara. Gabriel and Carina left
the room.
Kiara took a step toward where Tris lay.
"Good to see you awake," she said, with a tired smile. Tris held out
his hand to her, and she moved closer to sit on the edge of his bed. "You
gave us a real scare. Carina and I took shifts. We didn't want to leave you
alone."
Although his memory of the battle was blurred
by the wormroot, the image of destroying the Obsidian King in Kiara's body was
searingly clear.
Tris wondered whether the battle had changed things
between them.
"I was afraid you might not forgive me,
for what happened," Tris said quietly.
The pain of those memories flickered in
Kiara's eyes. "When the Obsidian King pushed his way through my shielding,
I wanted to die. I was afraid that you wouldn't—wouldn't be able to stop him,
or wouldn't free me. I didn't want to exist like that." She paused.
"Thank you."
Tris thought of Lemuel, and of his
grandmother's story. "I knew I was dying," Tris said. "If the
separation spell and the elixir didn't work, I knew we would be together in
the arms of the Lady. But I couldn't let the Obsidian King take you."
Kiara blinked back tears. "I'm just so
glad to see you—we were afraid we'd lost you. You took an awful chance."
"Lemuel saved me," Tris murmured,
closing his eyes. "Grandmother was right."
Kiara brushed the hair back from his face and
leaned down to kiss him. "Hush now. You can tell me all about it later.
But Carina will chase me out of here with a broom if she needs to heal you
again because of me."
Tris opened his eyes and met her gaze.
"Don't go far—promise?"
"Promise." She kissed his hand and
released it. "Now get some rest. As soon as you can walk, Ban and Mikhail
want to get you crowned and make everything official."
Tris watched her leave the room. He shut his
eyes and sank back against the pillow, grateful and amazed to be alive.
Everything was going to change; all the duties of kingship that he'd never
coveted would be his. His wedding would be a bright spot on a very dark
horizon. While Carroway and others could see to some of the essentials, like
restaffing the palace, there were many things that Tris knew only he could do
as King and Summoner. Trials and tribunals to preside over, as the generals and
lords loyal to Jared were captured and brought for sentencing. Working with
Soterius to rebuild an army and bring order and safety to the land. Mediating
for the scirranish, who would require his help to make peace with the
ghosts of their murdered loved ones.
Tris could feel the energy of angry spirits
bound by the pain they suffered at the hands of Jared and Arontala. He doubted
Shekerishet would be livable until he exorcised those troubled souls. He would
need to appoint an exchequer to find out how badly Jared had looted the
treasury. Equally important, he would need to stave off riots and unrest as
winter came; ruined fields meant hungry people. Now comes the hard part, he
thought. Cleaning up the mess that Jared made.
Two days
later, over Carina's protests, Tris insisted on getting up. When he
managed to make it through a hot bath and a shave without collapsing, the
healer gave up her arguments. A fresh outfit replaced his blood-soaked
clothing, which Carina sent to be burned.
Kiara was waiting for him in the parlor
outside his rooms.
"Keeping a vigil?" he asked as she
started. Kiara rose to greet him, then remembered herself and dropped to a
curtsey.
Tris took her hand with a pained expression.
"Please no," he said as he raised her to stand. "Not between us,
Kiara. I don't want your fealty. I want your love."
"Always," she said, reaching out to
touch his cheek. He pulled her close to him and kissed her. She rested her head
against his shoulder.
"Now that you're up," Kiara said,
"Ban will want to get you crowned until there can be a real coronation.
Technically, you haven't taken the throne."
"There's something I need to do
first," Tris said. "Something I have to settle. Will you come with
me?"
Kiara smiled. "Anywhere," she
murmured. "To the gates of the Lady herself."
Tris made his way to the family's chambers in
the palace and opened the door to Kait's room. The sky beyond the window was
beginning to lighten, softening the shadows of his torch, only bright enough
to cast a dim light over the room. Tris placed the torch in a wall sconce and
walked into the silent room.
