"Lackey, Mercedes - Arrows 2 - Arrow's Flight" - читать интересную книгу автора (Lackey Mercedes)Paface-Cottegia
at Haven (Capital) Prologue Long
ago—so long ago that the details of the conflict are lost and only the merest
legends remain—the world of Velgarth was wracked by sorcerous wars. The
population was decimated. The land quickly turned to wilderness and was given
over to the forest and the magically-engendered creatures that had been used to
fight those wars, while the people who remained flecv^p the eastern coastline,
there to resume their shattered lives. Humans are resilient creatures, however,
and it was not overlong before the population once again was on the increase,
and folk began to move westward again, building new kingdoms out of the
wilderness. One
such kingdom was Valdemar. Founded by the once-Baron Valdemar and those of his
people who had chosen exile with him rather than facing the wrath of a selfish
and cruel monarch, it lay on the very western-and-northernmost edge of the
civilized world. In part due to the nature of its founders, the monarchs of
Valdemar welcomed fugitives and fellow exiles, and the customs and habits of
its people had over the years become a polyglot patchwork. In point of fact,
the one rule by which the monarchs of Valdemar governed their people was
"There is no 'one, true way.'" 8 MERCEDES
LACKEY Governing
such an ill-assorted lot of subjects might have been impossible—had it not been
for the Heralds of Valdemar. The
Heralds served many functions; they were administrative overseers, dispensers
of justice, information gatherers, even temporary military advisors; answerable
only to the Monarch and their own circle of peers. Such a system might have
seemed ripe for abuse—it would have been, but for the Companions, To the
unknowing eye, a Companion would seem little more than an extraordinarily
graceful white horse. They were far more than that. Sent by some unknown power
or powers at the pleading of King Valdemar himself, it was the Companions who
chose new Heralds, forging between themselves and their Chosen a mind-to-mind
bond that only death could sever. While no one knew precisely how intelligent
they were, it was generally agreed that their capabilities were at least as
high as those of their human partners. Companions could (and did) Choose
irrespective of age and sex, although they tended to Choose youngsters just
entering adolescence, and more boys were Chosen than girlvThe one commonality
among the Chosen (other than a specific personality type; patient, unselfish,
responsible, and capable of heroic devotion to duty) was at least a trace of
psychic ability. Contact with a Companion and continued development of the bond
enhanced whatever latent paranormal capabilities lay within the Chosen, With
time, as these Gifts became better understood, ways were developed to train and
use them to the fullest extent to which the individual was capable. Gradually
the Gifts displaced in importance whatever knowledge of "true magic"
was left in Valdemar, until there was no record of how such magic had ever been
learned or used. So the
governing of Valdemar evolved; the Monarch, advised by his Council, made the
laws; the Heralds dispensed the laws and saw that they were ARROWSFUCHT 9 observed.
The Heralds themselves were nearly incapable of becoming corrupted or potential
abusers of their temporal power; the Chosen were by nature remarkably
self-sacrificing—their training only reinforced this. They had to be—there was
a better than even chance that a Herald would die in the line of duty. But they
were human for all of that; mostly young, mostly living on the edge of
danger—so, it was inevitable that outside of their duty they tended to be a bit
hedonistic and anything but chaste. And only seldom did a Herald form a tie
beyond that of brotherhood and the pleasures of the moment—perhaps because the
bond of brotherhood was so very strong, and because the Herald-Companion bond
left little room for any other permanent ties. For the most part, few of the
common or noble folk held this against them—knowing that, no matter how wanton
a Herald might be on leave, the moment he donned his snowy uniform he was
another creature altogether, for a Herald in Whites was a Herald on duty, and a
Herald on duty had no time for anything outside of that duty, least c-^ «U the
frivolity of his own pleasures. Still, there were those who held other opinions
... some of them in high places. Laws
laid down by the first King decreed that the Monarch himself must also be a
Herald. Thus it was ensured that the ruler of Valdemar could never be the kind
of tyrant who had caused the founders to flee their own homes. Second
in importance to the Monarch was the Herald known as the "King's (or
Queen's) Own." Chosen by a special Companion—one that never seemed to age
(though it was possible to kill him) and was always a stallion—the Queen's Own
held the special position of confidant and most trusted friend and advisor to
the ruler. Thus the Monarchs of Valdemar were assured that they would always
have at least one person about them who could be trusted and counted on at all
times. This tended to make for 10 MERCEDES
LACKEY stable
and confident rulers—and thus, a stable and dependable government For
generations it seemed that King Valdemar had planned his government perfectly.
But the best-laid plans are still capable of being circumvented by accident or
chance. In the
reign of King Sendar, the kingdom of Karse (that bordered Valdemar to the
south-east) hired a nomadic nation of mercenaries to attack Valdemar, In the
ensuing war, Sendar was killed, and his daughter, Selenay, assumed the throne,
herself having only recently completed her Herald's training. The Queen's Own,
an aged Herald called Talamir, was frequently confused and embarrassed at
having to advise a young, headstrong, and attractive female. As a result, Selenay
made an ill-advised marriage, one that nearly cost her both her throne and her
life. The
issue of that marriage, the Heir-presumptive, was a female child whom Selenay
called Elspeth. Elspeth came under the influence of the nurse Selenay's husband
had brought jf$?m his own land, and became an intractable, spo&Ј ijrat. It
became obvious that if things went on as they were tending, the girl would
never be Chosen, and thus could never inherit. This would leave Seienay with
two choices; marry again (with the attendant risks) and attempt to produce
another, more suitable Heir, or declare someone already Chosen and with the
proper bloodline to be Heir. Or, somehow, salvage the Heir-presumptive. Talamir
had a plan—one that it seemed had a good chance of success—which involved
sending the child into fosterage in a remote province, away from the influence
of the nurse and Court, with those who could be counted upon to take no
nonsense from her. Then
Talamir was murdered, throwing the situation into confusion again. His
Companion, Rolan, Chose a new Queen's Own—but instead of picking ARROWS
FLIGHT 11 an
adult or someone already a full Herald, Chose an adolescent girl named Talia. Talia
was of Holderkin—a puritanical Border group which did its best to discourage
knowledge of outsiders. Talia had no idea what it meant to have a Herald's
Companion accost her, and then (apparently) carry her off. Among her people,
females held very subordinate positions, and nonconformity was punished
immediately and harshly. And since Talia herself was ill-suited to a
subordinate role, she was constantly being told that everything she said or did
was wrong at best, and evil at worst. She was ill-prepared for the new world of
the Heralds and their Collegium. The one thing she did have experience in was
the handling and schooling of children, for she had been the teacher to her
Holding's younger members from the time she was nine. But she
managed—to find a true home among the Heralds, and to civilize the Brat. Now
the year-and-a-half of Field duty awaited her—and a trial she never dreamed of
having to pass. One Thwack! The
flat of Alberich's practice-blade cracked against Talia's ill-guarded side. She
hadn't seen the blow coming, she truly hadn't. That had hurt, and she would lay
money on having a bruise despite the padded jerkin that had absorbed most of
the blow. The practice blades may have only been wood, but Alberich tended to
wield them{all the harder for that. "Faugh!"
he spat in disgust, and came at her again before she had recovered from the
last blow. This time he connected with her knife-arm, right at the elbow. She
yelped, the arm went numb, and she lost her blade entirely. The
hawklike eyes glared at her with no trace of pity, and the scar-seamed face was
a demonic mask as he passed judgment on her performance. He was
at least in his mid-forties, if not older, but he hadn't lost a fraction of his
edge or agility in the five years Talia had known him. She was panting with
exertion—he might as well have been taking a leisurely stroll. His well-worn,
dark leathers (he was the only working Herald in Talia's experience who never
wore Whites) showed not so much as a tiny sweat stain. The afternoon sun
pouring down on all 12 /ARROW'S
FLIGHT 13 of them
had made him look as thin and insubstantial as a shadow. And he had been just
as hard to catch. "A
pity it is that Skif is not here to see you. Die of lau^mer he surely
would!" he growled. "Eighteen you are—one would think you eight.
Slow, clumsy, and stupid! Paugh! Had I been a real assassin—" "I
would have died of fright before you touched me." "Now
it is jokes! This is a battle-practice—not a comedy. If I wish amusement, I
shall find a jester. Once again—and correctly, this time." Once
she was ready to drop with exhaustion, he turned his attention to Elspeth. Now
that both of them deserved special tutelage he had changed the hour of their
lessons to one shared by no one else, so that he could give his full devotion
to the Queen's Own and Heir-presumptive. Rather than being held on the training
grounds outside, the two had their drills in the salle. This was a barn-like
building with a sanded wooden floor, lined with mirrors, with high derestory
windows to admit the maximum amount of light. Lessons were always held here
during inclement weather, but it was too small for mass practices and classes
for the combined Heraldic-Bardic-Healer's Collegium students. Only those
"privileged" to receive private lessons with Alberich took those lessons
habitually in the salle. Now
that his attention was off her, Talia found her thoughts drifting back to her
surprise of this afternoon. Talia
tugged and wriggled impatiently until she had succeeded in getting the supple,
soft, white leather tunic over her head. Pulling it into place over the White
raime shirt and leather breeches, she finally turned to admire the effect in
the polished metal mirror in front of her. "Havens!"
she laughed, not a little surprised, "Why don't the Grays ever look like
this?" 14 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Because,"
a harsh voice drawled from the next room, "You youngsters would have your
minds on anything but your studies if they did!" Talia
laughed, turned back to the mirror, and preened. Today was the anniversary of
her first class at Herald's Collegium—a fact that she'd forgotten until Keren
and Sherrill (senior Heralds both, and instructors at the Collegium as well as
Talia's longtime friends) arrived at her room with their arms full of white
uniforms and wearing broad grins. For the
Heraldic Circle had considered—for less than five minutes, all told—had
voted—and had passed Talia into full Herald status with the rest of her
year-mates—no surprise to anyone in the Collegium, though by tradition the
trainees were not to know when they were to be evaluated until the evaluation
had already been made and they had passed. Keren
and Sherrill had claimed the right to give her the good news. They
didn't even give her a chance to think, either— just appeared at her door,
swept her up one on either side, and herded her down the long, dark
wood-paneled hall of the Collegium dormitory, down the stairs to the first
floor, and out the double doors at the
end. From
there they had taken her off to the Seneschal's office to claim her new
quarters. Now she stood in the bedroom of the suite she'd chosen, marveling at
her reflection. "I
look like a real grownup for a change!" "That
is the general idea, Sherrill laughed
richly. She
cocked her head to one side, regarding the tiny, slender figure in the mirror.
Her unruly red-brown curls were as tousled as ever, but somehow gave an
impression now of being tumbled the way they were on purpose. The huge,
deep-brown eyes that had been utterly guileless seemed somehow wiser; the
heart-shaped face no longer so childlike. And all that change wrought by the
magic of a new uniform! ARROWS
FLIGHT 15 "Talia,
your head is going to swell like a spongetoad in rainy season if you're not
careful." Keren interrupted her train of thought a second time. By craning
her neck to peer around the doorframe Talia could see the riding instructor
grinning sardonically from where she was sprawled on the wooden-backed,
red-cushioned couch in the other room. "Don't
you know what the Book of the One says?" Sherrill added piously over her
mate's shoulder. ** 'Great pride shall earn equal humiliation.' " Talia
left her bedroom to join them. They were lounging comfortably in her
sparsely-furnished outer room, sharing the lone couch. "I
suppose you're both going to claim that you never spent so much as a minute in
front of the mirror when you first got^our Whites," Talia taunted,
strolling toward them with her hands clasped behind her back. "Who?
Me?" Sherrill replied in artificial innocence, lifting an airy hand and
batting thick black lashes over wide hazel eyes. "And feed my vanity?
W-e-1-1, maybe a little" "I
happen to know for a fact that you spent half the day there. I'm told you were
trying every hairstyle you could twist that black mane of yours into, seeing
which one went best with the new outfits," Keren countered dryly, running
her fingers through her own close-cropped, graying brown hair. Sherrill
just grinned and crossed her legs elegantly, leaning back into the cushions.
"Since I can't claim equal knowledge of what you did on that august
occasion, that's hardly a fair blow." **Oh, I
did my share of mirror-gazing," Keren admitted with mock reluctance.
"When you're as scrawny as a sapling and flat as a boy, it's rather
astonishing to see yourself in something that actually flatters you. I swear I
don't know how they do it— .it's the same pattern for everybody, and not that
dissimilar from the Student Grays—" 16 MERCEDES
LACKEY "But
Lord, the difference!" Sheri concluded for her. "I don't know of
anybody who doesn't look fantastic in their Whites. Even Dirk manages to look
presentable. Rumpled, but presentable." "Well,
what do you think of me?" Talia asked, turning on her toes in front of
them, and grinning impishly into Keren's eyes. "What
do I think? That you look fabulous, you young demon. Keep fishing for
compliments, though, and I'll likely dump you in the horse trough. Have they
told you anything about your internship?" Talia
shook her head, and clasped her hands behind her again. "No. All they said
was that the Herald they want to pair me with is in the field, and they won't
tell me who it is." "That's
pretty much to be expected. They don't want you to have time to think of things
to impress him with," Sherrill replied. Suddenly her eyes sparkled with
mischief. "Oh, but I can think of one prospect that would give Nerrissa a
litter of kittens!" "Who?"
Talia asked, head to one side. "Kris
and Dirk are due back in the next few weeks, and Dirk got the last greenie—as
you should know, since it was Skif—so it's Kris' turn next! Nessa would
die!" "Sheri,
it's only my internship assignment." "A
year and a half Sector-riding, most of it spent alone together, and you say
it's only an assignment? Talia, you must have ice water for blood! Do you have
any notion of the number of hours Nessa—and half the females of the Circle, for
that matter—spend on their knees praying for an assignment like that? Are you
sure you don't have leanings our way?" Talia
chuckled, and wrinkled her nose at them. "Quite sure, darlings. Just what
is Kris' attraction for Nessa, anyway? She's got most of the males of the
Circle panting at her heels as it is," "The
lure of the unattainable, or so I would surmise," Keren supplied, lids
half-closed lazily with ARROWS
FLIGHT 17 only a
glint of brown iris showing. "He hasn't taken a vow of chastity, but he's
so circumspect about his dalliances you'd never know it. It drives Nessa wild,
and the harder she chases, the faster he runs. She's as caught up now by the
chase as by the face." "Well,
she can chase him all she wants. / am not at all impressed by Kris' handsome
face," Talia replied firmly. "Or
the gorgeous body—?" interjected Sherrill. "Or
the gorgeous body. Nessa can have all the gorgeous bodies in the Circle, for
all I care. Holderkin men are handsome specimens, and I can do without diem—my
father could have given Kris stiff competition in his younger days, and I've
told you what kind of a petty tyrant he was. And my late-but-not-Uunented
brother Justus was actually handsomer, if you favor blonds, and he was the
foulest person I've ever known. I'd rather have a good heart and plain
packaging." "Yes,
but Kris is a Herald—" Sherrill pointed out, tapping one long finger on
her knee for emphasis. "That guarantees the good heart without having to
settle for a homely exterior. No handsome, smiling bastards in our ranks—" "Sheri,
this is all sheer speculation. Until I find out who I'm interning with, I
refuse to worry about the subject," Talia replied firmly. "You
are no fun at all." "I
never said I was." "Hmm.
Dirk's interning that scalawag Skif—" Keren said thoughtfully. "You
and Skif were very thick there for a while. In fact, as I recall, you and he
had a rumor or two floating about your heads. Is that why you aren't interested
in Dirk's partner?" "Maybe,"
Talia smiled enigmatically. The fact that their "romance" had been
entirely without any result was Skif s secret—and hers. The streak of ill-luck
and accident that had plagued their meetings had not had any effect on tneir
friendship: except that 18 MERCEDES
LACKEY they
had never managed to be more than just that— friends. Oddly enough, though,
except for a brief period of anxiety when word had come that Skif had been hurt
during his first three months in the field, Talia had thought less of Skif, and
more of his counselor. To her own amazement—and for no reason, logical or
fanciful that she could think of—when her thoughts strayed in the direction of
the former thief and his internship assignment, it was in Dirk's direction that
they tended to wander. This was annoying; she'd met the man all of three times
in her life, and had never been in his company for more than an hour or two at
most. Yet, that homely face and those wonderful blue eyes kept lingering
stubbornly in her thoughts. It did not make sense. She
shook her head to free it of those fanciful images. She had little enough time,
and had none to spare in daydreams. "Well,
this little wardrobe change of yours ought to surprise little Elspeth,"
Sherrill said, changing the subject. "Oh,
Lady Bright—" Talia sat down with a thump on one of her cushions, joy
extinguished. It almost seemed to her at that moment that the bright sun-rays
pouring through her windows had dimmed. "Poor
Elspeth—" "Something up?" Keren asked, one eyebrow rising. "Just
the usual." "What's
usual? You know I don't get around the Court." "Intrigue
rising beyond gossip. She's almost fourteen and still not Chosen; there's
muttering in the Court that she's still the Brat under the skin and she'll
never be Chosen. In Council meetings one or more of the Councilors is usually
trying to pressure Selenay into naming an Heir—'pro tern,' as they put it—"
"Who?" Sherrill asked in alarm, sitting straight up. "Who's
stirring up the water?" ARROWS
FLIGHT 19 "You
know I can't tell you that! Anyway it isn't just those particular Councilors;
it's more than half of the Court. Elspeth doesn't say much, but it's got her
very depressed, poor baby. Their timing couldn't be worse. She's already moody
enough with the normal adolescent woes, and this has got her in near-tears on a
regular basis. When I'm not getting my shoulder soggy, I keep finding her at
Companion's Field whenever she's free, sort of lurking—" "Hoping
any minute to be Chosen. Gods, no wonder she's wearing a long face whenever I
see her. What's Rolan got to say about this?" "Be
damned if 1 know!" Talia gifted Keren with a look of exasperation. 'Tow
know he doesn't Mindspeak me in words." "Sorry,"
Keren winced, "I keep forgetting." "He's
worried, but it could be as much over the machinations and power-maneuverings
at Court as anything else. The current candidates are Jeri, Kemoc, and your
oh-so-lovely Kris." "Wonderful
people in and of themselves," Keren observed, "But with some
not-so-wonderful relatives lurking in the family trees. One would think Kris'
uncle Lord Orthallen would have his hands full enough as chief Councilor
without wanting to be the Heir's uncle—" "That
man will never have enough power to satisfy him," Talia snapped bitterly. Keren
raised an eyebrow at the outburst, and continued. "Kemoc's horde of lazy
cousins would swarm ihe Court, looking for sinecures—and Kemoc's such a soft
touch he'd try to manage it. And Jeri—Lady Bright! Her mother!" "We'd
have a battle royal every day between Jeri and Lady Indra over how Jeri's
Council votes should go. I wish her husband would lock her away. Or buy a gag
for her." "Amen.
Pity none of them come without baggage. 20 MERCEDES
LACKEY Not my
idea of a fun situation. And poor catling caught in the middle." Talia
sighed in agreement. "Speaking of no fun, I'd better scramble. Alberich
informed me in no uncertain terms that my new status does not exempt me from
his special lessons. I have the sinking feeling that he intends to slap my
inflated pride down to pre-student levels, and probably with the flat of his
blade." "Can
I watch?" Keren asked wickedly. "Why
not? Elspeth's always there, and there's nothing like being worse at something
than a thirteen-year-old girl to really deflate your opinions of yourself.
Well, that ought to reinflate her self-esteem a bit. Ah, me, it's a pity to
have to get these lovely new clothes all over dirt and sweat—" As they
descended the cool darkness of the spiral-ing staircase, Keren and Sherrill in
the lead with their arms casually linked, Talia reflected that bringing them
together was probably the best thing she'd ever done. The bond between them was
easily as strong as the one Keren had shared with Visa—and had Ylsa lived, they
might very well have formed one of the relatively rare, permanent threesomes.
There was no doubt that they were very good for each other. Poor Ylsa ... Talia's
chosen living quarters were at the very top of her tower at the end of the
Herald's wing. The suites in the four towers were seldom used—probably because
they were more than a bit inconvenient. The walk up and down the darkened stone
staircase was a long one, but she felt that the view (and the privacy) were
worth it. But the
trudge was likely to bring complaints from Talia's friends—and Keren voiced the
first of many. "I'll
tell you one thing, my fine young Herald," Keren grumbled a little when
they finally reached the ground floor. "Visiting with you on a regular ARROWS
FLIGHT 21 basis
is going to keep your friends in shape. Why you chose to roost with the birds
is beyond me." "Do
you truly want to know why I chose that particular suite?" Talia asked
with a grin. "Say
on." "Pray
remember, if you will, what my Gift is—I'm an empath, not a mindspeaker. Either
of you remember who my neighbor was?" "Mm.
Destria, wasn't it?" Sherrill replied after thought. "Turned out to
be a good Field Herald, despite her—ah—" "Randiness,"
Keren supplied with a hint of grin. "That girl! Anything in Grays or
Whites, so long as it was male! Havens, when did she ever have time to
study?" "Then
you both know about her habit of 'entertaining' with great frequency
and—um—enthusiasm. What I couldn't shield I could most certainly hear! Between
her nocturnal activities and Rolan's, I got a quite thorough education, let me
assure you! That's when I swore my privacy was worth any inconvenience. I don't
want to eavesdrop on anyone else's fun ever again, and I certainly don't want
anyone eavesdropping on mine!" "Talia,
I don't believe a word of it," Sherrill giggled. "What could you
possibly have to fear from eavesdroppers? You're practically a temple virgin
compared with the rest of us!" "You
ought to believe it, since it's all true. Well, here's where we part company.
Wish me luck—I'm going to need it!" Pity
that they hadn't wished her luck—she might have gotten a few less bruises.
Talia fanned herself with a towel while she paced back and forth to keep from
stiffening up, and watched Elspeth with un-: forced enjoyment. The girl was a
pleasure to observe, moving through the sparring bout with the grace and
agility of a dancer, and making it all seem 22 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FUGHT 23 effortless
and easy. She was much better even than Jeri had been at her age, but then she
had had the benefits of four years of Alberich's remorseless training; Jeri had
only had the finest arms-tutors money could obtain. No amount of money could
buy Alberich's expertise. She ran
through the assigned exercises with careless grace. Then, at the end of a bout,
she unexpectedly executed one of the spin-and-tumbling-rolls that Alberich had
been trying to train into Talia—a move that was not one Alberich had been
teaching her. And she scored a kill on him. He
stared at her in startled amazement for a long moment, as both Talia and
Elspeth waited breathlessly for the roar of disapproval they were certain would
come. "Good!"
he said at last, as Elspeth's jaw dropped in surprise. "Very good!"
Then, lest she dare to grow careless because of the compliment, "But next
time must be better." Despite
this unexpected kudo, Talia found when she brought Elspeth a damp towel at the
conclusion of the lesson that the girl was subdued and depressed. "What's
wrong, catling?" she asked, seeing how like her mother Elspeth was,
despite the brown hair and eyes rather than Selenay's blond and blue. At this
moment the shadow on her face matched the one the Queen wore when troubled. She
knew the answer already, but it would do the girl good to talk it out one more
time. "I
can't do anything right," Elspeth replied unhappily, "I'll never be
as good as you, no matter how hard I try." "You
can't be serious—" "No,
really, look at you! You spent half your life on a backwoods dirt-farm; now you
can't be told from Heralds that were highborn. You got good marks in your
classes; I'm abysmal in all of mine. And I can't even manage to be
Chosen...." "I
suspect it's the last that's eating at you the most." Elspeth
nodded, the corners of her mouth drooping. "Catling,
we're two different people with wildly different abilities and interests. In
the five years I've been here I've never once managed to earn a 'good' from
Alberich, much less a 'very good'! I'm still so stiff when I dance that they
say it's like dancing with a broom." "Oh,
huzzah, I'm a marvel of coordination. I can kill anything on two legs. That's a
terrific qualification for being Heir." "Catling,
you've got the qualifications. Look, if I Uvc to be two hundred, I will never
understand politics. Think back a minute. At the last Council meeting, I could
sense that Lord Cariodoc was irritated, but you were the one who not only knew
why and by whom, but managed to placate the old buzzard before he could start
an incident. And your teachers assure me that though you may not be the best in
your classes, you aren't the worst by any stretch of the imagination. As for
being Chosen, catling, thirteen is only the average age for that. Think of
Jadus—he was sixteen and had been at Bardic for three years! Or Teren, for
Lady's sake—a man grown and with two children! Look, it's probably only that
your Companion just hasn't been old enough, and you know very well they don't
Choose until they're ten or better." Elspeth's
mood seemed to be lightening a bit. "Come
on, love, cheer up, and we'll go see Rolan. If riding him will bring some sun
to your day, I'm Mire hell let you." Elspeth's
long face brightened considerably. She loved
riding as much as dancing and swordwork. It wasn't
often that a Companion would consent to bear
anyone but his Chosen; Rolan had done so for Elspeth in the past, and she obviously
counted those moments
among the finest in her life. It wasn't the same as
having her own Companion, but it was at 24 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 25 least a
little like it. Together they left the training salle, and headed for the
wooded enclosure that was home to the Companions at the Collegium (partnered,
unpartnered, and foals) and that also held the Grove, that place where the
Companions had first appeared hundreds of years ago. And
although she took pains not to show it, Talia was profoundly worried. This
situation with Elspeth's status hanging fire could not be maintained for much
longer. The strain was telling on the Queen, the girl, and the Heraldic Circle. But
Talia had no more notion of how to solve the problem than anyone else. Talia
woke with a start, momentarily confused by the strange feel and sounds of the
room in which she found herself. She couldn't see a blessed thing, and over her
head was a rattling— Then
she remembered where she was; and that the rattling was the shutter of the
window just over the head of her bed. She'd latched it open, and it was
rattling in the high wind that must have begun some time during the night. She
turned over and levered herself into a kneeling position on her pillow, peering
out into the darkness. She still couldn't see much; dark humps of foliage
against barely-lighter grass. The moon was less than half full, all the
buildings were dark, and clouds racing along in the wind obscured the stars and
the moonlight. The wind s me lied of dawn though, and sunrise couldn't be far
off. Talia
shivered in the chill, as wind whipped at her; she was about to crawl back
under her warm blankets when she saw something below her. A
person—a small person—hardly more than a dim figure moving beyond the fence of
Companion's Field, visible only because it was wearing something light-colored. ; And
she knew with sudden surety that the one below was Elspeth. She
slid out of bed, wincing at the cold wood under her feet, and grabbed clothing
by feel, not waiting to stop to light a candle. Confused thoughts tumbled, one
over the other. Was the girl sleepwalking? Was she ill? But when she reached
unthinkingly and tentatively with her Gift, she encountered neither the feel of
a sleeping mind, nor a disturbed one; only a deep and urgent sense of purpose. She
should, she realized in some dim, far-off corner of her mind, be alarmed. But
as soon as she had touched Elspeth with her Empathic Gift, that sense of calm
purpose had infected her as well, and she could no more have disobeyed its
promptings than have launched into flight from her tower window. In a
dreamlike state she half-stumbled out into the middle room, fumbled her way to
the door, and cautiously felt her way down the spiraling staircase with one
hand on the cold smoothness of the metal railing and the other on the rough
stone of the wall beside her. She was shivering so hard her teeth rat-tied, and
the thick darkness in the stairwell was slightly unnerving. There
was light at the foot of it, though, from a lamp set up on the wall. The dim
yellow light filled the entranceway. And the wood-paneled corridor beyond was
lighted well enough by farther wall-hung lamps that Talia felt safe in running down
the stone-floored passageways to the first door to the outside she could find. The
wind hit her with a shock; it was a physical blow so hard that she gasped. It
nearly wrenched the door out of her hands and she had to struggle for a moment
she had not wanted to spare to get it closed behind her. She realized that she
had gotten only a hint of its force from her window; her room was shetered from
the worst of it by the bulk of the Palace
itself. 26 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 27 She
found herself at the exterior bend of the L-shaped Herald's wing; just beyond
her bulked the Companion's stables. Elspeth was nowhere in sight. More
certain of her ground now than she had been in the unfamiliar wing of the
Palace, Talia would have run if she could, but the wind made that impossible.
