"Briggs, Patricia - Raven 1 - Raven" - читать интересную книгу автора (Briggs Patricia)Raven’s Shadow Patricia Briggs 2004 ISBN:0-441-01187-X Spell-checked. This book is dedicated with gratitude to: Robin and Gene Walker Dan, Pam, Jason, John, and Alex Wright Buck, Scott, and the rest of the crew at Buckler’s V.W.
Parts Exchange Paula, Michael and Liam Bachelor Dave, Katharine, and Caroline Carson Anne Sowards—who made this one better And, as always, to those stalwart people who read it in
its roughest stages (in alphabetical order): Collin Briggs, Michael Briggs, Michael Enzweiler, Jeanne
Matteucci, Virginia Mohl, Ann Peters, Kaye Roberson, and John Wilson Part OneChapter I “It’s not far now, my lad,” said Tier.
“That’s smoke ahead, not just mist—we’ll find a nice village inn where we
can warm up.” His horse snorted at him in reply, or more likely at a bothersome
drop of rain, and continued its steady progress down the trail. The horse, like the sword Tier carried, was of far better
quality than his clothing. He’d scavenged both the horse and sword from men
he’d killed: the sword in his first year of war, the horse earlier this year
when his own mount had been killed beneath him. A warhorse bred and trained to
carry a nobleman, Skew had carried Tier, a baker’s son, through two battles,
six skirmishes, and, by rough reckoning, almost a thousand miles of trail. He was a valuable horse, though in the first few weeks of
Tier’s journey the avarice in the eyes of the ragged men in the areas torn by
years of war had as much to do with hunger as gold. Tier had waited eagerly for
one of them to attack him, to ambush him if they could. But something, maybe
the battle-readiness that still lurked under his calm facade, kept them away
from him. But in the more prosperous areas away from the Empire’s borders,
the chances of an attack were greatly lessened, damn the luck. A fight would
have given him momentary respite from the dread he felt toward his current
task—going home. So many were dead. The two young men from his village who’d
signed on with him to fight in a war half a continent away from their home had
died, as had many other young men hoping for gold, glory, or escape. Tier had
survived. He still wasn’t quite certain how that had happened—he certainly
hadn’t planned on it. He had never sought death, but any soldier knows his
demise could come at any time. If the war had lasted forever, Tier would have fought until
he died, But the war was over, and the post the Sept he’d served offered him
was nothing he wanted. He had no desire to train up more young men for battle. So now he rode back home. It would have never occurred to
the boy who’d crept out of the family home almost a decade ago that returning
would be so much harder than leaving. Tier’s massive gelding shook his black and white mane, splattering
Tier with water. He patted the horse’s neck. “There, what did I tell you, Skew?” Tier said. “There’s a
roof down there, you can see it between the trees.” He looked forward to the warm common room of an inn, flooded
with noise and ale—things to fill his emptiness. Maybe a bit of cheer would stay
with him until he was home. He was getting closer. Even without a map, the bitter taste
of old magic that filled these mountains would have told him so. Though the
battle had been over long ago, wizard’s magic had a way of outlasting even
memories, and the Shadowed had been a great wizard. Closer to the battlefield
of Shadow’s Fall, riding the forest paths could be dangerous. Near his home
village, Redem, everyone knew to avoid certain places still held in fell
magic’s grip. Unconcerned about magic of any kind, the bay and white
patchwork-colored gelding picked his way down the narrow mountain pathway, and,
as the slope turned gentle, onto a dirt track that in turn widened into a cobbled
road. Shortly thereafter the small village Tier’d glimpsed from the hills above
emerged from beneath the trees. The wet stone houses, so different from the wooden villages he’d
ridden through these past nine years, reminded him of home, though there was a
softness to the architecture that his village did not have. It wasn’t home, but
it was a proper village. It would have a market square, and that’s where the
inn would be. He envisioned a small, warm room, bathed in golden light
from the fireplace and torches—someplace where a soldier could get a good, hot
meal and stay warm and dry. As he drew closer to the town market, the smell of smoke and
roasting meat filled the air. It was reflex only that had him loosen his sword
and made the gelding flex and snort: too much war, too many villages burned.
Tier murmured to Skew, reminding him they were done with that part of their
lives, though he could not make himself resecure his sword. As they turned into the market square, he saw a burning
pyre. Evening was an odd time for a funeral; Tier frowned. This
close to home they would bury their dead, not burn them. He looked through the
crowd and noticed there were no women or children watching the fire. It was an execution, not a funeral. In most places where the memories of the Shadowed lingered,
they burned witches. Not the highborn wizards who worked their magic for the
nobles who paid them—they were above village justice—but the healers, hedgewitches,
and Travelers who offended or frightened the wrong person could find themselves
in serious trouble. When such a one burned, the village women would watch from
darkened windows—safe from the wrath of the dead. Strangers like Tier sometimes found themselves taken for Travelers
or hedgewitches. Still, he was armed and had hard coin to pay his way—and from
the smell of smoke and flesh, this village had already slaked its bloodlust. He
rested his hand on his sword hilt, and decided it would be safe enough to stop
for the night Tier rode by the pyre with little more than a glance, but
that quick look had told him that the man in the center of the burning wood had
been killed before the fire was lit A dead man was beyond aid. The sullen crowd of men gathered around the pyre quieted further
as he crossed near them, but when he took no notice of them, they turned back
to their grim entertainment. As Tier had expected, he found the inn on the edge of the village
square. There was a stable adjacent to the inn, but no one manned it. Doubtless
the stable boy could be found in the crowd in the square. Tier unsaddled Skew, rubbed him down with a rough cloth, and
led him into an unoccupied stall. Looking for hay, he noticed a handcart
bedecked in Traveler’s trappings, leather fringe and bright paint, sadly faded.
So the man they’d burned had been a Traveler. Tier walked past the cart and took a forkful of hay back to
Skew, though his eagerness to spend the evening in the tavern had ebbed
considerably since he’d ridden into the village. The nearness of violence had
set his nerves on edge, and the quiet stable soothed him. He lingered until
full darkness fell, but finally the thought of something hot to eat overcame
his reluctance to face people. As he walked out of the stables, only a few figures were
left silhouetted against the light of the fire: guards to make sure the man
didn’t come back to life and flee, Tier supposed. He’d never seen a man
with his throat slit come back to life and cast magic. Oh, he’d heard the
tales, too—even told a few himself. But he’d seen a lot of death, and in his
experience it was final. When he entered the tavern, he was taken aback by the noise.
A quick glance told him that no one had noticed him enter, so he found a place
between the stairs and the back wall where he could observe the room for a
moment. He ought to have realized that the mob wouldn’t have dispersed
so easily. After a killing, most men sought alcohol, and the inn’s common room
was filled to bursting with men, most of them half-drunk on ale and
mob-madness. He considered retreating to sleep in the stables, but he was
hungry. He’d wait a while and see if things would calm enough that it would be
safe for a stranger like him to eat here. The room rumbled with frantic laughter, reminding him of the
aftermath of battle, when men do crazy things they spend the rest of their life
trying to forget. He had cheese and flatbread still in his saddlebag. It
wasn’t a hot meal, and the cheese was a bit blue in spots, but he could eat it
in peace. He took a step toward the door. As if his movement had been a clarion call, the room hushed
expectantly. Tier froze, but he quickly realized that no one was looking at
him. In the silence, the creaking of wood drew his eyes to the
stairway not an arm’s length from where he stood. Heavy boots showed first, the
great bull of a man who wore them followed at last by a girl he pulled down the
stairs. From his splattered apron, the man had to be the innkeeper himself,
though there were old calluses on his hands that might have come from a war axe
or broadsword. The innkeeper stopped four or five steps above the main
floor, leaving his captive in plain view. Unnoticed in Us position near the
back of the room, a little behind the stairs, Tier faced the growing certainty
that he was not going to get a hot meal and a soft bed tonight. The distinctive silver-ash hair that hung in sleep-frayed
braids almost to her waist told Tier that she was a Traveler, a relative, he
supposed, of the dead young man roasting outside. He thought her a child at first, but her loose night rail
caught on a rounded hip that made him add a year or two to her age. When she
looked up at the crowd, he could see that her eyes were clear amber green and
older than her face. The men in the inn were mostly farmers; one or two carried a
long knife in their belt He had seen such men in the army, and respected them.
They were probably good men, most of them, with wives and mothers waiting for
them at home, uncomfortable with the violence their fear had led them to. The girl would be all right, Tier told himself. These men
would not hurt a child as easily as they’d killed the man. A man, a Traveler,
was a threat to their safety. A child, a girl-child, was something these men
protected. Tier looked around the room, seeing the softening in several faces
as they took in her bewildered alarm. His assessing gaze fell upon a bearded man who sat eating
stew from a pot. Finely tailored noblemen’s garments set the man apart from the
natives. Such clothes had been sewn in Taela or some other large city. Something about the absorbed, precise movements the man made
as he ate warned Tier that this man might be the most dangerous person in the
room—then he looked back, at the girl and reconsidered. In the few seconds that Tier had spent appraising the room,
she’d shed her initial shock and fright as cleanly as a snake sheds its skin. The young Traveler drew herself up like a queen, her face
quiet and composed. The innkeeper was a foot taller, but he no longer looked an
adequate guard. The ice in the girl’s cool eyes brought a chill born of
childhood stories to creep down Tier’s spine. Instincts honed in years of
battle told him that he wasn’t the only one she unnerved. Stupid girl, Tier thought. A smart girl would have been sobbing softly in terror and
shrinking to make herself look smaller and even younger, appealing to the
sympathies of the mob. These weren’t mercenaries or hardened fighters; they
were farmers and merchants. If he could have left then, he would have—or at least that’s
what he told himself; but any movement on his part now would draw attention. No
sense in setting himself up for the same treatment received by the dead man in
the square. “Where’s the priest? I need him to witness my account,” asked
the innkeeper, sounding smug and nervous at the same time. If he had looked at
the girl he held, he would have sounded more nervous than smug. The crowd shuffled and spat out a thin young man who looked
around in somewhat bleary surprise to find himself the center of attention.
Someone brought out a stool and a rickety table no bigger than a dinner plate.
When a rough sheet of skin, an ink pot, and a quill were unearthed, the priest
seated himself with a bit more confidence. “Now then,” said the innkeeper. “Three days’ lodging, four
coppers each day. Three meals each day at a copper each.” Tier’s eyebrows crept up cynically. He saw no signs that the
inn had been transported to Taela, where such charges might be justified. For
this inn, two coppers a day with meals was more likely. “Twenty-one coppers,” announced the priest finally. Silence
followed. “A copper a day for storing the cart,” said the nobleman
Tier had noticed, without looking up from his meal. By his accent he was from
more eastern regions, maybe even the coast “That makes three more coppers,
twenty-four coppers in total: one silver.” The innkeeper smiled smugly, “Ah yes, thank you, Lord Wresen.
According to the law, when a debt of a silver is incurred and not remanded”—from
the way the word was emphasized, it was obvious to Tier that remanded was
a word that seldom left the lips of the innkeeper—“that person may be sold to redeem
the debt. If no buyer is found, they shall suffer fifty lashes in the public
square.” Flogging was a common punishment. Tier knew, as did all the
men in the room, that such a child was unlikely to survive fifty lashes. Tier
stepped away from the door and opened his mouth to protest, but he stopped as
he realized exactly what had been happening. His old commander had told him once that knowledge won more
battles than swords did. The innkeeper’s motivation was easy to understand.
Selling the girl could net him more than his inn usually made in a week, if he
could sell her. None of the villagers here would spend a whole silver to buy a
Traveler. Tier would give odds that the innkeeper’s knowledge of law had come
from the nobleman—Lord Wresen, the innkeeper had called him. Tier doubted the
man was a “lord” at all: the innkeeper was flattering him with the title
because of his obvious wealth—it was safer and more profitable that way. It didn’t take a genius to see that Wresen had decided he
wanted the girl and engineered matters so that he would have her. She would not
be beautiful as a woman, but she had the loveliness that belongs to maidens
caught in the moment between childhood and the blossom of womanhood. Wresen had
no intention of letting her be flogged to death. “Do you have a silver?” the innkeeper asked the Traveler
girl with a rough shake. She should have been afraid. Even now Tier thought that a little
show of fear would go a long way toward keeping her safe. Selling a young girl
into slavery was not a part of these farmers’ lives and would seem wrong. Not
even the innkeeper was entirely comfortable with it. If she appealed to his
mercy, the presence of the other men in the inn would force him to release her. Instead, she smiled contemptuously at the innkeeper, showing
him that she, and everyone in the inn, knew that he was exploiting her
vulnerability for profit. All that did was infuriate the innkeeper and silence
his conscience entirely—didn’t this girl know anything about people? “So, gents,” said the innkeeper, glancing toward Wresen, who
was finishing the last few bites of his meal. “A dead man cannot pay his debts
and they are left to his heir. This one owes me a silver and has no means to
pay. Do any of you need a slave or shall she join her brother where he bums in
the square?” The flush of anger that had highlighted her cheeks paled
abruptly. Obviously, she hadn’t known the other Traveler had been killed until
the innkeeper spoke, although she must have suspected something had happened to
him. Her breathing picked up, and she blinked hard, but otherwise she
controlled herself until all that showed on her face was anger and contempt. Stupid girl, he thought again—then he felt the tingle
of gathering magic. He’d been nine long years in the Imperial Army under a Sept
who commanded six wizards—doubtless that was the reason Tier was contemplating
helping the Traveler rather than running out the door like a proper Redemi.
Those years had taught him that mages were just people like anyone else: this
girl was unlikely to be able to save herself from a mob of frightened men.
After they saw her work magic, no one else would be able to save her either. She was nothing to him. “One silver,” Tier said. Wresen started and shifted to alertness, his hand touching
his sword, staring at Tier. Tier knew what he saw: a travel-stained man, tall
and too thin, with a sword on his belt and his years in the Emperor’s army
recorded in the myriad small scars on face and hands. Tier opened his belt pouch and sorted through a smattering
of small coins before pulling out a silver round that looked as though it had
been trampled by a dozen armies. “Take off your hood,” said the innkeeper. “I’ll see a man’s
face and know his name and kin before I take his money.” Tier tossed his hood back and let them see by his dark hair
and eyes that he was no Traveler. “Tieragan from Redem and
late of the Imperial Army under the Sept of Gerant. I’m a baker’s son, but I
gave it up for the battlefield when I was young and stupid. The war’s ended by
the Emperor’s writ, and I am homebound.” The girl’s magic died down to a slow simmer. That’s it, he
thought, take the time I’m giving you to remember that one man is easier to
take than a whole room. You don’t really want revenge; you want escape. He
didn’t know whether he was saving her from these men, or the men from her. “If you take her, you won’t stay here,” blustered the
innkeeper. “I don’t want her kind in my inn.” Tier shrugged, “I’ve camped before, and my horse will take
me a few hours yet.” “Two silver,” said Wresen abruptly. The nobleman s1:*
his hands on his table with enough force that his sword bounced and the big
silver ring on his left hand punctuated his words with a bang. When all eyes
turned to him he said, “I’ve always wanted to sample Traveler bread—and that
one looks young enough to bring to heel.” Tier couldn’t afford to offer much more than Wresen’s two silver.
Not because he didn’t have it, the better part of nine years of pay and plunder
were safely sewn in his belt, but because no one would believe that he, a
baker’s son and soldier, would spend so much money on a strange woman-child no
matter how exotic. He could hardly believe it himself. If they decided he was a
confederate of hers, he might find himself sharing the pyre outside. On the
other hand, a bored nobleman could spend as much as he wanted without comment. Tier shot Wresen a look of contempt. “You’d be dead before your pants were down around your
knees, nobleman,” Tier said “You aren’t from around these mountains, or you
would understand about magic. My arms-mate was like you, used to the tame
wizards who take the Septs’ gold. He saved my life three times and survived
five years of war, only to fall at the hands of a Traveler wizard in a back
alley.” The mood in the room shifted as Tier reminded them why they
had killed the man burning outside. “We”—he included himself with every man in the room—“we
understand. You don’t play with fire. Lord Wresen, you drown it before
it burns your house down.” He looked at the innkeeper. “After the Traveler
killed my fighting brother, I spent years learning how to deal with such—I look
forward to testing my knowledge. Two silver and four copper.” The innkeeper nodded quickly, as Tier had expected. An innkeeper
would understand the moods of his patrons and see that many more words like
Tier’s last speech, and he’d get nothing. The men in the room were very close
to taking the girl out right now and throwing her on top of her brother. Much
better to end the auction early with something to show for it. Tier handed the innkeeper the silver coin and began digging
in his purse, eventually coming up with the twenty-eight coppers necessary to
make two silver and four. He was careful that a number of people saw how few
coppers he had left They didn’t need to know about the money in his belt. Wresen settled back, as if the Traveler’s fate was nothing
to him. His response made Tier all the more wary of him—in his experience bored
noblemen seldom gave up so easily. But for the moment at least. Tier had only
the girl to contend with. Tier walked to the stairs, ignoring the men who pushed back
away from him. He jerked the girl’s wrist and pulled her past the innkeeper. “What she has we’ll take,” Tier said. “I’ll burn it all when
we’re in the woods—you might think of doing the same to the bed and linen in
that room. I’ve seen wizards curse such things.” He took the stairs up at a pace that the girl couldn’t
possibly match with the awkward way he kept her arm twisted behind her. When
she stumbled, he jerked her up with force that was more apparent than real. He
wanted everyone to be completely convinced that he could handle whatever danger
she represented. There were four doors at the top of the stairs, but only one
hung ajar, and he hauled her into it and shut the door behind them. “Quick, girl,” he said, releasing her, “gather your things
before they decide that they might keep the silver and kill the both of us.” When she didn’t move, he tried a different tack. “What you
don’t have packed in a count of thirty, I’ll leave for the innkeeper to burn,”
he said. Proud and courageous she was, but also young. With quick,
jerky movements, she pulled a pair of shabby packs out from under the bed. She
tied the first one shut for travel, and retrieved clothing out of the other.
Using her night rail as cover, she put on a pair of loose pants and a long,
dark-colored tunic. After stuffing her sleeping shift back in the second pack,
she secured it, too. She stood up, glanced out the room, and froze. “Ushireh,” she said and added with more urgency, “he’s
alive!” Tier looked out and realized that the room looked over the
square, allowing a clear view of the fire. Clearly visible in the heat of the
flames, the dead man’s body was slowly sitting upright—and from the sounds of
it, frightening the daylights out of the men left to guard the pyre. He caught her before she could run out of the room. “Upon my
honor, mistress, he is dead,” he said with low-voiced urgency. “I saw him as I
rode in. His throat was cut and he was dead before they lit the fire.” She continued to struggle against his hold, her attention on
the pyre outside. “Would they have left so few men to guard a living man?” he
said. “Surely you’ve seen funeral pyres before. When the flame heats the bodies
they move.” In the eastern parts of the Empire; they burned their dead.
The priests held that when a corpse moved in the flame it was the spirit’s
desire to look once more upon the world. Tier’s old employer, the Sept, who had
a Traveler’s fondness for priests (that is to say, not much), said he reckoned
the heat shrank tissue faster than bone as the corpse burned. Whichever was
correct, the dead stayed dead. “He’s dead,” Tier said again. “I swear to it.” She pulled away from him, but only to run back to the
window. She was breathing in shaking, heaving gasps, her whole body trembling
with it If she’d done something of the same downstairs, he thought sourly, they
wouldn’t be looking to ride out in the rain without dinner. “They were so afraid of him and his magic,” she said in a
low voice trembling with rage and sorrow. “But they killed the wrong one.
Stupid solsenti, thinking that being a Traveler makes one a mage, and
that being young and female makes me harmless.” “We can’t afford to linger here,” he said briskly, though
his heart picked up its beat. He’d gotten familiar with mages, but that didn’t
make them any more comfortable to be around when they were angry. “Are you
ready?” She spun from the window, her eyes glowing just a little
with the magic she’d amassed watching her brother’s body burn. Doubtless, he thought, if he knew exactly what she was
capable of he’d have been even more frightened of her. “There are too many here,” he said. “Take what you need and
come.” The glow faded from her eyes, leaving her looking empty and
lost before she stiffened her spine, grabbed both bags resolutely, and nodded. He put a hand on her shoulder and followed her out the door
and down the stairs. The room had cleared remarkably—doubtless the men had been
called to witness the writhing corpse. “Best be gone before they get back,” said the innkeeper
sourly, doubtlessly worried about what would happen to his inn if the men
returned after their newest fright to find the Traveler lass still here. “Make sure and burn the curtains, too,” said Tier in reply.
There was nothing wrong with any of the furnishing in the room, but he thought
it would serve the innkeeper right to have to spend some of Tier’s money to buy
new material for curtains. The girl, bless her, had the sense to keep her head down and
her mouth shut. Out of the inn, he steered her into the stable, where the
stable boy had already brought out his horse and saddled it. The Traveler
handcart was set out, too. The girl was light, so Skew could certainly carry
the two of them as far as the next village, where Tier might obtain another
mount—but the handcart proposed more of a problem. “We’ll leave the cart,” he said to the boy, not the Traveler.
“I’ve no wish to continue only as fast as this child could haul a cart like
that” The boy’s chin lifted. “M’father says you have to take it
all. He doesn’t want Traveler curses to linger here.” “He’s worried that they’ll fire the barn,” said the girl to
no one in particular. “Serve him right,” said Tier in an Eastern dialect a stable
boy born and raised to this village would not know. The girl’s sudden intake of
breath told him that she did. “Get me an axe,” Tier said frowning. They didn’t have time
for this. “I’ll fire it before we go.” “It can be pulled by a horse,” said the girl. “There are
shafts stored underneath.” Tier snorted, but he looked obediently under the cart and
saw that she was right A clevis pin and toggle allowed the handpull to slide
under the cart. On each corner of the cart sturdy shafts pulled out and pinned
in place. Tier hurriedly discussed matters with the boy. The inn had
no extra mounts to sell, nor harness. Tier shook his head. As he’d done a time or two before,
though not with Skew, Tier jury-rigged a harness from his war saddle. The
breast strap functioned well enough as a collar with such a light weight He
adjusted the stirrups to hold the cart shafts and used an old pair of driving
reins the boy scavenged as traces. “You’ve come down in the world once more, my friend,” said
Tier as he led Skew out of the stable. The gelding snorted once at the contraption following him. A
warhorse was not a cart horse, but, inured to battle, Skew settled into pulling
the cart with calm good sense. While he’d been leading the horse, the girl had stopped at
the stable entrance, her eyes fixed on the pyre. “You’ll have time to mourn later,” he promised her. “Right
now we need to move before they return to the inn. You’ll do well enough on
Skew—just keep your feet off his ribs.” She scrambled up somehow, avoiding his touch as much as she
could. He didn’t blame her, but he didn’t stop to say anything reassuring where
the stable boy might hear. He kept Skew’s reins and led him out of the stable in the opposite
direction that he’d come earlier in the day. The girl twisted around to watch
the pyre as long as she could. Tier led Skew at a walk through the town. As soon as they
were off the cobbles and on a wide dirt-track. Tier broke into a dogtrot he
could hold for a long time. It shortened his breath until talking was no
pleasure—so he said nothing to the girl. Skew trotted at his side as well as any trained dog, nose at
Tier’s shoulder as they had traveled many miles before. The rain, which had let
up for a while, set in again and Tier slowed to a walk so he could keep a sharp
eye out for shelter. At last he found a place where a dead tree leaned against
two others, creating a small dry area, which he increased by tying up a piece
of oilskin. “Td do better if it weren’t full dark and raining,” he said
to the girl without looking at her. “But this’ll be drier at any rate.” He unharnessed and unsaddled Skew, rubbing him down briskly
before tethering him to a nearby tree. Skew presented his backside to the wind
and hitched up a hip. Like any veteran, the horse knew to snatch rest where it
came. The heavy war saddle in hand, Tier turned to the girl. “If you touch me,” she said coolly, “you won’t live out the
day.” He eyed her small figure for a moment. She was even less impressive
wet and cold than she had been held captive in the innkeeper’s hand. Tier had never actually met a Traveler before. But he was
well used to dealing with frightened young things—the army had been filled with
young men. Even tired and wet as he was, he knew better than to address those
words head on—why would she believe anything he said? But if he didn’t get her
under shelter, sharing his warmth, she was likely to develop lung fever. That
would defeat his entire purpose in saving her. “Good even, lady,” he said, with a fair imitation of a nobleman’s
bow despite the weight of the heavy saddle. “I am Tieragan of Redem—most people
call me Tier.” Then he waited. She stared at him; he felt a butterfly-flutter of magic—then
her eyes widened incredulously, as if she’d heard something more than he’d
said. “I am Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent. I give you
greetings, Bard.” “Well met, Seraph,” he said. Doubtless her answer would have
conveyed a lot to a fellow Traveler. Maybe they’d even know why she addressed
him as bard, doubtless some Traveler etiquette. “I am returning to
Redem. If my map is accurate—and it hasn’t been notably accurate so far—Redem
is about two days’ travel west and north of here.” “My clan, only Ushireh and I, was traveling to the village
we just left,” she returned, shivering now. “I don’t know where Ushireh
intended to go afterward.” Tier had been counting on being able to deliver her back to
her people. “It was just the two of you?” She nodded her head, watching him as warily as a hen before
a fox. “Do you have relatives nearby? Someone you could go to?” he
asked. “Traveling clans avoid this area,” she said. “It is known
that the people here are afraid of us.” “So why did your brother come here?” He shifted the saddle
to a more comfortable hold, resting it against his hip. “It is given to the head of a clan to know where shadows
dwell,” she replied obscurely. “My brother was following one such.” Tier’s experience with mages had led him to avoid questioning
them when they talked of magic—he found that he usually knew less after they
were finished than he did when he started. Whatever had led the young man here,
it had left Seraph on her own. “What happened to the rest of your clan?” he asked. “Plague,” she said. “We welcomed a Traveling stranger to our
fires one night The next night one of the babies had a cough—by morning there
were three of ours dead. The clan leader tried to isolate them, but it was too
late. Only my brother and I survived.” “How old are you? “Sixteen.” That was younger than he expected from her manner, though
from her appearance, she could have easily been as young as thirteen. He
shifted his saddle onto his shoulder to rest his arm. As he did so, he heard a
thump and the saddle jerked in his hold. The arrow quivered in the thick
leather of the saddle skirt, which presently covered his chest. He threw himself forward and knocked her to the muddy ground
underneath him. Holding her still despite her frantic battle to free herself of
him, a hand keeping her quiet, he spoke to her in a toneless whisper. “Quiet now, love. Someone out there is sending arrows our
way; take a look at my saddle.” When she stilled, he slid his weight off of her. The grass
was high enough to hide their movements in the dark. She rolled to her belly,
but made no further move away from him. He rested a hand on her back to keep
her in place until he could find their attacker in the dark. Her ribs vibrated
with the pounding of her heart “He’s two dozen paces beyond your horse,” she whispered, “a
little to the right.” He didn’t question how she could see their attacker in the
pitch-darkness of the forested night, but sneaked forward until he crouched in
front of Skew where he held still, hoping that the mud that covered him head to
toe would keep him from being a target for another arrow. He glanced back to make certain that Seraph was still
hidden, and stifled a curse. She stood upright, her gaze locked beyond Skew. He assumed
she was watching their attacker. Her clothes were dark enough to blend into the
forested dark, but her pale hair caught the faint moonlight. “Seraph,” said a soft voice. It continued in a liquid tongue
Tier had never heard before. “Speak Common,” answered Seraph in cold clear tones that
could have come from an empress rather than a battered, muddy, half-grown girl.
“Your tongue does not favor Traveler speech. You sound like a hen trying to
quack.” Well, thought Tier, if our pursuer had intended to
kill Seraph, he’d have done so already. He had a pretty good idea then who
it was that had tried to put an arrow in his hide. He hadn’t seen that Lord
Wresen carried a bow, but there might have been one in the man’s luggage. “I have killed the one who would hurt you,” continued the
soft voice. Tier supposed that it might have appeared that he’d been killed.
He’d thrown himself down half a breath after the arrow hit, and the saddle and
blanket made a lump on the ground that with the cover of tall grass might look
like a body from a distance. “Come with me, little one,” Tier’s would-be killer said. “I
have shelter and food nearby. You can’t stay out here alone. You’ll be safe with
me.” Tier could hear the lie in the man’s words, but he didn’t
think Seraph could. He waited for the man to get close enough for Tier to find
him, hoping that Seraph would not believe him. After spending two silver and
four copper on her, as well as missing his dinner, Tier had something of an
investment in her well-being. “A Raven is never alone,” Seraph said. “Seraph,” eluded the man. “You know better than that. Come,
child, I have a safe place for you to abide. In the morning I’ll take you to a
clan I know of, not far from here.” \ Tier could see him now, a shadow darker than the trees had slipped between. Something about the way the shadow moved,
combined with his voice, gave his identity to Tier: he’d been right; it was
Wresen. “Which clan would that be?” asked Seraph. “I—” Some instinct turned Wresen before Tier struck, and
Tier’s sword met metal. Tier threw his weight against the other man, pushing Wresen
away to get some striking distance between them—where Tier’s superior reach
would do him some good. They fought briskly for a few minutes, mostly feeling each
other out, searching for weaknesses. The older man was faster than Tier had
expected, but he wasn’t the only one who’d underestimated his opponent. From
the grunt Wresen let out the first time he caught Tier’s sword, he’d underestimated
Tier’s strength—something that was not uncommon. Tier was tall and, as he’d
often been teased, slight as a stripling. By the time they drew back to regroup. Tier boasted a
shallow cut on his cheekbone and another on the underside of his right forearm.
The other man had taken a hard blow from Tier’s pommel on the wrist and Tier
was pretty sure he’d drawn blood over his adversary’s eye. “What do you want with the girl?” asked Tier. This was too
much effort for a mere bedmate, no matter how Wresen’s tastes ran. “Naught but her safety,” insisted Wresen. The lie echoed in
Tier’s ears. “Which is more than you can say.” He made an odd gesture with his fingers, and Tier dropped
his sword with a cry as it became too hot to hold. Wizard, thought Tier, but neither surprise nor dismay
slowed him. Leaving his sword where it lay, Tier charged, catching the other
man in the stomach with his shoulder and pushing both of them back into a mass
of shrubs, which caught at their feet. Wresen, unprepared, stumbled and fell. Tier struck hard, aiming
for the throat, but his opponent rolled too fast. Quick as a weasel, Wresen
regained his feet. Twice Tier jumped and narrowly avoided the other’s blade.
But he wasn’t a fool; unarmed, his chances weren’t good. “Run, Seraph,” he said. “Take the horse and get out of
here.” With luck he should be capable of holding her pursuer long
enough that she could lose him in the woods. If he could keep him busy enough,
Wresen wouldn’t have time to work magic. “Don’t be more of a fool than you can help, Bard,” she said
coldly. The other man swore, and Tier saw that Wresen’s sword had’
begun to glow as if it were still in the blacksmith’s fire. Steam rose from his
sword hand as he made odd gestures toward it with his free hand. Wresen was no
longer giving any heed to Tier at all—which was the last mistake he ever made. Tier pulled his boot knife out of the man’s neck and cleaned
it on the other’s cloak. When he was finished, he looked at Seraph. Her pale skin and face were easy to find in the darkness.
She reminded him of a hundred legends: so must Loriel have stood when she faced
the Shadowed with nothing more than her song, or Terabet before throwing
herself from the walls of Anarorgehn rather than betraying
her people. His father had always said that his grandfather told him too many
stories. “Why choose me over him?” Tier asked her. She said, “I heard him at the inn. He was no friend of mine
“ Tier narrowed his eyes. “You heard me at the inn as well. He
only helped the innkeeper add coppers—I bought you intent on revenge.” She lifted her chin. “I’m not stupid. I am Raven—and you are
Bard. I saw what you did.” The words were in Common, but they made no sense to him. He frowned at her. “What do you mean? Mistress, I have been
a baker and a soldier, which is to say swordsman, tracker, spy, and even
tailor, blacksmith, and harness maker upon occasion—and doubtless a half dozen
other professions. But I make no claim to be a bard. Even if I were, I have no
idea what that has to do with you. Or what being a raven means.” She stared at him as if he made as little sense to her as
she had to him. “You are Bard,” she said again, but this time there was a
wobble in her voice. He took a good look at her. It might have been rain that wet
her cheeks, but he’d bet his good knife that there would be salt in the water.
She was little more than a child and she’d just lost her brother under
appalling circumstances. It was the middle of the night, she was shaking with
cold, and she’d held up to more than many a veteran soldier. “I’ll dispose of the body,” he said. “Neither of us will get
any sleep with him out here attracting carrion-eaters. You get out of the rain
and into dry clothes. We’ll talk in the morning. I promise that no one will
harm you until morning at least.” When she was occupied getting her baggage out of the cart,
he led Skew to the body and somehow wrestled the dead man onto the horse’s wet
back. He had no intention of burying the man, just moving him far enough away that
whatever scavengers the body attracted wouldn’t trouble them. It occurred to
him that Wresen might not be alone—indeed, it would be odd if he were because
noblemen traveled with servants. But all he found was a single grey horse tied to a tree
about a hundred paces back down the trail and no sign that another horse had
been tied nearby. Tier stopped beside the animal, and let the body slide off
Skew’s back into the mud, sword still welded to his hand. Skew, who’d borne
with everything, jumped three steps sideways as the body fell and snorted
unhappily. The grey pulled back and shook her head, trying to break free—but
the reins held. When nothing further happened the horse quieted and lipped
nervously at a bunch of nearby leaves. Tier rifled through the man’s saddlebags, but there was
nothing in them but the makings of a few meals and a pouch of silver and copper
coins. This last he tucked into his own purse with a soldier’s thrift He took
the food as well. There was nothing on the body either—except for a chunky
silver ring with a bit of dark stone in it. He deemed the ring, like the horse
and the man’s sword, too identifiable to take, and left it where it was. In the end, Tier found no hint of who Wresen was, or why
he’d been so intent on getting Seraph. Surely a mage wouldn’t have the same
unreasoning fear of Travelers that the villagers here had. He took his knife and cut most of the way through the gray’s
reins near the bit. When she got hungry enough she’d break free, but it
wouldn’t be for a while yet.’ By the time he rode back to camp, Tier was dragging with fatigue.
Seraph had taken his advice; he found her huddled under the tree. A second oilskin tarp, bigger and even more worn that his, increased
the size of their shelter so that he might even be able to keep his feet dry.
His saddle was in the shelter too, the mud wiped mostly off. He rummaged in the
saddlebags and changed to his second set of clothing. They weren’t clean, but
dry was more important just now. Seraph had turned her face away while he changed. Knowing
she’d not sleep for the cold on her own, nor agree to snuggle with a
stranger—especially not in the present circumstances, he didn’t bother to say
anything. He wrapped an arm around her, ignored her squeak of surprised dismay,
and stretched out to sleep. She tried to wiggle away from him, but there wasn’t much
room. Then she was still for a long time while Tier drifted into a light doze.
Some time later her quiet weeping woke him, and he shifted her closer, patting
her back as if she were his little sister coming to him with a scraped knee
rather than the loss of her family. He woke to her strange pale eyes staring at him, lit by
sunlight leaking through morning clouds. “I could have used this on you,” Seraph said. He looked at the blade she held in her dirty hands—his best
knife. She must have been into his saddlebags. “Yes,” he agreed, taking it from her unresisting hand. “But
I saw your face when you looked at our dead friend last night. I was pretty
certain you wouldn’t want to deal with another dead body any time soon.” “I have seen many dead,” she said, and he saw in her eyes
that it was true. “But none that you have killed,” he guessed. “If I had not been asleep when they were killing my
brother,” she said, “I would have killed them all, Bard.” “You might have.” Tier stretched and slid out from under the
tree. “But then you would have been killed also. And, as I told you last night,
I am no bard.” “Just a baker’s son,” she said. “From Redem.” “Where I am returning,” he agreed. “You are no solsenti,” she disagreed smugly. “There
are no solsenti Bards.” “Solsenti?” He was beginning to get the feeling that
they knew two entirely different languages that happened to have a few words in
common. Her assuredness began to falter, as if she’d expected some
other reaction from him. “Solsenti means someone who is not Traveler.” “Then I’m afraid I am most certainly solsenti.” He
dusted off his clothes, but nothing could remove the stains of travel. At least
they weren’t wet. “I can play a lute and a little harp, but I am not a
bard—though I think that means something different to you than it does to me.” She stared at him. “But I saw you,” she said. “I felt your
magic at the inn last night.” Startled he stared at her. “I am no mage, either.” “No,” she agreed. “But you charmed the innkeeper at
the inn so that he didn’t allow that man to buy my debt.” “I am a soldier, mistress,” he said. “And I was an officer.
Any good officer learns to manage people—or he doesn’t last long. The innkeeper
was more worried about losing his inn than he was about earning another silver
or two. It had nothing to do with magic.” “You don’t know,” she said at last, and not, he thought, particularly
to him. “How is it possible not to know that you are Bard?” “What do you mean?” She frowned. “I am Raven, you would say Mage—very
like a solsenti wizard. But there are other ways to use magic among the
Travelers, things your solsenti wizards cannot do. A few of us are
gifted in different ways and depending upon that gift, we belong to Orders. One
of those Orders is Bard—as you are. A Bard is, as you said, a musician first.
Your voice is true and rich. You have a remarkable memory, especially for
words. No one can lie to you without you knowing.” He opened his mouth to say something—he knew not what except
that it wouldn’t be kind—but he looked at her first and closed his mouth. She was so young, for all that she had the imposing manner
of an empress. Her skin was grey with fatigue and her eyes were puffy and red
with weeping she must have done while he slept. He decided not to argue with
her—or believe what she said though it caused cold chills to run down his
spine. He was merely good with people, that was all. He could sing, but then so
could most Redemi. He’ was no magic user. He left her to her speculations and began to take down the
camp. If Wresen’s horse made it back to the inn, there might be people looking
for him soon. Without saving anything more, she stood up and helped. “I’m going to take you to my kin in Redem,” he said when
their camp was packed and Skew once more attached to the Traveler cart. “But
you’ll have to promise me not to use magic while you’re there. My people are as
wary as any near Shadow’s Fall. Redem’s a trading town; if there are any
Traveler clans around, we’ll hear about them.” But she didn’t appear to be listening to him.
Instead, when she’d scrambled to Skew’s back she said, “You don’t have to
worry. I won’t tell anyone.” “Tell what?” he asked, leading the way back to the trail
they’d followed the night before. “That someone in your family, however far back, laid with a
Traveler. Only someone of Traveler blood could be a Bard,” she said. “There are
no solsenti Bards.” He was beginning to resent the way she said solsenti; whatever
the true meaning of the word, he was willing to bet it was also a deadly
insult. “I won’t tell anyone else,” she said. “Being Traveler is no
healthy thing.” She glanced up at the mountains that towered above the
narrow trail and shivered. There were not as many thieves in that part of the Empire as
there were in the lands to the east where war had driven men off their lands.
But Conex the Tinker, who found the dead body beside the trail, was not so
honest as all that. He took everything he could find of value: two good boots,
a bow, a scorched sword with scraps of flesh still clinging to it (he almost
left that but greed outweighed squeamishness in the end), a bait, and a silver
ring with a bit of onyx stone set in it. Two weeks after his unexpected good fortune a stranger met
up with him on the road, as sometimes happens when two men have the same
destination in mind. They spent most of the day exchanging news and ate
together that night. The next morning the stranger, a silver ring safely in his
belt pouch, rode off alone. Conex would never more go a-tinkering. Chapter 2“You see those two mountains over there?” Tier gestured
with his chin toward two rocky peaks that seemed to lean away from each
other. Seraph nodded. After several days’ travel she knew Tier well
enough to expect the start of another story, and she wasn’t wrong. Tier was a good traveling companion, she thought as she listened
to his story with half an ear. He was better than her brother Ushireh had been.
He was generally cheerful and did more than his fair share of the camp work. He
didn’t expect her to say much, which was just as well, for Seraph didn’t have
much to say—and she enjoyed his stories. She knew that she should be planning what to do when they
reached Tier’s village. If she could find another clan, they’d take her in just
for being Traveler, but being Raven would make her valuable to them. If Ushireh had been less proud they would have joined
another clan when their own clan died. But Ushireh had no Order to lend him
rank; he would have gone from clan chief’s son to being no one of importance.
Having more than her share of pride, Seraph had understood his dilemma. She’d
agreed that they would go on and see what the road brought them. Only see what the mad brought, Ushireh. There was no reason now not to find another clan. No reason
to continue on with this solsenti Bard to his solsenti village.
There would be no welcome for her in such a place. From what Tier said, it lay
very near Shadow’s Fall. There would be no clans anywhere near it. But instead of telling him that she would be on her way, she
continued to ride on his odd-colored gelding while Tier walked beside her and
amused them both with a wondrous array of stories that touched on everything
except his home, stories that distracted her from the shivery pain of Ushireh’s
death that she’d buried in the same tightly locked place she kept the deaths of
the rest of her family. Arrogance and control were necessary to those who bore the
Raven Order. Manipulation of the raw forces of magic was dangerous, and the
slightest bit of self-doubt or passion could let it slip out of control. She’d
never had trouble with arrogance, but she’d had a terrible time learning
emotional control Eventually she had learned to avoid things that drew her
temper: mostly that meant that she kept to herself as much as possible. Her
brother, being a loner himself, had respected that. They had often gone days
without speaking at all. Tier, with his constant speech and teasing ways, was outside
of her experience. She wasn’t in the habit of observing people; it hadn’t been
a skill that she’d needed. But, if truth be told, after journeying with Tier
only a few days, she knew more about him than she had most of the people she’d
lived with all her life. He wasn’t one of those soldiers who talked of nothing but
the battles he’d fought in. Tier shared funny stories about the life of a
solder, but he didn’t talk about the fighting at all. Every morning he rose
early and practiced with his sword—finding a quiet place away from her. She
knew about the need for quiet and let him be while she did her own practice. When he wasn’t talking he was humming or singing, but he
seldom talked of important things, and when he did he used far fewer words. He
didn’t make her talk and didn’t seem uncomfortable with her silence. When they
passed other people on the road, he smiled or talked as it came to him. Even
with Seraph’s silent presence, a moment or two of Tier’s patter and the other
people opened up. No wonder she found herself liking him—everyone liked him.
Isolated as most Ravens were kept, even within the clan, she’d never paid
enough attention to anyone outside of her family to actually like them before. “What are you smiling at?” he asked as he finished his
story. “That poor goatherd had to live with a wealthy man’s daughter for the
rest of his life. Can you imagine a worse fate?” “Traveling with a man who talks all the time,” she replied,
trying her hand at teasing. Thankfully, he grinned. It was evening the first time Seraph laid eyes on Redem, a
middling-size village carved into the eastern face of a steep-sided mountain
that rose ponderously from the icy fury of the Silver River. The settling sun
lent a red cast to the uniform grey stones of the buildings that zigzagged up
from the road. Tier slowed to look, and Skew bumped him. He patted the
horse’s head absently, then continued at his normal, brisk pace. The road they
were on continued past the base of the mountain and then veered abruptly toward
a narrow stone bridge that crossed the Silver at the foot of the village. “The Silver is narrowest here “ he said. “There used to be a
ferry, but a few generations ago the Sept ordered a bridge built.” Seraph thought he was going to begin another story, but he
fell silent. He bypassed the bridge by taking a narrow track that continued
along the river’s edge. A few donkeys and a couple of mules occupied a series
of pens just a few dozen yards beyond the bridge. He found an empty pen and began to separate Skew from the
cart. Seraph climbed down and helped him. A boy appeared out of one of the pens. “I’ll find some hay
for ’em, sir,” he said briskly. “You can store the cart in the shelter in the
far pen.” He took a better look at Skew and whistled, “Now that’s an odd one.
Never seen a horse with so many colors—like he was supposed to be a bay and
someone painted him with big white patches.” “He’s Fahlarn bred,” said Tier. “Though most of them are bay
or brown, I’ve seen a number of spotted horses.” “Fahlarn?” said the boy, and he looked closer at Tier.
“You’re a soldier then?” “Was,” agreed Tier as he led Skew into the pen. “Where did
you say to put the cart?” The boy turned to look at the cart and his gaze touched
Seraph and stuck there. “You’re Travelers?” The boy licked Ms lips nervously. “She is,” said Tier closing the pen. “I’m Redemi.” Tier was good with people: Seraph had every confidence that
the boy wouldn’t make them move on if she left Tier to talk to him. “He said to put the cart in the far pen,” murmured Seraph to
that end. “I’ll take it.” When she got back to Tier, the boy was gone, and Tier had
his saddle and bridle on his shoulder. “The boy’s gone to get some hay for Skew;’ he said. “He’ll
be in good care here. They don’t allow large animals on the streets—the streets
are too steep anyway.” He didn’t lie about that. The cobblestone village road followed
the contours of the mountain for almost a quarter of a mile, with houses on the
uppermost side of the road, and then swung abruptly back on itself like a
snake, climbing rapidly to a new level as it did so. The second layer of road
still had houses on the uphill side, but, looking toward the river, Seraph
could see the roofs of the houses they’d just passed. Stone benches lined the wide corner of the second bend of
the zigzagging road, and an old man sat on one of them playing a wooden flute.
Tier paused to listen, closing his eyes briefly. Seraph saw the old man look up
and start a bit, but he kept playing. After a moment, Tier moved on, but his
steps were slower. He stopped in front of a home marked by sheaves of wheat
carved into the lintel over the doorway and by the smell of fresh-baked bread. “Home,” he said after a moment. “I don’t know what kind of
welcome to expect. I haven’t heard from anyone here since I left to go to
war—and I left in the middle of the night.” Seraph waited, but when he made no move to continue she
said, “Did they love you?” He nodded without looking away from the door. “Then,” she said gently, “I expect that the men will bluster
and the women will cry and scold—then they will feast and welcome you home.” He laughed then. “That sounds about right. I suppose it
won’t change for putting it off longer.” He held the door open for her and followed her into a
largish room that managed to be both homey and businesslike at the same time. Behind
the counter that divided the room in half were tilted shelves displaying bread
in a dozen forms and a burly red-headed man who looked nothing like Tier. “May I help you, good sir?” asked the man. “Bandor?” said Tier. “What are you doing here?” The big man stared at him, then paled a bit. He shook his
head as if setting aside whatever it was that had bothered him. Then he smiled
with genuine welcome. “As I live and breathe, it’s Tier come back from the
dead.” Bandor stepped around the counter and enveloped Tier in a
hearty embrace. “It’s been too long.” It was odd to see two men embracing—her own people were
seldom touched in public outside of childhood. But Tier returned the bigger
man’s hug with equal enthusiasm. “You’re here for good, I hope,” said Bandor, taking a step
back. “That depends upon my father,” Tier replied soberly. Bandor shook his head and his mouth turned down. “Ah, there
is much that has happened since you left. Draken died four years ago, Tier.
Your sister and I had been married a few years earlier—I’d taken an apprenticeship
here when you left.” He stopped and shook his head. “I’m telling this all
topsy-turvy.” “Dead,” said Tier, his whole body stilled. “Bandor,” said a woman’s voice from behind a closed door.
The door swung wide and a woman came out backwards, having bumped open the door
with her hip. Her arms were occupied with a large basket of rolls. “Do you
think I ought to do another four dozen rolls, or are the eight dozen we have
enough?” The woman was taller than average, thin and lanky like Tier.
And as she turned around, Seraph could see that she had his dark hair and wide
mouth. “Alinath,” said Bandor. “I believe you have a visitor.” She turned toward Tier with a polite smile and opened her
mouth, but when her eyes caught his face no sound left her lips. She dropped
the basket on the ground, spilling rolls everywhere, then she was over the top
of the counter and wrapped tightly around him. “Tier,” she said in a muffled voice. “Oh, Tier. We thought
you were dead.” He hugged her back, lifting her off the floor. “Hey,
sprite,” he said, and his voice was as choked as hers. “We kept it for you,” said Alinath. “We kept the bakery for
you.” Alinath pulled back, tears running freely down her face. She
took a step away from him and then punched him in the belly, turning her
shoulder to put the full force of her body into the blow. “Nine years,” she said hotly. “Nine years. Tier, and not
even a note to say that you were still alive. Damn you, Tier.” Tier was bent over wheezing, but he held up three fingers. “We received nothing,” she said angrily. “I didn’t even know
where to send you word when Father died.” “I sent three letters the first year,” he said, huffing for
breath. “When I had no reply, I assumed Father washed his hands of me.” Alinath put her hands to her mouth. “If he ever got your
letters, he didn’t say anything to me. Darn my fiendish temper. I’m sorry I hit
you, Tier.” Tier shook his head, denying the need for apology. “Father
told me that someday I’d be sorry I taught you how to hit.” “Come with me,” she said. “Mother will want to see you.” She
tugged him from the room, leaving Seraph alone with the man at the counter. “Welcome,” Bandor said after a long awkward moment. “I am
Bandor, journeyman baker, and husband to Alinath of the Bakers of Redem.” “Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent,” Seraph replied
with outward composure, knowing her words would tell him no more than his eyes
had already noticed. He nodded, bent to right the basket Alinath had dropped, and
began to collect the rolls that had fallen on the floor. When he was finished he said, “Alinath will be busy with Tier, I’d best get to the baking.” He turned on his heel and
headed back through the door that Alinath and Tier had taken, leaving Seraph
truly alone. Uncomfortable and out of place, Seraph sat on a small bench
and waited. She should have left on her own as soon as Tier had killed the
nobleman who pursued her. She’d have been safe enough then. Here in Tier’s
village she was as out of place as a crow in a hummingbird nest But she stayed where she was until Tier returned alone. “My apologies,” he said. “I shouldn’t have left you
here alone.” She shrugged. “I am hardly going to come to harm here, nor
do I have a place in your reunion.” He gave her a faint smile. “Yes, well, come with me and I’ll
make you known to my sister and mother.” She stood up. “I’m sorry that your father was not here as
well.” His smile turned wry. “I don’t know if I’d have been welcomed
here if my father were still alive.” “Maybe not right away, but you’re persuasive. He’d have relented
eventually.” She found herself patting his arm and stopped as soon as she
realized what she was doing. Tier’s mother and sister awaited them in a small room that
had been arranged for a sick person. Alinath sat on a stool next to the bed
where Tier’s mother held court The older woman’s hair was the same dark color
as her children’s, though streaked with spiderwebs of age. She wasn’t old, not
by Traveler standards, but her skin was yellow with illness. Both women looked upon Seraph without favor as Tier made his
introductions. “Tier tells us you have no home, child,” said Tier’s mother,
in a begrudging tone—as if she expected Seraph to impose on her for a
place to stay. “As long as there are Travelers, I have a home,” Seraph replied.
“It only remains for me to find them. Thank you for your concern.” “I told them that I would escort you to your people,” said
Tier. “They don’t come near Shadow’s Fall, so it might take us a few months.” “So we are to lose you again?” said his mother querulously.
“Alinath and Bandor cannot keep up with the work—every week they toil from dawn
to dusk for the bakery, which is yours. When you come back in a few months, I
will be dead.” It was said in a dramatic fashion, but Seraph thought that
the older woman might be speaking truth. “I can find my people on my own,” said Seraph. “Do you hear that, Tier? She is a Traveler and can find her
own way,” said Alinath. “She is sixteen and a woman alone,” returned Tier sharply.
“I’ll see her safe.” “You were younger than that when you went off to war,” said
Alinath. “And you weren’t a witch.” She bit off the last word as if it were
filthy. “Alinath,” said Tier in a gentle voice that made his sister
pale. “Seraph is my guest here and you will not sharpen your tongue on her.” “I can take care of myself, both here and on the road,” said
Seraph, though his defense touched her—as if the words of a solsenti stranger
could hurt her. “No,” said Tier, his voice firm. “If you’ll house us for the
night, Mother, we’ll start out tomorrow morning.” Tier’s mother and sister exchanged a look, as if they’d discussed
the situation while Tier had left them alone to retrieve Seraph. Tier’s mother smiled at Seraph. “Child, is there a hurry to
find your people? If you cannot tarry here until I pass from this world into
the next, could you not stay with us as our guest for a season so that we might
not lose Tier so soon after we’ve found him?” “A Traveler might be harmful to business,” said Seraph. “As
I said, there is no need for Tier to escort me. I am well capable of finding my
people by myself.” “If you go, he’ll follow you,” said Alinath with resignation.
“It may have been a long time since I’ve seen my brother, but I doubt that he
has changed so much as to go back on his sworn word.” “Stay, please,” said his mother. “What few people who will
not eat from the table where a Traveler is fed will be more than compensated
for by the new business we’ll get from the curious who will come to the bakery
just to catch a glimpse of you.” Seraph was under no illusion that she’d be a welcome guest
But there was no doubt either that they wanted her to stay if that were the
only way to keep Tier for a while. “I’ll stay,” she said reluctantly and felt a weight lift off
her shoulders. If she were here then she wasn’t fighting demons and watching
people die around her because she hadn’t been able to protect them. “I’ll stay
for a little while.” “Where is my brother?” Alinath’s voice sounded almost accusing,
as if she thought Seraph had done something to Tier. Seraph looked up from sifting the never-ending supply of
flour, one of the unskilled tasks that had fallen to her hands. She glanced
pointedly at the empty space next to her where Tier had spent the last three
weeks mixing various permutations of yeasted bread. She raised her eyebrows in
surprise, as if she hadn’t noted that he hadn’t taken his usual place this
morning. Then she looked back at Alinath and shrugged. It was rude, but Alinath’s sharp question had been rude,
too. Alinath’s jaw tightened, but she was evidently still intimidated
enough by Seraph’s status as Traveler not to speak further. She turned on her
heel and left Seraph to her work. Tier didn’t return until the family was sitting down for
lunch. He brushed a kiss on the top of Alinath’s head and sat down across from
her, beside Seraph. “Where were you this morning?” Alinath asked. “Riding,” he said in a tone that welcomed no questions ..
“Pass the carrots please, Seraph.” The rhythms of the bakery came back to Tier as if he’d not
spent the better part of the last decade with a sword in his hand instead of a
wooden spoon. He woke before dawn to fire the ovens and, after a few days, quit
having to ask Alinath for the proper proportion of ingredients. He could see the days stretching ahead of him in endless procession,
each day just exactly like the one before. The years of soldiering had made him
no more resigned to spending the rest of his life baking than he’d been at fifteen. Even something as exotic as his stray Traveler didn’t alter
the pattern of life at his father’s bakery. She worked as she was asked and
seldom spoke, even to him. Only his nightly’ rides broke the habits of his
childhood, but even they had begun to acquire a sameness. He ought to sell the horse, his mother had told him
over dinner yesterday, then he could use the money as a bride price. There were
a number of lovely young village women who would love to be a baker’s wife. This morning he’d gotten up earlier than usual and tried to
subdue his restlessness with work—to no effect. So as soon as Bandor had come
in to watch the baking, Tier left and took Skew out, galloping him over the
bridge and up into the mountains until they arrived at a small valley he’d
discovered as a boy. Once there, he’d explored the valley until the lather on
Skew’s back had dried and his own desperation loosened under the influence of
the sweet-grass smell and mountain breeze. Part of him was ready to leave this afternoon, to take
Seraph and find her people. But the rest of him wanted to put the journey off
as long as he could. Once it was over, there would be no further escapes for
him. He wasn’t fifteen anymore: he was a man, with a man’s responsibilities. “You’re quiet today,” said Seraph as they worked together
after lunch. “I was beginning to think that silence was a thing that Redemi
avoided at all cost. Always you” are telling stories, or singing. Even Bandor
hums all the time he works.” He grinned at her as he kneaded dough. “I should have warned
you,” he said, “that every man in Redem thinks himself a bard and most of the
women, too.” “In love with the sound of your own voices, the whole lot of
you,” said Seraph without rancor, dumping hot water in the scrubbing tub where
a collection of mixing bowls awaited cleaning. “My father always said that too
many words cheapened the value of a man’s speech.” Tier laughed again—but Alinath had entered the baking room
with an armful of empty boards in time to hear the whole of Seraph’s
observation. “My father said that a silent person is trying to hide something,”
she said as she dumped the trays in a stack. “Girl, get the broom and sweep the
front room. See that you get the corners so that we don’t attract mice.” Tier saw Seraph stiffen, but she grabbed the broom and dustpan. “Alinath, she is a guest in our house,” Tier bit out as the
door closed behind Seraph. “You don’t use that tone to the hired boy. She has
done nothing to earn your disrespect. Leave her be.” “She is a Traveler,” snapped Alinath, but there was
an undercurrent of desperation in her voice. “She bewitches you because she is
young and pretty. You laugh with her and you’ll barely exchange a word with any
of us.” How could he explain to her his frustration with the life
that so obviously suited her without hurting her feelings? The bakery was
smothering him. When he said nothing, Alinath said, “You’re a man. Bandor is
the same—neither of you see what she is. You think she’s a poor familyless,
defenseless woman in need of protection because that’s what she wants you to
see.” A flush of temper lit Alinath’s eyes as she began to pace.
“I see a woman who looks at my brother as a way to wealth and ease that she’ll
never have when she finds one of those ragtag bands of Travelers. She doesn’t
want to go to her people—even you must see that. I tell you that if you just
give her the chance, she’ll snatch you into a marriage-bed.” Tier opened his mouth and then closed it again. He tried to
see Seraph as his sister described her, but the image didn’t ring true. “She’s a child,” he said. “I was married when I was her age.” “She is a child and a Traveler,” he said. “She’d no more
look at me that way than she’d think of marrying a ... a horse. She thinks of
all of us as if we were a different species.” “Oh and you know so much about women,” his sister ranted,
though she was careful to keep her voice down so she couldn’t be heard in the
front room where Seraph was. “You need to find a good wife. You always liked
Kirah. She’s widowed now and would bring a fair widow’s portion with her.” Tier put the dough in the greased bowl he’d set out for it,
covered it with cheesecloth, and then scrubbed his hands in Seraph’s tub of
cooling water. He shook them dry and took off his father’s apron and hung it on
the hook. Enough, he thought. “Don’t wait dinner for me,” he said and started to leave. He stopped before he opened the door to the front room. “I’ve
been counting too heavily on manners and the memory of my little sister who saw
me leave without telling anyone because she understood me enough to know that I
had to leave. I see that you need a stronger reason to leave Seraph alone. Just
you remember that, for all of her quietness she has a temper as hot as yours.
She is a Traveler and a wizard, and if she takes a notion to teach you
what that means, neither your tongue nor your fist will do you a bit of good.” He left before she could say anything, closing the door to
the baking room firmly behind him. Seraph glanced his way as he stalked past her, but he said
nothing to her. She’d be all right; his warning would keep Alinath away from
her for a while. He couldn’t face Seraph right now, not with his sister’s
accusations ringing in his ears. Not that he believed what Alinath had said
about Seraph for a moment—but Alinath’d opened the way for possibilities that
made him uncomfortable. He’d never thought much about the peace that Seraph’s
tart commentary and quiet presence brought him: he’d just been grateful for the
relief from the demands of his family. He didn’t want to examine what he felt
any closer. So Tier nodded once at Seraph and also to Bandor before leaving the
bakery. Once outside, his steps faltered. He’d worn Skew out this
morning, so it hardly seemed fair to take him out again. He could walk—but it
wasn’t exercise he needed, it was escape. The Hero’s Welcome was a tavern and an inn, a conglomeration
of several older buildings, and the first building on the road through Redem.
It was seldom empty, and when Tier entered it there were a number of men
sitting near the kitchen entrance gossiping with each other while the tanner’s
father, Giro, coaxed soft music from his viol. It made Tier think of his grandfather and the grand concerts
he and Giro, who had been the tanner himself then, had put on. If Seraph ever
heard the old man play, she’d know why Tier would never consider himself a bard
in any sense of the word. He seated himself beside these men he’d known since he was a
child and greeted them by name, older men, all of them, contemporaries of his
grandfather. The younger men would come in later, when they were finished with
their work and chores. One of the men had been a soldier in his youth, and Tier
spent a little time exchanging stories. The innkeeper, noticing that there was
a newcomer, offered Tier ale. He took it, but merely nursed it because the
oblivion he sought wouldn’t come from alcohol. Giro gradually shifted from playing broken bits and pieces
into a recognizable song, and an old, toothless man began humming, his tone
uncertain with age, but his pitch absolutely true. One after the other the old
men began to sing. Tier joined in and let the healing music make the present
fade away. They sang song after song, sometimes pausing while one man
tried to hum enough of something he’d heard long ago for Giro to remember it,
too—that man had a memory for music that Tier had only seen his grandfather
equal. It was the first time that he was happy to be home. “Boy,” said Giro, “sing “The Hills of Home’ with me.” Tier grinned at the familiar appellation. It no longer fit
as well as it had when he’d tagged along after his grandfather. He stood and
let the first few notes of the viol pull him into the song. He took the low
part of the duet, the part that had been his grandfather’s, while the old man’s
warm tenor flung itself into the more difficult melody. Singing a duet rather
than blending with a group, Tier loosed the power of his voice and realized
with momentary surprise that Giro didn’t have to hold back. For the first time,
Tier’s singing held its own with the old musician’s. Then the old words left no
more room for thought. It was one of the magic times, when no note could possibly
go astray and any foray into countermelody or harmony worked perfectly. When
they finished the last note they were greeted with a respectful silence. “In all my wandering, I’ve never heard the like. Not even in
the palace of the Emperor himself.” A stranger’s voice broke the silence. Tier turned to see a man of about fifty, a well-preserved,
athletic fifty, wearing plain-colored clothes of a cut and fit that would have
done for a wealthy merchant or lower nobleman, but somehow didn’t seem out of
place in a rural tavern full of brightly dressed Redemi. His iron-grey hair, a
shade darker than his short beard, was tied behind his head in a fashion that
belonged to the western seaboard. He smiled warmly at Tier. “I’ve heard a great deal about you
from these rascals since you returned—and they didn’t lie when they said that
your song was a rare treat. Willon, retired Master Trader, at your service. You
can be no one but Tieragan Baker back from war.” He held his hand out, and Tier
took it, liking the man immediately. As Tier sat down again, the retired master trader pulled a
chair in between two of the others so he sat opposite Tier at the table. Giro smiled and said in his shy speaking voice, so at odds
with his singing, “Master Willon has built a fine little store near the end of
the road. You should go there and see it, full of bits and things he’s
collected.” “You are young to be retiring,” observed Tier. “And Redem is
an odd place to choose for retirement—these mountains get cold in the winter.” Master Willon had one of those faces that appeared to be smiling
even in repose—which robbed his grin of not a bit of its effect. “My son made Master last year,” he said. “He’s got a fire
that will take him far—but not if he spends all of his days competing with me
for control of the business. So I retired.” Willon laughed quietly and shook his head. “But it wasn’t as
easy as that The men who serve my house had been mine for thirty years. They’d
listen to my son, nod their heads, and come to me to see if I liked their
orders. So I had to take myself out of Taela, and Redem came to mind.” He raised his tankard to Giro. “My first trip as a caravan
master I came by this very inn and was treated to the rarest entertainment I’d
ever heard—two men who sang as if the gods themselves were their audience. I
thought I’d heard the finest musicians in the world in Taela’s courts, but I’d
never heard anything like that Business is business, gentlemen. But music is in
my soul—if not my voice.” “If it’s music you like, there’s plenty here,” said Tier
agreeably as a small group of younger men came through the inn door. “Well look what decided to drop by at last,” said one of them.
“You wiggle out from under your sister’s thumb, Tier?” Tier had greeted them all since he’d returned from war, of
course, but that had been under different circumstances, when they were
customers or he was. The tavern doors made them all kindred. Too much so. With the younger men came less music and more talk—and they
must have been talking to his mother because most of the talk had to do with
his upcoming marriage. The question was not when he was going to marry; it was
to whom. Tier excused himself earlier than he had expected to and
found himself leaving with Master Willon. “Don’t let them fret you,” Willon said. “I won’t,” Tier said. He almost stopped there, but couldn’t
quite halt his bitterness—maybe because a stranger might understand better than
any of his friends and kin he’d left behind in the tavern. “There’s more to
life than wedding and breeding and baking bread.” He started walking and Willon fell into step beside him.
“I’ve heard as much praise for your baking as I have for your singing. You
don’t want to be a baker?” “Baking ...” Tier struggled to put a finger on the thing
that bothered him about his family’s business. “Baking is like washing—the
results are equally temporary.” He gave a half-laugh. “That’s arrogant of me,
isn’t it? That I’d like to do something that means more, something that will
outlast me the way these buildings have outlasted the men who built them.” “I hadn’t thought of it that way before,” said Willon
slowly. “But immortality ... I think that’s a basic instinct rather than the
product of pride. It goes toward the same things that they were trying to push
you into. How did you put it? Wedding and breeding. A man’s immortality can be
found in his children.” Children? Tier hadn’t been aware that he’d thought
about the matter at all, but the need was there, buried beneath the “I can’t
breathe with the weight of my family’s wishes” tightness in his chest. “So what do you want to do, if not bake?” asked Willon, betraying
his foreignness with the question. No Redemi would have suggested that he do
anything else. “Would you go back to fighting if there were a war to be had?” “Not soldiering,” Tier said firmly. “I’ve killed more than
any man ought—the only product of warmaking is death.” Tier took a deep breath
and closed his eyes briefly as he thought. Maybe it was seeing his little
valley again on his morning ride, but something inside of him vibrated like one
of Giro’s viol strings when he finally said, “I’d like to farm.” Willon laughed, but it was a comforting laugh. “I’d not
think that growing crops would be much more permanent than baking bread—just
takes a bit longer to get to the final product.” But it wasn’t. It was different Tier stopped walking so that
he could encompass that difference in words that didn’t sound as stupid out
loud as they did to himself, stupid but true. “I’ve known farmers,” he said slowly. “A lot of the men who
fought the Fahlarn were fanners, fighting for their lands. They are as much a
part of their lands as flour is a part of bread.” He shook his head at himself
and grinned sheepishly because it sounded stupider out loud. “The land is
immortal, Master Willon, and a farmer has a part of that immortality.” “So are you going to be a farmer?” asked Willon with
interest “And marry and breed?” Tier said lightly over the longing Willon’s
words produced. “Not likely.” He began walking again, though they’d passed the
bakery a while back. He had no desire to go home yet “There’s not a woman in
Redem who’d marry me and let me go fanning. I know the money fanning brings in
and that bakery brings in ten times as much—and it would break my family’s
heart.” “Fanners don’t make much,” agreed the master trader. “But if
you look around you might find a woman who’d rather be a farmer’s wife than
live in the village under the tyranny of her neighbors.” That night Seraph got up out of her cot in the small room
they’d given her and climbed out of the window into the garden that backed the
house, her blanket serving as a cloak. The solid walls made her feel closed in
and trapped. Most of her nights had been spent in tents rather than buildings. She found the bench that had served as her bed on more than
one night since she’d chosen to stay here and lay down on it again to look up
at the stars. She needed to go. These people owed her nothing, not the
food she ate or the blanket she wrapped herself in. She did not belong here.
She hadn’t heard the argument that Tier and Alinath had while she swept the
front room, but she’d heard the raised voices. Tomorrow, she would go. In two weeks or three she would find
a clan that would take her in. Resolute, she closed her eyes and willed herself to sleep. A
long time later, exhaustion had more success than her will and she relaxed into
slumber. A rotten tomato hit Arvage’s shoulder while the solsenti
boys bounced with nervous bravado. Didn’t they know that the old man could
kill them all with a touch of the magic he knew? Didn’t they know that he and
Seraph had spent the better part of the past two days banishing a khurlogh,
a demon spirit, that had been preying on nighttime visitors to the town
well? Instead her teacher’s arthritic fingers touched the mess
on his shoulder and transformed it into afresh, ripe tomato. “My thanks, young sirs,” he said. “A rare addition to my
dinner.” The scene faded as Seraph stirred restlessly in protest of
the old memory. She quieted and her dream took up again at a different point in
time. Her father’s fingers petted her hair as she leaned
against his knee, half-asleep in the aftermath of a full meal and the warmth of
the nearby fire. “The entire clan gone?” her father said, a small tremor
in his bossy voice. “Are you certain it was the Imperial Army?” Their visitor nodded his head wearily. “As far as we’ve
been able to determine, the last village that they passed through complained to
the commander of the imperial troops stationed nearby. Told them that—the
Travelers kidnapped a pair of young women. The troops came upon the clan and
massacred them from grandfather to day-old babe. Turns out that the women were
taken by bandits—the imperial troops found them on their way back to the
village.” They buried Arvage in a wilderness glen, just as he had
wanted. Seraph herself had thrown in the first, symbolic, handful of earth.
He’d died trying to work magic that he could no longer harness because the pain
in his joints broke through his fearsome control. He’d known the risk. In one of those things possible only in dreams, Arvage stood
beside her while her father and brothers buried him. “It is our task to take care of them or die,” he told
her. “Our purpose is to keep the shadows at bay for the solsenti who are
helpless against them. This is a Raven’s task before us, and I am Raven—as
are you. You aren’t old enough and I am too old, but we do as we must.” * Tier hadn’t lived in the comfortable safety of the village
long enough to sleep through small noises in the night. He’d heard Seraph go
out, as she often did, and he’d gone back to sleep afterward. But he’d awakened
again. He waited for the noise to repeat itself, and when it did he
pulled on his pants and slipped out his window to the garden where Seraph
whimpered in the helpless throes of a nightmare. The man was from the Clan of Gilarmist the Fat, running a
message to another clan. He’d flirted with Seraph’s oldest sister and died in
the night. Her sister died the next morning, drowning in the fluid that they
couldn’t keep from filling her lungs. By the time four days had passed only Seraph and her
brother Ushireh were left to bury the dead. Ushireh worked until he passed out.
She’d been so afraid that he was dead, too; it had taken her a long time to
convince herself that he was only unconscious. She’d dragged him away from the
dead they’d gathered together in the center of the camp, then she’d burned it
all—camp and bodies alike. It had been weeks before she could work
enough magic to light afire. When she managed it at last, Ushireh’s body sat up in the
pyre, and his head turned until he could fix his glowing eyes on her. Seraph
shrank back and tried to close her eyes. As if in death he’d acquired the magic
he’d so envied her in life, his will kept her from looking away from him. “You left me,” he said. “You left your duty. You cannot
run forever, Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent.” She awoke with a gasp and a cry and was gathered into warm
arms and rocked gently. “Shh,” said Tier, “it was a dream. You’re safe.” She buried
her head in his shoulder and gave up a lifetime of self-control to sob raggedly
against him. “I can’t do it,” she said. “I don’t want to be a Traveler. They
all die, and I have to burn them and bury them. I’m so tired of death and duty.
I want ... I want ...” What she wanted was tied away from her in strands of
guilt and duty, but she found a fair approximation of it in the safety of
Tier’s arms. “Shh,” he said. “You don’t have to go if you don’t want to.”
His words passed over and around her, the sense lost to her grief and guilt,
but the sound of his voice comforted her. From the third of the three windows that looked out into the
garden, Alinath watched her brother hold the witch he’d brought home and she
clenched her fists before she turned away. When the worst of it had passed, embarrassment made Seraph
turn away and wipe her face with the corner of the blanket. “Sorry,” she muttered. “It was a nightmare.” “Ah,” said Tier as he let her pull away from him. “It
sounded worse than that to me.” She shrugged, not looking at him. “Memories make the worst
nightmares, my father always said.” “You don’t have to go find another clan,” he said. “You can
stay here.” She tried to stifle her involuntary laugh. It wouldn’t be
polite to disparage the hospitality of his family. “No, I can’t. Thank you. But
no.” “I can’t leave now,” said Tier. “But I fear it won’t be
long. Mother complains and frets until it’s hard to believe that she’s sick at
all—but she’s losing weight and her color is much worse. Can you wait?” Seraph held herself still. Could she wait to take up her
duties? Oh, yes. Wait forever if she could. But was it the right thing
to do? At last she nodded. “I’ll wait.” “Good.” Tier sat with her a bit, while the sweat dried on her back. With the air of a man coining to a decision, he took something
from around his neck and put it into her hands. “This came with me into war and kept me safe enough through
any number of battlefields. As I am unlikely to need it now, I’d like you to
take it.” She fingered the collection of large wooden beads carefully. “They’re not much to look at,” he said hastily, and with a
little embarrassment, she thought. “But they carry the blessing of our priest.
You’ve met Karadoc?” She nodded. The priest had sought her out to give her his sympathies
on the death of her brother. The only Redemi aside from Tier who had. She
hadn’t been quite sure how to deal with a priest—Travelers had little use for
the minions of the gods—but he’d seemed like a good person. “Karadoc gave me that for helping him tend his garden after
he broke his wrist one summer.” “It must have been more than that,” Seraph said
thoughtfully. “People don’t give gifts like this lightly.” He stiffened, “It’s just a bunch of wooden beads, Seraph.” She put them against her face and rubbed against them like a
cat, soaking in the warmth that emanated from the battered wood. “Old wooden
beads,” she said. “I can’t tell exactly how old, but they’ve been given in love
and worn that way for a long, long time. They comfort me—did they comfort you
while you were far from your home?” She didn’t wait for his answer, “Tell me
the story of your gardening for Karadoc?” “I was young,” he said finally. “Karadoc is ... well, you’ve
met him. He always look time to talk to me, listening to me when my father and
I fought.” His voice hadn’t fallen into the cadences of storytelling;
he told this story hesitantly. “Karadoc broke his wrist; I told you that. His
garden is his pride and joy, and it started to get overgrown almost
immediately. I suppose being the priest of the god of green and growing things
has a certain influence on your garden.” “He hired a boy to tend it, but when harvest season came the
boy had to help his father in the field, and Karadoc couldn’t find another one.
So I started getting up a little earlier in the morning so I could work on it a
bit.” Seraph smiled a little; the beads and Tier’s company had
worked their own magic. “He didn’t know you were doing it.” “Well, I wasn’t certain that I would do it more than once or
twice. A baker gets up early to miss cooking in the heat of the day. I didn’t
want to promise something I couldn’t do.” “And Karadoc found you out,” said Seraph. “When you wouldn’t
take any pay, he gave you these.” He nodded. Seraph put the necklace around her throat. Gifts could not
be returned, only appreciated. She would find something she could do to repay
him for his kindness to her and his gift A Traveler’s blessing could be a
useful thing. “Thank you for this,” she said. “I will treasure it as long
as it remains in my hands and pass it on as you have, as Karadoc did.” They lapsed into a comfortable silence. “A man asked me today what I’d do if I could do something besides
baking and soldiering,” he said at last. “What did you answer?” “Fanning,” he said. She nodded. “The land gives back everything you put into it
and a little more, if you have the knack.” “If you could do anything, be anything, what would it be?” She stilled. She knew about villages, knew that most men’s
fates were set in stone when they were little more than children and
apprenticed to a trade—or else they were cast off never to be more than
itinerant workers or soldiers. Women’s lives were dictated by their husbands. Travelers were a little more free than that usually. A
bowyer could decide to smith if he wanted to, as long as he continued to
contribute to the clan. There were no guilds to restrict a person from doing as
he willed. And women, women ran the clan. Only the lives of the Ordered were
set out from the moment a Raven pronounced them gifted at birth. No Traveler would ever have asked a Raven what she wanted to
be. The silence must have lasted too long because he said, “That
question took me aback, today, too. But I learned something. What would you
do?” “Ravens don’t marry,” she said abruptly. He was easy to talk
to, especially in the dark. “We can’t afford the distraction. We don’t do the
normal chores of the clan. No cooking or firewood gathering. We don’t dam our
own clothes or sew them.” “You cook well,” he said. “That’s because Ushireh couldn’t cook at all. I learned a
lot when we were left on our own. But being a Raven’s not like being a baker.
Tier. You could leave it and become a soldier. You can leave it now and become
a farmer if you want. But I can’t leave being a Raven behind.” “But if you could—what would you do?” She leaned back on her hands and swung her feet back and
forth, the bench being somewhat tall for her. In a dreamy, smiling voice she
said, “I would be a wife, like the old harridan who runs an inn in Boarsdock on
the western coast. She has a double handful of children, all of them taller
than her, and they all cringe when she walks by. Her husband is an old sailing
man with one leg. I don’t think I’ve ever heard him say anything but, ‘yes,
dear.’” She caught him by surprise and Tier gave a crack of laughter
that he had to cover his mouth to suppress. Smiling her satisfaction in the dark, she thought that the
oddest thing about her statement was that it was the truth. That old woman ran
her inn and her children and their wives and husbands and they all, every one
of them, loved her. She lived in the daylight world, where shadow things
wouldn’t dare show their faces and the children in her family had no more
responsibility than grooming a few horses or cleaning a room could provide. But the thing that Seraph envied the most was that one
winter evening, when Seraph’s uncles entertained the boisterous crowd that
gathered beneath the great fireplace and told them stories of haunts and
shadow-things, that wise old woman shook her head with a laugh and said that
she had better things to do than listen to tales of monsters fabricated to keep
children up all night. So it was that she stayed when she should have gone. But a
week or a month would make little difference to her duties—a lifetime or two
would make little difference as far as she could tell. So she stayed. “Don’t pull that up. That’s an iris bulb, trimmed down now
that it’s bloomed,” said Tier’s sister several weeks later. “Don’t you know how
to weed?” Seraph released the hapless plant unharmed, straightened,
and almost groaned at the easing in her back. “No,” she said, though she’d told
her as much when Alinath had set her to the task. How would she have learned to
weed? The herbs and food plants she knew, but she’d no experience with flowers
at all. Tier had stormed off at lunch, beset by both his sister and
his mother, who had gotten out of her bed only to try and push him into finding
a wife. Since then Alinath had been picking at her as if it had been Seraph
who’d sent Tier off to seek peace. Seraph had been set to half a dozen tasks,
only to be sent to do something else because of some inadequacy in her work,
real or imaginary. “Well leave off then,” said Alinath. “Bandor or I will have
to finish it, I suppose. You are utterly useless, girl. Cannot sew, cannot
cook, cannot weed. The baking room floor needs cleaning—but mind how you do it.
Don’t let the dust get into the flour bins.” Seraph stood up and dusted off her skin; she’d left off
wearing her comfortable pants when she’d noticed that none of the Redemi women
wore anything except skirts. “It’s a shame,” she said finally. “That Tier, who wears
courtesy as close as his skin, should have a sister with none at all.” Before Alinath could do more than open her mouth, Seraph
turned on her heel and entered the house through the baking room door. She
regretted her comment as soon as she’d made it. The womenfolk in the clan were
no more courteous in their requests than Alinath was. But they would have never
turned their demands upon a Raven. Moreover, Seraph knew the solsenti well enough to
know that Alinath’s rudeness to a guest was a deliberate slight. Especially
since, except for that first time, she was careful to soften her orders around
Tier. Seraph had done her best to ignore the older woman. She was
a guest in Alinath’s home. She had no complaint with the work she was asked to
do—which was no more work than anyone else did, except for Tier’s mother. And,
by ignoring Alinath’s rudeness, Seraph bothered her more than any other
response could have. There was a more compelling reason to ignore Alinath’s trespasses. Seraph let her fingernails sink into the wood of the broom
handle as she swept with careful, slow strokes. A Raven could not afford to
lose her temper. She took a deep, calming breath and sought for control. The door opened and Alinath walked in. When she started to
speak her voice was carefully polite. “I have been rude,” she said. “I admit it. I believe
that it is time for some plainer speech. My brother thinks you are a child.” Seraph stared at her a moment, bewildered, her broom still
in her hands. What did Tier’s opinion have to do with anything? “But I know better,” continued Alinath. “I was married at
your age.” And I killed the ghouls who killed my teacher when I was
ten, thought Seraph. A Raven is never a child. But she saw where Alinath
was headed. “I told Tier what you are up to, but he doesn’t see it,”
said Alinath. “Anyone who marries my brother will have this bakery.” Anyone who married your brother would be safe for the
rest of their life, thought Seraph involuntarily, and envied his future
wife with all of her heart. “But you will never have him.” Seraph shrugged. “And he will never have me.” She went back to sweeping—and longing to be an old innkeeper
who thought that ghouls and demons were stories told to frighten children. She
crouched to get the broom under the low shelf of the table where Tier kneaded
his bread. “Where did you get those?” Alinath lunged at Seraph. Startled, Seraph dropped the broom
as Alinath’s hand clenched around Tier’s bead necklace; it must have slid out
of her blouse when she crouched. “Dirty Traveler thief!” shrieked Alinath, jerking wildly at
the necklace. “Where did you get these?” Seraph had heard all the epithets—but she’d been fighting
her anger for weeks. The slight pain of the jerk Alinath gave the necklace was
nothing to the outrage that Alinath had dared to grab her in the first place. She heard the door to the public room open and heard Tier’s
voice, but everything was secondary to the rage that swept through her. Rage
fed by her clan’s death, Ushireh’s death, her desperate, despairing guilt at
surviving when everyone else died, and lit by this stupid solsenti woman
who pushed and pushed until Seraph would retreat no more. Alinath must have seen some of it in her face because she
dropped her hold on the necklace and took two steps back. The necklace fell
back against Seraph’s neck like a kiss from a friend. Just before the wave of
magic left her, the warmth of Tier’s gift allowed her to regain control. It
saved Alinath’s life, and probably Seraph’s as well because magic loosed in
anger was not choosy in its target Pottery shattered as the stone building shook with a hollow
boom. Cooking spoons, wooden peels, and baking tiles flew across the room. The
great door that separated the hot ovens from the baking room pulled from its
hinges and flew between Seraph and Alinath, hitting the opposite wall and
sending plaster into the air in a thick white cloud as Alinath cried out in
fear. Flour joined plaster as the door fell to the ground, taking two tables
with it and knocking a barrel half-full of flour to its side. Closing her eyes to the destruction and Alinath’s frightened
face, Seraph fought to pull back the magic she’d loosed. It struggled in her
grasp, fed by the anger that had engendered it. It made her pay for her lack of
control, sweeping back to her call, back through her like shards of glass. But
it came, and peelers and tiles settled gently to the floor. Seraph opened her eyes to assess the damage. Alinath was
fine—though obviously shaken, she had quit screaming as soon as she’d begun.
The wall would have to be replastered and the door reining, the jamb repaired
or replaced. The jars of valuable mother, used to start the bread dough, had
somehow escaped, and the number of broken pots was fewer than she’d thought. Neither Tier, nor the four or five people who had followed him
into the room, had more damage than a coating of flour and plaster. Shame cut Seraph almost as rawly as the magic had. It was
the worst thing a Raven could do—loose magic in anger. That no one had been
hurt, nothing irreplaceable broken, was a tribute to Tier’s gift and a little
good luck rather than anything Seraph had done and so mitigated her crime not a
whit. Seraph stood frozen in the middle of the baking room. “I told you that she had a temper,” said Tier mildly. “This was an ill way to repay your hospitality,” said
Seraph. “I will get my things and leave.” Tier cursed the impulse that had led him to invite the men
he’d spent the afternoon singing with to try out an experimental batch of herb
bread he’d been working on. That he’d opened the door to the baking room when
he—and everyone else—heard Alinath cry out had been stupidity. He’d been
warning his sister not to antagonize Seraph for the better part of a week. “Mages aren’t tolerated here,” said someone behind him. “She said she’d leave,” said Giro. “She hurt no one.” “We’ll leave in the morning,” said Tier. “Strangers who come to Redem and work magic are condemned to
death,” said Alinath in a tone of voice he’d never heard from her. He looked at her. She should have appeared ridiculous, but
the cold fear-driven anger on her face made her formidable despite the coating
of white powder settling on her. Someone gave a growl of agreement. The ugly sound reminded Tier of the inn where he’d rescued
her—or rescued the villagers from her. He realized that unless he managed to
stop it, by morning his village might not be in any mood to let Seraph go. An odd idea that had been floating in his head since he’d
talked to Willon and then held Seraph in the wake of her night terrors
crystallized. “She is not a stranger,” lied Tier abruptly. “She is my
wife.” Silence descended in the room. Seraph looked at him sharply. “No,” said Alinath. “I’ll not have it.” She was in shock, he knew, or she’d never have said such a ridiculous
thing. “It is not for you to have or not have,” he reminded her,
his voice gentle but firm. “I won’t have her in this house,” Alinath said. “We would have had to leave in any case,” said Bandor, who’d
pushed through the crowd and into the baking room. He walked over to Alinath,
and put his hand on her shoulder. “Once Tier had chosen his wife, whoever she
was, we’d have had to leave. I’ve made some inquiries in Leheigh. The baker
there told me he’d be willing to take on a journeyman.” “There’s no need,” said Tier. Now that his choice was made,
the words he needed to convince them all flowed easily. “There’s a place I
intend to farm about an hour’s walk from here. I’ll have to get the Sept’s
steward’s permission, which won’t be difficult to obtain since the land is not
being used. There’s time to build a house before winter. We’ll live there, but
I’ll work in the bakery through the spring when planting season comes. Then
I’ll deed it to Alinath.” “When were you married?” whispered Alinath. “Last night,” lied Tier, holding out his hand to Seraph, who’d
been watching him with an expression he couldn’t read. She stepped to his side and took his hand. Her own was very
cold. “Yes,” said Karadoc, coming forward and putting a hand on
Tier’s head as he used to when Tier was a boy. “There have been Redemi who were
mages before. Seraph will harm no one.” The crowd dispersed, and Bandor took Alinath to their room
to talk, leaving only Karadoc, Tier, and Seraph. “See that you come by the temple tonight,” said the priest.
“I don’t like to keep a lie longer than necessary.” Tier grinned at him and hugged the older man. “Thank you.
We’ll stop by.” When he left, Tier turned to Seraph. “You can stay here with
me and be my wife. Karadoc will marry us tonight and no one will know the
difference.” He waited, and when she said nothing, he said, “Or I can do as I promised. We can
leave now and I’ll go with you to find your people.” Her hand tightened on his then, as if she’d never let it go.
She glanced once around the room and then lowered her eyes to the floor. “I’ll
stay,” she whispered. “I’ll stay.” Part Two Chapter 3When Seraph reached the narrow bridge, the river was high
and the wooden walkway was slick with cold water from the spring runoff. She
glanced across the river and up the mountainside where Redem hung, terraced
like some ancient giant’s stone garden. Even after twenty years, the sight
still impressed her. From where she stood, the new temple at the very top of the
village rose like a falcon over its prey. The rich hues of new wood contrasted
with the grays of the village, but, to her, that seemed to be merely an accent
to the harmony of stone buildings and craggy mountain. Seraph crossed the bridge, skirted the few people tending animals,
and headed for the steps of the steep road that zigzagged its way up the
mountain face, edged with stone buildings. The bakery looked much as it had when she’d first seen it
The house was newer than its neighbors, having been rebuilt several generations
earlier because of a fire. Tier had laughed and told her that his several times
great-grandfather had tried to make the building appear old but had succeeded
only in making it ugly. Not even the ceramic pots planted with roses could add
much charm to the cold grey edifice, but the smell of fresh-baked bread wafting
from the chimney gave the building an aura of welcome. Seraph almost walked on—she could sell her goods elsewhere,
but not without offending her sister-in-law. Perhaps Alinath would be out and
she could deal with Bandor, who had never been anything but kind. Resolutely,
she opened the bakery door. “Seraph,” Tier’s sister greeted her without welcome from the
wide, flour-covered wooden table where her clever hands wove dough into knots
and set them on baking tiles to be taken back to the ovens for cooking. Seraph smiled politely. “Jes found a honey-tree in the woods
last week. Rinnie and I spent the last few days jarring it I wondered if you
would like to buy some jars to make sweet bread.” Tier would have given it to his sister, but Seraph could not
afford such generosity. Tier was late back from winter fur-trapping, and
Jes needed boots. Alinath sniffed. “That boy. If I’ve told Tier once, I’ve
told him a thousand times, the way you let him wander the woods on his own—and
him not quite right—it’s a wonder a bear or worse hasn’t gotten him.” Seraph forced herself to smile politely. “Jes is as safe in
the woods as you or I here in your shop. I have heard my husband tell you that
as often as you complained to him.” Alinath wiped off her hands. “Speaking of children, I have been
meaning to talk to you about Rinnie.” Seraph waited. “Bandor and I have no children, and most probably never
will. We’d like to take Rinnie in and apprentice her.” Seraph reminded herself sternly that Alinath meant no harm
by her proposal. Even Travelers fostered children under certain circumstances,
but it seemed to Seraph that the solsenti traded and sold their children
like cattle. Tier had tried to explain the advantages of the apprenticing
system to her—the apprentice gained a trade, a means to make a fair living, and
the master gained free help. In her travels, Seraph had seen too many places
where children were treated worse than slaves; not that she thought Alinath
would treat Rinnie badly. So, Seraph was polite. “Rinnie is needed on the farm,” she
said with diplomacy that Tier would have applauded. “That farm will go to Lehr, sooner or later. Jes will be a
burden upon it and upon Lehr for as long as he lives,” said Alinath. “Tier will
not be able to give Rinnie a decent dowry and without that, with her mixed
blood, no one will have her.” Calm, Seraph told herself. “Jes more than carries his
own weight,” she said with as much outward serenity as she could muster. “He is
no burden. Any man who worries about Rinnie’s mixed blood is no one I want her
marrying. In any case, she’s only ten years old, and marriage is something she
won’t have to worry about for a long time.” “You are being stupid,” said Alinath. “I have approached the
Elders on the matter already. They know that scrap of land you have my brother
trying to farm is so poor he has to spend the winter trapping so you have food
on your table. It doesn’t really matter that you have no care for your
daughter; when the Elders step in, you’ll have no choice.” “Enough,” said Seraph, outrage lending unmistakable
power to that one word. No one was taking her children from her. No one. Alinath paled. No magic. Tier’s voice cautioned her, none at all,
Seraph. Not in Redem. Seraph closed her eyes and took a deep breath, trying to
cleanse herself of anger, and managed to continue speaking more normally. “You
may talk to Tier when he returns. But if anyone comes to try and take my
daughter before then ...” She let the unspoken threat hang in the air. “I agree,” said a mild voice from the kitchen. “Enough badgering,
Alinath.” Bandor entered from the baking room door with a large bowl of risen
dough. “If any of Seraph’s children want to apprentice we’d be glad to have
them here—but that’s for their parents to decide. Not you or the Elders.” He
nodded a greeting toward Seraph. “Bandor,” managed Seraph through her rage-tightened throat
“It’s good to see you.” . “You’ll have to excuse Alinath,” he said. “She’s been as worried
about Tier as you are. I’ve told her that it’s not fair to expect a man
trapping in the wild to come home on time every year. But he’s her brother, and
she frets. Tier’s only a few weeks late. He’ll show up.” “Yes,” Seraph agreed. “I’d best be going.” “Didn’t I hear you say you had some honey?” he asked. “Jes found some in the woods last week. I brought a few
dozen jars with me,” she answered. “But Alinath didn’t seem interested in it.” “Hummph,” said Bandor, with a glance at his wife. “We’ll
take twelve jars for half-copper a jar. Then you go to Willon up on the
heights, and tell him we’re paying a copper each for anything you don’t sell to
him. He’ll buy up your stock for that so he can compete. Yours is the first
honey this spring.” Without a word, Seraph took out her pack and pulled out
twelve jars, setting them on the counter. Just as silently, Alinath counted out
six coppers and set it beside the jars. When Seraph reached out to take the
money, the other woman’s hand clamped on her wrist. “If my brother had married Kirah”—Alinath said in a low
voice that was no less violent for its lack of sound—“he’d have had no need to
go to the mountains in the winter in order to feed his children.” Seraph’s chin jerked up and she twisted her wrist, freeing
it. “It has been near to two decades since Tier and I married. Find something
else to fret about.” “I agree,” said Bandor mildly, but there was something ugly
in his tone. Alinath flinched. Seraph frowned, having never seen Alinath afraid of anything
before—except Seraph herself on that one memorable occasion. She’d certainly
never seen anyone afraid of Bandor. Alinath’s face quickly rearranged
itself to the usual embittered expression she wore around Seraph, leaving only
a glint of fear in her eyes. “Thank you, Bandor, for your custom and your advice,” Seraph
said. As soon as the door was closed behind Seraph and she’d
started up the narrow, twisty road, she muttered to her absent husband. “See
what happens when you are away too long, Tier? You’d better get home soon, or
those Elders are in for a rude surprise.” She wasn’t really worried about the Elders. They weren’t stupid
enough to confront her, no matter what they thought should be done for Rinnie’s
benefit Once Tier was home, he could talk them out of whatever stupidity Alinath
had talked them into. He was good at that sort of thing. And if she was wrong,
and the Elders came to try to take Rinnie before Tier was home ... well, she
might have failed in her duties to her people, but she would never fail her
children. She wasn’t worried about Rinnie—but Tier was another matter
entirely. A thousand things could have delayed Tier’s return, she reminded
herself. He might even now be waiting at home. Even hardened by farmwork, Seraph’s calves ached by the time
she came to the door of Willon’s shop near the top edge of the village. When
she opened the homey door and stepped into the building, Willon was talking to
a stranger with several open packs on the floor, so she walked past him
and into the store. The only other person in the store was Giro, the tanner’s
father, who was stringing a small harp. The old man looked up when she came in
and returned her nod before going back to the harp. Willon’s store had once been a house. When he’d purchased
it, he’d excavated and built until his store extended well into the mountain.
He’d stocked the dark corners of the store with odds and bits from his merchant
days—and some of those were odd indeed—then added whatever he felt might sell. Seraph doubted many people knew what some of his things were
worth, but she recognized silk when she saw it—though doubtless the only piece
in Redem resided on the wall behind a shelf of carved ducks in Willon’s shop. She seldom had the money to shop here, but she loved to explore.
It reminded her of the strange places she’d been. Here was a bit of jade from
an island far to the south, and there a chipped cup edged in a design that reminded
her of a desert tribe who painted their cheeks with a similar pattern. Some of Willon’s wares were new, but much of it was secondhand.
In a back corner of one of a half dozen alcoves she found boxes of old boots
and shoes that still had a bit of life left in them. She took out the string she’d knotted and began measuring it
against the boots. In the very bottom of the second box she searched, she found
a pair made of thinner leather than usual for work boots. The sole was made for
walking miles on roads or forest trails, rather than tramping through the mud
of a farmer’s field. Her fingers lingered on the decorative stitches on the top
edge, hesitating where the right boot was stained with blood—though someone had
obviously worked to clean it away. Traveler’s boots. She didn’t compare them to her son’s feet, just set them
back in the box and piled a dozen pairs of other boots on top of them, as if
covering them would let her forget about them. In a third bin, she found what
she was looking for, and took a sturdy pair of boots up to the front. There is nothing I could have done, she told herself.
I am not a Traveler and have not been for years. But even knowing it was true, she couldn’t help the tug of
guilt that tried to tell her differently: to tell her that her place had never
been here, safe in Tier’s little village, but out in the world protecting those
who couldn’t protect themselves. “I can’t sell those here,” she heard Willon say to a
stranger at the front counter—a tinker by the color of his packs. “Folk ’round
here get upset with writing they can’t read—old traps of the Shadowed still
linger in these mountains. They know to fear magic, and even a stupid person’s
going to notice that those have Traveler’s marks on them.” “I bought them from a man in Korhadan. He claimed to have
collected them all,” said the tinker. “I paid him two silvers. I’ve had to
carry them from there to here. I’ll sell them for ten coppers, the entire bag,
sir, for I’m that tired of them. You’re the eighth merchant in as many towns as
told me the same thing, and they take up space in my packs as I might use for
something else. You surely could melt them down for something useful.” On the counter lay an assortment of objects that appeared
something like metal feathers. One end was sharp for a few inches, almost
daggerlike, but the other end was decorative and lacy. Some were short, but
most were as long as Seraph’s forearm, and one nearly twice that long. There
must have been nearly a hundred of them—mermori. “My son can work metal,” said Seraph, around the pulse of sorrow
that beat too heavily in her throat. There were so many of them. “He could turn
these into horseshoes. I can pay you six coppers.” “Done,” cried the fellow before Willon could say a thing. He
bundled them up in a worn leather bag and handed it to Seraph, taking the coins
she handed him. He gathered his packs together and carried them off as if he
were afraid she’d renege if he waited. Willon shook his head, “You shouldn’t have bought those, Seraph
Tieraganswife. Poor luck follows those who buy goods gotten by banditry and
murder the way those probably were.” A merchant to the bone, Willon should have objected to her
buying outright from the tinker rather than cut him in for a percentage—but
things like that happened when mermori were involved. “Travelers’ spells don’t hurt those of Traveler blood,” she
said in a low voice that wouldn’t carry to others in the store. Willon looked startled for a moment. “Ah. Yes, I had almost
forgotten that.” “So you think these were gotten by banditry?” she asked. “My sons tell me that they don’t call it that anymore.”
Willon shook his head in disapproval. “The present emperor’s father declared
the Travelers beyond the protection of his laws. The old man’s been dead for
years, but his son’s not going to change anything. He shuts himself up in the
palace and listens to people who tell him stories without questioning the truth
from falsehood, poor boy.” He spoke as if he knew him, but Seraph let it pass without
comment. Tier had told her that he thought that the caravanning business Willon
had retired from had been richer than he let on. He hadn’t changed much from
when he’d first come, other than the gradual lightening of his hair to white. Though
he must have been nearing his seventh decade, he looked much younger than that. “Ah well,” she said. “They’re pretty enough, but they’ll
make shoes for horses and buckles for harness, sir—surely if Travelers had that
much magic left they’d have used it to save themselves.” She set the boots
she’d selected on the counter. “Now, I need these for Jes, but I’ve spent my
coppers on the metal bits. In my pack I have some wild honey. I’ve sold a dozen
jars to Bandor at the bakery below for a half-penny apiece, and I’ve a little
more than twice that left” She’d looked, and hadn’t seen any honey in the
section where he kept a variety of jarred and dried goods. “My brother-in-law told me to tell you I sold him his at a
copper each,” she added with a small smile. Willon was one of the few villagers
she felt comfortable talking to—probably because he was an outsider too. “Aye, and he should have paid you that,” said Willon with a
snort. “Doubtless you know it, too. Taking advantage of his own kin.” “If Tier were home, we’d have given him the honey,” she
said, “which Bandor knows also.” Willon grinned. “I’ll buy what you’ve left for a copper
each—that’s a fair price. Especially if when that boy of yours finds more
honey, you bring it to me first.” “I’ll do that,” she said. “Thank you, Willon.” Thirty coppers for the honey minus ten for the boots left
her with twenty coppers, almost a whole silver. She tucked the coins in her
satchel as she left Willon’s shop, closing the door gently on the first few
notes of Giro’s harp. Her mind more on the mermori she’d bought from the
trader than on where she was going, she almost ran over a man who stood in the
way. “Excuse me,” she said apologetically, looking into his face. It was a good face, even-featured and wide-mouthed. He was
no one she knew, which was unusual. The village was small enough that even with
as little time as she spent there she knew everyone in it—at least by sight “A Traveler,” he said in a tone of near delight that shocked
her. Her reaction must have been easy to read because he laughed.
“I must sound like an idiot—I just hadn’t expected to run into a
Traveler here. I thought your people avoid coming here. Some aversion to being
so near Shadow’s Fall?” Aversion to being near people so fearful of magic, she
almost answered him, but not even surprise could loosen her habitual control
over her tongue. A look of comprehension crossed his face. “You must be Seraph
Tieraganswife. That’s why people speak of you ...” he seemed to realized that however people spoke of her
wouldn’t exactly be flattering and stumbled to a halt. If she had not been holding a bag of mention that reminded
her of the plight of the Travelers and her failure to live the life she’d been
called to serve, she might have helped him. But he’d talked his way into
offense, and she let him find his own way out. “I am sorry,” he said sincerely after a moment. “When I am excited
I tend to talk too much. Let me introduce myself properly. I am Volis, priest
of the Path of the Five.” “Seraph Tieraganswife,” she replied shortly, though she made
no move to leave. He was distracting her from her guilt, and for the moment she
was content that he continue to do so. She’d known that there was a new priest in town, of course.
Even if she’d forgotten, the new temple at the very top of the road would have
reminded her. He’d come from Taela with the new Sept last fall, and stayed when
the Sept returned to his duties in the capitol of the Empire. But she hadn’t
paid much heed to the news—she was still too much Traveler to worship in the
houses of the gods. Volis grinned at her, “I was right. I’m sorry to overwhelm
you, but the Travelers are a hobby of mine, though I’ve only met a few of
them.” What was she to say to that? she wondered and said nothing. “Do you have a while to spare?” he asked. “I have a wealth
of questions to ask you—and I’d like to show you the temple.” She glanced at the sun, but her business had taken very
little time and the pack of mermori was a cold, hard thing she would
have to deal with as soon as she left Redem. So she raised an eyebrow and nodded her head. Tier would
have laughed and called her “Empress” if she had done such a thing to him. This
boy merely smiled, as if he’d been certain she would follow him. He had, she
thought, a tithe of Tier’s charm and was used to having people obey him. He turned and led the way up the road, which was so steep
that it was set in stairs. “I would have been just as happy with something like the
rest of Redem,” he said. “But the new Sept was convinced that I would be
happier in something more modern looking.” “The Sept is a follower of your five gods?” Seraph asked. “Gods save us, no,” laughed Volis. “But he was willing to do
a favor when a few of the Path’s Elders twisted his arm to place a temple
here.” “Why here?” asked Seraph. “Why not in Leheigh, which also
belongs to the Sept? Surely you would find more followers in the larger city.” Volis smiled. “I have not done so badly here. Your own
family attends my meetings. In fact, I was on my way to consult with Bandor
when you ran into me—and I couldn’t resist the chance to have a Traveler to
speak to. But the main reason I am here—instead of a really big city, like Korhadan,
for instance—is Shadow’s Fall. We feel that there are things on the old
battlefield that might enlighten us.” Shadow’s Fall? Seraph bit back her opinion of the stupidity
of anyone who wanted to explore there. Doubtless the battlefield could educate
this solsenti fool better than she. Like Willon’s shop and many of the buildings on the steeper
slopes, the temple had been built into the mountain. The facade was raw timber
and crude, except for the doors, which were smooth and oiled until they were almost
black. Volis ushered her inside, and Seraph had to stop in the
threshold to allow her eyes to adjust from the brightness outside. The room was a richly appointed antechamber that would have
been more at home in a Sept’s keep than in a village temple. Either the—what
was it Volis had called it?—the Path of the Five was a rich church indeed, or
the Sept owed its Elders a lot of favors. “There are only three temples,” said Volis, seeing her expression.
“Two in Taela and this one. We intend this to be a place of pilgrimage.” “ Shadow’s Fall,” said Seraph, “a place of pilgrimage.” “Where the Five triumphed over evil,” said the priest, apparently
oblivious to the doubt in her voice. “Come and see the refuge, where I hold
services.” Seraph followed him through a tapestry-curtained entrance
into a room like none she’d ever seen before. The excavations were far more extensive than she had thought
The ceiling of the chamber soared overhead like an upside-down bowl. Near the
edge it was a single handspan over the doorway, in the center of the room it
rose three times the height of a tall man. The stone walls, floors, and ceiling
were as smooth as polished marble. This ... this was built in the short season since the new
Sept came to explore his inheritance? The ‘ceiling was painted a light sky-blue that darkened gradually
to black on the walls. The light that illuminated the room seemed to emanate
from that skylike ceiling. Magic, thought Seraph, solsenti magic. But
her attention was on the figures that occupied the false firmament. Chasing
each other endlessly around the perimeter of the ceiling were five life-sized
birds painted with exquisite detail. Volis was silent as she walked past him to the center of the
room. Lark, she thought, chills creeping down her spine. A
cormorant’s brilliant eyes invited her to play in the stormy winds. An owl
glided on silent wings toward the black raven, who held a bright silver and
ruby ring in its mouth, while next in line a falcon began its stoop. Together
they circled the room, caught in endless flight. In the center of the ceiling, twice as large as any other, a
river eagle caught the winds and twisted its head to look down upon the room as
if to examine its prey. Each bird a representative of the six Orders of the Travelers. “Behold the Five,” said Volis softly in a language Seraph
hadn’t heard since the day her brother died. “Lark the healer, Cormorant who
rules the weather. Owl of wisdom and memory, Raven the mage, Falcon the hunter.
And above them all, trapped in darkness is the secret god, the lost god. You
didn’t know about the lost god, did you?” “They are not gods,” said Seraph in her tongue. Though, she
remembered, in the old stories of before they Traveled, her people had believed
that there were gods as he had described. But as the Old Wizards had grown in
knowledge and power they had put those fallacies behind them. As if she hadn’t spoken, Volis pointed to the eagle. “I
found him, in books so old they crumbled at my touch, in hints in ancient
songs. For generations the Elders of the Path have worshiped only the
Five—until I found the lost god.” “The Eagle?” said Seraph, caught between an urge to laugh at
the idea of solsenti worshiping the Orders as gods, and distaste.
Distaste won. “The Eagle.” He looked pleased. “My discovery led me to be
honored by this appointment,” he waved a hand to indicate the temple. “Congratulations,” said Seraph, because he seemed to expect
her to say something of the sort. She glanced at the ceiling again and wondered
what her father would have said if he’d seen it. “I have gleaned some things,” he said. “The Eagle is
protected by the others, so that he can rescue them in some future time, when
they are all at risk and the world hangs in the balance.” She’d taught Tier that song in translation, a child’s tune
to teach them about the Orders. Obviously the translation that Volis had
happened upon had been less careful. He made it sound as if the Eagle’s purpose
as Guardian was for some single, predestined event. Eagerly the young priest turned to Seraph and took her
hands. “I see from your face that you know about the Eagle.” “We do not speak of the Eagle to outsiders,” said Seraph. “But I’m not an outsider,” he said waving an impassioned
hand at the ceiling. “I know about Travelers; I’ve spent my life
studying them. Please, tell me what you know of the Eagle.” Seraph didn’t suffer fools gladly—she certainly didn’t aid
and abet their stupidity. It was time to go home. “I am sorry,” she
said. “I have work awaiting me. Thank you for showing me around; the artwork is
very good.” “You have to tell me more,” he caught her arm before she
could leave. “You don’t understand. I know it is the Elders of the Path
of the Five who must free it,” “Free it?—she asked, and that chill that had touched her
upon seeing the Birds of the Orders in a solsenti temple strengthened,
distracting her from the encroaching grip of his arm. “In hiding him,” said Volis earnestly, “the Five trapped
him, for his protection. ‘Sleep on, guarded be, until upon waking destroys and
saves’—” Seraph started. That bit of poetry had no business being
spoken in the mouth of a solsenti, no matter how well he spoke Traveler.
It had nothing to do with the Eagle, but ... “He must be freed,” said Volis. “And the Master of the Path
has foreseen that it is we of the Path who will free the Stalker.” “The Stalker is not the Eagle,” Seraph said involuntarily,
then could have bitten off her tongue. This was dangerous, dangerous
knowledge. He was mistaken about the Eagle, about the Orders being gods, but
the Stalker ... He turned his mad gaze to her. He must have been mad. Only a
madman would speak of freeing the Stalker. “Ah,” he said. “What do you know about the Stalker?” “No more than you,” she lied. She fought to draw in a full breath and reminded herself
that this man was a solsenti, a solsenti possessed of more
knowledge that he should have—but even if he were so mistaken as to confuse the
Eagle with the Stalker, he still should be harmless enough. She gave him a short bow, Raven to stranger rather than good
Redemi wife to priest, and used the motion to break free of his grasp. “I have work,” she said. “Thank you for your time—I’ll see
myself out.” She turned on her heel and strode rapidly to the curtained entrance,
waiting for him to try and stop her, but he did not By the time she was on the bridge, she’d lost most of the
fear that her visit with the new priest had engendered. The Stalker was well
and truly imprisoned, and not even the Shadowed, who had almost destroyed the
human race, had been able to free it A solsenti priest with a handful of
half-understood information was not a threat—at least not to the world as a
whole, but she would still have to consider what Volis’s fancies would mean to
her and hers. Dismissing the priest as an immediate threat left her with
no distraction for the burden she carried. Though the honey jars were gone,
almost a hundred weight of them, her pack carried stones that weighed her soul
more than her back. As soon as Seraph left the main road for the cover of the
trail, she stopped and pulled out the bag of mermori and counted them.
Eighty-three. Her hand tightened on the last one until the sharp edge of
the end drew blood. Hurriedly she wiped off the mermora; it was never a
good thing to expose magicked things to blood. When she was certain it was
clean, she put them back in the leather bag and returned the whole bundle to
her pack. “There’s nothing I can do,” she said fiercely, though there
was no one to hear her. “I don’t know anything. I have no more ability
than a dozen other Ravens who have all failed to prevent the demise of the
Travelers. Here, in this place, I have three children who need me. There are
fields to be planted and gardens to tend and a husband to welcome me home.
There is nothing I can do.” But, by Lark and Raven, eighty-three. She swallowed. Maybe
Tier would be home when she returned. She needed him to be home. The land that Seraph and Tier farmed was in a very small hanging
valley, most of which was too rocky to plant. They had no close neighbors. It
had been virgin land when they had come there as newly married strangers. From the vantage point of a knoll above the valley. Seraph
fought back the feeling that it would all go back to wild within the decade—she
was no farseer, just tired. She adjusted her pack and started down the faint
trail. Trees gave way to grass and field. As soon as she started on
the path above the cabin, a joyous bark preceded Gura as he charged up the
trail to welcome her home. “Hello, fool dog,” she said, and he rolled at her feet in
rapture at her recognition of him, coating his thick fur in spring mud. He was huge and black, covered with hair that needed daily
grooming. Tier’d come home from town one evening with a black eye and a
frightened, half-starved puppy with huge feet. Always collecting strays, was
her husband. Seraph bit back tears, and shook her head at the dog. “Come,
Gura, let’s see how my lad did on his own today.” The huge dog lumbered to his feet and shook himself off,
sloughing off the puppy antics with the mud. He accompanied her to the cabin
with solemn dignity. With Gura’s welcome to warn her family, Seraph wasn’t surprised
to find Lehr and Rinnie quietly working in the cabin. “Ma!” said her youngest in tones of utter relief. “Lehr was so
mean. He yelled at me when I was already doing what he asked me to.” At ten, Rinnie had recently adopted the role of family
arbitrator and informant—which was having the expected results with her
siblings. She took after Seraph more than anyone in the—family at least in
looks. Rinnie was short with Seraph’s pale hair that stood out so in Redem’s
dark population. In temperament she more resembled her father, sharing both his
calm good sense and his flair for drama. Seraph hugged her and looked up at Lehr. “We finished turning the garden,” said Lehr repressively.
“And we planted a good third of it before Rinnie whined so much I let her go
inside.” “He made me work hard,” said Rinnie, still not giving
up the hope of getting her brother in trouble. When Rinnie stuck her tongue out at Lehr, he ignored it.
Last year he would have retaliated—or smiled at her, knowing that her reaction
would be worth whatever trouble he’d get in. “Thank you, Lehr,” Seraph said, standing on her toes to kiss
his cheek. “I know it’s not an easy job to keep this lazy girl working. I can
tell by the stew on the hob and the pile of carded wool that the both of you
came inside and rested like the highborn.” He laughed and hugged her. “She was fine. We’d have gotten the
whole garden done, Mother, if Jes had stuck around. He left sometime after
lunch—I didn’t even see him go.” “I can talk to him,” she offered. Lehr shook his head. “No, it’s all right. I know he does the
best he can. It’s just that with Papa gone, we need him. When he can keep his
mind on it, he can work as well as Papa does. Mother, the Sept’s steward was
here today.” “Forder?” Seraph asked, taking her cloak and hood off and
hanging them on the cloak tree by the door. “What did he want?” “He looked at the fields and asked if Papa was back yet.
When I told him no, he said the new Sept was demanding quarter again as much
for our tithe payment this year as last—of the garden and the fields. He said
that it’s almost past time to get the fields plowed.” Seraph put her pack against the wall. “I know, Lehr. We’ve
waited as long as we could. We’ll just have to break ground without Tier. We
can start tomorrow—no, day after tomorrow so I have time to look at the harness
and plow to make repairs. Don’t worry about the increased tithe; Tier said to
expect some kind of increase with the new Sept.” “Forder said the Sept had a horse we could lease, if we
needed.” “No.” She shook her head. When he’d left, Tier had taken the
young mare they’d bought last year, leaving their old gelding to his
retirement. “Skew knows these fields, and old as he is, he’ll do the job until
Tier gets back. We can’t afford to start leasing a horse, not if the Sept is
taking more of the harvest.” Outside the door, Gura gave a howl more suited to a dire
wolf than a dog, which was answered by a wail both higher and wilder. “Jes is home,” said Rinnie unnecessarily, for the door flew
back on its hinges and Seraph’s oldest child bounded in the door. “Mother, Mother,” he sang out. “I found a rabbit for
dinner.*’ He held out an enormous jackrabbit, already gutted, beheaded, and
skinned. “Jesaphi, my love,” Seraph said. “I am very glad that you
found a rabbit. But you need to shed some mud before you come inside.” Of all her children, Jes looked the most like his father.
Taller by a head than Lehr, Jes was lean and dark. Lehr was lean, too, but he
had Seraph’s pale hair. Like Tier, Jes was not handsome; his nose was thin and
too long. A deep dimple peered out of his left cheek, and his eyes were dark,
velvet brown. “I’m sorry, Mother,” he said shedding his exuberance like a
coat. “I didn’t mean to—to get muddy.” It was Jes’s voice that gave him away even to the least observant.
There was something wrong in the pitch and the singsong way he talked. He wasn’t simple, like the cooper’s son, but his affliction
appeared very similar and people assumed they were the same. Seraph had seen no
reason to confuse anyone but Tier with the truth. “Not to worry.” Seraph soothed Jes with one of the light touches,
which were usually all he could bear. “While the others set the table, you and
I’ll go clean you up.” “Did I do something wrong?” he asked anxiously. “No, love, come with me.” She took his hand and led him outside
to help him scrub off. In the middle of the night, unable to sleep, Seraph rose
quietly out of her too-empty bed in the loft and dressed. She opened a trunk
and took from it a large bag that dangled heavily from its worn cords. The
ladder steps were tight and let out no sound that might wake Lehr, who was a
light sleeper. The pack by the door still held the boots she’d gotten Jes;
she’d forgotten to give them to him. Seraph took them out and set them to the
side. She put the bag she’d taken from her room into the pack where the shoes
had been, then quietly let herself out. On the porch, Gura watched her with glittering eyes that
hinted at wolf somewhere in his background. “Shh,” she said. “Stay and watch.” Gura subsided and dropped his face back down on his forepaws,
jowls sliding loosely to either side. “I’ll be back soon enough,” she explained as if he’d understand.
“I just can’t sleep. There are things I have to work out.” Gura closed his eyes—sulking, she knew, because she hadn’t
asked him along. She followed a path behind the cabin that led into the
forest. The moon was high and her night vision was better than most so she had
little trouble finding her way. She walked a mile or so until she came to the meadow she
sought She set her pack down and opened it. “Eighty-three,” she said to herself, taking out the leather
bag she’d gotten in town as well as the bag from her trunk, “and a hundred and
forty-one.” She took one of the mention out and stuck it into the
ground, point down, so it stuck up like a short fencepost. She took another out
and measured it with her fingers then paced out a distance from the second. She
did the same with the third and the fourth as the moon crept across the sky. “What do you do, Mother?” She’d been so involved in the mention that she hadn’t
heard him. The low, velvety voice sounded so much like Tier’s that she had to
swallow. Despite her excellent eyesight and the moon she couldn’t see Jes in
the night. “I’ve told you some stories about the Travelers,” she said,
setting the last mermora she held into the earth, and walked back for
more. He didn’t reply immediately. She heard no footstep, but was
not surprised that he’d followed her back to the pack. “Yes,” he said close enough that the warmth of his breath
touched the back of her neck. Traveler-bred though she was, the vast difference
between her daytime son and this, more dangerous Jes disconcerted her, a mother
should not fear her child. “We are the descendants of the wizards who lived in Colossae
long before the Shadowed came to destroy mankind,” she said, ignoring the
shiver Jes’s voice had sent down her spine. “Yes,” he acknowledged, pacing beside her as she took a handful
of the mermori to an empty spot in the meadow and continued to measure
out distances. He was barefoot. Only she and Tier knew what her gentle-natured child became
away from the safety of the cabin. “Colossae was a great city of learning, and wizards came
from all the earth to study and learn there. For generations they gathered and
learned magic and forgot wisdom, until at last they created the greatest evil
their hearts had ever imagined.” She had told her children very little about the Travelers,
hoping that they would all become Redemi, like Tier. But Lehr and Rinnie
carried the Traveler’s looks, and Jes carried the Traveler’s curse. It had occurred to her, lying awake in her bed before she’d
left it, that with a priest who knew too much and garbled truth with lies, it
might be a good idea to teach her children more. She’d start tonight with Jes. “By the time the wizards realized what they had done, it was
too late to undo their making, almost too late to control it. As it was, only a
great sacrifice could stop their creation, and Colossae was killed to imprison
the Stalker, before it could destroy the world,” she said. “The wizards who survived
were sent to Travel the earth and keep it free of the Stalker’s corruption,
because such evil, even bound, was not without power. Even so great a sacrifice
as a city of light and knowledge could not hold it completely, nor keep it forever.” “Yes” Jes said again. This time she caught a glimpse of eyes
glowing a bit red in the night “What is it?” she asked. “Is there someone here?” “Not now,” he said, at last, a growl in his voice that
wasn’t quite human. “But there have been hunters in the forest who do not
belong. They hunt for sport and that offends the forest—and they’ve come too
near to the cabin for my liking.” “The new Sept is supposed to be quite a hunter,” she told
him. “Some of the nobles the Sept brought with him from Taela stayed when he
left. Is this hunting something that you must stop?” “No,” he replied after a moment. “The forest king told me he
will take care of these men if necessary.” Seraph shivered a little at the tone
of her son’s voice when he said “men”—it told her that her son, in this aspect
at least, did not consider himself one. “This forest yet has the power to keep
out killers who hunt wastefully,” he said. Seraph set another mermora. “You were talking about Colossae,” he reminded her after
she’d placed the mermora she held and was walking back for another
handful. “Ah, yes.” She decided it was too much trouble to keep
coming back so she transferred all that were left into the largest bag and
carried that with her. “It was decided after the wizards left and the city died,
that they should meet in secret every year. But they had truly bound the evil,
and there was no great need of the wizards in those early years so the meetings
began to take place every two years, then every five. “The merman”—she sorted through and held up a fragile-seeming
mermora no longer than her index finger—“were created by the wizard
Hinnum and gifted to each of the wizards who left the city. They were passed
down to the eldest of each family and in the beginning it is said they numbered
five hundred and four. Until the Shadowed rose to power, some five centuries
ago, each mermora was held by a large clan, but when the Army of Man gathered
to fight the creatures the Shadowed had gathered, Travelers were forefront in
the armies—because the Stalker, still imprisoned in Colossae, controlled the
Shadowed. More than half of the army fell that day, taking with it most of the
Travelers who fought there.” “You never told me that before—that the Shadowed was caused
by the thing the wizards bound in Colossae.” She smiled a little grimly, “It’s not something that we talk
about openly. If people knew that we Travelers held ourselves responsible for
the Shadowed, they’d make certain we suffered for it. Even some of the clans
claimed there was no connection between the two—or that the Shadowed was the
Stalker itself and that we should be freed of our tasks.” She set another mermora into the ground. “I remember
a discussion at the last Gather I went to. One of the Clan Fathers proposed
that we quit searching out evil. He said things like, ‘We destroyed the Shadow,
completed the tasks the Old Ones gave us. We should settle while there is still
good land unclaimed.’ Then my father stood up and said, ‘Arrogance has always
been the Traveler’s Bane. The Shadowed was not the Stalker, but merely a man corrupted
by it. My grandfather had this story through his line. When the Raven who faced
the Shadowed and reduced him to ashes returned to his circle, he told them that
the creature he’d killed had never touched the stones of Colossae. We fought
true evil on that day, but our task remains.’” Seraph laughed a little at the memory. “My father was a showman.
He didn’t wait for the debate that followed, but excused himself to his tent
and would speak no more about it. My grandfather always said that if you don’t
argue, you can’t be proved wrong.” “So your father was the only reason the Travelers kept Traveling?” Seraph shook her head. “No—it wouldn’t have worked if they’d
really wanted to settle down. It was hard enough for me to stay here—and I
would have followed your father through the Shadowed’s Realm if I’d had to.
Staying was more difficult. Travelers are well named.” Jes followed her silently as she began her task again. Jes
was good at silence. “I remember going to two Gathers as a child,” she said,
taking out another mermora and setting it upright. “There were two hundred
and thirty mermori held by just over two hundred clans at the first one.
I can remember my mother fretting about how few there were. She died before I
went to the second Gather, when I was thirteen. There were fewer than two
hundred then—and many clans carried more than one.” The largest mermora she had saved for last, having
left an extensive corner of the meadow for it. “The mermori were too dangerous
to allow them to exist without safeguards, so Hinnum spelled them so that,
eventually, they would find their way into the hands of the eldest of the
closest relatives of those who had died and left the mermori lost.” “Mother,” said Jes, after a bit. “There are two hundred
twenty-four mermori here.” “I know,” she whispered. “I’ve been acquiring them a few at
a time since I married your father. Today I bought eighty-three from a tinker.” “Eighty-three,” he said, startled into losing, for a moment,
the aura of danger he carried. “How did you pay for them? They are solid silver
and worth more than—” “People don’t always see that they are silver,” she said,
trying to pace off the area for the largest of them again—she kept losing
count. “Sometimes they appear to be iron or even wood. Most people dislike them
on sight I paid six coppers for them, and the merchant I bought them from will
shortly forget exactly what it was I bought, except that he came out ahead on
the deal.” “Ah,” he said and walked beside her for a while, gradually
blending into the darkness until she couldn’t see him if she looked
straight on. She caught glimpses of him sometimes when she wasn’t quite
looking. Sometimes she saw a man who looked like her husband, but more
dangerous. At others she saw a dark animal that prowled on four legs. Sometimes
if she turned her head and looked at him directly for too long, he disappeared
into the night It was only illusion, she knew, though he could take on shapes
of animals if he chose. But illusion or not, it was disconcerting. “What do they do?” he asked finally. She set the last one in. “I’ll show you. Come with me.” The meadow was set on a rise and she took her son to the highest
point. She had never done this with so many before. At the Gathers, the elders
from all the families would stand in a circle and chant together. She held out both hands and shouted imperiously, “Ishavan
shee davenadre hovena Hinnumadraun.” It had been so long since she’d allowed herself this much
magic. She did only a little magic now and then—when they planted their crops,
and when she warded the farm to keep the more dangerous creatures of the mountains
away. Even after so long, it came eagerly to her call, thrumming
from her bones to the earth, reverberating through the dirt, rotting vegetation,
and newborn sprigs of grass. Jes let out a startled snarl as the meadow lit up with the
windows of two hundred and twenty-four houses. Some were smaller than their
cabin, but most were as large as the largest of the houses in Redem. By chance
she’d put two in such a way that they blended into each other, sharing a
wall—it looked so right that Seraph wondered if the houses might have stood in
just such a relative location in Colossae. In the very corner of the meadow
stood a small castle. The architecture of the houses was distinctly foreign,
the windows open and rounded, the roofs covered with some kind of green pottery
tiles. “It’s all right,” she reassured Jes, though her eyes were
held by the castle. “They are all illusion. The wizards could take only the
most necessary of articles because they could not risk giving warning to the
enemy before they fled. They couldn’t take any of their libraries—So Hinnum
created the mermori, which remember the homes of the wizards as they
stood in Colossae so long ago. Come with me.” She led her son to one of the smaller ones, a brick-faced
home no bigger than Alinath’s bakery, though much more gracile.
Ebony wood doors were worn near the latch, giving testimony of the age of the
building. “This was the mermora my father carried from his father. It
belonged to Isolda the Silent, who died when they sealed the city.” Seraph
pulled the door latch, felt the metal cool against her fingers. The door opened
with a soft groan, and she stepped inside. “Illusion?” Jes questioned, stepping in beside her. The
light from Isolda’s oil lamps showed a young man rather than a beast. “I can smell oil and herbs—some I know, like anise, henbane,
but there are many I can’t identify.” “Hinnum was a very great illusionist. Legend says he was
four hundred years old when the city fell,” she said, trailing her fingers over
the familiar shawl that hung neatly on the back of a chair as if it only waited
for Isolda to return from some errand. “But all that this is, is illusion.” She turned to her son.
“If it is raining outside and you come in, you will not feel the rain—but when
you walk out you will be wet If you are freezing to death and come in, you’ll
feel warm and still die from the cold.” “How long ago did the city die?” asked Jes, touching a
carved table. For a moment Seraph allowed herself to see the house anew,
recognizing how alien it appeared to him. Perhaps a lord’s house would be
furnished with wooden tables and shelves polished like the surface of a
windless lake, but no dwelling in Redem held such treasures. “I’m not certain,” she replied. “It was long before the Shadowed
came to rule—and that was about six hundred years ago if the stories crediting
him with a hundred-year reign are correct. Colossae was a city with over a
million people, three times the size of Taela, and only the Travelers remember
its name.” “Where did it lie?” “I don’t know,” answered Seraph. “It doesn’t matter. The
city is protected against intruders.” “Is?” “As far as I know the city is still there—if it weren’t, the
Stalker would be free. The people died along with the less tangible things that
make up a community and the bones of the city seal the Stalker’s prison. Jes turned from where he was examining one of the walls,
which had a mural depicting a forest scene. “If this is all illusion, then why
were the ancient wizards so concerned about the mermori?” Seraph smiled and headed through a narrow doorway. The room
beyond was twice as big as the first room and the walls were lined with shelves
of books. “This is what they tried to save—within these buildings is all
that they knew of magic. But many of the languages the books are written in
were lost. I know only four or five. My father knew more—and I fear they are
lost with him, and with the others who are gone, because I hold almost half the
mermori that were made.” Chapter 4“Co catch some fish for dinner, you two.” Seraph made shooing
motions at Lehr and Rinnie. “I’ll take care of the breakfast dishes and getting
the plowing equipment ready. There’ll be work enough for us all in the coming
weeks, and we’ve but little salt meat left. I for one will be glad of some
river trout. You two pack a lunch and catch what you can.” “What about the stew we made with Jes’s rabbit yesterday,
Mother?” said Lehr. “There’s plenty left. Checking the harness won’t take all
day; we should get started on the fields as soon as we can.” “Tomorrow is soon enough for plowing,” Seraph replied
firmly. “Gura ate the last of the slew this morning.” Or he would as soon as
she fed it to him. She needed time and quiet to think. “Papa would not leave you unprotected,” said Lehr, clearly
torn between duty and pleasure. Rinnie tugged at his sleeve. “I think Gura is enough to
scare off anyone—you know how he is with strangers. And how often do people
come here?” Lehr clenched his jaw. “I haven’t seen Jes this morning “ he
said. “He spent the night in the woods,” Seraph replied. “I expect
he’ll be back this evening. If you see him, you might tell him I’m baking bread
today.” “He’ll be home then for sure,” said Rinnie. She’d already collected
cheese and crackers in a cloth and was busy tying it together. “Come on, Lehr.
If we don’t get out soon, the fish won’t bite.” His resolve broke. He kissed Seraph on the forehead, grabbed
his sister’s arm, and made for the barn, where they stored the fishing gear. Seraph smiled after them and turned back to wash up after
breakfast and begin mixing dough for bread. “Aren’t we going to the river?” asked Rinnie, lifting her
skirts to scramble up a rise behind Lehr. It wasn’t often that she got to join
in on fishing expeditions. Usually it was just Lehr, or sometimes Lehr and Jes.
When she went, she had to go with Papa and Mother. “Not first I thought we’d try the creek. Jes showed me a
good place where he says the trout like to sun. I haven’t tried it yet, but—” ‘ “But if Jes says it’s good, we’re sure to catch something,”
replied Rinnie happily. The soft leather sole of her shoe skidded on a rock, and
Lehr turned and caught her shoulder to steady her before she fell. “Be a little more careful,” Lehr said sternly. “The rocks
are still wet with snow runoff here. I don’t want to bring you back with too
much damage.” Rinnie made a face at him behind his back then paid strict attention
to her feet so he wouldn’t have to help her again. He wasn’t a bad older
brother—if he’d just quit trying to be Papa. Rinnie watched her brother’s back as he navigated the zigzag
route through old downed trees. Hard muscle filled last year’s shirt and
stretched the shoulders taut. He’d need a new shirt soon. She sighed; she knew
who would get to sew that shirt Mother could sew, but she didn’t like it. She wondered when they’d meet up with Jes. She’d never gone
out in the woods without him that he’d not come upon her sooner or later. Lehr
liked to say it was the most dependable thing about Jes. Jes worked hard, but he was as apt as not to leave the plow in
the middle of the field, horse and all, if the whim took him. He was always
worse in the springtime. Papa said it was because the winter snows kept him too
confined. By midsummer Jes would cut down his treks to once a se’nnight or so,
rather than every day. Last year at harvest he’d worked almost the whole time. Ahead of her, Lehr turned off the deer trail they’d been
following and started down the steep side into a ravine and began skidding
downhill. About halfway down he had to slow and pick his way through the
underbrush that lined most of the lower ground. The branches caught at Rinnie’s
skins until she fell some distance behind Lehr, who was already off the slope
and starting up the valley. She tried to hurry and ended up with her hair
tangled around the thorns of a wild rose. “Wait up,” she called, and began working the errant strand
free with impatient jerks that did as much to worsen the mess as to free her. “Wait up?” said an interested male voice from the ridge opposite
the one she and Lehr had traveled to get here. She jerked her gaze up to see Storne, the miller’s son, with
a couple of the boys he ran with peering down at her. Papa always said that the
miller gave Storne too little to do. Leave a young man without a task, and
he’ll make mischief instead, he’d said. Then Papa’d looked at her and told her to stay away from
Storne when he had other boys with him, no matter how polite he was when they
met at the mill, for a boy out to impress his friends will do things he
wouldn’t do on his own. The boys Storne had with him today were no prizes: Olbeck,
the steward’s son, and Lukeeth, whose father was one of the wealthier merchants
from town. Rinnie drew the knife out of her belt sheath and cut her
hair, stepping out of the bushes. She made no move to leave, because you never
run from predators. The knife she kept in her hand as if she’d forgotten about
it. “Rinnie?” Lehr called impatiently. He must not have heard
Storne, who’d spoken no louder than he had to. “Here,” she called. She didn’t want to start trouble by implying that she was worried
about Storne and the boys who watched her so she didn’t say anything more, but
something in her voice must have alerted Lehr because he came crashing through
the trees at a run. His eyes roved over the strands of hair dangling from the
rose bush and traveled uphill to Storne and his friends. “Should have tied your hair up,” he snapped. Relief gave way to hurt that he would criticize her in front
of such an audience. “Well, if it ain’t the little Traveler boy,” said Lukeeth,
sloe-eyed and slightly taller than Storne. “Does your father know you walked out on your tutor again?”
replied Lehr with such mildness that Rinnie’s jaw wanted to drop, especially
after the nasty way he’d blamed this on her. Lehr had Mother’s quick temper and
over the last couple of years, “boy” had become an epithet. “My tutor wouldn’t dare tell him,” Lukeeth laughed. “Then
I’d tell Father what the silly ass keeps in his water flask and he’d be out
like the last one. That your little sister? Another Traveler’s brat, just like
you.” “Pretty thing,” said Olbeck casually. Rinnie began to get really worried. Lehr was tough; her
father had taught him a few tricks, and her as well for that matter. But Olbeck
was almost a foot taller than Storne—who was as big as Lehr—and he didn’t have
that soft look that most of the village boys had. She couldn’t read his tone,
but it sent the other boys off into laughter that sounded more predatory than
happy. “Td heard you’d taken to running with scavengers, Storne,”
chided Lehr before turning to the ringleader. “Olbeck, I thought you’d decided
to stay out of the woods after you ran into Jes that time last fall.” A flush rose in Olbeck’s face. Lukeeth snickered but
subsided when Olbeck glanced at him. “Predators, not scavengers,” said Olbeck. “You’re just disappointed
that Storne decided he’d rather hunt with the wolves than graze with sheep like
you, Traveler’s brat,” he sneered. “As for your brother—if I’d realized he was
crazy I’d have just slit his throat that day, a mercy killing, like I’d do to
any other poor beast” Until Olbeck’s words reminded her, Rinnie’d almost forgotten
that Storne and Lehr had once been best friends. But something had happened
several years ago, Lehr wouldn’t say what, and he’d even quit going with Papa
to the mill. “I’ll tell Jes you’d like to meet him again,” said
Lehr pleasantly. “I’ll relay your exact words to him. I’m sure he’ll be impressed—since
you’ve never so much as gutted a cow. Rinnie, why don’t you go home and let us
talk a bit” “No, Rinnie,” said Olbeck. He smiled at her, “I think you’d
better just stay there. The two of us can have a conversation after
we’ve finished ... conversing with your brother.” Lehr turned to her and whispered, “Run, Rinnie, now. Don’t
stop until you get home.” Knowing that without her there, the other boys wouldn’t be
as interested in fighting, she fled back up the hill as fast as she could
without looking back, the small knife cold in her fist. Home wasn’t so far
away. If she could get within hearing distance she could call Gura. Even a
grown man would think twice before taking on the big dog. She heard the dull mud of fist on flesh before she topped
the ravine. But she couldn’t worry about the fight now because at least one of
them had gotten past Lehr and was trailing her up the side of the ridge. She
could hear him crashing through the brush like an ox. When she reached the trail and her footing was more certain
she glanced back and saw that it was Olbeck who’d taken up the chase, and she
stretched out to run as fast as she ever had. With Olbeck following her, Lehr had a chance. Storne was the
only one of the boys who had enough muscle to give Lehr a real fight. Her
brother was tough as an old wolf; he’d use the rough terrain to his advantage. The trail’s upward slope robbed her legs of speed and her
chest of breath, but she didn’t dare slow down. Her eyes were focused firmly on
the ground in front of her. When someone reached out and snagged her off her
feet she thought it was Olbeck. She kicked him once, before she realized it was Jes and
stilled, gasping for breath. He set her down gently, the expression on his face
different than she’d ever seen it. She didn’t have time to understand what the
difference was before he stepped in front of her and turned his attention to
Olbeck. “Thought I told you stay out of my woods,” said Jes, only it
didn’t sound like Jes at all. Menace clung to his voice and promise. The
familiar singsong softness was gone as if it had never been. “These aren’t your woods,” said Olbeck, who’d stopped a few
lengths down the trail, though he didn’t sound intimidated. “My father is
steward for the Sept. If these are anyone’s woods, they are mine.” Safe behind Jes, she couldn’t see the expression on his
face, but Olbeck blanched. “Run, boy,” purred Jes. “See if you can outrun your nightmares.” Rinnie tried to step around Jes’s shoulder, but he stepped
sideways, keeping her behind him. Showing the whites of his eyes like a spooked
horse, Olbeck turned and ran. “There’re still two fighting Lehr,” Rinnie rasped and then
threw up. It was messy and nasty, as she had to gasp for air between
convulsions. Jes gathered her hair out of the way and waited for her to finish. “Ran too fast,” he said. “Lehr’s down that way?” She spat to clear the taste out of her mouth. “Yes. Toward
the fishing hole you showed him in the creek,” she said. “It’s Storne and
Lukeeth.” Jes looked at her, and the oddness was still there—a
sharpness she wasn’t used to seeing. “All right, now?” “Yes,” she said. He nodded and took off at a jog. It took her a moment to recover
her breath. As soon as she knew she wasn’t going to be sick again, she
scrambled to her feet and headed down after Jes. Somehow with Jes there she
wasn’t afraid of the village-boys anymore. She wouldn’t have thought that Jes,
of all people, could make her feel safe. Going down the trail was less demanding than her run up it
had been: She made it to the place where Lehr had originally left the trail
just as Jes was finishing a controlled slide to the bottom. Rinnie looked down, half-afraid of what she’d see. But Lehr
was safe. He held Storne in some sort of mysterious wrestling hold, and Lukeeth
was lying unconscious nearby with blood running from his nose. “Is Rinnie all right, Jes?” said Lehr. “Fine,” answered Rinnie for herself. “Jes scared Olbeck.
From the expression I saw on Olbeck’s face I bet he won’t leave his house for a
week.” “Good,” grunted Lehr as he held on while Storne struggled
with renewed energy. He waited until the other boy was still. “You drink too
much,” Lehr said calmly, “and you think too little. Just because Olbeck’s
father is the steward doesn’t make him invulnerable or someone you should listen
to—you’re smarter than that. And to try and”—he paused and looked at Rinnie for
an instant before changing what he was going to say. “You heard Olbeck. He likes
to ‘have conversations’ with children now? My sister is ten years old, Storne.