He closed his eyes against the tears, held
back these many months. He found that he could finally weep for Kait and Serae,
the first of the innocents who had blocked Jared's path to power. Bricen was a
man of war, accepting the dangers of the throne. But Tris's mother and Kait
were inconvenient pawns in Jared's desperate bid. It was for them that Tris had
returned, far more than the abstract need for justice in Margolan. In the
half-light of the early-morning he let his grief find voice, allowing the loss
and pain
to wash over
him and through
him, permitting the tears to come until his throat was raw and he could
weep no more.
Now, Tris thought, perhaps he could do his
mother and Kait one final service.
"I've come for you," he said to the
empty air. "I've come to set you free." Tris closed his eyes,
stretching out along the spectral plains where the restless spirits walked. He
felt the touch of a familiar soul, and then another. He opened his eyes to find
Serae and Kait standing in front of him. Weakened as they had become within the
orb, they had not been destroyed. Tris tried to retain the presence of mind to
work the magic he must do. He used his power to make the ghosts visible to
Kiara.
"You've won!" Kait said, beaming with
pride. "I knew you could. Look at you, king now and a mage!"
Tris had to swallow again before he found his
voice. "You know I wish it had never been necessary. I miss you
terribly."
"The Lady chooses our paths,"
Serae's spirit said, her voice as calm in death as it had been in life.
"You serve her well."
"I can let you rest," Tris said
brokenly. "If you wish." His own heartfelt desire to keep them close
to him went unspoken; it was an imposition he dared not make. "But there's
someone I want you to meet. This is Kiara of Isencroft, daughter of King
Donelan. My betrothed."
Kait grinned and clapped. Serae extended her
hands in welcome to Kiara, stepping forward to give a ghostly kiss on each
cheek. Serae reached out and laid her hand on Tris's arm.
"With the crown and a bride, you have
all that you require to rule Margolan, my son. You don't require my blessing,
but I'll give it to you anyway." The ghost smiled at both Tris and Kiara.
Kait threw her arms around Tris. Insubstantial though she was Tris welcomed the
contact, glad for the chance to sense his sister's spirit at peace.
"When you were born," Serae said,
"Mother told me that it would be you who would wear the crown. I never
told anyone, not even your father. I never wanted that burden for you. But she
was right. You're her heir as much as Bricen's and my own. You've done
well."
Tris sensed the presence of two more spirits,
revenants strong enough to make their appearance plain to Kiara. Bava K'aa and
Lemuel stood beside Serae, and Bava K'aa embraced her daughter. Serae looked
from her mother to Lemuel.
"I heard what you told Tris about the
Obsidian King," Serae said. "And while I loved Grayson dearly as my
father, I can sense in my spirit that what you said is true."
Bava K'aa nodded. Her eyes held the memory of
remembered pain. "I'm sorry for the deception, my dear. It was necessary
to save your life—and perhaps mine, as well. And to spare Grayson from
humiliation that he did not deserve. Now all is known."
"Will you also go to the Lady?"
Tris asked his grandmother and Lemuel.
Bava K'aa nodded once more. "I chose to stay
on after my death to protect you, and in the hopes that one day I might be able
to free Lemuel. You no longer need my protection, and Lemuel is
free.
We're ready to go to our rest. We would be
honored if you would make the passing over."
Tris looked down, unable to speak. He willed
himself to raise his head and meet his mother's eyes. "Then let's
begin," he said in a voice like gravel, squaring his shoulders. He closed
his eyes once more, stretching out along the currents of magic, feeling the
power rise to his command. He felt the shift in his soul that signaled his
presence in the spirit world as well as the world of light. For a few precious
moments he gathered his family around him, warm and real to the touch. Then he
spoke the words of power that freed them, sending their spirits to rest with
the Lady.
"Never doubt that you are the Chosen of
the Lady," his mother's voice sounded from afar. "She does not choose
her champions in vain."
"Goodbye," Tris whispered. When he
opened his eyes again, they were gone. He bowed his head, and Kiara wrapped her
arms around him. She waited as he swallowed back the last of the tears. Then
she took his hand, and they stepped into the corridor together.