It plastered her clothing to her body, and drove unidentifiable debris at her
with the velocity of crossbow bolts. She couldn't hear anything now with it
howling in her ears; she knew no one would hear her calling. Now she became
vaguely alarmed; with the wind this strong and in the dark, it would be so easy
for Elspeth to misstep and find herself in the river— She
mindcalled Rolan for help—and could not reach him— Or
rather, she could reach him, but he was paying no attention to her whatsoever;
his whole being was focused on—what it was, she could not say, but it demanded
all his concentration; for he was absorbed in it with such intensity that he
was shutting everything and everyone else out. It was
up to her, then. She fought her way around the stables toward the bridge that
led across the river to the main portion of Companion's Field. It was with
incredible relief that she spotted the vague blur of Elspeth ahead of her,
already across the river, and headed with utter single-minded concentration in
the direction of— There
was only one place she could be heading for— the Grove. Talia
forced her pace to the fastest she could manage, leaning at an acute angle into
the wind, but the girl had a considerable head start on her, and had already
entered the Grove by the time she had crossed the bridge. The
pale blob was lost to sight as the foliage closed around it, and Talia stumbled
over the uneven ground, falling more than once and bruising hands and
knees on the stones hidden in the grass. The long grass itself whipped at her
booted legs, tangling iher feet with each step. She was halfway to the Grove
when she looked up from yet another fall to see that it was—gods!—glowing
faintly from within. She
shook her head, blinking, certain that her eyes ^ere playing tricks on her. The
glow remained, scarcely brighter than foxfire, but unmistakably there. She
started to rise, when the entire world seemed to give a gut-wrenching lurch,
disorienting her completely. She clutched at the grass beneath her hands, as
the only reality in a suddenly unreal world, the pain of her bruised palms
hardly registering. Everything seemed to be spinning, the way it had the one
time she'd fainted, and she was lost in the darkness with the wind wailing in a
whirlwind around her and the Grove. There was a sickening moment—or
eternity—when nothing was real. Then
the world settled, and normality returned with an almost audible snap; the wind
died away to nothing, sound returned, the disorientation vanished, ail in the
space of a single heartbeat. Talia
opened her eyes, unaware until that moment that she'd been clenching both eyes
and jaw so tightly her face ached. Less than five feet away stood Elspeth,
between the supporting shoulders of two Companions. The one on her left was
Rolan, and he was back id Talia's awareness again—tired, though; very tired,
but strangely contented. Talia
staggered to her feet; the gray light of the setting moon was lightening the
sky, and by it, she Could make out the girl's features. Elspeth seemed dazed,
and if the contrast between the dark mass of her hair and the paleness of her
skin meant any-thing, she was drained as white as paper. Talia
stumbled the few steps between them, grabbed her shoulders and shook her; until
that moment the girl didn't seem to realize she was there. 28 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Elspeth—"
was all she managed to choke out around her own nerveless shivering. "Talia?"
The girl blinked once, then dumbfounded her mentor by seeming to snap into
total wakefulness, smiling and throwing her arms around Talia's shoulders.
"Talia—I—" she laughed, almost hysterical with joy, and for one brief
moment Talia feared she'd lost her mind. Then
she let go of the Herald and threw both of her arms around the neck of the
Companion to her right. "Talia, Talia, it happened! Gwena Chose me! She
called me when I was asleep, and I came, and she Chose me!" Gwena? Talia
knew every Companion in residence, having spent nearly as much time with them
as Keren, and having helped to midwife many of the foals. That name didn't
belong to any of them. And
that could only mean one thing; Gwena, like Rolan—and unlike any other
Companion currently alive—was Grove-born. But why? For centuries only Monarch's
Own Companions had appeared in the Grove like Companions of old. Talia
started to say something—and abruptly felt Rolan's presence overwhelming her
mind, tinged with a feeling of gentle regret. Talia
shook her head, bewildered by the sensation that she'd forgotten something,
then dismissed the feeling. Elspeth had been Chosen; that was what mattered.
She remembered the mare vaguely now. Gwena had always been one of the shyer
Companions, staying well away from visitors. All her shyness seemed gone, as
she nuzzled Elspeth's hair with possessive pride. Rolan, who had been
supporting Elspeth on the left, now paced forward in time to give Talia a
shoulder to lean on, for her own knees were going weak with reaction, and she
felt as drained as if she'd had a three-candlemark workout with Alberich. Birds
were ARROW'S
FLIGHT 29 breaking
into morning-song all around them, and jhe first light of true dawn streaked
the sky to the east with festive ribbons of brightness among the clouds. "Oh,
catling!" Talia released her hold on Rolan's mane and flung both her arms
around Elspeth, nearly Hi tears with joy. It did
not occur to either of them to wonder why no one else had been mustered out of
bed by that imperative calling both of them had answered—and why no one else
had noticed anything at all out of the ordinary even yet. Talia
managed to convince Elspeth—not to go back to her bed, because that was an
impossibility—but to settle with Gwena in a sheltered little hollow, with a
blanket purloined from the stable around her shoulders. Talia hoped that when
her excitement faded the child would doze off again; the gods knew she'd be
safe enough in the Field with her own Companion standing protective guard over
her. She wished devoutly mat she could have done the same, but there Were far
too many things she had to attend to. The
first—and most important—was to inform the Queen. Even at this early hour
Selenay would be awake and working, and likely with one or more Councilors. That
meant a formal announcement, and not what Talia really wanted to do, which was
to burst into Selenay's chamber caroling for joy. However
pleased Selenay would be, that sort of ac-tion would only give the Councilors a
very poor impression of the Queen's Own's maturity. So
Talia stumbled back to her room again, through the sweet breeze of a perfect
dawn, through bird choruses that were only a faint, far echo of the joy in her
heart, to get redressed. And this time, as neatly and precisely as she could
manage, cringing inwardly at the grass stains left on the knees of the pair of
breeches she'd just peeled off. Then she walked— 30 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 31 walked—decorously
and soberly down through the silence of the Herald's wing to the "New
Palace" wing that held the suites of Queen and Court. As
usual, there were two blue-clad Guardsmen stationed outside the doors to the
Royal chambers. She nodded to them, dark Jon to the right, wizened Fess to the
left; she knew both of them well, and longed to be able to whisper her news,
but that wouldn't do. It wouldn't be dignified, and it would absolutely shatter
protocol. As Queen's Own, she had the right of entry to the Queen's chambers at
any time of night or day, and was quickly admitted beyond those heavy goldenoak
doors. As she
had expected, Selenay was already hard at work in her dark-paneled outer
chamber; dressed for the day in formal Whites, massive desk covered with
papers, and both Lord Orthallen and the Seneschal at her shoulders. She looked
up at Talia's entrance, startled, blue eyes seeming weary even this early in
the day. Whatever brought those two Councilors to her side, it did not look to
be pleasant.. .. Perhaps
Talia's news would change all that. She
clued Selenay to the gravity of her news by making the formal half-bow before
entering, and that it was good news by a cheerful wink so timed that only
Selenay noted it. Protocol demanded exactly five steps across that dark-blue
carpet, which took her to exactly within comfortable conversational distance of
the desk. Then she went to one knee, trying not to flinch as her bruises
encountered the floor. Selenay, tucking a strand of gold hair behind one ear
and straightening in expectation, nodded to indicate she could speak. "Majesty—I
have come to petition the right of a trainee to enter the Collegium,"
Talia said gravely, with both hands clasped upon the upright knee, while her
eyes danced at the nonsense of all this formality. That
got the attention not only of Selenay, but of both
Councilors. Only highborn trainees needed to have
petitions laid before the Crown, for becoming a Herald often meant renouncing titles and lands, ei- ther
actual or presumptive. Talia
could see the puzzlement in the Councilors' eyes—and the rising hope in
Selenay's. "What Companion has
Chosen—and what is the candidate's name and rank?" Selenay replied just as formally,
one hand clutching the goblet before her sp
tightly her knuckles went white. "The
Companion Gwena has Chosen," Talia barely Managed
to keep from singing the words, "And her Choice
is the Heir-presumptive, now Heir-In-Right, the Lady Elspeth. May I have the Queen's
leave to enter the trainee in the Collegium rolls?" Within
the hour Court and Collegium were buzz-ing, and Talia was up to her eyebrows in
all the tasks needed to transfer Elspeth from her mother's custody to that of
the Collegium. Elspeth spent the day in blissful ignorance of all the
fuss—which was only fair. The first few hours were critical in the formation of
the Herald-Companion bond, and should be spent
in as undisturbed a manner as possible. So it Was Talia's task to see to it
that when Elspeth finally drifted dreamily back through the gates of
Companion's Field, everything, from room assignment to having
her belongings transferred, had been taken care of
for her. And toward day's end it occurred to Talia
that it behooved her to take dinner with the Court rather than the Collegium.
The Queen might make dinner the occasion for the formal announcement of choice of
Heir. She finished setting up Elspeth's class
schedule with Dean Elcarth, and sprinted to her quarters and up the stairs as
fast as her sore knees would permit. After a quick wash, she rummaged in the
wooden wardrobe, cursing as she bumped her head against 32 MERCEDES
LACKEY one of
the doors. After making what she hoped was an appropriate selection, she
dressed hastily in one of the velvet outfits. With one hand brushing her hair,
half-skipping as she wedged her feet into the soft slippers that went with it,
she used the other hand to snatch the appropriate book of protocol from among
the others on her still-dusty desk. While wriggling to settle the clothing
properly and using both hands to smooth her hair, she reviewed the brief
ceremony attendant on the coronation of the Heir. She shot a quick look at
herself in the mirror, then took herself off to the Great Hall. She
slipped into her seldom-used seat between Elspeth and the Queen and whispered
"Well?" "She's
going to do it as soon as everyone arrives," Elspeth breathed back.
"I think I'm going to die. . .." "No
you won't," Talia answered in a conspiratorial manner, "You've been
doing things like this for ages. Now / may die!" Elspeth was relaxing
visibly now that Talia was there to share her ordeal. Talia
had only taken meals with the Court a handful of times since she'd arrived at
the Collegium, and the Great Hall never ceased to impress her. It was the
largest single room in the Palace, its high, vaulted ceiling supported by
slender-seeming pillars of ironoak that gleamed golden in the light from the
windows and the lamp- and candle-light. There were battle-banners and heraldic
pennons that went clear back to the Founding hanging from the rafters. Talia's
seat was at the table placed on the dais, which stood at right angle to the
rest of the tables in the Hall. Late sunlight streamed in through the tall,
narrow windows that filled the west wall, but the windows to the east were
already beginning to darken with the onset of nightfall. The courtiers seated
along the tables below her were as colorful as a bed of wild-flowers, and
formed a pleasing grouping against the panels and tables of golden ironoak. When
the Great Hall was filled, the Queen arose ARROW'S
FLIGHT 33 as the
stewards called for silence. It would have been possible
to hear a feather fall as she began. Every eye in the Hall was riveted on her
proud, White-clad figure, with the thin circlet of Royal red gold (it was all
she would wear as token of her rank) encircling her raival-leaf golden hair. "Since
the death of my father, we have been with-out an Heir. I can understand and
sympathize with those of you who found this a disquieting and frightening
situation. You may rejoice, for all uncertainty is at an end. This day was my
daughter Elspeth Chosen by the Companion Gwena, making her a fully eligible
candidate for the position of Heir. Rise, daughter." Elspeth and Talia both rose, Elspeth to stand
before her mother, Talia to take the silver coronet of the Heir from the
steward holding it. She presented it to the Queen, then retired to her proper
position as Queen's Own, behind and slightly to Selenay's right. She was
pleased to note that although Elspeth's hands trembled, her voice, as she
repeated her vows, Was strong and clear. Elspeth caught her eyes and held to
Talia's gaze as if to a lifeline. Elspeth
was frightened half to death, despite her lifelong preparation for this moment.
She could dearly see Talia's encouraging expression, and the presence of the
Queen's Own gave her comfort and courage For one panicked moment halfway
through her vows, she forgot what her mother had said just the instant before.
She felt a flood of gratitude when she noticed Talia's lips moving, and
realized that she was mouthing the words Elspeth had just forgotten. There was
more to it than just having a friend at hand, too—with her mental senses
sharpened and enhanced by having been Chosen, Elspeth could dimly feel Talia as
a solid, comforting presence, like a deply-rooted tree in a wild windstorm.
There would be shelter for her beneath those branches, 34 MERCEDES
LACKEY and as
she repeated the last words of her Oath, she suddenly realized how vital that
shelter would be to one, who as ruler, must inevitably face the gales; and more
often than not alone. There was also, distinctly, though distantly, the sense
that Talia loved her for herself, and as a true friend. And that in itself was
a comfort. As she finished the last words and her mother placed the silver
circlet on her head, she tried to put all her gratitude to her friend in the
smile she gave her. As the
Queen placed the coronet on her daughter's hair, a spontaneous cheer rose that
gladdened Talia's heart. Perhaps now the Brat could be forgotten. But as
they resumed their seats and the serving began, the unaccustomed dainties of
the Queen's table suddenly lost their appeal as Talia realized that there was
yet another ceremony to be endured, one about which she knew nothing. As soon
as the powers of the Kingdom could be gathered there must be a great ceremony
of fealty in which the Queen's Own would play a significant role. Talia reached
blindly for her goblet to moisten a mouth gone dry with panic. Then
she took herself firmly in hand; Kyril and Elcarth, as Seneschal's Herald and
Dean of the Collegium, would surely know everything about this occasion—and
just as surely would be aware that Talia didn't. There was no need to panic.
Not yet, anyway. The
meal seemed to be progressing with ponderous slowness. This was Talia's first
High Feast—and it seemed incredibly dull. She sighed, and the Queen caught the
sound. "Bored?"
she whispered out of the corner of her mouth. "Oh,
no!" Talia replied with a forced smile. "Liar,"
the Queen replied with a twinkle. "No one but a moron could avoid being
bored by all this. You ARROWS
FLIGHT 35 sit and
sit, and smile and smile, till your face and backside are both stiff. Then you
sit and smile some more." "How
do you manage this day after day?" Talia asked, trying not to laugh. "Father
taught me a game; Elspeth and I play it now. What are we doing this time,
catling?" "We're
back to animals," Elspeth replied, as her mother nodded to an elderly duke
in response to some comment he'd mumbled. "You try and decide what animal
the courtiers most remind you of. We change each time. Sometimes it's flowers,
trees, rocks, landmarks—even weather. This time it's animals, and he's a badger." "Well
if he's a badger, his lady's a watchdog. Look how she raises her hackles
whenever he smiles at that pretty serving girl," Talia said. "Oh,
I'd never have thought of that one!" Elspeth exclaimed. "You're going
to be good at this game!" They managed
to keep straight faces, but it wasn't easy. Talia
sought out Kyril the next day before the thrice-weekly Council meeting to learn
that she had three weeks in which to prepare for Elspeth's formal investiture.
He and Elcarth pledged to drill her in all she needed to know, from protocol to
politics, every day. The
Council meeting in itself was something of an ordeal. She and Elspeth had seats
on the far end of the horseshoe-shaped Council table, almost opposite Selenay
and the empty place beside her. That empty chair was the seat of the Queen's
Own, but Talia could not, under law, assume that place until she had passed her
own internship. She and Elspeth had voice on the Council, but no vote.
Elspeth's own voting rights were in abeyance until she passed internship. The
Councilors tended to ignore them because of that lack of voting rights—but not
today. 36 MERCEDES
LACKEY No,
today they interrogated both Talia and Elspeth with an ill-concealed eagerness
that bordered on greed. How soon did Talia think she'd be out in the
field—could the internship be cut back to a year? Or given the importance of
her position, and her lack of experience, should it be extended past the normal
year-and-a-half? Could Elspeth's education be rushed? What should she be
tutored in besides the normal curriculum of the Herald's Collegium? Did she
feel ready for her new position as Heir? And on and on .,. From
most of the Councilors Talia only received a well-intentioned (if irritating)
eagerness to help "the children" (and she cursed—not for the first
time— her slight stature that made her seem barely an adolescent). But from
others— Lord
Orthallen, one of Selenay's closest advisors (as he had been to her father)
regarded both of them with a cool, almost cold, gaze. And Talia felt very like
a prime specimen of some unusual beetle on the dissecting table. She got no
emotional impressions from him at all; she never had. That was profoundly
disturbing for one whose Gift was Empathy— and even more disturbing was the vague
feeling that he was not pleased that Elspeth had at last been Chosen. From
Bard Hyron, speaker for the Bardic Circle, she got a distinct feeling that all
this was happening far too quickly. And that not enough caution was being
exercised. And that he didn't quite trust her. Lord
Gartheser's feelings were of general displeasure over the whole affair, but she
couldn't pinpoint why. There was also a faint overtone of disappointment; he
was related to Kemoc, one of the three other contenders for the position. Could
that be all, though? Or was there something deeper in his motivation? Lady
Wyrist was downright annoyed, but why, Talia couldn't fathom. It might have
been simply that she was afraid that Talia would favor her own relations, ARROW'S
FLIGHT 37 the
Holderkin, who lived in the area Wyrist spoke for. She could hardly know that
there was small chance of that! Orthallen
was the one who bothered her most, but as the meeting broke up, she knew she
would mention this to no one. She had nothing of fact to report; and she and
Orthallen had bad blood between them over his treatment (and near-expulsion) of
her friend Skif from the Collegium. She knew better than to give Orthallen so
powerful a weapon if he was an enemy as to seem to be holding a grudge. Instead
she smiled sweetly and thanked him for his good wishes. Let him think her an
innocent idiot. Meanwhile she would make sure to have one eye on him. But
soon, very soon now, she would be gone, on her year-and-a-half internship, and
that would take her entirely out of the current intrigues at Court. It would
also make it impossible for her to deal with any of it. If Gartheser,
Orthallen, or any of the others had deeper schemes, there would be no one near
Elspeth who could detect the shadow of the scheming. She
would be gone—and who would watch them then? Two Three
weeks to the investiture. Only three weeks, but they seemed like three years,
at least to Talia. There
was an elaborate ceremony of oaths and bindings to memorize, but that wasn't
the worst of it. Talia's main function at this particular rite would be
apparently to perform the original duties of Heralds, the duties they had held
in the days before Valdemar founded his kingdom, to announce each dignitary by
name and all ranks and titles before escorting him or her to the foot of the
Throne. This
was, of course, the lesser of her twin functions. In reality the more important
would be using her empathic Gift to assess—and, one hoped, neutralize—any
danger to the Queen and Heir from those about to come within striking distance
of them. The full High Court ceremonial costumes included a wide variety of
instruments of potential mayhem and assassination. There
was one small problem with this; Talia was farmbred, not highborn. The
elaborate tabards of state that a highborn child could read as easily as a book
were little more than bewildering patterns of gold and embroidery to her eyes.
And she would be dealing with nobles who were very touchy over their titles, and
apt to take affront if even the least and littlest were eliminated. 38 ARROW'S
FLIGHT 39 That
meant hours closeted in Herald Kyril's office, sitting until her behind went
numb on one of the hard wooden chairs he favored, memorizing plate after plate
from the state book of devices until her eyes were watering. She fell asleep at
night with the wildly colored and imaginative beasts, birds, and plants
spinning in mad dances behind her eyes. She woke in the morning with Kyril's
voice echoing out of her dreams, inescapably drilling her. She
spent at least another hour of every day in the stuffy Council chamber, with
the Councilors engaged in pointless debate about this or that item of protocol
for the coming ceremony until she wanted to scream with frustration. Elspeth,
at least, was spared this nonsense; she had quite enough on her plate with her
new round of Collegium classes and duties. For the next five years or so, once
the ceremony was complete, she would be neither more nor less important nor
cosseted than any other trainee—within certain limitations. She would still be
attending Council sessions once she'd settled in, and certain High Court
functions. But these were far more in the nature of duties rather than
treats—and were, in fact, things Talia reckoned that Elspeth would really
rather have foregone if she'd had any choice in the matter. When
Talia had taken the opportunity to check on her, the girl seemed well-content.
She was surely enjoying the new-found bond with her Companion Gwena. Keren had
told Talia that every free moment saw the two of them out in the Field
together, which was exactly as it should be. But
there was one unsettling oddity about the Council sessions that kept them from
sending Talia to sleep—an oddity that, in fact, was contributing to an
uneasiness ill-suited to the general festive atmosphere that hovered over Court
and Collegium. Talia
was catching Councilors and courtiers alike giving her bewildered, almost
fearful glances when 40 MERCEDES
LACKEY they
thought she wasn't watching. If it had not happened so frequently, she might
have thought she was imagining it, but scarcely a day passed without someone
watching her with the same attention they might have given to some outre
creature that might prove to be dangerous. It troubled her—and she wished more
than once for Skif and his talents at spying and subterfuge. But Skif was
furlongs away at very best, so she knew she'd have to muddle along beneath the
suspicious glances, and hope that whatever rumors were being passed about her
(and she had no doubt that they were about her) would either be put to rest or
come to light where she coufd confront them. Another
goodly portion of each day she spent helping to train a young Healer, Rynee,
who was to substitute for her while she was gone on her internship circuit.
Rynee, like Talia, was a mindHealer; she could never replace Talia, not without
being a Herald herself, but she could (and would) try to keep her senses alert
for Heralds in stress and distress, and get them somewhat sorted out. And
last, but by no means least, there were exhausting bouts with Alberich, all
with the express purpose of getting both Talia and Elspeth prepared for any
kind of assassination attempts that might occur. "I
really don't understand why you're doing this," Elspeth said one day,
about a week from the date of the ceremony. "After all, I'm the one who's
the better fighter." She had been watching from a vantage point well out
of the way, sitting cross-legged on one of the benches in the salle, against
the wall. Talia was absolutely sodden with sweat, and bruised in more places
than she cared to think about—and for a wonder, Alberich wasn't in any better
condition than she. Alberich
motioned to Talia that she could rest, and she sagged to the floor where she
stood. "Appearances," he said, "partially. I do not wish that
any ARROW'S
FUGHT 41 save
the Heralds should know how skilled you truly are. That could be the saving of
your life, one day. Also it is tradition that crowned heads do not defend
themselves; that is the duty of others." "Unless
there's no other choice?" Alberich
nodded. Elspeth
sighed. "I'm beginning to wish I wasn't Heir, now. It doesn't look like
I'm going to be allowed to have any fun!" "Catling,"
Talia panted, "If this is your idea of fun—you're welcome to it!" Elspeth
and Alberich exchanged rueful glances that said as plainly as words, she'll
never understand, and made shrugs so nearly identical that Talia was hard put
to keep from laughing. Finally
the day arrived for the long awaited—and dreaded—rite of Elspeth's formal
investiture as Heir. The fealty ceremony was scheduled for the evening with a
revel to follow. Talia, as usual, was running late. She
dashed from her last drilling session with Kyril to the bathing-room, then up
to her tower suite, taking the steps two at a time. She thanked the gods when
she got there that one of the servants had had the foresight to lay out her
gown and all its accoutrements, else she'd have been later still. She
donned the magnificent silk and velvet creation with trepidation. She'd never
worn High Court ceremonials in her life, though she'd helped Elspeth into her
own often enough. She
faced the mirror, balancing on one foot while she tied the ribbons to the
matching slippers around the ankle of the other. "Oh,
bloody hell," she sighed. She knew what a courtier ought to look like—and
she didn't. "Well, it's going to have to do. I just wish ..." "You
wish what?" Jeri
and Keren rapped on the side of the tower 42 MERCEDES
LACKEY door
and poked their heads around the edge of it. Talia groaned; Jeri looked the way
she wished she looked, gowned and coiffed exquisitely, every chestnut hair
neatly twisted into a High Court confection and precisely in place. "I
wish I could look like you—stunning, instead of stunned." Jeri
laughed; to look at her, no one would ever guess this lady was nearly the equal
of Alberich in neatly dissecting an opponent with any weapon at hand.
"It's all practice, love. Want some help?" Her green eyes sparkled.
"I've been doing this sort of nonsense since I was old enough to walk, and
mama usually commandeered all the servants in the house to attend her
preparations, so I had to learn how to do it myself." "If
you can make me look less like a plowboy, I will love you forever!" "I
think," Jeri replied merrily, "that we can manage at least that
much." For the
next half hour Talia sat on her bed in nervous anticipation as arcane things
happened to her hair and face while Jeri and Keren exchanged mysterious
comments. Finally Jeri handed her a mirror. "Is
that me?" Talia asked in amazement, staring at the worldly sophisticate in
the mirror frame. She could scarcely find a trace of Jeri's handiwork, yet
somehow she had added experience and a certain dignity without adding years or
subtracting freshness. Replacing her usual disordered tumble of curls was a
fashionable creation threaded through with a silver ribbon. "Do
I dare move? Is it all going to come apart?" "Havens,
no!" Jeri laughed, "That's what the ribbon's for, love. It isn't
likely to happen this time, praise the Lord, but you know very well what your
duty is in an emergency. The Queen's Own is supposed to be able to defend her
monarch at swordpoint, ARROW'S
FLIGHT 43 then
calmly clean her blade on the loser's tunic and go right back to whatever
ceremony was taking place. That's why your dress is ankle-length instead of
floor-length, has no train, and the sleeves detach with one pull—yes, they do,
trust me! I ought to know; I supervised the making of it. It's been a long time
since we've had a female Monarch's Own, and nobody knew exactly how to modify
High Court gear to suit. At any rate, you could work out now with Alberich
without one lock coming loose or losing any part of the costume you didn't want
to lose. But don't rub your eyes, or you'll look like you've been beaten."
She gathered her things. "We'd better be moving if we don't want to get
caught in the mob." "And
you'd better take care of the important part of your costume, childing,"
Keren warned as they started down the stairs. Talia
had not needed the reminder. The rest of her accessories were already laid out
and waiting. A long dagger in a sheath strapped around her waist and along her
right thigh that she could reach—as she carefully determined—through a slit in
her dress was the first weapon she donned. Then came paired throwing knives in
quick-release sheaths for both arms—gifts from Skif, which he had shown her how
to use long ago. Even Alberich admitted that Skif had no peer when it came to
his chosen weapons. Lastly, were two delicate stilettos furnished with winking,
jeweled ornaments that she inserted carefully into Jeri's handiwork. No
Herald was ever without a weapon, especially not the Queen's Own, as Keren had
reminded her. The life of more than one Monarch had been saved by just such
precautions. Just as
Talia was about to depart, there was a knock at her door. She opened it to find
Dean Elcarth standing on her threshold. Towering over him, fair and raven heads
side by side, lit by the lantern that 44 MERCEDES
LACKEY cast
its light beside her door and looking like living representatives of Day and
Night, were Dirk and Kris. Talia had not heard that either of them had returned
from the field, and surprise stilled her voice as she stared at the unexpected
visitors. "Neither
of these gallants seems to have a lady," the Dean said with mischief in
his eyes. "And since you have no escort, I thought of you
immediately," "How
thoughtful," Talia said dryly, Finally regaining the use of her wits, and
knowing there was more to it than that. "I don't suppose you had any other
motives, did you?" "Well,
since you are interning under Kris, I thought you might like to get acquainted
under calmer circumstances than the last time you met." So Kris
was to be her counselor, Sheri had been right. "Calmer?"
Talia squeaked. "You call this calmer?" "Relatively
speaking." "Elcarth!"
Dirk exclaimed impatiently. "Herald Talia, he's teasing you. He asked us
to help you because we know most of the people here on sight, so we can prompt
you if you get lost." "We
also know who the possible troublemakers are—not that we expect any problems,"
Kris continued, a smile warming his sky-blue eyes. "But there's less
likely to be any trouble with two great hulking brutes like us standing behind
the Queen." "Oh,
bless you!" Talia exclaimed with relief. "I've been worried half to
death that I'll say something wrong or announce the wrong person and mortally
offend someone." She carefully avoided mentioning assassination attempts,
though she knew all four of them were thinking about how useful the pair would
be in that event. Kris
smiled broadly, and Dirk executed a courtly bow that was saved from absurdity
by the twinkle in his eyes as he glanced up at her. "We
are your servants, O fairest of Heralds," he ARROWS
FUQHT 45 intoned,
sounding a great deal like an over-acting player in some truly awful romantic
drama. "Oh,
don't be ridiculous." Talia flushed, feeling oddly flattered and yet
uncomfortable, "You know very well that Nessa and Sheri make me look like
a squirrel, and the last time you saw me, I was passing out at your feet like a
silly child and probably looked like leftover porridge. Among friends my name
is Talia. Just Talia." The
Dean pivoted and trotted down the staircases, seemingly very pleased with
himself. Kris chuckled and Dirk grinned; both of them offered her their arms.