You are better than that.” It was strange hearing Lehr lecture someone else besides her
or Jes. She could see that Storne felt that quiet voice cut through his skin,
too. Lehr stepped back and let Storne up. The miller’s son
brushed off his clothes and, with a wary look at Jes, turned to leave. “Aren’t you forgetting Lukeeth? If you leave him here he
might never find his way out of the forest,” Lehr said. Storne hefted the other boy across his shoulders without a
word, and started up the hill. “You take care of your friends, I remember that,” said Lehr
softly. “But the question is, would they have taken care of you? Olbeck left
you to us.” Storne spun around, almost overbalancing. “At least they can
keep their tongues from wagging too freely. Unlike some I know.” “You idiots were going to get yourselves killed,” said Lehr
explosively, as if it was something he’d kept bottled for too long. “Swimming
at night is a fool’s game—and there are things in the river—” “Things.” Storne spat on the ground. “So you went
whining to your father who ran to tell mine. Let me tell you something, Traveler’s
brat. You don’t know half what you think you do. You’d better just stay out of
my way.” Jes put his hand on Lehr’s shoulder, but no one said
anything until Storne was at the top of the ridge. “Is that why you aren’t friends anymore?” asked Rinnie. “You
told Papa they were going to go swimming in the river at night?” Lehr shrugged. “That was the excuse. But Storne’s friends
didn’t like that he ran around with a Traveler’s brat. He would have dropped me
sooner or later.” “Storne traded you for Olbeck?” she said, knowing how much
it hurt him. She knew exactly how much it hurt; there were girls in town who
wouldn’t talk to her because Mother was a Traveler. “He is stupider than I
thought.” “They are dangerous in a pack,” said Jes. “If Rinnie had
been alone ...” Lehr gave a jerky nod. “When Papa gets back, I’ll talk to
him about this. He’ll know what to do to see that they don’t hurt anyone.” He
reached up to pat Jes’s hand, which was still on his shoulder. “Let’s go home,”
he said. Jes released his hold and picked up the fishing rods that
lay scattered about on the ground where Lehr had dropped them. “Fishing’s still
good,” he said. Rinnie looked at him, but the air of danger that had surrounded
him was gone, and he looked and sounded as he always did except for a certain
lingering crispness to his voice. Lehr touched his reddened cheekbone tenderly. “I suppose
they’ll not bother us anymore. Mother will be safe enough with Gura.” He took a
close look at Rinnie. “You look pale.” Rinnie smiled at him and tried to look less pale. “I’m fine.
Ma’s counting on a fish for dinner. You always bring one back; she won’t have
anything else ready.” So they went down to the creek and fished. Seraph heaved a sigh of relief. The harness collar that fit
Skew had been neglected, but the leather was only very dry, not cracked. If it
had cracked they’d have had to wait until Tier got back with Frost before
starting the plowing. She oiled the collar carefully until the leather was butter-supple
under her fingers. Then she turned her attention to the harness. She untied the
leather strings that kept it together and oiled each piece as she went,
carefully organizing the straps on the freshly swept floor of the tack room so
she could put the harness back together when she finished. Broken down, the
harness looked like random scraps of leather. The first time she and Tier had taken it apart and oiled it,
she thought they’d never get it back together correctly. Even Tier had been all
but stumped. A grin pulled at the comers of her mouth when she remembered the
look on his face when she’d called him in for help. Maybe if he had been the
one who’d taken it apart he’d have stood a better chance. They’d finally taken
Skew out and put the harness back together on him one strap at a time. From his loose box in the stable, Skew snorted at her. He
was frustrated that one of his people was near enough to see, but not near
enough to give him the attention that was his due. “Do you remember the look on the steward’s face that first
year when he came and saw the furrows we’d plowed?” Not the current steward,
but his uncle, who had been a kind man. “No two lines anywhere near straight
None of us had ever plowed a field before.” The steward had come by the next morning and worked side by
side with Tier for the whole day. He’d made a point of stopping by now and
again throughout the season to lend a hand and dispense a bit of advice. Skew wickered a soft entreaty at her, so Seraph set down the
cropper and wiped her hands off on her skirts before rubbing Skew’s face. The
dark oil would clean off of her skirts better than it came off of Skew’s white
patches. “How the old steward hated seeing you in that plow harness,”
she told the old gelding. “He offered to buy you from us, did you know? Offered
two horses trained for farm work because he thought it disgraceful that a gentleman
of your breeding should pull a plow. Tier said that a good soldier hates war,
and you were a good soldier so farming would be all right with you.” She rubbed the ridge just in front of Skew’s ear and smiled
when he tilted his head sideways and closed his eye in pleasure. “You didn’t
mind the plow anymore than you minded pulling my wagon, did you?” She smiled
again. “Tier says the best warhorse is one who’ll do what he’s asked.” Skew rubbed his head against her, knocking her back a step. “So what do you think?” Seraph asked softly. “Am I seeing
problems that don’t exist? How much of a threat is one misguided priest? If I
tell my children what they are, it’ll change them forever.” “I should have told them a long time ago,” she whispered. “Tier
told me to. But they deserved a chance at ... innocence.” She closed her eyes and rested her face against the old
horse’s neck, breathing in the sweat-straw scent of his skin. “I think it’s
time, though, old friend.” She stepped away. “They need to know what they are. I have
no right to keep it from them, and the priest is a good excuse.” She nodded her
head briskly. “Thank you. Your advice is always correct.” She finished the harness, inspected the plow and found no significant
damage from its winter in the barn, then returned to the cabin and started
shaping her risen dough for loaves, putting some aside for fry bread as an
after-dinner treat. She’d just taken the loaf of bread out to cool when Jes,
Lehr, and Rinnie came in the door with three fat trout, cleaned and ready to
cook. Seraph took a good long look at the bruise on Lehr’s face,
the rips in Rinnie’s clothing and the place where her hair had been hacked
short. Only then did she take the fish Lehr held out to her. “Jes and I’ll set up the smoker and we’ll smoke these two,”
Lehr said hastily and retreated outside with his brother. With hard-won forbearance, Seraph set the trout on a baking
tile, salted it, and filled the body cavity with onions and herbs. After
wrapping it tightly in leaves, she used the peel to set the tile on the coals
of the fire below the oven. She put the tool where it belonged, dusted off her
hands, and turned to her daughter. “Now,” she said. “Just what happened today?” Rinnie took a washing rag and began to clean the table. “We
ran into a little trouble with Storne and his friends—Olbeck, the steward’s
son, and Lukeeth. I got caught up in some thorns and I had to cut my hair to
get untangled. But Jes showed up and the other boys took off. “Mother,” Rinnie said, staring unnecessarily hard at the
surface she was cleaning. “There was something odd about Jes. I mean, he didn’t do anything and Olbeck took
off like a startled foolhen. Has Jes ever hurt anyone?” Seraph took off her apron and rubbed her cheeks, hot from
the work with the ovens. It was indeed time for a few truths, she thought, but
not right now. She gave Rinnie part of the truth. “For all that our Jes is
different, he’s strong and accurate with his fists—your Papa saw to that.
Olbeck came out poorly in ah encounter with Jes not too long ago.” After dinner, thought Seraph. We’ll talk after
dinner. “This is as good as anything you’d find on the Emperor’s table,”
declared Rinnie, finishing the last of her fish. “Thanks to the fearless fishing folk,” agreed Seraph, already
up and tidying. She’d tried so long to let her children fit in with the life
of the village, and had hoped they’d be happy here, free of the never-ending
quest to protect people who feared and hated the Travelers more than the things
the Travelers fought. Tonight that innocence would be over—but it wasn’t fair
to keep their truths as her secrets either. “Rinnie,” Seraph said, abruptly impatient to talk. “Get the
basket of fry bread with a jar of honey. I think we’ll take a walk and find a
good place to talk.” “It’ll be dark soon,” said Jes, sounding subdued. Seraph gave him a straight look. “I think that might be just
what is needed. I have some things to discuss with you all that will be easier
to do in the meadow above the farm—and a few of those things will be more
believable in the darkness of the forest than they will here.” “Mother—” began Lehr, but Seraph shook her head at him. “Not
now. Let’s take a walk.” Jes was right; by the time they got to the meadow the sun
had sunk behind the mountains. There was still plenty of light, but Seraph was
glad of her warm cloak in the evening chill. At her direction, her children sat in a rough semicircle and
divided the fry bread, consuming it like voracious wolves, even Lehr. Sweets
were not a common treat for any of them. “I haven’t told you much about my family,” Seraph began
abruptly. “They were Travelers,” said Rinnie. “Everyone but your
youngest brother, Ushireh, died of plague brought by a Traveler they took in
for the night. And when Ushireh was killed, Papa rescued you when you were a
little younger than Lehr and Jes. And you blew up the bakery and Papa
said you were married to each other before you really were to save you again. And
I know about the Wizard Ancestors, too. They called up the Stalker and then
killed everyone who lived in the city to contain it. But it didn’t work as well
as they’d hoped. So from that time until this the Travelers have had to fight
the evil that leaks from the city.” Seraph laughed. “Right. But there is more to tell you.” She
looked at each of her children in turn. “Understand that this was my decision,
not Tier’s. I didn’t want you to know about my folk. I wanted you to fit in
with your father’s people, but ... there are things that you need to know.” She took a deep breath. “You know I am a mage.” “But you don’t do any magic, Ma,” said Rinnie suddenly
in tones of complaint. “Aunt Alinath says that there are no such things as
mages, just people who are good at making others see magic in ordinary sleight
of hand.” Jes began to laugh. It wasn’t his usual full-throated, joyful
laugh, but something low and unamused. Rinnie looked up at him and shifted a little away from him. “Jes, it’s not her fault,” Seraph chided gently before looking
at Rinnie. “I’m afraid your aunt is wrong—and she knows better, too. She was
there when I blew up the bakery—your father was there as well. And despite what
you’ve heard, not all Travelers are mages, nor are all mages Travelers.”—“Remember
the stories Papa told us sometimes, Rinnie,” said Lehr, “about the mages in the
army?” “Right,” agreed Seraph. “But I am a special kind of mage—a
Raven.” The cool power slid over Seraph’s skin like a lover’s caress
as she lit a mage fire in the palm of her hand. When the magic stabilized she
took Lehr’s hand and put the light in his palm where it flickered cheerfully. “Let me tell the story from the beginning,” Seraph said. “There once was a great city of wizards who were arrogant in
their power. In the blindness of pride, they called into being the Stalker, a
great evil. To contain that evil they sacrificed the entire city, all of the
non-wizard residents of the city, man, woman, and child—including their own
wives, husbands, and children.” She took a deep breath—and closed her eyes, trying to hear
the cadence of her father’s voice so that she didn’t leave anything out. “When
the wizards sacrificed their city to bind the Stalker, the cost of the magic
they wrought killed all but a few of the most powerful mages and most of the
very weakest. The survivors had virtually nothing but the clothes on their
back. At first, they thought that would be enough, but the world is not kind to
a people who have no place. As the years passed and the people dwindled, the remnants
of the wizards of Colossae discussed what could be done.” She smiled a bit grimly. “Arrogant in their knowledge and
power, even with their city sealed in death behind them, the wizards still
meddled where they would. The Stalker was caged, but as time passed the bars of
that cage would loosen. The wizards decided that their descendants, not having
Colossae to nourish and educate them, would not be able to stand against the
thing they had created, so it was decided to change their children and give
them powers less dependent upon learning. They created the Orders.” “I’m a mage,” she said. “There are other Traveler mages who
are much like the Emperor’s mages who helped Tier fight against the Fahlar. But
I bear the Raven’s Order. I don’t need complex spells, I don’t need to steal
power as other mages do. I can do things that have not been written in a book
and memorized. But the Raven is only one of six Orders bestowed upon
Travelers.” Jes had withdrawn from the family until his face was hidden
from the light of magefire. Seraph rose to her knees and stretched until she
could touch his arm lightly. “Peace, Jes,” she said. “It’s not just you—and I’m sorry I
let you think it was. Your gift is just more difficult to hide.” Jes’s gift was so terrible that there had been nothing she
could do to shield him as she had the other children. When he settled reluctantly where he was, she sat back down and
said, “I am Raven. But there are also Bard, Healer, Hunter, Weather Witch, and
Guardian. But, like Mage, we call the Orders by the birds who are symbolic to
each Order because it is less confusing. Ordinary wizards are also called
mages, but Raven always means the Order of Mage. The other five Orders are
thus: Bard is Owl; Healer is Lark; Hunter is Falcon; Weather Witch is Cormorant;
and Guardian is Eagle.” She watched them closely, but they seemed to be following
her words so she continued. “My father told me that once the Orders were far
more common. Among my clan, in my generation only three of us were Order-bound,
Raven, Eagle, and Falcon. Other clans fared less well—and I knew of only one
Lark still living when I left the clans, and she was very old.” Seraph drew a breath and wondered how to say this next part.
“Imagine my surprise, then, when all of you were born into Orders.” Lehr passed the light across the basket of fry bread to Rinnie
and rubbed his hands on his thighs. “But there’s nothing different about any of
us,” he said. “Except Jes. And his oddities are surely nothing that would have
served the purposes of the Travelers.” “Nothing different about you? Isn’t there?” asked Seraph
softly. “Have you ever come back from a hunt without game, Lehr? Have you ever
been lost, my Falcon?” He stared at her scarcely breathing. “Father taught me how
to track, and to remember things so I wouldn’t get lost,” he said tightly. “Did he?” she said. “That’s not what he told me.” “What am I, Mother?” asked Rinnie eagerly, staring into the
light she held. “Can I make a light like this?” Seraph smiled. “No. You are Cormorant—Weather Witch. Not
everyone knows when a storm is coming, Rinnie.” “What about Jes and Papa ... and Aunt Alinath?” asked Rinnie
eagerly. “Lehr is Falcon, and that makes him a hunter, right? What do Falcons
and Cormorants get to do if they can’t build fires?” “Papa and Aunt Alinath aren’t Travelers,” said Lehr. “We’re only half, and we have Orders,” Rinnie defended herself
hotly. Seraph held up her hand. “Hold a moment. Let’s see. Uhm. Yes. Lehr is right, the Orders belong only to Travelers. Or
that’s what I always thought until I met your Papa. Tier is Owl—that means
Bard. I’ve thought about it a lot over the years, but the only explanation I
have is this: the old Raven who was my teacher told me that the Orders cannot
be bred for as we breed for certain traits in horses. They attach to someone
suitable to their purposes at the moment of birth.” She smiled to herself. Her
old teacher, Arvage, would have been outraged at the mere suggestion that an
Order would attach itself to someone outside the Traveler clans. She cleared her throat and continued, “In the Traveling
clans, the Owl is responsible for keeping the history of the clans because one
of their talents is for memory. But the Owl holds music, too—and music has
always been a part of Tier. “You had some more questions.” Seraph clucked her tongue to
her teeth as she checked her memory. “Falcons track and have some affinity for
weaponry. Cormorants can predict—and, if they are careful, control the weather.
There are more things, but I don’t know them all. Some things vary from person
to person; these things you will have to discover for yourself. Others”—she
shrugged—“we might eventually have to find someone to teach you.” “What about Aunt Alinath?” Rinnie asked again. “Your aunt is exactly what she appears—a solsenti baker.” “What does solsenti mean?” asked Jes abruptly. “Stupid people,” said Rinnie with smug wisdom. “Especially
Aunt Alinath.” Seraph said, “Quit snickering, Lehr. In Traveler’s speech solsenti
means someone who’s blind or crippled, but most of us use it to refer to
anyone who is not of Traveler blood. Now, what else did you ask, Rinnie?” “Jes,” said Rinnie. “Jes is Guardian.” “And Guardian is furthest from human,” Jes broke in
bitterly. “They took the spirit of a demon and bound it to their will. In the
night I am this.” He stood up and let his cloak fall so he stood before them
all, revealed in the light Rinnie held. For a moment he was as human seeming as
any of them, but then his shape flowed and darkened. A panther the size of Gura
stood before them, his eyes gold flecked with an eldritch light It was the speed of the change that Seraph used to gauge whether
what she saw was illusion or real. This time she was pretty certain the panther
was solid and not created of her fears. “The Guardian is the caretaker of the clan,” said Seraph
calmly. “Where danger threatens, in the forests, in the darkness, he adapts to
protect us. No magic works on him except his own. In the daytime—and I’m not
talking about just when the sun is up, but in safety—the Guardian sleeps, taking
part of Jes with him.” Rinnie gave the light back to Lehr and walked all the way
around Jes with wide eyes. Seraph could see her son cringe under that steady
gaze, though he moved not a hair—but she had more confidence in Rinnie than Jes
did. “You’re beautiful,” said her daughter in awe, reaching out
to touch the grey-black coat Lehr watched the cat narrowly, then laughed. “What, did you
expect us all to shriek and run away, Jes? No one raised around Aunt Alinath
could be afraid of a mere demon.” “I don’t get to turn into a panther either?” asked Rinnie
plaintively as she sat down next to Jes. “No, only Jes,” replied Seraph. Lehr frowned. “If I’d known about this, I wouldn’t have
gotten so mad at you when you took off for the forest all the time,” he said to
Jes. “I suspect it’ll take a few days for all of us to understand what Mother’s
told us tonight.” He paused, then said the important thing. “I think you need
to know that I’m glad you are my brother, day or night” “Don’t I even get fangs?” asked Rinnie. The cat let out a huff of laughter and shifted back into a
more familiar form. “No, Rinnie. No fangs for you.” He reached over and ruffled
her hair. “But don’t worry. If you want me to bite someone for you, I will.” Jes settled back on his heels, though he didn’t relax enough
to sit “Papa told me I should tell all of you, but I didn’t want to. I didn’t
want you to be afraid of me.” Seraph frowned at him, “You know better than that,” she
said. “No matter what they really think, they’re going to be a little afraid.”
Turning to the rest of them she explained, “Dread is one of the gifts of the
Guardian. If he wants to, he can panic horses or wild game. But just his very
presence will make people nervous. It’s not that you are afraid of him, but
that he triggers your fears.” Seraph smiled at a sudden clear memory. “My oldest brother
was Guardian,” she said. “He had a wicked sense of humor. He used to stalk
people through the forest. They’d arrive at our camp panting in fear and trying
not to show it, because there had been nothing to be afraid of. My grandfather
used to scold him so.” She shook her head in amusement at the memory of the
bent old man shaking his finger at her brother, so fierce and large. He could
have broken the old man with a single blow, but instead he’d stand there, head
bowed as his grandfather chastised him—and a few weeks later another terrified
wanderer would approach their camp. “That’s why Olbeck ran,” said Rinnie. “Jes really did
frighten him away.” Seraph nodded. “If it was only the dread, he’ll remember
that he ran, but not why he was afraid. It’ll make him angry. He’ll have to prove
himself. Be careful.” “Mother,” said Lehr. “Why are you telling us about the
Orders, now?” “It’s that priest the new Sept brought back from Taela,”
Seraph said. “I don’t like him,” said Jes abruptly. “Have you met him?” asked Seraph, surprised; Jes hardly ever
went into the city. “I saw him once riding with the new Sept’s hunting party,”
he answered. “I don’t like him.” “Good,” she said. “I’d like you all to avoid him if you can.
There’s something ... odd about him.” “What?” asked Lehr with a sudden grin. “Does he turn into
panthers or call light out of nothing?” She smiled back, but shook her head. “He worries me.” She
explained what the priest had told her about his beliefs. Lehr shook his head when she was done. “You mean a whole
bunch of solsenti—possibly solsenti wizards, from the magic
they’ve used to light their temple—have started a religion based on the
Travelers’ Orders?” She nodded. “I thought you ought to know the truth of what
you are before he managed somehow to corner you and feed you the muddle he and
his religion have been brewing.” She hesitated. “I should have told you
sooner—and there’s one other thing. I’ve never worried over it before because
Travelers don’t believe in fate the way those who live here do.” And because
Tier had always made her feel as if no evil could ever befall them. “For
generations the Orders have been fading from the Travelers. Yet, from the marriage
of Traveler and an Ordered solsenti, the first Ordered solsenti I’ve
ever heard of, comes three Ordered children? My grandfather said, ‘Where great
gifts are given great evils come.’ I want you all to be careful.” Jes flowed to his feet, all of his attention toward home.
“Mother, there’s someone riding into the farm.” Chapter 5Even from the vantage point of the knoll behind the house,
Seraph could only pick out vague shadows of horses near the porch, but Jes
said, “It’s the steward and a man in the Sept’s colors—ah, him. I think it’s
the Sept’s huntsman himself, Mother.” “Well,” she said after a moment, “let’s go see what they
want” She led her brood out of the trees and down to the trail that led from
field to house. Gura barked welcome as they neared, and Seraph saw that he’d
kept the men from approaching the house too closely. Now that Seraph was nearer
to the house she saw the steward’s distinctive braid, which he wore to hide the
balding spot on the top of his head. “Hello, Forder,” Seraph said. “Welcome.” At the sound of her voice Gura quieted, his job done. “Seraph Tieraganswife,” said the Sept’s steward, “Where have
you been?” He asked it as if it were her fault he’d been kept waiting, as if he
had clan-father rights over her. Part of her flexed, like a cat testing its claws. So many
years in Redem and she still couldn’t get used to the way women were treated—as
if being a man gave them the right to hold sway over any woman who crossed
their paths. Sensitive to her moods, Gura left the porch, a low growl
hovering in his barrel chest. He quieted at her gesture, but stayed on his
feet. “We break ground tomorrow,” Lehr said peaceably, drawing
attention away from Seraph so that the steward wouldn’t notice her gathering
ire. “We took time to walk the fields tonight. Pray accept our apologies for
keeping you waiting. We had no idea that you would come again today. If you had
sent word we would have awaited your pleasure.” “No more had I intended to return,” Forder grunted. Ignoring
Seraph completely he addressed Lehr. “The Sept’s huntsman has found something;
I thought you should hear from him as soon as possible. If I’d known you had
the habit of walking the forest in the night, I would have waited for a more
convenient time.” If Lehr’s hand hadn’t tightened on her shoulder, Seraph
would have said something rash. It wasn’t like her to lose control of her
temper so easily, but it was easier to cling to temper than to wonder why the
steward, who was a man who enjoyed his comforts, would put himself to the trouble
of coming here a second time in two days. Bad news travels fast. “Thank you,” said Lehr, though he was enough his mother’s
son that he didn’t apologize again. “I was out with a pair of my men,” said the huntsman, who
upon close inspection was vaguely familiar to Seraph. He lived in Leheigh,
where the Sept’s keep was, but he’d come down to Redem a number of times to hear
Tier sing in the tavern at the edge of the village. “We were up past the falls,
tracking a deer that had taken an arrow, when we came upon what must have been
a Blighted Place.” He shuffled his feet uncomfortably. Seraph reached up and took Lehr’s hand in a fierce grip. “I tell you,” the huntsman said with sudden intensity, “I,
my own self, have ridden by there a dozen times, and never seen anything
untoward, but I can think of nothing else but the old evil left by the Shadowed
that could have done what I saw.” “What was that, sir?” asked Lehr tightly when Seraph said
nothing. “The body of a grey mare,” replied the huntsman. “Her hooves
were scorched as if she had been burned in a fire—and not much left but bones
in front and a bit of flesh and hide behind. There was a human skull there,
clean and white, and a few bones. I knew that Tier was still out trapping, and
one of my men recalled that your husband had just bought a grey horse. We
buried the remains where we found them, as is proper for Blight-kill but I
brought what was left of the bridle in hope we could identify the man.” He took a bag from his saddle and withdrew a handful of
leather, both scorched and cracked, and the half-melted remains of a copper
bit. When Seraph made no move to take it, Lehr freed himself gently
from her hold and took the scraps of leather and the bit. He stared at it a
moment, then knelt by the porch. He rearranged the pieces on the wooden boards
until he revealed the remains of a bridle with enough of the beaded browband left
that Seraph couldn’t deny it belonged to her husband. “It is my father’s bridle,” Lehr said. “Frost, the horse he
was riding, was dappled grey.” “I regret bringing you such news,” said the huntsman, as if
he meant it. “My father is usually home much earlier than this,” said
Lehr. “Papa?” said Rinnie. Her voice broke through the numbness that encased Seraph.
She couldn’t afford to lose herself in grief; she had children. She took a step
toward Rinnie, but Jes was already there, holding her against him. He nodded at
Seraph: the Guardian would watch over his sister until Seraph could send the
steward on his way. “Where did you find them? I’d like to bring Tier home,” said
Seraph. The huntsman didn’t look at her, instead giving his answer
to Lehr. “There was nothing left but a skull, and we buried that,” he said.
“Shadowed magic is nothing to play with. I won’t lead a boy or a woman there.
One man is already dead; there is no need for more.” “I see,” said Lehr over Seraph’s soundless snarl. “You know, of course, that I should serve you notice”—the
steward changed the subject—“since your brother is simple and you are not yet
fully of age. But it is too late to bring in another family to farm, and you
are a stout lad. The Sept will give you this year as a trial.” Lehr bowed his acceptance to Forder, and Seraph bit her
tongue. No one else would farm this far into the mountains. If the steward
drove them out there would be nothing for the Sept. But she knew Forder, knew
that if she antagonized him enough he’d send them away for spite. “The Sept is generous,” said Lehr. “We will do our best to deserve
the chance he gives.” “Huntsman,” said Seraph, seeing a dim reflection of her own
wild grief in his eyes. “Thank you. There are very few who would have the
courage to get near a Blighted Place just to identify a dead man. Knowing is
better than waiting with false hope.” Few men as well would have roused the steward to bring the
news as soon as it came to him. It had been the huntsman, of course, who had
forced Forder to come out at night instead of waiting until tomorrow. Gratitude
and grief ripped through years of habit and she sketched a glowing sigil in the
air that hung between them briefly. “Traveler’s blessing upon you,” she said, “and upon your
house. Good fortune hold by you and yours.” In the darkness she could see the whites of Forder’s eyes,
but the huntsman was made of sterner stuff, as befitted a man who braved
Blighted Places. “And to yours,” he said with a quick nod before he mounted
his horse. As soon as the huntsman’s foot was in the stirrup, Forder
had his own horse in motion. Then they were gone, disappearing into the night,
leaving only the lingering sounds of trotting hooves behind them. Seraph ushered her children into the cabin and lit the fire
with a wave of her hand. A corner of her mind noted how easily she shed the
cloak of good Redemi wife she’d held to since she married Tier, but she tucked
the thought back with her grief as she dealt with the more immediate problem of
her children. The Guardian lurked in the room like a restless spirit,
adding fear to the mix of shock and sorrow. Rinnie clung to him, sobbing
heartbrokenly. Lehr was pale and still wore the air of calm he’d donned for the
benefit of the steward—but his hands held the remains of Tier’s bridle in a
white-knuckled grip. Tier would have known how to ease their sorrow. He would
have said something wise and soothing. He would have held Rinnie until she fell
asleep. Then he would have talked to his sons until there was a bandage of
comfort between them and their grief. Seraph wanted to scream and rage until she was too tired to
feel any more. “There was nothing,” she said, “that Tier loved more than
you three.” Lehr’s face whitened and she went to him and hugged him
fiercely. She knew it was the right thing when he wrapped his arms around her
and lifted her so he could press his forehead to the crook of her neck. She would keep them safe, she vowed silently, as she had not
been able to keep her clan or Tier. And if she cried, only Jes could see. Rinnie fell asleep finally. Jes carried her up the ladder to
her half of the loft and rejoined Seraph and Lehr where they sat on a bench in
front of the fire. “She wasn’t afraid of me,” he said. Seraph smiled and patted the space beside her. “She didn’t
seem to be, did she?” He didn’t sit down. “Everyone is afraid, even you and Papa.” “And me,” said Lehr with a tired smile that was more in his
eyes than on his mouth. “Still, it is just a general unease, isn’t it? I’m not
really afraid of you, just twitchy.” Seraph nodded. “She might have felt that, but there are
worse things than fear.” “People don’t touch me,” said the Guardian, looking down at
his hands as if he missed the weight of Rinnie’s warm body. Lehr looked at him sharply, because Jes almost couldn’t bear
to be touched most of the time. “You comforted her,” said Seraph. “You reminded her that she
wasn’t alone.” The Guardian looked at her and between one breath and the
next became Jes again. “Oh, Mother,” he whispered, “we are so sad.” He dropped
bonelessly to the floor in front of her and began sobbing softly with overwhelming
grief. Seraph started to put a hand on his shoulder, but caught
herself. As overwrought as Jes was, he wasn’t going to be able to stand her
touch at all. Instead, she got to her feet and opened the front door.
“Gura,” she said. “In.” The big dog gave her an astonished look—though during the
day he sometimes came inside, at night he guarded the farm. “In,” she said again. Gura padded past her to the fire. As soon as he saw Jes, he
flopped out beside him with a sigh. Jes, unable to bear the distraction of
human touch, wrapped his arms around the dog and pressed his face against him. When Seraph sat back down beside Lehr he said, “Why doesn’t
he like to be touched—when ...” he hesitated. “This is really confusing. Why
didn’t it bother him to be touched when he was being Guardian?” “Jes is sensitive to the touch of others. Many of the Eagles
have the gift of empathy. Because he must always keep the Guardian contained, a
third person’s feelings are just too much.” “You make it sound like he’s two people.” Seraph nodded. “From what my oldest brother who was also a
Guardian told me, it’s very much like that. I don’t know why the Eagle is so
different from other Orders, why it is so much more difficult to bear. My
teacher believed that the old wizards were trying to make something quite
different—a superior warrior perhaps—and they made some mistakes: mistakes that
Jes and those like him have to pay for all of their lives.” She paused and
glanced at Jes. He wasn’t paying any attention to them, but she lowered her
voice before continuing. “Most Eagles die before they reach Jes’s age, so my
people are very protective of them; we keep them away from strangers when we
can, and don’t speak of them outside of the clan. The Guardian is both the most
dangerous and most vulnerable of all the Orders.” Seraph crossed her arms over her chest, realizing that his
survival was up to her alone now. Lehr put an arm around her shoulder and drew
her up next to him. “It will be all right, Mother,” he said. They stayed there until Jes’s tears grew silent and Gura
fell into a doze, snoring softly. Seraph wanted to do something, anything—but
there was nothing more she could do to help Tier, nothing more she could do to
help Jes, Lehr, or Rinnie. Her gaze fell upon the scraps of Tier’s bridle. She picked it up and left the bench for the better light in
front of the fire. “What are you doing. Mother?” asked Lehr. “I’m going to see what this bridle has to tell me,” said
Seraph, sounding much more confident than she felt. She had failed her Order so
badly that it seemed wrong that it hadn’t failed her. “I told you that within
each Order, there is still some variation in abilities. One of the things I
could do that my teacher could not was read an object’s past.” “You’re going to see what happened to Papa?” “Tm going to try,” she said. She took a deep breath and braced herself, because reading objects
closely associated with death was painful. Tentatively she rested her fingers
on the browband. Delicacy was more important than power in this kind of magic.
She let threads of magic drift through her fingers and touch the leather. Nothing. Thinking she’d misjudged the necessary power, she opened
herself until the ends of her fingers tingled—still nothing. She pulled her
fingers away as if they had been burned. “Lehr, could you find something ...” Seraph’s gaze scanned
the room and brushed the corner where Tier’s sword hung under Lehr’s bow. The
sword certainly had enough history for her to read. “The sword. Get the sword
for me, please.” “What’s wrong?” asked Lehr as he took the sword down and
brought it to her. Seraph shook her head and took the sword and unsheathed it.
“I don’t know.” She set the bridle aside and lay the sword on the floor. She
had to push Gura to get him out of the way, disturbing Jes, who sat up. “Papa’s sword,” he said. She nodded absently at him and rubbed her fingers together
lightly, waiting until she felt the magic ready and eager—just as it had been when
she touched the bridle. She opened herself as widely as she could to the traces
time left on objects and touched—death and darkness. She had a moment of fiery pain as gold light gathered under
her fingers, then it was gone. She opened her eyes and had the odd feeling that
time had jumped without her noticing. Her ears rang, her elbow felt bruised,
and she was lying back with her head on Jes’s knee. Jes patted her cheeks gently, his eyes flickering with the
Guardian’s presence. “Did the sparks hurt you, Mother?” “No, Jes,” she said, sitting up on her own and resting her
head on her raised knees while visions from the sword flashed behind her closed
lids. “I’m fine,” she said, seeing Lehr’s anxious look. “Just a
bruise or two. I haven’t done this in a long time, and I misjudged. The sword
was a poor choice.” Solsenti warriors used their blades for generations
until rust robbed the blade of its strength. They even named them, never
dreaming of the pseudo-life imbued by so much death—or the danger in giving such
a thing a name. There were stories about swords that held against all odds and
others that tended to slip and bite their wielder, but solsenti never
seemed to heed the warning. Travelers cleansed their weapons after each life
taken and discarded the blades of dead men. Tier’s sword was old. Newly sensitized, Seraph could feel
its hunger for Tier’s hand and battle even though it lay several handspans from
her skirts. But the Tier the sword longed for was a version of her husband
Seraph had never seen: a cold-faced killer who let his sword drink its fill of
blood. Seraph touched the bridle again, running her fingers over
the blue and red beads on the browband, lingering on the bit. After a moment
she felt a dullness, the bare touch of Lehr’s grief as he held the bridle, a
dusting of time lacking in power. As if the bridle, bit and all, had somehow
come into being just a few days ago. “Nothing,” Seraph growled in frustration. Her hand fisted on
a scrap of leather, both hand and leather glowing with power, but there was no
flash of vision, only emptiness, as if whatever trap Tier had sprung had wiped
the bridle’s history clean. “What does il mean?” asked Lehr. She shook her head. “I don’t know. Tier’s death should be emblazoned
upon the bridle. I haven’t done this in a very long time, but I didn’t have any
trouble reading the sword.” “It was Shadow Blight,” Lehr reminded her. “Maybe the Shadowed’s
magic affected it.” Seraph frowned. It felt as if the bridle had been wiped
clean of its past, not blasted with magic. “Fire or running water can clean
something of its past; I suppose Shadow Blight might do the same.” Weary in spirit more than body, Seraph rubbed her face.
“Jes, could you put Papa’s sword in its sheath and then put it away?” She
didn’t want to touch it again. Logically she shouldn’t sense anything unless
she looked for it, but she could feel it waiting. “We’d better get to sleep.
Tomorrow you two will have to start plowing. I will take word of Tier’s death
to your aunt and uncle.” Seraph waited until they were all asleep before sneaking
out. She used enough magic to keep from disturbing Jes or Gura, both still
curled up before the coals of the fire. She walked until she was far from the cabin; the ground was
uncomfortably cold on her bare feet. When she stopped, she bowed her head
against the rough bark of a tree, seeking the peace resident in its stolid,
slow-growing, long-lived presence—but all she felt was rage. It seethed from the soles of her feet and coiled through her
body until it was forced into the long strands of her hair. Her hands shook
with it as they curled and clawed at the hapless tree. Her breath left her
throat in a low, moaning growl. And with the rage came magic, destructive and hot, and as aimless
as her wrath. Because the focus of her anger, of her pain, was dead. “Tier,” she whispered and then in a voice of power that
shook the ground under her feet, she asked, “Why did you leave me?” “Listen to Jes,” Seraph told Lehr the next morning. “He’ll
take care of Skew and see that he doesn’t overdo. Skew’s going to have to do
the whole field and you’ll have to watch to see that he doesn’t hurt himself.” “Yes, Mother,” said Lehr patiently. Seraph was pale, tired,
and obviously dreading the trip into town—and he didn’t blame her. “Rinnie, make sure to run water out to the boys a couple of
times this morning. That’s more important than getting the garden done.” “Yes, Mother,” said Rinnie in such a blatant imitation of
Lehr’s tone that he had to turn aside so no one saw his grin. “Right.” Seraph gave a quick nod. “I should be back in time
to fix the midday meal—but if not, there is bread, honey, and cheese.” With
that she turned on her heel and began walking briskly up the path toward town,
leaving her children to begin their assigned tasks. They rested Skew rather more often than Lehr would have, but
he let Jes decide when to stop. After each rest, Lehr and Jes traded who held
the plow. The soil was somewhat rocky, and the plow bucked and wallowed unexpectedly
until they were as tired as the horse. By midmorning Skew’s head was low, and sweat washed out from
under his harness. They’d made some headway: five mostly straight furrows in
and twenty-three more to go. Lehr walked beside Jes, whose turn it was to hold
the handles. The long reins trailed though the metal hoops in the harness down
Skew’s back and wrapped around Jes’s shoulders so when he stopped, so did Skew. “He can’t be tired again,” protested Lehr. “We haven’t come
fifty paces since the last rest.” “Hush,” commanded Jes. Lehr had quit looking for the stranger inside his brother
about halfway up the first furrow, but he saw him now. Abruptly Lehr realized how still the land was. Not a bird
sang; not a cricket chirruped. Silently he unbuckled the sheath that held his
long knife and rested his hand on its haft. The forest seemed somehow darker
than it had been just a moment earlier. Skew’s head came up and he tested the wind with fluttering
nostrils. Tossing his mane uneasily, he wickered once. Whatever it was that Lehr was watching for, it wasn’t the
man who stepped out of the woods. He was slight and dark, but otherwise
unremarkable—until Lehr met his gaze. Fathomless black eyes examined him coolly, and the hair on
the back of Lehr’s neck crawled. “Hunter,” said the stranger. Lehr’s eyes told him that the man in front of him was a nondescript
man dressed, more or less, like any other man to be found wandering in the
woods. But another sense was ringing like an alarm bell, warning him that he
stood before a Power. Skew shoved his nose against Lehr’s arm and breathed in
little huffs, ears pinned forward as if he perceived some threat and readied
himself to do battle. Lehr glanced at Jes, who stood at his back, watching the
stranger steadily but without tension. Turning back to the man, Lehr half bowed, because it felt as
if he should. “Sir. What can we do for you?” The man smiled, but his too-knowing eyes stayed cold and
clear like the river in winter. “I found a child wandering my forests alone.
She smells like one of yours, so I thought I would offer her to you rather than
the wolves.” “Rinnie?” asked Jes, glancing toward their home, but when
Lehr looked too, Rinnie was plainly visible planting the kitchen garden with
Gura stretched out nearby. “Go ahead, Jes,” said Lehr. “I’ll keep at the fields until
you get back. She’s probably one of the villagers, so you might have to take
her all the way to Redem.” Jes ducked out of the reins and followed the dark man into
the woods without a word. Lehr remained by Skew’s head until the gelding quit
staring into the trees. Rubbing under Skew’s browband where the sweat gathered, Lehr
spoke quietly to the horse, “I believe you and I have just met the forest king.
I always thought he was just a fancy of Jes’s.” So many strange things had
happened in the past few days that the forest king rated no more than a shake
of the head before Lehr turned to take up the plow again. » The Guardian paced beside the boar who was the forest king
and tested the area for threat. Finding none, he allowed his ire full sway. “You will leave my brother alone,” the Guardian said in a
voice that held the winter winds. The boar snorted, unimpressed. “Why would I do that? Your
brother’s ties to the forest are closer than yours. Something has happened to
him to make him aware of his power. If I had called you today as I usually do,
he would have heard me. It was time to acknowledge the Hunter. I cannot say I
welcome him, for it is my job to protect those within my realm. But your
brother has long hunted these forests and he does not kill indiscriminately.
Death is seldom a welcome guest, but it has a place in the life of the forest.” “Just leave him alone—he takes on enough without you.” The boar laughed, his hoarse voice squealing high in merriment.
“Am I so chance a comrade then, Jes?” “Who is being dragged through the forest at your whim?” returned
the Guardian roundly. “I should be helping my brother coax Skew over the fields
rather than chasing off after some child.” “Not that kind of child,” grunted the boar, scrambling over
a largish log in his path. “I believe that she’s older than you.” He seemed to
find amusement in something, for he snorted a while before continuing. “Child
of Travelers she is, though not exactly like you or your brother either. She
passed me by as I was eating my breakfast this morning and the smell of her
magic intrigued me, so I followed her.” The Guardian waited until he was certain the boar wouldn’t
continue without prompting. “Where did she go?” “Through my lands,” said the forest king. “I almost stopped
at the border, but by then I was curious. I followed her to a place where magic
blackened the ground and a new rip in the earth contained the body of a horse—a
grey mare who used to graze in your fields.” “You know where my father was killed,” said the Guardian
slowly. “Your father is dead?” The boar considered it a moment. “I
tell you what I saw: it is up to you to discover what you’ll take from it. But
first you must deal with the child—or allow me to do so.” The Guardian knew how the boar would deal with one he must
have decided might be a threat. The Guardian recognized the same grim spirit
lived inside of him as well—though he’d never killed anyone. Not yet. Never
wanted to kill anyone—because he was afraid that by that act, something the
daytime Jes could not comprehend, he would somehow sever the ties that held the
two disparate parts of himself together. “What did you find at my father’s grave?” asked the
Guardian. “My mother thinks that there was more to his death than we have been
told.” “Your mother may be right,” said the forest king. “But that
is not for my judgment.” By this time, the Guardian was fairly confident he knew
where the forest king was taking him. There weren’t actually all that many
places to store a person safely in the woods without worrying what might happen
to them—even for a spirit as powerful as the forest king. The old building was so covered in vines and surrounded by
trees that it was impossible to see from the outside. It was, as far as he
knew, the only building he’d ever been in that had been built before the reign
of the Shadowed. The only entrance required some undignified scrambling for
anything larger than the boar. Not knowing exactly what he would face, the Guardian chose
to stay in human form and crawled under the foliage, through the crumbling
tunnel that had once held water and still bore the mark of ancient algae. Inside, the boar waited with bright red eyes that glittered
in the dark interior, standing over a sleeping person who certainly was no
child. Pale Traveler’s hair looked more silver than ash in the faint light that
poured in through the leaves that guarded the barren rafters that must once
have been thatched. “Traveler,” said the Guardian, crouching down and pushing
her hair aside to reassure himself that it wasn’t his mother who lay there. But
the features of the woman who lay sleeping in the forest king’s lair were those
of a stranger, younger than his mother—but as the boar had said, older than Jes
was. “You say she came from town?” “Yes. She came from the town, walked almost directly to the
place where the horse lay dead then started back.” He paused. “She wasn’t going
back to town.” “Where then?” asked the Guardian. The boar stared at the sleeping woman. “It looked to me as
if she were headed directly toward your home. But there is dark magic about
her, and power. Her path would have taken her through the heart of my lands,
and I decided I preferred that she not trespass unguarded.” The Guardian contemplated the woman. Was it someone his
mother knew? Seraph hadn’t mentioned finding another Traveler in the village
the day before yesterday. Surely she would have said something if she had. “Will you awaken her?” said the Guardian finally, deciding
that her mysteries would be better answered by the woman herself. “Or do you
wish me to take her away from this place first?” “Take her.” The forest king turned back toward the entrance
of the building. “When you are far enough from here, I’ll lift the sleep from
her.” The Guardian sighed; though the woman was slight, the tunnel
was narrow. Still, he gathered her up and scrambled his way out with only a few
extra bruises—on him. He managed to keep her safe from harm. In the sunlight he could see what features she shared with
his mother and what differences marked her. His mother was a smaller woman, and
this woman had a thinner, longer nose that gave her face an arrogant beauty. He’d never seen anyone except his family who bore Traveler
blood. He wondered where her people were, if they were among those who were
killed or if they awaited her somewhere. Walking in the woods with the sun on his back, Jes slowly filtered
into being, easing the Guardian to sleep. Untroubled by his burden he continued
on toward home. Mother would know what to do with her. They were close to the edge of the woods when she stiffened.
He glanced down at her and saw that her eyes were open. He smiled into pale eyes that matched her hair and continued
on, ignoring her attempts to get down. If she were on foot it would be harder
to bring her home, and Jes knew that he needed to take her home so she would be
safe from the forest king. When she couldn’t free herself, she began asking him rapid
questions that ran through his ears like rain, first in words he could have
understood if he’d bothered, then in the liquid silver tongue that his mother
used sometimes when she was very angry or very sad. “Hush,” he said, shaking his head, and he began humming the
song his mother had used to sing Rinnie to sleep when she was a babe and
fretting in the night. She stilled at his song, then said slowly, “Who are you?” “Jes,” he said. She stared at him a moment, “I can walk.” He hesitated. “You have to come with me.” “I’ll come with you—but let me walk.” He set her down then, but kept a grip on her hand because he
liked the way it felt. She was closed down so he didn’t feel the annoying
buzzing of her thoughts, just the warmth of her skin. His-mother could do that,
too. “You don’t look Traveler,” she said, almost to herself. “Mother’s a Traveler,” he replied. “Papa’s a Redemi.” “What happened to me?” But he’d said as much as he was going to. It was too complex
and he couldn’t be bothered explaining everything. He shook his head at her and
continued toward home. The field they’d been plowing was empty, the plowshare
raised out of the ground and cleaned of soil and dampness to keep it free of
rust. If it had looked like rain, Lehr’d have brought it in. With a glance at the sky, Jes measured the time he’d spent
in the woods. As usual, it was longer than he’d thought but not so long that
Lehr should be finished plowing. Something must have happened to Skew. He started to increase his pace, but slowed when the woman
stumbled beside him. She didn’t have the knack of walking over plowed ground.
He swooped, picked her up, and carried her over their field. Remembering her
request, though, he set her down on the other side and continued his determined
course to the barn. Lehr carried a heavy, steaming bucket to the bam and was
oblivious to them until Jes called out his name. Lehr halted and set down the bucket. “Jes? I thought you
were out looking for a child?” Jes frowned. “I found her in the woods “ he said, because it
somehow fit Lehr’s questions. “Is something wrong with Skew?” “No, no,” his brother automatically soothed, staring at the
woman. “He’s fine. But he was so tired, I thought it would be better to stop.
I’m bringing him some hot bran mash and Rinnie’s giving him a rubdown so he’s
not so stiff and sore tomorrow.” He frowned. “Jes, who is this?” Jes frowned back, though he knew his frown wasn’t as impressive
as Lehr’s. “This is the one I was sent for,” he said. Lehr smiled suddenly and shook his head. “All right, Jes.
Good afternoon, lady. I am Lehr Tieraganson. You’ve already met my brother
Jes.” The stranger he’d brought back with him tugged at Jes’s hand
gently and he released her. “I am called Hennea,” she said. “I am looking for the
Traveler called Seraph.” “This one went to where Father was killed,” said Jes,
because the Guardian reminded him that it was important. “The forest king
followed her and then held her for us. He thought she was coming here, which
was fine with him.” “So why did he send for you?” asked Lehr after a moment, and
the woman, Hennea, looked as if she’d like to know, too. Jes sighed. “I’m not sure.” But it was something Mother
should know, and Lehr would remember to tell her. So he prodded the Guardian,
who could make a better answer. Lehr took a step back when the Guardian came, and that made
Jes sad. The Guardian didn’t like frightening his family. “The forest king said that she had dark magic and power and
he didn’t want her in his territory.” Jes came back quickly, because the Guardian was unpredictable
and might decide that the woman could be a threat to his territory, too. Jes
didn’t want him to scare her because ... because he liked her. “Dark magic?” asked Lehr, with a look at Hennea. She put out her hand and showed him her wrist and tapped on
the bracelet there. Jes didn’t like it, nor did the Guardian—it smelled wrong. “I expect that he’s talking about this. Who is the forest
king?” Lehr smiled suddenly and shrugged. “I don’t know, actually.
I thought he was a story that Jes made up until I met him today.” He turned to
Jes. “Who is the forest king?” Jes squirmed, uncomfortable with all the attention that they
had been paying him. The Guardian didn’t like people looking at him too much.
“He’s the forest king,” he mumbled, almost forgetting the question in his discomfort. Lehr seemed to sense how Jes was feeling because he said,
“Come with me,” picked up the bucket, and continued out to the barn. Depressed and weary of both grief and anger, Seraph almost
didn’t notice that there was something wrong as she walked up to her cabin. Alinath had already heard about Tier—Forder had stayed overnight
in Redem and spread the news. She’d approached Alinath expecting to deal with
shock and grief, but found Tier’s sister waiting for her with anger and blame,
instead. It was only when Gura didn’t greet her that Seraph set the
stress of the unhappy meeting she’d had with Alinath aside and looked around.
The boys weren’t in the field, and Rinnie wasn’t working in the garden. She whistled and was rewarded with a bark, and Gura dashed
out of the barn to welcome her with a wuff of apology for his tardiness. He
followed at her heels as she headed for the barn. Something must have happened to Skew, she thought. The interior of the bam was dim in comparison to the
afternoon light, so she was still half-blind when she heard Lehr say, “Here she
is, now. Mother, we have a visitor.” As her vision cleared, Seraph saw Skew with his head buried
in a grain bucket. Rinnie was standing next to him with a brush in her hand.
Jes slouched against the barn wall a few feet from Lehr and a woman: a Traveler
woman wearing a solsenti dress who stared at Seraph with pale eyes. Seraph felt her eyebrows climb in surprise and instinctive
dismay. She had enough trouble on her hands, and a lone Traveler could only be
bringing more. “I am Hennea,” the woman said. “Raven of the Clan of
Rivilain Moon-Haired.” “Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent,” replied Seraph.
She waited and Lehr obliged her. “Jes’s forest king came this morning,” he said, sounding a
bit bemused. “He told us that there was a child loose in the woods and asked
Jes to fetch her. Jes brought Hennea back. He told me that the forest king
didn’t want her in his territory because she held dark magic and power.” “This is dark magic,” said Hennea, holding up her wrist. Seraph closed the distance between them and set her hands on
either side of the leather and bead bracelet. “Solsenti wizardry,” she
said shortly. “A geas?” Hennea nodded. “Yes.” Seraph knew of only one wizard anywhere near Redem. “Volis
the priest has bound you to his service?” Hennea smiled faintly. “Yes.” He’d been hiding her then. Seraph had not the slightest
doubt that if any of the villagers knew that there was another Traveler in the
vicinity they would have told her so. “I can help you rid yourself of this.” Seraph didn’t know
the exact method, but she was confident it would be in one of Isolda’s books:
wizards of Isolda’s rime had been fond of binding others to their services. Any
spell that could break a spell woven by the Colossae wizards could be adapted
to sever the bonds of a solsenti wizard without too much trouble. “No,” said Hennea, curling her hand into a fist “Not yet.
When the time comes I will rid myself of it.” “Jes said the forest king told him that she went directly
from Redem to the place where Father was killed. From there, he thought that
she was trying to reach us,” Lehr’s voice was neutral. “Ah,” said Seraph, narrowing her eyes at the other woman.
“Why don’t you tell me more about yourself, Hennea, Raven of Rivilain
Moon-Haired?” “Thank you,” said Hennea, who appeared to have been waiting
for Seraph’s invitation. “I am no Owl, so I ask that you bear with my tale as I
tell it Two years ago I and my lover, who was a Raven and my student, were
taken by solsenti wizards who bound us with Raven magics.” How could solsenti bind with Raven magic? Hennea
paused as if she expected Seraph to ask, but Seraph seldom interrupted.
Doubtless it was a question to be addressed later in Hennea’s story. When Seraph said nothing, Hennea continued. “We were taken
to some sort of stronghold where these wizards—there were six of them and some
greater number of lesser wizardlings, performed a ritual of magic upon me.” She stopped again, but Seraph didn’t think it had anything
to do with her audience. It looked more as if she were fighting the memory’s
hold; her hands were clenched at her side and sweat gathered on her forehead.
Jes stepped forward and set a hand on Hennea’s shoulder, the unexpected action
telling Seraph that the Guardian had accepted Hennea. “Are the details of the spell important now?” asked Seraph
more gently than she’d first intended. “Not now,” said Hennea. “Only that their magic failed. They
blamed the failure on one wizard who had not done the spell before—Volis. They
coached him, and tried three more times. After the last time they conceded that
the spell had been performed perfectly, but that something about the way it had
been misworked the first time had rendered me an unfit subject. So they took
Moselm, he who was my student.” She was breathing heavier now, and Seraph saw her blink
hard. “I didn’t even notice at first—I was too wrapped up in my own pain—but
then he began screaming and screaming.” She closed her eyes briefly, as if that could shut out the
sound. With her eyes closed, Hennea looked very young; Seraph had thought her
ten years older than Jes, but she wasn’t so certain now. “When they finished with him,” Hennea said, “they took him
out of the room, still screaming. I never saw him again. I didn’t even know
what their spell casting did because I was too raw from what they had done to
me.” She gave Seraph a bitter smile. “These wizards were as confident
as if they had come fresh from Colossae. They talked of killing me, as I was no
good for their purposes, but the young wizard—Volis, who is the priest of their
twisted religion here—asked if he might keep me to see if he could discover
what he had done. So they let him bind me with this”—she held up her wrist—“and
made me his plaything.” “I accused them of arrogance,” she said. “But I was
arrogant, too. I could have broken free of this geas—it might hold a solsenti
wizard or even a Traveler who was not Raven, but as you have seen, it will
not hold a Raven long. But they presented a puzzle to me. How had solsenti wizards
worked Raven magic? Even more worrisome, I didn’t think that we were the first
Ravens they had taken. They knew too well how to neutralize anything I might
have done for my defense—and with the exception of Volis, they had all
performed their ritual before. I reasoned that whatever they had done to
Moselm, it had already been done. If I could reverse it, I could reverse it
later as well—after I discovered what they were doing.” “So you waited,” said Seraph. Hennea nodded. “For a year or so I bided my time and learned
what I could. We were in Taela secreted within the Emperor’s own palace. The
wizards ruled over a group of solsenti called the Secret Path of the
Five Gods. I saw only the wizards, who are relatively few, but there are apparently
many others, all men—noblemen and high-ranked merchants and the like—men of
power.” “Volis seemed sincere in his devotion,” said Seraph. “Obsessive
even. Not a man who is seeking after political power.” Hennea nodded. “Oh, they take themselves very seriously, including
this religion that someone thought up a few centuries or so ago as a way to
encourage bored young noblemen to join up. Can you think of anything a young
man would like better than to shock his family? Worshiping like a Traveler is
beyond offensive.” “Travelers don’t worship gods,” said Rinnie, who’d been
brushing Skew as Hennea talked. “No, indeed,” agreed Hennea. “But Volis doesn’t believe
that. We Travelers like to keep our secrets, and he thinks he knows them. He
likes me to spout his own theories back to him. I don’t think he really knows
how this geas really works. He thought it made”—she glanced over her
shoulder at Rinnie and gave Seraph an ironic smile—“made us friends. But
he likes to believe in lies. One night, while we were still in Taela, he came
into his rooms a little worse for drink—something he seldom did. He was wearing
a crude ring made of silver and rose quartz and reeking of tainted magic.” She
sat down abruptly on the small bench Rinnie used as a mounting block. “Unto Raven it is given to know the Order,” she whispered.
“Somehow they had stolen Moselm’s Order and put it into the ring. Volis was
drunk from celebrating Moselm’s death—and worried because it hadn’t gone quite
as planned. It seems that capturing the Order once it’s taken from a Traveler
is very difficult and sometimes fails.” “They did what?” asked Seraph, appalled. “They killed him and retained the power of the Order in the
stone,” said Hennea with Raven cairn. “Their spell slowly rips the Order away
from a Traveler over a period of some months. Many of the stones are all but
useless, but the ones that work can be worn in a ring or necklace. Then the solsenti
wizards become Raven, Falcon, or Cormorant as they wish.” Dread closed Seraph’s throat. It was starting again, as if
the mermori had been harbingers of things to come. Tier had died, and
now Seraph would be forced to live as she had before she met him. “I don’t know what I can do to help you,” she said at last,
because, in the end, there was no choice. “I can take a message to the clans,
though I don’t know where any are at present. I will give you what aid I can.” “You don’t understand,” Hennea said. “I’ve come to help
you.” Chapter 6“You are going to help me?” asked Seraph. “With what?” Hennea smiled grimly. “Your new Sept travels with quite an
entourage.” “Including you and Volis,” Seraph said. “Is the Sept one of
the ... what did you call them, something stupid ... the Secret Path?” “The Sept?” she said. “No, not him, at least I don’t think
so. He’s charismatic, the Emperor’s best if not only friend, and he’s very good
at political games. No one is surprised at the number of people who follow him
around. Volis said that someone called in a few debts and offered a favor or
two so that the Sept would agree to build a Temple of the Five Gods here.” Hennea stood up and began pacing in abrupt, quick steps.
“The Secret Path decided to bring the religion out into the public. They don’t
tell people that they get their five gods from the Travelers’ Orders, of
course.” “There are six Orders,” observed Rinnie. “They don’t know about the Guardian,” said Jes. “Travelers
don’t talk about their mistakes.” “You are not a mistake,” said Seraph, though Jes was more right
than wrong about the Travelers’ reasoning regarding the Guardians. “Travelers
protect the Guardians’ secrets because your Order works better that way.” As if
that settled the matter, Seraph turned back to Hennea, and sorted through her
story for some way to change the subject. “Why did this Path of yours change
and decide to bring their church to the masses?” Hennea shook her head. “I don’t know. Volis thinks that it’s
because the truth must be made known—but Volis wouldn’t know the truth if it
tore his throat out. I don’t think that all of the wizards believe in their
made-up gods, so there must be another reason.” “Volis told me they chose to set his temple here because of
Shadow’s Fall.” “I’ve heard him say that, too,” agreed Hennea. “I don’t know
what they want with Shadow’s Fall, but I suppose that whatever power still
lurks there can defend itself more than adequately.” ““Indeed,” said Seraph. “My husband is proof of that.” “No,” said Hennea. “I don’t think that he is.” Seraph stiffened. “Oh?” she said softly. “There were some wizards who traveled with us from Taela.
They stayed with the Sept when Volis moved us into the new temple.” She stopped
her pacing to frown down at Seraph. “Understand, please, that I’ve had to take
a few facts and string them together. A few days ago, Volis got some
correspondence from Taela. It wasn’t signed, but from the content I think that
it was from one of the wizards who came here with us. The letter devoted an
entire paragraph to your family—unless there is another family with a Raven,
Falcon, and Cormorant?” “No,” said Seraph softly. Hennea nodded once and began to pace again. “Someone’s taken
a Raven’s eye to your home—and a real Raven would know that you had a Guardian,
too. So it must have been one of the Path’s wizards wearing one of their
stones.” Seraph nodded. “I’d been listening to talk since we came here, and I heard
of a Traveler mage married to a solsenti farmer. Since it was unlikely
that any other Travelers had settled here, I could only suppose that you’d been
blessed with two Ordered children, half-blood or not. I decided to warn you as
soon as I could, though there seemed to be no particular urgency. Then, last
night, a man came to tell Volis that your husband’s dead horse had been found
with a few human bones. Tier’s dead, they said, and they mourned the loss of
his music.” Hennea stopped again, rubbing her wrist absently. “And I
thought on that letter I’d read. The first line read, ‘we have the Owl safe
here.’” Seraph froze as her heart leapt to her throat. “By Lark and
Raven,” she said, imbuing the words with compulsion, “do not mislead me on
this.” Hennea nodded to herself in satisfaction. “Your husband was
Traveler and Owl and they took him to Taela to work their magic on him.” “My husband was Redemi born and bred—but given to the Order
of the Owl,” corrected Seraph absently to give herself time to regain control. Tier
was alive? “If there was Traveler blood in his lineage it was a long time
ago.” “Ah,” said Hennea, revealing mild surprise. “I’ve never
heard of something like that.” She rubbed her wrist again. “Anyway. I waited
until Volis left on business this morning and set out to find the place where
the huntsman found your husband’s horse. It wasn’t difficult to follow the
huntsman’s trail.” “What did you find?” asked Seraph, her voice so soft that
Lehr shifted uncomfortably. Hennea shook her head. “Not much.” She shivered and clenched
her hand over her wrist where Volis’s geas band held her. “I have to get
back soon.” She straightened slightly and continued, “The huntsman and his men
buried both the horse and the skull, and I had no means to dig them up. I found
hints of old magic, but nothing that would cause a person’s death. There were a
few tracks—but I’m not a Falcon to be certain of anything the tracks could
tell.” “Lehr is,” said Rinnie. “Yes,” said Hennea, “I know. I had hoped to prove my suspicions
before I talked to you—but I’m unlikely to get a chance to come so far again.
Take your Falcon and find out what they did. Then come and help me deal with
Volis—and I’ll help you find your husband.” “I don’t like leaving Rinnie alone,” said Lehr as he led
Seraph through the partially plowed field. “She’ll be safe with Gura,” Seraph said, though she wasn’t
happy with it either. “And Jes will be back soon.” She’d certainly be safer at home than investigating a place
that might have been Shadow Blighted. If Seraph hadn’t needed Lehr’s help,
she’d have found some way to leave him behind, too. Jes, she’d found excuses to send off with Hennea. The forest
king’s territory extended on either side of the trail to town, but Jes thought
that as long as he was with her the forest king wouldn’t stop Hennea a second
time. The geas had obviously been very painful by the time they’d
left—Jes could get Hennea back to the temple sooner than if she had to find her
way herself. So now she only had to risk one of her children to find out
if Hennea had been right. Tier was alive. Seraph was too much a Raven to
allow herself to believe it without more proof, but even so, the thought
thrummed through her. She would have the chance to save him, as she hadn’t been
able to save Ushireh. “There’s two places I could pick up the trail,” Lehr said.
“But knowing Jes, I thought that it might be shorter to follow the path he took
with the forest king than to try and follow the trail he made bringing Hennea
back.” “You’re the Hunter,” Seraph said. “I trust you.” Lehr stopped where the field turned to forest. “The forest
king came here,” he said, but he didn’t immediately start on the trail, just
stared at the ground. “Are you certain that I’m a Hunter? Papa could ... can
track as well as I can.” He didn’t look at her as he spoke. Lehr, she thought, saw beyond the power to the cost of acknowledging
his Traveler blood. He knew that a Falcon could never belong to Redem. “It doesn’t matter,” she said gently. “We just need to track
Jes to where he found the girl, then follow her trail to where ... where the
huntsman found whatever he found.” “Right,” he said and started through the forest. Seraph followed Lehr’s rapid gait with an effort, but made
no complaint. The afternoon was well spent and he would need light to track.
Whatever he hoped, she could feel the hum of magic as it passed from him and
seeped into the woods around her. She had learned basic tracking skills
herself, but she could see no sign of bent grass or footprint in the trail Lehr
followed—she doubted that anyone but a Hunter could have followed the forest
king through his own territory. But she said nothing of it. Lehr would have to accept his
abilities in his own way—or not. When Lehr began a steady jog, Seraph left off her musings
and concentrated on keeping up with him. He ran a mile or so before dropping
back to a walk in a glade of wild wheat edged by forest on three sides and a
formidable rock formation on the other. “I think this is where Jes picked up the girl,” he said,
glancing around at the ground. He turned his back to the stone formation and
knelt in the thick, spring-short grass. “There are several sets of his tracks.
Do you see how much deeper Jes’s print is here than it usually is?” A branch moved behind his head. Seraph hissed a warning and
called her magic. “Now there is no need for that, Raven,” said the man who
rolled nimbly out from under a particularly thick area of foliage that gathered
in front of the stone formation. “It is you who have invaded my home, not the
other way around.” Lehr got to his feet and dusted off the knee of his
breeches. “Mother,” he said. “This is Jes’s forest king.” He looked more like a grubby farmer fallen on hard times,
thought Seraph. The tunic he wore was patched on top of older patches. His feet
were bare and his hands were the knobby-knuckled, dark-nailed hands of a man
who had worked the land. She’d always wanted to see Jes’s friend, and on any other
day she would have had a number of questions for him. But nothing mattered
except Tier. Seraph bowed her head shallowly so she could keep her eyes
on him. “We are sorry to disturb you,” she said. “We are following the woman’s
tracks to the place where my husband’s horse died.” “You won’t find it trying to track her from here, Hunter. I
didn’t bring her by ways you can follow.” The forest king grinned, revealing
yellowing teeth that looked sharp, and his eyes stayed cold and watchful. “The
place you speak of is outside my realm, but you can follow the girl’s tracks
starting from the big waterfall. Let me loan you a guide.” He turned and looked at the brush behind him. It shuddered
briefly then a rangy vixen emerged. Seraph felt no magic, though beside her
Lehr stiffened as if he heard something odd, but the vixen stared at the
bedraggled forest king as if he were talking to her before setting out at a
trot without looking at Seraph or Lehr. The forest king waved his hand at the fox. “Follow her—she
won’t wait.” “My thanks.” Seraph bowed again and started out after Lehr,
who was already headed deeper into the forest. It was chilly near the falls where ,the cold river water was
pounded to vapor at the bottom of its descent. The fox shifted nervously while
Lehr paced by the river. The moment he found Hennea’s trail and knelt beside
it, she left without waiting for gratitude. Lehr rose to his feet and set out at a gait scarcely slower
than he’d used to follow the fox. Even so, the sun was low when they broke free
of the trees at last and began climbing a narrow path up the rock-strewn side
of a mountain. “Lots of traffic here,” said Lehr, pointing at a rock scored
by a shod hoof. “More than usual for such a remote place.” “Hennea was here,” Seraph reminded him. “The huntsman and
his men.” Lehr shook his head. “More people than that have been here.
Some of the tracks are pretty faint, but I’d say five or six horsemen were here
a month or more ago. Their tracks go up the mountain and back down again. Isn’t
that what we’re looking for?” Seraph nodded. “If you find anything that might have
belonged to them, a bit of cloth or hair, get it for me.” She wiped the sweat
from her face to clear her eyes. “I can use it to get more information.” “Like you did from Frost’s bridle,” Lehr began moving again,
but only at a walk. His change of pace might have been to allow him to observe
the tracks more clearly, but Seraph suspected it was more likely to allow her
to catch her breath. They didn’t slow long, and after a few miles Lehr seemed to
forget she was there. The trail he followed snaked across the foothills and
into the crevices of the Ragged Mountains. Seraph’s calves ached, then burned as they hadn’t since her
Traveling days. Farming was hard, but climbing at a jog in the mountains was a
different sort of work, Lehr didn’t seem bothered by it, even though he wore
the pack she’d filled with things they might need.’ When Lehr stopped, she wondered if he were finally getting
tired, but then she really looked at where they were. The deer trail they’d been following had widened into a
piece of open level ground as big as the kitchen garden. In the center of the cleared
area, a waist-high white rock with an unusual flat top broke through the dirt. The grass in the clearing was knee-high, unusually tall for
this time of year this high in the mountains. It carpeted the ground in dark
bitter green, except for a large mound of disturbed earth to one side, a burial
mound large enough for a horse. “Why did they bury the horse?” asked Lehr. “Sometimes,” said Seraph, “the Blighted Places can recharge
their magics. The bodies will tend to attract people or animals, and it’s best
to get them safely buried. There are also stories about odd things happening to
the bodies of people who die of Shadow Blight—things that don’t happen if the
bodies are safely buried.” “Weren’t they afraid of the magic?” “Maybe,” said Seraph. “There are a lot of Redemi who can
sense magic—especially the ones who spend a lot of time out in the mountains.
Maybe because in earlier times, when the Shadowed’s hand was heavier on the mountains, the people who
couldn’t sense the Blighted areas didn’t survive.” Tier had said that he could
sense such places—she pushed hope away and said, “There isn’t any magic that I
can feel now—likely the huntsman felt the same. Take a look around, would you,
and tell me what you find.” Lehr nodded, then stopped. “Do you believe her, Mother?” he
said, his voice tight. “Do you believe Papa might be alive?” “I don’t know,” she said, because it was the answer that
would hurt him the least. Seraph took a deep breath. “This doesn’t feel like
one of the Blighted Places to me. Hennea said there was old magic here, but I
can’t sense it.” “What does that mean?” he asked. She shook her head. “I think I would sense anything that had
lasted here from the time of the Shadowed’s Fall, especially power still strong
enough to kill.” “So this is not a shadowed place.” Seraph nodded slowly. “A month is long enough to dissipate solsenti
magic,” she said, and then forced herself to point out the obvious to both
of them. “Just because it was not old magic that killed here, doesn’t mean that
those solsenti wizards of Hennea’s didn’t kill Tier outright. I need you
to look and see if you can tell what happened when Frost was killed here.
Remember to look especially closely for any scrap of hair or clothing that I
might be able to read.” She moved back to the edge of the clearing as he began to
quarter it thoroughly. “The clearest thing I see,” he said at last, “is that something
burned here. You can see where the earth was scorched—the patch goes all the
way around the grave—see here where the grass is a bit shorter?” She nodded. “It looks to me that there have been three groups of people
here recently,” he said. “The most recent was Jes’s Hennea. She walked the
meadow, just like I did, stopped there”—he pointed to a place just to the right
of the large stone—“and stopped again to press her hand into the dirt mound.
Then she left. The party who came before her, was here a few days ago—three
horsemen. One of them was the huntsman—see the way that off fore is angled?” He
didn’t look at her so Seraph didn’t bother shaking her head. “That’s the horse
he was riding-when he come to tell us what he’d found.” “The earliest group, though, is what we’re interested in,
and they worked at hiding their tracks. They were here after the snow started
to melt—so no earlier than a month and a half ago. I can’t tell you how many of
them there were here for certain, but they were here about the same time as
Papa.” Lehr gestured for Seraph to follow him and led her to the
far side of the clearing, through a thicket of elderberry, to a stand of trees. “He saw them. Mother,” said Lehr. “He stopped Frost here for
a while and watched them, maybe for as long as a quarter of an hour. See how
Frost stood here, shifting her weight?” He turned and walked back the way they
came without taking his eyes from the ground. “Then he walked Frost out into
the clearing. There was no fighting, or scuffle that I can see. But Frost’s
prints are lost in this burnt area.” He glanced around again. “I can pick up the tracks of the
other men lower down and backtrack them.” “We’ll do that if necessary,” said Seraph. “Did you find anything
they left behind?” He shook his head. “Nothing. I’m sorry I couldn’t find out
anything more. Are we done now?” “Just beginning,” Seraph answered. “Give me your pack,” she
said. There was a camp shovel tied to the back and she took it. “Now we dig.” “You’re looking for something that can tell you what happened?”
asked Lehr. “Like the saddle or Papa’s pack?” “If there’s something to read, I’ll try—but mostly I’m
looking for the human bones the huntsman buried with Frost.” Before she set cold iron to earth, she touched the dirt,
trying to find the old magic that Hennea had spoken of. “There’s death here,”
she said. “Sudden and painful.” “Papa?” he asked. “I don’t know,” Seraph replied, rubbing the grains between
her fingers. “Ravens are not necromancers.” She got to her feet and started digging with the
shovel—refusing Lehr’s help. This was not something for children, no matter
that the child in question was a foot taller and almost twice her weight. She dug until the metal edge of the shovel blade bounced off
bone. They hadn’t buried Frost very deep—but a horse is a large animal.
Scraping gently with the blade, she pushed away dirt and saw, beneath a coating
of soil and ash, the familiar pattern of Frost’s dapples. “Let me, Mother,” said Lehr, taking the shovel from her. He shouldn’t have been able to read anything from her face,
but he was almost as sensitive as Jes or Tier. She was too tired from the trip
here, from digging, from hope and fear to fight him. “If we’re lucky,” Lehr said as he began digging, “they’d
have set the skull beside the horse and not beneath her.” We don’t have ropes
and horses to move Frost the way the huntsman did.” “I can move her if we have to,” said Seraph—not as certain
as she sounded. “But I’d rather not add more magic here until I’ve sifted all
the information the grave contains.” He probed the disturbed ground and uncovered, little by
little, Frost’s poor burnt corpse. As the huntsman had said, her head and neck
had been charred to the bone with just enough tissue to hold the vertebrae
together. But the hindquarters were almost intact—left that way by the chill of
the mountain spring. There was only a faint odor of meat turning rotten. “How did the bridle survive?” asked Lehr after he’d cleared
a space around the blackened skull of the horse. “There are spells that only attack the living,” said Seraph.
“I think that the damage to the bridle was secondary—the spell burnt the horse,
and the burning horse burnt the bridle in turn. Hold up, there’s the saddle
blanket.” Part of it, anyway. Where the saddle had been was gone, leaving only
a black scorch mark on Frost’s back. •* She knelt and touched the cloth. Nothing. She whispered
words of power, but they slid past the saddle blanket and sank deeply into the
soil as if something sucked them down and ate them. And deep below the surface
of the earth, something very old stirred then subsided, its sleep too deep to
be awakened so easily. Cautiously she withdrew her magic, letting it die down until
it no longer fed whatever it was that waited beneath. She looked again at the
flat-topped stone and saw that it could have served as an altar. She felt the
dirt again and looked at the deep green grass. Blood had once flowed over the
altar, enough blood that generations later the grass still fed upon it. Hennea
had been right, there was old magic here—older than Shadow’s Blight. This was not a Blighted Place. If any mage tried to set a
trap here, the magic would be eaten by the same thing that had eaten hers. “Mother?” Lehr asked, pausing in his steady pace to look at
her. “Something’s waiting here,” she said. “But it had nothing to
do with any recent deaths. It’ll likely lie here until your grandchildren are
dust unless it’s awakened.” “What about the blanket?” Seraph shook her head. “Nothing. I need the skull. I’ll be
able to tell if it’s Tier’s.” His shovel hesitated before he resumed his search, widening
the cleared space around the horse. Seraph cleaned the dirt from her fingertips absently and
watched as Lehr at last unearthed a fire-blackened human skull, set near the
horse’s neck bones. Gently Lehr took the grim thing into his hands and handed it
to her. Seraph stared at the wide brow and looked for a hint of familiar
features. Had Tier’s front teeth been so square? She couldn’t tell. There was
no jaw bone to give the skull balance. As she’d told Tier, necromancy was not something Ravens
used—but it was prudence rather than ability that stopped them. Meddling with the
dead was no light thing. If her need had not been so great she’d have left it
alone. Her fingers told her nothing; the bone could almost have
been a stone in a field that had never felt a human hand, so little of its past
stayed with it. She set it down and touched Frost’s skull. Nothing. Someone
had deliberately cleaned these bones as they’d cleaned the bridle and saddle
blanket. No random magic could rape the memory of life from a bone. She picked up the human skull again and sent more magic seeking
through it. A bridle or a blanket could be cleaned of lives that brush past it,
but not even a great deal of magic could clean away a whole lifetime
completely. There had to be bits of it left, if she tried hard enough. Beneath her fingers she felt a tentative response. She
pressed the cool bone to her forehead and left it there a long time as she
sought to touch the faint pulse of experience. The sun was setting, when she placed the skull gently beside
Frost’s. “This man was not Tier,” she whispered around the throbbing
pain in her temples. “He was a Traveler, dead of a blade, not magic fire—and he
died somewhere far away, though not long ago:’ “It doesn’t mean that Papa’s alive,” he said, obviously
hoping she’d contradict him. “Someone tried to make us think him dead with the
skull and Frost’s body—but they might simply have taken his body away, or taken
him off to kill elsewhere.” “It only means that Tier probably didn’t die here,” she
agreed, fear and hope both held in firm control. Lehr began filling in the grave, skull and all, and Seraph
thought about what she knew. “Lehr?” she said finally. “Hmm?” “These people who killed Frost took a lot of trouble to
obscure their tracks. They weren’t good enough to fool you, but they tried very
hard. If you hadn’t seen their tracks below, would you have noticed them here?
If we were looking for Tier’s remains rather than evidence that he was taken?” He frowned, “Maybe not” Seraph nodded. “I think they knew about you. They were careful
to take Tier outside of the realm of the forest king—I think they knew about
him as well. They cleansed Frost’s body and the leather and-cloth, leaving them
no past for me to read. They spent a long time trying to make that skull
silent—and almost succeeded.” “No one knows about the forest king,” said Lehr, turning
over the last spade of dirt. “But Hennea said that whoever sent the letter to
the priest knew what we are.” “Yes,” agreed Seraph. “How did they know, not only that I am Raven, but exactly what my skills are? Most Ravens cannot
read the past in an object.-These men knew what trail Tier would take home—and
it’s not the way he left.” Lehr frowned. “Not even I knew what path Papa takes home. He
kept it quiet because the furs are worth a lot of money—did you notice that
there is no trace of the furs? They would have been packed over Frost’s
hindquarters, which weren’t even scorched.” “No, I hadn’t noticed,” said Seraph. “So thrifty of them.” Lehr packed in a layer of dirt with his foot. “I suppose
that someone could have overheard Jes talking about the forest king—but Jes
seldom talks to anyone but the family. No one else really pays attention to
what he says anyway. And if none of us knew what magic you could do until Forder
brought back Frost’s bridle, who would know what you could do?” She waited, watching him think about it. If he came up with
the same answer as she did ... “Bandor used to hunt with Papa, didn’t he?” Lehr whispered
it. “During the first years when the bakery used to have to support the farm,
too? Jes was just a baby.” “That’s right,” Seraph said. “And, after you and Papa got married, Bandor was the only
one who used to talk to you. He knows a lot about the Travelers—did you tell
him what kinds of things you could do?”. “Yes,” she said. “And Bandor knows about Jes’s stories of the forest king—but
he doesn’t believe them, Mother.” She smiled at him grimly. “Do you know who your father
thinks the forest king is? I mean aside from Jes’s dealings with him?” “No.” “What if I told you that in a very old language, ell means
king or lord and vanail is forest. If you put them
together—” “Ellevanal?” Seraph had never seen anyone’s jaw drop before; it was an unattractive
expression. “Do you mean,” whispered her son, “that Ellevanal, god of
the forest and growing things, the Ellevanal, Karadoc’s Ellevanal,
is Jes’s forest king?” “I don’t know,” she said. “Today is the first time I’ve met
him, and I didn’t ask. He doesn’t look like a god, does he? But I know that
Tier was convinced of it, and he told your Aunt Alinath what he thought” Alinath had been at her worst, telling Tier that Seraph
couldn’t give Jes the kind of attention that he needed. That Seraph encouraged
Jes’s problems by listening to his stories about his made-up friend. A boy, she’d
said, needed to understand that lying was not acceptable. She hadn’t
liked it when Tier suggested Jes hadn’t lied at all. Seraph smiled grimly. “Bandor was there when he said it.” But Lehr was still worried about other matters. “But the
forest lord belongs here, to our forest. Ellevanal is worshiped everywhere—I
mean, Karadoc has had apprentices, and there’s a larger church in Korhadan.” “I don’t worship gods,” said Seraph. “You’ll have to take it
up with the forest king next time you meet him.” Lehr thought about her answer, but it seemed to satisfy him
because he changed the subject. “Uncle Bandor loves us, loved ... loves Papa.
He wouldn’t do anything to hurt Papa.” “So I believe,” agreed Seraph. “But you and I both came up
with his name. He’s become one of Volis’s followers. I think that we need
to be cautious around him until we know more.” “So what are we going to do now?” “First we’ll finish here, then I have a few questions for
the priest. Can you take us by the quickest route to Redem?” “Yes,” he said. “But we won’t make it before dark.” “No matter,” Seraph said coldly. “I don’t mind waking up a
few people.” Or tearing them limb from limb if she had to. Tier had been
taken, alive—because she couldn’t bear it otherwise—and she intended to find
out where he was. And tearing someone limb from limb sounded very, very good.
Let Volis face a Raven who knew what he was when he didn’t have a cadre of
wizards to protect him. Oh, she would have her answers from him before she
slept this night. “What about Rinnie?” asked Lehr. “Jes will have gotten back from taking Hennea to the village
by now. Rinnie will be safe with him.” Gura barked, and Rinnie looked up from her gardening. But
whoever had disturbed the dog was on the other side of the house. Rinnie jumped to her feet and dusted off her skirt. She put
her hand on Gura’s collar and set off to see who had come. Chapter 7He opened his eyes to utter darkness and a cold stone floor
under his cheek, though he didn’t remember going to sleep. He took a deep,
shaken breath and tried to determine how he got here, wherever here was. The
last thing Tier remembered was riding Frost down the mountain on the way back
home. Undeniably, he was no longer on the mountain. The stone
floor beneath his hands was level, and his fingers found the marks of a chisel.
He was in a room, though he could hear water flowing nearby. He rose cautiously to hands and knees and felt his way
forward until his hands closed on grating set into the floor, the source of the
sound of water. The bars were too close to let him put anything wider than his
finger through and the water flowed well below that. He tried to pull up the
grate, but it didn’t so much as shift. Hours later he was hungry, thirsty, and knew that he was in
a room six paces wide by four paces long. An ironbound wooden door was inset
flat against one of the narrow walls with the hinges on the outside. The stonemason responsible for the walls had been very good,
leaving only the smallest of fingerholds. Tier’d fallen three times, but he
finally climbed the corner of the room until he touched a wooden ceiling. By
his reckoning it was about twice his height to the floor. With a fool braced on
adjacent walls he couldn’t put any significant pressure against any of the
boards, though he tried all the ones he could reach from his perch. At last he climbed back down, convinced that the room he was
in wasn’t anywhere in Redem—or Leheigh either for that matter. He’d been inside
the Sept’s keep a time or two, and the walls in this room—which had obviously
been designed as a prison cell—were better formed than the walls of the great
hall in the Sept’s keep. Why had someone gone to the trouble of hauling him off the
mountain and imprisoning him? It wasn’t as if he, himself, would be worth money
to anyone, not the kind of money that would be important to anyone who could afford
a cell built like this one was. He had a long time to think about it. Emperor Phoran the Twenty-Seventh (Twenty-Sixth if he didn’t
count the Phoran who united the Empire—it was the first Phoran’s son who had
declared himself emperor) stretched his feet out before him and cast a
practiced leer at the woman sitting on him. She was all but baring her breasts
at him, the stupid cow. Did she really think that his favors were likely to be
won by such as she? He snagged a mug from a nearby serving tray and drank
deeply, closing his eyes to the party that had somehow spread from the dining
hall to his own private rooms. The laughter of a nearby woman cut through his
spine with its falseness. He wondered what his so-long-ago ancestor would have thought
about such decadence. Would he still have set aside his plow to organize his
fellow farmers into a militia to defend themselves against bandits? Or would he
have turned back to his farming, ashamed that his loins could breed such a degenerate
creature as the current emperor? Phoran sighed. “Am I boring you, my love?” asked the woman on his lap
archly. He opened his mouth to inflict the kind of cruel remark that
had become second nature to him over the past few years, but instead he sighed
again. She wasn’t worth it—dumb as a sheep and oblivious to fine nuances of language. Instead he pushed her off and away with a pat. “Go find someone
else to cuddle tonight, there’s a love. This fine ale suits me better than a
woman ... tonight.” Someone giggled as if his remark had been witty. The woman
who’d been on his lap swayed her hips and half staggered onto the lap of a
handsome young man who’d been seated on the end of the bed, watching the party
with a jaundiced eye—Toarsen, Avar’s younger brother, who’d doubtless been told
to watch over Phoran while Avar was out in the wilds taking stock of his new
inheritance. Phoran swallowed the better part of the contents of his cup
then closed his eyes once more. This time he left them closed. Maybe if he
feigned a drunken stupor (a common enough occurrence) they would all go away. He let his hand fall away from his lips and the mug fell on
the plush rug his great-grandfather had imported from somewhere at great
expense. He hoped the dark ale ruined the rug. Then the chatelaine would run to
Avar when he returned. Avar would listen gravely, and when the chatelaine left,
he would laugh and pat Phoran on the back—and pay attention to him again. Avar, mentor, best friend, and Sept of Leheigh now that his
miserly old father had died hadn’t had much time to spend with his emperor
lately. Spitefully, Phoran wondered if he should take away the title and lands
that kept Avar from noticing that his emperor needed a friend more than he
needed another Sept. Tears of self-pity welled up and were firmly repressed.
Tears were something he shed alone, never, never in front of the court no
matter how drunk he was. Self-indulgence aside, Phoran had no intention of taking
Avar’s inheritance away. He even knew that Avar had to attend to his duties; he
just wished he had duties to attend to as well. The endless parties had become
... sickening—like too much apple mead. When would he be old enough to start
ruling his empire? Someone patted his cheek and he slapped at the hand, purposefully
making the movement clumsier than necessary. He could drink a fair bit more
than he had tonight before it affected him much. “He’s unconscious.” Phoran recognized the voice. It was
Toarsen. He must have gotten rid of the cow, too. “Let’s get this room cleared
out.” The Emperor listened while people shuffled away. At last the
guardsmen came in to gather the few who’d passed out in the chamber. His door
shut behind them and he was alone. Without people around, without Avar to keep
it at bay, the Memory would come for him, again. Before he could sit up and call them back, someone spoke. It
startled him so that for a moment he didn’t quite recognize the speaker. “Some emperor,” sneered a voice quite close to his ear. Not
his Memory but someone who’d stayed after the guardsmen had left—Kissel, the
younger son of the Sept of Seal Hold. The relief of his mistake almost blinded
Phoran to the words. “A beardless boy who drinks himself to sleep every night.” “Got to hand it to Avar,” agreed Toarsen. “I thought that
the boy would be harder to tame and we’d have to have him killed like
the Regent was. But Avar’s turned him into a proper sot who jumps when Avar
asks.” “Well I’d rather not have to be on the cleanup committee.
He’s gone to fat like a capon. Come help me heave him to the bed.” They managed it with grunts and swearing while Phoran concentrated
on being as heavy as possible. How dare they speak of him like this? He’d fix
these imbeciles. Tomorrow his guards would have their heads. He was emperor,
they’d forgotten that. He’d have Avar ... Avar was his friend. Just
because Avar’s brother talked that way about him didn’t mean that Avar felt the
same way. Avar liked him, was proud of the way he could outdrink and outinsult
any man in the court. “And why isn’t Avar here to do the honors?” asked Kissel. “I
thought he was going to see the Emperor tonight after resting yesterday.” Avar was in Taela? “He had some pressing business,” grunted Toarsen, pushing Phoran toward the center of the bed. “He’ll admit to coming
in late tonight and greet the Emperor over breakfast.” When the men left him alone in his room, the Emperor opened
his eyes and rolled off the bed. He walked to the full-length mirror and stared
at himself by the light of the few candles that had been left burning. Mud-colored, too-fine hair that had been coaxed into
ringlets this afternoon hung limply around his rounded face, spotty and pale.
Hands that had once had sword calluses were soft and pudgy, covered with rings
his uncle had eschewed. “Ruins your sword grip, boy,” the regent had said. “A man
who can’t protect himself depends upon others, too much.” Phoran touched the mirror lightly. “But you died anyway, Uncle.
You left me alone.” Alone. Fear curled in his stomach. Unless Avar was
with him, the Memory came every night. If Avar was in Taela, as Toarsen had claimed, he’d be
staying with his mistress in the town. Phoran could send a messenger to bring
him here. The Emperor stared at his image in the mirror and rolled up
the sleeve of the loose shirt he wore. In the reflection the faint marks the
Memory left on him each night were almost invisible in the dim candlelight. Avar planned to lie to his emperor: Avar, who was Phoran’s
only friend. The Emperor made no move to summon a messenger. Food came at irregular intervals through a small opening
near the floor that Tier had somehow missed on his first blind, inspection of
the cell. An anonymous hand opened the metal covering and shoved a tray of
water and bread through, shutting and latching the cover before Tier’s eyes
even adjusted to the light. Still, he’d grown grateful for those brief moments, for the
reassurance that he was not blind. The bread was always good, flavored with salt and herbs and
made with sifted wheat flour rather than the cheaper rye. Bread fit for a
lord’s table, not a prison cell. First he’d tried to fit his situation into some logical
path, but nothing about his captivity made sense. Finally he’d come to the
conclusion that he was lacking some information necessary for a solution. Only then had he raged. He’d slept when he was tired, worn-out from anger and fruitless
attempts to find a way out of the cell. When he’d realized that he was losing
track of time he told himself stories, the ones he’d gathered from the old
people of Redem, saved word for word from one generation to the next. Some of
those were songs as well as stories, ballads that took almost an hour each to
sing. When the toll of the hours grew too great, he’d quit
singing, quit thinking, quit raging, and given in to despair. But even that
left him alone eventually. Finally, he developed habits to fill the empty hours. He did
the exercises he’d learned when he’d been a soldier. When he ran out of the
ones he could do in his confined space, he made up others. Only after he was
sweating and panting, he’d sit down and tell one story. Then he’d either rest
or exercise again as the impulse took him. But it was the magic that had given him purpose. He’d known some of the things his magic could do. Seraph had
told him what she knew—and, despite the danger, he’d used it some over the
years. It helped that his magic wasn’t the showy sort that people all knew
about, like Seraph’s. His magic was more subtle. He could calm an angry drunk or give a frightened man courage
with his songs. Such things as any music could do, but with more effect. When
he chose, he could commit a song or letter to memory and recall it, word
perfect, years later. When he’d sung at the tavern in Redem, he almost always
gave his last song a push to cheer his audience. It had made him feel guilty, because Seraph had given up her
magic entirely. But she’d never seemed to mind, never seemed to miss the power
that she’d set aside. He could never have set aside his music. There were some things he’d avoided. Some things were harmful
to his audience; music alone shared the darker emotions with his audience,
never magic. He was very careful not to use his magic to persuade others to his
will—words were enough. And then there were the things too obviously magic to
use in Redem. Alone in the darkness of his cell, he’d succeeded in
creating small lights to accompany his songs the first time he tried. They were
flickering, faint things, but they comforted him. Sounds were more difficult, even though he’d accidentally
called them once before. After a particularly nasty battle, he and a hunch of
the other officers got roaring drunk and someone thrust a small lyre, part of
the spoils, into his hands. The song he’d sung had included fair maidens and
barnyard animals. He was pretty certain he’d been the only one who noticed that
the moos and quacks of the chorus were accompanied by the real thing. He had been trying to re-create the experiment the first
time his visitor arrived. The constant dark had honed his other senses, and the scuff
of a foot on the boards above him stopped him midword. He’d sat silently,
waiting for something more. Finally, barely audible over the burble of the water that
flowed under the grating in the back corner of his cell, he’d heard it again. It hadn’t been a rat; a rat was too light to make a stout
board creak under its weight. He’d been almost certain that the noise was made
by a person. “Hello,” he’d said. “Who is there?” The boards had given a small, surprised squeak and then
there was nothing. Whoever it had been, he had left. Some unknowable span of tune later, while Tier was doing
push-ups, he’d heard it again. He’d stilled, too worried that he would drive
whoever it was off again if he made another move. He hadn’t heard another
sound, but somehow he knew that his visitor was gone. Desperate for company,
Tier turned his thoughts toward enticing his visitor to stay. Tier awoke with the knowledge that there was someone nearby.
He hadn’t heard anything, but he could feel that someone stood above him listening.
He sat up, leaned his back against the wall, and began his story with the traditional
words. “It happened like this,” he said. If he pretended that his eyes were closed, he could think himself
leaning against the wall at home telling stories to his own restless children
so they’d fall asleep faster. Seraph would be cleaning—she was always in
motion. Maybe, he thought, she would be grumpy as she sometimes got when Rinnie
was tired and the boys were restless. Her face would be serene, but the tautness
of her shoulders gave her away. I wonder if she knows that something has happened
to me? Is she looking ? It was an old thought by now, and held a certain comfort. “A boy came to be king when he was only sixteen,” Tier said,
“when his own father died in battle. War was common then, and the kingdom he
inherited was neither so large nor so powerful that the king could sit in
safety and leave the fighting to his generals.” The story of the Shadowed was one he knew so well that he
had once told it backwards, word for word, for a half-drunken wager. He’d
missed one phrase, but his comrades hadn’t noticed. “This young man,” he said, “was a good king, which is to say
that he promoted order and prosperity among his nobles and usually kept the
rest from starvation. He married well, and in time was blessed with five sons.
As years passed and his sons became men, his kingdom waxed in wealth because
the king was skilled at keeping the neighboring kingdoms fighting among
themselves rather than attacking his people.” The floor above him made a sound, as if a listener were
settling in more comfortably. Tier added his unknown listener to his audience. A boy, he decided with no more evidence than his visitor’s
willingness to travel without lights. There were spaces between the boards that
would have let light into Tier’s cell, if Ms unknown guest had brought so much
as a single candle with him. He would be a boy old enough to be allowed to wander about
on his own, but not so old as to have other duties to attend to; an adventurous
boy who would venture into the dark corners where prisoners were kept. “The king had many of the interests of his kind. He could hunt
and ride as well as any of his men. He danced with grace and could play the
lute. None of his guardsmen or nobles could stand long against him with sword
or staff.” Tier had always had some doubt about the king’s prowess—what kind of
fool would beat his king at swordplay? Tier fought to picture the king in his mind, pulling out
details that weren’t in the story. He’d be a slender young man, like Tier’s son
Jes—but his hair would be the pure, red gold of the eastern nobles .... Seraph had told him that some of the Bards had been able to
create pictures for their listeners, but his cell stayed dark as pitch. “But what the king loved most was learning,” he continued,
in the proper words. “He established libraries at every village, and in his
capital he collected more books than had ever been assembled together then or
since. Perhaps that was the reason for what happened to him.” Tier found himself grinning as he remembered Seraph’s contemptuous
sniff the first time he’d told her that part. Books weren’t evil, she’d
explained loftily, what people did with the knowledge they’d gleaned was no
judgment against the books that held it. “Time passed, and the king grew old and wizened as his sons
became strong and wise. People waited without worry for the old king to die and
his oldest son—to take the crown—for the heir was every bit as temperate and
wise as his father.” Tier took a sip of water, experience guiding his hand to the
place where he left the earthen bowl. He let the pause linger, as much a part
of this story as the words which followed. “Had that happened, like as not, our
king would have gone to earth and be as forgotten as his name.” “One evening the king’s oldest son went to bed, complaining
of a headache. By the next day he was blind and covered with boils; by that
evening he was dead. Plague had struck the palace, and, before it left, the
queen and every male of royal blood was dead.” Tier’s voice trembled on the last word, because he heard, as
clearly as he’d heard his own breath, a woman’s voice wailing in grief. He’d
done it—and he found the thread of magic that powered the eerie sound. A board creaked above him, closer than the sounds of the
mourning woman, recalling Tier back to the dark cell where there was no plague,
no dead women and children. “The king became haunted, spending hours alone in his great
library. But no one took much note, because the plague had spread in short
order to the capital city and then to the towns and villages beyond. A
horrible, ravening sickness that touched and lingered until its victim died a
week later, deaf and blind to anything except pain.” Cautiously he tried to feed energy toward the path that had
allowed the woman’s cry to sound. It seemed to him that he could feel the
unhealthy miasma of evil coating the emptiness of his cell floor. He stood up
abruptly, but the feeling ebbed as he stopped feeding the story. The control
reassured him. It was only a story, his story. He resumed his efforts as he continued the story. “One day,
after the last of his grandsons died, the king went to sleep an old, broken man
and woke up a young man of eighteen again. They called it a miracle at first,
some kind god’s deliverance from the ghastly illness that killed two of every
three that came down sick. But the plague spread further, unaffected by the
king’s miraculously returned youth. It traveled across borders, devouring the
royal houses of the kingdoms all around, until there was only one kingdom and
one king.” Tier’s voice stuck there, as the magic of the
generations-old words caught him in brutal understanding of the numberless dead
whose death had fed the evil that was in the king. “He ate their lives,” said a voice abruptly from the ceiling
above Tier. A shiver ran down Tier’s spine, though the words were the exact
ones he’d intended to use himself. Somehow the oddity of his listener knowing
the words to a Redemi story was part of the strange shape the story was taking. The soft, sexless voice continued relentlessly, “He ate them
all to preserve himself—and so he lost himself in truth.” Tier waited, but when his visitor said nothing more, Tier continued
the story himself. “As the years passed and the king lived far beyond his life
span, what few of his old advisors who escaped the original plague died, old
men that they were, one by one. As they did the king replaced them with
dark-robed, nameless men—it was these who gave him away at last.” “The king’s youngest daughter, Loriel, discovered them feasting
upon a child in her father’s antechamber,” Tier said, drawing the horror of
that into his dark cell. He could hear the sound of fangs crunching the fragile
bone in his soul. He could see it. A woman, older than he’d pictured her, stood in an open doorway.
Her hair, like Seraph’s, was pale, though washed in sunlight rather than
moonlight. Two figures crouched before her, anonymous in heavy brocade robes.
They were too occupied with what was before them to notice that they had been
seen. Between them lay a boy of ten or twelve years whose freckles stood out
against his too-white skin. His shoulders jerked rhythmically back and forth in
a mockery of life as the king’s councilors buried their heads in his abdomen
and fed. Tier’s shock kept him from holding the image, though the wet
sound of their feeding accompanied his voice. “And she fled to the last of her
father’s advisors, a mage.” He stopped speaking and tightened his control until the only
sounds remaining in the cell were the ones that belonged there. “And so they gathered,” said his listener. “And so they gathered,” repeated Tier, and the repetition
felt right, felt like the rhythm of the story. He relaxed: it was only a story,
one that he knew very well. “The remnants of people who had survived the
plague. But the sickness had taken the experienced warriors, the lords, and
commanders, leaving only a broken people. Loriel led the first attack, herself.” “She died,” whispered the listener and the magic coaxed Tier
as well, raising needs he’d never realized he’d felt. “She died,” Tier said, “but left behind a handful of men who
had learned what leadership meant, left them with the ancient mage who taught
them and fought by their side. They battled the minions of the Shadowed. As his
followers died, the king called upon a host of evil; ancient creatures woke
from their slumbers to fight at his behest.” Tier let his magic free, finding the places where he had
bound it too tightly over the years. The bindings, he saw, had been the reason
he’d had such difficulty. As the magic swept through him, exhilarating and
frightening by turns, the words came to him, as well-worn and soft as an old
cotton coverlet, but full of unexpected burrs that pricked and stung. “He lost himself and his name. There remained only a title,
given by the men who died fighting him. They called him the Shadowed.” “Numberless were the heroes ...” The other’s voice became
part of the story, too. Tier felt his magic rush up to envelope his listener. “Numberless were the heroes who fell,” continued Tier.
“Their songs unsung because there was no one left to sing.” He paused, letting
the other do his part. “Then came Red Ernave who fought with axe and bow ...” “A giant of a man,” said Tier. “He gathered them all, all
the men, women, and children who could pick up a stick or throw a stone. He
called them the Glorious Army of Man, and he taught them to fight.” As if there were no walls in his cell, the people of the
Glorious Army gathered before Tier. Gaunt-eyed and battered, they stood in
silent, unmoving defiance of the evil they fought. There were a few men, but
most of them were hollow-cheeked women, old men, and a small, precious
gathering of children worn by hunger and fear. Tier knew, by the Owl-borne bond that
formed by magic between storyteller and audience, that his listener saw them,
too. “And in the first days of autumn the king’s old mage took
council with Red Ernave. They talked alone all night, and when the morning sun
came, the mage’s days had found their number. He was burned in great ceremony,
and as the last coals died, Red Ernave assembled his army. He brought them to a
flat plain, just beyond the Ragged Mountains.” Tier had been there, once. He’d been following the track of
a deer and found himself, unexpectedly, on the plain of Shadow’s Fall. There
was no marker to warn the unwary, but he’d known where he was. Even so many
centuries later, under a blanket of pure white snow, there was death in that
place. He could almost feel the soil of the wounded land under his feet. The meadow stretched out before him now; he recognized the
shapes of the peaks that surrounded it. There was no snow on the ground
to hide the shape of the bodies littering the ground. “There, there they faced the hosts of the Shadowed
and fought. The sky grew black and blood drenched the ground.” Tier smelled the
bitter scent of old blood and almost gagged at the familiar odor of war. “Bodies piled and the battle raged around them for days. And
nights.” His cell rang with the sounds of battle, and he realized
he’d forgotten how overwhelming it was: the clash of metal on metal and the
screams of the dying. “The Shadowed’s creatures needed no sleep and they fed upon
the dead. The Army of Man fought on because there was nothing else to do; they
fought and died. But not so many died on the third day as had fallen on the second
day. By the fourth day it seemed that the evil host was thinning, and hope rose
among the ragged band—and for the first time they drove the host back.” Tier found that he had to stop to catch his breath, and slow
his heartbeat. In his pitch-black cell he saw a red-maned, scarred warrior with
his axe held wearily against his shoulder, waiting for Tier to continue telling
his story. But it was too real now, and the words were gone, lost in
the desolation of the long-ago battle. “And hope flooded the Army of Man for the first time,” said
the other, in a voice as ragged as Tier’s. “But even as they cheered, the skies darkened, though it was
yet midday, and another assault began.” The words were Tier’s again, though
they seemed oddly unreal compared to the scenes that unfolded before him. It was hard to breathe, the air was so foul. Red Ernave’s
hands were weary from the endless fighting. His axe laid into a creature that
looked as if it had once been a wolf before the Shadowed’s magics had gotten to
it. It died hard and Ernave had to hit it a second time before it lay still. He found himself on a small rise without an immediate opponent.
He took the chance to rest briefly and ran his gaze over the fighting—and saw
the Shadowed for the first time since the battle had begun. The Shadowed was less than he’d expected. A full head
shorter than Ernave and half his weight, he looked no more than a lad. He bore
more than a passing resemblance to Loriel—though her eyes had never been so
empty. The Shadowed smiled, and Ernave, who had thought he was tired beyond
fear, found that tie was wrong. A voice beside him said, “I’m here.” It was Kerine, the scrawny Traveler who was now their
only wizard. He’d staggered into Ernave’s encampment several winters ago and
been a thorn in Ernave’s side ever since. “It only needed that,” said Ernave sourly. Surprisingly the wizard laughed. “When the Shadow one is
dead, I’ll wash my hands of you, you hard-headed bastard. But from this moment
until that we are brothers, and I’ll stand with you. It’ll take more than that
axe of yours to kill the Shadowed.” ‘ Ernave said, “Come then, brother,” and cut a path through
the battle to the Shadowed. The Nameless King fought alone. His own creatures granted
him a wide berth—as if there could only be so much evil in one place and
the Shadowed’s presence made all other dark things unnecessary. Ernave approached from the side and swung, but the king’s
shield intercepted the blow. Ernave’s axe sank through the thin metal outer
layer into the wood underneath and stuck. Ernave jerked his axe hard and forced the Shadowed two
wild steps to the side before he slipped his arm out of the shield’s straps. Ernave slammed the shield into the ground, splitting it
as he would have a log so that his axe was free. It was a swift and practiced
move, but he just barely managed to bring his weapon up to parry the king’s
strike. The Shadowed fought as well as the old mage, his advisor,
had warned Ernave. Time and again the sword slid along Ernave’s axe, turning
the blows so that the heavier steel of the axe didn’t damage the sword blade. The king’s mouth moved with magic-making the whole time
he fought. For the most part Red Ernave forestalled the spell with heavy blows
that forced the king to lose his rhythm and concentrate on swordwork. Doubtless
there were more spells that Kerine deflected, but, every so often, a
spell touched Er-nave with white-hot heat that drained his spent body even
more. The king was fresh, and Ernave had been tired unto death
before the battle began. Even so, Ernave planted his feet, and, with a swift
pattern of his axe, he forced the king to leap away. The axe felt heavy in his hands, and every time it jerked
as the king turned aside another blow the shock shot up Ernave’s forearms and
through his shoulders and neck in a flash of pain. Ernave stumbled over nothing and, as he fell, his axe
caught the king a glancing blow in the knee and laid it bare to the bone.
Ernave didn’t hesitate, but kept wiling until he staggered to his feet and
turned back to face the king. The Shadowed shrieked and the semblance of the young man
the king had been fell away, leaving behind something that was little more than
sinew clinging to bone. There was no time for horror. Ernave surged to his feet
and struck at the king’s sword again. The blow hit fairly at last, shattering the elegant
blade. Ernave set himself for a killing blow, but the Shadowed dropped his
sword and lashed out with his hand. Claws that belonged on no human fingers
sunk deep into Ernave’s side. Ernave cried out, but the pain did not slow his strike
and the axe cleaved sweetly through the Shadowed’s neck. Bleeding and breathing heavily, Red Ernave stared in astonished
shock at the body of the old, old man who lay on the ground. Who’d have thought the Shadowed could really be killed? “How did you do that? How did you withstand his magic? I
couldn’t block it all. You are no mage.” Kerine’s nagging voice broke
through the buzzing exhaustion that made everything seem oddly distant. “The old mage,” said Ernave, his breathlessness growing
worse until he breathed in shallow pants. “He gave the last of his life to hold
off the dark magic long enough for me to kill the Shadowed. I thought he was a
fool to believe it would work ... but it didn’t matter as we were all dead anyway.” As he finished speaking he fell to his knees. Buried deep in Red Ernave’s heart. Tier, knowing how this story
ended, realized his danger and straggled to surface, but there was nothing to
cling to as Ernave began to submit to the death bequeathed him by the Shadowed. A thin whisper rang in his ears. “And so the great warrior died in the wake of the Shadowed
and left ...” “Left the battlefield.” Tier grasped the words. “Left his
army to mourn.” But he couldn’t remember the next— Kerine tried uselessly to save Ernave with what little
remained of his power. “They burned the thing that had once been a king,” continued
Tier’s visitor softly when Tier stopped speaking. Tier fumbled a little but the familiar words began to flow
again, separating him from his story. “And ... and scattered his ashes in
stream and field so that there would be no grave nor memorial to the king who
had no name.” The pain in Tier’s side faded and he was once more safe in
the dark of his prison. • “They buried Red Ernave in the battlefield, hoping that his
presence would somehow hold the host of darkness at bay. They trailed into the
empty city where the Shadowed had ruled and pulled down the king’s palace until
not one brick stood upon the other. Then the remnants of the Glorious Army of
Man waited, for they had no place to go. The last of the cities and villages
were years since ground to dust under the weight of the Shadowed. Only when the
food ran short did the army drift away in twos and threes.” Tier found himself shaking in the dark as the story faded
away. Next time he experimented with magic, he decided firmly, it would be with
a story whose hero survived. “What have you done, Bard?” said the voice from above him.
“Magic for music, both becoming more real. What have you done?” And, severing
the bond that still held him to Tier, the listener departed without a sound. Avar, Sept of Leheigh, looked just as a Sept ought, thought
Phoran, playing with his breakfast without enthusiasm. Avar was lean, tall, and heroic. His face was chiseled, his
chin firm and his mouth smiling sympathetically. He’d come, unannounced, into
the royal bedchambers as if he had the right to be there. “Not hungry this morning, my emperor?” he said, looking at
the mess Phoran had made of his plate. “When I heard that you were breaking
your fast in your room I thought that might be the case. My new man has a
potion against drink-sickness. He’s a half-blood Traveler, or so he claims.
He’s certainly a wizard with potions and medicines.” “No, thank you,” Phoran looked down at his plate. Avar was
home. Relief and joy were severely tempered by his suspicion that
Toarsen’s words last night were truth. Last night he’d been certain, but in
Avar’s charismatic presence Phoran’s need for Avar’s approval vied with the
words of a couple of half-drunken lords and scored a narrow triumph. Narrow
enough that Phoran didn’t ask Avar to join him—although there were extra plates
and plenty of food. Phoran forked up a bit of fruit and ate it without enthusiasm.
“I don’t need potions—I’m not sick from drinking.” It sounded too much like a
pouting child, so Phoran continued speaking. “So you’re back from your sept already?”
Did he sound casual enough? “I’d thought you intended to be gone longer than
this?” Avar looked disgruntled, Phoran thought, feeling a bare
touch of triumph. Perhaps Avar had expected a warmer greeting—or even the scold
Phoran’d intended to hand out to the Sept before overhearing that conversation
last night. Cool composure wasn’t a mood the young emperor often indulged
himself in. “Where is Leheigh, anyway? In the South?” The indifference
in Phoran’s voice was less of an effort. There. See how little I concern
myself with your affairs? He’d looked up the ancient deed in the library and followed
the path on several of the maps in the map room. He could have discussed the
crops in the Sept’s new inheritance with knowledge gained from poring over tax
records of the past few centuries. But now he would not admit to knowing
anything. Avar’s brother wouldn’t have dared to show such disgust for the
Emperor if he had no encouragement from Avar himself. But Phoran needed Avar. He needed his praise. He needed his
support against the older council members who weren’t happy with an emperor who
indulged himself in nightly parties, and yet they still refused to let him do
anything more useful. Needed him because Avar, when he stayed at the palace,
often slept in a bed in the Emperor’s suite—and when Avar was there, Phoran was
safe. “Leheigh is southwest, sire, along the Silver River below
Shadow’s Fall,” said Avar, his face settling into its usual warmth. “I didn’t
have time to visit the battlefield—but I will next time I go there, if I can
find a guide. All in all, I’m very happy with the lands; my father wasn’t a
hunter so he left the forest wild and filled with game. The keep dates back to
a few centuries after Shadow’s Fall—the family legend claims that my many times
great-grandfather was a solder of the Remnant of the Army of Man, and a few of
those soldiers settled along the river after the final battle. There’s a couple
of towns in the district, a largish village near my keep, and a smaller town on
the banks of the river. The Redem villagers—that’s the smaller town—still talk
as if the Fall of the Shadowed happened yesterday. I suppose because nothing
interesting has happened there since.” “I see,” said Phoran. “When did you get back?” “The day before yesterday,” Avar said. “My apologies for not
coming to you directly, but I had to make arrangements for some items I brought
back.” He hesitated. “And, I came back and found that my mistress had a few
extra men warming her bed while I was gone. By the time I dealt with that my
temper was none too sweet.” A good reason for waiting, thought Phoran with secret
jubilation. Maybe Avar’s brother was jealous of the time Avar spent with him;
maybe that’s why he’d said such hurtful things. Phoran could understand
Toarsen’s jealousy. “I thought I’d go riding today,” said Phoran, changing the
subject as if Avar’s trip and return were something that held no interest.
“Will you accompany me?” He hadn’t intended to ask for company. But Avar’s
presence soothed the hurts Toarsen and Kissel had dealt. Avar was his
friend—anyone could see it by the warmth of his gaze. Avar’s eyebrows climbed up that perfect forehead. “Of course,
my lord. I’ll send word to the stables. I left my horse at home.” “I’ve done that already,” Phoran said, setting his fork
aside. “You can ride the horse my armsman was to take.” He’d have no need of a
guard with Avar by his side. “I feel as if I haven’t been out of the castle in
months.” Only after he said it did he realize that it was true. When was the
last time he’d been out? Oh, yes, that tavern crawl in disguise on Avar’s
birthday four months before. “Ah.” Avar frowned a little. “Is something bothering you?” Phoran shook his head and stood up. “Just bored. Tell me
about your new curiosity. A Traveler, you said. Is he a mage?” Avar grinned, “Aren’t they all? But truthfully, I don’t
think he has a drop of Traveler blood—he is, however, a skilled healer.” And as they strode through the palace to the stables, Avar
chatted cheerfully about his trip, not at all like a man talking to someone he
held in contempt. Phoran wondered whether he should tell Avar what his brother
had said—and decided not to. Not because he was afraid to hurt Avar, but
because he didn’t want Avar to know that anyone held Phoran in contempt. Under the cheerful flow of Avar’s attention, Phoran began to
rethink the whole of last night’s debacle. It was traditional for people not to
like their rulers—and he probably misunderstood what they were saying about his
uncle. They hadn’t said that they had killed him, just that he had been killed.
Phoran hadn’t been drunk, precisely, but he hadn’t exactly been sober either.
It was easy to misinterpret things in that state. Phoran relaxed and let himself revel in his hero’s company.
It had been weeks since he’d had Avar’s undivided attention. His contentment
was somewhat shaken when they brought his stallion to him. Phoran, who had learned to ride as soon as he could walk,
had to use a mounting block to attain the saddle. Fat, indeed, he thought, red-faced as the stablemen
who’d known him from the time he was a toddler fought not to meet his eyes. At
least they had trusted him with his own stallion, who had responded with his
usual fury to the weight of a rider—perhaps a little worse for having not been
ridden for so many months. By the time Blade quit fussing, Phoran was tired, quite
certain he’d pulled a muscle in his back, and thoroughly triumphant. Not
everyone could have stayed on such an animal, and he’d managed it. The stallion
snorted and settled down as if the previous theatrics had never been. “Nicely ridden, my emperor,” murmured Avar with just the
proper amount of admiration to make the comment too much. Phoran watched the stablemen’s faces change from approval to
veiled contempt. Had Avar done that on purpose? thought the small hurt
part of Phoran that was still writhing under Toarsen’s derision. Avar had things to look after that evening, and Phoran did
not follow his impulse to plead with Avar to stay. The ride had reminded him of
his uncle, who had taught him horsemanship. His uncle, who would have
been disappointed in the man Phoran had grown to be. “You have brains, m’lad,” he remembered his uncle saying.
“Emperor or not. Use them.” So it was that as darkness fell in his rooms and the flames
in the fireplace died to bare glowing embers, Phoran was alone again when the
Memory came. It stood taller than a man and stopped some few feet away.
Doubtless, Phoran thought with humor that barely masked his terror; it was
taken aback that he was not in a drunken stupor or crying in the corner as he
had been on more than one occasion. It looked like nothing at all, as if a human eye couldn’t
quite focus on what it was—though tonight it looked, somehow, more real than
it had been before. Its hesitation, if it had hesitated at all, was only
momentary. For the first time, Phoran stood quietly as it enfolded him in its
blackness, taking away his ability to move or cry out. He’d hoped that it would
be better if he held still, but the burning pain of fangs piercing the inner skin
of his elbow was as terrible as he remembered. Cold entered Phoran from the
place where the Memory fed, as if it was replacing what it drank with ice. When
it was done it said the words that had become too familiar. “By the taking of your blood, I owe you. One answer. Choose
your question.” “Are you afraid of other people?” Phoran asked. “Is that why
you don’t come if someone’s in the room with me?” “No,” it said and vanished. Shivering as if he’d been hunting in winter, Phoran the
Twenty-Seventh curled up on the rug on the floor of his room. Chapter 8This time it wasn’t the grating that opened, but the door.
Tier shot to his feet and had to stop there because the sudden light blinded
him. “If it please you, my lord,” said a soft tenor voice that
could have belonged equally well to a young man or a woman, “Would you come
with me? We have arranged for your comfort. I am to offer you also an apology
for how you have been treated. We have not been ready to receive you until now.” Tier wiped his eyes and squinted against the glare of what
was, after all, a fairly dim lantern to see the backlit form of a woman. The sight, he could tell, was staged. She held the light
carefully to exhibit certain aspects of her form. The slight tremor in the hand
that held the lantern might be faked as well—but he’d have been worried about
facing a man who’d been caged for as long as Tier had, so he gave her the
benefit of the doubt. “I’m no lord,” he said at last. “Tell me just who it is I
have to thank for my recent stay here?” “If it please you, sir,” she said. “I’ll take you to
where all of your questions can be answered.” Tier could have overpowered her, and would have if she had
been a man. But if they, whoever they were, sent a woman to get him, it could only be because overpowering her would
get him nowhere. “You’ll have to give me a moment,” he said, “until I can see
again.” As his vision cleared, he saw that the woman was arrayed in
flowing garments that hinted broadly at the body beneath. A whore’s costume, but this woman was no common whore. She
was extraordinarily beautiful, even to a man who preferred his woman to be less
soft and breakable. Even if the net of gems and gold that confined quite a bit
of equally golden hair was paste and brass—and he wasn’t at all sure it was—the
cloth of her dress was worth a fair penny. “Can you see, yet, sir?” she asked. “Oh aye,” he said congenially. He’d bide his time until he
had enough information to act. “Lead on, fair lady.” She laughed gently at his address as she led him out into a
winding corridor. Behaving, he thought, as if he were a customer, rather than a
man who’d been imprisoned for weeks. The hall ceiling was so low he could have easily touched it
with a hand. On either side of his cell there were doors that opened to his
hand and revealed rooms that looked much like his. The woman was patient with
him, waiting without murmuring and pausing with him when he stopped by an iron
door twice as wide as the one that led into his cell. The door stuck fast when
he tried it. The woman said nothing. When he took the lantern from her
and adjusted it brighter so he could look more closely at the doors, she merely
folded her arms under her full breasts. He ignored her until he was certain that the door was hinged
on the other side, with two iron bars (barely visible in the narrow space
between door and frame) in place to keep the door shut. If he’d access to a
forge he could fashion something to unbar the door—but they were unlikely to allow
him such. He handed the lantern back to his hostess and allowed her to
lead him. The hall continued around a sharp bend and ended in double
doors. Just before the walls ended, there was a door on either side. It was the
left-hand door the woman opened, stepping back for him to precede her. The smell of steam and the sound of running water emerged from
the opened door, so he was unsurprised to enter a bathing room. He knew what
one looked like because the Sept of Gerant had held war conferences in
his—saying that the sound of the water kept people from overhearing anything
useful. But that austere chamber had as much to do with this one as a donkey
had with a warhorse. A golden tub of a size to accommodate five or six was brim
full of hot, steaming water with a tall table near it holding a variety of soaps
and pots of lotion. But by far the most impressive part of the room was the
cold pool. Water cascaded from an opening in the ceiling high above and
poured onto a ledge of fitted rock where it was spread to fall in a wide sheet
to the waist-deep pool below. He could tell the pool was waist-deep because
there were two naked, frightened, and obviously cold women standing in it. “Sssst,” hissed his guide in sudden irritation. “You look as
if you are about to lose your virtue again. Does this look like a man who’d
hurt women?” She softened her voice to velvet and turned back to Tier.
“You’ll forgive them, my ... sir. Our last guest was none to happy with his
captivity and took it out on those who had nothing to do with it.” He laughed with honest amusement. “After that speech I would
certainly feel like a stupid lout to try any such thing,” he said. In the brighter light of the bathing chamber he could see
that she was more than beautiful—she was fascinating, a woman who’d draw men’s
eyes when she was eighty. He mentally upped her probable price again. So why
was he being offered such service? The thought pulled the smile from his face. “So I’m to clean myself before being presented, eh?” he said
neutrally. “We will perform that service, sir, if you will allow us,”
she said, bowing her head in submission, “When you are finished bathing, there
are clean clothes to replace the ones you wear now. This is for your comfort
entirely. If you choose, you may stay as you are and I’ll take you in now. I
thought you would prefer not to appear at a disadvantage.” “Disadvantage, eh?” He glanced at his clothes. “If they
kidnap a man at the tail end of a three-month hunt, they get as they deserve.
I’ll wash, but you ladies get yourselves out of here or my wife will have my head.” The women in the pool giggled as if he’d been witty, but
they waited for a gesture from the woman he’d followed before they left the
pool. They wrapped themselves in a couple of the bathing sheets folded in piles
on a bench and exited the room through the same door he’d entered. “You too, lass,” he told his guide. “The high-born you serve
may be comfortable with help, but we Redemi are competent to wash ourselves.” Smilingly she bowed and left, shutting the door behind her.
He hadn’t noticed a latch, but he heard a click that could be nothing else so
he didn’t bother to try the door. The waterfall was more intriguing. Four leaps gave him a fingerhold on the lowest ledge and he
climbed the rest with relative ease. When he found the opening the water fell
through in the corner of the ceiling, it was grated with iron bars set in
mortar. He slid back down and splashed uncaring of his battered clothing
into the cold pool of water. He hadn’t expected such an obvious way out, but he
needed to know what he dealt with. Eventually he’d manage a way out—in the meantime
there was no need for filth. He washed the clothes on his body first, then threw them
into the waiting hot tub, where he’d soap down both them and himself when he
was ready. The cold water poured over his face, clearing his head and
his thoughts as he scraped away dirt. He hadn’t heard anyone enter, but when he stepped out from
the waterfall, there were clean clothes waiting for him. He ignored them and settled into the tub of hot water,
soaped himself off, and gave rough service to his clothes. Rinsing everything
in the cold pool, he draped his clothes where he could. Shivering now, he dried
himself and examined the clothing she’d left for him. It was serviceable clothing, very like the filthy garments
he’d taken off, though less worn. He fingered the shirt thoughtfully before
donning it. The leather boots fit him as well as his old ones, lost somewhere
during his captivity. As he tied the laces of his boots, his guide returned, her timing
too accurate for guessing. Someone had been watching him—he hoped they enjoyed
the show. She held a tray with a comb and a plain silver clip and held them
out. He ran the comb through his hair and pulled it back into a queue which he
fastened with the clip. He turned around once for her perusal and she nodded.
“You’ll do, sir. If you’ll follow me, the Master awaits your presence.” “Master?” he asked. But she’d given him all the information she intended to.
“Come,” she said, leading him back to the corridor. The double doors at the end of the hall were open this time
and a haze of smoke drifted into the corridor along with a desultory drumbeat
and a hum of conversation. But he had only a moment to glance inside and get an
impression of some sort of public room with tables and benches scattered
around, before the woman opened the door directly across from the bathing room
and gestured him in. In size and lack of windows, the room resembled the cell
Tier had been living in, though here the stone floor was covered with a tightly
woven rug that cushioned his feet. A pair of matching tapestries hung on one
wall. The only furnishings in the room were two comfortable-looking chairs
flanking a small round table. In one of the chairs sat a man in a black velvet robe sipping
from a goblet. He was a decade or so older than Tier with the features of an
eastern nobleman, wide-cheeked and flat-nosed. Like his face, his hands
belonged to an aristocrat, long-fingered and bedecked with rings. He looked up when Tier’s guide softly cleared her throat. “Ah. Thank you, Myrceria,” he said pleasantly, setting his
goblet on the table. “That will be all.” The door shut quietly behind Tier’s back, leaving the two
men alone in the room. The robed man folded his hands contemplatively against his
chin, “You don’t look like a Traveler, Tieragan of Redem.” Traveler? Tier raised an eyebrow and took the empty chair. It was a
little short for him, so he stretched out his legs and crossed his ankles. When
he was comfortable, he looked at the man most probably responsible for his
recent imprisonment and said courteously, “And you don’t look like a festering
pustule on a slug’s hind end either. Appearances can be deceiving.” The other man’s face didn’t change, but Tier felt a pulse of
power, of magic—just as he was meant to. The surge of magic died and the wizard smiled. “You are angry,
aren’t you? I ,do believe we owe you an apology for keeping you locked in your
cell, but it has been a long time since we had an Owl in our keeping. We had to
be certain that we could contain your magic before releasing you.” Contain his magic? “You seem to know a lot about me,” Tier commented. “Would
you care to return the favor?” The other man laughed, “You’ll have to excuse me—you’re not
quite what I expected. I am Kerstang, Sept of Telleridge.” Tier nodded slowly. “And what would the Sept of Telleridge
want with a Redemi farmer?” “Nothing at all,” said Telleridge. “I do, however, have a
use for a Traveler and Bard.” “I told you,” said Tier mildly. “I am not a Traveler. What
do you need me for?” Telleridge smiled as if Tier’s answer had pleased him. “In addition
to my duties as a Sept, I find myself with the delicate charge of the youth of
the Empire. The law of primogeniture, however necessary, leaves many of the
younger sons of noblemen without any constructive outlets for their energies. I
run an Eyrie for these lost young men and I’m responsible for their
entertainment.” “I’m the entertainment?” said Tier. “Surely there are bards
who don’t need abducting to be persuaded to provide entertainment.” Telleridge laughed, “But they would not be nearly as amusing.”
The laughter drifted away as if it had never been. “Nor would they be Owl. All
you need to know at the moment is that you are, will you or nil you, my guest
for the next year. During that time you will entertain my young friends and
occasionally participate in our ceremonies. In return you may ask for anything
that you wish, short of leaving, and it will be arranged.” “I don’t think so,” said Tier. “Refusing is not an option,” said the wizard. “For a year
and a day you will have whatever you want—or you can struggle; it matters not
one whit to me.” That phrase struck a chord of memory. “A year and a day,”
Tier said. “You’ll make me beggar king for a year and a day.” He hummed a bit
of the old tune. “And I suppose, like the beggar king, you’ll sacrifice me to
the gods at the end?” “That’s right,” said the wizard as if Tier were a prized
pupil. “I see that an Owl will be different than a Raven—which is what we’ve
had the last three times. The Hunter was interesting, though we finally had to
cage him. I think you’ll do. But first ...” He leaned forward and touched Tier lightly; as he did so,
the silver and onyx ring on his index finger caught Tier’s attention briefly. He was distracted by the ring when the wizard’s voice
dropped a full octave and he said in the Traveler tongue, “By Lark and Raven,
I bind you that you will harm neither me nor any wizard who wears a black cloak
in these halls. By Cormorant, and Owl, I bind you that you will not ask anyone
to help you escape. By Falcon, I bind you that you will not speak of your
death.” Magic surged through Tier, holding him still until the
wizard was done. “There,” he said sitting back again. There indeed, thought Tier, shaken. No one had ever
laid a spell on him before. He felt ... violated and frightened. It had been so
fast and he hadn’t been able to defend himself from it at all. Cold sweat slid
down his neck and he shivered, fighting nausea. “Sick?” Telleridge asked. “It takes some people like that,
but I couldn’t depend upon the word of a Traveler peasant—even if you’d give
it. My young friends are easily influenced. I would hate to lose any of my Passerines
too soon.” “Passerines?” asked Tier, breathing shallowly through his
nose and hoping he didn’t look as shaken as he felt. “You have song birds
here?” The wizard smiled. “As I said, a Bard will be interesting.
Myrceria will tell you what you need to know about my Passerines. Ask her about the Secret Path if you wish. She
is waiting for you outside the door.” The woman was indeed waiting for him, kneeling on the cold
stone of the floor with her hands at rest. Prepared, Tier thought, to deal with
a man in any mood he might emerge with. She sat unmoving until he closed the
door gently behind him. “If you like, I can take you into the Eyrie,” she said,
using her right arm to indicate the open double doors. “There are others to
talk to if you wish and food and drink are available to you there. If you would
prefer to ask me questions, we can go back to your room. You will find it much
improved.” “Let’s go talk,:’ he said after a moment. As Myrceria promised, the cell had been transformed in his absence.
It had been scoured clean and furnished with a bed such as the nobles slept in
rather than the rush-stuffed mattress over stretched rope he had at home. Rich
fabrics and rare woods filled the room; it should have looked crowded, but it
managed to appear cozy instead. In the center of the bed a worn lute rested,
looking oddly out of place. He took a step toward it, but stopped. He wasn’t like
Seraph: he didn’t feel the need to do the opposite of whatever anyone tried to
get him to do, but that didn’t mean he enjoyed being manipulated either. So he
left the lute for later examination and chose to investigate another oddity.
The room was lit by glowing stones in copper braziers placed in strategic
places around the room. “They’re quite safe,” said Myrceria behind him. She moved
against him, pressing close until her breasts rested against his back, then
reached around him to pick the fist-sized rock out of the brazier he’d picked
up. He set the brazier down gently and stepped away from her.
“You are quite lovely, lass,” he said. “But if you knew my wife, you’d know
that she’d take my liver and eat it in front of my quivering body if I ever
betrayed her.” “She is not here,” Myrceria murmured, replacing the rock and
turning gracefully in a circle so that he could see what he was refusing. “She
will never know.” “I don’t underestimate my wife,” he replied. “Nor should
you.” Myrceria touched the net that confined her hair and shook
her head, freeing waves of gold to cascade down her back and touch her ankles.
“She’ll believe you’re dead,” she said. “They have arranged for it. Will she be
faithful to you if you are dead?” Seraph thought he was dead? He needed to get home. “Telleridge said you would answer my questions,” he said.
“Where are we?” “In the palace,” she answered. “In Taela?” “That’s right,” she leaned into him. He bent until his face was close to hers. “No,” he said
softly. “You have answers to my questions, and that is all I’m interested in.”
There was a flash of fear in her eyes, and it occurred to him that a whore was
hardly likely to be so interested in him on her own. “You can tell Telleridge
whatever you like about tonight; I’ll not deny it—but I’ll not break the vows
I’ve made. I have my own woman; I need answers.” She stood very still for a moment, her eyes unreadable—which
told him more about what she was thinking than the facile, convenient
expressions Of a whore. Slowly, but not seductively, she rebound her hair. When she
was finished she had tucked away her potent sexuality as well. “Very well,” she said. “What would you like to know?” “Tell me a lie,” he said. Her eyebrows raised. “A lie?” “Anything. Tell me that the coverlet is blue.” “The coverlet is blue.” Nothing. He felt nothing. “Tell me it’s green,” he said. “The coverlet is green.” He couldn’t tell when she was lying. Just about the only
useful thing his magic could do. He opened his mouth to ask her to help him
escape, just to see if he could, but no word of his request left his throat. “Gods take him!” he roared angrily. “Gods take him
and eat his spleen while he yet lives.” He turned toward the whore and she
flinched away from him needlessly. He had himself under control now. “Tell me
about this place, the Passerines, the Secret Path, Telleridge ... all of it.” She took a step back and sat gingerly on the edge of the
bed, on the far side of the lute. Speaking quickly, she said, “The Secret Path
is a clandestine organization of nobles. The rooms that you have seen today and
a few others are under an unused wing of the palace. Most of the activities of
the Path involve only the young men, the Passerines. The older members and the Masters,
the wizards, direct what those activities are. The Passerines are the younger
members of the Secret Path. They are brought in between the ages of sixteen and
twenty.” “What do they call the older members?” asked Tier. “Raptors,” she replied, relaxing a little, “and the wizard;:
are the Masters.” “Who is in charge, the wizards or the Raptors?” “The High Path—which is made up of a select group of Raptors
and Masters and led by Master Telleridge.” “What is the requirement for membership?” he asked. “Noble birth and the proper temperament. None of them can be
direct heirs of the Septs. Most of the boys come at the recommendation of the
other Passerines.” “Telleridge is a Sept,” said Tier, trying to put his knowledge
into an acceptable pattern. “Yes. His father and brothers died of plague.” “Did he start this ... Secret Path?” “No.” She settled more comfortably against the wall. “It is
a very old association, over two hundred and fifty years old.” Tier thought back over the history of the Empire. “After the
Third Civil War.” Myrceria nodded her head, and smiled a little. “Phoran the Eighteenth, I believe, who inherited right in
the middle of the war when his father was killed by an assassin,” he said. “A
man known for his brilliance in diplomacy rather than war. Now what exactly was
it that caused that war ...” Her smile widened, “I imagine you know quite well. Bards,
I’ve been told, have to know their history.” “The younger sons of a number of the more powerful Septs seized
their fathers’—or brothers’ lands illegally while the Septs were meeting in
council. They claimed that the laws of primogeniture were wrong, robbing
younger sons of their proper inheritance. The war lasted twenty years.” “Twenty-three,” she corrected mildly. “I bet the Path was founded by Phoran the Eighteenth’s
younger brother—the war leader” She cleared her throat. “By Phoran’s youngest son, actually,
although his brother was one of the original members.” “The Path,” said Tier, having found the pattern, “draws the
younger sons, young men educated to wield power but who will never have any.
Only the ones who are angriest at their lot in life are allowed into it. As
young men, they are given a secret way to defy those in power—a safe outlet for
their energies. Then, I suppose, a few are guided slowly into places where they
can gain power—advisor to the king, merchant, diplomat. Places where they
acquire power and an investment in the health of the Empire they despise. Old
Phoran the Eighteenth was a master strategist.” “You are well educated for a ... a baker,” she said, “from a
little village in the middle of nowhere.” He smiled at her. “I fought under the Sept of Gerant from
the time I was fifteen until the last war was over. He has a reputation as
being something of an eccentric. He wasn’t concerned with the birth of his
commanders, but he did think that his commanders needed to know as much about
politics and history as they knew about war.” “A soldier?” She considered the idea. “I’d forgotten
that—they didn’t seem to consider it to be of much importance.” “You are well-educated for your position as well,” he said. “If younger sons have no place in the Empire, their
daughters have—” she stopped abruptly and took a step backward. “Why am I
telling you this?” Her voice shook in unfeigned fear. “You’re not supposed to
be able to work magic here. They said that you couldn’t.” “I’m working no magic,” he said. “I have to go,” she said and left the cell. She didn’t, he
noticed, forget to shut and bolt the door. When she was gone, he pulled his legs up on the bed, boots
and all, and leaned against the wall. Whatever the Path was supposed to have been, he doubted that
its only purpose was to keep the young nobles occupied. Telleridge didn’t
strike him as the sort to serve anyone except himself—certainly not the
stability of the Empire. Thinking of Telleridge reminded Tier of what the wizard had
done to him. His magic was really gone—not that it was likely to do him much
good in a situation like this. Alone, without witnesses, Tier sat on the bed
and buried his head in his hands, seeing, once more, Telleridge’s hand closing
on his arm. Wizards weren’t supposed to be able to cast spells like
that. They had to make potions and draw symbols—he’d seen them do it. Only
Ravens were able to cast spells with words. Telleridge had spoken in the Traveler tongue. Tier straightened up and stared at one of the glowing
braziers without seeing it. That ring. He had seen that ring before, the night
he’d met Seraph. Though it had been twenty years, he was certain he was not
mistaken. He’d a knack for remembering things, and the ring Telleridge had worn
had the same notch on the setting that the ring ... what had his name been?
Wresen. Wresen had been a wizard, too. A wizard following Seraph. How had Telleridge known that Tier was Bard? Tier had supposed
that his unknown visitor had told the wizard, if it hadn’t been the wizard
himself. However, it sounded as if Tier being a Bard was the reason they’d
taken him in the first place. No one except Seraph knew what he was—though
she’d told him that any Raven would know. They had been watching him. Myrceria had known that he had
been a baker and a soldier. Had they been watching him and Seraph for twenty
years? Were they watching Seraph now? He sprang to his feet and paced. He had to get home. When an
hour of fruitless thought left him-still in the locked cell, he settled back on
the bed and took up the lute absently. All he could do was be ready for an
opportunity to escape as it presented itself. He noticed the tune that he’d begun fingering with wry amusement.
Almost defiantly he plucked out the chorus with quick-fingered precision. A year and a day, A year and a day, And the beggar’ll be king For a year and a day. In the song, in order to stop a decade-long drought,
desperate priests decided that the ultimate sacrifice had to be made—the most
important person in the nation had to be sacrificed: the king. Unwilling to
die, the king refused, but proposed the priests take one of the beggars from
the street. The king would step down from office for a year and let the beggar
be king. The priests argued that a year was not long enough—so they made the
beggar king for a year and a day. The drought ended with the final, willing
sacrifice of the young man who’d proved more worthy than the real king. Just as the Secret Path’s Traveler king, Tier, would die at
the end of his reign. He thought of one of the bindings Telleridge had put on him.
The young men, the Passerines, didn’t know he would die—otherwise there would
be no reason to forbid him to speak of it with them. No doubt then his death would serve a purpose greater than
mimicking an old song. Would it appease the gods like the beggar king’s
sacrifice in the story? But then why hide it from the young men? What would a
wizard want with his death? Magic and death, he remembered Seraph telling him once.
Magic and death are a very powerful combination. The better the mage knows the
victim, the’ stronger the magic he can work. The mage’s pet cat works better
than a stray. A friend better than an enemy ... a friend for a year and a day. He had to get word to Seraph. He had to warn her to protect
the children. His fingers picked out the chords to an old war song. Myrceria,
he thought, I will work on Myrceria. Phoran held the bundle of parchment triumphantly as he
marched alone through the halls of the palace toward his study. They’d look for
him in his rooms first, he thought. No one but the old librarian knew about the
study. They’d find him eventually, but not until he was ready for them. It had been impulse, really. When the old fool, Douver, set
down the papers the Council of Septs had for him to sign, Phoran had just
picked them up, tucked them under his arm, and announced to the almost empty
room that he would take them under advisement. He’d turned on his heel and walked out, slipping through a
complex system of secret passages—some of which were so well known they might
be corridors and others he rather thought he might be the only one who knew.