Carroway was waiting patiently for them,
leaning against the wall with his arms crossed, grinning widely.
"You don't waste time," the bard
jibed good-naturedly. "A throne and a queen. Now if you'll just
appoint me Master Minstrel..."
Tris slipped his arm around Kiara's waist,
wincing as his newly healed ribs protested. "Be careful what you wish
for," Tris teased. "You're already in charge of planning both a
coronation and a wedding."
Carroway grinned wider. "Suits me fine.
I'll help the steward plan the food, and I'll arrange the best entertainment
and decorations in the Winter Kingdoms. That's how reputations are made, after
all," he said with an exaggerated courtly bow.
"Let's wait until tomorrow to start
planning the menu, if it's all the same to you," Tris asked tiredly.
"It's been tomorrow for a while
now," Carroway replied. "Carina is with Jonmarc. He won't be going
anywhere for a long time. I promised to send orders to the kitchen—if the
servants ever return— to have their meals sent up to Jonmarc's room."
Carroway grinned conspiratorially. "Maybe there'll be a double wedding,
before all is said and done. Ban left orders that you're not to be disturbed
until noon, but a line of petitioners is already forming and one or two of your
father's old retainers have come out of hiding.
"That makes it possible, and probably
wise, to convey the crown later this morning." Carroway held up a hand to
forestall any protest. "Mikhail pointed out that kingdoms can be lost on
technicalities. You've won the crown, but you haven't actually been
proclaimed king. He tells me there is protocol for a field coronation—King
Hotten was crowned that way, so there is precedent—and we can worry about all
the pomp and circumstance later."
Carroway shook his head. "We've got a mess to
clean up just restaffing the castle," he went on. "And we have to
convince the servants that the vayash moru will keep the truce, or they
won't step foot back in the kitchen. We'll be eating cheese and salt beef for
the rest of our lives."
"I don't know," Tris teased,
"all that time on the road kind of gave me a taste for salt beef."
"Trail rations never hurt anyone,"
Kiara joined in. "Builds character."
Carroway rolled his eyes. "I've had my
character built enough for ten lifetimes. Now I just want one of those
comfortable court positions where I can write songs immortalizing the king and
his lady and become one of the most honored bards of the kingdoms."
"Let me know if you don't have enough
material for good stories," Tris said. "I can send you back out for a
while with Ban. Or maybe Gabriel would take you in."
Carroway gave him a sidelong glance. "No
thanks. I think I've got enough to work on."
Kiara laughed. "You two have got
business to take care of. I'll go see how Carina and Jonmarc are doing. Don't
worry—I'll be with you shortly."
Tris kissed her and let her go, watching as
she headed down the corridor.
Carroway looked at Tris, dressed in a
borrowed tunic and trews, and shook his head. "I can see that the first
order of business is to get you outfitted like a king and not like a tent
rigger. Come with me, and let's see what we can find."
CHAPTER FORTY prev next contents
SIX weeks
later, the palace courtyards were again filled with cheering crowds for
the formal coronation of the new king of Margolan.
"Carroway really outdid himself."
Kiara sat with Tris in the banquet hall after the coronation ceremony.
"Remind me never to make him a dare
again," Tris replied. True to his word, Carroway had engineered a fete of
grand proportions on short notice, with musicians, entertainers, bonfires, and
jousts. Tris protested, to no avail, that far too much had been made of the
event.
"Staden's enjoying himself," Kiara
added. She glanced toward where the Principality king sat, regaling the others
at their table with hunting stories. Berry sat next to him, resplendent in a
gown of emerald brocade, looking bored. Royster, still unready to return to his
self-imposed exile at the Library, was exuberantly keeping the noble ladies on
the terrace entertained with his stories.
"He's certainly entitled to it,"
Tris replied. In addition to the reward treasure they had left behind in
Principality and Vahaman's gold, Staden and Berry presented Tris with a
generous coronation gift of precious gems.