She accepted both, feeling dwarfed between the two of them. There was barely
enough room for all three of them on the stairs. "Well,
you devil, you've done it again," Dirk said to his partner over her head,
blinking as they emerged from the half-dark of the staircase into the light of
the hall. "I get a scrawny ex-thief with an appetite like a horse for my
internee, and look what you get! It's just not fair." He looked down at
her from his lofty six-and-a-half feet, and said mournfully to her, "I
suppose now that you've gotten a good look at my partner's justifiably famous
face, the rest of us don't stand a chance with you." "I
wouldn't go making any bets if I were you," she replied with a hint of an
edge to her voice, "1 have seen him before, you know, and you don't see me
falling at his feet worshiping now, do you? My father and brothers were just as
handsome. No insult meant to you, Kris, but I've had ample cause to mistrust
handsome men. I'd rather you were cross-eyed, or had warts, or something. I'd
feel a great deal more comfortable around you if you were a little less than
perfect." Dirk
howled with laughter at the nonplussed expression on his friend's face.
"That's a new one for you, my old and rare! Rejected by a woman! How's it
feel to be in my shoes?" 46 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Odd,"
Kris replied with good humor, "distinctly odd. I must say though, I'm
rather relieved. I was afraid Elcarth's mind was going, assigning me a female
internee. I've only seen you once or twice, remember, and we weren't exchanging
much personal information at the time! I thought you might be like Nessa.
Around her I start to feel like a hunted stag!" He suddenly looked
sheepish. "I have the feeling I may have put my foot in it; I hope you
don't mind my being frank." "Not
at all. It's my besetting sin, too." "Well,
you seem unexpectedly sensible. I think we'll do all right together." "Provided
that / haven't taken a dislike to you," Talia was just a little nettled at
his easy assumption that she would fall swift prey to his admittedly charming
manner. "Haven't you ever been told not to count your eggs till the hens
lay them?" From
the look on Kris' face, that possibility hadn't occurred to him, and he was
rather at a loss to deal with it. Dirk didn't help matters by becoming
hysterical. "She's
got you there, old boy!" he choked. "Stars be praised, I've lived to
see the day when it's you that gets put in his place, and not me! "On,
Bright Havens, don't worry about it," Talia said, taking pity on him.
"We're Doth Heralds, for pity's sake! We'll manage to get along. It's just
for a year and a half. After all, it's not as if somebody were forcing me to
marry you!" Kris'
expression was indescribable when Talia spoke of being 'forced" to marry
him as if it were something distasteful. "I
m fairly sure you didn't insult me, but that certainly didn't sound like a
compliment!" he complained forlornly. "I'm beginning to think I
prefer Nessa's attitude after all!" By now
they'd had to stop in the middle of the hall, as Dirk was doubled over and
tears were streaming down his face. Both of them had to pound on his back in
order to help him catch his breath again. ARROWS
FLIGHT 47 "Holy—Astera—"
he gasped. "This is something I never expected to see. Or hear!
Whew!" He somehow managed to look both contrite and satisfied at the same
time. "Forgive me, partner. It's just that seeing you as the rejected one
for a change—you should have seen your own face!—you looked like you'd swallowed
a live toad!" "Which
means that nothing worse can happen to him for the rest of the week. Now look,
none of this is getting us to the ceremony," Talia pointed out, "and
we're already running late." "She's
right again," Dirk said, taking her arm. "What
do you mean, 'again?" Kris asked suspiciously, as they hurried to the
Great Hall. Fortunately,
their arrival at the door of the Great Hall prevented his having to answer that
question. Dirk
had been having a little trouble sorting out some very odd feelings from the
moment that Talia had answered her door. The last time he'd seen the Queen's
Own, she'd fainted from total exhaustion practically at his feet, after having
undergone a considerable mental and emotional ordeal. He had learned afterward
that she had experienced at firsthand the murder of the Herald-Courier Visa,
and saved Visa's lifemate Keren from death-willing herself in shock. Then,
without a pause for rest, she had mentally guided him and his partner to the
spot where Visa had been slain. This slight, fragile-seeming woman-child had
aroused all of his protective instincts as well as his admiration for her raw
courage. He'd carried her up to her room himself, and made certain she was
safely tucked into her bed; then left medicinal tea ready for her to brew to
counteract the inevitable reaction-headache she'd have when she woke. He'd
known at the time she'd exhausted all her resources—when he heard the whole
story later in the day he'd been flabbergasted at her courage and endurance. 48 MERCEDES
LACKEY And she
was so very frail-looking; it was easy to feel protective about her, even
though her actions gave lie to that frail appearance. At least, he'd thought at
the time that it was only his protective instincts that she aroused. But the sight
of her this time had seemed to stir something a bit more complicated than
that—something he wasn't entirely sure he'd wanted to acknowledge. So he
defused the situation as best he could, by clowning with Kris. But even while
he was bent double with laughter, there was a vague disquiet in the back of his
mind, as though his subconscious was trying to warn him that he wasn't going to
be able to delay acknowledgment for long. Talia
was refusing to allow her nerves to show, but they were certainly affecting her
despite her best efforts. She was rather guiltily hoping Kris had realized that
she had been taking some of that nervousness out on him. The
Great Hall, tables cleared away, and benches placed along the walls, with every
candle and lantern lit, gleamed like a box made of gold. The courtiers and
notables were dressed in their finest array, jewels and silver and gold
ornaments catching the light and throwing it back so that the assemblage
sparkled like the contents of a highborn dame's jewelbox. Prominent among the
gilded nobles were the bright scarlet of Bards, the emerald green of Healers,
the bright blue of the uniforms of high-ranking officers of the Guard and Army,
and the brilliant white of Heralds. Each of those to be presented wore over his
or her finery the stiff tabard, heavy with embroidery, that marked a family or
Guild association. The men and women of the Guards standing duty in their sober
midnight-blue and silver ringed the walls, a dark frame for the rest. The
Queen's Own and her escorts assumed their places behind the thrones, Talia in
her place behind and to Selenay's right, Kris and Dirk behind and to ARROW'S
FLIGHT 49 either
side of her. Talia had a feeling that the three of them made a very impressive
and reassuring sight to those who had come here fearing to see weakness. But
there was uneasiness, too—the uneasiness she had been sensing for the past
three weeks, magnified. And she could not, for the life of her, fathom the
reason. The
ceremony began; Talia determined to ignore what she could not change, and did
her best to appear somehow both harmless and competent. She wasn't sure just
how successful she was, but some of the background of general nervousness did
seem to decrease after a while. She
tried to will some confidence into the young Heir, who was beginning to wilt
under the strain. She tried to catch her eyes and give her a reassuring smile,
but Elspeth's expression was tight and nervous, and her eyes were beginning to
glaze. For
Elspeth was not faring as well as Talia. The ceremony demanded that she respond
to each of her new liegemen with some sort of personalized speech, and about
halfway through she began running out of things to say. Kris
was the first, with his musician's ear for cadence, to notice her stumbling and
hesitating over her speeches. As the next worthy was being brought before her,
he whispered, "His son's just presented him with his first
grandchild." Elspeth
cast him a look of undying gratitude as she moved to receive this oath. As the
gouty lord rose with difficulty from his knees, she congratulated him on the
blessed event. The gentleman's expression as he was escorted away was
compounded of equal parts of startlement and pleasure, for he'd no notion that
anyone knew other than the immediate members of his family. Elspeth
decided at that moment that Kris was fully qualified for elevation to
sainthood, and beamed 50 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 51 quickly
at both of the Heralds before the next notable arrived. Dirk
caught on immediately and supplied the information for the next. Kris countered
with intelligence for the following two. Elspeth began to sparkle under the
gratified looks of the courtiers, reviving as quickly as she'd wilted; and Kris
and Dirk began to keep score in the impromptu contest. The Queen seemed to find
it all she could do to keep a straight face. Finally,
the last dignitary made his oath, and all three Heralds took their places with
the Circle to swear their oaths en masse. The Healer's and Bardic Circles
followed them, then the various clerics and priests made vows on behalf of
their orders and devotees. And the
long ceremony was at last complete— without a mishap. The
Queen's party retired from the dais, leaving it to instrumentalists of the
Bardic Circle, who immediately struck up a dance melody. Talia
joined Elspeth in the window-alcove furnished with velvet-padded benches that
was reserved for the Queen's entourage. "What were you three up to?"
she asked curiously. "I was too far away to hear any of it, but you
certainly seemed to be having a good time!" "These
two Heralds that came as your escort—they were wonderful!" Elspeth
bubbled. "I ran out of things to say, and they told me exactly what I
needed to know. Not big things, but what was most important to them right
now—the lords and so forth, I mean. Then they started making a contest out of
it, and that was what was so funny, them arguing back and forth about how much
something was 'worth' in points. Mother could hardly keep from laughing." "I
can imagine," Talia grinned, "Who won?" "I
did," Kris said from behind her. "You
wouldn't have if I'd thought of the sheep first," Dirk retorted. "Sheep?"
Talia said inquisitively. "Sheep? Do I want to know about this?" Dirk
snickered, and Kris glared at him. "It's
perfectly harmless," Kris answered, with just a hint of irritation.
"When Lady Fiona's husband died, she and Guildmistress Arawell started a
joint project to boost the fortunes of her family and ArawelTs branch of the
Weaver's Guild. They imported some sheep with an especially soft and fine
fleece much like lambswool from outKingdom—quite far south. They've finally
succeeded in adapting them to our harsher winters; the spring lambing more than
doubled their flock, and it seems that everyone is going to want stock or
fabric of the wool." 'That's
not what we came here for," Dirk said firmly. "Sheep and discussions
of animal husbandry— keep your filthy thoughts to yourself, partner!—" "My
filthy thoughts? Who was the one doing all the chording a few minutes
ago?" "—do
not belong at a revel. I claim the first dance with you, Talia, by virtue of
the fact that my partner is going to have you all to himself for a year and
more." "And
since that leaves me partnerless," Kris added, "I would very much
like to claim our newest Chosen for the same purpose." "Mother?"
Elspeth looked pleadingly at the Queen. Kris' stunning good looks had made more
than a slight impression on her, and that he should want to dance with her was
a distinct thrill. "My
dear, this is your celebration. If you want to ride your Companion around the
Great Hall, you could even do that—provided you're willing to face the
Seneschal's wrath when he sees the hoofmarks on his precious wood floor." Without
waiting for further permission, Kris swept the girl into the dance. 52 MERCEDES
LACKEY Dirk
lifted an inquisitive eyebrow at Talia. "Oh,
no," Talia laughed, "You don't know what you're asking. I dance like
a plowboy, I have no sense of rhythm, and I ruin my partner's feet." "Nonsense,"
Dirk replied, shaking unruly blond hair out of his eyes. "You just never
had the right partner." "Which
is you? And I thought Kris was vain!" "My
dear Talia," he countered, swinging her onto the floor, "Truth can
hardly be considered in the same light as vanity. I have it on the best
authority that my dancing more than compensates for my looks." Shortly,
Talia was forced to admit that he was absolutely correct. For the first time in
her experience, she began to enjoy a dance—it was almost magical, the way they
seemed to move together. Dirk didn't seem displeased by her performance either,
as he yielded her to other partners with extreme reluctance. Kris,
on the other hand, despite yearning glances from nearly every young woman
present, danced only with women far older than himself, or with Elspeth or
Talia. "I
hope you don't mind being used like this," he said contritely, after the
sixth or seventh dance. "Used?"
she replied, puzzled. "As
a shield. I'm dancing with you to keep from being devoured by them," he
nodded toward a group of Court beauties languishing in his direction. "I
can't dance just with beldames, Elspeth has to take other partners, and the
only Heralds I can trust not to try to carry me off are Keren, Sheri, and you.
And those other two don't dance." "It's
nice to know I'm wanted," she laughed up at him, "Did
I just put my foot in it again?" "No,
not really. And I don't mind being 'used.' After all, by now they all know
we're assigned to- ARROWS
FLIGHT 53 gether,
so they'll assume we're getting acquainted. You can avoid people without
anyone's feelings being hurt." "You
do understand," he said, relieved. "I hate to hurt anyone's feelings,
but they all seem to think if they just throw themselves at me hard enough,
I'll have to take one of them—short-term, long-term, it doesn't seem to matter.
Nobody ever seems to wonder what / want." "Well,
what do you want?" Talia asked. "The
Collegium," he replied to Talia's amazement, "That's where most of my
time and energy go—and where I want them to go. I do a lot of studying on my
own: history, administration, law. I'd like to be Elcarth's replacement as Dean
and Historian when he retires, and that takes a lot of preparation. I don't
have much free time—certainly none to spend on games of courtly love. Or
shepherd-in-the-hay." Talia
looked at him with new respect. "That's mar-velous; Elcarth's job is the
hardest and most thankless I can think of. In some ways, it's even worse than
mine. You might just be the one to handle it. I don't think you can serve the
Collegium and still give another person a—a—" "The
amount of attention a decent pairing needs," he finished for her,
"Thank you—do you know, you're the first person besides Dirk who didn't
think I was out of my mind?" "But
what would you do if you did find someone you wanted?" "I
don't know—except that it isn't likely to happen. Face it, Talia, Heralds
seldom form permanent attachments to anyone or anything. We're friends, always,
and sometimes things get more intense than that, but it doesn't last for long.
Maybe it's because our hearts are given first to our Companions, then to our
duty—and I guess there aren't too many of us with hearts big enough for a third
love. Non-Heralds don't seem to be able to grasp that. Not too many 54 MERCEDES
LACKEY Heralds
do, for that matter. But look around you— Sherrill and Keren are the only
Hfebonded couple I can think of, and I wouldn't be willing to settle for less
than what they've got. Which is why I'm hiding behind you." "You
can't hide forever." "I
don't have to," he replied whimsically. "Just till the end of the
revel. After that, I'll be safely in the field, accompanied solely by the only
person I've met who thinks I'd be better off cross-eyed and covered with
warts!" Dirk
reclaimed her after that; it was during that dance that she noticed that the
number of white-clad bodies was rapidly diminishing. "Where's everyone
gone?" she asked him, puzzled. "It's
not often that we get this many of us together at one time," he replied,
"so as people get tired of dancing, we slip off to our own private party.
Want to go?" "Bright
Havens, yes!" she replied with enthusiasm. "Let
me catch Kris' eye." He moved them closer to where Kris was dancing with a
spritely grandmother, and tilted an eyebrow toward the door. When Kris nodded,
Dirk arranged for them to end the dance next to the exit as the musicians
played the final phrase. Kris
joined them after escorting his partner to her seat. "I like that one; she
kept threatening to take me home, feed me 'proper'—and then 'train me right,1
and I know she wasn't talking about dancing or manners!" He laughed
quiedy. "I take it Talia's ready to go? I am." "Good,
then we're all agreed," Dirk replied. "Talia, go get changed into
something comfortable, find something to sit on, and an old cloak in case we
end up outside. If you play any instruments, bring them, too—then meet us in the
Library." "This
is like the littles' game of 'Spy'!" she giggled. "You're
not far wrong," Kris answered, "We go to ARROWS
FLIGHT 55 great
lengths to keep these parties private. Now hurry, or we'll leave without
you!" She
gathered her skirts in both hands and ran lightly down the halls of the Palace.
When she reached her tower, she again took the steps two at a time. She paused
only long enough in her room to light a lamp before unlacing her dress and
sliding out of it. Even though she was in a hurry she hung it up with
care—there was no use in ruining it with creases. She changed into the first
things that came to hand. She freed her hair from the ribbon, letting it tumble
around her face while she carefully stored My Lady in her case, and stuck her
shepherd's pipe in her belt. She slung the carrying strap of the harpcase over
her shoulder, an old, worn wool cloak from her trainee days over all, picked up
one of her cushions, and was ready to go. Well,
almost. Remembering what Jeri had said about the cosmetics, she stopped at the
bathing room at the base of the tower for a quick wash, then ran for the
Library. When
she swung open the door to the Library, she discovered that the other two had
beaten her there— but then, they probably didn't have several flights of stairs
to climbs. Kris
was all in black, and looking too poetic for words. Dirk was in mismatched
bluish grays that looked rather as if he'd just left them in a heap when he'd
picked up his clean laundry (which, in fact, was probably the case). Both of
them looked up at the sound of the door opening. "Talia!
Good—you don't dawdle like my sisters do," Dirk greeted ner. "Come
over here, and we'll let you in on the secret." Talia
crossed the room to where they were standing; the first study cubicle. 'The
first to leave always meet here to decide where we're going to convene,"
Dirk explained, "And they leave something telling the rest of us where
that is. In this case—it's this." 56 MERCEDES
LACKEY He
showed her a book left on the table—on harness-making. "Let
me guess/' Tatia said. "The stable?" "Close.
The tackshed in Companion's Field; see, it's open at the chapter on the special
bridles we use," Kris explained. "Last time they had to leave a rock
on top of a copy of a religious text; we used the half-finished temple down
near the river because we'd met too often around here. A bit cold for my
liking, though I'm told those currently keeping company enjoyed keeping each
other warm." Talia
smothered giggles as they slipped outside. The
windows of the tackshed had been tightly shuttered so that no light leaked out
to betray the revelry within. Both fireplaces had been lighted against the
slight chill in the air and as the main source of illumination. The three of
them slipped in as quiedy as possible to avoid disturbing the entertainment in
progress—a tale being told with some skill by a middle-aged Herald whose twin
streaks of gray, one at each temple, stood out stardingly in the firelight. "It'll
be quiet tonight," Kris whispered in Talia's ear. "Probably because
the Palace revel turned into such a romp. Our revels tend to be the opposite of
the official ones." Heralds
were sprawled over the floor of the tackshed in various comfortable poses, all giving
rapt attention to the storyteller. There seemed to be close to seventy of them;
the most Talia had ever seen together at one time. Apparently every Herald
within riding distance had arranged to be here for the fealty ceremony. The
storyteller concluded his tale to the sighs of satisfaction of those around
him. Then, with the spell of the story gone, many of them leaped up to greet
the newcomers, hugging the two men or grasping their hands with warm and
heart-felt affection. Since they were uniformly strangers to Talia, she shrank
back shyly into the shadows by the door. ARROWS
FLIGHT 57 "Whoa,
there—slow down, friends!" Dirk chuckled, extricating himself from the
press of greeters. "We've brought someone to meet all of you." He
searched the shadows, found Talia, and reaching out a long arm, pulled her
fully into the light. "You all know we've finally got a true Queen's Own
again—and here she is!" Before
anyone could move to greet her, there was a whoop of joy from the far side of
the room, and a hurtling body bounced across it, vaulting over several Heralds
who laughed, ducked, and protected their heads with their arms. The leaper
reached Talia and picked her up bodily, lifting her high into the air, and
setting her down with an enthusiastic kiss. "Skif?"
she gasped. "Every
inch of me!" Skif crowed. "B-but—you're
so tall!" When he'd gotten his Whites, Skif hadn't topped her by more than
an inch or two. Now he could easily challenge Dirk's height. "I
guess something in the air of the south makes things grow, 'cause I sure did
last year," Skif chuckled. "Ask Dirk—he was my counselor." "Grow?
Bright Stars, grow is too tame a word!" Dirk groaned. "We spent half
our time keeping him fed; he ate more than our mules!" "You've
done pretty well yourself, I'd say," Skif went on, pointedly ignoring
Dirk. "You looked fine up there. Made us all damn proud." Talia
blushed, glad it wouldn't show in the dim light. "I've had a lot of
help," she said, almost apologetically. "It
takes more than a lot of help, and we both know it," he retorted.
"Well, hellfire, this isn't the time or place for talk about work. You
two—you know the rules. Entrance fee!" Dirk
and Kris were laughingly pushed to the center of the room, as the story teller vacated
his place for them. "Anybody bring a harp?" Kris called. "Mine's
still packed; I just got in today." 58 MERCEDES
LACKEY "I
did," Talia volunteered, and eager hands reached out to convey the harp,
still in the case, to Kris. "Is
this—this can't be My Lady, can it?" Kris asked as the firelight gleamed
on the golden wood and the clean, delicate lines. "I wondered who Jadus
had left her to." He ran his fingers reverently across the strings, and
they sighed sweetly. "She's in perfect tune, Talia. You've been caring for
her as she deserves." Without
waiting for an answer, he began playing an old lullaby. Jadus had been a better
player, but Kris was surprisingly good for an amateur, and much better than
Talia. He made an incredibly beautiful picture, with the golden wood gleaming
against his black tunic, and his raven head bent in concentration over the
strings. He was almost as much a pleasure to watch as to listen to. "Any
requests?" he asked when he'd finished. "
'Sun and Shadow,'" several people called out at once. "All
right," Dirk replied, "But I want a volunteer to sing Shadowdancer.
The last time I did it, I was hoarse for a month." "I
could," Talia heard herself saying, to her surprise. "You?"
Dirk seemed both pleased and equally surprised. "You're full of amazing
things, aren't you?" He made room beside himself; and Talia picked her way
across the crowded floor, to sit shyly in the shadow he cast in the firelight. "Sun
and Shadow" told of the meeting of two of the earliest Heralds, Rothas
Sunsinger and Lythe Shadowdancer; long before they were ever Chosen and while
their lives still remained tangled by strange curses. It was a duet for male
and female voice, though Dirk had often sung it all himself. It was one of those
odd songs that either made you hold your breath or bored you to tears,
depending on how it was sung. Dirk wondered which it would be tonight. As
Talia began her verse in answer to his,,Dirk ARROW'S
FLIGHT 59 stopped
wondering. There was no doubt who'd trained her—the deft phrasing that made the
most of her delicate, slightly breathy voice showed Jadus' touch as clearly as
the harp he'd left her. But she sang with something more than just her mind and
voice, something the finest training couldn't impart. This was going to be one
of the magic times. Dirk
surrendered himself to the song, little guessing that he was surpassing his own
best this night as well. Kris knew, as he accompanied them—and he wished there
was a way to capture the moment for all time. The
spontaneous applause that shook the rafters starded both Dirk and Talia out of
the spell the music had wrapped them in. Dirk smiled with more than usual
warmth at the tiny female half-hiding in his shadow, and felt his smile
returned. "Well,
we've paid our forfeit," Kris said, cutting short the demands for more.
"It's somebody else's turn now." "That's
not fair," a voice from the back complained, "How could any of us
possibly follow that?" Someone
did, of course, by changing the mood rather than ruining it by trying to
sustain it. A tall, bony fellow borrowed Talia's pipe to play a lively jig,
while two men and a woman bounded into the center to dance to it. That seemed
to decide everyone on a dancing-set; Talia reclaimed her pipe to join Kris,
someone with a gittern, and Jeri on tambour in a series of very lively round
dances of the village festival variety. As these were both strenuous and of an
accelerated tempo, those who had felt lively enough to dance were soon
exhausted and ready to become an audience again. Those
who didn't feel up to entertaining paid their "entrance fee" in food
and drink; Talia saw a good many small casks of wine, cider, and ale ranged
along the walls, and with them, baskets of fruit, sausages, or bread and
cheese. Stray mugs and odd 60 MERCEDES
LACKEY cups
were always accumulating in the tackshed, especially during the hot summer
months when Heralds and students were likely to need a draught of cool water
from the well that supplied the Companions' needs at this end of the Field.
These handy receptacles were filled and refilled and passed from hand to hand
with a gay disregard for the possibility of colds or fever being passed with
the drink. Like Talia, most of the Heralds had brought cushions from their
quarters; these and their saddles and packs were piled into comfortable lounges
that might be shared or not. A few murmurs from some of the darker corners made
Talia hastily avert her eyes and close her ears, and she recalled Dirk's
earlier comments about Heralds "keeping each other warm." From time
to time some of these rose from the dark, and either left for more private
surroundings or rejoined those by the two fires. And over all was an atmosphere
of—belonging. There was no one here that was not cared for and welcomed by all
the rest. It was Talia's first exposure to a gathering of her fellows under
pleasant circumstances, and she gradually realized that the feeling of oneness
extended outside the walls as well—to the Companions in the Field, and beyond
that, to those who could not be present this night. Small wonder, with such a
warmth of brotherhood to bask in, that the Heralds had deserted the main
revelry for this more intimate celebration of their joy at the Choosing of the
Heir. It was enough to make her forget the strange uneasiness that had been
shadowing her the past three weeks. As soon
as she could manage it, Talia retrieved Skif from a knot of year-mates who
seemed bent on emptying a particular cask by themselves. "Let's
go up to the loft," she said, after scanning that perch and ascertaining
that none of the amorous had chosen it themselves. "I don't want to
disturb anybody, but I don't want to leave, either." ARROWS
FLIGHT 61 The
"loft" was little more than a narrow balcony that ran the length of
one side and gave access to storage places in the rafters. Talia noticed
immediately that Skif—very uncharacteristically—kept to the wall on the stairs,
and put his back against it when they reached the loft itself. "Lord
and Lady, it's good to see you!" he exclaimed softly, giving her a repeat
of his earlier hug. "We weren't sure we'd make it back in time. In fact,
we left all the baggage and the mules back at a Resupply Station; took only
what Cymry and Ahrodie could carry besides ourselves. I've missed you, little
sister. The letters helped, but I'd rather have been able to talk with you,
especially—" Talia
could sense him fighting a surge of what could only be fear. "Especially?" "—after—the
accident." She moved
closer to him, resting both her hands on his. She didn't have to see him to
know he was pale and white-knuckled. "Tell me." "I—can't." She
lowered her shields; he was spiky inside with phobic fears; of storms, of
entrapment; and most of all, of falling. In the state he was in now, she
doubted he'd be able to look out a second-story window without exerting iron
control—and this from the young man who'd led her on a scramble across the face
of the second story of the Palace itself, one dark night! "Remember
me? What I am? Just start at the beginning; take it slowly. I'll help you face
it down." He
swallowed. "It—it started with a storm; we were caught out on the trail in
the hills. Hills, ha! More like mountains! Gods, it was dark; rain was pouring
down so hard I couldn't even see Cymry's ears. Dirk had point, the mules were
next, I was tail—it was supposed to be the safest place. We were more or less
feeling our way along; sheer rock on one side of us, ravine on the other." 62 MERCEDES
LACKEY Talia
had herself in half-trance, carefully extending herself into his mind. He was
fighting down his fear as he spoke and beginning to lose to it. "The
trail just—crumbled, right under Cymry's hooves. We fell; there wasn't even
time to yell for help." Gently,
Talia touched the fear, took it into herself, and began working away at it. It
was like knife-edged flint, all points and slicing surfaces. As softly as
flowing water, and as inexorably, she began wearing away at it, dulling it,
muting it. "We
ended up wedged halfway down. Cymry was stunned; I'd broken my arm and most of
my ribs, I think; I don't remember much. It hurt too much to think, and where I
was stuck, there was a flood of water pouring down the wall like a young
waterfall. You know I don't Mindspeak too well, and Dirk's Gift isn't
Mindspeech anyway; I couldn't get hold of myself enough to call for help that
way, and it was impossible to be heard over the storm." He was
shaking like a reed in a windstorm; she put her arm around his shoulders;
supplying a physical comfort as well as the mental. "But Dirk found
you," she pointed out. "The
Gods alone know how; he had no reason to think we were still alive." The
tension was rapidly draining out of him as Talia shielded him from the phobic
memories; not enough to make him forget, but enough to make them less real,
less obsessive. "He got ropes around both of us and anchored us where we
were; used something to divert the water away from me, and stayed with us,
hanging on with his teeth and toenails, until the storm was over. Then he got
blankets over us and sent Ahrodie off for help while he got me back up to the
trail. I don't remember that part at all; I must have blacked out from the
pain." His voice sounded less strained. The
fear was nearly conquered now; time to diffuse the rest of it. "You must
have looked like a ARROW'S
FLIGHT 63 drowned
rat," she replied with a hint of chuckle. "I know you have a fetish
for cleanliness, but don't you think that was overdoing it a bit?" He
stared at her in surprise, then began to laugh, shakily. The laughter was half
tears as the last of the tension was released. Hysterics—yes, but long needed. She
held him quietly until the worst passed, and he could see past the tears to her
face, childlike in the half-dark. The
paralysis of fear that Skif had lived with on a daily basis for the past
several months had all but choked the voice out of him as he tried to tell
Talia what had happened that awful night. He'd suffered nightmare replays of
the incident at least one night a week ever since. It had taken all of his
control to repeat it to her—at least at first. But then, gradually, the words
had begun to flow more freely; the fear had slowly loosed its grip on him. As
he neared the end of his narrative, he began to realize what Talia had done. It was
gratitude as much as release that shook the tears from him then. "You—you
did it to me, didn't you—fixed me like you did with Vostel and the rest of
them—?" "Mm-hm,"
she nodded, touching his hair in the dark. "I didn't think you'd
mind." "No
more nightmares?" "No
more nightmares, big brother. You won't find yourself wanting to hide in a
closet during storms anymore, and you'll be able to look down over cliffs
again. In fact, you'll even be able to tell the story in a week or two without
shaking like a day-old chick, and it should make a good tale to earn the
sympathy of a pretty lady with!" "You—you're
unbelievable," he said at last, holding her tightly. "So
are you, to have been coping with all that fear all this time, and not letting
it get the best of you." They
sat that way for some time, before the mur- 64 MERCEDES
LACKEY mur of
voices below them recalled them to their surroundings. "Hellfire!