He’d given no one a chance to follow him. For most of his life, he’d signed what they told him to. At
least his uncle had done him the courtesy of explaining what he’d signed—though
he remembered not caring much about most of it. But the empty room had been an insult. When the Emperor
signed the proposals into law twice a year, there should be people present, and
would have been, if anyone thought that the Emperor would do anything but sign
what he was told. He entered the library through a secondary door, passed unnoticed
among the bins of parchment and shelves of books in the back corner of the
room, and unlocked the door of his study. It was a small room, but it locked
from the inside as well as the outside, which was all that he required. He settled himself into his chair and thought. It was all
very well to decide to be emperor in fact as well as name, but he didn’t really
have the support he needed. The Sept of Gorrish fancied himself de facto ruler,
and the Septs who followed him, Telleridge, and the like, would do their best
to fight any sign of independence. Really, he’d best sign the damn things and get it over with. Instead he uncorked his inkwell, trimmed his pens, and began
to read. The first three parchments he signed—complex trade agreements between
various Septs, and nothing the Emperor should interfere with. But, almost involuntarily,
he made mental notes of the names involved and the alliances the new laws revealed. The fourth parchment was another of the increasingly
punitive laws aimed at the Travelers. He signed that one, too. Most Travelers
were thieves, his uncle had said, though not without a certain amount of
sympathy. Having no land they could settle on, because no Sept would have
allowed such a thing, they were forced to earn their bread as best they could. Hours passed. Occasionally, Phoran would sneak out to the library
to retrieve maps or books. But he signed the parchments one by one—setting only
a few aside for further review. Two he found that might serve his point. They were regional
matters that most of the council would not care unduly about; each was signed
by only a few more than half the council with no protests. The first act would give the Sept of Holla exclusive fishing
rights in Lake Azalan. Phoran had checked his maps and found Lake Azalan to be
a small body of water in the Sept of Holla’s lands. The law was so odd—the
Septs usually had effective exclusive rights to any fully enclosed body of water—that
Phoran knew there was a story behind the ruling. The second concerned a small
section of land awarded to the Sept of Jenne for his “services to the Empire.” He pored over the simple words to mine them for clues and regretted
the indifference that had kept him from the council the past few years, because
he no longer knew all of the different alliances. Geography helped—all of
Holla’s signatures were from Septs in the Northeast, Holla’s neighbors. All
except one of his neighbors. The one, thought Phoran with sudden comprehension,
who had been sending fishermen into his neighbor’s lake. That one would work—Holla had little influence in the
council. But he’d rather come down on the side of justice. The second one was frustrating because the land in question
was so small that he couldn’t find out much about it. He looked up from a map and the Memory was there. He hadn’t realized how long he’d been in his study. He’d
trimmed the lamps absently as he’d needed, and there was no window to tell him
that the sun had set. Slowly Phoran set his pen down and shed the heavy state
robes so he could bare his arm. The hope that had cloaked him for most of the
day evaporated at the touch of cold, cold lips on his skin. It hurt, and he looked away as it fed. * “By the taking of
your blood, I owe you one answer. Choose your question.” Tired beyond reason and still trembling with the remnants of
pain, Phoran laughed harshly and said, “Do you know someone who could help me
understand what’s so special about a small slice of the Sept of Gerant’s lands
that the council would gift it to the Sept of Jenne?” The Memory turned and drifted toward the door. “I thought you owed me an answer,” said Phoran without heat.
That would have taken too much passion, and he’d already, really, given up on
his plans. He would not hurt an innocent man just because his petition was
convenient for his purposes, and he was beginning to believe that the library
did not contain the information he needed to refuse to sign Jenne’s petition. He’d already begun to go back to comparing two well-drawn
maps to a third, less clear, but more detailed when the Memory said, “Come.” Phoran looked up and saw it waiting for him. It took him a
moment to remember exactly what he’d asked. “You know someone who could help?” It didn’t answer. Phoran stared at it and tried to think. If anyone saw him
... He glanced at the parchments and maps scattered around and gathered the
ones that might prove helpful. Chapter 9They came for him shortly after Myrceria left. Tier set the lute down, and stood up when the door opened to
admit five men in black robes like the one Telleridge had worn. Their hoods
were pulled down over their faces and they walked in as if they each had a predetermined
place to stand. Tier had the oddest feeling that they did not see him at all. They took up positions around him. One after the other they
began chanting, a low, droning, off-pitch sound that he could not decipher
because the words they used belonged to no’ language he’d ever heard. Magic, he
knew, but he was helpless to stop them because of Telleridge’s command. As one, they raised their hands above their heads and
clapped ... He awoke lying on the floor, naked and sweating. The memory
of pain lent nausea to the cacophony of tingling body parts. He sat up,
frantically trying to remember what had happened after the wizards had clapped
their hands, but the thought of the sound made his ears ring. They had taken his memories. Even so, there were things that
he knew, as if the events he couldn’t remember had left a visceral residue on
his body. He’d been violated, not physically raped but something that was a
near kin. He sat up straight and held his head like a wolf scenting a
hare. He remembered that, remembered someone telling Mm ... remembered Telleridge
telling him that he would not know what had happened. Owls had very good memories. Tier’s lips drew back in a snarl. Hatred was a foreign
emotion to him. He’d fought for years against an enemy he was told to hate, but
he’d never found anything in his heart but a grim determination to persevere.
The Fahlarn were not wicked, just wrongly ambitious. He had seen people do terrible
things because of stupidity, ignorance, anger, but he’d never met evil before. Now he was befouled by it Staggering to his feet, he looked for his clothing. When he
was clothed he could feel less vulnerable. They’d taken his memories and his
magic, but surely they would leave him clothes. A cursory search of the room turned up a tunic and pants,
though not his own. They were looser in fit than he was used to and darker
colored: Traveler clothes for their pet Traveler. Nevertheless, he pulled them on
quickly. Instinctively he looked for something he could use to clean
himself, and noticed there was no water in the room. Even as he regretted the
lack, he knew that it wouldn’t have mattered if they’d left him in the bathing
room—the filth that coated him could not be cleaned that way. His gaze fell upon the lute. No matter how fine the instrument, a lute always needed tuning.
He sat down beside it and cradled it to him. There were eight courses on this instrument, two strings per
course except for the highest note, and this lute hadn’t been properly tuned in
a while. As he settled into the familiar chore, the shaky, frightened feeling
in his stomach began to settle. He tightened pegs by slight movements, because there were no
extra strings sitting around if he broke one. As the lute started to come up to
tune, he noticed that the man who’d set the fretting had had an ear as good as
his own—perhaps he’d been a Bard, too. He tried a simple refrain and knew in a rush of relief that
this was what he’d needed. For a long time he just played bits of this and
that, letting the music salve the hurt that had been done to him. At last his fingers hit upon a tune that his ears enjoyed, a
piece his grandfather had written to welcome the coming of spring. He closed his
eyes and let the music fill him until everything else was distant, where it
could no longer harm him. He took a deep breath that filled his lungs with the
scent of lilacs. Magic. He opened his eyes, stilled his hands, and took another
breath. The scent had faded, but he could still smell the sweet flowers until
his sinuses closed. His eyes watered and he sneezed twice; Lilacs always made
him sneeze. Perhaps, he thought, they don’t know as much about
Traveler magic as they think they do. There was a scuffle outside his door, as if someone fumbled
with a key. “Drat,” said a young man’s voice. “Drat, drat. This key is
supposed to open any door in the palace. Wait, ah. A turnkey box.” There was
some more rustling and a jangle of keys rattling together. The door of his cell
creaked open. “Er, hallo?” A rather pudgy young face peered around the
edge of the door. “Hello,” Tier said mildly, though his body was tense and
ready to act. “Look, I hope I didn’t wake you or ... your light was still
on so I thought ...” The young man stumbled to a halt. “Come in,” invited Tier genially. Keys, he thought, lowering
his eyelids. This boy would be no— He rolled to his feet abruptly. “What in the name of the
seven flaming hells is that?” The boy looked over his shoulder at the dark, nebulous shape
behind him for a moment. “You can see it?” he asked, sounding unhappy. “Most people
can’t. It’s ... ah ... it calls itself a Memory—as if that’s a name. I haven’t
figured it out exactly myself. It doesn’t usually linger like this.” As the thing moved into the room, Tier took a step back from
the overwhelming presence it carried with it. He sat back on his bed and tried
to look peaceful. “I’m sorry,” the boy apologized. Tier turned his attention back to him with an effort, and
noticed for the first time the quality of the clothes he was wearing. Velvet
embroidered in heavy metal threads that looked as if they were really gold. “Look,” said the boy again. “I don’t know why you’re
here. These aren’t the regular holding cells. But for some reason”—he gave an
odd, short laugh—“I think you might help me with a problem I’ve been looking
into.” And the boy took a piece of parchment he’d been holding and
thrust it at Tier. He sat beside him on the bed, started to point at something
and then stopped. “Do you read?” he asked. “Not to be offensive, you understand,
but you’re dressed like—” “I can read Common,” said Tier. He’d learned under the Sept
of Gerant, making him one of the double handful of people who could read in
Redem. Since the Memory, whatever that was, had decided to stay on
the far side of the cell. Tier allowed himself to look more closely at the
writing on the parchment. “Look here,” said the boy, sounding more authoritative.
“This is nominally just a simple award for a job well done. Except that usually
properties that belong to one Sept aren’t gifted to another—certainly not with
a vague ‘for services to the Empire.’ See?” Tier looked at what he held with disbelief. It appeared to
be a law document of some sort. First Tier had thought that the boy might be one of Telleridge’s
wizards, especially with the thing that had followed him in. Then he’d been
almost certain that he was one of the Passerines Myrceria had told him about.
Now ... He cleared his throat. “Are you a member of the Secret
Path?” “If I’m not, does that mean you can’t tell me the answer?” The disingenuous answer made Tier laugh in spite of his generally
lousy mood. The young man gave him a pleased smile .. “Actually, I’ve never heard of the Secret Path. Though, if
you put any three nobles together, they’ll start four secret societies of
something.” Tier nodded his head slowly. “I’d been given the impression
that the Path members had taken over this bit of the palace and made it their
own. If you’re not one, how did you find your way here?” The boy shrugged. “The palace has enough rooms to house the
whole city and then some. The first fifteen Emperors Phoran spent all their
time building the place and the next ten tried to figure out what to do with
all the rooms—mostly close them up. At least two of them, the eighth and the
fourteenth—or the seventh and the thirteenth if you’d rather not give a number
to the first Phoran—were fascinated by secret rooms and passages. By happy
chance I stumbled upon the plans of Eight and actively sought Fourteen’s. Once
I had them, I hid them myself. At any rate, they give me ready access to most
of the palace. Not that there’s usually much to see.” “I see,” said Tier, rather dazzled by all the eights who
might have been sevens—there was a song in that somewhere. He hadn’t really
thought about how the Path had managed to secret off such a big chunk of
building. He had a hard time wrapping his mind around a building so large that
the Path could use a section for generations and not have it discovered. “I’m not a lawyer,” Tier said finally. “Nor do I know
anything about the Septs. I don’t see how I can help you.” The boy frowned. “I asked if there was someone who could
help me find out more about the piece of land in question. Is there any reason that
you would know something about the Sept of Gerant’s lands? “The Sept of Gerant?” exclaimed Tier, distracted from the
question of who knew enough to send this boy after him. “That’s right,” said the boy. “I don’t know him by face, but
it sounds as if you’ve met him.” “He’ll not have been at court,” murmured Tier, reading the
rest of the document rapidly. “He’s an old warrior, not fitted for wearing
silks and such. The Sept of Jenne, hmm.” “I have this, if it helps,” said the boy, and he
pulled a small, faded map from a pocket. “I can show you where the land in question
is—I just don’t know what’s so important about it” The soft hand that handed Tier a map had a signet ring on
it. Tier noticed and catalogued it, but he was thinking about the map so it took
him a moment before he realized who was sitting on his bed beside him. The Emperor? His night had acquired a new level of strangeness. Tier
glanced at the Memory. Was it some sort of body guard? He forced his eyes back to the map. If the Emperor had wanted
him to know who he was talking to, he would have introduced himself. The boy tapped a spot on the old map. “That’s where it is.
It doesn’t even connect to Jenne’s lands.” Tier closed his eyes and thought back twenty years, trying
to make the lines on the map correspond to the land he had known rather well at
one time. “Water rights,” he said finally. “That’s the headwaters of
the creek that gives Gerant’s people water. This piece of land belongs to the
Sept of Jenne’s father-in-law—or it did twenty years ago. The current Sept
might be the son or grandson of the man I’m thinking of, but at any rate, the
land’s in Jenne’s family’s hands. It’s pretty useless despite its size, because
it’s in the rainshadow of Brulles Mountain—won’t grow anything but sagebrush.
If Jenne had control of Brulles—that strip of map should be marked to show the
mountain—he could hire a wizard to divert the flow of water and send it down
the other side of the mountain, or find some way of diverting the small river
that runs on the wrong side for their purposes.” “Hah,” the boy exclaimed happily. “It’s a payoff. That’s the
one I want, then. What can you tell me about Gerant’s allies?” Tier hesitated. “Gerant’s a good man,” he said. The boy raised an eyebrow. “I’m not planning on hurting him.
I ...” Now it was his turn to hesitate. “I suspect,” said Tier softly, “that there’s a law or two
against a common man like me sharing a seat with the Emperor. If you’ve a need
to be incognito, it might be better to take off that ring.” Phoran (doubtless the boy’s name was Phoran—though Her couldn’t remember the number that went with the name)
looked upset for a moment, glanced at the ring that was the Emperor’s seal,
then shrugged. “I’ll keep your advice in mind. Well enough. If you know
that much, look here.” He tapped the paper impatiently. “I need something I can
use as a fulcrum to move the power structure in the Council of Septs so that I
don’t continue to be just a figurehead, and this document is it. It was in my
twice-yearly stack of petitions to be signed into law. There aren’t many
signatures on this—only a few people who owed Jenne something. Like as not most
of them didn’t know what it was they were signing. You can’t even tell that
this land is Gerant’s without this map.” “Right,” said Tier. He hadn’t realized that the boy was a figurehead,
but then he hadn’t concerned himself with any news outside of Redem since he’d
left Gerant’s services several years before the last Phoran died.
“Twenty-sixth,” he said aloud. “Only if you don’t count the first Phoran,” said Phoran, not
the least discomposed. “I like to, though my father didn’t. Are you still with
me?” “Right,” Tier nodded. “You have a bill, obviously a favor,
but not for a Sept who is very powerful. So if you decide to decline to sign it,
you’re not going to make a slew of enemies. Who could object to your refusal to
grant one Sept’s lands to another without better reason than you’ve been given?
And I’ll put up my right arm that Gerant is no traitor or mischief maker that
will embarrass you on this. He’s true as oak. So you refuse to sign it, and the
rest of the council either supports you, or makes it look like they think the
council should have the right to take land from whatever Sept they want without
giving an adequate reason.” “That’s it,” said the boy, gathering up his map and
document. “And I have a toehold into ruling on my own. So, you have done me a
favor.” Carefully he folded the parchment so it fit into his pocket with the
map. “I owe you an equal favor. Before I determine how best to repay you, tell
me what you are doing here, what this Path that I’m not a member of is, and
what the two have to do with each other.” “It’s faster if I start with the Path,” said Tier after thinking
about it for a minute. “The rest of the story should fall out of that.” Briefly
he outlined the information Telleridge and Myrceria had given him. Phoran stopped him. “They kill the Traveler wizards for
power, these wizards who wear black robes?” Tier nodded. “So I’m told. I’ve only met two people—three
with you—since I was brought here.” He thought the ladies in the bath didn’t
count. “I haven’t actually seen any of this for myself.” “You still haven’t told me what you are doing here,” said
Phoran. “Or who you are, other than someone who fought under Gerant in the last
war.” “I am a fanner who occasionally sings for a few coppers at
the local tavern in Redem,” Tier said. “I usually spend the winter months
trapping for furs. I was on my way home. I have a vague memory of seeing a
group of strangers, and then I awoke in this cell. Telleridge—that’s the man I
told you about—” “Telleridge?” said Phoran. “I know him, though I didn’t know
he was a wizard. Did he tell you why they wanted you enough to take you from
Redem?” asked Phoran. Then a strange expression came over his face. “Is that
the Redem that belongs to the Sept of Leheigh?” “Yes,” Tier agreed. “Avar?” said Phoran almost to himself. Avar, Tier recalled, was the given name of the new Sept, the
new Sept who was supposed to be so influential with the Emperor. “Is Avar a member of this Path?” Tier shrugged. “I don’t know. The only two I’ve met by name
are Telleridge and Myrceria—and I don’t think she’d be considered a member.” Phoran got to his feet and began pacing. “Why you?” he asked
again. “Why did they go all the way to Redem to find you? You aren’t a
Traveler, not if you’re a farmer in Redem who used to be a solder.” “Because I have a magical talent usually associated with the
Travelers,” replied Tier. Preempting the next question, he began telling Phoran
what he knew about the Orders. Phoran held up a hand. “Enough,” he said. “I believe you. Let’s get you out of here, then you can explain
anything you feel necessary.” Her followed him to the threshold, but when he leaned
forward to step through the door, white-hot pain convulsed his body and a shock
of magic threw him back several feet into the cell. “What was that?” said Phoran, startled. “He is bound,” said the Memory. It sounded like a crow’s mating
call or the rattle of dry bones. Tier wobbled to his feet. “It talks?” The Emperor looked at the Memory. “Sometimes. But this is
the first time it’s ever volunteered information. Are you all right?” Tier nodded. “Your Memory is right. There must be some sort
of magic here I cannot cross.” “Can you do something with it? Didn’t you say that you have
magic?” “He is bound,” said the Memory again. “Stop that,” said Tier, a command that usually worked when
Jes began to get too creepy. He turned to Phoran. “I don’t have the kind of
magic that could counter this, and they have managed to keep me from what
little useful magic I do have. It looks like I’m stuck here.” Phoran nodded. “Very well.” He came back into the room and
shut the door. “There are wizards who are supposed to serve me, or serve the
Empire at least, but I don’t know if any of them are the ones who belong to the
Path. Find out who the Path’s wizards are, and then maybe I can find a wizard
to undo this.” He gave Tier an apologetic look. “I am more emperor in name
than in reality or I could just order your release. The twentieth—nineteenth by
common reckoning—had real power.” Tier grinned, “That’s because he’d ordered the death of
fifteen Septs by the time he was your age and accounted for another three or
four personally.” “I’m rather finicky in my food choices,” said Phoran with
mock sadness. “I’ll never manage to be properly terrifying.” “You wouldn’t have to suck the marrow from their bones the
way the Nineteen:—ah, excuse me—Twenty did,” said Tier solemnly. “I suspect a
cooked heart or two would do just fine.” . “I don’t eat heart,” said Phoran
firmly. “Though I suppose I could feed it to the grieving heir—that might have
a similar effect.” Tier and Phoran gave each other a look of mutual approval. “I already owe you a favor,” said Phoran, “but your experience
is different man my own. I’d like your opinion on my problem.” He waved at the
Memory. “I am, always, your servant, my emperor,” Tier was rather
pleased to find that he meant it. “For the past three months,” Phoran began, “I’ve had this
creature. Not that it follows me all the time, you understand. Usually, it just
visits me once a night.” He smiled grimly and sat down on the bed. Tier followed his example and collapsed on the other end of
the bed. He should have waited until the Emperor bid him sit, but between
whatever happened during the time he couldn’t remember and the jolt the doorway
had given him, his joints were all but jelly. “Sometimes when I can’t sleep,” Phoran said, “I go exploring
the shut-off places in the palace. I have this key,” he took one out of his
pocket. “It’s supposed to open every door in the palace. It didn’t do yours,
but it opened the turnkey’s box that had your key in it.” He put it away and began his story again. “Anyway, one night
a few months ago I was wandering through the Kaore wing—that’s one of the ones
my father shut down, I’m told. It’s usually pretty boring: long corridors with
identical rooms on either side, that sort of thing. But this time I heard some
noise at the end of one of the corridors. “No one’s supposed to be there—but sometimes people are. I
sneaked down to a door that was ajar.” He pulled the velvet fabric of his pants
and absently rubbed it between thumb and index finger. “There were a number of people in dark robes with hoods over
their heads. They were standing in a loose circle, chanting. A seventh man was
kneeling, blindfolded and bound in the center. If I’d known what they were
going to do, I’d have tried to stop it somehow. But by the time I saw the knife
it was too late. One of the robed men had already slit the bound man’s throat.” Phoran got off the bed and began to pace restlessly. “There
was blood everywhere—I hadn’t realized ... It was too late for the dead man,
and I thought that they might riot be too excited at having a witness so I left
as quickly as I could. The Memory came to me the next night.” Phoran looked at the creature solemnly, then sank back onto
the bed and began rolling up his sleeve. “It comes to me every night,” he said,
showing Tier marks on the inside of his wrist that climbed in fading scars to
the hollow of his elbow. “After it feeds it tells me that in return it owes me the
answer to a question. Usually its answers aren’t very useful. Tonight I asked
if it knew someone who could tell me something about the Sept of Gerant’s lands
and it brought me here.” Tier said, “You think that you interrupted them killing
their last Traveler prisoner.” He considered it. “I think you are right—how
many groups of dark-robed men do you have going around killing people in the
palace?” “There might be as many as five or ten,” he said. “But not
that manage to summon or create something like this.” He pointed at his dark
comrade. “This is wizardry.” Tier nodded slowly. “I’m not a wizard, but I’ve dealt with
them. If this was something that might result from their meddling, I’d think
they’d be careful that it would not attach itself to them. Maybe some magic.
That would mean that you were the only one there it could attach itself to.” He got off the bed and walked closer to the Memory. His eyes
wouldn’t quite focus on it, reminding him forcibly of the way Jes could fade
into the shadows when he wanted to. “How did you know that I could answer the Emperor’s question
tonight?” asked Tier. The thing shifted restlessly. “You fed me true,” it said at
last. “I know you as I know Phoran, twenty-seventh emperor of that name.” “I fed you?” Tier asked. “‘Numberless were the heroes who fell,’” whispered the Memory
in a voice quite different than it had been using: it was no longer without
inflection. The change was remarkable. “You were my listener?” said Tier. “I was Kerine to your Red Ernave,” agreed the Memory. “What else are you?” Tier took a step nearer to it. “I am death,” it said and was gone. “Did you understand what it meant?” asked Phoran. Tier rubbed his hands together lightly. “Only a bit of it,”
he said. “Apparently it feeds on more than just blood. I gave it a story and it
took more than I offered—which is how it knew that I’d been one of Gerant’s
commanders.” He’d invoked magic in that story—more magic than he’d ever
brought forth before—and it had only been shortly after that when Telleridge
had informed him that his magic was contained. He’d thought that Telleridge had
meant that they’d taken his magic away—but perhaps it was more subtle than
that. “Would you tell me a lie?” he asked Phoran. “My stallion is cow-hocked,” he said immediately, apparently
unfazed by the abrupt change in subject. “What are you doing?” “Well,” said Tier. “I misunderstood what Telleridge meant
when he said they had contained my magic. I can tell if you lie—but not
Telleridge or Myrceria.” “Your magic works, but not on the members of the Path,”
Phoran said. “So it seems.” “I have two more requests before I go,” said Phoran. “First,
I ask that you not tell anyone about the Memory.” He gave Tier another bleak
smile. “It’s more than a social problem for me, you know. If a whisper of the
Memory got out I’d face a headsman’s axe. The Empire cannot forget the lessons
learned from the Shadowed: the Emperor must be free of magic.” “Without your permission, no one will hear it from my lips,”
promised Tier. “Would you see if you can find out if your Sept, Avar the
Sept of Leheigh, is a member of the Secret Path?” He sighed. “Telleridge is ...
a spider who avoids me light of day while he spins his webs and sends his
friends and foes whirling in deadly earnest, unaware whose threads pull them
this way and that. If he is involved with the Secret Path, then they are a
threat to me and vice versa. I need to know who I can trust.” “If I can discover it,” Tier agreed, then gave his emperor a
wry grin. “Since I don’t have any choice about staying, I might as well make
myself useful.” He slept for a while after Phoran left. He had no idea how
long because his cell allowed for no daylight, just the endless glow of the
stones that lit his room. Longing for home brought him to his feet. Frustration sent
him pacing. He hadn’t been able to ask if Phoran could get a message to Seraph.
His tongue wouldn’t shape the words. By Cormorant and Owl, I bind you that you will not ask
anyone to help you escape ... Seraph would help him escape if she could. He
supposed that was enough to invoke Telleridge’s magic. If Seraph knew where to find him ... but she did not. She
probably thought him dead after all this time. He probably would die without seeing her again: there was
something in the arrogance of Telleridge that told Tier that many Travelers had
died here. Tier closed his eyes and rested his face against the cool
stone wall. Without the distraction of sight, he could pull her into his
heart’s thoughts. Owl memory, she called it, when he was able to recall
conversations held months before. Gifted, his grandfather said, when he could
sing a song after the first time he’d heard it. Blessed, he thought now,
visualizing the pale-faced child Seraph had been the first time he’d seen her.
Blessed to have his memories to keep in his heart in this place. In his mind’s eye, he built her face as it had been, little
by little, loving the curve of her shoulder and the odd pale color of her hair. Proud, he thought, she had been so proud. It
was in the stubborn set of her chin, raised in defiance of the men in that
tavern. He could see the bruise on her wrist where the innkeeper had grabbed
her and yanked her out of bed. He’d been intrigued by her then, he thought as he had
before. In the clear light of his memory he could see how young she’d been,
little more than a child, and yet they’d been married less than a season later. Eschewing the luxuries his cell now offered, Tier sat On the floor and set his back against the wall. He remembered the
very moment that he knew he loved her. Two days after Jes was born. Tier came back from the barn to
find Seraph sitting on the end of the bed, back straight as a board, with Jes held
protectively in her arms. “I have something to say to you,” she said, as welcoming as
an angry hedgehog. He took off his coat and hung it up. “All right,” he’d said,
wondering how he’d managed to offend her this time. Her eyes narrowed, she told him that their son was a
Guardian. She explained how difficult Jes would find it to maintain a balance
between daytime and nighttime personalities. “If he were a girl, he would stand a better chance,” she
said in the cold, clear voice she only used when she was really upset. “Male
Guardians seldom maintain their balance after puberty. If they become maddened,
they will kill anyone who crosses their path except for those in their charge.
Once that happens, they must be killed because they cannot be confined.” Jes began to fuss and she set him against her shoulder and
rocked him gently—keeping Tier at a distance by the force of her gaze. “I had a
brother who was a Guardian, adopted from another tribe. Often Guardians are
given to other clans to raise because the normal anxieties of birth parents
seem to add strain to the Guardian’s burden. It is an honor to raise a Guardian
child, and no clan would refuse to take him.” Give up his son? The shock of the suggestion ripped
cleanly through dismay that had encased him as he realized the terrible thing
that the gods had laid upon his small son. How could she think that he’d
entertain a suggestion that they throw Jes away because he was too much
trouble? How could she consider deserting her child? She wouldn’t. Not she. She who fought demons for people she
didn’t even know, would never, ever, shrink at anything that would threaten her
second family. “How old was your Guardian brother when he died?” asked Tier
finally. “Risovar was thirty,” she said, her hands fluttering restlessly
over Jes, as if she wanted to clutch him close, but was afraid she might hurt
him if she did. “He was among the first who died of the plague.” “Then you know how it is done,” Tier said. “Jes will stay
with us, and you will teach me how to raise a Guardian who will die of ripe old
age.” Her face had come alive then, and he saw what it had cost
her to be honest with him. When he cradled his family against him, mother and
child, she’d whispered, “I’d have killed anyone who would have tried to take
him.” “Me, too,” Tier had said fiercely into her moon-colored
hair. No one would ever separate them. “Me, too,” said Tier, in his cell in the palace at Taela. How best to weather this captivity? The answers came to him
in Gerant’s dry tenor. Know your enemy. Know what they want so you know
where to expect their next attack. Discover their strengths and avoid them.
Find their weaknesses and exploit them with your strengths. Knowledge is a
better weapon than a sword. He smiled affably when Myrceria entered his room. “If you would come with me, sir,” she said. “We’ll make you
ready for presentation. After the ceremony you’ll be given the freedom of the
Eyrie and all the pleasures it can provide you.” The women who’d tried to bathe him once before were back in
the bathing pool, and this time Myrceria wouldn’t let him send them out. They
scrubbed, combed, shaved, trimmed, and ignored his blushes and protests. When one of the women started after his hair, Myrceria
caught her hand, “No, leave it long. We’ll braid it and it will look properly
exotic.” They persuaded him into court clothing, the like of which
he’d have never willingly put on. He might actually have refused to wear them,
even with his resolution to be a meek and mild guest while he gathered
knowledge of his enemy, if it weren’t for the fear in their eyes. He could see
that, if they didn’t turn him out pretty as a lady’s mare, it wouldn’t be him
that suffered. So he protested and-made rude comments, but he wore the silly
things. There was a polished metal mirror embedded in the wall, and
the women pushed and shoved him until he stood in front of it. Baggy red velvet trousers, tight at waist and ankles, were
half-concealed by a tunic that hung straight from shoulder to knees. From the
weight of it, the tunic was real cloth of gold. Under the tunic, his shirt was
blood-red silk embroidered with metallic gold thread. They’d shaved his face
smooth, then oiled his hair with something that left flakes of metal in it that
caught the light as he moved. Then they’d braided it with gold and red cords
that gradually replaced his own hair so the braid hung down to his hips, where
it ended in gold and red tassels. On his feet were gold slippers encrusted with
bits of red glass. At least he hoped it was glass. After looking at the full effect, he hung his head and
closed his eyes. “Lassies, if my wife ever saw me like this she’d never let
me live it down.” Myrceria tapped him playfully with one manicured finger.
“You look handsome, admit it We did a good job, ladies, although he wasn’t so
bad to start out.” Tier looked at himself in the mirror again. If he looked carefully,
he could see how the outfit might have been inspired by Traveler’s garments.
They wore the loose pants and the knee-length tunic—but one of the things that
Seraph liked about Redemi clothes was the bright colors. Her own people wore
mostly undyed fabrics or earth tones. Tier sighed, “I’m glad there’s no one here who knows me. I’d
never live this down.” They covered his magnificent gaudiness with a brown robe and
pulled its hood down to hide his face. “There now,” said Myrceria. “You are ready.” She hesitated,
and the practiced manner of a court whore faded a little. “You’ve made our job
easier,” she said. “Let me help you a little. The wizards will be waiting when
we take you out the door. Go with them quietly; they won’t hurt you. They’ll
escort you through the Eyrie—the largest room that belongs to the Path. It’s an
auditorium tonight, but usually it is just a room for people to gather in. The
wizards will take you to the stage at the end and introduce you to the
Passerines and whatever Raptors decided to come.” He took her hand in his and bent to kiss it. “Thank you for
your kindness, Myrceria. Ladies.” There were four men in black robes waiting for him, just as
Myrceria had promised. Like him, their hoods were pulled over their faces. Tier hesitated in the doorway, unprepared for the fearful
reluctance he felt at the sight of them and the sudden conviction that he’d
seen the knobby hands of the man nearest him holding a small knife wet with
blood. He repressed his fear and the anger it called. With a small
smile he set himself in the center of the procession. “Shall we go, gentlemen?” he said pleasantly. The Eyrie was made up of broad shelves of level flooring with
short drops between sections; the level shelves narrowed as they neared the
stage at the far side of the room. The uppermost section, where Tier and his escort entered,
was mostly occupied by a bar laden with food. Behind the bar was an open
doorway where servants appeared with trays of food or armloads of ale mugs. There were a few tables against the wall with white-robed
men who watched Tier mostly indifferently. But most of the people in the room
were young men in blue robes who quieted as the procession passed them by. By
the time they reached the stage, the room was eerily silent. The wizards walked Tier onto the stage and stopped in the middle,
turning as one to face the audience. As soon as they stood there, the lights in
the Eyrie dimmed except for the stones that lined the edge of the stage. Squinting against the odd light, Tier saw that everyone in
the room was slowly moving down to the chairs set in front of the stage. When
they had all gathered, a hollow boom made the Eyrie shudder,-and in a cloud of
smoke and magic, a fifth black-robed man appeared: Telleridge. He stood bareheaded before the crowd so that every man there
could see him. “My friends,” he said. “For some of you, this will be the first
introduction to the secrets of our path. Traveler Magic from the hands of the
Five Gods.” He lifted his right hand up and displayed an implement that looked
like a morningstar without the spiked ball. Instead, dangling on the end of the
chain was a large, silver owl. “Owl who is Bard,” he said. The man on Tier’s left front held up a similar item with a
raven rather than an owl. “Raven who is Mage,” he said. Five gods? thought Tier. If they were using the
Orders they were missing one. The other wizards called out Lark, Cormorant, and
Falcon; but there was no Eagle. He would have fretted about it more, but he
remembered where he’d heard of the Five Gods before: the new priest in Redem. Seraph,
he thought in panic, my children—who would they take next? A flood of magic interrupted Tier’s worrying. “For centuries,” Telleridge said, his voice carried to the
far corners of the room by magic, “the Travelers hid their power from us—just
as the Emperor and his Septs hide their lands and titles away from us, thinking
that they have rendered us powerless, helpless. But we are the Followers of the
Secret Path and Hidden Gods: we worship the Birds—Raven for magic, Lark for
life and death, Cormorant to rule the seas, Falcon to find our prey, and Owl to
lead men into our darkness. Tonight, my friends we will all partake of
darkness.” He took a step to the side so the audience had an unobstructed
view of Tier; at the same time one of the wizards who stood behind Tier pulled
off his robe. He said something as well, too soft for Tier to catch, but
whatever it was, it froze Tier motionless. “Raven is flown,” said the man who held the raven symbol.
“Gone from our keeping.” At his words Telleridge flung his free hand up and the whole
room erupted into howls, like a pack of hunting dogs. Tier would have been
impressed if the effect hadn’t had a practiced polish. This was a response
trained into the Passerines, a war cry without passion. The wizards Tier could see put the chains over their
shoulder, balancing their symbols with the handle hanging down their back,
leaving the birds in front where they could be seen. With their hands free, they began to clap in a slow, restless
rhythm. Fourteen beats into it there was an echo from the audience. By the
twentieth beat the noise was loud enough to account for everyone in the room
except for Tier. On the thirty-fifth beat, everyone stopped, leaving only
Tier’s heart beating still. The wizard with the raven said, again, “Raven is flown.” An older man in white stood up and said, “So farewell the Raven.
What guest have you brought?” Telleridge said, “We bring the Owl, cunning and beautiful,
that he will give us the gift of music.” The Passerines replied then, as if one man spoke with a hundred
mouths. “By blood shall we bind him, by fire shall we seal our bargain. By
blood shall we free him after a year and a day.” “As you will,” said Telleridge. He touched the owl and a
small blade shot out at the end of the owl’s feet. With measured steps he
walked to Tier’s side. He took Tier’s helpless wrist and made a shallow cut.
Then he held the knife beneath the wound until the silver blade was completely
covered in blood. He went to the wizard with the raven and touched a finger to
the blade and then touched the wizard’s raven. “By blood,” said the Raven wizard. Telleridge repeated the procedure with the others. When he
was finished he resumed his former position to the right of the Raven wizard. The ceremony was nonsense as far as magic went, Tier knew.
The only magic that had been done was the spell that kept him still—but Tier
could read audiences. Excitement filled the room like some heady wine. “Raptors, Passerines, Masters all, I give you the Owl!”
Telleridge called, and the audience roared to their feet. When the cheering and hooting died down, Telleridge held up
his hand, snapped his fingers, and a lute appeared in his hand. “Play for us. Bard,” said Telleridge. “And we will grant you
guesting rights.” As easily as that Tier could move. Quickly, he considered his options and chose the one that appealed
to him the most. He took the lute the Owl Master held out to him—a beautiful
instrument to look at—but when he played a few notes he shook his head. “Myrceria, lass,” he said, letting his voice find her
wherever she waited in the darkness that disguised the further rows of the audience.
“Hie you back to my rooms and bring my lute, please. This one your Masters
provided is garbage for all it’s pretty.” The problem with solemn ceremonies and young men, Tier knew,
was that the urge to break the solemnity was almost irresistible. They greeted
his informal request with a roar more spontaneous than the one they’d given
Telleridge, if not as loud. As easily as that he took the crowd from the wizard
and lessened the effect of the earlier ceremony in the minds of everyone
present He wouldn’t have tried it if his cell were far away, but it
should only take a moment to retrieve the lute—not long enough to make his
audience restless. “Bard,” called a young man. “I thought that an Owl could
play any instrument” Tier nodded his head. “I’ve heard that, too. But no one ever
said they would play any instrument just because they could.” It wasn’t Myrceria, but one of the Passerines, who ran up
with the lute from Tier’s cell. Tier took up the battered lute and sat on the
edge of the stage, one long leg hanging over the edge. He’d only had her a
night, but the lute felt like an old friend as he cradled her and coaxed her
back into tune, again. “Now,” he said, “What kind of song should it be?” He played
a rippling series of scales so quickly it was hard to pick out the individual
notes. “No,” he shook his head, “No one except another musician would like
that.” He tightened a peg again to bring a string back into pitch. He’d have to
watch that one, he thought, probably a new string. “War songs sound stupid on a lute,” he said, picking enough
of a familiar melody out that a few heads began to nod, “at least they sound
stupid without a drum.” “Play ‘Shadow’s Fall’,” said someone over the suggestions in
the crowd. Tier shook his head. It’d be a while before he used that
story again. “No, everyone knows that. What about a love ballad?” He struck a
few chords of a particularly flowery piece and laughed at the groans from the
audience. “Fine,” he said, “Try this one for size.” And he began the
song he’d intended to sing from the very first. It was a wickedly funny story of a lowborn killer who, on impulse,
stole the clothes of a rich young man he’d been paid to kill and set himself up
as a nobleman. Tier smiled to himself as he saw that the young men in the audience
enjoyed rude double meanings and clever wording as much as the soldiers he’d
fought with. The lute, for all that it was battered, was easily the
finest he’d ever played. Responsive and clear-toned, it sang out, complementing
his voice and lending just the right accent to the words. He started into the third verse, the crowd silent, muffling
their laughter so that they wouldn’t miss a word. Even with such a fine
instrument, it was difficult to get the volume he needed before this many
people. With his encouragement, they joined in the final chorus, making the
stage vibrate with the sheer volume. He ended it with a flourish. He could sense the wizards
moving forward, but he decided to end the performance without them. “Now,” he said with a deliberately engaging grin. “Come join
me for the feast and drink or two—and I’ll do my best to be entertaining.” Lute
in hand, he jumped off the high stage, away from the wizards, and led the horde
to an invasion of the bar in the back of the room. Chapter 10It was almost dark when Jes got back to the farm. Gura greeted him from the porch and Jes ruffled his fingers
through the wiry hair. The Guardian had been demanding today; Jes was tired and
his head hurt. He died not noticing that there was something wrong because he
didn’t know if he could keep the Guardian under control this time if there was. Rinnie hadn’t come out when Gura barked. The Guardian also knew he was tired, and he was willing to
wait until they knew for certain. So it was Jes who walked to the back of the
cabin and saw that Rinnie had done a few hours’ worth of work before putting
her tools away where they belonged. Had Rinnie grown impatient and set out after Mother and
Lehr? He didn’t think so, especially since she’d left Gura here. He followed
Mother and Lehr’s tracks to the woods, but he couldn’t see anything that
indicated Rinnie had come here today. The ground around the cabin was too
packed-down for him to follow a trail there. Reluctantly he gave way to the Guardian. He shouldn’t have stayed so long watching the new temple,
thought the Guardian unhappily. But he’d never seen anything like the taint
that spread from the temple through Redem. He’d been worried about Hennea; the forest king had made him
responsible for her safety, and there was nothing safe about the temple. The geas
that bound her made it impossible for him to stop her from going in, but
he’d stayed and fretted over it until Jes had convinced him that Mother would
know what to do about it. In wolf form, the Guardian looked for Rinnie’s scent along
the edge of the forest, but Jes had been right. She hadn’t followed Mother. , He went back to the cabin. Gura flattened himself submissively,
but the Guardian ignored him. Gura shouldn’t have let Rinnie go off alone. Dogs
did not make good guards—they were taught to obey the commands of the people
they guarded. Rinnie’s scent was here, but it was difficult to pick out
one trail from another. He needed Lehr for this kind of job. He lifted his head
from the porch step and cast an irritated glance toward the forest; judging by
the time Hennea had taken to get from the village to the place where something
had happened to Papa, Mother and Lehr should have been back by now. As he
turned his head he caught a whiff of an odd scent. What had Bandor been doing at the farm? He seldom visited his aunt—both the Guardian and Jes found
the village distressful. There were too many people for Jes, and he got
confused by their unguarded emotions. To the Guardian, there were too many
possible threats. Even so, he knew Bandor’s scent of yeast, salt, and soap. The sound of rapid footsteps made him blend into the side of
the porch so that he remained unseen. The wind was coming from the wrong
direction, so he couldn’t tell who it was until Hennea came out in the open. One sleeve was burned away and blisters started at her fingertips
and trailed up fire-blackened flesh to her shoulder. She slowed to a walk,
staggering slightly as she came in sight of the cabin. “Seraph,” she said. “Jes, are you here?” The Guardian shook with the implied violence of her
condition, even though Jes tried to soothe him with the observation that she
might nave done the damage to herself because the hurt was concentrated on the
wrist the geas band had been on. Hennea smelled of anger, fear, and pain, and Jes was tired.
The beast snarled silently. Hennea gasped slightly, and the Guardian knew that she felt
the dread of his anger. “Jes,” she said, closing in on the cabin. “Jes, I need to
talk to you. There’s none here to harm anyone. Please. I need to talk to you.” A tear slid down her face, and she wiped it away
impatiently. “Please. I need your help.” If the forest king hadn’t given her to him, the Guardian
could have ignored her; but she was one of his now. So he slunk away from the
porch and let her see him clearly, though Jes would rather have resumed his
usual form because he didn’t want to frighten her anymore than she already was.
Jes liked Hennea. “Jes,” she said, unfazed by the monstrous wolf that stalked
toward her. “Guardian. I’m so sorry. I’ve betrayed you all. I don’t know what
he’s planned, but it’s my fault.” It was difficult to get human speech out of his wolf throat,
but the Guardian managed. “Who?” “He planned it,” she said, holding her burnt arm awkwardly
away from her body. “I thought I was so clever, figuring out that he was
playing a game with your family—but his game was more subtle than I expected.
He set me up, all but sent me out to find Seraph and tell her that I thought
your father hadn’t been killed. He knew that she’d go and take Lehr. He
knew Rinnie would be left here unprotected. He didn’t care about you, he
doesn’t know what you are. But he wants Rinnie.” Jes helped the Guardian cool his rage, and the beast
welcomed the calm that would allow him to accomplish what was necessary. “He has her?” he asked. “Not when I left—I thought I might beat him here—but she’s
gone, isn’t she? That’s why you’re here and not Jes.” “My uncle was here,” the Guardian said. “Bandor, the village
baker.” “Lark take them all,” she whispered. “Bandor is one of Volis’s
favorites. Would he turn your sister over to Volis?” “He wouldn’t hurt her knowingly,” said the Guardian after a
moment. “But his intentions are not important.” Since Jes controlled his
savagery, the Guardian was able to think clearly again and focus his purpose.
“We need to find them. Can you run?” Lehr was right, it was late when they reached Redem, and Seraph
was exhausted, both emotionally and physically. Only her obsessive need to
force answers out of the solsenti priest gave her the fortitude to start
up the steep street of Redem. She almost walked right past the bakery. If there hadn’t
been a light in Alinath’s room, she might have been able to do it. Alinath
loved Tier, too. Seraph hesitated outside the door. “She won’t believe you. Mother,” offered Lehr. “Yes,” said Seraph, “she will—because she needs to believe
it as much as I did.” She gave Lehr a tired smile. “She’ll still think it is my
fault—but at least she won’t think he’s dead. She has the right to know.” Seraph knocked briskly at the door. “Alinath, it’s Seraph,
open up.” She waited, and then knocked again. “Alinath? Bandor?” Lehr tested the air, “I smell blood. Is the door locked?” Seraph tried the latch and the door swung open easily. There
was no light in the front room, nor the bakery, but Lehr didn’t need light and
she followed him to Alinath’s room. The door was ajar and Lehr opened it
cautiously. “Aunt Alinath?” he said, and the concern in his voice sent
Seraph ducking under the arm he held the door open with. Alinath was gagged and bound hand and foot on her bed. Her
face was bruised; someone had hit her cheek and split the skin, which had bled
copiously all over the bedding. When she saw them she began struggling
furiously. “Shh,” said Seraph, sitting beside Alinath. She took out her
knife and carefully slid it around swollen flesh to cut the ropes. “I’ll have
you free in a moment.” “Rinnie,” said Alinath as soon as the gag dropped from her
mouth. “What?” asked Seraph. But Alinath had begun to shake and Seraph couldn’t understand
what she was saying. “Slow down,” she said, keeping her voice calm so she didn’t upset
Alinath further. “What about Bandor and Rinnie? Did Bandor do this to you?” Alinath tried to sit up, but it was obviously painful and
Seraph hurried to help support her. “It was Bandor,” Alinath said, breathing shallowly around
sore ribs. “He’s gotten so strange lately—I don’t know what’s wrong with him.
This afternoon, after the priest came, he started muttering about Rinnie and
you.” She stopped and swallowed. “You and I have never seen eye to
eye. Seraph—but you’d die to protect your children. I know that. So when he
started saying dangerous things ... things that would get the whole village
riled up if they heard ... Well, I told him he was a fool. That there was
nothing evil about you, and he had no call to accuse you of being shadowed.” Seraph’s stomach clenched. Alinath turned her head away. “He hit me. He’s done that a
couple of times in the past month. I’m not saying I’m the easiest person to
live with, but ... you know Bandor; he was never like that.” “Go on,” said Seraph. “This time, it was more than a casual slap. I didn’t know if
he was going to stop. Ellevanal help me, I don’t think he did either. Then he
muttered a bit more and said something about not needing my interference. He
tied me up and left. Seraph, I don’t know what he’s gone to do.” “He started after the priest left? Volis, not Karadoc?”
asked Seraph. Alinath nodded. “I don’t like that man. Did Bandor go out to
the farm?” “Did he say that was what he was going to do?” asked Seraph. “He said that he was going to save Rinnie.” “We haven’t been there since early this afternoon,” said Seraph.
“I left her with Gura; but Gura knows Bandor. I have to go find her. Will you
be all right here?” Alinath nodded. “Find him before he hurts her,” she said. “Where would he take Rinnie,” said Lehr, “if he didn’t come
back here?” “The priest,” said Seraph. “If he thought she was shadowed he’d
take her to the priest. We’ll find them,” she told Alinath. “Be careful,” said
Tier’s sister. “Be careful, Seraph. Bandor’s not the man you know.” Outside the bakery, Seraph frowned in indecision; go to the
temple or all the way out to the farm? “Can you tell if Bandor and Rinnie came by here?” she asked
Lehr. He shook his head. “Not even if it were full noon—there’s
too much ...” He stiffened and looked around. Seraph felt it, too, a cold chill fluttering down her spine
and a lump in her throat that made it hard to swallow. “Jes,” she called. “Are you here?” “Listen,” said Lehr. “Someone’s riding a horse up the road.” She saw Skew first, his white spots clearly visible in the
starlight as he leapfrogged up the steep corner, hooves slipping and sliding.
As soon as he was on the more level part of the road he broke into a smooth
trot and stopped in front of her. “The priest,” said Hennea tightly, sliding off the horse. “I
was a fool. He sent me to get you to leave your daughter unprotected.” Seraph nodded. “I’ve come to that conclusion myself. Do you
think they’d take her to the temple?” “Yes.” “We’ll leave Skew here,” said Seraph. “He’ll lose his
footing on the cobbles in the steep parts. Lehr, can you find some place to secure
him?” “There’ll be space by the woodshed,” he said and took the
horse. Hennea stood a little crookedly, as if she were in pain.
Seraph called a magelight and took a good look at Hennea’s burnt arm. “There are easier ways to break a geas” she said
dryly. “I was in a hurry,” replied Hennea, her lips curving in a
pale smile. “And I was angry.” “That’s going to hurt,” observed Seraph. “It already does. I’m not going to be much help in any kind
of fight; my concentration is gone. I can feed your magic, though.” “Good enough,” Seraph said. Lehr came back and Seraph turned and started up the road at
a rapid walk. Jes and Lehr could probably run all the way to the temple, but
she and Hennea would have to take it slower or they wouldn’t be any good when
they got there. She knew that Jes was with them by the clenching of her
stomach, but she only caught a glimpse of him now and again out of the corner
of her eye. “Tell me about Volis,” said Seraph. “Whatever you think will
be useful.” “He’s smarter than I thought he was, obviously. The other
mages in the Secret Path respected his power—but he’s young by solsenti standards
and complex spells frustrate him. Because of that, he tends to use the Raven
ring more than his own magic unless he’s weaving an illusion.” They came to a steep bend in the road, and Hennea quit speaking
until they were on flatter ground. “I told you that the wizards steal Orders
and wear them. Usually as rings, but there are some stones set in earrings and
necklaces. He told me that some of the rings are painful to use, and some of
them don’t work all the time. Most of the wizards can only use one ring at a
time, but Volis has two he uses. The first one bears the Order of the Raven.
With it he usually has an Owl, though I’ve seen him with a Hunter’s ring a time
or two as well. You’ll know which one he wears when you see him, just look.” “How well does he bear the Orders?” “About as you’d think,” she said. “He seems to believe the Raven
Order is just like his magic, except that he doesn’t have to use rituals.” Seraph smiled in satisfaction. “tell me, does he have a bad
temper?” As they got closer to the temple, Lehr stopped and bent down
as if to touch the ground, but he pulled his hand back before it touched. “What’s this, Mother?” he asked. “What?” Seraph stopped, too, but she didn’t see anything. “A taint,” said Jes. He must have been close to Hennea
because she gave a nervous squeak. “What does it look like?” “It looks as if a foul substance was spilled over the
ground,” said Lehr. “It smells bad, too.” “Shadowed,” said Hennea in a small voice. “I’d wondered.” “It comes from the temple,” said Jes. “It’s darker there.” “It’s really there?” asked Lehr. “Why can’t you see it,
Mother?” “I don’t know why Ravens can’t see the Stalker’s influence,
or why Larks can’t either,” replied Seraph. “I can understand why the ancients
didn’t feel it necessary for Owls or Cormorants, but Larks and Ravens have to
deal with shadowing.” “Unto each Order ...” murmured Hennea. “‘Are the powers so given’—yes, yes, I know. It is still
stupid. So Volis is most likely shadowed.” It was a very rare condition. Seraph
had never dealt with someone who was shadowed, though her teacher had. He’d
died before he taught her much about it because there was so much else to
learn. She knew the Stalker needed some destructive feeling or act to gain
influence and the amount of influence varied. The Shadowed had been different,
her teacher said, because the Shadowed had invoked the Stalker’s power and welcomed
the shadowing. “Let’s go,” she said. “We need to get to Rinnie.” They reached the temple finally, and Lehr tried the door. “It’s locked,” he said. “Barred from the inside, I think.” Seraph said something short and guttural, a summoning she
would not have remembered if she’d stopped to think about it, and the door blew
apart, reduced to splinters and bits of metal that covered the floor of the
inner chamber. “Careful,” cautioned Hennea. “Anger and magic don’t mix
well.” “Where will he take her?” Seraph knew that Hennea was right,
but ever since the huntsman had come to tell her that Tier was dead she’d been
more frightened than she’d been since the night her brother died—and fear, like
grief, made her angry. “Follow me.” The temple was brightly lit with wall sconces, so Seraph had
no trouble picking her way through the debris left by the door. But the
room on the other side of the curtain was quite different than the one she
remembered. It was a rectangular room with a low ceiling. There were no flying
birds, no arched ceiling. “Is this the real room or is the chamber with the Orders the
real room?” she asked Hennea. “Which do you think?” This room was more in keeping with a building that had been
put up in less than a season’s time. It was not too different from Willon’s
store, and she couldn’t smell magic in it at all ... but ... “The other one is real,” she said with conviction. That room had been too detailed to have been an illusion set
up just for her, but he couldn’t show that room to just anyone. This chamber
looked just as the villagers would expect. Hennea nodded her head. “As I told you, he is a very good
illusionist.” There was a small door set unobtrusively near the back wall
and Hennea led them through it and down a narrow stairway. “We’re close now,” Hennea said. “We should be as quiet as we
can.” “Rinnie’s been here,” whispered Lehr. “I can smell her fear,” agreed Jes, already at the bottom of
the stairway. The stair ended in a short, dark hallway that smelled of
earth and moisture to Seraph; but Lehr’s nose was wrinkled with disgust and he
was careful not to bump against the wall. Light pooled by an open doorway. Seraph brushed by the others to enter the room first. Rinnie was there; like Alinath, she’d been tied and gagged,
but Seraph didn’t see any bruises. Relief washed over Seraph; Rinnie wasn’t
safe yet, but she was alive. Several hundred candles were set out to form five circles on
the floor with Rinnie in the middle of the center circle. The others each
contained a bit of jewelry with a single large stone in the setting. Volis was there, too, peering over a fragile-looking scroll
laid out on a table almost too small for it. He didn’t look up as they entered.
As Hennea had advised, Seraph looked at his hands and saw two rings. One of
them should be Raven. Seraph focused her magic and looked at the rings.
Raven and Owl, just as Hennea had predicted, but twisted somehow and empty.
Wrong. In the far corner of the room, Bandor sat cross-legged on
the floor, rocking back and forth and muttering to himself. Owl-sick, thought
Seraph. Unbound by Traveler laws, Volis had forced Bandor to do something
against his will, and Bandor was paying the price. She took another step forward and ran into a barrier of
magic. With a quick flick of thought she made the barrier visible. It arched
across the room, leaving Volis, Bandor, and Rinnie on one side of the barrier
and the rest of them trapped on the other: trapped, because the barrier now covered
the doorway and sealed them all in. At least she assumed they were all there.
She hadn’t seen Jes in the quick glance she’d taken. “Volis,” Seraph said. Her voice trembled with fury; she’d thought she had herself
under better control. She was so angry at him and at those unknown men who were
like him and played havoc in their ignorance. They had stolen Tier, Rinnie, and
Seraph’s peace; they would pay, all of them. Painfully, she drew the serenity of her training around her
like a cloak; it was Volis who had to lose his temper. When she was certain she
was calm, she said, “What are you doing?” “Summoning the Stalker,” he said, without looking up. “I’ve
been expecting you—as you can see. Once my little Raven took flight I thought
she’d bring you here. At first I was upset with her, but then I thought it
would not be a bad thing to have an audience—as long as they didn’t become part
of the ceremonies’.” Guardians were all but immune to magic—Jes could go through
the barrier. It was just possible he could get through, retrieve Rinnie, and
return across the barrier with her. But if he couldn’t, he would never leave
her. Trapped there, he would try to protect Rinnie from Volis—and that was
unacceptably dangerous. She’d send him there only if there was no choice. She could tell that Jes had reached the end of his control because the temperature in the room was dropping rapidly. “You are an ignorant fool,” she said coldly. “The Eagle is
not the Stalker. The Stalker is what made the Shadowed what he was. If you
manage to summon it, you will not be more—you will be nothing. The Stalker has
no followers, because anything that answers to it becomes a thing just as it
is.” “Don’t think I don’t know about people like you,” said Volis.
“My first teacher liked to tell me how ignorant I was because he was afraid of
me and what I could do. So for years I did his bidding as his apprentice. When
the Master of the Secret Path found me and told me the truth, the first thing I
did was arrange for my teacher to receive a lesson ensuring that he never had a
chance to mislead anyone again.” Satisfaction colored his voice. “Take warning
from that You say I am wrong, but you don’t know me, don’t know what I can do.” The growing cold made Seraph shiver, but she trusted that
Jes would hold on a few minutes more. She needed to make this boy angry. “Oh, I know what you can do,” said Seraph serenely. “Do you
think that Hennea spent the whole day silent? Or do you think that I should
tremble before an illusionist!” She saw her tone made him flush. Solsenti
wizards looked down upon illusionists, saw their magic as a lesser thing
because it neither created nor destroyed. Solsenti wizards were fools
about many things. “A boy barely old enough to dress himself? A solsenti conjurer
who defiles himself with the dead because he has to steal their magic or
everyone would know how ignorant he was?” “I may be an illusionist,” he said with careful dignity,
“but I trapped you—both of you Ravens and your Hunter son, too. And this
ignorant boy found out your secrets. I know how to summon a god.” “You can’t even keep a Raven withgow,”
said Seraph. “How could you summon a god?” She’d hoped to anger him with the reminder of Hennea’s escape,
but he was too excited about his discovery. “It will be easy,” said Volis. “The Cormorant was the key.” And then, pacing back and forth, he began to pontificate
upon pseudo-complexities of the Orders that the wizards of his Secret Path had
“discovered” over the years. “Lehr,” Seraph said softly underneath the flow of Volis’s
words. “Is he shadowed?” “Yes. Uncle Bandor, too—though not as deeply.” Seraph nodded her understanding, then turned her attention
back to the ranting Volis. “I took the rings, one for each Order. The Secret Path only
has four Healer rings, but none of them work right. So they gave me this one to
do as I wish. I have one for each of the Orders, but with your daughter I don’t
need the Cormorant.” He looked at Seraph, his face flushed with triumph. “I tried
it with just the rings, but it didn’t work because the spell calls for blood
and death. Getting someone of each Order is impractical—but then I remembered
something I read about sympathetic magic, using one thing to represent other
things, like using a feather for air. I wrote to Telleridge and he said he
thought it might work. So all I needed was one of you.” He looked at Hennea and said spitefully, “I could have used
you, but I thought you liked me. I didn’t want to hurt you. I could have saved
myself a lot of trouble, couldn’t I?” “You might have,” Hennea agreed mildly. He didn’t know what to say to that, so he turned his
attention back to Seraph. “I thought that it would be easier to use the youngest
one. It wasn’t hard to persuade Bandor that she was in danger and I could help
her. You should be proud, Seraph; your daughter’s death will return the Eagle
to the world.” Sweat dripped from his forehead, though on the other side of
his barrier, Seraph’s breath fogged in the cold. Evidently the barrier blocked
the effects of Jes’s ire. “Solsenti wizards,” said Seraph, slowly shaking her
head, “always making things much more complicated than they really are. The
Stalker is already here at your request.” She smiled at him. “You know I speak
the truth.” His eyes widened for an instant as his stolen Owl ring, once
she’d called his attention to it, told him she was right. Then he narrowed his
eyes accusingly. “You just think you speak the truth, that’s all it means. You
are wrong.” “I can’t give you proof of-the Stalker,” agreed Seraph mildly.
“You’d have to be Hunter to see what you have done in your stupidity.” He
didn’t like to hear the word stupid, especially as he knew that she
meant it. But he wasn’t going to lose his temper enough for her purposes; he was too buoyed up by
his plans. She’d have to bring Jes into it. “I can show you what Eagle is,” she said. The whole time they’d spent talking, Seraph had been sorting
through the intricate work of the spell holding the barrier together. If he’d
just used solsenti magic, she might not have been able to break it, but
he’d woven Raven and solsenti magic together and the result was
unstable. “Jes,” she said, “go get Rinnie and keep her safe. Lehr,
when you can, take Bandor.” Volis frowned at her words. “Jes? Isn’t that the name of
your idiot son? He’s not here.” He shivered once. “Yes,” said Seraph, “he is. You just aren’t looking. Jes,
the priest wants to get a good look at you.” The Guardian was nothing if not dramatic, coalescing out of
candle smoke into the oversized wolf he favored over other forms. He stood not
two paces from Volis, frost shading his coat and moving from his paws to the
hem of Volis’s robes. Jes growled, a low rumbling sound. Seraph’s pulse picked
up until she could hear the sound of her heartbeat in her ears. Volis, who had no warning or understanding of what Jes was,
cried out in terror. That fear did for Volis’s magic what anger had once done
for Seraph’s. His control of Raven magic failed, and Seraph ripped the barrier
into pieces with a sweep of power. “This is my eldest son, Jes,” she said. “Who is Eagle and
Guardian—and in no need of your summons.” She kicked aside the carefully placed candles, breaking the
circles and removing any temptation he might have had to kill Rinnie. As she walked she continued speaking, quoting from the book
of Orders. “ “Thus is it said that when the Elder Wizards took upon themselves
the need to fight the Shadow-Stalker, that they created them the Orders. Six
Orders created they them, after the six who slept forever. First, Raven Mage, second,
Cormorant Weather Witch to aid their travels, and third created was Healer who
is Lark that they might survive to continue the fight. They rested and then
made fourth, the Bard and Owl to ease their way among strangers, fifth, Falcon
the Hunter to feed them at need, last created they Eagle who is Guardian for all
to fear.’ The Guardian, Volis, is an Order like any other, though, as you can
see, more difficult to detect.” Jes took back his human form and gathered Rinnie into his
arms. “The priest is wrong” he said, and the voice thundered in bass
notes almost too deep to hear, as if he still held partway to the wolfshape. “He’s been shadowed,” agreed Seraph. But Seraph had given the priest too long. He threw a blast
of raw magic at her and she was forced to counter it—more than counter it,
because she had to protect those around her. She held the magic for a moment
then returned it to him. Because it was his magic, it did not harm him, just
allowed him to reabsorb it. Not an ideal solution, because he retrieved the
energy he’d sent at her, but no one else got hurt. While she’d been trying to decide what to do with it, he’d
had time to gather more power and he flung it at her, forcing her back several
steps. She caught it and flung it back again, but it was more of an effort. She
couldn’t keep doing it indefinitely because she continued to lose power and he
didn’t. He also learned quickly. The third shot was no less
powerful, but he broadened his target to include everyone in the room. She had
no choice but to absorb the full force of his hit, or let something escape
where it might hurt one of her children. Tears of pain slipped down her face as she staggered and
swayed, then someone touched her and the pain lessened. For a dazed instant, the voice and strong hands that pressed
into her shoulders were Tier’s. Then, as the effects of the priest’s attack
faded, she realized it was Hennea behind her, offering her support and power. She needed a shield like the one Volis had set to encase
them when they had entered the room, but she didn’t have time to throw a shield
around everyone. Instead, she created a shield and set it around Volis. For a
moment the whole area around Volis lit up; but then the shield fell apart, a victim
of its hasty construction. He laughed. “Try this,” he said and sketched a sigil in the
air. She blocked most of it, but the straining of her magic past
her reserves almost blinded her with pain, and the remnants of his sorcery sent
both Seraph and Hennea tumbling to the ground. She wouldn’t be able to hold out
against a second such blast. “Hennea,” she whispered. “When I tell you, jump away, then
get the others out of here.” If she could distract Volis long enough, maybe her
children could escape. “No,” said Hennea. A breeze blew a stray lock of hair into Seraph’s eyes. Wrath lighting his face, Volis drew back his hand in the manner
of a man throwing a rock. Hennea took control of the remnants of Seraph’s
shields and refined them as Volis’s hand released whatever it was he’d formed
and the spell bounced off harmlessly. Wind cooled the sweat on Seraph’s forehead—she had just
enough time to realize that there shouldn’t be a wind when a sudden gust of it
knocked her to her knees. The wind picked up even more speed, turning Seraph’s hair
into a vicious whip that stung her eyes and cheeks as her left knee made
painful contact with the floor. The table Volis had been working on skidded
across the floor, nit the wall, then flung itself at the priest’s head. Temporarily occupied defending himself from his furnishings,
Volis quit concentrating on Seraph; but any magic would draw his attention. Seraph drew her knife and staggered to her feet, bracing
herself against the wind. “Hennea,” she said, her voice low. “Is there a cure for the
shadowing that you know and I do not?” Seraph thought for a moment that Hennea had fallen too far
away to hear her, but then Hennea said, “No. There is no cure but death.” Seraph crouched and used the motion of the wind and a feathering
of magic to creep up behind Volis. When she was close enough she rushed
forward, and stepped on the back of his knee, collapsing the joint so the
wizard staggered backward, off balance. She threw her left arm around his chin
to hold him steady and jerked her knife into his neck as Tier had once taught
her. The sharp knife cut through Volis’s throat, severing skin and artery. Seraph stumbled back, fighting the wind for her balance. Victory
came so quickly, brought to her by the sharp blade of her knife. Her first
kill. She wondered if she’d used magic to kill him, if it would seem more real
to her. The young man’s body fought for a while, but pain blocked
his own magic and the extremity of his emotions kept Raven magic from coming to
his aid—rings or no. Seraph watched because it seemed an act of cowardice to
turn away from a death she had summoned. When he was dead, Seraph turned away to survey the ‘room.
Lehr, bless him, had remembered what she told him. He had Bandor pinned face
against the wall in some sort of wrestling hold. Hennea had gotten to her hands
and knees and crawled against the wind toward Volis’s body. Jes, looking
exhausted, sat on the floor near— Ah, Seraph
thought ruefully, that’s where the wind came from. Rinnie’s hair spread out in pale flames as she stood motionless,
arms spread with palms out like some ancient statue, her skirts absolutely
still though the wind still tore furiously through the room. Jes must have cut
her loose because there were no ropes on her, though lines on either side of
her mouth showed where they had been. Her eyes glowed with an eerie gold light
that obscured her pupils. Words of warning, long forgotten, came back to Seraph. To be
a weather witch was always to long for the energies that coursed and strew
themselves in tempestuous’ weather, always to be in danger of being so caught
up that there was no way back. “Rinnie,” she said firmly. “We are safe, call back the winds
and let them sleep.” Her daughter stared blankly at her with incandescent eyes
and the winds swirled and played. An inkwell flipped out of nowhere and caught
Seraph painfully on the elbow. “Rinnie!” barked Seraph in the same tone she used to break
up sibling squabbles. “Enough.” Rinnie blinked, and the wind died down to gentle gusts and
then nothing. Small items dropped to the ground with clattering noises. Rinnie
fell to her hands and knees, and Seraph hurried across the room and crouched
beside her. “How is it with you? Are you well?” Rinnie nodded. “Sorry, Mother. I’m just a bit dizzy.” Then she
gave a ghost of her usual grin to Jes. “That was better than changing into an
animal.” “Mother,” said Lehr, “What do you need to do with Uncle Bandor?
I can’t hold him here forever.” Bandor was shadowed. Her hand tightened on her knife—but
before she could do more than rise back to her feet, Hennea said, “No, Seraph.
I lied. The shadow can be cleansed.” Seraph stilled. “What?” Hennea sat on the floor beside the dead priest, her cheeks
painted with his blood. “I lied. I swore that this one would die. It is fitting
that he should die in his sins. But I can cleanse the baker with your help.” “Seraph? Bandor?” Alinath’s voice rang down the corridor. If she and Hennea were going to help Bandor, Seraph didn’t
have time to be angry with her now. “Jes? Can you keep Alinath at bay without hurting her or yourself?”
asked Seraph. “If we are working more magic tonight, we
can’t have her interrupting us.” “Yes,” said Jes, using the wall to get to his feet. He look
a couple of half-drunken steps and came to the doorway. Alinath got there
first, but stopped just short of Jes. “We need to get this done,” said Seraph. “I think I could
just possibly light a magelight. Do you have the magic, and can you concentrate
well enough to use it?” Hennea rose painfully to her feet, using her good arm for
leverage. “I think I’m too numb to hurt and I am not as spent as you are. It’ll
be all right.” She limped over to Lehr and Bandor and spoke a word. Glowing
lines circled Bandor’s wrists and ankles. “Release him, please,” she said, and Lehr stepped away from
him. With the silvery threads of magic, Hennea forced Bandor
around so that he stood with his back flat against the wall. He spat at her. “Shadowspawn Witch. You should burn in the
fires of good rowan and oak.” Ignoring him, Hennea reached for his head and forced him to
look at her. Seraph stood as near as she dared. Hennea took a firm grip on Bandor’s hair and then set
another glowing line about his forehead to hold his head where she wanted it. “You can’t allow them to distract you,” she explained to Seraph
in Traveler’s speech. “If you have to start again it’s twice as hard to grasp
it.” Once she had him unable to move she reached up to place a
hand on his forehead. He struggled then, fighting the restraints like a
madman—but Hennea had done a good job, and his head never moved. “It’s hard to find—the shadowing. It’ll help if I’m more
familiar with him. Tell me something of him—how the shadow caught him.” “His name is Bandor,” said Seraph. “He is married to my husband’s
sister. He has always been a man of even temperament, a fair man if a bit
greedy.” But only a bit. The low price he’d given her for Jes’s honey had been
out of character, she realized. With family, he’d always been inclined to be
generous. “His parents were not Redemi and he was never really accepted until
he married Alinath, my husband’s sister.” Hennea sent off questioning tendrils of magic, which passed
through Bandor like a hot knife through butter, slipping and sliding. “What does he want?” Hennea asked. “What drives him?” That was harder. “I don’t know,” Seraph said finally. “Reducing
a man to a handful of words is no gift of mine.” She turned to her youngest,
who knew him best. “Rinnie,” she said in Common tongue. “If Uncle Bandor could
be, or have, anything in the world what would he want?” “Children,” said Rinnie promptly, though her voice shook.
“He and Aunt Alinath want children more than anything. He also worries that
Papa might decide to return to the bakery. Last year when the harvests weren’t
good, he was certain Papa would take the bakery. Nothing Papa said could
reassure him.” Seraph remembered that now; it hadn’t seemed important at
the time. One of the tendrils of Hennea’s magic snagged and went taut,
like a fisherman’s net. Another slid to the same place and stuck fast as well.
A third caught another place. “More,” said Hennea. “Tell me more about him, child.” “He loves Aunt Alinath,” Rinnie said with more confidence. “But he worries that she loves Papa better. He wants her to
see him as a better man than Papa.” The rest of the tendrils snapped taut like the strings of a
violin and emitted a sound as if an invisible musician plucked at the instrument. “Envy,” murmured Hennea in the Traveler tongue. “Small
darknesses that allow the shadow to take hold and shake him a bit until the
small darkness grows like a blot on his soul. You have to ferret them all out,
Seraph, and not miss any. Could you have your Hunter see if I’ve missed
anything?” “Lehr,” said Seraph. “Come here and look. Does the net she’s
woven encase the taint?” Lehr examined his Uncle closely. “Missed something,” he
said. “He wants,” murmured Seraph. “He loves. He hates. He fears.” “He’s afraid of you, Mother,” said Rinnie at last. “He
doesn’t much care for Jes either.” She gave her brother’s back an apologetic
look. “He doesn’t like to be around people who are odd like Jes is.” Hennea, lines of strain appearing around her eyes and mouth,
sent out more magic. “Done,” said Lehr. “Mother,” said Jes. Seraph turned and saw that Alinath had company in the doorway.
Karadoc was with her. He’d managed to take a few steps forward, so he stood
several paces in front of the door. But when Jes looked at him, he stilled once
more. “We’ll be done momentarily,” said Hennea. “I wouldn’t try
this without one who can see the shadow. Otherwise it’s too easy to fail—and
you’ll not know it until the shadowed one kills those nearest to him.” “Like the Nameless King, the Shadowed,” said Seraph. “When
he killed his sons first.” “He allowed no Travelers within his realm,” said Hennea. “So
now we go where we are needed, not where we are wanted.” “What next?” said Seraph. Hennea smiled wearily. “The last part is more strength than
finesse. I’ll try to burn the shadow from him.” “Let me help,” said Seraph. “I’m all but done up, but you
may freely take what magic I have left.” She followed her words with action,
setting the blooded knife on the floor and placing her hands on Hennea’s
shoulders. Hennea thanked her with a nod and then set about destroying
the hold the Stalker had taken on Bandor’s soul. It was, Seraph saw, much the
same as burning wood with magic, just using a different fuel. If she had to do
it herself, she’d know how. “Done,” said Hennea, but Seraph, feeling the last of the shadowing
leave, had already stepped away. Bandor had long since stopped his struggles, but now he hung
limply in the bonds that held him to the Wall, his face blank and his mouth
drooping on either side. A drop of spittle dripped slowly off his chin. “Lehr,” she said. “Come help me with Bandor.” Lehr helped Seraph brace his uncle so that Hennea could release
him. Once on his feet, Bandor seemed to recover a bit. At least he could stand
on his own and his face started to lose the blankness and adopt some of Bandor’s
own personality, like a wineskin refilled with wine. Lehr still braced him, but Seraph stepped away—remembering
what Rinnie had said about his fear of her. She didn’t want to cause him any
more distress than she had to. “All right, Jes,” she said calmly, “You can let them in,
now.” He stared at her a moment, then bowed his head shallowly.
She hid her sigh of relief: the next few minutes were bound to be interesting
enough without Jes running amok. Alinath slipped around them all without a look
and stood in front of Bandor. “Is it true,” she said, “is he better now? Is he unharmed?” Seraph raised an eyebrow and looked at Hennea, who had collapsed
against the wall. She nodded. “He’ll be all right,” Seraph said. “Give him a while to
recover and he’ll be all right.” Alinath’s mouth trembled and she took one more step until
she stood against her husband, looking small and frail. “Bandor,” she said.
“Bandor.” Karadoc, leaning heavily on his staff, looked closely at
Jes. “Ellevanal favors you, boy, though you never come to his temple;
that told me there was more to you than it appeared. I didn’t expect quite this
much more. Some of your mother’s magic in you, eh, that kept us from coming
in?” “Yes,” agreed Seraph. “Jes is more than he appears.” “Traveler,” Karadoc said sternly, as if reminded of his
duty. “Traveler, what happened here?” “Shadows and magic, priest,” she said. “Volis and Bandor
were shadow-touched. If I had known that the priest could be cured, I would
have—” she remembered the satisfaction of stopping him with her knife and
stopped, saying merely, “I was ill-informed.” “How did you know they were shadowed?” The old man, she
thought, was playing the stern priest role to the hilt. It was a good sign. If
he’d been frightened by all the magic, he wouldn’t be taking the time to
perform for his audience; he’d be getting the rest of the Council Elders. “She found me tonight as Bandor left me,” said Alinath, as
she and Lehr helped Bandor sit on the floor “Bruised and bound. I told her that
there was something wrong with him, a bile of jealousy toward my brother after
all these years.” There was a pause, then she said, “I don’t know what exactly
he did, but he had a hand in my brother’s death.” She sat beside her husband and raised her chin in a familiar
gesture. “I have never approved of the choices my brother has made,” she said.
“I have no use for magic or Seraph. You know as much, Karadoc. I would never
take her side against my Bandor. But I know that Bandor, if he were himself,
would never hit me. He would never have made himself slave to another’s will as
he has enslaved himself to that false priest.” She spat out the words. “If Seraph
says that he was shadow-taken ... well, I for one have to agree with her.” No one, thought Seraph with secret amusement, could miss how
much it bothered Alinath to agree with Seraph. Karadoc nodded formally. “Accepted.” He grinned at Seraph,
transforming in an instant from sour old man to mischievous gnome. “You should
know that Alinath came to me several days ago—concerned with the oddities of
her husband’s behavior. I told her to keep watch, for as we all know, those of
us who live in the lee of Shadow’s Fall have always to be on guard against
such.” He shook his head, “But of course we’ll have to tell a different
story to everyone else or Seraph won’t be able to stay here, and no one will
really believe that he was cleansed.” Bandor was huddled against his wife, bowing his forehead to
touch the top of her shoulder. Seraph could hear his soft, half-coherent
apologies. Karadoc leaned on his staff. “Let me tell you what happened
tonight. Volis is an evil mage, not a real priest. He needed a death to feed
some dark magic and chose Rinnie, because he thought she was without
protection. Her father is dead—” “Actually,” said Lehr. “Probably not. That’s what Mother and
I were doing when Rinnie was taken. We walked up to the place where the
huntsman thought he found Father’s remains. The bones weren’t Father’s. We
think a group of human mages surprised Papa and took him.” “Alive,” said Alinath. “Tier is alive?” “Alive?” asked Rinnie, grabbing Jes’s hand in a tight grip. “I think so,” said Seraph. “Ah,” said Karadoc, “then Volis was one of a group of
corrupt mages who helped him in his evil doings. He was responsible for a
number of terrible happenings, Tier’s disappearance ... oh, I’ll think of a few
more things. I’m sure someone had a pet die in the last month or so. Volis has
been watching your farm with his magic—” “Magic doesn’t work like that,” said Seraph. “Not even solsenti
magic.” “They won’t know that,” said Karadoc repressively. “When he
saw that you were away from home, he kidnapped Rinnie. Alinath saw him take
Rinnie by the bakery. She came to my temple to get Bandor, who had come to talk
to me about suspicions that he had about Volis. I am an old man. Bandor and
Alinath confronted Volis—he hurt Alinath, and Bandor killed him.” “What about us?” asked Seraph. “You, none of you were here. I don’t know who you are, young
lady,” he said to Hennea, “but I can see what you are, and you’d be safer away
from here.” “She can sleep at the farm tonight,” said Seraph. “How do you know that Tier is alive?” asked Alinath. “Because they took him to use his magic,” replied Hennea.
“They can’t use it with him dead—not this soon.” “Liar,” said Alinath, rising to her feet. “My brother had no
magic.” From his position on the floor, Bandor reached up and took
his wife’s hand. “Yes,” he said. “Yes, he did.” Alinath froze, staring at the hand she held. At last she
sank down again. “Do you know where they took him?” asked Karadoc when it
became apparent Alinath wasn’t going to say anything further. “To Taela,” answered Hennea. “To the imperial palace at
Taela.” “Before we leave here, Hennea and I will search the temple
to make sure there’s nothing left that could hurt anyone,” said Seraph tiredly.
They’d find all the Order stones, too. She glanced at Volis, but his hands were
bare. Hennea must have already taken the rings Volis had worn. “We’ll go look for Papa tomorrow?” asked Lehr. Seraph considered it. “The day after. We’ll have to pack for
the trip.” “If you leave, the Sept’s steward will take away your land
rights,” observed Alinath. “No,” replied Karadoc. “He won’t He’d never get anyone else
to farm that close to the mountains. I’ll have a talk with him myself.” Chapter 11Early the next morning, Alinath came to call. Seraph had
already sent the boys and Rinnie out to the bam to sort through the tools and
harness for things that they would need on their travel. Hennea was still
asleep in the loft. “I didn’t know how soon you were going,” said Alinath, in a
sideways apology for the hour of her call. “I brought this.” She set down a
large basket of journey bread on the table. “We made it yesterday so it should
last you a month or more if you need it.” She hadn’t met Seraph’s eyes since
she came in. “How is Bandor?” asked Seraph. “Almost himself again, though he doesn’t remember much,”
said Alinath, at last looking up. “Thank you for giving him back to me.” “I’m glad you came,” Seraph said after they’d both taken a
seat on the kitchen bench, which was pulled away from its customary place at
the table. “Otherwise I would have come to you. The trip to Taela is a long
one, and getting Tier back might be dangerous. I hate to take Rinnie on a
journey like that. Would you watch her for me?” “Of course,” Alinath said after a moment of shock. “Of
course I will. There’s plenty of space—she can have Tier’s old room.” “Thank you,” smiled Seraph. “I told her that Bandor would
not be feeling well for a while and you needed her help. Give her something to
do so she doesn’t think I’m a liar.” “I’ll do that,” said Alinath. “Karadoc wanted me to tell you
that the other Elders were happy with his story. All except Willon, who saw
Bandor carrying Rinnie up to the temple. But Willon agreed to keep the real
story quiet.” Alinath reached into a large pouch she carried and brought
out several pieces of folded parchment “Willon sent these. Maps, he said. And
Seraph”—Alinath set a bag of coins on the table—“these are from the bakery’s
accounts. Use them as you need to—I’d like to have Tier back also.” Seraph took the coins. “Thank you. I won’t deny that these
will make the journey easier.” “I’ll come tomorrow morning about this time,” said Alinath,
getting up briskly. “To get Rinnie, and to see you safely on your way.” “Thank you, Alinath,” said Seraph. Alinath stopped at the doorway and turned back. “No, Seraph.
Thank you. I appreciate your trust, especially after ...” “He had no choice,” said Seraph. “Remember that Even shadowed,
Bandor believed he was saving Rinnie.” The next morning was cold and the sun a pale line against
the mountain as they adjusted the packs on Skew. Gura whined at Seraph from his
self-appointed guard post by the packs still to be loaded. “Fool dog,” Seraph said, not unkindly. “You’re coming, too.” “But not me,” said Rinnie from the porch. “I need you to take care of your aunt and uncle for me,”
said Seraph. “Aunt Alinath would like nothing better than to drop everything
and come with us, but she needs to take care of Bandor and the bakery.” She
took a deep breath, “And I need you safe. Please.” Rinnie stared at her hard. “All right,” she said. “I’ll
stay.” Seraph, Hennea, Jes, and Lehr set out for Taela before the
sun was full up while Alinath and Rinnie watched from the porch. A few miles to the south, the path from the farm joined to
the main road. Though Willon’s maps were useful, finding a road to Taela was no
more difficult than finding a stream that would lead to the ocean. “It’s hard leaving Rinnie behind.” Lehr patted Skew’s neck.
“I miss her already.” “I miss everything,” said Jes happily. Lehr lost his grim air and thumped Jes on his pack where it
rested between his shoulders, “I see that you do.” “Do you know where your clan is?” Seraph ask Hennea, who
walked beside her at the back of the small caravan. “No,” said Hennea. “But I can find them when I want to. I’ll
be of more use to you than I’ll be to them.” “Hennea,” said Seraph softly. “Yes?” “If you ever lie to me for your own ends again—as you did
when I killed the priest for you—there will be a reckoning.” “I will bear that in mind,” Hennea said. “See that you do.” Seraph deliberately cut the first day’s travel short Hennea
was looking pale and drawn; though her arm was healing nicely, it was still
painful. The tent that they’d brought was the old one Seraph had used when
she’d traveled with her brother. Seraph expected it would take a few days of
practice before they could put it up in the dark. After supper, she left the boys to clean up and took out
Isolda the Silent’s mermora. “So you are the last survivor of your clan,” said Hennea. Seraph loosened the top of her bag so Hennea could see the assorted
merman she carried. “The last of any number of clans,” she said. “How many?” Hennea asked in a horrified whisper. “Two hundred and twenty-four,” replied Seraph. Hennea frowned. “Why did they all come to you?” “You mean as opposed to a clan leader who actually had a
clan?” Seraph shrugged. “I don’t know. I’ve given it a lot of thought over the
years. The last eighty-three I found in one cache, presumably taken from one
leader. That could mean that the mermori are being drawn by the other mermori.
The more mermori someone has, the more likely it is that a lost
clan’s mermori will come to them. Or perhaps Shadow’s Fall might have
some influence on it.” “It’s more than that,” said Hennea slowly. “How did you find
a solsenti who was Ordered? Why did the two of you have three Ordered
children? It isn’t like breeding horses; the Orders go where they will—though I
really did think that the Order bearer had to at the least be of Traveler blood.
I don’t know many clans who can claim five Ordered people, nor have I heard of
a family where every single person in the family was born to an Order.” “It frightens me,” admitted Seraph, glancing at the boys,
who were packing away the last of the dinnerware. “My father’s favorite saying
was, ‘When you find a coin on the road and pick it up, it’s certain that you’ll
need twice that ere you ‘walk another mile.’ He used to say that the Orders
went where they were most necessary. I don’t want to be in the middle of an
event that needs a Raven, Owl, Eagle, Falcon, and Cormorant.” . Hennea smiled a little. “Neither do I. Maybe I should go
my own way.” She was joking, but Seraph nodded solemnly. “I would keep
that in mind. Having you help us find Tier would be very helpful—but certainly
dangerous. There is no need for you to risk your life for someone you’ve never
even met.” Hennea laughed and shook her head. “That’s the Raven’s calling,
you know that Go out and risk your life for someone who’d just as soon that you
burned as lived.” “Perverse,” grinned Seraph. “It did always seem that the
ones who most needed help were the ones who wanted it least. Anyway, I got the mermora
out to call Isolda’s house and see if someone in her time had managed something
like the Ordered stones.” “They didn’t have the Orders when Isolda’s library was collected,”
said Hennea. “No,” agreed Seraph. “But they did a lot of evil in the
search for knowledge. They might have come up with something that will help us.
I don’t want to destroy those stones without understanding what that will do to
the Order trapped there.” Jes and Lehr, finished with their tasks, came to see what Seraph
was doing. She pushed the mermora into the dirt and called Isolda’s
house into being. “Come in,” she said, “come and be welcome to the house of
Isolda the Silent.” They settled into the patterns of journeying that Seraph remembered.
Hennea and Jes in front, Seraph and Lehr bringing up the rear with Skew. Gura
scouted about, taking anxious trips back to make certain they were all still
walking as he’d left them. After a week’s travel, Seraph felt as if she were
slowly sloughing off the skin of the Redem farmer’s wife she had been. Every evening she took out Isolda’s mermora and
searched through her library to find out what to do with the Ordered stones. “Why don’t you use them?” asked Lehr, one evening. He was
seated on the other side of the little table from Seraph, playing with the game
pieces to a game no one knew how to play. “We almost lost all to Volis—and there
will be more wizards with Papa. Wouldn’t the extra power be useful?” “Travelers don’t like to deal with the dead,” said Jes. He
was curled up on the floor with as much of Gura on his lap as he could get,
grooming the dog with a silver comb that Isolda had kept by her bed. “It’s not that exactly,” said Hennea, looking up from a
book. “But we understand that it can be dangerous to play with dark magics.” “Especially when doing so leaves you vulnerable to the
Stalker,” agreed Seraph. “Since we have seen that he is already concerned in
these matters, we’d be foolish to allow him an invitation to one of us.” “I like walking,” said Jes contentedly. Hennea looked over at him. His eyes were half-shut and his
face raised toward the sun. Seraph and Lehr had dropped behind them a while
back; Jes’s usual pace was faster man Skew liked. Seraph didn’t want to push
the old horse, so Hennea and Jes would walk ahead and then sit and wait for the
others to catch up. “What do you like about it?” she asked him. “The Guardian is happy, because we’re going to get Papa,” he
said. “And Rinnie is safe with Aunt Alinath. I don’t like Aunt Alinath, but I
know that Rinnie does. I know that Aunt Alinath will keep her safe. Mother and
Lehr are safe, too, because they are with me and with Skew and Gura. I am
outside and the sun is shining and making my face warm.” “I like walking, too,” Hennea admitted. “Why?” He bounced once on his heels and then turned his head
to look at her with a bright smile that lit his eyes and summoned the deep dimple
in his cheek. She smiled back; she’d found that it was impossible not to respond
to Jes when he was happy. “For the same reasons you have. Walking means that
right this moment, nothing bad is happening. There are interesting things to
look at. My feet like to feel the road under them.” “Yes,” he said contentedly. “It’s just like that.” After a minute he said, “Lehr is not happy.” “He doesn’t like walking?” she asked. He frowned, “I don’t think that’s it. I think he worries too
much. He is like the Guardian, you know. He thinks that he needs to take care
of everyone. He doesn’t know about walking. He finds things that are bad and
tries to solve them before they happen.” Hennea said, “You know your brother pretty well, don’t you?” Jes nodded. “He is my brother and I love him. He is not
afraid of the Guardian; he loves the Guardian, too. I like that. Rinnie loves
us, too. But she doesn’t want to be a Guardian anymore because she can play
with the wind.” “I like your family, Jes,” Hennea said softly. He smiled again. “I do too.” A week’s travel from Korhadan, the first of the large cities
that lay between them and Taela, they stopped to eat lunch a little distance
from another, larger party that they’d been trailing for a few days. “We could eat on the road, Mother,” said Lehr to Seraph as she
sat down beside him. “We could make another mile in the time it takes for Jes
to finish eating.” She shook her head. “And lose more miles in a few days when
Skew is too tired to go on. It’s all right to push hard if your journey’s end
is in a day or two, but we have to strike a speed that we can hold on to for a
month or more. How is that blister you had?” “Fine.” “Traveler whore!” Seraph was on her feet before the young man’s bellow had finished;
her eyes found Hennea standing by the side of the swift-running creek, her
drinking cup loose in her hand while a chunk of wet mud slid from her cheek.
Shock made her look young and vulnerable, but that wouldn’t last. Before Seraph could take more than a step or two, Jes, with
Gura at his side, stood between Hennea and the small group of young men. “Apologize,” whispered Jes. Seraph increased her speed. The men backed away, most of them mumbling apologies. If
they stared at the huge growling dog, or Jes, rather than looking at Hennea, it
was understandable. “Go,” Jes said. “Leave us alone and we’ll do the same.” “Hey, what goes on here! Are you vagabonds threatening my
sons!” “Jes, I’ll deal with this,” said Seraph in a low voice,
moving until she was between Jes and the young men. When the older man,
presumably their father, was close enough to hear her, she said, more calmly
than she felt, “There were no problems until your sons made them.” The man strode past his sons and stopped not two paces from
Seraph, clearly intending to intimidate her with his size. “My sons,
Traveler?” Anger was going to make her do something stupid, she knew
it—and Jes would be no help at all. Where was Tier when a diplomatic word was
needed? She could have left it to Hennea, but the younger woman had already
been seen as weak: if she had to prove herself there would be blood shed here. “One of your boys decided it was a good game to throw mud at
a woman who was doing him no harm,” said Seraph. She should have stopped there,
but she couldn’t abide bullies. “Obviously he was poorly raised; he has no
manners.” “Poorly raised, Traveler bitch?” he snarled. “Who are you to
say so?” Jes, Seraph noticed gratefully, had taken her at her word
and dampened the fear he generated. Fear fed anger, and might make the man do
something more stupid than he otherwise would. Of course, she herself would
have to control her tongue or risk pushing the man too far anyway. She knew,
even before she spoke, what choice she had made, throwing away years of
iron-willed control and prudence. “Indeed.” Seraph kept her tones polite, even though she knew
that would inflame the man more than if she yelled. “It seems that they were
not the only ones who were ill-taught.” She paused for effect and then borrowed
Jes’s whispering technique. “Didn’t your mother teach you that bad things
happen to people who annoy Travelers?” She didn’t know if she wanted to scare him away, or force
him to attack her. She’d assumed she’d long ago buried all this anger at the solsenti
who hated and needed the Travelers. But all it took was a bit of mud to
prove her wrong. The anger that flooded her felt good, even cleansing. Whatever she’d wanted to gain by her threat, the people from
his group who’d begun to gather around forced him to act rather than run.
Perhaps if she had been a man he could have backed down and not lost face. Perhaps if she didn’t have a full bag of mermori to remind
her how dangerous it was when solsenti began to lose their respect for
Travelers she would have given him a graceful way out. “Have a care, Seraph,” said Hennea in Traveler. The man took another step closer. He was a big man, but Seraph
was used to looking up at people and a few inches more didn’t make much
difference to her. “Your man should have taught you respect for your betters,
whore,” he said on the tails of Hennea’s words. Seraph held her tongue. A raised eyebrow and a speaking look
at him did the job nicely: You ? My better? I don’t think so. He raised a hand. Gura sank a bit, ready to defend her and
she could hear the sheath of Tier’s sword rattle as Lehr readied himself to
draw it. She still might have let him hit her but for Jes breathing heavily
beside her. With a word and a breath of power, she froze his arm in
place. When she smiled at the crowd of solsenti, several of
them backed up hastily. She had the feeling that her victim would have backed
up, too, but he couldn’t move his arm from where it was stuck. “What’s going on here?” said an authoritative voice—and a
young man pushed his way through the crowd. Ash-pale hair in a waist-length braid announced his Traveler
bloodlines as well as a written sign. Soon he had a wide circle around him. “Look by the road, Mother,” whispered Jes. Seraph looked, and sure enough, there was an entire
Traveling clan waiting on alert. Silence had fallen, mostly because the solsenti group
hadn’t yet noticed the Travelers beside the road and didn’t know what to make
of a man whose arm hung unmoving in the air. “Well,” he said again, “What goes on here?” “I am Seraph,” she said. “Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent.
This one’s half-grown sons offered insult to my young friend. We were
discussing the issue.” The stranger tilted his head at the man’s arm. “Interesting
discussion?” “No,” said Seraph. “I was almost finished. If you’ll excuse
me a moment.” She turned to the man. “I have no more patience with you. I curse you and your
sons that if you ever hit a woman or child, you’ll lose the use of that which
men value most. Now go.” She released his arm and met the eyes of the few solsenti
inclined to linger. The stranger waited until they were gone before he started
laughing. “I’m no Raven, but even so I could tell there was no magic to power
that curse.” She smiled. “It doesn’t need magic, does it?” If any of them
ever hit a woman or child they’d remember her words and worry about it. Worry
could achieve the effect she wanted more easily than magic. “Who are you?” asked Jes, breaking into the shared moment. “Ah, my apologies, sir. I am Benroln, Cormorant and Leader
of the Clan of Rongier the Librarian.” He bowed shallowly. “If we may join you
in your eating we might exchange stories.” “Come and be welcome,” agreed Seraph. There was a fair bit of confusion as the Clan of Rongier
organized a meal stop and the solsenti group packed hastily and left, most
eating the remains of their meals in one hand while they started out The fear on their faces didn’t bother Seraph nearly as much
as the catcalls that came from the Librarian’s clan. Her father would never
have stood for such a thing, but Benroln was young, and perhaps he felt much
the same as the young people who teased the solsenti. Still there were
older heads about, and Seraph thought that someone should have said something. A glance at the clan’s wagons and clothing told her that
having a young leader hadn’t hurt the clan materially, even if their manners
had suffered. Their clothing was without holes or mending and their wagons were
all freshly painted. Seraph’s small family stayed close to her as the strange
clansmen laid out food and attended to the chores of meal preparation.
Doubtless the boys were intimidated by the foreign tongue and sheer volume of
noise so many people set to a single task could make. Seraph finished the last
of her meal as Benroln approached her with three other men. “Seraph, this is my uncle, Isfain,” he said, indicating the
eldest of the men, “My cousin, Calahar” was a young man with unusual
raven-black hair. “Kors” had reached middle age and middle height with slightly
stooped shoulders. “This,” continued Benroln, “is Seraph, Raven of Isolda the Silent,
and her family. This young man here is Eagle.” The older man Benroln had introduced as Isfain smiled. “Well
blessed in the Order your family is. Will you introduce them?” There was nothing in the words they spoke to raise Seraph’s
suspicions, but there was just a little extra stress in Benroln’s voice when he
named the Orders.—That stress had been answered with a thread of smugness in Isfain’s
voice. Seraph bowed her head. “This is my son, Jes, Eagle. My son
Lehr, and my friend Hennea.” No one had ever accused Seraph of being a trusting
soul. She couldn’t hide the Orders Benroln had noted, but there was no need to
share information unnecessarily. Time enough to clear the matter up if
necessary once Seraph knew more about the Clan of Rongier. “May I inquire how it is that there are so few of you?”
asked Kors diffidently. “I had heard that the Clan of Isolda the Silent fell to
the sickness years ago.” Seraph nodded graciously. “Only my brother and I survived.
When my brother died we were left without kin.” Two decades of living with solsenti
had not lowered her awareness of the disgrace of what she had done—so she
lifted her chin, daring any of them to comment. “I married a solsenti man
and we lived with him and his family until he died this spring. His relatives
turned us out—but they did not know that he had investments in Taela. We are
headed there to recover his monies.” The men considered what she told them. For a Traveler to
marry or even lie with solsenti was expressly forbidden. It happened,
but a very strict clan leader could punish the offender with banishment or
death. Only Kors looked taken aback, and Benroln tapped him on the
shoulder before he could say anything. Isfain merely said, in tones of apparent delight, “Ah, we
take the same road. Our clan has business that lies along the road to Taela,
and we have friends in the city who are willing to aid us. We’d be more than
pleased to lend you escort until our roads part.” There was no way out of Isfain’s generous offer without offense,
so Seraph nodded. “Your escort would be most welcome.” Calahar glanced over at Skew and then moved toward him.
“Nice horse,” he said. “My husband’s warhorse,” replied Seraph. “Careful. He’s old
now. But he was trained not to let strangers approach too closely.” “I’ve only seen a few horses with his coloration,” he said.
“Your husband get him as a war prize?” “Yes.” “Too bad he’s a gelding.” “Yes,” replied Seraph. “But he serves us well as it is.
Lehr, would you check to make sure we’ve gotten everything packed?” Hennea waited until they were walking again and the fuss of
adding new members had died down before approaching Seraph. “You were less than forthcoming,” Hennea said quietly. “And
Skew’s never objected to me.” “But they don’t need to know that I’d rather not have people
ruffling through our packs. There’s something off about this clan,” Seraph
replied. “Though it’s been a long time since I walked with Travelers, so
perhaps I’m misreading something.” “Perhaps you are right to be suspicious,” agreed Hennea
thoughtfully. “They certainly aren’t going to be looking for Lehr and I to be
Ordered, not when they know that two of us are Order-Bearers. Although if they
have a Raven who looks at us, they’ll know what you are up to.” “I’ve been looking,” said Seraph. “The only
Order-Bearer I’ve seen is Benroln himself.” “I suppose there will be no harm done,” said Hennea. “No harm to whom?” asked Benroln. Seraph carefully maintained her smile. “To us. It’s a relief
to find a clan to journey with—but it bothers me that we might need your
protection. This is a main road, there should be no danger for Travelers
here—but I worry all the same.” “It’s not just those hotheaded men either,” said Benroln in
grim tones. “There hasn’t been a Gathering in a long time. The last one was
disrupted by solsenti soldiers, and the clans felt that another
Gathering might just be setting ourselves up for a solsenti sword. The
illness that swept through our clans twenty years ago took out more than just
your clan. If the solsenti have their way, in another twenty there will
be no Travelers at all.” The clipped note in his voice when he said “solsenti” reminded
her forcibly of the way some of the more frightened Redemi said “magic.” “Then it is their doom,” said Hennea indifferently. “Travelers
exist to keep the solsenti from paying the price of a failure that was
not theirs.” “What failure?” said Benroln explosively, but Seraph saw calculation
in his eyes. He was playing to his audience. “A story nattered at by the
elderly? It is only a story—and it was old before the Shadow’s Fall. It’s a
myth, and no more accurate than the twaddle the solsenti spout about the
gods. There are no gods and there was no lost city. There is no evil Stalker.
We have paid and paid for a crime committed in an Owl’s tale. If we don’t wise
up we’ll be nothing more than a solsenti minstrel’s tale ourselves,
something told to frighten small children.” “Wise up and do what?” asked Seraph. “Survive,” he said. “We need to keep food in our mouths and
clothes on our backs. We need to teach the solsenti to leave us alone—as
you did to that solsenti bastard who tried to injure Hennea.” He paused,
then said softly, “You taught that man and his sons to leave us be. If you had
allowed your Eagle to teach them, the rest of the solsenti in that group
would have taken the story to his village and they all would have trembled in
fear.” “Maybe someone did,” said Seraph coolly. “Maybe that’s why,
instead of welcoming us and looking to us to help them when my brother took us
into the village years ago, the villagers feared us so much that they burned my
brother.” “The solsenti already fear us, that is the problem,”
said Hennea. “Fear leads to violence. The villagers who killed Seraph’s brother
were very afraid and too ignorant to know that they had nothing to fear from a
Traveler. Perhaps because, in the last few generations, we have taught them
that they should fear us.” “Rot,” said Benroln curtly before turning his attention back
to Seraph. “You have lived among them for what?” He glanced at Jes and Lehr and
came up with an accurate guess, “Twenty years or more? You are beginning to
sound like one of them—or worse, one of the old ones who sit around the fire
and say, ‘We are supposed to protect them.’” The anger in his voice was honest
now. “Let them protect themselves. They have wizards.” “Who are helpless against the evil we fight,” said Seraph. Benroln’s lip curled. “When solsenti soldiers caught
my father and our Hunter and Raven out alone, there was nothing we could do but
bury them. Had my father not believed the old folktales, he could have taught
that village what harming a Traveler might mean. When those villagers killed
your brother—you could have saved him. Could have made them so afraid
that the thought of harming one of us would never occur to them again. How many
of us died because you didn’t teach them what you taught that man today? How
many more will die because you didn’t loose the talons of your Eagle upon them
instead of tricking them into thinking you’d set a spell on them?” Part of Seraph agreed. Part of her had wanted to burn
the village to the ground. She had spent most of that first night at Tier’s
side wondering how long it would take her to get back to the village and avenge
her brother. She could have killed them all. “Your father was killed?” said Hennea softly, taking Benroln’s
arm in sympathy and distracting him from Seraph. He nodded, his anger dissipating under Hennea’s attention.
“Our Clan Guide took us to the Sept of Arvill’s keep. My
father said that they’d never admit a whole clan, so he, who was Raven, took
our other Raven—my cousin Kiris who was only fifteen—and our Hunter to see what
was amiss. They didn’t even make it to the gate of the keep before they were
shot from ambush.” “Terrible,” agreed Seraph. “When I think about that village
where my brother was killed, I think of how helpless they would have been
against my power. I think of the children who lived there, and the mothers and
fathers. More death never solves a crime, no matter how regrettable.” She tried
to keep her tones conciliatory, but she could not agree with him. Benroln met her gaze for a moment, then dropped his head in
the respectful bow of a vanquished opponent. “And so I learn from your wisdom.” Lehr, who’d come upon them as Seraph had been giving her
last speech, snorted and then grinned at Benroln. “She knows better than
that. That’s what she always said to Papa when she didn’t want to agree
with him but he was winning the argument.” Seraph smiled gently. “We can agree to disagree.” The Travelers were a highly organized people—just like a
well-trained army, and for the same reasons. Every person had an assigned role. Seraph hadn’t realized, not really, how independent the life
that they’d led in Redem had been. As long as the Sept’s tithes made it to him,
they were left largely alone to do as they wanted. If she’d been married to
another Redemi man, that might have meant that she would have been at his
mercy. But Tier was Tier. He’d sought her advice, and she’d worked shoulder to
shoulder with him both in the fields and in the kitchen. She’d grown used to
the freedom of making her own decisions. When Isfain had pointed to a place and told her to make camp
there, she’d nearly told him where to take his orders. If she hadn’t caught
Lehr watching her expectantly, Seraph would have done just that. Instead she’d
just nodded and gotten to work. At least they accorded Seraph some leeway for being Raven,
and clan leader, if only just of her family plus Hennea. Lehr they treated like
a green boy—Tier had never treated him so. She just hoped he was enough his
father’s son to hold his peace until she’d had time to learn more about this
clan: they might be a great help in retrieving Tier. Seraph pitched in to help prepare the evening meal. Some of
the men tended horses and goats, some set out to fish, and a smaller group set
out into the forest to see what game they could find. Jes and Lehr joined the
latter group. She’d had time to talk with Lehr, and Seraph knew he wouldn’t
give himself away. He didn’t care for Benroln much either. “My Kors told me that you married a solsenti,” said
the woman on Seraph’s left, while her clever fingers and sharp knife were
making short work of deboning one of the rabbit carcasses that were the basis
for tonight’s meal. There was such studied neutrality in the words that Seraph
didn’t reply, pretending that skinning her own rabbit took up all of her
attention. “What was it like?” said the woman on the other side
of her with hushed interest “I’ve heard that solsenti men—” She was quickly hushed by several of the other women who
were giggling as they chided her. “Would you look at this!” exclaimed a woman in gravelly
tones. Seraph turned and saw a tiny, ancient crone approaching the tables set
up to prepare food. Her hair was pale yellow and thin; it hung in a braid from
the crown of her head to her hips. Her shoulders were stooped and bent, and her
hand as knobby as the staff she balanced herself with. “You’d think you’d never
had a man before the way you act here! She is a guest. Ah, you embarrass the
clan.” “Brewydd,” said the woman who had begun the conversation.
“What brings you here?” “Brewydd?” said Seraph, setting down the naked rabbit
carcass and wiping her hands on the apron someone had given her. “Are you the
Healer?” Even twenty years ago, Brewydd the Healer had been ancient The old woman nodded. “That I be,” she said. “I know you,
child—Isolda’s Raven. The one who survived.” The woman on Seraph’s right put aside the food she was working
with and hurried over to tuck her hand under Brewydd’s arm and lend support.
“Come, grandmother. You need to get off your feet” Scolding gently and prodding,
the woman took Brewydd away toward a wagon built up on all four sides and
roofed like a small house on wheels—a karis it was called for the kari,
the Elders, who were the only Travelers who rode in them. “Raven,” said the old woman, stopping for a moment to turn
back and look at Seraph. “Not all shadows come from the evil one.” “People can be evil all on their own,” agreed Seraph. Satisfied with Seraph’s reply, the old woman tottered back
to her karis. “She can still heal,” said the woman on Seraph’s left. “But
she’s a little touched. It’s the years, you know. She won’t tell anyone how old
she is, but my Kors is her great-grandson.” Three days of travel with Rongier’s clan taught Seraph a lot
about them. Benroln and the old Healer were the only Ordered among them, though
they had a few who could work magic in the solsenti fashion—with words
and spell casting that hoped to gather enough stray magic to accomplish their
task. It was most remarkable, she thought, watching as a young man
named Rilkin used a spell to light a damp log, that they got any results at
all. Her father had been gifted that way, and they’d spent many a Traveling day
exploring the differences between her magic and his. A solsenti spell
cast out a blind net into the sea to haul in whatever stray magic might attach
itself to the net; Ordered magic was more like putting a pail in a well. She turned back to grooming Skew and to her current worries.
Tier she could do nothing about until they reached Taela, so she tucked her
fear for him away until it might be useful. Lehr and Jes were more immediate concerns.
They were growing more and more unhappy with the continued association with the
Traveling clan. Skew stretched his neck out appreciatively when her brush
rubbed a particularly good spot. Skew, at least, was having the time of his
life with all the attention he was getting. Lehr, however, chafed under the commands that all of the men
and most of the women of the clan felt free to throw at him. Without hinting at
what he was, he couldn’t win their respect by his hunting skills so they
treated him as they treated all the other young men. No one gave Jes orders—they all knew what he was. Her daylight
Jes was bewildered by the way they lowered their eyes around him and avoided
him. Seraph didn’t remember her clan treating her brother, the Guardian, that
way. The Librarian’s clan hurt Jes’s feelings by their rejection, and that made
the Guardian restless: Jes was one of the people he protected. Hennea helped. She knitted in the evenings, and found things
that required Jes’s aid. He was calmer around her, too; perhaps it was the
discipline of being Raven that made Hennea easier for Jes to bear. Some people,
like Alinath, were hard for him to be in the same room with. “Mother?” It was Lehr. “Have you seen Jes? He was with me at
dinner, but someone decided they needed a dray mule and I was the nearest they
could find. When I went back to the dining tables, Jes wasn’t there. I checked
the horses and he wasn’t there either. Hennea was looking for him, too. He’s
not in the camp, Mother. I told Hennea I would check with you.” To see if she wanted him to search, even though someone
might notice what he was doing. “I don’t—” Seraph stopped speaking abruptly. Over Lehr’s shoulder. Seraph saw Benroln, Kors, and Calahar
approach with intent Isfain, the fourth man, was nowhere to be seen. The air of
grim triumph Benroln wore was as damning as the guilt on Kors’s face. She stepped around Lehr so she stood between him and the
leadership of the Clan of Rongier. “Is something wrong?” asked Benroln. “I don’t know,” Seraph replied softly. “I think that’s
something you can tell me. Where is Jes, Benroln?” Benroln held his arms out open palm to show her he meant no
harm. “He is safe, Seraph. I won’t harm him unless there is no other way to
save my clan.” Seraph waited. “Jes is in one of the tents with Isfain at watch.” “What do you want?” she asked. Benroln smiled as if to say, See, I knew you’d do it my
way. Three days had obviously not taught him much about her—she hoped that
her other secrets were as well-hidden. “My uncle has been scouting for work for us, and he found
some not five miles down the road.” “What kind of work?” asked Seraph. “There is a merchant who buys grain and hauls it to Korhadan
to sell. Last year one of the farmers with whom he had a contract delivered his
grain himself and cost our merchant money and reputation when he wasn’t able to
deliver the grain he had promised his buyers. He went to the courts for redress,
but they were unable to help him.” “I see,” said Seraph neutrally. “I want you to curse this farmer’s fields.” “To teach him a lesson,” she said. “Right,” he smiled engagingly. “Just like that man who assaulted
Hennea.” “But this merchant will pay you money.” “Yes.” He didn’t even have the grace to look uncomfortable. “And what will I get out of it?” “Your family will have a home at last. A place where they
fit in and no one taunts them for their Traveler blood. We will share with you
all that is ours,” said Calahar, as if he were offering her a gift instead of
blackmailing her. Benroln was smarter than that. “Safety,” he said. “For you
and your family.” Seraph stared at them for a minute. “You can’t hold Jes for long,” said Lehr confidently. “He
doesn’t like strangers much—he’ll know that there is something wrong.” He was right—or should have been. Seraph watched, but Benroln’s
confidence didn’t falter. “You have a foundrael,” she said, suddenly certain it
was true. There weren’t many of them, but then there weren’t many clans left
either. They weren’t such fools as to try to keep a Guardian prisoner without
something to keep him under control. “What is that?” asked Lehr. “Guardians can be difficult to control,” she explained
without looking away from Benroln’s face. “They are driven to protect their own
at the expense of everything else. Sometimes their imperatives are
inconvenient; guardians don’t follow orders well at all.” She wasn’t going to
tell them how common it was for an Eagle to lose his daytime persona and become
completely violent, even toward the people he had previously protected. “A
Raven a long time ago came up with a solution. She created ten foundraels—collars
that keep the Guardian from emerging—before she realized what the end effect of
repressing a Guardian is.” “What’s wrong with it?” asked Lehr. “Is Jes in danger?” Seraph fingered the knife at her hip. “Let’s just say that
if they thought they had problems with their Guardians when they decided to use
the foundrael, they had real problems the first time they decided to
take it off. The use of foundraels is forbidden except under the most
dire conditions.” “My father will keep him calm—your Guardian will experience
no difficulties unless you give him reason to think that there is danger,” said
Calabar, stung by the contempt in her voice. “Seraph—I’ve looked all over ...” Hennea’s voice died out as
she recognized the confrontation. “These men have taken Jes,” Seraph told Hennea. “So that I
will aid them in cursing a man’s field. They will receive gold for their
efforts.” She saw Hennea’s face as worry faded, leaving behind a
facade as cold as ice—just such a face had Hennea worn as she knelt beside the
dead priest in Redem. “They take gold to curse people?” Seraph spat on the ground in front of Benroln. “They have chosen
to forget who we are. But they have me at a disadvantage.” She shook her head
in disgust and then looked at Lehr. She needed someone to tend Jes, someone he trusted who would
sit by him calmly until she could get Benroln to take the foundrael off—the
collars could only be taken off by the person who put them on. But Lehr was too
angry, she thought in near despair; Jes would know that there was something
wrong. “Where’s Jes?” asked Hennea. Seraph looked at the other woman’s expressionless face
thoughtfully. “Kors,” she abruptly, “will take you to Jes. He’s being held with
a foundrael—Isfain is supposed to be keeping him calm. I would
appreciate it if you would do your best to see that Jes is not discomforted
while I go with Benroln.” “A foundrael?” If anything, Hennea’s voice was colder
than before. A blush rose on Kors’s cheeks. Hennea’s mouth was tight with
anger, but she nodded her head at Seraph. “I’ll take care of him—he’s been
helping me knit in the evenings since we met up with this clan. Sometimes
simple tasks help.” “Thank you, Hennea,” said Seraph, feeling vast relief at Hennea’s
confidence. She pointed to the tent entrance. “Gura. Stay. Guard.” The last
thing she wanted was for one of these fools to get their hands on the Ordered
stones. Once the dog was sitting where she’d asked him to, she said, “Lehr, my
dear, it looks like you might miss the Hunt today. You will come with me—I have
no desire to lose anything more than I can help on this fool’s errand.” Chapter 12Hennea stalked behind Kors, the canvas bag that held her
needles and woolen thread clutched tightly in one hand. Her anger was partly
self-disgust. She knew better than to get involved; that always brought
unnecessary pain. Poor Moselm ... he’d been such a kind man, uncomplicated.
They’d been lovers before they’d been taken, but it had been little more than a
convenience to both. Moselm’s wife had died several years before of one of the
mysterious ailments that plagued the Traveling clans. They had come together
for comfort. But it was the Traveler’s lot in life to confront things
that no one else would face. If Moselm’s death brought the light of destruction
to the Path, he would have counted his life well-spent. But Jes ... There was no peace in dying among kinsfolk—and Hennea, like
Seraph, knew that every minute that Jes spent collared by the foundrael brought
him that much nearer to madness and a merciful death at the hands of those who
loved him. She didn’t want to do that ever again. That Travelers would come to this. Travelers
sworn and taught to aid the solsenti. For gold and hatred they betrayed their
oaths, and put a good man at risk—perhaps they all deserved the fate that the solsenti
intended to mete out. Kors, subdued and somber with doubt, led Hennea toward one
of the more distant campsites. The clansfolk they encountered on the way bowed
their heads and refused to look her in the eye. They knew, she saw, and they
were ashamed—but angry at the guilt they felt. Before long, she thought, they’d
turn that guilt into righteous indignation. See what the solsenti have turned us into, they
would say to one another, so lacking in pride that they could not even accept
the responsibility for their own downfall. Kors stopped in front of a large tent and they both heard Isfain’s
harsh voice snap out. “Sit here and wait, boy, as I told you. Your mother has
business with Benroln and then you may do as you wish.” Hennea’s eyebrows climbed. “Supposed to be keeping him calm,
is he?” she murmured to Kors, pleased when she saw that he was unhappy with
what they’d just heard as well. She swept open the tent with none of the usual courtesies. Isfain
was standing in front of her and she shoved him ungently aside to see Jes
perched unhappily on a tall stool in the middle of the tent. It was the only
object in the tent—if Benroln had indeed given orders to keep Jes calm he had
failed marvelously. “Woman, watch what you do!” snapped Isfain. Evidently, he didn’t care for her entrance. She ignored him. “Hennea,” Jes said in soft-spoken relief. “I need to see
Mother.” One hand rubbed at the leather strap he wore around his neck, turning
it about as if to find a buckle or lacing that wasn’t there. To Hennea’s eyes
the leather was as smooth as if it had just grown around his neck. “What are you doing here?” said Isfain. “Does Benroln know
you are here?” She ignored him again. “It’s all right, Jes,” she said to the dark young man
sitting restlessly on the battered old stool. “Benroln wants to force your
mother to curse some poor fanner’s land for money. They’re holding you with an
artifact that keeps your other spirit at bay—there’s nothing wrong with you.
Lehr went with your mother.” She didn’t know how much he’d understand in his current
state so she was gratified when Jes’s swaying slowed down. “They are safe?” he said. “I don’t think that Benroln will be able to do anything to
Seraph that she doesn’t want to happen. Lehr is with her.” He swallowed, “And you are safe here.” “Yes,” she agreed. “I’m safe with you. Would you help me
with my knitting until your mother’s business is completed?” She opened her bag and gave him a skein that she’d tangled
just for this purpose. After a little hesitation he took it from her. He stared
at it for a minute, but at last his long-fingered hands began to work patiently
at untangling knots. The rough wool thread had a mind of its own, and it would
take a while to unravel the mess she’d made. She settled at his feet and began knitting with a ball he’d
rolled for her yesterday. She leaned lightly against his leg, prepared to shift
away if she made him uncomfortable. The long muscles of his thigh softened and
relaxed, so she let him take a bit more of her weight. She glanced into his eyes and saw the fury trapped
impotently in the net of the foundrael. She shivered and looked back at
the sweater she knitted. For a while he seemed calmer. Perhaps if the tent had
not been so starkly furnished, or if that idiot Isfain had quit looking at Jes
as if he expected him to explode, Jes would have been all right. “I don’t like this,” said Jes, abruptly throwing his yarn on
the ground. “I need ... I need to be somewhere.” Hennea looked up at him and saw the despair in his eyes.
Enough, she thought. “Wait a moment,” she told him. Kors was not a problem. He knew what was right when someone
shoved it in his face, as much as he wished he didn’t. Isfain, though, Isfain
might be more difficult. He was one of those gifted with magic, though not Ordered.
Hennea knew that other Ravens had a tendency to look upon unordered mages as
weak, but she was not so foolish. A good wizard used subtlety as well as power,
and like a well-knit wool sweater, their spells could be difficult to unravel. The trick with wizards was not to give them time to do anything. “Isfain,” she said simply. “Hush, be still.” It wouldn’t have been worth doing to a Raven, because they
needed neither word nor movement to call magic. A wizard could call magic that
way, too—but it was a poor business they made of it. It would be a long time
before Isfain worked his way free of her binding. “What?” asked Kors incredulously, surprised at Hennea’s rudeness. She put her knitting away carefully, then she took the yarn
Jes had thrown and set it in the top of her bag. Time enough later to unspell
it so it could be organized more easily. “He’s too far,” she said. “What do you mean?” asked Kors, who still hadn’t noticed
that Isfain was now immobile because of her magic. He didn’t know what she was. “Have you ever seen a Guardian released from the foundrael?”
she asked. “It’s not bad if they haven’t been upset—but your Isfain
precluded that.” “Mother,” said Jes sadly. She nodded. “I know, Lehr will keep her from harm, but that
is your job. To protect your family.” “Yes,” he said. She turned to Kors. “If I were you I’d leave this tent, so
that you aren’t the first thing he sees when he’s free.” She’d given him warning enough. If he didn’t choose to
follow ... she relaxed as she heard him leave. Really, Kors wasn’t a bad
sort “All right, Jes, I’m going to take this thing off.” She reached up, but he caught her hands. “Can’t. Benroln
said only him.” “Well,” Hennea said. “I’m not as powerful as your mother,
Jes, but I have spent a long time studying. I think I know how to take the
blasted thing off. I’ll not lie to you, there is some danger—but not as much as
leaving it on.” “To me,” he said, catching her hands before she could touch the
foundrael. “Not you.” “Only to you,” she lied, but she’d had a lot of practice
lying and it came out like the truth. He let her set her hands on the soft band around his neck.
The leather was soft and new-looking, as if it had been tanned yesterday
instead of centuries ago. That made it easier, because she knew which one it
was. “No,” he said, pulling her hands away again. “It’s all right,” she said. “No,” Jes said again. “The Guardian will kill the big man.
That would be bad. He thinks that killing would be very bad for us. Killing is
bad, but he would have no choice. He is very angry.” Hennea considered him. Everyone had a tendency, she thought,
to ignore the daylight Jes in their fear of the Guardian. Oh, Seraph loved him
in either guise, but she treated him with the same indulgence and discipline
that she treated their dog and the others followed her example. Jes, thought Hennea, was more than just a disguise where the
Guardian resided. Impulsively she put her hand, still clasped loosely by his,
on his cheek. He closed his eyes and leaned against it, moving so the light
stubble, new-grown since his shaving this morning, prickled her fingers. He was just a boy, she thought, uncomfortable with the
instant response his innocently sensual gesture had called from her. He might be right about killing. The Order of the Eagle came
only to people who were empathic, a rare gift and usually weak. If Jes were a
strong enough empath, killing might very well be enough to damage him. “The Guardian won’t calm until we take it off, Jes. He’ll
just feel worse and worse,” she said, though she didn’t move her hand from his
face. “The longer we wait the more difficult it will be.” He nodded, but didn’t open his eyes. “He’s so angry,” he
said. Dark lashes brushed her fingertips, and she shivered. He looked at her then, his eyes dark and hungry. “You could
make him not angry,” said Jes. “He likes you, too. Kiss me.” His suggestion startled her. She’d never heard of anyone
trying something like this. Likely because only an idiot would think of kissing
an angry Guardian. Her lips were still canted in a smile when they touched his.
It was an innocent kiss at first, because he called that from her—though not
without arousal. His lips were a little chafed, and the rough surface scraped
hers in butterfly-wing caresses. She could feel him tense when her hands touched his neck
again, so she opened her mouth to nip lightly at his lips, distracting him from
what she did. It distracted her, too—but not so much that she fumbled the
Unlocking. As soon as she finished, fear washed through the tent like a
flash flood, taking her breath with its strength. She dug her fingers into
Jes’s shoulders, which had turned to iron. But he didn’t fight her as she held
him to her and touched his lips with her tongue. Fear had driven away the embarrassment she felt at seducing
him, but it hadn’t erased the desire he called from her. When he took charge of
the kiss, she softened for him and allowed him to vent his fury into passion. It was the Guardian who gentled the kiss again and shifted
his weight away from her. He rubbed his face against hers, like a cat marking
his territory, and then pulled away despite the tension that shook his body. “Benroln has Mother and Lehr?” he asked hoarsely. She had to clear her throat before she could say anything.
“Yes,” she said. She averted her face, knowing her cheeks were red, so she
didn’t have a chance to move away before he touched her again. He pulled her
against him, and set his chin on top of her head. “We’ll go find them,” he said. Then he must have noticed Isfain,
because he stiffened. “What have you done to that one?” he growled. She used the excuse of looking at Isfain to step out of
Jes’s arms. “Not as much as I’d have liked to,” she said. “Benroln was young
when he stepped up to the leadership—if I understand the history that led to
this stupidity. But you,” she tapped Isfain’s nose reprovingly, “you knew better.
He was your sister’s son and you taught him poorly.” “Release him,” said the Guardian. She cocked her head at him warily. “Why?” When he growled at her, she found herself smiling despite
the way the skin on her back flinched. “I think we’d better just leave him as
he is until we find Lehr and your mother, don’t you?” “Soft-hearted,” he said. “Better than soft-headed,” she replied. “Should we go after
Lehr and Seraph?” He stepped around her and held open the tent flap. “I’d
rather eat someone,” he said—she thought it was for Isfain’s benefit, but she
wasn’t quite sure. “But we’ll head out looking for Mother first. Is Gura here?” “Seraph told him to guard the tent,” she said. As she ducked through the flap he put his lips near her ear
and said, “Don’t feel guilty.” She stopped so abruptly that the top of her head collided
with his jaw hard enough that she heard his teeth click. “Why should I feel guilty for kissing a handsome young boy?”
she said sarcastically, without lowering her tone at all. To her amazement he grinned at her. Guardians didn’t grin.
They smiled with pleasure while they choked the life out of some poor fool who
crossed them. They bared their teeth. They didn’t grin. “I don’t know. We both enjoyed it very much, Jes and I,” his
grin widened. “And we’d like to do it again as soon as possible.” “Here you are,” said a young man in rich clothing who
awaited them in a small clearing set in the side of a hill and overlooking a
twenty-acre field with a tidy cottage at the far end. “I thought you might not
make it.” Benroln smiled congenially. “I don’t break contracts, sir.” “And besides,” said the young man, “you knew there was more
gold where you got the first, eh?” He looked too young to have been a merchant for long,
thought Seraph, then she reconsidered. There was a softness in his face that
made him look exceedingly young, but his eyes were sharp and old. I’ll bet that he uses that young face of his, Seraph
thought as she revised her estimate of his age upward by ten years. “Of course, sir,” said Benroln after he laughed politely at
the merchant’s comment. “This is the woman who will set the spell.” “And this is the farm right here,” replied the merchant in a
light, pleasant voice. “I want it cursed—you understand. Paid good money for a
mage to curse it last year—but Asherstal still got a harvest out. I told that
sorcerer I wanted nothing to grow on these fields, not even a weed. I want the
other farmers to avoid Asherstal for fear whatever befell him will happen to
them. I want him shamed. You’d better do the job or maybe some ill might befall
you, eh? Like happened to that mage I hired last year.” Benroln looked taken aback, and Seraph wondered if he’d believed
that sweet, innocent air the merchant exuded. “Your mage’s curse is still here,” she murmured. “Perhaps
you had him killed too soon. I’ll have to take it off before I can work.” “I don’t tell a tanner how to do his job,” said the
merchant. “I just pay him for good work.” He made an odd motion with his hand that
might have been accidental—but Tier had taught the boys the signs soldiers
used. It had the look of one of those. Lehr had caught it, too, she thought. He faded back silently
into the night. Neither the merchant nor Benroln seemed to notice—she doubted
the merchant had ever seen him to begin with. “I’ll have to go down to the edge of the field,” Seraph
said. “Fine, fine,” he agreed. “It’s dark enough that they won’t
see you. We can wait in the trees that border the field.” He led the way down. If Benroln was worried by anything, Seraph
couldn’t tell—but she thought not. If he’d been properly worried about the
merchant, he wouldn’t have left Isfain and Kors to tend Jes and Hennea. More
fool he, to trust a man who’d curse another man’s living. She suspected that the hidden men were to come out when she
finished to make certain neither Benroln nor she told anyone that he’d paid to
have this poor farmer’s fields cursed. Lehr wondered if his mother had caught the signal the merchant
had sent. There were men out here somewhere, men waiting to kill Benroln and
his mother when the merchant decided he was finished with them. Personally,
Lehr wasn’t worried about Benroln one way or the other, but his mother was
another matter entirely. Lehr backtracked the merchant until he found a place where
the man had waited with four others. Enough men to account for a couple of
Travelers as long as they took them by surprise. Each had taken a different
path. They left no tracks that he could see, because the forest
was inky-dark; not even the starlight illuminated the ground under the trees.
But he knew they had been there because he could smell them. He shuddered. What was he that he could scent a man like a
dog? He drew his knife and picked a trail to follow. When they came to the edge of the woods, the merchant motioned
Seraph on. He and Benroln settled in to wait under the cover of the trees while
she worked her magic. She sat down on the ground at the edge of the field, just
outside of the area of planting. She could see the weaving of magic through the
soil. The mage this merchant had hired had done well; it was going to take her
a long time to clean the field. Time for Lehr to find the merchant’s men. Tune
for Jes to be lost to the effects of the foundrael. She began plucking the threads of the dead mage’s spell without
further ado. As she did so, the familiarity of what she was doing settled
around her with a feeling of rightness: this is what she
had been born to do. After a while the merchant became impatient. “I don’t see anything.
I don’t pay good money for nothing—and I don’t put up with people who try to
steal from me.” “Tell him I can’t work unless he’s quiet,” said Seraph serenely,
knowing that the calmer she was the worse the merchant would take it. His sort
always liked to see people cringe in fear of him. She could have given him a
light show, but the people her magic told her were sleeping in the cottage
might be awakened. She didn’t want them coming out to investigate with the
merchant’s armsmen lurking about—the wrong people might be killed. “Come away,” Benroln said to the merchant with an air of determinedly
cheerful diplomacy. “This will take a while. I brought a pair of dice with me.
We can pass the time while Seraph works.” Just as well he’d intervened before she’d pushed the
merchant too far, she thought and turned her attention back to the field. Lehr
needed all the time she could buy him. Now why didn’t you work? she asked as she pulled the
cursing magic away from stalks of wheat only half the size they should be this
time of year. Nonetheless, with the strength of the spell she was unravelling,
this field shouldn’t have grown anything more than a sprig of cheatgrass. Night fell, but she didn’t pay any attention—what she was
looking at didn’t require light for her to see. Finally, she detached the last
of the spelling and, unanchored, the weave fell apart and lost its form. The magic the wizard had imbued in his casting drifted off
when the spell lost its power. It didn’t go far before it was caught firmly,
and pulled back into the earth to enrich the soil. That was when Seraph
realized how it was that the farmer had managed to grow wheat in this field. There were other creatures that used magic besides the
shadow beasts who lived in the Ragged Mountains. Most of them had died fighting
at Shadow’s Fall. But some of them escaped. This one hadn’t been strong enough
to remove the spell, but it had done a great deal to mitigate the effects.
Likely whatever it was, it had felt her meddling and was watching from nearby. “Mmm,” she murmured, smiling in pleasure as she leaned forward
and pressed her hands onto the field, sinking her hands into the soft ground
where the magic held in the grains of dirt made her fingers tingle. Seraph sent out a drift of Seeking magic again, this time
looking for a creature not human. She found something almost immediately, but
it was different than she expected: darkness but not shadow, somehow more
natural, more elemental than the woods around her, something frightening. It
could only be Jes. The time had come, whether Lehr was finished or not. She set
the mystery of the farm’s protector aside and began her show. She stood up and held both arms out theatrically, calling
out in the Old Tongue. They weren’t words of power—she didn’t need them for
this. She didn’t know many words of the Old Tongue, but she was willing to bet
that Benroln knew even less. Theatrics, her father would have scolded her, but her grandfather
would have understood. Some people wouldn’t believe in magic until it came with
light and sounds. The merchant himself had given her the idea for this, and
the magic embedded in the soil gave her the power. She called light filaments
to sparkle and grow like cobwebs on the wheat, dancing from stalk to stalk
until the whole field glittered in light that shifted rapidly through the
shades of the rainbow in waves. It was a pretty effect, she drought, though it
was merely light. But there wouldn’t be a solsenti alive who would turn
their heads from the field to look behind them when Seraph’s children
approached. Benroln and the merchant stepped out of the trees, but a flicker of
magic held them where they were. Now to leave the merchant in no doubt of what his gold had
purchased for him. This was more difficult and she would never have even
attempted it if it hadn’t been for that dark, tingling soil that ached to aid
the growth of the plants rooted in it. Slowly she raised her arms together as she pushed her magic
into plants. Grow, she urged them, grow and be strong. Stalks thickened slowly and stretched up ... A defter hand than hers touched them and straightened and
strengthened; balancing root, stalk, and bearding head in a way that Seraph
would not have, though she knew, from the rightness of
the path of magic, that this was how plants ought to grow. Since her magic was not needed, she glanced toward the
source of the magework and saw it, sitting near a fencepost. It wasn’t much
bigger than a cat, a small, mossy creature with rounded, droopy ears and large
eyes that gleamed with power. Its coloring matched the earth and wood so
closely that she doubted that she would have seen it if the field hadn’t been
thrumming with its power. “Earthkit,” she said softly to herself. “This farmer must
keep to the old ways.” “When he had naught but old bread and milk for his own children
he didn’t forget me,” agreed a voice she felt as much as heard. “Such acts are
to be rewarded.” “Indeed,” agreed Seraph. Since she wasn’t doing anything else,
she added a crackle to the lights so that the merchant and Benroln wouldn’t
hear her talking to the creature. “I would not have been able to heal this so
well without you.” “Nor could I break that other spelling,” said the earthkit
in its rusty voice. “But I am done now,” The magic ceased abruptly and it left
in a scuttling run that her eyes could not quite follow. The wheat swayed under Seraph’s lights, ready to harvest
now—at least two months early. She lowered her arms and allowed the glitter and
noise to die away slowly. “I won’t do the work of petty criminals,” she said clearly. “Raven,” spat Benroln. “Fine. See what happens to your children
now. And as for this,” he waved a hand at the field, “You may be Raven, but I
am Cormorant.” Electricity began gathering in the air. Stupid, stupid, arrogant Raven, Seraph thought,
bitterly ashamed. A storm with the heavy wheat heads atop slender, drying
stalks would be disastrous. If she’d just left the field alone once she’d
broken the curse, the earthkit would have seen to it that the wheat grew
normally. She knew what Benroln was, and being a farmer’s wife she should have
remembered what disasters the weather can bring. “Benroln,” she said harshly, “you are a fool. This man has assassins
in the woods—do you think they lurk there to watch the magic?” “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said the merchant. Benroln stopped his casting and looked at the other man. “Why do you think that a man like this would come here without
guards?” said Seraph. “There has always been a problem doing the work of solsenti
who are willing to hire Travelers to make evil upon others of their kind.” “What do you suggest?” Benroln said bitterly. “My people
will starve. I tried it your way. We were driven from one place to another,
sometimes by people who feared what we might do and sometimes by people because
we wouldn’t do as they asked. I’ve had four—four—mermori come to
me. Four more clans dead and gone.” “Do not air our quarrels before solsenti,” she said
sharply. Benroln glanced at the merchant and bit his lip. “Lehr took care of three of the men who were watching,” said
Hennea, coming out of the woods with Gura at her side. “Jes has the other one
immobilized.” “So what do we do with him?” Benroln asked. Jes appeared and grabbed the merchant’s hand. “You don’t want to draw that knife,” Jes said quietly. “My
brother’s over there with one of your men’s bows. No use anyone else dying
tonight.” The merchant all but collapsed at Jes’s touch, and Seraph’s
oldest son relieved him of several throwing knives. “Asherstal,” said Seraph, snapping her fingers. “The owner
of this field. He has managed to survive this long; I suspect he can handle
this one if we deliver him. Hennea, Jes, could you escort him there?” She
turned to Benroln and said, “I need you to call a meeting of your people
tonight. I’d like to tell you some things that you need to know.” If she could persuade the entire clan to follow her to
Taela, she’d have the clan’s healer for her husband when she found him. She
just wished she were as good at persuading people as Tier was. Benroln didn’t wait for her, but stomped off, angry at her,
at the merchant, and at a responsibility he didn’t know how to fulfill. When Benroln was gone, Jes said, “He bears no open wounds,
Mother, but Lehr is hurt.” Seraph nodded. “Take this one to the farmhouse and don’t get
anyone hurt in the process, and I’ll do my best for Lehr.” She waited until Jes and Hennea were halfway to the cabin,
but before she called out, Lehr came. It was too dark to see him well, but she
could smell the blood on him. “Thank you,” she said. “If you had not been here tonight, Benroln
and I would doubtless have been dead.” “There are three men dead instead,” he said. “Jes tied the
fourth one up before I got to him.” “They were men who were willing to kill for no cause but gold,”
said Seraph. Words were not her strength, but for Lehr she searched for the
right ones. “They have doubtless killed others on the merchant’s orders. Now
they will not kill anyone again.” “When I killed them,” whispered Lehr, coming toward her, “it
was so easy. Easier than hunting deer. What am I, Mother?” “This is what it means to be an Order-Bearer,” she told him.
“None of the Orders are easy. You are Hunter, and among the tasks of the Hunter
is the bringing of death.” She opened her arms, and, when he dropped to his knees in
front of her, she pulled him close. He buried his face in the crook of her
neck. “I don’t like it,” he said. “Shh,” she held him and rocked lightly back and forth, as
she had when he’d been a child. “Shh.” “Someone’s waiting in front of our tent,” said Jes just as
Gura gave a happy bark and ran forward with his tail wagging. “So,” said Brewydd from a bench someone must have carried
over for her. “You stopped Benroln from his folly. That’s more than I’ve
managed to do.” Gura sat beside her and put his big black muzzle on her knee
and heaved a contented sigh. “Hardly,” said Seraph. “I just pointed out that the merchant
he chose to do business with was a thief and a killer—and that any other solsenti
he’d find to pay for the same sort of favor will probably be equally bad.” The old woman cackled, “I never thought of that.” “It won’t stop him,” said Seraph. “He’s obviously done
similar things before; he’ll do them again.” “Most of them weren’t this bad,” said Brewydd. “Though making
certain that a village was dry a month or more in high summer, then forcing
them to pay him to bring the rain is no noble deed.” “No,” agreed Hennea dryly. “Talk to him at this meeting tonight,” Brewydd told Seraph.
“Make him understand what he does is folly.” “What good will talking do?” asked Lehr. “Haven’t you told
him what he’s been doing is wrong? Why would he listen to Mother when he won’t
listen to you?” “Hah!” exclaimed Brewydd. “A man would rather listen to a
beautiful woman than a wrinkled old crone. You, boy,” she said pointing at
Lehr. “You can help an old woman to her home.” Lehr took a deep breath, tightened his jaw, and nodded his
head. When he took her arm, Brewydd patted his biceps lightly before using him
to lever herself up. “Your mother teaches you well, boy. It is good when a
youngling is kind to old women.” She winked at Seraph and continued to mutter
at Lehr as he led her back to her wagon. “Right,” said Seraph, hoping Brewydd could do better for
Lehr than she’d managed. “Let’s go find Benroln.” “Seraph,” said Hennea, “if you go and start attacking
Benroln for what he’s done, you’ll make Lehr happy and we’ll all go our
separate ways tomorrow. Benroln will still take gold from the next solsenti who
wants to pay to have his neighbor’s fields destroyed, and you’ll have the
satisfaction of telling them what you think of them.” “You have another suggestion?” said Seraph. “The Secret Path is very powerful,” said Hennea. “They claim
that they run the Empire, and that might very well be true. Having more people
to call on for help could be very useful.” “I’ve thought of that,” said Seraph. “But—Hennea, I am not a
Bard. Yelling I can do, but persuasion is another matter entirely. Would you
try?” She shook her head. “To Benroln and his people, you are our
leader. To have me speak to them would be an insult You can do this. Just
remember that Benroln is frustrated because there’s nothing he can do to keep
his people safe. Give him something to do other than rob the solsenti of
their gold, some way to strike back, and he’ll forget about the games.” Isfain was angry with Hennea, Seraph observed as she sipped
her hot tea. But Hennea had told her the state she’d found Jes in, and Seraph
didn’t mind seeing him grit his teeth when Hennea got too close. What chance
had given Hennea the knowledge of loosing the foundrael, Seraph didn’t
know, but she was grateful for it all the same. Hennea had certainly impressed a few people with her freeing
of Jes. The whole Rongier clan, at least those present at the small gathering
in front of Benroln’s tent, were treating Hennea as if she’d grown a third
head. Or maybe Hennea was just sitting too close to Jes. Jes had no intention of forgiving anyone for imprisoning
him. He lurked in a wolfish form only half-revealed by the flickering light of
the bonfire. It might have been easier if he’d chosen to be wolf in whole, but
the wolf’s muzzle and eyes in an otherwise human body was particularly disturbing.