"Harrtuck looks no worse for the
wear." The burly soldier came into view, milling among guests and
guardsmen who greeted him with cheers and back slapping.
"I almost think he enjoyed himself out
with the mercs," Tris said. "He's certainly enjoyed telling stories
about the adventure."
Harrtuck had returned a few days before the
festivities began, riding from the Principality border after dismissing the
mercenary troops. The nights before the coronation had been filled with an
exchange of stories. The friends had sat up late, trading news of the last days
of the campaign over brandy and the cellar's best dried fruits.
"Now there's an odd couple." Kiara
looked across the room to where Sakwi and Alyzza bent together in conversation.
Sakwi had been successful in his journey to Eastmark to hold back the Nargi
troops. This was the first time since his return that Tris had seen the pair
without Royster, with whom the two mages eagerly exchanged lore.
"I imagine Royster will have two more
visitors, assuming Alyzza and Sakwi don't move in with him altogether,"
Tris chuckled.
Jolie and Astir moved comfortably among the
guests. If any of the nobles thought amiss of Jolie's presence, they said
nothing. Jolie brought gifts for
the occasion, with bolts of fine Mussa silk
and casks of aged Cartelesian brandy, whose origin Tris decided not to consider
too carefully. Maynard Linton joined them; it was clear that Jolie and Linton
were long-time trading partners.
For Kiara, Jolie brought bolts of creamy
Noorish satins and silks. She gave them to Kiara with an aside that brought a
crimson blush to the princess's cheeks. Along the back wall, the innkeeper Lars
and his wife Tabethe were dressed in fine clothes. They looked dazed, as if
they could not believe themselves guests at the king's coronation. Tris had no
doubt that once the designation of "king's favored inn" was widely
known, Lars would never again lack customers.
"Damn fine feast, Tris," King
Harrol boomed, clapping Tris on the shoulder. "Your father would have been
proud." Harrol, Bricen's brother-in-law, was more than pleased to preside
over the coronation and present Tris with the crown, bringing with him welcome
news that the magicked beasts on Dhasson's borders were destroyed.
"Blame Carroway," Tris grinned.
"He's out to build a legend."
Harrol laughed heartily. "He doesn't
need to. He can tell your stories until his dying day and never lack for an
audience." He looked down at Kiara. "Remind me to tell you some
stories of my own, about Tris's fostering, sometime when there's a flask of
brandy on the table," he said with a broad wink to Tris.
Kiara gave a wicked grin. "That sounds
tempting." If Tris intended to make a rejoinder, it was cut off as the musicians
struck up a lively tune. Harrol moved away with a wave, seeking out one of the
noble ladies to dance with him as the celebrants crowded the dance floor.
"I haven't seen Carina in a while,"
Tris said, watching the festivities.
"She's probably out walking with
"How's Jonmarc putting up with the
competition?" Tris chuckled.
"Reasonably well. He hasn't squabbled
with Carina in a day or two, so it must be true love. Honestly, those two
deserve each other!"
Even the palace ghosts, now returned from
their long banishment, were determined to make the coronation memorable. They
appeared freely to the guests, and Tris could sense their whole-hearted
approval and blessing.
Tris watched the entertainment restlessly. A
nearly endless line of well-wishers and boon-seekers formed to greet him and
offer their fealty, renewing pledges made to his father and grandfather. But in
the tower on the far side of the palace were
the nobles who had freely assisted Jared, along with dozens of soldiers loyal
to Jared who had been imprisoned for their crimes. Their trials and, most
likely executions, loomed ahead, an unpleasant part of assuming the kingship.
Kiara squeezed his hand. "Don't borrow
trouble."
"Sorry," Tris said with a smile.
"An old habit."
"I have to admit, you know how to throw
a party." Vahanian joined them, making a perfunctory bow. Even with his
leg in a splint, Vahanian managed to stride across the room as if he owned it.
A sling of black silk held his still-healing sword arm, but the splint on his
leg was more difficult to hide. Vahanian was dressed in black with a dark
burgundy long coat, his swordbelt notably visible. Tris gladly granted him
permission to wear his sword in the presence of the king, though until
Vahanian's arm healed the gesture was largely symbolic.