This is supposed to be a party, and you're supposed to be enjoying it,"
Skif said at last. "I
am, now that you're all right." She rose to her feet, and gave him a hand
up. "Well, I'm going back to the singing, and it seems to me that your
year-mate Mavry is looking a bit lonely." "Hm.
So she is," he replied, peering down into the lighted area. "Think
I'll go keep her company. And—heart-sister—" "No
thanks needed, love." He
kissed her forehead by way of reply, then skipped lightly down the stairs of
the loft and took himself off to the other side of the room, where Mavry
willingly made a space for him beside her. Talia
rejoined the musicians just in time for Dirk to claim her for another duet She
had to plead a dry throat before they'd let someone else take the floor. She
didn't notice the passing of time until she caught herself yawning hard enough
to split her head in half. When she tried to reckon up how much time had
passed, she was shocked. Thinking
she surely must be mistaken, she slipped over to the door to look out to the
east. Sure enough, there on the horizon was the first hint of false dawn. True
dawn was less than an hour away. She
collected her things, feeling suddenly ready to collapse. Dirk, half-propped on
a backrest of saddle and several old saddleblankets, seemed to be asleep as she
slipped past him, but he cracked an eyelid open as she tried to ease herself
out. "Giving
up?" he asked softly. She
nodded, stifling another yawn with the back of her hand. "Enjoy
yourself?" At her enthusiastic nod, he smiled, another of those wonderful
warm smiles that seemed to embrace her and close everything and everyone ARROWS
FLIGHT 65 else
outside of it. "I'll be heading back to my own bed before long. About this
time things start to break up on their own. And don't worry about being
expected on duty today. No one will be up to notice before noon at the
earliest—look over there." He cocked an eyebrow to his left. Talia was
astonished to see the Queen, dressed in old, worn leathers, sharing a cloak and
resting her head in easy intimacy on the shoulder of the middle-aged
storyteller. And not far from her sat Alberich, finishing the last of a
wineskin with Keren, Sherrill, and Jeri. "How
did Selenay and Alberich get in without my noticing?" Talia asked him. "Easy.
You were singing at the time. See, though? You won't be missed. Have a good
long sleep—and pleasant dreams, Talia." "And
to you, Dirk," she said. "They
will be," he chuckled, and closed his eyes again. "They most
assuredly will be." Three Talia
didn't usually sleep long or heaviiy. Perhaps the cause was that she'd drunk
more wine than usual, or perhaps it was just the incredibly late hour at which
she'd sought her bed. At any rate, it took having the sun shine directly into
her eyes to wake her the next morning. Since
the window of her bedroom faced the east, she'd positioned her bed with the
headboard right under the windowsill. That way she always had the fresh air,
and her face should remain out of the sunlight until well after the time she
normally rose. No matter how cold the winter, she'd never been able to bear the
slight claustrophobia that closed shutters induced in her, so the glazed
windows themselves and the thin fabric curtaining them were all that stood
between her eyes and the sun's rays, and the windows themselves were open, with
the curtains moving slightly in the breeze. As she
squinted groggily through the glare, she realized that it must be nearly noon,
and as if to confirm this, the noon warning bell at the Collegium sounded
clearly through her open window. Well,
the wine she'd indulged in last night had given her a slight headache. She
muttered something to herself about fools and lack of judgment 66 ARROW'S
FLIGHT 67 and
pulled her pillow over her head, tempted to go right back to sleep again. But a
nagging sense of duty, (and, more urgently, a need to use the privy) denied her
further sloth. She'd
been so tired last night—this morning?—that all she'd been able to do was peel
off her clothing, leave it in a heap on the floor, and fall into bed. Now that
she felt a little more awake, her skin crawled with the need for a bath. Her
hair itched. Her mouth didn't bear thinking about. She groaned. It was
definitely time to get up. She
sighed, levered herself out of bed, and set about getting herself back into
working condition. Sitting
on the edge of the bed, she rubbed her eyes until they cooperated by focusing
properly, then reached for the robe hanging on one of the posts at the foot of
her bed. She wrapped it about herself, then collected the clothing on the
floor. The soiled clothing went into a hamper; the servant who tended to the
Heralds in this section of the wing collected it and sent it to the laundry as
part of her duties—and that was a luxury that was going to take some getting
used to! She'd been lowborn and at the bottom of her Holderkin family's pecking
order as a child, and once at the Collegium had fallen naturally in with the
tradition that trainees tended to their own needs and shared the common chores.
She had become habituated to doing the serving, and not to being waited on
herself! The
warmth of the smooth wood beneath her feet was very comforting, and she decided
then that she would not have any floor coverings in her new quarters. She liked
the way the sunwarmed boards felt to bare feet, and she liked the way the wood
glowed when the sun touched it. She
rummaged in her wardrobe, and draped a new, clean uniform over one arm, then
bundled her bathing things into the other arm and headed for the door. 68 MERCEDES
LACKEY The
bathing-room shared by the other tower occupants was on the bottom floor; that
was another disadvantage of having selected a tower room. It was a long walk, and
seemed longer for the thinking about it. Talia was the only current occupant
though. The other rooms were either unclaimed or their owners were out on
circuit. So at least there wasn't going to be any competition for the
facilities. Talia
saw a note waiting for her on her door as soon as she opened it. Rubbing her
temple in response to the ache behind her eyes, she wondered who could be the
early riser after the revelry of the previous night. She took it down and began
to skim through it as she headed down the stairs. What she read caused her to
stop dead and reread it thoroughly. It was
from Kyril. /
realize this is notice so short as to be nonexistent, he wrote, but we've had
an emergency since last night. The Herald currently riding one of the Northern
Border Sectors has had an accident, and we have no one free who knows anything
about the area to cover it. Dirk can't—he's already assigned to another Border
Sector that needs a Border-bred Herald too badly to reassign him elsewhere. The
closest we can come is this—since Dirk is a native of that area, Kris has
visited up there fairly often; and you're of Borderer upbringing. Since you
haven't been assigned a circuit yet, it seemed to me that assigning it to you
as your internship with Kris would solve our problems very neatly. However,
this means that you two will have to start as soon as we can get you on the
road north; tomorrow, I hope. Please report to me right after the noon meal—or
as soon as you read this note!—-for a briefing and some final information. Her
first thought was an irreverent and irrelevant one. She knew Kyril hadn't left
the revel before her— how could he have been awake and ready to handle crises
so blasted early in the morning after? Her next was more to the point. Tomorrow!
She hadn't expected assignment with so little warning. There wasn't any time to
waste; she ran downstairs to the bathing- ARROWS
FLIGHT 69 room.
The last thing she wanted to do was give Kyril an impression of carelessness or
incompetence. A good
hot bath did a great deal to revitalize her; a dose of willowbark tea took care
of the ache in her head. She couldn't do much for the half-cloudy feeling of
her mind, but she hoped that being aware that she wasn't quite at her best
would compensate for that. Rather than take the time for a full meal she begged
cheese, bread, and fruit from Mero. She was far too keyed up to eat much,
anyway. This would be the first time that she would meet with Kyril as an
equal; up until now, even though she had her Whites, it had still been very
much a teacher-student relationship. She
took a few moments of precious time to consult with Rolan before seeking Kyril.
It was frustrating not to be able to speak with him in words—but simply
Mindtouching with him gave her an added measure of calmness. He reassured her
that Kyril would never have expected her to report any earlier than this, and
prevented her from changing at the last minute into one of her formal uniforms.
And beneath it all was the solidity of knowing that he stood ready to help her
if she truly found herself out of her depth on this assignment. Feeling a good
bit more confident, she skipped down the tower steps and entered the Palace
proper. A few
moments later she had made her way to the administrative area. She paused
outside the door of the Records Room—which served as Kyril's office— for a
moment to order her mind and calm herself. She pulled the doeskin tunic
straight, smoothed her hair; took a deep breath, knocked once and entered. The
Records Room was as neat as Dean Elcarth's office was cluttered. Sun streamed
in through the two windows that looked out into the gardens on the west side of
the building. Both of them were wide open, and flower-scent wafted in through
them. The 70 MERCEDES
LACKEY room
was crammed as full of bookshelves as it was possible to be. Kyril's desk stood
just under one of the two windows, to take full advantage of the light. Kyril
himself was leaning in the window frame, absently watching courtiers stroll in
the gardens, and obviously waiting for her. She noticed something anomalous on
his desk as he turned from the window to greet her; a quiverful of white
arrows. "Sir?"
she said softly; and he turned to smile greeting at her. Kyril
was pleased to see that Talia was looking alert and ready for practically
anything. In the past few weeks of working with her, he had come to truly
believe all that her Collegium teachers had claimed for her. The Queen's Own
was always an outstanding person among Heralds, but Talia bid fair to be
outstanding among the ranks of her own kind. He could not for a moment fathom
why her reputation, even among her fellow Heralds, was one of being a sweet,
but somewhat simple creature. He wasn't altogether certain that he would have
been able to manage the feat of memorizing all the Kingdom's familial devices
and tides in the three weeks she'd taken. Perhaps it was because she was so
shy, even yet, and seldom spoke without first being spoken to. Perhaps it was
because of her ability with children in general, and the Heir in particular—a
strong maternal instinct was not necessarily coupled in anyone's mind with a
high intellectual level. Then
again, there weren't too many even among the Heralds who had been her teachers
who had seen the real Talia. She had not allowed very many of them to come
within arm's length, as it were. Kyril was just sorry he had had so little time
for her; and he sometimes worried a little about that strange Gift of hers.
Empathy that strong—and having seen her exert herself, he knew it was very
strong—was far more the Gift of Healers. He had been relieved when she'd begun
spending so much time with the ARROWS
FLIGHT 71 Healers;
they would know how to train her properly, if anybody would. If he had only had
the time—if Visa hadn't been killed— But
Talia seemed to have everything perfectly under control, and if even her own
peers tended to underestimate her, that surely wasn't going to harm her any. Perhaps,
though, that tendency to dismiss her lightly was not altogether a bad thing.
Kyril had been dealing with Court and Council on a daily basis for something
like twenty years, and being underestimated could be a potent and very useful
weapon. People might not see past the guileless eyes, and tend to let their
tongues run on longer leads in her presence. No, that reputation of hers might
well be a very good thing for all of them. Certainly the disturbing rumors he'd
heard lately about her would not survive much longer if people began comparing
the tales of machinations with her reputation as a sweet and uncomplicated
innocent. "Sit,
sit," he waved at a chair, taking one himself. "You look none the
worse for your late night. I remember my first Herald's revel; I thought my
hangover was going to last for the next week! I trust you enjoyed
yourself." He smiled again as she nodded shyly. "It's the first
chance I had to hear you sing. Jadus used to make us all curious, boasting
about your abilities. He was certainly right about you! Last night—to tell the
truth, I've heard Bards that didn't give performances that moving. You're as
good as Jadus claimed, maybe better." She blushed, and he chuckled.
"Well, that's neither here nor there. I am very sorry about all the hurry,
but we don't like to leave Border Sectors without a Herald for very long; in
this case, it's not that there's potential for trouble, but that the people of
the Sector feel isolated enough as it is, particularly in winter. They need to
know that they're as important to the life of this Kingdom as the capital
Sector itself." He regarded her stead- 72 MERCEDES
LACKEY ily;
her answer to his speech would tell him a great deal. The
eyes that met his squarely held faint surprise. "I—I
thought there was always potential for trouble in a Border Sector, sir,"
Talia ventured. "There're raiders, bandits—lots of problems even if the
people themselves never cause them." "In
the general run of things that's true, but the Border in this Sector runs
through the Forest of Sorrows, and that's no small protection." "Then
the tale of Vanyel's Curse is true?" Talia was amazed. "Sorrows does
protect the Kingdom? But . .. how?" "I
wish I knew," Kyril replied, musing half to himself, "They knew
things, those old ones, that we've forgotten or lost. They had magic then—real
magic, and not our mind-magic; the Truth Spell is just about all we have left
of that. Vanyel's Curse is as strong in Sorrows as the day he cast it with his
dying breath. Nothing that intends ill to this Kingdom or the people in it lives
more than five minutes there; I've seen some of the results with my own eyes. I
used to ride Northern myself, back in the days when I was still riding
circuits, and not Seneschal's Herald. I've seen bandits impaled on branches as
if on thrown spears. I've seen outlaws who starved to death, buried to their
waist in rock-hard earth, as if it opened beneath their feet, then closed on
them like a trap. What's more—and this is what was more frightening than the
other things—I've seen barbarian raiders dead without a mark on them, but their
faces twisted into an expression of complete and utter terror. I don't know
what it was that happened to them, but my guess is that they were truly
frightened to death." Talia
shook her head wonderingly, "It's hard to believe. How can a curse know
someone's intent?" "I
can't explain it, and neither can any of the old chronicles. It's true
nevertheless. You, or I, or any of ARROW'S
FLIGHT 73 the
people of the Sector can walk that forest totally without fear. A baby could
walk through there totally unharmed, because even the forest predators leave
humans alone in Sorrows—well, that's the only anomalous thing about the area.
The religion is fairly ordinary, the people follow the Lady as Astera of the
Stars, and the God as Kernos of the Northern Lights; there's no anti-woman
prejudice. In fact, because of Sorrows, we often have females riding circuit
there alone. The Herald you're replacing is a woman, in point of fact. You may
know her, she was two year-groups ahead of you—Destria." "Destria?
Havens—she isn't badly hurt, is she? What happened?" "The
injury is fairly serious, but not life-threatening. She was trying to rescue
half a dozen children during a flood—it's a hard land, Talia, that's the main
problem with it—and broke both legs." "Thank
the Goddess for Companions." "Amen
to that; without hers she'd have lain in sleet-born water for hours, probably
died of exposure. No, Destria's Sofi managed to get not only her Herald but all
the children to safety. All's well there except for the injury. So, that's the
gist of the situation, and as I said, I apologize for the short notice. I hope
you don't mind too much." "Not
at all sir," Talia replied, "After all, I had even less notice when I
was Chosen, didn't I?" "Good
for you!" Kyril chuckled. "Well, now we come to the reason why I
asked you to come here, instead of meeting you for lunch or asking you to meet
with both Kris and myself to be told about this. I'm sure you realized a long
time ago that there were things we wouldn't teach you until you got your
Whites. What I'm about to show you is the best-kept secret of the Heraldic
Circle. Haven't you ever wondered why all Heralds are required to become
archers?" "I
never thought about it," she confessed, looking 74 MERCEDES
LACKEY puzzled.
"It does seem a little odd, now that you mention it. We don't fight with
the royal Archers in battle; when we do fight, it's mostly sword or
hand-to-hand. We usually don't have to hunt to feed ourselves riding circuit;
we carry supplies or depend on the shelters. So why do we have to learn
bow?" "So
that you have an excuse to carry arrows wherever you go," Kyril replied.
"Not everyone has the kind of mind-reach I have; Lady knows things would
be much simpler if they did, because there are plenty of times when the
ordinary means of passing information wouldn't do at all. We have to have a
foolproof, unambiguous method of passing simple messages, but it has to be
impervious to tampering. That's why the Arrow-Code was developed, and thus far
no one has broken it. And it all starts with this— " With
skillful and practiced fingers, he carefully broke barbs from the Retchings of
a plain white arrow he pulled from the quiver. Talia could see that he was
being very precise about which barbs he broke from which fletchings, yet when
he was through, it looked as if the arrow had simply been handled too roughly. "So
that's why all our arrows are fletched with mud-gannet feathers!" Talia
said, enlightened. "Right.
They're nowhere near as suitable as goose, but the barbs are so thick, heavy,
and regular it's possible to have the fletching on every arrow we carry
absolutely identical—and it's possible to literally count barbs for the code.
Now this is my pattern. It's registered here, among the secret Records, and
even there it's in an encrypted form for added security. Outside of those
Records, only four people know it—the Queen, the Seneschal, Elcarth, and Teren,
who used to be my partner. Only the Queen, the Seneschal, and Elcarth know how
to translate the ciphers we've written the patterns in besides myself. When
your internship is over, you'll be given the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 75 encryption
key as part of what you need to know as Queen's Own. Only two people know every
pattern by heart; myself and Elcarth. Now you know why one of the primary
prerequisites of both our jobs is a perfect memory!" Talia
smiled, and bit her lip to keep from chuckling. "This
pattern identifies the message carried by the color of the banding on the arrow
as coming from me and no one else. Now—" He took a second arrow from the
quiver, and broke the barbs in a second pattern. "—this is your pattern.
When I'm satisfied that you can reproduce it in the dark and behind your back,
I'll give you a general idea of the rest of the code." She was
slightly nonplussed to discover that Kyril meant that literally. It took
several hours before she could perform that simple task without seeing the
arrow she was working on, and without truly thinking about it, with a speed and
accuracy that contented him. Meanwhile, the sun crept across Kyril's desk, and
her stomach began reminding her that it had been a long time since her last
real meal. Finally
Kyril pronounced her competent, and allowed her to give her tired fingers a
rest while he explained the remainder of the code to her. "The
rest of it," he told her, "is a bit more complicated, although we've
done our best to make the colors mnemonic to the message. Kris will drill you
on the full code on your way to your sector, but in general, this is what the
simple banding of one color means. White means there's nothing wrong—'all is
well, come ahead.' It's usually used just to identify that there's another
Herald about, and who it is. Green calls for a Healer to be sent, purple for a
priest, gray for another Herald. Brown tells the receiver to watch for a
message; there's trouble, not serious, but something that requires elaboration,
and something that may delay the Herald sending it in 76 MERCEDES
LACKEY keeping
his schedule. Blue means 'treachery.1 Yellow calls for military aid, the number
of yellow bands on the arrows tells how many units—if you send every
yellow-ringed arrow you've got, and we know exactly how many you have, we know
to send the entire Army! Red means 'great danger—come with all speed.' Then
there's black." He
paused, his eyes holding Talia's. "I pray to Heaven that you never have to
send a black arrow, Talia. Sending any black-ringed arrow means there's been or
will be death or catastrophe. And there's a variant on the code for black you
should also know now rather than later. The black arrow intact except for the
fletching pattern means 'total disaster, help or rescue needed.' Break the
arrow, send the pieces, and it reads 'disaster, all hope gone. Do not attempt
rescue.* Remove the head, and it means that the one whose pattern is in the
fletching is dead. The broken arrow, the headless arrow—those can actually be
of any color so long as the fletching pattern's there. Those are the two we'll
always understand—and the ones we never want to see." Talia
felt a peculiar chill thread her backbone, and suddenly the hot, sunny day
seemed unaccountably gray and chill. She shook off the feeling, and repeated
Kyril's words back to him, verbatim. "That's
all there is," he said, satisfied. "You're as well prepared as any of
us is for his first assignment— and you're one of the best Heralds the
Collegium has ever turned out. You ought to do just fine, even though this is going
to be a tough assignment. Good luck to you, Talia; 1 look forward to seeing you
in another year and a half." She
took her leave of him and despite her hunger, decided it would be a good idea
to hunt up Kris. The first place she looked for him, given the situation, was
the tackshed. After all, he was only just in from fieldwork; his first move
should be to see that needed repairs had already been made to his Com- ARROW'S
FUGHT 77 panion's
gear. That was exactly where he was, in company with Dirk, checking over his
harness and tack. As
alert as a wild thing to any hint of movement, Dirk was the first to notice
her. "It's our songbird!" he said genially, favoring her with one of
those smiles that was almost an embrace. "I expect you have the word? And
Kyril's given you the code?" She
nodded, feeling oddly shy, then searched for Rolan's never-used traveling
equipment. It was similar to the tack he'd worn when he'd found her, except
that the bridle bells were removable, and the saddle was a bit more
complicated. Besides the usual girth, it had breast and rump bands like those
on warriors' saddles, a far larger number of the snaffles by which objects
could be fastened to the skirting, and an arrangement of rings and straps that
made it possible for a rider—ill, injured, or unconscious, perhaps—to be belted
securely into his seat. Talia
rarely ever bothered with saddle or bridle around the Collegium, but she knew
from experience, both her own and Rolan's, that it would mean a great deal in the
way of comfort on a ride of more than an hour (for both of them) for her to use
the saddle. And as her near-fatal escapade in the river had shown, the
otherwise useless reins on the bridle had other functions than guiding her
Companion. Had Rolan been wearing his bridle, she could have twined her arms in
the reins and let him tow her to shore, for instance. "Everything
in good order?" Kris asked. She nodded an affirmative, feeling awkward and
tongue-tied now that she was less than twenty-four hours away from a long
journey spent mostly in his company. "Kris
and I haven't taken care of requistioning your supplies yet," Dirk said,
giving her an encouraging, lopsided grin, as if he sensed how she was feeling,
"We were waiting for you to catch up with us." 78 MERCEDES
LACKEY "We?"
Kris lifted an eyebrow at his partner. "What's this 'we' all about? She
happens to be my trainee, you know." "And
who's the one who can't ever remember how many furlongs it is to his Sector,
and whether or not you need high-energy rations, or even where he's going, half
the time?" "Your
guess is as good as mine—I don't know of anybody answering that
description," Kris grinned. Dirk
heaved a heavy sigh. "No gratitude, that's what it is. All right,
sieve-head, let's you and your trainee get over to the Quartermaster and show
her how it's done." They
arranged themselves with Talia walking between them, and strolled out of the
Collegium area of the Palace to the area reserved for the Guard. That is, they
strolled—Talia had to stretch her legs no small amount to keep up with them.
All the time she was constantly aware of the little, warm, sidelong glances
Dirk kept throwing at her when he thought she wasn't watching. She wasn't used
to being under such intense scrutiny, and it made her a little—not uneasy,
precisely—unsettled was perhaps the better word. Like
the Heralds, the Guard had their own area of the Palace, although they had
nothing that was quite like the Collegium. They did have a training center, and
a communal barracks, as well as officer's quarters, and they maintained a
number of small rooms as offices. Since the needs of the Heralds and the Guard
were quite similar in some areas of supply, the Quartermaster of the Guard also
dispensed initial supplies to outbound Heralds. Any other supplies were taken
care of at special Resupply Stations in the field. The
Offices of the Guard were entered by a door directly under the shadow of the
wall that encircled the entire Palace/Collegium complex. There were a dozen or
more officers seated at desks literally ARROWS
FLIGHT 79 crammed
together in the relatively small room, all busy with piles of paperwork, but
Kris and Dirk seemed to know exactly where they were going. Talia followed as
they threaded their way through the maze, while the officers whose work they
inadvertently disturbed gave them either glares or friendly winks. Their goal
was a desk at the very rear, whose occupant, a grizzled old veteran, looked
rather out of place among the younger, obviously townbred officers. He seemed
to be hard at his paperwork, but looked up and grinned broadly at the sight of
them. "Wot,
ye tired of our faces alriddy?" he jeered. "Or is't ye've got
somebody's daddy 'twould like t' see if Heralds bleed red?" "Neither,
you old pirate," Kris replied. "We've got a gap to fill up North, and
Kyril, in his infinite wisdom, has decreed that we're best suited to fill
it." The
man's face grew serious. "Ah didna hear the' Bell—" "Relax,
Levris, it wasn't fatal," Dirk assured him. "A pair of broken legs,
or so I'm told. Talia, this is Levris, he's the Quartermaster of the Guard, and
as such, those of us on circuit see a lot of him." The
wizened man stood, took her hand like a courtier, and bowed gracefully over it.
" Tis a pleasure," he said gravely, while Talia blushed. "An' a
privilege. Ye be Queen's Own, I'm thinkin'—" "Absolutely
right," Kris said, corners of his mouth twitching. "She's my
internee." "Oh,
so?" Levris let go of Talia's hand, rested both hands on his hips, and
gave him a stern look. "Ye'll not be tryin' any of yer seducin' tricks on
her, m'lad, or if Ah come t' hear of it..." Now it
was Kris' turn to blush, and Dirk's to hide a grin. Talia
decided to come to his rescue. "Herald Kyril surely wouldn't have assigned
us together if he thought there was any harm in the pairing," she pointed
out. "And this is duty, not a pleasure-jaunt." 80 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Well,
an' that's true," he admitted reluctantly, seating himself again. "So—what
Sector?" "North
Border, Sorrows Two," Kris told him, "And since we won't be meeting
the outgoing Herald, we'll need the whole kit." "By
t'morrow, Ah s'ppose? And ye'll be wantin' the special rations. Ye might give a
man some warnin', next time!" he grumbled, but there was a twinkle in his
eye. "Sure,
Levris. We'll make certain to schedule our broken legs from now on—and make
certain it's convenient for you." "See
that ye do, then," he chuckled; then pulled out a half-dozen forms, and had
Kris and Talia sign them all. That done, he shooed them out the way they had
come. "That's
all there is to it," Kris said as they returned to the Collegium side.
"He'll have everything we'll need ready for us in the morning." "Provided
Herald Sluggard can be persuaded to rise that early," Dirk grinned. "Now
that you've checked over your harness, all you need to do is pack your personal
things," Kris continued, ignoring him. "Keep in mind that where we're
going it gets cold sooner than here, stays that way for longer, and the cold is
more intense. The leaves are already falling up there, though they've just
started to turn here. We'll plan on staying mostly in Waystations near the
villages; we won't want to get too far from other people if we can help
it." "Nevertheless,"
Dirk warned both of them, "You'd better also plan on having to spend
several nights alone in the wilderness. I lived in that area; you didn't. The
villages are far apart, and winter storms can spring up out of nowhere. You may
get caught without a Waystation near, so pack the emergency supplies; if you
don't use them, there's no harm done, but if you need them, you'll be glad you
have them. Plan for the worst possible snow you've ever seen—then
overplan." ARROW'S
FVCHT 81 "Yes,
O graybeard," Kris made a face at him. "Holy Stars, Dirk, I visited
with your family up there often enough! The way you're fussing, you'd think
both of us were green as grass and totally untrained! Talia's no highborn
fragile flower, she's a Borderer, too, even if she's from farther south than
you." "Well,
better I should remind you needlessly .. ." "Stow
it and rope it down, granther! We'll be fine! Anyone would think you were my
keeper, not my partner." Now Kris cast a sly, sidelong glance at Talia,
who was feeling distinctly uncomfortable. "Or is it someone else you're
worrying about?" From
the surprise on Kris' face, even he hadn't expected the blush that reddened
Dirk's ears. "Look,"
Dirk said hastily, "I just don't want you two to get into any trouble. You
owe me for too many lost bets, and I'd rather not have to try to collect from
your lord father! Is there anything else you'd like advice for, Talia?" "N-no,"
she stammered. "I don't think so, anyway. I thank you both. I'd better get
back to my quarters and pack." "Don't
forget—take nothing but Whites!" Dirk called after her. "You're on
duty every minute in the field. And nothing fancy! It'll only get ruined." He
needn't have said that, about "nothing fancy," she thought a little
resentfully. After all, I'm not some silly townbred chit. And then she wondered
for a fleeting instant why his good opinion of her should seem so important. Dismissing
the thought from her mind, she ran back up the tower stairs and ransacked her wardrobe,
laying everything white she could find on the bed. That way she wouldn't
overlook a tunic or other article that she might find herself in need of out in
the field. She
packed nothing but the doeskin, with the summer and winter changes both—but she
packed every stitch of those she had. 82 MERCEDES
LACKEY Though
from the way Dirk talks, she thought wryly, you'd think it never got warm up
there. She
added a repair kit for leather and one for harness, and then for good measure
added a sealed pot of glue, just in case. There'd been times enough back on the
Holding when she was on sheep-watch that she'd needed a pot of glue, and not
had one to hand. She packed her sewing kit, and a brick of hard, concentrated
soap—the special kind that you needed for use on Whites to keep them pristine—
just in case it ever became necessary to do her own repairs and cleaning of her
clothing. Certainly the village laundrypeople normally tended those jobs, but
you never knew. She added a small metal traveling lamp, and extra wicks,
because she'd never seen a lamp in the Waystations, and if they stayed more
than one night, lamplight was easier on the eyes than firelight. Then her
personal gear, her weapons, a precious book or two, some writing supplies. Her
bedroll was next, and all the extra blankets she could find; with them, two
extra towels besides the others she carried, and a pair of thick sheepskin
slippers. Rolan's gear was all with his tack, but just the same she packed a
vial of ferris-oil. He liked it; it was good for his hooves and coat and kept
the insects away. Even
when she'd packed everything as compactly as she could, it still bulked
distressingly large. She stared at the clumsy packs in near-despair, trying to
think of something she dared leave behind. Kris would surely think she was an
idiot for wanting to bring all this stuff! "Good
packing job," Keren said from the open door behind her, "I intended
to come up here and help you cut down on the flotsam, but it looks like I'm not
needed." "Is
that meant ironically or seriously?' Talia asked, turning to greet the more
experienced Herald with relief. "Oh,
seriously. My counselor made me repack three ARROW'S
FUGHT 83 times
for my interning trip, and I never did get my packs down that small — I kept
thinking of things I was sure I'd miss. Know what? 1 ended up sending most of
them back here." "But
how is Rolan ever going to carry all this, the supply pack and me, too?" "Easy,
he won't have to. You'll each have a packbeast, probably a mule. Well, maybe
not; you're going north, they may give you chirras. Didn't anybody tell you
that? You're riding circuit, not carrying messages, so you don't need speed.