Low growls told everyone that he was unhappy with them all. Seraph rather
thought the shape was an illusion, but it was difficult to tell. Brewydd had brought Lehr with her. He looked tired, but the
sickness had faded from his eyes. When the old woman griped at him and ordered
him to move her camp chair three times before she sat in it, he actually
grinned. Benroln came out of his tent at last, and looked around to
see that everyone was there. He sat down directly opposite Seraph and nodded
his head at her so the meeting would begin with her comments. Unhappy people, all, she thought, glancing around at
the faces of the clan. “We could spend the night throwing accusations and debating
ancient history,” said Seraph. “If you were not honest with what you wanted of
us, well then, we were not entirely honest either.” “I’d like to rage at you, and tell you how wrong what you’ve
been doing is, but you already know what I think.” She took a deep bream. “So
I’m going to tell you the things that we didn’t tell you when you invited us to
journey with you to Taela. It will take a while, and I am no Bard. I ask for
your patience just the same.” “I am Seraph, Raven of Isolda the Silent and wife to Tieragan
of Redem, Owl in his own right, though he has not a drop of Traveler blood ...” By the time she brought them into the present she was
hoarse. Benroln refilled her cup and urged it upon her solicitously—as if they
had not just fought a battle over a farmer’s field. As clan leader, it was his place to respond, so everyone sat
silently while he considered her story. “This Path,” he said, “they have been taking our people for
years and stealing their Orders?” Seraph nodded. “You have some of the stones?” asked Brewydd. Seraph had thought the old Healer was asleep. “Yes.” “I’d like to see them,” Brewydd murmured. “Bring them here
when we are done and we’ll sit in the Librarian’s home, you and I, Hennea and
Benroln, and see just what evil the solsenti have wrought.” “All right,” Seraph said and then changed the subject. “Tomorrow,
my family and I will continue on to Taela where my husband is being kept.” “You say your husband is Ordered,” said Isfain. “But he is a
solsenti?” “That’s right.” “Could this Secret Path you told us about be the reason that
the solsenti laws have become so stringent against us?” asked Kors. Seraph thought that they could look to themselves and to
other clans who had gone after gold rather than fighting evil for the cause of
the antipathy solsenti had toward Travelers, but she wasn’t such a fool
as to say so. Benroln, unaware of Seraph’s thoughts, nodded intently. “It
could be. If what we have heard tonight is true, this Path could be very
powerful.” He nodded his head once more. “Then this is what we will do. Isfain,
send out messages to the other clans we know of and warn them of this Path and
their methods. See to it that they in turn pass the message on.” He waited
until Isfain nodded. “Tomorrow we also strike out at speed for Taela.” He turned to Seraph. “There are things that we can do to
help. We have friends in Taela.” Seraph looked at his eager face. “I would be very
grateful for any help you can give,” she said. Seraph was exhausted, but she found herself as unable to say
no to the old Healer as everyone else was. Besides, she wanted to know what the
Healer could tell her about the rings. So it was that she found herself inside
the house of Rongier the Librarian with Hennea, Benroln, and Brewydd. Rongier’s home had been larger and more prosperous than
Isolda’s. His library had a table large enough to seat eight or ten people. Seraph took the seat next to Brewydd and dumped the bag of
rings on the table. Brewydd hesitated and lightly fingered each ring before settling
on an old ring set with a stone of rose quartz. “Well,” she murmured, “how did they do that then? You told
me that they took the Orders and bound them to a ring.” “Right,” said Seraph. “That’s what Hennea said, and that’s
what seems to have happened.” “Indeed.” Brewydd put the ring down and pushed it away from
her. Her hand was shaking a little. “So that’s one of the reasons,” she
murmured. “Reasons for what, Brewydd?” asked Benroln. He’d made no
move to look closer at the rings. “There were only ever so many Orders,” she said. “I don’t
know the numbers, I’m not certain where to find an exact count of most of
them—but there were only ever ten healers. One would die and another would be
born. But now there are only six.” She pointed at the ring she’d been handling.
“That one is one of the missing.” “Do you mean to say that the Orders are ... like a ...”
Seraph searched for a proper comparison. “Like a suit of armor,” said Brewydd. “One that is fitted at
birth and stays with you, grows to be a part of you until it is like your skin.
When you die, the skin sloughs off and cleanses itself of everything that was
yours—your scent, your shape, the sound of your voice. Then, once mote only a
suit of armor, it goes off and seeks the next person to fit itself to.” She folded her hands and rested her chin on them. “The
Orders don’t go to just anyone.” She nodded her head toward Seraph. “You would
have been a mage even if you hadn’t been Raven. Your husband would still have
sung. Benroln would have been one of those people who always seems to know when
a bad storm is coming in. The Orders go where they will be welcomed.” “So when they made these stones,” said Benroln somberly,
“each ring was another Traveler born without an Order.” Brewydd nodded her head. She looked at Hennea. “You said
that the wizards of the Path, these Masters, find that they cannot use some of
these. I believe that they took the Order too soon, that there are bits of
personality still clinging to the stones. The only time I’ve ever seen
something similar is when I had to deal with a Raven’s Memory.” “A Raven’s Memory?” asked Benroln. “A Raven’s Memory,” said Brewydd, “happens only when a Raven
is murdered. A Raven can take the power that always comes with death and a part
of himself to the Order and bind the result to a false life until it carries
out vengeance against his murderer.” “But it’s not only the Raven stones that ...” Seraph’s voice
trailed off because she wasn’t certain how to explain it. “No.” Brewydd sorted out a half dozen rings. “Here is the
Lark, a couple of Ravens, a Hunter and Bard, these all contain part of their
last Order-Bearer. They’re bound, tied to the stones so they can’t act like
Raven Memories—but I bet the wizards who tried to wear them got a rude
surprise.” “Do you know what to do with them?” asked Hennea. “Not yet,” said Brewydd. “Do you mind if I keep these?” She
indicated the jewelry. “No,” said Seraph. “If you can figure out what to do with
them, how to free the Orders, it is more than Hennea and I have managed.” Brewydd nodded and collected the rings into Seraph’s bag. “Tell
that boy of yours to come to my wagon tomorrow when we stop to camp,” she said. “Lehr?” asked Seraph cautiously. Brewydd nodded. “I know a few odd things about Hunters he
might be interested in.” She got to her feet. “I know a lot more than I let
on,” she said. “But I only share with those I like. Your boy was exhausted and
heartsick, not to mention tired of taking orders and angry with the whole of my
clan—yet he still was courteous and gentle. I like him.” She glared at Benroln. He got up off the chair with a crack of laughter. “I love
you, old woman.” He leaned over and kissed her cheek. “I’m going to get some
sleep before I fall over. You’ll want to keep the mermora until you’ve
solved this puzzle with the rings, and you are welcome to it, Brewydd. Good
night.” Brewydd turned to Seraph. “I’m an honest woman, so I’ll tell
you that I’m not used to learning wisdom from those younger than I.I thought
that I had to convince him that what he was doing to earn gold was wrong. I
never considered trying to find something else for him to do instead. Thank
you.” Seraph shook her head. “I’m afraid you have Hennea to thank
for that” Hennea smiled and got up. “You’re welcome to any bits of
wisdom I pick up. Now, I’m with Benroln; it’s time to sleep. Can I escort you
to your wagon?” Brewydd laughed and winked at Seraph. “I’ll say yes, only because
that handsome young Guardian who’s been waiting outside will come, too.” Seraph laughed, yawned, and left for their tent “Seraph, wake up,” Hennea’s voice was soft and disappeared
into the dream. “Mother,” murmured Jes. At the sound, Seraph sat up and opened her eyes almost in
the same motion. “Jes, are you all right?” He smiled his sweet smile. “Fine, Mother, but you’re going
to wake the camp.” Seraph yawned and tried to find the reason they’d woken her
up in what Jes had just said. It was still dark out and everyone except her was
lying down. Hennea had a gentle grip on Seraph’s arm. “You were having nightmares,” said Lehr, rolling on his side
so he could see her more easily. When he said it, she remembered. Tier had been sitting on a
throne of oak, ash, and rowan while a spell was worked around him. He’d been
playing one of the songs he played often at the tavern, though she couldn’t
remember which one it was. She’d run to him, knelt at his feet, and set her
head in his lap as she had sometimes when the nightmares had been so bad after
her brother had died. But there had been something wrong. He’d kept playing, ignoring
her entirely. Finally she’d reached up to touch the skin of his arm and
screamed. His flesh had been warm, she could feel blood pulse under her
fingertips, but she knew that he was dead. Nervously she ran her fingers in her hair. “Thank you for waking
me,” she said, lying down again. “What did you dream of?” asked Hennea. “I don’t remember,” Seraph lied. She had no talent for
foreseeing, she reminded herself firmly. It had only been a dream. She lay back and stared at the top of the tent. She knew
that Jes and Lehr assumed they’d find Tier hale and whole and the only problem
would be getting him out, but Seraph had too much experience to believe in
happy endings. He might be dead. She’d never told Tier that she loved him. Never once. She had done her best to turn herself into a good wife,
tried to become the person he needed as helpmeet. She knew he’d assume that
she’d never told him that she loved him because she didn’t. He was wrong. Tier felt guilty for so much: that she’d been forced to
marry him, that she’d been so young. Their marriage had freed him from the
burden of taking over the family bakery and he felt guilty about that, too.
He’d gained his freedom and she’d lost hers, lost her chance to rejoin her
people. If she’d ever told him that she loved him, he’d have told her that he
loved her, too. He’d have lied for her. Tier was the most truthful person she knew. He’d have lied
to her out of guilt, and she couldn’t abide that, so she’d never told him. Dry-eyed, she stared, at the tent ceiling and hoped that
she’d get the chance to hear him lie to her. Chapter 13Phoran nervously caressed the stack of parchment on his bed.
He had already carefully organized it, placing the one that would make his
first bid for power fifteenth down. Far enough down that many of the Septs
would have relaxed their guard, but not so far that they would have quit listening
entirely. A light tap at his door made him take three quick steps away
from the bed. Then he realized that the bed was an odd place for formal
documents, so he ran back, snatched them up, and placed them on his writing
desk. He wouldn’t want anyone to think that he’d spent all day and most of the
night going through them. Most of the. Septs would think that he was merely
tormenting Douver, the council secretary: everyone knew that Phoran couldn’t
stand the worm. The quiet tap sounded again. “Your Highness?” said the guard
who stood his watch at the door to the Emperor’s bedchamber. “My lord, Avar,
Sept of Leheigh, begs entrance.” “Avar?” Phoran said distractedly. Now that he thought of it,
the writing desk was an odd choice as well. He couldn’t remember ever actually
sitting at it—something Avar would have noticed. “Yes, Your Highness.” “Yes, yes, let him in.” It was too late to change anything
anyway. The door opened and Avar made his entrance. “Phoran,” he
said as soon as the door was closed behind him. “I’ve been looking for you
since yesterday afternoon. Did you really take all the proposed laws and run
off with them?” Surprisingly, Phoran didn’t have a prepared reply. He hadn’t
even thought about what Avar would say. Not that he didn’t care—but it didn’t
seem as important anymore. Avar misread his hesitation. “Not that you didn’t have every right to—but you might have
warned someone you intended to take a closer look. It wasn’t necessary to give
poor Douver an anxiety attack.” Phoran found himself smiling. “Wasn’t it? You’ll have to forgive
me if I’ve forgotten that I could have just called the things into my review. I
suspect everyone else has forgotten as well.” A frown chased itself across Avar’s perfect brow. “What are
you up to, my friend?” “Do you know anything about the Secret Path?” It was an impulsive
question born of years of trust, blind trust he was no longer certain he felt.
But even after the question left his lips, Phoran didn’t regret it “The secret, secret club that everyone knows about?”
asked Avar with a grin. “Where a bunch of young hotheads go to pretend they are
villainous Travelers? My brother, Toarsen, and his tagalong, muscle-bound
friend, Kissel, belong to it” Phoran walked back to his bed and perched on the end,
offering a nearby padded bench to Avar with his hand. “Tell me everything you
know.” “Does this have something to do with taking the proposals?”
asked Avar as he availed himself of the offered seat and leaned back against
the wall. “I don’t know,” said Phoran truthfully. “Well then.” Avar put his head back and relaxed. “They
choose young men of noble blood when they’re fifteen or sixteen and induct them
in some sort of secret ceremony. They don’t pick a lot of boys—no more than
five or ten a year. I don’t know what they do at the ceremony—but my brother
carried bruises from it for a week or more. The people they choose are usually
the ones who are ... well, problems for their families.” He looked at Phoran a moment, then sighed. “I know they had
something to do with that mess last year when some young thugs destroyed the
weavers’ market. I saw Toarsen coming home in the wee hours of the morning,
dead drunk with a hatchet in his hand. I should have said something, but”—he
shrugged ruefully—“he’s my brother.” “Do you know any of the older members?” asked Phoran. “The
Raptors?” “Some,” answered Avar with a quick grin. “The ones my
brother gripes the most about. The council leader—the Sept of Gorrish is one of
them and Telleridge is another. My father was—I think that’s how my brother was
selected.” Phoran closed his eyes and thought. “Didn’t the Weavers’
Guild file a complaint against Gorrish just before the market was destroyed?
They dropped it because he was instrumental in getting funds to help them
rebuild it.” “You’re right,” said Avar in an arrested voice. “I never
thought to look for a deeper motive. I’ve always thought of the Secret Path as
a game for boys who are at loose ends.” “I have heard that you cannot be an heir to a Sept and belong
to the Path,” said Phoran. “Gorrish’s father and three older brothers died in the
plague that hit the Empire about twenty years ago,” said Avar. “He’s not the
only younger son who has inherited.” He smiled. “My own father was a second
son.” Phoran had a terrible thought. Maybe it was because he’d
just spent the night talking to a bard that he’d thought of the old story of
the Shadowed. How the first magic the Shadowed had loosed was plague. Maybe it
was all the talk of magic—or maybe it was his current affliction of Memory.
“How many of those second and third sons, or cousins who inherited a Sept were
members of the Path?” he asked. “I don’t know exactly—I was about four at the time, Phoran.
The younger sons who inherited unexpectedly ... oh, Seal Hold, Telleridge,
Jenne, and a few others. You aren’t going to tell me that the Secret Path is
responsible for the plague, are you?” Avar shook his head. “A lot of people
died, Phoran. Most of them weren’t Septs with heirs who happened to be
members of the Secret Club.” “Doubtless, you’re right” Phoran smiled and changed the subject.
“I am calling a Council Seating for tomorrow,” he said. “You are?” asked Avar, surprised into insult. Phoran smiled at him grimly. “It may have become usual,
since my uncle died, for Gorrish to call the Seat, but it is the imperial
prerogative he uses. I am calling it, and I’d like you to deliver the messages.
See if you can convince them that it’s just a silly whim of mine—that I said
something about being bored.” Avar stared at him for a long time, then nodded his head.
“I’ll do that. Tell me what time you’d like to meet.” The Memory came again that night. Phoran waited impatiently
for it to finish. At last the cold tongue licked the puncture wounds clean and
the Memory gave him the usual offer. “Were you a Traveler held by the Secret Path?” Phoran asked. “Yes,” it said and was gone with its usual abruptness. Pale and a little dizzy, the Emperor went to his closet and
pulled on a robe. With only a little caution—because the Path’s rooms were in
an obscure corner of the palace—Phoran made it back to the bard’s cell with
little trouble. He found Tier’s door unlocked, but when he went in, Tier lay
unmoving on his bed and nothing Phoran could do would awaken him. Phoran took up a seat on the end of the bed and stared at
Tier’s face—but other than being a little pale, he seemed healthy enough. At
last Phoran arose unhappily and returned to his suite. When Tier awoke, he knew they’d come for him again, though
his last memory was of settling in to play a bit of music after leaving the
party in the Eyrie. He moved and the lute tucked beside him dug into his ribs. He sat up with sudden anxiety and inspected it for any
damage it might have taken. He found something that could have been a new
scratch on the finish, but nothing that would impair its use. He settled back
against the wall with a sigh of relief. His head throbbed, his body ached, and
his mouth was uncomfortably dry—but the lute could not heal itself. He hugged the lute against his body. What was it that they did to him? Someone knocked on the door. Tier gathered himself together
and stood up. “It’s dinnertime, sir,” Myrceria explained after he’d opened
the door to her. “I can have food brought to you, or you can eat in the Eyrie
with the Passerines.” She hesitated, then said, “You might have noticed that
your movements have been restricted unless you have an escort. I was told to
inform you that you now can move freely around most of the rooms used by the
Passerines. If you’d like to wait and go alone, you may do that also. Food will
be provided at any time upon your request.” He stood up slowly, but the movement seemed to help some of
his aches and pains. “By all means,” he said with as much charm as he could
muster over his fading headache. “Let us go to the Eyrie.” The room was almost full to bursting. When Tier stepped inside,
the dull roar quieted as the young men all watched him. Like a duck who had the
ill luck to drop to earth in the midst of a pack of wolves, Tier thought with
amusement. Food of every description was spread out on the bar for the
taking. Tier, following Myrceria’s example, took a wooden platter and began
filling it. When she led the way to an unoccupied table he followed her. He ate without seeming to look up, but his peripheral vision
was very good. He saw the boys’ cautious approach. The first to arrive and sit at Tier’s table was a tall boy,
too thin for his height. Before he opened his mouth, Tier knew a few things
about him. The first was that he was a loner. The Passerines, he noticed,
tended to travel in packs, and there was no one moving with this boy. The pads
of his fingers were calloused from instrument strings and in one of those
calloused hands was a large case. He sat down beside Myrceria and put the case on their table
in the place of the food dishes that an efficient servant had just whisked
away. “You said last night that a Bard could play any instrument,”
he said. “Try this one.” “What’s your name?” asked Tier. He ignored the shuffle as a
number of young men pulled up stools and benches to listen in on their
conversation; instead, he kept his eyes on the case as he undid the various
hooks that kept it closed. “Collarn,” said the boy. “I am an assistant at the Imperial
College of Music. What do you think?” The challenge in Collarn’s voice was such that Tier wasn’t
surprised to discover that the case held an instrument he’d never seen before.
He coaxed the thing out of its close-fitting case and scooted his stool back so
that he could rest it on his lap for a closer look. It looked somewhat like a lute, he decided, but it was
squarer and deeper-bodied. There were tuning pegs, but the strings were hidden
inside the body. Below the pegs it had two rows of buttons on the side. On the side was a—“A handle?” Tier said, and turned it. At
once an odd, penetrating, grinding sound issued from the bowels of the
instrument He grinned in delight Tier tilted his head and closed his eyes, turning the handle
again. “It’s like a violin,” he said. “Or pipes. What do you call it, Collarn
of the College of Music?” “It’s a symphonia. There’s a wheel-bow inside that turns
with the handle.” Collarn had obviously come to flummox the Bard—probably for
usurping his place as the Passerine’s musical entertainment, but he shared
Tier’s love of music too deeply not to fall into a discussion with someone
willing to explore the possibilities of his obscure instrument. Tier hid his smile—he liked Collarn, and the boy obviously
took himself too seriously to enjoy a laugh at his own expense. After trying
several positions, Tier shifted the symphonia until he could turn the handle
with his right hand and touch the buttons on the side with his left After a moment he managed a simple melody—but he heard the
possibilities of much greater things. The instrument was louder than his lute,
making it a good choice for performing outdoors or before a large audience. A
pair of strings played the same note continuously like a bagpipe’s drones, lending
a sonorously eerie accompaniment to the rest of the notes that changed at the
touch of his fingers on the buttons. Tier stood up and handed the instrument to Collarn. “Would
you play something for me?” he asked. “I’d like to hear it played by someone
who knows what it can do.” The boy was talented—though his grandfather’s old friend
Giro could have taught him something about softening the straight rhythm
Collarn held to when the song wanted to fly. Finished, the boy looked up, his face a little bright.
“That’s the only song I know on it. We have no music written directly for it.
The masters at the college don’t think much of the instrument—it’s an odd thing
someone brought to the college a dozen years ago.” “May I try it again?” asked Tier, and the boy handed the symphonia
over. “The piece you played”—Tier played a bit, deliberately more
hesitant than Collarn had played so that he didn’t rob the boy of his
performance—“is something written for violin. It’s a good choice, and plays to
the instrument’s strengths.” “I can do it better on a violin,” said Collarn. “There’s no
dynamic range to the symphonia.” He grinned and the sweetness of the unexpected
expression reminded Tier of Jes. “It just doesn’t do quiet.” “Bagpipes are like that,” said Tier. “You might try piping music.” He fell silent and searched the instrument for range and
effect. When he turned the handle at just the right speed and the instrument
added a buzz to its already odd sound, Tier stopped and laughed outright “I can see why your college masters have a problem. It’s
just a bit brash, eh? A little boldness isn’t necessarily a bad thing.” He
hummed a little tune under his breath. “Let me try this ...” He knew he had it right when the toes of the boys nearest
him started moving. When Collarn took a small silver penny-whistle out of his
pocket and added a few runs, it made Tier think of playing with the old men in
the afternoons at the tavern in Redem. He played through the song twice—the
second time his fingers found their own way as he looked around the room at all
the young faces. He’d come here this afternoon to gather information, and instead
he’d gained a friend. Speculatively, Tier’s eyes fell on a promising young man
who was using the haft of his knife to tap out a rhythm on a tabletop. Tier knew about recruiting young men. Phoran was deliberately late going to the Council chambers.
He wanted them to gossip, to fret. If Avar had done as he asked, they would be
more annoyed than worried. The Emperor stopped before the door, took a deep breath, and
nodded to the chamberlain to announce him. “Rise for the Emperor Phoran, may his reign never cease!” If it doesn’t ever begin, thought Phoran, can it
ever cease? Silence fell in the room and Phoran strode leisurely through
the doorway, followed by the young page he’d chosen for his small size to make
the stack of parchment the page carried look even larger than it was. Phoran himself was in his most glittering, gaudy
clothes—clothes that had caused his valet to mutter about street whores. Phoran
had started out to wear a more conservative outfit—but he’d decided that would
send the wrong message. He didn’t want to announce, Look! I’ve changed for
you. He wanted to force them to acknowledge him emperor on his own terms. His hair was curled, and his face was powdered paler than
any court dandy. A small blue star painted beside his eye matched the
glittering blue and silver stars embroidered on purple velvet portions of his
costume. He didn’t hurry, forcing himself to keep his appearance
languid while the impatience of the Septs grew almost palpable. At last he
reached the place reserved for the Emperor. A thin coat of dust covered the
inlayed surface of his podium, where he gestured for the boy to set the
parchment before waving him off in the general direction of Douver, the council
secretary. The page relayed the message he’d been given and the secretary
looked up at Phoran incredulously. Phoran stared back, doing his best to look
neither nervous nor smug as his page rejoined him. Douver cleared his throat. “Septs of the Empire. I call a general
roll so that His Glory the Emperor shall know who attends this meeting. Each
Sept will call out as I read his name.” He took up a paper and Phoran made a
show of removing the top sheet of parchment, which was a copy of the clerk’s. In the end, twenty-four Septs were absent. Phoran was
careful to mark each of their names with a stylus while the council watched.
Everyone in the room knew that at least eighteen of those named were in the
palace. “Thank you,” said Phoran graciously, and without a speech or
any further delay, he picked up the first of the proposed laws. “The matter of
the trade agreement between the Septs of Isslaw and Blackwater is declared to
be Imperial Law.” He set the first parchment to one side and picked up the
next By the tenth parchment the Septs began shifting uncomfortably in their
seats—except for Avar, who sat in his chair with arms folded across his chest,
and stared at Phoran thoughtfully as Phoran continued his show. Phoran took the fifteenth parchment and read, “For his
services to the Empire, the Sept of Jenne is to be awarded the land from Iscar
Rock to the eastern field of Kersay Holm in a path no more than ten miles
wide.” He looked up and found the Sept of Jenne in his usual place
in the council. “So, what service did you perform for the Empire, Jenne?” The man he’d addressed stood up. A contemporary of Phoran’s
father, he was in his late middle years, with iron-grey hair and a short beard.
He bowed. “If it please Your Imperial Majesty, it was in the matter of the
trouble the Weavers’ Guild had last year. I found myself in the position of
being able to perform some little service in the matter of raising funds for
the displaced merchants.” “Ah,” said Phoran. “We had wondered. In any case, this proposal
is denied. You may reseat yourself, Jenne.” He set it to his left, away from
the neat stack of signed documents. He’d picked up the next proposal when the paralysis wore off
and the Sept of Gorrish jumped to his feet followed by a fair number of his
followers. “I protest!” he said, and that was the last thing that anyone heard clearly for several minutes as the Council of Septs
roared its displeasure with the Emperor. Phoran set the parchment he’d picked up back where he’d gotten
it and waited for the uproar to die down with as cool a manner as he could
force over his pounding heart His instincts told him that if he were not able
to take control of the Septs at this meeting, he never would. He watched the flushed faces of the men who protested,
seeing the hidden satisfaction on Telleridge’s countenance at the strength of
the Septs’ outrage, though Telleridge said nothing. Avar caught Phoran’s gaze
and raised an eyebrow, then he made a subtle gesture toward himself as if to
ask, “May I?” Avar thought he could do something about this? Phoran raised
his own eyebrows (he had never learned the trick of raising only one) and
nodded his head. Avar stood up, jumped the waist-high barrier and landed on
the council floor, six feet or so below the searing area. His action caught the
attention of the Septs, buying him a momentary lull in the noise. “Gentlemen,” he bellowed. “Any man who is still standing and
talking after a count of five, I shall personally challenge to armed deadly
combat. Even if I have to fight each of you. His Imperial Majesty will then
have a much more pleasant time with your heirs. One. Two. Three.” Avar could do it, too; Phoran knew. Could defeat each and
every one of the Septs. That they agreed with Phoran’s assessment was
demonstrated by the fact that they were seated and silent before Avar reached
“four.” Avar scanned the scats to make certain they were occupied,
then with that easy athleticism that Phoran envied so, he jumped up, caught the
bottom railing and scaled the barrier to resume his own seat. “We give thanks to the Sept of Leheigh for his service to
the Empire,” said Phoran with more aplomb than he felt. Avar’s audacious and
effective ploy to silence the Septs had left Phoran the opportunity for a bit
of cleverness—or stupidity depending upon how it turned out. Phoran turned his head to the council leader. “So, Ombre,
Sept of Gorrish—you object to my rejection of this proposed law?” He picked up
the offending document and appeared to look at it more closely. “Permission to speak, please?” Gorrish ground out between
clenched teeth. “Oh, of course,” said Phoran in surprised tones. “We are always
glad to hear your concerns, Gorrish.” The council leader dropped his eyes and took a deep breath.
“This is a matter that was already put forth and approved by the council.” “For me to consider putting into law,” agreed Phoran
lightly. “I decided that it was ill-considered.” He reached for the next parchment
again. “Please, Your Majesty, hear me out,” said Gorrish. “The particulars
of the case were made known to the council at the time the lands were granted.
There were no objections at all.” Phoran raised his eyebrows again in surprise. “What, none?”
He looked around the room. “Avar?” “Yes, Imperial Majesty?” Avar stood. “Did you not just put your life at risk in Our Service?” questioned
Phoran. To Phoran’s delight, Avar looked at the Septs around him and
shook his head slightly. “I suppose someone might have gotten in a lucky blow,
Your Majesty, but I did not feel imperiled.” “Nonetheless,” said Phoran, “there was risk and you did not
hesitate to serve me. Is this not a greater deed than raising funds to help a
few merchants? A matter, I understand, of some two hundred and thirty-five gold
pieces?” The air went still as the more observant Septs began to
realize that Phoran knew more about the affair than he’d appeared to at first. “Perhaps, Your Majesty,” agreed Avar with seeming reluctance. “Avar, Sept of Leheigh, please enlighten those here with the
amount that you spent on that magnificent mare you purchased yesterday.” Avar cleared his throat. “Ah, two hundred and forty gold
pieces. Your Majesty.” “We believe that the life of a Sept is of more value than a
horse,” said Phoran firmly. “Therefore Avar, Sept of Leheigh, I put it before the
council that I intend to gift you with a piece of land from Tisl to Riesling of
a width not more than three miles—” “But—” Servish, the hotheaded young Sept of Allyn,
surged to his feet. Servish, though, was loyal to a fault and he caught his
tongue and began to sink down. “But what, Allyn?” invited Phoran gently. He had picked
Servish especially for this role. Servish swallowed and straightened up. “I am, always, your
loyal servant. Majesty.” Phoran nodded. “Please,” he said. “What was it you were
going to say?” Servish flushed and took a deep breath. “The land you spoke
of is within my Sept, Majesty.” Phoran smiled at him and then looked at Avar, who had remained
standing. “Avar, I am afraid that I cannot grant you lands that belong to a
loyal Sept. It would not be right.” “No,” agreed Avar. “What say you, my lords?” Phoran looked to the Septs. “Those
who would grant me or any other such powers, stand and say, ‘Aye’ now.” The
room was silent. “Nor, Gorrish, can I take lands away from any loyal Sept
just to grant them to someone who performed some small service to the Empire.
The Sept of Gerant has never shown me anything but loyalty. It would be a poor
emperor who took lands away from Septs who have committed no offense. You may
all take your seats.” He could feel it happen, Phoran thought. He could feel the
reins of the Empire slip into his hands. He kept his face clear of triumph and
picked up another piece of parchment. “In the matter of the border dispute ...” And the Septs all
sat silently in their seats as Phoran read through every last one of the
documents. “What is your purpose?” Phoran asked, his hands only a little
shaky as he pulled down his sleeve. The triumph of this afternoon was such that
even the Memory’s bite wasn’t enough to sour his mood. If he could control the
Septs, then surely he could rid himself of this curse. “To destroy the Masters of the Secret Path,” it said. “Ah,” said Phoran. He’d known the answer, but he hadn’t thought of a better question.
He had to steady himself when he stood up. “I’m going to see if our friend in
the Path’s dungeons is any better. You may join me if you’d like.” Truthfully, he was tempted just to go to bed. He had been
tired before the Memory showed up, and losing more blood hadn’t helped any. But
the memory of Tier’s unnaturally deep sleep had been with him all day. The
Memory, for whatever reason, followed him to Tier’s cell. There was music coming from the Bard’s cell, but the door
was too thick to hear more than that. Drawing his short sword, Phoran tapped
lightly on the door. “Come in.” Impossible to mistake that voice: it was Tier. Phoran sheathed his sword and opened the door. The Bard was
sitting on his bed with a lute in his hands. He was pale and looked nearly as
tired as Phoran felt, but when Tier saw that it was Phoran, he set the
instrument aside and got quickly to his feet. “My emperor.” “Just Phoran,” Phoran advised him and shuffled over to plop
down on the end of the bed. He scooted back until his back was braced against
the wall and motioned for Tier to do likewise. “I’m glad to see you in a better
state than last night.” “You came last night as well?” Tier sat down and pulled the
lute back into his lap as if it were a baby. He glanced over at the Memory,
which had taken up the same place it had on the first night. “I couldn’t wake you,” Phoran yawned. He’d forgotten that he
hadn’t gotten much sleep the night before. At least he had a better excuse for
being tired. “I waited for a few hours, but decided that I’d give you a night
to recover from—?” “Something the wizards have cooked up,” said Her unhappily.
“I’m not certain what.” He shook his head and gave Phoran a small smile.
“Nothing anyone can do about it right now. I do have some information for you.
You asked about Avar, the Sept of Leheigh. I heard his name mentioned, mostly
because his brother, Toarsen, is a Passerine, but if he’s a member, the
Passerines don’t know about it.” Phoran heaved a sigh of relief. He’d been almost certain
after the council incident, but it was good to be sure. “There are a number of Septs who are Raptors,” said Tier and
raided off a list of thirty or forty. Phoran would have been more impressed if the list hadn’t
frightened him so badly. “Could you go through them again, please?” he said
tightly. Tier complied, listing the same people in the same order. “Did you hear any other names?” asked Phoran, almost afraid
to ask. “Not of the Passerines, but the wizards.” “The Masters, the wizards, except for Telleridge, keep their
identities hidden,” said Tier. “I do have the names of more Raptors.” Phoran listened to a recital that consisted of people ranging
from Douver, the council secretary, to the captain of the palace guard,
including any number of influential tradesmen and scholars. “You have a remarkable memory,” said Phoran neutrally. “You
heard all of those in the past two days?” “Mostly today,” agreed Tier. He gave Phoran a small smile.
“Bards have to have a good memory, and the Passerines weren’t at all unhappy to
discuss the glories of membership in the Secret Path.” Phoran believed him, and wished unhappily that he did not.
“What if,” he said slowly, “what if I told you that the Path recruits the
restless younger sons and cousins among the nobles of the Empire at the age of
fifteen—the kinds of boys who are an embarrassment to their families. Remember,
the one rule the Path has when the young men join is that they cannot be direct
heirs of any Sept.” “I have noticed that there are a lot of Septs among the Raptors,”
agreed Tier, clearly seeing what was bothering Phoran. “But since I haven’t
heard of a wave of assassinations of Septs and their heirs, I assumed there was
an explanation—the last war or that plague.” “You told the Memory the story of the Shadowed,” said
Phoran. Tier wasn’t stupid; he understood where Phoran was going.
“You think that one of the Masters of the Path created that plague?” he asked.
Unlike Avar, Tier had no incredulity in his voice; he was considering Phoran’s
theory. Thus encouraged, Phoran continued. “The plague twenty years
ago was very convenient for a number of Raptors. Tomorrow I’ll bring paper and
ink so you can write down the list of Septs for me again. Then I’ll do a little
research, but I know that Telleridge, Gorrish, Jenne, the old Sept of Leheigh,
and a dozen others you named inherited then. Some of them were six or seven
people away from inheritance.” Phoran glanced at Tier. “Go on,” the Bard said. “My father died in the plague. His brother, my uncle, was
named regent. When I was twelve he was poisoned by his mistress, and the
council, under Gorrish, took over an informal regency. The Sept of Leheigh’s
son, Avar, took me under his wing.” Phoran smiled without humor. “He’s mellowed
out a lot in the past few years, but when I met him he was a lot less
respectable than his reputation would have shown him.” Phoran had done a lot of thinking since his conversation
with Avar before the council meeting. “He was a boy, and his own father had
encouraged him to be wild. It wouldn’t have struck him odd that the old Sept
would encourage him to take a twelve-year-old places that were at best unsavory
and at worst outright dangerous—I don’t think that he’d have sought out my
company without his father forcing him to do so.” It hurt to admit that, but he
knew it was true. “You have gained a reputation of being volatile and unreliable,”
said Tier slowly. “Even we in the hinterlands of Redem have heard so much.” “Not to say that I wasn’t a willing participant,” Phoran
said staunchly, though he wanted Tier to like him and it was difficult to admit
responsibility. “But if my uncle had lived I would never have been allowed the
excesses I have visited.” “And you would have come to power by now,” said Tier. “You
are what, twenty-four? The Septs would have been under you directly for five
years.” “Am I seeing shadows that don’t exist?” Phoran asked. “I don’t know,” said Tier. “But if you are, then so am I.
I’ve been looking upon them as my problem, or even a Traveler problem. But so
many Septs would make any group powerful, and powerful groups seek more power.
I don’t know that wizards can create convenient plagues, but it is odd that so
many of the Path survived to inherit” “I sent a letter to your wife,” said Phoran
hesitantly. Tier’s head jerked up, but Phoran couldn’t read his expression. “I told her that you were here in the palace,” Phoran continued
quickly. “I told her you were alive, but that it would be dangerous to come. I
told her that she could send word to me or you through the messenger—he was one
of my uncle’s men, retired this past decade. My uncle was a canny man; I doubt
that any of his would be suborned to the Path.” Tier laughed abruptly. “Told her it was dangerous, did you?” Phoran nodded. “I thought it best.” “We can plan on her showing up a week after she receives the
letter, then,” he said. “And we’ll be the better for it. I’m not a Traveler—but
my wife is, and, if you gave her enough information, she’ll bring the whole of
the Travelers with her when she comes.” He laughed again. “Thank you.” “I wrote to Gerant as well,” Phoran said. “Directly after
the council meeting. I thought he ought to know what the council had almost
done.” He hesitated. “It was a long letter. I told him of the situation I’ve
made for myself, then asked him to come here and help clear out the Path. I
told him that I had it on good authority that he was an honest man.” Tier laughed. “He’ll want to thank me for that—but he’ll
come, right enough. He’s almost too old for fighting—fifty or thereabouts by
now—but he had several sons, good men all.” He began to play a quiet melody as
he talked. “If the Path is as bad as we think, then it will be good to have
Gerant at your back. The wizards won’t scare him off either one of his
daughters-in-law is a wizard, and he employed a few more when I knew him. I
take it that you saved his land?” Phoran launched into the story of his triumph. Tier was a
good listener. He laughed in the right places—grinned, when Phoran told him
about the way Avar had silenced the court. “I can see why you like him. Phoran,” said Tier, “would you
take some advice from an old soldier?” “Try me,” Phoran replied. “There are a lot of the Passerines here who might turn out to
be good men if they had some goal, some task to work at. No one is more loyal
than someone who feels good about himself and his accomplishments—someone who
has a stake in the stability of your throne. Find them jobs to do.” Phoran laughed. “If anyone should have hope that reformation
is possible, it should be me. Get me a list of names and I’ll come up with
something.” “Military would work for most of them,” said Her. “Bloodless
dueling seems to be a pastime around here—and there are a number of fine swordsmen
in the bunch.” Phoran shook his head. “I don’t know where I’d put them. The
city guards are political appointments through the merchant guilds. The palace
guards are mostly inherited positions—and one of the Raptors is the captain of the
guards. Neither troop is one a nobleman would willingly join.” “You’re a Sept yourself, aren’t you?” asked Tier. “Yes, Sept of Taela and of Hawkshold—but Hawkshold is a
meaningless title. It’s been part of Taela for several hundred years. My lands
are cared for by the palace guard, the city guard, and, if those won’t do, I
can call upon the Septs to create an imperial army.” “If the council leader were to countermand one of your
orders to the palace guard, who would they obey?” asked Tier. Phoran didn’t answer, because the answer was obvious. “Gerant’s men will obey him, and he’ll obey you,” said Tier,
his question answered by Phoran’s silence. “But his Sept is in a border area.
He cannot stay in Taela for long without risking disaster to his own lands.” “You’re saying that if I make up a troop of the Passerines
they will obey me rather than the Raptors?” Tier smiled a little grimly. “The Raptors provide the Passerines
with drink, sex, and a place to lurk about and pretend to be dangerous. They
are sent out periodically to destroy a tavern or rape and pillage or maim.
There are sixty of them and I’ve seen five or six already that I wouldn’t want
at my back—but mere are some good men. If you make them feel like men, not
boys, they will follow you to hell and back.” Phoran was flattered, but he knew what he was. “They won’t
follow me, Tier. A drunkard and a stupid fop.” “You may be right,” agreed Tier readily. “But that’s not who
you are, Phoran. It is what you once allowed yourself to become. But you do not
smell of alcohol tonight, and there’s not a stupid man alive who ever got the
best of the Council of Septs. Be honest with them, Phoran; they know what you
have done. Lead and they will follow, my emperor. Just as Gerant and I follow.” Phoran swallowed hard. “Get me a list of the men you think
could work.” “I’ll do that,” agreed Tier. “Let me have some more time
with them first, maybe a couple of weeks. Then I’ll have a better idea who is
suitable and who is not.” He hummed a haunting descant to go with the song he
played, and then suddenly he smiled. “I have one for you already. There’s a
young man named Collarn. Do you know him?” Phoran shook his head. “He is a musician, but one with more technical ability than
talent. What he is good with are instruments and their care. And the stranger
the instrument, the better he likes it.” Tier silenced his strings. “Am I
mistaken in assuming that this labyrinth of yours might have a musical
instrument or two?” Phoran laughed and held up a hand. “I’ll find out.” After a moment, Tier said, “If the Raptors are playing games
with the merchant guilds as you think, you might go to them if you need more
support. It seems to me that a group who’s being blackmailed, like the Weavers’
Guild is, wouldn’t be unhappy at removing their blackmailer’s ability to hurt
them.” Phoran smiled back, “Likely not.” He closed his eyes and listened to the music, wondering when
he’d ever been this content before. This was the feeling he’d been looking for
since his uncle died. He had a larger purpose, if he could hold on to the gains
he’d made today. But there was more, too: for the first time in his life he
felt like an adult. He smiled to himself—Tier was right, it was a powerful
feeling. Chapter 14Tier staked out a table on the edge of the Eyrie where he
could observe the Passerines. Myrceria sat with him as she usually did,
never giving the appearance of being bored. He wondered at her attentions,
though he said nothing to her. She was in charge of the running of the Eyrie:
the servants, whores, and cooks all looked to her for guidance. From little
things the Passerines let drop, she was a great favorite of several of the
Raptors and a few of the older Passerines. Even so, none of them approached her
while she was with him, and, if he was out of his cell, she was with him. She was not the only one who attended him, though. Wherever
he went there were always a few Passerines who came to gossip and quiz him
about his Me as a Traveler. Since Tier had never so much as seen a Traveler
clan, he told them stories of being a soldier instead—which they seemed
perfectly happy with. • All the while he watched them. Sorting the salvageable
from the worthless in a process the Sept of Gerant had called “sieving the
ferrets.” The Sept would gather all of the new recruits together and start them
training with two or three veterans. Then he’d send in a man just to
observe—usually Gerant himself, though Her had done that duty more than once. At the end of several weeks, the observer would pick out the
troublemakers, the cowards, and the men just not physically cut out for warfare
and send them on their way with a bit of silver for their trouble. Tier found that sorting the boys of the Silent Path was a
bit more difficult because the Path encouraged just the kind of behavior he was
looking to weed out He’d found five or six that he’d not have in any of his
fighting troops, and ten more that he’d have been able to whip into shape eventually—but
he was going to turn these boys over to Phoran, not an experienced military
leader. Phoran had good instincts, but he also had some things that
would make commanding a group like the one Her proposed difficult. First of
all, he was young. But worse was his reputation. It would make leading the
Passerines in anything but drunken debauchery difficult. Tier had decided that he’d have to do a little training
first He took a judicious sip of his ale. He’d just wait until the next fight
broke out—which, if the night ran to form, would be in the next hour or so. “Came and knocked on our suite this morning,” Collarn was
saying with palpable excitement “My father thought they’d come to arrest me for
something stupid I’d done. I thought he’d die of shock when they told him that
the Emperor had decided that the Keeper of Music needed help and that the
masters at the School of Music had recommended me for the position.” Tier smiled at him. “So are you going to take the job?” Collarn grinned back. “And have to slave around after an old
man for years, cleaning, tuning, and refinishing instruments? Absolutely. Do
you know the kinds of things that are rabbited away in these rooms?” He gave a
vague wave around to indicate the palace. “Neither do I. But I’ve already
gotten to play instruments that are worth more than all my family’s holdings
combined.” Tier talked with him a bit more, and gradually turned the conversation
over to Myrceria. When she had Collarn’s attention fully engaged, Tier excused
himself and began meandering through the auditorium because the unmistakable
sounds of another fight were starting to rumble from somewhere near the stage. He spoke casually to a few boys as he passed. By the time he
made it to the fight, a crowd had gathered around to call encouragement to the
combatants. They parted for Tier willingly enough. Once he had a clear view of
the action, Tier folded his arms and watched. The first boy was Toarsen, who was a hotheaded, bitter young
man and, like most of his fellows, spoiled by too much money and nothing to do.
But he was smart, which Tier liked, and he wasn’t a coward. His opponent was a little bit of a surprise, one of the
twenty-year-olds who Tier had pegged as the worst kind of troublemaker, the
ones who sat by and let other people do their dirty work. Nehret was not one of
the boys who usually found themselves in duels. Watching them closely, Tier could see signs that both of
them had been trained to sword since birth, as many noblemen were, but they
were trained as duelists, not as soldiers. When he’d seen enough, Tier turned to the boy on his right,
“May I borrow your sword?” The boy flushed and fumbled, but handed the weapon over.
When Tier asked the boy on his left for his sword also, that young man laughed,
drew with a flourish and presented it to Tier on one knee. With a short sword
in either hand, Tier walked into the makeshift combat floor. He watched closely for a moment, staying out of both opponents’
immediate line of sight as he tested the swords he held for balance. They were
lighter than the one he’d left in Redem and of a slightly different design—made
for letting blood rather than killing, he thought. Finished with his preparations, he darted forward and attacked.
Toarsen lost his sword altogether. Nehret kept his blade, but only at the cost
of form and balance. He landed ignominiously on his rump. “If you’re going to fight,” said Tier. “At least do it
right. Nehret, you lose power because your shoulders are stiff—you’re making
your arms do all the work.” Tier turned his back to Nehret, knowing from the
past few days of observation just how well the boy would take being criticized
and what he would do about it. “Toarsen,” Tier said. “You need to worry less about trying
to scratch your opponent, and more about defending yourself. In a real fight
you’d have been dead a half dozen times.” He turned and caught the blade Nehret
had aimed at his back. “Watch this and see what I mean,” continued Tier as if he
weren’t fending off the angry boy’s blows. It wasn’t as easy as he made it
look. “Nehret is extending too much—ah, see? That attack is what I was talking
about earlier. If you’d had your body behind it instead of just your, arm it
might have accomplished something. Look, he wants to really hurt me, but he’s
been so trained to go for touches rather than hits that he doesn’t stand a
chance of hurting me beyond a scratch or two. That’s the problem with too much
dueling, you don’t know what to do in a real fight” Tier put his left hand behind his back to get that blade out
of his way. Then he turned the blade in his right so that when he hit Nehret he
didn’t take off his arm, just numbed it so the boy lost his sword. Tier tapped him on the cheek. “By the way,” he said, “never
go after an opponent when his back is turned unless there is more at stake than
your pride.” Then he turned his back to Nehret again, knowing that he’d gone a
fair way to reducing the amount of influence the boy had upon the other
Passerines in the last few minutes. “Toarsen, why don’t you try a round against
me?” After the council meeting, Phoran found that he was quite
popular. People followed him wherever he went—to his bedchamber if he
didn’t get the door shut fast enough. Tradition would keep all the Septs at the
palace until just before harvest; if they kept this up until then, he’d have
the whole lot of them thrown out. Finally, having had enough of the fawning,
resentful Septs, Phoran sent for Avar to go riding with him. He’d been avoiding Avar, since he’d put words to the fears
he’d always had. It was poor payment for the Sept’s swift support during the
council meeting, and Phoran had to do something to change it. In the stable, he mounted
without aid, but he had other things on his mind and took little note of
it. For hours he dragged Avar from one merchant guild master to the next. It
was not out of the ordinary for the Emperor to visit a guild master’s shop—an
emperor would hardly buy goods from a lesser man. If anyone was watching
Phoran—and he thought there was at least one man following them—they would see
that Phoran purchased something at every shop. Phoran knew all the guild masters of course, but this was
the first time he’d set himself to be pleasant to them. After they left the
Weavers’ Guild, Avar gave in to the curiosity Phoran had seen building all
morning. “You don’t need a bed hanging,” said Avar. “You could care
less about silver candy dishes and tables with fluted legs. Just what are you
doing?” Phoran had come to believe Avar innocent of anything other
than being assigned to keep the Emperor company and told to keep him occupied.
Even so, he didn’t quite trust his own evaluation. He should not have had Avar
come with him. Blade tossed his head, and Phoran let his reins slide
through his fingers then gradually shortened them again to keep a light hold on
the stallion. “After my uncle died, who told you to befriend me?” Avar stilled. “It’s all right,” said Phoran, though he watched the crowded
streets rather than Avar. “I just would like to know who it was.” “My father,” said Avar. “But it wasn’t—” “I suspect it was,” said Phoran ruefully. “I was, what,
twelve? And you seventeen. It would have been an unhappy chore—and I thank you
for it.” He took a deep breath and chose to trust. “I’m trying to
build some kind of a power base. The Septs will require a lot of work on my
part before I know who will back me and why. But the city is as important to
the stability of the Empire as the Septs. I thought it would be good to find
backing here, where the Septs are too proud to look.” “I do like you,” said Avar quietly. “I always have.” “Ah,” said Phoran, for lack of anything better to say. How
could Avar have liked him when everyone, including Phoran himself, had despised
him? What had there been to like? But Avar had done his best to forward Phoran’s plans, and for
that, and for so many years of duty, Phoran owed him the chance to keep his
white lies. They rode in silence to the shop of the master importer, who
brought goods from all over the Empire and beyond. “Is Guild Master Emtarig in?” asked Phoran of the boy who
manned the shop. “Not now, sir. May I help you?” He was new, this boy, and Phoran doubted that he knew even
who it was who entered the shop. Phoran was dressed in riding clothes without
imperial symbols—there was nothing to say who he was except his face. “Boy,” said Avar, gently enough, “tell your master that the
Emperor awaits him in his shop.” The boy’s eyes darted between Phoran and Avar, trying to decide
who was the Emperor. At last he bowed low to Avar and scuttled through a
curtained passage and, from the sound of his feet, up the stairs to the
master’s private lodgings. Phoran began sorting among the items on the laden shelves
and hid his smile. Avar couldn’t help that he looked more like an emperor than
Phoran did. By careful negotiations with the other guilds, the importer’s
guild members could sell items that were not made in the city. There were
beautifully tanned skins of animals Phoran had never seen—and likely never
would. Valuable blown-glass goblets stood on a high shelf where no one was
likely to knock them off accidentally. Phoran was fingering a handful of
brightly colored beads that caught his attention when he heard the boy leap
back down the stairs. He didn’t turn until the guild master said, “Most Gracious Emperor,
you honor my shop.” “Master Willon?” Phoran said with honest delight. He had to
turn back to put the beads away. “I thought that you had retired to some gods’
forsaken province, never to return to Taela?” “Careful, Phoran,” said Avar, who was grinning. “He went to
Redem, which is part of my Sept.” “And Leheigh is truly a gods’ forsaken place,” agreed
Phoran. “What business brings you back? I hope that there is nothing wrong with
Master Emtarig.” “My son is well,” said Willon. “But I have not seen my grandchildren
in too long. I thought it was time to visit. My son is out to the market to
speak with the Music Guild about a drum I brought back with me. Also, I had
some people to see here.” “Good,” said Phoran. He thought of asking Willon what he
knew of a man named Tier—but when he spoke, all he said was, “What would you
take for three of these hangings?” He would ask Tier about Willon instead. They bargained briskly until they reached a price both
thought fair. Phoran let it drag on for longer than he might have, hoping to
catch Emtarig. Willon was an old friend of his uncle’s, but Emtarig was the
master guildsman now, the man Phoran needed to impress. But Emtarig did not
return, so Phoran paid for the hangings and asked Willon to send the goods to
the palace at his leisure. They went to three more guild masters and bought a cobalt
blue glass jar, four copper birds that sang in the wind, and an eating knife
inlaid with shell before Phoran headed back to his rooms for a private evening
meal with Avar. They talked, but not about anything serious. Soon, thought Phoran, he’d tell Avar all that he’d found out
about the Path—but not yet. Avar wouldn’t believe him as easily as Tier had; he
wasn’t used to Phoran being anything except a jaded drunkard. Though to do him
justice, Avar didn’t have the motivation to believe in evil that Tier had. Tier returned to his room tired, bruised, and ultimately
satisfied—a usual state these days. His daily sword lessons had become more of
a favorite activity than the dueling had ever been. The Passerines blossomed under his attention and some, especially
Toarsen, had come around and grown more than he’d thought possible. He’d always
had a knack for turning boys into fighting men, which was why Gerant offered
him a job in his personal guard when there were other men, born in the Sept,
who were as good or better with weapons. There were a few that weren’t worth saving. Nehret was one,
and there was one of the youngest batch who was, if Tier wasn’t mistaken, one
of those very few who seemed to be born without any morals or courage at all. He’d toady to
those more powerful and hurt anyone he saw as weaker. In a few years, if he
wasn’t already, he’d be a rapist and murderer, and never lose a night’s sleep
over it. Tier had set Toarsen and his large friend Kissel to watch over that
one and protect the younger Passerines. The door to his room was open. Some of the boys would stop
in at night, so nothing struck him as odd until he saw who it was. “Myrceria?” Sitting on his bed, her legs folded neatly underneath her,
she smiled at him brightly. “I hope that you don’t mind that I came here this
evening.” “Not at all,” he said. She looked away. “Play something for me, please,” she said.
“Something to make me laugh.” He closed the door and sat on the foot of his bed, taking
the lute off the hooks he’d had installed in the wall. He played a bit of
melody on the lute, tuning automatically until it was acceptable. “How do you do it?” she asked. “Collarn doesn’t like
anyone—and they generally return his feeling with interest. The only thing he
loves is music. He works so hard at it, and he is never good enough. He hated
the thought that because of your magic you would play better than he, no matter
what he did or how much he practiced. I saw you take his hatred and turn it to
hero worship in less than an hour. Telleridge said that you can’t use your
magic on us.” “It’s not magic,” Tier said. “Collarn loves music, and that
is more important to him than all the hurts the world has dealt him. I just
showed him that I loved music, too.” “What about the rest?” she asked. “The Passerines follow you
around like lost puppies.” “I like people,” said Tier with a shrug. “I don’t
think most of these boys are used to dealing with someone who likes them.” Unexpectedly she laughed, but it wasn’t a happy sound. “The
Masters are very concerned with what you have done to their control of the
Passerines. Be careful.” She turned her head and he saw that there was a bruise on
her jaw. “Who hit you?” he asked. She picked up a pillow and began straightening the fringe.
“One of the Masters told Kissel that they were worried because Collarn was
spending so much time away from the Eyrie. They told Kissel that he was to
remind Collarn where his loyalties should lie—and Kissel refused them. He said
that you would not approve of him picking on someone weaker than himself.” Tier stilled his strings. “I don’t suppose it even crossed
his mind to agree and then either fake it—or tell me about it. Ellevanal save
me from honest fools. Why couldn’t they have gone to Toarsen?” Myrceria stared at him, her hands stilled. “You’ve done it
on purpose, haven’t you? You’re taking control from the Masters on purpose. A
month ago Kissel would have been happy to please the Masters, to win the fear
of the other Passerines. How did you do it?” Tier played a few notes of a dirge Collarn had played for
him on a violin—it sounded odd on a lute. “They are trying to ruin those boys,” he said at last, “to
turn them into something much less than they could be.” He’d been certain that she was a spy for Telleridge, and
that might still be true—but his instincts told him that it wouldn’t take a lot
to turn her against the Masters of the Path. He would just have to find the
right words. He played a few more measures. “What happens to the ones who
don’t play their little game, Myrceria? Boys like Collarn who would never agree
to the kinds of real damage the Path metes out? Or ones like Kissel, who is discovering
that protecting someone weaker than he is makes him feel better about himself
than tormenting them ever did?” She didn’t say anything. “There aren’t as many Raptors as there should be,” he said
gently. “Not for the numbers of Passerines they have.” “That’s how they progress in the Path,” she whispered. “The
boys who would be Raptors are given the other boys’ names—the ones like
Collarn. They have to bring back proof that they have killed the bearer of the
name they were give before they are Raptors.” She set the pillow aside. “How do you do that?” she said. “If they knew what I told you, they would kill me.” “You know it is wrong,” he told her. “You know they must be
stopped.” “By whom?” she said, her incredulousness fueled by anger.
“You? Me? You are a prisoner in their power, Tier of Redem. You will die as
they all do at the end of their year. And I am as much a prisoner as you.” “Evil must always be fought,” Tier said. “If you don’t
fight—then you are a part of it.” She rose to her feet and walked without haste to the door.
“You know nothing of what you face, or you would not be so arrogant, Bard.” She shut the door tightly behind her. Well, thought Tier, that was unexpected. Whores
learn early that survival means that they have to look out for themselves. Myrceria
had been a whore for a long time, but she wasn’t talking like a whore who cared
for no one else. She cared about those boys. She wasn’t happy about it, but
she cared. Tier slapped one of the scrawny first-year Passerines on the
shoulder after the boy finally executed the move Toarsen had been struggling to
teach him for days. “Drills,” Tier called. There were groans and half-hearted protests,
but they formed up in three ragged lines, lines that straightened at his silent
frown. “Begin,” he called, and worked with them. Drills were the
heart of swordplay. If a man had to think about his body and how to move his
sword, he’d be too slow to save himself. Drills taught the body to respond to
information from eyes and ears, leaving the mind to plan larger strategy than
just how to meet the next thrust. The sword he held wasn’t the equal of the one he’d taken
from some nobleman on the battlefield, but it was balanced. Myrceria had
brought it to him when he requested it. Tier’d continued to work with his sword over the years, but
the past weeks had sharpened him until he’d almost reached the speed and
strength he’d held while he was a soldier. His left shoulder was always a bit
stiff until he worked it out, but otherwise he hadn’t lost much flexibility to
age. He drilled with the boys until sweat made his shirt cling uncomfortably
to his shoulders, then he brought his sword around in a flashy stroke that
ended with it in its sheath. “Pools!” shouted the boys in one voice, and they dashed,
swords in hands, to the washroom to play in the cold pool. Tier laughed and shook his head when Collarn stopped to invite
him to the waterfight. “I’ve no wish to drown before my time,” he avowed. “I’ll
wash up in my rooms.” Loyalty, he thought, watching the last of them disappear
into the hall, was won by sweating with them. “They’ve improved,” said Telleridge. Tier hadn’t noticed the Master, but he’d been concentrating
on the boys. He took a glass of water from a servant. “They have,” he said, after taking a long drink. “Some of
them had further to go than others.” “I knew that you were a soldier, but you were more than
that—I’ve been looking into it,” Telleridge said. “Remarkable that a peasant
boy, no offense, could be set to command soldiers. Are you one of the old Sept
of Leheigh’s by-blows?” “Do you know where I’m from?” asked Tier with a lazy smile
as he handed the empty glass off to one of the silent waiters. “The Sept of Leheigh,” replied Telleridge. Tier shook his head. “I’m from Redem, the first settlement
the Army of Man created after the Fall of the Shadowed, named for the Hero of
the Fall, Red Ernave. We are farmers, tanners, bakers ...” He shrugged. “But
scratch a Redemi very deeply and you’ll find the blood of warriors. If you’ll
excuse me, I need to wash up and change clothes.” When Tier reached his cell, he closed his door and washed
quickly with water from the basin left there for that purpose. Once he’d
changed into clean clothes he lay down on his bed. The last time Phoran had visited, a few days ago, Gerant had
sent word that he was on his way. It couldn’t be too soon for Tier’s comfort:
the Masters weren’t going to wait forever while Tier wrested control of the
Passerines from them. He woke for lunch and spent the rest of the day in his usual
manner, talking and socializing in the Eyrie. In the evening he played for
them, mostly raunchy army songs—but he feathered in others, songs of glory in
battle and the sweetness of home. Looking over the faces of the men who listened to his music
he knew triumph because, given a chance, most of them would grow into fine men.
Men who would serve their emperor, a boy who was showing signs of being the
kind of ruler a man could take pride in serving: shrewd and clever with a
streak of kindness he tried hard to hide. When he returned to his room for the night, Myrceria tucked
her arm flirtatiously in his and accompanied him. When they were inside his room, she dropped her flirtation
and his arm and settled on his bed. Stroking the coverlet absently she said, “I
swore I was done talking to you. I have survived here a long time—and I did it
by keeping my mouth shut. How dare you demand more of me?” She said it without
heat. “I have no power to affect the men who rule here. I am just a whore.” Tier leaned against the wall opposite the bed, crossed his
feet at the ankles and did his best to look neutral. “I haven’t seen the sun since I was fifteen,” she murmured,
almost to herself. “Sometimes I wonder if it still rises and sets.” “It does,” said Tier. “It does.” “Telleridge is planning a Disciplining.” She flattened her
hand and stared at it as though she’d never seen it before. “What is a Disciplining?” asked Tier, not liking the sound
of it at all. “When a Passerine disobeys a Raptor, they hold a meeting to
decide what his punishment will be. Then they are punished in the Eyrie with
all the Passerines in attendance. They usually do one every year, just as a
reminder.” “Who is being disciplined?” asked Tier. They wouldn’t pick
him, he thought; they were too smart for that. They didn’t need a martyr, they
needed an example. “I don’t know,” she said. “Collarn,” he said. “Or maybe Kissel or Toarsen. But Collarn
if they’re smart. If they hurt Toarsen, Kissel won’t stand for it. If they hurt
Kissel, Toarsen will go to his brother—and Avar has enough friends, including
the Emperor, to hurt the Path. Collarn has no close friends except for me, and
he’s the kind of person that people expect bad things to happen to. When it does, it won’t disturb the Passerines much.” “That’s what I thought,” said Myrceria softly. “I like
Col-lam. He has a vicious tongue when he wants to, but he’s always polite to
the people who can’t defend themselves.” Tier heard the grief in her voice. “This is more than a caning
or a beating,” he said. “All of the boys are forced to participate in the Disciplining
in some way—and the punishment can be anything,” she said. “Telleridge is very
creative. Whipping is the most common, but some of the others are worse. One
boy they forced to drink water ... he passed out, and I think he died. They
poured water on his face while he choked and gagged. And when he stopped, they
just kept pouring.” “Can you make sure I know about it before it happens?” he
asked. She kept her eyes averted, but nodded quickly. “If I know in
advance. I don’t always.” “Can you get word to Collarn?” If they could warn him ... “Tomorrow,” she said after a moment. “I have to do it myself—I
can’t trust any of the girls with a message like that And I can’t leave the
Path’s rooms anymore than you can. Tomorrow should be soon enough;’ She spoke
those words quickly, as if she could make it true just by saying so. “It should
take a day or two for them to arrange to get word to everyone anyway.” “Right,” he said. “Tell him to find a reason to leave town
for a week.” She nodded, started to get up to leave, but then settled
back, wrapping her arms around her middle. “Would you play something for me?
Something cheerful so I can sleep?” He was tired, but she was tired, too, and no more than she
could he have slept—not with the knowledge that the Masters had decreed that
one of his boys was going to suffer for what Tier had done. “I’m not going to sleep anytime soon either,” he said.
“Music would be nice.” He sat on the other end of his bed and started to tune his
lute again. He’d just finished bringing the second course of strings in accord
with the rest, when the door opened unexpectedly. Tier’d grown used to the respectful knocks of his captors—even
Phoran knocked. It was too early for a visit from Phoran. Tier opened his mouth
for a reproval but stopped, shocked dumb when Lehr entered the room wearing
Tier’s own sword. Joy lit Lehr’s face, then dimmed a bit when he looked past
Tier and saw Myrceria. He made a move to block the door—perhaps Tier thought
with a touch of amusement that threaded past his astonishment, to allow Tier to
assume a less compromising position. Did Lehr actually think that his father
would take a leman? But the door popped open wider before Lehr could reach it,
and Jes took two full strides into the room. The comfortable temperature of the
room plummeted until Tier could see his own breath, and Myrceria let out an abortive
squeak. Tier got to his feet slowly, because it was never smart to
move too quickly around Jes in this mode, and opened his arms. Jes’s glance
swept the room comprehensively. But he apparently didn’t see anything too
threatening in Myrceria because he took two steps forward and wrapped his arms
around Tier. “Papa,” he breathed as the room warmed. “Oh, Papa, we
thought we’d never find you.” “Of course you did.” A woman’s voice, deep, rich, and
beloved filled the room like the sound of a cello! Tier looked over Jes’s
shoulder to see his wife enter. “Ever since Hennea told us that he’d been taken
alive. Are you well?” Seraph looked so much like the empress-child he’d first met
that it made him smile. An ice princess, his sister had called her with
contempt Being a straightforward person herself, Alinath had never seen that
the cool facade could hide all manner of emotions that Seraph chose not to
share. “I’m fine,” Tier said, and seeing that she was not going to
run into his arms immediately, he continued speaking, “and much happier than I
was a few minutes ago. Lehr, come here.” Lehr had grown in the months since he’d seen him last, Tier
thought, hugging him tightly. So had Jes for that matter; his oldest son was a
little taller than Tier now. “We missed you,” said Lehr, returning his hug. “I missed you, too.” He held him for a moment more. “Lehr killed some people,” said Jes. “He saved Mother.” Lehr stiffened in his arms, but Tier merely hugged him
tighter. “I’m sorry, son,” he said. “Killing another man is not something that
should rest easily on your shoulders.” When he stepped back at last, he looked at Seraph, who’d
stayed by the open door. “Is Rinnie out there, too?” As was her habit with him, she answered the real question he
asked. “She’s safe with your sister. Frost, it seems, was the only family casualty
of this mess—though we were quite worried about you until just now.” “They killed Frost?” She nodded, “To make it look as if the both of you had
walked into one of the Blighted Places. We might have believed it if a cousin
of mine hadn’t straightened us out.” She hadn’t looked at Myrceria, but he knew that she didn’t
have any cousins. She must have met another Traveler. “It’s not safe for your cousins here,” he warned. She smiled like a wolf scenting prey. “Oh they know that,”
she said. “I just hope these solsenti of the Secret Path choose to try
their tricks again.” Her tongue lingered on “Secret Path,” making it sound
childish and stupid, which, of course, it was. “You know about the Secret Path?” he said. “We know about the Secret Path,” said Lehr. “They’re killing
Travelers and stealing their Orders.” “What?” said Tier, looking at Seraph. She nodded. “They take them from the dying Traveler and
place them in a stone that they wear on jewelry so that they can use them.” “How did you find out so much?” he asked. “Hennea told us,” said Jes helpfully. “My cousin,” agreed Seraph. “They have someone in Redem who has been watching our whole
family,” said Tier. “Not anymore,” said his wife coolly. “Mother killed him.” Jes had found a perch on top of a small
table and was playing with the vase that had occupied the table first. Tier glanced back at Myrceria. “I told you they’d be sorry
if they ever ran afoul of my wife. Myrceria, I’d like you to meet my family. My
wife, Seraph; my eldest son, Jes; and my youngest son, Lehr. Seraph,-Jes, Lehr,
this is Myrceria, who has helped make my captivity bearable.” Jes nodded with the shy manner that characterized him in
front of strangers, Lehr made a stiff bow, and Seraph turned on her heel and
walked out the door. Lehr’s smile died, so Tier took a moment to explain to him.
“She knows me too well to think I’ve taken a mistress after all these years—as
you should. Myrceria is an ally, so be polite. I need to take a moment with
your mother.” He followed Seraph and closed the door behind him softly.
Seraph was studying the stone wall of the hall as if she’d never seen stone
laid upon stone before. They were safe enough, he thought. Anyone who walked
down this hall was coming to see him—and at this hour that meant one of the Passerines.
There was time, so he waited for her to show him what she needed from him. “There is death magic in these stones,” she said. She didn’t
sound as if it bothered her. “They’ve been killing people for a long time,” he said.
“There’s a message awaiting you in Redem telling you that I’m still alive. It
should have gotten there by now.” “Hopefully someone will direct the messenger to Alinath,”
said Seraph, without looking away from the wall. She set a palm against it and
said, “Once we convinced her you were alive when you left, she was most eager
to hear if you’d stayed that way.” She pushed away from the wall abruptly. When she turned toward
him he thought she’d look at him at last, but her eyes caught on the floor and
stayed there. “We need to get you out of here,” she said in a low voice.
“This place is a labyrinth, but Lehr found you, which was the difficult part.
He’ll be able to backtrack on the way out.” “I can’t leave. Seraph,” he said. Her face came up at that. “There’s a boy about Jes’s age who’s going to be hurt because
of me if I can’t put a stop to it—and they’ve put some sort of hex on me anyway
so I can’t wander around at will.” She reached out to touch him for the first time since she’d
appeared at his door. Gripping his hands lightly, she turned his hands over to
look at his wrists. “I can break this,” she said positively after a moment. “But
it will take time—and will-do us no good, since as long as this boy of yours is
in danger you won’t leave anyway.” He twisted his hands until he could grip hers. “Seraph,” he
said. “It’s all right, now.” Her hands shook in his but he could only see the top of her
head. “I thought you were dead,” she said. She looked up, and the empress was gone, lost in a face wild
with emotion. Unexpectedly he felt the lick of her magic caress his palms. “I can’t do that again,” she told him. “I can’t lose
anyone I love again.” “You love me?” He moved his hands to her shoulders and
pulled her close. She leaned against him like a tired infant. It was the first time she’d said that to him, though he knew
that she loved him with the same fierceness that she loved her children. She
had been trained to maintain control, and he knew that she was uncomfortable
with the strength of the emotions she felt Because he understood her, he’d
never pushed her to tell him something that he’d known full well. He knew it would make her angry but he had to tease her. “I
had to get myself kidnapped by a bunch of stupid wizards and dragged halfway
across the Empire to hear that? If I’d known that’s what it would take, I’d
have gotten myself kidnapped twenty years ago.” “It’s not funny,” she said, stomping on his foot in her effort
to get away from him. “No, it’s not,” he said, pulling her tighter. The ferocious
joy of holding her when he’d been half-certain he’d never see her again kept
him teasing her beyond prudence. “So why didn’t you tell me you loved me
before? Twenty years didn’t give you enough time? Or did you only figure it out
when you thought I was dead?” “Oh, aye, if I’d have told you—you’d just have said the same
back,” she said. Her answer made no sense to him—except that she really
didn’t find anything amusing in the situation. He didn’t want to hurt her
feelings, so he tucked the laughter of her presence inside his heart and tried
to understand what had upset her. “If you had told me that you loved me,” he said carefully,
“I’d have told you the same.” “You wouldn’t have meant it,” she said firmly. “Haven’t you
spent the last twenty years trying to make up for marrying me by being the
perfect husband and father?” Her words stung, so his were a little sharp in return. “I’d
have meant it.” “You married a woman you thought a child, married her so
that you would not have to take over the bakery from Alinath and Bandor. You
felt guilty.” “Of course I did,” he agreed. “I told them we were married.
I did it knowing that you were too young for marriage and that you would have
to give up your magic and your people. I knew that you were frightened of
rejoining the Travelers and having to take responsibility for so many lives
again—but I knew that was where you felt you belonged and I kept you with me.” “You did it to save yourself from being forced into the
bakery,” Seraph said. “And that made you feel guilty. If I’d told you then that
I loved you—you’d nave said you loved me, too, because you wouldn’t hurt my
feelings.” Abruptly Tier understood. He pulled her back to him and
laughed. He started to speak, but he had to laugh again first. “Seraph,” he
said. “Seraph, I was never going to be a baker—even Alinath knew that. I wanted
you. And I was extremely glad that circumstances forced you to turn to me. I
don’t know that I loved you then—I just knew that I couldn’t let you get away
from me.” He stepped back so he could look into her face. “I love you, Seraph.” He watched, delighted, as tears filled her eyes and spilled
over, then he kissed her. “I was so afraid,” she said when she could talk. “I was so
afraid that we’d be too late.” She sniffed. “Plague it, Tier, my nose is
running. I don’t suppose you have something I can wipe it on?” He pulled back and stripped off his overshirt and handed it
to her. “Tier,” she said, scandalized, “that is silk.” “And we didn’t pay for it. Here, blow.” She did. He wadded up the shirt and wiped her eyes with a clean
spot. Then, the expression in his eyes holding her motionless, he tossed the
shirt on the floor. He put a hand on either side of her face and kissed her,
open-mouthed and hungry. “I love you,” she whispered when he pulled his head away,
breathing heavily. He kissed the top of her head and hugged her close. “I know
that,” he said. “I’ve always known that. Did you think that you could hide it
by not saying the words? I love you, too—do you believe it now?” Seraph started to answer him, but then remembered that he’d
know if she lied. Did she really believe him when he said that he loved her? Whatever he believed now, she knew she was right about the
reasons he’d married her in the first place—he needed a reason to leave the
bakery that would allow him to stay near enough so that he didn’t feel that he
was running away from his family again. But that didn’t mean that he wasn’t attracted
to her. It didn’t mean he couldn’t have grown to love her. Yes, she believed him. She started to say so, but she’d
waited too long. “You know, for an intelligent woman,” he said, exasperated,
“you can be remarkably stupid.” He threw up his hands and paced away from her.
“All right, all right. Maybe if I married a woman and felt I’d taken advantage
of her, if she asked me, I might tell her that I loved her. Maybe I wouldn’t
want to hurt her feelings. You could be right about that. But why do you
persist in believing that I couldn’t love you even if I felt guilty about
marrying you so young? Is it impossible that I’ve lusted after you since you
stood on the steps of that inn and defied the whole lot of grown men who’d just
gotten finished killing your brother?” She tried to hide her smile, but he saw it, and it only made
him angrier. So he did what he always did when she’d pushed past that air
of pleasant affability he showed the world. He dragged her back against him and
kissed her again. Hot and fierce he moved his lips on hers, forcing his tongue
through before she could welcome him. The stone was cold on her shoulders as his
hips settled heavily against her midriff and demonstrated quite admirably that,
if nothing else, his lust was quite real. “All right,” she said mildly, if a bit breathlessly, when he
freed her mouth at last. “I believe you love me. Likely our sons and that poor woman
you left with them believe you love me, too. Shall we go see?” He laughed. “I missed you, Seraph.” Chapter 15Inside Tier’s cell (for that’s what it was, even decked
out in luxuries befitting royalty) Seraph saw that she had been exactly
right about what everyone had been doing. Lehr looked uncomfortable, Jes,
inscrutable, and the woman, Myrceria, looked vaguely panicked. “I am sorry,” said Seraph sincerely to Myrceria. “I meant no
insult to you, Myrceria, but crying in front of strangers is not something I do
willingly. We had all but given Tier up for dead these months past and I could
hardly believe that he is here safe.” Myrceria looked distinctly relieved at Seraph’s calm manner.
She got to her feet. “Of course I understand; I’ll leave you, Tier, to your
reunion.” “Thank you,” said Tier. “Let me know about the Disciplining.” She paused by the door. “I won’t tell them that your family
is here,” she said. “I didn’t think you would,” said Tier. “Sleep well.” “I think I will,” she said and closed the door behind her. Tier sat down on the bed, pulling Seraph down next to him
and tucking her under his arm. Lehr sat on the other side of him, not quite
touching, but close. “So,” said Tier. “Tell me about your adventures. Not you, Seraph,
I want more than the bare bones. Lehr, what happened? You thought I was dead?” Seraph was happy to let Lehr do most of the talking. Tier
seemed to think that they were all safe here for now, and she was content with
his assessment. She closed her eyes and breathed in Tier’s scent, felt his
warmth against her side. At the end of the story. Her shook his head. “My love,” he
said, and she saw the laughter in his eyes. “You have changed: you brought a
whole Traveler clan out to Taela to rescue me. When did you learn how to be so persuasive?” She scowled at him. “When I discovered it was more useful to
have pawns to do what I wanted them to than it was to kill them all and do it
myself.” Triumph flooded her when she saw that Tier wasn’t absolutely certain
she was joking until Lehr laughed. Tier rolled his eyes. “Leave for a season and see what
happens. The women and children don’t remember the respect they owe you. What
are you planning on doing with a whole clan?” “We’d have never found a way into the palace without them,”
said Seraph. Lehr laughed. “Turns out that one of the emperors hired Travelers
to work some magic for him a few generations back. He didn’t want to be seen
consorting with them, so he brought them in by a secret way.” “We went under the ground,” said Jes, his voice dreamy. “Fungus
hung from the sides of the tunnel like strings of melted cheese.” “Jes found a girlfriend,” said Lehr. • Tier looked at Seraph, but it was the first she’d heard of
it. Jes smiled sweetly, and said nothing. The girls of Rongier’s clan wouldn’t come within a dozen
yards of Jes if they could help it. “Hennea?” she said. Lehr grinned. “I think that’s how she feels about it,
too—sort of shocked and dismayed, but Jes is smug.” “Hennea is the Raven you found, right?” asked Tier. She nodded. “Don’t worry so, Mother,” said Jes. Tier smiled and kissed the top of her head. “Trust Jes,” he said.
“He’ll be all right.” He looked over at Lehr. “How do you like being a Hunter?” “He’s always been a Hunter,” said Seraph acerbically. She
wasn’t certain that she wanted to hear Lehr’s answer to that question. She
didn’t want her son to be unhappy. “He just didn’t know about it.” “The Lark of Rongier’s clan has been teaching me some things
that are pretty interesting,” said Lehr. Tier reached out and patted Lehr’s knee sympathetically. “Rinnie wanted to be a Guardian,” Jes said, his gentle eyes
gliding over Lehr. “She wanted to turn into a panther, like me.” “I’ll just bet she did,” said Tier. “I’ve missed you all.” “We should go, Papa,” said Jes abruptly. “We can’t,” answered Seraph. “One of Tier’s friends is in danger,
and the wizards here have bespelled Tier so he can’t leave the Path’s
domain.” She saw the Guardian rising through her son’s eyes and said, “It’s
nothing I can’t fix, but I’ll need a little time to study it. In any case he
won’t go until his friend is out of danger. Tier, Lehr’s told you our story,
tell us what happened to you.” They weren’t as polite an audience as he had been, interrupting
him frequently. Seraph pestered him for details about what little he recalled
from the times the Path’s wizards had taken him. Lehr teased him about the
women who’d bathed him and braided his hair and fretted when Tier told them how
he was imprisoned by magic. Jes was quiet until Tier told them about his royal
visitor. “The Emperor?” said Jes. “The Emperor visited you in your
cell?” “How did he know you were here?” asked Lehr suspiciously. “I’m sworn to secrecy so I need to get his permission before
I tell you,” said Tier. “But that’s another story entirely.” Both of the boys enjoyed Tier’s explanation of how he’d
begun winning over the Passerines. Seraph shook her head. “They didn’t know what they were doing,
kidnapping you.” “Well,” said Tier. “I may have outsmarted myself. Seems Telleridge tried to set one of my boys out on a bullying mission,
something that boy had done a number of times. Kissel refused and, being a
straightforward son of fellow, he told Telleridge that the reason he’d refused
was because I wouldn’t like it.” “Is he the one that you were worried about?” asked Seraph. “Myrceria told me tonight that the Masters, the Path’s
wizards, are organizing something they call the Disciplining.” He told them
what he knew of it. “I don’t think that they’ll actually go after Kissel; he’s
got friends in high places. I think they’ll take the boy that they tried to
send Kissel after.” He leaned his head back against the wall. “Seraph, you said
that Bandor and the Master in Redem were shadowed.” “Yes. Lehr and Jes both could see it.” He inhaled. “When Phoran and I combined all the information
that we had about the Path we came to some disturbing conclusions. That plague
that swept through the Traveling clans twenty years ago also visited the noble
houses of the Empire and when it was finished, the Emperor was dead, leaving
only an infant on the throne. Also a high percentage of the followers of the
Path found themselves Septs, though they might have been as many as eight or
ten people away from the inheritance when the plague hit.” “You think that there might be another one,” she said, cold
chills tightening her spine. “Not just shadowed, but willingly shadowed like
the Unnamed King. You think it might be this Telleridge?” He nodded. “Phoran’s sent for my old commander, the Sept of
Gerant. He’s on his way, now. With his military and tactical advice, Phoran
hopes that he can break the Path. If we take them by surprise and Phoran is
ruthless enough, he’ll be right.” “But Gerant won’t be here in time to save your boy,” said Seraph
softly. “Probably not.” “These Passerines of yours,” said Seraph thoughtfully. “They
won’t willingly participate in hurting another boy.” “I don’t think so,” said Tier. “Some of them, maybe,
but most of them won’t.” Seraph smiled. “Then the Masters will be straining to
enforce their will upon them with their stolen Bardic Orders. Tell me, Tier, if
all of the Path were in the same room together, how many would there be?” “There are about sixty Passerines,” he said. “I don’t know exactly
how many Raptors—I have the names of about a hundred. Perhaps double that.” “And the wizards,” said Seraph. “You said there were five.” “Five,” he agreed. “And a handful of apprentice and
hedge-witch types.” “We have an Owl, a Falcon, an Eagle, and two Ravens,” said
Seraph. “I don’t know how many ordinary wizards the clan has, but they’ll come
along. There are probably fifty Travelers who would love nothing more than an
excuse to attack a bunch of solsenti who’ve been preying upon Travelers.” “You are short one Owl,” said Tier. “They’ve done something
so that my magic doesn’t work on them, remember?” Seraph frowned. She didn’t like the mysterious magic that
these Masters had been working on Tier. “That kind of thing works better on
wizards than it does on Order-Bearers.” She tapped her fingers against her lips
as she worked it out. “You said that it just keeps your magic from working on
them, right?” He nodded. “That would be a very difficult and odd thing to do on purpose,”
Seraph said. “They’d have to have something personal from everyone who is a
follower to do that—blood or hair. It would be an incredibly complex spell and
the power it would require ...” She stopped when a better idea occurred to her.
“I’ll ask Hennea to be certain, but it sounds to me that it is more likely that
their spell is imperfect and erratic. Hennea told me that they don’t really
know as much about the Orders as they think. Blocking the powers of an ordinary
wizard would be simple if they had enough power. But in order to block the
powers of an Order-Bearer they’d have to be very specific about everything they
want to stop. I’ll bet that some of the odder magics still come to you without
a problem. Because they didn’t get it right, their spell will be unraveling
slowly.” She nodded because the explanation fit what she knew of magic and
Tier’s experience here. “Your magic didn’t work on them, because they and you know it won’t work. But
even that effect will fade with time.” She smiled at him. “But even if it doesn’t fade, you have already
made your contributions in the number of Passerines who will take your side. If
we attack them during the Disciplining, we’ll have the Travelers, both warriors
and wizards; our Order-Bearers; and most of the Passerines. You said that the
Disciplining is mandatory for the Passerines, but not the Raptors.” “That doesn’t mean that they won’t be there,” he said. “But
I see where you’re going. They’ll all be there, the Masters who are the real
danger. Once they are gone, Phoran can take his time to eliminate the rest.
We’ll have to talk to Phoran, though. I’ll not bring a clan of Travelers into
his palace without his permission if I can help it.” A light knock sounded at the door, sending Tier to his feet,
“A moment, a moment,” he said, glancing around the room, though he knew there
weren’t any hiding places. “Peace,” whispered Seraph. “He won’t see Jes, and—” She
turned to Lehr, but couldn’t see him either. “I’m going to have a talk with
Brewydd about what she’s teaching Lehr,” she murmured. “Go ahead and open the
door, Tier. He won’t see me either, not unless he’s one of your wizards.” With
a whisper of magic she ensured that she’d not attract any notice. Tier’s
visitor would see her, but he would just ignore her presence unless something
called her to his attention. Tier’s eyebrows climbed and his mouth quirked with amusement—at
himself, she thought It was one thing to know everyone in your family Could
work magic; it was quite another to have them do it. “Toarsen,” he said when he’d opened the door. “Come in.” “I came as soon as I heard,” said Toarsen. “The rumor’s being
passed all Over the Eyrie. There’s going to be a Disciplining.” “I heard,” said Tier. Seraph could see her husband weighing
some decision. “Toarsen,” he said, “if you needed to get in to see the emperor,
could you? At this time of night?” “I—I suppose I could,” Toarsen said, “but not without my
brother Avar’s help.” He hesitated and thrust his chin up. “But I won’t do anything that will imperil my emperor—even if
he’s a stupid sot more interested in the newest wine from Carek than in running
his Empire.” “Agreed,” said Tier. “What I’d like you to do is persuade
your brother to get you in to see the Emperor—tell him it’s urgent that you do
so. Then—” Tier paused and shook his head. “Then tell Phoran you have a message
for him that you can’t give him in front of anyone except for Avar. The Emperor
knows too much about you, my lad, to trust himself to you, but he trusts Avar.
When the three of you are alone, you tell Phoran that his Bard would like an urgent
word. Tell him that you and Avar will accompany him, if he doesn’t mind. Tell
Phoran that I have a plan, but time is of the essence.” Toarsen stared at him. “Phoran knows about you?” The Bard grinned wickedly. “Don’t go dismissing your emperor
out of hand, lad. I have a feeling that a lot of people have underestimated
him, and they’re about to get a—rude awakening.” Toarsen nodded slowly. “All right. I’ll do it. If I can’t
get in, I’ll come back alone.” “Good, lad,” said Tier, patting his shoulder and shooing him
out the door. He waited until the sound of Toarsen’s footsteps grew faint. “That was Toarsen, the Sept of Leheigh’s younger brother,”
he said, sitting back down beside Seraph. “He’ll find Phoran for us.” “You know,” muttered Seraph, who’d been working through
Tier’s story while he talked with the boy, “I knew that we were in trouble when
all of our children were born Ordered. I should have resigned myself to
fighting against another shadowed with the Emperor at my side years ago.” Jes looked back at her impassively, but Lehr smiled. “Maybe
the gods are making you make up for those wells and blights you didn’t fix for
all these years in one fell swoop.” Seraph stole Tier’s eye roll—she could do it when she chose.
“Cheeky. Carry them for nine months, feed them, clothe them, and what do I get?
Impertinence.” “Seraph,” Tier asked, “if they want my Order—why didn’t they
just take it? Why wait for a year?” “I’m not certain,” said Seraph, “but magic works better on something
you know well. I could cast a spell better on you than I could on a stranger.
Their magic isn’t foolproof; a lot of their stones don’t work right. The year
wait might be time for one of their wizards to get close to you so that their
spells will succeed.” Tier rubbed his face. “I can’t tell a solsenti wizard
from anyone else unless he’s gathering magic, can you?” Seraph shook her head. “I can see the Orders, if I look. But
simple wizards, no.” Tier yawned. Seraph frowned at him. “How many nights do you sit up plotting?” she asked briskly,
but didn’t wait for an answer. “Boys, can you settle yourselves to being quiet?
Tier, you won’t do anyone any good if you fall over asleep. You lie down here,
and the boys and I will keep watch until the Emperor comes.” He started to protest, and it was a mark of how tired he was
that he stopped himself. “My love, if you make yourself comfortable, I’ll lay
my head upon your lap and dream sweetly for a year.” “See,” said Lehr in a stage whisper, “that’s how you get
women to do things for you. You ought to try it, Jes. Think Hennea will let you
rest your weary brow upon her lap?” “Lehr,” said Jes, “shut up and let Papa sleep.” Seraph didn’t sleep, though truthfully she was tired as
well, but sitting peacefully on the soft bed with her husband’s head in her lap
was as effective as a week’s worth of sleep. While she waited she worked on
loosening the magic net the solsenti wizards had bound around Tier. She
didn’t fight them but just encouraged the unraveling that time would have
brought. When she had done what she could, she half-opened one eye
and saw that Lehr was sleeping sitting up. Jes was alert and watchful—he nodded
his head at her so that she would know that he’d seen her looking. The very
peace that had settled in her heart told her it was really Jes who watched and
not the Guardian. She thought it was a good sign that the Guardian would trust
in Jes. She closed her eye and let herself enjoy the quiet. “Someone’s coming,” said Jes softly. Tier rolled to his feet and stretched. “Thank you, love. Would you all please stand so that you aren’t directly in
line with the door—but no disguises, eh? If this isn’t Phoran, I’d rather keep
your presence quiet, but if it is Phoran, I don’t want him thinking that we’re
trying to ambush him.” “There’s three of them,” said Lehr as he obediently shifted
over without getting up. “One of them is Toarsen, one of them is wearing a lot
of metal, and the third is in soft-soled shoes.” Tier looked at Lehr in surprise. Well, thought Seraph, she’d
told him that the children had been growing into their powers. “How do you know it’s Toarsen?” Tier asked. Lehr grimaced, “I know. It bothers me, too. Mother says I’ll
get used to it. But I liked it better when I just thought I was a good
tracker—bringing magic into it robs me of the satisfaction of having a skill.
Toarsen’s wearing leather-soled boots and there’s a nail sticking out of one
heel. Gives him a stomp-click, stomp-click kind of walk.” There was a soft knock on the door, and Jes’s soundless response
made Seraph shiver with the cold. “Who is it?” asked Tier, deliberately sounding groggy and
irritable. “Phoran,” replied a firm tenor not a whit less irritable.
“Here at your command.” Tier grinned and opened the door. “Thank you for coming.
Your Greatness. Come in.” “I really hate that one,” said a young man who could be none
other than the Emperor. His bright eyes slid over Seraph and Jes, paused on
Lehr, and returned to Tier. “It’s bad enough to be Your Mightinessed and Your
Highnessed by people who consider you a fool. But to be insulted for my extra
weight”—he patted his waist, which was plump—“is beyond the pale. I hope you
didn’t wake me up to meet your family—although your wife is certainly lovely
enough to be worth any effort on my part. I’m afraid that Avar is miffed with
his brother for having the audaciousness to force him to get me up—and twice as
miffed that I hadn’t told him that I was meeting a prisoner in the bowels of
the palace.” Tier grinned at him. “How did you know they’re my family?” Phoran snorted. “A lovely Traveler lady and two boys—one who
looks like her and the other like you? Please, I’m supposed to be a drunkard
but I am not a complete idiot. I know that you told me she’d come, but isn’t
she a little early?” He turned gracefully and indicated the big man who’d closed
the door behind them—the one Lehr said was wearing metal. “Avar, I’d like to
introduce you to Tier of Redem—from your own Sept. Tier this is Avar, Sept of Leheigh,
and my friend.” “My Sept,” Tier said, bowing his head briskly. “Who are you that you call the Emperor to attend you?” said
Avar, ignoring Tier’s greeting. Jealous? thought Seraph. “I am his humble servant,” said Tier smoothly. “He’s helping me,” said Phoran. “The Path is more dangerous
than you think. It is thanks to Tier that I realized how dangerous. He’s been
helping to find out who the Raptors are and at the same time subverting the
Passerines.” “That’s why you started the sword drills,” said Toarsen,
sounding disillusioned. Seraph, being a mother, heard the unspoken—you didn’t
really care about us. “He told me,” said Phoran, not looking at Toarsen, “that
there were a number of young men who wanted but a little direction to be the
best chance I had of controlling my empire.” “You thought we could aid the Emperor?” said Toarsen,
sounding almost shocked. As if, thought Seraph with exasperation for the male half of
the species, being used by the Emperor were a great thing. “I know you can,” said Tier. “Where else is he likely to get
a bunch of hotheads who can fight and aren’t sworn men of some Sept or other?” “Collarn’s job,” said Toarsen. “You arranged Collarn’s job.” “Actually,” said the Emperor, clearing his throat. “That was
me.” Toarsen’s face was bewildered when he turned to Tier. “The
Emperor is a drunken sot,” he said, as if the Emperor weren’t standing next to
him. “He follows Avar around like a lost puppy and does whatever Avar tells him
to. You, Tier, are a bored soldier who has found a hobby to help make a year in
captivity pass more quickly. You find the Raptors annoying and the Masters even
more so. So you decided to see what you could do to tweak their tails and gain
the admiration of the Passerines. When you started, you found that you actually
liked a few of us.” “I was never allowed to be anything but a drunken sot,” said
Phoran coolly, but without anger. “And everyone follows Avar around like lost
puppies.” “I saw a bunch of rowdy boys being led into hell by a pack
of carrion-eaters,” said Tier. “As I rather liked some of you and despise men
who play games with other people’s lives—I decided to see what I could do about
the situation.” “It works because he does care,” added Lehr. “If he’d just
been trying to use you, you’d have seen through him.” Avar, leaning against the door, rubbed his face. “Would someone
care to tell us why we’re here now? Certainly there are better times for
theatrics than the wee hours of the morning.” The Path is preparing a move to preempt me from taking control
of the young men from them,” said Tier. “Myrceria told me that they are
intending to have a Disciplining—a particularly brutal method they employ to
keep their secrets. One of the boys is singled out and punished by everyone. I
gather that the boy who is punished sometimes doesn’t survive. I think that
they’ll choose Collarn—but they might take Toarsen or Kissel as they are the
three who are my closest associates.” Phoran humpfed, then said, “I can warn Collarn on my way
back to bed without anyone being the wiser. But we ought to finish the
introductions before we attend to business further. Do be a credit to your
parents’ instructions in manners and introduce us to your family, Tier.” Tier bowed and grinned sheepishly. “This is my wife Seraph,
Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent My son Jesaphi, whom we call Jes,
Guardian. My younger son Lehr, Hunter. Seraph, Jes, Lehr, may I introduce you
to Phoran the Twenty-Seventh.” Over the polite murmurs and shuffles, Toarsen said, “Twenty-Sixth.” Phoran grinned. “Only if you don’t count the first one. I
always do, since without him were wouldn’t have been an Empire, whatever his
son Phoran the First or Second said.” Toarsen smiled reluctantly. No wonder her husband liked this
boy who happened to be emperor, thought Seraph. They were very much alike. “I had intended to warn Collarn,” said Tier, returning to
the matter at hand. “But my wife pointed out that this Disciplining is the best
chance we’ll have of clearing the whole lot. Everyone is supposed to attend
them. They’ll be expecting some resistance from the Passerines—too many of them
have begun to look at the things the Path wants of them—but they won’t be
expecting an outside attack.” “When will it be?” asked Phoran. “Sometime in the next few days,” replied Tier. Phoran shook his head. “There are two hundred of them—and
five wizards, and the Sept of Gerant and his men aren’t here yet. I have—” “I have twenty men here,” said Avar, “who are my men, not my
father’s.” “And my wife tells me that she can bring another fifty or
so—light foot, armed mostly with knives with a few swords,” said Tier. “Travelers.” Suspiciously, Avar asked, “Why would you Travelers be interested
in this?” “Because our people are dying out,” Seraph said. “For as
long as I remember the Septs have been trying to destroy them. If my friends
help you, Phoran—would you be willing to return the favor?” Phoran nodded his head slowly. “I’ll do what I can. I don’t
have the power that an emperor should, and championing the Travelers is not
going to help. But I’ll do what I can.” “Will that be good enough?” asked Avar. Seraph smiled. “The Path have been killing Travelers for centuries.
We just didn’t know about them until now—if Phoran would not invite us in to
help him, we would go after them on our own. But it’s much safer to invade the
palace under imperial command.” “Myrceria will try and find out when this Disciplining will
take place,” continued Tier. “I’ll know sooner,” said Toarsen. “Myrceria will have to
wait until someone tells her about it—me they have to send for. With your
permission”—he glanced from Tier to Phoran as if he didn’t really know whose
permission he needed—“I’ll let Kissel know, too, in case it’s me they’ve
decided to use as an example.” “How much lead time do you need to bring in the Travelers?”
asked Phoran, and they all began planning. Seraph settled back and gave them information as they asked
for it. Clearly the Emperor, Avar, and Tier were having the time of their
lives, and the younger men were almost as bad—except for Jes, who seemed
content to stay in the background. It amused Seraph to see that the Emperor, the Sept of Leheigh,
and his younger brother all ceded the leadership to Tier, though they all
outranked him—and he had them hanging on his every word. Chapter 16The next morning Tier was bone-tired, but more peaceful than
he’d been for a long time. Seraph was here. Well, not here. She’d gone
off to play diplomat among the Travelers, which was pretty strange—the only
person that he knew less suited to diplomacy was Alinath. “Keep your guard centered,” he told one of his Passerines.
“Remember this isn’t about first blood, it’s about who lives and who dies. Make
sure you’re one of the former and not the latter.” He paced behind his troops, watching foot positions, when a
servant caught hold of his sleeve. “Telleridge requests a moment of your time.” “Toarsen,” called Tier. “Kissel. Run the drills for me. If
I’m not back, break when every man’s shirt is wet through.” Toarsen stepped out of the line and made a quick mocking salute
as he did. He didn’t look nearly as tired as Tier felt, and he’d had no more
sleep. It made Tier feel old. The servant took Tier to one of the smaller rooms that
served as the Raptors’ meeting halls and opened the door for Tier’s entrance.
The room had been partially screened off with a delicately carved wooden panel.
Four black-robed figures sat in gold upholstered chairs ringed in front of a
cheerful fire, two empty chairs in the center. Telleridge, also in his robes,
stood in front of the fire. Telleridge looked up when Tier entered, though the others
kept their eyes on the fireplace. “Ah, thank you for attending me. Baskins, you may leave.” The servant shut the door, leaving Tier alone with the
Path’s wizards. “Come have a seat, Bard,” Telleridge said in an unreadable
tone. Warily, Tier sat on the edge of one of the empty chairs as
the Master took the other. He had the odd impression that Telleridge’s calm was
just a thin film spread over turbulent waters. “You have cost us much, my friend,” Telleridge said. “Whatever
possessed you to try and take the Passerines from us? Did you think that we
would allow it?” “You aren’t doing anything with them,” replied Tier. “There
are a number of fine young men amongst the Passerines—and a few who are a waste
of shoe leather.” “They are useful to us,” said Telleridge, sounding distantly
amused. Tier took note of the effect, planning to save it for some time when he
wanted to be obnoxiously patronizing. “Just as they were. We’ve called a
Disciplining, which will return control to us, but I fear that very few of
these Passerines will make it to Raptor now. I was particularly upset when you
took the Sept of Leheigh’s young brother. I had great hopes for him. And it’s
too bad about the young musician, Collarn—we shall miss having music in these
halls when you both are gone.” “I see,” said Tier, deciding to let the Master direct the
conversation into the gently ironic tones he seemed to prefer. “I take it that
my demise will happen a little sooner than you planned?” There was a noise from behind the screen, but it was too
faint for Tier to identify. “I’m not any happier about it than you are,” the Master
said. Apparently the others had all been told to sit and be silent, because
none of them had done anything more exciting than breathe since Tier entered
the room. “Owls are few and far between, and this haste will destroy our plans.
That makes two failures in as many years. We’ve never had this much trouble
controlling a Bard—I assume it’s a Bardic talent you are using to win over the
Passerines?” Tier frowned at him. “How could it be? You’ve told me that
you have my Order under control.” He’d used the methods Gerant had taught him
instead, because he’d never relied on his Order for much—unlike a
Traveler-raised Bard. “I wonder that none of our other Bards have done such a
thing,” said the Master. Because a Traveler Bard was hardly likely to worry about the
lives of a bunch of solsenti thugs-in-the-making, thought Tier, but he
didn’t say anything. The Master waited politely, but when Tier didn’t respond he
shrugged. “At any rate, I, personally, am most distressed at a few other things
you’ve cost us,” he got to his feet and strolled to the screen, “Come, Bard.
And maybe you will be sorry as well.” For want of a better thing to do while surrounded by five
mages, Tier got slowly to his feet and followed the Master’s beckoning. The
others got up silently and followed. A woman was tied naked to a chair, and someone had obviously
been testing, in the time-honored fashion, how well flesh fared against knives
and other things. Her face was so battered that it was unrecognizable—but Tier
knew the hair. “Myrceria,” he said. She stiffened when he spoke, and he realized that her eyes
were so swollen that she must not be able to see at all. “Myrceria has been telling us things,” said Telleridge. “Haven’t
you, my dear?” He patted the top of her head, then took out a dagger and cut off
the gag. “I’m sorry,” she said, her face turned blindly toward Tier.
“I’m sorry sorry.” “Shh,” said Tier, putting some force behind the words. “It
doesn’t matter. Shh.” She kept shaking, but she quit apologizing. Either his words
worked, or Seraph was right about the unraveling of the Master’s spells and
she’d felt the magic push he’d given them. “I was angry about the Passerines,” said Telleridge.
“Angrier still when I questioned Myrceria this morning and realized that instead
of keeping an eye on you as she was supposed to—you had taken her from
us, too. She has been a valuable tool for years, and you’ve ruined her.” His movement was so quick, so unexpected that before Tier realized
what the Master had done, Myrceria’s blood showered him from chest to knee. Telleridge pulled up her head and held it through the throes
of death. “She’s been so useful over the years. Where am I going to find
another wizard who is so good at getting close to our Traveler guests? I have
no more daughters.” He dropped her head and wiped his hands on his robes. Black
robes hid the blood much better than Tier’s light-colored clothing. It wasn’t, thought Tier, that he hadn’t believed they were
evil. He had just forgotten how sudden death could be, and how final. He’d
liked Myrceria. Tier still had his sword from practice, but this was too
well-orchestrated. If his sword would have done him any good, they’d never have
let him keep it. Had Myrceria betrayed their plans? She hadn’t known it
all—but she’d known enough. “But you know the thing that bothers me the most?” asked
Telleridge, intruding on Tier’s grief and anger. “How did you get to the
Emperor? Do you know how long it took us to come by a harmless ruler? How many
people gave their lives so that I could mold the proper emperor? Then suddenly,
he is making an effective grasp for power. It wasn’t until I spoke with you the
other day that I drew a parallel between what you’ve done to the Passerines and
what happened to the Emperor.” Telleridge shook his head. “And what have you left us to
rule in his place? Avar is next for the throne; but although he is an idiot, he
is a well-meaning idiot. You’ve ruined Toarsen.” He heaved a theatrical sigh.
“Not that it will matter to you how much trouble you’ve caused, but I thought
you might enjoy sharing the stage tonight. I’ll leave you for last so you can
watch your little projects die.” Tier stared silently at Myrceria’s corpse. “Ah, no words for me, Bard?” taunted the Master. Yes, thought Tier, it was time to see just how much control
they had over his Order. “Only cowards torture women,” he said, not bothering to
dodge the staff that took him across the cheekbone. Toarsen rubbed his hair dry with a towel as he walked down
the secret ways that would lead him back to the rest of the palace. Alone, he
allowed himself to smile with remembered satisfaction at Avar’s face when
Toarsen had burst into his rooms and demanded to be taken to the Emperor. Firmly convinced that it was some stupid wager, Avar had almost
refused him. But he hadn’t. Toarsen was surprised about that His brother had seldom paid
any attention to him at all, except to order him about. When he’d sworn on his honor that he carried an urgent message
to the Emperor, Avar had heaved a martyred sigh, rolled out of bed, dressed,
and done as Toarsen asked. On the way back to their rooms after they’d spent
the night in councils of war, Avar had patted him on the back, an affectionate,
respectful gesture he’d never given Toarsen before. The passage Toarsen had taken opened not far from his rooms
in an obscure storage room. He glanced cautiously out of the room, but there
was no one in the hall to see him as he slipped out of the storage room and
into his own. He’d changed into the uncomfortable clothes of court and was
halfway to the door before he realized that there was a vellum envelope on the
cherrywood table near his bed. His pulse picked up as he slit it opened and read the invitation. “Now?” he said. Seraph curled up, enfolded in the bedding that smelled of
Tier. She’d left him while the sun was only a faint hint in the sky. It had
been even easier than she expected to talk Benroln and his clan into serving as
the Emperor’s foot soldiers. She’d left Lehr and Jes sleeping and left the
sheep farm just outside of Taela where they’d been staying to come back here. Tier hadn’t been here when she’d returned to tell him of her
success, but she’d known that he would have to continue his normal habits or
risk alerting someone. So she’d climbed into his bed and reminded herself that
he was alive. If someone came in, they’d not see her unless she wanted them to. Someone knocked at the door. “Tier? It’s Toarsen. Are you back?” Reluctantly, she got out of the bed and pulled the covers
flat. She opened the door and motioned the young man in. “He’s not here,” she said. “I can’t find him anywhere,” Toarsen said, sounding a little
frantic. “The Disciplining is set for early this evening, and I can’t find
Tier.” “It’s all right” said Seraph, his anxiety lending her
calm. “He’ll want to know, but it’s Phoran, your brother, and my people who
really need to know right now. Go to your brother and tell him to get word to
Phoran and to get his men and meet my people in the passages we discussed. I’ll
get the Travelers, and after you’ve told Avar, you go about your day as if
nothing were wrong. Avar can get word to Phoran. Just make sure you are armed
when you go to the Disciplining.” He nodded and left the room. Seraph set out at a dead run
through the labyrinth of passages—there was no time to waste. She needed to get
Benroln. Tier had survived a long time here without her to watch over him. She
had to believe he’d be all right. Avar and his men waited for them as he’d promised, in a
long, dark corridor large enough to have held twice as many people. Relief
crossed his face when he saw Seraph and the Librarian’s clan. “I don’t like this,” he said without waiting for introductions.
“Toarsen said he couldn’t find Tier anywhere. He looked for Myrceria to give
her a message for him, but he couldn’t find her either, and none of the other
whores knew where she was. He said that he’d last seen Tier at sword practice,
but that one of the Masters called him to a meeting. Then I couldn’t find
Phoran in any of his usual haunts, though his horse is still in the stable.” Seraph pushed her anxiety aside and forced herself to think
clearly. The Path were upset with Tier for taking control of the Passerines ...
so they took him and ... Her thoughts stuck there. Would they simply have
killed him? “I don’t see anything to do except follow the plans we laid
out last night,” she said at last. Beside her Benroln nodded his head. “If what Seraph told us
about this group is true, this is the best chance to destroy them. It would be better for us if the Emperor is there to
bear witness for us—but the Path needs to be destroyed here and now.” “Neither Tier nor Phoran are essential to the destruction of
the Path now,” said Seraph with painful honesty. “Without Tier, though, we
might have to fight the Passerines, too. And if Phoran is not there, Benroln,
your men will have to try and get out as soon as this is finished and take all
of our fallen, too. Maybe Telleridge has taken them for part of the performance
tonight. If the Masters have hurt Tier, they’ll have a hard time controlling
the Passerines.” “You don’t know the Passerines,” said Avar. “I know my husband,” she said. She didn’t miss the uneasy way Avar’s people surveyed the
exotic lot of armed Travelers or the puzzled looks aimed at Brewydd. Old women
were not usually part of a battle force—but Healers could look after themselves
on a battlefield. “We need to take them tonight,” Seraph said again. Avar nodded slowly, then turned to the troops around him. In
short, punctuated sentences he described what they were doing and why. The white robes she’d taken from an unwary Raptor were
woolen and itchy, but Seraph stood quietly next to Brewydd, who was carrying on
a conversation with the white-robed Raptor beside her, talking, of all things,
about growing tomatoes. Hennea had laid spells on all of them: look-away spells to
keep them from being noticed and minor illusions to hide things—like Seraph’s
lack of height and her sex—that would otherwise attract attention. When Hennea
had told them all to avoid being noticed, Seraph didn’t think that exchanging
gardening tips with the first Raptor they happened upon was what she’d had in
mind. Seraph looked out over the room. Jes was somewhere, too,
though he hadn’t bothered with the white robes. No one would see him until he
wanted them to. Lehr was with the rest of their little army. The Passerines were gathered already; she’d counted them. Assuming Tier’s protege1 was the boy they
intended to produce, all of the Passerines were there. Though they didn’t have
hoods on their robes, Seraph found that the robes obscured enough differences
that she had a hard time picking out Toarsen, the only Passerine she knew, from
the rest. There were chairs in rows in front of the stage, and the Passerines
were all directed to those; even as she watched, the last of them took his
seat. There were more Raptors than she’d hoped, nearly three times
the number of Passerines. Well, enough, she told herself, it would be even less
likely that anyone should spot the cuckoos in the mix. “Followers of the Secret Path.” Seraph stiffened at the whiff of magic that accompanied the
words so that they rang out and appeared louder than they really were. The room quieted. Brewydd softened her voice to a murmur,
but continued comparing the benefits of growing tomatoes in various soils. It had been Raven magic that gave power to the words the
black-robed man standing in front of the curtained stage had said. Why hadn’t
he used the Bardic Order? A Bard would have done more than just overpower the
talking of the crowd: he could have caught the attention of everyone, even
tomato zealots like Brewydd’s conversation partner, and held it. Perhaps they didn’t know that, or maybe they just preferred
to work with more familiar powers. A solsenti mage, she thought, would
be used to having magic work a certain way—like Raven or even Cormorant. They
wanted the Orders for power, but even Volis had had no use for subtlety. “When you come to our Eyrie you take vows,” said the wizard.
“First, never reveal to anyone what we do here. Second, to attend the Eyrie at
least three evenings a week. Third, to obey the Raptors and the Masters over
and above all other oaths. One of you has broken the last two of these rules.
We are here today to discipline him—not in hope of reformation, because he will
never again be welcome to our Eyrie.” “Telleridge sure knows how to capture his audience, doesn’t
he,” marveled the Raptor talking to Brewydd, his voice shaking with age, but he
returned to his favorite subject with more ado. “I find that the tomatoes I grow in the
orangery—” “But that is not all we are here for.” The Master’s voice
dipped into sorrow, but Seraph thought he overdid it a bit. “In recent weeks it
has come to our attention that our Passerines have been led astray by the magic
of our Traveler guest. The magic that keeps his at bay, here in our halls, is
dependent upon your resistance. If you want to be his follower, his servant,
there is nothing our magic can do to protect you. So we have to take more
stringent measures with him.” They had Tier. Was he alive? “There is a third problem that has held our attention these
past few years. Our Empire, founded by heroes, built by men of vision, men of
intelligence is, even now, presided over by a drunken sot. Bored with the
available women and wealth, he has decided to interfere with the men who try to
preserve the Empire. Who is to save us when our frivolous Emperor chooses to
change the ancient boundaries of the Septs? Who? We shall save ourselves.” He raised both hands and the great curtains behind him
creaked and squealed as they slowly opened to the Master’s magic. On the stage was a frightened young man, naked and chained
by his wrists to a ring in the floor of the stage. In the center position was
the Emperor. They hadn’t stripped him—too worried about arousing the wrong
emotion in the crowd, judged Seraph—but he was wearing the same robes he’d been
in last night, and they looked the worse for wear. But it was the third man,
Tier, her eyes found and locked on. He was alive, she thought with a rush of relief; she could
see his ribs move as he breathed. Like the Passerine he’d been so worried
about, he’d been stripped naked and chained, but he lay curled up and still,
his skin red and black from beating. Rage rose up in Seraph like a red tide. She stared at the
Master who orchestrated this mess and took what her magic could tell her. He
was a solsenti wizard of moderate power, aided by two Raven rings—one of
them very old. “We deal first with the greatest offense. Phoran the
Twenty-Sixth, we, the Followers of the Secret Path, judge you unfit to rule our
Empire!” The Master turned to the audience and gave the signal for a response
of some kind. A roar of approval perhaps? But it never came, because Phoran spoke. “Actually,” he said with dignity that caught at the heart of
every person in the room, “it’s Phoran the Twenty-Seventh. I’ve always felt
that since the old farmer started the Empire, he ought to get credit for it.” Even Brewydd’s new friend quit sneaking. Seraph felt a relieved grin tug at her lips. Tier was doing better
than he appeared if he could give Phoran’s mundane words that much power. Phoran looked a little taken aback by the response his quip
had drawn. Go, Tier, thought Seraph fiercely. She glanced at Telleridge,
but even with the partial immunity the Raven rings he wore gave him, he was too
close to Phoran to do anything except listen. Phoran was not at a loss for more than a breath. “Some of
what Telleridge has said is correct I have not been the best of emperors, but I
didn’t realize that anyone needed me to be that. Like you, I thought that the
Council of Septs—ruled by people like Telleridge here—were far more capable
than I ever could be. That should have been true.” He was taking too long, thought Seraph, watching Telleridge
struggle against the Bardic touch. Tier couldn’t possibly maintain his hold on
the whole room for very long, not in the condition he was in. She stepped away from the wall and began making her way down
toward the auditorium. If she could get to him, she could help. “They are intelligent men, and well-trained to their office.
If they chose to rule justly, they could surely do so. But they rule instead
for personal gain. Some of you were encouraged to work a little mischief in the
street of the weavers last year. Did you know that the council leader’s riches
increased by half after that incident because the weavers now pay him for the
right to sell their goods in their own craft stalls? Gorrish is one of the
Raptors who sent you out to attack the weavers—did any of you gain from that?” Phoran took a deep breath, and Seraph felt the crowd stir as
the Bardic touch faded momentarily and then strengthened again. With the
shifting of the crowd, her only path to the stage closed up. “Those Raptors among you will know that almost half the Passerines
who are here will die mysteriously shortly after they graduate to being
Raptors. Some of you know that it is not so mysterious, because you aided in
those men’s deaths. Why kill so many? Because some of you are already
outgrowing the trappings of childhood. Some of you realize that it is not
necessary to prove who you are by how much destruction you can cause—you are
the first ones they will kill. Like this young man beside me who was targeted
only because he loves old instruments more than he loves tormenting the younger
Passerines.” “I haven’t been much of an emperor,” Phoran said.
“I’ve disappointed people who cared about me all of my life—just as you have.
Mostly, my failures have been passive failures—things not done rather than
great and terrible acts. Just as yours have been, until today. If you harm men
whose only crime is to fall afoul of a power-mad politician, then you take a
step that cannot be undone.” Tier crooked his neck and peered out of his one good eye to
see how Phoran was holding up. Something, he thought, something had walked
close to the Emperor. It leaned nearer as if it were whispering something in
Phoran’s ear, then faded from Tier’s view. Jes, he thought. Anxiously, Tier looked at the
audience, but they didn’t seem to have seen that nebulous shape. Phoran took a breath. “You have a choice tonight. You can
hold to the oaths you made to the Masters of the Path. Realize that they have
not given you an oath in return—as I did when I became emperor. I owe you fair
hearing in disputes, I owe you a place in our society, and I owe you an emperor
worth serving in return. You must choose now.” He looked up, scanning the
crowd. When he saw what he sought he nodded once. Then he began speaking
rapidly. “Choose who you fight carefully, because this is a battle for the soul
of the Empire.” He swung one of his chained wrists to indicate the wall of
the Eyrie and, as if he’d wielded the magic himself, the wall disintegrated
into so much plaster dust and splintered wood. The noise and magical backwash distracted Tier, and he lost
his tenuous hold on his own magic. The failure of his control hit Tier like a blow to the head.
It awakened every inch of the screaming flesh the Masters had abused. He cried
out, and his vision blackened. The sounds of battle erupted around him, and
half-dazed as he was, he couldn’t remember where he was or what he was doing
here without a sword. The destruction of the wall caught Seraph by surprise. She
had been supposed to help bring it down, but, unable to see over the crowd, she
must have missed the signal—or Hennea had used an opportune moment in the
Emperor’s speech. Irritably, Seraph poked the tall, bulky Raptor who stood in
front of her. Since she’d used a touch of magic, he jumped aside with a yelp,
pushing several other men over and briefly clearing a visual path for Seraph
just as Avar’s men and the Travelers began pouring into the room with a war-cry
that was even more effective in a room designed as a theater than it would have
been on an open battlefield. The astonishment of such strangeness held the Followers of
the Path oddly still until the first of Avar’s men gutted the nearest Raptor. A man near Seraph drew his sword, but he was looking toward
the far side of the room for his enemy, so he never even noticed Seraph until
her knife intersected his belly. A young blue-robed boy drew his sword and
finished the job—but gave her white robes a wary look. “I’m Tier’s wife,” she said, tossing back her hood. “Pleased to meet you,” he said, grunting the last as
he used his sword to catch the blade of a Raptor who was a bit quicker than
most to realize that the Passerines were as much a threat as the fighting men
who’d come through the wall. “I’m Kissel.” She had to get to Tier. Discarding the robes both because
they got in her way and because they might get her killed by one of Tier’s
Passerines, she aimed for the most direct path to Tier, whom she still couldn’t
see. The fighting was widespread by now, and the heaviest fighting lay between her and the stage. Seraph called her
magic to her. Blindly, instinctively, Tier tried to rise to his feet,
since a down man on a battlefield was a dead man, but something held, his
wrists and he couldn’t call any strength to his muscles. “It’s all right, sir,” said Toarsen’s familiar voice. “I’ll
keep you safe;”. “The Emperor,” managed Tier, falling back to his damaged
knees and biting back a moan. Screams were for people who weren’t as weary as
he was. There was a series of clanking sounds, battle sounds that
ended in a grunt and a thunk. Toarsen, panting a bit, said, “Kissel’s with him,
and someone cut him loose and gave him a sword. I never knew that Phoran knew
how to fight. Never thought”—another thunk and gasp—“someone as fat as he is
could move that fast.” “The Masters?” asked Tier. Seated and calmer, he found that
his vision was coming back a bit, but not well enough to sort through the chaos
of battle. He wiped his good eye with the back of his hand. His hand came away
wet, but he could see again. “I don’t see “em,” Toarsen said. “I was watching Avar and
his men boil into the room. When I looked back, this place was covered in
fighters and I thought I might come up here and bear you company a bit. We’ve a
nice view of the fighting up here—those two boys of yours can surely fight” Someone in white blundered into the small area of stage that
Toarsen was guarding, and he sent the Raptor on his way with a kick that
impaled him on a sword held by a man with moon-pale hair. “Gessa,” said the man. “Anytime,” said Toarsen. “Collarn?” asked Tier, his returning vision allowing him to
see that the boy’s place was empty. “Naked as a newborn,” said Toarsen cheerfully. “You’re not
able to get high enough to enjoy the sight, but I can see him from here.
Remember all those times you told him that he carries his guard too high?” “Yes?” “You should have made him fight naked.” Tier laughed, one short bark, then held his breath and his
ribs. “No joking right now,” he managed. Lehr rolled onto the stage and then bounced up and ran over.
“Good to see that you’re alive, Papa. But I think I speak for us all when I
tell you that I’d rather not worry about you again for a while. Parents are
supposed to worry about their children, not vice versa. Let me get a look at
those chains.” He held the manacles in his hands and closed his eyes. After
a moment, the locks clicked open. Lehr grinned at his father’s expression. “I don’t know how opening locks ties in with being a Hunter
either, though Brewydd explained it to me a dozen times.” He sounded pleased
with himself. He looked at Toarsen. “Go ahead,” said Toarsen. “I’ll stay here.” “Thanks,” said Lehr, and he leaped off the edge of the
stage. Having completed the task Hennea had given him, the Guardian
took a quick glance around the room. Lehr was fighting at Avar’s side and
accounting for himself quite well. Just as his gaze found Seraph, she raised
her hands and tossed a half dozen men into the air. Obviously she was in no
need of immediate protection. He turned to go to his father, but the Sept of Leheigh’s
brother was standing over Papa’s crumpled form and seemed to be having no
trouble fending off attackers. The wizards, who posed more of a threat, had
other things on their minds than hurting his father. A double handful of
Passerines were doing their best to get onto the stage and attack the
Masters—too many of them to allow the wizards’ magic to be an effective weapon.
The Guardian knew—remembered from other battles fought long ago, before
Jes’s father’s father had been born—that keeping the Passerines away would
soon weaken the solsenti wizards too much for them to be a danger to
Tier. Satisfied that they were all safe for the moment, the Guardian jumped off the stage to return to Hennea’s side,
slipping between fighters who mostly moved out of his way without ever looking
at him directly. The noise of swords clashing and men screaming excited him
almost as much as the smell of blood. A man bumped his arm and the Guardian turned on him with a
snarl and a flash of fangs. If the man hadn’t retreated, falling backwards over
a body on the floor, even Jes could not have held the Guardian back. Hennea stood alone near the fallen wall. He couldn’t tell if
her spells to avoid being seen were working on everyone else, or if they were
just smart enough to stay away. Mother had told him that spells usually didn’t
work right on him. There were two men attacking a boy who was stepping back
rapidly to avoid being overrun. The Guardian could see that the boy wouldn’t
stay away from their blades for much longer. He glanced at Hennea, but she was
all right. The Guardian dropped the sword he held and reached for the form of
the great cat—he wanted to taste blood, not feel flesh part against steel. He picked the nearest Raptor and leaped onto his shoulders,
driving him down to the floor. As his claws sank deep into meat, the man’s pain
and fear washed through Jes. The Guardian reveled in the searing sensations,
which only raised his bloodlust further. The other antagonist paused to stare, but the Passerine recovered
a little faster and killed his opponent before beating a rapid retreat. Death
and the boy’s fear fed the battle rage and Jes turned his attention to the man
who lay beneath him. “Jes!” The great cat halted, his mouth already opened to still the
struggles of his prey. “Jes, come back. I need you!” Hennea sounded frantic. Her hand touched his tense back. “Jes,” she said. Trembling, fighting, Jes forced the Guardian to step away
from the downed man even as the beast roared its thwarted rage. “What?” he managed, the emotions and pain of the battle raging
around him raw without the Guardian’s protection. Hennea smoothed her hands over him and the worst of the
clamor faded until it was manageable. The Guardian would have been better, but
Jes couldn’t let him loose until he had a moment to calm down. “Look on the stage,” Hennea whispered. “What do you see?” There had been wizards on the stage when he’d earned Hennea’s
message to the Emperor. Five stood in plain view, but the other held to the
shadows. When his father had lost control of them, they, like Hennea, had stood
back from the battle and aided their people as they could. Now four wizards lay crumpled on the ground, and something—something
that caused the Guardian to take control again—fed on the fifth. “What is that?” asked the Guardian. “A Raven’s Memory,” she said. “A vengeful ghost—though I’ve
never seen one so substantial. It’s almost alive.” The sixth wizard, anonymous in his robes, slipped off the
stage and toward the destroyed wall. No one looked at him, though he passed a
few men quite closely. “One of the wizards is getting away,” the Guardian observed
to Hennea, calm again. “Where?” she asked, but when he pointed, she didn’t see him. “I’ll follow him,” he decided and Jes, anxious to get away
from the battle, agreed with the Guardian’s decision: Neither of them listened
to Hennea’s protest as the great cat leaped over a heap of rubble to follow the
escaping man. Seraph blew her hair out of her eyes wearily and kept moving
forward. The large young man who had been so helpful in dispatching that first
Raptor had stayed by her side as she used whatever means necessary to push
through the battle. There was a limit to her magic, and after the first blast
won her only a few yards before the fighting spread into the cleared area she’d
made, she decided that she was going to have to use more subtlety and less
power. With a sword she scavenged from the floor, she used magic to lend force
to her blows until the blade slid through bone as if it were water. She’d taken
the time to add her own see-me-not spell to Hennea’s efforts. Blood
covered her from the elbows down, weighting down her clothes with more than
physical burden—but she wasn’t here to fight fair. She needed to get to Tier. “You know it’s true what he said,” panted her young friend
Kissel. “What’s that?” she managed, dropping another Raptor who was
raising his sword to attack a blue-robed man from behind. “A man would be smarter to face an enraged boar than to
cross my wife.” The boy managed to imitate Tier’s style. “Huh,” she grunted, kicking an unsuspecting man behind his
knee and dropping him onto his opponent’s blade. “How flattering.” The boy grinned wearily. “He doesn’t seem to mind.” “Can you see him yet?” “No,” he said. “But I can see Toarsen on the stage—he’ll do
his best to keep him from harm.” Tier knew that he should get to his feet and claim a sword,
but he just couldn’t manage it As if he read his mind, Toarsen said, “It’s all right, sir.
Just having Avar in here fighting for the Emperor took most of the heart out of
the Raptors. All the Passerines called out his name as soon as they saw who it
was—even that squid you’ve had Kissel and me watching was attacking the Raptors.
Remind me never to let him behind me with something sharp. All that’s left now
is just a few of the Raptors and mercenaries who didn’t leave fast enough. Avar
will call quarter in a minute, as soon as he thinks that his men have had
enough of killing.” Sure enough, through the sounds of battle—all the louder for
being inside the cavernous chamber—came a bass rumble still distinguishable as
the words: “Quarter give quarter! Surrender or die!” picking up in volume as
more voices took up the cry. “Waste of time,” murmured Tier, just before he passed out.
“They’re all guilty of treason—Phoran will have to hang ’em all.” He wasn’t actually out all that long because there were
still clashes, as a few desperate men continued to fight, when he woke up. He opened his eyes just as an old, quavering voice said,
“Woo-eyah. I see that those giggling twits were right about solsenti men.” Tier stared at the oldest woman he’d ever seen, then
grinned. “You must be Brewydd,” he said, “the Healer.” “And it’s a good thing for you, young man,” she agreed. “You
must be the Bard that woman’s been so upset about. Now let me see what this old
biddy can do about making you want to stay with the living.” She clicked her tongue against her teeth when she saw what
they’d done to his knees. “Good thing you did this with a Lark nearby,” she
said. “If you’d done it somewhere else you wouldn’t be walking on these again.” “I’d give, you a kiss,” said Tier, then he had to stop and
grit his teeth as her touch brought burning pain that was worse than the
original blows had been. “Except that my wife would finish what the Path
began.” “It is good that a man knows his place,” said Seraph comfortably
from somewhere behind him. He hurt too much to turn so he could see her, so he gave her
a vague wave. She crouched down on her heels beside him. “So,” she said,
“I know where there is a white robe you can have—but that might make you a
target. On the other hand, parading around in nothing at all might make you a
different sort of target.” He laughed, then moaned. “Why is it that the first thing someone
does when you’ve cracked your ribs is make a joke?” “You don’t have cracked ribs,” said the Healer, looking up
from his battered knees. “You have broken ones. And hold off on that robe,
girl, until I see to them as well. He doesn’t have anything that I haven’t seen
better.” “Hello,” said a Traveler, crouching down on Tier’s other
side. “You must be the Bard.” “Tier,” said Seraph, “this is Kors. Kors, my husband, Tier.
Kors, what do you want?” Ah, thought Tier contentedly, all that in under a breath, my
Seraph at her charismatic best. “We were wondering if you’d seen the Guardian? We know he
was here, but none of us can locate him.” “Most all of what I’ve seen is a bunch of people from the
knees down,” quipped Tier. Then he added, “Actually I saw him—or at least
something that was probably him, whispering to Phoran. I suppose he was telling
Phoran that Avar was waiting as planned because it was just after that that
Phoran signaled the Ravens to bring down the wall.” “I didn’t see it,” said Seraph sourly. “I was trying to get
down to you and I got caught in the crowd. Hennea brought down the wall by
herself—I didn’t even get to singe that bloody wizard to ash. By the time I got
in the clear, all of the Masters were down and dead—or at least not moving.” “Well,” said Kors, clearing his throat a little, “that’s
kind of why Benroln sent me over to see if you could find your son. A lot of us
saw something kill the Masters, one after the other, but we couldn’t quite see
it We’d all appreciate it if you could find Jes and make certain he doesn’t
mistake anyone else for the enemy.” “Jes isn’t that stupid,” said Tier. But he worried about
what all the violence had done to the Guardian, too. “He’s probably gone off to
find someplace quiet” “Wait until I’ve gotten the ribs stabilized, young man,”
chided the Healer, moving creakily from his knee to his side—pushing Kors out
of the way. “And then you can go looking for your boy.” It took more than a few minutes, but finally with Lehr under
one shoulder and Toarsen under the other, Tier gained his feet, Seraph’s robe stopping
a few inches below his knees. The joints in question still felt like they’d
been hit with a club—which they had—but at least he was able to shuffle over to
take a look at the victims. His first clue was the rather sick look Phoran sent him
before he turned back to talking with Avar. They’d piled all the Masters’ bodies together. When Tier arrived,
Kors and Kissel hauled one of the bodies out and pulled back the cowl. The dark
veil that lined it, making the robes a more effective disguise, had been ripped
so that the face could be revealed. Tier had the boys help lower him until he was sitting on the
ground. The sight he had out of his good eye was getting worse, and he supposed
it would be swollen all the way shut by tomorrow, but he wanted to see them, to
know that they were dead. Tier’s first reaction was a dull sort of surprise. He’d
never actually seen any of the Master’s faces except for Telleridge’s, but
somehow he felt as if he ought to recognize them anyway. He didn’t even know
which one it was. His second was a realization that the dried, sunken look was
due to more than age. Almost hidden on the man’s neck were two fading puncture
wounds. “The Travelers tell us that your son is capable of this,”
said Avar as he and Phoran approached. “And that he has magic that can make him
hard to see—much like what they saw kill these men.” Tier opened his mouth, then saw Phoran’s pale face behind
Avar and realized what had killed the wizards. “Must have been him, then,” he
said, trying to hide the rush of relief. Jes hadn’t been running amok—the
Memory had. Lehr stiffened, and Seraph put a hand on Tier’s shoulder. He
patted her hand, then Lehr’s leg. “Do the rest of them look the same?” “Yes,” said Phoran. “Just the same. As if they’d been
drained.” “Work of the Guardian,” said the Healer briskly. Tier hadn’t
realized she’d followed them. “Work of the Guardian to protect his own. Get
that man up off the floor and don’t put him down until he’s somewhere he can
rest comfortably. Do you have a chamber where we can store him overnight?” She
asked the last question of Phoran. He bowed. “I suspect that the one that he’s been occupying
will be the easiest for him. He’s welcome to take as long as necessary—and as
soon as he’s up to it, I’d be happy to find him better accommodations.” Brewydd looked at Seraph. “You wanted to burn him to ash,
girl, do it now. It’s not a good thing to leave wizard’s bodies intact,” she
said. Lehr and Toarsen managed to lever Tier up once more. Seraph
waved a hand and the bodies of the Masters burst into a dark blue-white flame
that consumed them utterly in a moment. She gave Tier a look that told him
that he’d better have a good reason to put Jes in a position that would make it
even more difficult for others to accept him. “Let’s get him back to his cell,” she said. “Then Lehr can
hunt Jes down and bring him to us there.” The trip down that short hallway was miserable. Halfway
there, Lehr exchanged a look with Toarsen, and with his help, shifted Tier
until Lehr could pick him up and carry him the rest of the way. Seraph sent Toarsen off to help Avar with a kiss on his
cheek, ignoring Tier’s indignant “Hey.” When Toarsen was gone, she said to Lehr, “Doubtless your father
will explain why he blamed Jes for that nasty business. So just find your
brother and bring him back here so Tier can explain it to Jes, too, before he
gets hurt by the reception he gets.” The Healer had accompanied them, and she checked Tier over
thoroughly to make sure the mending she’d done on him would hold. When she was through
she patted him on the shoulder. “Hardest thing that a Healer learns is when to stop
healing,” she said. “There’s always a price to pay. You’re going to be very
tired in a short period of time, and you’ll spend the next few days more asleep
than awake. So you’d better tell me quickly why you’re blaming that poor lad
for the work of a Memory.” Seraph drew in her breath. “A Memory?” “Can’t,” said Tier. “Promised.” “Promised what?” asked Phoran, slipping into the room and
shutting the door behind him. “Not to explain why he’d want his son to bear the blame for
deaths caused by a Raven’s Memory,” said the old Healer sourly. She took
another look at Phoran. “You have the signs of being afflicted by a Memory,
boy.” Seraph raised an eyebrow, but cleared her throat. “Emperor,”
she reminded Brewydd. “When you’re as old as I am,” said Brewydd. “You can call
anyone anything.” Phoran smiled. “It’s my Memory,” he said. “It’s all right,
Tier. Go to sleep, I’ll tell them.” The Emperor patted the end of the bed and found a safe place
to sit. He spoke quietly and told them how the Memory came to be bound to him.
At some point in the story, Tier drifted off. “They were guarded,” said Brewydd, after Phoran finished his
story. “It couldn’t take them. In the normal course of things, unable to feed,
it would have just drifted away. But you were there.” She nodded her head.
“I’ve heard of something like that happening. The Memory attaching itself to
the wrong person. As long as it gave something back, its victim will continue to
live. What did it give you?”.. “Answers to my questions,” said Phoran. “That’s how I found
Tier.” “Why was it able to kill the Masters now?” asked Seraph. She
was touched by the way that Phoran kept patting Tier’s feet. “They were draining themselves trying to control the Passerines
and fight our wizards,” explained Brewydd. “I expect that weakened the
protections that kept the Memory from killing them before.” “It will leave Phoran in peace, then?” asked Seraph. “If it has accomplished its task it should,” said the old
woman. “I suppose your son will understand that the life of an emperor who just
might be what this Empire needs is worth a little discomfort. Tell your man to
try not to make anyone mad enough to hit him in those knees again and he’ll be
right as rain in a month or so. I’d better go back and see if my services are
needed elsewhere.” Phoran got up reluctantly. “I suppose I’d better go as
well—before some idiot thinks I’m lost.” “I’ll be fine,” Tier said faintly. “Go reassure the idiots.” Phoran was laughing as he left. Seraph shut the door and
took Phoran’s place on the end of the bed. “Is there anyway I can lay down beside you that won’t make
it worse?” she asked. “No,” he sighed without opening his eyes. “Come here anyway.” When she was tucked against him, he buried his face in her
hair. “Telleridge killed Myrceria in front of me,” he said. “He’d
had her tortured, but she didn’t tell him anything. Telleridge didn’t know
about you.” “There was nothing you could have done,” Seraph said, hurting
for him and for the woman she’d met only briefly. “How do you know that?” he whispered, because he needed to
believe she was right. “Because if you could have done anything, you would have.
It’s all right, Tier.” “He was her father, and he tortured her and killed her,”
said Tier. “And he enjoyed doing it. Was he shadowed?” “Can’t people be evil on their own?” she asked with a sigh.
“You’ll have to ask your sons; Ravens can’t see shadowing—but I think so. Shh,”
she said. “I love you. She did, too.” She let him hold her while he cried quietly into her hair
until the tiredness of being healed overwhelmed him. Then, between one breath
and the next he slept. Seraph awoke from a doze to a light knock on the door. Carefully,
she extracted herself so Tier slept on undisturbed. Lehr and Jes waited out in the hall. Seraph motioned them
out, went out herself, and shut the door so they wouldn’t disturb Tier. “I told him what Papa said,” said Lehr. “Jes said he didn’t
kill anyone.” Seraph looked up and down the hall and quietly explained. “It’s fine, Mother,” said the Guardian. “No one will be much
more afraid of me than they already are.” “Mother,” said Lehr, “You need to hear why Jes left the
Eyrie.” “I was following a black-robed wizard,” said the Guardian.
“Father was right, all the wizards were tainted. But there was one ... did you
see him, Lehr?” “No,” Lehr said. “I only saw the five wizards the Memory
killed.” “There was one who left when the wall disintegrated. He
wasn’t just tainted. Mother, he was the taint itself.” “Like the Unnamed King?” The Guardian nodded. “I didn’t see the taint at first,
Mother. I followed the wizard out of the room and into the halls on the other
side of the wall. Before I could get close, the Memory was there. It touched
the wizard.” The Guardian flinched. “I don’t know what the Memory did, but it
felt as if a veil had been pulled away and revealed the wizard for what he
really was.” He took a shaky breath. “Jes is very brave, Mother, even I don’t
scare him—but what hid beneath the wizard’s illusionary veil was evil. The
wizard hit the Memory with some kind of magic, and the Memory was just gone.
The wizard didn’t see us. When it left, we didn’t follow.” “Good,” said Seraph, reassuringly. “You did the right
thing.” “When I caught up with him,” said Lehr, “he showed me where
the man had gone—and I couldn’t find his trail. Mother, I could see where rats
had been running down the hall, but I couldn’t pick up his tracks.” Seraph touched Lehr’s shoulder. “It’s all right,” she said
and hoped it was true. Chapter 17If it hadn’t been for Skew, Tier would have had to wait another
week before setting out for Redem, but the old horse’s soft gaits were easy on
Tier’s ribs. He seemed to understand that Tier was hurt: not even Gura’s
anxious weaving in and out around his legs caused Skew to alter his smooth
stride. If he remembered to breathe shallowly, it didn’t even hurt
too much—but he didn’t like to do that, because it only increased the number of
Seraph’s anxious glances. She had wanted to wait, but he needed to get home to
Redem—needed to have all of his children together where he could protect them. There was another Shadowed who walked the land. There were other explanations for all that had passed. He
wasn’t certain if even Seraph really believed it in the light of day—but the
Healer knew. She hadn’t said anything, but he could see in her eyes that she
believed. Tier glanced over at the brightly colored cart that Brewydd
rode in. It was her voice, he thought, that had made Benroln insist on accompanying
them back. Benroln had said that Phoran would do better without Traveler aid
now that the Sept of Gerant was there. Doubtless Benroln was right about that. The Sept of Gerant had
said as much when he’d come to see Tier off in lieu of the Emperor, The
political situation was unstable and Phoran clung to the throne primarily
because there were so few of imperial blood around to fight him for the Empire.
Phoran had wished him good travels in secret the night before they’d left. “I like your Gerant,” said Seraph. “He reminds me of Giro, a
little. Quiet and unassuming until his skill is called upon.” Tier smiled down at his wife who walked at his stirrup as if
she were afraid he’d fall out of the saddle. “He liked you as well. Told me
that I’d made a good exchange when I chose to follow you instead of the sword.” “He laughed when you told him you were a farmer,” she said. Tier glanced at her sharply, but her face was tilted down,
watching the ground. “Not this year,” he said. “But with the money Phoran sent us
back with we’ll be able to survive this year and buy another horse to replace
Frost for next planting season.” “You don’t think we’ll be planting next season either,” she
said softly, her hand coming up to grip his calf. He shook his head, then realized that she wasn’t watching
him. “No,” he said. She took a step closer to Skew, until her shoulder pressed
against his leg. “I don’t know what awaits us, but I don’t think the Stalker is
through with us yet.” Jes laughed, and Tier glanced up to see the Traveler Raven
Hennea stalk away from his son. He’d thought at first that she was younger than
Seraph until he’d gotten a good look at her eyes. When he’d asked Seraph, she’d
told him she didn’t know how old Hennea was either. Ravens seldom lived as long
as Larks, but it could be very difficult to tell how old they were. He’d worried until he’d seen how she watched Jes when she
thought no one was watching. He knew what love looked like. “Today,” Tier told Seraph, “the sun is warm on my face.
Let’s save tomorrow’s troubles for tomorrow.” About The AuthorPatricia Briggs lived a fairly normal life until she
learned to read. After that she spent lazy afternoons flying dragonback and
looking for magic swords when she wasn’t horseback riding in the Rocky
Mountains. Once she graduated from Montana State University with degrees
in history and German, she spent her time substitute teaching and writing. She
and her family live in the Pacific Northwest, where she is hard at work on her
newest project. Visit her on the web at www.hurog.com. Raven’s Shadow Patricia Briggs 2004 ISBN:0-441-01187-X Spell-checked. This book is dedicated with gratitude to: Robin and Gene Walker Dan, Pam, Jason, John, and Alex Wright Buck, Scott, and the rest of the crew at Buckler’s V.W.