"You're going to miss us," Tris
said, grinning. "Although you might have your hands full with Dark
Haven."
Vahanian grinned. "Carina and Gabriel
and I've been making plans; I've had nothing to do but play tarle and wait for
my bones to heal for the last six weeks. Gabriel made drawings of the manor
house, and we've put a plan together to make it habitable again. We think we
can get the lands profitable in a season or two. Once the party is over,
Gabriel is going back to get things started between now and the royal wedding.
As soon as I can ride, I'll go up and see how I can help." He paused. "I've
asked Carina to winter at Dark Haven. She's said yes—if Donelan can spare
her." Kiara grinned. "I can arrange that." Vahanian smiled.
"Who knows? I might even be able to convince all of you to visit."
Carina and
Carina, beautiful in a dark red gown that
matched Vahanian's long coat, merely laughed and patted his good arm. "I
wouldn't know what to do with my time if you quit making a target of yourself.
You're my star patient."
Vahanian turned to her with a wicked smile.
"I might be able to suggest some other pastimes," he said and she
reddened.
"I'll have to bring my chaperone."
Carina looked to
"Thinking about being on the receiving
end of the Goddess's attention doesn't make me sleep well at night, to tell you
the truth," Vahanian replied.
"They say the Lord of Dark Haven is favored
by the Dark Lady," Carina said mischievously. "Gabriel told me
so."
"The last time I felt favored, I almost
died," Vahanian said, remembering the illusion in the Nargi camp.
"There's something to be said for anonymity."
Carina barely hid a snicker. "Then by
all means, go on believing you're anonymous. It's just your phenomenal luck at
work."
Tris chuckled at the banter. He looked back
to the acrobats who tumbled and whirled in the great hall. "Look
there," Kiara said, nodding toward the crowd. Gabriel and Riqua stood
together against the back wall, resplendent in fine silks and brocades,
unremarkable among the guests except for a pallor that was nearly hidden by the
candlelight. All of the Blood Council was in attendance except for Uri. While
both Tris and Vahanian shared a sense of foreboding about Uri's absence, both
refused to worry about it on this day of celebration.
"You add new meaning to the part of the
litany about being 'king of the realm, master of the living and the
dead,'" Kiara said dryly. "Until now, I always thought that was just
a nice overstatement."
Tris grimaced. "I'm still getting used
to that part," he admitted. "And the palace ghosts have brought their
own list of grievances to be redressed. I have a feeling that once I get down
to the work part of being king, I may never get a moment's rest."
Kiara gave him a mischievous grin. "Let
me take care of that," she said, placing her hand over his.
Just then the doors to the greatroom opened,
and a hush fell over the celebration. A single robed figure stood in the
doorway. Dressed in the plain-spun brown robes of the Sisterhood, the figure
made its way through the crowd that wordlessly parted to make a pathway to the
dais. Tris rose to his feet. The woman's cowl fell back, revealing Sister
Taru's face.
"The Sisterhood, too, has a gift for the
new king," Taru announced. She reached beneath her cloak and withdrew a
gleaming sword. Its grip was beautifully worked, its steel etched with runes
that seemed to burn in the torchlight. From the way it laid across her open
hands Tris knew it was perfectly balanced, the weapon of a master blade maker.
Tris made his way down to stand before the
sorceress. "Welcome, esteemed Sister," he said respectfully.
"We're honored at your presence."
"You are the grandson of Bava
K'aa," Taru said, offering him the sword that lay across her outstretched
hands. "Heir of blood and heir of power. Take her sword to replace
Mageslayer. It will serve you well." And in a voice that only Tris could
hear, Taru said, "You may find it harbors a vestige of her power, as well
as her memory."
Tris accepted the sword, taking it carefully
on his open palms. With his touch, the runes along its blade burst into flame
that neither burned nor smoked. The audience gasped. When Tris looked again to
thank Taru, she had disappeared.