You can easily hold your speed down to match your packbeasts' without sacrificing
anything." Talia
heaved a sigh of relief. "Nobody told me. Kris either assumed that I knew,
or left it out deliberately to keep me from overpacking." "Well
don't go crazy now that you know," Keren warned. "I
won't. In fact, other than begging a couple more blankets and a pillow from
Supply, packing all three pairs of my boots, and adding a bit more in the way
of towels and soap and the like, there's only one thing more I want to
add." Talia tucked her third pair of boots into a pack, tied it shut, and
turned to the hearthcorner. There, where she'd left her last night still in her
carrying case, was My Lady. She opened the case, detuned the strings for safety
in traveling, and added her to the pile. "Good
notion," Keren said. "You may be snowbound at any time, and that'll
keep you from tearing out each other's throats from boredom. Not only that,
folks up there seldom see a Bard except in summer. You'll be like gifts from
the Gods." "Keren
— I'll — " Talia suddenly had a lump in her throat. Now it came home to
her; she was leaving, leaving the only place that had ever felt like home, and
the only friends she'd ever had. " — I'll miss Keren
reached out and hugged her shoulders. 84 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Don't
you worry. You'll be fine, I know you will. Kris is a good lad, if a bit too
conscious of his own good looks. Little centaur—I'll miss you, too. But don't
you dare cry—" she warned, caught between a chuckle and a tear, "—or
I'll start! Come on, we've just enough time to catch the end of supper, and you
must be ready to chew harness." Supper
was rather subdued; nearly everyone had long since eaten and gone, and of those
that were left Talia really knew only Keren well. Talia kept glancing around
her, realizing how much she was going to miss this place, that had been her
first real home. She had
expected that Keren would leave her afterward, but to her surprise, the older
woman insisted that she come with her to Keren's rooms. She was even more
surprised when Keren insisted Talia precede her through the door. Then
she saw who was waiting for them there; almost more people than would fit into
the room: Elcarth, Sherri, Jeri, Skif, Teren—even Alberich. Devan made a
brilliant patch of green among the Whites in his Healer's robes; the students
were well represented by Elspeth. Keren pushed her into the room from behind as
she hesitated on the threshold. "You
really didn't think we'd let you go without a proper good-bye, did you?"
Skif teased as Talia stared in dumb amazement. "Besides, I know you—you
were all set to mope away your last night here alone. Goose! Well, we're not
having any of that!" Since
that was exactly what she'd expected to be doing, Talia blushed rose-pink, then
stuck her tongue out at him. Skif,
knowing very well how prone Talia was to isolating herself just when she needed
others the most, had accosted Keren as soon as the news of Talia's assignment
had gotten to him. The two of them had put their heads together and quickly put ARROW'S
FLIGHT 85 together
this little "fare-thee-well" party, designed to keep her from falling
into a last-minute melancholy. When Skif saw the expression on Talia's face as
she'd realized what they'd done, he felt more than repaid for his effort. He did
his level best the whole evening to project how much his "little
sister" meant to him, knowing she'd pick it up. The warmth in her eyes
made him feel that he'd at least begun to give her an honest return for the
help she'd given him last night. In some ways he was just as glad now that
they'd never become lovers, for there was nothing that could have been more
satisfying, in the long run, than the open, loving relationship they had
instead. He had more than a suspicion that she felt the same. "So,
songbird, how about a tune or three?" While it wasn't precisely as festive
as the celebration the night before had been, everything had been geared to
setting her mind at rest and making her feel confident about the morrow. Each
of them, with the exception of Devan and Elspeth, had faced the same moment—and
each knew some way to make the prospect a positive one. There was a great deal
of laughter, plenty of absurd stories, and a palpable aura of caring. They sent
her off to bed in good time to get a full night's sleep, and she left with a
smile on her face. Kris
answered the tap on his door late that evening, expecting to see Dirk; in fact,
he'd already gotten out a bottle of wine and two glasses, figuring that his
partner wouldn't let the evening pass without coming by for a farewell drink
and chat. He got a fair shock to find his uncle, the Councilor Lord Orthallen,
standing in the dim hallway instead. He
managed to stammer out a surprised greeting, which Orthallen took as an
invitation to enter. The silver-haired, velvet-robed noble wore a grave
expression on his still-handsome, square-jawed face, so 86 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 87 Kris
had more than a faint suspicion that his visit was not just to bid farewell to
his nephew. He
directed his uncle to the most comfortable chair in the room and supplied him
with the glass of wine intended for Dirk before taking the chair opposite him. "Well,
uncle?" he said, deciding he was too tired to dance diplomatically around
the subject. "What brings you here? I know it wasn't just to bid me a fond
farewell." Orthallen
raised one eyebrow at his bluntness. "I understand you have the new
Queen's Own as your internee." Kris
shrugged. "It's no secret." "How
well do you know her?" "Not
at all," he admitted. "I've seen her twice, worked with her once. She
seems nice enough—quite well balanced, all told. Her Gift is an odd one,
but—" "That
is exactly what is worrying me." Orthallen all but pounced on the opening.
"Her Gift. From all anyone has been able to tell me, it is a very unusual
one for a Herald, much less the Queen's Own. It seems to be one that the
Heralds themselves know very little about, and I'm not entirely happy that an
inexperienced child should be in her position with a power so ... out-of-the-ordinary." "Rolan
Chose her," Kris replied warily. "That should be proof enough that
she's capable of handling it." "Yes,
but—emotions—it's such a volatile area. No black-and-white there, only gray.
There are rumors in the Court. . ." "Such
as?" "That
she has fostered an unnatural dependence in the Heir. After all, the child is
vulnerable to that sort of thing. It was her unnatural dependence on that
foreign nurse, Hulda, that led to her nearly being disallowed in the first
place. And there are other rumors." Kris
bit back an angry retort; best hear his uncle out. "Go on." "That
Talia has used her power to influence the Council; you can imagine for yourself
how easy that would be. If a Councilor were wavering ... it would be very easy
to nudge his emotions, make him feel happier about one side or the other. Or
not even that.. . simply sense that he is wavering, and use that knowledge to
persuade him in a more ordinary fashion. By knowing how Councilors stood, it
would make it quite simple for her to manipulate them just by tone of voice. ..
." "That's
absurd! No Herald would ever use her Gift in any such fashion!" "So
/ have maintained," Orthallen replied smoothly, "But—the only others
Gifted with Empathy are the Healers; Healers put it to very specific and
humanitarian use. There is no corresponding protocol of use among Heralds. And,
nephew—what if she truly were not aware she was using her abilities? These
powers are not material properties one can weigh or measure or hold in one's hand.
What if she were doing this sort of thing without even realizing it?" Kris
felt as if he had been hit with a pail of cold water. "I—I suppose it's
just barely possible. I don't think it's at all likely, but I can't dismiss the
notion out of hand." Orthallen
rose, a satisfied smile creasing his lips. "That is what I hoped you would
tell me, I'm counting on you, nephew, to lay these phantoms of doubt to rest.
You'll be with her night and day for the next eighteen months, and I'm sure you
will be able to tell me on your return that all these rumors are no more than
smoke." "I'm
sure I will, uncle," Kris replied, letting him out—but not at all sure in
his own mind. It was
just false dawn when Talia woke, and she dressed as quickly as she could, discovering
that someone had left a breakfast tray for her outside her door. She had only
just finished it when a Guards- 88 MERCEDES
LACKEY man
tapped discreetly on the doorframe, explaining that he was there to help her
carry her packs down. With his aid she managed to get everything down to the
tackshed in one trip. Bright
tight from oil lamps along the wall dazzled her eyes as she entered. Waiting in
the very center was Rolan; his harness was piled beside him. Next to him was a
second Companion stallion, and Talia could see Kris' legs behind him as she and
the Guard approached. Tethered beside the strange Companion were two most
unusual pack animals. Talia
had never seen chirras before except in pictures, for their heavy coats made
summer at the Collegium far too uncomfortable for them. Rather than keep them
there, the Circle had a northern farm where they were bred and stabled, and
only brought them down on rare occasions like this. Had this been within the
normal order of things they would have taken mules from the Collegium stables
for the first part of the journey. Then they would have met the Herald they
were replacing at the edge of her Sector and exchanged their mules for her
chirras. Talia
discovered that pictures and descriptions were inadequate to convey the charm
of the northern beasts. The chirras were as tall at the shoulder as a horse,
but a much longer neck put their heads on a level with the head of a human on
horseback. Instead of hooves they had doglike, clawed feet, except that the
feet were almost round and far bigger than Talia would have expected from the
overall size of the animal. Both chirras were creamy white with black markings;
one had a little cap-like spot on the top of its head, and a matching
saddle-marking on its back, the other had a collar of black fur that ran around
its throat and down its chest. Their ears were large, resembling rabbit ears,
but rounder, with tips that flopped over. Their ears were set on the tops of
their skulls and faced forward. Their faces were ARROW'S
FLIGHT 89 vaguely
rabbit-like. Their brown eyes were very large, gentle, and intelligent. When
Talia approached them with her hand held out to them, they scrutinized her
closely, then politely took turns whuffling her palm. Kris
was already halfway through his inspection of the beasts and their gear. "Kind
of cute, aren't they? Anybody ever tell you how they manage to live through
those blizzards? They've got three layers of fur," he said, bent over and
adjusting the girth of the pack-harness, half-hidden by the chirra's bulk.
"The outermost is long and coarse, and pretty much waterproof—even frost
won't form on it. The middle layer is shorter, and not quite so coarse. The
inner layer is what they shed every year; it's dense, very soft and fine, and
is what does most of the work of keeping them warm. We'll have to groom them
very carefully every night to keep all that fur from getting matted, or they'll
lose the warming and waterproofing effect." "Why
are their feet so big?" "To
hold them up on the snow; they'll be able to walk on snow crusts that the
Companions will break right through." He moved to the front of his and
picked up its forefoot while it whiffled his hair. "Look here—see all the
hair between the toes? If you think their feet look big now, wait till they
spread them out on snow. You'd think that hair wouldn't make any difference,
but it does, like the webbing on snow-shoes. I much prefer chirras over mules
in any kind of climate that they can tolerate. They've got sweet tempers, and
they're really quite intelligent. If a mule balks, you can't tell half the time
if he's being stubborn, or if there's really something wrong. A chirra never
balks unless there's something wrong." The
chirra next to Talia stretched out his neck and nudged her hand, obviously
wanting to be petted. "How much can they carry?" she asked, complying
by scratching behind the chirra's ears. It sighed happily and closed its eyes
in content. 90 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Almost
half their own weight—as good or better than a mule. Well, look at the packs
they're bringing now, and you can see." Talia
was astonished at the size of the pack the stablehands were loading on the
chirra she was scratching. It didn't seem the least bit uncomfortable. Kris
looked it over, then eyed the packs Talia had brought down from her room.
"They've left enough leeway for you to load those on him as well, Talia.
Don't worry, he's smart. If it's going to be more than he can carry, he'll just
lie down until we lighten the load." To her
relief, the chirra showed no sign of wanting to lie down after her packs had
been strapped on top of the supplies. Kris saw to the distribution of the rest
of the supplies and his own belongings, while Talia made sure the chirra's
harness was firm, but comfortable, with nothing twisted or binding. She
harnessed Rolan herself, then double-checked her work, and asked him in an
undertone, "You don't mind traveling with these beasties, do you?" He
seemed pleased that she had asked the question but conveyed the impression that
he was quite pleased with the packbeasts. Without words, Talia got the distinct
impression that the chirras, sporting those thick, warm coats, would be more
than welcome company on cold winter nights. She
fastened the lead rope of the chirra to the back of Rolan's saddle, and
mounted. Kris mounted a fraction of a second later. "Ready?" he
asked. "As
ready as any internee, I guess." "Then
let's go." Four Kris
took the lead; they had to go single file in the city. Talia and Rolan followed
his chirra out of the gates of the courtyard, past the Collegium and Palace
buildings, gray and silent in the early morning light, then down the
cobblestoned road to the iron gates leading to city streets themselves, the
road she'd ridden up five and a half years previously. She looked back over her
shoulder for a last glimpse of the dear, familiar stone buildings, and wondered
what she'd be like when she saw them again. The
guard at the gate let them out; it was scarcely an hour until dawn and the
streets were not yet crowded. They followed the long spiral outward, passing
first through the residential areas that were nearest the Palace—huge buildings
belonging to the highest ranked of the nobly-born, some nearly rivaling the
size of Bardic or Healer's Collegium, though not that of the Palace itself.
Then, crowded far more closely together, the homes of the rich—merchants and
craftsmen and Guild officials. Unlike the Palace and the edifices of the
nobles, which were the same gray granite as the city walls, these buildings
were wooden. Since land within the walls was at a premium, they crowded so
closely the eaves touched— and when there was a need to expand, the only 91 92 MERCEDES
LACKEY direction
to take was up, which sometimes produced some very strange results. Most of
these houses had been constructed of ironoak, a wood nearly as tough and
indestructible as steel, but that was where any similarity among them ended.
They had been built to some highly individual styles, and often had been added
to in years and styles varying wildly from the original. Had the spiraling main
street not been wide enough for three carriages, it would never have gotten any
sun; as it was, riding through this district so early in the morning was rather
like riding down a canyon with sides carved in the most fantastic of shapes.
Talia had to fight to keep from giggling as she passed some of these houses,
for Skif—to "keep his hand in," or so he claimed—had often paid uninvited
visits to the upper stories of some of these places. He'd usually left unsigned
notes to be found later, chiding the owners for their lack of security. That
was one prank the Provost-Marshal would never have forgiven him if it had been
discovered. After
the street took a sharp right-angle turn, the purely residential district came
to an end. Now the lower stories of the buildings were devoted to shops and the
work-places of fine craftsmen, or offices, with an occasional expensive
hostelry. The upper floors were comprised of apartments or lodgings. At this
point they began encountering what little traffic there was this early in the
morning. Nearly the only people about were the farmers who had brought their
produce in to market, for the only cityfolk moving were those who were buying
fresh supplies for their inns. Talia and Kris were able to move at a brisk
pace, not having to stop for traffic more than once or twice. The streets were
so quiet at this hour that they were the chief sources of sound; the ringing of
the Companions' hooves, the chime of their bridle-bells, and the click of the
chirras' claws on the cobblestones. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 93 It took
them nearly an hour to reach the Northern gate; the farther from the center of
the city they went, the less wealth was displayed. There were no slums within
the Old City; those were outside the city gates, huddling against the walls as
if in hopes that those sturdy stone structures might shelter them from the
elements. It was in one such district that Skif had grown up, the rather odd
section along Exile's Road that led into the West. Talia had never been there;
she had seldom been out of the Old City, much less into the New. The one time
she'd asked to be taken there, Skif had turned white, and refused. She'd never
asked again. Nor
would she go anywhere near that section this time, for Kris1 chosen route led
past the warehouses and the shipwrights, after crossing over the River just
inside the Old City walls and exiting through the North Point Gate. Here there
was no activity at all; workers had not yet arrived, and deliveries to the
warehouses had yet to be made. So once again, they rode in silence after a
sleepy Guardswoman waved them on their way. Beyond
the gate the road widened and changed from stone to that odd substance that
wasn't stone and wasn't clay. Talia hadn't thought about it in years, but it
occurred to her now to wonder just what it was that paved some of the roadways
of this Kingdom. "Kris?"
she called, and he motioned to her to ride up alongside him, now that they were
out of the city. "What
is this stuff?" she asked, pointing to the surface of the road. He
shrugged. "Another lost secret. Some of the roads leading to the capital
are paved with it, a few all the way to the Border; but any roads made later
than Elspeth the Peacemaker's time are just packed gravel at best." He saw
she was looking about her with unconcealed curiosity. "Haven't you ever
been out of the city before?" 94 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Not
very often since I was Chosen," she replied, "And never in this
direction." "Didn't
you even go back home for holidays?" he asked, astonished. "My
parents weren't exactly pleased with me, even—or perhaps especially—when they
learned I was Chosen," she replied dryly. "Not to put too fine a
point upon it, they disowned me. In Hold terms, that means they denied the very
fact of my existence. I spent all my holidays here, with Jadus while he was
still alive, then with Keren and Visa, or with Gaytha Housekeeper and Mero the
Collegium cook." "You've
been rather sheltered, then." "At
the Collegium, yes, except for the first year. Not at the Hold, though. Know
anything about Holderkin?" "Not
much," Kris admitted. "They seemed so dull, I'm afraid I've forgotten
most of what I learned about them as a student." "Whether
or not it's dull depends on whether you were born male or female. Holderkin are
originally from outKingdom—Karse, if you're curious. They fled from religious
persecution; their religion is based on a dominating, ruling God and a passive,
submissive Goddess, and the Karsites are monotheistic. That was . .. oh, two
generations ago. They are very secretive, and very intent on maintaining their
ways intact. Men have some choice in their lives; women are given exactly two
choices—serve the Goddess as a cloistered, isolated votary under a vow of
silence, or marry. You make that choice at the mature age of thirteen, or
thereabouts." "Thirteen!"
Kris looked aghast. "Hellfire,
Kris, life is hard on the Border! You ought to know that, with your partner
being a Borderer. There were raiders every winter I can remember. The land is
stony and hard to farm. Holderkin don't believe in going to Healers, so a lot ARROW'S
FLIGHT 95 of
simple injuries and illnesses end in death. If you're not wedded by fifteen,
you may not leave any offspring—and they need every working hand they can
get." .
"You sound like you enjoyed that kind of life—like you approve of
it!" Kris was plainly astonished by her attitude. "I
hated it," she said flatly. "I hated every minute that I didn't spend
reading or daydreaming. Rolan's Choosing me was the only thing that saved me
from a forced marriage with some stranger picked out by my father. I think that
the way they confine themselves, their children, and most especially their
minds is something approaching a crime. But most of the Holderfolk I knew
seemed content, even happy, and I have no right to judge for them." "Fine;
you don't judge for them, but what about others who are unhappy as you were,
with no Rolan to rescue them?" "A
good point—and fortunately for those would-be rebels, one Elcarth and Selenay
thought of after hearing my story. The Holderfolk got their landgrants on
condition that they obey the Queen and the laws of this Kingdom. Shortly after
I arrived at the Collegium, Selenay had a law passed through the Council that
Heralds must be allowed free access to children at ail times, in order that
they can be certain that the children of this Kingdom are properly educated in
our laws, history, and traditions. Heralds whose Gift is Thought-sensing go
right into the Holdings now. Anyone willing to sacrifice family ties and
standing as I did is free to leave with them, and they make sure the unhappy
ones know this. The amazing thing to me is that there was very little objection
to the practice after the initial outrage died down. I suppose the Hold Elders
are only too pleased that their potential troublemakers are leaving on their
own." Kris
seemed a bit bemused. "I can't imagine why anyone would not want to leave
conditions like that." 96 MERCEDES
LACKEY Talia
shook her head sadly, remembering. It wasn't quite true that she hadn't gone
back to the Hold— she had, once, last year. She'd gone back in the hopes of
rescuing her sister Vrisa—to discover Vris had changed, changed past all
recognition. Vris was a Firstwife now, with status, and three Underwives to
rule. She'd regarded Talia as if she were a demon— when she thought Talia
wasn't looking, she'd made holy signs against her. In point of fact, she looked
and acted enough like Keldar, the Firstwife who'd done her best to break
Talia's rebellious spirit, to have been Keldar's younger self. She not only
didn't want rescue, she'd been horrified by the idea. "Kris,
it's not my choice to make," she answered wearily, "it's theirs. All
that I care about is that the ones like me now have the option I didn't have
before I was Chosen—to escape." Kris
looked at her with curiosity. "Just when I think I have you neatly
categorized, you say or do something that turns it all upside down again. I'd
have bet that you'd have been willing to lead an army into the Holds to free
the women, given the chance." "Maybe
when I didn't know as much about people as I do now," she sighed. They
rode on in silence. The sun rose on their right, turning the sky pink, rose and
blue, casting long shadows across their path from the buildings. Before long
they had passed beyond the edge of the New City, and there was nothing before
them but the occasional farmhouse. Cows were gathering outside barns, lowing to
be milked. Now they saw people working; and a light breeze carried to them the
smell of cut grain and drying hay, and the sounds of birds and farmbeasts. "Tell
me about yourself," Kris said, finally. "When you're tired of
talking, I'll tell you about me. Start with what it was like on the Hold,
before you were Chosen." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 97 "It's
boring," she cautioned him. "Maybe—but
it's part of you. As your counselor, I need to know about you." He did
his best to keep his opinions to himself while she talked, but he frequently
looked surprised by some of what she told him, and actually horrified once or
twice. He had, she thought, a hard time conceiving of a culture so alien to his
own, so confining and repressive. Talia herself spoke in a kind of detached
tone. She felt very distant from the Hold-erkin and all they meant now. She
could think of them without much animosity; as something foreign. It was
noon when she finally grew tired of explaining Hold customs to Kris. She paused
for a long drink from her waterskin, suddenly aware that her mouth was very
dry, and said firmly, "I think I've talked enough." "More
than that; it's time to break for lunch," he replied. "While we keep
to this pace the chirras can go on indefinitely, so whether or not we break
depends on whether or not we want to take a rest from riding. How are you
feeling?" "Like
I'd like to get off for a while," she admitted, "It's been a long,
long time since I spent this many hours riding." "I'm
glad you said that." His answering smile was completely ingenuous and
quite charming. "I'm not all that fond of eating in the saddle unless
there's no choice. As soon as I spot a place where we can water the chirras and
our Companions, we'll take a rest." They
found a Waystation within the half-hour. This one was watered by a well rather
than a stream; they took turns hauling up enough water to satisfy the
four-footed members of the party, then tethered the chirras so that both
Companions and chirras could graze for a bit while they ate their own lunch. They
ate in silence, and Kris seemed to be in no great hurry to move on afterward.
He lay back in the 98 MERCEDES
LACKEY soft grass
instead, thoughts evidently elsewhere, though he glanced over at Talia once or
twice. Kris
was worried, though he was taking pains not to show it. His uncle's words kept
coming back to him, and he could not, in all conscience, dismiss them. He'd made
a number of assumptions about his trainee, most of them based on her apparent
youth and inexperience—and now what she'd told him seemed to indicate that she
was anything but inexperienced, and certainly was not the simple creature he'd
pictured to himself. This child—no, woman; he began to wonder now if she'd ever
had anything like a "childhood" as he knew the meaning of the term—
had been functionally the Queen's Own long before she ever attained her Whites.
But she was so tiny, and so guileless, and so very innocent-seeming, that you
forgot all about that, and tended to think of her as much younger than she
really was. He
didn't think any of that surface was a deliberate act—but he also couldn't tell
what lay below the surface, either. Was she
capable of the kind of deliberate misuse of her Gift that Orthallen had
described? "I've
got to ask you a question," he said at last. "And please, I don't
mean this as any kind of insult. There are some rather unpleasant rumors
circulating the Court, and I'd like to know the truth. Have— have you ever used
your Gift to influence Elspeth?" Her reaction was far more violent than he
would have expected. "No!" she shouted, sitting bolt upright, and
actually startling Companions and chirras into shying. "How can you even
think such a thing?" Her eyes were hot with anger; her face as white as
her uniform. He met
that angry gaze as best he could, acutely aware of how still it was, of the
grass under his hands, of the sun on his head. "It's a rumor, I told you;
I have to know." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 99 UI have
never—I would never—do anything like that to anyone. It's—the whole idea is
perverted," she choked. "Dammit, I knew there had to be some odd
things being said about me. I mean, I could tell, people were acting very
strangely when they thought I wasn't looking. But this! It's—it's disgusting.
Does Elspeth know about this?" "Not
so far as I know—" He broke off at the sudden, pained look she gave him. She
rose to her feet, abruptly. "I've—I've got to go back; I can't leave her
to face that alone." "That's
just what you can't do," he said, jumping up and catching hold of both her
arms. "Don't you see? If you did that, you'd just be confirming the idea
in people's heads. Besides, you've been given an assignment, and a set of
orders. It's not up to you to decide whether or not you're going to obey
them." She
buried her face in her hands for a moment; when she took her hands away he
could see her fighting to exert control over herself. "All right,"
she said, sinking back to the ground, "You're right. You said that there
were other rumors. What are they?" "That
you've been using your Gift to influence other people—specifically Councilors
on crucial votes. The kindest version of that rumor says that you're not doing
it consciously, that you don't realize you're doing it." "Good
God. How am I supposed to answer that one?" Kris
didn't have an adequate reply, so he continued. "Another rumor is that
you're using your Gift just to read people, then using the knowledge of their
emotional state to manipulate them into doing what you want." "Goddess.
That's almost close to the truth . .." "Again,
the kindest version is that you don't realize that you're doing it. People are
frightened; your Gift isn't one they've seen outside of a Healer; 100 MERCEDES
LACKEY Mindspeakers
have an ethical code they understand, but this?" "So
far as I know, there is no ethical code," she said, and looked up at him.
Her eyes were full of a pain he didn't understand, and a confusion he wished he
could resolve. "Is that al!?" "Isn't
it enough? They say you're young, you're inexperienced—some say too young to be
in the position of power that you are, and to be wielding such a strange
mindGift." "As
if," she replied bitterly, "I have any choice in the matter." And she
did not speak to him again until long after they had mounted up and gotten back
on the North Road. Kris
bore with her lack of communication up to a point, but finally decided to try
and break the deadlock himself. He Mindtouched Tantris, asking him to move in
closer to Rolan, until he and Talia were almost knee to knee. "Just
exactly how does your Gift work?" he asked, unwilling to bear the tense
silence. "I
feel emotions the way Farspeakers hear words," she replied, after turning
in her saddle to give him a sober look, one that seemed to be weighing him for
some quality. "If the emotions are connected with something strongly
enough, I See that. If they're twisted or wrong, or very negative, sometimes I
can fix them, like a Healer with a wound. Visa said it's a pretty rare Gift to
see crop up alone, that it's usually tied up with the Healing Gifts. As you
know." "Interesting,"
he replied as casually as he could. "So that's how you were able to lead
me to where Ylsa died. Most Heralds are Mindspeakers, you know, and most of the
rest are Farseers, like me. Only a few of us have odd Gifts like yours and
Dirk's. And Griffon's— birr!—-that's one I wouldn't want." The sun lost
some ARROWS
FLIGHT 101 of its
warmth for him as he thought of the demonstration Griffon and Dirk had given
him. "Firestarting is a terrible burden, and it's so easy for the power to
get out of control .. . and when it does, well, you end up with barrens like at
Burning Pines. And it isn't really useful at all except as a weapon. I hope his
being born with it now doesn't mean something; Heralds with the really odd
Gifts tend to appear when there's going to be a need for them. The last
Flrestarter was Lavan Firestorm, and you know what his era was like—" He
flushed, beginning to realize that he was pontificating—but, damn—he wanted to
get her mind off the rumors so she'd act normally again. "Sorry. I tend to
get carried away when I start discussing Gifts. It's a hobby of mine, one I
share with Kyril. It's fascinating to see what kinds of Gifts we have, and to
try and see if there are patterns." "Really?"