Parts Exchange Paula, Michael and Liam Bachelor Dave, Katharine, and Caroline Carson Anne Sowards—who made this one better And, as always, to those stalwart people who read it in
its roughest stages (in alphabetical order): Collin Briggs, Michael Briggs, Michael Enzweiler, Jeanne
Matteucci, Virginia Mohl, Ann Peters, Kaye Roberson, and John Wilson Part OneChapter I “It’s not far now, my lad,” said Tier.
“That’s smoke ahead, not just mist—we’ll find a nice village inn where we
can warm up.” His horse snorted at him in reply, or more likely at a bothersome
drop of rain, and continued its steady progress down the trail. The horse, like the sword Tier carried, was of far better
quality than his clothing. He’d scavenged both the horse and sword from men
he’d killed: the sword in his first year of war, the horse earlier this year
when his own mount had been killed beneath him. A warhorse bred and trained to
carry a nobleman, Skew had carried Tier, a baker’s son, through two battles,
six skirmishes, and, by rough reckoning, almost a thousand miles of trail. He was a valuable horse, though in the first few weeks of
Tier’s journey the avarice in the eyes of the ragged men in the areas torn by
years of war had as much to do with hunger as gold. Tier had waited eagerly for
one of them to attack him, to ambush him if they could. But something, maybe
the battle-readiness that still lurked under his calm facade, kept them away
from him. But in the more prosperous areas away from the Empire’s borders,
the chances of an attack were greatly lessened, damn the luck. A fight would
have given him momentary respite from the dread he felt toward his current
task—going home. So many were dead. The two young men from his village who’d
signed on with him to fight in a war half a continent away from their home had
died, as had many other young men hoping for gold, glory, or escape. Tier had
survived. He still wasn’t quite certain how that had happened—he certainly
hadn’t planned on it. He had never sought death, but any soldier knows his
demise could come at any time. If the war had lasted forever, Tier would have fought until
he died, But the war was over, and the post the Sept he’d served offered him
was nothing he wanted. He had no desire to train up more young men for battle. So now he rode back home. It would have never occurred to
the boy who’d crept out of the family home almost a decade ago that returning
would be so much harder than leaving. Tier’s massive gelding shook his black and white mane, splattering
Tier with water. He patted the horse’s neck. “There, what did I tell you, Skew?” Tier said. “There’s a
roof down there, you can see it between the trees.” He looked forward to the warm common room of an inn, flooded
with noise and ale—things to fill his emptiness. Maybe a bit of cheer would stay
with him until he was home. He was getting closer. Even without a map, the bitter taste
of old magic that filled these mountains would have told him so. Though the
battle had been over long ago, wizard’s magic had a way of outlasting even
memories, and the Shadowed had been a great wizard. Closer to the battlefield
of Shadow’s Fall, riding the forest paths could be dangerous. Near his home
village, Redem, everyone knew to avoid certain places still held in fell
magic’s grip. Unconcerned about magic of any kind, the bay and white
patchwork-colored gelding picked his way down the narrow mountain pathway, and,
as the slope turned gentle, onto a dirt track that in turn widened into a cobbled
road. Shortly thereafter the small village Tier’d glimpsed from the hills above
emerged from beneath the trees. The wet stone houses, so different from the wooden villages he’d
ridden through these past nine years, reminded him of home, though there was a
softness to the architecture that his village did not have. It wasn’t home, but
it was a proper village. It would have a market square, and that’s where the
inn would be. He envisioned a small, warm room, bathed in golden light
from the fireplace and torches—someplace where a soldier could get a good, hot
meal and stay warm and dry. As he drew closer to the town market, the smell of smoke and
roasting meat filled the air. It was reflex only that had him loosen his sword
and made the gelding flex and snort: too much war, too many villages burned.
Tier murmured to Skew, reminding him they were done with that part of their
lives, though he could not make himself resecure his sword. As they turned into the market square, he saw a burning
pyre. Evening was an odd time for a funeral; Tier frowned. This
close to home they would bury their dead, not burn them. He looked through the
crowd and noticed there were no women or children watching the fire. It was an execution, not a funeral. In most places where the memories of the Shadowed lingered,
they burned witches. Not the highborn wizards who worked their magic for the
nobles who paid them—they were above village justice—but the healers, hedgewitches,
and Travelers who offended or frightened the wrong person could find themselves
in serious trouble. When such a one burned, the village women would watch from
darkened windows—safe from the wrath of the dead. Strangers like Tier sometimes found themselves taken for Travelers
or hedgewitches. Still, he was armed and had hard coin to pay his way—and from
the smell of smoke and flesh, this village had already slaked its bloodlust. He
rested his hand on his sword hilt, and decided it would be safe enough to stop
for the night Tier rode by the pyre with little more than a glance, but
that quick look had told him that the man in the center of the burning wood had
been killed before the fire was lit A dead man was beyond aid. The sullen crowd of men gathered around the pyre quieted further
as he crossed near them, but when he took no notice of them, they turned back
to their grim entertainment. As Tier had expected, he found the inn on the edge of the village
square. There was a stable adjacent to the inn, but no one manned it. Doubtless
the stable boy could be found in the crowd in the square. Tier unsaddled Skew, rubbed him down with a rough cloth, and
led him into an unoccupied stall. Looking for hay, he noticed a handcart
bedecked in Traveler’s trappings, leather fringe and bright paint, sadly faded.
So the man they’d burned had been a Traveler. Tier walked past the cart and took a forkful of hay back to
Skew, though his eagerness to spend the evening in the tavern had ebbed
considerably since he’d ridden into the village. The nearness of violence had
set his nerves on edge, and the quiet stable soothed him. He lingered until
full darkness fell, but finally the thought of something hot to eat overcame
his reluctance to face people. As he walked out of the stables, only a few figures were
left silhouetted against the light of the fire: guards to make sure the man
didn’t come back to life and flee, Tier supposed. He’d never seen a man
with his throat slit come back to life and cast magic. Oh, he’d heard the
tales, too—even told a few himself. But he’d seen a lot of death, and in his
experience it was final. When he entered the tavern, he was taken aback by the noise.
A quick glance told him that no one had noticed him enter, so he found a place
between the stairs and the back wall where he could observe the room for a
moment. He ought to have realized that the mob wouldn’t have dispersed
so easily. After a killing, most men sought alcohol, and the inn’s common room
was filled to bursting with men, most of them half-drunk on ale and
mob-madness. He considered retreating to sleep in the stables, but he was
hungry. He’d wait a while and see if things would calm enough that it would be
safe for a stranger like him to eat here. The room rumbled with frantic laughter, reminding him of the
aftermath of battle, when men do crazy things they spend the rest of their life
trying to forget. He had cheese and flatbread still in his saddlebag. It
wasn’t a hot meal, and the cheese was a bit blue in spots, but he could eat it
in peace. He took a step toward the door. As if his movement had been a clarion call, the room hushed
expectantly. Tier froze, but he quickly realized that no one was looking at
him. In the silence, the creaking of wood drew his eyes to the
stairway not an arm’s length from where he stood. Heavy boots showed first, the
great bull of a man who wore them followed at last by a girl he pulled down the
stairs. From his splattered apron, the man had to be the innkeeper himself,
though there were old calluses on his hands that might have come from a war axe
or broadsword. The innkeeper stopped four or five steps above the main
floor, leaving his captive in plain view. Unnoticed in Us position near the
back of the room, a little behind the stairs, Tier faced the growing certainty
that he was not going to get a hot meal and a soft bed tonight. The distinctive silver-ash hair that hung in sleep-frayed
braids almost to her waist told Tier that she was a Traveler, a relative, he
supposed, of the dead young man roasting outside. He thought her a child at first, but her loose night rail
caught on a rounded hip that made him add a year or two to her age. When she
looked up at the crowd, he could see that her eyes were clear amber green and
older than her face. The men in the inn were mostly farmers; one or two carried a
long knife in their belt He had seen such men in the army, and respected them.
They were probably good men, most of them, with wives and mothers waiting for
them at home, uncomfortable with the violence their fear had led them to. The girl would be all right, Tier told himself. These men
would not hurt a child as easily as they’d killed the man. A man, a Traveler,
was a threat to their safety. A child, a girl-child, was something these men
protected. Tier looked around the room, seeing the softening in several faces
as they took in her bewildered alarm. His assessing gaze fell upon a bearded man who sat eating
stew from a pot. Finely tailored noblemen’s garments set the man apart from the
natives. Such clothes had been sewn in Taela or some other large city. Something about the absorbed, precise movements the man made
as he ate warned Tier that this man might be the most dangerous person in the
room—then he looked back, at the girl and reconsidered. In the few seconds that Tier had spent appraising the room,
she’d shed her initial shock and fright as cleanly as a snake sheds its skin. The young Traveler drew herself up like a queen, her face
quiet and composed. The innkeeper was a foot taller, but he no longer looked an
adequate guard. The ice in the girl’s cool eyes brought a chill born of
childhood stories to creep down Tier’s spine. Instincts honed in years of
battle told him that he wasn’t the only one she unnerved. Stupid girl, Tier thought. A smart girl would have been sobbing softly in terror and
shrinking to make herself look smaller and even younger, appealing to the
sympathies of the mob. These weren’t mercenaries or hardened fighters; they
were farmers and merchants. If he could have left then, he would have—or at least that’s
what he told himself; but any movement on his part now would draw attention. No
sense in setting himself up for the same treatment received by the dead man in
the square. “Where’s the priest? I need him to witness my account,” asked
the innkeeper, sounding smug and nervous at the same time. If he had looked at
the girl he held, he would have sounded more nervous than smug. The crowd shuffled and spat out a thin young man who looked
around in somewhat bleary surprise to find himself the center of attention.
Someone brought out a stool and a rickety table no bigger than a dinner plate.
When a rough sheet of skin, an ink pot, and a quill were unearthed, the priest
seated himself with a bit more confidence. “Now then,” said the innkeeper. “Three days’ lodging, four
coppers each day. Three meals each day at a copper each.” Tier’s eyebrows crept up cynically. He saw no signs that the
inn had been transported to Taela, where such charges might be justified. For
this inn, two coppers a day with meals was more likely. “Twenty-one coppers,” announced the priest finally. Silence
followed. “A copper a day for storing the cart,” said the nobleman
Tier had noticed, without looking up from his meal. By his accent he was from
more eastern regions, maybe even the coast “That makes three more coppers,
twenty-four coppers in total: one silver.” The innkeeper smiled smugly, “Ah yes, thank you, Lord Wresen.
According to the law, when a debt of a silver is incurred and not remanded”—from
the way the word was emphasized, it was obvious to Tier that remanded was
a word that seldom left the lips of the innkeeper—“that person may be sold to redeem
the debt. If no buyer is found, they shall suffer fifty lashes in the public
square.” Flogging was a common punishment. Tier knew, as did all the
men in the room, that such a child was unlikely to survive fifty lashes. Tier
stepped away from the door and opened his mouth to protest, but he stopped as
he realized exactly what had been happening. His old commander had told him once that knowledge won more
battles than swords did. The innkeeper’s motivation was easy to understand.
Selling the girl could net him more than his inn usually made in a week, if he
could sell her. None of the villagers here would spend a whole silver to buy a
Traveler. Tier would give odds that the innkeeper’s knowledge of law had come
from the nobleman—Lord Wresen, the innkeeper had called him. Tier doubted the
man was a “lord” at all: the innkeeper was flattering him with the title
because of his obvious wealth—it was safer and more profitable that way. It didn’t take a genius to see that Wresen had decided he
wanted the girl and engineered matters so that he would have her. She would not
be beautiful as a woman, but she had the loveliness that belongs to maidens
caught in the moment between childhood and the blossom of womanhood. Wresen had
no intention of letting her be flogged to death. “Do you have a silver?” the innkeeper asked the Traveler
girl with a rough shake. She should have been afraid. Even now Tier thought that a little
show of fear would go a long way toward keeping her safe. Selling a young girl
into slavery was not a part of these farmers’ lives and would seem wrong. Not
even the innkeeper was entirely comfortable with it. If she appealed to his
mercy, the presence of the other men in the inn would force him to release her. Instead, she smiled contemptuously at the innkeeper, showing
him that she, and everyone in the inn, knew that he was exploiting her
vulnerability for profit. All that did was infuriate the innkeeper and silence
his conscience entirely—didn’t this girl know anything about people? “So, gents,” said the innkeeper, glancing toward Wresen, who
was finishing the last few bites of his meal. “A dead man cannot pay his debts
and they are left to his heir. This one owes me a silver and has no means to
pay. Do any of you need a slave or shall she join her brother where he bums in
the square?” The flush of anger that had highlighted her cheeks paled
abruptly. Obviously, she hadn’t known the other Traveler had been killed until
the innkeeper spoke, although she must have suspected something had happened to
him. Her breathing picked up, and she blinked hard, but otherwise she
controlled herself until all that showed on her face was anger and contempt. Stupid girl, he thought again—then he felt the tingle
of gathering magic. He’d been nine long years in the Imperial Army under a Sept
who commanded six wizards—doubtless that was the reason Tier was contemplating
helping the Traveler rather than running out the door like a proper Redemi.
Those years had taught him that mages were just people like anyone else: this
girl was unlikely to be able to save herself from a mob of frightened men.
After they saw her work magic, no one else would be able to save her either. She was nothing to him. “One silver,” Tier said. Wresen started and shifted to alertness, his hand touching
his sword, staring at Tier. Tier knew what he saw: a travel-stained man, tall
and too thin, with a sword on his belt and his years in the Emperor’s army
recorded in the myriad small scars on face and hands. Tier opened his belt pouch and sorted through a smattering
of small coins before pulling out a silver round that looked as though it had
been trampled by a dozen armies. “Take off your hood,” said the innkeeper. “I’ll see a man’s
face and know his name and kin before I take his money.” Tier tossed his hood back and let them see by his dark hair
and eyes that he was no Traveler. “Tieragan from Redem and
late of the Imperial Army under the Sept of Gerant. I’m a baker’s son, but I
gave it up for the battlefield when I was young and stupid. The war’s ended by
the Emperor’s writ, and I am homebound.” The girl’s magic died down to a slow simmer. That’s it, he
thought, take the time I’m giving you to remember that one man is easier to
take than a whole room. You don’t really want revenge; you want escape. He
didn’t know whether he was saving her from these men, or the men from her. “If you take her, you won’t stay here,” blustered the
innkeeper. “I don’t want her kind in my inn.” Tier shrugged, “I’ve camped before, and my horse will take
me a few hours yet.” “Two silver,” said Wresen abruptly. The nobleman s1:*
his hands on his table with enough force that his sword bounced and the big
silver ring on his left hand punctuated his words with a bang. When all eyes
turned to him he said, “I’ve always wanted to sample Traveler bread—and that
one looks young enough to bring to heel.” Tier couldn’t afford to offer much more than Wresen’s two silver.
Not because he didn’t have it, the better part of nine years of pay and plunder
were safely sewn in his belt, but because no one would believe that he, a
baker’s son and soldier, would spend so much money on a strange woman-child no
matter how exotic. He could hardly believe it himself. If they decided he was a
confederate of hers, he might find himself sharing the pyre outside. On the
other hand, a bored nobleman could spend as much as he wanted without comment. Tier shot Wresen a look of contempt. “You’d be dead before your pants were down around your
knees, nobleman,” Tier said “You aren’t from around these mountains, or you
would understand about magic. My arms-mate was like you, used to the tame
wizards who take the Septs’ gold. He saved my life three times and survived
five years of war, only to fall at the hands of a Traveler wizard in a back
alley.” The mood in the room shifted as Tier reminded them why they
had killed the man burning outside. “We”—he included himself with every man in the room—“we
understand. You don’t play with fire. Lord Wresen, you drown it before
it burns your house down.” He looked at the innkeeper. “After the Traveler
killed my fighting brother, I spent years learning how to deal with such—I look
forward to testing my knowledge. Two silver and four copper.” The innkeeper nodded quickly, as Tier had expected. An innkeeper
would understand the moods of his patrons and see that many more words like
Tier’s last speech, and he’d get nothing. The men in the room were very close
to taking the girl out right now and throwing her on top of her brother. Much
better to end the auction early with something to show for it. Tier handed the innkeeper the silver coin and began digging
in his purse, eventually coming up with the twenty-eight coppers necessary to
make two silver and four. He was careful that a number of people saw how few
coppers he had left They didn’t need to know about the money in his belt. Wresen settled back, as if the Traveler’s fate was nothing
to him. His response made Tier all the more wary of him—in his experience bored
noblemen seldom gave up so easily. But for the moment at least. Tier had only
the girl to contend with. Tier walked to the stairs, ignoring the men who pushed back
away from him. He jerked the girl’s wrist and pulled her past the innkeeper. “What she has we’ll take,” Tier said. “I’ll burn it all when
we’re in the woods—you might think of doing the same to the bed and linen in
that room. I’ve seen wizards curse such things.” He took the stairs up at a pace that the girl couldn’t
possibly match with the awkward way he kept her arm twisted behind her. When
she stumbled, he jerked her up with force that was more apparent than real. He
wanted everyone to be completely convinced that he could handle whatever danger
she represented. There were four doors at the top of the stairs, but only one
hung ajar, and he hauled her into it and shut the door behind them. “Quick, girl,” he said, releasing her, “gather your things
before they decide that they might keep the silver and kill the both of us.” When she didn’t move, he tried a different tack. “What you
don’t have packed in a count of thirty, I’ll leave for the innkeeper to burn,”
he said. Proud and courageous she was, but also young. With quick,
jerky movements, she pulled a pair of shabby packs out from under the bed. She
tied the first one shut for travel, and retrieved clothing out of the other.
Using her night rail as cover, she put on a pair of loose pants and a long,
dark-colored tunic. After stuffing her sleeping shift back in the second pack,
she secured it, too. She stood up, glanced out the room, and froze. “Ushireh,” she said and added with more urgency, “he’s
alive!” Tier looked out and realized that the room looked over the
square, allowing a clear view of the fire. Clearly visible in the heat of the
flames, the dead man’s body was slowly sitting upright—and from the sounds of
it, frightening the daylights out of the men left to guard the pyre. He caught her before she could run out of the room. “Upon my
honor, mistress, he is dead,” he said with low-voiced urgency. “I saw him as I
rode in. His throat was cut and he was dead before they lit the fire.” She continued to struggle against his hold, her attention on
the pyre outside. “Would they have left so few men to guard a living man?” he
said. “Surely you’ve seen funeral pyres before. When the flame heats the bodies
they move.” In the eastern parts of the Empire; they burned their dead.
The priests held that when a corpse moved in the flame it was the spirit’s
desire to look once more upon the world. Tier’s old employer, the Sept, who had
a Traveler’s fondness for priests (that is to say, not much), said he reckoned
the heat shrank tissue faster than bone as the corpse burned. Whichever was
correct, the dead stayed dead. “He’s dead,” Tier said again. “I swear to it.” She pulled away from him, but only to run back to the
window. She was breathing in shaking, heaving gasps, her whole body trembling
with it If she’d done something of the same downstairs, he thought sourly, they
wouldn’t be looking to ride out in the rain without dinner. “They were so afraid of him and his magic,” she said in a
low voice trembling with rage and sorrow. “But they killed the wrong one.
Stupid solsenti, thinking that being a Traveler makes one a mage, and
that being young and female makes me harmless.” “We can’t afford to linger here,” he said briskly, though
his heart picked up its beat. He’d gotten familiar with mages, but that didn’t
make them any more comfortable to be around when they were angry. “Are you
ready?” She spun from the window, her eyes glowing just a little
with the magic she’d amassed watching her brother’s body burn. Doubtless, he thought, if he knew exactly what she was
capable of he’d have been even more frightened of her. “There are too many here,” he said. “Take what you need and
come.” The glow faded from her eyes, leaving her looking empty and
lost before she stiffened her spine, grabbed both bags resolutely, and nodded. He put a hand on her shoulder and followed her out the door
and down the stairs. The room had cleared remarkably—doubtless the men had been
called to witness the writhing corpse. “Best be gone before they get back,” said the innkeeper
sourly, doubtlessly worried about what would happen to his inn if the men
returned after their newest fright to find the Traveler lass still here. “Make sure and burn the curtains, too,” said Tier in reply.
There was nothing wrong with any of the furnishing in the room, but he thought
it would serve the innkeeper right to have to spend some of Tier’s money to buy
new material for curtains. The girl, bless her, had the sense to keep her head down and
her mouth shut. Out of the inn, he steered her into the stable, where the
stable boy had already brought out his horse and saddled it. The Traveler
handcart was set out, too. The girl was light, so Skew could certainly carry
the two of them as far as the next village, where Tier might obtain another
mount—but the handcart proposed more of a problem. “We’ll leave the cart,” he said to the boy, not the Traveler.
“I’ve no wish to continue only as fast as this child could haul a cart like
that” The boy’s chin lifted. “M’father says you have to take it
all. He doesn’t want Traveler curses to linger here.” “He’s worried that they’ll fire the barn,” said the girl to
no one in particular. “Serve him right,” said Tier in an Eastern dialect a stable
boy born and raised to this village would not know. The girl’s sudden intake of
breath told him that she did. “Get me an axe,” Tier said frowning. They didn’t have time
for this. “I’ll fire it before we go.” “It can be pulled by a horse,” said the girl. “There are
shafts stored underneath.” Tier snorted, but he looked obediently under the cart and
saw that she was right A clevis pin and toggle allowed the handpull to slide
under the cart. On each corner of the cart sturdy shafts pulled out and pinned
in place. Tier hurriedly discussed matters with the boy. The inn had
no extra mounts to sell, nor harness. Tier shook his head. As he’d done a time or two before,
though not with Skew, Tier jury-rigged a harness from his war saddle. The
breast strap functioned well enough as a collar with such a light weight He
adjusted the stirrups to hold the cart shafts and used an old pair of driving
reins the boy scavenged as traces. “You’ve come down in the world once more, my friend,” said
Tier as he led Skew out of the stable. The gelding snorted once at the contraption following him. A
warhorse was not a cart horse, but, inured to battle, Skew settled into pulling
the cart with calm good sense. While he’d been leading the horse, the girl had stopped at
the stable entrance, her eyes fixed on the pyre. “You’ll have time to mourn later,” he promised her. “Right
now we need to move before they return to the inn. You’ll do well enough on
Skew—just keep your feet off his ribs.” She scrambled up somehow, avoiding his touch as much as she
could. He didn’t blame her, but he didn’t stop to say anything reassuring where
the stable boy might hear. He kept Skew’s reins and led him out of the stable in the opposite
direction that he’d come earlier in the day. The girl twisted around to watch
the pyre as long as she could. Tier led Skew at a walk through the town. As soon as they
were off the cobbles and on a wide dirt-track. Tier broke into a dogtrot he
could hold for a long time. It shortened his breath until talking was no
pleasure—so he said nothing to the girl. Skew trotted at his side as well as any trained dog, nose at
Tier’s shoulder as they had traveled many miles before. The rain, which had let
up for a while, set in again and Tier slowed to a walk so he could keep a sharp
eye out for shelter. At last he found a place where a dead tree leaned against
two others, creating a small dry area, which he increased by tying up a piece
of oilskin. “Td do better if it weren’t full dark and raining,” he said
to the girl without looking at her. “But this’ll be drier at any rate.” He unharnessed and unsaddled Skew, rubbing him down briskly
before tethering him to a nearby tree. Skew presented his backside to the wind
and hitched up a hip. Like any veteran, the horse knew to snatch rest where it
came. The heavy war saddle in hand, Tier turned to the girl. “If you touch me,” she said coolly, “you won’t live out the
day.” He eyed her small figure for a moment. She was even less impressive
wet and cold than she had been held captive in the innkeeper’s hand. Tier had never actually met a Traveler before. But he was
well used to dealing with frightened young things—the army had been filled with
young men. Even tired and wet as he was, he knew better than to address those
words head on—why would she believe anything he said? But if he didn’t get her
under shelter, sharing his warmth, she was likely to develop lung fever. That
would defeat his entire purpose in saving her. “Good even, lady,” he said, with a fair imitation of a nobleman’s
bow despite the weight of the heavy saddle. “I am Tieragan of Redem—most people
call me Tier.” Then he waited. She stared at him; he felt a butterfly-flutter of magic—then
her eyes widened incredulously, as if she’d heard something more than he’d
said. “I am Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent. I give you
greetings, Bard.” “Well met, Seraph,” he said. Doubtless her answer would have
conveyed a lot to a fellow Traveler. Maybe they’d even know why she addressed
him as bard, doubtless some Traveler etiquette. “I am returning to
Redem. If my map is accurate—and it hasn’t been notably accurate so far—Redem
is about two days’ travel west and north of here.” “My clan, only Ushireh and I, was traveling to the village
we just left,” she returned, shivering now. “I don’t know where Ushireh
intended to go afterward.” Tier had been counting on being able to deliver her back to
her people. “It was just the two of you?” She nodded her head, watching him as warily as a hen before
a fox. “Do you have relatives nearby? Someone you could go to?” he
asked. “Traveling clans avoid this area,” she said. “It is known
that the people here are afraid of us.” “So why did your brother come here?” He shifted the saddle
to a more comfortable hold, resting it against his hip. “It is given to the head of a clan to know where shadows
dwell,” she replied obscurely. “My brother was following one such.” Tier’s experience with mages had led him to avoid questioning
them when they talked of magic—he found that he usually knew less after they
were finished than he did when he started. Whatever had led the young man here,
it had left Seraph on her own. “What happened to the rest of your clan?” he asked. “Plague,” she said. “We welcomed a Traveling stranger to our
fires one night The next night one of the babies had a cough—by morning there
were three of ours dead. The clan leader tried to isolate them, but it was too
late. Only my brother and I survived.” “How old are you? “Sixteen.” That was younger than he expected from her manner, though
from her appearance, she could have easily been as young as thirteen. He
shifted his saddle onto his shoulder to rest his arm. As he did so, he heard a
thump and the saddle jerked in his hold. The arrow quivered in the thick
leather of the saddle skirt, which presently covered his chest. He threw himself forward and knocked her to the muddy ground
underneath him. Holding her still despite her frantic battle to free herself of
him, a hand keeping her quiet, he spoke to her in a toneless whisper. “Quiet now, love. Someone out there is sending arrows our
way; take a look at my saddle.” When she stilled, he slid his weight off of her. The grass
was high enough to hide their movements in the dark. She rolled to her belly,
but made no further move away from him. He rested a hand on her back to keep
her in place until he could find their attacker in the dark. Her ribs vibrated
with the pounding of her heart “He’s two dozen paces beyond your horse,” she whispered, “a
little to the right.” He didn’t question how she could see their attacker in the
pitch-darkness of the forested night, but sneaked forward until he crouched in
front of Skew where he held still, hoping that the mud that covered him head to
toe would keep him from being a target for another arrow. He glanced back to make certain that Seraph was still
hidden, and stifled a curse. She stood upright, her gaze locked beyond Skew. He assumed
she was watching their attacker. Her clothes were dark enough to blend into the
forested dark, but her pale hair caught the faint moonlight. “Seraph,” said a soft voice. It continued in a liquid tongue
Tier had never heard before. “Speak Common,” answered Seraph in cold clear tones that
could have come from an empress rather than a battered, muddy, half-grown girl.
“Your tongue does not favor Traveler speech. You sound like a hen trying to
quack.” Well, thought Tier, if our pursuer had intended to
kill Seraph, he’d have done so already. He had a pretty good idea then who
it was that had tried to put an arrow in his hide. He hadn’t seen that Lord
Wresen carried a bow, but there might have been one in the man’s luggage. “I have killed the one who would hurt you,” continued the
soft voice. Tier supposed that it might have appeared that he’d been killed.
He’d thrown himself down half a breath after the arrow hit, and the saddle and
blanket made a lump on the ground that with the cover of tall grass might look
like a body from a distance. “Come with me, little one,” Tier’s would-be killer said. “I
have shelter and food nearby. You can’t stay out here alone. You’ll be safe with
me.” Tier could hear the lie in the man’s words, but he didn’t
think Seraph could. He waited for the man to get close enough for Tier to find
him, hoping that Seraph would not believe him. After spending two silver and
four copper on her, as well as missing his dinner, Tier had something of an
investment in her well-being. “A Raven is never alone,” Seraph said. “Seraph,” eluded the man. “You know better than that. Come,
child, I have a safe place for you to abide. In the morning I’ll take you to a
clan I know of, not far from here.” \ Tier could see him now, a shadow darker than the trees had slipped between. Something about the way the shadow moved,
combined with his voice, gave his identity to Tier: he’d been right; it was
Wresen. “Which clan would that be?” asked Seraph. “I—” Some instinct turned Wresen before Tier struck, and
Tier’s sword met metal. Tier threw his weight against the other man, pushing Wresen
away to get some striking distance between them—where Tier’s superior reach
would do him some good. They fought briskly for a few minutes, mostly feeling each
other out, searching for weaknesses. The older man was faster than Tier had
expected, but he wasn’t the only one who’d underestimated his opponent. From
the grunt Wresen let out the first time he caught Tier’s sword, he’d underestimated
Tier’s strength—something that was not uncommon. Tier was tall and, as he’d
often been teased, slight as a stripling. By the time they drew back to regroup. Tier boasted a
shallow cut on his cheekbone and another on the underside of his right forearm.
The other man had taken a hard blow from Tier’s pommel on the wrist and Tier
was pretty sure he’d drawn blood over his adversary’s eye. “What do you want with the girl?” asked Tier. This was too
much effort for a mere bedmate, no matter how Wresen’s tastes ran. “Naught but her safety,” insisted Wresen. The lie echoed in
Tier’s ears. “Which is more than you can say.” He made an odd gesture with his fingers, and Tier dropped
his sword with a cry as it became too hot to hold. Wizard, thought Tier, but neither surprise nor dismay
slowed him. Leaving his sword where it lay, Tier charged, catching the other
man in the stomach with his shoulder and pushing both of them back into a mass
of shrubs, which caught at their feet. Wresen, unprepared, stumbled and fell. Tier struck hard, aiming
for the throat, but his opponent rolled too fast. Quick as a weasel, Wresen
regained his feet. Twice Tier jumped and narrowly avoided the other’s blade.
But he wasn’t a fool; unarmed, his chances weren’t good. “Run, Seraph,” he said. “Take the horse and get out of
here.” With luck he should be capable of holding her pursuer long
enough that she could lose him in the woods. If he could keep him busy enough,
Wresen wouldn’t have time to work magic. “Don’t be more of a fool than you can help, Bard,” she said
coldly. The other man swore, and Tier saw that Wresen’s sword had’
begun to glow as if it were still in the blacksmith’s fire. Steam rose from his
sword hand as he made odd gestures toward it with his free hand. Wresen was no
longer giving any heed to Tier at all—which was the last mistake he ever made. Tier pulled his boot knife out of the man’s neck and cleaned
it on the other’s cloak. When he was finished, he looked at Seraph. Her pale skin and face were easy to find in the darkness.
She reminded him of a hundred legends: so must Loriel have stood when she faced
the Shadowed with nothing more than her song, or Terabet before throwing
herself from the walls of Anarorgehn rather than betraying
her people. His father had always said that his grandfather told him too many
stories. “Why choose me over him?” Tier asked her. She said, “I heard him at the inn. He was no friend of mine
“ Tier narrowed his eyes. “You heard me at the inn as well. He
only helped the innkeeper add coppers—I bought you intent on revenge.” She lifted her chin. “I’m not stupid. I am Raven—and you are
Bard. I saw what you did.” The words were in Common, but they made no sense to him. He frowned at her. “What do you mean? Mistress, I have been
a baker and a soldier, which is to say swordsman, tracker, spy, and even
tailor, blacksmith, and harness maker upon occasion—and doubtless a half dozen
other professions. But I make no claim to be a bard. Even if I were, I have no
idea what that has to do with you. Or what being a raven means.” She stared at him as if he made as little sense to her as
she had to him. “You are Bard,” she said again, but this time there was a
wobble in her voice. He took a good look at her. It might have been rain that wet
her cheeks, but he’d bet his good knife that there would be salt in the water.
She was little more than a child and she’d just lost her brother under
appalling circumstances. It was the middle of the night, she was shaking with
cold, and she’d held up to more than many a veteran soldier. “I’ll dispose of the body,” he said. “Neither of us will get
any sleep with him out here attracting carrion-eaters. You get out of the rain
and into dry clothes. We’ll talk in the morning. I promise that no one will
harm you until morning at least.” When she was occupied getting her baggage out of the cart,
he led Skew to the body and somehow wrestled the dead man onto the horse’s wet
back. He had no intention of burying the man, just moving him far enough away that
whatever scavengers the body attracted wouldn’t trouble them. It occurred to
him that Wresen might not be alone—indeed, it would be odd if he were because
noblemen traveled with servants. But all he found was a single grey horse tied to a tree
about a hundred paces back down the trail and no sign that another horse had
been tied nearby. Tier stopped beside the animal, and let the body slide off
Skew’s back into the mud, sword still welded to his hand. Skew, who’d borne
with everything, jumped three steps sideways as the body fell and snorted
unhappily. The grey pulled back and shook her head, trying to break free—but
the reins held. When nothing further happened the horse quieted and lipped
nervously at a bunch of nearby leaves. Tier rifled through the man’s saddlebags, but there was
nothing in them but the makings of a few meals and a pouch of silver and copper
coins. This last he tucked into his own purse with a soldier’s thrift He took
the food as well. There was nothing on the body either—except for a chunky
silver ring with a bit of dark stone in it. He deemed the ring, like the horse
and the man’s sword, too identifiable to take, and left it where it was. In the end, Tier found no hint of who Wresen was, or why
he’d been so intent on getting Seraph. Surely a mage wouldn’t have the same
unreasoning fear of Travelers that the villagers here had. He took his knife and cut most of the way through the gray’s
reins near the bit. When she got hungry enough she’d break free, but it
wouldn’t be for a while yet.’ By the time he rode back to camp, Tier was dragging with fatigue.
Seraph had taken his advice; he found her huddled under the tree. A second oilskin tarp, bigger and even more worn that his, increased
the size of their shelter so that he might even be able to keep his feet dry.
His saddle was in the shelter too, the mud wiped mostly off. He rummaged in the
saddlebags and changed to his second set of clothing. They weren’t clean, but
dry was more important just now. Seraph had turned her face away while he changed. Knowing
she’d not sleep for the cold on her own, nor agree to snuggle with a
stranger—especially not in the present circumstances, he didn’t bother to say
anything. He wrapped an arm around her, ignored her squeak of surprised dismay,
and stretched out to sleep. She tried to wiggle away from him, but there wasn’t much
room. Then she was still for a long time while Tier drifted into a light doze.
Some time later her quiet weeping woke him, and he shifted her closer, patting
her back as if she were his little sister coming to him with a scraped knee
rather than the loss of her family. He woke to her strange pale eyes staring at him, lit by
sunlight leaking through morning clouds. “I could have used this on you,” Seraph said. He looked at the blade she held in her dirty hands—his best
knife. She must have been into his saddlebags. “Yes,” he agreed, taking it from her unresisting hand. “But
I saw your face when you looked at our dead friend last night. I was pretty
certain you wouldn’t want to deal with another dead body any time soon.” “I have seen many dead,” she said, and he saw in her eyes
that it was true. “But none that you have killed,” he guessed. “If I had not been asleep when they were killing my
brother,” she said, “I would have killed them all, Bard.” “You might have.” Tier stretched and slid out from under the
tree. “But then you would have been killed also. And, as I told you last night,
I am no bard.” “Just a baker’s son,” she said. “From Redem.” “Where I am returning,” he agreed. “You are no solsenti,” she disagreed smugly. “There
are no solsenti Bards.” “Solsenti?” He was beginning to get the feeling that
they knew two entirely different languages that happened to have a few words in
common. Her assuredness began to falter, as if she’d expected some
other reaction from him. “Solsenti means someone who is not Traveler.” “Then I’m afraid I am most certainly solsenti.” He
dusted off his clothes, but nothing could remove the stains of travel. At least
they weren’t wet. “I can play a lute and a little harp, but I am not a
bard—though I think that means something different to you than it does to me.” She stared at him. “But I saw you,” she said. “I felt your
magic at the inn last night.” Startled he stared at her. “I am no mage, either.” “No,” she agreed. “But you charmed the innkeeper at
the inn so that he didn’t allow that man to buy my debt.” “I am a soldier, mistress,” he said. “And I was an officer.
Any good officer learns to manage people—or he doesn’t last long. The innkeeper
was more worried about losing his inn than he was about earning another silver
or two. It had nothing to do with magic.” “You don’t know,” she said at last, and not, he thought, particularly
to him. “How is it possible not to know that you are Bard?” “What do you mean?” She frowned. “I am Raven, you would say Mage—very
like a solsenti wizard. But there are other ways to use magic among the
Travelers, things your solsenti wizards cannot do. A few of us are
gifted in different ways and depending upon that gift, we belong to Orders. One
of those Orders is Bard—as you are. A Bard is, as you said, a musician first.
Your voice is true and rich. You have a remarkable memory, especially for
words. No one can lie to you without you knowing.” He opened his mouth to say something—he knew not what except
that it wouldn’t be kind—but he looked at her first and closed his mouth. She was so young, for all that she had the imposing manner
of an empress. Her skin was grey with fatigue and her eyes were puffy and red
with weeping she must have done while he slept. He decided not to argue with
her—or believe what she said though it caused cold chills to run down his
spine. He was merely good with people, that was all. He could sing, but then so
could most Redemi. He’ was no magic user. He left her to her speculations and began to take down the
camp. If Wresen’s horse made it back to the inn, there might be people looking
for him soon. Without saving anything more, she stood up and helped. “I’m going to take you to my kin in Redem,” he said when
their camp was packed and Skew once more attached to the Traveler cart. “But
you’ll have to promise me not to use magic while you’re there. My people are as
wary as any near Shadow’s Fall. Redem’s a trading town; if there are any
Traveler clans around, we’ll hear about them.” But she didn’t appear to be listening to him.
Instead, when she’d scrambled to Skew’s back she said, “You don’t have to
worry. I won’t tell anyone.” “Tell what?” he asked, leading the way back to the trail
they’d followed the night before. “That someone in your family, however far back, laid with a
Traveler. Only someone of Traveler blood could be a Bard,” she said. “There are
no solsenti Bards.” He was beginning to resent the way she said solsenti; whatever
the true meaning of the word, he was willing to bet it was also a deadly
insult. “I won’t tell anyone else,” she said. “Being Traveler is no
healthy thing.” She glanced up at the mountains that towered above the
narrow trail and shivered. There were not as many thieves in that part of the Empire as
there were in the lands to the east where war had driven men off their lands.
But Conex the Tinker, who found the dead body beside the trail, was not so
honest as all that. He took everything he could find of value: two good boots,
a bow, a scorched sword with scraps of flesh still clinging to it (he almost
left that but greed outweighed squeamishness in the end), a bait, and a silver
ring with a bit of onyx stone set in it. Two weeks after his unexpected good fortune a stranger met
up with him on the road, as sometimes happens when two men have the same
destination in mind. They spent most of the day exchanging news and ate
together that night. The next morning the stranger, a silver ring safely in his
belt pouch, rode off alone. Conex would never more go a-tinkering. Chapter 2“You see those two mountains over there?” Tier gestured
with his chin toward two rocky peaks that seemed to lean away from each
other. Seraph nodded. After several days’ travel she knew Tier well
enough to expect the start of another story, and she wasn’t wrong. Tier was a good traveling companion, she thought as she listened
to his story with half an ear. He was better than her brother Ushireh had been.
He was generally cheerful and did more than his fair share of the camp work. He
didn’t expect her to say much, which was just as well, for Seraph didn’t have
much to say—and she enjoyed his stories. She knew that she should be planning what to do when they
reached Tier’s village. If she could find another clan, they’d take her in just
for being Traveler, but being Raven would make her valuable to them. If Ushireh had been less proud they would have joined
another clan when their own clan died. But Ushireh had no Order to lend him
rank; he would have gone from clan chief’s son to being no one of importance.
Having more than her share of pride, Seraph had understood his dilemma. She’d
agreed that they would go on and see what the road brought them. Only see what the mad brought, Ushireh. There was no reason now not to find another clan. No reason
to continue on with this solsenti Bard to his solsenti village.
There would be no welcome for her in such a place. From what Tier said, it lay
very near Shadow’s Fall. There would be no clans anywhere near it. But instead of telling him that she would be on her way, she
continued to ride on his odd-colored gelding while Tier walked beside her and
amused them both with a wondrous array of stories that touched on everything
except his home, stories that distracted her from the shivery pain of Ushireh’s
death that she’d buried in the same tightly locked place she kept the deaths of
the rest of her family. Arrogance and control were necessary to those who bore the
Raven Order. Manipulation of the raw forces of magic was dangerous, and the
slightest bit of self-doubt or passion could let it slip out of control. She’d
never had trouble with arrogance, but she’d had a terrible time learning
emotional control Eventually she had learned to avoid things that drew her
temper: mostly that meant that she kept to herself as much as possible. Her
brother, being a loner himself, had respected that. They had often gone days
without speaking at all. Tier, with his constant speech and teasing ways, was outside
of her experience. She wasn’t in the habit of observing people; it hadn’t been
a skill that she’d needed. But, if truth be told, after journeying with Tier
only a few days, she knew more about him than she had most of the people she’d
lived with all her life. He wasn’t one of those soldiers who talked of nothing but
the battles he’d fought in. Tier shared funny stories about the life of a
solder, but he didn’t talk about the fighting at all. Every morning he rose
early and practiced with his sword—finding a quiet place away from her. She
knew about the need for quiet and let him be while she did her own practice. When he wasn’t talking he was humming or singing, but he
seldom talked of important things, and when he did he used far fewer words. He
didn’t make her talk and didn’t seem uncomfortable with her silence. When they
passed other people on the road, he smiled or talked as it came to him. Even
with Seraph’s silent presence, a moment or two of Tier’s patter and the other
people opened up. No wonder she found herself liking him—everyone liked him.
Isolated as most Ravens were kept, even within the clan, she’d never paid
enough attention to anyone outside of her family to actually like them before. “What are you smiling at?” he asked as he finished his
story. “That poor goatherd had to live with a wealthy man’s daughter for the
rest of his life. Can you imagine a worse fate?” “Traveling with a man who talks all the time,” she replied,
trying her hand at teasing. Thankfully, he grinned. It was evening the first time Seraph laid eyes on Redem, a
middling-size village carved into the eastern face of a steep-sided mountain
that rose ponderously from the icy fury of the Silver River. The settling sun
lent a red cast to the uniform grey stones of the buildings that zigzagged up
from the road. Tier slowed to look, and Skew bumped him. He patted the
horse’s head absently, then continued at his normal, brisk pace. The road they
were on continued past the base of the mountain and then veered abruptly toward
a narrow stone bridge that crossed the Silver at the foot of the village. “The Silver is narrowest here “ he said. “There used to be a
ferry, but a few generations ago the Sept ordered a bridge built.” Seraph thought he was going to begin another story, but he
fell silent. He bypassed the bridge by taking a narrow track that continued
along the river’s edge. A few donkeys and a couple of mules occupied a series
of pens just a few dozen yards beyond the bridge. He found an empty pen and began to separate Skew from the
cart. Seraph climbed down and helped him. A boy appeared out of one of the pens. “I’ll find some hay
for ’em, sir,” he said briskly. “You can store the cart in the shelter in the
far pen.” He took a better look at Skew and whistled, “Now that’s an odd one.
Never seen a horse with so many colors—like he was supposed to be a bay and
someone painted him with big white patches.” “He’s Fahlarn bred,” said Tier. “Though most of them are bay
or brown, I’ve seen a number of spotted horses.” “Fahlarn?” said the boy, and he looked closer at Tier.
“You’re a soldier then?” “Was,” agreed Tier as he led Skew into the pen. “Where did
you say to put the cart?” The boy turned to look at the cart and his gaze touched
Seraph and stuck there. “You’re Travelers?” The boy licked Ms lips nervously. “She is,” said Tier closing the pen. “I’m Redemi.” Tier was good with people: Seraph had every confidence that
the boy wouldn’t make them move on if she left Tier to talk to him. “He said to put the cart in the far pen,” murmured Seraph to
that end. “I’ll take it.” When she got back to Tier, the boy was gone, and Tier had
his saddle and bridle on his shoulder. “The boy’s gone to get some hay for Skew;’ he said. “He’ll
be in good care here. They don’t allow large animals on the streets—the streets
are too steep anyway.” He didn’t lie about that. The cobblestone village road followed
the contours of the mountain for almost a quarter of a mile, with houses on the
uppermost side of the road, and then swung abruptly back on itself like a
snake, climbing rapidly to a new level as it did so. The second layer of road
still had houses on the uphill side, but, looking toward the river, Seraph
could see the roofs of the houses they’d just passed. Stone benches lined the wide corner of the second bend of
the zigzagging road, and an old man sat on one of them playing a wooden flute.
Tier paused to listen, closing his eyes briefly. Seraph saw the old man look up
and start a bit, but he kept playing. After a moment, Tier moved on, but his
steps were slower. He stopped in front of a home marked by sheaves of wheat
carved into the lintel over the doorway and by the smell of fresh-baked bread. “Home,” he said after a moment. “I don’t know what kind of
welcome to expect. I haven’t heard from anyone here since I left to go to
war—and I left in the middle of the night.” Seraph waited, but when he made no move to continue she
said, “Did they love you?” He nodded without looking away from the door. “Then,” she said gently, “I expect that the men will bluster
and the women will cry and scold—then they will feast and welcome you home.” He laughed then. “That sounds about right. I suppose it
won’t change for putting it off longer.” He held the door open for her and followed her into a
largish room that managed to be both homey and businesslike at the same time. Behind
the counter that divided the room in half were tilted shelves displaying bread
in a dozen forms and a burly red-headed man who looked nothing like Tier. “May I help you, good sir?” asked the man. “Bandor?” said Tier. “What are you doing here?” The big man stared at him, then paled a bit. He shook his
head as if setting aside whatever it was that had bothered him. Then he smiled
with genuine welcome. “As I live and breathe, it’s Tier come back from the
dead.” Bandor stepped around the counter and enveloped Tier in a
hearty embrace. “It’s been too long.” It was odd to see two men embracing—her own people were
seldom touched in public outside of childhood. But Tier returned the bigger
man’s hug with equal enthusiasm. “You’re here for good, I hope,” said Bandor, taking a step
back. “That depends upon my father,” Tier replied soberly. Bandor shook his head and his mouth turned down. “Ah, there
is much that has happened since you left. Draken died four years ago, Tier.
Your sister and I had been married a few years earlier—I’d taken an apprenticeship
here when you left.” He stopped and shook his head. “I’m telling this all
topsy-turvy.” “Dead,” said Tier, his whole body stilled. “Bandor,” said a woman’s voice from behind a closed door.
The door swung wide and a woman came out backwards, having bumped open the door
with her hip. Her arms were occupied with a large basket of rolls. “Do you
think I ought to do another four dozen rolls, or are the eight dozen we have
enough?” The woman was taller than average, thin and lanky like Tier.
And as she turned around, Seraph could see that she had his dark hair and wide
mouth. “Alinath,” said Bandor. “I believe you have a visitor.” She turned toward Tier with a polite smile and opened her
mouth, but when her eyes caught his face no sound left her lips. She dropped
the basket on the ground, spilling rolls everywhere, then she was over the top
of the counter and wrapped tightly around him. “Tier,” she said in a muffled voice. “Oh, Tier. We thought
you were dead.” He hugged her back, lifting her off the floor. “Hey,
sprite,” he said, and his voice was as choked as hers. “We kept it for you,” said Alinath. “We kept the bakery for
you.” Alinath pulled back, tears running freely down her face. She
took a step away from him and then punched him in the belly, turning her
shoulder to put the full force of her body into the blow. “Nine years,” she said hotly. “Nine years. Tier, and not
even a note to say that you were still alive. Damn you, Tier.” Tier was bent over wheezing, but he held up three fingers. “We received nothing,” she said angrily. “I didn’t even know
where to send you word when Father died.” “I sent three letters the first year,” he said, huffing for
breath. “When I had no reply, I assumed Father washed his hands of me.” Alinath put her hands to her mouth. “If he ever got your
letters, he didn’t say anything to me. Darn my fiendish temper. I’m sorry I hit
you, Tier.” Tier shook his head, denying the need for apology. “Father
told me that someday I’d be sorry I taught you how to hit.” “Come with me,” she said. “Mother will want to see you.” She
tugged him from the room, leaving Seraph alone with the man at the counter. “Welcome,” Bandor said after a long awkward moment. “I am
Bandor, journeyman baker, and husband to Alinath of the Bakers of Redem.” “Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent,” Seraph replied
with outward composure, knowing her words would tell him no more than his eyes
had already noticed. He nodded, bent to right the basket Alinath had dropped, and
began to collect the rolls that had fallen on the floor. When he was finished he said, “Alinath will be busy with Tier, I’d best get to the baking.” He turned on his heel and
headed back through the door that Alinath and Tier had taken, leaving Seraph
truly alone. Uncomfortable and out of place, Seraph sat on a small bench
and waited. She should have left on her own as soon as Tier had killed the
nobleman who pursued her. She’d have been safe enough then. Here in Tier’s
village she was as out of place as a crow in a hummingbird nest But she stayed where she was until Tier returned alone. “My apologies,” he said. “I shouldn’t have left you
here alone.” She shrugged. “I am hardly going to come to harm here, nor
do I have a place in your reunion.” He gave her a faint smile. “Yes, well, come with me and I’ll
make you known to my sister and mother.” She stood up. “I’m sorry that your father was not here as
well.” His smile turned wry. “I don’t know if I’d have been welcomed
here if my father were still alive.” “Maybe not right away, but you’re persuasive. He’d have relented
eventually.” She found herself patting his arm and stopped as soon as she
realized what she was doing. Tier’s mother and sister awaited them in a small room that
had been arranged for a sick person. Alinath sat on a stool next to the bed
where Tier’s mother held court The older woman’s hair was the same dark color
as her children’s, though streaked with spiderwebs of age. She wasn’t old, not
by Traveler standards, but her skin was yellow with illness. Both women looked upon Seraph without favor as Tier made his
introductions. “Tier tells us you have no home, child,” said Tier’s mother,
in a begrudging tone—as if she expected Seraph to impose on her for a
place to stay. “As long as there are Travelers, I have a home,” Seraph replied.
“It only remains for me to find them. Thank you for your concern.” “I told them that I would escort you to your people,” said
Tier. “They don’t come near Shadow’s Fall, so it might take us a few months.” “So we are to lose you again?” said his mother querulously.
“Alinath and Bandor cannot keep up with the work—every week they toil from dawn
to dusk for the bakery, which is yours. When you come back in a few months, I
will be dead.” It was said in a dramatic fashion, but Seraph thought that
the older woman might be speaking truth. “I can find my people on my own,” said Seraph. “Do you hear that, Tier? She is a Traveler and can find her
own way,” said Alinath. “She is sixteen and a woman alone,” returned Tier sharply.
“I’ll see her safe.” “You were younger than that when you went off to war,” said
Alinath. “And you weren’t a witch.” She bit off the last word as if it were
filthy. “Alinath,” said Tier in a gentle voice that made his sister
pale. “Seraph is my guest here and you will not sharpen your tongue on her.” “I can take care of myself, both here and on the road,” said
Seraph, though his defense touched her—as if the words of a solsenti stranger
could hurt her. “No,” said Tier, his voice firm. “If you’ll house us for the
night, Mother, we’ll start out tomorrow morning.” Tier’s mother and sister exchanged a look, as if they’d discussed
the situation while Tier had left them alone to retrieve Seraph. Tier’s mother smiled at Seraph. “Child, is there a hurry to
find your people? If you cannot tarry here until I pass from this world into
the next, could you not stay with us as our guest for a season so that we might
not lose Tier so soon after we’ve found him?” “A Traveler might be harmful to business,” said Seraph. “As
I said, there is no need for Tier to escort me. I am well capable of finding my
people by myself.” “If you go, he’ll follow you,” said Alinath with resignation.
“It may have been a long time since I’ve seen my brother, but I doubt that he
has changed so much as to go back on his sworn word.” “Stay, please,” said his mother. “What few people who will
not eat from the table where a Traveler is fed will be more than compensated
for by the new business we’ll get from the curious who will come to the bakery
just to catch a glimpse of you.” Seraph was under no illusion that she’d be a welcome guest
But there was no doubt either that they wanted her to stay if that were the
only way to keep Tier for a while. “I’ll stay,” she said reluctantly and felt a weight lift off
her shoulders. If she were here then she wasn’t fighting demons and watching
people die around her because she hadn’t been able to protect them. “I’ll stay
for a little while.” “Where is my brother?” Alinath’s voice sounded almost accusing,
as if she thought Seraph had done something to Tier. Seraph looked up from sifting the never-ending supply of
flour, one of the unskilled tasks that had fallen to her hands. She glanced
pointedly at the empty space next to her where Tier had spent the last three
weeks mixing various permutations of yeasted bread. She raised her eyebrows in
surprise, as if she hadn’t noted that he hadn’t taken his usual place this
morning. Then she looked back at Alinath and shrugged. It was rude, but Alinath’s sharp question had been rude,
too. Alinath’s jaw tightened, but she was evidently still intimidated
enough by Seraph’s status as Traveler not to speak further. She turned on her
heel and left Seraph to her work. Tier didn’t return until the family was sitting down for
lunch. He brushed a kiss on the top of Alinath’s head and sat down across from
her, beside Seraph. “Where were you this morning?” Alinath asked. “Riding,” he said in a tone that welcomed no questions ..
“Pass the carrots please, Seraph.” The rhythms of the bakery came back to Tier as if he’d not
spent the better part of the last decade with a sword in his hand instead of a
wooden spoon. He woke before dawn to fire the ovens and, after a few days, quit
having to ask Alinath for the proper proportion of ingredients. He could see the days stretching ahead of him in endless procession,
each day just exactly like the one before. The years of soldiering had made him
no more resigned to spending the rest of his life baking than he’d been at fifteen. Even something as exotic as his stray Traveler didn’t alter
the pattern of life at his father’s bakery. She worked as she was asked and
seldom spoke, even to him. Only his nightly’ rides broke the habits of his
childhood, but even they had begun to acquire a sameness. He ought to sell the horse, his mother had told him
over dinner yesterday, then he could use the money as a bride price. There were
a number of lovely young village women who would love to be a baker’s wife. This morning he’d gotten up earlier than usual and tried to
subdue his restlessness with work—to no effect. So as soon as Bandor had come
in to watch the baking, Tier left and took Skew out, galloping him over the
bridge and up into the mountains until they arrived at a small valley he’d
discovered as a boy. Once there, he’d explored the valley until the lather on
Skew’s back had dried and his own desperation loosened under the influence of
the sweet-grass smell and mountain breeze. Part of him was ready to leave this afternoon, to take
Seraph and find her people. But the rest of him wanted to put the journey off
as long as he could. Once it was over, there would be no further escapes for
him. He wasn’t fifteen anymore: he was a man, with a man’s responsibilities. “You’re quiet today,” said Seraph as they worked together
after lunch. “I was beginning to think that silence was a thing that Redemi
avoided at all cost. Always you” are telling stories, or singing. Even Bandor
hums all the time he works.” He grinned at her as he kneaded dough. “I should have warned
you,” he said, “that every man in Redem thinks himself a bard and most of the
women, too.” “In love with the sound of your own voices, the whole lot of
you,” said Seraph without rancor, dumping hot water in the scrubbing tub where
a collection of mixing bowls awaited cleaning. “My father always said that too
many words cheapened the value of a man’s speech.” Tier laughed again—but Alinath had entered the baking room
with an armful of empty boards in time to hear the whole of Seraph’s
observation. “My father said that a silent person is trying to hide something,”
she said as she dumped the trays in a stack. “Girl, get the broom and sweep the
front room. See that you get the corners so that we don’t attract mice.” Tier saw Seraph stiffen, but she grabbed the broom and dustpan. “Alinath, she is a guest in our house,” Tier bit out as the
door closed behind Seraph. “You don’t use that tone to the hired boy. She has
done nothing to earn your disrespect. Leave her be.” “She is a Traveler,” snapped Alinath, but there was
an undercurrent of desperation in her voice. “She bewitches you because she is
young and pretty. You laugh with her and you’ll barely exchange a word with any
of us.” How could he explain to her his frustration with the life
that so obviously suited her without hurting her feelings? The bakery was
smothering him. When he said nothing, Alinath said, “You’re a man. Bandor is
the same—neither of you see what she is. You think she’s a poor familyless,
defenseless woman in need of protection because that’s what she wants you to
see.” A flush of temper lit Alinath’s eyes as she began to pace.
“I see a woman who looks at my brother as a way to wealth and ease that she’ll
never have when she finds one of those ragtag bands of Travelers. She doesn’t
want to go to her people—even you must see that. I tell you that if you just
give her the chance, she’ll snatch you into a marriage-bed.” Tier opened his mouth and then closed it again. He tried to
see Seraph as his sister described her, but the image didn’t ring true. “She’s a child,” he said. “I was married when I was her age.” “She is a child and a Traveler,” he said. “She’d no more
look at me that way than she’d think of marrying a ... a horse. She thinks of
all of us as if we were a different species.” “Oh and you know so much about women,” his sister ranted,
though she was careful to keep her voice down so she couldn’t be heard in the
front room where Seraph was. “You need to find a good wife. You always liked
Kirah. She’s widowed now and would bring a fair widow’s portion with her.” Tier put the dough in the greased bowl he’d set out for it,
covered it with cheesecloth, and then scrubbed his hands in Seraph’s tub of
cooling water. He shook them dry and took off his father’s apron and hung it on
the hook. Enough, he thought. “Don’t wait dinner for me,” he said and started to leave. He stopped before he opened the door to the front room. “I’ve
been counting too heavily on manners and the memory of my little sister who saw
me leave without telling anyone because she understood me enough to know that I
had to leave. I see that you need a stronger reason to leave Seraph alone. Just
you remember that, for all of her quietness she has a temper as hot as yours.
She is a Traveler and a wizard, and if she takes a notion to teach you
what that means, neither your tongue nor your fist will do you a bit of good.” He left before she could say anything, closing the door to
the baking room firmly behind him. Seraph glanced his way as he stalked past her, but he said
nothing to her. She’d be all right; his warning would keep Alinath away from
her for a while. He couldn’t face Seraph right now, not with his sister’s
accusations ringing in his ears. Not that he believed what Alinath had said
about Seraph for a moment—but Alinath’d opened the way for possibilities that
made him uncomfortable. He’d never thought much about the peace that Seraph’s
tart commentary and quiet presence brought him: he’d just been grateful for the
relief from the demands of his family. He didn’t want to examine what he felt
any closer. So Tier nodded once at Seraph and also to Bandor before leaving the
bakery. Once outside, his steps faltered. He’d worn Skew out this
morning, so it hardly seemed fair to take him out again. He could walk—but it
wasn’t exercise he needed, it was escape. The Hero’s Welcome was a tavern and an inn, a conglomeration
of several older buildings, and the first building on the road through Redem.
It was seldom empty, and when Tier entered it there were a number of men
sitting near the kitchen entrance gossiping with each other while the tanner’s
father, Giro, coaxed soft music from his viol. It made Tier think of his grandfather and the grand concerts
he and Giro, who had been the tanner himself then, had put on. If Seraph ever
heard the old man play, she’d know why Tier would never consider himself a bard
in any sense of the word. He seated himself beside these men he’d known since he was a
child and greeted them by name, older men, all of them, contemporaries of his
grandfather. The younger men would come in later, when they were finished with
their work and chores. One of the men had been a soldier in his youth, and Tier
spent a little time exchanging stories. The innkeeper, noticing that there was
a newcomer, offered Tier ale. He took it, but merely nursed it because the
oblivion he sought wouldn’t come from alcohol. Giro gradually shifted from playing broken bits and pieces
into a recognizable song, and an old, toothless man began humming, his tone
uncertain with age, but his pitch absolutely true. One after the other the old
men began to sing. Tier joined in and let the healing music make the present
fade away. They sang song after song, sometimes pausing while one man
tried to hum enough of something he’d heard long ago for Giro to remember it,
too—that man had a memory for music that Tier had only seen his grandfather
equal. It was the first time that he was happy to be home. “Boy,” said Giro, “sing “The Hills of Home’ with me.” Tier grinned at the familiar appellation. It no longer fit
as well as it had when he’d tagged along after his grandfather. He stood and
let the first few notes of the viol pull him into the song. He took the low
part of the duet, the part that had been his grandfather’s, while the old man’s
warm tenor flung itself into the more difficult melody. Singing a duet rather
than blending with a group, Tier loosed the power of his voice and realized
with momentary surprise that Giro didn’t have to hold back. For the first time,
Tier’s singing held its own with the old musician’s. Then the old words left no
more room for thought. It was one of the magic times, when no note could possibly
go astray and any foray into countermelody or harmony worked perfectly. When
they finished the last note they were greeted with a respectful silence. “In all my wandering, I’ve never heard the like. Not even in
the palace of the Emperor himself.” A stranger’s voice broke the silence. Tier turned to see a man of about fifty, a well-preserved,
athletic fifty, wearing plain-colored clothes of a cut and fit that would have
done for a wealthy merchant or lower nobleman, but somehow didn’t seem out of
place in a rural tavern full of brightly dressed Redemi. His iron-grey hair, a
shade darker than his short beard, was tied behind his head in a fashion that
belonged to the western seaboard. He smiled warmly at Tier. “I’ve heard a great deal about you
from these rascals since you returned—and they didn’t lie when they said that
your song was a rare treat. Willon, retired Master Trader, at your service. You
can be no one but Tieragan Baker back from war.” He held his hand out, and Tier
took it, liking the man immediately. As Tier sat down again, the retired master trader pulled a
chair in between two of the others so he sat opposite Tier at the table. Giro smiled and said in his shy speaking voice, so at odds
with his singing, “Master Willon has built a fine little store near the end of
the road. You should go there and see it, full of bits and things he’s
collected.” “You are young to be retiring,” observed Tier. “And Redem is
an odd place to choose for retirement—these mountains get cold in the winter.” Master Willon had one of those faces that appeared to be smiling
even in repose—which robbed his grin of not a bit of its effect. “My son made Master last year,” he said. “He’s got a fire
that will take him far—but not if he spends all of his days competing with me
for control of the business. So I retired.” Willon laughed quietly and shook his head. “But it wasn’t as
easy as that The men who serve my house had been mine for thirty years. They’d
listen to my son, nod their heads, and come to me to see if I liked their
orders. So I had to take myself out of Taela, and Redem came to mind.” He raised his tankard to Giro. “My first trip as a caravan
master I came by this very inn and was treated to the rarest entertainment I’d
ever heard—two men who sang as if the gods themselves were their audience. I
thought I’d heard the finest musicians in the world in Taela’s courts, but I’d
never heard anything like that Business is business, gentlemen. But music is in
my soul—if not my voice.” “If it’s music you like, there’s plenty here,” said Tier
agreeably as a small group of younger men came through the inn door. “Well look what decided to drop by at last,” said one of them.
“You wiggle out from under your sister’s thumb, Tier?” Tier had greeted them all since he’d returned from war, of
course, but that had been under different circumstances, when they were
customers or he was. The tavern doors made them all kindred. Too much so. With the younger men came less music and more talk—and they
must have been talking to his mother because most of the talk had to do with
his upcoming marriage. The question was not when he was going to marry; it was
to whom. Tier excused himself earlier than he had expected to and
found himself leaving with Master Willon. “Don’t let them fret you,” Willon said. “I won’t,” Tier said. He almost stopped there, but couldn’t
quite halt his bitterness—maybe because a stranger might understand better than
any of his friends and kin he’d left behind in the tavern. “There’s more to
life than wedding and breeding and baking bread.” He started walking and Willon fell into step beside him.
“I’ve heard as much praise for your baking as I have for your singing. You
don’t want to be a baker?” “Baking ...” Tier struggled to put a finger on the thing
that bothered him about his family’s business. “Baking is like washing—the
results are equally temporary.” He gave a half-laugh. “That’s arrogant of me,
isn’t it? That I’d like to do something that means more, something that will
outlast me the way these buildings have outlasted the men who built them.” “I hadn’t thought of it that way before,” said Willon
slowly. “But immortality ... I think that’s a basic instinct rather than the
product of pride. It goes toward the same things that they were trying to push
you into. How did you put it? Wedding and breeding. A man’s immortality can be
found in his children.” Children? Tier hadn’t been aware that he’d thought
about the matter at all, but the need was there, buried beneath the “I can’t
breathe with the weight of my family’s wishes” tightness in his chest. “So what do you want to do, if not bake?” asked Willon, betraying
his foreignness with the question. No Redemi would have suggested that he do
anything else. “Would you go back to fighting if there were a war to be had?” “Not soldiering,” Tier said firmly. “I’ve killed more than
any man ought—the only product of warmaking is death.” Tier took a deep breath
and closed his eyes briefly as he thought. Maybe it was seeing his little
valley again on his morning ride, but something inside of him vibrated like one
of Giro’s viol strings when he finally said, “I’d like to farm.” Willon laughed, but it was a comforting laugh. “I’d not
think that growing crops would be much more permanent than baking bread—just
takes a bit longer to get to the final product.” But it wasn’t. It was different Tier stopped walking so that
he could encompass that difference in words that didn’t sound as stupid out
loud as they did to himself, stupid but true. “I’ve known farmers,” he said slowly. “A lot of the men who
fought the Fahlarn were fanners, fighting for their lands. They are as much a
part of their lands as flour is a part of bread.” He shook his head at himself
and grinned sheepishly because it sounded stupider out loud. “The land is
immortal, Master Willon, and a farmer has a part of that immortality.” “So are you going to be a farmer?” asked Willon with
interest “And marry and breed?” Tier said lightly over the longing Willon’s
words produced. “Not likely.” He began walking again, though they’d passed the
bakery a while back. He had no desire to go home yet “There’s not a woman in
Redem who’d marry me and let me go fanning. I know the money fanning brings in
and that bakery brings in ten times as much—and it would break my family’s
heart.” “Fanners don’t make much,” agreed the master trader. “But if
you look around you might find a woman who’d rather be a farmer’s wife than
live in the village under the tyranny of her neighbors.” That night Seraph got up out of her cot in the small room
they’d given her and climbed out of the window into the garden that backed the
house, her blanket serving as a cloak. The solid walls made her feel closed in
and trapped. Most of her nights had been spent in tents rather than buildings. She found the bench that had served as her bed on more than
one night since she’d chosen to stay here and lay down on it again to look up
at the stars. She needed to go. These people owed her nothing, not the
food she ate or the blanket she wrapped herself in. She did not belong here.
She hadn’t heard the argument that Tier and Alinath had while she swept the
front room, but she’d heard the raised voices. Tomorrow, she would go. In two weeks or three she would find
a clan that would take her in. Resolute, she closed her eyes and willed herself to sleep. A
long time later, exhaustion had more success than her will and she relaxed into
slumber. A rotten tomato hit Arvage’s shoulder while the solsenti
boys bounced with nervous bravado. Didn’t they know that the old man could
kill them all with a touch of the magic he knew? Didn’t they know that he and
Seraph had spent the better part of the past two days banishing a khurlogh,
a demon spirit, that had been preying on nighttime visitors to the town
well? Instead her teacher’s arthritic fingers touched the mess
on his shoulder and transformed it into afresh, ripe tomato. “My thanks, young sirs,” he said. “A rare addition to my
dinner.” The scene faded as Seraph stirred restlessly in protest of
the old memory. She quieted and her dream took up again at a different point in
time. Her father’s fingers petted her hair as she leaned
against his knee, half-asleep in the aftermath of a full meal and the warmth of
the nearby fire. “The entire clan gone?” her father said, a small tremor
in his bossy voice. “Are you certain it was the Imperial Army?” Their visitor nodded his head wearily. “As far as we’ve
been able to determine, the last village that they passed through complained to
the commander of the imperial troops stationed nearby. Told them that—the
Travelers kidnapped a pair of young women. The troops came upon the clan and
massacred them from grandfather to day-old babe. Turns out that the women were
taken by bandits—the imperial troops found them on their way back to the
village.” They buried Arvage in a wilderness glen, just as he had
wanted. Seraph herself had thrown in the first, symbolic, handful of earth.
He’d died trying to work magic that he could no longer harness because the pain
in his joints broke through his fearsome control. He’d known the risk. In one of those things possible only in dreams, Arvage stood
beside her while her father and brothers buried him. “It is our task to take care of them or die,” he told
her. “Our purpose is to keep the shadows at bay for the solsenti who are
helpless against them. This is a Raven’s task before us, and I am Raven—as
are you. You aren’t old enough and I am too old, but we do as we must.” * Tier hadn’t lived in the comfortable safety of the village
long enough to sleep through small noises in the night. He’d heard Seraph go
out, as she often did, and he’d gone back to sleep afterward. But he’d awakened
again. He waited for the noise to repeat itself, and when it did he
pulled on his pants and slipped out his window to the garden where Seraph
whimpered in the helpless throes of a nightmare. The man was from the Clan of Gilarmist the Fat, running a
message to another clan. He’d flirted with Seraph’s oldest sister and died in
the night. Her sister died the next morning, drowning in the fluid that they
couldn’t keep from filling her lungs. By the time four days had passed only Seraph and her
brother Ushireh were left to bury the dead. Ushireh worked until he passed out.
She’d been so afraid that he was dead, too; it had taken her a long time to
convince herself that he was only unconscious. She’d dragged him away from the
dead they’d gathered together in the center of the camp, then she’d burned it
all—camp and bodies alike. It had been weeks before she could work
enough magic to light afire. When she managed it at last, Ushireh’s body sat up in the
pyre, and his head turned until he could fix his glowing eyes on her. Seraph
shrank back and tried to close her eyes. As if in death he’d acquired the magic
he’d so envied her in life, his will kept her from looking away from him. “You left me,” he said. “You left your duty. You cannot
run forever, Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent.” She awoke with a gasp and a cry and was gathered into warm
arms and rocked gently. “Shh,” said Tier, “it was a dream. You’re safe.” She buried
her head in his shoulder and gave up a lifetime of self-control to sob raggedly
against him. “I can’t do it,” she said. “I don’t want to be a Traveler. They
all die, and I have to burn them and bury them. I’m so tired of death and duty.
I want ... I want ...” What she wanted was tied away from her in strands of
guilt and duty, but she found a fair approximation of it in the safety of
Tier’s arms. “Shh,” he said. “You don’t have to go if you don’t want to.”
His words passed over and around her, the sense lost to her grief and guilt,
but the sound of his voice comforted her. From the third of the three windows that looked out into the
garden, Alinath watched her brother hold the witch he’d brought home and she
clenched her fists before she turned away. When the worst of it had passed, embarrassment made Seraph
turn away and wipe her face with the corner of the blanket. “Sorry,” she muttered. “It was a nightmare.” “Ah,” said Tier as he let her pull away from him. “It
sounded worse than that to me.” She shrugged, not looking at him. “Memories make the worst
nightmares, my father always said.” “You don’t have to go find another clan,” he said. “You can
stay here.” She tried to stifle her involuntary laugh. It wouldn’t be
polite to disparage the hospitality of his family. “No, I can’t. Thank you. But
no.” “I can’t leave now,” said Tier. “But I fear it won’t be
long. Mother complains and frets until it’s hard to believe that she’s sick at
all—but she’s losing weight and her color is much worse. Can you wait?” Seraph held herself still. Could she wait to take up her
duties? Oh, yes. Wait forever if she could. But was it the right thing
to do? At last she nodded. “I’ll wait.” “Good.” Tier sat with her a bit, while the sweat dried on her back. With the air of a man coining to a decision, he took something
from around his neck and put it into her hands. “This came with me into war and kept me safe enough through
any number of battlefields. As I am unlikely to need it now, I’d like you to
take it.” She fingered the collection of large wooden beads carefully. “They’re not much to look at,” he said hastily, and with a
little embarrassment, she thought. “But they carry the blessing of our priest.
You’ve met Karadoc?” She nodded. The priest had sought her out to give her his sympathies
on the death of her brother. The only Redemi aside from Tier who had. She
hadn’t been quite sure how to deal with a priest—Travelers had little use for
the minions of the gods—but he’d seemed like a good person. “Karadoc gave me that for helping him tend his garden after
he broke his wrist one summer.” “It must have been more than that,” Seraph said
thoughtfully. “People don’t give gifts like this lightly.” He stiffened, “It’s just a bunch of wooden beads, Seraph.” She put them against her face and rubbed against them like a
cat, soaking in the warmth that emanated from the battered wood. “Old wooden
beads,” she said. “I can’t tell exactly how old, but they’ve been given in love
and worn that way for a long, long time. They comfort me—did they comfort you
while you were far from your home?” She didn’t wait for his answer, “Tell me
the story of your gardening for Karadoc?” “I was young,” he said finally. “Karadoc is ... well, you’ve
met him. He always look time to talk to me, listening to me when my father and
I fought.” His voice hadn’t fallen into the cadences of storytelling;
he told this story hesitantly. “Karadoc broke his wrist; I told you that. His
garden is his pride and joy, and it started to get overgrown almost
immediately. I suppose being the priest of the god of green and growing things
has a certain influence on your garden.” “He hired a boy to tend it, but when harvest season came the
boy had to help his father in the field, and Karadoc couldn’t find another one.
So I started getting up a little earlier in the morning so I could work on it a
bit.” Seraph smiled a little; the beads and Tier’s company had
worked their own magic. “He didn’t know you were doing it.” “Well, I wasn’t certain that I would do it more than once or
twice. A baker gets up early to miss cooking in the heat of the day. I didn’t
want to promise something I couldn’t do.” “And Karadoc found you out,” said Seraph. “When you wouldn’t
take any pay, he gave you these.” He nodded. Seraph put the necklace around her throat. Gifts could not
be returned, only appreciated. She would find something she could do to repay
him for his kindness to her and his gift A Traveler’s blessing could be a
useful thing. “Thank you for this,” she said. “I will treasure it as long
as it remains in my hands and pass it on as you have, as Karadoc did.” They lapsed into a comfortable silence. “A man asked me today what I’d do if I could do something besides
baking and soldiering,” he said at last. “What did you answer?” “Fanning,” he said. She nodded. “The land gives back everything you put into it
and a little more, if you have the knack.” “If you could do anything, be anything, what would it be?” She stilled. She knew about villages, knew that most men’s
fates were set in stone when they were little more than children and
apprenticed to a trade—or else they were cast off never to be more than
itinerant workers or soldiers. Women’s lives were dictated by their husbands. Travelers were a little more free than that usually. A
bowyer could decide to smith if he wanted to, as long as he continued to
contribute to the clan. There were no guilds to restrict a person from doing as
he willed. And women, women ran the clan. Only the lives of the Ordered were
set out from the moment a Raven pronounced them gifted at birth. No Traveler would ever have asked a Raven what she wanted to
be. The silence must have lasted too long because he said, “That
question took me aback, today, too. But I learned something. What would you
do?” “Ravens don’t marry,” she said abruptly. He was easy to talk
to, especially in the dark. “We can’t afford the distraction. We don’t do the
normal chores of the clan. No cooking or firewood gathering. We don’t dam our
own clothes or sew them.” “You cook well,” he said. “That’s because Ushireh couldn’t cook at all. I learned a
lot when we were left on our own. But being a Raven’s not like being a baker.
Tier. You could leave it and become a soldier. You can leave it now and become
a farmer if you want. But I can’t leave being a Raven behind.” “But if you could—what would you do?” She leaned back on her hands and swung her feet back and
forth, the bench being somewhat tall for her. In a dreamy, smiling voice she
said, “I would be a wife, like the old harridan who runs an inn in Boarsdock on
the western coast. She has a double handful of children, all of them taller
than her, and they all cringe when she walks by. Her husband is an old sailing
man with one leg. I don’t think I’ve ever heard him say anything but, ‘yes,
dear.’” She caught him by surprise and Tier gave a crack of laughter
that he had to cover his mouth to suppress. Smiling her satisfaction in the dark, she thought that the
oddest thing about her statement was that it was the truth. That old woman ran
her inn and her children and their wives and husbands and they all, every one
of them, loved her. She lived in the daylight world, where shadow things
wouldn’t dare show their faces and the children in her family had no more
responsibility than grooming a few horses or cleaning a room could provide. But the thing that Seraph envied the most was that one
winter evening, when Seraph’s uncles entertained the boisterous crowd that
gathered beneath the great fireplace and told them stories of haunts and
shadow-things, that wise old woman shook her head with a laugh and said that
she had better things to do than listen to tales of monsters fabricated to keep
children up all night. So it was that she stayed when she should have gone. But a
week or a month would make little difference to her duties—a lifetime or two
would make little difference as far as she could tell. So she stayed. “Don’t pull that up. That’s an iris bulb, trimmed down now
that it’s bloomed,” said Tier’s sister several weeks later. “Don’t you know how
to weed?” Seraph released the hapless plant unharmed, straightened,
and almost groaned at the easing in her back. “No,” she said, though she’d told
her as much when Alinath had set her to the task. How would she have learned to
weed? The herbs and food plants she knew, but she’d no experience with flowers
at all. Tier had stormed off at lunch, beset by both his sister and
his mother, who had gotten out of her bed only to try and push him into finding
a wife. Since then Alinath had been picking at her as if it had been Seraph
who’d sent Tier off to seek peace. Seraph had been set to half a dozen tasks,
only to be sent to do something else because of some inadequacy in her work,
real or imaginary. “Well leave off then,” said Alinath. “Bandor or I will have
to finish it, I suppose. You are utterly useless, girl. Cannot sew, cannot
cook, cannot weed. The baking room floor needs cleaning—but mind how you do it.
Don’t let the dust get into the flour bins.” Seraph stood up and dusted off her skin; she’d left off
wearing her comfortable pants when she’d noticed that none of the Redemi women
wore anything except skirts. “It’s a shame,” she said finally. “That Tier, who wears
courtesy as close as his skin, should have a sister with none at all.” Before Alinath could do more than open her mouth, Seraph
turned on her heel and entered the house through the baking room door. She
regretted her comment as soon as she’d made it. The womenfolk in the clan were
no more courteous in their requests than Alinath was. But they would have never
turned their demands upon a Raven. Moreover, Seraph knew the solsenti well enough to
know that Alinath’s rudeness to a guest was a deliberate slight. Especially
since, except for that first time, she was careful to soften her orders around
Tier. Seraph had done her best to ignore the older woman. She was
a guest in Alinath’s home. She had no complaint with the work she was asked to
do—which was no more work than anyone else did, except for Tier’s mother. And,
by ignoring Alinath’s rudeness, Seraph bothered her more than any other
response could have. There was a more compelling reason to ignore Alinath’s trespasses. Seraph let her fingernails sink into the wood of the broom
handle as she swept with careful, slow strokes. A Raven could not afford to
lose her temper. She took a deep, calming breath and sought for control. The door opened and Alinath walked in. When she started to
speak her voice was carefully polite. “I have been rude,” she said. “I admit it. I believe
that it is time for some plainer speech. My brother thinks you are a child.” Seraph stared at her a moment, bewildered, her broom still
in her hands. What did Tier’s opinion have to do with anything? “But I know better,” continued Alinath. “I was married at
your age.” And I killed the ghouls who killed my teacher when I was
ten, thought Seraph. A Raven is never a child. But she saw where Alinath
was headed. “I told Tier what you are up to, but he doesn’t see it,”
said Alinath. “Anyone who marries my brother will have this bakery.” Anyone who married your brother would be safe for the
rest of their life, thought Seraph involuntarily, and envied his future
wife with all of her heart. “But you will never have him.” Seraph shrugged. “And he will never have me.” She went back to sweeping—and longing to be an old innkeeper
who thought that ghouls and demons were stories told to frighten children. She
crouched to get the broom under the low shelf of the table where Tier kneaded
his bread. “Where did you get those?” Alinath lunged at Seraph. Startled, Seraph dropped the broom
as Alinath’s hand clenched around Tier’s bead necklace; it must have slid out
of her blouse when she crouched. “Dirty Traveler thief!” shrieked Alinath, jerking wildly at
the necklace. “Where did you get these?” Seraph had heard all the epithets—but she’d been fighting
her anger for weeks. The slight pain of the jerk Alinath gave the necklace was
nothing to the outrage that Alinath had dared to grab her in the first place. She heard the door to the public room open and heard Tier’s
voice, but everything was secondary to the rage that swept through her. Rage
fed by her clan’s death, Ushireh’s death, her desperate, despairing guilt at
surviving when everyone else died, and lit by this stupid solsenti woman
who pushed and pushed until Seraph would retreat no more. Alinath must have seen some of it in her face because she
dropped her hold on the necklace and took two steps back. The necklace fell
back against Seraph’s neck like a kiss from a friend. Just before the wave of
magic left her, the warmth of Tier’s gift allowed her to regain control. It
saved Alinath’s life, and probably Seraph’s as well because magic loosed in
anger was not choosy in its target Pottery shattered as the stone building shook with a hollow
boom. Cooking spoons, wooden peels, and baking tiles flew across the room. The
great door that separated the hot ovens from the baking room pulled from its
hinges and flew between Seraph and Alinath, hitting the opposite wall and
sending plaster into the air in a thick white cloud as Alinath cried out in
fear. Flour joined plaster as the door fell to the ground, taking two tables
with it and knocking a barrel half-full of flour to its side. Closing her eyes to the destruction and Alinath’s frightened
face, Seraph fought to pull back the magic she’d loosed. It struggled in her
grasp, fed by the anger that had engendered it. It made her pay for her lack of
control, sweeping back to her call, back through her like shards of glass. But
it came, and peelers and tiles settled gently to the floor. Seraph opened her eyes to assess the damage. Alinath was
fine—though obviously shaken, she had quit screaming as soon as she’d begun.
The wall would have to be replastered and the door reining, the jamb repaired
or replaced. The jars of valuable mother, used to start the bread dough, had
somehow escaped, and the number of broken pots was fewer than she’d thought. Neither Tier, nor the four or five people who had followed him
into the room, had more damage than a coating of flour and plaster. Shame cut Seraph almost as rawly as the magic had. It was
the worst thing a Raven could do—loose magic in anger. That no one had been
hurt, nothing irreplaceable broken, was a tribute to Tier’s gift and a little
good luck rather than anything Seraph had done and so mitigated her crime not a
whit. Seraph stood frozen in the middle of the baking room. “I told you that she had a temper,” said Tier mildly. “This was an ill way to repay your hospitality,” said
Seraph. “I will get my things and leave.” Tier cursed the impulse that had led him to invite the men
he’d spent the afternoon singing with to try out an experimental batch of herb
bread he’d been working on. That he’d opened the door to the baking room when
he—and everyone else—heard Alinath cry out had been stupidity. He’d been
warning his sister not to antagonize Seraph for the better part of a week. “Mages aren’t tolerated here,” said someone behind him. “She said she’d leave,” said Giro. “She hurt no one.” “We’ll leave in the morning,” said Tier. “Strangers who come to Redem and work magic are condemned to
death,” said Alinath in a tone of voice he’d never heard from her. He looked at her. She should have appeared ridiculous, but
the cold fear-driven anger on her face made her formidable despite the coating
of white powder settling on her. Someone gave a growl of agreement. The ugly sound reminded Tier of the inn where he’d rescued
her—or rescued the villagers from her. He realized that unless he managed to
stop it, by morning his village might not be in any mood to let Seraph go. An odd idea that had been floating in his head since he’d
talked to Willon and then held Seraph in the wake of her night terrors
crystallized. “She is not a stranger,” lied Tier abruptly. “She is my
wife.” Silence descended in the room. Seraph looked at him sharply. “No,” said Alinath. “I’ll not have it.” She was in shock, he knew, or she’d never have said such a ridiculous
thing. “It is not for you to have or not have,” he reminded her,
his voice gentle but firm. “I won’t have her in this house,” Alinath said. “We would have had to leave in any case,” said Bandor, who’d
pushed through the crowd and into the baking room. He walked over to Alinath,
and put his hand on her shoulder. “Once Tier had chosen his wife, whoever she
was, we’d have had to leave. I’ve made some inquiries in Leheigh. The baker
there told me he’d be willing to take on a journeyman.” “There’s no need,” said Tier. Now that his choice was made,
the words he needed to convince them all flowed easily. “There’s a place I
intend to farm about an hour’s walk from here. I’ll have to get the Sept’s
steward’s permission, which won’t be difficult to obtain since the land is not
being used. There’s time to build a house before winter. We’ll live there, but
I’ll work in the bakery through the spring when planting season comes. Then
I’ll deed it to Alinath.” “When were you married?” whispered Alinath. “Last night,” lied Tier, holding out his hand to Seraph, who’d
been watching him with an expression he couldn’t read. She stepped to his side and took his hand. Her own was very
cold. “Yes,” said Karadoc, coming forward and putting a hand on
Tier’s head as he used to when Tier was a boy. “There have been Redemi who were
mages before. Seraph will harm no one.” The crowd dispersed, and Bandor took Alinath to their room
to talk, leaving only Karadoc, Tier, and Seraph. “See that you come by the temple tonight,” said the priest.
“I don’t like to keep a lie longer than necessary.” Tier grinned at him and hugged the older man. “Thank you.
We’ll stop by.” When he left, Tier turned to Seraph. “You can stay here with
me and be my wife. Karadoc will marry us tonight and no one will know the
difference.” He waited, and when she said nothing, he said, “Or I can do as I promised. We can
leave now and I’ll go with you to find your people.” Her hand tightened on his then, as if she’d never let it go.
She glanced once around the room and then lowered her eyes to the floor. “I’ll
stay,” she whispered. “I’ll stay.” Part Two Chapter 3When Seraph reached the narrow bridge, the river was high
and the wooden walkway was slick with cold water from the spring runoff. She
glanced across the river and up the mountainside where Redem hung, terraced
like some ancient giant’s stone garden. Even after twenty years, the sight
still impressed her. From where she stood, the new temple at the very top of the
village rose like a falcon over its prey. The rich hues of new wood contrasted
with the grays of the village, but, to her, that seemed to be merely an accent
to the harmony of stone buildings and craggy mountain. Seraph crossed the bridge, skirted the few people tending animals,
and headed for the steps of the steep road that zigzagged its way up the
mountain face, edged with stone buildings. The bakery looked much as it had when she’d first seen it
The house was newer than its neighbors, having been rebuilt several generations
earlier because of a fire. Tier had laughed and told her that his several times
great-grandfather had tried to make the building appear old but had succeeded
only in making it ugly. Not even the ceramic pots planted with roses could add
much charm to the cold grey edifice, but the smell of fresh-baked bread wafting
from the chimney gave the building an aura of welcome. Seraph almost walked on—she could sell her goods elsewhere,
but not without offending her sister-in-law. Perhaps Alinath would be out and
she could deal with Bandor, who had never been anything but kind. Resolutely,
she opened the bakery door. “Seraph,” Tier’s sister greeted her without welcome from the
wide, flour-covered wooden table where her clever hands wove dough into knots
and set them on baking tiles to be taken back to the ovens for cooking. Seraph smiled politely. “Jes found a honey-tree in the woods
last week. Rinnie and I spent the last few days jarring it I wondered if you
would like to buy some jars to make sweet bread.” Tier would have given it to his sister, but Seraph could not
afford such generosity. Tier was late back from winter fur-trapping, and
Jes needed boots. Alinath sniffed. “That boy. If I’ve told Tier once, I’ve
told him a thousand times, the way you let him wander the woods on his own—and
him not quite right—it’s a wonder a bear or worse hasn’t gotten him.” Seraph forced herself to smile politely. “Jes is as safe in
the woods as you or I here in your shop. I have heard my husband tell you that
as often as you complained to him.” Alinath wiped off her hands. “Speaking of children, I have been
meaning to talk to you about Rinnie.” Seraph waited. “Bandor and I have no children, and most probably never
will. We’d like to take Rinnie in and apprentice her.” Seraph reminded herself sternly that Alinath meant no harm
by her proposal. Even Travelers fostered children under certain circumstances,
but it seemed to Seraph that the solsenti traded and sold their children
like cattle. Tier had tried to explain the advantages of the apprenticing
system to her—the apprentice gained a trade, a means to make a fair living, and
the master gained free help. In her travels, Seraph had seen too many places
where children were treated worse than slaves; not that she thought Alinath
would treat Rinnie badly. So, Seraph was polite. “Rinnie is needed on the farm,” she
said with diplomacy that Tier would have applauded. “That farm will go to Lehr, sooner or later. Jes will be a
burden upon it and upon Lehr for as long as he lives,” said Alinath. “Tier will
not be able to give Rinnie a decent dowry and without that, with her mixed
blood, no one will have her.” Calm, Seraph told herself. “Jes more than carries his
own weight,” she said with as much outward serenity as she could muster. “He is
no burden. Any man who worries about Rinnie’s mixed blood is no one I want her
marrying. In any case, she’s only ten years old, and marriage is something she
won’t have to worry about for a long time.” “You are being stupid,” said Alinath. “I have approached the
Elders on the matter already. They know that scrap of land you have my brother
trying to farm is so poor he has to spend the winter trapping so you have food
on your table. It doesn’t really matter that you have no care for your
daughter; when the Elders step in, you’ll have no choice.” “Enough,” said Seraph, outrage lending unmistakable
power to that one word. No one was taking her children from her. No one. Alinath paled. No magic. Tier’s voice cautioned her, none at all,
Seraph. Not in Redem. Seraph closed her eyes and took a deep breath, trying to
cleanse herself of anger, and managed to continue speaking more normally. “You
may talk to Tier when he returns. But if anyone comes to try and take my
daughter before then ...” She let the unspoken threat hang in the air. “I agree,” said a mild voice from the kitchen. “Enough badgering,
Alinath.” Bandor entered from the baking room door with a large bowl of risen
dough. “If any of Seraph’s children want to apprentice we’d be glad to have
them here—but that’s for their parents to decide. Not you or the Elders.” He
nodded a greeting toward Seraph. “Bandor,” managed Seraph through her rage-tightened throat
“It’s good to see you.” . “You’ll have to excuse Alinath,” he said. “She’s been as worried
about Tier as you are. I’ve told her that it’s not fair to expect a man
trapping in the wild to come home on time every year. But he’s her brother, and
she frets. Tier’s only a few weeks late. He’ll show up.” “Yes,” Seraph agreed. “I’d best be going.” “Didn’t I hear you say you had some honey?” he asked. “Jes found some in the woods last week. I brought a few
dozen jars with me,” she answered. “But Alinath didn’t seem interested in it.” “Hummph,” said Bandor, with a glance at his wife. “We’ll
take twelve jars for half-copper a jar. Then you go to Willon up on the
heights, and tell him we’re paying a copper each for anything you don’t sell to
him. He’ll buy up your stock for that so he can compete. Yours is the first
honey this spring.” Without a word, Seraph took out her pack and pulled out
twelve jars, setting them on the counter. Just as silently, Alinath counted out
six coppers and set it beside the jars. When Seraph reached out to take the
money, the other woman’s hand clamped on her wrist. “If my brother had married Kirah”—Alinath said in a low
voice that was no less violent for its lack of sound—“he’d have had no need to
go to the mountains in the winter in order to feed his children.” Seraph’s chin jerked up and she twisted her wrist, freeing
it. “It has been near to two decades since Tier and I married. Find something
else to fret about.” “I agree,” said Bandor mildly, but there was something ugly
in his tone. Alinath flinched. Seraph frowned, having never seen Alinath afraid of anything
before—except Seraph herself on that one memorable occasion. She’d certainly
never seen anyone afraid of Bandor. Alinath’s face quickly rearranged
itself to the usual embittered expression she wore around Seraph, leaving only
a glint of fear in her eyes. “Thank you, Bandor, for your custom and your advice,” Seraph
said. As soon as the door was closed behind Seraph and she’d
started up the narrow, twisty road, she muttered to her absent husband. “See
what happens when you are away too long, Tier? You’d better get home soon, or
those Elders are in for a rude surprise.” She wasn’t really worried about the Elders. They weren’t stupid
enough to confront her, no matter what they thought should be done for Rinnie’s
benefit Once Tier was home, he could talk them out of whatever stupidity Alinath
had talked them into. He was good at that sort of thing. And if she was wrong,
and the Elders came to try to take Rinnie before Tier was home ... well, she
might have failed in her duties to her people, but she would never fail her
children. She wasn’t worried about Rinnie—but Tier was another matter
entirely. A thousand things could have delayed Tier’s return, she reminded
herself. He might even now be waiting at home. Even hardened by farmwork, Seraph’s calves ached by the time
she came to the door of Willon’s shop near the top edge of the village. When
she opened the homey door and stepped into the building, Willon was talking to
a stranger with several open packs on the floor, so she walked past him
and into the store. The only other person in the store was Giro, the tanner’s
father, who was stringing a small harp. The old man looked up when she came in
and returned her nod before going back to the harp. Willon’s store had once been a house. When he’d purchased
it, he’d excavated and built until his store extended well into the mountain.
He’d stocked the dark corners of the store with odds and bits from his merchant
days—and some of those were odd indeed—then added whatever he felt might sell. Seraph doubted many people knew what some of his things were
worth, but she recognized silk when she saw it—though doubtless the only piece
in Redem resided on the wall behind a shelf of carved ducks in Willon’s shop. She seldom had the money to shop here, but she loved to explore.
It reminded her of the strange places she’d been. Here was a bit of jade from
an island far to the south, and there a chipped cup edged in a design that reminded
her of a desert tribe who painted their cheeks with a similar pattern. Some of Willon’s wares were new, but much of it was secondhand.
In a back corner of one of a half dozen alcoves she found boxes of old boots
and shoes that still had a bit of life left in them. She took out the string she’d knotted and began measuring it
against the boots. In the very bottom of the second box she searched, she found
a pair made of thinner leather than usual for work boots. The sole was made for
walking miles on roads or forest trails, rather than tramping through the mud
of a farmer’s field. Her fingers lingered on the decorative stitches on the top
edge, hesitating where the right boot was stained with blood—though someone had
obviously worked to clean it away. Traveler’s boots. She didn’t compare them to her son’s feet, just set them
back in the box and piled a dozen pairs of other boots on top of them, as if
covering them would let her forget about them. In a third bin, she found what
she was looking for, and took a sturdy pair of boots up to the front. There is nothing I could have done, she told herself.
I am not a Traveler and have not been for years. But even knowing it was true, she couldn’t help the tug of
guilt that tried to tell her differently: to tell her that her place had never
been here, safe in Tier’s little village, but out in the world protecting those
who couldn’t protect themselves. “I can’t sell those here,” she heard Willon say to a
stranger at the front counter—a tinker by the color of his packs. “Folk ’round
here get upset with writing they can’t read—old traps of the Shadowed still
linger in these mountains. They know to fear magic, and even a stupid person’s
going to notice that those have Traveler’s marks on them.” “I bought them from a man in Korhadan. He claimed to have
collected them all,” said the tinker. “I paid him two silvers. I’ve had to
carry them from there to here. I’ll sell them for ten coppers, the entire bag,
sir, for I’m that tired of them. You’re the eighth merchant in as many towns as
told me the same thing, and they take up space in my packs as I might use for
something else. You surely could melt them down for something useful.” On the counter lay an assortment of objects that appeared
something like metal feathers. One end was sharp for a few inches, almost
daggerlike, but the other end was decorative and lacy. Some were short, but
most were as long as Seraph’s forearm, and one nearly twice that long. There
must have been nearly a hundred of them—mermori. “My son can work metal,” said Seraph, around the pulse of sorrow
that beat too heavily in her throat. There were so many of them. “He could turn
these into horseshoes. I can pay you six coppers.” “Done,” cried the fellow before Willon could say a thing. He
bundled them up in a worn leather bag and handed it to Seraph, taking the coins
she handed him. He gathered his packs together and carried them off as if he
were afraid she’d renege if he waited. Willon shook his head, “You shouldn’t have bought those, Seraph
Tieraganswife. Poor luck follows those who buy goods gotten by banditry and
murder the way those probably were.” A merchant to the bone, Willon should have objected to her
buying outright from the tinker rather than cut him in for a percentage—but
things like that happened when mermori were involved. “Travelers’ spells don’t hurt those of Traveler blood,” she
said in a low voice that wouldn’t carry to others in the store. Willon looked startled for a moment. “Ah. Yes, I had almost
forgotten that.” “So you think these were gotten by banditry?” she asked. “My sons tell me that they don’t call it that anymore.”
Willon shook his head in disapproval. “The present emperor’s father declared
the Travelers beyond the protection of his laws. The old man’s been dead for
years, but his son’s not going to change anything. He shuts himself up in the
palace and listens to people who tell him stories without questioning the truth
from falsehood, poor boy.” He spoke as if he knew him, but Seraph let it pass without
comment. Tier had told her that he thought that the caravanning business Willon
had retired from had been richer than he let on. He hadn’t changed much from
when he’d first come, other than the gradual lightening of his hair to white. Though
he must have been nearing his seventh decade, he looked much younger than that. “Ah well,” she said. “They’re pretty enough, but they’ll
make shoes for horses and buckles for harness, sir—surely if Travelers had that
much magic left they’d have used it to save themselves.” She set the boots
she’d selected on the counter. “Now, I need these for Jes, but I’ve spent my
coppers on the metal bits. In my pack I have some wild honey. I’ve sold a dozen
jars to Bandor at the bakery below for a half-penny apiece, and I’ve a little
more than twice that left” She’d looked, and hadn’t seen any honey in the
section where he kept a variety of jarred and dried goods. “My brother-in-law told me to tell you I sold him his at a
copper each,” she added with a small smile. Willon was one of the few villagers
she felt comfortable talking to—probably because he was an outsider too. “Aye, and he should have paid you that,” said Willon with a
snort. “Doubtless you know it, too. Taking advantage of his own kin.” “If Tier were home, we’d have given him the honey,” she
said, “which Bandor knows also.” Willon grinned. “I’ll buy what you’ve left for a copper
each—that’s a fair price. Especially if when that boy of yours finds more
honey, you bring it to me first.” “I’ll do that,” she said. “Thank you, Willon.” Thirty coppers for the honey minus ten for the boots left
her with twenty coppers, almost a whole silver. She tucked the coins in her
satchel as she left Willon’s shop, closing the door gently on the first few
notes of Giro’s harp. Her mind more on the mermori she’d bought from the
trader than on where she was going, she almost ran over a man who stood in the
way. “Excuse me,” she said apologetically, looking into his face. It was a good face, even-featured and wide-mouthed. He was
no one she knew, which was unusual. The village was small enough that even with
as little time as she spent there she knew everyone in it—at least by sight “A Traveler,” he said in a tone of near delight that shocked
her. Her reaction must have been easy to read because he laughed.
“I must sound like an idiot—I just hadn’t expected to run into a
Traveler here. I thought your people avoid coming here. Some aversion to being
so near Shadow’s Fall?” Aversion to being near people so fearful of magic, she
almost answered him, but not even surprise could loosen her habitual control
over her tongue. A look of comprehension crossed his face. “You must be Seraph
Tieraganswife. That’s why people speak of you ...” he seemed to realized that however people spoke of her
wouldn’t exactly be flattering and stumbled to a halt. If she had not been holding a bag of mention that reminded
her of the plight of the Travelers and her failure to live the life she’d been
called to serve, she might have helped him. But he’d talked his way into
offense, and she let him find his own way out. “I am sorry,” he said sincerely after a moment. “When I am excited
I tend to talk too much. Let me introduce myself properly. I am Volis, priest
of the Path of the Five.” “Seraph Tieraganswife,” she replied shortly, though she made
no move to leave. He was distracting her from her guilt, and for the moment she
was content that he continue to do so. She’d known that there was a new priest in town, of course.
Even if she’d forgotten, the new temple at the very top of the road would have
reminded her. He’d come from Taela with the new Sept last fall, and stayed when
the Sept returned to his duties in the capitol of the Empire. But she hadn’t
paid much heed to the news—she was still too much Traveler to worship in the
houses of the gods. Volis grinned at her, “I was right. I’m sorry to overwhelm
you, but the Travelers are a hobby of mine, though I’ve only met a few of
them.” What was she to say to that? she wondered and said nothing. “Do you have a while to spare?” he asked. “I have a wealth
of questions to ask you—and I’d like to show you the temple.” She glanced at the sun, but her business had taken very
little time and the pack of mermori was a cold, hard thing she would
have to deal with as soon as she left Redem. So she raised an eyebrow and nodded her head. Tier would
have laughed and called her “Empress” if she had done such a thing to him. This
boy merely smiled, as if he’d been certain she would follow him. He had, she
thought, a tithe of Tier’s charm and was used to having people obey him. He turned and led the way up the road, which was so steep
that it was set in stairs. “I would have been just as happy with something like the
rest of Redem,” he said. “But the new Sept was convinced that I would be
happier in something more modern looking.” “The Sept is a follower of your five gods?” Seraph asked. “Gods save us, no,” laughed Volis. “But he was willing to do
a favor when a few of the Path’s Elders twisted his arm to place a temple
here.” “Why here?” asked Seraph. “Why not in Leheigh, which also
belongs to the Sept? Surely you would find more followers in the larger city.” Volis smiled. “I have not done so badly here. Your own
family attends my meetings. In fact, I was on my way to consult with Bandor
when you ran into me—and I couldn’t resist the chance to have a Traveler to
speak to. But the main reason I am here—instead of a really big city, like Korhadan,
for instance—is Shadow’s Fall. We feel that there are things on the old
battlefield that might enlighten us.” Shadow’s Fall? Seraph bit back her opinion of the stupidity
of anyone who wanted to explore there. Doubtless the battlefield could educate
this solsenti fool better than she. Like Willon’s shop and many of the buildings on the steeper
slopes, the temple had been built into the mountain. The facade was raw timber
and crude, except for the doors, which were smooth and oiled until they were almost
black. Volis ushered her inside, and Seraph had to stop in the
threshold to allow her eyes to adjust from the brightness outside. The room was a richly appointed antechamber that would have
been more at home in a Sept’s keep than in a village temple. Either the—what
was it Volis had called it?—the Path of the Five was a rich church indeed, or
the Sept owed its Elders a lot of favors. “There are only three temples,” said Volis, seeing her expression.
“Two in Taela and this one. We intend this to be a place of pilgrimage.” “ Shadow’s Fall,” said Seraph, “a place of pilgrimage.” “Where the Five triumphed over evil,” said the priest, apparently
oblivious to the doubt in her voice. “Come and see the refuge, where I hold
services.” Seraph followed him through a tapestry-curtained entrance
into a room like none she’d ever seen before. The excavations were far more extensive than she had thought
The ceiling of the chamber soared overhead like an upside-down bowl. Near the
edge it was a single handspan over the doorway, in the center of the room it
rose three times the height of a tall man. The stone walls, floors, and ceiling
were as smooth as polished marble. This ... this was built in the short season since the new
Sept came to explore his inheritance? The ‘ceiling was painted a light sky-blue that darkened gradually
to black on the walls. The light that illuminated the room seemed to emanate
from that skylike ceiling. Magic, thought Seraph, solsenti magic. But
her attention was on the figures that occupied the false firmament. Chasing
each other endlessly around the perimeter of the ceiling were five life-sized
birds painted with exquisite detail. Volis was silent as she walked past him to the center of the
room. Lark, she thought, chills creeping down her spine. A
cormorant’s brilliant eyes invited her to play in the stormy winds. An owl
glided on silent wings toward the black raven, who held a bright silver and
ruby ring in its mouth, while next in line a falcon began its stoop. Together
they circled the room, caught in endless flight. In the center of the ceiling, twice as large as any other, a
river eagle caught the winds and twisted its head to look down upon the room as
if to examine its prey. Each bird a representative of the six Orders of the Travelers. “Behold the Five,” said Volis softly in a language Seraph
hadn’t heard since the day her brother died. “Lark the healer, Cormorant who
rules the weather. Owl of wisdom and memory, Raven the mage, Falcon the hunter.
And above them all, trapped in darkness is the secret god, the lost god. You
didn’t know about the lost god, did you?” “They are not gods,” said Seraph in her tongue. Though, she
remembered, in the old stories of before they Traveled, her people had believed
that there were gods as he had described. But as the Old Wizards had grown in
knowledge and power they had put those fallacies behind them. As if she hadn’t spoken, Volis pointed to the eagle. “I
found him, in books so old they crumbled at my touch, in hints in ancient
songs. For generations the Elders of the Path have worshiped only the
Five—until I found the lost god.” “The Eagle?” said Seraph, caught between an urge to laugh at
the idea of solsenti worshiping the Orders as gods, and distaste.
Distaste won. “The Eagle.” He looked pleased. “My discovery led me to be
honored by this appointment,” he waved a hand to indicate the temple. “Congratulations,” said Seraph, because he seemed to expect
her to say something of the sort. She glanced at the ceiling again and wondered
what her father would have said if he’d seen it. “I have gleaned some things,” he said. “The Eagle is
protected by the others, so that he can rescue them in some future time, when
they are all at risk and the world hangs in the balance.” She’d taught Tier that song in translation, a child’s tune
to teach them about the Orders. Obviously the translation that Volis had
happened upon had been less careful. He made it sound as if the Eagle’s purpose
as Guardian was for some single, predestined event. Eagerly the young priest turned to Seraph and took her
hands. “I see from your face that you know about the Eagle.” “We do not speak of the Eagle to outsiders,” said Seraph. “But I’m not an outsider,” he said waving an impassioned
hand at the ceiling. “I know about Travelers; I’ve spent my life
studying them. Please, tell me what you know of the Eagle.” Seraph didn’t suffer fools gladly—she certainly didn’t aid
and abet their stupidity. It was time to go home. “I am sorry,” she
said. “I have work awaiting me. Thank you for showing me around; the artwork is
very good.” “You have to tell me more,” he caught her arm before she
could leave. “You don’t understand. I know it is the Elders of the Path
of the Five who must free it,” “Free it?—she asked, and that chill that had touched her
upon seeing the Birds of the Orders in a solsenti temple strengthened,
distracting her from the encroaching grip of his arm. “In hiding him,” said Volis earnestly, “the Five trapped
him, for his protection. ‘Sleep on, guarded be, until upon waking destroys and
saves’—” Seraph started. That bit of poetry had no business being
spoken in the mouth of a solsenti, no matter how well he spoke Traveler.
It had nothing to do with the Eagle, but ... “He must be freed,” said Volis. “And the Master of the Path
has foreseen that it is we of the Path who will free the Stalker.” “The Stalker is not the Eagle,” Seraph said involuntarily,
then could have bitten off her tongue. This was dangerous, dangerous
knowledge. He was mistaken about the Eagle, about the Orders being gods, but
the Stalker ... He turned his mad gaze to her. He must have been mad. Only a
madman would speak of freeing the Stalker. “Ah,” he said. “What do you know about the Stalker?” “No more than you,” she lied. She fought to draw in a full breath and reminded herself
that this man was a solsenti, a solsenti possessed of more
knowledge that he should have—but even if he were so mistaken as to confuse the
Eagle with the Stalker, he still should be harmless enough. She gave him a short bow, Raven to stranger rather than good
Redemi wife to priest, and used the motion to break free of his grasp. “I have work,” she said. “Thank you for your time—I’ll see
myself out.” She turned on her heel and strode rapidly to the curtained entrance,
waiting for him to try and stop her, but he did not By the time she was on the bridge, she’d lost most of the
fear that her visit with the new priest had engendered. The Stalker was well
and truly imprisoned, and not even the Shadowed, who had almost destroyed the
human race, had been able to free it A solsenti priest with a handful of
half-understood information was not a threat—at least not to the world as a
whole, but she would still have to consider what Volis’s fancies would mean to
her and hers. Dismissing the priest as an immediate threat left her with
no distraction for the burden she carried. Though the honey jars were gone,
almost a hundred weight of them, her pack carried stones that weighed her soul
more than her back. As soon as Seraph left the main road for the cover of the
trail, she stopped and pulled out the bag of mermori and counted them.
Eighty-three. Her hand tightened on the last one until the sharp edge of
the end drew blood. Hurriedly she wiped off the mermora; it was never a
good thing to expose magicked things to blood. When she was certain it was
clean, she put them back in the leather bag and returned the whole bundle to
her pack. “There’s nothing I can do,” she said fiercely, though there
was no one to hear her. “I don’t know anything. I have no more ability
than a dozen other Ravens who have all failed to prevent the demise of the
Travelers. Here, in this place, I have three children who need me. There are
fields to be planted and gardens to tend and a husband to welcome me home.
There is nothing I can do.” But, by Lark and Raven, eighty-three. She swallowed. Maybe
Tier would be home when she returned. She needed him to be home. The land that Seraph and Tier farmed was in a very small hanging
valley, most of which was too rocky to plant. They had no close neighbors. It
had been virgin land when they had come there as newly married strangers. From the vantage point of a knoll above the valley. Seraph
fought back the feeling that it would all go back to wild within the decade—she
was no farseer, just tired. She adjusted her pack and started down the faint
trail. Trees gave way to grass and field. As soon as she started on
the path above the cabin, a joyous bark preceded Gura as he charged up the
trail to welcome her home. “Hello, fool dog,” she said, and he rolled at her feet in
rapture at her recognition of him, coating his thick fur in spring mud. He was huge and black, covered with hair that needed daily
grooming. Tier’d come home from town one evening with a black eye and a
frightened, half-starved puppy with huge feet. Always collecting strays, was
her husband. Seraph bit back tears, and shook her head at the dog. “Come,
Gura, let’s see how my lad did on his own today.” The huge dog lumbered to his feet and shook himself off,
sloughing off the puppy antics with the mud. He accompanied her to the cabin
with solemn dignity. With Gura’s welcome to warn her family, Seraph wasn’t surprised
to find Lehr and Rinnie quietly working in the cabin. “Ma!” said her youngest in tones of utter relief. “Lehr was so
mean. He yelled at me when I was already doing what he asked me to.” At ten, Rinnie had recently adopted the role of family
arbitrator and informant—which was having the expected results with her
siblings. She took after Seraph more than anyone in the—family at least in
looks. Rinnie was short with Seraph’s pale hair that stood out so in Redem’s
dark population. In temperament she more resembled her father, sharing both his
calm good sense and his flair for drama. Seraph hugged her and looked up at Lehr. “We finished turning the garden,” said Lehr repressively.
“And we planted a good third of it before Rinnie whined so much I let her go
inside.” “He made me work hard,” said Rinnie, still not giving
up the hope of getting her brother in trouble. When Rinnie stuck her tongue out at Lehr, he ignored it.
Last year he would have retaliated—or smiled at her, knowing that her reaction
would be worth whatever trouble he’d get in. “Thank you, Lehr,” Seraph said, standing on her toes to kiss
his cheek. “I know it’s not an easy job to keep this lazy girl working. I can
tell by the stew on the hob and the pile of carded wool that the both of you
came inside and rested like the highborn.” He laughed and hugged her. “She was fine. We’d have gotten the
whole garden done, Mother, if Jes had stuck around. He left sometime after
lunch—I didn’t even see him go.” “I can talk to him,” she offered. Lehr shook his head. “No, it’s all right. I know he does the
best he can. It’s just that with Papa gone, we need him. When he can keep his
mind on it, he can work as well as Papa does. Mother, the Sept’s steward was
here today.” “Forder?” Seraph asked, taking her cloak and hood off and
hanging them on the cloak tree by the door. “What did he want?” “He looked at the fields and asked if Papa was back yet.
When I told him no, he said the new Sept was demanding quarter again as much
for our tithe payment this year as last—of the garden and the fields. He said
that it’s almost past time to get the fields plowed.” Seraph put her pack against the wall. “I know, Lehr. We’ve
waited as long as we could. We’ll just have to break ground without Tier. We
can start tomorrow—no, day after tomorrow so I have time to look at the harness
and plow to make repairs. Don’t worry about the increased tithe; Tier said to
expect some kind of increase with the new Sept.” “Forder said the Sept had a horse we could lease, if we
needed.” “No.” She shook her head. When he’d left, Tier had taken the
young mare they’d bought last year, leaving their old gelding to his
retirement. “Skew knows these fields, and old as he is, he’ll do the job until
Tier gets back. We can’t afford to start leasing a horse, not if the Sept is
taking more of the harvest.” Outside the door, Gura gave a howl more suited to a dire
wolf than a dog, which was answered by a wail both higher and wilder. “Jes is home,” said Rinnie unnecessarily, for the door flew
back on its hinges and Seraph’s oldest child bounded in the door. “Mother, Mother,” he sang out. “I found a rabbit for
dinner.*’ He held out an enormous jackrabbit, already gutted, beheaded, and
skinned. “Jesaphi, my love,” Seraph said. “I am very glad that you
found a rabbit. But you need to shed some mud before you come inside.” Of all her children, Jes looked the most like his father.
Taller by a head than Lehr, Jes was lean and dark. Lehr was lean, too, but he
had Seraph’s pale hair. Like Tier, Jes was not handsome; his nose was thin and
too long. A deep dimple peered out of his left cheek, and his eyes were dark,
velvet brown. “I’m sorry, Mother,” he said shedding his exuberance like a
coat. “I didn’t mean to—to get muddy.” It was Jes’s voice that gave him away even to the least observant.
There was something wrong in the pitch and the singsong way he talked. He wasn’t simple, like the cooper’s son, but his affliction
appeared very similar and people assumed they were the same. Seraph had seen no
reason to confuse anyone but Tier with the truth. “Not to worry.” Seraph soothed Jes with one of the light touches,
which were usually all he could bear. “While the others set the table, you and
I’ll go clean you up.” “Did I do something wrong?” he asked anxiously. “No, love, come with me.” She took his hand and led him outside
to help him scrub off. In the middle of the night, unable to sleep, Seraph rose
quietly out of her too-empty bed in the loft and dressed. She opened a trunk
and took from it a large bag that dangled heavily from its worn cords. The
ladder steps were tight and let out no sound that might wake Lehr, who was a
light sleeper. The pack by the door still held the boots she’d gotten Jes;
she’d forgotten to give them to him. Seraph took them out and set them to the
side. She put the bag she’d taken from her room into the pack where the shoes
had been, then quietly let herself out. On the porch, Gura watched her with glittering eyes that
hinted at wolf somewhere in his background. “Shh,” she said. “Stay and watch.” Gura subsided and dropped his face back down on his forepaws,
jowls sliding loosely to either side. “I’ll be back soon enough,” she explained as if he’d understand.
“I just can’t sleep. There are things I have to work out.” Gura closed his eyes—sulking, she knew, because she hadn’t
asked him along. She followed a path behind the cabin that led into the
forest. The moon was high and her night vision was better than most so she had
little trouble finding her way. She walked a mile or so until she came to the meadow she
sought She set her pack down and opened it. “Eighty-three,” she said to herself, taking out the leather
bag she’d gotten in town as well as the bag from her trunk, “and a hundred and
forty-one.” She took one of the mention out and stuck it into the
ground, point down, so it stuck up like a short fencepost. She took another out
and measured it with her fingers then paced out a distance from the second. She
did the same with the third and the fourth as the moon crept across the sky. “What do you do, Mother?” She’d been so involved in the mention that she hadn’t
heard him. The low, velvety voice sounded so much like Tier’s that she had to
swallow. Despite her excellent eyesight and the moon she couldn’t see Jes in
the night. “I’ve told you some stories about the Travelers,” she said,
setting the last mermora she held into the earth, and walked back for
more. He didn’t reply immediately. She heard no footstep, but was
not surprised that he’d followed her back to the pack. “Yes,” he said close enough that the warmth of his breath
touched the back of her neck. Traveler-bred though she was, the vast difference
between her daytime son and this, more dangerous Jes disconcerted her, a mother
should not fear her child. “We are the descendants of the wizards who lived in Colossae
long before the Shadowed came to destroy mankind,” she said, ignoring the
shiver Jes’s voice had sent down her spine. “Yes,” he acknowledged, pacing beside her as she took a handful
of the mermori to an empty spot in the meadow and continued to measure
out distances. He was barefoot. Only she and Tier knew what her gentle-natured child became
away from the safety of the cabin. “Colossae was a great city of learning, and wizards came
from all the earth to study and learn there. For generations they gathered and
learned magic and forgot wisdom, until at last they created the greatest evil
their hearts had ever imagined.” She had told her children very little about the Travelers,
hoping that they would all become Redemi, like Tier. But Lehr and Rinnie
carried the Traveler’s looks, and Jes carried the Traveler’s curse. It had occurred to her, lying awake in her bed before she’d
left it, that with a priest who knew too much and garbled truth with lies, it
might be a good idea to teach her children more. She’d start tonight with Jes. “By the time the wizards realized what they had done, it was
too late to undo their making, almost too late to control it. As it was, only a
great sacrifice could stop their creation, and Colossae was killed to imprison
the Stalker, before it could destroy the world,” she said. “The wizards who survived
were sent to Travel the earth and keep it free of the Stalker’s corruption,
because such evil, even bound, was not without power. Even so great a sacrifice
as a city of light and knowledge could not hold it completely, nor keep it forever.” “Yes” Jes said again. This time she caught a glimpse of eyes
glowing a bit red in the night “What is it?” she asked. “Is there someone here?” “Not now,” he said, at last, a growl in his voice that
wasn’t quite human. “But there have been hunters in the forest who do not
belong. They hunt for sport and that offends the forest—and they’ve come too
near to the cabin for my liking.” “The new Sept is supposed to be quite a hunter,” she told
him. “Some of the nobles the Sept brought with him from Taela stayed when he
left. Is this hunting something that you must stop?” “No,” he replied after a moment. “The forest king told me he
will take care of these men if necessary.” Seraph shivered a little at the tone
of her son’s voice when he said “men”—it told her that her son, in this aspect
at least, did not consider himself one. “This forest yet has the power to keep
out killers who hunt wastefully,” he said. Seraph set another mermora. “You were talking about Colossae,” he reminded her after
she’d placed the mermora she held and was walking back for another
handful. “Ah, yes.” She decided it was too much trouble to keep
coming back so she transferred all that were left into the largest bag and
carried that with her. “It was decided after the wizards left and the city died,
that they should meet in secret every year. But they had truly bound the evil,
and there was no great need of the wizards in those early years so the meetings
began to take place every two years, then every five. “The merman”—she sorted through and held up a fragile-seeming
mermora no longer than her index finger—“were created by the wizard
Hinnum and gifted to each of the wizards who left the city. They were passed
down to the eldest of each family and in the beginning it is said they numbered
five hundred and four. Until the Shadowed rose to power, some five centuries
ago, each mermora was held by a large clan, but when the Army of Man gathered
to fight the creatures the Shadowed had gathered, Travelers were forefront in
the armies—because the Stalker, still imprisoned in Colossae, controlled the
Shadowed. More than half of the army fell that day, taking with it most of the
Travelers who fought there.” “You never told me that before—that the Shadowed was caused
by the thing the wizards bound in Colossae.” She smiled a little grimly, “It’s not something that we talk
about openly. If people knew that we Travelers held ourselves responsible for
the Shadowed, they’d make certain we suffered for it. Even some of the clans
claimed there was no connection between the two—or that the Shadowed was the
Stalker itself and that we should be freed of our tasks.” She set another mermora into the ground. “I remember
a discussion at the last Gather I went to. One of the Clan Fathers proposed
that we quit searching out evil. He said things like, ‘We destroyed the Shadow,
completed the tasks the Old Ones gave us. We should settle while there is still
good land unclaimed.’ Then my father stood up and said, ‘Arrogance has always
been the Traveler’s Bane. The Shadowed was not the Stalker, but merely a man corrupted
by it. My grandfather had this story through his line. When the Raven who faced
the Shadowed and reduced him to ashes returned to his circle, he told them that
the creature he’d killed had never touched the stones of Colossae. We fought
true evil on that day, but our task remains.’” Seraph laughed a little at the memory. “My father was a showman.
He didn’t wait for the debate that followed, but excused himself to his tent
and would speak no more about it. My grandfather always said that if you don’t
argue, you can’t be proved wrong.” “So your father was the only reason the Travelers kept Traveling?” Seraph shook her head. “No—it wouldn’t have worked if they’d
really wanted to settle down. It was hard enough for me to stay here—and I
would have followed your father through the Shadowed’s Realm if I’d had to.
Staying was more difficult. Travelers are well named.” Jes followed her silently as she began her task again. Jes
was good at silence. “I remember going to two Gathers as a child,” she said,
taking out another mermora and setting it upright. “There were two hundred
and thirty mermori held by just over two hundred clans at the first one.
I can remember my mother fretting about how few there were. She died before I
went to the second Gather, when I was thirteen. There were fewer than two
hundred then—and many clans carried more than one.” The largest mermora she had saved for last, having
left an extensive corner of the meadow for it. “The mermori were too dangerous
to allow them to exist without safeguards, so Hinnum spelled them so that,
eventually, they would find their way into the hands of the eldest of the
closest relatives of those who had died and left the mermori lost.” “Mother,” said Jes, after a bit. “There are two hundred
twenty-four mermori here.” “I know,” she whispered. “I’ve been acquiring them a few at
a time since I married your father. Today I bought eighty-three from a tinker.” “Eighty-three,” he said, startled into losing, for a moment,
the aura of danger he carried. “How did you pay for them? They are solid silver
and worth more than—” “People don’t always see that they are silver,” she said,
trying to pace off the area for the largest of them again—she kept losing
count. “Sometimes they appear to be iron or even wood. Most people dislike them
on sight I paid six coppers for them, and the merchant I bought them from will
shortly forget exactly what it was I bought, except that he came out ahead on
the deal.” “Ah,” he said and walked beside her for a while, gradually
blending into the darkness until she couldn’t see him if she looked
straight on. She caught glimpses of him sometimes when she wasn’t quite
looking. Sometimes she saw a man who looked like her husband, but more
dangerous. At others she saw a dark animal that prowled on four legs. Sometimes
if she turned her head and looked at him directly for too long, he disappeared
into the night It was only illusion, she knew, though he could take on shapes
of animals if he chose. But illusion or not, it was disconcerting. “What do they do?” he asked finally. She set the last one in. “I’ll show you. Come with me.” The meadow was set on a rise and she took her son to the highest
point. She had never done this with so many before. At the Gathers, the elders
from all the families would stand in a circle and chant together. She held out both hands and shouted imperiously, “Ishavan
shee davenadre hovena Hinnumadraun.” It had been so long since she’d allowed herself this much
magic. She did only a little magic now and then—when they planted their crops,
and when she warded the farm to keep the more dangerous creatures of the mountains
away. Even after so long, it came eagerly to her call, thrumming
from her bones to the earth, reverberating through the dirt, rotting vegetation,
and newborn sprigs of grass. Jes let out a startled snarl as the meadow lit up with the
windows of two hundred and twenty-four houses. Some were smaller than their
cabin, but most were as large as the largest of the houses in Redem. By chance
she’d put two in such a way that they blended into each other, sharing a
wall—it looked so right that Seraph wondered if the houses might have stood in
just such a relative location in Colossae. In the very corner of the meadow
stood a small castle. The architecture of the houses was distinctly foreign,
the windows open and rounded, the roofs covered with some kind of green pottery
tiles. “It’s all right,” she reassured Jes, though her eyes were
held by the castle. “They are all illusion. The wizards could take only the
most necessary of articles because they could not risk giving warning to the
enemy before they fled. They couldn’t take any of their libraries—So Hinnum
created the mermori, which remember the homes of the wizards as they
stood in Colossae so long ago. Come with me.” She led her son to one of the smaller ones, a brick-faced
home no bigger than Alinath’s bakery, though much more gracile.
Ebony wood doors were worn near the latch, giving testimony of the age of the
building. “This was the mermora my father carried from his father. It
belonged to Isolda the Silent, who died when they sealed the city.” Seraph
pulled the door latch, felt the metal cool against her fingers. The door opened
with a soft groan, and she stepped inside. “Illusion?” Jes questioned, stepping in beside her. The
light from Isolda’s oil lamps showed a young man rather than a beast. “I can smell oil and herbs—some I know, like anise, henbane,
but there are many I can’t identify.” “Hinnum was a very great illusionist. Legend says he was
four hundred years old when the city fell,” she said, trailing her fingers over
the familiar shawl that hung neatly on the back of a chair as if it only waited
for Isolda to return from some errand. “But all that this is, is illusion.” She turned to her son.
“If it is raining outside and you come in, you will not feel the rain—but when
you walk out you will be wet If you are freezing to death and come in, you’ll
feel warm and still die from the cold.” “How long ago did the city die?” asked Jes, touching a
carved table. For a moment Seraph allowed herself to see the house anew,
recognizing how alien it appeared to him. Perhaps a lord’s house would be
furnished with wooden tables and shelves polished like the surface of a
windless lake, but no dwelling in Redem held such treasures. “I’m not certain,” she replied. “It was long before the Shadowed
came to rule—and that was about six hundred years ago if the stories crediting
him with a hundred-year reign are correct. Colossae was a city with over a
million people, three times the size of Taela, and only the Travelers remember
its name.” “Where did it lie?” “I don’t know,” answered Seraph. “It doesn’t matter. The
city is protected against intruders.” “Is?” “As far as I know the city is still there—if it weren’t, the
Stalker would be free. The people died along with the less tangible things that
make up a community and the bones of the city seal the Stalker’s prison. Jes turned from where he was examining one of the walls,
which had a mural depicting a forest scene. “If this is all illusion, then why
were the ancient wizards so concerned about the mermori?” Seraph smiled and headed through a narrow doorway. The room
beyond was twice as big as the first room and the walls were lined with shelves
of books. “This is what they tried to save—within these buildings is all
that they knew of magic. But many of the languages the books are written in
were lost. I know only four or five. My father knew more—and I fear they are
lost with him, and with the others who are gone, because I hold almost half the
mermori that were made.” Chapter 4“Co catch some fish for dinner, you two.” Seraph made shooing
motions at Lehr and Rinnie. “I’ll take care of the breakfast dishes and getting
the plowing equipment ready. There’ll be work enough for us all in the coming
weeks, and we’ve but little salt meat left. I for one will be glad of some
river trout. You two pack a lunch and catch what you can.” “What about the stew we made with Jes’s rabbit yesterday,
Mother?” said Lehr. “There’s plenty left. Checking the harness won’t take all
day; we should get started on the fields as soon as we can.” “Tomorrow is soon enough for plowing,” Seraph replied
firmly. “Gura ate the last of the slew this morning.” Or he would as soon as
she fed it to him. She needed time and quiet to think. “Papa would not leave you unprotected,” said Lehr, clearly
torn between duty and pleasure. Rinnie tugged at his sleeve. “I think Gura is enough to
scare off anyone—you know how he is with strangers. And how often do people
come here?” Lehr clenched his jaw. “I haven’t seen Jes this morning “ he
said. “He spent the night in the woods,” Seraph replied. “I expect
he’ll be back this evening. If you see him, you might tell him I’m baking bread
today.” “He’ll be home then for sure,” said Rinnie. She’d already collected
cheese and crackers in a cloth and was busy tying it together. “Come on, Lehr.
If we don’t get out soon, the fish won’t bite.” His resolve broke. He kissed Seraph on the forehead, grabbed
his sister’s arm, and made for the barn, where they stored the fishing gear. Seraph smiled after them and turned back to wash up after
breakfast and begin mixing dough for bread. “Aren’t we going to the river?” asked Rinnie, lifting her
skirts to scramble up a rise behind Lehr. It wasn’t often that she got to join
in on fishing expeditions. Usually it was just Lehr, or sometimes Lehr and Jes.
When she went, she had to go with Papa and Mother. “Not first I thought we’d try the creek. Jes showed me a
good place where he says the trout like to sun. I haven’t tried it yet, but—” ‘ “But if Jes says it’s good, we’re sure to catch something,”
replied Rinnie happily. The soft leather sole of her shoe skidded on a rock, and
Lehr turned and caught her shoulder to steady her before she fell. “Be a little more careful,” Lehr said sternly. “The rocks
are still wet with snow runoff here. I don’t want to bring you back with too
much damage.” Rinnie made a face at him behind his back then paid strict attention
to her feet so he wouldn’t have to help her again. He wasn’t a bad older
brother—if he’d just quit trying to be Papa. Rinnie watched her brother’s back as he navigated the zigzag
route through old downed trees. Hard muscle filled last year’s shirt and
stretched the shoulders taut. He’d need a new shirt soon. She sighed; she knew
who would get to sew that shirt Mother could sew, but she didn’t like it. She wondered when they’d meet up with Jes. She’d never gone
out in the woods without him that he’d not come upon her sooner or later. Lehr
liked to say it was the most dependable thing about Jes. Jes worked hard, but he was as apt as not to leave the plow in
the middle of the field, horse and all, if the whim took him. He was always
worse in the springtime. Papa said it was because the winter snows kept him too
confined. By midsummer Jes would cut down his treks to once a se’nnight or so,
rather than every day. Last year at harvest he’d worked almost the whole time. Ahead of her, Lehr turned off the deer trail they’d been
following and started down the steep side into a ravine and began skidding
downhill. About halfway down he had to slow and pick his way through the
underbrush that lined most of the lower ground. The branches caught at Rinnie’s
skins until she fell some distance behind Lehr, who was already off the slope
and starting up the valley. She tried to hurry and ended up with her hair
tangled around the thorns of a wild rose. “Wait up,” she called, and began working the errant strand
free with impatient jerks that did as much to worsen the mess as to free her. “Wait up?” said an interested male voice from the ridge opposite
the one she and Lehr had traveled to get here. She jerked her gaze up to see Storne, the miller’s son, with
a couple of the boys he ran with peering down at her. Papa always said that the
miller gave Storne too little to do. Leave a young man without a task, and
he’ll make mischief instead, he’d said. Then Papa’d looked at her and told her to stay away from
Storne when he had other boys with him, no matter how polite he was when they
met at the mill, for a boy out to impress his friends will do things he
wouldn’t do on his own. The boys Storne had with him today were no prizes: Olbeck,
the steward’s son, and Lukeeth, whose father was one of the wealthier merchants
from town. Rinnie drew the knife out of her belt sheath and cut her
hair, stepping out of the bushes. She made no move to leave, because you never
run from predators. The knife she kept in her hand as if she’d forgotten about
it. “Rinnie?” Lehr called impatiently. He must not have heard
Storne, who’d spoken no louder than he had to. “Here,” she called. She didn’t want to start trouble by implying that she was worried
about Storne and the boys who watched her so she didn’t say anything more, but
something in her voice must have alerted Lehr because he came crashing through
the trees at a run. His eyes roved over the strands of hair dangling from the
rose bush and traveled uphill to Storne and his friends. “Should have tied your hair up,” he snapped. Relief gave way to hurt that he would criticize her in front
of such an audience. “Well, if it ain’t the little Traveler boy,” said Lukeeth,
sloe-eyed and slightly taller than Storne. “Does your father know you walked out on your tutor again?”
replied Lehr with such mildness that Rinnie’s jaw wanted to drop, especially
after the nasty way he’d blamed this on her. Lehr had Mother’s quick temper and
over the last couple of years, “boy” had become an epithet. “My tutor wouldn’t dare tell him,” Lukeeth laughed. “Then
I’d tell Father what the silly ass keeps in his water flask and he’d be out
like the last one. That your little sister? Another Traveler’s brat, just like
you.” “Pretty thing,” said Olbeck casually. Rinnie began to get really worried. Lehr was tough; her
father had taught him a few tricks, and her as well for that matter. But Olbeck
was almost a foot taller than Storne—who was as big as Lehr—and he didn’t have
that soft look that most of the village boys had. She couldn’t read his tone,
but it sent the other boys off into laughter that sounded more predatory than
happy. “Td heard you’d taken to running with scavengers, Storne,”
chided Lehr before turning to the ringleader. “Olbeck, I thought you’d decided
to stay out of the woods after you ran into Jes that time last fall.” A flush rose in Olbeck’s face. Lukeeth snickered but
subsided when Olbeck glanced at him. “Predators, not scavengers,” said Olbeck. “You’re just disappointed
that Storne decided he’d rather hunt with the wolves than graze with sheep like
you, Traveler’s brat,” he sneered. “As for your brother—if I’d realized he was
crazy I’d have just slit his throat that day, a mercy killing, like I’d do to
any other poor beast” Until Olbeck’s words reminded her, Rinnie’d almost forgotten
that Storne and Lehr had once been best friends. But something had happened
several years ago, Lehr wouldn’t say what, and he’d even quit going with Papa
to the mill. “I’ll tell Jes you’d like to meet him again,” said
Lehr pleasantly. “I’ll relay your exact words to him. I’m sure he’ll be impressed—since
you’ve never so much as gutted a cow. Rinnie, why don’t you go home and let us
talk a bit” “No, Rinnie,” said Olbeck. He smiled at her, “I think you’d
better just stay there. The two of us can have a conversation after
we’ve finished ... conversing with your brother.” Lehr turned to her and whispered, “Run, Rinnie, now. Don’t
stop until you get home.” Knowing that without her there, the other boys wouldn’t be
as interested in fighting, she fled back up the hill as fast as she could
without looking back, the small knife cold in her fist. Home wasn’t so far
away. If she could get within hearing distance she could call Gura. Even a
grown man would think twice before taking on the big dog. She heard the dull mud of fist on flesh before she topped
the ravine. But she couldn’t worry about the fight now because at least one of
them had gotten past Lehr and was trailing her up the side of the ridge. She
could hear him crashing through the brush like an ox. When she reached the trail and her footing was more certain
she glanced back and saw that it was Olbeck who’d taken up the chase, and she
stretched out to run as fast as she ever had. With Olbeck following her, Lehr had a chance. Storne was the
only one of the boys who had enough muscle to give Lehr a real fight. Her
brother was tough as an old wolf; he’d use the rough terrain to his advantage. The trail’s upward slope robbed her legs of speed and her
chest of breath, but she didn’t dare slow down. Her eyes were focused firmly on
the ground in front of her. When someone reached out and snagged her off her
feet she thought it was Olbeck. She kicked him once, before she realized it was Jes and
stilled, gasping for breath. He set her down gently, the expression on his face
different than she’d ever seen it. She didn’t have time to understand what the
difference was before he stepped in front of her and turned his attention to
Olbeck. “Thought I told you stay out of my woods,” said Jes, only it
didn’t sound like Jes at all. Menace clung to his voice and promise. The
familiar singsong softness was gone as if it had never been. “These aren’t your woods,” said Olbeck, who’d stopped a few
lengths down the trail, though he didn’t sound intimidated. “My father is
steward for the Sept. If these are anyone’s woods, they are mine.” Safe behind Jes, she couldn’t see the expression on his
face, but Olbeck blanched. “Run, boy,” purred Jes. “See if you can outrun your nightmares.” Rinnie tried to step around Jes’s shoulder, but he stepped
sideways, keeping her behind him. Showing the whites of his eyes like a spooked
horse, Olbeck turned and ran. “There’re still two fighting Lehr,” Rinnie rasped and then
threw up. It was messy and nasty, as she had to gasp for air between
convulsions. Jes gathered her hair out of the way and waited for her to finish. “Ran too fast,” he said. “Lehr’s down that way?” She spat to clear the taste out of her mouth. “Yes. Toward
the fishing hole you showed him in the creek,” she said. “It’s Storne and
Lukeeth.” Jes looked at her, and the oddness was still there—a
sharpness she wasn’t used to seeing. “All right, now?” “Yes,” she said. He nodded and took off at a jog. It took her a moment to recover
her breath. As soon as she knew she wasn’t going to be sick again, she
scrambled to her feet and headed down after Jes. Somehow with Jes there she
wasn’t afraid of the village-boys anymore. She wouldn’t have thought that Jes,
of all people, could make her feel safe. Going down the trail was less demanding than her run up it
had been: She made it to the place where Lehr had originally left the trail
just as Jes was finishing a controlled slide to the bottom. Rinnie looked down, half-afraid of what she’d see. But Lehr
was safe. He held Storne in some sort of mysterious wrestling hold, and Lukeeth
was lying unconscious nearby with blood running from his nose. “Is Rinnie all right, Jes?” said Lehr. “Fine,” answered Rinnie for herself. “Jes scared Olbeck.
From the expression I saw on Olbeck’s face I bet he won’t leave his house for a
week.” “Good,” grunted Lehr as he held on while Storne struggled
with renewed energy. He waited until the other boy was still. “You drink too
much,” Lehr said calmly, “and you think too little. Just because Olbeck’s
father is the steward doesn’t make him invulnerable or someone you should listen
to—you’re smarter than that. And to try and”—he paused and looked at Rinnie for
an instant before changing what he was going to say. “You heard Olbeck. He likes
to ‘have conversations’ with children now? My sister is ten years old, Storne.