"That certainly took care of any doubts
your guests might have had about you being a real spook," Vahanian
observed dryly.
Tris sheathed the sword carefully, and the
runes faded to indistinct tracings. "I'm going to have to ask Royster
about that inscription." The musicians struck up their tunes again and the
guests resumed their conversation.
Tris looked out over the ballroom; he let his
mind wander with the music. It was more than he had hoped just to be alive.
Everything around him was starting to change. Shekerishet—and Margolan—would
never be as it had been under Bricen. That truth was sad but undeniable. In
time, Tris hoped that Jared's legacy would fade, and that Margolan's wounds
could be healed without added bloodshed. It would take a strong king to do
that. Tris fervently hoped that he was up to the challenge.
He smiled, looking at his friends amid the
mix of coronation guests. Carroway, thoroughly at home in charge of the
festivities, was fully enjolying the role of Master Bard. Soterius, now
Margolan's youngest general, had earned such deep loyalty from the rebel army
that he would be playing an essential part in rebuilding the kingdom's
defenses. Vahanian and Carina were headed together to Dark Haven, with its
promise and danger. Harrtuck, Royster and
As the music swelled, Tris's attention
returned to Kiara. In just a few months, many of these same guests would return
to Shekerishet for their wedding. The thought was exhilarating and unsettling
all at the same time. Kiara looked at him quizzically, but before she could
speak Carroway slipped up behind them.
"Quit upstaging me with that
sword," Carroway hissed, chasing down an errant cupbearer. "Good
entertainers are hard to get."
"So are good dancing partners,"
Kiara said. She made a little bow, and reached out to take Tris's arm.
"Shall we, Your Majesty?"
"At your service, milady," Tris
replied with an answering bow. "Now and forever."
ABOUT THE AUTHOR prev next contents
Gail Z. Martin discovered her passion for
science fiction, fantasy and ghost stories in
elementary school. The first story she
wrote—at age five—was about a vampire.
Her favorite TV show as a preschooler was
Dark Shadows. At age
fourteen, she decided
to become a writer. She enjoys attending
science fiction/fantasy conventions,
Renaissance fairs and living history sites.
She is married and has three children, a
Himalayan cat and a golden retriever.
You can visit Gail at: www.myspace.com/chronicleofthenecromancer
www.chroniclesofthenecromancer.com
Read her blog: blog.myspace.com/chronicleofthenecromancer
Alaine
Sister Landis's assistant.
ALLE
A spy and member of the Margolan resistance.
Alyzza
A half-mad mage who traveled with Linton's
caravan as a hedge witch and helped Tris with his first efforts to learn
control of his magic.
Astasia
One of the vayash moru nobles on the
Blood Council.
Ban Soterius
Captain of King Bricen's guard on the night
of the coup and a close friend of Tris Drayke.
Bava K'aa
Mother of Queen Serae, grandmother to Tris
and his sister Kait. A powerful Summoner, Bava K'aa fought the Obsidian King
during the Mage Wars and was responsible for binding his spirit in the orb
Soulcatcher. Until her death, Bava K'aa led the Sisterhood, an elite group of
mages.
Daughter of King Staden of Principality, she
first meets Tris as a captive of slavers, where she hid her identity to lessen
her risk.
Bricen of
Margolan
King of Margolan, father to both Martris
(Tris) Drayke and his half-brother, Jared. Killed by Jared and Foor Arontala on
the night of the Feast of the Departed (Haunts) along with Queen Serae and
their daughter, Kait.
Carina Jesthrata
Healer to King Donelan of Isencroft, distant
cousin to Kiara Sharsequin and sister to the fighter
Carroway
A gifted bard in the court of King Bricen and
a close friend of Tris Drayke.
CURANE
A Margolan noble who is among Jared's most
loyal supporters.
Darrath
A senior general in the Principality army. He
is an expert tactician, provided by Staden to help Tris plan his strike against
Jared.
The Sister in charge of the citadel in
Fallon
A member of the Sisterhood who oversees a
citadel in northern Margolan.