She perked up a little, a bit more color coming into her cheeks. "Has
anybody else ever had my kind of Gift before?" "Not
that I'm aware of among the Heralds, but I must admit that I've only looked
into the Gifts of living Heralds, or the really spectacular ones of the past. I
can't say that I've ever heard of that ability to Heal the mind, except in a
true Healer, but it wouldn't surprise me much to discover that this one's the
Gift that distinguishes the Queen's Own from the rest of us. And you seem to
have it mostly by itself, and maybe much stronger even than in Healers.
Probably the others have had it, but not so strongly that anyone noticed it.
Nobody seems to have made a study of the Monarch's Own—not like they have with
the more ordinary Gifts. And now that I think about it, your primary job is to
ensure the mental stability of the Monarch—an ability like the one you have
could come in very useful if something really went wrong." He was doing
his best to imply that he believed her—that he was certain the rumors weren't 102 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 103 true.
He only wished that he really could be that certain. "I
can see that." She was silent, and seemed to be thinking hard. Late
afternoon sun was gilding everything, and the early breeze had died. The
chirras' eyes were half-closed in the drowsy warmth, and the few sounds to
either side of them were those of farmworkers cutting hay and grain, and
insects droning in the grass. "So you See, and Dirk Fetches?" "Right.
That's why we work together, and generally don't ride Sectors except when we're
shorthanded, the way we have been lately. To put it bluntly, we're Selenay's
thieves." He laughed a little. "If I know what I'm looking for, I can
generally find where it is from several miles away—more, if I get a 'ride,'
like I got from you. Once I know exactly where it is and can fix the location
in my mind, Dirk can read the location to Fetch whatever it is to where we
happen to be. That's how he retrieved Visa's arrows." "That
seems to be a lot harder than it sounds .. . rather wearing, too, from the
little I've seen." "Gods,
that's an understatement. In a lot of ways, it would be less tiring to run on
foot to where it is, get it, and run back. And the heavier the object, the more
difficult it is to Fetch. We haven't tried anything much larger than a building
brick—and that gave him a reaction-headache that lasted for a week. I was
pretty surprised when he had enough energy left to carry you to your room after
retrieving those arrows." "Aha!"
She seemed please that it had been Dirk who had cared for her. "A mystery
solved! I've wondered about that for the last two years. So he was the
one!" "He
was like a hen with one chick—wouldn't let me do more than trail along, and I
was in better shape than he, Said that with all those girls in his family, he
knew better than I did what to do with a sick one." "Can
he work with anyone but you?" "We don't know; he's never tried, since
he gets such a good 'fix' from me. Probably, though. One Farseer's a lot like
another." "How
long have you two been working together?" she asked curiously. "Since
we both got our Whites. That was another year they were shorthanded, and sent
us both out to intern with the same counselor—Gerick. Well, you know Gerick,
he's absentminded; he left a small, but valuable ring at one of the
Waystations—it was the Queen's gift to one of the Guildmasters. Rather than
spend two hours going back for it, Dirk offered to try Fetching it. I Looked
for it, found it had rolled under the bed while we were packing, and gave Dirk
the location. That was when we discovered that I gave him the clearest 'fix'
he'd ever had to work from. He Fetched the ring, no problem; we started working
as a team, and we've been doing things that way ever since." "It's
just that you seem so unlike each other, I find it hard to imagine you two
staying together." Kris
laughed, pleased to have gotten onto a safe subject.
"You might be surprised. Underneath that jester
mask he wears, Dirk's a very serious gentle- .V man.
And we have pretty much the same taste in music,
reading, even food. . . ." "In
women?" she teased. "Well
... that, too," he admitted with a reluctant smile. "And it's really
pretty unfair. Poor Dirk—it doesn't matter if he finds the lady first. Once
she's seen me she usually goes all 'sisterly' on him. He's mostly pretty
good-natured about it, but if I were in his shoes, I'd be damned annoyed!" "Well,
he knows you can't help it. You were born looking like an angel, and he ...
well, he wasn't, and that's all there is to say." "It's
still not fair. You'd think that at least one 104 MERCEDES
LACKEY woman
would figure out that Dirk the man is worth ten faces like mine." "I
expect someday someone will," Talia replied noncommittally, avoiding his
eyes. "Where is he from?" Her
reply was just a bit too casual; her attempt at nonchalance immediately set off
mental alerts in Kris1 mind, especially following all those questions about his
partner. Part of him followed up on the puzzle while he answered her question.
He had a very faint suspicion, too tenuous to be even a guess. It was rather
like trying to remember a name he'd forgotten. It would probably take a while
before he had enough information to make a surmise . . . but now he'd be
subconsciously watching for clues. "The
Sector right next to ours, Sorrows One. He's got a huge family up there. He
used to haul me home with him for holidays—still does when we're free. Three of
his married sisters and their families live with their parents and help run the
farm. It's like a madhouse; people everywhere, babies and cats constantly
underfoot. It's marvelous madness though. They're wonderful people, and there's
never a lonely or dull moment." He
smiled half to himself as he recalled some of those visits, his earlier
thoughts gone on the breeze. Dirk's family—they should have been gypsies! All
of them crazy, and all of them delightful. He'd been looking forward to another
Midwinter Festival with them, but it obviously wasn't going to be this year.
Well, there was always another time. Talia's
next question broke the strange, apprehensive chill he felt at that thought. "What
about you?" "Well,
let me think. My father is Lord Peregrine; I'm the second son, but my brother
is ten years older than I am, and I have nephews and nieces that aren't much
younger than you. My parents are both very wrapped up in matters of state, so I
was left pretty ARROW'S
FLIGHT 105 much in
the hands of my tutors, back on the family estate." "I
think I know your father; he's one of the Seneschal's chief assistants. And
your mother?" "She
organizes the resupply of the Waystations. I think she would have liked to have
been a Herald, but since she wasn't Chosen, this is the closest she can
get." "Weren't
there any children your own age on the estate?" "Not
many; their parents seemed to think mine would be angry if their offspring were
allowed to 'contaminate* me. I spent a great deal of my time reading." "Like
me—only you didn't have to hide to do it!" she laughed. "You're
wrong there! My tutors seemed to think that my every waking moment should be
spent learning something serious, dull, and practical. I had a hiding place up
in the oldest tree in the garden. I fixed it up until it was quite impossible
to see me from the ground. I smuggled my tales and poetry up there, and escaped
at every opportunity." A breeze that stirred the leaves of the trees
lining the road to either side of them seemed to chuckle at Kris' childish
escapes. "Then, when I was twelve, my parents took me to Court. I don't
think it ever entered their heads that the Collegium stood on the same
grounds." He smiled. "Even if they'd forgotten, though, I hadn't. I
hoped—but when no Companion met me at the Palace gate, I gave the dream up. I
was supposed to be presented at Vernal Equinox Festival, and I can remember
everything, right down to the fact that one of my boot-lacings didn't quite
match the other. I was standing next to my father, outside, in the gardens, you
know—when there was an unexpected visitor to the Festivities." Tantris
shook his head, making the bells on his bridle sing. Kris chuckled, and reached
forward to 106 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 107 scratch
behind his ears. "I knew what the appearance of a Companion meant, and I
kept looking around to see who he had come to Choose. I nearly went out of my
mind with happiness, when I finally stopped craning my head around and found he
was standing right in front of me! Then, when I looked into his eyes. ..
." His voice trailed off. "It's
not like anything else, is it?" Talia prompted sofdy. "and it isn't
something you ever lose the wonder of." "That
it's not," he agreed, speaking half to himself, "and I knew then that
I'd never be lonely again...." He shook off the spell, and became
matter-of-fact. "Well, my parents were both very proud. They had me
installed at the Collegium before I had a chance to turn around. Oddly enough,
it's easier to deal with them now that I'm an adult. My father can relate to me
as an equal, and I think that my mother forgets half the time that I'm one of
her offspring. I really don't think they ever knew what to do with a
child." "They
probably didn't, especially with so much time between you and your
brother." "Dirk
has no notion how much I envy him his family," he sighed. "You
think not?" Talia smiled. "Then why does he keep bringing you home
with him?" "I
never thought about that." They
rode silently for a mile or so. "Talia,
do you ever miss your family?" "Not
after I found other people who really cared about me. I was the scarlet jay
among the crows with them; I was more of an outsider among my own family than I
ever was at the Collegium. One of those pretty brothers of mine used to steal
my books, and call me 'Herald Talia1 to make me cry. I'd like to have seen his
face when I was Chosen." "Do
you ever think about going back?" "You
know, that used to be a daydream of mine, that
I'd somehow magically become a Herald—remember, I didn't know about being
Chosen—and I'd come back dressed in my Whites and covered in glory. Then they'd
all be envious, and sorry that they were mean to me." . "And
now?" "Well,
I went back long enough to try and 'rescue' the sister I'd been closest to only
to find she had turned into a stranger. I didn't go any farther into the Holdings,
just turned around and came back home. I didn't want to see any of them again.
Why bother? My parents pretended I was an outsider, my sibs were either afraid
or contemptuous; Heralds are very immoral, you know. What is it Mero's Book
says? About how the people you grow up with react to your fame?" "
'No one honors a saint on his hearthstone.1 " "It's true, too. I'm
resigned to letting things rest as they are, knowing that my example shows
misfits that there is an escape." He
didn't seem inclined to further conversation, so she turned her attention back
to those unsettling rumors. Poisonous,
that's what they were. Ugly, and poisonous. And
true? said a niggling little doubt. She
wanted to deny any truth to it at all—vehemently. But could she? In all
conscience, could she? The
business about Elspeth—no, she could not believe she'd been fostering
dependence in the child, not even unconsciously. Once Elspeth had begun acting
like a human being again, she'd been pushing her toward independence, driving
her to make her own decisions and take responsibility for the results. But the
rest—oh, insidious. For a Mindspeaker, it was obvious when he was projecting;
it sounded to the recipient a great deal like the Mindspeaker's 108 MERCEDES
LACKEY normal
voice, but as if the words were coming from deep inside his own ear. But when
she projected— would anyone be able to tell she was doing so? She
could tell; sending emotion cost her effort and energy. But if
she were excited or agitated—would she notice the energy expense? Did she
even need to be doing it while she was awake? What about when she was asleep?
How could she possibly be sure what her irrational sleeping mind was doing? And
what about simply reading people's emotional states? Was she transgressing by
doing so, and acting on the knowledge? How
could she avoid doing it? It was like seeing color; it was just there unless
someone was deliberately shielding. Doubt
followed doubt in an insidious circle, each feeding on the one preceding it,
until Kris broke the silence. "This
is our first stop—this close to the capital they won't be hungry for news, and
it's very unlikely they'd need us to work in any official capacity. Still, it's
only good manners to repay them in some way for their hospitality. Small
villages don't see trained Bards oftener than once a month, so they're very
receptive to even amateur music. Would you be willing to sing if I
played?" "Of
course," she replied, grateful for the interruption. "It's only fair
that I share the work. Did you notice that I brought My Lady?" "No!"
he exclaimed with delight. "You'll let me play her? I have a smaller
traveling harp with me, but it hasn't half the range or the tone of My
Lady." "I
let you have her the other night, didn't I? You'll have to retune her. I
detuned the strings so they wouldn't snap if the weather changed
suddenly." She smiled shyly. "I have good instrument etiquette. Jadus
taught me quite well, I assure you." ARROW'S
FUGHT 109 "He
couldn't do otherwise when it came to music. He's the one who taught me in the
first place." "Really?
I wonder why he didn't leave her to you?" "That's
easy enough to answer. I didn't take the time, to keep him company the way you
did," Kris rplied with a slightly shamed expression. "He may have
given me a little of his skill, but he gave his harp where he'd given his
heart—to a lonely little girl, because she'd given him her own." The
village came into view before a surprised Talia had time to form a reply.
Children swarmed upon them, chattering and calling questions that both Heralds
fielded with chuckles and smiles. Older children ran ahead to alert their
elders that there were two Heralds taking the road north, who were clearly
planning on spending the night. Long
before they reached the inn at the center of the village square, a crowd had
gathered to meet them. The village itself was a large one, with cobble-stoned
streets and white-plastered buildings of two and even three stories high. Rather
than thatched, the roofs were tiled—something Talia had read was more common
the farther north one went. With all the shutters thrown open, soft yellow
light gleamed through the windows of the houses, as the sun set and candles and
lamps were lit. As Kris
had indicated, this village was close enough to the capital that Heralds
stopped with fair regularity. Heralds traveling to their Sectors were housed in
inns rather than the Waystations, unless they were caught without other
shelter, and inns got back a percentage of their taxes for every Herald they
entertained. It was possible for an inn on a busy road to be rebated all of its
tax if enough Heralds stayed there—and that made Heralds welcomed and
sought-after guests. Under
all those strange eyes, Talia regained an outward control, at least; putting on
her "public" face and pushing her self-doubts into the back of her no MERCEDES
LACKEY mind.
It would not do for these people to see her disturbed. The
Innmaster himself welcomed them at his front step and escorted them to the
stables. Stablehands tended to the chirras, but the Heralds themselves cared
for their Companions. Kris chuckled once or twice—apparently at something that
Tantris "said" to him—and Talia felt a tiny twinge of jealousy at
their ability to Mindspeak one another. Once
back inside, the Innmaster escorted them personally to their quarters, and gave
Talia and Kris small rooms on the second floor—rooms scrupulously, almost
painfully clean. Their rooms adjoined one another and each boasted a window, a
small table, and a narrow bed that looked surprisingly comfortable. They
were courteously given the use of the bathhouse without anyone pestering them.
But once they joined the rest of the guests in the common room for supper, the
questions began. The dark-paneled common room overflowed to near-bursting with
villagers; tallow-dips in sconces on the walls cast a dim but clear light, so
it was easy to see and be seen, The air was seasoned with a pleasant aroma of
bread and roasting meat and wood smoke. Though the furnishings were only rough
wooden tables and benches, they, and the floor, were sanded smooth and scrubbed
clean. The Heralds took their places at a table near the fire, and the rest of
the guests gathered around them. Kris
took it upon himself to try and answer them, but when it seemed as if he'd
never get more than a mouthful of dinner before it got cold, Talia took her own
turn. As Kris had told her, the common people were very well informed this
close to the capital: what they wanted most was detail. Much of what they
wanted to know centered on the new Heir, a subject Talia knew very well indeed.
She satisfied ARROWS
FLIGHT 111 MJbem
enough that eventually she and Kris were able ; to finish their dinners in
peace. Talia
had brought My Lady down with her; while Kris tuned her, she took the time to
answer questions from a different source—the children. They seemed to sense
that this Herald would not brush them off, ignore them, or give them light answers.
They had a thousand questions concerning Heralds and what it took to be one. Some of
the questions gave her pause for thought. "Why
don't Heralds ever stay in one place?" one young boy asked. "We
always have the same priest— why don't we keep the same Herald?" "For
one thing, there just aren't enough of us to send one to each village, or even
one to each group of villages," Talia told him. "For another—tell me,
what will happen when your priest grows old and retires, or perhaps dies?" "They'll
send us a new one, of course." "And
hell be a stranger to all of you. Do you think he'll fit in and be accepted
right away?" "No."
The lad grinned impudently. "A lot of the grannies won't really trust him
until he's been here for years—if then." "But
a Herald has to have your trust right away, don't you see? If you come to trust
the person more than the office, the way you do with your priest, there would
be trouble for every new Herald in a Sector." The boy
looked thoughtful at this. "So you move all the time, to make sure it's
the job that stays important, not the person doing it. I bet if you stayed in
one place too long, you'd get too bound up with the people to judge right,
too." A
little startled by this observation, so very accurate, she sent a fleeting
thought toward the stable. ; Since
she wasn't in trance, Rolan couldn't give her tjnore than a vague feeling—but
the impression was pthat he had already noted this boy, and it was very 112 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 113 probable
that the child was going to receive a hooved visitor in the next year or two. Armed
with this knowledge, she answered the rest of this boy's questions with special
care and watched him afterward. She noted that he seemed to be the mentor and
protector of some of the little children, urging them forward to talk to her
when he knew that they were too shy to go alone. He wasn't above his share of
pranking about, she noticed with relief, but his tricks were never those that
could hurt anyone. Kris
soon had the harp in tune; Talia let him take center stage alone for a while,
knowing how much the approving attention would please him. The guests and
villagers were loud in their appreciation, and only when Kris was glowing from
their applause did Talia add her voice to the harpsong. The
host of the inn eventually decreed they'd tired the Heralds out long enough,
and mock-ordered both of them to their beds. Talia was just as pleased; she was
feeling the effects of a long day in the saddle, and she thought of her pillow
and warm bed with longing. When
they mounted the next morning, just as the sun arose, Talia winced a little as
she climbed into her saddle. "Sore?"
Kris asked with a slight smile. She
groaned faintly. "Before this trip is over I'll probably be in agony. I
didn't realize I was this badly out of riding trim. I may never be able to get
my legs closed again." "That
would make some people happy," he teased, and ducked as she threw an apple
core left from her breakfast at him, "Just
for that, maybe I won't give you this." He held up a pouch that jingled
faintly. "Why?
What is it?" she asked, curiosity aroused. "When
I picked up our expense money, I thought ^perhaps
you might have forgotten your stipend," he replied, tossing the pouch over
to her. '"You had, so I drew it for you. You're a full Herald now,
remember? You earn a stipend." "Bright
Havens!" Her hand flew to her head in embarrassment. "I did
forget." "Don't
feel badly. After five years of no pocket money, most of us forget. I did. But
it comes in very handy, especially when you happen to be at a fair, and see
something you just know So-and-so would love. Or, for that matter, that you
can't live without." "It's
a good thing I've got you for a counselor," she replied ruefully.
"I'd probably have left my own head back at the Collegium." Kris
just chuckled as he led the way out the gates of the inn onto the road. As they
traveled northward, the road changed from the strange, gray material to packed
gravel, to clay, to finally a simple raised and cleared strip between the
trees, all the grass worn down by travelers and their mounts and carts. As the
roadway changed, so did the landscape to either side. Farms covered more
area—and there were greater stretches of uncultivated land between them, from
wide meadows to nearly virgin forest. The
weather changed, growing slowly, but steadily, worse. It rained almost every
day, in a steady, penetrating shower. And soon the rains lasted all day, never becoming
less than a drippy drizzle, so that the chill water soaked through even their
oiled-wool cloaks. The chirras whined in protest at being made to travel at
all, and they rode enveloped in miasmas of soggy leaves and wet wool. By the
time they reached their chosen resting place each night, they were aching with
cold, sodden clear through, ; and longing for hot wine, hot food, and hotter
baths. Talia's
mood was at one with the weather. Her mind kept running in circles on the same
subject. 114 MERCEDES
LACKEY Was she
misusing her Gift? How could she tell? What were the ethics of Empathic
sensing, anyway? From
time to time, long skeins of waterbirds called from overhead, flying south,
high and fast, their cries coming down on the wind like the calls of lonely
spirits. The lost calls echoed in Talia's mind long after they'd passed; sad
callings for the answers to questions that could not be answered. And
when, at dismal day's end, they saw the lights of the next village and heard
the cheerful noise of the inn, those were welcome sights and sounds indeed. And yet
for Talia, the sight of the inn became a prospect she almost dreaded. She found
herself scanning the faces of those around her, seeking almost obsessively for
some sign that she was influencing their moods. The
only interruption to her rounds of intense self-scrutiny came when Kris drilled
her in the intricacies of the Arrow Code, or coaxed her into some kind of
conversation while they rode. The
farther north they came, the farther apart the villages were. Finally there was
little choice as to which village they would rest in overnight; often there
would be only one within striking distance. The cultivated areas began to be
fewer, the woods and forests thicker and showing less evidence of the hand of
man. At long last the weather cleared a bit; the rain stopped, although most
days were overcast. At the beginning of the trip, the workers they saw in the
fields had hailed them cheerfully, then gotten on with what they were doing.
Now almost invariably the farmfolk called them to the roadside and offered them
a drink of sweet cider or cold spring water in exchange for a bit of news. This
evidence alone made it plain that they were on the very edge of the Kingdom,
for at this time of year, there wasn't much time left to get the last of the
crops in; and it took a great deal to pull a farmer's attention away ARROW'S
FLIGHT 115 to from
that goal, even for the little time it took drink a glass and pass a trifle of
information. Talia
was just as glad that they met with so few people. Her circling self-doubts
were beginning to have an effect on her; her shields were wearing thin and she
could feel the press of Kris' emotional state just beyond them—though he was
trained to mind-block without thinking about it. With ordinary folk it was far
worse. It
didn't help her doubts at all that to sense that he was still uneasy about her, Kris
had done his best to shove his uncle's words into the back of his mind, but he
wasn't overly successful. He wanted to bring up the subject with Talia again,
but hadn't dared. She seemed edgy and preoccupied in general—and nervous
whenever they were around large groups of people, although he doubted that
anyone but another Herald would have noticed the nerves behind her
"public" face. So he tried to keep the conversation going on other
topics. But
behind it all were the unanswered questions. Was she misusing her Gift? Was she
doing so without realizing it? And—much
more sobering—was she using it to manipulate him? It was
distressing, because he was coming to like her—like her a great deal, more so
even than the usual hail-fellow good comradeship that was the norm among
Heralds. They were very much alike in many ways. It was horrible to have to
suspect a friend of something so insidious. Because
she was becoming that—a friend of the same order as Dirk. "You
know .. ." he said one day, out of the blue, "you're like the sister
I never had." "You're
like the brother I wish I had .. ." she replied without seeming to think
about it. "That I * might have had if Andrean hadn't died in that raid. 116 MERCEDES
LACKEY He was
the only one of my sibs who was kind to me, excepting Vrisa. If I'd had you
instead of Justus and Keltev, things might have been easier." "They
also might have turned out a lot differently. Would you have been willing to
run away if life had been more pleasant?" "A
good point," she conceded. "Probably not. And then where would I
be?" He
grinned, while Tantris shook his head mirthfully and made his bridle bells
ring. "If what you've told me is true, six years married, and the mother
of as many children." She
grimaced, and shifted in the saddle with a creak of leather. "Thank you,
no. Hectic as it is, I like the life I'm leading now. Speaking of which, don't
we cross into our new Sector today?" He
pulled the map they'd been given out of a pocket on the front of his saddle,
consulted it, and peered around under the lowering sky, looking for landmarks.
Finally he spotted one, a cluster of three flat-topped hills off to the west of
the road. "We'll cross the border before nightfall, and we'll be staying
tonight at our first Waystation." "Because—"
she put on a somber mien. "—Heralds do not stay at inns in the Sector they
serve, unless weather prevents them from reaching a Station; this insures that
they keep a proper distance and maintain impartiality with the people of their
Sector.' I remember." "You
certainly do!" he laughed, cheered by her apparent return to good humor.
"That's old Werda to the life!" "And
that's also the reason we either buy the supplies we run out of outright, or
wait until we reach a Resupply Station; assuming they're not in the
Way-station. Right?" "High
marks; completely correct." He looked about him at the falling leaves, at
trees whose branches were almost bare. "I'm sorry that this isn't going to ARROWS
FLIGHT 111 an easy
beginning for you. This is a bad time of ytar to start riding this Sector.
There's going to be snow in the next couple of weeks. Trainees usually aren't
faced with conditions this hard at the beginning of their internships." "I'm
Borderbred, remember? This is a lot more like the kind of life I was bred to
than my life at the Collegium. I'll manage." "You
know," he said soberly, "I know you'll do your best. I know you'll
try your hardest. That's all anyone can ask. I trust you. Talia." At
least, he thought to himself, / think I do. ARROWS
FLIGHT 119 Five The
boughs of the nearly-leafless trees arched above them, skeletal hands reaching
for the gray sky. The road continued before them, a leaf-carpeted tunnel
through the bleak, gray-brown forest. The sodden leaves had been flattened by
so many rains that the Companions didn't even kick them up; the dense mat only
served to muffle the sounds of their hooves. There were no birds, only the
occasional sound of a branch cracking somewhere off in the shadows of the
underbrush. Talia
and Kris rode well past sunset and on into the dark to reach the Waystation
Kris intended to use as their first stop in their new Sector. With the last
rays of the sun went the last hint of warmth; as the last dim, red light
filtered through the branches, a cold wind began to sigh among them. Kris took
the lead, but it was Tantris, with the superior night-sight of Companions, who
was really picking out their way, through cold and dark that was enough to
drive just about any other consideration from human minds. Talia was strongly
considering unpacking her heavy cloak and was definitely glad that all
Waystations, however small or primitive, had fireplaces. The wind had a sharp
bit to it, and carried a hint of snow along with the cold. 118 This
Station, as it loomed up out of the shadows in front of them, did not appear to
be all that small. Hopefully, it was not primitive either. One thing was always the first order of
business, no
matter how late the hour, nor how foul the weather, when Heralds opened a
Waystation. Talia dismounted, felt along Rolan's saddle, and took out her
firestarter and tinderbox. After no little fumbling and cursing, she managed to
get a tiny flame going in the tinder. Protecting it carefully from the wind,
she removed a small, fibrous bundle from one of the packs; it had a waxed wick
sticking out of it, which she lit at the tiny flame. While Kris pulled off the
packs and saddlebags, she tossed it inside and shut the door. He left the packs
at her feet, and took Companions and chirras around to the side of the building.
While she waited, she shivered in the cold wind, and started a little when an
owl cried in the distance. The little, homely sounds Kris was making in the
lean-to stable were very welcome against all that dark, with the wind sighing
in the boughs of the trees. She
nursed the tiny fire she had going; if it went out, the whole rigamarole was to
do over again. When she had counted to one hundred, slowly, she opened the door
again. The Station was full of a pungent, oily smoke that was now being swiftly
drawn up the chimney with the help of the draft from the open door. And any
vermin that had been within the Station were either dead or fled. Talia
hauled the packs and bedrolls inside, then began to get them set up while Kris
ducked inside long enough to get grain for the Companions and ,the chirras who
were now in the stabling at the side ,of the building. She took a rushlight
from her saddlebag by feel, and lit it from her bit of tinder. To her immense
relief, the place seemed to be quite sturdy, and well maintained and supplied.
She threw the
bedrolls into the twin bedboxes, then proceeded (wistfully wishing for just a
touch of Griffon's Gift) to get a fire going. It took several false starts, but
eventually she managed to get a respectable blaze on the cold hearth. Once the
flames were high enough to provide illumination as well as warmth, she
extinguished the light she'd lit; no sense in wasting what wasn't really
necessary, and the rushlights took up so much space in the packs that they
didn't carry many of them. She unpacked some of their food supplies and
unsealed the vermin-proof cendal-wood bins the Station staples were kept in to
put together a reasonable meal, then took two of the larger pots outside to the
well to get water for washing and cooking. Kris
seemed to be taking overly long with bedding down the chirras and Companions;
she'd managed to heat enough water for both of them to wash, had fixed a meal,
and had cleaned herself up and changed into a worn shift and old breeches she
kept for sleeping in before he finally appeared. She was about to chide him for
being so slow, when she realized that he'd dawdled on purpose. "Kris,
you don't have to be so thrice-blessed chivalrous, you know," she said
instead, feeling his reticence sharply, and being irrationally irritated by it.
"All the children on the Holdings sleep in the same room until they're
thirteen, and you know very well I've shared Waystations and tents with my
whole year-group while we were in training. I can't possibly nave something
you've never seen before—and the same goes for you." "I'm
. .. just not used to having a woman as a partner," he said. "Then
stop thinking of me as a woman," she yawned, bundling herself into her
bedroll and blinking at him sleepily through the firelight. Her irritation was
gone as quickly as it had come, once she'd reinforced her shielding—although
the fact that she'd had to do the latter bothered her; she shouldn't have
needed to. "That's
easy for you to say!" he retorted. .
"Then pretend I'm Keren, with no interest in men whatsoever.