You are better than that.” It was strange hearing Lehr lecture someone else besides her
or Jes. She could see that Storne felt that quiet voice cut through his skin,
too. Lehr stepped back and let Storne up. The miller’s son
brushed off his clothes and, with a wary look at Jes, turned to leave. “Aren’t you forgetting Lukeeth? If you leave him here he
might never find his way out of the forest,” Lehr said. Storne hefted the other boy across his shoulders without a
word, and started up the hill. “You take care of your friends, I remember that,” said Lehr
softly. “But the question is, would they have taken care of you? Olbeck left
you to us.” Storne spun around, almost overbalancing. “At least they can
keep their tongues from wagging too freely. Unlike some I know.” “You idiots were going to get yourselves killed,” said Lehr
explosively, as if it was something he’d kept bottled for too long. “Swimming
at night is a fool’s game—and there are things in the river—” “Things.” Storne spat on the ground. “So you went
whining to your father who ran to tell mine. Let me tell you something, Traveler’s
brat. You don’t know half what you think you do. You’d better just stay out of
my way.” Jes put his hand on Lehr’s shoulder, but no one said
anything until Storne was at the top of the ridge. “Is that why you aren’t friends anymore?” asked Rinnie. “You
told Papa they were going to go swimming in the river at night?” Lehr shrugged. “That was the excuse. But Storne’s friends
didn’t like that he ran around with a Traveler’s brat. He would have dropped me
sooner or later.” “Storne traded you for Olbeck?” she said, knowing how much
it hurt him. She knew exactly how much it hurt; there were girls in town who
wouldn’t talk to her because Mother was a Traveler. “He is stupider than I
thought.” “They are dangerous in a pack,” said Jes. “If Rinnie had
been alone ...” Lehr gave a jerky nod. “When Papa gets back, I’ll talk to
him about this. He’ll know what to do to see that they don’t hurt anyone.” He
reached up to pat Jes’s hand, which was still on his shoulder. “Let’s go home,”
he said. Jes released his hold and picked up the fishing rods that
lay scattered about on the ground where Lehr had dropped them. “Fishing’s still
good,” he said. Rinnie looked at him, but the air of danger that had surrounded
him was gone, and he looked and sounded as he always did except for a certain
lingering crispness to his voice. Lehr touched his reddened cheekbone tenderly. “I suppose
they’ll not bother us anymore. Mother will be safe enough with Gura.” He took a
close look at Rinnie. “You look pale.” Rinnie smiled at him and tried to look less pale. “I’m fine.
Ma’s counting on a fish for dinner. You always bring one back; she won’t have
anything else ready.” So they went down to the creek and fished. Seraph heaved a sigh of relief. The harness collar that fit
Skew had been neglected, but the leather was only very dry, not cracked. If it
had cracked they’d have had to wait until Tier got back with Frost before
starting the plowing. She oiled the collar carefully until the leather was butter-supple
under her fingers. Then she turned her attention to the harness. She untied the
leather strings that kept it together and oiled each piece as she went,
carefully organizing the straps on the freshly swept floor of the tack room so
she could put the harness back together when she finished. Broken down, the
harness looked like random scraps of leather. The first time she and Tier had taken it apart and oiled it,
she thought they’d never get it back together correctly. Even Tier had been all
but stumped. A grin pulled at the comers of her mouth when she remembered the
look on his face when she’d called him in for help. Maybe if he had been the
one who’d taken it apart he’d have stood a better chance. They’d finally taken
Skew out and put the harness back together on him one strap at a time. From his loose box in the stable, Skew snorted at her. He
was frustrated that one of his people was near enough to see, but not near
enough to give him the attention that was his due. “Do you remember the look on the steward’s face that first
year when he came and saw the furrows we’d plowed?” Not the current steward,
but his uncle, who had been a kind man. “No two lines anywhere near straight
None of us had ever plowed a field before.” The steward had come by the next morning and worked side by
side with Tier for the whole day. He’d made a point of stopping by now and
again throughout the season to lend a hand and dispense a bit of advice. Skew wickered a soft entreaty at her, so Seraph set down the
cropper and wiped her hands off on her skirts before rubbing Skew’s face. The
dark oil would clean off of her skirts better than it came off of Skew’s white
patches. “How the old steward hated seeing you in that plow harness,”
she told the old gelding. “He offered to buy you from us, did you know? Offered
two horses trained for farm work because he thought it disgraceful that a gentleman
of your breeding should pull a plow. Tier said that a good soldier hates war,
and you were a good soldier so farming would be all right with you.” She rubbed the ridge just in front of Skew’s ear and smiled
when he tilted his head sideways and closed his eye in pleasure. “You didn’t
mind the plow anymore than you minded pulling my wagon, did you?” She smiled
again. “Tier says the best warhorse is one who’ll do what he’s asked.” Skew rubbed his head against her, knocking her back a step. “So what do you think?” Seraph asked softly. “Am I seeing
problems that don’t exist? How much of a threat is one misguided priest? If I
tell my children what they are, it’ll change them forever.” “I should have told them a long time ago,” she whispered. “Tier
told me to. But they deserved a chance at ... innocence.” She closed her eyes and rested her face against the old
horse’s neck, breathing in the sweat-straw scent of his skin. “I think it’s
time, though, old friend.” She stepped away. “They need to know what they are. I have
no right to keep it from them, and the priest is a good excuse.” She nodded her
head briskly. “Thank you. Your advice is always correct.” She finished the harness, inspected the plow and found no significant
damage from its winter in the barn, then returned to the cabin and started
shaping her risen dough for loaves, putting some aside for fry bread as an
after-dinner treat. She’d just taken the loaf of bread out to cool when Jes,
Lehr, and Rinnie came in the door with three fat trout, cleaned and ready to
cook. Seraph took a good long look at the bruise on Lehr’s face,
the rips in Rinnie’s clothing and the place where her hair had been hacked
short. Only then did she take the fish Lehr held out to her. “Jes and I’ll set up the smoker and we’ll smoke these two,”
Lehr said hastily and retreated outside with his brother. With hard-won forbearance, Seraph set the trout on a baking
tile, salted it, and filled the body cavity with onions and herbs. After
wrapping it tightly in leaves, she used the peel to set the tile on the coals
of the fire below the oven. She put the tool where it belonged, dusted off her
hands, and turned to her daughter. “Now,” she said. “Just what happened today?” Rinnie took a washing rag and began to clean the table. “We
ran into a little trouble with Storne and his friends—Olbeck, the steward’s
son, and Lukeeth. I got caught up in some thorns and I had to cut my hair to
get untangled. But Jes showed up and the other boys took off. “Mother,” Rinnie said, staring unnecessarily hard at the
surface she was cleaning. “There was something odd about Jes. I mean, he didn’t do anything and Olbeck took
off like a startled foolhen. Has Jes ever hurt anyone?” Seraph took off her apron and rubbed her cheeks, hot from
the work with the ovens. It was indeed time for a few truths, she thought, but
not right now. She gave Rinnie part of the truth. “For all that our Jes is
different, he’s strong and accurate with his fists—your Papa saw to that.
Olbeck came out poorly in ah encounter with Jes not too long ago.” After dinner, thought Seraph. We’ll talk after
dinner. “This is as good as anything you’d find on the Emperor’s table,”
declared Rinnie, finishing the last of her fish. “Thanks to the fearless fishing folk,” agreed Seraph, already
up and tidying. She’d tried so long to let her children fit in with the life
of the village, and had hoped they’d be happy here, free of the never-ending
quest to protect people who feared and hated the Travelers more than the things
the Travelers fought. Tonight that innocence would be over—but it wasn’t fair
to keep their truths as her secrets either. “Rinnie,” Seraph said, abruptly impatient to talk. “Get the
basket of fry bread with a jar of honey. I think we’ll take a walk and find a
good place to talk.” “It’ll be dark soon,” said Jes, sounding subdued. Seraph gave him a straight look. “I think that might be just
what is needed. I have some things to discuss with you all that will be easier
to do in the meadow above the farm—and a few of those things will be more
believable in the darkness of the forest than they will here.” “Mother—” began Lehr, but Seraph shook her head at him. “Not
now. Let’s take a walk.” Jes was right; by the time they got to the meadow the sun
had sunk behind the mountains. There was still plenty of light, but Seraph was
glad of her warm cloak in the evening chill. At her direction, her children sat in a rough semicircle and
divided the fry bread, consuming it like voracious wolves, even Lehr. Sweets
were not a common treat for any of them. “I haven’t told you much about my family,” Seraph began
abruptly. “They were Travelers,” said Rinnie. “Everyone but your
youngest brother, Ushireh, died of plague brought by a Traveler they took in
for the night. And when Ushireh was killed, Papa rescued you when you were a
little younger than Lehr and Jes. And you blew up the bakery and Papa
said you were married to each other before you really were to save you again. And
I know about the Wizard Ancestors, too. They called up the Stalker and then
killed everyone who lived in the city to contain it. But it didn’t work as well
as they’d hoped. So from that time until this the Travelers have had to fight
the evil that leaks from the city.” Seraph laughed. “Right. But there is more to tell you.” She
looked at each of her children in turn. “Understand that this was my decision,
not Tier’s. I didn’t want you to know about my folk. I wanted you to fit in
with your father’s people, but ... there are things that you need to know.” She took a deep breath. “You know I am a mage.” “But you don’t do any magic, Ma,” said Rinnie suddenly
in tones of complaint. “Aunt Alinath says that there are no such things as
mages, just people who are good at making others see magic in ordinary sleight
of hand.” Jes began to laugh. It wasn’t his usual full-throated, joyful
laugh, but something low and unamused. Rinnie looked up at him and shifted a little away from him. “Jes, it’s not her fault,” Seraph chided gently before looking
at Rinnie. “I’m afraid your aunt is wrong—and she knows better, too. She was
there when I blew up the bakery—your father was there as well. And despite what
you’ve heard, not all Travelers are mages, nor are all mages Travelers.”—“Remember
the stories Papa told us sometimes, Rinnie,” said Lehr, “about the mages in the
army?” “Right,” agreed Seraph. “But I am a special kind of mage—a
Raven.” The cool power slid over Seraph’s skin like a lover’s caress
as she lit a mage fire in the palm of her hand. When the magic stabilized she
took Lehr’s hand and put the light in his palm where it flickered cheerfully. “Let me tell the story from the beginning,” Seraph said. “There once was a great city of wizards who were arrogant in
their power. In the blindness of pride, they called into being the Stalker, a
great evil. To contain that evil they sacrificed the entire city, all of the
non-wizard residents of the city, man, woman, and child—including their own
wives, husbands, and children.” She took a deep breath—and closed her eyes, trying to hear
the cadence of her father’s voice so that she didn’t leave anything out. “When
the wizards sacrificed their city to bind the Stalker, the cost of the magic
they wrought killed all but a few of the most powerful mages and most of the
very weakest. The survivors had virtually nothing but the clothes on their
back. At first, they thought that would be enough, but the world is not kind to
a people who have no place. As the years passed and the people dwindled, the remnants
of the wizards of Colossae discussed what could be done.” She smiled a bit grimly. “Arrogant in their knowledge and
power, even with their city sealed in death behind them, the wizards still
meddled where they would. The Stalker was caged, but as time passed the bars of
that cage would loosen. The wizards decided that their descendants, not having
Colossae to nourish and educate them, would not be able to stand against the
thing they had created, so it was decided to change their children and give
them powers less dependent upon learning. They created the Orders.” “I’m a mage,” she said. “There are other Traveler mages who
are much like the Emperor’s mages who helped Tier fight against the Fahlar. But
I bear the Raven’s Order. I don’t need complex spells, I don’t need to steal
power as other mages do. I can do things that have not been written in a book
and memorized. But the Raven is only one of six Orders bestowed upon
Travelers.” Jes had withdrawn from the family until his face was hidden
from the light of magefire. Seraph rose to her knees and stretched until she
could touch his arm lightly. “Peace, Jes,” she said. “It’s not just you—and I’m sorry I
let you think it was. Your gift is just more difficult to hide.” Jes’s gift was so terrible that there had been nothing she
could do to shield him as she had the other children. When he settled reluctantly where he was, she sat back down and
said, “I am Raven. But there are also Bard, Healer, Hunter, Weather Witch, and
Guardian. But, like Mage, we call the Orders by the birds who are symbolic to
each Order because it is less confusing. Ordinary wizards are also called
mages, but Raven always means the Order of Mage. The other five Orders are
thus: Bard is Owl; Healer is Lark; Hunter is Falcon; Weather Witch is Cormorant;
and Guardian is Eagle.” She watched them closely, but they seemed to be following
her words so she continued. “My father told me that once the Orders were far
more common. Among my clan, in my generation only three of us were Order-bound,
Raven, Eagle, and Falcon. Other clans fared less well—and I knew of only one
Lark still living when I left the clans, and she was very old.” Seraph drew a breath and wondered how to say this next part.
“Imagine my surprise, then, when all of you were born into Orders.” Lehr passed the light across the basket of fry bread to Rinnie
and rubbed his hands on his thighs. “But there’s nothing different about any of
us,” he said. “Except Jes. And his oddities are surely nothing that would have
served the purposes of the Travelers.” “Nothing different about you? Isn’t there?” asked Seraph
softly. “Have you ever come back from a hunt without game, Lehr? Have you ever
been lost, my Falcon?” He stared at her scarcely breathing. “Father taught me how
to track, and to remember things so I wouldn’t get lost,” he said tightly. “Did he?” she said. “That’s not what he told me.” “What am I, Mother?” asked Rinnie eagerly, staring into the
light she held. “Can I make a light like this?” Seraph smiled. “No. You are Cormorant—Weather Witch. Not
everyone knows when a storm is coming, Rinnie.” “What about Jes and Papa ... and Aunt Alinath?” asked Rinnie
eagerly. “Lehr is Falcon, and that makes him a hunter, right? What do Falcons
and Cormorants get to do if they can’t build fires?” “Papa and Aunt Alinath aren’t Travelers,” said Lehr. “We’re only half, and we have Orders,” Rinnie defended herself
hotly. Seraph held up her hand. “Hold a moment. Let’s see. Uhm. Yes. Lehr is right, the Orders belong only to Travelers. Or
that’s what I always thought until I met your Papa. Tier is Owl—that means
Bard. I’ve thought about it a lot over the years, but the only explanation I
have is this: the old Raven who was my teacher told me that the Orders cannot
be bred for as we breed for certain traits in horses. They attach to someone
suitable to their purposes at the moment of birth.” She smiled to herself. Her
old teacher, Arvage, would have been outraged at the mere suggestion that an
Order would attach itself to someone outside the Traveler clans. She cleared her throat and continued, “In the Traveling
clans, the Owl is responsible for keeping the history of the clans because one
of their talents is for memory. But the Owl holds music, too—and music has
always been a part of Tier. “You had some more questions.” Seraph clucked her tongue to
her teeth as she checked her memory. “Falcons track and have some affinity for
weaponry. Cormorants can predict—and, if they are careful, control the weather.
There are more things, but I don’t know them all. Some things vary from person
to person; these things you will have to discover for yourself. Others”—she
shrugged—“we might eventually have to find someone to teach you.” “What about Aunt Alinath?” Rinnie asked again. “Your aunt is exactly what she appears—a solsenti baker.” “What does solsenti mean?” asked Jes abruptly. “Stupid people,” said Rinnie with smug wisdom. “Especially
Aunt Alinath.” Seraph said, “Quit snickering, Lehr. In Traveler’s speech solsenti
means someone who’s blind or crippled, but most of us use it to refer to
anyone who is not of Traveler blood. Now, what else did you ask, Rinnie?” “Jes,” said Rinnie. “Jes is Guardian.” “And Guardian is furthest from human,” Jes broke in
bitterly. “They took the spirit of a demon and bound it to their will. In the
night I am this.” He stood up and let his cloak fall so he stood before them
all, revealed in the light Rinnie held. For a moment he was as human seeming as
any of them, but then his shape flowed and darkened. A panther the size of Gura
stood before them, his eyes gold flecked with an eldritch light It was the speed of the change that Seraph used to gauge whether
what she saw was illusion or real. This time she was pretty certain the panther
was solid and not created of her fears. “The Guardian is the caretaker of the clan,” said Seraph
calmly. “Where danger threatens, in the forests, in the darkness, he adapts to
protect us. No magic works on him except his own. In the daytime—and I’m not
talking about just when the sun is up, but in safety—the Guardian sleeps, taking
part of Jes with him.” Rinnie gave the light back to Lehr and walked all the way
around Jes with wide eyes. Seraph could see her son cringe under that steady
gaze, though he moved not a hair—but she had more confidence in Rinnie than Jes
did. “You’re beautiful,” said her daughter in awe, reaching out
to touch the grey-black coat Lehr watched the cat narrowly, then laughed. “What, did you
expect us all to shriek and run away, Jes? No one raised around Aunt Alinath
could be afraid of a mere demon.” “I don’t get to turn into a panther either?” asked Rinnie
plaintively as she sat down next to Jes. “No, only Jes,” replied Seraph. Lehr frowned. “If I’d known about this, I wouldn’t have
gotten so mad at you when you took off for the forest all the time,” he said to
Jes. “I suspect it’ll take a few days for all of us to understand what Mother’s
told us tonight.” He paused, then said the important thing. “I think you need
to know that I’m glad you are my brother, day or night” “Don’t I even get fangs?” asked Rinnie. The cat let out a huff of laughter and shifted back into a
more familiar form. “No, Rinnie. No fangs for you.” He reached over and ruffled
her hair. “But don’t worry. If you want me to bite someone for you, I will.” Jes settled back on his heels, though he didn’t relax enough
to sit “Papa told me I should tell all of you, but I didn’t want to. I didn’t
want you to be afraid of me.” Seraph frowned at him, “You know better than that,” she
said. “No matter what they really think, they’re going to be a little afraid.”
Turning to the rest of them she explained, “Dread is one of the gifts of the
Guardian. If he wants to, he can panic horses or wild game. But just his very
presence will make people nervous. It’s not that you are afraid of him, but
that he triggers your fears.” Seraph smiled at a sudden clear memory. “My oldest brother
was Guardian,” she said. “He had a wicked sense of humor. He used to stalk
people through the forest. They’d arrive at our camp panting in fear and trying
not to show it, because there had been nothing to be afraid of. My grandfather
used to scold him so.” She shook her head in amusement at the memory of the
bent old man shaking his finger at her brother, so fierce and large. He could
have broken the old man with a single blow, but instead he’d stand there, head
bowed as his grandfather chastised him—and a few weeks later another terrified
wanderer would approach their camp. “That’s why Olbeck ran,” said Rinnie. “Jes really did
frighten him away.” Seraph nodded. “If it was only the dread, he’ll remember
that he ran, but not why he was afraid. It’ll make him angry. He’ll have to prove
himself. Be careful.” “Mother,” said Lehr. “Why are you telling us about the
Orders, now?” “It’s that priest the new Sept brought back from Taela,”
Seraph said. “I don’t like him,” said Jes abruptly. “Have you met him?” asked Seraph, surprised; Jes hardly ever
went into the city. “I saw him once riding with the new Sept’s hunting party,”
he answered. “I don’t like him.” “Good,” she said. “I’d like you all to avoid him if you can.
There’s something ... odd about him.” “What?” asked Lehr with a sudden grin. “Does he turn into
panthers or call light out of nothing?” She smiled back, but shook her head. “He worries me.” She
explained what the priest had told her about his beliefs. Lehr shook his head when she was done. “You mean a whole
bunch of solsenti—possibly solsenti wizards, from the magic
they’ve used to light their temple—have started a religion based on the
Travelers’ Orders?” She nodded. “I thought you ought to know the truth of what
you are before he managed somehow to corner you and feed you the muddle he and
his religion have been brewing.” She hesitated. “I should have told you
sooner—and there’s one other thing. I’ve never worried over it before because
Travelers don’t believe in fate the way those who live here do.” And because
Tier had always made her feel as if no evil could ever befall them. “For
generations the Orders have been fading from the Travelers. Yet, from the marriage
of Traveler and an Ordered solsenti, the first Ordered solsenti I’ve
ever heard of, comes three Ordered children? My grandfather said, ‘Where great
gifts are given great evils come.’ I want you all to be careful.” Jes flowed to his feet, all of his attention toward home.
“Mother, there’s someone riding into the farm.” Chapter 5Even from the vantage point of the knoll behind the house,
Seraph could only pick out vague shadows of horses near the porch, but Jes
said, “It’s the steward and a man in the Sept’s colors—ah, him. I think it’s
the Sept’s huntsman himself, Mother.” “Well,” she said after a moment, “let’s go see what they
want” She led her brood out of the trees and down to the trail that led from
field to house. Gura barked welcome as they neared, and Seraph saw that he’d
kept the men from approaching the house too closely. Now that Seraph was nearer
to the house she saw the steward’s distinctive braid, which he wore to hide the
balding spot on the top of his head. “Hello, Forder,” Seraph said. “Welcome.” At the sound of her voice Gura quieted, his job done. “Seraph Tieraganswife,” said the Sept’s steward, “Where have
you been?” He asked it as if it were her fault he’d been kept waiting, as if he
had clan-father rights over her. Part of her flexed, like a cat testing its claws. So many
years in Redem and she still couldn’t get used to the way women were treated—as
if being a man gave them the right to hold sway over any woman who crossed
their paths. Sensitive to her moods, Gura left the porch, a low growl
hovering in his barrel chest. He quieted at her gesture, but stayed on his
feet. “We break ground tomorrow,” Lehr said peaceably, drawing
attention away from Seraph so that the steward wouldn’t notice her gathering
ire. “We took time to walk the fields tonight. Pray accept our apologies for
keeping you waiting. We had no idea that you would come again today. If you had
sent word we would have awaited your pleasure.” “No more had I intended to return,” Forder grunted. Ignoring
Seraph completely he addressed Lehr. “The Sept’s huntsman has found something;
I thought you should hear from him as soon as possible. If I’d known you had
the habit of walking the forest in the night, I would have waited for a more
convenient time.” If Lehr’s hand hadn’t tightened on her shoulder, Seraph
would have said something rash. It wasn’t like her to lose control of her
temper so easily, but it was easier to cling to temper than to wonder why the
steward, who was a man who enjoyed his comforts, would put himself to the trouble
of coming here a second time in two days. Bad news travels fast. “Thank you,” said Lehr, though he was enough his mother’s
son that he didn’t apologize again. “I was out with a pair of my men,” said the huntsman, who
upon close inspection was vaguely familiar to Seraph. He lived in Leheigh,
where the Sept’s keep was, but he’d come down to Redem a number of times to hear
Tier sing in the tavern at the edge of the village. “We were up past the falls,
tracking a deer that had taken an arrow, when we came upon what must have been
a Blighted Place.” He shuffled his feet uncomfortably. Seraph reached up and took Lehr’s hand in a fierce grip. “I tell you,” the huntsman said with sudden intensity, “I,
my own self, have ridden by there a dozen times, and never seen anything
untoward, but I can think of nothing else but the old evil left by the Shadowed
that could have done what I saw.” “What was that, sir?” asked Lehr tightly when Seraph said
nothing. “The body of a grey mare,” replied the huntsman. “Her hooves
were scorched as if she had been burned in a fire—and not much left but bones
in front and a bit of flesh and hide behind. There was a human skull there,
clean and white, and a few bones. I knew that Tier was still out trapping, and
one of my men recalled that your husband had just bought a grey horse. We
buried the remains where we found them, as is proper for Blight-kill but I
brought what was left of the bridle in hope we could identify the man.” He took a bag from his saddle and withdrew a handful of
leather, both scorched and cracked, and the half-melted remains of a copper
bit. When Seraph made no move to take it, Lehr freed himself gently
from her hold and took the scraps of leather and the bit. He stared at it a
moment, then knelt by the porch. He rearranged the pieces on the wooden boards
until he revealed the remains of a bridle with enough of the beaded browband left
that Seraph couldn’t deny it belonged to her husband. “It is my father’s bridle,” Lehr said. “Frost, the horse he
was riding, was dappled grey.” “I regret bringing you such news,” said the huntsman, as if
he meant it. “My father is usually home much earlier than this,” said
Lehr. “Papa?” said Rinnie. Her voice broke through the numbness that encased Seraph.
She couldn’t afford to lose herself in grief; she had children. She took a step
toward Rinnie, but Jes was already there, holding her against him. He nodded at
Seraph: the Guardian would watch over his sister until Seraph could send the
steward on his way. “Where did you find them? I’d like to bring Tier home,” said
Seraph. The huntsman didn’t look at her, instead giving his answer
to Lehr. “There was nothing left but a skull, and we buried that,” he said.
“Shadowed magic is nothing to play with. I won’t lead a boy or a woman there.
One man is already dead; there is no need for more.” “I see,” said Lehr over Seraph’s soundless snarl. “You know, of course, that I should serve you notice”—the
steward changed the subject—“since your brother is simple and you are not yet
fully of age. But it is too late to bring in another family to farm, and you
are a stout lad. The Sept will give you this year as a trial.” Lehr bowed his acceptance to Forder, and Seraph bit her
tongue. No one else would farm this far into the mountains. If the steward
drove them out there would be nothing for the Sept. But she knew Forder, knew
that if she antagonized him enough he’d send them away for spite. “The Sept is generous,” said Lehr. “We will do our best to deserve
the chance he gives.” “Huntsman,” said Seraph, seeing a dim reflection of her own
wild grief in his eyes. “Thank you. There are very few who would have the
courage to get near a Blighted Place just to identify a dead man. Knowing is
better than waiting with false hope.” Few men as well would have roused the steward to bring the
news as soon as it came to him. It had been the huntsman, of course, who had
forced Forder to come out at night instead of waiting until tomorrow. Gratitude
and grief ripped through years of habit and she sketched a glowing sigil in the
air that hung between them briefly. “Traveler’s blessing upon you,” she said, “and upon your
house. Good fortune hold by you and yours.” In the darkness she could see the whites of Forder’s eyes,
but the huntsman was made of sterner stuff, as befitted a man who braved
Blighted Places. “And to yours,” he said with a quick nod before he mounted
his horse. As soon as the huntsman’s foot was in the stirrup, Forder
had his own horse in motion. Then they were gone, disappearing into the night,
leaving only the lingering sounds of trotting hooves behind them. Seraph ushered her children into the cabin and lit the fire
with a wave of her hand. A corner of her mind noted how easily she shed the
cloak of good Redemi wife she’d held to since she married Tier, but she tucked
the thought back with her grief as she dealt with the more immediate problem of
her children. The Guardian lurked in the room like a restless spirit,
adding fear to the mix of shock and sorrow. Rinnie clung to him, sobbing
heartbrokenly. Lehr was pale and still wore the air of calm he’d donned for the
benefit of the steward—but his hands held the remains of Tier’s bridle in a
white-knuckled grip. Tier would have known how to ease their sorrow. He would
have said something wise and soothing. He would have held Rinnie until she fell
asleep. Then he would have talked to his sons until there was a bandage of
comfort between them and their grief. Seraph wanted to scream and rage until she was too tired to
feel any more. “There was nothing,” she said, “that Tier loved more than
you three.” Lehr’s face whitened and she went to him and hugged him
fiercely. She knew it was the right thing when he wrapped his arms around her
and lifted her so he could press his forehead to the crook of her neck. She would keep them safe, she vowed silently, as she had not
been able to keep her clan or Tier. And if she cried, only Jes could see. Rinnie fell asleep finally. Jes carried her up the ladder to
her half of the loft and rejoined Seraph and Lehr where they sat on a bench in
front of the fire. “She wasn’t afraid of me,” he said. Seraph smiled and patted the space beside her. “She didn’t
seem to be, did she?” He didn’t sit down. “Everyone is afraid, even you and Papa.” “And me,” said Lehr with a tired smile that was more in his
eyes than on his mouth. “Still, it is just a general unease, isn’t it? I’m not
really afraid of you, just twitchy.” Seraph nodded. “She might have felt that, but there are
worse things than fear.” “People don’t touch me,” said the Guardian, looking down at
his hands as if he missed the weight of Rinnie’s warm body. Lehr looked at him sharply, because Jes almost couldn’t bear
to be touched most of the time. “You comforted her,” said Seraph. “You reminded her that she
wasn’t alone.” The Guardian looked at her and between one breath and the
next became Jes again. “Oh, Mother,” he whispered, “we are so sad.” He dropped
bonelessly to the floor in front of her and began sobbing softly with overwhelming
grief. Seraph started to put a hand on his shoulder, but caught
herself. As overwrought as Jes was, he wasn’t going to be able to stand her
touch at all. Instead, she got to her feet and opened the front door.
“Gura,” she said. “In.” The big dog gave her an astonished look—though during the
day he sometimes came inside, at night he guarded the farm. “In,” she said again. Gura padded past her to the fire. As soon as he saw Jes, he
flopped out beside him with a sigh. Jes, unable to bear the distraction of
human touch, wrapped his arms around the dog and pressed his face against him. When Seraph sat back down beside Lehr he said, “Why doesn’t
he like to be touched—when ...” he hesitated. “This is really confusing. Why
didn’t it bother him to be touched when he was being Guardian?” “Jes is sensitive to the touch of others. Many of the Eagles
have the gift of empathy. Because he must always keep the Guardian contained, a
third person’s feelings are just too much.” “You make it sound like he’s two people.” Seraph nodded. “From what my oldest brother who was also a
Guardian told me, it’s very much like that. I don’t know why the Eagle is so
different from other Orders, why it is so much more difficult to bear. My
teacher believed that the old wizards were trying to make something quite
different—a superior warrior perhaps—and they made some mistakes: mistakes that
Jes and those like him have to pay for all of their lives.” She paused and
glanced at Jes. He wasn’t paying any attention to them, but she lowered her
voice before continuing. “Most Eagles die before they reach Jes’s age, so my
people are very protective of them; we keep them away from strangers when we
can, and don’t speak of them outside of the clan. The Guardian is both the most
dangerous and most vulnerable of all the Orders.” Seraph crossed her arms over her chest, realizing that his
survival was up to her alone now. Lehr put an arm around her shoulder and drew
her up next to him. “It will be all right, Mother,” he said. They stayed there until Jes’s tears grew silent and Gura
fell into a doze, snoring softly. Seraph wanted to do something, anything—but
there was nothing more she could do to help Tier, nothing more she could do to
help Jes, Lehr, or Rinnie. Her gaze fell upon the scraps of Tier’s bridle. She picked it up and left the bench for the better light in
front of the fire. “What are you doing. Mother?” asked Lehr. “I’m going to see what this bridle has to tell me,” said
Seraph, sounding much more confident than she felt. She had failed her Order so
badly that it seemed wrong that it hadn’t failed her. “I told you that within
each Order, there is still some variation in abilities. One of the things I
could do that my teacher could not was read an object’s past.” “You’re going to see what happened to Papa?” “Tm going to try,” she said. She took a deep breath and braced herself, because reading objects
closely associated with death was painful. Tentatively she rested her fingers
on the browband. Delicacy was more important than power in this kind of magic.
She let threads of magic drift through her fingers and touch the leather. Nothing. Thinking she’d misjudged the necessary power, she opened
herself until the ends of her fingers tingled—still nothing. She pulled her
fingers away as if they had been burned. “Lehr, could you find something ...” Seraph’s gaze scanned
the room and brushed the corner where Tier’s sword hung under Lehr’s bow. The
sword certainly had enough history for her to read. “The sword. Get the sword
for me, please.” “What’s wrong?” asked Lehr as he took the sword down and
brought it to her. Seraph shook her head and took the sword and unsheathed it.
“I don’t know.” She set the bridle aside and lay the sword on the floor. She
had to push Gura to get him out of the way, disturbing Jes, who sat up. “Papa’s sword,” he said. She nodded absently at him and rubbed her fingers together
lightly, waiting until she felt the magic ready and eager—just as it had been when
she touched the bridle. She opened herself as widely as she could to the traces
time left on objects and touched—death and darkness. She had a moment of fiery pain as gold light gathered under
her fingers, then it was gone. She opened her eyes and had the odd feeling that
time had jumped without her noticing. Her ears rang, her elbow felt bruised,
and she was lying back with her head on Jes’s knee. Jes patted her cheeks gently, his eyes flickering with the
Guardian’s presence. “Did the sparks hurt you, Mother?” “No, Jes,” she said, sitting up on her own and resting her
head on her raised knees while visions from the sword flashed behind her closed
lids. “I’m fine,” she said, seeing Lehr’s anxious look. “Just a
bruise or two. I haven’t done this in a long time, and I misjudged. The sword
was a poor choice.” Solsenti warriors used their blades for generations
until rust robbed the blade of its strength. They even named them, never
dreaming of the pseudo-life imbued by so much death—or the danger in giving such
a thing a name. There were stories about swords that held against all odds and
others that tended to slip and bite their wielder, but solsenti never
seemed to heed the warning. Travelers cleansed their weapons after each life
taken and discarded the blades of dead men. Tier’s sword was old. Newly sensitized, Seraph could feel
its hunger for Tier’s hand and battle even though it lay several handspans from
her skirts. But the Tier the sword longed for was a version of her husband
Seraph had never seen: a cold-faced killer who let his sword drink its fill of
blood. Seraph touched the bridle again, running her fingers over
the blue and red beads on the browband, lingering on the bit. After a moment
she felt a dullness, the bare touch of Lehr’s grief as he held the bridle, a
dusting of time lacking in power. As if the bridle, bit and all, had somehow
come into being just a few days ago. “Nothing,” Seraph growled in frustration. Her hand fisted on
a scrap of leather, both hand and leather glowing with power, but there was no
flash of vision, only emptiness, as if whatever trap Tier had sprung had wiped
the bridle’s history clean. “What does il mean?” asked Lehr. She shook her head. “I don’t know. Tier’s death should be emblazoned
upon the bridle. I haven’t done this in a very long time, but I didn’t have any
trouble reading the sword.” “It was Shadow Blight,” Lehr reminded her. “Maybe the Shadowed’s
magic affected it.” Seraph frowned. It felt as if the bridle had been wiped
clean of its past, not blasted with magic. “Fire or running water can clean
something of its past; I suppose Shadow Blight might do the same.” Weary in spirit more than body, Seraph rubbed her face.
“Jes, could you put Papa’s sword in its sheath and then put it away?” She
didn’t want to touch it again. Logically she shouldn’t sense anything unless
she looked for it, but she could feel it waiting. “We’d better get to sleep.
Tomorrow you two will have to start plowing. I will take word of Tier’s death
to your aunt and uncle.” Seraph waited until they were all asleep before sneaking
out. She used enough magic to keep from disturbing Jes or Gura, both still
curled up before the coals of the fire. She walked until she was far from the cabin; the ground was
uncomfortably cold on her bare feet. When she stopped, she bowed her head
against the rough bark of a tree, seeking the peace resident in its stolid,
slow-growing, long-lived presence—but all she felt was rage. It seethed from the soles of her feet and coiled through her
body until it was forced into the long strands of her hair. Her hands shook
with it as they curled and clawed at the hapless tree. Her breath left her
throat in a low, moaning growl. And with the rage came magic, destructive and hot, and as aimless
as her wrath. Because the focus of her anger, of her pain, was dead. “Tier,” she whispered and then in a voice of power that
shook the ground under her feet, she asked, “Why did you leave me?” “Listen to Jes,” Seraph told Lehr the next morning. “He’ll
take care of Skew and see that he doesn’t overdo. Skew’s going to have to do
the whole field and you’ll have to watch to see that he doesn’t hurt himself.” “Yes, Mother,” said Lehr patiently. Seraph was pale, tired,
and obviously dreading the trip into town—and he didn’t blame her. “Rinnie, make sure to run water out to the boys a couple of
times this morning. That’s more important than getting the garden done.” “Yes, Mother,” said Rinnie in such a blatant imitation of
Lehr’s tone that he had to turn aside so no one saw his grin. “Right.” Seraph gave a quick nod. “I should be back in time
to fix the midday meal—but if not, there is bread, honey, and cheese.” With
that she turned on her heel and began walking briskly up the path toward town,
leaving her children to begin their assigned tasks. They rested Skew rather more often than Lehr would have, but
he let Jes decide when to stop. After each rest, Lehr and Jes traded who held
the plow. The soil was somewhat rocky, and the plow bucked and wallowed unexpectedly
until they were as tired as the horse. By midmorning Skew’s head was low, and sweat washed out from
under his harness. They’d made some headway: five mostly straight furrows in
and twenty-three more to go. Lehr walked beside Jes, whose turn it was to hold
the handles. The long reins trailed though the metal hoops in the harness down
Skew’s back and wrapped around Jes’s shoulders so when he stopped, so did Skew. “He can’t be tired again,” protested Lehr. “We haven’t come
fifty paces since the last rest.” “Hush,” commanded Jes. Lehr had quit looking for the stranger inside his brother
about halfway up the first furrow, but he saw him now. Abruptly Lehr realized how still the land was. Not a bird
sang; not a cricket chirruped. Silently he unbuckled the sheath that held his
long knife and rested his hand on its haft. The forest seemed somehow darker
than it had been just a moment earlier. Skew’s head came up and he tested the wind with fluttering
nostrils. Tossing his mane uneasily, he wickered once. Whatever it was that Lehr was watching for, it wasn’t the
man who stepped out of the woods. He was slight and dark, but otherwise
unremarkable—until Lehr met his gaze. Fathomless black eyes examined him coolly, and the hair on
the back of Lehr’s neck crawled. “Hunter,” said the stranger. Lehr’s eyes told him that the man in front of him was a nondescript
man dressed, more or less, like any other man to be found wandering in the
woods. But another sense was ringing like an alarm bell, warning him that he
stood before a Power. Skew shoved his nose against Lehr’s arm and breathed in
little huffs, ears pinned forward as if he perceived some threat and readied
himself to do battle. Lehr glanced at Jes, who stood at his back, watching the
stranger steadily but without tension. Turning back to the man, Lehr half bowed, because it felt as
if he should. “Sir. What can we do for you?” The man smiled, but his too-knowing eyes stayed cold and
clear like the river in winter. “I found a child wandering my forests alone.
She smells like one of yours, so I thought I would offer her to you rather than
the wolves.” “Rinnie?” asked Jes, glancing toward their home, but when
Lehr looked too, Rinnie was plainly visible planting the kitchen garden with
Gura stretched out nearby. “Go ahead, Jes,” said Lehr. “I’ll keep at the fields until
you get back. She’s probably one of the villagers, so you might have to take
her all the way to Redem.” Jes ducked out of the reins and followed the dark man into
the woods without a word. Lehr remained by Skew’s head until the gelding quit
staring into the trees. Rubbing under Skew’s browband where the sweat gathered, Lehr
spoke quietly to the horse, “I believe you and I have just met the forest king.
I always thought he was just a fancy of Jes’s.” So many strange things had
happened in the past few days that the forest king rated no more than a shake
of the head before Lehr turned to take up the plow again. » The Guardian paced beside the boar who was the forest king
and tested the area for threat. Finding none, he allowed his ire full sway. “You will leave my brother alone,” the Guardian said in a
voice that held the winter winds. The boar snorted, unimpressed. “Why would I do that? Your
brother’s ties to the forest are closer than yours. Something has happened to
him to make him aware of his power. If I had called you today as I usually do,
he would have heard me. It was time to acknowledge the Hunter. I cannot say I
welcome him, for it is my job to protect those within my realm. But your
brother has long hunted these forests and he does not kill indiscriminately.
Death is seldom a welcome guest, but it has a place in the life of the forest.” “Just leave him alone—he takes on enough without you.” The boar laughed, his hoarse voice squealing high in merriment.
“Am I so chance a comrade then, Jes?” “Who is being dragged through the forest at your whim?” returned
the Guardian roundly. “I should be helping my brother coax Skew over the fields
rather than chasing off after some child.” “Not that kind of child,” grunted the boar, scrambling over
a largish log in his path. “I believe that she’s older than you.” He seemed to
find amusement in something, for he snorted a while before continuing. “Child
of Travelers she is, though not exactly like you or your brother either. She
passed me by as I was eating my breakfast this morning and the smell of her
magic intrigued me, so I followed her.” The Guardian waited until he was certain the boar wouldn’t
continue without prompting. “Where did she go?” “Through my lands,” said the forest king. “I almost stopped
at the border, but by then I was curious. I followed her to a place where magic
blackened the ground and a new rip in the earth contained the body of a horse—a
grey mare who used to graze in your fields.” “You know where my father was killed,” said the Guardian
slowly. “Your father is dead?” The boar considered it a moment. “I
tell you what I saw: it is up to you to discover what you’ll take from it. But
first you must deal with the child—or allow me to do so.” The Guardian knew how the boar would deal with one he must
have decided might be a threat. The Guardian recognized the same grim spirit
lived inside of him as well—though he’d never killed anyone. Not yet. Never
wanted to kill anyone—because he was afraid that by that act, something the
daytime Jes could not comprehend, he would somehow sever the ties that held the
two disparate parts of himself together. “What did you find at my father’s grave?” asked the
Guardian. “My mother thinks that there was more to his death than we have been
told.” “Your mother may be right,” said the forest king. “But that
is not for my judgment.” By this time, the Guardian was fairly confident he knew
where the forest king was taking him. There weren’t actually all that many
places to store a person safely in the woods without worrying what might happen
to them—even for a spirit as powerful as the forest king. The old building was so covered in vines and surrounded by
trees that it was impossible to see from the outside. It was, as far as he
knew, the only building he’d ever been in that had been built before the reign
of the Shadowed. The only entrance required some undignified scrambling for
anything larger than the boar. Not knowing exactly what he would face, the Guardian chose
to stay in human form and crawled under the foliage, through the crumbling
tunnel that had once held water and still bore the mark of ancient algae. Inside, the boar waited with bright red eyes that glittered
in the dark interior, standing over a sleeping person who certainly was no
child. Pale Traveler’s hair looked more silver than ash in the faint light that
poured in through the leaves that guarded the barren rafters that must once
have been thatched. “Traveler,” said the Guardian, crouching down and pushing
her hair aside to reassure himself that it wasn’t his mother who lay there. But
the features of the woman who lay sleeping in the forest king’s lair were those
of a stranger, younger than his mother—but as the boar had said, older than Jes
was. “You say she came from town?” “Yes. She came from the town, walked almost directly to the
place where the horse lay dead then started back.” He paused. “She wasn’t going
back to town.” “Where then?” asked the Guardian. The boar stared at the sleeping woman. “It looked to me as
if she were headed directly toward your home. But there is dark magic about
her, and power. Her path would have taken her through the heart of my lands,
and I decided I preferred that she not trespass unguarded.” The Guardian contemplated the woman. Was it someone his
mother knew? Seraph hadn’t mentioned finding another Traveler in the village
the day before yesterday. Surely she would have said something if she had. “Will you awaken her?” said the Guardian finally, deciding
that her mysteries would be better answered by the woman herself. “Or do you
wish me to take her away from this place first?” “Take her.” The forest king turned back toward the entrance
of the building. “When you are far enough from here, I’ll lift the sleep from
her.” The Guardian sighed; though the woman was slight, the tunnel
was narrow. Still, he gathered her up and scrambled his way out with only a few
extra bruises—on him. He managed to keep her safe from harm. In the sunlight he could see what features she shared with
his mother and what differences marked her. His mother was a smaller woman, and
this woman had a thinner, longer nose that gave her face an arrogant beauty. He’d never seen anyone except his family who bore Traveler
blood. He wondered where her people were, if they were among those who were
killed or if they awaited her somewhere. Walking in the woods with the sun on his back, Jes slowly filtered
into being, easing the Guardian to sleep. Untroubled by his burden he continued
on toward home. Mother would know what to do with her. They were close to the edge of the woods when she stiffened.
He glanced down at her and saw that her eyes were open. He smiled into pale eyes that matched her hair and continued
on, ignoring her attempts to get down. If she were on foot it would be harder
to bring her home, and Jes knew that he needed to take her home so she would be
safe from the forest king. When she couldn’t free herself, she began asking him rapid
questions that ran through his ears like rain, first in words he could have
understood if he’d bothered, then in the liquid silver tongue that his mother
used sometimes when she was very angry or very sad. “Hush,” he said, shaking his head, and he began humming the
song his mother had used to sing Rinnie to sleep when she was a babe and
fretting in the night. She stilled at his song, then said slowly, “Who are you?” “Jes,” he said. She stared at him a moment, “I can walk.” He hesitated. “You have to come with me.” “I’ll come with you—but let me walk.” He set her down then, but kept a grip on her hand because he
liked the way it felt. She was closed down so he didn’t feel the annoying
buzzing of her thoughts, just the warmth of her skin. His-mother could do that,
too. “You don’t look Traveler,” she said, almost to herself. “Mother’s a Traveler,” he replied. “Papa’s a Redemi.” “What happened to me?” But he’d said as much as he was going to. It was too complex
and he couldn’t be bothered explaining everything. He shook his head at her and
continued toward home. The field they’d been plowing was empty, the plowshare
raised out of the ground and cleaned of soil and dampness to keep it free of
rust. If it had looked like rain, Lehr’d have brought it in. With a glance at the sky, Jes measured the time he’d spent
in the woods. As usual, it was longer than he’d thought but not so long that
Lehr should be finished plowing. Something must have happened to Skew. He started to increase his pace, but slowed when the woman
stumbled beside him. She didn’t have the knack of walking over plowed ground.
He swooped, picked her up, and carried her over their field. Remembering her
request, though, he set her down on the other side and continued his determined
course to the barn. Lehr carried a heavy, steaming bucket to the bam and was
oblivious to them until Jes called out his name. Lehr halted and set down the bucket. “Jes? I thought you
were out looking for a child?” Jes frowned. “I found her in the woods “ he said, because it
somehow fit Lehr’s questions. “Is something wrong with Skew?” “No, no,” his brother automatically soothed, staring at the
woman. “He’s fine. But he was so tired, I thought it would be better to stop.
I’m bringing him some hot bran mash and Rinnie’s giving him a rubdown so he’s
not so stiff and sore tomorrow.” He frowned. “Jes, who is this?” Jes frowned back, though he knew his frown wasn’t as impressive
as Lehr’s. “This is the one I was sent for,” he said. Lehr smiled suddenly and shook his head. “All right, Jes.
Good afternoon, lady. I am Lehr Tieraganson. You’ve already met my brother
Jes.” The stranger he’d brought back with him tugged at Jes’s hand
gently and he released her. “I am called Hennea,” she said. “I am looking for the
Traveler called Seraph.” “This one went to where Father was killed,” said Jes,
because the Guardian reminded him that it was important. “The forest king
followed her and then held her for us. He thought she was coming here, which
was fine with him.” “So why did he send for you?” asked Lehr after a moment, and
the woman, Hennea, looked as if she’d like to know, too. Jes sighed. “I’m not sure.” But it was something Mother
should know, and Lehr would remember to tell her. So he prodded the Guardian,
who could make a better answer. Lehr took a step back when the Guardian came, and that made
Jes sad. The Guardian didn’t like frightening his family. “The forest king said that she had dark magic and power and
he didn’t want her in his territory.” Jes came back quickly, because the Guardian was unpredictable
and might decide that the woman could be a threat to his territory, too. Jes
didn’t want him to scare her because ... because he liked her. “Dark magic?” asked Lehr, with a look at Hennea. She put out her hand and showed him her wrist and tapped on
the bracelet there. Jes didn’t like it, nor did the Guardian—it smelled wrong. “I expect that he’s talking about this. Who is the forest
king?” Lehr smiled suddenly and shrugged. “I don’t know, actually.
I thought he was a story that Jes made up until I met him today.” He turned to
Jes. “Who is the forest king?” Jes squirmed, uncomfortable with all the attention that they
had been paying him. The Guardian didn’t like people looking at him too much.
“He’s the forest king,” he mumbled, almost forgetting the question in his discomfort. Lehr seemed to sense how Jes was feeling because he said,
“Come with me,” picked up the bucket, and continued out to the barn. Depressed and weary of both grief and anger, Seraph almost
didn’t notice that there was something wrong as she walked up to her cabin. Alinath had already heard about Tier—Forder had stayed overnight
in Redem and spread the news. She’d approached Alinath expecting to deal with
shock and grief, but found Tier’s sister waiting for her with anger and blame,
instead. It was only when Gura didn’t greet her that Seraph set the
stress of the unhappy meeting she’d had with Alinath aside and looked around.
The boys weren’t in the field, and Rinnie wasn’t working in the garden. She whistled and was rewarded with a bark, and Gura dashed
out of the barn to welcome her with a wuff of apology for his tardiness. He
followed at her heels as she headed for the barn. Something must have happened to Skew, she thought. The interior of the bam was dim in comparison to the
afternoon light, so she was still half-blind when she heard Lehr say, “Here she
is, now. Mother, we have a visitor.” As her vision cleared, Seraph saw Skew with his head buried
in a grain bucket. Rinnie was standing next to him with a brush in her hand.
Jes slouched against the barn wall a few feet from Lehr and a woman: a Traveler
woman wearing a solsenti dress who stared at Seraph with pale eyes. Seraph felt her eyebrows climb in surprise and instinctive
dismay. She had enough trouble on her hands, and a lone Traveler could only be
bringing more. “I am Hennea,” the woman said. “Raven of the Clan of
Rivilain Moon-Haired.” “Seraph, Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent,” replied Seraph.
She waited and Lehr obliged her. “Jes’s forest king came this morning,” he said, sounding a
bit bemused. “He told us that there was a child loose in the woods and asked
Jes to fetch her. Jes brought Hennea back. He told me that the forest king
didn’t want her in his territory because she held dark magic and power.” “This is dark magic,” said Hennea, holding up her wrist. Seraph closed the distance between them and set her hands on
either side of the leather and bead bracelet. “Solsenti wizardry,” she
said shortly. “A geas?” Hennea nodded. “Yes.” Seraph knew of only one wizard anywhere near Redem. “Volis
the priest has bound you to his service?” Hennea smiled faintly. “Yes.” He’d been hiding her then. Seraph had not the slightest
doubt that if any of the villagers knew that there was another Traveler in the
vicinity they would have told her so. “I can help you rid yourself of this.” Seraph didn’t know
the exact method, but she was confident it would be in one of Isolda’s books:
wizards of Isolda’s rime had been fond of binding others to their services. Any
spell that could break a spell woven by the Colossae wizards could be adapted
to sever the bonds of a solsenti wizard without too much trouble. “No,” said Hennea, curling her hand into a fist “Not yet.
When the time comes I will rid myself of it.” “Jes said the forest king told him that she went directly
from Redem to the place where Father was killed. From there, he thought that
she was trying to reach us,” Lehr’s voice was neutral. “Ah,” said Seraph, narrowing her eyes at the other woman.
“Why don’t you tell me more about yourself, Hennea, Raven of Rivilain
Moon-Haired?” “Thank you,” said Hennea, who appeared to have been waiting
for Seraph’s invitation. “I am no Owl, so I ask that you bear with my tale as I
tell it Two years ago I and my lover, who was a Raven and my student, were
taken by solsenti wizards who bound us with Raven magics.” How could solsenti bind with Raven magic? Hennea
paused as if she expected Seraph to ask, but Seraph seldom interrupted.
Doubtless it was a question to be addressed later in Hennea’s story. When Seraph said nothing, Hennea continued. “We were taken
to some sort of stronghold where these wizards—there were six of them and some
greater number of lesser wizardlings, performed a ritual of magic upon me.” She stopped again, but Seraph didn’t think it had anything
to do with her audience. It looked more as if she were fighting the memory’s
hold; her hands were clenched at her side and sweat gathered on her forehead.
Jes stepped forward and set a hand on Hennea’s shoulder, the unexpected action
telling Seraph that the Guardian had accepted Hennea. “Are the details of the spell important now?” asked Seraph
more gently than she’d first intended. “Not now,” said Hennea. “Only that their magic failed. They
blamed the failure on one wizard who had not done the spell before—Volis. They
coached him, and tried three more times. After the last time they conceded that
the spell had been performed perfectly, but that something about the way it had
been misworked the first time had rendered me an unfit subject. So they took
Moselm, he who was my student.” She was breathing heavier now, and Seraph saw her blink
hard. “I didn’t even notice at first—I was too wrapped up in my own pain—but
then he began screaming and screaming.” She closed her eyes briefly, as if that could shut out the
sound. With her eyes closed, Hennea looked very young; Seraph had thought her
ten years older than Jes, but she wasn’t so certain now. “When they finished with him,” Hennea said, “they took him
out of the room, still screaming. I never saw him again. I didn’t even know
what their spell casting did because I was too raw from what they had done to
me.” She gave Seraph a bitter smile. “These wizards were as confident
as if they had come fresh from Colossae. They talked of killing me, as I was no
good for their purposes, but the young wizard—Volis, who is the priest of their
twisted religion here—asked if he might keep me to see if he could discover
what he had done. So they let him bind me with this”—she held up her wrist—“and
made me his plaything.” “I accused them of arrogance,” she said. “But I was
arrogant, too. I could have broken free of this geas—it might hold a solsenti
wizard or even a Traveler who was not Raven, but as you have seen, it will
not hold a Raven long. But they presented a puzzle to me. How had solsenti wizards
worked Raven magic? Even more worrisome, I didn’t think that we were the first
Ravens they had taken. They knew too well how to neutralize anything I might
have done for my defense—and with the exception of Volis, they had all
performed their ritual before. I reasoned that whatever they had done to
Moselm, it had already been done. If I could reverse it, I could reverse it
later as well—after I discovered what they were doing.” “So you waited,” said Seraph. Hennea nodded. “For a year or so I bided my time and learned
what I could. We were in Taela secreted within the Emperor’s own palace. The
wizards ruled over a group of solsenti called the Secret Path of the
Five Gods. I saw only the wizards, who are relatively few, but there are apparently
many others, all men—noblemen and high-ranked merchants and the like—men of
power.” “Volis seemed sincere in his devotion,” said Seraph. “Obsessive
even. Not a man who is seeking after political power.” Hennea nodded. “Oh, they take themselves very seriously, including
this religion that someone thought up a few centuries or so ago as a way to
encourage bored young noblemen to join up. Can you think of anything a young
man would like better than to shock his family? Worshiping like a Traveler is
beyond offensive.” “Travelers don’t worship gods,” said Rinnie, who’d been
brushing Skew as Hennea talked. “No, indeed,” agreed Hennea. “But Volis doesn’t believe
that. We Travelers like to keep our secrets, and he thinks he knows them. He
likes me to spout his own theories back to him. I don’t think he really knows
how this geas really works. He thought it made”—she glanced over her
shoulder at Rinnie and gave Seraph an ironic smile—“made us friends. But
he likes to believe in lies. One night, while we were still in Taela, he came
into his rooms a little worse for drink—something he seldom did. He was wearing
a crude ring made of silver and rose quartz and reeking of tainted magic.” She
sat down abruptly on the small bench Rinnie used as a mounting block. “Unto Raven it is given to know the Order,” she whispered.
“Somehow they had stolen Moselm’s Order and put it into the ring. Volis was
drunk from celebrating Moselm’s death—and worried because it hadn’t gone quite
as planned. It seems that capturing the Order once it’s taken from a Traveler
is very difficult and sometimes fails.” “They did what?” asked Seraph, appalled. “They killed him and retained the power of the Order in the
stone,” said Hennea with Raven cairn. “Their spell slowly rips the Order away
from a Traveler over a period of some months. Many of the stones are all but
useless, but the ones that work can be worn in a ring or necklace. Then the solsenti
wizards become Raven, Falcon, or Cormorant as they wish.” Dread closed Seraph’s throat. It was starting again, as if
the mermori had been harbingers of things to come. Tier had died, and
now Seraph would be forced to live as she had before she met him. “I don’t know what I can do to help you,” she said at last,
because, in the end, there was no choice. “I can take a message to the clans,
though I don’t know where any are at present. I will give you what aid I can.” “You don’t understand,” Hennea said. “I’ve come to help
you.” Chapter 6“You are going to help me?” asked Seraph. “With what?” Hennea smiled grimly. “Your new Sept travels with quite an
entourage.” “Including you and Volis,” Seraph said. “Is the Sept one of
the ... what did you call them, something stupid ... the Secret Path?” “The Sept?” she said. “No, not him, at least I don’t think
so. He’s charismatic, the Emperor’s best if not only friend, and he’s very good
at political games. No one is surprised at the number of people who follow him
around. Volis said that someone called in a few debts and offered a favor or
two so that the Sept would agree to build a Temple of the Five Gods here.” Hennea stood up and began pacing in abrupt, quick steps.
“The Secret Path decided to bring the religion out into the public. They don’t
tell people that they get their five gods from the Travelers’ Orders, of
course.” “There are six Orders,” observed Rinnie. “They don’t know about the Guardian,” said Jes. “Travelers
don’t talk about their mistakes.” “You are not a mistake,” said Seraph, though Jes was more right
than wrong about the Travelers’ reasoning regarding the Guardians. “Travelers
protect the Guardians’ secrets because your Order works better that way.” As if
that settled the matter, Seraph turned back to Hennea, and sorted through her
story for some way to change the subject. “Why did this Path of yours change
and decide to bring their church to the masses?” Hennea shook her head. “I don’t know. Volis thinks that it’s
because the truth must be made known—but Volis wouldn’t know the truth if it
tore his throat out. I don’t think that all of the wizards believe in their
made-up gods, so there must be another reason.” “Volis told me they chose to set his temple here because of
Shadow’s Fall.” “I’ve heard him say that, too,” agreed Hennea. “I don’t know
what they want with Shadow’s Fall, but I suppose that whatever power still
lurks there can defend itself more than adequately.” ““Indeed,” said Seraph. “My husband is proof of that.” “No,” said Hennea. “I don’t think that he is.” Seraph stiffened. “Oh?” she said softly. “There were some wizards who traveled with us from Taela.
They stayed with the Sept when Volis moved us into the new temple.” She stopped
her pacing to frown down at Seraph. “Understand, please, that I’ve had to take
a few facts and string them together. A few days ago, Volis got some
correspondence from Taela. It wasn’t signed, but from the content I think that
it was from one of the wizards who came here with us. The letter devoted an
entire paragraph to your family—unless there is another family with a Raven,
Falcon, and Cormorant?” “No,” said Seraph softly. Hennea nodded once and began to pace again. “Someone’s taken
a Raven’s eye to your home—and a real Raven would know that you had a Guardian,
too. So it must have been one of the Path’s wizards wearing one of their
stones.” Seraph nodded. “I’d been listening to talk since we came here, and I heard
of a Traveler mage married to a solsenti farmer. Since it was unlikely
that any other Travelers had settled here, I could only suppose that you’d been
blessed with two Ordered children, half-blood or not. I decided to warn you as
soon as I could, though there seemed to be no particular urgency. Then, last
night, a man came to tell Volis that your husband’s dead horse had been found
with a few human bones. Tier’s dead, they said, and they mourned the loss of
his music.” Hennea stopped again, rubbing her wrist absently. “And I
thought on that letter I’d read. The first line read, ‘we have the Owl safe
here.’” Seraph froze as her heart leapt to her throat. “By Lark and
Raven,” she said, imbuing the words with compulsion, “do not mislead me on
this.” Hennea nodded to herself in satisfaction. “Your husband was
Traveler and Owl and they took him to Taela to work their magic on him.” “My husband was Redemi born and bred—but given to the Order
of the Owl,” corrected Seraph absently to give herself time to regain control. Tier
was alive? “If there was Traveler blood in his lineage it was a long time
ago.” “Ah,” said Hennea, revealing mild surprise. “I’ve never
heard of something like that.” She rubbed her wrist again. “Anyway. I waited
until Volis left on business this morning and set out to find the place where
the huntsman found your husband’s horse. It wasn’t difficult to follow the
huntsman’s trail.” “What did you find?” asked Seraph, her voice so soft that
Lehr shifted uncomfortably. Hennea shook her head. “Not much.” She shivered and clenched
her hand over her wrist where Volis’s geas band held her. “I have to get
back soon.” She straightened slightly and continued, “The huntsman and his men
buried both the horse and the skull, and I had no means to dig them up. I found
hints of old magic, but nothing that would cause a person’s death. There were a
few tracks—but I’m not a Falcon to be certain of anything the tracks could
tell.” “Lehr is,” said Rinnie. “Yes,” said Hennea, “I know. I had hoped to prove my suspicions
before I talked to you—but I’m unlikely to get a chance to come so far again.
Take your Falcon and find out what they did. Then come and help me deal with
Volis—and I’ll help you find your husband.” “I don’t like leaving Rinnie alone,” said Lehr as he led
Seraph through the partially plowed field. “She’ll be safe with Gura,” Seraph said, though she wasn’t
happy with it either. “And Jes will be back soon.” She’d certainly be safer at home than investigating a place
that might have been Shadow Blighted. If Seraph hadn’t needed Lehr’s help,
she’d have found some way to leave him behind, too. Jes, she’d found excuses to send off with Hennea. The forest
king’s territory extended on either side of the trail to town, but Jes thought
that as long as he was with her the forest king wouldn’t stop Hennea a second
time. The geas had obviously been very painful by the time they’d
left—Jes could get Hennea back to the temple sooner than if she had to find her
way herself. So now she only had to risk one of her children to find out
if Hennea had been right. Tier was alive. Seraph was too much a Raven to
allow herself to believe it without more proof, but even so, the thought
thrummed through her. She would have the chance to save him, as she hadn’t been
able to save Ushireh. “There’s two places I could pick up the trail,” Lehr said.
“But knowing Jes, I thought that it might be shorter to follow the path he took
with the forest king than to try and follow the trail he made bringing Hennea
back.” “You’re the Hunter,” Seraph said. “I trust you.” Lehr stopped where the field turned to forest. “The forest
king came here,” he said, but he didn’t immediately start on the trail, just
stared at the ground. “Are you certain that I’m a Hunter? Papa could ... can
track as well as I can.” He didn’t look at her as he spoke. Lehr, she thought, saw beyond the power to the cost of acknowledging
his Traveler blood. He knew that a Falcon could never belong to Redem. “It doesn’t matter,” she said gently. “We just need to track
Jes to where he found the girl, then follow her trail to where ... where the
huntsman found whatever he found.” “Right,” he said and started through the forest. Seraph followed Lehr’s rapid gait with an effort, but made
no complaint. The afternoon was well spent and he would need light to track.
Whatever he hoped, she could feel the hum of magic as it passed from him and
seeped into the woods around her. She had learned basic tracking skills
herself, but she could see no sign of bent grass or footprint in the trail Lehr
followed—she doubted that anyone but a Hunter could have followed the forest
king through his own territory. But she said nothing of it. Lehr would have to accept his
abilities in his own way—or not. When Lehr began a steady jog, Seraph left off her musings
and concentrated on keeping up with him. He ran a mile or so before dropping
back to a walk in a glade of wild wheat edged by forest on three sides and a
formidable rock formation on the other. “I think this is where Jes picked up the girl,” he said,
glancing around at the ground. He turned his back to the stone formation and
knelt in the thick, spring-short grass. “There are several sets of his tracks.
Do you see how much deeper Jes’s print is here than it usually is?” A branch moved behind his head. Seraph hissed a warning and
called her magic. “Now there is no need for that, Raven,” said the man who
rolled nimbly out from under a particularly thick area of foliage that gathered
in front of the stone formation. “It is you who have invaded my home, not the
other way around.” Lehr got to his feet and dusted off the knee of his
breeches. “Mother,” he said. “This is Jes’s forest king.” He looked more like a grubby farmer fallen on hard times,
thought Seraph. The tunic he wore was patched on top of older patches. His feet
were bare and his hands were the knobby-knuckled, dark-nailed hands of a man
who had worked the land. She’d always wanted to see Jes’s friend, and on any other
day she would have had a number of questions for him. But nothing mattered
except Tier. Seraph bowed her head shallowly so she could keep her eyes
on him. “We are sorry to disturb you,” she said. “We are following the woman’s
tracks to the place where my husband’s horse died.” “You won’t find it trying to track her from here, Hunter. I
didn’t bring her by ways you can follow.” The forest king grinned, revealing
yellowing teeth that looked sharp, and his eyes stayed cold and watchful. “The
place you speak of is outside my realm, but you can follow the girl’s tracks
starting from the big waterfall. Let me loan you a guide.” He turned and looked at the brush behind him. It shuddered
briefly then a rangy vixen emerged. Seraph felt no magic, though beside her
Lehr stiffened as if he heard something odd, but the vixen stared at the
bedraggled forest king as if he were talking to her before setting out at a
trot without looking at Seraph or Lehr. The forest king waved his hand at the fox. “Follow her—she
won’t wait.” “My thanks.” Seraph bowed again and started out after Lehr,
who was already headed deeper into the forest. It was chilly near the falls where ,the cold river water was
pounded to vapor at the bottom of its descent. The fox shifted nervously while
Lehr paced by the river. The moment he found Hennea’s trail and knelt beside
it, she left without waiting for gratitude. Lehr rose to his feet and set out at a gait scarcely slower
than he’d used to follow the fox. Even so, the sun was low when they broke free
of the trees at last and began climbing a narrow path up the rock-strewn side
of a mountain. “Lots of traffic here,” said Lehr, pointing at a rock scored
by a shod hoof. “More than usual for such a remote place.” “Hennea was here,” Seraph reminded him. “The huntsman and
his men.” Lehr shook his head. “More people than that have been here.
Some of the tracks are pretty faint, but I’d say five or six horsemen were here
a month or more ago. Their tracks go up the mountain and back down again. Isn’t
that what we’re looking for?” Seraph nodded. “If you find anything that might have
belonged to them, a bit of cloth or hair, get it for me.” She wiped the sweat
from her face to clear her eyes. “I can use it to get more information.” “Like you did from Frost’s bridle,” Lehr began moving again,
but only at a walk. His change of pace might have been to allow him to observe
the tracks more clearly, but Seraph suspected it was more likely to allow her
to catch her breath. They didn’t slow long, and after a few miles Lehr seemed to
forget she was there. The trail he followed snaked across the foothills and
into the crevices of the Ragged Mountains. Seraph’s calves ached, then burned as they hadn’t since her
Traveling days. Farming was hard, but climbing at a jog in the mountains was a
different sort of work, Lehr didn’t seem bothered by it, even though he wore
the pack she’d filled with things they might need.’ When Lehr stopped, she wondered if he were finally getting
tired, but then she really looked at where they were. The deer trail they’d been following had widened into a
piece of open level ground as big as the kitchen garden. In the center of the cleared
area, a waist-high white rock with an unusual flat top broke through the dirt. The grass in the clearing was knee-high, unusually tall for
this time of year this high in the mountains. It carpeted the ground in dark
bitter green, except for a large mound of disturbed earth to one side, a burial
mound large enough for a horse. “Why did they bury the horse?” asked Lehr. “Sometimes,” said Seraph, “the Blighted Places can recharge
their magics. The bodies will tend to attract people or animals, and it’s best
to get them safely buried. There are also stories about odd things happening to
the bodies of people who die of Shadow Blight—things that don’t happen if the
bodies are safely buried.” “Weren’t they afraid of the magic?” “Maybe,” said Seraph. “There are a lot of Redemi who can
sense magic—especially the ones who spend a lot of time out in the mountains.
Maybe because in earlier times, when the Shadowed’s hand was heavier on the mountains, the people who
couldn’t sense the Blighted areas didn’t survive.” Tier had said that he could
sense such places—she pushed hope away and said, “There isn’t any magic that I
can feel now—likely the huntsman felt the same. Take a look around, would you,
and tell me what you find.” Lehr nodded, then stopped. “Do you believe her, Mother?” he
said, his voice tight. “Do you believe Papa might be alive?” “I don’t know,” she said, because it was the answer that
would hurt him the least. Seraph took a deep breath. “This doesn’t feel like
one of the Blighted Places to me. Hennea said there was old magic here, but I
can’t sense it.” “What does that mean?” he asked. She shook her head. “I think I would sense anything that had
lasted here from the time of the Shadowed’s Fall, especially power still strong
enough to kill.” “So this is not a shadowed place.” Seraph nodded slowly. “A month is long enough to dissipate solsenti
magic,” she said, and then forced herself to point out the obvious to both
of them. “Just because it was not old magic that killed here, doesn’t mean that
those solsenti wizards of Hennea’s didn’t kill Tier outright. I need you
to look and see if you can tell what happened when Frost was killed here.
Remember to look especially closely for any scrap of hair or clothing that I
might be able to read.” She moved back to the edge of the clearing as he began to
quarter it thoroughly. “The clearest thing I see,” he said at last, “is that something
burned here. You can see where the earth was scorched—the patch goes all the
way around the grave—see here where the grass is a bit shorter?” She nodded. “It looks to me that there have been three groups of people
here recently,” he said. “The most recent was Jes’s Hennea. She walked the
meadow, just like I did, stopped there”—he pointed to a place just to the right
of the large stone—“and stopped again to press her hand into the dirt mound.
Then she left. The party who came before her, was here a few days ago—three
horsemen. One of them was the huntsman—see the way that off fore is angled?” He
didn’t look at her so Seraph didn’t bother shaking her head. “That’s the horse
he was riding-when he come to tell us what he’d found.” “The earliest group, though, is what we’re interested in,
and they worked at hiding their tracks. They were here after the snow started
to melt—so no earlier than a month and a half ago. I can’t tell you how many of
them there were here for certain, but they were here about the same time as
Papa.” Lehr gestured for Seraph to follow him and led her to the
far side of the clearing, through a thicket of elderberry, to a stand of trees. “He saw them. Mother,” said Lehr. “He stopped Frost here for
a while and watched them, maybe for as long as a quarter of an hour. See how
Frost stood here, shifting her weight?” He turned and walked back the way they
came without taking his eyes from the ground. “Then he walked Frost out into
the clearing. There was no fighting, or scuffle that I can see. But Frost’s
prints are lost in this burnt area.” He glanced around again. “I can pick up the tracks of the
other men lower down and backtrack them.” “We’ll do that if necessary,” said Seraph. “Did you find anything
they left behind?” He shook his head. “Nothing. I’m sorry I couldn’t find out
anything more. Are we done now?” “Just beginning,” Seraph answered. “Give me your pack,” she
said. There was a camp shovel tied to the back and she took it. “Now we dig.” “You’re looking for something that can tell you what happened?”
asked Lehr. “Like the saddle or Papa’s pack?” “If there’s something to read, I’ll try—but mostly I’m
looking for the human bones the huntsman buried with Frost.” Before she set cold iron to earth, she touched the dirt,
trying to find the old magic that Hennea had spoken of. “There’s death here,”
she said. “Sudden and painful.” “Papa?” he asked. “I don’t know,” Seraph replied, rubbing the grains between
her fingers. “Ravens are not necromancers.” She got to her feet and started digging with the
shovel—refusing Lehr’s help. This was not something for children, no matter
that the child in question was a foot taller and almost twice her weight. She dug until the metal edge of the shovel blade bounced off
bone. They hadn’t buried Frost very deep—but a horse is a large animal.
Scraping gently with the blade, she pushed away dirt and saw, beneath a coating
of soil and ash, the familiar pattern of Frost’s dapples. “Let me, Mother,” said Lehr, taking the shovel from her. He shouldn’t have been able to read anything from her face,
but he was almost as sensitive as Jes or Tier. She was too tired from the trip
here, from digging, from hope and fear to fight him. “If we’re lucky,” Lehr said as he began digging, “they’d
have set the skull beside the horse and not beneath her.” We don’t have ropes
and horses to move Frost the way the huntsman did.” “I can move her if we have to,” said Seraph—not as certain
as she sounded. “But I’d rather not add more magic here until I’ve sifted all
the information the grave contains.” He probed the disturbed ground and uncovered, little by
little, Frost’s poor burnt corpse. As the huntsman had said, her head and neck
had been charred to the bone with just enough tissue to hold the vertebrae
together. But the hindquarters were almost intact—left that way by the chill of
the mountain spring. There was only a faint odor of meat turning rotten. “How did the bridle survive?” asked Lehr after he’d cleared
a space around the blackened skull of the horse. “There are spells that only attack the living,” said Seraph.
“I think that the damage to the bridle was secondary—the spell burnt the horse,
and the burning horse burnt the bridle in turn. Hold up, there’s the saddle
blanket.” Part of it, anyway. Where the saddle had been was gone, leaving only
a black scorch mark on Frost’s back. •* She knelt and touched the cloth. Nothing. She whispered
words of power, but they slid past the saddle blanket and sank deeply into the
soil as if something sucked them down and ate them. And deep below the surface
of the earth, something very old stirred then subsided, its sleep too deep to
be awakened so easily. Cautiously she withdrew her magic, letting it die down until
it no longer fed whatever it was that waited beneath. She looked again at the
flat-topped stone and saw that it could have served as an altar. She felt the
dirt again and looked at the deep green grass. Blood had once flowed over the
altar, enough blood that generations later the grass still fed upon it. Hennea
had been right, there was old magic here—older than Shadow’s Blight. This was not a Blighted Place. If any mage tried to set a
trap here, the magic would be eaten by the same thing that had eaten hers. “Mother?” Lehr asked, pausing in his steady pace to look at
her. “Something’s waiting here,” she said. “But it had nothing to
do with any recent deaths. It’ll likely lie here until your grandchildren are
dust unless it’s awakened.” “What about the blanket?” Seraph shook her head. “Nothing. I need the skull. I’ll be
able to tell if it’s Tier’s.” His shovel hesitated before he resumed his search, widening
the cleared space around the horse. Seraph cleaned the dirt from her fingertips absently and
watched as Lehr at last unearthed a fire-blackened human skull, set near the
horse’s neck bones. Gently Lehr took the grim thing into his hands and handed it
to her. Seraph stared at the wide brow and looked for a hint of familiar
features. Had Tier’s front teeth been so square? She couldn’t tell. There was
no jaw bone to give the skull balance. As she’d told Tier, necromancy was not something Ravens
used—but it was prudence rather than ability that stopped them. Meddling with the
dead was no light thing. If her need had not been so great she’d have left it
alone. Her fingers told her nothing; the bone could almost have
been a stone in a field that had never felt a human hand, so little of its past
stayed with it. She set it down and touched Frost’s skull. Nothing. Someone
had deliberately cleaned these bones as they’d cleaned the bridle and saddle
blanket. No random magic could rape the memory of life from a bone. She picked up the human skull again and sent more magic seeking
through it. A bridle or a blanket could be cleaned of lives that brush past it,
but not even a great deal of magic could clean away a whole lifetime
completely. There had to be bits of it left, if she tried hard enough. Beneath her fingers she felt a tentative response. She
pressed the cool bone to her forehead and left it there a long time as she
sought to touch the faint pulse of experience. The sun was setting, when she placed the skull gently beside
Frost’s. “This man was not Tier,” she whispered around the throbbing
pain in her temples. “He was a Traveler, dead of a blade, not magic fire—and he
died somewhere far away, though not long ago:’ “It doesn’t mean that Papa’s alive,” he said, obviously
hoping she’d contradict him. “Someone tried to make us think him dead with the
skull and Frost’s body—but they might simply have taken his body away, or taken
him off to kill elsewhere.” “It only means that Tier probably didn’t die here,” she
agreed, fear and hope both held in firm control. Lehr began filling in the grave, skull and all, and Seraph
thought about what she knew. “Lehr?” she said finally. “Hmm?” “These people who killed Frost took a lot of trouble to
obscure their tracks. They weren’t good enough to fool you, but they tried very
hard. If you hadn’t seen their tracks below, would you have noticed them here?
If we were looking for Tier’s remains rather than evidence that he was taken?” He frowned, “Maybe not” Seraph nodded. “I think they knew about you. They were careful
to take Tier outside of the realm of the forest king—I think they knew about
him as well. They cleansed Frost’s body and the leather and-cloth, leaving them
no past for me to read. They spent a long time trying to make that skull
silent—and almost succeeded.” “No one knows about the forest king,” said Lehr, turning
over the last spade of dirt. “But Hennea said that whoever sent the letter to
the priest knew what we are.” “Yes,” agreed Seraph. “How did they know, not only that I am Raven, but exactly what my skills are? Most Ravens cannot
read the past in an object.-These men knew what trail Tier would take home—and
it’s not the way he left.” Lehr frowned. “Not even I knew what path Papa takes home. He
kept it quiet because the furs are worth a lot of money—did you notice that
there is no trace of the furs? They would have been packed over Frost’s
hindquarters, which weren’t even scorched.” “No, I hadn’t noticed,” said Seraph. “So thrifty of them.” Lehr packed in a layer of dirt with his foot. “I suppose
that someone could have overheard Jes talking about the forest king—but Jes
seldom talks to anyone but the family. No one else really pays attention to
what he says anyway. And if none of us knew what magic you could do until Forder
brought back Frost’s bridle, who would know what you could do?” She waited, watching him think about it. If he came up with
the same answer as she did ... “Bandor used to hunt with Papa, didn’t he?” Lehr whispered
it. “During the first years when the bakery used to have to support the farm,
too? Jes was just a baby.” “That’s right,” Seraph said. “And, after you and Papa got married, Bandor was the only
one who used to talk to you. He knows a lot about the Travelers—did you tell
him what kinds of things you could do?”. “Yes,” she said. “And Bandor knows about Jes’s stories of the forest king—but
he doesn’t believe them, Mother.” She smiled at him grimly. “Do you know who your father
thinks the forest king is? I mean aside from Jes’s dealings with him?” “No.” “What if I told you that in a very old language, ell means
king or lord and vanail is forest. If you put them
together—” “Ellevanal?” Seraph had never seen anyone’s jaw drop before; it was an unattractive
expression. “Do you mean,” whispered her son, “that Ellevanal, god of
the forest and growing things, the Ellevanal, Karadoc’s Ellevanal,
is Jes’s forest king?” “I don’t know,” she said. “Today is the first time I’ve met
him, and I didn’t ask. He doesn’t look like a god, does he? But I know that
Tier was convinced of it, and he told your Aunt Alinath what he thought” Alinath had been at her worst, telling Tier that Seraph
couldn’t give Jes the kind of attention that he needed. That Seraph encouraged
Jes’s problems by listening to his stories about his made-up friend. A boy, she’d
said, needed to understand that lying was not acceptable. She hadn’t
liked it when Tier suggested Jes hadn’t lied at all. Seraph smiled grimly. “Bandor was there when he said it.” But Lehr was still worried about other matters. “But the
forest lord belongs here, to our forest. Ellevanal is worshiped everywhere—I
mean, Karadoc has had apprentices, and there’s a larger church in Korhadan.” “I don’t worship gods,” said Seraph. “You’ll have to take it
up with the forest king next time you meet him.” Lehr thought about her answer, but it seemed to satisfy him
because he changed the subject. “Uncle Bandor loves us, loved ... loves Papa.
He wouldn’t do anything to hurt Papa.” “So I believe,” agreed Seraph. “But you and I both came up
with his name. He’s become one of Volis’s followers. I think that we need
to be cautious around him until we know more.” “So what are we going to do now?” “First we’ll finish here, then I have a few questions for
the priest. Can you take us by the quickest route to Redem?” “Yes,” he said. “But we won’t make it before dark.” “No matter,” Seraph said coldly. “I don’t mind waking up a
few people.” Or tearing them limb from limb if she had to. Tier had been
taken, alive—because she couldn’t bear it otherwise—and she intended to find
out where he was. And tearing someone limb from limb sounded very, very good.
Let Volis face a Raven who knew what he was when he didn’t have a cadre of
wizards to protect him. Oh, she would have her answers from him before she
slept this night. “What about Rinnie?” asked Lehr. “Jes will have gotten back from taking Hennea to the village
by now. Rinnie will be safe with him.” Gura barked, and Rinnie looked up from her gardening. But
whoever had disturbed the dog was on the other side of the house. Rinnie jumped to her feet and dusted off her skirt. She put
her hand on Gura’s collar and set off to see who had come. Chapter 7He opened his eyes to utter darkness and a cold stone floor
under his cheek, though he didn’t remember going to sleep. He took a deep,
shaken breath and tried to determine how he got here, wherever here was. The
last thing Tier remembered was riding Frost down the mountain on the way back
home. Undeniably, he was no longer on the mountain. The stone
floor beneath his hands was level, and his fingers found the marks of a chisel.
He was in a room, though he could hear water flowing nearby. He rose cautiously to hands and knees and felt his way
forward until his hands closed on grating set into the floor, the source of the
sound of water. The bars were too close to let him put anything wider than his
finger through and the water flowed well below that. He tried to pull up the
grate, but it didn’t so much as shift. Hours later he was hungry, thirsty, and knew that he was in
a room six paces wide by four paces long. An ironbound wooden door was inset
flat against one of the narrow walls with the hinges on the outside. The stonemason responsible for the walls had been very good,
leaving only the smallest of fingerholds. Tier’d fallen three times, but he
finally climbed the corner of the room until he touched a wooden ceiling. By
his reckoning it was about twice his height to the floor. With a fool braced on
adjacent walls he couldn’t put any significant pressure against any of the
boards, though he tried all the ones he could reach from his perch. At last he climbed back down, convinced that the room he was
in wasn’t anywhere in Redem—or Leheigh either for that matter. He’d been inside
the Sept’s keep a time or two, and the walls in this room—which had obviously
been designed as a prison cell—were better formed than the walls of the great
hall in the Sept’s keep. Why had someone gone to the trouble of hauling him off the
mountain and imprisoning him? It wasn’t as if he, himself, would be worth money
to anyone, not the kind of money that would be important to anyone who could afford
a cell built like this one was. He had a long time to think about it. Emperor Phoran the Twenty-Seventh (Twenty-Sixth if he didn’t
count the Phoran who united the Empire—it was the first Phoran’s son who had
declared himself emperor) stretched his feet out before him and cast a
practiced leer at the woman sitting on him. She was all but baring her breasts
at him, the stupid cow. Did she really think that his favors were likely to be
won by such as she? He snagged a mug from a nearby serving tray and drank
deeply, closing his eyes to the party that had somehow spread from the dining
hall to his own private rooms. The laughter of a nearby woman cut through his
spine with its falseness. He wondered what his so-long-ago ancestor would have thought
about such decadence. Would he still have set aside his plow to organize his
fellow farmers into a militia to defend themselves against bandits? Or would he
have turned back to his farming, ashamed that his loins could breed such a degenerate
creature as the current emperor? Phoran sighed. “Am I boring you, my love?” asked the woman on his lap
archly. He opened his mouth to inflict the kind of cruel remark that
had become second nature to him over the past few years, but instead he sighed
again. She wasn’t worth it—dumb as a sheep and oblivious to fine nuances of language. Instead he pushed her off and away with a pat. “Go find someone
else to cuddle tonight, there’s a love. This fine ale suits me better than a
woman ... tonight.” Someone giggled as if his remark had been witty. The woman
who’d been on his lap swayed her hips and half staggered onto the lap of a
handsome young man who’d been seated on the end of the bed, watching the party
with a jaundiced eye—Toarsen, Avar’s younger brother, who’d doubtless been told
to watch over Phoran while Avar was out in the wilds taking stock of his new
inheritance. Phoran swallowed the better part of the contents of his cup
then closed his eyes once more. This time he left them closed. Maybe if he
feigned a drunken stupor (a common enough occurrence) they would all go away. He let his hand fall away from his lips and the mug fell on
the plush rug his great-grandfather had imported from somewhere at great
expense. He hoped the dark ale ruined the rug. Then the chatelaine would run to
Avar when he returned. Avar would listen gravely, and when the chatelaine left,
he would laugh and pat Phoran on the back—and pay attention to him again. Avar, mentor, best friend, and Sept of Leheigh now that his
miserly old father had died hadn’t had much time to spend with his emperor
lately. Spitefully, Phoran wondered if he should take away the title and lands
that kept Avar from noticing that his emperor needed a friend more than he
needed another Sept. Tears of self-pity welled up and were firmly repressed.
Tears were something he shed alone, never, never in front of the court no
matter how drunk he was. Self-indulgence aside, Phoran had no intention of taking
Avar’s inheritance away. He even knew that Avar had to attend to his duties; he
just wished he had duties to attend to as well. The endless parties had become
... sickening—like too much apple mead. When would he be old enough to start
ruling his empire? Someone patted his cheek and he slapped at the hand, purposefully
making the movement clumsier than necessary. He could drink a fair bit more
than he had tonight before it affected him much. “He’s unconscious.” Phoran recognized the voice. It was
Toarsen. He must have gotten rid of the cow, too. “Let’s get this room cleared
out.” The Emperor listened while people shuffled away. At last the
guardsmen came in to gather the few who’d passed out in the chamber. His door
shut behind them and he was alone. Without people around, without Avar to keep
it at bay, the Memory would come for him, again. Before he could sit up and call them back, someone spoke. It
startled him so that for a moment he didn’t quite recognize the speaker. “Some emperor,” sneered a voice quite close to his ear. Not
his Memory but someone who’d stayed after the guardsmen had left—Kissel, the
younger son of the Sept of Seal Hold. The relief of his mistake almost blinded
Phoran to the words. “A beardless boy who drinks himself to sleep every night.” “Got to hand it to Avar,” agreed Toarsen. “I thought that
the boy would be harder to tame and we’d have to have him killed like
the Regent was. But Avar’s turned him into a proper sot who jumps when Avar
asks.” “Well I’d rather not have to be on the cleanup committee.
He’s gone to fat like a capon. Come help me heave him to the bed.” They managed it with grunts and swearing while Phoran concentrated
on being as heavy as possible. How dare they speak of him like this? He’d fix
these imbeciles. Tomorrow his guards would have their heads. He was emperor,
they’d forgotten that. He’d have Avar ... Avar was his friend. Just
because Avar’s brother talked that way about him didn’t mean that Avar felt the
same way. Avar liked him, was proud of the way he could outdrink and outinsult
any man in the court. “And why isn’t Avar here to do the honors?” asked Kissel. “I
thought he was going to see the Emperor tonight after resting yesterday.” Avar was in Taela? “He had some pressing business,” grunted Toarsen, pushing Phoran toward the center of the bed. “He’ll admit to coming
in late tonight and greet the Emperor over breakfast.” When the men left him alone in his room, the Emperor opened
his eyes and rolled off the bed. He walked to the full-length mirror and stared
at himself by the light of the few candles that had been left burning. Mud-colored, too-fine hair that had been coaxed into
ringlets this afternoon hung limply around his rounded face, spotty and pale.
Hands that had once had sword calluses were soft and pudgy, covered with rings
his uncle had eschewed. “Ruins your sword grip, boy,” the regent had said. “A man
who can’t protect himself depends upon others, too much.” Phoran touched the mirror lightly. “But you died anyway, Uncle.
You left me alone.” Alone. Fear curled in his stomach. Unless Avar was
with him, the Memory came every night. If Avar was in Taela, as Toarsen had claimed, he’d be
staying with his mistress in the town. Phoran could send a messenger to bring
him here. The Emperor stared at his image in the mirror and rolled up
the sleeve of the loose shirt he wore. In the reflection the faint marks the
Memory left on him each night were almost invisible in the dim candlelight. Avar planned to lie to his emperor: Avar, who was Phoran’s
only friend. The Emperor made no move to summon a messenger. Food came at irregular intervals through a small opening
near the floor that Tier had somehow missed on his first blind, inspection of
the cell. An anonymous hand opened the metal covering and shoved a tray of
water and bread through, shutting and latching the cover before Tier’s eyes
even adjusted to the light. Still, he’d grown grateful for those brief moments, for the
reassurance that he was not blind. The bread was always good, flavored with salt and herbs and
made with sifted wheat flour rather than the cheaper rye. Bread fit for a
lord’s table, not a prison cell. First he’d tried to fit his situation into some logical
path, but nothing about his captivity made sense. Finally he’d come to the
conclusion that he was lacking some information necessary for a solution. Only then had he raged. He’d slept when he was tired, worn-out from anger and fruitless
attempts to find a way out of the cell. When he’d realized that he was losing
track of time he told himself stories, the ones he’d gathered from the old
people of Redem, saved word for word from one generation to the next. Some of
those were songs as well as stories, ballads that took almost an hour each to
sing. When the toll of the hours grew too great, he’d quit
singing, quit thinking, quit raging, and given in to despair. But even that
left him alone eventually. Finally, he developed habits to fill the empty hours. He did
the exercises he’d learned when he’d been a soldier. When he ran out of the
ones he could do in his confined space, he made up others. Only after he was
sweating and panting, he’d sit down and tell one story. Then he’d either rest
or exercise again as the impulse took him. But it was the magic that had given him purpose. He’d known some of the things his magic could do. Seraph had
told him what she knew—and, despite the danger, he’d used it some over the
years. It helped that his magic wasn’t the showy sort that people all knew
about, like Seraph’s. His magic was more subtle. He could calm an angry drunk or give a frightened man courage
with his songs. Such things as any music could do, but with more effect. When
he chose, he could commit a song or letter to memory and recall it, word
perfect, years later. When he’d sung at the tavern in Redem, he almost always
gave his last song a push to cheer his audience. It had made him feel guilty, because Seraph had given up her
magic entirely. But she’d never seemed to mind, never seemed to miss the power
that she’d set aside. He could never have set aside his music. There were some things he’d avoided. Some things were harmful
to his audience; music alone shared the darker emotions with his audience,
never magic. He was very careful not to use his magic to persuade others to his
will—words were enough. And then there were the things too obviously magic to
use in Redem. Alone in the darkness of his cell, he’d succeeded in
creating small lights to accompany his songs the first time he tried. They were
flickering, faint things, but they comforted him. Sounds were more difficult, even though he’d accidentally
called them once before. After a particularly nasty battle, he and a hunch of
the other officers got roaring drunk and someone thrust a small lyre, part of
the spoils, into his hands. The song he’d sung had included fair maidens and
barnyard animals. He was pretty certain he’d been the only one who noticed that
the moos and quacks of the chorus were accompanied by the real thing. He had been trying to re-create the experiment the first
time his visitor arrived. The constant dark had honed his other senses, and the scuff
of a foot on the boards above him stopped him midword. He’d sat silently,
waiting for something more. Finally, barely audible over the burble of the water that
flowed under the grating in the back corner of his cell, he’d heard it again. It hadn’t been a rat; a rat was too light to make a stout
board creak under its weight. He’d been almost certain that the noise was made
by a person. “Hello,” he’d said. “Who is there?” The boards had given a small, surprised squeak and then
there was nothing. Whoever it had been, he had left. Some unknowable span of tune later, while Tier was doing
push-ups, he’d heard it again. He’d stilled, too worried that he would drive
whoever it was off again if he made another move. He hadn’t heard another
sound, but somehow he knew that his visitor was gone. Desperate for company,
Tier turned his thoughts toward enticing his visitor to stay. Tier awoke with the knowledge that there was someone nearby.
He hadn’t heard anything, but he could feel that someone stood above him listening.
He sat up, leaned his back against the wall, and began his story with the traditional
words. “It happened like this,” he said. If he pretended that his eyes were closed, he could think himself
leaning against the wall at home telling stories to his own restless children
so they’d fall asleep faster. Seraph would be cleaning—she was always in
motion. Maybe, he thought, she would be grumpy as she sometimes got when Rinnie
was tired and the boys were restless. Her face would be serene, but the tautness
of her shoulders gave her away. I wonder if she knows that something has happened
to me? Is she looking ? It was an old thought by now, and held a certain comfort. “A boy came to be king when he was only sixteen,” Tier said,
“when his own father died in battle. War was common then, and the kingdom he
inherited was neither so large nor so powerful that the king could sit in
safety and leave the fighting to his generals.” The story of the Shadowed was one he knew so well that he
had once told it backwards, word for word, for a half-drunken wager. He’d
missed one phrase, but his comrades hadn’t noticed. “This young man,” he said, “was a good king, which is to say
that he promoted order and prosperity among his nobles and usually kept the
rest from starvation. He married well, and in time was blessed with five sons.
As years passed and his sons became men, his kingdom waxed in wealth because
the king was skilled at keeping the neighboring kingdoms fighting among
themselves rather than attacking his people.” The floor above him made a sound, as if a listener were
settling in more comfortably. Tier added his unknown listener to his audience. A boy, he decided with no more evidence than his visitor’s
willingness to travel without lights. There were spaces between the boards that
would have let light into Tier’s cell, if Ms unknown guest had brought so much
as a single candle with him. He would be a boy old enough to be allowed to wander about
on his own, but not so old as to have other duties to attend to; an adventurous
boy who would venture into the dark corners where prisoners were kept. “The king had many of the interests of his kind. He could hunt
and ride as well as any of his men. He danced with grace and could play the
lute. None of his guardsmen or nobles could stand long against him with sword
or staff.” Tier had always had some doubt about the king’s prowess—what kind of
fool would beat his king at swordplay? Tier fought to picture the king in his mind, pulling out
details that weren’t in the story. He’d be a slender young man, like Tier’s son
Jes—but his hair would be the pure, red gold of the eastern nobles .... Seraph had told him that some of the Bards had been able to
create pictures for their listeners, but his cell stayed dark as pitch. “But what the king loved most was learning,” he continued,
in the proper words. “He established libraries at every village, and in his
capital he collected more books than had ever been assembled together then or
since. Perhaps that was the reason for what happened to him.” Tier found himself grinning as he remembered Seraph’s contemptuous
sniff the first time he’d told her that part. Books weren’t evil, she’d
explained loftily, what people did with the knowledge they’d gleaned was no
judgment against the books that held it. “Time passed, and the king grew old and wizened as his sons
became strong and wise. People waited without worry for the old king to die and
his oldest son—to take the crown—for the heir was every bit as temperate and
wise as his father.” Tier took a sip of water, experience guiding his hand to the
place where he left the earthen bowl. He let the pause linger, as much a part
of this story as the words which followed. “Had that happened, like as not, our
king would have gone to earth and be as forgotten as his name.” “One evening the king’s oldest son went to bed, complaining
of a headache. By the next day he was blind and covered with boils; by that
evening he was dead. Plague had struck the palace, and, before it left, the
queen and every male of royal blood was dead.” Tier’s voice trembled on the last word, because he heard, as
clearly as he’d heard his own breath, a woman’s voice wailing in grief. He’d
done it—and he found the thread of magic that powered the eerie sound. A board creaked above him, closer than the sounds of the
mourning woman, recalling Tier back to the dark cell where there was no plague,
no dead women and children. “The king became haunted, spending hours alone in his great
library. But no one took much note, because the plague had spread in short
order to the capital city and then to the towns and villages beyond. A
horrible, ravening sickness that touched and lingered until its victim died a
week later, deaf and blind to anything except pain.” Cautiously he tried to feed energy toward the path that had
allowed the woman’s cry to sound. It seemed to him that he could feel the
unhealthy miasma of evil coating the emptiness of his cell floor. He stood up
abruptly, but the feeling ebbed as he stopped feeding the story. The control
reassured him. It was only a story, his story. He resumed his efforts as he continued the story. “One day,
after the last of his grandsons died, the king went to sleep an old, broken man
and woke up a young man of eighteen again. They called it a miracle at first,
some kind god’s deliverance from the ghastly illness that killed two of every
three that came down sick. But the plague spread further, unaffected by the
king’s miraculously returned youth. It traveled across borders, devouring the
royal houses of the kingdoms all around, until there was only one kingdom and
one king.” Tier’s voice stuck there, as the magic of the
generations-old words caught him in brutal understanding of the numberless dead
whose death had fed the evil that was in the king. “He ate their lives,” said a voice abruptly from the ceiling
above Tier. A shiver ran down Tier’s spine, though the words were the exact
ones he’d intended to use himself. Somehow the oddity of his listener knowing
the words to a Redemi story was part of the strange shape the story was taking. The soft, sexless voice continued relentlessly, “He ate them
all to preserve himself—and so he lost himself in truth.” Tier waited, but when his visitor said nothing more, Tier continued
the story himself. “As the years passed and the king lived far beyond his life
span, what few of his old advisors who escaped the original plague died, old
men that they were, one by one. As they did the king replaced them with
dark-robed, nameless men—it was these who gave him away at last.” “The king’s youngest daughter, Loriel, discovered them feasting
upon a child in her father’s antechamber,” Tier said, drawing the horror of
that into his dark cell. He could hear the sound of fangs crunching the fragile
bone in his soul. He could see it. A woman, older than he’d pictured her, stood in an open doorway.
Her hair, like Seraph’s, was pale, though washed in sunlight rather than
moonlight. Two figures crouched before her, anonymous in heavy brocade robes.
They were too occupied with what was before them to notice that they had been
seen. Between them lay a boy of ten or twelve years whose freckles stood out
against his too-white skin. His shoulders jerked rhythmically back and forth in
a mockery of life as the king’s councilors buried their heads in his abdomen
and fed. Tier’s shock kept him from holding the image, though the wet
sound of their feeding accompanied his voice. “And she fled to the last of her
father’s advisors, a mage.” He stopped speaking and tightened his control until the only
sounds remaining in the cell were the ones that belonged there. “And so they gathered,” said his listener. “And so they gathered,” repeated Tier, and the repetition
felt right, felt like the rhythm of the story. He relaxed: it was only a story,
one that he knew very well. “The remnants of people who had survived the
plague. But the sickness had taken the experienced warriors, the lords, and
commanders, leaving only a broken people. Loriel led the first attack, herself.” “She died,” whispered the listener and the magic coaxed Tier
as well, raising needs he’d never realized he’d felt. “She died,” Tier said, “but left behind a handful of men who
had learned what leadership meant, left them with the ancient mage who taught
them and fought by their side. They battled the minions of the Shadowed. As his
followers died, the king called upon a host of evil; ancient creatures woke
from their slumbers to fight at his behest.” Tier let his magic free, finding the places where he had
bound it too tightly over the years. The bindings, he saw, had been the reason
he’d had such difficulty. As the magic swept through him, exhilarating and
frightening by turns, the words came to him, as well-worn and soft as an old
cotton coverlet, but full of unexpected burrs that pricked and stung. “He lost himself and his name. There remained only a title,
given by the men who died fighting him. They called him the Shadowed.” “Numberless were the heroes ...” The other’s voice became
part of the story, too. Tier felt his magic rush up to envelope his listener. “Numberless were the heroes who fell,” continued Tier.
“Their songs unsung because there was no one left to sing.” He paused, letting
the other do his part. “Then came Red Ernave who fought with axe and bow ...” “A giant of a man,” said Tier. “He gathered them all, all
the men, women, and children who could pick up a stick or throw a stone. He
called them the Glorious Army of Man, and he taught them to fight.” As if there were no walls in his cell, the people of the
Glorious Army gathered before Tier. Gaunt-eyed and battered, they stood in
silent, unmoving defiance of the evil they fought. There were a few men, but
most of them were hollow-cheeked women, old men, and a small, precious
gathering of children worn by hunger and fear. Tier knew, by the Owl-borne bond that
formed by magic between storyteller and audience, that his listener saw them,
too. “And in the first days of autumn the king’s old mage took
council with Red Ernave. They talked alone all night, and when the morning sun
came, the mage’s days had found their number. He was burned in great ceremony,
and as the last coals died, Red Ernave assembled his army. He brought them to a
flat plain, just beyond the Ragged Mountains.” Tier had been there, once. He’d been following the track of
a deer and found himself, unexpectedly, on the plain of Shadow’s Fall. There
was no marker to warn the unwary, but he’d known where he was. Even so many
centuries later, under a blanket of pure white snow, there was death in that
place. He could almost feel the soil of the wounded land under his feet. The meadow stretched out before him now; he recognized the
shapes of the peaks that surrounded it. There was no snow on the ground
to hide the shape of the bodies littering the ground. “There, there they faced the hosts of the Shadowed
and fought. The sky grew black and blood drenched the ground.” Tier smelled the
bitter scent of old blood and almost gagged at the familiar odor of war. “Bodies piled and the battle raged around them for days. And
nights.” His cell rang with the sounds of battle, and he realized
he’d forgotten how overwhelming it was: the clash of metal on metal and the
screams of the dying. “The Shadowed’s creatures needed no sleep and they fed upon
the dead. The Army of Man fought on because there was nothing else to do; they
fought and died. But not so many died on the third day as had fallen on the second
day. By the fourth day it seemed that the evil host was thinning, and hope rose
among the ragged band—and for the first time they drove the host back.” Tier found that he had to stop to catch his breath, and slow
his heartbeat. In his pitch-black cell he saw a red-maned, scarred warrior with
his axe held wearily against his shoulder, waiting for Tier to continue telling
his story. But it was too real now, and the words were gone, lost in
the desolation of the long-ago battle. “And hope flooded the Army of Man for the first time,” said
the other, in a voice as ragged as Tier’s. “But even as they cheered, the skies darkened, though it was
yet midday, and another assault began.” The words were Tier’s again, though
they seemed oddly unreal compared to the scenes that unfolded before him. It was hard to breathe, the air was so foul. Red Ernave’s
hands were weary from the endless fighting. His axe laid into a creature that
looked as if it had once been a wolf before the Shadowed’s magics had gotten to
it. It died hard and Ernave had to hit it a second time before it lay still. He found himself on a small rise without an immediate opponent.
He took the chance to rest briefly and ran his gaze over the fighting—and saw
the Shadowed for the first time since the battle had begun. The Shadowed was less than he’d expected. A full head
shorter than Ernave and half his weight, he looked no more than a lad. He bore
more than a passing resemblance to Loriel—though her eyes had never been so
empty. The Shadowed smiled, and Ernave, who had thought he was tired beyond
fear, found that tie was wrong. A voice beside him said, “I’m here.” It was Kerine, the scrawny Traveler who was now their
only wizard. He’d staggered into Ernave’s encampment several winters ago and
been a thorn in Ernave’s side ever since. “It only needed that,” said Ernave sourly. Surprisingly the wizard laughed. “When the Shadow one is
dead, I’ll wash my hands of you, you hard-headed bastard. But from this moment
until that we are brothers, and I’ll stand with you. It’ll take more than that
axe of yours to kill the Shadowed.” ‘ Ernave said, “Come then, brother,” and cut a path through
the battle to the Shadowed. The Nameless King fought alone. His own creatures granted
him a wide berth—as if there could only be so much evil in one place and
the Shadowed’s presence made all other dark things unnecessary. Ernave approached from the side and swung, but the king’s
shield intercepted the blow. Ernave’s axe sank through the thin metal outer
layer into the wood underneath and stuck. Ernave jerked his axe hard and forced the Shadowed two
wild steps to the side before he slipped his arm out of the shield’s straps. Ernave slammed the shield into the ground, splitting it
as he would have a log so that his axe was free. It was a swift and practiced
move, but he just barely managed to bring his weapon up to parry the king’s
strike. The Shadowed fought as well as the old mage, his advisor,
had warned Ernave. Time and again the sword slid along Ernave’s axe, turning
the blows so that the heavier steel of the axe didn’t damage the sword blade. The king’s mouth moved with magic-making the whole time
he fought. For the most part Red Ernave forestalled the spell with heavy blows
that forced the king to lose his rhythm and concentrate on swordwork. Doubtless
there were more spells that Kerine deflected, but, every so often, a
spell touched Er-nave with white-hot heat that drained his spent body even
more. The king was fresh, and Ernave had been tired unto death
before the battle began. Even so, Ernave planted his feet, and, with a swift
pattern of his axe, he forced the king to leap away. The axe felt heavy in his hands, and every time it jerked
as the king turned aside another blow the shock shot up Ernave’s forearms and
through his shoulders and neck in a flash of pain. Ernave stumbled over nothing and, as he fell, his axe
caught the king a glancing blow in the knee and laid it bare to the bone.
Ernave didn’t hesitate, but kept wiling until he staggered to his feet and
turned back to face the king. The Shadowed shrieked and the semblance of the young man
the king had been fell away, leaving behind something that was little more than
sinew clinging to bone. There was no time for horror. Ernave surged to his feet
and struck at the king’s sword again. The blow hit fairly at last, shattering the elegant
blade. Ernave set himself for a killing blow, but the Shadowed dropped his
sword and lashed out with his hand. Claws that belonged on no human fingers
sunk deep into Ernave’s side. Ernave cried out, but the pain did not slow his strike
and the axe cleaved sweetly through the Shadowed’s neck. Bleeding and breathing heavily, Red Ernave stared in astonished
shock at the body of the old, old man who lay on the ground. Who’d have thought the Shadowed could really be killed? “How did you do that? How did you withstand his magic? I
couldn’t block it all. You are no mage.” Kerine’s nagging voice broke
through the buzzing exhaustion that made everything seem oddly distant. “The old mage,” said Ernave, his breathlessness growing
worse until he breathed in shallow pants. “He gave the last of his life to hold
off the dark magic long enough for me to kill the Shadowed. I thought he was a
fool to believe it would work ... but it didn’t matter as we were all dead anyway.” As he finished speaking he fell to his knees. Buried deep in Red Ernave’s heart. Tier, knowing how this story
ended, realized his danger and straggled to surface, but there was nothing to
cling to as Ernave began to submit to the death bequeathed him by the Shadowed. A thin whisper rang in his ears. “And so the great warrior died in the wake of the Shadowed
and left ...” “Left the battlefield.” Tier grasped the words. “Left his
army to mourn.” But he couldn’t remember the next— Kerine tried uselessly to save Ernave with what little
remained of his power. “They burned the thing that had once been a king,” continued
Tier’s visitor softly when Tier stopped speaking. Tier fumbled a little but the familiar words began to flow
again, separating him from his story. “And ... and scattered his ashes in
stream and field so that there would be no grave nor memorial to the king who
had no name.” The pain in Tier’s side faded and he was once more safe in
the dark of his prison. • “They buried Red Ernave in the battlefield, hoping that his
presence would somehow hold the host of darkness at bay. They trailed into the
empty city where the Shadowed had ruled and pulled down the king’s palace until
not one brick stood upon the other. Then the remnants of the Glorious Army of
Man waited, for they had no place to go. The last of the cities and villages
were years since ground to dust under the weight of the Shadowed. Only when the
food ran short did the army drift away in twos and threes.” Tier found himself shaking in the dark as the story faded
away. Next time he experimented with magic, he decided firmly, it would be with
a story whose hero survived. “What have you done, Bard?” said the voice from above him.
“Magic for music, both becoming more real. What have you done?” And, severing
the bond that still held him to Tier, the listener departed without a sound. Avar, Sept of Leheigh, looked just as a Sept ought, thought
Phoran, playing with his breakfast without enthusiasm. Avar was lean, tall, and heroic. His face was chiseled, his
chin firm and his mouth smiling sympathetically. He’d come, unannounced, into
the royal bedchambers as if he had the right to be there. “Not hungry this morning, my emperor?” he said, looking at
the mess Phoran had made of his plate. “When I heard that you were breaking
your fast in your room I thought that might be the case. My new man has a
potion against drink-sickness. He’s a half-blood Traveler, or so he claims.
He’s certainly a wizard with potions and medicines.” “No, thank you,” Phoran looked down at his plate. Avar was
home. Relief and joy were severely tempered by his suspicion that
Toarsen’s words last night were truth. Last night he’d been certain, but in
Avar’s charismatic presence Phoran’s need for Avar’s approval vied with the
words of a couple of half-drunken lords and scored a narrow triumph. Narrow
enough that Phoran didn’t ask Avar to join him—although there were extra plates
and plenty of food. Phoran forked up a bit of fruit and ate it without enthusiasm.
“I don’t need potions—I’m not sick from drinking.” It sounded too much like a
pouting child, so Phoran continued speaking. “So you’re back from your sept already?”
Did he sound casual enough? “I’d thought you intended to be gone longer than
this?” Avar looked disgruntled, Phoran thought, feeling a bare
touch of triumph. Perhaps Avar had expected a warmer greeting—or even the scold
Phoran’d intended to hand out to the Sept before overhearing that conversation
last night. Cool composure wasn’t a mood the young emperor often indulged
himself in. “Where is Leheigh, anyway? In the South?” The indifference
in Phoran’s voice was less of an effort. There. See how little I concern
myself with your affairs? He’d looked up the ancient deed in the library and followed
the path on several of the maps in the map room. He could have discussed the
crops in the Sept’s new inheritance with knowledge gained from poring over tax
records of the past few centuries. But now he would not admit to knowing
anything. Avar’s brother wouldn’t have dared to show such disgust for the
Emperor if he had no encouragement from Avar himself. But Phoran needed Avar. He needed his praise. He needed his
support against the older council members who weren’t happy with an emperor who
indulged himself in nightly parties, and yet they still refused to let him do
anything more useful. Needed him because Avar, when he stayed at the palace,
often slept in a bed in the Emperor’s suite—and when Avar was there, Phoran was
safe. “Leheigh is southwest, sire, along the Silver River below
Shadow’s Fall,” said Avar, his face settling into its usual warmth. “I didn’t
have time to visit the battlefield—but I will next time I go there, if I can
find a guide. All in all, I’m very happy with the lands; my father wasn’t a
hunter so he left the forest wild and filled with game. The keep dates back to
a few centuries after Shadow’s Fall—the family legend claims that my many times
great-grandfather was a solder of the Remnant of the Army of Man, and a few of
those soldiers settled along the river after the final battle. There’s a couple
of towns in the district, a largish village near my keep, and a smaller town on
the banks of the river. The Redem villagers—that’s the smaller town—still talk
as if the Fall of the Shadowed happened yesterday. I suppose because nothing
interesting has happened there since.” “I see,” said Phoran. “When did you get back?” “The day before yesterday,” Avar said. “My apologies for not
coming to you directly, but I had to make arrangements for some items I brought
back.” He hesitated. “And, I came back and found that my mistress had a few
extra men warming her bed while I was gone. By the time I dealt with that my
temper was none too sweet.” A good reason for waiting, thought Phoran with secret
jubilation. Maybe Avar’s brother was jealous of the time Avar spent with him;
maybe that’s why he’d said such hurtful things. Phoran could understand
Toarsen’s jealousy. “I thought I’d go riding today,” said Phoran, changing the
subject as if Avar’s trip and return were something that held no interest.
“Will you accompany me?” He hadn’t intended to ask for company. But Avar’s
presence soothed the hurts Toarsen and Kissel had dealt. Avar was his
friend—anyone could see it by the warmth of his gaze. Avar’s eyebrows climbed up that perfect forehead. “Of course,
my lord. I’ll send word to the stables. I left my horse at home.” “I’ve done that already,” Phoran said, setting his fork
aside. “You can ride the horse my armsman was to take.” He’d have no need of a
guard with Avar by his side. “I feel as if I haven’t been out of the castle in
months.” Only after he said it did he realize that it was true. When was the
last time he’d been out? Oh, yes, that tavern crawl in disguise on Avar’s
birthday four months before. “Ah.” Avar frowned a little. “Is something bothering you?” Phoran shook his head and stood up. “Just bored. Tell me
about your new curiosity. A Traveler, you said. Is he a mage?” Avar grinned, “Aren’t they all? But truthfully, I don’t
think he has a drop of Traveler blood—he is, however, a skilled healer.” And as they strode through the palace to the stables, Avar
chatted cheerfully about his trip, not at all like a man talking to someone he
held in contempt. Phoran wondered whether he should tell Avar what his brother
had said—and decided not to. Not because he was afraid to hurt Avar, but
because he didn’t want Avar to know that anyone held Phoran in contempt. Under the cheerful flow of Avar’s attention, Phoran began to
rethink the whole of last night’s debacle. It was traditional for people not to
like their rulers—and he probably misunderstood what they were saying about his
uncle. They hadn’t said that they had killed him, just that he had been killed.
Phoran hadn’t been drunk, precisely, but he hadn’t exactly been sober either.
It was easy to misinterpret things in that state. Phoran relaxed and let himself revel in his hero’s company.
It had been weeks since he’d had Avar’s undivided attention. His contentment
was somewhat shaken when they brought his stallion to him. Phoran, who had learned to ride as soon as he could walk,
had to use a mounting block to attain the saddle. Fat, indeed, he thought, red-faced as the stablemen
who’d known him from the time he was a toddler fought not to meet his eyes. At
least they had trusted him with his own stallion, who had responded with his
usual fury to the weight of a rider—perhaps a little worse for having not been
ridden for so many months. By the time Blade quit fussing, Phoran was tired, quite
certain he’d pulled a muscle in his back, and thoroughly triumphant. Not
everyone could have stayed on such an animal, and he’d managed it. The stallion
snorted and settled down as if the previous theatrics had never been. “Nicely ridden, my emperor,” murmured Avar with just the
proper amount of admiration to make the comment too much. Phoran watched the stablemen’s faces change from approval to
veiled contempt. Had Avar done that on purpose? thought the small hurt
part of Phoran that was still writhing under Toarsen’s derision. Avar had things to look after that evening, and Phoran did
not follow his impulse to plead with Avar to stay. The ride had reminded him of
his uncle, who had taught him horsemanship. His uncle, who would have
been disappointed in the man Phoran had grown to be. “You have brains, m’lad,” he remembered his uncle saying.
“Emperor or not. Use them.” So it was that as darkness fell in his rooms and the flames
in the fireplace died to bare glowing embers, Phoran was alone again when the
Memory came. It stood taller than a man and stopped some few feet away.
Doubtless, Phoran thought with humor that barely masked his terror; it was
taken aback that he was not in a drunken stupor or crying in the corner as he
had been on more than one occasion. It looked like nothing at all, as if a human eye couldn’t
quite focus on what it was—though tonight it looked, somehow, more real than
it had been before. Its hesitation, if it had hesitated at all, was only
momentary. For the first time, Phoran stood quietly as it enfolded him in its
blackness, taking away his ability to move or cry out. He’d hoped that it would
be better if he held still, but the burning pain of fangs piercing the inner skin
of his elbow was as terrible as he remembered. Cold entered Phoran from the
place where the Memory fed, as if it was replacing what it drank with ice. When
it was done it said the words that had become too familiar. “By the taking of your blood, I owe you. One answer. Choose
your question.” “Are you afraid of other people?” Phoran asked. “Is that why
you don’t come if someone’s in the room with me?” “No,” it said and vanished. Shivering as if he’d been hunting in winter, Phoran the
Twenty-Seventh curled up on the rug on the floor of his room. Chapter 8This time it wasn’t the grating that opened, but the door.
Tier shot to his feet and had to stop there because the sudden light blinded
him. “If it please you, my lord,” said a soft tenor voice that
could have belonged equally well to a young man or a woman, “Would you come
with me? We have arranged for your comfort. I am to offer you also an apology
for how you have been treated. We have not been ready to receive you until now.” Tier wiped his eyes and squinted against the glare of what
was, after all, a fairly dim lantern to see the backlit form of a woman. The sight, he could tell, was staged. She held the light
carefully to exhibit certain aspects of her form. The slight tremor in the hand
that held the lantern might be faked as well—but he’d have been worried about
facing a man who’d been caged for as long as Tier had, so he gave her the
benefit of the doubt. “I’m no lord,” he said at last. “Tell me just who it is I
have to thank for my recent stay here?” “If it please you, sir,” she said. “I’ll take you to
where all of your questions can be answered.” Tier could have overpowered her, and would have if she had
been a man. But if they, whoever they were, sent a woman to get him, it could only be because overpowering her would
get him nowhere. “You’ll have to give me a moment,” he said, “until I can see
again.” As his vision cleared, he saw that the woman was arrayed in
flowing garments that hinted broadly at the body beneath. A whore’s costume, but this woman was no common whore. She
was extraordinarily beautiful, even to a man who preferred his woman to be less
soft and breakable. Even if the net of gems and gold that confined quite a bit
of equally golden hair was paste and brass—and he wasn’t at all sure it was—the
cloth of her dress was worth a fair penny. “Can you see, yet, sir?” she asked. “Oh aye,” he said congenially. He’d bide his time until he
had enough information to act. “Lead on, fair lady.” She laughed gently at his address as she led him out into a
winding corridor. Behaving, he thought, as if he were a customer, rather than a
man who’d been imprisoned for weeks. The hall ceiling was so low he could have easily touched it
with a hand. On either side of his cell there were doors that opened to his
hand and revealed rooms that looked much like his. The woman was patient with
him, waiting without murmuring and pausing with him when he stopped by an iron
door twice as wide as the one that led into his cell. The door stuck fast when
he tried it. The woman said nothing. When he took the lantern from her
and adjusted it brighter so he could look more closely at the doors, she merely
folded her arms under her full breasts. He ignored her until he was certain that the door was hinged
on the other side, with two iron bars (barely visible in the narrow space
between door and frame) in place to keep the door shut. If he’d access to a
forge he could fashion something to unbar the door—but they were unlikely to allow
him such. He handed the lantern back to his hostess and allowed her to
lead him. The hall continued around a sharp bend and ended in double
doors. Just before the walls ended, there was a door on either side. It was the
left-hand door the woman opened, stepping back for him to precede her. The smell of steam and the sound of running water emerged from
the opened door, so he was unsurprised to enter a bathing room. He knew what
one looked like because the Sept of Gerant had held war conferences in
his—saying that the sound of the water kept people from overhearing anything
useful. But that austere chamber had as much to do with this one as a donkey
had with a warhorse. A golden tub of a size to accommodate five or six was brim
full of hot, steaming water with a tall table near it holding a variety of soaps
and pots of lotion. But by far the most impressive part of the room was the
cold pool. Water cascaded from an opening in the ceiling high above and
poured onto a ledge of fitted rock where it was spread to fall in a wide sheet
to the waist-deep pool below. He could tell the pool was waist-deep because
there were two naked, frightened, and obviously cold women standing in it. “Sssst,” hissed his guide in sudden irritation. “You look as
if you are about to lose your virtue again. Does this look like a man who’d
hurt women?” She softened her voice to velvet and turned back to Tier.
“You’ll forgive them, my ... sir. Our last guest was none to happy with his
captivity and took it out on those who had nothing to do with it.” He laughed with honest amusement. “After that speech I would
certainly feel like a stupid lout to try any such thing,” he said. In the brighter light of the bathing chamber he could see
that she was more than beautiful—she was fascinating, a woman who’d draw men’s
eyes when she was eighty. He mentally upped her probable price again. So why
was he being offered such service? The thought pulled the smile from his face. “So I’m to clean myself before being presented, eh?” he said
neutrally. “We will perform that service, sir, if you will allow us,”
she said, bowing her head in submission, “When you are finished bathing, there
are clean clothes to replace the ones you wear now. This is for your comfort
entirely. If you choose, you may stay as you are and I’ll take you in now. I
thought you would prefer not to appear at a disadvantage.” “Disadvantage, eh?” He glanced at his clothes. “If they
kidnap a man at the tail end of a three-month hunt, they get as they deserve.
I’ll wash, but you ladies get yourselves out of here or my wife will have my head.” The women in the pool giggled as if he’d been witty, but
they waited for a gesture from the woman he’d followed before they left the
pool. They wrapped themselves in a couple of the bathing sheets folded in piles
on a bench and exited the room through the same door he’d entered. “You too, lass,” he told his guide. “The high-born you serve
may be comfortable with help, but we Redemi are competent to wash ourselves.” Smilingly she bowed and left, shutting the door behind her.
He hadn’t noticed a latch, but he heard a click that could be nothing else so
he didn’t bother to try the door. The waterfall was more intriguing. Four leaps gave him a fingerhold on the lowest ledge and he
climbed the rest with relative ease. When he found the opening the water fell
through in the corner of the ceiling, it was grated with iron bars set in
mortar. He slid back down and splashed uncaring of his battered clothing
into the cold pool of water. He hadn’t expected such an obvious way out, but he
needed to know what he dealt with. Eventually he’d manage a way out—in the meantime
there was no need for filth. He washed the clothes on his body first, then threw them
into the waiting hot tub, where he’d soap down both them and himself when he
was ready. The cold water poured over his face, clearing his head and
his thoughts as he scraped away dirt. He hadn’t heard anyone enter, but when he stepped out from
the waterfall, there were clean clothes waiting for him. He ignored them and settled into the tub of hot water,
soaped himself off, and gave rough service to his clothes. Rinsing everything
in the cold pool, he draped his clothes where he could. Shivering now, he dried
himself and examined the clothing she’d left for him. It was serviceable clothing, very like the filthy garments
he’d taken off, though less worn. He fingered the shirt thoughtfully before
donning it. The leather boots fit him as well as his old ones, lost somewhere
during his captivity. As he tied the laces of his boots, his guide returned, her timing
too accurate for guessing. Someone had been watching him—he hoped they enjoyed
the show. She held a tray with a comb and a plain silver clip and held them
out. He ran the comb through his hair and pulled it back into a queue which he
fastened with the clip. He turned around once for her perusal and she nodded.
“You’ll do, sir. If you’ll follow me, the Master awaits your presence.” “Master?” he asked. But she’d given him all the information she intended to.
“Come,” she said, leading him back to the corridor. The double doors at the end of the hall were open this time
and a haze of smoke drifted into the corridor along with a desultory drumbeat
and a hum of conversation. But he had only a moment to glance inside and get an
impression of some sort of public room with tables and benches scattered
around, before the woman opened the door directly across from the bathing room
and gestured him in. In size and lack of windows, the room resembled the cell
Tier had been living in, though here the stone floor was covered with a tightly
woven rug that cushioned his feet. A pair of matching tapestries hung on one
wall. The only furnishings in the room were two comfortable-looking chairs
flanking a small round table. In one of the chairs sat a man in a black velvet robe sipping
from a goblet. He was a decade or so older than Tier with the features of an
eastern nobleman, wide-cheeked and flat-nosed. Like his face, his hands
belonged to an aristocrat, long-fingered and bedecked with rings. He looked up when Tier’s guide softly cleared her throat. “Ah. Thank you, Myrceria,” he said pleasantly, setting his
goblet on the table. “That will be all.” The door shut quietly behind Tier’s back, leaving the two
men alone in the room. The robed man folded his hands contemplatively against his
chin, “You don’t look like a Traveler, Tieragan of Redem.” Traveler? Tier raised an eyebrow and took the empty chair. It was a
little short for him, so he stretched out his legs and crossed his ankles. When
he was comfortable, he looked at the man most probably responsible for his
recent imprisonment and said courteously, “And you don’t look like a festering
pustule on a slug’s hind end either. Appearances can be deceiving.” The other man’s face didn’t change, but Tier felt a pulse of
power, of magic—just as he was meant to. The surge of magic died and the wizard smiled. “You are angry,
aren’t you? I ,do believe we owe you an apology for keeping you locked in your
cell, but it has been a long time since we had an Owl in our keeping. We had to
be certain that we could contain your magic before releasing you.” Contain his magic? “You seem to know a lot about me,” Tier commented. “Would
you care to return the favor?” The other man laughed, “You’ll have to excuse me—you’re not
quite what I expected. I am Kerstang, Sept of Telleridge.” Tier nodded slowly. “And what would the Sept of Telleridge
want with a Redemi farmer?” “Nothing at all,” said Telleridge. “I do, however, have a
use for a Traveler and Bard.” “I told you,” said Tier mildly. “I am not a Traveler. What
do you need me for?” Telleridge smiled as if Tier’s answer had pleased him. “In addition
to my duties as a Sept, I find myself with the delicate charge of the youth of
the Empire. The law of primogeniture, however necessary, leaves many of the
younger sons of noblemen without any constructive outlets for their energies. I
run an Eyrie for these lost young men and I’m responsible for their
entertainment.” “I’m the entertainment?” said Tier. “Surely there are bards
who don’t need abducting to be persuaded to provide entertainment.” Telleridge laughed, “But they would not be nearly as amusing.”
The laughter drifted away as if it had never been. “Nor would they be Owl. All
you need to know at the moment is that you are, will you or nil you, my guest
for the next year. During that time you will entertain my young friends and
occasionally participate in our ceremonies. In return you may ask for anything
that you wish, short of leaving, and it will be arranged.” “I don’t think so,” said Tier. “Refusing is not an option,” said the wizard. “For a year
and a day you will have whatever you want—or you can struggle; it matters not
one whit to me.” That phrase struck a chord of memory. “A year and a day,”
Tier said. “You’ll make me beggar king for a year and a day.” He hummed a bit
of the old tune. “And I suppose, like the beggar king, you’ll sacrifice me to
the gods at the end?” “That’s right,” said the wizard as if Tier were a prized
pupil. “I see that an Owl will be different than a Raven—which is what we’ve
had the last three times. The Hunter was interesting, though we finally had to
cage him. I think you’ll do. But first ...” He leaned forward and touched Tier lightly; as he did so,
the silver and onyx ring on his index finger caught Tier’s attention briefly. He was distracted by the ring when the wizard’s voice
dropped a full octave and he said in the Traveler tongue, “By Lark and Raven,
I bind you that you will harm neither me nor any wizard who wears a black cloak
in these halls. By Cormorant, and Owl, I bind you that you will not ask anyone
to help you escape. By Falcon, I bind you that you will not speak of your
death.” Magic surged through Tier, holding him still until the
wizard was done. “There,” he said sitting back again. There indeed, thought Tier, shaken. No one had ever
laid a spell on him before. He felt ... violated and frightened. It had been so
fast and he hadn’t been able to defend himself from it at all. Cold sweat slid
down his neck and he shivered, fighting nausea. “Sick?” Telleridge asked. “It takes some people like that,
but I couldn’t depend upon the word of a Traveler peasant—even if you’d give
it. My young friends are easily influenced. I would hate to lose any of my Passerines
too soon.” “Passerines?” asked Tier, breathing shallowly through his
nose and hoping he didn’t look as shaken as he felt. “You have song birds
here?” The wizard smiled. “As I said, a Bard will be interesting.
Myrceria will tell you what you need to know about my Passerines. Ask her about the Secret Path if you wish. She
is waiting for you outside the door.” The woman was indeed waiting for him, kneeling on the cold
stone of the floor with her hands at rest. Prepared, Tier thought, to deal with
a man in any mood he might emerge with. She sat unmoving until he closed the
door gently behind him. “If you like, I can take you into the Eyrie,” she said,
using her right arm to indicate the open double doors. “There are others to
talk to if you wish and food and drink are available to you there. If you would
prefer to ask me questions, we can go back to your room. You will find it much
improved.” “Let’s go talk,:’ he said after a moment. As Myrceria promised, the cell had been transformed in his absence.
It had been scoured clean and furnished with a bed such as the nobles slept in
rather than the rush-stuffed mattress over stretched rope he had at home. Rich
fabrics and rare woods filled the room; it should have looked crowded, but it
managed to appear cozy instead. In the center of the bed a worn lute rested,
looking oddly out of place. He took a step toward it, but stopped. He wasn’t like
Seraph: he didn’t feel the need to do the opposite of whatever anyone tried to
get him to do, but that didn’t mean he enjoyed being manipulated either. So he
left the lute for later examination and chose to investigate another oddity.
The room was lit by glowing stones in copper braziers placed in strategic
places around the room. “They’re quite safe,” said Myrceria behind him. She moved
against him, pressing close until her breasts rested against his back, then
reached around him to pick the fist-sized rock out of the brazier he’d picked
up. He set the brazier down gently and stepped away from her.
“You are quite lovely, lass,” he said. “But if you knew my wife, you’d know
that she’d take my liver and eat it in front of my quivering body if I ever
betrayed her.” “She is not here,” Myrceria murmured, replacing the rock and
turning gracefully in a circle so that he could see what he was refusing. “She
will never know.” “I don’t underestimate my wife,” he replied. “Nor should
you.” Myrceria touched the net that confined her hair and shook
her head, freeing waves of gold to cascade down her back and touch her ankles.
“She’ll believe you’re dead,” she said. “They have arranged for it. Will she be
faithful to you if you are dead?” Seraph thought he was dead? He needed to get home. “Telleridge said you would answer my questions,” he said.
“Where are we?” “In the palace,” she answered. “In Taela?” “That’s right,” she leaned into him. He bent until his face was close to hers. “No,” he said
softly. “You have answers to my questions, and that is all I’m interested in.”
There was a flash of fear in her eyes, and it occurred to him that a whore was
hardly likely to be so interested in him on her own. “You can tell Telleridge
whatever you like about tonight; I’ll not deny it—but I’ll not break the vows
I’ve made. I have my own woman; I need answers.” She stood very still for a moment, her eyes unreadable—which
told him more about what she was thinking than the facile, convenient
expressions Of a whore. Slowly, but not seductively, she rebound her hair. When she
was finished she had tucked away her potent sexuality as well. “Very well,” she said. “What would you like to know?” “Tell me a lie,” he said. Her eyebrows raised. “A lie?” “Anything. Tell me that the coverlet is blue.” “The coverlet is blue.” Nothing. He felt nothing. “Tell me it’s green,” he said. “The coverlet is green.” He couldn’t tell when she was lying. Just about the only
useful thing his magic could do. He opened his mouth to ask her to help him
escape, just to see if he could, but no word of his request left his throat. “Gods take him!” he roared angrily. “Gods take him
and eat his spleen while he yet lives.” He turned toward the whore and she
flinched away from him needlessly. He had himself under control now. “Tell me
about this place, the Passerines, the Secret Path, Telleridge ... all of it.” She took a step back and sat gingerly on the edge of the
bed, on the far side of the lute. Speaking quickly, she said, “The Secret Path
is a clandestine organization of nobles. The rooms that you have seen today and
a few others are under an unused wing of the palace. Most of the activities of
the Path involve only the young men, the Passerines. The older members and the Masters,
the wizards, direct what those activities are. The Passerines are the younger
members of the Secret Path. They are brought in between the ages of sixteen and
twenty.” “What do they call the older members?” asked Tier. “Raptors,” she replied, relaxing a little, “and the wizard;:
are the Masters.” “Who is in charge, the wizards or the Raptors?” “The High Path—which is made up of a select group of Raptors
and Masters and led by Master Telleridge.” “What is the requirement for membership?” he asked. “Noble birth and the proper temperament. None of them can be
direct heirs of the Septs. Most of the boys come at the recommendation of the
other Passerines.” “Telleridge is a Sept,” said Tier, trying to put his knowledge
into an acceptable pattern. “Yes. His father and brothers died of plague.” “Did he start this ... Secret Path?” “No.” She settled more comfortably against the wall. “It is
a very old association, over two hundred and fifty years old.” Tier thought back over the history of the Empire. “After the
Third Civil War.” Myrceria nodded her head, and smiled a little. “Phoran the Eighteenth, I believe, who inherited right in
the middle of the war when his father was killed by an assassin,” he said. “A
man known for his brilliance in diplomacy rather than war. Now what exactly was
it that caused that war ...” Her smile widened, “I imagine you know quite well. Bards,
I’ve been told, have to know their history.” “The younger sons of a number of the more powerful Septs seized
their fathers’—or brothers’ lands illegally while the Septs were meeting in
council. They claimed that the laws of primogeniture were wrong, robbing
younger sons of their proper inheritance. The war lasted twenty years.” “Twenty-three,” she corrected mildly. “I bet the Path was founded by Phoran the Eighteenth’s
younger brother—the war leader” She cleared her throat. “By Phoran’s youngest son, actually,
although his brother was one of the original members.” “The Path,” said Tier, having found the pattern, “draws the
younger sons, young men educated to wield power but who will never have any.
Only the ones who are angriest at their lot in life are allowed into it. As
young men, they are given a secret way to defy those in power—a safe outlet for
their energies. Then, I suppose, a few are guided slowly into places where they
can gain power—advisor to the king, merchant, diplomat. Places where they
acquire power and an investment in the health of the Empire they despise. Old
Phoran the Eighteenth was a master strategist.” “You are well educated for a ... a baker,” she said, “from a
little village in the middle of nowhere.” He smiled at her. “I fought under the Sept of Gerant from
the time I was fifteen until the last war was over. He has a reputation as
being something of an eccentric. He wasn’t concerned with the birth of his
commanders, but he did think that his commanders needed to know as much about
politics and history as they knew about war.” “A soldier?” She considered the idea. “I’d forgotten
that—they didn’t seem to consider it to be of much importance.” “You are well-educated for your position as well,” he said. “If younger sons have no place in the Empire, their
daughters have—” she stopped abruptly and took a step backward. “Why am I
telling you this?” Her voice shook in unfeigned fear. “You’re not supposed to
be able to work magic here. They said that you couldn’t.” “I’m working no magic,” he said. “I have to go,” she said and left the cell. She didn’t, he
noticed, forget to shut and bolt the door. When she was gone, he pulled his legs up on the bed, boots
and all, and leaned against the wall. Whatever the Path was supposed to have been, he doubted that
its only purpose was to keep the young nobles occupied. Telleridge didn’t
strike him as the sort to serve anyone except himself—certainly not the
stability of the Empire. Thinking of Telleridge reminded Tier of what the wizard had
done to him. His magic was really gone—not that it was likely to do him much
good in a situation like this. Alone, without witnesses, Tier sat on the bed
and buried his head in his hands, seeing, once more, Telleridge’s hand closing
on his arm. Wizards weren’t supposed to be able to cast spells like
that. They had to make potions and draw symbols—he’d seen them do it. Only
Ravens were able to cast spells with words. Telleridge had spoken in the Traveler tongue. Tier straightened up and stared at one of the glowing
braziers without seeing it. That ring. He had seen that ring before, the night
he’d met Seraph. Though it had been twenty years, he was certain he was not
mistaken. He’d a knack for remembering things, and the ring Telleridge had worn
had the same notch on the setting that the ring ... what had his name been?
Wresen. Wresen had been a wizard, too. A wizard following Seraph. How had Telleridge known that Tier was Bard? Tier had supposed
that his unknown visitor had told the wizard, if it hadn’t been the wizard
himself. However, it sounded as if Tier being a Bard was the reason they’d
taken him in the first place. No one except Seraph knew what he was—though
she’d told him that any Raven would know. They had been watching him. Myrceria had known that he had
been a baker and a soldier. Had they been watching him and Seraph for twenty
years? Were they watching Seraph now? He sprang to his feet and paced. He had to get home. When an
hour of fruitless thought left him-still in the locked cell, he settled back on
the bed and took up the lute absently. All he could do was be ready for an
opportunity to escape as it presented itself. He noticed the tune that he’d begun fingering with wry amusement.
Almost defiantly he plucked out the chorus with quick-fingered precision. A year and a day, A year and a day, And the beggar’ll be king For a year and a day. In the song, in order to stop a decade-long drought,
desperate priests decided that the ultimate sacrifice had to be made—the most
important person in the nation had to be sacrificed: the king. Unwilling to
die, the king refused, but proposed the priests take one of the beggars from
the street. The king would step down from office for a year and let the beggar
be king. The priests argued that a year was not long enough—so they made the
beggar king for a year and a day. The drought ended with the final, willing
sacrifice of the young man who’d proved more worthy than the real king. Just as the Secret Path’s Traveler king, Tier, would die at
the end of his reign. He thought of one of the bindings Telleridge had put on him.
The young men, the Passerines, didn’t know he would die—otherwise there would
be no reason to forbid him to speak of it with them. No doubt then his death would serve a purpose greater than
mimicking an old song. Would it appease the gods like the beggar king’s
sacrifice in the story? But then why hide it from the young men? What would a
wizard want with his death? Magic and death, he remembered Seraph telling him once.
Magic and death are a very powerful combination. The better the mage knows the
victim, the’ stronger the magic he can work. The mage’s pet cat works better
than a stray. A friend better than an enemy ... a friend for a year and a day. He had to get word to Seraph. He had to warn her to protect
the children. His fingers picked out the chords to an old war song. Myrceria,
he thought, I will work on Myrceria. Phoran held the bundle of parchment triumphantly as he
marched alone through the halls of the palace toward his study. They’d look for
him in his rooms first, he thought. No one but the old librarian knew about the
study. They’d find him eventually, but not until he was ready for them. It had been impulse, really. When the old fool, Douver, set
down the papers the Council of Septs had for him to sign, Phoran had just
picked them up, tucked them under his arm, and announced to the almost empty
room that he would take them under advisement. He’d turned on his heel and walked out, slipping through a
complex system of secret passages—some of which were so well known they might
be corridors and others he rather thought he might be the only one who knew.