Foor Arontala
A Fire Clan mage and one of the undead vayash
moru, Foor Arontala is mage-advisor to Jared of Margolan, Arontala seeks to
reawaken the spirit of the Obsidian King from its prison in the orb Soulcatcher
and permit the spirit to possess him, incarnating the greatest dark Summoner
the Winter Kingdoms has known.
Gabriel
A vayash moru lord who travels with
Tris and his friends as their friend and protector. One of the Blood Council.
Hant
King Staden's spymaster.
Jared Drayke
Son of King Bricen of Margolan and
half-brother to Tris Drayke. As the eldest son, no one questioned Jared's
position as heir to the throne. With the help of his dark mage, Foor Arontala,
Jared murdered his father and all of the royal family except for Tris. He seeks
to destroy Tris and solidify his hold on Margolan.
JONMARC VaHANIAN
A gifted fighter with a checkered past,
Vahanian has twice before been brought to grief by Arontala. Harrtuck gets Tris
to hire Vahanian as a guide to take the group safely through the northern
mountains.
KIARA SHARSEQUIN
Daughter of King Donelan of Isencroft and the
late Queen Viata, Kiara is sent by the Oracle of the goddess on a coming of
age Journey that takes her into dangerous territory across Margolan. Bound by
an old pact, Kiara is desperate to avoid an arranged marriage to Jared of
Margolan, to whom she was betrothed at birth.
Landis
One of the senior Sisters at the citadel in
Lemuel
A great Summoner and the lover of Bava K'aa.
Lemuel was possessed by the spirit of the Obsidian King. Bava K'aa bound the
Obsidian King's spirit in the orb Soulcatcher rather than destroy him because
she hoped that Lemuel still existed within
the Obsidian King's power and could someday
be freed.
Macaria, HalIk
and Paiva
Three bards from the Margolan court who are
close friends of Carroway.
Martris
Drayke
Known as Tris to his friends, Prince Drayke
is the
only survivor of the coup against his father,
King Bricen of Margolan, except for Jared the Usurper. Grandson of famed
sorceress Bava K'aa, Tris learns that he has inherited his grandmother's
powerful spirit magic and is a Summoner, a mage who can intercede among the
living, dead and undead. Although as Bricen's second son Tris never desired or
expected the crown, he realizes that he is the only one who can challenge Jared
and bring peace to Margolan and the
Maynard Linton
A smuggler and long-time friend of Jonmarc
Vahanian, Linton ran the caravan which provided cover for Tris and his friends
on their flight from Margolan.
Mikhail
A vayash moru from Gabriel's undead
'family' who served King Hotten, Tris's ancestor, over 200 years ago.
Obsidian King
The powerful evil spirit of a great Summoner
from long ago. His spirit possessed the
mage Lemuel a generation before Tris Drayke's birth. In Lemuel's body, the
Obsidian King waged war against the Winter Kingdoms in what became the Mage
Wars. He was defeated and his spirit was bound in the orb Soulcatcher by Bava
K'aa.
Pell, Tabb and
Andras
Margolan soldiers loyal to King Bricen who
deserted after the coup and are among the refugees in Principality.
Rafe
A powerful vayash moru who is one of
the Blood
Council.
RlQUA
A wealthy and powerful vayash moru who
serves on the Blood Council.
ROYSTER
Librarian and Keeper at the Library at
Westmarch.
Sahila
A leader among the Margolan refugees.
Staden
King of Principality and the father of
Princess Berwyn.
Tadrie
A Margolan farmer whose family was rescued
from angry guards by Kiara. Now a leader among the Margolan refugees.
Taru
One of the mages of the Sisterhood
responsible for Tris's training.
TOV Harrtuck
A loyal guardsman to King Bricen who helped
Tris, Soterius and Carroway escape on the night of the coup. Harrtuck's friendship
with Jonmarc Vahanian and their shared past as mercenaries connected the group
with Vahanian as a guide.
Uri
One of the vayash moru lords on the
Blood Council.