Because if you don't, one of these evenings I'm going to find an ice statue
waiting outside the door—and it'll be you!" He
chuckled, and admitted that she just might be right. Her
heart pounded a little the next day as they approached their first village of
their Sector. There was no telling what reception awaited them—or what
requests. This far from the capital, a village often didn't even boast its own
priest, but shared one with several other villages; and the only
representatives of Kingdom law were the Heralds. Her
shields were so very thin; she'd discovered that last night. She couldn't
fathom why; shielding had always been second-nature, nearly instinctive— and
now they seemed to be eroding, slowly, inexorably. She was frightened by the
loss of control and was afraid to tell Kris, afraid her confession would simply
reinforce his own doubts about her, and create more stress than she already
had. As they
rode in, it appeared as though the entire population of the area had asssembled
to meet them. Talia thought they must have had lookouts posted, perhaps for the
last week or so, waiting for the Heralds they knew were replacing the injured
one. The emotional atmosphere—which she felt in spite of her best efforts to
shield—was tense, with no hint of why. The village was a small one,
single-storied houses of gray wood and darker gray stone, topped with tile
roofs, all clustered about a central square. There were no bright-painted
shutters here; the wind-driven ice of winter storms would have etched the paint
off in a single season. The inn was so small it obviously had no guest-rooms;
those overnighting Would have to sleep in the common room on the benches when
the inn closed for the night. There 122 MERCEDES
LACKEY was no
sign of damage to any of the buildings, no hint of disorder; whatever had these
folk anxious had nothing to do with their material life. The village folk,
though—they were dressed in gaudy colors, as if for a festival. So why the
feeling of apprehension so thick she could almost smell it? "Thanks
be to the Lady, you've finally come!" A plump
woman who reminded Talia for all the world of a hen bustled forward, pushing
before her a young couple of about sixteen or so until they stood less than a
foot from Kris' stirrup. Both were dressed in heavily embroidered finery, and
the girl was roundly pregnant. They clutched each other's hands as if they were
afraid, and neither of them would look at the Heralds. Talia was puzzled beyond
her own worries. What was it that could be wrong— that she hadn't sensed? "The
priest took sick and hasn't been able to make his rounds since eight weeks
ago," continued the plump woman, tucking a stray strand of hair behind the
girl's ear, "and in any case, he hasn't been here since before Midsummer.
There hasn't been anyone to marry these two in all that time!" "Were
they properly year-and-day handfasted?" Talia asked, knowing the Border
custom, meant to ensure fertility before a permanent bond was made. "Bright
Stars, yes—the priest did it himself last Midwinter!" the woman exclaimed
impatiently, while the other villagers nodded in agreement. Enlightenment
dawned on Talia, though Kris was obviously still perplexed about the reason for
their obvious apprehension. "You're
both still willing?" he asked. Both gave a very shy assent, but one
obviously unforced. "They're
just victims of very bad timing," Talia whispered to him. "And
they're afraid we'll disapprove—maybe even refuse to wed them—because they left
the formal ceremony so long. They should have wedded as soon as they knew she
was with ARROW'S
FLIGHT 123 child,
but I'll bet a pretty they were so busy with planting that they put it off
until after Midsummer, assuming the priest would get here in plenty of time—
Except that they hadn't counted on him falling HI. Poor babies! They're
terribly in awe of us, and they're afraid we'll make difficulties for them
because they didn't take care of it right away. We'd be within our right to do
so ... by the letter of the law." "But
not by the spirit," Kris whispered back, relieved that it was so simple.
"Well, since everyone's agreed," he said loudly enough for everyone
to hear, smiling broadly, "what's holding up the celebration?" There
was a general sigh of tension vanishing, and trestle tables and food began
appearing as if conjured by a spell. Before very long the square had been
transformed and a proper wedding celebration was in full swing. To save them
any further embarrassment, Kris took the young couple off to one side and
witnessed their vows, signing their wedding contract as officiating Herald in
lieu of a priest. The
young couple returned to enjoy their feast, their shyness nearly gone. They
were obviously comforted on two counts: that the Heralds had made no difficulty
over the lateness of their vows, and that now their Firstborn would have no
taint of illegitimacy about it. The
remainder of that day they spent in relative idleness, since there was no use
whatsoever in trying to get any official business conducted. The press of
people was putting a considerable strain on Talia, but she thought she was
succeeding in keeping the strain from showing, even to Kris. She sat mostly on
the edge of things, speaking pleasantly when spoken to, but letting Kris take
the lion's share of the attention. And she
was even more worried than when they'd first entered this village; her shields
hadn't been this fragile since before she'd learned the full use of her Gift.
Virtually anything would bring them down, and 124 MERCEDES
LACKEY she had
to expend ridiculous amounts of energy to put them back up again. If only
she'd never heard those filthy rumors. .. . The
thought of the rumors brought her back full circle to her self-doubt and fear,
and the press of emotions became almost painful, until she finally resorted to
an old expedient; drinking enough wine to blur the edges of her sensing, and
make it all bearable. It was rather too bad that it left her sober enough to
negotiate the dark path back to the Waystation with no trouble at all—for that
meant she was still sober enough to think. They
returned the next day, ready for business. The people of the village had no
grievances that needed settling, but they were eager to hear the news from the
capital and the other towns of the Sector. The common room of the inn, dark and
smokey as it was, was the only "public" room in the whole village, so
that was where they conducted their business. The village storyteller—who
doubled as the clerk—sat drinking in every word they spoke, and making copious
notes, for it would be his duty to repeat all that the Heralds related for
those who were absent from the village, or for those small holders who seldom
came to town. They gave
the morning to the decisions of the Queen and Council, how and why those
decisions had been reached, and what, if any, laws had been passed to uphold
and enforce those decisions; and the afternoon they spent relating the news of
the Court and events of major importance to the entire Kingdom—all of which
took them until darkness fell, and they returned to the Station again. This
day had lain easier on Talia's wire-taunt nerves, for there was nothing to
excite anyone's emotions in the dry news they recited, and even if there had
been, the storyteller/clerk was too intent on mem-ori/ing every word to allow
his feelings to intrude. ARROW'S
FUGHT 125 the two
of them returned to the Waystation, made herself a cup of double-strength
shamile tea, a strong soporific. She was determined to get to sleep, and to
sleep deeply, thinking perhaps weari-ness was part of the cause of her
troubles. But her
dreams were uneasy, and she woke feeling more drained than she had been when
she'd gone to sleep. They
spent the third day on the reports of the headman and clerk, and taking the
verbal news of the village to be passed on up the line. Kris would carry the
headman's written reports until they came to a center of population large
enough to boast a messsenger, or until they arrived at a Resupply Station, at
which point he could send what he had collected south to the capital, together
with his own observations on the probable truth or falsehood of the information
contained in them. That
was Kris' job. Talia remained in the background the entire time, hoping to be
noticed as little as possible, for it seemed that the strain was worst when she
was interacting with someone. But
that evening at the Waystation, Kris insisted on hearing Talia's opinion on the
reports they'd been given, and the reliability of the headman and clerk who had
given them. "They
seemed honest to me," she told him, hoping he had no notion of how much
she had sensed, against her will. "I didn't have any feeling they were
trying to mislead us, hide anything, or hold anything back. As far as I can
judge, the only mistakes in their records are honest errors. They were quick
enough to correct them, in any event, when you pointed them out." "Good,"
Kris said with satisfaction. "That tallies with what I saw. I'm just as
glad; I hate calling people out—even when it's blatantly obvious that they're
lying to me," He noted both their observations on 126 MERCEDES
LACKEY the
cover page of the reports, and sealed them in a waterproof wrapper. To
Talia's relief, he had not seemed to note how much strain she was under. "I
didn't realize we took tax records, too," she said, attempting to distract
herself—and him—with questions about routine. "Always,
in Border Sectors; almost never in the interior. We take a duplicate of what
they're supposed to give the taxmen when they come next spring. This way, if
some disaster should destroy their records, they have at least a partial
reckoning on file. It's to their advantage, since if there's a disaster of that
magnitude, the village may have lost quite a bit more than the records, and the
Queen will be able to judge what aid to give them based on what would have been
taxed." She did
not make the same mistake with the tea this night, but instead lay in the
darkness of the Station, staring up at the blackness above her head, listening
to Kris' quiet breathing and going back to her earliest lessons in
shield-discipline. She thought, when she finally was weary enough to sleep,
that she might have reinforced her shields enough to carry her through the
final day. The
fourth day they went over the clerk-storyteller's accounts of what they'd told
him, making corrections or elaborations as required. When the fifth day dawned
(much to Talia's relief), they were back on the road again; headed through the
village on their way out, but not to do more than pick up their laundry and
visit the village bathhouse. By the
time they were well past the village and out into the wilds, it was growing
noticeably colder, and both of them were wearing their heavier winter cloaks.
The trees were now totally barren of leaves, and the warm, friendly scents of
autumn were gone from the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 127 wind.
Although it seldom rained anymore, the skies continued to be overcast—a
featureless slate-gray. They crunched their way through a carpet of dead, brown
leaves that had collected on the roadway. Most of the birds and beasts were
gone, hibernating, or in hiding now; the loss of foliage and cover made them
cautious and quiet, those that were left. The Heralds seldom saw more than the
occasional rabbit or squirrel, and never heard much besides the wind in the
naked boughs of the trees and the scream of a crow or two. The Companions'
bridle bells made a lonely chime against the silence of the sleeping forest. So far
as Talia was concerned, that was all to the good; at least she wasn't having to
be continually on guard against her shields failing. But her nerves continued
to fray; and as they traveled onward through the bleak woods, she wasn't sure
which was worse, being alone in this gloom-ridden wilderness, where the gray
and empty forest only fed her depression, or being surrounded by people, with
shields slowly going to pieces. Kris
wasn't much happier; he kept wondering if— and how much—of his general feelings
of approval toward Talia were manufactured. Was she consciously or
unconsciously augmenting them? He was beginning to examine every nuance of
feeling, trying to detect if she had had a hand in it. He
liked her—Bright Havens, he wanted to like her, she was so much like him in so
many ways. She was a good partner, taking on tasks without complaining, without
needing to be prompted, striving to be a full equal and pull her own weight ..
. and yet,
and yet... Yet there were those rumors, and his own
feelings that he could well have been tampered with without his ever noticing
it. "No smoke without fire?" Perhaps. It was so damned hard to tell .
.. and the way she was withdrawing wasn't helping. 128 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 129 The
next stop was two days distant, which meant an overnight stay in a Waystation
midway between the two villages. Kris was no longer even thinking of his
partner in terms of being female; now the strain on his nerves was because of
his suspicions. They repeated their routine of the first night; Talia readying
the shelter while Kris took care of the four-footed members of the party. His
night-vision was much better than hers; it only seemed logical. And it gave him
a chance to consult with Tantris without her around. Tantris
was puzzled, and worried. ;/ haven't felt anything, little brother, but . . .: "But?"
Kris asked aloud. .7 am
not certain that I would. Rolan is disturbed, and refuses to discuss it.: "Great." :He is
senior to me, as you are senior to Talia. If he does not wish to discuss the
private affairs of his Chosen, that is his business, and his right.: "I
know, I know. Look, at least tell me if you pick up anything, all right?" :You
have my word.: his Companion replied, :but I think perhaps "Perhaps
what?" :You
need more expert aid,: came the reluctant reply. "Tell
me from where, and I'll get it! There isn't anybody in the Circle with a Gift
like hers—and I rather doubt that Healer's Empathy is identical." :True,:
came the sigh in his mind, and after that, he could coax nothing more out of
Tantris on the subject. It
troubled him deeply. If a Companion didn't feel up to the problem . . . And
they did not even have time to reach the gate of the next village before they
were met on the road by two different parties demanding justice. ""'.;
They saw it coming easily enough. "Steady," Kris said as they rode
into a press of farmers in heavy brown homespun, who crowded up against the
sides of the Companions with their petitions. Talia went pale and strained, and
sat Rolan's back absolutely motionless and with lips tightly compressed. Kris
did his best to sort out the arguments, then finally lost patience and sharply
ordered them all to hold their tongues. When
the clamor died down, he finally managed to ascertain that there were two
aggrieved parties, both as alike to his eyes as a pair of crows—brown hair,
thick brown beards, nearly identical clothing of brown homespun. After
listening to both sides, and putting up with each one interrupting the other
until he was ready to take a stick to both of them, he decreed that the
argument was moot until third parries could be questioned. The
dispute was a trivial one by his lights, over a cow and her calf. The facts
were that a bull had somehow made its way into a field containing a cow in
season; not surprisingly, the calf resulted. The calf was quite plainly the
offspring of the bull in question, nor did the cow's owner deny this. What was
under dispute was how the bull had gotten at the cow in the first place. The
cow's owner claimed angrily that the owner of the bull had allowed it to stray,
and that it had found its own way there, and thus he had incurred no stud fee.
He pointed to the damage done to his hedges, and inquired with self-righteous
wrath if anyone thought he'd ruin his own enclosure to save himself the fee. The
bull's owner claimed just as vociferously that Ae owner of the cow had enticed
the bull into the pasture with the express purpose of saving himself the stud
fee. Kris
felt absolutely helpless; this was not an area in which he had any expertise at
all. He glanced en- 130 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 131 treatingiy
at his internee, who was farmbred, after all, and should have some notion of
how to sort it out. Talia was looking a bit white around the lips and eyes, but
otherwise seemed in control. He nudged Tantris up beside her, and whispered,
"All right, trainee—you know more about this sort of thing than I do. Got
any ideas?" She
started just a litde; possibly only someone watching for reactions would have
noticed it. "I ... I think so," she said, slowly. "It's like a
dispute we had once back at Sensholding." "Then
take over. I'm out of my depth." She
asked a few questions of the disputants, then went among the rest of the
villagers, making inquiries into the habits of each of the parties in question.
It was generally agreed that, while the owner of the cow was parsimonious, he
was far too stingy to have ruined his own fences just to save a stud fee. And
the bull's owner had a habit of allowing it to stray, being too lazy to fix
breaks in his own enclosures until after the beast had escaped yet another time. But
then she surprised Kris by asking a source he never would have considered—some
of the children gathered at the edge of the crowd. After sidelong glances to be
certain that no one was likely to tell them to hold their tongues, they told
Talia that this particular cow was never kept in the field where the bull had
supposedly found her. She was quite valuable, and her owner always kept her
where he could keep an eye on her. Talia
returned to the disputants. "This
is my first judgment;" she said, slowly, and with an oddly expressionless
tone. "There is no doubt that your bull did stray, and since it is quite
probable that it did the damage claimed to the fences, you owe this man for the
repairs he had to make." The
owner of the bull looked extremely disgrun-ded; the cow's owner gloated. Talia
did not allow him to gloat for long. •E
"You, on the other hand," she told him—not quite Jpoking at him,
"have never kept your cow in that ticular field. You must have seen that
the bull broken in, and decided that since the damage already done, you might
as well save yourself the Stud fee. So you moved your cow to the field where
the bull was. Because of this, my second judgment is that you owe him half the
stud fee he would normally have charged you." Now
both of them looked chagrined. "AH
things considered, I should think that you are probably even." They
grudgingly agreed that this was the case. "Don't
you leave yet!" she said, turning to the owner of the bull, and showing a
little more animation. "You have been letting a potentially dangerous
animal roam loose. My third judgment is that anyone who finds your bull roaming
and confines it in a safe place for you to take home is entitled to have his
cows serviced for nothing to pay him for his trouble. That should induce you to
take better care of your stock in the future." The
grins creasing the faces of the rest of the villagers made it clear that they
considered Talia's rulings to have been equitable and appropriate—and they were
certainly popular. Kris smiled and gave her a little nod of approval; she
smiled back, tentatively, some of the strain gone from around her eyes. With
children ranging along before and behind them, they continued down to the
village itself, which was a slightly larger version of the first village they
had served, and actually boasted a "town hall" of sorts. It was there
that they set up shop in the single large room that served as a meeting hall,
behind an ancient and battered marble-topped table that might well be the
oldest object in the village. It was an improvement on the common room of the
inn in that it wasn't as smoky or cramped; but the fireplace cUd little to heat
it, and Kris found himself hoping 132 MERCEDES
LACKEY that
they would be able to deal with their business and be on their way before he
got frostbitten feet and Fingers. But
another dispute for arbitration landed on them almost immediately; a problem of
the location of the boundary between two neighboring farms. The farmers themselves
were not overly concerned about the matter, as they were old freinds and had
settled the problem over the years by sharing equally both the work and the
fruits of the Fields in question. They confided to Kris, however, that they
feared this could not continue for very much longer; both had more than one son
to be provided for, and they feared that tempers were already growing heated on
the subject among their offspring. Kris, after a glance at Talia showed him she
had no opinion in this matter, agreed that the matter should be settled now,
before it developed into a full-blown feud. He promised that they would attend
to it as soon as they had discharged their other duties. The
disputants were obliged to be content with that. Kris called for the village
records, and while each of them took a turn at relaying the news and the laws,
the other searched the records provided by the village clerk for clues to the
ownership of the properties in question. Regrettably,
the clues were few, and contradictory. It seemed that both claims were equally
valid. Talia
was increasingly reluctant to take any part in the affairs at hand. Her
shielding was disintegrating, slowly, but steadily; she was positive of that
now. What was worse, she was no longer certain that she was able to keep her
own feelings from intruding and influencing those around her, for her
instinct-level control over projection was going, too. Kris was trying to put
her at ease, but she could sense his own doubts as clearly as if he were
shouting them aloud. And
when, the night before they were due to ARROW'S
FLIGHT 133 ye,
they discussed the problem of the disputed IJelds at length in the privacy of
the Waystation, she ^pas keeping herself under such tight control that she
ItJtew she was going to have a reaction-headache from the strain. vThe
problem is that the stream they used as the original dividing line has changed
its bed so many times that I can't see any way of reconstructing what it was
originally," Kris sighed. "And you can't cast a Truth Spell on a
stream!" She
hesitated a long moment, drawing invisible patterns on the hearthstone of the
Station with a twig. "Do you suppose they'd settle for dividing it
equally? You've talked with them more than I have." "Not
a chance," Kris replied flatly, firelight casting ever-changing shadows
across his face. "I've talked with the eldest sons, and they're just about
ready to come to blows over it. The fathers would be perfectly willing, but the
children would never stand for it, and it's the children who will make trouble
if they're not satisfied." "I
can't see making this an all-or-nothing proposition," she sighed, after a
long pause. "Neither
can I," Kris stared into the flames, thinking. "Among the highborn
the way to settle this would be to marry two of the younger children, then deed
the land in question to them." "There's
not enough land there to support even one person, much less a family,"
Talia felt impelled to point out, "even if we could Find two of the
children willing to marry." Kris
played absently with one of the arrows from his quiver—then looked down at it
suddenly, and smiled in inspiration. "What about the hand of Fate?" "What
do you mean by that?" "Suppose
we each took a stand on the opposite sides of the area and shot arrows straight
up—then drew a line between where they landed for the new border. If there's no
wind tomorrow, where they fall 134 MERCEDES
LACKEY is
going to be pretty much at the whim of the Lady. Do you think that would satisfy
everyone?" "That
.. . that's no bad notion," she said, thinking hard. "Especially if
we have the priest bless the arrows, pray over the fields, that sort of thing.
It wouldn't be human decision anymore; it would be in the hands of the gods—and
who's going to dispute the will of the gods? I think both families will be
willing to abide by it. Kris, that's a wonderful idea!" She sighed, rather
sadly. "I wouldn't have thought of that." "You
did fine yourself, earlier," he said, more forcefully than he had
intended. "I was totally out of my depth." "Well,
I don't like the idea of anyone allowing livestock to roam at will. Out here on
the Border if cattle or hogs get into the forested areas, they're likely to go
feral, and then you've got a real problem on your hands." "Hmn.
I knew dogs gone wild could be a problem, but I never knew livestock
could." Kris filed that piece of information away for future reference. "It's
a fairly serious problem," she replied absently. "When domestic
animals go feral, they have no fear of man the way wild animals do, and what's
more, they're familiar with how people act. There was more than one person
among Holderkin killed or maimed by feral stock." "Well,
I repeat, you did fine. You shouldn't be afraid to put your say in. That's what
this internship is all about." "I—"
she started, then shrank back into herself. "What?" "Nothing,"
she replied, moving back into the shadows where he couldn't read her
expression. "I'm just tired, that's all. We should get some rest." That
withdrawal troubled him badly ... but there didn't seem to be anything he could
do about it. ARROWS
FUGHT 135 On
their way out of town the next day, they stopped *0 acquire the clerk and the
priest; when they presented their solution to the two families in question,
both sides were heartily in favor of it. The farmers themselves were willing to
agree to any solution to the problem that would defuse the potentially
explosive situation between their children. The children of both families were
equally certain that the gods would be with them when the arrows flew. For
something that had been under dispute for so long, the end came almost as an
anticlimax. The priest blessed arrows, bows, Heralds, fields, families—
anything that could possibly pertain to or be interested in the problem.
("If it moves, I'm blessing it," he told the Heralds with a twinkle
in his eyes. "And if it doesn't move, I'm praying over it!") Talia
and Kris each took a stand on the exact midpoint of the northern and southern
boundaries of the disputed dot and launched their arrows; the priest marked the
landing point of one, the clerk 01 the other. The landing places were
permanently designated with stone cairns and newly-planted trees, the new
border was made and drawn on the maps and deeds. Both sides professed
themselves satisfied. The Heralds went on their way. But by
now Talia was so withdrawn that Kris could not read her at all; she might as
well have been a statue of a Herald. She seemed to have wrapped herself in a
cocoon of self-imposed isolation, and nothing he could do or say seemed to be
able to break her out of it. And as
for himself, he found himself wondering if both those disputes hadn't been
solved a little too easily. It would have been child's play for her to have
nudged the disputants ever so slightly into a more friendly—or at least less
antagonistic—attitude toward one another. And once she was gone, if that was
indeed what she had done, the quarrels would break out all over again. 136 MERCEDES
LACKEY Had he
been overly impressed with the way she had handled the first case? Had she been
adjusting his attitude? There
was simply no way of being sure ... no way at all. Talia
was coming to realize that all her control had been on a purely instinctive
level; that she really didn't understand how her own Gift worked. The training
Visa had given her was the sort given to Mindspeakers, and in the face of this
disintegration of control, very little of Visa's teaching seemed directly
applicable to her current problem. The Healers she'd worked with had never said
anything to her . .. perhaps because they'd seen the control and assumed it was
conscious rather than instinctive. For
that matter, her Gift might not be much like theirs except in effect. They
certainly didn't use their Empathy as primary Gift; it was used mostly as an
adjunct to Healing. They
certainly weren't confronted with the ethical considerations she found herself
facing. When they weren't Healing, they simply shielded. And they didn't work
with law and politics. She
longed to tell Kris—and feared to. It would only make things worse, and what
could he do, after ail? His Gift wasn't even of the same type as hers, and what
training he had been given could hardly apply to her. So she
said nothing, endured in miserable self-doubt, and did her best to reverse a
situation that was moving increasingly out of control. Six There
was little of note in any of the towns and villages they passed through on
their meandering way to the Border. The worst that they encountered were three
cases where the village headmen were obviously trying to cover something up;
twice they were lining their own pockets with tax money, once die headman was
deliberately omitting his farms and those of his kin from the survey and tax
rolls. In all three cases they actually did nothing when the cheats were
uncovered; that was not their job. Instead, they noted these facts on their
reports. When the taxmen arrived in the spring, they would come armed with the
truth, and the guilty parties would find themselves paying a stiff penalty.
This kept the onus of tax enforcement off the Heralds. One
thing was notable; the farther north they went, the greater the distance grew
between communities, and the smaller the communities were. Now it was taking
nearly a week's ride to pass from village to village. Talia
remained withdrawn and silent, responding only when spoken to, and never
volunteering any opinion. She seemed to warm up a little when they were between
villages. She'd talk to Kris then, on her own; she even could be persuaded to
sing a little. 137 138 MERCEDES
LACKEY But as
soon as they came within a day's ride of a populated area, the shutters came
down, and she locked everything and everyone outside. When she spoke, she had
an odd, flat, indifferent quality to her tone. She reminded Kris of himself the
first time he'd walked the two-rope bridge on the obstacle course; there was
that kind of tautness underneath the mask, as if she expected to fall at any
moment. Tantris could tell him nothing, but even Rolan seemed unusually on
edge. There
was one other thing to observe about the countryside; these northernmost
communities were not only smaller, but they kept themselves behind palisades of
strong logs, with gates that were barred at night. There were wolves and other
wild beasts prowling the winter nights—and some of those beasts were on two
legs. The Forest of Sorrows didn't keep everything out of this Sector, and
couldn't prevent outlaws from coming in from the three directions other than
the forest Border. Talia and Kris rode with all senses alert and their weapons
loose and to hand now, and they bolted the Waystation doors at night. All of
which might have accounted for Talia's nerves; except that she supposedly came
from Border country herself, and should be used to keeping watch for raiders.
Still, Kris reasoned, it had been a long time, and she had never been part of
the defenders—she had been part of what was being protected. But
that wouldn't account for Roian's nerves. The Companions were both
combat-trained and combat-experienced; they were more than guard enough for
themselves, their Chosen, and the chirras. Kris watched Talia—unobtrusively, he
hoped—and worried, and wondered. They
progressed through several towns and villages; Talia was beginning to feel as
if she were falling to pieces, bit by bit. Her shields were eroding ARROW'S
FLIGHT 139 to the
point where she had very little control over them, and nearly everything was
getting through; she knew she was not only reading, she was inadvertantly
projecting, because Rolan was becoming as nervous as she was. Her only defense
was to withdraw into herself as much as possible, and Kris seemed bound and determined
to prevent that. She felt lost, and frightened, and utterly alone. There was no
one she could turn to for help; Kris himself had said that he thought her Gift
was unique. She was certain now that he couldn't give her any advice on how to
handle it; his own Gift was very nearly the kind that could be weighed and
measured. Hers wasn't even necessarily detectable. And now it was becoming
utterly unpredictable. Her feeling of panic and entrapment grew. Finally
they reached the town of Hevenbeck, very nearly on the Border itself. Tailia's
unhappiness was a hard knot within her now; the petty problems of the townfolk
seemed trivial at this point. In the
previous village they'd had some of their messages catch up with them; one of
them had been a brief note to Talia from Elspeth. She'd said only that she was
doing well, hoped Talia was the same, and that Talia wasn't to worry about her.
And that added to Talia's troubles. She had no notion of what prompted the
note, or what could be happening back at the capital at this moment. Elspeth
was in her first year as a trainee; like Talia she was the only girl in her
year-group. She was probably confused—most certainly overwhelmed—and just
entering adolescence to top it all off. And she would be having to cope with
all the rumors Talia already knew, and whatever had sprung up in her absence.
It was quite likely she needed Talia more now than she ever had since she'd
been the Brat. Not to
mention the effect of the rumors on the rest of the Heralds. Would
they, like Kris, be tempted to believe them? 140 MERCEDES
LACKEY Or
would they dismiss them out of hand and ignore the matter—leaving Elspeth to
face them alone? How was
Selenay getting along without her? What if the Queen was turning to Orthallen
for advice— Orthallen, whom Talia somehow could not bring herself to trust? She was
so engrossed in trying to hold control and deal with these other worries that
had begun occurring to her that she was paying scant attention to the
petitioners before her—a grim and straitlaced couple who reminded Talia
unpleasantly of her own Holderkin relatives. They
were dressed in clothing of faded black and dusty brown; carefully mended and
patched as if they were two of the town's poorest inhabitants, although Talia
and Kris had been informed by the headman that they were actually one of the
wealthiest couples Hevenbeck boasted. Their mouths were set in identical
disapproving grimaces as they harked over their grievances in thin, whining
voices. Those
voices irritated her no end; their petty spite-fulness rasped at her through
what was left of her shields, like having sandpaper rubbing over a sunburn. She
was grateful when Kris interrupted them. "You're
quite certain this girl is responsible for the missing poultry? There's no
chance it could be foxes or other vermin?" "Our
coops are as tight as our house, Herald," the man whined. "More so!
She's done it; done it in spite of the good wages we've paid her and the
comfortable job she's had with us. I don't doubt she's been selling them—" "But
to whom? You said yourself no one in town will admit to buying fowl from
her." "Then
she's been eating them!" the woman retorted. "Greedy she is, that I
know for certain—" Talia
forced herself to turn her attention to the serving maid; her garb was even
more threadbare than her employers, she was thin and pale, and looked ARROW'S
FLIGHT 141 ill-used.