He’d given no one a chance to follow him. For most of his life, he’d signed what they told him to. At
least his uncle had done him the courtesy of explaining what he’d signed—though
he remembered not caring much about most of it. But the empty room had been an insult. When the Emperor
signed the proposals into law twice a year, there should be people present, and
would have been, if anyone thought that the Emperor would do anything but sign
what he was told. He entered the library through a secondary door, passed unnoticed
among the bins of parchment and shelves of books in the back corner of the
room, and unlocked the door of his study. It was a small room, but it locked
from the inside as well as the outside, which was all that he required. He settled himself into his chair and thought. It was all
very well to decide to be emperor in fact as well as name, but he didn’t really
have the support he needed. The Sept of Gorrish fancied himself de facto ruler,
and the Septs who followed him, Telleridge, and the like, would do their best
to fight any sign of independence. Really, he’d best sign the damn things and get it over with. Instead he uncorked his inkwell, trimmed his pens, and began
to read. The first three parchments he signed—complex trade agreements between
various Septs, and nothing the Emperor should interfere with. But, almost involuntarily,
he made mental notes of the names involved and the alliances the new laws revealed. The fourth parchment was another of the increasingly
punitive laws aimed at the Travelers. He signed that one, too. Most Travelers
were thieves, his uncle had said, though not without a certain amount of
sympathy. Having no land they could settle on, because no Sept would have
allowed such a thing, they were forced to earn their bread as best they could. Hours passed. Occasionally, Phoran would sneak out to the library
to retrieve maps or books. But he signed the parchments one by one—setting only
a few aside for further review. Two he found that might serve his point. They were regional
matters that most of the council would not care unduly about; each was signed
by only a few more than half the council with no protests. The first act would give the Sept of Holla exclusive fishing
rights in Lake Azalan. Phoran had checked his maps and found Lake Azalan to be
a small body of water in the Sept of Holla’s lands. The law was so odd—the
Septs usually had effective exclusive rights to any fully enclosed body of water—that
Phoran knew there was a story behind the ruling. The second concerned a small
section of land awarded to the Sept of Jenne for his “services to the Empire.” He pored over the simple words to mine them for clues and regretted
the indifference that had kept him from the council the past few years, because
he no longer knew all of the different alliances. Geography helped—all of
Holla’s signatures were from Septs in the Northeast, Holla’s neighbors. All
except one of his neighbors. The one, thought Phoran with sudden comprehension,
who had been sending fishermen into his neighbor’s lake. That one would work—Holla had little influence in the
council. But he’d rather come down on the side of justice. The second one was frustrating because the land in question
was so small that he couldn’t find out much about it. He looked up from a map and the Memory was there. He hadn’t realized how long he’d been in his study. He’d
trimmed the lamps absently as he’d needed, and there was no window to tell him
that the sun had set. Slowly Phoran set his pen down and shed the heavy state
robes so he could bare his arm. The hope that had cloaked him for most of the
day evaporated at the touch of cold, cold lips on his skin. It hurt, and he looked away as it fed. * “By the taking of
your blood, I owe you one answer. Choose your question.” Tired beyond reason and still trembling with the remnants of
pain, Phoran laughed harshly and said, “Do you know someone who could help me
understand what’s so special about a small slice of the Sept of Gerant’s lands
that the council would gift it to the Sept of Jenne?” The Memory turned and drifted toward the door. “I thought you owed me an answer,” said Phoran without heat.
That would have taken too much passion, and he’d already, really, given up on
his plans. He would not hurt an innocent man just because his petition was
convenient for his purposes, and he was beginning to believe that the library
did not contain the information he needed to refuse to sign Jenne’s petition. He’d already begun to go back to comparing two well-drawn
maps to a third, less clear, but more detailed when the Memory said, “Come.” Phoran looked up and saw it waiting for him. It took him a
moment to remember exactly what he’d asked. “You know someone who could help?” It didn’t answer. Phoran stared at it and tried to think. If anyone saw him
... He glanced at the parchments and maps scattered around and gathered the
ones that might prove helpful. Chapter 9They came for him shortly after Myrceria left. Tier set the lute down, and stood up when the door opened to
admit five men in black robes like the one Telleridge had worn. Their hoods
were pulled down over their faces and they walked in as if they each had a predetermined
place to stand. Tier had the oddest feeling that they did not see him at all. They took up positions around him. One after the other they
began chanting, a low, droning, off-pitch sound that he could not decipher
because the words they used belonged to no’ language he’d ever heard. Magic, he
knew, but he was helpless to stop them because of Telleridge’s command. As one, they raised their hands above their heads and
clapped ... He awoke lying on the floor, naked and sweating. The memory
of pain lent nausea to the cacophony of tingling body parts. He sat up,
frantically trying to remember what had happened after the wizards had clapped
their hands, but the thought of the sound made his ears ring. They had taken his memories. Even so, there were things that
he knew, as if the events he couldn’t remember had left a visceral residue on
his body. He’d been violated, not physically raped but something that was a
near kin. He sat up straight and held his head like a wolf scenting a
hare. He remembered that, remembered someone telling Mm ... remembered Telleridge
telling him that he would not know what had happened. Owls had very good memories. Tier’s lips drew back in a snarl. Hatred was a foreign
emotion to him. He’d fought for years against an enemy he was told to hate, but
he’d never found anything in his heart but a grim determination to persevere.
The Fahlarn were not wicked, just wrongly ambitious. He had seen people do terrible
things because of stupidity, ignorance, anger, but he’d never met evil before. Now he was befouled by it Staggering to his feet, he looked for his clothing. When he
was clothed he could feel less vulnerable. They’d taken his memories and his
magic, but surely they would leave him clothes. A cursory search of the room turned up a tunic and pants,
though not his own. They were looser in fit than he was used to and darker
colored: Traveler clothes for their pet Traveler. Nevertheless, he pulled them on
quickly. Instinctively he looked for something he could use to clean
himself, and noticed there was no water in the room. Even as he regretted the
lack, he knew that it wouldn’t have mattered if they’d left him in the bathing
room—the filth that coated him could not be cleaned that way. His gaze fell upon the lute. No matter how fine the instrument, a lute always needed tuning.
He sat down beside it and cradled it to him. There were eight courses on this instrument, two strings per
course except for the highest note, and this lute hadn’t been properly tuned in
a while. As he settled into the familiar chore, the shaky, frightened feeling
in his stomach began to settle. He tightened pegs by slight movements, because there were no
extra strings sitting around if he broke one. As the lute started to come up to
tune, he noticed that the man who’d set the fretting had had an ear as good as
his own—perhaps he’d been a Bard, too. He tried a simple refrain and knew in a rush of relief that
this was what he’d needed. For a long time he just played bits of this and
that, letting the music salve the hurt that had been done to him. At last his fingers hit upon a tune that his ears enjoyed, a
piece his grandfather had written to welcome the coming of spring. He closed his
eyes and let the music fill him until everything else was distant, where it
could no longer harm him. He took a deep breath that filled his lungs with the
scent of lilacs. Magic. He opened his eyes, stilled his hands, and took another
breath. The scent had faded, but he could still smell the sweet flowers until
his sinuses closed. His eyes watered and he sneezed twice; Lilacs always made
him sneeze. Perhaps, he thought, they don’t know as much about
Traveler magic as they think they do. There was a scuffle outside his door, as if someone fumbled
with a key. “Drat,” said a young man’s voice. “Drat, drat. This key is
supposed to open any door in the palace. Wait, ah. A turnkey box.” There was
some more rustling and a jangle of keys rattling together. The door of his cell
creaked open. “Er, hallo?” A rather pudgy young face peered around the
edge of the door. “Hello,” Tier said mildly, though his body was tense and
ready to act. “Look, I hope I didn’t wake you or ... your light was still
on so I thought ...” The young man stumbled to a halt. “Come in,” invited Tier genially. Keys, he thought, lowering
his eyelids. This boy would be no— He rolled to his feet abruptly. “What in the name of the
seven flaming hells is that?” The boy looked over his shoulder at the dark, nebulous shape
behind him for a moment. “You can see it?” he asked, sounding unhappy. “Most people
can’t. It’s ... ah ... it calls itself a Memory—as if that’s a name. I haven’t
figured it out exactly myself. It doesn’t usually linger like this.” As the thing moved into the room, Tier took a step back from
the overwhelming presence it carried with it. He sat back on his bed and tried
to look peaceful. “I’m sorry,” the boy apologized. Tier turned his attention back to him with an effort, and
noticed for the first time the quality of the clothes he was wearing. Velvet
embroidered in heavy metal threads that looked as if they were really gold. “Look,” said the boy again. “I don’t know why you’re
here. These aren’t the regular holding cells. But for some reason”—he gave an
odd, short laugh—“I think you might help me with a problem I’ve been looking
into.” And the boy took a piece of parchment he’d been holding and
thrust it at Tier. He sat beside him on the bed, started to point at something
and then stopped. “Do you read?” he asked. “Not to be offensive, you understand,
but you’re dressed like—” “I can read Common,” said Tier. He’d learned under the Sept
of Gerant, making him one of the double handful of people who could read in
Redem. Since the Memory, whatever that was, had decided to stay on
the far side of the cell. Tier allowed himself to look more closely at the
writing on the parchment. “Look here,” said the boy, sounding more authoritative.
“This is nominally just a simple award for a job well done. Except that usually
properties that belong to one Sept aren’t gifted to another—certainly not with
a vague ‘for services to the Empire.’ See?” Tier looked at what he held with disbelief. It appeared to
be a law document of some sort. First Tier had thought that the boy might be one of Telleridge’s
wizards, especially with the thing that had followed him in. Then he’d been
almost certain that he was one of the Passerines Myrceria had told him about.
Now ... He cleared his throat. “Are you a member of the Secret
Path?” “If I’m not, does that mean you can’t tell me the answer?” The disingenuous answer made Tier laugh in spite of his generally
lousy mood. The young man gave him a pleased smile .. “Actually, I’ve never heard of the Secret Path. Though, if
you put any three nobles together, they’ll start four secret societies of
something.” Tier nodded his head slowly. “I’d been given the impression
that the Path members had taken over this bit of the palace and made it their
own. If you’re not one, how did you find your way here?” The boy shrugged. “The palace has enough rooms to house the
whole city and then some. The first fifteen Emperors Phoran spent all their
time building the place and the next ten tried to figure out what to do with
all the rooms—mostly close them up. At least two of them, the eighth and the
fourteenth—or the seventh and the thirteenth if you’d rather not give a number
to the first Phoran—were fascinated by secret rooms and passages. By happy
chance I stumbled upon the plans of Eight and actively sought Fourteen’s. Once
I had them, I hid them myself. At any rate, they give me ready access to most
of the palace. Not that there’s usually much to see.” “I see,” said Tier, rather dazzled by all the eights who
might have been sevens—there was a song in that somewhere. He hadn’t really
thought about how the Path had managed to secret off such a big chunk of
building. He had a hard time wrapping his mind around a building so large that
the Path could use a section for generations and not have it discovered. “I’m not a lawyer,” Tier said finally. “Nor do I know
anything about the Septs. I don’t see how I can help you.” The boy frowned. “I asked if there was someone who could
help me find out more about the piece of land in question. Is there any reason that
you would know something about the Sept of Gerant’s lands? “The Sept of Gerant?” exclaimed Tier, distracted from the
question of who knew enough to send this boy after him. “That’s right,” said the boy. “I don’t know him by face, but
it sounds as if you’ve met him.” “He’ll not have been at court,” murmured Tier, reading the
rest of the document rapidly. “He’s an old warrior, not fitted for wearing
silks and such. The Sept of Jenne, hmm.” “I have this, if it helps,” said the boy, and he
pulled a small, faded map from a pocket. “I can show you where the land in question
is—I just don’t know what’s so important about it” The soft hand that handed Tier a map had a signet ring on
it. Tier noticed and catalogued it, but he was thinking about the map so it took
him a moment before he realized who was sitting on his bed beside him. The Emperor? His night had acquired a new level of strangeness. Tier
glanced at the Memory. Was it some sort of body guard? He forced his eyes back to the map. If the Emperor had wanted
him to know who he was talking to, he would have introduced himself. The boy tapped a spot on the old map. “That’s where it is.
It doesn’t even connect to Jenne’s lands.” Tier closed his eyes and thought back twenty years, trying
to make the lines on the map correspond to the land he had known rather well at
one time. “Water rights,” he said finally. “That’s the headwaters of
the creek that gives Gerant’s people water. This piece of land belongs to the
Sept of Jenne’s father-in-law—or it did twenty years ago. The current Sept
might be the son or grandson of the man I’m thinking of, but at any rate, the
land’s in Jenne’s family’s hands. It’s pretty useless despite its size, because
it’s in the rainshadow of Brulles Mountain—won’t grow anything but sagebrush.
If Jenne had control of Brulles—that strip of map should be marked to show the
mountain—he could hire a wizard to divert the flow of water and send it down
the other side of the mountain, or find some way of diverting the small river
that runs on the wrong side for their purposes.” “Hah,” the boy exclaimed happily. “It’s a payoff. That’s the
one I want, then. What can you tell me about Gerant’s allies?” Tier hesitated. “Gerant’s a good man,” he said. The boy raised an eyebrow. “I’m not planning on hurting him.
I ...” Now it was his turn to hesitate. “I suspect,” said Tier softly, “that there’s a law or two
against a common man like me sharing a seat with the Emperor. If you’ve a need
to be incognito, it might be better to take off that ring.” Phoran (doubtless the boy’s name was Phoran—though Her couldn’t remember the number that went with the name)
looked upset for a moment, glanced at the ring that was the Emperor’s seal,
then shrugged. “I’ll keep your advice in mind. Well enough. If you know
that much, look here.” He tapped the paper impatiently. “I need something I can
use as a fulcrum to move the power structure in the Council of Septs so that I
don’t continue to be just a figurehead, and this document is it. It was in my
twice-yearly stack of petitions to be signed into law. There aren’t many
signatures on this—only a few people who owed Jenne something. Like as not most
of them didn’t know what it was they were signing. You can’t even tell that
this land is Gerant’s without this map.” “Right,” said Tier. He hadn’t realized that the boy was a figurehead,
but then he hadn’t concerned himself with any news outside of Redem since he’d
left Gerant’s services several years before the last Phoran died.
“Twenty-sixth,” he said aloud. “Only if you don’t count the first Phoran,” said Phoran, not
the least discomposed. “I like to, though my father didn’t. Are you still with
me?” “Right,” Tier nodded. “You have a bill, obviously a favor,
but not for a Sept who is very powerful. So if you decide to decline to sign it,
you’re not going to make a slew of enemies. Who could object to your refusal to
grant one Sept’s lands to another without better reason than you’ve been given?
And I’ll put up my right arm that Gerant is no traitor or mischief maker that
will embarrass you on this. He’s true as oak. So you refuse to sign it, and the
rest of the council either supports you, or makes it look like they think the
council should have the right to take land from whatever Sept they want without
giving an adequate reason.” “That’s it,” said the boy, gathering up his map and
document. “And I have a toehold into ruling on my own. So, you have done me a
favor.” Carefully he folded the parchment so it fit into his pocket with the
map. “I owe you an equal favor. Before I determine how best to repay you, tell
me what you are doing here, what this Path that I’m not a member of is, and
what the two have to do with each other.” “It’s faster if I start with the Path,” said Tier after thinking
about it for a minute. “The rest of the story should fall out of that.” Briefly
he outlined the information Telleridge and Myrceria had given him. Phoran stopped him. “They kill the Traveler wizards for
power, these wizards who wear black robes?” Tier nodded. “So I’m told. I’ve only met two people—three
with you—since I was brought here.” He thought the ladies in the bath didn’t
count. “I haven’t actually seen any of this for myself.” “You still haven’t told me what you are doing here,” said
Phoran. “Or who you are, other than someone who fought under Gerant in the last
war.” “I am a fanner who occasionally sings for a few coppers at
the local tavern in Redem,” Tier said. “I usually spend the winter months
trapping for furs. I was on my way home. I have a vague memory of seeing a
group of strangers, and then I awoke in this cell. Telleridge—that’s the man I
told you about—” “Telleridge?” said Phoran. “I know him, though I didn’t know
he was a wizard. Did he tell you why they wanted you enough to take you from
Redem?” asked Phoran. Then a strange expression came over his face. “Is that
the Redem that belongs to the Sept of Leheigh?” “Yes,” Tier agreed. “Avar?” said Phoran almost to himself. Avar, Tier recalled, was the given name of the new Sept, the
new Sept who was supposed to be so influential with the Emperor. “Is Avar a member of this Path?” Tier shrugged. “I don’t know. The only two I’ve met by name
are Telleridge and Myrceria—and I don’t think she’d be considered a member.” Phoran got to his feet and began pacing. “Why you?” he asked
again. “Why did they go all the way to Redem to find you? You aren’t a
Traveler, not if you’re a farmer in Redem who used to be a solder.” “Because I have a magical talent usually associated with the
Travelers,” replied Tier. Preempting the next question, he began telling Phoran
what he knew about the Orders. Phoran held up a hand. “Enough,” he said. “I believe you. Let’s get you out of here, then you can explain
anything you feel necessary.” Her followed him to the threshold, but when he leaned
forward to step through the door, white-hot pain convulsed his body and a shock
of magic threw him back several feet into the cell. “What was that?” said Phoran, startled. “He is bound,” said the Memory. It sounded like a crow’s mating
call or the rattle of dry bones. Tier wobbled to his feet. “It talks?” The Emperor looked at the Memory. “Sometimes. But this is
the first time it’s ever volunteered information. Are you all right?” Tier nodded. “Your Memory is right. There must be some sort
of magic here I cannot cross.” “Can you do something with it? Didn’t you say that you have
magic?” “He is bound,” said the Memory again. “Stop that,” said Tier, a command that usually worked when
Jes began to get too creepy. He turned to Phoran. “I don’t have the kind of
magic that could counter this, and they have managed to keep me from what
little useful magic I do have. It looks like I’m stuck here.” Phoran nodded. “Very well.” He came back into the room and
shut the door. “There are wizards who are supposed to serve me, or serve the
Empire at least, but I don’t know if any of them are the ones who belong to the
Path. Find out who the Path’s wizards are, and then maybe I can find a wizard
to undo this.” He gave Tier an apologetic look. “I am more emperor in name
than in reality or I could just order your release. The twentieth—nineteenth by
common reckoning—had real power.” Tier grinned, “That’s because he’d ordered the death of
fifteen Septs by the time he was your age and accounted for another three or
four personally.” “I’m rather finicky in my food choices,” said Phoran with
mock sadness. “I’ll never manage to be properly terrifying.” “You wouldn’t have to suck the marrow from their bones the
way the Nineteen:—ah, excuse me—Twenty did,” said Tier solemnly. “I suspect a
cooked heart or two would do just fine.” . “I don’t eat heart,” said Phoran
firmly. “Though I suppose I could feed it to the grieving heir—that might have
a similar effect.” Tier and Phoran gave each other a look of mutual approval. “I already owe you a favor,” said Phoran, “but your experience
is different man my own. I’d like your opinion on my problem.” He waved at the
Memory. “I am, always, your servant, my emperor,” Tier was rather
pleased to find that he meant it. “For the past three months,” Phoran began, “I’ve had this
creature. Not that it follows me all the time, you understand. Usually, it just
visits me once a night.” He smiled grimly and sat down on the bed. Tier followed his example and collapsed on the other end of
the bed. He should have waited until the Emperor bid him sit, but between
whatever happened during the time he couldn’t remember and the jolt the doorway
had given him, his joints were all but jelly. “Sometimes when I can’t sleep,” Phoran said, “I go exploring
the shut-off places in the palace. I have this key,” he took one out of his
pocket. “It’s supposed to open every door in the palace. It didn’t do yours,
but it opened the turnkey’s box that had your key in it.” He put it away and began his story again. “Anyway, one night
a few months ago I was wandering through the Kaore wing—that’s one of the ones
my father shut down, I’m told. It’s usually pretty boring: long corridors with
identical rooms on either side, that sort of thing. But this time I heard some
noise at the end of one of the corridors. “No one’s supposed to be there—but sometimes people are. I
sneaked down to a door that was ajar.” He pulled the velvet fabric of his pants
and absently rubbed it between thumb and index finger. “There were a number of people in dark robes with hoods over
their heads. They were standing in a loose circle, chanting. A seventh man was
kneeling, blindfolded and bound in the center. If I’d known what they were
going to do, I’d have tried to stop it somehow. But by the time I saw the knife
it was too late. One of the robed men had already slit the bound man’s throat.” Phoran got off the bed and began to pace restlessly. “There
was blood everywhere—I hadn’t realized ... It was too late for the dead man,
and I thought that they might riot be too excited at having a witness so I left
as quickly as I could. The Memory came to me the next night.” Phoran looked at the creature solemnly, then sank back onto
the bed and began rolling up his sleeve. “It comes to me every night,” he said,
showing Tier marks on the inside of his wrist that climbed in fading scars to
the hollow of his elbow. “After it feeds it tells me that in return it owes me the
answer to a question. Usually its answers aren’t very useful. Tonight I asked
if it knew someone who could tell me something about the Sept of Gerant’s lands
and it brought me here.” Tier said, “You think that you interrupted them killing
their last Traveler prisoner.” He considered it. “I think you are right—how
many groups of dark-robed men do you have going around killing people in the
palace?” “There might be as many as five or ten,” he said. “But not
that manage to summon or create something like this.” He pointed at his dark
comrade. “This is wizardry.” Tier nodded slowly. “I’m not a wizard, but I’ve dealt with
them. If this was something that might result from their meddling, I’d think
they’d be careful that it would not attach itself to them. Maybe some magic.
That would mean that you were the only one there it could attach itself to.” He got off the bed and walked closer to the Memory. His eyes
wouldn’t quite focus on it, reminding him forcibly of the way Jes could fade
into the shadows when he wanted to. “How did you know that I could answer the Emperor’s question
tonight?” asked Tier. The thing shifted restlessly. “You fed me true,” it said at
last. “I know you as I know Phoran, twenty-seventh emperor of that name.” “I fed you?” Tier asked. “‘Numberless were the heroes who fell,’” whispered the Memory
in a voice quite different than it had been using: it was no longer without
inflection. The change was remarkable. “You were my listener?” said Tier. “I was Kerine to your Red Ernave,” agreed the Memory. “What else are you?” Tier took a step nearer to it. “I am death,” it said and was gone. “Did you understand what it meant?” asked Phoran. Tier rubbed his hands together lightly. “Only a bit of it,”
he said. “Apparently it feeds on more than just blood. I gave it a story and it
took more than I offered—which is how it knew that I’d been one of Gerant’s
commanders.” He’d invoked magic in that story—more magic than he’d ever
brought forth before—and it had only been shortly after that when Telleridge
had informed him that his magic was contained. He’d thought that Telleridge had
meant that they’d taken his magic away—but perhaps it was more subtle than
that. “Would you tell me a lie?” he asked Phoran. “My stallion is cow-hocked,” he said immediately, apparently
unfazed by the abrupt change in subject. “What are you doing?” “Well,” said Tier. “I misunderstood what Telleridge meant
when he said they had contained my magic. I can tell if you lie—but not
Telleridge or Myrceria.” “Your magic works, but not on the members of the Path,”
Phoran said. “So it seems.” “I have two more requests before I go,” said Phoran. “First,
I ask that you not tell anyone about the Memory.” He gave Tier another bleak
smile. “It’s more than a social problem for me, you know. If a whisper of the
Memory got out I’d face a headsman’s axe. The Empire cannot forget the lessons
learned from the Shadowed: the Emperor must be free of magic.” “Without your permission, no one will hear it from my lips,”
promised Tier. “Would you see if you can find out if your Sept, Avar the
Sept of Leheigh, is a member of the Secret Path?” He sighed. “Telleridge is ...
a spider who avoids me light of day while he spins his webs and sends his
friends and foes whirling in deadly earnest, unaware whose threads pull them
this way and that. If he is involved with the Secret Path, then they are a
threat to me and vice versa. I need to know who I can trust.” “If I can discover it,” Tier agreed, then gave his emperor a
wry grin. “Since I don’t have any choice about staying, I might as well make
myself useful.” He slept for a while after Phoran left. He had no idea how
long because his cell allowed for no daylight, just the endless glow of the
stones that lit his room. Longing for home brought him to his feet. Frustration sent
him pacing. He hadn’t been able to ask if Phoran could get a message to Seraph.
His tongue wouldn’t shape the words. By Cormorant and Owl, I bind you that you will not ask
anyone to help you escape ... Seraph would help him escape if she could. He
supposed that was enough to invoke Telleridge’s magic. If Seraph knew where to find him ... but she did not. She
probably thought him dead after all this time. He probably would die without seeing her again: there was
something in the arrogance of Telleridge that told Tier that many Travelers had
died here. Tier closed his eyes and rested his face against the cool
stone wall. Without the distraction of sight, he could pull her into his
heart’s thoughts. Owl memory, she called it, when he was able to recall
conversations held months before. Gifted, his grandfather said, when he could
sing a song after the first time he’d heard it. Blessed, he thought now,
visualizing the pale-faced child Seraph had been the first time he’d seen her.
Blessed to have his memories to keep in his heart in this place. In his mind’s eye, he built her face as it had been, little
by little, loving the curve of her shoulder and the odd pale color of her hair. Proud, he thought, she had been so proud. It
was in the stubborn set of her chin, raised in defiance of the men in that
tavern. He could see the bruise on her wrist where the innkeeper had grabbed
her and yanked her out of bed. He’d been intrigued by her then, he thought as he had
before. In the clear light of his memory he could see how young she’d been,
little more than a child, and yet they’d been married less than a season later. Eschewing the luxuries his cell now offered, Tier sat On the floor and set his back against the wall. He remembered the
very moment that he knew he loved her. Two days after Jes was born. Tier came back from the barn to
find Seraph sitting on the end of the bed, back straight as a board, with Jes held
protectively in her arms. “I have something to say to you,” she said, as welcoming as
an angry hedgehog. He took off his coat and hung it up. “All right,” he’d said,
wondering how he’d managed to offend her this time. Her eyes narrowed, she told him that their son was a
Guardian. She explained how difficult Jes would find it to maintain a balance
between daytime and nighttime personalities. “If he were a girl, he would stand a better chance,” she
said in the cold, clear voice she only used when she was really upset. “Male
Guardians seldom maintain their balance after puberty. If they become maddened,
they will kill anyone who crosses their path except for those in their charge.
Once that happens, they must be killed because they cannot be confined.” Jes began to fuss and she set him against her shoulder and
rocked him gently—keeping Tier at a distance by the force of her gaze. “I had a
brother who was a Guardian, adopted from another tribe. Often Guardians are
given to other clans to raise because the normal anxieties of birth parents
seem to add strain to the Guardian’s burden. It is an honor to raise a Guardian
child, and no clan would refuse to take him.” Give up his son? The shock of the suggestion ripped
cleanly through dismay that had encased him as he realized the terrible thing
that the gods had laid upon his small son. How could she think that he’d
entertain a suggestion that they throw Jes away because he was too much
trouble? How could she consider deserting her child? She wouldn’t. Not she. She who fought demons for people she
didn’t even know, would never, ever, shrink at anything that would threaten her
second family. “How old was your Guardian brother when he died?” asked Tier
finally. “Risovar was thirty,” she said, her hands fluttering restlessly
over Jes, as if she wanted to clutch him close, but was afraid she might hurt
him if she did. “He was among the first who died of the plague.” “Then you know how it is done,” Tier said. “Jes will stay
with us, and you will teach me how to raise a Guardian who will die of ripe old
age.” Her face had come alive then, and he saw what it had cost
her to be honest with him. When he cradled his family against him, mother and
child, she’d whispered, “I’d have killed anyone who would have tried to take
him.” “Me, too,” Tier had said fiercely into her moon-colored
hair. No one would ever separate them. “Me, too,” said Tier, in his cell in the palace at Taela. How best to weather this captivity? The answers came to him
in Gerant’s dry tenor. Know your enemy. Know what they want so you know
where to expect their next attack. Discover their strengths and avoid them.
Find their weaknesses and exploit them with your strengths. Knowledge is a
better weapon than a sword. He smiled affably when Myrceria entered his room. “If you would come with me, sir,” she said. “We’ll make you
ready for presentation. After the ceremony you’ll be given the freedom of the
Eyrie and all the pleasures it can provide you.” The women who’d tried to bathe him once before were back in
the bathing pool, and this time Myrceria wouldn’t let him send them out. They
scrubbed, combed, shaved, trimmed, and ignored his blushes and protests. When one of the women started after his hair, Myrceria
caught her hand, “No, leave it long. We’ll braid it and it will look properly
exotic.” They persuaded him into court clothing, the like of which
he’d have never willingly put on. He might actually have refused to wear them,
even with his resolution to be a meek and mild guest while he gathered
knowledge of his enemy, if it weren’t for the fear in their eyes. He could see
that, if they didn’t turn him out pretty as a lady’s mare, it wouldn’t be him
that suffered. So he protested and-made rude comments, but he wore the silly
things. There was a polished metal mirror embedded in the wall, and
the women pushed and shoved him until he stood in front of it. Baggy red velvet trousers, tight at waist and ankles, were
half-concealed by a tunic that hung straight from shoulder to knees. From the
weight of it, the tunic was real cloth of gold. Under the tunic, his shirt was
blood-red silk embroidered with metallic gold thread. They’d shaved his face
smooth, then oiled his hair with something that left flakes of metal in it that
caught the light as he moved. Then they’d braided it with gold and red cords
that gradually replaced his own hair so the braid hung down to his hips, where
it ended in gold and red tassels. On his feet were gold slippers encrusted with
bits of red glass. At least he hoped it was glass. After looking at the full effect, he hung his head and
closed his eyes. “Lassies, if my wife ever saw me like this she’d never let
me live it down.” Myrceria tapped him playfully with one manicured finger.
“You look handsome, admit it We did a good job, ladies, although he wasn’t so
bad to start out.” Tier looked at himself in the mirror again. If he looked carefully,
he could see how the outfit might have been inspired by Traveler’s garments.
They wore the loose pants and the knee-length tunic—but one of the things that
Seraph liked about Redemi clothes was the bright colors. Her own people wore
mostly undyed fabrics or earth tones. Tier sighed, “I’m glad there’s no one here who knows me. I’d
never live this down.” They covered his magnificent gaudiness with a brown robe and
pulled its hood down to hide his face. “There now,” said Myrceria. “You are ready.” She hesitated,
and the practiced manner of a court whore faded a little. “You’ve made our job
easier,” she said. “Let me help you a little. The wizards will be waiting when
we take you out the door. Go with them quietly; they won’t hurt you. They’ll
escort you through the Eyrie—the largest room that belongs to the Path. It’s an
auditorium tonight, but usually it is just a room for people to gather in. The
wizards will take you to the stage at the end and introduce you to the
Passerines and whatever Raptors decided to come.” He took her hand in his and bent to kiss it. “Thank you for
your kindness, Myrceria. Ladies.” There were four men in black robes waiting for him, just as
Myrceria had promised. Like him, their hoods were pulled over their faces. Tier hesitated in the doorway, unprepared for the fearful
reluctance he felt at the sight of them and the sudden conviction that he’d
seen the knobby hands of the man nearest him holding a small knife wet with
blood. He repressed his fear and the anger it called. With a small
smile he set himself in the center of the procession. “Shall we go, gentlemen?” he said pleasantly. The Eyrie was made up of broad shelves of level flooring with
short drops between sections; the level shelves narrowed as they neared the
stage at the far side of the room. The uppermost section, where Tier and his escort entered,
was mostly occupied by a bar laden with food. Behind the bar was an open
doorway where servants appeared with trays of food or armloads of ale mugs. There were a few tables against the wall with white-robed
men who watched Tier mostly indifferently. But most of the people in the room
were young men in blue robes who quieted as the procession passed them by. By
the time they reached the stage, the room was eerily silent. The wizards walked Tier onto the stage and stopped in the middle,
turning as one to face the audience. As soon as they stood there, the lights in
the Eyrie dimmed except for the stones that lined the edge of the stage. Squinting against the odd light, Tier saw that everyone in
the room was slowly moving down to the chairs set in front of the stage. When
they had all gathered, a hollow boom made the Eyrie shudder,-and in a cloud of
smoke and magic, a fifth black-robed man appeared: Telleridge. He stood bareheaded before the crowd so that every man there
could see him. “My friends,” he said. “For some of you, this will be the first
introduction to the secrets of our path. Traveler Magic from the hands of the
Five Gods.” He lifted his right hand up and displayed an implement that looked
like a morningstar without the spiked ball. Instead, dangling on the end of the
chain was a large, silver owl. “Owl who is Bard,” he said. The man on Tier’s left front held up a similar item with a
raven rather than an owl. “Raven who is Mage,” he said. Five gods? thought Tier. If they were using the
Orders they were missing one. The other wizards called out Lark, Cormorant, and
Falcon; but there was no Eagle. He would have fretted about it more, but he
remembered where he’d heard of the Five Gods before: the new priest in Redem. Seraph,
he thought in panic, my children—who would they take next? A flood of magic interrupted Tier’s worrying. “For centuries,” Telleridge said, his voice carried to the
far corners of the room by magic, “the Travelers hid their power from us—just
as the Emperor and his Septs hide their lands and titles away from us, thinking
that they have rendered us powerless, helpless. But we are the Followers of the
Secret Path and Hidden Gods: we worship the Birds—Raven for magic, Lark for
life and death, Cormorant to rule the seas, Falcon to find our prey, and Owl to
lead men into our darkness. Tonight, my friends we will all partake of
darkness.” He took a step to the side so the audience had an unobstructed
view of Tier; at the same time one of the wizards who stood behind Tier pulled
off his robe. He said something as well, too soft for Tier to catch, but
whatever it was, it froze Tier motionless. “Raven is flown,” said the man who held the raven symbol.
“Gone from our keeping.” At his words Telleridge flung his free hand up and the whole
room erupted into howls, like a pack of hunting dogs. Tier would have been
impressed if the effect hadn’t had a practiced polish. This was a response
trained into the Passerines, a war cry without passion. The wizards Tier could see put the chains over their
shoulder, balancing their symbols with the handle hanging down their back,
leaving the birds in front where they could be seen. With their hands free, they began to clap in a slow, restless
rhythm. Fourteen beats into it there was an echo from the audience. By the
twentieth beat the noise was loud enough to account for everyone in the room
except for Tier. On the thirty-fifth beat, everyone stopped, leaving only
Tier’s heart beating still. The wizard with the raven said, again, “Raven is flown.” An older man in white stood up and said, “So farewell the Raven.
What guest have you brought?” Telleridge said, “We bring the Owl, cunning and beautiful,
that he will give us the gift of music.” The Passerines replied then, as if one man spoke with a hundred
mouths. “By blood shall we bind him, by fire shall we seal our bargain. By
blood shall we free him after a year and a day.” “As you will,” said Telleridge. He touched the owl and a
small blade shot out at the end of the owl’s feet. With measured steps he
walked to Tier’s side. He took Tier’s helpless wrist and made a shallow cut.
Then he held the knife beneath the wound until the silver blade was completely
covered in blood. He went to the wizard with the raven and touched a finger to
the blade and then touched the wizard’s raven. “By blood,” said the Raven wizard. Telleridge repeated the procedure with the others. When he
was finished he resumed his former position to the right of the Raven wizard. The ceremony was nonsense as far as magic went, Tier knew.
The only magic that had been done was the spell that kept him still—but Tier
could read audiences. Excitement filled the room like some heady wine. “Raptors, Passerines, Masters all, I give you the Owl!”
Telleridge called, and the audience roared to their feet. When the cheering and hooting died down, Telleridge held up
his hand, snapped his fingers, and a lute appeared in his hand. “Play for us. Bard,” said Telleridge. “And we will grant you
guesting rights.” As easily as that Tier could move. Quickly, he considered his options and chose the one that appealed
to him the most. He took the lute the Owl Master held out to him—a beautiful
instrument to look at—but when he played a few notes he shook his head. “Myrceria, lass,” he said, letting his voice find her
wherever she waited in the darkness that disguised the further rows of the audience.
“Hie you back to my rooms and bring my lute, please. This one your Masters
provided is garbage for all it’s pretty.” The problem with solemn ceremonies and young men, Tier knew,
was that the urge to break the solemnity was almost irresistible. They greeted
his informal request with a roar more spontaneous than the one they’d given
Telleridge, if not as loud. As easily as that he took the crowd from the wizard
and lessened the effect of the earlier ceremony in the minds of everyone
present He wouldn’t have tried it if his cell were far away, but it
should only take a moment to retrieve the lute—not long enough to make his
audience restless. “Bard,” called a young man. “I thought that an Owl could
play any instrument” Tier nodded his head. “I’ve heard that, too. But no one ever
said they would play any instrument just because they could.” It wasn’t Myrceria, but one of the Passerines, who ran up
with the lute from Tier’s cell. Tier took up the battered lute and sat on the
edge of the stage, one long leg hanging over the edge. He’d only had her a
night, but the lute felt like an old friend as he cradled her and coaxed her
back into tune, again. “Now,” he said, “What kind of song should it be?” He played
a rippling series of scales so quickly it was hard to pick out the individual
notes. “No,” he shook his head, “No one except another musician would like
that.” He tightened a peg again to bring a string back into pitch. He’d have to
watch that one, he thought, probably a new string. “War songs sound stupid on a lute,” he said, picking enough
of a familiar melody out that a few heads began to nod, “at least they sound
stupid without a drum.” “Play ‘Shadow’s Fall’,” said someone over the suggestions in
the crowd. Tier shook his head. It’d be a while before he used that
story again. “No, everyone knows that. What about a love ballad?” He struck a
few chords of a particularly flowery piece and laughed at the groans from the
audience. “Fine,” he said, “Try this one for size.” And he began the
song he’d intended to sing from the very first. It was a wickedly funny story of a lowborn killer who, on impulse,
stole the clothes of a rich young man he’d been paid to kill and set himself up
as a nobleman. Tier smiled to himself as he saw that the young men in the audience
enjoyed rude double meanings and clever wording as much as the soldiers he’d
fought with. The lute, for all that it was battered, was easily the
finest he’d ever played. Responsive and clear-toned, it sang out, complementing
his voice and lending just the right accent to the words. He started into the third verse, the crowd silent, muffling
their laughter so that they wouldn’t miss a word. Even with such a fine
instrument, it was difficult to get the volume he needed before this many
people. With his encouragement, they joined in the final chorus, making the
stage vibrate with the sheer volume. He ended it with a flourish. He could sense the wizards
moving forward, but he decided to end the performance without them. “Now,” he said with a deliberately engaging grin. “Come join
me for the feast and drink or two—and I’ll do my best to be entertaining.” Lute
in hand, he jumped off the high stage, away from the wizards, and led the horde
to an invasion of the bar in the back of the room. Chapter 10It was almost dark when Jes got back to the farm. Gura greeted him from the porch and Jes ruffled his fingers
through the wiry hair. The Guardian had been demanding today; Jes was tired and
his head hurt. He died not noticing that there was something wrong because he
didn’t know if he could keep the Guardian under control this time if there was. Rinnie hadn’t come out when Gura barked. The Guardian also knew he was tired, and he was willing to
wait until they knew for certain. So it was Jes who walked to the back of the
cabin and saw that Rinnie had done a few hours’ worth of work before putting
her tools away where they belonged. Had Rinnie grown impatient and set out after Mother and
Lehr? He didn’t think so, especially since she’d left Gura here. He followed
Mother and Lehr’s tracks to the woods, but he couldn’t see anything that
indicated Rinnie had come here today. The ground around the cabin was too
packed-down for him to follow a trail there. Reluctantly he gave way to the Guardian. He shouldn’t have stayed so long watching the new temple,
thought the Guardian unhappily. But he’d never seen anything like the taint
that spread from the temple through Redem. He’d been worried about Hennea; the forest king had made him
responsible for her safety, and there was nothing safe about the temple. The geas
that bound her made it impossible for him to stop her from going in, but
he’d stayed and fretted over it until Jes had convinced him that Mother would
know what to do about it. In wolf form, the Guardian looked for Rinnie’s scent along
the edge of the forest, but Jes had been right. She hadn’t followed Mother. , He went back to the cabin. Gura flattened himself submissively,
but the Guardian ignored him. Gura shouldn’t have let Rinnie go off alone. Dogs
did not make good guards—they were taught to obey the commands of the people
they guarded. Rinnie’s scent was here, but it was difficult to pick out
one trail from another. He needed Lehr for this kind of job. He lifted his head
from the porch step and cast an irritated glance toward the forest; judging by
the time Hennea had taken to get from the village to the place where something
had happened to Papa, Mother and Lehr should have been back by now. As he
turned his head he caught a whiff of an odd scent. What had Bandor been doing at the farm? He seldom visited his aunt—both the Guardian and Jes found
the village distressful. There were too many people for Jes, and he got
confused by their unguarded emotions. To the Guardian, there were too many
possible threats. Even so, he knew Bandor’s scent of yeast, salt, and soap. The sound of rapid footsteps made him blend into the side of
the porch so that he remained unseen. The wind was coming from the wrong
direction, so he couldn’t tell who it was until Hennea came out in the open. One sleeve was burned away and blisters started at her fingertips
and trailed up fire-blackened flesh to her shoulder. She slowed to a walk,
staggering slightly as she came in sight of the cabin. “Seraph,” she said. “Jes, are you here?” The Guardian shook with the implied violence of her
condition, even though Jes tried to soothe him with the observation that she
might nave done the damage to herself because the hurt was concentrated on the
wrist the geas band had been on. Hennea smelled of anger, fear, and pain, and Jes was tired.
The beast snarled silently. Hennea gasped slightly, and the Guardian knew that she felt
the dread of his anger. “Jes,” she said, closing in on the cabin. “Jes, I need to
talk to you. There’s none here to harm anyone. Please. I need to talk to you.” A tear slid down her face, and she wiped it away
impatiently. “Please. I need your help.” If the forest king hadn’t given her to him, the Guardian
could have ignored her; but she was one of his now. So he slunk away from the
porch and let her see him clearly, though Jes would rather have resumed his
usual form because he didn’t want to frighten her anymore than she already was.
Jes liked Hennea. “Jes,” she said, unfazed by the monstrous wolf that stalked
toward her. “Guardian. I’m so sorry. I’ve betrayed you all. I don’t know what
he’s planned, but it’s my fault.” It was difficult to get human speech out of his wolf throat,
but the Guardian managed. “Who?” “He planned it,” she said, holding her burnt arm awkwardly
away from her body. “I thought I was so clever, figuring out that he was
playing a game with your family—but his game was more subtle than I expected.
He set me up, all but sent me out to find Seraph and tell her that I thought
your father hadn’t been killed. He knew that she’d go and take Lehr. He
knew Rinnie would be left here unprotected. He didn’t care about you, he
doesn’t know what you are. But he wants Rinnie.” Jes helped the Guardian cool his rage, and the beast
welcomed the calm that would allow him to accomplish what was necessary. “He has her?” he asked. “Not when I left—I thought I might beat him here—but she’s
gone, isn’t she? That’s why you’re here and not Jes.” “My uncle was here,” the Guardian said. “Bandor, the village
baker.” “Lark take them all,” she whispered. “Bandor is one of Volis’s
favorites. Would he turn your sister over to Volis?” “He wouldn’t hurt her knowingly,” said the Guardian after a
moment. “But his intentions are not important.” Since Jes controlled his
savagery, the Guardian was able to think clearly again and focus his purpose.
“We need to find them. Can you run?” Lehr was right, it was late when they reached Redem, and Seraph
was exhausted, both emotionally and physically. Only her obsessive need to
force answers out of the solsenti priest gave her the fortitude to start
up the steep street of Redem. She almost walked right past the bakery. If there hadn’t
been a light in Alinath’s room, she might have been able to do it. Alinath
loved Tier, too. Seraph hesitated outside the door. “She won’t believe you. Mother,” offered Lehr. “Yes,” said Seraph, “she will—because she needs to believe
it as much as I did.” She gave Lehr a tired smile. “She’ll still think it is my
fault—but at least she won’t think he’s dead. She has the right to know.” Seraph knocked briskly at the door. “Alinath, it’s Seraph,
open up.” She waited, and then knocked again. “Alinath? Bandor?” Lehr tested the air, “I smell blood. Is the door locked?” Seraph tried the latch and the door swung open easily. There
was no light in the front room, nor the bakery, but Lehr didn’t need light and
she followed him to Alinath’s room. The door was ajar and Lehr opened it
cautiously. “Aunt Alinath?” he said, and the concern in his voice sent
Seraph ducking under the arm he held the door open with. Alinath was gagged and bound hand and foot on her bed. Her
face was bruised; someone had hit her cheek and split the skin, which had bled
copiously all over the bedding. When she saw them she began struggling
furiously. “Shh,” said Seraph, sitting beside Alinath. She took out her
knife and carefully slid it around swollen flesh to cut the ropes. “I’ll have
you free in a moment.” “Rinnie,” said Alinath as soon as the gag dropped from her
mouth. “What?” asked Seraph. But Alinath had begun to shake and Seraph couldn’t understand
what she was saying. “Slow down,” she said, keeping her voice calm so she didn’t upset
Alinath further. “What about Bandor and Rinnie? Did Bandor do this to you?” Alinath tried to sit up, but it was obviously painful and
Seraph hurried to help support her. “It was Bandor,” Alinath said, breathing shallowly around
sore ribs. “He’s gotten so strange lately—I don’t know what’s wrong with him.
This afternoon, after the priest came, he started muttering about Rinnie and
you.” She stopped and swallowed. “You and I have never seen eye to
eye. Seraph—but you’d die to protect your children. I know that. So when he
started saying dangerous things ... things that would get the whole village
riled up if they heard ... Well, I told him he was a fool. That there was
nothing evil about you, and he had no call to accuse you of being shadowed.” Seraph’s stomach clenched. Alinath turned her head away. “He hit me. He’s done that a
couple of times in the past month. I’m not saying I’m the easiest person to
live with, but ... you know Bandor; he was never like that.” “Go on,” said Seraph. “This time, it was more than a casual slap. I didn’t know if
he was going to stop. Ellevanal help me, I don’t think he did either. Then he
muttered a bit more and said something about not needing my interference. He
tied me up and left. Seraph, I don’t know what he’s gone to do.” “He started after the priest left? Volis, not Karadoc?”
asked Seraph. Alinath nodded. “I don’t like that man. Did Bandor go out to
the farm?” “Did he say that was what he was going to do?” asked Seraph. “He said that he was going to save Rinnie.” “We haven’t been there since early this afternoon,” said Seraph.
“I left her with Gura; but Gura knows Bandor. I have to go find her. Will you
be all right here?” Alinath nodded. “Find him before he hurts her,” she said. “Where would he take Rinnie,” said Lehr, “if he didn’t come
back here?” “The priest,” said Seraph. “If he thought she was shadowed he’d
take her to the priest. We’ll find them,” she told Alinath. “Be careful,” said
Tier’s sister. “Be careful, Seraph. Bandor’s not the man you know.” Outside the bakery, Seraph frowned in indecision; go to the
temple or all the way out to the farm? “Can you tell if Bandor and Rinnie came by here?” she asked
Lehr. He shook his head. “Not even if it were full noon—there’s
too much ...” He stiffened and looked around. Seraph felt it, too, a cold chill fluttering down her spine
and a lump in her throat that made it hard to swallow. “Jes,” she called. “Are you here?” “Listen,” said Lehr. “Someone’s riding a horse up the road.” She saw Skew first, his white spots clearly visible in the
starlight as he leapfrogged up the steep corner, hooves slipping and sliding.
As soon as he was on the more level part of the road he broke into a smooth
trot and stopped in front of her. “The priest,” said Hennea tightly, sliding off the horse. “I
was a fool. He sent me to get you to leave your daughter unprotected.” Seraph nodded. “I’ve come to that conclusion myself. Do you
think they’d take her to the temple?” “Yes.” “We’ll leave Skew here,” said Seraph. “He’ll lose his
footing on the cobbles in the steep parts. Lehr, can you find some place to secure
him?” “There’ll be space by the woodshed,” he said and took the
horse. Hennea stood a little crookedly, as if she were in pain.
Seraph called a magelight and took a good look at Hennea’s burnt arm. “There are easier ways to break a geas” she said
dryly. “I was in a hurry,” replied Hennea, her lips curving in a
pale smile. “And I was angry.” “That’s going to hurt,” observed Seraph. “It already does. I’m not going to be much help in any kind
of fight; my concentration is gone. I can feed your magic, though.” “Good enough,” Seraph said. Lehr came back and Seraph turned and started up the road at
a rapid walk. Jes and Lehr could probably run all the way to the temple, but
she and Hennea would have to take it slower or they wouldn’t be any good when
they got there. She knew that Jes was with them by the clenching of her
stomach, but she only caught a glimpse of him now and again out of the corner
of her eye. “Tell me about Volis,” said Seraph. “Whatever you think will
be useful.” “He’s smarter than I thought he was, obviously. The other
mages in the Secret Path respected his power—but he’s young by solsenti standards
and complex spells frustrate him. Because of that, he tends to use the Raven
ring more than his own magic unless he’s weaving an illusion.” They came to a steep bend in the road, and Hennea quit speaking
until they were on flatter ground. “I told you that the wizards steal Orders
and wear them. Usually as rings, but there are some stones set in earrings and
necklaces. He told me that some of the rings are painful to use, and some of
them don’t work all the time. Most of the wizards can only use one ring at a
time, but Volis has two he uses. The first one bears the Order of the Raven.
With it he usually has an Owl, though I’ve seen him with a Hunter’s ring a time
or two as well. You’ll know which one he wears when you see him, just look.” “How well does he bear the Orders?” “About as you’d think,” she said. “He seems to believe the Raven
Order is just like his magic, except that he doesn’t have to use rituals.” Seraph smiled in satisfaction. “tell me, does he have a bad
temper?” As they got closer to the temple, Lehr stopped and bent down
as if to touch the ground, but he pulled his hand back before it touched. “What’s this, Mother?” he asked. “What?” Seraph stopped, too, but she didn’t see anything. “A taint,” said Jes. He must have been close to Hennea
because she gave a nervous squeak. “What does it look like?” “It looks as if a foul substance was spilled over the
ground,” said Lehr. “It smells bad, too.” “Shadowed,” said Hennea in a small voice. “I’d wondered.” “It comes from the temple,” said Jes. “It’s darker there.” “It’s really there?” asked Lehr. “Why can’t you see it,
Mother?” “I don’t know why Ravens can’t see the Stalker’s influence,
or why Larks can’t either,” replied Seraph. “I can understand why the ancients
didn’t feel it necessary for Owls or Cormorants, but Larks and Ravens have to
deal with shadowing.” “Unto each Order ...” murmured Hennea. “‘Are the powers so given’—yes, yes, I know. It is still
stupid. So Volis is most likely shadowed.” It was a very rare condition. Seraph
had never dealt with someone who was shadowed, though her teacher had. He’d
died before he taught her much about it because there was so much else to
learn. She knew the Stalker needed some destructive feeling or act to gain
influence and the amount of influence varied. The Shadowed had been different,
her teacher said, because the Shadowed had invoked the Stalker’s power and welcomed
the shadowing. “Let’s go,” she said. “We need to get to Rinnie.” They reached the temple finally, and Lehr tried the door. “It’s locked,” he said. “Barred from the inside, I think.” Seraph said something short and guttural, a summoning she
would not have remembered if she’d stopped to think about it, and the door blew
apart, reduced to splinters and bits of metal that covered the floor of the
inner chamber. “Careful,” cautioned Hennea. “Anger and magic don’t mix
well.” “Where will he take her?” Seraph knew that Hennea was right,
but ever since the huntsman had come to tell her that Tier was dead she’d been
more frightened than she’d been since the night her brother died—and fear, like
grief, made her angry. “Follow me.” The temple was brightly lit with wall sconces, so Seraph had
no trouble picking her way through the debris left by the door. But the
room on the other side of the curtain was quite different than the one she
remembered. It was a rectangular room with a low ceiling. There were no flying
birds, no arched ceiling. “Is this the real room or is the chamber with the Orders the
real room?” she asked Hennea. “Which do you think?” This room was more in keeping with a building that had been
put up in less than a season’s time. It was not too different from Willon’s
store, and she couldn’t smell magic in it at all ... but ... “The other one is real,” she said with conviction. That room had been too detailed to have been an illusion set
up just for her, but he couldn’t show that room to just anyone. This chamber
looked just as the villagers would expect. Hennea nodded her head. “As I told you, he is a very good
illusionist.” There was a small door set unobtrusively near the back wall
and Hennea led them through it and down a narrow stairway. “We’re close now,” Hennea said. “We should be as quiet as we
can.” “Rinnie’s been here,” whispered Lehr. “I can smell her fear,” agreed Jes, already at the bottom of
the stairway. The stair ended in a short, dark hallway that smelled of
earth and moisture to Seraph; but Lehr’s nose was wrinkled with disgust and he
was careful not to bump against the wall. Light pooled by an open doorway. Seraph brushed by the others to enter the room first. Rinnie was there; like Alinath, she’d been tied and gagged,
but Seraph didn’t see any bruises. Relief washed over Seraph; Rinnie wasn’t
safe yet, but she was alive. Several hundred candles were set out to form five circles on
the floor with Rinnie in the middle of the center circle. The others each
contained a bit of jewelry with a single large stone in the setting. Volis was there, too, peering over a fragile-looking scroll
laid out on a table almost too small for it. He didn’t look up as they entered.
As Hennea had advised, Seraph looked at his hands and saw two rings. One of
them should be Raven. Seraph focused her magic and looked at the rings.
Raven and Owl, just as Hennea had predicted, but twisted somehow and empty.
Wrong. In the far corner of the room, Bandor sat cross-legged on
the floor, rocking back and forth and muttering to himself. Owl-sick, thought
Seraph. Unbound by Traveler laws, Volis had forced Bandor to do something
against his will, and Bandor was paying the price. She took another step forward and ran into a barrier of
magic. With a quick flick of thought she made the barrier visible. It arched
across the room, leaving Volis, Bandor, and Rinnie on one side of the barrier
and the rest of them trapped on the other: trapped, because the barrier now covered
the doorway and sealed them all in. At least she assumed they were all there.
She hadn’t seen Jes in the quick glance she’d taken. “Volis,” Seraph said. Her voice trembled with fury; she’d thought she had herself
under better control. She was so angry at him and at those unknown men who were
like him and played havoc in their ignorance. They had stolen Tier, Rinnie, and
Seraph’s peace; they would pay, all of them. Painfully, she drew the serenity of her training around her
like a cloak; it was Volis who had to lose his temper. When she was certain she
was calm, she said, “What are you doing?” “Summoning the Stalker,” he said, without looking up. “I’ve
been expecting you—as you can see. Once my little Raven took flight I thought
she’d bring you here. At first I was upset with her, but then I thought it
would not be a bad thing to have an audience—as long as they didn’t become part
of the ceremonies’.” Guardians were all but immune to magic—Jes could go through
the barrier. It was just possible he could get through, retrieve Rinnie, and
return across the barrier with her. But if he couldn’t, he would never leave
her. Trapped there, he would try to protect Rinnie from Volis—and that was
unacceptably dangerous. She’d send him there only if there was no choice. She could tell that Jes had reached the end of his control because the temperature in the room was dropping rapidly. “You are an ignorant fool,” she said coldly. “The Eagle is
not the Stalker. The Stalker is what made the Shadowed what he was. If you
manage to summon it, you will not be more—you will be nothing. The Stalker has
no followers, because anything that answers to it becomes a thing just as it
is.” “Don’t think I don’t know about people like you,” said Volis.
“My first teacher liked to tell me how ignorant I was because he was afraid of
me and what I could do. So for years I did his bidding as his apprentice. When
the Master of the Secret Path found me and told me the truth, the first thing I
did was arrange for my teacher to receive a lesson ensuring that he never had a
chance to mislead anyone again.” Satisfaction colored his voice. “Take warning
from that You say I am wrong, but you don’t know me, don’t know what I can do.” The growing cold made Seraph shiver, but she trusted that
Jes would hold on a few minutes more. She needed to make this boy angry. “Oh, I know what you can do,” said Seraph serenely. “Do you
think that Hennea spent the whole day silent? Or do you think that I should
tremble before an illusionist!” She saw her tone made him flush. Solsenti
wizards looked down upon illusionists, saw their magic as a lesser thing
because it neither created nor destroyed. Solsenti wizards were fools
about many things. “A boy barely old enough to dress himself? A solsenti conjurer
who defiles himself with the dead because he has to steal their magic or
everyone would know how ignorant he was?” “I may be an illusionist,” he said with careful dignity,
“but I trapped you—both of you Ravens and your Hunter son, too. And this
ignorant boy found out your secrets. I know how to summon a god.” “You can’t even keep a Raven withgow,”
said Seraph. “How could you summon a god?” She’d hoped to anger him with the reminder of Hennea’s escape,
but he was too excited about his discovery. “It will be easy,” said Volis. “The Cormorant was the key.” And then, pacing back and forth, he began to pontificate
upon pseudo-complexities of the Orders that the wizards of his Secret Path had
“discovered” over the years. “Lehr,” Seraph said softly underneath the flow of Volis’s
words. “Is he shadowed?” “Yes. Uncle Bandor, too—though not as deeply.” Seraph nodded her understanding, then turned her attention
back to the ranting Volis. “I took the rings, one for each Order. The Secret Path only
has four Healer rings, but none of them work right. So they gave me this one to
do as I wish. I have one for each of the Orders, but with your daughter I don’t
need the Cormorant.” He looked at Seraph, his face flushed with triumph. “I tried
it with just the rings, but it didn’t work because the spell calls for blood
and death. Getting someone of each Order is impractical—but then I remembered
something I read about sympathetic magic, using one thing to represent other
things, like using a feather for air. I wrote to Telleridge and he said he
thought it might work. So all I needed was one of you.” He looked at Hennea and said spitefully, “I could have used
you, but I thought you liked me. I didn’t want to hurt you. I could have saved
myself a lot of trouble, couldn’t I?” “You might have,” Hennea agreed mildly. He didn’t know what to say to that, so he turned his
attention back to Seraph. “I thought that it would be easier to use the youngest
one. It wasn’t hard to persuade Bandor that she was in danger and I could help
her. You should be proud, Seraph; your daughter’s death will return the Eagle
to the world.” Sweat dripped from his forehead, though on the other side of
his barrier, Seraph’s breath fogged in the cold. Evidently the barrier blocked
the effects of Jes’s ire. “Solsenti wizards,” said Seraph, slowly shaking her
head, “always making things much more complicated than they really are. The
Stalker is already here at your request.” She smiled at him. “You know I speak
the truth.” His eyes widened for an instant as his stolen Owl ring, once
she’d called his attention to it, told him she was right. Then he narrowed his
eyes accusingly. “You just think you speak the truth, that’s all it means. You
are wrong.” “I can’t give you proof of-the Stalker,” agreed Seraph mildly.
“You’d have to be Hunter to see what you have done in your stupidity.” He
didn’t like to hear the word stupid, especially as he knew that she
meant it. But he wasn’t going to lose his temper enough for her purposes; he was too buoyed up by
his plans. She’d have to bring Jes into it. “I can show you what Eagle is,” she said. The whole time they’d spent talking, Seraph had been sorting
through the intricate work of the spell holding the barrier together. If he’d
just used solsenti magic, she might not have been able to break it, but
he’d woven Raven and solsenti magic together and the result was
unstable. “Jes,” she said, “go get Rinnie and keep her safe. Lehr,
when you can, take Bandor.” Volis frowned at her words. “Jes? Isn’t that the name of
your idiot son? He’s not here.” He shivered once. “Yes,” said Seraph, “he is. You just aren’t looking. Jes,
the priest wants to get a good look at you.” The Guardian was nothing if not dramatic, coalescing out of
candle smoke into the oversized wolf he favored over other forms. He stood not
two paces from Volis, frost shading his coat and moving from his paws to the
hem of Volis’s robes. Jes growled, a low rumbling sound. Seraph’s pulse picked
up until she could hear the sound of her heartbeat in her ears. Volis, who had no warning or understanding of what Jes was,
cried out in terror. That fear did for Volis’s magic what anger had once done
for Seraph’s. His control of Raven magic failed, and Seraph ripped the barrier
into pieces with a sweep of power. “This is my eldest son, Jes,” she said. “Who is Eagle and
Guardian—and in no need of your summons.” She kicked aside the carefully placed candles, breaking the
circles and removing any temptation he might have had to kill Rinnie. As she walked she continued speaking, quoting from the book
of Orders. “ “Thus is it said that when the Elder Wizards took upon themselves
the need to fight the Shadow-Stalker, that they created them the Orders. Six
Orders created they them, after the six who slept forever. First, Raven Mage, second,
Cormorant Weather Witch to aid their travels, and third created was Healer who
is Lark that they might survive to continue the fight. They rested and then
made fourth, the Bard and Owl to ease their way among strangers, fifth, Falcon
the Hunter to feed them at need, last created they Eagle who is Guardian for all
to fear.’ The Guardian, Volis, is an Order like any other, though, as you can
see, more difficult to detect.” Jes took back his human form and gathered Rinnie into his
arms. “The priest is wrong” he said, and the voice thundered in bass
notes almost too deep to hear, as if he still held partway to the wolfshape. “He’s been shadowed,” agreed Seraph. But Seraph had given the priest too long. He threw a blast
of raw magic at her and she was forced to counter it—more than counter it,
because she had to protect those around her. She held the magic for a moment
then returned it to him. Because it was his magic, it did not harm him, just
allowed him to reabsorb it. Not an ideal solution, because he retrieved the
energy he’d sent at her, but no one else got hurt. While she’d been trying to decide what to do with it, he’d
had time to gather more power and he flung it at her, forcing her back several
steps. She caught it and flung it back again, but it was more of an effort. She
couldn’t keep doing it indefinitely because she continued to lose power and he
didn’t. He also learned quickly. The third shot was no less
powerful, but he broadened his target to include everyone in the room. She had
no choice but to absorb the full force of his hit, or let something escape
where it might hurt one of her children. Tears of pain slipped down her face as she staggered and
swayed, then someone touched her and the pain lessened. For a dazed instant, the voice and strong hands that pressed
into her shoulders were Tier’s. Then, as the effects of the priest’s attack
faded, she realized it was Hennea behind her, offering her support and power. She needed a shield like the one Volis had set to encase
them when they had entered the room, but she didn’t have time to throw a shield
around everyone. Instead, she created a shield and set it around Volis. For a
moment the whole area around Volis lit up; but then the shield fell apart, a victim
of its hasty construction. He laughed. “Try this,” he said and sketched a sigil in the
air. She blocked most of it, but the straining of her magic past
her reserves almost blinded her with pain, and the remnants of his sorcery sent
both Seraph and Hennea tumbling to the ground. She wouldn’t be able to hold out
against a second such blast. “Hennea,” she whispered. “When I tell you, jump away, then
get the others out of here.” If she could distract Volis long enough, maybe her
children could escape. “No,” said Hennea. A breeze blew a stray lock of hair into Seraph’s eyes. Wrath lighting his face, Volis drew back his hand in the manner
of a man throwing a rock. Hennea took control of the remnants of Seraph’s
shields and refined them as Volis’s hand released whatever it was he’d formed
and the spell bounced off harmlessly. Wind cooled the sweat on Seraph’s forehead—she had just
enough time to realize that there shouldn’t be a wind when a sudden gust of it
knocked her to her knees. The wind picked up even more speed, turning Seraph’s hair
into a vicious whip that stung her eyes and cheeks as her left knee made
painful contact with the floor. The table Volis had been working on skidded
across the floor, nit the wall, then flung itself at the priest’s head. Temporarily occupied defending himself from his furnishings,
Volis quit concentrating on Seraph; but any magic would draw his attention. Seraph drew her knife and staggered to her feet, bracing
herself against the wind. “Hennea,” she said, her voice low. “Is there a cure for the
shadowing that you know and I do not?” Seraph thought for a moment that Hennea had fallen too far
away to hear her, but then Hennea said, “No. There is no cure but death.” Seraph crouched and used the motion of the wind and a feathering
of magic to creep up behind Volis. When she was close enough she rushed
forward, and stepped on the back of his knee, collapsing the joint so the
wizard staggered backward, off balance. She threw her left arm around his chin
to hold him steady and jerked her knife into his neck as Tier had once taught
her. The sharp knife cut through Volis’s throat, severing skin and artery. Seraph stumbled back, fighting the wind for her balance. Victory
came so quickly, brought to her by the sharp blade of her knife. Her first
kill. She wondered if she’d used magic to kill him, if it would seem more real
to her. The young man’s body fought for a while, but pain blocked
his own magic and the extremity of his emotions kept Raven magic from coming to
his aid—rings or no. Seraph watched because it seemed an act of cowardice to
turn away from a death she had summoned. When he was dead, Seraph turned away to survey the ‘room.
Lehr, bless him, had remembered what she told him. He had Bandor pinned face
against the wall in some sort of wrestling hold. Hennea had gotten to her hands
and knees and crawled against the wind toward Volis’s body. Jes, looking
exhausted, sat on the floor near— Ah, Seraph
thought ruefully, that’s where the wind came from. Rinnie’s hair spread out in pale flames as she stood motionless,
arms spread with palms out like some ancient statue, her skirts absolutely
still though the wind still tore furiously through the room. Jes must have cut
her loose because there were no ropes on her, though lines on either side of
her mouth showed where they had been. Her eyes glowed with an eerie gold light
that obscured her pupils. Words of warning, long forgotten, came back to Seraph. To be
a weather witch was always to long for the energies that coursed and strew
themselves in tempestuous’ weather, always to be in danger of being so caught
up that there was no way back. “Rinnie,” she said firmly. “We are safe, call back the winds
and let them sleep.” Her daughter stared blankly at her with incandescent eyes
and the winds swirled and played. An inkwell flipped out of nowhere and caught
Seraph painfully on the elbow. “Rinnie!” barked Seraph in the same tone she used to break
up sibling squabbles. “Enough.” Rinnie blinked, and the wind died down to gentle gusts and
then nothing. Small items dropped to the ground with clattering noises. Rinnie
fell to her hands and knees, and Seraph hurried across the room and crouched
beside her. “How is it with you? Are you well?” Rinnie nodded. “Sorry, Mother. I’m just a bit dizzy.” Then she
gave a ghost of her usual grin to Jes. “That was better than changing into an
animal.” “Mother,” said Lehr, “What do you need to do with Uncle Bandor?
I can’t hold him here forever.” Bandor was shadowed. Her hand tightened on her knife—but
before she could do more than rise back to her feet, Hennea said, “No, Seraph.
I lied. The shadow can be cleansed.” Seraph stilled. “What?” Hennea sat on the floor beside the dead priest, her cheeks
painted with his blood. “I lied. I swore that this one would die. It is fitting
that he should die in his sins. But I can cleanse the baker with your help.” “Seraph? Bandor?” Alinath’s voice rang down the corridor. If she and Hennea were going to help Bandor, Seraph didn’t
have time to be angry with her now. “Jes? Can you keep Alinath at bay without hurting her or yourself?”
asked Seraph. “If we are working more magic tonight, we
can’t have her interrupting us.” “Yes,” said Jes, using the wall to get to his feet. He look
a couple of half-drunken steps and came to the doorway. Alinath got there
first, but stopped just short of Jes. “We need to get this done,” said Seraph. “I think I could
just possibly light a magelight. Do you have the magic, and can you concentrate
well enough to use it?” Hennea rose painfully to her feet, using her good arm for
leverage. “I think I’m too numb to hurt and I am not as spent as you are. It’ll
be all right.” She limped over to Lehr and Bandor and spoke a word. Glowing
lines circled Bandor’s wrists and ankles. “Release him, please,” she said, and Lehr stepped away from
him. With the silvery threads of magic, Hennea forced Bandor
around so that he stood with his back flat against the wall. He spat at her. “Shadowspawn Witch. You should burn in the
fires of good rowan and oak.” Ignoring him, Hennea reached for his head and forced him to
look at her. Seraph stood as near as she dared. Hennea took a firm grip on Bandor’s hair and then set
another glowing line about his forehead to hold his head where she wanted it. “You can’t allow them to distract you,” she explained to Seraph
in Traveler’s speech. “If you have to start again it’s twice as hard to grasp
it.” Once she had him unable to move she reached up to place a
hand on his forehead. He struggled then, fighting the restraints like a
madman—but Hennea had done a good job, and his head never moved. “It’s hard to find—the shadowing. It’ll help if I’m more
familiar with him. Tell me something of him—how the shadow caught him.” “His name is Bandor,” said Seraph. “He is married to my husband’s
sister. He has always been a man of even temperament, a fair man if a bit
greedy.” But only a bit. The low price he’d given her for Jes’s honey had been
out of character, she realized. With family, he’d always been inclined to be
generous. “His parents were not Redemi and he was never really accepted until
he married Alinath, my husband’s sister.” Hennea sent off questioning tendrils of magic, which passed
through Bandor like a hot knife through butter, slipping and sliding. “What does he want?” Hennea asked. “What drives him?” That was harder. “I don’t know,” Seraph said finally. “Reducing
a man to a handful of words is no gift of mine.” She turned to her youngest,
who knew him best. “Rinnie,” she said in Common tongue. “If Uncle Bandor could
be, or have, anything in the world what would he want?” “Children,” said Rinnie promptly, though her voice shook.
“He and Aunt Alinath want children more than anything. He also worries that
Papa might decide to return to the bakery. Last year when the harvests weren’t
good, he was certain Papa would take the bakery. Nothing Papa said could
reassure him.” Seraph remembered that now; it hadn’t seemed important at
the time. One of the tendrils of Hennea’s magic snagged and went taut,
like a fisherman’s net. Another slid to the same place and stuck fast as well.
A third caught another place. “More,” said Hennea. “Tell me more about him, child.” “He loves Aunt Alinath,” Rinnie said with more confidence. “But he worries that she loves Papa better. He wants her to
see him as a better man than Papa.” The rest of the tendrils snapped taut like the strings of a
violin and emitted a sound as if an invisible musician plucked at the instrument. “Envy,” murmured Hennea in the Traveler tongue. “Small
darknesses that allow the shadow to take hold and shake him a bit until the
small darkness grows like a blot on his soul. You have to ferret them all out,
Seraph, and not miss any. Could you have your Hunter see if I’ve missed
anything?” “Lehr,” said Seraph. “Come here and look. Does the net she’s
woven encase the taint?” Lehr examined his Uncle closely. “Missed something,” he
said. “He wants,” murmured Seraph. “He loves. He hates. He fears.” “He’s afraid of you, Mother,” said Rinnie at last. “He
doesn’t much care for Jes either.” She gave her brother’s back an apologetic
look. “He doesn’t like to be around people who are odd like Jes is.” Hennea, lines of strain appearing around her eyes and mouth,
sent out more magic. “Done,” said Lehr. “Mother,” said Jes. Seraph turned and saw that Alinath had company in the doorway.
Karadoc was with her. He’d managed to take a few steps forward, so he stood
several paces in front of the door. But when Jes looked at him, he stilled once
more. “We’ll be done momentarily,” said Hennea. “I wouldn’t try
this without one who can see the shadow. Otherwise it’s too easy to fail—and
you’ll not know it until the shadowed one kills those nearest to him.” “Like the Nameless King, the Shadowed,” said Seraph. “When
he killed his sons first.” “He allowed no Travelers within his realm,” said Hennea. “So
now we go where we are needed, not where we are wanted.” “What next?” said Seraph. Hennea smiled wearily. “The last part is more strength than
finesse. I’ll try to burn the shadow from him.” “Let me help,” said Seraph. “I’m all but done up, but you
may freely take what magic I have left.” She followed her words with action,
setting the blooded knife on the floor and placing her hands on Hennea’s
shoulders. Hennea thanked her with a nod and then set about destroying
the hold the Stalker had taken on Bandor’s soul. It was, Seraph saw, much the
same as burning wood with magic, just using a different fuel. If she had to do
it herself, she’d know how. “Done,” said Hennea, but Seraph, feeling the last of the shadowing
leave, had already stepped away. Bandor had long since stopped his struggles, but now he hung
limply in the bonds that held him to the Wall, his face blank and his mouth
drooping on either side. A drop of spittle dripped slowly off his chin. “Lehr,” she said. “Come help me with Bandor.” Lehr helped Seraph brace his uncle so that Hennea could release
him. Once on his feet, Bandor seemed to recover a bit. At least he could stand
on his own and his face started to lose the blankness and adopt some of Bandor’s
own personality, like a wineskin refilled with wine. Lehr still braced him, but Seraph stepped away—remembering
what Rinnie had said about his fear of her. She didn’t want to cause him any
more distress than she had to. “All right, Jes,” she said calmly, “You can let them in,
now.” He stared at her a moment, then bowed his head shallowly.
She hid her sigh of relief: the next few minutes were bound to be interesting
enough without Jes running amok. Alinath slipped around them all without a look
and stood in front of Bandor. “Is it true,” she said, “is he better now? Is he unharmed?” Seraph raised an eyebrow and looked at Hennea, who had collapsed
against the wall. She nodded. “He’ll be all right,” Seraph said. “Give him a while to
recover and he’ll be all right.” Alinath’s mouth trembled and she took one more step until
she stood against her husband, looking small and frail. “Bandor,” she said.
“Bandor.” Karadoc, leaning heavily on his staff, looked closely at
Jes. “Ellevanal favors you, boy, though you never come to his temple;
that told me there was more to you than it appeared. I didn’t expect quite this
much more. Some of your mother’s magic in you, eh, that kept us from coming
in?” “Yes,” agreed Seraph. “Jes is more than he appears.” “Traveler,” Karadoc said sternly, as if reminded of his
duty. “Traveler, what happened here?” “Shadows and magic, priest,” she said. “Volis and Bandor
were shadow-touched. If I had known that the priest could be cured, I would
have—” she remembered the satisfaction of stopping him with her knife and
stopped, saying merely, “I was ill-informed.” “How did you know they were shadowed?” The old man, she
thought, was playing the stern priest role to the hilt. It was a good sign. If
he’d been frightened by all the magic, he wouldn’t be taking the time to
perform for his audience; he’d be getting the rest of the Council Elders. “She found me tonight as Bandor left me,” said Alinath, as
she and Lehr helped Bandor sit on the floor “Bruised and bound. I told her that
there was something wrong with him, a bile of jealousy toward my brother after
all these years.” There was a pause, then she said, “I don’t know what exactly
he did, but he had a hand in my brother’s death.” She sat beside her husband and raised her chin in a familiar
gesture. “I have never approved of the choices my brother has made,” she said.
“I have no use for magic or Seraph. You know as much, Karadoc. I would never
take her side against my Bandor. But I know that Bandor, if he were himself,
would never hit me. He would never have made himself slave to another’s will as
he has enslaved himself to that false priest.” She spat out the words. “If Seraph
says that he was shadow-taken ... well, I for one have to agree with her.” No one, thought Seraph with secret amusement, could miss how
much it bothered Alinath to agree with Seraph. Karadoc nodded formally. “Accepted.” He grinned at Seraph,
transforming in an instant from sour old man to mischievous gnome. “You should
know that Alinath came to me several days ago—concerned with the oddities of
her husband’s behavior. I told her to keep watch, for as we all know, those of
us who live in the lee of Shadow’s Fall have always to be on guard against
such.” He shook his head, “But of course we’ll have to tell a different
story to everyone else or Seraph won’t be able to stay here, and no one will
really believe that he was cleansed.” Bandor was huddled against his wife, bowing his forehead to
touch the top of her shoulder. Seraph could hear his soft, half-coherent
apologies. Karadoc leaned on his staff. “Let me tell you what happened
tonight. Volis is an evil mage, not a real priest. He needed a death to feed
some dark magic and chose Rinnie, because he thought she was without
protection. Her father is dead—” “Actually,” said Lehr. “Probably not. That’s what Mother and
I were doing when Rinnie was taken. We walked up to the place where the
huntsman thought he found Father’s remains. The bones weren’t Father’s. We
think a group of human mages surprised Papa and took him.” “Alive,” said Alinath. “Tier is alive?” “Alive?” asked Rinnie, grabbing Jes’s hand in a tight grip. “I think so,” said Seraph. “Ah,” said Karadoc, “then Volis was one of a group of
corrupt mages who helped him in his evil doings. He was responsible for a
number of terrible happenings, Tier’s disappearance ... oh, I’ll think of a few
more things. I’m sure someone had a pet die in the last month or so. Volis has
been watching your farm with his magic—” “Magic doesn’t work like that,” said Seraph. “Not even solsenti
magic.” “They won’t know that,” said Karadoc repressively. “When he
saw that you were away from home, he kidnapped Rinnie. Alinath saw him take
Rinnie by the bakery. She came to my temple to get Bandor, who had come to talk
to me about suspicions that he had about Volis. I am an old man. Bandor and
Alinath confronted Volis—he hurt Alinath, and Bandor killed him.” “What about us?” asked Seraph. “You, none of you were here. I don’t know who you are, young
lady,” he said to Hennea, “but I can see what you are, and you’d be safer away
from here.” “She can sleep at the farm tonight,” said Seraph. “How do you know that Tier is alive?” asked Alinath. “Because they took him to use his magic,” replied Hennea.
“They can’t use it with him dead—not this soon.” “Liar,” said Alinath, rising to her feet. “My brother had no
magic.” From his position on the floor, Bandor reached up and took
his wife’s hand. “Yes,” he said. “Yes, he did.” Alinath froze, staring at the hand she held. At last she
sank down again. “Do you know where they took him?” asked Karadoc when it
became apparent Alinath wasn’t going to say anything further. “To Taela,” answered Hennea. “To the imperial palace at
Taela.” “Before we leave here, Hennea and I will search the temple
to make sure there’s nothing left that could hurt anyone,” said Seraph tiredly.
They’d find all the Order stones, too. She glanced at Volis, but his hands were
bare. Hennea must have already taken the rings Volis had worn. “We’ll go look for Papa tomorrow?” asked Lehr. Seraph considered it. “The day after. We’ll have to pack for
the trip.” “If you leave, the Sept’s steward will take away your land
rights,” observed Alinath. “No,” replied Karadoc. “He won’t He’d never get anyone else
to farm that close to the mountains. I’ll have a talk with him myself.” Chapter 11Early the next morning, Alinath came to call. Seraph had
already sent the boys and Rinnie out to the bam to sort through the tools and
harness for things that they would need on their travel. Hennea was still
asleep in the loft. “I didn’t know how soon you were going,” said Alinath, in a
sideways apology for the hour of her call. “I brought this.” She set down a
large basket of journey bread on the table. “We made it yesterday so it should
last you a month or more if you need it.” She hadn’t met Seraph’s eyes since
she came in. “How is Bandor?” asked Seraph. “Almost himself again, though he doesn’t remember much,”
said Alinath, at last looking up. “Thank you for giving him back to me.” “I’m glad you came,” Seraph said after they’d both taken a
seat on the kitchen bench, which was pulled away from its customary place at
the table. “Otherwise I would have come to you. The trip to Taela is a long
one, and getting Tier back might be dangerous. I hate to take Rinnie on a
journey like that. Would you watch her for me?” “Of course,” Alinath said after a moment of shock. “Of
course I will. There’s plenty of space—she can have Tier’s old room.” “Thank you,” smiled Seraph. “I told her that Bandor would
not be feeling well for a while and you needed her help. Give her something to
do so she doesn’t think I’m a liar.” “I’ll do that,” said Alinath. “Karadoc wanted me to tell you
that the other Elders were happy with his story. All except Willon, who saw
Bandor carrying Rinnie up to the temple. But Willon agreed to keep the real
story quiet.” Alinath reached into a large pouch she carried and brought
out several pieces of folded parchment “Willon sent these. Maps, he said. And
Seraph”—Alinath set a bag of coins on the table—“these are from the bakery’s
accounts. Use them as you need to—I’d like to have Tier back also.” Seraph took the coins. “Thank you. I won’t deny that these
will make the journey easier.” “I’ll come tomorrow morning about this time,” said Alinath,
getting up briskly. “To get Rinnie, and to see you safely on your way.” “Thank you, Alinath,” said Seraph. Alinath stopped at the doorway and turned back. “No, Seraph.
Thank you. I appreciate your trust, especially after ...” “He had no choice,” said Seraph. “Remember that Even shadowed,
Bandor believed he was saving Rinnie.” The next morning was cold and the sun a pale line against
the mountain as they adjusted the packs on Skew. Gura whined at Seraph from his
self-appointed guard post by the packs still to be loaded. “Fool dog,” Seraph said, not unkindly. “You’re coming, too.” “But not me,” said Rinnie from the porch. “I need you to take care of your aunt and uncle for me,”
said Seraph. “Aunt Alinath would like nothing better than to drop everything
and come with us, but she needs to take care of Bandor and the bakery.” She
took a deep breath, “And I need you safe. Please.” Rinnie stared at her hard. “All right,” she said. “I’ll
stay.” Seraph, Hennea, Jes, and Lehr set out for Taela before the
sun was full up while Alinath and Rinnie watched from the porch. A few miles to the south, the path from the farm joined to
the main road. Though Willon’s maps were useful, finding a road to Taela was no
more difficult than finding a stream that would lead to the ocean. “It’s hard leaving Rinnie behind.” Lehr patted Skew’s neck.
“I miss her already.” “I miss everything,” said Jes happily. Lehr lost his grim air and thumped Jes on his pack where it
rested between his shoulders, “I see that you do.” “Do you know where your clan is?” Seraph ask Hennea, who
walked beside her at the back of the small caravan. “No,” said Hennea. “But I can find them when I want to. I’ll
be of more use to you than I’ll be to them.” “Hennea,” said Seraph softly. “Yes?” “If you ever lie to me for your own ends again—as you did
when I killed the priest for you—there will be a reckoning.” “I will bear that in mind,” Hennea said. “See that you do.” Seraph deliberately cut the first day’s travel short Hennea
was looking pale and drawn; though her arm was healing nicely, it was still
painful. The tent that they’d brought was the old one Seraph had used when
she’d traveled with her brother. Seraph expected it would take a few days of
practice before they could put it up in the dark. After supper, she left the boys to clean up and took out
Isolda the Silent’s mermora. “So you are the last survivor of your clan,” said Hennea. Seraph loosened the top of her bag so Hennea could see the assorted
merman she carried. “The last of any number of clans,” she said. “How many?” Hennea asked in a horrified whisper. “Two hundred and twenty-four,” replied Seraph. Hennea frowned. “Why did they all come to you?” “You mean as opposed to a clan leader who actually had a
clan?” Seraph shrugged. “I don’t know. I’ve given it a lot of thought over the
years. The last eighty-three I found in one cache, presumably taken from one
leader. That could mean that the mermori are being drawn by the other mermori.
The more mermori someone has, the more likely it is that a lost
clan’s mermori will come to them. Or perhaps Shadow’s Fall might have
some influence on it.” “It’s more than that,” said Hennea slowly. “How did you find
a solsenti who was Ordered? Why did the two of you have three Ordered
children? It isn’t like breeding horses; the Orders go where they will—though I
really did think that the Order bearer had to at the least be of Traveler blood.
I don’t know many clans who can claim five Ordered people, nor have I heard of
a family where every single person in the family was born to an Order.” “It frightens me,” admitted Seraph, glancing at the boys,
who were packing away the last of the dinnerware. “My father’s favorite saying
was, ‘When you find a coin on the road and pick it up, it’s certain that you’ll
need twice that ere you ‘walk another mile.’ He used to say that the Orders
went where they were most necessary. I don’t want to be in the middle of an
event that needs a Raven, Owl, Eagle, Falcon, and Cormorant.” . Hennea smiled a little. “Neither do I. Maybe I should go
my own way.” She was joking, but Seraph nodded solemnly. “I would keep
that in mind. Having you help us find Tier would be very helpful—but certainly
dangerous. There is no need for you to risk your life for someone you’ve never
even met.” Hennea laughed and shook her head. “That’s the Raven’s calling,
you know that Go out and risk your life for someone who’d just as soon that you
burned as lived.” “Perverse,” grinned Seraph. “It did always seem that the
ones who most needed help were the ones who wanted it least. Anyway, I got the mermora
out to call Isolda’s house and see if someone in her time had managed something
like the Ordered stones.” “They didn’t have the Orders when Isolda’s library was collected,”
said Hennea. “No,” agreed Seraph. “But they did a lot of evil in the
search for knowledge. They might have come up with something that will help us.
I don’t want to destroy those stones without understanding what that will do to
the Order trapped there.” Jes and Lehr, finished with their tasks, came to see what Seraph
was doing. She pushed the mermora into the dirt and called Isolda’s
house into being. “Come in,” she said, “come and be welcome to the house of
Isolda the Silent.” They settled into the patterns of journeying that Seraph remembered.
Hennea and Jes in front, Seraph and Lehr bringing up the rear with Skew. Gura
scouted about, taking anxious trips back to make certain they were all still
walking as he’d left them. After a week’s travel, Seraph felt as if she were
slowly sloughing off the skin of the Redem farmer’s wife she had been. Every evening she took out Isolda’s mermora and
searched through her library to find out what to do with the Ordered stones. “Why don’t you use them?” asked Lehr, one evening. He was
seated on the other side of the little table from Seraph, playing with the game
pieces to a game no one knew how to play. “We almost lost all to Volis—and there
will be more wizards with Papa. Wouldn’t the extra power be useful?” “Travelers don’t like to deal with the dead,” said Jes. He
was curled up on the floor with as much of Gura on his lap as he could get,
grooming the dog with a silver comb that Isolda had kept by her bed. “It’s not that exactly,” said Hennea, looking up from a
book. “But we understand that it can be dangerous to play with dark magics.” “Especially when doing so leaves you vulnerable to the
Stalker,” agreed Seraph. “Since we have seen that he is already concerned in
these matters, we’d be foolish to allow him an invitation to one of us.” “I like walking,” said Jes contentedly. Hennea looked over at him. His eyes were half-shut and his
face raised toward the sun. Seraph and Lehr had dropped behind them a while
back; Jes’s usual pace was faster man Skew liked. Seraph didn’t want to push
the old horse, so Hennea and Jes would walk ahead and then sit and wait for the
others to catch up. “What do you like about it?” she asked him. “The Guardian is happy, because we’re going to get Papa,” he
said. “And Rinnie is safe with Aunt Alinath. I don’t like Aunt Alinath, but I
know that Rinnie does. I know that Aunt Alinath will keep her safe. Mother and
Lehr are safe, too, because they are with me and with Skew and Gura. I am
outside and the sun is shining and making my face warm.” “I like walking, too,” Hennea admitted. “Why?” He bounced once on his heels and then turned his head
to look at her with a bright smile that lit his eyes and summoned the deep dimple
in his cheek. She smiled back; she’d found that it was impossible not to respond
to Jes when he was happy. “For the same reasons you have. Walking means that
right this moment, nothing bad is happening. There are interesting things to
look at. My feet like to feel the road under them.” “Yes,” he said contentedly. “It’s just like that.” After a minute he said, “Lehr is not happy.” “He doesn’t like walking?” she asked. He frowned, “I don’t think that’s it. I think he worries too
much. He is like the Guardian, you know. He thinks that he needs to take care
of everyone. He doesn’t know about walking. He finds things that are bad and
tries to solve them before they happen.” Hennea said, “You know your brother pretty well, don’t you?” Jes nodded. “He is my brother and I love him. He is not
afraid of the Guardian; he loves the Guardian, too. I like that. Rinnie loves
us, too. But she doesn’t want to be a Guardian anymore because she can play
with the wind.” “I like your family, Jes,” Hennea said softly. He smiled again. “I do too.” A week’s travel from Korhadan, the first of the large cities
that lay between them and Taela, they stopped to eat lunch a little distance
from another, larger party that they’d been trailing for a few days. “We could eat on the road, Mother,” said Lehr to Seraph as she
sat down beside him. “We could make another mile in the time it takes for Jes
to finish eating.” She shook her head. “And lose more miles in a few days when
Skew is too tired to go on. It’s all right to push hard if your journey’s end
is in a day or two, but we have to strike a speed that we can hold on to for a
month or more. How is that blister you had?” “Fine.” “Traveler whore!” Seraph was on her feet before the young man’s bellow had finished;
her eyes found Hennea standing by the side of the swift-running creek, her
drinking cup loose in her hand while a chunk of wet mud slid from her cheek.
Shock made her look young and vulnerable, but that wouldn’t last. Before Seraph could take more than a step or two, Jes, with
Gura at his side, stood between Hennea and the small group of young men. “Apologize,” whispered Jes. Seraph increased her speed. The men backed away, most of them mumbling apologies. If
they stared at the huge growling dog, or Jes, rather than looking at Hennea, it
was understandable. “Go,” Jes said. “Leave us alone and we’ll do the same.” “Hey, what goes on here! Are you vagabonds threatening my
sons!” “Jes, I’ll deal with this,” said Seraph in a low voice,
moving until she was between Jes and the young men. When the older man,
presumably their father, was close enough to hear her, she said, more calmly
than she felt, “There were no problems until your sons made them.” The man strode past his sons and stopped not two paces from
Seraph, clearly intending to intimidate her with his size. “My sons,
Traveler?” Anger was going to make her do something stupid, she knew
it—and Jes would be no help at all. Where was Tier when a diplomatic word was
needed? She could have left it to Hennea, but the younger woman had already
been seen as weak: if she had to prove herself there would be blood shed here. “One of your boys decided it was a good game to throw mud at
a woman who was doing him no harm,” said Seraph. She should have stopped there,
but she couldn’t abide bullies. “Obviously he was poorly raised; he has no
manners.” “Poorly raised, Traveler bitch?” he snarled. “Who are you to
say so?” Jes, Seraph noticed gratefully, had taken her at her word
and dampened the fear he generated. Fear fed anger, and might make the man do
something more stupid than he otherwise would. Of course, she herself would
have to control her tongue or risk pushing the man too far anyway. She knew,
even before she spoke, what choice she had made, throwing away years of
iron-willed control and prudence. “Indeed.” Seraph kept her tones polite, even though she knew
that would inflame the man more than if she yelled. “It seems that they were
not the only ones who were ill-taught.” She paused for effect and then borrowed
Jes’s whispering technique. “Didn’t your mother teach you that bad things
happen to people who annoy Travelers?” She didn’t know if she wanted to scare him away, or force
him to attack her. She’d assumed she’d long ago buried all this anger at the solsenti
who hated and needed the Travelers. But all it took was a bit of mud to
prove her wrong. The anger that flooded her felt good, even cleansing. Whatever she’d wanted to gain by her threat, the people from
his group who’d begun to gather around forced him to act rather than run.
Perhaps if she had been a man he could have backed down and not lost face. Perhaps if she didn’t have a full bag of mermori to remind
her how dangerous it was when solsenti began to lose their respect for
Travelers she would have given him a graceful way out. “Have a care, Seraph,” said Hennea in Traveler. The man took another step closer. He was a big man, but Seraph
was used to looking up at people and a few inches more didn’t make much
difference to her. “Your man should have taught you respect for your betters,
whore,” he said on the tails of Hennea’s words. Seraph held her tongue. A raised eyebrow and a speaking look
at him did the job nicely: You ? My better? I don’t think so. He raised a hand. Gura sank a bit, ready to defend her and
she could hear the sheath of Tier’s sword rattle as Lehr readied himself to
draw it. She still might have let him hit her but for Jes breathing heavily
beside her. With a word and a breath of power, she froze his arm in
place. When she smiled at the crowd of solsenti, several of
them backed up hastily. She had the feeling that her victim would have backed
up, too, but he couldn’t move his arm from where it was stuck. “What’s going on here?” said an authoritative voice—and a
young man pushed his way through the crowd. Ash-pale hair in a waist-length braid announced his Traveler
bloodlines as well as a written sign. Soon he had a wide circle around him. “Look by the road, Mother,” whispered Jes. Seraph looked, and sure enough, there was an entire
Traveling clan waiting on alert. Silence had fallen, mostly because the solsenti group
hadn’t yet noticed the Travelers beside the road and didn’t know what to make
of a man whose arm hung unmoving in the air. “Well,” he said again, “What goes on here?” “I am Seraph,” she said. “Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent.
This one’s half-grown sons offered insult to my young friend. We were
discussing the issue.” The stranger tilted his head at the man’s arm. “Interesting
discussion?” “No,” said Seraph. “I was almost finished. If you’ll excuse
me a moment.” She turned to the man. “I have no more patience with you. I curse you and your
sons that if you ever hit a woman or child, you’ll lose the use of that which
men value most. Now go.” She released his arm and met the eyes of the few solsenti
inclined to linger. The stranger waited until they were gone before he started
laughing. “I’m no Raven, but even so I could tell there was no magic to power
that curse.” She smiled. “It doesn’t need magic, does it?” If any of them
ever hit a woman or child they’d remember her words and worry about it. Worry
could achieve the effect she wanted more easily than magic. “Who are you?” asked Jes, breaking into the shared moment. “Ah, my apologies, sir. I am Benroln, Cormorant and Leader
of the Clan of Rongier the Librarian.” He bowed shallowly. “If we may join you
in your eating we might exchange stories.” “Come and be welcome,” agreed Seraph. There was a fair bit of confusion as the Clan of Rongier
organized a meal stop and the solsenti group packed hastily and left, most
eating the remains of their meals in one hand while they started out The fear on their faces didn’t bother Seraph nearly as much
as the catcalls that came from the Librarian’s clan. Her father would never
have stood for such a thing, but Benroln was young, and perhaps he felt much
the same as the young people who teased the solsenti. Still there were
older heads about, and Seraph thought that someone should have said something. A glance at the clan’s wagons and clothing told her that
having a young leader hadn’t hurt the clan materially, even if their manners
had suffered. Their clothing was without holes or mending and their wagons were
all freshly painted. Seraph’s small family stayed close to her as the strange
clansmen laid out food and attended to the chores of meal preparation.
Doubtless the boys were intimidated by the foreign tongue and sheer volume of
noise so many people set to a single task could make. Seraph finished the last
of her meal as Benroln approached her with three other men. “Seraph, this is my uncle, Isfain,” he said, indicating the
eldest of the men, “My cousin, Calahar” was a young man with unusual
raven-black hair. “Kors” had reached middle age and middle height with slightly
stooped shoulders. “This,” continued Benroln, “is Seraph, Raven of Isolda the Silent,
and her family. This young man here is Eagle.” The older man Benroln had introduced as Isfain smiled. “Well
blessed in the Order your family is. Will you introduce them?” There was nothing in the words they spoke to raise Seraph’s
suspicions, but there was just a little extra stress in Benroln’s voice when he
named the Orders.—That stress had been answered with a thread of smugness in Isfain’s
voice. Seraph bowed her head. “This is my son, Jes, Eagle. My son
Lehr, and my friend Hennea.” No one had ever accused Seraph of being a trusting
soul. She couldn’t hide the Orders Benroln had noted, but there was no need to
share information unnecessarily. Time enough to clear the matter up if
necessary once Seraph knew more about the Clan of Rongier. “May I inquire how it is that there are so few of you?”
asked Kors diffidently. “I had heard that the Clan of Isolda the Silent fell to
the sickness years ago.” Seraph nodded graciously. “Only my brother and I survived.
When my brother died we were left without kin.” Two decades of living with solsenti
had not lowered her awareness of the disgrace of what she had done—so she
lifted her chin, daring any of them to comment. “I married a solsenti man
and we lived with him and his family until he died this spring. His relatives
turned us out—but they did not know that he had investments in Taela. We are
headed there to recover his monies.” The men considered what she told them. For a Traveler to
marry or even lie with solsenti was expressly forbidden. It happened,
but a very strict clan leader could punish the offender with banishment or
death. Only Kors looked taken aback, and Benroln tapped him on the
shoulder before he could say anything. Isfain merely said, in tones of apparent delight, “Ah, we
take the same road. Our clan has business that lies along the road to Taela,
and we have friends in the city who are willing to aid us. We’d be more than
pleased to lend you escort until our roads part.” There was no way out of Isfain’s generous offer without offense,
so Seraph nodded. “Your escort would be most welcome.” Calahar glanced over at Skew and then moved toward him.
“Nice horse,” he said. “My husband’s warhorse,” replied Seraph. “Careful. He’s old
now. But he was trained not to let strangers approach too closely.” “I’ve only seen a few horses with his coloration,” he said.
“Your husband get him as a war prize?” “Yes.” “Too bad he’s a gelding.” “Yes,” replied Seraph. “But he serves us well as it is.
Lehr, would you check to make sure we’ve gotten everything packed?” Hennea waited until they were walking again and the fuss of
adding new members had died down before approaching Seraph. “You were less than forthcoming,” Hennea said quietly. “And
Skew’s never objected to me.” “But they don’t need to know that I’d rather not have people
ruffling through our packs. There’s something off about this clan,” Seraph
replied. “Though it’s been a long time since I walked with Travelers, so
perhaps I’m misreading something.” “Perhaps you are right to be suspicious,” agreed Hennea
thoughtfully. “They certainly aren’t going to be looking for Lehr and I to be
Ordered, not when they know that two of us are Order-Bearers. Although if they
have a Raven who looks at us, they’ll know what you are up to.” “I’ve been looking,” said Seraph. “The only
Order-Bearer I’ve seen is Benroln himself.” “I suppose there will be no harm done,” said Hennea. “No harm to whom?” asked Benroln. Seraph carefully maintained her smile. “To us. It’s a relief
to find a clan to journey with—but it bothers me that we might need your
protection. This is a main road, there should be no danger for Travelers
here—but I worry all the same.” “It’s not just those hotheaded men either,” said Benroln in
grim tones. “There hasn’t been a Gathering in a long time. The last one was
disrupted by solsenti soldiers, and the clans felt that another
Gathering might just be setting ourselves up for a solsenti sword. The
illness that swept through our clans twenty years ago took out more than just
your clan. If the solsenti have their way, in another twenty there will
be no Travelers at all.” The clipped note in his voice when he said “solsenti” reminded
her forcibly of the way some of the more frightened Redemi said “magic.” “Then it is their doom,” said Hennea indifferently. “Travelers
exist to keep the solsenti from paying the price of a failure that was
not theirs.” “What failure?” said Benroln explosively, but Seraph saw calculation
in his eyes. He was playing to his audience. “A story nattered at by the
elderly? It is only a story—and it was old before the Shadow’s Fall. It’s a
myth, and no more accurate than the twaddle the solsenti spout about the
gods. There are no gods and there was no lost city. There is no evil Stalker.
We have paid and paid for a crime committed in an Owl’s tale. If we don’t wise
up we’ll be nothing more than a solsenti minstrel’s tale ourselves,
something told to frighten small children.” “Wise up and do what?” asked Seraph. “Survive,” he said. “We need to keep food in our mouths and
clothes on our backs. We need to teach the solsenti to leave us alone—as
you did to that solsenti bastard who tried to injure Hennea.” He paused,
then said softly, “You taught that man and his sons to leave us be. If you had
allowed your Eagle to teach them, the rest of the solsenti in that group
would have taken the story to his village and they all would have trembled in
fear.” “Maybe someone did,” said Seraph coolly. “Maybe that’s why,
instead of welcoming us and looking to us to help them when my brother took us
into the village years ago, the villagers feared us so much that they burned my
brother.” “The solsenti already fear us, that is the problem,”
said Hennea. “Fear leads to violence. The villagers who killed Seraph’s brother
were very afraid and too ignorant to know that they had nothing to fear from a
Traveler. Perhaps because, in the last few generations, we have taught them
that they should fear us.” “Rot,” said Benroln curtly before turning his attention back
to Seraph. “You have lived among them for what?” He glanced at Jes and Lehr and
came up with an accurate guess, “Twenty years or more? You are beginning to
sound like one of them—or worse, one of the old ones who sit around the fire
and say, ‘We are supposed to protect them.’” The anger in his voice was honest
now. “Let them protect themselves. They have wizards.” “Who are helpless against the evil we fight,” said Seraph. Benroln’s lip curled. “When solsenti soldiers caught
my father and our Hunter and Raven out alone, there was nothing we could do but
bury them. Had my father not believed the old folktales, he could have taught
that village what harming a Traveler might mean. When those villagers killed
your brother—you could have saved him. Could have made them so afraid
that the thought of harming one of us would never occur to them again. How many
of us died because you didn’t teach them what you taught that man today? How
many more will die because you didn’t loose the talons of your Eagle upon them
instead of tricking them into thinking you’d set a spell on them?” Part of Seraph agreed. Part of her had wanted to burn
the village to the ground. She had spent most of that first night at Tier’s
side wondering how long it would take her to get back to the village and avenge
her brother. She could have killed them all. “Your father was killed?” said Hennea softly, taking Benroln’s
arm in sympathy and distracting him from Seraph. He nodded, his anger dissipating under Hennea’s attention.
“Our Clan Guide took us to the Sept of Arvill’s keep. My
father said that they’d never admit a whole clan, so he, who was Raven, took
our other Raven—my cousin Kiris who was only fifteen—and our Hunter to see what
was amiss. They didn’t even make it to the gate of the keep before they were
shot from ambush.” “Terrible,” agreed Seraph. “When I think about that village
where my brother was killed, I think of how helpless they would have been
against my power. I think of the children who lived there, and the mothers and
fathers. More death never solves a crime, no matter how regrettable.” She tried
to keep her tones conciliatory, but she could not agree with him. Benroln met her gaze for a moment, then dropped his head in
the respectful bow of a vanquished opponent. “And so I learn from your wisdom.” Lehr, who’d come upon them as Seraph had been giving her
last speech, snorted and then grinned at Benroln. “She knows better than
that. That’s what she always said to Papa when she didn’t want to agree
with him but he was winning the argument.” Seraph smiled gently. “We can agree to disagree.” The Travelers were a highly organized people—just like a
well-trained army, and for the same reasons. Every person had an assigned role. Seraph hadn’t realized, not really, how independent the life
that they’d led in Redem had been. As long as the Sept’s tithes made it to him,
they were left largely alone to do as they wanted. If she’d been married to
another Redemi man, that might have meant that she would have been at his
mercy. But Tier was Tier. He’d sought her advice, and she’d worked shoulder to
shoulder with him both in the fields and in the kitchen. She’d grown used to
the freedom of making her own decisions. When Isfain had pointed to a place and told her to make camp
there, she’d nearly told him where to take his orders. If she hadn’t caught
Lehr watching her expectantly, Seraph would have done just that. Instead she’d
just nodded and gotten to work. At least they accorded Seraph some leeway for being Raven,
and clan leader, if only just of her family plus Hennea. Lehr they treated like
a green boy—Tier had never treated him so. She just hoped he was enough his
father’s son to hold his peace until she’d had time to learn more about this
clan: they might be a great help in retrieving Tier. Seraph pitched in to help prepare the evening meal. Some of
the men tended horses and goats, some set out to fish, and a smaller group set
out into the forest to see what game they could find. Jes and Lehr joined the
latter group. She’d had time to talk with Lehr, and Seraph knew he wouldn’t
give himself away. He didn’t care for Benroln much either. “My Kors told me that you married a solsenti,” said
the woman on Seraph’s left, while her clever fingers and sharp knife were
making short work of deboning one of the rabbit carcasses that were the basis
for tonight’s meal. There was such studied neutrality in the words that Seraph
didn’t reply, pretending that skinning her own rabbit took up all of her
attention. “What was it like?” said the woman on the other side
of her with hushed interest “I’ve heard that solsenti men—” She was quickly hushed by several of the other women who
were giggling as they chided her. “Would you look at this!” exclaimed a woman in gravelly
tones. Seraph turned and saw a tiny, ancient crone approaching the tables set
up to prepare food. Her hair was pale yellow and thin; it hung in a braid from
the crown of her head to her hips. Her shoulders were stooped and bent, and her
hand as knobby as the staff she balanced herself with. “You’d think you’d never
had a man before the way you act here! She is a guest. Ah, you embarrass the
clan.” “Brewydd,” said the woman who had begun the conversation.
“What brings you here?” “Brewydd?” said Seraph, setting down the naked rabbit
carcass and wiping her hands on the apron someone had given her. “Are you the
Healer?” Even twenty years ago, Brewydd the Healer had been ancient The old woman nodded. “That I be,” she said. “I know you,
child—Isolda’s Raven. The one who survived.” The woman on Seraph’s right put aside the food she was working
with and hurried over to tuck her hand under Brewydd’s arm and lend support.
“Come, grandmother. You need to get off your feet” Scolding gently and prodding,
the woman took Brewydd away toward a wagon built up on all four sides and
roofed like a small house on wheels—a karis it was called for the kari,
the Elders, who were the only Travelers who rode in them. “Raven,” said the old woman, stopping for a moment to turn
back and look at Seraph. “Not all shadows come from the evil one.” “People can be evil all on their own,” agreed Seraph. Satisfied with Seraph’s reply, the old woman tottered back
to her karis. “She can still heal,” said the woman on Seraph’s left. “But
she’s a little touched. It’s the years, you know. She won’t tell anyone how old
she is, but my Kors is her great-grandson.” Three days of travel with Rongier’s clan taught Seraph a lot
about them. Benroln and the old Healer were the only Ordered among them, though
they had a few who could work magic in the solsenti fashion—with words
and spell casting that hoped to gather enough stray magic to accomplish their
task. It was most remarkable, she thought, watching as a young man
named Rilkin used a spell to light a damp log, that they got any results at
all. Her father had been gifted that way, and they’d spent many a Traveling day
exploring the differences between her magic and his. A solsenti spell
cast out a blind net into the sea to haul in whatever stray magic might attach
itself to the net; Ordered magic was more like putting a pail in a well. She turned back to grooming Skew and to her current worries.
Tier she could do nothing about until they reached Taela, so she tucked her
fear for him away until it might be useful. Lehr and Jes were more immediate concerns.
They were growing more and more unhappy with the continued association with the
Traveling clan. Skew stretched his neck out appreciatively when her brush
rubbed a particularly good spot. Skew, at least, was having the time of his
life with all the attention he was getting. Lehr, however, chafed under the commands that all of the men
and most of the women of the clan felt free to throw at him. Without hinting at
what he was, he couldn’t win their respect by his hunting skills so they
treated him as they treated all the other young men. No one gave Jes orders—they all knew what he was. Her daylight
Jes was bewildered by the way they lowered their eyes around him and avoided
him. Seraph didn’t remember her clan treating her brother, the Guardian, that
way. The Librarian’s clan hurt Jes’s feelings by their rejection, and that made
the Guardian restless: Jes was one of the people he protected. Hennea helped. She knitted in the evenings, and found things
that required Jes’s aid. He was calmer around her, too; perhaps it was the
discipline of being Raven that made Hennea easier for Jes to bear. Some people,
like Alinath, were hard for him to be in the same room with. “Mother?” It was Lehr. “Have you seen Jes? He was with me at
dinner, but someone decided they needed a dray mule and I was the nearest they
could find. When I went back to the dining tables, Jes wasn’t there. I checked
the horses and he wasn’t there either. Hennea was looking for him, too. He’s
not in the camp, Mother. I told Hennea I would check with you.” To see if she wanted him to search, even though someone
might notice what he was doing. “I don’t—” Seraph stopped speaking abruptly. Over Lehr’s shoulder. Seraph saw Benroln, Kors, and Calahar
approach with intent Isfain, the fourth man, was nowhere to be seen. The air of
grim triumph Benroln wore was as damning as the guilt on Kors’s face. She stepped around Lehr so she stood between him and the
leadership of the Clan of Rongier. “Is something wrong?” asked Benroln. “I don’t know,” Seraph replied softly. “I think that’s
something you can tell me. Where is Jes, Benroln?” Benroln held his arms out open palm to show her he meant no
harm. “He is safe, Seraph. I won’t harm him unless there is no other way to
save my clan.” Seraph waited. “Jes is in one of the tents with Isfain at watch.” “What do you want?” she asked. Benroln smiled as if to say, See, I knew you’d do it my
way. Three days had obviously not taught him much about her—she hoped that
her other secrets were as well-hidden. “My uncle has been scouting for work for us, and he found
some not five miles down the road.” “What kind of work?” asked Seraph. “There is a merchant who buys grain and hauls it to Korhadan
to sell. Last year one of the farmers with whom he had a contract delivered his
grain himself and cost our merchant money and reputation when he wasn’t able to
deliver the grain he had promised his buyers. He went to the courts for redress,
but they were unable to help him.” “I see,” said Seraph neutrally. “I want you to curse this farmer’s fields.” “To teach him a lesson,” she said. “Right,” he smiled engagingly. “Just like that man who assaulted
Hennea.” “But this merchant will pay you money.” “Yes.” He didn’t even have the grace to look uncomfortable. “And what will I get out of it?” “Your family will have a home at last. A place where they
fit in and no one taunts them for their Traveler blood. We will share with you
all that is ours,” said Calahar, as if he were offering her a gift instead of
blackmailing her. Benroln was smarter than that. “Safety,” he said. “For you
and your family.” Seraph stared at them for a minute. “You can’t hold Jes for long,” said Lehr confidently. “He
doesn’t like strangers much—he’ll know that there is something wrong.” He was right—or should have been. Seraph watched, but Benroln’s
confidence didn’t falter. “You have a foundrael,” she said, suddenly certain it
was true. There weren’t many of them, but then there weren’t many clans left
either. They weren’t such fools as to try to keep a Guardian prisoner without
something to keep him under control. “What is that?” asked Lehr. “Guardians can be difficult to control,” she explained
without looking away from Benroln’s face. “They are driven to protect their own
at the expense of everything else. Sometimes their imperatives are
inconvenient; guardians don’t follow orders well at all.” She wasn’t going to
tell them how common it was for an Eagle to lose his daytime persona and become
completely violent, even toward the people he had previously protected. “A
Raven a long time ago came up with a solution. She created ten foundraels—collars
that keep the Guardian from emerging—before she realized what the end effect of
repressing a Guardian is.” “What’s wrong with it?” asked Lehr. “Is Jes in danger?” Seraph fingered the knife at her hip. “Let’s just say that
if they thought they had problems with their Guardians when they decided to use
the foundrael, they had real problems the first time they decided to
take it off. The use of foundraels is forbidden except under the most
dire conditions.” “My father will keep him calm—your Guardian will experience
no difficulties unless you give him reason to think that there is danger,” said
Calabar, stung by the contempt in her voice. “Seraph—I’ve looked all over ...” Hennea’s voice died out as
she recognized the confrontation. “These men have taken Jes,” Seraph told Hennea. “So that I
will aid them in cursing a man’s field. They will receive gold for their
efforts.” She saw Hennea’s face as worry faded, leaving behind a
facade as cold as ice—just such a face had Hennea worn as she knelt beside the
dead priest in Redem. “They take gold to curse people?” Seraph spat on the ground in front of Benroln. “They have chosen
to forget who we are. But they have me at a disadvantage.” She shook her head
in disgust and then looked at Lehr. She needed someone to tend Jes, someone he trusted who would
sit by him calmly until she could get Benroln to take the foundrael off—the
collars could only be taken off by the person who put them on. But Lehr was too
angry, she thought in near despair; Jes would know that there was something
wrong. “Where’s Jes?” asked Hennea. Seraph looked at the other woman’s expressionless face
thoughtfully. “Kors,” she abruptly, “will take you to Jes. He’s being held with
a foundrael—Isfain is supposed to be keeping him calm. I would
appreciate it if you would do your best to see that Jes is not discomforted
while I go with Benroln.” “A foundrael?” If anything, Hennea’s voice was colder
than before. A blush rose on Kors’s cheeks. Hennea’s mouth was tight with
anger, but she nodded her head at Seraph. “I’ll take care of him—he’s been
helping me knit in the evenings since we met up with this clan. Sometimes
simple tasks help.” “Thank you, Hennea,” said Seraph, feeling vast relief at Hennea’s
confidence. She pointed to the tent entrance. “Gura. Stay. Guard.” The last
thing she wanted was for one of these fools to get their hands on the Ordered
stones. Once the dog was sitting where she’d asked him to, she said, “Lehr, my
dear, it looks like you might miss the Hunt today. You will come with me—I have
no desire to lose anything more than I can help on this fool’s errand.” Chapter 12Hennea stalked behind Kors, the canvas bag that held her
needles and woolen thread clutched tightly in one hand. Her anger was partly
self-disgust. She knew better than to get involved; that always brought
unnecessary pain. Poor Moselm ... he’d been such a kind man, uncomplicated.
They’d been lovers before they’d been taken, but it had been little more than a
convenience to both. Moselm’s wife had died several years before of one of the
mysterious ailments that plagued the Traveling clans. They had come together
for comfort. But it was the Traveler’s lot in life to confront things
that no one else would face. If Moselm’s death brought the light of destruction
to the Path, he would have counted his life well-spent. But Jes ... There was no peace in dying among kinsfolk—and Hennea, like
Seraph, knew that every minute that Jes spent collared by the foundrael brought
him that much nearer to madness and a merciful death at the hands of those who
loved him. She didn’t want to do that ever again. That Travelers would come to this. Travelers
sworn and taught to aid the solsenti. For gold and hatred they betrayed their
oaths, and put a good man at risk—perhaps they all deserved the fate that the solsenti
intended to mete out. Kors, subdued and somber with doubt, led Hennea toward one
of the more distant campsites. The clansfolk they encountered on the way bowed
their heads and refused to look her in the eye. They knew, she saw, and they
were ashamed—but angry at the guilt they felt. Before long, she thought, they’d
turn that guilt into righteous indignation. See what the solsenti have turned us into, they
would say to one another, so lacking in pride that they could not even accept
the responsibility for their own downfall. Kors stopped in front of a large tent and they both heard Isfain’s
harsh voice snap out. “Sit here and wait, boy, as I told you. Your mother has
business with Benroln and then you may do as you wish.” Hennea’s eyebrows climbed. “Supposed to be keeping him calm,
is he?” she murmured to Kors, pleased when she saw that he was unhappy with
what they’d just heard as well. She swept open the tent with none of the usual courtesies. Isfain
was standing in front of her and she shoved him ungently aside to see Jes
perched unhappily on a tall stool in the middle of the tent. It was the only
object in the tent—if Benroln had indeed given orders to keep Jes calm he had
failed marvelously. “Woman, watch what you do!” snapped Isfain. Evidently, he didn’t care for her entrance. She ignored him. “Hennea,” Jes said in soft-spoken relief. “I need to see
Mother.” One hand rubbed at the leather strap he wore around his neck, turning
it about as if to find a buckle or lacing that wasn’t there. To Hennea’s eyes
the leather was as smooth as if it had just grown around his neck. “What are you doing here?” said Isfain. “Does Benroln know
you are here?” She ignored him again. “It’s all right, Jes,” she said to the dark young man
sitting restlessly on the battered old stool. “Benroln wants to force your
mother to curse some poor fanner’s land for money. They’re holding you with an
artifact that keeps your other spirit at bay—there’s nothing wrong with you.
Lehr went with your mother.” She didn’t know how much he’d understand in his current
state so she was gratified when Jes’s swaying slowed down. “They are safe?” he said. “I don’t think that Benroln will be able to do anything to
Seraph that she doesn’t want to happen. Lehr is with her.” He swallowed, “And you are safe here.” “Yes,” she agreed. “I’m safe with you. Would you help me
with my knitting until your mother’s business is completed?” She opened her bag and gave him a skein that she’d tangled
just for this purpose. After a little hesitation he took it from her. He stared
at it for a minute, but at last his long-fingered hands began to work patiently
at untangling knots. The rough wool thread had a mind of its own, and it would
take a while to unravel the mess she’d made. She settled at his feet and began knitting with a ball he’d
rolled for her yesterday. She leaned lightly against his leg, prepared to shift
away if she made him uncomfortable. The long muscles of his thigh softened and
relaxed, so she let him take a bit more of her weight. She glanced into his eyes and saw the fury trapped
impotently in the net of the foundrael. She shivered and looked back at
the sweater she knitted. For a while he seemed calmer. Perhaps if the tent had
not been so starkly furnished, or if that idiot Isfain had quit looking at Jes
as if he expected him to explode, Jes would have been all right. “I don’t like this,” said Jes, abruptly throwing his yarn on
the ground. “I need ... I need to be somewhere.” Hennea looked up at him and saw the despair in his eyes.
Enough, she thought. “Wait a moment,” she told him. Kors was not a problem. He knew what was right when someone
shoved it in his face, as much as he wished he didn’t. Isfain, though, Isfain
might be more difficult. He was one of those gifted with magic, though not Ordered.
Hennea knew that other Ravens had a tendency to look upon unordered mages as
weak, but she was not so foolish. A good wizard used subtlety as well as power,
and like a well-knit wool sweater, their spells could be difficult to unravel. The trick with wizards was not to give them time to do anything. “Isfain,” she said simply. “Hush, be still.” It wouldn’t have been worth doing to a Raven, because they
needed neither word nor movement to call magic. A wizard could call magic that
way, too—but it was a poor business they made of it. It would be a long time
before Isfain worked his way free of her binding. “What?” asked Kors incredulously, surprised at Hennea’s rudeness. She put her knitting away carefully, then she took the yarn
Jes had thrown and set it in the top of her bag. Time enough later to unspell
it so it could be organized more easily. “He’s too far,” she said. “What do you mean?” asked Kors, who still hadn’t noticed
that Isfain was now immobile because of her magic. He didn’t know what she was. “Have you ever seen a Guardian released from the foundrael?”
she asked. “It’s not bad if they haven’t been upset—but your Isfain
precluded that.” “Mother,” said Jes sadly. She nodded. “I know, Lehr will keep her from harm, but that
is your job. To protect your family.” “Yes,” he said. She turned to Kors. “If I were you I’d leave this tent, so
that you aren’t the first thing he sees when he’s free.” She’d given him warning enough. If he didn’t choose to
follow ... she relaxed as she heard him leave. Really, Kors wasn’t a bad
sort “All right, Jes, I’m going to take this thing off.” She reached up, but he caught her hands. “Can’t. Benroln
said only him.” “Well,” Hennea said. “I’m not as powerful as your mother,
Jes, but I have spent a long time studying. I think I know how to take the
blasted thing off. I’ll not lie to you, there is some danger—but not as much as
leaving it on.” “To me,” he said, catching her hands before she could touch the
foundrael. “Not you.” “Only to you,” she lied, but she’d had a lot of practice
lying and it came out like the truth. He let her set her hands on the soft band around his neck.
The leather was soft and new-looking, as if it had been tanned yesterday
instead of centuries ago. That made it easier, because she knew which one it
was. “No,” he said, pulling her hands away again. “It’s all right,” she said. “No,” Jes said again. “The Guardian will kill the big man.
That would be bad. He thinks that killing would be very bad for us. Killing is
bad, but he would have no choice. He is very angry.” Hennea considered him. Everyone had a tendency, she thought,
to ignore the daylight Jes in their fear of the Guardian. Oh, Seraph loved him
in either guise, but she treated him with the same indulgence and discipline
that she treated their dog and the others followed her example. Jes, thought Hennea, was more than just a disguise where the
Guardian resided. Impulsively she put her hand, still clasped loosely by his,
on his cheek. He closed his eyes and leaned against it, moving so the light
stubble, new-grown since his shaving this morning, prickled her fingers. He was just a boy, she thought, uncomfortable with the
instant response his innocently sensual gesture had called from her. He might be right about killing. The Order of the Eagle came
only to people who were empathic, a rare gift and usually weak. If Jes were a
strong enough empath, killing might very well be enough to damage him. “The Guardian won’t calm until we take it off, Jes. He’ll
just feel worse and worse,” she said, though she didn’t move her hand from his
face. “The longer we wait the more difficult it will be.” He nodded, but didn’t open his eyes. “He’s so angry,” he
said. Dark lashes brushed her fingertips, and she shivered. He looked at her then, his eyes dark and hungry. “You could
make him not angry,” said Jes. “He likes you, too. Kiss me.” His suggestion startled her. She’d never heard of anyone
trying something like this. Likely because only an idiot would think of kissing
an angry Guardian. Her lips were still canted in a smile when they touched his.
It was an innocent kiss at first, because he called that from her—though not
without arousal. His lips were a little chafed, and the rough surface scraped
hers in butterfly-wing caresses. She could feel him tense when her hands touched his neck
again, so she opened her mouth to nip lightly at his lips, distracting him from
what she did. It distracted her, too—but not so much that she fumbled the
Unlocking. As soon as she finished, fear washed through the tent like a
flash flood, taking her breath with its strength. She dug her fingers into
Jes’s shoulders, which had turned to iron. But he didn’t fight her as she held
him to her and touched his lips with her tongue. Fear had driven away the embarrassment she felt at seducing
him, but it hadn’t erased the desire he called from her. When he took charge of
the kiss, she softened for him and allowed him to vent his fury into passion. It was the Guardian who gentled the kiss again and shifted
his weight away from her. He rubbed his face against hers, like a cat marking
his territory, and then pulled away despite the tension that shook his body. “Benroln has Mother and Lehr?” he asked hoarsely. She had to clear her throat before she could say anything.
“Yes,” she said. She averted her face, knowing her cheeks were red, so she
didn’t have a chance to move away before he touched her again. He pulled her
against him, and set his chin on top of her head. “We’ll go find them,” he said. Then he must have noticed Isfain,
because he stiffened. “What have you done to that one?” he growled. She used the excuse of looking at Isfain to step out of
Jes’s arms. “Not as much as I’d have liked to,” she said. “Benroln was young
when he stepped up to the leadership—if I understand the history that led to
this stupidity. But you,” she tapped Isfain’s nose reprovingly, “you knew better.
He was your sister’s son and you taught him poorly.” “Release him,” said the Guardian. She cocked her head at him warily. “Why?” When he growled at her, she found herself smiling despite
the way the skin on her back flinched. “I think we’d better just leave him as
he is until we find Lehr and your mother, don’t you?” “Soft-hearted,” he said. “Better than soft-headed,” she replied. “Should we go after
Lehr and Seraph?” He stepped around her and held open the tent flap. “I’d
rather eat someone,” he said—she thought it was for Isfain’s benefit, but she
wasn’t quite sure. “But we’ll head out looking for Mother first. Is Gura here?” “Seraph told him to guard the tent,” she said. As she ducked through the flap he put his lips near her ear
and said, “Don’t feel guilty.” She stopped so abruptly that the top of her head collided
with his jaw hard enough that she heard his teeth click. “Why should I feel guilty for kissing a handsome young boy?”
she said sarcastically, without lowering her tone at all. To her amazement he grinned at her. Guardians didn’t grin.
They smiled with pleasure while they choked the life out of some poor fool who
crossed them. They bared their teeth. They didn’t grin. “I don’t know. We both enjoyed it very much, Jes and I,” his
grin widened. “And we’d like to do it again as soon as possible.” “Here you are,” said a young man in rich clothing who
awaited them in a small clearing set in the side of a hill and overlooking a
twenty-acre field with a tidy cottage at the far end. “I thought you might not
make it.” Benroln smiled congenially. “I don’t break contracts, sir.” “And besides,” said the young man, “you knew there was more
gold where you got the first, eh?” He looked too young to have been a merchant for long,
thought Seraph, then she reconsidered. There was a softness in his face that
made him look exceedingly young, but his eyes were sharp and old. I’ll bet that he uses that young face of his, Seraph
thought as she revised her estimate of his age upward by ten years. “Of course, sir,” said Benroln after he laughed politely at
the merchant’s comment. “This is the woman who will set the spell.” “And this is the farm right here,” replied the merchant in a
light, pleasant voice. “I want it cursed—you understand. Paid good money for a
mage to curse it last year—but Asherstal still got a harvest out. I told that
sorcerer I wanted nothing to grow on these fields, not even a weed. I want the
other farmers to avoid Asherstal for fear whatever befell him will happen to
them. I want him shamed. You’d better do the job or maybe some ill might befall
you, eh? Like happened to that mage I hired last year.” Benroln looked taken aback, and Seraph wondered if he’d believed
that sweet, innocent air the merchant exuded. “Your mage’s curse is still here,” she murmured. “Perhaps
you had him killed too soon. I’ll have to take it off before I can work.” “I don’t tell a tanner how to do his job,” said the
merchant. “I just pay him for good work.” He made an odd motion with his hand that
might have been accidental—but Tier had taught the boys the signs soldiers
used. It had the look of one of those. Lehr had caught it, too, she thought. He faded back silently
into the night. Neither the merchant nor Benroln seemed to notice—she doubted
the merchant had ever seen him to begin with. “I’ll have to go down to the edge of the field,” Seraph
said. “Fine, fine,” he agreed. “It’s dark enough that they won’t
see you. We can wait in the trees that border the field.” He led the way down. If Benroln was worried by anything, Seraph
couldn’t tell—but she thought not. If he’d been properly worried about the
merchant, he wouldn’t have left Isfain and Kors to tend Jes and Hennea. More
fool he, to trust a man who’d curse another man’s living. She suspected that the hidden men were to come out when she
finished to make certain neither Benroln nor she told anyone that he’d paid to
have this poor farmer’s fields cursed. Lehr wondered if his mother had caught the signal the merchant
had sent. There were men out here somewhere, men waiting to kill Benroln and
his mother when the merchant decided he was finished with them. Personally,
Lehr wasn’t worried about Benroln one way or the other, but his mother was
another matter entirely. Lehr backtracked the merchant until he found a place where
the man had waited with four others. Enough men to account for a couple of
Travelers as long as they took them by surprise. Each had taken a different
path. They left no tracks that he could see, because the forest
was inky-dark; not even the starlight illuminated the ground under the trees.
But he knew they had been there because he could smell them. He shuddered. What was he that he could scent a man like a
dog? He drew his knife and picked a trail to follow. When they came to the edge of the woods, the merchant motioned
Seraph on. He and Benroln settled in to wait under the cover of the trees while
she worked her magic. She sat down on the ground at the edge of the field, just
outside of the area of planting. She could see the weaving of magic through the
soil. The mage this merchant had hired had done well; it was going to take her
a long time to clean the field. Time for Lehr to find the merchant’s men. Tune
for Jes to be lost to the effects of the foundrael. She began plucking the threads of the dead mage’s spell without
further ado. As she did so, the familiarity of what she was doing settled
around her with a feeling of rightness: this is what she
had been born to do. After a while the merchant became impatient. “I don’t see anything.
I don’t pay good money for nothing—and I don’t put up with people who try to
steal from me.” “Tell him I can’t work unless he’s quiet,” said Seraph serenely,
knowing that the calmer she was the worse the merchant would take it. His sort
always liked to see people cringe in fear of him. She could have given him a
light show, but the people her magic told her were sleeping in the cottage
might be awakened. She didn’t want them coming out to investigate with the
merchant’s armsmen lurking about—the wrong people might be killed. “Come away,” Benroln said to the merchant with an air of determinedly
cheerful diplomacy. “This will take a while. I brought a pair of dice with me.
We can pass the time while Seraph works.” Just as well he’d intervened before she’d pushed the
merchant too far, she thought and turned her attention back to the field. Lehr
needed all the time she could buy him. Now why didn’t you work? she asked as she pulled the
cursing magic away from stalks of wheat only half the size they should be this
time of year. Nonetheless, with the strength of the spell she was unravelling,
this field shouldn’t have grown anything more than a sprig of cheatgrass. Night fell, but she didn’t pay any attention—what she was
looking at didn’t require light for her to see. Finally, she detached the last
of the spelling and, unanchored, the weave fell apart and lost its form. The magic the wizard had imbued in his casting drifted off
when the spell lost its power. It didn’t go far before it was caught firmly,
and pulled back into the earth to enrich the soil. That was when Seraph
realized how it was that the farmer had managed to grow wheat in this field. There were other creatures that used magic besides the
shadow beasts who lived in the Ragged Mountains. Most of them had died fighting
at Shadow’s Fall. But some of them escaped. This one hadn’t been strong enough
to remove the spell, but it had done a great deal to mitigate the effects.
Likely whatever it was, it had felt her meddling and was watching from nearby. “Mmm,” she murmured, smiling in pleasure as she leaned forward
and pressed her hands onto the field, sinking her hands into the soft ground
where the magic held in the grains of dirt made her fingers tingle. Seraph sent out a drift of Seeking magic again, this time
looking for a creature not human. She found something almost immediately, but
it was different than she expected: darkness but not shadow, somehow more
natural, more elemental than the woods around her, something frightening. It
could only be Jes. The time had come, whether Lehr was finished or not. She set
the mystery of the farm’s protector aside and began her show. She stood up and held both arms out theatrically, calling
out in the Old Tongue. They weren’t words of power—she didn’t need them for
this. She didn’t know many words of the Old Tongue, but she was willing to bet
that Benroln knew even less. Theatrics, her father would have scolded her, but her grandfather
would have understood. Some people wouldn’t believe in magic until it came with
light and sounds. The merchant himself had given her the idea for this, and
the magic embedded in the soil gave her the power. She called light filaments
to sparkle and grow like cobwebs on the wheat, dancing from stalk to stalk
until the whole field glittered in light that shifted rapidly through the
shades of the rainbow in waves. It was a pretty effect, she drought, though it
was merely light. But there wouldn’t be a solsenti alive who would turn
their heads from the field to look behind them when Seraph’s children
approached. Benroln and the merchant stepped out of the trees, but a flicker of
magic held them where they were. Now to leave the merchant in no doubt of what his gold had
purchased for him. This was more difficult and she would never have even
attempted it if it hadn’t been for that dark, tingling soil that ached to aid
the growth of the plants rooted in it. Slowly she raised her arms together as she pushed her magic
into plants. Grow, she urged them, grow and be strong. Stalks thickened slowly and stretched up ... A defter hand than hers touched them and straightened and
strengthened; balancing root, stalk, and bearding head in a way that Seraph
would not have, though she knew, from the rightness of
the path of magic, that this was how plants ought to grow. Since her magic was not needed, she glanced toward the
source of the magework and saw it, sitting near a fencepost. It wasn’t much
bigger than a cat, a small, mossy creature with rounded, droopy ears and large
eyes that gleamed with power. Its coloring matched the earth and wood so
closely that she doubted that she would have seen it if the field hadn’t been
thrumming with its power. “Earthkit,” she said softly to herself. “This farmer must
keep to the old ways.” “When he had naught but old bread and milk for his own children
he didn’t forget me,” agreed a voice she felt as much as heard. “Such acts are
to be rewarded.” “Indeed,” agreed Seraph. Since she wasn’t doing anything else,
she added a crackle to the lights so that the merchant and Benroln wouldn’t
hear her talking to the creature. “I would not have been able to heal this so
well without you.” “Nor could I break that other spelling,” said the earthkit
in its rusty voice. “But I am done now,” The magic ceased abruptly and it left
in a scuttling run that her eyes could not quite follow. The wheat swayed under Seraph’s lights, ready to harvest
now—at least two months early. She lowered her arms and allowed the glitter and
noise to die away slowly. “I won’t do the work of petty criminals,” she said clearly. “Raven,” spat Benroln. “Fine. See what happens to your children
now. And as for this,” he waved a hand at the field, “You may be Raven, but I
am Cormorant.” Electricity began gathering in the air. Stupid, stupid, arrogant Raven, Seraph thought,
bitterly ashamed. A storm with the heavy wheat heads atop slender, drying
stalks would be disastrous. If she’d just left the field alone once she’d
broken the curse, the earthkit would have seen to it that the wheat grew
normally. She knew what Benroln was, and being a farmer’s wife she should have
remembered what disasters the weather can bring. “Benroln,” she said harshly, “you are a fool. This man has assassins
in the woods—do you think they lurk there to watch the magic?” “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said the merchant. Benroln stopped his casting and looked at the other man. “Why do you think that a man like this would come here without
guards?” said Seraph. “There has always been a problem doing the work of solsenti
who are willing to hire Travelers to make evil upon others of their kind.” “What do you suggest?” Benroln said bitterly. “My people
will starve. I tried it your way. We were driven from one place to another,
sometimes by people who feared what we might do and sometimes by people because
we wouldn’t do as they asked. I’ve had four—four—mermori come to
me. Four more clans dead and gone.” “Do not air our quarrels before solsenti,” she said
sharply. Benroln glanced at the merchant and bit his lip. “Lehr took care of three of the men who were watching,” said
Hennea, coming out of the woods with Gura at her side. “Jes has the other one
immobilized.” “So what do we do with him?” Benroln asked. Jes appeared and grabbed the merchant’s hand. “You don’t want to draw that knife,” Jes said quietly. “My
brother’s over there with one of your men’s bows. No use anyone else dying
tonight.” The merchant all but collapsed at Jes’s touch, and Seraph’s
oldest son relieved him of several throwing knives. “Asherstal,” said Seraph, snapping her fingers. “The owner
of this field. He has managed to survive this long; I suspect he can handle
this one if we deliver him. Hennea, Jes, could you escort him there?” She
turned to Benroln and said, “I need you to call a meeting of your people
tonight. I’d like to tell you some things that you need to know.” If she could persuade the entire clan to follow her to
Taela, she’d have the clan’s healer for her husband when she found him. She
just wished she were as good at persuading people as Tier was. Benroln didn’t wait for her, but stomped off, angry at her,
at the merchant, and at a responsibility he didn’t know how to fulfill. When Benroln was gone, Jes said, “He bears no open wounds,
Mother, but Lehr is hurt.” Seraph nodded. “Take this one to the farmhouse and don’t get
anyone hurt in the process, and I’ll do my best for Lehr.” She waited until Jes and Hennea were halfway to the cabin,
but before she called out, Lehr came. It was too dark to see him well, but she
could smell the blood on him. “Thank you,” she said. “If you had not been here tonight, Benroln
and I would doubtless have been dead.” “There are three men dead instead,” he said. “Jes tied the
fourth one up before I got to him.” “They were men who were willing to kill for no cause but gold,”
said Seraph. Words were not her strength, but for Lehr she searched for the
right ones. “They have doubtless killed others on the merchant’s orders. Now
they will not kill anyone again.” “When I killed them,” whispered Lehr, coming toward her, “it
was so easy. Easier than hunting deer. What am I, Mother?” “This is what it means to be an Order-Bearer,” she told him.
“None of the Orders are easy. You are Hunter, and among the tasks of the Hunter
is the bringing of death.” She opened her arms, and, when he dropped to his knees in
front of her, she pulled him close. He buried his face in the crook of her
neck. “I don’t like it,” he said. “Shh,” she held him and rocked lightly back and forth, as
she had when he’d been a child. “Shh.” “Someone’s waiting in front of our tent,” said Jes just as
Gura gave a happy bark and ran forward with his tail wagging. “So,” said Brewydd from a bench someone must have carried
over for her. “You stopped Benroln from his folly. That’s more than I’ve
managed to do.” Gura sat beside her and put his big black muzzle on her knee
and heaved a contented sigh. “Hardly,” said Seraph. “I just pointed out that the merchant
he chose to do business with was a thief and a killer—and that any other solsenti
he’d find to pay for the same sort of favor will probably be equally bad.” The old woman cackled, “I never thought of that.” “It won’t stop him,” said Seraph. “He’s obviously done
similar things before; he’ll do them again.” “Most of them weren’t this bad,” said Brewydd. “Though making
certain that a village was dry a month or more in high summer, then forcing
them to pay him to bring the rain is no noble deed.” “No,” agreed Hennea dryly. “Talk to him at this meeting tonight,” Brewydd told Seraph.
“Make him understand what he does is folly.” “What good will talking do?” asked Lehr. “Haven’t you told
him what he’s been doing is wrong? Why would he listen to Mother when he won’t
listen to you?” “Hah!” exclaimed Brewydd. “A man would rather listen to a
beautiful woman than a wrinkled old crone. You, boy,” she said pointing at
Lehr. “You can help an old woman to her home.” Lehr took a deep breath, tightened his jaw, and nodded his
head. When he took her arm, Brewydd patted his biceps lightly before using him
to lever herself up. “Your mother teaches you well, boy. It is good when a
youngling is kind to old women.” She winked at Seraph and continued to mutter
at Lehr as he led her back to her wagon. “Right,” said Seraph, hoping Brewydd could do better for
Lehr than she’d managed. “Let’s go find Benroln.” “Seraph,” said Hennea, “if you go and start attacking
Benroln for what he’s done, you’ll make Lehr happy and we’ll all go our
separate ways tomorrow. Benroln will still take gold from the next solsenti who
wants to pay to have his neighbor’s fields destroyed, and you’ll have the
satisfaction of telling them what you think of them.” “You have another suggestion?” said Seraph. “The Secret Path is very powerful,” said Hennea. “They claim
that they run the Empire, and that might very well be true. Having more people
to call on for help could be very useful.” “I’ve thought of that,” said Seraph. “But—Hennea, I am not a
Bard. Yelling I can do, but persuasion is another matter entirely. Would you
try?” She shook her head. “To Benroln and his people, you are our
leader. To have me speak to them would be an insult You can do this. Just
remember that Benroln is frustrated because there’s nothing he can do to keep
his people safe. Give him something to do other than rob the solsenti of
their gold, some way to strike back, and he’ll forget about the games.” Isfain was angry with Hennea, Seraph observed as she sipped
her hot tea. But Hennea had told her the state she’d found Jes in, and Seraph
didn’t mind seeing him grit his teeth when Hennea got too close. What chance
had given Hennea the knowledge of loosing the foundrael, Seraph didn’t
know, but she was grateful for it all the same. Hennea had certainly impressed a few people with her freeing
of Jes. The whole Rongier clan, at least those present at the small gathering
in front of Benroln’s tent, were treating Hennea as if she’d grown a third
head. Or maybe Hennea was just sitting too close to Jes. Jes had no intention of forgiving anyone for imprisoning
him. He lurked in a wolfish form only half-revealed by the flickering light of
the bonfire. It might have been easier if he’d chosen to be wolf in whole, but
the wolf’s muzzle and eyes in an otherwise human body was particularly disturbing.
Low growls told everyone that he was unhappy with them all. Seraph rather
thought the shape was an illusion, but it was difficult to tell. Brewydd had brought Lehr with her. He looked tired, but the
sickness had faded from his eyes. When the old woman griped at him and ordered
him to move her camp chair three times before she sat in it, he actually
grinned. Benroln came out of his tent at last, and looked around to
see that everyone was there. He sat down directly opposite Seraph and nodded
his head at her so the meeting would begin with her comments. Unhappy people, all, she thought, glancing around at
the faces of the clan. “We could spend the night throwing accusations and debating
ancient history,” said Seraph. “If you were not honest with what you wanted of
us, well then, we were not entirely honest either.” “I’d like to rage at you, and tell you how wrong what you’ve
been doing is, but you already know what I think.” She took a deep bream. “So
I’m going to tell you the things that we didn’t tell you when you invited us to
journey with you to Taela. It will take a while, and I am no Bard. I ask for
your patience just the same.” “I am Seraph, Raven of Isolda the Silent and wife to Tieragan
of Redem, Owl in his own right, though he has not a drop of Traveler blood ...” By the time she brought them into the present she was
hoarse. Benroln refilled her cup and urged it upon her solicitously—as if they
had not just fought a battle over a farmer’s field. As clan leader, it was his place to respond, so everyone sat
silently while he considered her story. “This Path,” he said, “they have been taking our people for
years and stealing their Orders?” Seraph nodded. “You have some of the stones?” asked Brewydd. Seraph had thought the old Healer was asleep. “Yes.” “I’d like to see them,” Brewydd murmured. “Bring them here
when we are done and we’ll sit in the Librarian’s home, you and I, Hennea and
Benroln, and see just what evil the solsenti have wrought.” “All right,” Seraph said and then changed the subject. “Tomorrow,
my family and I will continue on to Taela where my husband is being kept.” “You say your husband is Ordered,” said Isfain. “But he is a
solsenti?” “That’s right.” “Could this Secret Path you told us about be the reason that
the solsenti laws have become so stringent against us?” asked Kors. Seraph thought that they could look to themselves and to
other clans who had gone after gold rather than fighting evil for the cause of
the antipathy solsenti had toward Travelers, but she wasn’t such a fool
as to say so. Benroln, unaware of Seraph’s thoughts, nodded intently. “It
could be. If what we have heard tonight is true, this Path could be very
powerful.” He nodded his head once more. “Then this is what we will do. Isfain,
send out messages to the other clans we know of and warn them of this Path and
their methods. See to it that they in turn pass the message on.” He waited
until Isfain nodded. “Tomorrow we also strike out at speed for Taela.” He turned to Seraph. “There are things that we can do to
help. We have friends in Taela.” Seraph looked at his eager face. “I would be very
grateful for any help you can give,” she said. Seraph was exhausted, but she found herself as unable to say
no to the old Healer as everyone else was. Besides, she wanted to know what the
Healer could tell her about the rings. So it was that she found herself inside
the house of Rongier the Librarian with Hennea, Benroln, and Brewydd. Rongier’s home had been larger and more prosperous than
Isolda’s. His library had a table large enough to seat eight or ten people. Seraph took the seat next to Brewydd and dumped the bag of
rings on the table. Brewydd hesitated and lightly fingered each ring before settling
on an old ring set with a stone of rose quartz. “Well,” she murmured, “how did they do that then? You told
me that they took the Orders and bound them to a ring.” “Right,” said Seraph. “That’s what Hennea said, and that’s
what seems to have happened.” “Indeed.” Brewydd put the ring down and pushed it away from
her. Her hand was shaking a little. “So that’s one of the reasons,” she
murmured. “Reasons for what, Brewydd?” asked Benroln. He’d made no
move to look closer at the rings. “There were only ever so many Orders,” she said. “I don’t
know the numbers, I’m not certain where to find an exact count of most of
them—but there were only ever ten healers. One would die and another would be
born. But now there are only six.” She pointed at the ring she’d been handling.
“That one is one of the missing.” “Do you mean to say that the Orders are ... like a ...”
Seraph searched for a proper comparison. “Like a suit of armor,” said Brewydd. “One that is fitted at
birth and stays with you, grows to be a part of you until it is like your skin.
When you die, the skin sloughs off and cleanses itself of everything that was
yours—your scent, your shape, the sound of your voice. Then, once mote only a
suit of armor, it goes off and seeks the next person to fit itself to.” She folded her hands and rested her chin on them. “The
Orders don’t go to just anyone.” She nodded her head toward Seraph. “You would
have been a mage even if you hadn’t been Raven. Your husband would still have
sung. Benroln would have been one of those people who always seems to know when
a bad storm is coming in. The Orders go where they will be welcomed.” “So when they made these stones,” said Benroln somberly,
“each ring was another Traveler born without an Order.” Brewydd nodded her head. She looked at Hennea. “You said
that the wizards of the Path, these Masters, find that they cannot use some of
these. I believe that they took the Order too soon, that there are bits of
personality still clinging to the stones. The only time I’ve ever seen
something similar is when I had to deal with a Raven’s Memory.” “A Raven’s Memory?” asked Benroln. “A Raven’s Memory,” said Brewydd, “happens only when a Raven
is murdered. A Raven can take the power that always comes with death and a part
of himself to the Order and bind the result to a false life until it carries
out vengeance against his murderer.” “But it’s not only the Raven stones that ...” Seraph’s voice
trailed off because she wasn’t certain how to explain it. “No.” Brewydd sorted out a half dozen rings. “Here is the
Lark, a couple of Ravens, a Hunter and Bard, these all contain part of their
last Order-Bearer. They’re bound, tied to the stones so they can’t act like
Raven Memories—but I bet the wizards who tried to wear them got a rude
surprise.” “Do you know what to do with them?” asked Hennea. “Not yet,” said Brewydd. “Do you mind if I keep these?” She
indicated the jewelry. “No,” said Seraph. “If you can figure out what to do with
them, how to free the Orders, it is more than Hennea and I have managed.” Brewydd nodded and collected the rings into Seraph’s bag. “Tell
that boy of yours to come to my wagon tomorrow when we stop to camp,” she said. “Lehr?” asked Seraph cautiously. Brewydd nodded. “I know a few odd things about Hunters he
might be interested in.” She got to her feet. “I know a lot more than I let
on,” she said. “But I only share with those I like. Your boy was exhausted and
heartsick, not to mention tired of taking orders and angry with the whole of my
clan—yet he still was courteous and gentle. I like him.” She glared at Benroln. He got up off the chair with a crack of laughter. “I love
you, old woman.” He leaned over and kissed her cheek. “I’m going to get some
sleep before I fall over. You’ll want to keep the mermora until you’ve
solved this puzzle with the rings, and you are welcome to it, Brewydd. Good
night.” Brewydd turned to Seraph. “I’m an honest woman, so I’ll tell
you that I’m not used to learning wisdom from those younger than I.I thought
that I had to convince him that what he was doing to earn gold was wrong. I
never considered trying to find something else for him to do instead. Thank
you.” Seraph shook her head. “I’m afraid you have Hennea to thank
for that” Hennea smiled and got up. “You’re welcome to any bits of
wisdom I pick up. Now, I’m with Benroln; it’s time to sleep. Can I escort you
to your wagon?” Brewydd laughed and winked at Seraph. “I’ll say yes, only because
that handsome young Guardian who’s been waiting outside will come, too.” Seraph laughed, yawned, and left for their tent “Seraph, wake up,” Hennea’s voice was soft and disappeared
into the dream. “Mother,” murmured Jes. At the sound, Seraph sat up and opened her eyes almost in
the same motion. “Jes, are you all right?” He smiled his sweet smile. “Fine, Mother, but you’re going
to wake the camp.” Seraph yawned and tried to find the reason they’d woken her
up in what Jes had just said. It was still dark out and everyone except her was
lying down. Hennea had a gentle grip on Seraph’s arm. “You were having nightmares,” said Lehr, rolling on his side
so he could see her more easily. When he said it, she remembered. Tier had been sitting on a
throne of oak, ash, and rowan while a spell was worked around him. He’d been
playing one of the songs he played often at the tavern, though she couldn’t
remember which one it was. She’d run to him, knelt at his feet, and set her
head in his lap as she had sometimes when the nightmares had been so bad after
her brother had died. But there had been something wrong. He’d kept playing, ignoring
her entirely. Finally she’d reached up to touch the skin of his arm and
screamed. His flesh had been warm, she could feel blood pulse under her
fingertips, but she knew that he was dead. Nervously she ran her fingers in her hair. “Thank you for waking
me,” she said, lying down again. “What did you dream of?” asked Hennea. “I don’t remember,” Seraph lied. She had no talent for
foreseeing, she reminded herself firmly. It had only been a dream. She lay back and stared at the top of the tent. She knew
that Jes and Lehr assumed they’d find Tier hale and whole and the only problem
would be getting him out, but Seraph had too much experience to believe in
happy endings. He might be dead. She’d never told Tier that she loved him. Never once. She had done her best to turn herself into a good wife,
tried to become the person he needed as helpmeet. She knew he’d assume that
she’d never told him that she loved him because she didn’t. He was wrong. Tier felt guilty for so much: that she’d been forced to
marry him, that she’d been so young. Their marriage had freed him from the
burden of taking over the family bakery and he felt guilty about that, too.
He’d gained his freedom and she’d lost hers, lost her chance to rejoin her
people. If she’d ever told him that she loved him, he’d have told her that he
loved her, too. He’d have lied for her. Tier was the most truthful person she knew. He’d have lied
to her out of guilt, and she couldn’t abide that, so she’d never told him. Dry-eyed, she stared, at the tent ceiling and hoped that
she’d get the chance to hear him lie to her. Chapter 13Phoran nervously caressed the stack of parchment on his bed.
He had already carefully organized it, placing the one that would make his
first bid for power fifteenth down. Far enough down that many of the Septs
would have relaxed their guard, but not so far that they would have quit listening
entirely. A light tap at his door made him take three quick steps away
from the bed. Then he realized that the bed was an odd place for formal
documents, so he ran back, snatched them up, and placed them on his writing
desk. He wouldn’t want anyone to think that he’d spent all day and most of the
night going through them. Most of the. Septs would think that he was merely
tormenting Douver, the council secretary: everyone knew that Phoran couldn’t
stand the worm. The quiet tap sounded again. “Your Highness?” said the guard
who stood his watch at the door to the Emperor’s bedchamber. “My lord, Avar,
Sept of Leheigh, begs entrance.” “Avar?” Phoran said distractedly. Now that he thought of it,
the writing desk was an odd choice as well. He couldn’t remember ever actually
sitting at it—something Avar would have noticed. “Yes, Your Highness.” “Yes, yes, let him in.” It was too late to change anything
anyway. The door opened and Avar made his entrance. “Phoran,” he
said as soon as the door was closed behind him. “I’ve been looking for you
since yesterday afternoon. Did you really take all the proposed laws and run
off with them?” Surprisingly, Phoran didn’t have a prepared reply. He hadn’t
even thought about what Avar would say. Not that he didn’t care—but it didn’t
seem as important anymore. Avar misread his hesitation. “Not that you didn’t have every right to—but you might have
warned someone you intended to take a closer look. It wasn’t necessary to give
poor Douver an anxiety attack.” Phoran found himself smiling. “Wasn’t it? You’ll have to forgive
me if I’ve forgotten that I could have just called the things into my review. I
suspect everyone else has forgotten as well.” A frown chased itself across Avar’s perfect brow. “What are
you up to, my friend?” “Do you know anything about the Secret Path?” It was an impulsive
question born of years of trust, blind trust he was no longer certain he felt.
But even after the question left his lips, Phoran didn’t regret it “The secret, secret club that everyone knows about?”
asked Avar with a grin. “Where a bunch of young hotheads go to pretend they are
villainous Travelers? My brother, Toarsen, and his tagalong, muscle-bound
friend, Kissel, belong to it” Phoran walked back to his bed and perched on the end,
offering a nearby padded bench to Avar with his hand. “Tell me everything you
know.” “Does this have something to do with taking the proposals?”
asked Avar as he availed himself of the offered seat and leaned back against
the wall. “I don’t know,” said Phoran truthfully. “Well then.” Avar put his head back and relaxed. “They
choose young men of noble blood when they’re fifteen or sixteen and induct them
in some sort of secret ceremony. They don’t pick a lot of boys—no more than
five or ten a year. I don’t know what they do at the ceremony—but my brother
carried bruises from it for a week or more. The people they choose are usually
the ones who are ... well, problems for their families.” He looked at Phoran a moment, then sighed. “I know they had
something to do with that mess last year when some young thugs destroyed the
weavers’ market. I saw Toarsen coming home in the wee hours of the morning,
dead drunk with a hatchet in his hand. I should have said something, but”—he
shrugged ruefully—“he’s my brother.” “Do you know any of the older members?” asked Phoran. “The
Raptors?” “Some,” answered Avar with a quick grin. “The ones my
brother gripes the most about. The council leader—the Sept of Gorrish is one of
them and Telleridge is another. My father was—I think that’s how my brother was
selected.” Phoran closed his eyes and thought. “Didn’t the Weavers’
Guild file a complaint against Gorrish just before the market was destroyed?
They dropped it because he was instrumental in getting funds to help them
rebuild it.” “You’re right,” said Avar in an arrested voice. “I never
thought to look for a deeper motive. I’ve always thought of the Secret Path as
a game for boys who are at loose ends.” “I have heard that you cannot be an heir to a Sept and belong
to the Path,” said Phoran. “Gorrish’s father and three older brothers died in the
plague that hit the Empire about twenty years ago,” said Avar. “He’s not the
only younger son who has inherited.” He smiled. “My own father was a second
son.” Phoran had a terrible thought. Maybe it was because he’d
just spent the night talking to a bard that he’d thought of the old story of
the Shadowed. How the first magic the Shadowed had loosed was plague. Maybe it
was all the talk of magic—or maybe it was his current affliction of Memory.
“How many of those second and third sons, or cousins who inherited a Sept were
members of the Path?” he asked. “I don’t know exactly—I was about four at the time, Phoran.
The younger sons who inherited unexpectedly ... oh, Seal Hold, Telleridge,
Jenne, and a few others. You aren’t going to tell me that the Secret Path is
responsible for the plague, are you?” Avar shook his head. “A lot of people
died, Phoran. Most of them weren’t Septs with heirs who happened to be
members of the Secret Club.” “Doubtless, you’re right” Phoran smiled and changed the subject.
“I am calling a Council Seating for tomorrow,” he said. “You are?” asked Avar, surprised into insult. Phoran smiled at him grimly. “It may have become usual,
since my uncle died, for Gorrish to call the Seat, but it is the imperial
prerogative he uses. I am calling it, and I’d like you to deliver the messages.
See if you can convince them that it’s just a silly whim of mine—that I said
something about being bored.” Avar stared at him for a long time, then nodded his head.
“I’ll do that. Tell me what time you’d like to meet.” The Memory came again that night. Phoran waited impatiently
for it to finish. At last the cold tongue licked the puncture wounds clean and
the Memory gave him the usual offer. “Were you a Traveler held by the Secret Path?” Phoran asked. “Yes,” it said and was gone with its usual abruptness. Pale and a little dizzy, the Emperor went to his closet and
pulled on a robe. With only a little caution—because the Path’s rooms were in
an obscure corner of the palace—Phoran made it back to the bard’s cell with
little trouble. He found Tier’s door unlocked, but when he went in, Tier lay
unmoving on his bed and nothing Phoran could do would awaken him. Phoran took up a seat on the end of the bed and stared at
Tier’s face—but other than being a little pale, he seemed healthy enough. At
last Phoran arose unhappily and returned to his suite. When Tier awoke, he knew they’d come for him again, though
his last memory was of settling in to play a bit of music after leaving the
party in the Eyrie. He moved and the lute tucked beside him dug into his ribs. He sat up with sudden anxiety and inspected it for any
damage it might have taken. He found something that could have been a new
scratch on the finish, but nothing that would impair its use. He settled back
against the wall with a sigh of relief. His head throbbed, his body ached, and
his mouth was uncomfortably dry—but the lute could not heal itself. He hugged the lute against his body. What was it that they did to him? Someone knocked on the door. Tier gathered himself together
and stood up. “It’s dinnertime, sir,” Myrceria explained after he’d opened
the door to her. “I can have food brought to you, or you can eat in the Eyrie
with the Passerines.” She hesitated, then said, “You might have noticed that
your movements have been restricted unless you have an escort. I was told to
inform you that you now can move freely around most of the rooms used by the
Passerines. If you’d like to wait and go alone, you may do that also. Food will
be provided at any time upon your request.” He stood up slowly, but the movement seemed to help some of
his aches and pains. “By all means,” he said with as much charm as he could
muster over his fading headache. “Let us go to the Eyrie.” The room was almost full to bursting. When Tier stepped inside,
the dull roar quieted as the young men all watched him. Like a duck who had the
ill luck to drop to earth in the midst of a pack of wolves, Tier thought with
amusement. Food of every description was spread out on the bar for the
taking. Tier, following Myrceria’s example, took a wooden platter and began
filling it. When she led the way to an unoccupied table he followed her. He ate without seeming to look up, but his peripheral vision
was very good. He saw the boys’ cautious approach. The first to arrive and sit at Tier’s table was a tall boy,
too thin for his height. Before he opened his mouth, Tier knew a few things
about him. The first was that he was a loner. The Passerines, he noticed,
tended to travel in packs, and there was no one moving with this boy. The pads
of his fingers were calloused from instrument strings and in one of those
calloused hands was a large case. He sat down beside Myrceria and put the case on their table
in the place of the food dishes that an efficient servant had just whisked
away. “You said last night that a Bard could play any instrument,”
he said. “Try this one.” “What’s your name?” asked Tier. He ignored the shuffle as a
number of young men pulled up stools and benches to listen in on their
conversation; instead, he kept his eyes on the case as he undid the various
hooks that kept it closed. “Collarn,” said the boy. “I am an assistant at the Imperial
College of Music. What do you think?” The challenge in Collarn’s voice was such that Tier wasn’t
surprised to discover that the case held an instrument he’d never seen before.
He coaxed the thing out of its close-fitting case and scooted his stool back so
that he could rest it on his lap for a closer look. It looked somewhat like a lute, he decided, but it was
squarer and deeper-bodied. There were tuning pegs, but the strings were hidden
inside the body. Below the pegs it had two rows of buttons on the side. On the side was a—“A handle?” Tier said, and turned it. At
once an odd, penetrating, grinding sound issued from the bowels of the
instrument He grinned in delight Tier tilted his head and closed his eyes, turning the handle
again. “It’s like a violin,” he said. “Or pipes. What do you call it, Collarn
of the College of Music?” “It’s a symphonia. There’s a wheel-bow inside that turns
with the handle.” Collarn had obviously come to flummox the Bard—probably for
usurping his place as the Passerine’s musical entertainment, but he shared
Tier’s love of music too deeply not to fall into a discussion with someone
willing to explore the possibilities of his obscure instrument. Tier hid his smile—he liked Collarn, and the boy obviously
took himself too seriously to enjoy a laugh at his own expense. After trying
several positions, Tier shifted the symphonia until he could turn the handle
with his right hand and touch the buttons on the side with his left After a moment he managed a simple melody—but he heard the
possibilities of much greater things. The instrument was louder than his lute,
making it a good choice for performing outdoors or before a large audience. A
pair of strings played the same note continuously like a bagpipe’s drones, lending
a sonorously eerie accompaniment to the rest of the notes that changed at the
touch of his fingers on the buttons. Tier stood up and handed the instrument to Collarn. “Would
you play something for me?” he asked. “I’d like to hear it played by someone
who knows what it can do.” The boy was talented—though his grandfather’s old friend
Giro could have taught him something about softening the straight rhythm
Collarn held to when the song wanted to fly. Finished, the boy looked up, his face a little bright.
“That’s the only song I know on it. We have no music written directly for it.
The masters at the college don’t think much of the instrument—it’s an odd thing
someone brought to the college a dozen years ago.” “May I try it again?” asked Tier, and the boy handed the symphonia
over. “The piece you played”—Tier played a bit, deliberately more
hesitant than Collarn had played so that he didn’t rob the boy of his
performance—“is something written for violin. It’s a good choice, and plays to
the instrument’s strengths.” “I can do it better on a violin,” said Collarn. “There’s no
dynamic range to the symphonia.” He grinned and the sweetness of the unexpected
expression reminded Tier of Jes. “It just doesn’t do quiet.” “Bagpipes are like that,” said Tier. “You might try piping music.” He fell silent and searched the instrument for range and
effect. When he turned the handle at just the right speed and the instrument
added a buzz to its already odd sound, Tier stopped and laughed outright “I can see why your college masters have a problem. It’s
just a bit brash, eh? A little boldness isn’t necessarily a bad thing.” He
hummed a little tune under his breath. “Let me try this ...” He knew he had it right when the toes of the boys nearest
him started moving. When Collarn took a small silver penny-whistle out of his
pocket and added a few runs, it made Tier think of playing with the old men in
the afternoons at the tavern in Redem. He played through the song twice—the
second time his fingers found their own way as he looked around the room at all
the young faces. He’d come here this afternoon to gather information, and instead
he’d gained a friend. Speculatively, Tier’s eyes fell on a promising young man
who was using the haft of his knife to tap out a rhythm on a tabletop. Tier knew about recruiting young men. Phoran was deliberately late going to the Council chambers.
He wanted them to gossip, to fret. If Avar had done as he asked, they would be
more annoyed than worried. The Emperor stopped before the door, took a deep breath, and
nodded to the chamberlain to announce him. “Rise for the Emperor Phoran, may his reign never cease!” If it doesn’t ever begin, thought Phoran, can it
ever cease? Silence fell in the room and Phoran strode leisurely through
the doorway, followed by the young page he’d chosen for his small size to make
the stack of parchment the page carried look even larger than it was. Phoran himself was in his most glittering, gaudy
clothes—clothes that had caused his valet to mutter about street whores. Phoran
had started out to wear a more conservative outfit—but he’d decided that would
send the wrong message. He didn’t want to announce, Look! I’ve changed for
you. He wanted to force them to acknowledge him emperor on his own terms. His hair was curled, and his face was powdered paler than
any court dandy. A small blue star painted beside his eye matched the
glittering blue and silver stars embroidered on purple velvet portions of his
costume. He didn’t hurry, forcing himself to keep his appearance
languid while the impatience of the Septs grew almost palpable. At last he
reached the place reserved for the Emperor. A thin coat of dust covered the
inlayed surface of his podium, where he gestured for the boy to set the
parchment before waving him off in the general direction of Douver, the council
secretary. The page relayed the message he’d been given and the secretary
looked up at Phoran incredulously. Phoran stared back, doing his best to look
neither nervous nor smug as his page rejoined him. Douver cleared his throat. “Septs of the Empire. I call a general
roll so that His Glory the Emperor shall know who attends this meeting. Each
Sept will call out as I read his name.” He took up a paper and Phoran made a
show of removing the top sheet of parchment, which was a copy of the clerk’s. In the end, twenty-four Septs were absent. Phoran was
careful to mark each of their names with a stylus while the council watched.
Everyone in the room knew that at least eighteen of those named were in the
palace. “Thank you,” said Phoran graciously, and without a speech or
any further delay, he picked up the first of the proposed laws. “The matter of
the trade agreement between the Septs of Isslaw and Blackwater is declared to
be Imperial Law.” He set the first parchment to one side and picked up the
next By the tenth parchment the Septs began shifting uncomfortably in their
seats—except for Avar, who sat in his chair with arms folded across his chest,
and stared at Phoran thoughtfully as Phoran continued his show. Phoran took the fifteenth parchment and read, “For his
services to the Empire, the Sept of Jenne is to be awarded the land from Iscar
Rock to the eastern field of Kersay Holm in a path no more than ten miles
wide.” He looked up and found the Sept of Jenne in his usual place
in the council. “So, what service did you perform for the Empire, Jenne?” The man he’d addressed stood up. A contemporary of Phoran’s
father, he was in his late middle years, with iron-grey hair and a short beard.
He bowed. “If it please Your Imperial Majesty, it was in the matter of the
trouble the Weavers’ Guild had last year. I found myself in the position of
being able to perform some little service in the matter of raising funds for
the displaced merchants.” “Ah,” said Phoran. “We had wondered. In any case, this proposal
is denied. You may reseat yourself, Jenne.” He set it to his left, away from
the neat stack of signed documents. He’d picked up the next proposal when the paralysis wore off
and the Sept of Gorrish jumped to his feet followed by a fair number of his
followers. “I protest!” he said, and that was the last thing that anyone heard clearly for several minutes as the Council of Septs
roared its displeasure with the Emperor. Phoran set the parchment he’d picked up back where he’d gotten
it and waited for the uproar to die down with as cool a manner as he could
force over his pounding heart His instincts told him that if he were not able
to take control of the Septs at this meeting, he never would. He watched the flushed faces of the men who protested,
seeing the hidden satisfaction on Telleridge’s countenance at the strength of
the Septs’ outrage, though Telleridge said nothing. Avar caught Phoran’s gaze
and raised an eyebrow, then he made a subtle gesture toward himself as if to
ask, “May I?” Avar thought he could do something about this? Phoran raised
his own eyebrows (he had never learned the trick of raising only one) and
nodded his head. Avar stood up, jumped the waist-high barrier and landed on
the council floor, six feet or so below the searing area. His action caught the
attention of the Septs, buying him a momentary lull in the noise. “Gentlemen,” he bellowed. “Any man who is still standing and
talking after a count of five, I shall personally challenge to armed deadly
combat. Even if I have to fight each of you. His Imperial Majesty will then
have a much more pleasant time with your heirs. One. Two. Three.” Avar could do it, too; Phoran knew. Could defeat each and
every one of the Septs. That they agreed with Phoran’s assessment was
demonstrated by the fact that they were seated and silent before Avar reached
“four.” Avar scanned the scats to make certain they were occupied,
then with that easy athleticism that Phoran envied so, he jumped up, caught the
bottom railing and scaled the barrier to resume his own seat. “We give thanks to the Sept of Leheigh for his service to
the Empire,” said Phoran with more aplomb than he felt. Avar’s audacious and
effective ploy to silence the Septs had left Phoran the opportunity for a bit
of cleverness—or stupidity depending upon how it turned out. Phoran turned his head to the council leader. “So, Ombre,
Sept of Gorrish—you object to my rejection of this proposed law?” He picked up
the offending document and appeared to look at it more closely. “Permission to speak, please?” Gorrish ground out between
clenched teeth. “Oh, of course,” said Phoran in surprised tones. “We are always
glad to hear your concerns, Gorrish.” The council leader dropped his eyes and took a deep breath.
“This is a matter that was already put forth and approved by the council.” “For me to consider putting into law,” agreed Phoran
lightly. “I decided that it was ill-considered.” He reached for the next parchment
again. “Please, Your Majesty, hear me out,” said Gorrish. “The particulars
of the case were made known to the council at the time the lands were granted.
There were no objections at all.” Phoran raised his eyebrows again in surprise. “What, none?”
He looked around the room. “Avar?” “Yes, Imperial Majesty?” Avar stood. “Did you not just put your life at risk in Our Service?” questioned
Phoran. To Phoran’s delight, Avar looked at the Septs around him and
shook his head slightly. “I suppose someone might have gotten in a lucky blow,
Your Majesty, but I did not feel imperiled.” “Nonetheless,” said Phoran, “there was risk and you did not
hesitate to serve me. Is this not a greater deed than raising funds to help a
few merchants? A matter, I understand, of some two hundred and thirty-five gold
pieces?” The air went still as the more observant Septs began to
realize that Phoran knew more about the affair than he’d appeared to at first. “Perhaps, Your Majesty,” agreed Avar with seeming reluctance. “Avar, Sept of Leheigh, please enlighten those here with the
amount that you spent on that magnificent mare you purchased yesterday.” Avar cleared his throat. “Ah, two hundred and forty gold
pieces. Your Majesty.” “We believe that the life of a Sept is of more value than a
horse,” said Phoran firmly. “Therefore Avar, Sept of Leheigh, I put it before the
council that I intend to gift you with a piece of land from Tisl to Riesling of
a width not more than three miles—” “But—” Servish, the hotheaded young Sept of Allyn,
surged to his feet. Servish, though, was loyal to a fault and he caught his
tongue and began to sink down. “But what, Allyn?” invited Phoran gently. He had picked
Servish especially for this role. Servish swallowed and straightened up. “I am, always, your
loyal servant. Majesty.” Phoran nodded. “Please,” he said. “What was it you were
going to say?” Servish flushed and took a deep breath. “The land you spoke
of is within my Sept, Majesty.” Phoran smiled at him and then looked at Avar, who had remained
standing. “Avar, I am afraid that I cannot grant you lands that belong to a
loyal Sept. It would not be right.” “No,” agreed Avar. “What say you, my lords?” Phoran looked to the Septs. “Those
who would grant me or any other such powers, stand and say, ‘Aye’ now.” The
room was silent. “Nor, Gorrish, can I take lands away from any loyal Sept
just to grant them to someone who performed some small service to the Empire.
The Sept of Gerant has never shown me anything but loyalty. It would be a poor
emperor who took lands away from Septs who have committed no offense. You may
all take your seats.” He could feel it happen, Phoran thought. He could feel the
reins of the Empire slip into his hands. He kept his face clear of triumph and
picked up another piece of parchment. “In the matter of the border dispute ...” And the Septs all
sat silently in their seats as Phoran read through every last one of the
documents. “What is your purpose?” Phoran asked, his hands only a little
shaky as he pulled down his sleeve. The triumph of this afternoon was such that
even the Memory’s bite wasn’t enough to sour his mood. If he could control the
Septs, then surely he could rid himself of this curse. “To destroy the Masters of the Secret Path,” it said. “Ah,” said Phoran. He’d known the answer, but he hadn’t thought of a better question.
He had to steady himself when he stood up. “I’m going to see if our friend in
the Path’s dungeons is any better. You may join me if you’d like.” Truthfully, he was tempted just to go to bed. He had been
tired before the Memory showed up, and losing more blood hadn’t helped any. But
the memory of Tier’s unnaturally deep sleep had been with him all day. The
Memory, for whatever reason, followed him to Tier’s cell. There was music coming from the Bard’s cell, but the door
was too thick to hear more than that. Drawing his short sword, Phoran tapped
lightly on the door. “Come in.” Impossible to mistake that voice: it was Tier. Phoran sheathed his sword and opened the door. The Bard was
sitting on his bed with a lute in his hands. He was pale and looked nearly as
tired as Phoran felt, but when Tier saw that it was Phoran, he set the
instrument aside and got quickly to his feet. “My emperor.” “Just Phoran,” Phoran advised him and shuffled over to plop
down on the end of the bed. He scooted back until his back was braced against
the wall and motioned for Tier to do likewise. “I’m glad to see you in a better
state than last night.” “You came last night as well?” Tier sat down and pulled the
lute back into his lap as if it were a baby. He glanced over at the Memory,
which had taken up the same place it had on the first night. “I couldn’t wake you,” Phoran yawned. He’d forgotten that he
hadn’t gotten much sleep the night before. At least he had a better excuse for
being tired. “I waited for a few hours, but decided that I’d give you a night
to recover from—?” “Something the wizards have cooked up,” said Her unhappily.
“I’m not certain what.” He shook his head and gave Phoran a small smile.
“Nothing anyone can do about it right now. I do have some information for you.
You asked about Avar, the Sept of Leheigh. I heard his name mentioned, mostly
because his brother, Toarsen, is a Passerine, but if he’s a member, the
Passerines don’t know about it.” Phoran heaved a sigh of relief. He’d been almost certain
after the council incident, but it was good to be sure. “There are a number of Septs who are Raptors,” said Tier and
raided off a list of thirty or forty. Phoran would have been more impressed if the list hadn’t
frightened him so badly. “Could you go through them again, please?” he said
tightly. Tier complied, listing the same people in the same order. “Did you hear any other names?” asked Phoran, almost afraid
to ask. “Not of the Passerines, but the wizards.” “The Masters, the wizards, except for Telleridge, keep their
identities hidden,” said Tier. “I do have the names of more Raptors.” Phoran listened to a recital that consisted of people ranging
from Douver, the council secretary, to the captain of the palace guard,
including any number of influential tradesmen and scholars. “You have a remarkable memory,” said Phoran neutrally. “You
heard all of those in the past two days?” “Mostly today,” agreed Tier. He gave Phoran a small smile.
“Bards have to have a good memory, and the Passerines weren’t at all unhappy to
discuss the glories of membership in the Secret Path.” Phoran believed him, and wished unhappily that he did not.
“What if,” he said slowly, “what if I told you that the Path recruits the
restless younger sons and cousins among the nobles of the Empire at the age of
fifteen—the kinds of boys who are an embarrassment to their families. Remember,
the one rule the Path has when the young men join is that they cannot be direct
heirs of any Sept.” “I have noticed that there are a lot of Septs among the Raptors,”
agreed Tier, clearly seeing what was bothering Phoran. “But since I haven’t
heard of a wave of assassinations of Septs and their heirs, I assumed there was
an explanation—the last war or that plague.” “You told the Memory the story of the Shadowed,” said
Phoran. Tier wasn’t stupid; he understood where Phoran was going.
“You think that one of the Masters of the Path created that plague?” he asked.
Unlike Avar, Tier had no incredulity in his voice; he was considering Phoran’s
theory. Thus encouraged, Phoran continued. “The plague twenty years
ago was very convenient for a number of Raptors. Tomorrow I’ll bring paper and
ink so you can write down the list of Septs for me again. Then I’ll do a little
research, but I know that Telleridge, Gorrish, Jenne, the old Sept of Leheigh,
and a dozen others you named inherited then. Some of them were six or seven
people away from inheritance.” Phoran glanced at Tier. “Go on,” the Bard said. “My father died in the plague. His brother, my uncle, was
named regent. When I was twelve he was poisoned by his mistress, and the
council, under Gorrish, took over an informal regency. The Sept of Leheigh’s
son, Avar, took me under his wing.” Phoran smiled without humor. “He’s mellowed
out a lot in the past few years, but when I met him he was a lot less
respectable than his reputation would have shown him.” Phoran had done a lot of thinking since his conversation
with Avar before the council meeting. “He was a boy, and his own father had
encouraged him to be wild. It wouldn’t have struck him odd that the old Sept
would encourage him to take a twelve-year-old places that were at best unsavory
and at worst outright dangerous—I don’t think that he’d have sought out my
company without his father forcing him to do so.” It hurt to admit that, but he
knew it was true. “You have gained a reputation of being volatile and unreliable,”
said Tier slowly. “Even we in the hinterlands of Redem have heard so much.” “Not to say that I wasn’t a willing participant,” Phoran
said staunchly, though he wanted Tier to like him and it was difficult to admit
responsibility. “But if my uncle had lived I would never have been allowed the
excesses I have visited.” “And you would have come to power by now,” said Tier. “You
are what, twenty-four? The Septs would have been under you directly for five
years.” “Am I seeing shadows that don’t exist?” Phoran asked. “I don’t know,” said Tier. “But if you are, then so am I.
I’ve been looking upon them as my problem, or even a Traveler problem. But so
many Septs would make any group powerful, and powerful groups seek more power.
I don’t know that wizards can create convenient plagues, but it is odd that so
many of the Path survived to inherit” “I sent a letter to your wife,” said Phoran
hesitantly. Tier’s head jerked up, but Phoran couldn’t read his expression. “I told her that you were here in the palace,” Phoran continued
quickly. “I told her you were alive, but that it would be dangerous to come. I
told her that she could send word to me or you through the messenger—he was one
of my uncle’s men, retired this past decade. My uncle was a canny man; I doubt
that any of his would be suborned to the Path.” Tier laughed abruptly. “Told her it was dangerous, did you?” Phoran nodded. “I thought it best.” “We can plan on her showing up a week after she receives the
letter, then,” he said. “And we’ll be the better for it. I’m not a Traveler—but
my wife is, and, if you gave her enough information, she’ll bring the whole of
the Travelers with her when she comes.” He laughed again. “Thank you.” “I wrote to Gerant as well,” Phoran said. “Directly after
the council meeting. I thought he ought to know what the council had almost
done.” He hesitated. “It was a long letter. I told him of the situation I’ve
made for myself, then asked him to come here and help clear out the Path. I
told him that I had it on good authority that he was an honest man.” Tier laughed. “He’ll want to thank me for that—but he’ll
come, right enough. He’s almost too old for fighting—fifty or thereabouts by
now—but he had several sons, good men all.” He began to play a quiet melody as
he talked. “If the Path is as bad as we think, then it will be good to have
Gerant at your back. The wizards won’t scare him off either one of his
daughters-in-law is a wizard, and he employed a few more when I knew him. I
take it that you saved his land?” Phoran launched into the story of his triumph. Tier was a
good listener. He laughed in the right places—grinned, when Phoran told him
about the way Avar had silenced the court. “I can see why you like him. Phoran,” said Tier, “would you
take some advice from an old soldier?” “Try me,” Phoran replied. “There are a lot of the Passerines here who might turn out to
be good men if they had some goal, some task to work at. No one is more loyal
than someone who feels good about himself and his accomplishments—someone who
has a stake in the stability of your throne. Find them jobs to do.” Phoran laughed. “If anyone should have hope that reformation
is possible, it should be me. Get me a list of names and I’ll come up with
something.” “Military would work for most of them,” said Her. “Bloodless
dueling seems to be a pastime around here—and there are a number of fine swordsmen
in the bunch.” Phoran shook his head. “I don’t know where I’d put them. The
city guards are political appointments through the merchant guilds. The palace
guards are mostly inherited positions—and one of the Raptors is the captain of the
guards. Neither troop is one a nobleman would willingly join.” “You’re a Sept yourself, aren’t you?” asked Tier. “Yes, Sept of Taela and of Hawkshold—but Hawkshold is a
meaningless title. It’s been part of Taela for several hundred years. My lands
are cared for by the palace guard, the city guard, and, if those won’t do, I
can call upon the Septs to create an imperial army.” “If the council leader were to countermand one of your
orders to the palace guard, who would they obey?” asked Tier. Phoran didn’t answer, because the answer was obvious. “Gerant’s men will obey him, and he’ll obey you,” said Tier,
his question answered by Phoran’s silence. “But his Sept is in a border area.
He cannot stay in Taela for long without risking disaster to his own lands.” “You’re saying that if I make up a troop of the Passerines
they will obey me rather than the Raptors?” Tier smiled a little grimly. “The Raptors provide the Passerines
with drink, sex, and a place to lurk about and pretend to be dangerous. They
are sent out periodically to destroy a tavern or rape and pillage or maim.
There are sixty of them and I’ve seen five or six already that I wouldn’t want
at my back—but mere are some good men. If you make them feel like men, not
boys, they will follow you to hell and back.” Phoran was flattered, but he knew what he was. “They won’t
follow me, Tier. A drunkard and a stupid fop.” “You may be right,” agreed Tier readily. “But that’s not who
you are, Phoran. It is what you once allowed yourself to become. But you do not
smell of alcohol tonight, and there’s not a stupid man alive who ever got the
best of the Council of Septs. Be honest with them, Phoran; they know what you
have done. Lead and they will follow, my emperor. Just as Gerant and I follow.” Phoran swallowed hard. “Get me a list of the men you think
could work.” “I’ll do that,” agreed Tier. “Let me have some more time
with them first, maybe a couple of weeks. Then I’ll have a better idea who is
suitable and who is not.” He hummed a haunting descant to go with the song he
played, and then suddenly he smiled. “I have one for you already. There’s a
young man named Collarn. Do you know him?” Phoran shook his head. “He is a musician, but one with more technical ability than
talent. What he is good with are instruments and their care. And the stranger
the instrument, the better he likes it.” Tier silenced his strings. “Am I
mistaken in assuming that this labyrinth of yours might have a musical
instrument or two?” Phoran laughed and held up a hand. “I’ll find out.” After a moment, Tier said, “If the Raptors are playing games
with the merchant guilds as you think, you might go to them if you need more
support. It seems to me that a group who’s being blackmailed, like the Weavers’
Guild is, wouldn’t be unhappy at removing their blackmailer’s ability to hurt
them.” Phoran smiled back, “Likely not.” He closed his eyes and listened to the music, wondering when
he’d ever been this content before. This was the feeling he’d been looking for
since his uncle died. He had a larger purpose, if he could hold on to the gains
he’d made today. But there was more, too: for the first time in his life he
felt like an adult. He smiled to himself—Tier was right, it was a powerful
feeling. Chapter 14Tier staked out a table on the edge of the Eyrie where he
could observe the Passerines. Myrceria sat with him as she usually did,
never giving the appearance of being bored. He wondered at her attentions,
though he said nothing to her. She was in charge of the running of the Eyrie:
the servants, whores, and cooks all looked to her for guidance. From little
things the Passerines let drop, she was a great favorite of several of the
Raptors and a few of the older Passerines. Even so, none of them approached her
while she was with him, and, if he was out of his cell, she was with him. She was not the only one who attended him, though. Wherever
he went there were always a few Passerines who came to gossip and quiz him
about his Me as a Traveler. Since Tier had never so much as seen a Traveler
clan, he told them stories of being a soldier instead—which they seemed
perfectly happy with. • All the while he watched them. Sorting the salvageable
from the worthless in a process the Sept of Gerant had called “sieving the
ferrets.” The Sept would gather all of the new recruits together and start them
training with two or three veterans. Then he’d send in a man just to
observe—usually Gerant himself, though Her had done that duty more than once. At the end of several weeks, the observer would pick out the
troublemakers, the cowards, and the men just not physically cut out for warfare
and send them on their way with a bit of silver for their trouble. Tier found that sorting the boys of the Silent Path was a
bit more difficult because the Path encouraged just the kind of behavior he was
looking to weed out He’d found five or six that he’d not have in any of his
fighting troops, and ten more that he’d have been able to whip into shape eventually—but
he was going to turn these boys over to Phoran, not an experienced military
leader. Phoran had good instincts, but he also had some things that
would make commanding a group like the one Her proposed difficult. First of
all, he was young. But worse was his reputation. It would make leading the
Passerines in anything but drunken debauchery difficult. Tier had decided that he’d have to do a little training
first He took a judicious sip of his ale. He’d just wait until the next fight
broke out—which, if the night ran to form, would be in the next hour or so. “Came and knocked on our suite this morning,” Collarn was
saying with palpable excitement “My father thought they’d come to arrest me for
something stupid I’d done. I thought he’d die of shock when they told him that
the Emperor had decided that the Keeper of Music needed help and that the
masters at the School of Music had recommended me for the position.” Tier smiled at him. “So are you going to take the job?” Collarn grinned back. “And have to slave around after an old
man for years, cleaning, tuning, and refinishing instruments? Absolutely. Do
you know the kinds of things that are rabbited away in these rooms?” He gave a
vague wave around to indicate the palace. “Neither do I. But I’ve already
gotten to play instruments that are worth more than all my family’s holdings
combined.” Tier talked with him a bit more, and gradually turned the conversation
over to Myrceria. When she had Collarn’s attention fully engaged, Tier excused
himself and began meandering through the auditorium because the unmistakable
sounds of another fight were starting to rumble from somewhere near the stage. He spoke casually to a few boys as he passed. By the time he
made it to the fight, a crowd had gathered around to call encouragement to the
combatants. They parted for Tier willingly enough. Once he had a clear view of
the action, Tier folded his arms and watched. The first boy was Toarsen, who was a hotheaded, bitter young
man and, like most of his fellows, spoiled by too much money and nothing to do.
But he was smart, which Tier liked, and he wasn’t a coward. His opponent was a little bit of a surprise, one of the
twenty-year-olds who Tier had pegged as the worst kind of troublemaker, the
ones who sat by and let other people do their dirty work. Nehret was not one of
the boys who usually found themselves in duels. Watching them closely, Tier could see signs that both of
them had been trained to sword since birth, as many noblemen were, but they
were trained as duelists, not as soldiers. When he’d seen enough, Tier turned to the boy on his right,
“May I borrow your sword?” The boy flushed and fumbled, but handed the weapon over.
When Tier asked the boy on his left for his sword also, that young man laughed,
drew with a flourish and presented it to Tier on one knee. With a short sword
in either hand, Tier walked into the makeshift combat floor. He watched closely for a moment, staying out of both opponents’
immediate line of sight as he tested the swords he held for balance. They were
lighter than the one he’d left in Redem and of a slightly different design—made
for letting blood rather than killing, he thought. Finished with his preparations, he darted forward and attacked.
Toarsen lost his sword altogether. Nehret kept his blade, but only at the cost
of form and balance. He landed ignominiously on his rump. “If you’re going to fight,” said Tier. “At least do it
right. Nehret, you lose power because your shoulders are stiff—you’re making
your arms do all the work.” Tier turned his back to Nehret, knowing from the
past few days of observation just how well the boy would take being criticized
and what he would do about it. “Toarsen,” Tier said. “You need to worry less about trying
to scratch your opponent, and more about defending yourself. In a real fight
you’d have been dead a half dozen times.” He turned and caught the blade Nehret
had aimed at his back. “Watch this and see what I mean,” continued Tier as if he
weren’t fending off the angry boy’s blows. It wasn’t as easy as he made it
look. “Nehret is extending too much—ah, see? That attack is what I was talking
about earlier. If you’d had your body behind it instead of just your, arm it
might have accomplished something. Look, he wants to really hurt me, but he’s
been so trained to go for touches rather than hits that he doesn’t stand a
chance of hurting me beyond a scratch or two. That’s the problem with too much
dueling, you don’t know what to do in a real fight” Tier put his left hand behind his back to get that blade out
of his way. Then he turned the blade in his right so that when he hit Nehret he
didn’t take off his arm, just numbed it so the boy lost his sword. Tier tapped him on the cheek. “By the way,” he said, “never
go after an opponent when his back is turned unless there is more at stake than
your pride.” Then he turned his back to Nehret again, knowing that he’d gone a
fair way to reducing the amount of influence the boy had upon the other
Passerines in the last few minutes. “Toarsen, why don’t you try a round against
me?” After the council meeting, Phoran found that he was quite
popular. People followed him wherever he went—to his bedchamber if he
didn’t get the door shut fast enough. Tradition would keep all the Septs at the
palace until just before harvest; if they kept this up until then, he’d have
the whole lot of them thrown out. Finally, having had enough of the fawning,
resentful Septs, Phoran sent for Avar to go riding with him. He’d been avoiding Avar, since he’d put words to the fears
he’d always had. It was poor payment for the Sept’s swift support during the
council meeting, and Phoran had to do something to change it. In the stable, he mounted
without aid, but he had other things on his mind and took little note of
it. For hours he dragged Avar from one merchant guild master to the next. It
was not out of the ordinary for the Emperor to visit a guild master’s shop—an
emperor would hardly buy goods from a lesser man. If anyone was watching
Phoran—and he thought there was at least one man following them—they would see
that Phoran purchased something at every shop. Phoran knew all the guild masters of course, but this was
the first time he’d set himself to be pleasant to them. After they left the
Weavers’ Guild, Avar gave in to the curiosity Phoran had seen building all
morning. “You don’t need a bed hanging,” said Avar. “You could care
less about silver candy dishes and tables with fluted legs. Just what are you
doing?” Phoran had come to believe Avar innocent of anything other
than being assigned to keep the Emperor company and told to keep him occupied.
Even so, he didn’t quite trust his own evaluation. He should not have had Avar
come with him. Blade tossed his head, and Phoran let his reins slide
through his fingers then gradually shortened them again to keep a light hold on
the stallion. “After my uncle died, who told you to befriend me?” Avar stilled. “It’s all right,” said Phoran, though he watched the crowded
streets rather than Avar. “I just would like to know who it was.” “My father,” said Avar. “But it wasn’t—” “I suspect it was,” said Phoran ruefully. “I was, what,
twelve? And you seventeen. It would have been an unhappy chore—and I thank you
for it.” He took a deep breath and chose to trust. “I’m trying to
build some kind of a power base. The Septs will require a lot of work on my
part before I know who will back me and why. But the city is as important to
the stability of the Empire as the Septs. I thought it would be good to find
backing here, where the Septs are too proud to look.” “I do like you,” said Avar quietly. “I always have.” “Ah,” said Phoran, for lack of anything better to say. How
could Avar have liked him when everyone, including Phoran himself, had despised
him? What had there been to like? But Avar had done his best to forward Phoran’s plans, and for
that, and for so many years of duty, Phoran owed him the chance to keep his
white lies. They rode in silence to the shop of the master importer, who
brought goods from all over the Empire and beyond. “Is Guild Master Emtarig in?” asked Phoran of the boy who
manned the shop. “Not now, sir. May I help you?” He was new, this boy, and Phoran doubted that he knew even
who it was who entered the shop. Phoran was dressed in riding clothes without
imperial symbols—there was nothing to say who he was except his face. “Boy,” said Avar, gently enough, “tell your master that the
Emperor awaits him in his shop.” The boy’s eyes darted between Phoran and Avar, trying to decide
who was the Emperor. At last he bowed low to Avar and scuttled through a
curtained passage and, from the sound of his feet, up the stairs to the
master’s private lodgings. Phoran began sorting among the items on the laden shelves
and hid his smile. Avar couldn’t help that he looked more like an emperor than
Phoran did. By careful negotiations with the other guilds, the importer’s
guild members could sell items that were not made in the city. There were
beautifully tanned skins of animals Phoran had never seen—and likely never
would. Valuable blown-glass goblets stood on a high shelf where no one was
likely to knock them off accidentally. Phoran was fingering a handful of
brightly colored beads that caught his attention when he heard the boy leap
back down the stairs. He didn’t turn until the guild master said, “Most Gracious Emperor,
you honor my shop.” “Master Willon?” Phoran said with honest delight. He had to
turn back to put the beads away. “I thought that you had retired to some gods’
forsaken province, never to return to Taela?” “Careful, Phoran,” said Avar, who was grinning. “He went to
Redem, which is part of my Sept.” “And Leheigh is truly a gods’ forsaken place,” agreed
Phoran. “What business brings you back? I hope that there is nothing wrong with
Master Emtarig.” “My son is well,” said Willon. “But I have not seen my grandchildren
in too long. I thought it was time to visit. My son is out to the market to
speak with the Music Guild about a drum I brought back with me. Also, I had
some people to see here.” “Good,” said Phoran. He thought of asking Willon what he
knew of a man named Tier—but when he spoke, all he said was, “What would you
take for three of these hangings?” He would ask Tier about Willon instead. They bargained briskly until they reached a price both
thought fair. Phoran let it drag on for longer than he might have, hoping to
catch Emtarig. Willon was an old friend of his uncle’s, but Emtarig was the
master guildsman now, the man Phoran needed to impress. But Emtarig did not
return, so Phoran paid for the hangings and asked Willon to send the goods to
the palace at his leisure. They went to three more guild masters and bought a cobalt
blue glass jar, four copper birds that sang in the wind, and an eating knife
inlaid with shell before Phoran headed back to his rooms for a private evening
meal with Avar. They talked, but not about anything serious. Soon, thought Phoran, he’d tell Avar all that he’d found out
about the Path—but not yet. Avar wouldn’t believe him as easily as Tier had; he
wasn’t used to Phoran being anything except a jaded drunkard. Though to do him
justice, Avar didn’t have the motivation to believe in evil that Tier had. Tier returned to his room tired, bruised, and ultimately
satisfied—a usual state these days. His daily sword lessons had become more of
a favorite activity than the dueling had ever been. The Passerines blossomed under his attention and some, especially
Toarsen, had come around and grown more than he’d thought possible. He’d always
had a knack for turning boys into fighting men, which was why Gerant offered
him a job in his personal guard when there were other men, born in the Sept,
who were as good or better with weapons. There were a few that weren’t worth saving. Nehret was one,
and there was one of the youngest batch who was, if Tier wasn’t mistaken, one
of those very few who seemed to be born without any morals or courage at all. He’d toady to
those more powerful and hurt anyone he saw as weaker. In a few years, if he
wasn’t already, he’d be a rapist and murderer, and never lose a night’s sleep
over it. Tier had set Toarsen and his large friend Kissel to watch over that
one and protect the younger Passerines. The door to his room was open. Some of the boys would stop
in at night, so nothing struck him as odd until he saw who it was. “Myrceria?” Sitting on his bed, her legs folded neatly underneath her,
she smiled at him brightly. “I hope that you don’t mind that I came here this
evening.” “Not at all,” he said. She looked away. “Play something for me, please,” she said.
“Something to make me laugh.” He closed the door and sat on the foot of his bed, taking
the lute off the hooks he’d had installed in the wall. He played a bit of
melody on the lute, tuning automatically until it was acceptable. “How do you do it?” she asked. “Collarn doesn’t like
anyone—and they generally return his feeling with interest. The only thing he
loves is music. He works so hard at it, and he is never good enough. He hated
the thought that because of your magic you would play better than he, no matter
what he did or how much he practiced. I saw you take his hatred and turn it to
hero worship in less than an hour. Telleridge said that you can’t use your
magic on us.” “It’s not magic,” Tier said. “Collarn loves music, and that
is more important to him than all the hurts the world has dealt him. I just
showed him that I loved music, too.” “What about the rest?” she asked. “The Passerines follow you
around like lost puppies.” “I like people,” said Tier with a shrug. “I don’t
think most of these boys are used to dealing with someone who likes them.” Unexpectedly she laughed, but it wasn’t a happy sound. “The
Masters are very concerned with what you have done to their control of the
Passerines. Be careful.” She turned her head and he saw that there was a bruise on
her jaw. “Who hit you?” he asked. She picked up a pillow and began straightening the fringe.
“One of the Masters told Kissel that they were worried because Collarn was
spending so much time away from the Eyrie. They told Kissel that he was to
remind Collarn where his loyalties should lie—and Kissel refused them. He said
that you would not approve of him picking on someone weaker than himself.” Tier stilled his strings. “I don’t suppose it even crossed
his mind to agree and then either fake it—or tell me about it. Ellevanal save
me from honest fools. Why couldn’t they have gone to Toarsen?” Myrceria stared at him, her hands stilled. “You’ve done it
on purpose, haven’t you? You’re taking control from the Masters on purpose. A
month ago Kissel would have been happy to please the Masters, to win the fear
of the other Passerines. How did you do it?” Tier played a few notes of a dirge Collarn had played for
him on a violin—it sounded odd on a lute. “They are trying to ruin those boys,” he said at last, “to
turn them into something much less than they could be.” He’d been certain that she was a spy for Telleridge, and
that might still be true—but his instincts told him that it wouldn’t take a lot
to turn her against the Masters of the Path. He would just have to find the
right words. He played a few more measures. “What happens to the ones who
don’t play their little game, Myrceria? Boys like Collarn who would never agree
to the kinds of real damage the Path metes out? Or ones like Kissel, who is discovering
that protecting someone weaker than he is makes him feel better about himself
than tormenting them ever did?” She didn’t say anything. “There aren’t as many Raptors as there should be,” he said
gently. “Not for the numbers of Passerines they have.” “That’s how they progress in the Path,” she whispered. “The
boys who would be Raptors are given the other boys’ names—the ones like
Collarn. They have to bring back proof that they have killed the bearer of the
name they were give before they are Raptors.” She set the pillow aside. “How do you do that?” she said. “If they knew what I told you, they would kill me.” “You know it is wrong,” he told her. “You know they must be
stopped.” “By whom?” she said, her incredulousness fueled by anger.
“You? Me? You are a prisoner in their power, Tier of Redem. You will die as
they all do at the end of their year. And I am as much a prisoner as you.” “Evil must always be fought,” Tier said. “If you don’t
fight—then you are a part of it.” She rose to her feet and walked without haste to the door.
“You know nothing of what you face, or you would not be so arrogant, Bard.” She shut the door tightly behind her. Well, thought Tier, that was unexpected. Whores
learn early that survival means that they have to look out for themselves. Myrceria
had been a whore for a long time, but she wasn’t talking like a whore who cared
for no one else. She cared about those boys. She wasn’t happy about it, but
she cared. Tier slapped one of the scrawny first-year Passerines on the
shoulder after the boy finally executed the move Toarsen had been struggling to
teach him for days. “Drills,” Tier called. There were groans and half-hearted protests,
but they formed up in three ragged lines, lines that straightened at his silent
frown. “Begin,” he called, and worked with them. Drills were the
heart of swordplay. If a man had to think about his body and how to move his
sword, he’d be too slow to save himself. Drills taught the body to respond to
information from eyes and ears, leaving the mind to plan larger strategy than
just how to meet the next thrust. The sword he held wasn’t the equal of the one he’d taken
from some nobleman on the battlefield, but it was balanced. Myrceria had
brought it to him when he requested it. Tier’d continued to work with his sword over the years, but
the past weeks had sharpened him until he’d almost reached the speed and
strength he’d held while he was a soldier. His left shoulder was always a bit
stiff until he worked it out, but otherwise he hadn’t lost much flexibility to
age. He drilled with the boys until sweat made his shirt cling uncomfortably
to his shoulders, then he brought his sword around in a flashy stroke that
ended with it in its sheath. “Pools!” shouted the boys in one voice, and they dashed,
swords in hands, to the washroom to play in the cold pool. Tier laughed and shook his head when Collarn stopped to invite
him to the waterfight. “I’ve no wish to drown before my time,” he avowed. “I’ll
wash up in my rooms.” Loyalty, he thought, watching the last of them disappear
into the hall, was won by sweating with them. “They’ve improved,” said Telleridge. Tier hadn’t noticed the Master, but he’d been concentrating
on the boys. He took a glass of water from a servant. “They have,” he said, after taking a long drink. “Some of
them had further to go than others.” “I knew that you were a soldier, but you were more than
that—I’ve been looking into it,” Telleridge said. “Remarkable that a peasant
boy, no offense, could be set to command soldiers. Are you one of the old Sept
of Leheigh’s by-blows?” “Do you know where I’m from?” asked Tier with a lazy smile
as he handed the empty glass off to one of the silent waiters. “The Sept of Leheigh,” replied Telleridge. Tier shook his head. “I’m from Redem, the first settlement
the Army of Man created after the Fall of the Shadowed, named for the Hero of
the Fall, Red Ernave. We are farmers, tanners, bakers ...” He shrugged. “But
scratch a Redemi very deeply and you’ll find the blood of warriors. If you’ll
excuse me, I need to wash up and change clothes.” When Tier reached his cell, he closed his door and washed
quickly with water from the basin left there for that purpose. Once he’d
changed into clean clothes he lay down on his bed. The last time Phoran had visited, a few days ago, Gerant had
sent word that he was on his way. It couldn’t be too soon for Tier’s comfort:
the Masters weren’t going to wait forever while Tier wrested control of the
Passerines from them. He woke for lunch and spent the rest of the day in his usual
manner, talking and socializing in the Eyrie. In the evening he played for
them, mostly raunchy army songs—but he feathered in others, songs of glory in
battle and the sweetness of home. Looking over the faces of the men who listened to his music
he knew triumph because, given a chance, most of them would grow into fine men.
Men who would serve their emperor, a boy who was showing signs of being the
kind of ruler a man could take pride in serving: shrewd and clever with a
streak of kindness he tried hard to hide. When he returned to his room for the night, Myrceria tucked
her arm flirtatiously in his and accompanied him. When they were inside his room, she dropped her flirtation
and his arm and settled on his bed. Stroking the coverlet absently she said, “I
swore I was done talking to you. I have survived here a long time—and I did it
by keeping my mouth shut. How dare you demand more of me?” She said it without
heat. “I have no power to affect the men who rule here. I am just a whore.” Tier leaned against the wall opposite the bed, crossed his
feet at the ankles and did his best to look neutral. “I haven’t seen the sun since I was fifteen,” she murmured,
almost to herself. “Sometimes I wonder if it still rises and sets.” “It does,” said Tier. “It does.” “Telleridge is planning a Disciplining.” She flattened her
hand and stared at it as though she’d never seen it before. “What is a Disciplining?” asked Tier, not liking the sound
of it at all. “When a Passerine disobeys a Raptor, they hold a meeting to
decide what his punishment will be. Then they are punished in the Eyrie with
all the Passerines in attendance. They usually do one every year, just as a
reminder.” “Who is being disciplined?” asked Tier. They wouldn’t pick
him, he thought; they were too smart for that. They didn’t need a martyr, they
needed an example. “I don’t know,” she said. “Collarn,” he said. “Or maybe Kissel or Toarsen. But Collarn
if they’re smart. If they hurt Toarsen, Kissel won’t stand for it. If they hurt
Kissel, Toarsen will go to his brother—and Avar has enough friends, including
the Emperor, to hurt the Path. Collarn has no close friends except for me, and
he’s the kind of person that people expect bad things to happen to. When it does, it won’t disturb the Passerines much.” “That’s what I thought,” said Myrceria softly. “I like
Col-lam. He has a vicious tongue when he wants to, but he’s always polite to
the people who can’t defend themselves.” Tier heard the grief in her voice. “This is more than a caning
or a beating,” he said. “All of the boys are forced to participate in the Disciplining
in some way—and the punishment can be anything,” she said. “Telleridge is very
creative. Whipping is the most common, but some of the others are worse. One
boy they forced to drink water ... he passed out, and I think he died. They
poured water on his face while he choked and gagged. And when he stopped, they
just kept pouring.” “Can you make sure I know about it before it happens?” he
asked. She kept her eyes averted, but nodded quickly. “If I know in
advance. I don’t always.” “Can you get word to Collarn?” If they could warn him ... “Tomorrow,” she said after a moment. “I have to do it myself—I
can’t trust any of the girls with a message like that And I can’t leave the
Path’s rooms anymore than you can. Tomorrow should be soon enough;’ She spoke
those words quickly, as if she could make it true just by saying so. “It should
take a day or two for them to arrange to get word to everyone anyway.” “Right,” he said. “Tell him to find a reason to leave town
for a week.” She nodded, started to get up to leave, but then settled
back, wrapping her arms around her middle. “Would you play something for me?
Something cheerful so I can sleep?” He was tired, but she was tired, too, and no more than she
could he have slept—not with the knowledge that the Masters had decreed that
one of his boys was going to suffer for what Tier had done. “I’m not going to sleep anytime soon either,” he said.
“Music would be nice.” He sat on the other end of his bed and started to tune his
lute again. He’d just finished bringing the second course of strings in accord
with the rest, when the door opened unexpectedly. Tier’d grown used to the respectful knocks of his captors—even
Phoran knocked. It was too early for a visit from Phoran. Tier opened his mouth
for a reproval but stopped, shocked dumb when Lehr entered the room wearing
Tier’s own sword. Joy lit Lehr’s face, then dimmed a bit when he looked past
Tier and saw Myrceria. He made a move to block the door—perhaps Tier thought
with a touch of amusement that threaded past his astonishment, to allow Tier to
assume a less compromising position. Did Lehr actually think that his father
would take a leman? But the door popped open wider before Lehr could reach it,
and Jes took two full strides into the room. The comfortable temperature of the
room plummeted until Tier could see his own breath, and Myrceria let out an abortive
squeak. Tier got to his feet slowly, because it was never smart to
move too quickly around Jes in this mode, and opened his arms. Jes’s glance
swept the room comprehensively. But he apparently didn’t see anything too
threatening in Myrceria because he took two steps forward and wrapped his arms
around Tier. “Papa,” he breathed as the room warmed. “Oh, Papa, we
thought we’d never find you.” “Of course you did.” A woman’s voice, deep, rich, and
beloved filled the room like the sound of a cello! Tier looked over Jes’s
shoulder to see his wife enter. “Ever since Hennea told us that he’d been taken
alive. Are you well?” Seraph looked so much like the empress-child he’d first met
that it made him smile. An ice princess, his sister had called her with
contempt Being a straightforward person herself, Alinath had never seen that
the cool facade could hide all manner of emotions that Seraph chose not to
share. “I’m fine,” Tier said, and seeing that she was not going to
run into his arms immediately, he continued speaking, “and much happier than I
was a few minutes ago. Lehr, come here.” Lehr had grown in the months since he’d seen him last, Tier
thought, hugging him tightly. So had Jes for that matter; his oldest son was a
little taller than Tier now. “We missed you,” said Lehr, returning his hug. “I missed you, too.” He held him for a moment more. “Lehr killed some people,” said Jes. “He saved Mother.” Lehr stiffened in his arms, but Tier merely hugged him
tighter. “I’m sorry, son,” he said. “Killing another man is not something that
should rest easily on your shoulders.” When he stepped back at last, he looked at Seraph, who’d
stayed by the open door. “Is Rinnie out there, too?” As was her habit with him, she answered the real question he
asked. “She’s safe with your sister. Frost, it seems, was the only family casualty
of this mess—though we were quite worried about you until just now.” “They killed Frost?” She nodded, “To make it look as if the both of you had
walked into one of the Blighted Places. We might have believed it if a cousin
of mine hadn’t straightened us out.” She hadn’t looked at Myrceria, but he knew that she didn’t
have any cousins. She must have met another Traveler. “It’s not safe for your cousins here,” he warned. She smiled like a wolf scenting prey. “Oh they know that,”
she said. “I just hope these solsenti of the Secret Path choose to try
their tricks again.” Her tongue lingered on “Secret Path,” making it sound
childish and stupid, which, of course, it was. “You know about the Secret Path?” he said. “We know about the Secret Path,” said Lehr. “They’re killing
Travelers and stealing their Orders.” “What?” said Tier, looking at Seraph. She nodded. “They take them from the dying Traveler and
place them in a stone that they wear on jewelry so that they can use them.” “How did you find out so much?” he asked. “Hennea told us,” said Jes helpfully. “My cousin,” agreed Seraph. “They have someone in Redem who has been watching our whole
family,” said Tier. “Not anymore,” said his wife coolly. “Mother killed him.” Jes had found a perch on top of a small
table and was playing with the vase that had occupied the table first. Tier glanced back at Myrceria. “I told you they’d be sorry
if they ever ran afoul of my wife. Myrceria, I’d like you to meet my family. My
wife, Seraph; my eldest son, Jes; and my youngest son, Lehr. Seraph,-Jes, Lehr,
this is Myrceria, who has helped make my captivity bearable.” Jes nodded with the shy manner that characterized him in
front of strangers, Lehr made a stiff bow, and Seraph turned on her heel and
walked out the door. Lehr’s smile died, so Tier took a moment to explain to him.
“She knows me too well to think I’ve taken a mistress after all these years—as
you should. Myrceria is an ally, so be polite. I need to take a moment with
your mother.” He followed Seraph and closed the door behind him softly.
Seraph was studying the stone wall of the hall as if she’d never seen stone
laid upon stone before. They were safe enough, he thought. Anyone who walked
down this hall was coming to see him—and at this hour that meant one of the Passerines.
There was time, so he waited for her to show him what she needed from him. “There is death magic in these stones,” she said. She didn’t
sound as if it bothered her. “They’ve been killing people for a long time,” he said.
“There’s a message awaiting you in Redem telling you that I’m still alive. It
should have gotten there by now.” “Hopefully someone will direct the messenger to Alinath,”
said Seraph, without looking away from the wall. She set a palm against it and
said, “Once we convinced her you were alive when you left, she was most eager
to hear if you’d stayed that way.” She pushed away from the wall abruptly. When she turned toward
him he thought she’d look at him at last, but her eyes caught on the floor and
stayed there. “We need to get you out of here,” she said in a low voice.
“This place is a labyrinth, but Lehr found you, which was the difficult part.
He’ll be able to backtrack on the way out.” “I can’t leave. Seraph,” he said. Her face came up at that. “There’s a boy about Jes’s age who’s going to be hurt because
of me if I can’t put a stop to it—and they’ve put some sort of hex on me anyway
so I can’t wander around at will.” She reached out to touch him for the first time since she’d
appeared at his door. Gripping his hands lightly, she turned his hands over to
look at his wrists. “I can break this,” she said positively after a moment. “But
it will take time—and will-do us no good, since as long as this boy of yours is
in danger you won’t leave anyway.” He twisted his hands until he could grip hers. “Seraph,” he
said. “It’s all right, now.” Her hands shook in his but he could only see the top of her
head. “I thought you were dead,” she said. She looked up, and the empress was gone, lost in a face wild
with emotion. Unexpectedly he felt the lick of her magic caress his palms. “I can’t do that again,” she told him. “I can’t lose
anyone I love again.” “You love me?” He moved his hands to her shoulders and
pulled her close. She leaned against him like a tired infant. It was the first time she’d said that to him, though he knew
that she loved him with the same fierceness that she loved her children. She
had been trained to maintain control, and he knew that she was uncomfortable
with the strength of the emotions she felt Because he understood her, he’d
never pushed her to tell him something that he’d known full well. He knew it would make her angry but he had to tease her. “I
had to get myself kidnapped by a bunch of stupid wizards and dragged halfway
across the Empire to hear that? If I’d known that’s what it would take, I’d
have gotten myself kidnapped twenty years ago.” “It’s not funny,” she said, stomping on his foot in her effort
to get away from him. “No, it’s not,” he said, pulling her tighter. The ferocious
joy of holding her when he’d been half-certain he’d never see her again kept
him teasing her beyond prudence. “So why didn’t you tell me you loved me
before? Twenty years didn’t give you enough time? Or did you only figure it out
when you thought I was dead?” “Oh, aye, if I’d have told you—you’d just have said the same
back,” she said. Her answer made no sense to him—except that she really
didn’t find anything amusing in the situation. He didn’t want to hurt her
feelings, so he tucked the laughter of her presence inside his heart and tried
to understand what had upset her. “If you had told me that you loved me,” he said carefully,
“I’d have told you the same.” “You wouldn’t have meant it,” she said firmly. “Haven’t you
spent the last twenty years trying to make up for marrying me by being the
perfect husband and father?” Her words stung, so his were a little sharp in return. “I’d
have meant it.” “You married a woman you thought a child, married her so
that you would not have to take over the bakery from Alinath and Bandor. You
felt guilty.” “Of course I did,” he agreed. “I told them we were married.
I did it knowing that you were too young for marriage and that you would have
to give up your magic and your people. I knew that you were frightened of
rejoining the Travelers and having to take responsibility for so many lives
again—but I knew that was where you felt you belonged and I kept you with me.” “You did it to save yourself from being forced into the
bakery,” Seraph said. “And that made you feel guilty. If I’d told you then that
I loved you—you’d nave said you loved me, too, because you wouldn’t hurt my
feelings.” Abruptly Tier understood. He pulled her back to him and
laughed. He started to speak, but he had to laugh again first. “Seraph,” he
said. “Seraph, I was never going to be a baker—even Alinath knew that. I wanted
you. And I was extremely glad that circumstances forced you to turn to me. I
don’t know that I loved you then—I just knew that I couldn’t let you get away
from me.” He stepped back so he could look into her face. “I love you, Seraph.” He watched, delighted, as tears filled her eyes and spilled
over, then he kissed her. “I was so afraid,” she said when she could talk. “I was so
afraid that we’d be too late.” She sniffed. “Plague it, Tier, my nose is
running. I don’t suppose you have something I can wipe it on?” He pulled back and stripped off his overshirt and handed it
to her. “Tier,” she said, scandalized, “that is silk.” “And we didn’t pay for it. Here, blow.” She did. He wadded up the shirt and wiped her eyes with a clean
spot. Then, the expression in his eyes holding her motionless, he tossed the
shirt on the floor. He put a hand on either side of her face and kissed her,
open-mouthed and hungry. “I love you,” she whispered when he pulled his head away,
breathing heavily. He kissed the top of her head and hugged her close. “I know
that,” he said. “I’ve always known that. Did you think that you could hide it
by not saying the words? I love you, too—do you believe it now?” Seraph started to answer him, but then remembered that he’d
know if she lied. Did she really believe him when he said that he loved her? Whatever he believed now, she knew she was right about the
reasons he’d married her in the first place—he needed a reason to leave the
bakery that would allow him to stay near enough so that he didn’t feel that he
was running away from his family again. But that didn’t mean that he wasn’t attracted
to her. It didn’t mean he couldn’t have grown to love her. Yes, she believed him. She started to say so, but she’d
waited too long. “You know, for an intelligent woman,” he said, exasperated,
“you can be remarkably stupid.” He threw up his hands and paced away from her.
“All right, all right. Maybe if I married a woman and felt I’d taken advantage
of her, if she asked me, I might tell her that I loved her. Maybe I wouldn’t
want to hurt her feelings. You could be right about that. But why do you
persist in believing that I couldn’t love you even if I felt guilty about
marrying you so young? Is it impossible that I’ve lusted after you since you
stood on the steps of that inn and defied the whole lot of grown men who’d just
gotten finished killing your brother?” She tried to hide her smile, but he saw it, and it only made
him angrier. So he did what he always did when she’d pushed past that air
of pleasant affability he showed the world. He dragged her back against him and
kissed her again. Hot and fierce he moved his lips on hers, forcing his tongue
through before she could welcome him. The stone was cold on her shoulders as his
hips settled heavily against her midriff and demonstrated quite admirably that,
if nothing else, his lust was quite real. “All right,” she said mildly, if a bit breathlessly, when he
freed her mouth at last. “I believe you love me. Likely our sons and that poor woman
you left with them believe you love me, too. Shall we go see?” He laughed. “I missed you, Seraph.” Chapter 15Inside Tier’s cell (for that’s what it was, even decked
out in luxuries befitting royalty) Seraph saw that she had been exactly
right about what everyone had been doing. Lehr looked uncomfortable, Jes,
inscrutable, and the woman, Myrceria, looked vaguely panicked. “I am sorry,” said Seraph sincerely to Myrceria. “I meant no
insult to you, Myrceria, but crying in front of strangers is not something I do
willingly. We had all but given Tier up for dead these months past and I could
hardly believe that he is here safe.” Myrceria looked distinctly relieved at Seraph’s calm manner.
She got to her feet. “Of course I understand; I’ll leave you, Tier, to your
reunion.” “Thank you,” said Tier. “Let me know about the Disciplining.” She paused by the door. “I won’t tell them that your family
is here,” she said. “I didn’t think you would,” said Tier. “Sleep well.” “I think I will,” she said and closed the door behind her. Tier sat down on the bed, pulling Seraph down next to him
and tucking her under his arm. Lehr sat on the other side of him, not quite
touching, but close. “So,” said Tier. “Tell me about your adventures. Not you, Seraph,
I want more than the bare bones. Lehr, what happened? You thought I was dead?” Seraph was happy to let Lehr do most of the talking. Tier
seemed to think that they were all safe here for now, and she was content with
his assessment. She closed her eyes and breathed in Tier’s scent, felt his
warmth against her side. At the end of the story. Her shook his head. “My love,” he
said, and she saw the laughter in his eyes. “You have changed: you brought a
whole Traveler clan out to Taela to rescue me. When did you learn how to be so persuasive?” She scowled at him. “When I discovered it was more useful to
have pawns to do what I wanted them to than it was to kill them all and do it
myself.” Triumph flooded her when she saw that Tier wasn’t absolutely certain
she was joking until Lehr laughed. Tier rolled his eyes. “Leave for a season and see what
happens. The women and children don’t remember the respect they owe you. What
are you planning on doing with a whole clan?” “We’d have never found a way into the palace without them,”
said Seraph. Lehr laughed. “Turns out that one of the emperors hired Travelers
to work some magic for him a few generations back. He didn’t want to be seen
consorting with them, so he brought them in by a secret way.” “We went under the ground,” said Jes, his voice dreamy. “Fungus
hung from the sides of the tunnel like strings of melted cheese.” “Jes found a girlfriend,” said Lehr. • Tier looked at Seraph, but it was the first she’d heard of
it. Jes smiled sweetly, and said nothing. The girls of Rongier’s clan wouldn’t come within a dozen
yards of Jes if they could help it. “Hennea?” she said. Lehr grinned. “I think that’s how she feels about it,
too—sort of shocked and dismayed, but Jes is smug.” “Hennea is the Raven you found, right?” asked Tier. She nodded. “Don’t worry so, Mother,” said Jes. Tier smiled and kissed the top of her head. “Trust Jes,” he said.
“He’ll be all right.” He looked over at Lehr. “How do you like being a Hunter?” “He’s always been a Hunter,” said Seraph acerbically. She
wasn’t certain that she wanted to hear Lehr’s answer to that question. She
didn’t want her son to be unhappy. “He just didn’t know about it.” “The Lark of Rongier’s clan has been teaching me some things
that are pretty interesting,” said Lehr. Tier reached out and patted Lehr’s knee sympathetically. “Rinnie wanted to be a Guardian,” Jes said, his gentle eyes
gliding over Lehr. “She wanted to turn into a panther, like me.” “I’ll just bet she did,” said Tier. “I’ve missed you all.” “We should go, Papa,” said Jes abruptly. “We can’t,” answered Seraph. “One of Tier’s friends is in danger,
and the wizards here have bespelled Tier so he can’t leave the Path’s
domain.” She saw the Guardian rising through her son’s eyes and said, “It’s
nothing I can’t fix, but I’ll need a little time to study it. In any case he
won’t go until his friend is out of danger. Tier, Lehr’s told you our story,
tell us what happened to you.” They weren’t as polite an audience as he had been, interrupting
him frequently. Seraph pestered him for details about what little he recalled
from the times the Path’s wizards had taken him. Lehr teased him about the
women who’d bathed him and braided his hair and fretted when Tier told them how
he was imprisoned by magic. Jes was quiet until Tier told them about his royal
visitor. “The Emperor?” said Jes. “The Emperor visited you in your
cell?” “How did he know you were here?” asked Lehr suspiciously. “I’m sworn to secrecy so I need to get his permission before
I tell you,” said Tier. “But that’s another story entirely.” Both of the boys enjoyed Tier’s explanation of how he’d
begun winning over the Passerines. Seraph shook her head. “They didn’t know what they were doing,
kidnapping you.” “Well,” said Tier. “I may have outsmarted myself. Seems Telleridge tried to set one of my boys out on a bullying mission,
something that boy had done a number of times. Kissel refused and, being a
straightforward son of fellow, he told Telleridge that the reason he’d refused
was because I wouldn’t like it.” “Is he the one that you were worried about?” asked Seraph. “Myrceria told me tonight that the Masters, the Path’s
wizards, are organizing something they call the Disciplining.” He told them
what he knew of it. “I don’t think that they’ll actually go after Kissel; he’s
got friends in high places. I think they’ll take the boy that they tried to
send Kissel after.” He leaned his head back against the wall. “Seraph, you said
that Bandor and the Master in Redem were shadowed.” “Yes. Lehr and Jes both could see it.” He inhaled. “When Phoran and I combined all the information
that we had about the Path we came to some disturbing conclusions. That plague
that swept through the Traveling clans twenty years ago also visited the noble
houses of the Empire and when it was finished, the Emperor was dead, leaving
only an infant on the throne. Also a high percentage of the followers of the
Path found themselves Septs, though they might have been as many as eight or
ten people away from the inheritance when the plague hit.” “You think that there might be another one,” she said, cold
chills tightening her spine. “Not just shadowed, but willingly shadowed like
the Unnamed King. You think it might be this Telleridge?” He nodded. “Phoran’s sent for my old commander, the Sept of
Gerant. He’s on his way, now. With his military and tactical advice, Phoran
hopes that he can break the Path. If we take them by surprise and Phoran is
ruthless enough, he’ll be right.” “But Gerant won’t be here in time to save your boy,” said Seraph
softly. “Probably not.” “These Passerines of yours,” said Seraph thoughtfully. “They
won’t willingly participate in hurting another boy.” “I don’t think so,” said Tier. “Some of them, maybe,
but most of them won’t.” Seraph smiled. “Then the Masters will be straining to
enforce their will upon them with their stolen Bardic Orders. Tell me, Tier, if
all of the Path were in the same room together, how many would there be?” “There are about sixty Passerines,” he said. “I don’t know exactly
how many Raptors—I have the names of about a hundred. Perhaps double that.” “And the wizards,” said Seraph. “You said there were five.” “Five,” he agreed. “And a handful of apprentice and
hedge-witch types.” “We have an Owl, a Falcon, an Eagle, and two Ravens,” said
Seraph. “I don’t know how many ordinary wizards the clan has, but they’ll come
along. There are probably fifty Travelers who would love nothing more than an
excuse to attack a bunch of solsenti who’ve been preying upon Travelers.” “You are short one Owl,” said Tier. “They’ve done something
so that my magic doesn’t work on them, remember?” Seraph frowned. She didn’t like the mysterious magic that
these Masters had been working on Tier. “That kind of thing works better on
wizards than it does on Order-Bearers.” She tapped her fingers against her lips
as she worked it out. “You said that it just keeps your magic from working on
them, right?” He nodded. “That would be a very difficult and odd thing to do on purpose,”
Seraph said. “They’d have to have something personal from everyone who is a
follower to do that—blood or hair. It would be an incredibly complex spell and
the power it would require ...” She stopped when a better idea occurred to her.
“I’ll ask Hennea to be certain, but it sounds to me that it is more likely that
their spell is imperfect and erratic. Hennea told me that they don’t really
know as much about the Orders as they think. Blocking the powers of an ordinary
wizard would be simple if they had enough power. But in order to block the
powers of an Order-Bearer they’d have to be very specific about everything they
want to stop. I’ll bet that some of the odder magics still come to you without
a problem. Because they didn’t get it right, their spell will be unraveling
slowly.” She nodded because the explanation fit what she knew of magic and
Tier’s experience here. “Your magic didn’t work on them, because they and you know it won’t work. But
even that effect will fade with time.” She smiled at him. “But even if it doesn’t fade, you have already
made your contributions in the number of Passerines who will take your side. If
we attack them during the Disciplining, we’ll have the Travelers, both warriors
and wizards; our Order-Bearers; and most of the Passerines. You said that the
Disciplining is mandatory for the Passerines, but not the Raptors.” “That doesn’t mean that they won’t be there,” he said. “But
I see where you’re going. They’ll all be there, the Masters who are the real
danger. Once they are gone, Phoran can take his time to eliminate the rest.
We’ll have to talk to Phoran, though. I’ll not bring a clan of Travelers into
his palace without his permission if I can help it.” A light knock sounded at the door, sending Tier to his feet,
“A moment, a moment,” he said, glancing around the room, though he knew there
weren’t any hiding places. “Peace,” whispered Seraph. “He won’t see Jes, and—” She
turned to Lehr, but couldn’t see him either. “I’m going to have a talk with
Brewydd about what she’s teaching Lehr,” she murmured. “Go ahead and open the
door, Tier. He won’t see me either, not unless he’s one of your wizards.” With
a whisper of magic she ensured that she’d not attract any notice. Tier’s
visitor would see her, but he would just ignore her presence unless something
called her to his attention. Tier’s eyebrows climbed and his mouth quirked with amusement—at
himself, she thought It was one thing to know everyone in your family Could
work magic; it was quite another to have them do it. “Toarsen,” he said when he’d opened the door. “Come in.” “I came as soon as I heard,” said Toarsen. “The rumor’s being
passed all Over the Eyrie. There’s going to be a Disciplining.” “I heard,” said Tier. Seraph could see her husband weighing
some decision. “Toarsen,” he said, “if you needed to get in to see the emperor,
could you? At this time of night?” “I—I suppose I could,” Toarsen said, “but not without my
brother Avar’s help.” He hesitated and thrust his chin up. “But I won’t do anything that will imperil my emperor—even if
he’s a stupid sot more interested in the newest wine from Carek than in running
his Empire.” “Agreed,” said Tier. “What I’d like you to do is persuade
your brother to get you in to see the Emperor—tell him it’s urgent that you do
so. Then—” Tier paused and shook his head. “Then tell Phoran you have a message
for him that you can’t give him in front of anyone except for Avar. The Emperor
knows too much about you, my lad, to trust himself to you, but he trusts Avar.
When the three of you are alone, you tell Phoran that his Bard would like an urgent
word. Tell him that you and Avar will accompany him, if he doesn’t mind. Tell
Phoran that I have a plan, but time is of the essence.” Toarsen stared at him. “Phoran knows about you?” The Bard grinned wickedly. “Don’t go dismissing your emperor
out of hand, lad. I have a feeling that a lot of people have underestimated
him, and they’re about to get a—rude awakening.” Toarsen nodded slowly. “All right. I’ll do it. If I can’t
get in, I’ll come back alone.” “Good, lad,” said Tier, patting his shoulder and shooing him
out the door. He waited until the sound of Toarsen’s footsteps grew faint. “That was Toarsen, the Sept of Leheigh’s younger brother,”
he said, sitting back down beside Seraph. “He’ll find Phoran for us.” “You know,” muttered Seraph, who’d been working through
Tier’s story while he talked with the boy, “I knew that we were in trouble when
all of our children were born Ordered. I should have resigned myself to
fighting against another shadowed with the Emperor at my side years ago.” Jes looked back at her impassively, but Lehr smiled. “Maybe
the gods are making you make up for those wells and blights you didn’t fix for
all these years in one fell swoop.” Seraph stole Tier’s eye roll—she could do it when she chose.
“Cheeky. Carry them for nine months, feed them, clothe them, and what do I get?
Impertinence.” “Seraph,” Tier asked, “if they want my Order—why didn’t they
just take it? Why wait for a year?” “I’m not certain,” said Seraph, “but magic works better on something
you know well. I could cast a spell better on you than I could on a stranger.
Their magic isn’t foolproof; a lot of their stones don’t work right. The year
wait might be time for one of their wizards to get close to you so that their
spells will succeed.” Tier rubbed his face. “I can’t tell a solsenti wizard
from anyone else unless he’s gathering magic, can you?” Seraph shook her head. “I can see the Orders, if I look. But
simple wizards, no.” Tier yawned. Seraph frowned at him. “How many nights do you sit up plotting?” she asked briskly,
but didn’t wait for an answer. “Boys, can you settle yourselves to being quiet?
Tier, you won’t do anyone any good if you fall over asleep. You lie down here,
and the boys and I will keep watch until the Emperor comes.” He started to protest, and it was a mark of how tired he was
that he stopped himself. “My love, if you make yourself comfortable, I’ll lay
my head upon your lap and dream sweetly for a year.” “See,” said Lehr in a stage whisper, “that’s how you get
women to do things for you. You ought to try it, Jes. Think Hennea will let you
rest your weary brow upon her lap?” “Lehr,” said Jes, “shut up and let Papa sleep.” Seraph didn’t sleep, though truthfully she was tired as
well, but sitting peacefully on the soft bed with her husband’s head in her lap
was as effective as a week’s worth of sleep. While she waited she worked on
loosening the magic net the solsenti wizards had bound around Tier. She
didn’t fight them but just encouraged the unraveling that time would have
brought. When she had done what she could, she half-opened one eye
and saw that Lehr was sleeping sitting up. Jes was alert and watchful—he nodded
his head at her so that she would know that he’d seen her looking. The very
peace that had settled in her heart told her it was really Jes who watched and
not the Guardian. She thought it was a good sign that the Guardian would trust
in Jes. She closed her eye and let herself enjoy the quiet. “Someone’s coming,” said Jes softly. Tier rolled to his feet and stretched. “Thank you, love. Would you all please stand so that you aren’t directly in
line with the door—but no disguises, eh? If this isn’t Phoran, I’d rather keep
your presence quiet, but if it is Phoran, I don’t want him thinking that we’re
trying to ambush him.” “There’s three of them,” said Lehr as he obediently shifted
over without getting up. “One of them is Toarsen, one of them is wearing a lot
of metal, and the third is in soft-soled shoes.” Tier looked at Lehr in surprise. Well, thought Seraph, she’d
told him that the children had been growing into their powers. “How do you know it’s Toarsen?” Tier asked. Lehr grimaced, “I know. It bothers me, too. Mother says I’ll
get used to it. But I liked it better when I just thought I was a good
tracker—bringing magic into it robs me of the satisfaction of having a skill.
Toarsen’s wearing leather-soled boots and there’s a nail sticking out of one
heel. Gives him a stomp-click, stomp-click kind of walk.” There was a soft knock on the door, and Jes’s soundless response
made Seraph shiver with the cold. “Who is it?” asked Tier, deliberately sounding groggy and
irritable. “Phoran,” replied a firm tenor not a whit less irritable.
“Here at your command.” Tier grinned and opened the door. “Thank you for coming.
Your Greatness. Come in.” “I really hate that one,” said a young man who could be none
other than the Emperor. His bright eyes slid over Seraph and Jes, paused on
Lehr, and returned to Tier. “It’s bad enough to be Your Mightinessed and Your
Highnessed by people who consider you a fool. But to be insulted for my extra
weight”—he patted his waist, which was plump—“is beyond the pale. I hope you
didn’t wake me up to meet your family—although your wife is certainly lovely
enough to be worth any effort on my part. I’m afraid that Avar is miffed with
his brother for having the audaciousness to force him to get me up—and twice as
miffed that I hadn’t told him that I was meeting a prisoner in the bowels of
the palace.” Tier grinned at him. “How did you know they’re my family?” Phoran snorted. “A lovely Traveler lady and two boys—one who
looks like her and the other like you? Please, I’m supposed to be a drunkard
but I am not a complete idiot. I know that you told me she’d come, but isn’t
she a little early?” He turned gracefully and indicated the big man who’d closed
the door behind them—the one Lehr said was wearing metal. “Avar, I’d like to
introduce you to Tier of Redem—from your own Sept. Tier this is Avar, Sept of Leheigh,
and my friend.” “My Sept,” Tier said, bowing his head briskly. “Who are you that you call the Emperor to attend you?” said
Avar, ignoring Tier’s greeting. Jealous? thought Seraph. “I am his humble servant,” said Tier smoothly. “He’s helping me,” said Phoran. “The Path is more dangerous
than you think. It is thanks to Tier that I realized how dangerous. He’s been
helping to find out who the Raptors are and at the same time subverting the
Passerines.” “That’s why you started the sword drills,” said Toarsen,
sounding disillusioned. Seraph, being a mother, heard the unspoken—you didn’t
really care about us. “He told me,” said Phoran, not looking at Toarsen, “that
there were a number of young men who wanted but a little direction to be the
best chance I had of controlling my empire.” “You thought we could aid the Emperor?” said Toarsen,
sounding almost shocked. As if, thought Seraph with exasperation for the male half of
the species, being used by the Emperor were a great thing. “I know you can,” said Tier. “Where else is he likely to get
a bunch of hotheads who can fight and aren’t sworn men of some Sept or other?” “Collarn’s job,” said Toarsen. “You arranged Collarn’s job.” “Actually,” said the Emperor, clearing his throat. “That was
me.” Toarsen’s face was bewildered when he turned to Tier. “The
Emperor is a drunken sot,” he said, as if the Emperor weren’t standing next to
him. “He follows Avar around like a lost puppy and does whatever Avar tells him
to. You, Tier, are a bored soldier who has found a hobby to help make a year in
captivity pass more quickly. You find the Raptors annoying and the Masters even
more so. So you decided to see what you could do to tweak their tails and gain
the admiration of the Passerines. When you started, you found that you actually
liked a few of us.” “I was never allowed to be anything but a drunken sot,” said
Phoran coolly, but without anger. “And everyone follows Avar around like lost
puppies.” “I saw a bunch of rowdy boys being led into hell by a pack
of carrion-eaters,” said Tier. “As I rather liked some of you and despise men
who play games with other people’s lives—I decided to see what I could do about
the situation.” “It works because he does care,” added Lehr. “If he’d just
been trying to use you, you’d have seen through him.” Avar, leaning against the door, rubbed his face. “Would someone
care to tell us why we’re here now? Certainly there are better times for
theatrics than the wee hours of the morning.” The Path is preparing a move to preempt me from taking control
of the young men from them,” said Tier. “Myrceria told me that they are
intending to have a Disciplining—a particularly brutal method they employ to
keep their secrets. One of the boys is singled out and punished by everyone. I
gather that the boy who is punished sometimes doesn’t survive. I think that
they’ll choose Collarn—but they might take Toarsen or Kissel as they are the
three who are my closest associates.” Phoran humpfed, then said, “I can warn Collarn on my way
back to bed without anyone being the wiser. But we ought to finish the
introductions before we attend to business further. Do be a credit to your
parents’ instructions in manners and introduce us to your family, Tier.” Tier bowed and grinned sheepishly. “This is my wife Seraph,
Raven of the Clan of Isolda the Silent My son Jesaphi, whom we call Jes,
Guardian. My younger son Lehr, Hunter. Seraph, Jes, Lehr, may I introduce you
to Phoran the Twenty-Seventh.” Over the polite murmurs and shuffles, Toarsen said, “Twenty-Sixth.” Phoran grinned. “Only if you don’t count the first one. I
always do, since without him were wouldn’t have been an Empire, whatever his
son Phoran the First or Second said.” Toarsen smiled reluctantly. No wonder her husband liked this
boy who happened to be emperor, thought Seraph. They were very much alike. “I had intended to warn Collarn,” said Tier, returning to
the matter at hand. “But my wife pointed out that this Disciplining is the best
chance we’ll have of clearing the whole lot. Everyone is supposed to attend
them. They’ll be expecting some resistance from the Passerines—too many of them
have begun to look at the things the Path wants of them—but they won’t be
expecting an outside attack.” “When will it be?” asked Phoran. “Sometime in the next few days,” replied Tier. Phoran shook his head. “There are two hundred of them—and
five wizards, and the Sept of Gerant and his men aren’t here yet. I have—” “I have twenty men here,” said Avar, “who are my men, not my
father’s.” “And my wife tells me that she can bring another fifty or
so—light foot, armed mostly with knives with a few swords,” said Tier. “Travelers.” Suspiciously, Avar asked, “Why would you Travelers be interested
in this?” “Because our people are dying out,” Seraph said. “For as
long as I remember the Septs have been trying to destroy them. If my friends
help you, Phoran—would you be willing to return the favor?” Phoran nodded his head slowly. “I’ll do what I can. I don’t
have the power that an emperor should, and championing the Travelers is not
going to help. But I’ll do what I can.” “Will that be good enough?” asked Avar. Seraph smiled. “The Path have been killing Travelers for centuries.
We just didn’t know about them until now—if Phoran would not invite us in to
help him, we would go after them on our own. But it’s much safer to invade the
palace under imperial command.” “Myrceria will try and find out when this Disciplining will
take place,” continued Tier. “I’ll know sooner,” said Toarsen. “Myrceria will have to
wait until someone tells her about it—me they have to send for. With your
permission”—he glanced from Tier to Phoran as if he didn’t really know whose
permission he needed—“I’ll let Kissel know, too, in case it’s me they’ve
decided to use as an example.” “How much lead time do you need to bring in the Travelers?”
asked Phoran, and they all began planning. Seraph settled back and gave them information as they asked
for it. Clearly the Emperor, Avar, and Tier were having the time of their
lives, and the younger men were almost as bad—except for Jes, who seemed
content to stay in the background. It amused Seraph to see that the Emperor, the Sept of Leheigh,
and his younger brother all ceded the leadership to Tier, though they all
outranked him—and he had them hanging on his every word. Chapter 16The next morning Tier was bone-tired, but more peaceful than
he’d been for a long time. Seraph was here. Well, not here. She’d gone
off to play diplomat among the Travelers, which was pretty strange—the only
person that he knew less suited to diplomacy was Alinath. “Keep your guard centered,” he told one of his Passerines.
“Remember this isn’t about first blood, it’s about who lives and who dies. Make
sure you’re one of the former and not the latter.” He paced behind his troops, watching foot positions, when a
servant caught hold of his sleeve. “Telleridge requests a moment of your time.” “Toarsen,” called Tier. “Kissel. Run the drills for me. If
I’m not back, break when every man’s shirt is wet through.” Toarsen stepped out of the line and made a quick mocking salute
as he did. He didn’t look nearly as tired as Tier felt, and he’d had no more
sleep. It made Tier feel old. The servant took Tier to one of the smaller rooms that
served as the Raptors’ meeting halls and opened the door for Tier’s entrance.
The room had been partially screened off with a delicately carved wooden panel.
Four black-robed figures sat in gold upholstered chairs ringed in front of a
cheerful fire, two empty chairs in the center. Telleridge, also in his robes,
stood in front of the fire. Telleridge looked up when Tier entered, though the others
kept their eyes on the fireplace. “Ah, thank you for attending me. Baskins, you may leave.” The servant shut the door, leaving Tier alone with the
Path’s wizards. “Come have a seat, Bard,” Telleridge said in an unreadable
tone. Warily, Tier sat on the edge of one of the empty chairs as
the Master took the other. He had the odd impression that Telleridge’s calm was
just a thin film spread over turbulent waters. “You have cost us much, my friend,” Telleridge said. “Whatever
possessed you to try and take the Passerines from us? Did you think that we
would allow it?” “You aren’t doing anything with them,” replied Tier. “There
are a number of fine young men amongst the Passerines—and a few who are a waste
of shoe leather.” “They are useful to us,” said Telleridge, sounding distantly
amused. Tier took note of the effect, planning to save it for some time when he
wanted to be obnoxiously patronizing. “Just as they were. We’ve called a
Disciplining, which will return control to us, but I fear that very few of
these Passerines will make it to Raptor now. I was particularly upset when you
took the Sept of Leheigh’s young brother. I had great hopes for him. And it’s
too bad about the young musician, Collarn—we shall miss having music in these
halls when you both are gone.” “I see,” said Tier, deciding to let the Master direct the
conversation into the gently ironic tones he seemed to prefer. “I take it that
my demise will happen a little sooner than you planned?” There was a noise from behind the screen, but it was too
faint for Tier to identify. “I’m not any happier about it than you are,” the Master
said. Apparently the others had all been told to sit and be silent, because
none of them had done anything more exciting than breathe since Tier entered
the room. “Owls are few and far between, and this haste will destroy our plans.
That makes two failures in as many years. We’ve never had this much trouble
controlling a Bard—I assume it’s a Bardic talent you are using to win over the
Passerines?” Tier frowned at him. “How could it be? You’ve told me that
you have my Order under control.” He’d used the methods Gerant had taught him
instead, because he’d never relied on his Order for much—unlike a
Traveler-raised Bard. “I wonder that none of our other Bards have done such a
thing,” said the Master. Because a Traveler Bard was hardly likely to worry about the
lives of a bunch of solsenti thugs-in-the-making, thought Tier, but he
didn’t say anything. The Master waited politely, but when Tier didn’t respond he
shrugged. “At any rate, I, personally, am most distressed at a few other things
you’ve cost us,” he got to his feet and strolled to the screen, “Come, Bard.
And maybe you will be sorry as well.” For want of a better thing to do while surrounded by five
mages, Tier got slowly to his feet and followed the Master’s beckoning. The
others got up silently and followed. A woman was tied naked to a chair, and someone had obviously
been testing, in the time-honored fashion, how well flesh fared against knives
and other things. Her face was so battered that it was unrecognizable—but Tier
knew the hair. “Myrceria,” he said. She stiffened when he spoke, and he realized that her eyes
were so swollen that she must not be able to see at all. “Myrceria has been telling us things,” said Telleridge. “Haven’t
you, my dear?” He patted the top of her head, then took out a dagger and cut off
the gag. “I’m sorry,” she said, her face turned blindly toward Tier.
“I’m sorry sorry.” “Shh,” said Tier, putting some force behind the words. “It
doesn’t matter. Shh.” She kept shaking, but she quit apologizing. Either his words
worked, or Seraph was right about the unraveling of the Master’s spells and
she’d felt the magic push he’d given them. “I was angry about the Passerines,” said Telleridge.
“Angrier still when I questioned Myrceria this morning and realized that instead
of keeping an eye on you as she was supposed to—you had taken her from
us, too. She has been a valuable tool for years, and you’ve ruined her.” His movement was so quick, so unexpected that before Tier realized
what the Master had done, Myrceria’s blood showered him from chest to knee. Telleridge pulled up her head and held it through the throes
of death. “She’s been so useful over the years. Where am I going to find
another wizard who is so good at getting close to our Traveler guests? I have
no more daughters.” He dropped her head and wiped his hands on his robes. Black
robes hid the blood much better than Tier’s light-colored clothing. It wasn’t, thought Tier, that he hadn’t believed they were
evil. He had just forgotten how sudden death could be, and how final. He’d
liked Myrceria. Tier still had his sword from practice, but this was too
well-orchestrated. If his sword would have done him any good, they’d never have
let him keep it. Had Myrceria betrayed their plans? She hadn’t known it
all—but she’d known enough. “But you know the thing that bothers me the most?” asked
Telleridge, intruding on Tier’s grief and anger. “How did you get to the
Emperor? Do you know how long it took us to come by a harmless ruler? How many
people gave their lives so that I could mold the proper emperor? Then suddenly,
he is making an effective grasp for power. It wasn’t until I spoke with you the
other day that I drew a parallel between what you’ve done to the Passerines and
what happened to the Emperor.” Telleridge shook his head. “And what have you left us to
rule in his place? Avar is next for the throne; but although he is an idiot, he
is a well-meaning idiot. You’ve ruined Toarsen.” He heaved a theatrical sigh.
“Not that it will matter to you how much trouble you’ve caused, but I thought
you might enjoy sharing the stage tonight. I’ll leave you for last so you can
watch your little projects die.” Tier stared silently at Myrceria’s corpse. “Ah, no words for me, Bard?” taunted the Master. Yes, thought Tier, it was time to see just how much control
they had over his Order. “Only cowards torture women,” he said, not bothering to
dodge the staff that took him across the cheekbone. Toarsen rubbed his hair dry with a towel as he walked down
the secret ways that would lead him back to the rest of the palace. Alone, he
allowed himself to smile with remembered satisfaction at Avar’s face when
Toarsen had burst into his rooms and demanded to be taken to the Emperor. Firmly convinced that it was some stupid wager, Avar had almost
refused him. But he hadn’t. Toarsen was surprised about that His brother had seldom paid
any attention to him at all, except to order him about. When he’d sworn on his honor that he carried an urgent message
to the Emperor, Avar had heaved a martyred sigh, rolled out of bed, dressed,
and done as Toarsen asked. On the way back to their rooms after they’d spent
the night in councils of war, Avar had patted him on the back, an affectionate,
respectful gesture he’d never given Toarsen before. The passage Toarsen had taken opened not far from his rooms
in an obscure storage room. He glanced cautiously out of the room, but there
was no one in the hall to see him as he slipped out of the storage room and
into his own. He’d changed into the uncomfortable clothes of court and was
halfway to the door before he realized that there was a vellum envelope on the
cherrywood table near his bed. His pulse picked up as he slit it opened and read the invitation. “Now?” he said. Seraph curled up, enfolded in the bedding that smelled of
Tier. She’d left him while the sun was only a faint hint in the sky. It had
been even easier than she expected to talk Benroln and his clan into serving as
the Emperor’s foot soldiers. She’d left Lehr and Jes sleeping and left the
sheep farm just outside of Taela where they’d been staying to come back here. Tier hadn’t been here when she’d returned to tell him of her
success, but she’d known that he would have to continue his normal habits or
risk alerting someone. So she’d climbed into his bed and reminded herself that
he was alive. If someone came in, they’d not see her unless she wanted them to. Someone knocked at the door. “Tier? It’s Toarsen. Are you back?” Reluctantly, she got out of the bed and pulled the covers
flat. She opened the door and motioned the young man in. “He’s not here,” she said. “I can’t find him anywhere,” Toarsen said, sounding a little
frantic. “The Disciplining is set for early this evening, and I can’t find
Tier.” “It’s all right” said Seraph, his anxiety lending her
calm. “He’ll want to know, but it’s Phoran, your brother, and my people who
really need to know right now. Go to your brother and tell him to get word to
Phoran and to get his men and meet my people in the passages we discussed. I’ll
get the Travelers, and after you’ve told Avar, you go about your day as if
nothing were wrong. Avar can get word to Phoran. Just make sure you are armed
when you go to the Disciplining.” He nodded and left the room. Seraph set out at a dead run
through the labyrinth of passages—there was no time to waste. She needed to get
Benroln. Tier had survived a long time here without her to watch over him. She
had to believe he’d be all right. Avar and his men waited for them as he’d promised, in a
long, dark corridor large enough to have held twice as many people. Relief
crossed his face when he saw Seraph and the Librarian’s clan. “I don’t like this,” he said without waiting for introductions.
“Toarsen said he couldn’t find Tier anywhere. He looked for Myrceria to give
her a message for him, but he couldn’t find her either, and none of the other
whores knew where she was. He said that he’d last seen Tier at sword practice,
but that one of the Masters called him to a meeting. Then I couldn’t find
Phoran in any of his usual haunts, though his horse is still in the stable.” Seraph pushed her anxiety aside and forced herself to think
clearly. The Path were upset with Tier for taking control of the Passerines ...
so they took him and ... Her thoughts stuck there. Would they simply have
killed him? “I don’t see anything to do except follow the plans we laid
out last night,” she said at last. Beside her Benroln nodded his head. “If what Seraph told us
about this group is true, this is the best chance to destroy them. It would be better for us if the Emperor is there to
bear witness for us—but the Path needs to be destroyed here and now.” “Neither Tier nor Phoran are essential to the destruction of
the Path now,” said Seraph with painful honesty. “Without Tier, though, we
might have to fight the Passerines, too. And if Phoran is not there, Benroln,
your men will have to try and get out as soon as this is finished and take all
of our fallen, too. Maybe Telleridge has taken them for part of the performance
tonight. If the Masters have hurt Tier, they’ll have a hard time controlling
the Passerines.” “You don’t know the Passerines,” said Avar. “I know my husband,” she said. She didn’t miss the uneasy way Avar’s people surveyed the
exotic lot of armed Travelers or the puzzled looks aimed at Brewydd. Old women
were not usually part of a battle force—but Healers could look after themselves
on a battlefield. “We need to take them tonight,” Seraph said again. Avar nodded slowly, then turned to the troops around him. In
short, punctuated sentences he described what they were doing and why. The white robes she’d taken from an unwary Raptor were
woolen and itchy, but Seraph stood quietly next to Brewydd, who was carrying on
a conversation with the white-robed Raptor beside her, talking, of all things,
about growing tomatoes. Hennea had laid spells on all of them: look-away spells to
keep them from being noticed and minor illusions to hide things—like Seraph’s
lack of height and her sex—that would otherwise attract attention. When Hennea
had told them all to avoid being noticed, Seraph didn’t think that exchanging
gardening tips with the first Raptor they happened upon was what she’d had in
mind. Seraph looked out over the room. Jes was somewhere, too,
though he hadn’t bothered with the white robes. No one would see him until he
wanted them to. Lehr was with the rest of their little army. The Passerines were gathered already; she’d counted them. Assuming Tier’s protege1 was the boy they
intended to produce, all of the Passerines were there. Though they didn’t have
hoods on their robes, Seraph found that the robes obscured enough differences
that she had a hard time picking out Toarsen, the only Passerine she knew, from
the rest. There were chairs in rows in front of the stage, and the Passerines
were all directed to those; even as she watched, the last of them took his
seat. There were more Raptors than she’d hoped, nearly three times
the number of Passerines. Well, enough, she told herself, it would be even less
likely that anyone should spot the cuckoos in the mix. “Followers of the Secret Path.” Seraph stiffened at the whiff of magic that accompanied the
words so that they rang out and appeared louder than they really were. The room quieted. Brewydd softened her voice to a murmur,
but continued comparing the benefits of growing tomatoes in various soils. It had been Raven magic that gave power to the words the
black-robed man standing in front of the curtained stage had said. Why hadn’t
he used the Bardic Order? A Bard would have done more than just overpower the
talking of the crowd: he could have caught the attention of everyone, even
tomato zealots like Brewydd’s conversation partner, and held it. Perhaps they didn’t know that, or maybe they just preferred
to work with more familiar powers. A solsenti mage, she thought, would
be used to having magic work a certain way—like Raven or even Cormorant. They
wanted the Orders for power, but even Volis had had no use for subtlety. “When you come to our Eyrie you take vows,” said the wizard.
“First, never reveal to anyone what we do here. Second, to attend the Eyrie at
least three evenings a week. Third, to obey the Raptors and the Masters over
and above all other oaths. One of you has broken the last two of these rules.
We are here today to discipline him—not in hope of reformation, because he will
never again be welcome to our Eyrie.” “Telleridge sure knows how to capture his audience, doesn’t
he,” marveled the Raptor talking to Brewydd, his voice shaking with age, but he
returned to his favorite subject with more ado. “I find that the tomatoes I grow in the
orangery—” “But that is not all we are here for.” The Master’s voice
dipped into sorrow, but Seraph thought he overdid it a bit. “In recent weeks it
has come to our attention that our Passerines have been led astray by the magic
of our Traveler guest. The magic that keeps his at bay, here in our halls, is
dependent upon your resistance. If you want to be his follower, his servant,
there is nothing our magic can do to protect you. So we have to take more
stringent measures with him.” They had Tier. Was he alive? “There is a third problem that has held our attention these
past few years. Our Empire, founded by heroes, built by men of vision, men of
intelligence is, even now, presided over by a drunken sot. Bored with the
available women and wealth, he has decided to interfere with the men who try to
preserve the Empire. Who is to save us when our frivolous Emperor chooses to
change the ancient boundaries of the Septs? Who? We shall save ourselves.” He raised both hands and the great curtains behind him
creaked and squealed as they slowly opened to the Master’s magic. On the stage was a frightened young man, naked and chained
by his wrists to a ring in the floor of the stage. In the center position was
the Emperor. They hadn’t stripped him—too worried about arousing the wrong
emotion in the crowd, judged Seraph—but he was wearing the same robes he’d been
in last night, and they looked the worse for wear. But it was the third man,
Tier, her eyes found and locked on. He was alive, she thought with a rush of relief; she could
see his ribs move as he breathed. Like the Passerine he’d been so worried
about, he’d been stripped naked and chained, but he lay curled up and still,
his skin red and black from beating. Rage rose up in Seraph like a red tide. She stared at the
Master who orchestrated this mess and took what her magic could tell her. He
was a solsenti wizard of moderate power, aided by two Raven rings—one of
them very old. “We deal first with the greatest offense. Phoran the
Twenty-Sixth, we, the Followers of the Secret Path, judge you unfit to rule our
Empire!” The Master turned to the audience and gave the signal for a response
of some kind. A roar of approval perhaps? But it never came, because Phoran spoke. “Actually,” he said with dignity that caught at the heart of
every person in the room, “it’s Phoran the Twenty-Seventh. I’ve always felt
that since the old farmer started the Empire, he ought to get credit for it.” Even Brewydd’s new friend quit sneaking. Seraph felt a relieved grin tug at her lips. Tier was doing better
than he appeared if he could give Phoran’s mundane words that much power. Phoran looked a little taken aback by the response his quip
had drawn. Go, Tier, thought Seraph fiercely. She glanced at Telleridge,
but even with the partial immunity the Raven rings he wore gave him, he was too
close to Phoran to do anything except listen. Phoran was not at a loss for more than a breath. “Some of
what Telleridge has said is correct I have not been the best of emperors, but I
didn’t realize that anyone needed me to be that. Like you, I thought that the
Council of Septs—ruled by people like Telleridge here—were far more capable
than I ever could be. That should have been true.” He was taking too long, thought Seraph, watching Telleridge
struggle against the Bardic touch. Tier couldn’t possibly maintain his hold on
the whole room for very long, not in the condition he was in. She stepped away from the wall and began making her way down
toward the auditorium. If she could get to him, she could help. “They are intelligent men, and well-trained to their office.
If they chose to rule justly, they could surely do so. But they rule instead
for personal gain. Some of you were encouraged to work a little mischief in the
street of the weavers last year. Did you know that the council leader’s riches
increased by half after that incident because the weavers now pay him for the
right to sell their goods in their own craft stalls? Gorrish is one of the
Raptors who sent you out to attack the weavers—did any of you gain from that?” Phoran took a deep breath, and Seraph felt the crowd stir as
the Bardic touch faded momentarily and then strengthened again. With the
shifting of the crowd, her only path to the stage closed up. “Those Raptors among you will know that almost half the Passerines
who are here will die mysteriously shortly after they graduate to being
Raptors. Some of you know that it is not so mysterious, because you aided in
those men’s deaths. Why kill so many? Because some of you are already
outgrowing the trappings of childhood. Some of you realize that it is not
necessary to prove who you are by how much destruction you can cause—you are
the first ones they will kill. Like this young man beside me who was targeted
only because he loves old instruments more than he loves tormenting the younger
Passerines.” “I haven’t been much of an emperor,” Phoran said.
“I’ve disappointed people who cared about me all of my life—just as you have.
Mostly, my failures have been passive failures—things not done rather than
great and terrible acts. Just as yours have been, until today. If you harm men
whose only crime is to fall afoul of a power-mad politician, then you take a
step that cannot be undone.” Tier crooked his neck and peered out of his one good eye to
see how Phoran was holding up. Something, he thought, something had walked
close to the Emperor. It leaned nearer as if it were whispering something in
Phoran’s ear, then faded from Tier’s view. Jes, he thought. Anxiously, Tier looked at the
audience, but they didn’t seem to have seen that nebulous shape. Phoran took a breath. “You have a choice tonight. You can
hold to the oaths you made to the Masters of the Path. Realize that they have
not given you an oath in return—as I did when I became emperor. I owe you fair
hearing in disputes, I owe you a place in our society, and I owe you an emperor
worth serving in return. You must choose now.” He looked up, scanning the
crowd. When he saw what he sought he nodded once. Then he began speaking
rapidly. “Choose who you fight carefully, because this is a battle for the soul
of the Empire.” He swung one of his chained wrists to indicate the wall of
the Eyrie and, as if he’d wielded the magic himself, the wall disintegrated
into so much plaster dust and splintered wood. The noise and magical backwash distracted Tier, and he lost
his tenuous hold on his own magic. The failure of his control hit Tier like a blow to the head.
It awakened every inch of the screaming flesh the Masters had abused. He cried
out, and his vision blackened. The sounds of battle erupted around him, and
half-dazed as he was, he couldn’t remember where he was or what he was doing
here without a sword. The destruction of the wall caught Seraph by surprise. She
had been supposed to help bring it down, but, unable to see over the crowd, she
must have missed the signal—or Hennea had used an opportune moment in the
Emperor’s speech. Irritably, Seraph poked the tall, bulky Raptor who stood in
front of her. Since she’d used a touch of magic, he jumped aside with a yelp,
pushing several other men over and briefly clearing a visual path for Seraph
just as Avar’s men and the Travelers began pouring into the room with a war-cry
that was even more effective in a room designed as a theater than it would have
been on an open battlefield. The astonishment of such strangeness held the Followers of
the Path oddly still until the first of Avar’s men gutted the nearest Raptor. A man near Seraph drew his sword, but he was looking toward
the far side of the room for his enemy, so he never even noticed Seraph until
her knife intersected his belly. A young blue-robed boy drew his sword and
finished the job—but gave her white robes a wary look. “I’m Tier’s wife,” she said, tossing back her hood. “Pleased to meet you,” he said, grunting the last as
he used his sword to catch the blade of a Raptor who was a bit quicker than
most to realize that the Passerines were as much a threat as the fighting men
who’d come through the wall. “I’m Kissel.” She had to get to Tier. Discarding the robes both because
they got in her way and because they might get her killed by one of Tier’s
Passerines, she aimed for the most direct path to Tier, whom she still couldn’t
see. The fighting was widespread by now, and the heaviest fighting lay between her and the stage. Seraph called her
magic to her. Blindly, instinctively, Tier tried to rise to his feet,
since a down man on a battlefield was a dead man, but something held, his
wrists and he couldn’t call any strength to his muscles. “It’s all right, sir,” said Toarsen’s familiar voice. “I’ll
keep you safe;”. “The Emperor,” managed Tier, falling back to his damaged
knees and biting back a moan. Screams were for people who weren’t as weary as
he was. There was a series of clanking sounds, battle sounds that
ended in a grunt and a thunk. Toarsen, panting a bit, said, “Kissel’s with him,
and someone cut him loose and gave him a sword. I never knew that Phoran knew
how to fight. Never thought”—another thunk and gasp—“someone as fat as he is
could move that fast.” “The Masters?” asked Tier. Seated and calmer, he found that
his vision was coming back a bit, but not well enough to sort through the chaos
of battle. He wiped his good eye with the back of his hand. His hand came away
wet, but he could see again. “I don’t see “em,” Toarsen said. “I was watching Avar and
his men boil into the room. When I looked back, this place was covered in
fighters and I thought I might come up here and bear you company a bit. We’ve a
nice view of the fighting up here—those two boys of yours can surely fight” Someone in white blundered into the small area of stage that
Toarsen was guarding, and he sent the Raptor on his way with a kick that
impaled him on a sword held by a man with moon-pale hair. “Gessa,” said the man. “Anytime,” said Toarsen. “Collarn?” asked Tier, his returning vision allowing him to
see that the boy’s place was empty. “Naked as a newborn,” said Toarsen cheerfully. “You’re not
able to get high enough to enjoy the sight, but I can see him from here.
Remember all those times you told him that he carries his guard too high?” “Yes?” “You should have made him fight naked.” Tier laughed, one short bark, then held his breath and his
ribs. “No joking right now,” he managed. Lehr rolled onto the stage and then bounced up and ran over.
“Good to see that you’re alive, Papa. But I think I speak for us all when I
tell you that I’d rather not worry about you again for a while. Parents are
supposed to worry about their children, not vice versa. Let me get a look at
those chains.” He held the manacles in his hands and closed his eyes. After
a moment, the locks clicked open. Lehr grinned at his father’s expression. “I don’t know how opening locks ties in with being a Hunter
either, though Brewydd explained it to me a dozen times.” He sounded pleased
with himself. He looked at Toarsen. “Go ahead,” said Toarsen. “I’ll stay here.” “Thanks,” said Lehr, and he leaped off the edge of the
stage. Having completed the task Hennea had given him, the Guardian
took a quick glance around the room. Lehr was fighting at Avar’s side and
accounting for himself quite well. Just as his gaze found Seraph, she raised
her hands and tossed a half dozen men into the air. Obviously she was in no
need of immediate protection. He turned to go to his father, but the Sept of Leheigh’s
brother was standing over Papa’s crumpled form and seemed to be having no
trouble fending off attackers. The wizards, who posed more of a threat, had
other things on their minds than hurting his father. A double handful of
Passerines were doing their best to get onto the stage and attack the
Masters—too many of them to allow the wizards’ magic to be an effective weapon.
The Guardian knew—remembered from other battles fought long ago, before
Jes’s father’s father had been born—that keeping the Passerines away would
soon weaken the solsenti wizards too much for them to be a danger to
Tier. Satisfied that they were all safe for the moment, the Guardian jumped off the stage to return to Hennea’s side,
slipping between fighters who mostly moved out of his way without ever looking
at him directly. The noise of swords clashing and men screaming excited him
almost as much as the smell of blood. A man bumped his arm and the Guardian turned on him with a
snarl and a flash of fangs. If the man hadn’t retreated, falling backwards over
a body on the floor, even Jes could not have held the Guardian back. Hennea stood alone near the fallen wall. He couldn’t tell if
her spells to avoid being seen were working on everyone else, or if they were
just smart enough to stay away. Mother had told him that spells usually didn’t
work right on him. There were two men attacking a boy who was stepping back
rapidly to avoid being overrun. The Guardian could see that the boy wouldn’t
stay away from their blades for much longer. He glanced at Hennea, but she was
all right. The Guardian dropped the sword he held and reached for the form of
the great cat—he wanted to taste blood, not feel flesh part against steel. He picked the nearest Raptor and leaped onto his shoulders,
driving him down to the floor. As his claws sank deep into meat, the man’s pain
and fear washed through Jes. The Guardian reveled in the searing sensations,
which only raised his bloodlust further. The other antagonist paused to stare, but the Passerine recovered
a little faster and killed his opponent before beating a rapid retreat. Death
and the boy’s fear fed the battle rage and Jes turned his attention to the man
who lay beneath him. “Jes!” The great cat halted, his mouth already opened to still the
struggles of his prey. “Jes, come back. I need you!” Hennea sounded frantic. Her hand touched his tense back. “Jes,” she said. Trembling, fighting, Jes forced the Guardian to step away
from the downed man even as the beast roared its thwarted rage. “What?” he managed, the emotions and pain of the battle raging
around him raw without the Guardian’s protection. Hennea smoothed her hands over him and the worst of the
clamor faded until it was manageable. The Guardian would have been better, but
Jes couldn’t let him loose until he had a moment to calm down. “Look on the stage,” Hennea whispered. “What do you see?” There had been wizards on the stage when he’d earned Hennea’s
message to the Emperor. Five stood in plain view, but the other held to the
shadows. When his father had lost control of them, they, like Hennea, had stood
back from the battle and aided their people as they could. Now four wizards lay crumpled on the ground, and something—something
that caused the Guardian to take control again—fed on the fifth. “What is that?” asked the Guardian. “A Raven’s Memory,” she said. “A vengeful ghost—though I’ve
never seen one so substantial. It’s almost alive.” The sixth wizard, anonymous in his robes, slipped off the
stage and toward the destroyed wall. No one looked at him, though he passed a
few men quite closely. “One of the wizards is getting away,” the Guardian observed
to Hennea, calm again. “Where?” she asked, but when he pointed, she didn’t see him. “I’ll follow him,” he decided and Jes, anxious to get away
from the battle, agreed with the Guardian’s decision: Neither of them listened
to Hennea’s protest as the great cat leaped over a heap of rubble to follow the
escaping man. Seraph blew her hair out of her eyes wearily and kept moving
forward. The large young man who had been so helpful in dispatching that first
Raptor had stayed by her side as she used whatever means necessary to push
through the battle. There was a limit to her magic, and after the first blast
won her only a few yards before the fighting spread into the cleared area she’d
made, she decided that she was going to have to use more subtlety and less
power. With a sword she scavenged from the floor, she used magic to lend force
to her blows until the blade slid through bone as if it were water. She’d taken
the time to add her own see-me-not spell to Hennea’s efforts. Blood
covered her from the elbows down, weighting down her clothes with more than
physical burden—but she wasn’t here to fight fair. She needed to get to Tier. “You know it’s true what he said,” panted her young friend
Kissel. “What’s that?” she managed, dropping another Raptor who was
raising his sword to attack a blue-robed man from behind. “A man would be smarter to face an enraged boar than to
cross my wife.” The boy managed to imitate Tier’s style. “Huh,” she grunted, kicking an unsuspecting man behind his
knee and dropping him onto his opponent’s blade. “How flattering.” The boy grinned wearily. “He doesn’t seem to mind.” “Can you see him yet?” “No,” he said. “But I can see Toarsen on the stage—he’ll do
his best to keep him from harm.” Tier knew that he should get to his feet and claim a sword,
but he just couldn’t manage it As if he read his mind, Toarsen said, “It’s all right, sir.
Just having Avar in here fighting for the Emperor took most of the heart out of
the Raptors. All the Passerines called out his name as soon as they saw who it
was—even that squid you’ve had Kissel and me watching was attacking the Raptors.
Remind me never to let him behind me with something sharp. All that’s left now
is just a few of the Raptors and mercenaries who didn’t leave fast enough. Avar
will call quarter in a minute, as soon as he thinks that his men have had
enough of killing.” Sure enough, through the sounds of battle—all the louder for
being inside the cavernous chamber—came a bass rumble still distinguishable as
the words: “Quarter give quarter! Surrender or die!” picking up in volume as
more voices took up the cry. “Waste of time,” murmured Tier, just before he passed out.
“They’re all guilty of treason—Phoran will have to hang ’em all.” He wasn’t actually out all that long because there were
still clashes, as a few desperate men continued to fight, when he woke up. He opened his eyes just as an old, quavering voice said,
“Woo-eyah. I see that those giggling twits were right about solsenti men.” Tier stared at the oldest woman he’d ever seen, then
grinned. “You must be Brewydd,” he said, “the Healer.” “And it’s a good thing for you, young man,” she agreed. “You
must be the Bard that woman’s been so upset about. Now let me see what this old
biddy can do about making you want to stay with the living.” She clicked her tongue against her teeth when she saw what
they’d done to his knees. “Good thing you did this with a Lark nearby,” she
said. “If you’d done it somewhere else you wouldn’t be walking on these again.” “I’d give, you a kiss,” said Tier, then he had to stop and
grit his teeth as her touch brought burning pain that was worse than the
original blows had been. “Except that my wife would finish what the Path
began.” “It is good that a man knows his place,” said Seraph comfortably
from somewhere behind him. He hurt too much to turn so he could see her, so he gave her
a vague wave. She crouched down on her heels beside him. “So,” she said,
“I know where there is a white robe you can have—but that might make you a
target. On the other hand, parading around in nothing at all might make you a
different sort of target.” He laughed, then moaned. “Why is it that the first thing someone
does when you’ve cracked your ribs is make a joke?” “You don’t have cracked ribs,” said the Healer, looking up
from his battered knees. “You have broken ones. And hold off on that robe,
girl, until I see to them as well. He doesn’t have anything that I haven’t seen
better.” “Hello,” said a Traveler, crouching down on Tier’s other
side. “You must be the Bard.” “Tier,” said Seraph, “this is Kors. Kors, my husband, Tier.
Kors, what do you want?” Ah, thought Tier contentedly, all that in under a breath, my
Seraph at her charismatic best. “We were wondering if you’d seen the Guardian? We know he
was here, but none of us can locate him.” “Most all of what I’ve seen is a bunch of people from the
knees down,” quipped Tier. Then he added, “Actually I saw him—or at least
something that was probably him, whispering to Phoran. I suppose he was telling
Phoran that Avar was waiting as planned because it was just after that that
Phoran signaled the Ravens to bring down the wall.” “I didn’t see it,” said Seraph sourly. “I was trying to get
down to you and I got caught in the crowd. Hennea brought down the wall by
herself—I didn’t even get to singe that bloody wizard to ash. By the time I got
in the clear, all of the Masters were down and dead—or at least not moving.” “Well,” said Kors, clearing his throat a little, “that’s
kind of why Benroln sent me over to see if you could find your son. A lot of us
saw something kill the Masters, one after the other, but we couldn’t quite see
it We’d all appreciate it if you could find Jes and make certain he doesn’t
mistake anyone else for the enemy.” “Jes isn’t that stupid,” said Tier. But he worried about
what all the violence had done to the Guardian, too. “He’s probably gone off to
find someplace quiet” “Wait until I’ve gotten the ribs stabilized, young man,”
chided the Healer, moving creakily from his knee to his side—pushing Kors out
of the way. “And then you can go looking for your boy.” It took more than a few minutes, but finally with Lehr under
one shoulder and Toarsen under the other, Tier gained his feet, Seraph’s robe stopping
a few inches below his knees. The joints in question still felt like they’d
been hit with a club—which they had—but at least he was able to shuffle over to
take a look at the victims. His first clue was the rather sick look Phoran sent him
before he turned back to talking with Avar. They’d piled all the Masters’ bodies together. When Tier arrived,
Kors and Kissel hauled one of the bodies out and pulled back the cowl. The dark
veil that lined it, making the robes a more effective disguise, had been ripped
so that the face could be revealed. Tier had the boys help lower him until he was sitting on the
ground. The sight he had out of his good eye was getting worse, and he supposed
it would be swollen all the way shut by tomorrow, but he wanted to see them, to
know that they were dead. Tier’s first reaction was a dull sort of surprise. He’d
never actually seen any of the Master’s faces except for Telleridge’s, but
somehow he felt as if he ought to recognize them anyway. He didn’t even know
which one it was. His second was a realization that the dried, sunken look was
due to more than age. Almost hidden on the man’s neck were two fading puncture
wounds. “The Travelers tell us that your son is capable of this,”
said Avar as he and Phoran approached. “And that he has magic that can make him
hard to see—much like what they saw kill these men.” Tier opened his mouth, then saw Phoran’s pale face behind
Avar and realized what had killed the wizards. “Must have been him, then,” he
said, trying to hide the rush of relief. Jes hadn’t been running amok—the
Memory had. Lehr stiffened, and Seraph put a hand on Tier’s shoulder. He
patted her hand, then Lehr’s leg. “Do the rest of them look the same?” “Yes,” said Phoran. “Just the same. As if they’d been
drained.” “Work of the Guardian,” said the Healer briskly. Tier hadn’t
realized she’d followed them. “Work of the Guardian to protect his own. Get
that man up off the floor and don’t put him down until he’s somewhere he can
rest comfortably. Do you have a chamber where we can store him overnight?” She
asked the last question of Phoran. He bowed. “I suspect that the one that he’s been occupying
will be the easiest for him. He’s welcome to take as long as necessary—and as
soon as he’s up to it, I’d be happy to find him better accommodations.” Brewydd looked at Seraph. “You wanted to burn him to ash,
girl, do it now. It’s not a good thing to leave wizard’s bodies intact,” she
said. Lehr and Toarsen managed to lever Tier up once more. Seraph
waved a hand and the bodies of the Masters burst into a dark blue-white flame
that consumed them utterly in a moment. She gave Tier a look that told him
that he’d better have a good reason to put Jes in a position that would make it
even more difficult for others to accept him. “Let’s get him back to his cell,” she said. “Then Lehr can
hunt Jes down and bring him to us there.” The trip down that short hallway was miserable. Halfway
there, Lehr exchanged a look with Toarsen, and with his help, shifted Tier
until Lehr could pick him up and carry him the rest of the way. Seraph sent Toarsen off to help Avar with a kiss on his
cheek, ignoring Tier’s indignant “Hey.” When Toarsen was gone, she said to Lehr, “Doubtless your father
will explain why he blamed Jes for that nasty business. So just find your
brother and bring him back here so Tier can explain it to Jes, too, before he
gets hurt by the reception he gets.” The Healer had accompanied them, and she checked Tier over
thoroughly to make sure the mending she’d done on him would hold. When she was through
she patted him on the shoulder. “Hardest thing that a Healer learns is when to stop
healing,” she said. “There’s always a price to pay. You’re going to be very
tired in a short period of time, and you’ll spend the next few days more asleep
than awake. So you’d better tell me quickly why you’re blaming that poor lad
for the work of a Memory.” Seraph drew in her breath. “A Memory?” “Can’t,” said Tier. “Promised.” “Promised what?” asked Phoran, slipping into the room and
shutting the door behind him. “Not to explain why he’d want his son to bear the blame for
deaths caused by a Raven’s Memory,” said the old Healer sourly. She took
another look at Phoran. “You have the signs of being afflicted by a Memory,
boy.” Seraph raised an eyebrow, but cleared her throat. “Emperor,”
she reminded Brewydd. “When you’re as old as I am,” said Brewydd. “You can call
anyone anything.” Phoran smiled. “It’s my Memory,” he said. “It’s all right,
Tier. Go to sleep, I’ll tell them.” The Emperor patted the end of the bed and found a safe place
to sit. He spoke quietly and told them how the Memory came to be bound to him.
At some point in the story, Tier drifted off. “They were guarded,” said Brewydd, after Phoran finished his
story. “It couldn’t take them. In the normal course of things, unable to feed,
it would have just drifted away. But you were there.” She nodded her head.
“I’ve heard of something like that happening. The Memory attaching itself to
the wrong person. As long as it gave something back, its victim will continue to
live. What did it give you?”.. “Answers to my questions,” said Phoran. “That’s how I found
Tier.” “Why was it able to kill the Masters now?” asked Seraph. She
was touched by the way that Phoran kept patting Tier’s feet. “They were draining themselves trying to control the Passerines
and fight our wizards,” explained Brewydd. “I expect that weakened the
protections that kept the Memory from killing them before.” “It will leave Phoran in peace, then?” asked Seraph. “If it has accomplished its task it should,” said the old
woman. “I suppose your son will understand that the life of an emperor who just
might be what this Empire needs is worth a little discomfort. Tell your man to
try not to make anyone mad enough to hit him in those knees again and he’ll be
right as rain in a month or so. I’d better go back and see if my services are
needed elsewhere.” Phoran got up reluctantly. “I suppose I’d better go as
well—before some idiot thinks I’m lost.” “I’ll be fine,” Tier said faintly. “Go reassure the idiots.” Phoran was laughing as he left. Seraph shut the door and
took Phoran’s place on the end of the bed. “Is there anyway I can lay down beside you that won’t make
it worse?” she asked. “No,” he sighed without opening his eyes. “Come here anyway.” When she was tucked against him, he buried his face in her
hair. “Telleridge killed Myrceria in front of me,” he said. “He’d
had her tortured, but she didn’t tell him anything. Telleridge didn’t know
about you.” “There was nothing you could have done,” Seraph said, hurting
for him and for the woman she’d met only briefly. “How do you know that?” he whispered, because he needed to
believe she was right. “Because if you could have done anything, you would have.
It’s all right, Tier.” “He was her father, and he tortured her and killed her,”
said Tier. “And he enjoyed doing it. Was he shadowed?” “Can’t people be evil on their own?” she asked with a sigh.
“You’ll have to ask your sons; Ravens can’t see shadowing—but I think so. Shh,”
she said. “I love you. She did, too.” She let him hold her while he cried quietly into her hair
until the tiredness of being healed overwhelmed him. Then, between one breath
and the next he slept. Seraph awoke from a doze to a light knock on the door. Carefully,
she extracted herself so Tier slept on undisturbed. Lehr and Jes waited out in the hall. Seraph motioned them
out, went out herself, and shut the door so they wouldn’t disturb Tier. “I told him what Papa said,” said Lehr. “Jes said he didn’t
kill anyone.” Seraph looked up and down the hall and quietly explained. “It’s fine, Mother,” said the Guardian. “No one will be much
more afraid of me than they already are.” “Mother,” said Lehr, “You need to hear why Jes left the
Eyrie.” “I was following a black-robed wizard,” said the Guardian.
“Father was right, all the wizards were tainted. But there was one ... did you
see him, Lehr?” “No,” Lehr said. “I only saw the five wizards the Memory
killed.” “There was one who left when the wall disintegrated. He
wasn’t just tainted. Mother, he was the taint itself.” “Like the Unnamed King?” The Guardian nodded. “I didn’t see the taint at first,
Mother. I followed the wizard out of the room and into the halls on the other
side of the wall. Before I could get close, the Memory was there. It touched
the wizard.” The Guardian flinched. “I don’t know what the Memory did, but it
felt as if a veil had been pulled away and revealed the wizard for what he
really was.” He took a shaky breath. “Jes is very brave, Mother, even I don’t
scare him—but what hid beneath the wizard’s illusionary veil was evil. The
wizard hit the Memory with some kind of magic, and the Memory was just gone.
The wizard didn’t see us. When it left, we didn’t follow.” “Good,” said Seraph, reassuringly. “You did the right
thing.” “When I caught up with him,” said Lehr, “he showed me where
the man had gone—and I couldn’t find his trail. Mother, I could see where rats
had been running down the hall, but I couldn’t pick up his tracks.” Seraph touched Lehr’s shoulder. “It’s all right,” she said
and hoped it was true. Chapter 17If it hadn’t been for Skew, Tier would have had to wait another
week before setting out for Redem, but the old horse’s soft gaits were easy on
Tier’s ribs. He seemed to understand that Tier was hurt: not even Gura’s
anxious weaving in and out around his legs caused Skew to alter his smooth
stride. If he remembered to breathe shallowly, it didn’t even hurt
too much—but he didn’t like to do that, because it only increased the number of
Seraph’s anxious glances. She had wanted to wait, but he needed to get home to
Redem—needed to have all of his children together where he could protect them. There was another Shadowed who walked the land. There were other explanations for all that had passed. He
wasn’t certain if even Seraph really believed it in the light of day—but the
Healer knew. She hadn’t said anything, but he could see in her eyes that she
believed. Tier glanced over at the brightly colored cart that Brewydd
rode in. It was her voice, he thought, that had made Benroln insist on accompanying
them back. Benroln had said that Phoran would do better without Traveler aid
now that the Sept of Gerant was there. Doubtless Benroln was right about that. The Sept of Gerant had
said as much when he’d come to see Tier off in lieu of the Emperor, The
political situation was unstable and Phoran clung to the throne primarily
because there were so few of imperial blood around to fight him for the Empire.
Phoran had wished him good travels in secret the night before they’d left. “I like your Gerant,” said Seraph. “He reminds me of Giro, a
little. Quiet and unassuming until his skill is called upon.” Tier smiled down at his wife who walked at his stirrup as if
she were afraid he’d fall out of the saddle. “He liked you as well. Told me
that I’d made a good exchange when I chose to follow you instead of the sword.” “He laughed when you told him you were a farmer,” she said. Tier glanced at her sharply, but her face was tilted down,
watching the ground. “Not this year,” he said. “But with the money Phoran sent us
back with we’ll be able to survive this year and buy another horse to replace
Frost for next planting season.” “You don’t think we’ll be planting next season either,” she
said softly, her hand coming up to grip his calf. He shook his head, then realized that she wasn’t watching
him. “No,” he said. She took a step closer to Skew, until her shoulder pressed
against his leg. “I don’t know what awaits us, but I don’t think the Stalker is
through with us yet.” Jes laughed, and Tier glanced up to see the Traveler Raven
Hennea stalk away from his son. He’d thought at first that she was younger than
Seraph until he’d gotten a good look at her eyes. When he’d asked Seraph, she’d
told him she didn’t know how old Hennea was either. Ravens seldom lived as long
as Larks, but it could be very difficult to tell how old they were. He’d worried until he’d seen how she watched Jes when she
thought no one was watching. He knew what love looked like. “Today,” Tier told Seraph, “the sun is warm on my face.
Let’s save tomorrow’s troubles for tomorrow.” About The AuthorPatricia Briggs lived a fairly normal life until she
learned to read. After that she spent lazy afternoons flying dragonback and
looking for magic swords when she wasn’t horseback riding in the Rocky
Mountains. Once she graduated from Montana State University with degrees
in history and German, she spent her time substitute teaching and writing. She
and her family live in the Pacific Northwest, where she is hard at work on her
newest project. Visit her on the web at www.hurog.com. |
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