She certainly didn't look to Talia as if she'd been feasting on stolen chickens
and geese! The girl
briefly raised her eyes—and a disquieting chill threaded Talia's backbone at
the strange blank, gray gaze. Then she dropped her regard again, and Talia
dismissed her misgiving as another manifestation of her lack of control over
her Gift. She wanted away from them all; they made her skin crawl, and all she
wanted was to have this nonsense over with so that she could retreat back into
the relatively safe haven of the Station. She
spoke without thinking about anything except getting rid of them. "I
can't see where you have any proof of what you're claiming," she
interrupted sharply, "and I can't see why you're bringing it before
Heralds—" "Talia,
you haven't been listening," Kris said in a low, warning voice. "It
isn't just the missing birds— though that's all they seem to be worrying about.
There's other things—the runes on their doorstep in blood—the—" "Kris,
this is ridiculous!" she exploded. "All they want is an excuse to
dismiss that poor child without her wages! Havens, Keldar used to pull that
filthy trick once every year—hire some pathetic wench and dismiss her on some
trumped-up excuse before her year's wage came due!" "Talia,"
Kris said after a pause, his voice full of reluctance, "I hate to have to
pull rank on you, but I'm going to have to insist—because you can work
Second-stage Truth Spell and I can't. I want you to cast it on all three of
them in turn." "I
can't believe you're wasting Truth Spell on something this petty!" "That's
an order, Herald." She bit
her lip at the cold tone of his voice, and obeyed without another word. The
First-stage Truth Spell only revealed whether or not the speaker was telling
the truth. Second-stage forced him to tell it. 142 MERCEDES
LACKEY Much to
her surprise, when Kris questioned the couple at some length while she held the
spell on them, their story was the same. Then
she transferred the spell to the timid-seeming servant-girl—and mouse became a
rabid weasel. The
girl underwent a complete personality change when Talia's spell touched her
mind. She stared at her employers, eyes bright and feral, a fierce snarl
twisting her lips. "Oh, yes," she hissed softly. "Oh yes, I've
been taking their birds. It's little enough for all they've done to me—" "What
have they done to you?" Kris prompted. "Beatings
for the least little clumsiness—bread and barley-broth and moldy cheese, meal
after meal. They own the biggest flock of hens in the town, and I haven't
tasted an egg or a bit of chicken in half a year! My pledged clothing is her
castoffs, and worn to nothing by the time I get them. When I'm not bruised, I'm
hungry, when I'm not hungry, I'm cold! But I'll have my revenge—" The
look of mad hatred she turned on the two made them shrink back away from her,
frightened at the transformation in her. And Talia clenched her hands until her
nails bit into her palms, endeavoring to hold control in the storm of the rage
and hatr/ed she was experiencing. "—oh,
yes, I'll have my revenge! That's what the birds were for, you know. I've not been
eating them. I've been sacrificing them—giving them to the wolves. They come to
me every night now. Soon now, soon they 11 teach me how to change my skin for
one of theirs, and when I learn—when I learn—" The mad
light in her eyes told clearly what she expected to do to her employers when
she'd learned to shift her shape. Talia went cold all over, shaking from head
to foot. The beat of the girl's emotions against her crumbling barriers was
almost enough to send her fleeing in panic. Her breath froze in her throat, and
she could feel herself coming perilously close to insanity herself. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 143 "—and
after them, the rest. And my gray brothers and sisters will help, oh,
yes—" The maid began to raise her voice, and her words disintegrated into
babbling; raving fragments of hatred and imagination. It was
too much for Talia to bear. The girl was shattering her barriers, and about to
draw her down into madness. She reached out blindly, without thinking, using
her Gift in instinctive self-defense, and touched the girl, putting her into a
sudden sleep. The
plaintiff couple was speechless; for a long moment, so was Kris. "I
think," Kris said carefully, at last, "That we had better take her
and put her into the care of a Healer. I don't know how much of what she said
about the way you treated her was the truth, and how much she imagined, but I
think perhaps you'd better agree to pay all the Healer's expenses. And if you
take another servant—you'd best be careful about her working conditions." Kris
was ominously silent as they rode back to the Station in the gathering dusk.
The disposition of the mad girl had occupied all the rest of the afternoon. It
had taken the Healer nearly a candlemark to wake her from the deep sleep Talia
had thrown over her. And Talia was profoundly shamed, as much for her panicked,
unthinking reaction as for the self-centered, willful irresponsibility that had
led her to neglect her duty. "Kris
... I'm sorry," she said in a subdued, unhappy voice as soon as they were
past the city gates. "I didn't mean—I—" Kris
said nothing, and Talia shrank back into herself, the last of her
carefully-built self-confidence shattered. He
guesses—surely he guesses. I'm a failure; I can't even control myself enough to
complete half a circuit. I can't do anything right. But he
made no reply, not even to condemn; she 144 MERCEDES
LACKEY could
only sense that he was thinking, but not what he was thinking about. She rode
silently at his side, waiting for the axe to fall, all the way back to the
Station. And the fact that it did not fall only made things worse. Kris
rode in silence, only now beginning to realize that by not giving her a little
comfort and encouragement that he had made a nearly fatal mistake. Her
self-esteem was far more fragile than he had guessed. And her nerves were
plainly gone. Now he thought he knew why she would venture no judgments at all,
and gave him her opinions hesitantly, and only when directly asked for them.
When he asked her, back at the Station, she avoided answering all questions
about how she was feeling, answering only that she was "all right."
He began to wonder if she'd ever recover from the incident . .. and he began to
fear that he'd ruined her. And
then, deep in the darkness of the night, the disturbing thought occurred to him
that she was slowly going mad, and perhaps taking him with her. There
was snow on the ground as they rode toward the tiny hamlet that bore the
dubious distinction of being the settlement that was farthest north and nearest
the Border, right up against the Forest of Sorrows itself. Talia, more used to
having to exert herself to bolster what was left of her shields than to stretch
out to sense the population centers, began wondering if her powers had finally
failed her altogether. But, no—there was Kris, so clear to her raw mind that
his proximity was almost painful. So it had to be something else. She
Finally got up her courage and confided what she had not sensed to Kris.
"There's just too much ... well, 'silence' is the only way I can put it. I
can hardly feel anything, and the little I can pick up is as if everyone were
sleeping, or unconscious." ARROWS
FLIGHT 145 "You're
certain that the cold's not affecting you?" he asked. / only wish
it would, she thought wistfully, then answered him. "No ... I don't think
so. It was no colder back at Greenhaven, and I could feel the people from a day
away." He
considered. "All right then, we'd better pick up our pace to the fastest
the chirras can maintain. If there's something wrong, the sooner we get there,
the better." The
snow creaked underfoot, and the bridle-bells rang madly as they picked up the
pace to a trot. The air was utterly still; the sky cloudless and an intense
blue that almost hurt the eyes. Sun filtered through the bare branches of the
trees, leaving shadows like blue lace on the snowbanks. It was a beautiful day,
and the strange uneasiness Talia was feeling was entirely out of place in it. The
village itself was very quiet as they came within sight of it—too quiet by far.
Sheltered between two hills, the cleared area in which it stood showed no
tracks on the snow whatsoever, neither coming nor going. The gates stood open,
and unattended. Kris' face showed his alarm so clearly that Talia knew without
having his emotions battering her that he was as fearful as she. He ordered
Talia to remain where she was, and descended the hill they were on to the
village gates, taking his chirra inside with him. He
hadn't been inside long when she saw the gates slam shut, and heard the bar
slide into its slots. Immediately following this, she saw an arrow arc over the
palisade to land in the snow on her side of the wall. She ran
to where it had landed. It bore four rings; three were green, one was red. She
checked the fletching pattern; it was Kris' without a doubt. It might have
seemed silly for him to have patterned the arrow when she'd watched him enter
the village with her own eyes, but this was truly the only way for 146 MERCEDES
LACKEY her to
be certain that when the gate slammed shut it had been because he had shut it,
and not outlaws lairing within. This
could only mean one thing. The entire village had fallen victim to some kind of
plague. Lord
and Lady—what do I do— she thought frantically, then staggered as Rolan pushed
her impatiently with his nose. She felt his annoyance as plainly as if he'd
spoken it. He'd had more than enough of her self-indulgent nerves; this
required action, simple action. She knew very well what she had to do, and
she'd damn well better get about doing it! It was
as if something within her that had been broken was being splinted together.
She forced herself to regain calm, to plan. She wrote a note, telling Kris that
she was leaving her chirra tethered to the gate, and that he should take it
inside when he saw that she'd left. She took a plain white arrow of her own,
tied the note to it, and sent it back across the wall. She went through her
packs, removing a map, a skin of water, and a bag of meal for herself and Rolan
to share. Consulting
the map, she saw that the nearest Healing Temple lay five days by horse to the
east. That meant that she and Rolan could make it in two. She
tethered the chirra, swung herself onto Rolan's back, and they were off. This
was where the ground-devouring pace of the Herald's Companion was worth more
than gold or gems. A Companion could travel at the equivalent of an ordinary
horse's gallop for hours without tiring. If need be, he could subsist for several
days at this punishing pace with little more than water and a handful or two of
meal. He would need several days of heavy feeding and rest when the ordeal was
over, but a Companion never faltered, and seldom even strained muscles or
tendons under the conditions that would kill a horse. Any place a hooved animal
could go, a Companion could go, including scram- ARROWS
FLIGHT 147 bling
over icy, hazardous rock-falls only goats would dare. The only thing his Herald
need worry about was whether he was capable of staying on his back! Talia
and Rolan pushed their pace far into the night; she ate and drank in the
saddle, even dozed a bit. Their road was clear, and relatively dry; the footing
was good, so Rolan exerted himself to the uttermost. There was even a full
moon, so they could see their way quite clearly. The noise of their passing
disturbed whatever wildlife there was, so they rode in a silence broken only by
the sound of Rolan's hooves pounding on the frozen ground. It was an eerie journey,
like something out of a dream, a wild ride that never seemed to get anywhere.
Rolan was relatively fresh, so they continued on until even after the moon had
set. Finally, however, even he had to take a brief rest. Not long before dawn,
they broke their journey in a tiny clearing alongside the road, beside a stream
crowned with an ice-covered waterfall. Rolan
halted right next to the pool below the waterfall, his flanks heaving, his
sides steaming in the cold, his breath puffing out and frosting around his
nostrils. Talia broke the ice for him, but the water was too cold for him to
drink safely. She gave him water from her own waterskin instead, filling it
when it was empty, warming it against her body, and letting him drink until
he'd had enough. She filled the skin one last time, and had a long drink
herself after giving him about a third of the meal she was carrying. Just as
the sun rose, striking fire from the be-jeweled waterfall, they were ready to
resume the grueling run. They
stopped again near noon, for both of them had needs of nature to attend to.
That did not take them long at all, and Talia took advantage of the daylight
and relatively warm sun to strip his tack off him long enough for it to dry,
rubbing him down with the towel she always kept in his saddlebag. She
leaned her head against his flank, knees feeling weak, and not just from the
long ride. 148 MERCEDES
LACKEY Lady
help me—Heaters have my Gift—how am I ever going to face them? How can I face
anyone, falling apart like this? Oh, gods—/ can't bear it— Rolan
nudged her shoulder gently; she could almost hear him in words, so clearly did
his message come to her. I'll help you, the feeling said. "Oh,
Gods—can you?" The
reply was an unqualified affirmative. She sighed, and relaxed, and reached out
to him— And
felt her shields coming up, held up by a force from outside herself; felt a
calm come over her, and a kind of numbness that was so much better than the
pain and stress she'd been living with that she nearly cried. "How
long—?" His
regret seemed to say that he couldn't hold things for very long at all. "Just
make it long enough for us to get there and back. I'll work so hard I'll wear
myself out, and that will keep things under control. I can't project if I don't
have the strength to spare. I'll figure out what's gone wrong, I know I will—if
I can just stay away from people for a while—" Then
let's go, his impatient headshake said. The
tack, including the saddle blanket, was dry to the touch, so she lost no time
in getting him saddled again and getting on their way, with anxiety riding
pillion behind her. They
galloped into the courtyard of the Healing Temple shortly after dusk. Her
Whites and her Companion gave her instant attention; Rolan had not even halted
when a green-clad novice Healer was at her stirrup to receive her orders.
Immediately behind him came two more, one with hot wine with herbs in it for
Taiia, the other with fresh, warm gruel for Rolan. Both of them consumed their
portions with gratitude, while a messenger went to arouse the two Heralds
posted to this Temple. Meanwhile ARROWS
FLIGHT 149 another
novice lit torches all around the courtyard, and before Talia had finished her
wine, a fragile, slender woman whose close-cropped hair flamed red even in the
uncertain torchlight came at a dead run across the cobbled court. She had a
heavy satchel slung over one shoulder, her green robes were flying, and she was
tying a cloak on as she ran. "I'm
Kerithwyn;" she said as she reached Talia. "I'm the most experienced
Healer here in plague diseases. The other two you asked for will follow as soon
as our Heralds are ready, but I'm ready to leave now." "All
right, then; the sooner we get back to Kris the happier I'll be. You're used to
riding pillion with a Herald?" Talia held out her hand to aid the Healer
astride Rolan. "You
could say that," the woman replied, taking Talia's outstretched hand. She
gave Talia an odd look when their hands touched, hesitated a moment, then set her
foot on top of the Herald's, and lifted herself onto the pillion pad behind
Talia with practiced ease. "Rolan
is a good bit faster than most Companions— so be prepared." Despite
the advance warning, Talia heard the woman gasp a little in surprise as Rolan
launched himself back the way they had come. It was
obvious, however, that the woman was no stranger to this kind of
transportation. She held her seat without losing her grip on her medicinals or
on Talia's belt, but also without any panic-stricken clutching. She kept her
cloak tucked in all around her, and kept her head down, taking advantage of the
small shelter behind Talia from the wind of their passing. Talia was relieved
to learn that she was prepared to eat and doze a-horse, and if anything, was
even less willing than Rolan to stop for rest. They
reached the village shortly after midday of 150 MERCEDES
LACKEY the
second day of their return. It was still utterly lifeless, and Talia's
unpredictable shields had shut down on her, so that she couldn't even sense
Kris within. She had
the Healer dismount, then backed Rolan up to the gate to beat a tattoo on it
with one of his hind hooves. No matter where Kris was, waking or sleeping, so
long as he hadn't fallen ill himself, he'd hear that. She
fretted, hands clenching on the reins, when he didn't appear immediately after
the pounding. He could so easily have caught the plague himself; they were
anything but immune. Kerithwyn stirred uneasily by her stirrup, the same
thoughts obviously occurring to her, by the worried look on her face. But
then she heard the bar slide back and the gate cracked open just enough to
admit them. She rode straight in without stopping to dismount, the Healer
following, and only slid off when they were inside the gates. "The
other two are less than a day behind us, but I was ready immediately, so I came
on ahead," Kerithwyn told Kris briskly. "What is the situation?" Kris
was sliding the bar back into place, and when he turned to face them, Talia wanted
to weep with pity for him. She could hardly believe how worn-looking he was; he
must have been on his feet since she'd left. "It's
bad," Kris said wearily, "It looks like the entire population was hit
within a day or two. There were five dead when I got here, and I've lost three
more since." "Symptoms?" "High
fever, delirium, a red rash, and swelling under the jaw and the arms." Kerithwyn
nodded. "Snow fever—that's what we call it anyway. It generally shows up
right after the first few snowfalls; after Midwinter it seems to vanish and it
never appears in warm weather. How have you been treating them?" ARROW'S
FLIGHT 151 "Trying
to get liquids down them, especially wil-lowbark tea, although when the fever
seemed to be getting too high, especially in the children, I packed them in
snow for a bit to bring it down." "Excellent
job! I couldn't have done better myself," she applauded. "I've got
some specific remedy with me, but it will take 3 litde time to do any good, so
we'll be doing more of the same with the ones not in immediate danger. I'll
start with Healing the worst victims now. Have either of you ever assisted a
Healer before?" "I
can't," Kris replied shaking his head, so that his lank hair fell onto his
forehead. "The last Healer I spoke to said my Gifts were all wrong. I'm
afraid I'll be of more use as a simple pair of hands." Kerithwyn
turned to look at Talia, her look oddly measuring. She
swallowed hard, but answered. "I've never tried, but my Gifts are Empathy
and Mind healing. My instructor said they were Healing types." If I'm
going to be assisting, I can't have shields up anyway, and this is going to
take so much energy I won't be projecting either. "Empathy
in a Herald?" Kerithwyn raised one eyebrow. "Well, you ought to be a
great deal of help, then. We'll try it, anyway; the worst that can happen is
nothing. Herald, have you isolated the worst cases?" "They're
all in here," Kris pointed to a small house immediately next to the gate.
"When it didn't seem to harm them to move them, I put all of the worst of
them together." "Excellent."
Kerithwyn gave him about a pound of an herbal mixture, instructing him to make
a cauldron of tea with it. He was to give every victim at least a cupful, and
drink some himself. As Kris left to follow her instructions and care for Rolan,
Kerithwyn entered the house with Talia. The
house was cramped and dark, with the windows kept shuttered against the cold
air. Kris had 152 MERCEDES
LACKEY moved
as many beds and pallets into the three rooms of the house as he could fit. He
had done his best to keep his patients clean and had herbal incense burning on
the hearth against the miasma of sickness, but there was still a faint but
noticeable odor of illness. So many people crowded together made Talia feel
claustrophobic, and the smell made her faintly nauseous. She was only grateful
that these people were apparently so deeply unconscious that there was nothing
for her to have to try to shield against. Kerithwyn appeared not to notice any
of this. The
worst of the sick ones was a frail old woman whose bloated jaws looked
grotesque on her thin face. "Take
a chair and sit next to me, Herald," the Healer instructed. "Make
yourself comfortable, take my free hand, and drop your shielding—" Again
that measuring look. "—and do whatever it is that you do when you prepare
to Mindspeak. I'll take care of the rest." Talia
closed her eyes and forcibly ignored her surroundings and put her anxieties
into abeyance by concentrating on an old breathing exercise. It took
her a long, considering moment to determine that she was still capable of going
into deep-trance. With everything else going merrily to hell, she wasn't
entirely certain she'd be able to perform even such a rudimentary exercise as
deep-trancing. Tentative
trial proved that fear, at least, was groundless. Once
she achieved the appropriate level of trance-state, the Healer appeared to her
inner eyes as a nearly solid core of calming green-and-gold energy. Gods be
thanked, she thought with detached gratitude, Kerithwyn must be even more of an
expert than she claimed. It
wasn't just that the Healer possessed a controlled power the equal of any of
the teaching Healers Talia had dealt with—it was also that Talia herself ARROW'S
FLIGHT 153 had
nothing to fear from the Healer's presence. Kerithwyn was allowing no negative
emotions to ruf-fie the surface of her mind! The
patient seemed to be roiling with something dark, muddy-red. Talia observed
with detached fascination as the Healer sent lances of light into these sullen
eddies, cleaning and dispersing them, and feeding the tiny, flickering sparks
she uncovered beneath them until they burned strongly again. As Kerithwyn
worked, Talia could both see and feel energy draining from herself to the
Healer, replacing what Kerithwyn spent. Now
that she understood what the Healer required, she opened the channel between
them to its fullest possible extent and reached for Rolan's support. Energy
flowed to the Healer in a steady, powerful stream from the two of them, and the
work picked up in pace and sureness. It was all finished in a moment, and Talia
felt the contact between them break. She sped up her own breathing, turned her
concentration outward, and opened her eyes. The
Healer's gray eyes were filled with approval "Very good, Herald; you
grasped the concept quite quickly. Can you continue as well as you have
begun?" 'Til
give you all I have." "In
that case, I think that the plague will claim no more victims. As you can see,
we have done quite well with this one." The old
woman bore little resemblance to the sick creature she had been when they
started. The swelling in her jaws was already more than half gone, and it was
clear that her fever was nearly broken. Talia was immensely cheered by the
sight. This was the first time in so long that she'd done something right. . .. They
treated every person in the house before the Healer insisted that Talia rest.
Talia sought out their packs, remembering that she had seen them when 154 MERCEDES
LACKEY she had
entered. Kris had left them all in a heap by the fire. She dug out some dried
meat and fruit, but found she had so little appetite that she couldn't even
raise enough interest to bite into the radons. Instead of eating, she sagged
cross-legged on the hearthstone with her back to the fire, soaking up the heat
with her eyes closed, too exhausted to sense anything, and so grateful for the
respite that all she wanted to do was enjoy the stillness in her mind. "Foolish
girl! Didn't you learn anything about Gifts at that Collegium of yours?" Talia
opened her eyes in surprise; Kerithwyn was standing over her with a steaming
mug in one hand and a bar of something in the other. "You
should know perfectly well that if you don't replenish your energy reserves,
you'll be of no use to anyone!" She thrust both articles into Talia's
hands. "I know you aren't hungry—eat anyway! Finish these, then go find
your partner and make him eat and sleep. He doesn't look like he's done either
for a week. Don't worry, when I want you, I'll find you. And make sure your
Companions are all right as well." The
block proved to be dried fruit and nuts pressed together with honey. Under
other conditions Talia would probably have found it to be revoltingly sweet,
but once she'd forced down the first bite, it seemed to gain enormously in
appeal and the rest followed rather quickly. She recognized the liquid for the
tea Kris had been feeding the plague victims, and saved one bite of the bar to
take the nasty taste out of her mouth. She
looked first for Rolan; Kris had removed his tack, thrown several blankets over
him, and led him to the stabling area of the inn. Kris had left food and water
within reach, but that was all he'd had time to do. She
groomed and cleaned him, grateful that Com- ARROWS
FLIGHT 155 panions
were intelligent creatures that could be trusted to walk themselves cool. He
was obviously tired for the first time in her experience, and equally obviously
hungry, but otherwise none the worse for the run. She blanketed him warmly
against chill and hunted until she found the grain storage area. She added
dried fruit to the sweet-feed and put plenty within easy reach, then made a pot
of hot gruel, which Rolan slurped up greedily as soon as it had cooled enought
to eat. It
occurred to her, tired as she was, that she ought to check on Tantris. Kris'
Companion whickered a welcome and ratded his grain bucket entreatingly. She
laughed—how long it had been since the last time she'd laughed!—he had hay, he
wasn't about to starve, but he obviously wanted some of the same treatment
Rolan was getting. She obliged him as he nuzzled her in thanks. The chirras,
loose in a large enclosure that gave them access to the outside and which
contained enough fodder for them for a week, were in fine fettle. She changed
their water, and went to look for Kris. It
didn't take much persuasion on her part to get him into the bedroll she had
laid out on the hearth. He actually fell asleep before he'd finished the
rations she'd given him; she gently removed the half-finished meal from his
hands and placed it where he would see it when he woke, then took up the task
she'd pulled him away from. All
three of them worked like slaves far into the night, snatching food and sleep
in stolen moments when no one seemed to need aid too urgently. Oddly enough,
the frail-seeming Kerithwyn exhibited the least amount of wear. She showed
incredible stamina and tirelessness; she frequently scolded them into taking a
rest when she herself had taken fewer breaks than either of them. All
three of them were worn and wan when the longed-for sound of hooves pounding on
the gate 156 MERCEDES
LACKEY signaled
the arrival of the other two Healers and their Herald-escorts. The two
new Healers—a great, hairy bear of a man, and a round-faced girl who seemed
scardy old enough to have attained full Greens—quickly assumed control from
Kerithwyn, who found a flat space, a few blankets, and promptly went to sleep.
Both Heralds were experienced in assisting Healers, and sent Talia and Kris to
their bedrolls for their first steady night of sleep since they'd arrived here. All of
them were on their feet the next day, and back to the job at hand. They took it
in turn to eat and sleep, and by the end of the week several of their former
patients were in good enough shape to begin helping them care for their fellow
victims. At that point Kerithwyn told Kris gently but firmly to be on their
way. "We
don't need you anymore—no, not even for the usual," she insisted.
"Our own Heralds can take care of any disputes; we get the laws and news
at least once every month, and we're perfectly capable of relaying reports. I
want you two out of here before you catch this plague yourselves." "But—"
Kris protested. "Out!"
she replied. "I've had this sort of thing happen to me six times already;
this is the seventh. You are not shirking your duty. Loris and Herald Pelsin
are going to be staying here until Midwinter; these people are not going to
need you! Now go!" Kris
gathered his belongings, acquired some fresh food to supplement the dried—it
would stay perfectly sound in the cold—left their reports with the Heralds who
had brought the Healers, as well as giving them the written reports on the
villages they had already visited to be sent back to the capital. But
Talia did not escape so easily. While Kris was conferring with the other two
Heralds, Kerithwyn took her aside just before she was ready to mount ARROWS
FLIGHT 157 Rolan.
"Child," she said bluntly, "Your shields are as full of holes as
last week's target, and if you weren't exhausted, you'd be projecting
everything under the sun! You're in such a state that if I had any time, I
wouldn't let you leave this place. But I don't have either the time or the
energy to spare. I don't know what you've been doing, or what you think you're
doing, but whatever it is, it's dead wrong. You'd better get yourself in hand,
girl, and quickly, or you'll be affecting even the unGifted. Now go—and start
working on that control." With
those blunt words she turned on her heel and left; leaving Talia torn between
running after her and begging her help, and slitting her wrists on the spot. In the
end, though, she gathered the ragged bits of her courage around her, and headed
out the gate after Kris. Kris
consulted the map; Kerithwyn had ordered him to find a layover point where the
two of them could take a long rest. He told Talia that he thought he'd found a
particularly good Waystation for them to use as their resting-place. Talia
nodded, sunk in her own misery; Kris was preoccupied with making certain of
their current location, and hadn't noticed anything—or at least, he hadn't said
anything to her about it. But after what Kerithwyn said .. . Well,
she was going to have to be twice as careful as before, that was all. They
were a full half-day from the village now, and well into the Forest of Sorrows
itself. Kris had called a halt around midday, so that they could all get a bite
to eat while he checked his bearings. There were several narrow roads through
Sorrows, and if they had missed theirs, or mistaken the road for a herd-track,
they could get into trouble before nightfall. But
they were on the right road, and the Waystation was within easy striking
distance. 158 MERCEDES
LACKEY It was
fortunate that it was not too far distant, for just after they had dismounted
and taken rations from their packs, the chirras began whuffing, and dancing uneasily. "Talia,
chirras don't misbehave unless there's a good reason," Kris said with a
frown of worry, as his jerked the lead rope from his hands for the third time.
"Can you tell what's wrong?" "I
don't know . . ." she said doubtfully, still shaking from her
confrontation with the Healer, and never having done a great deal of work with
animals. "I'll give it a try, though." She
braced herself, and sent herself into the deep-trance in which she had been
able to touch animals' minds before. The image of what was causing their
unhappiness was clear and sharp—and enough to send her flying back to
consciousness with speed. "Snow," she said succinctly, for the image
had been crystal clear and highly sharpened by fear. "Lots of it—a big
blizzard coming down out of the north. It'll hit us before dusk." Kris
swore. "Then we haven't much time. Let's get moving." Seven The
chirras resumed their good behavior, as if they understood that Talia had
learned what was troubling them. They all pushed on as quickly as they could,
but the icy road made it hard for both chirras and Companions to keep their
footing, and the clouds piling up from the north were making it as dark as if
it were already dusk. Then a bitter wind began, cutting through the trees with
an eerie moan. The road they were following had taken a turn to the north about
a furlong back, which put the wind right in their faces. Kris and Talia
dismounted and fought against it alongside the Companions and chirras. When the
first fat flakes began falling, they were already in difficulty. Within
moments it was no longer possible for either Herald to see more than a few feet
ahead, and the wind was strong enough to whip the edges of their cloaks out of
their benumbed hands. It howled among the tree branches, and ravened on the
ground, shrieking like the damned. The trees groaned and creaked in protest,
the thinner branches whipping wildly above their heads. It was so hard to be
heard above the storm that neither of them bothered to speak, using only hand
signals when there was something that had to be communicated. This was like no 159 160 MERCEDES
LACKEY storm
Talia had ever seen before, and she hoped (when she had any thoughts at all
through the numbing cold) that it wasn't typical for this Sector. The
snow piled up with frightening speed; ankle-deep, then knee-deep. They
completely lost track of distance and time in the simple struggle to place one
foot in front of the other. Kris and Tantris found the lane that led to the
Waystation more by accident than anything else, literally stumbling into it as
they probed the bushes at the side of the road. The
lane soon plunged down between two shallow ridges where they were sheltered
from the worst of the wind. They let go of the girths they'd clung to and
stumbled along in their Companions' wake, trusting to their mounts' better
senses to guide them all to the Station. By the time they achieved it, they
could hardly see the path ahead of them. The bulk of the Station loomed up
before them out of the gray-white wall of snow only when they were practically
on top of it. The
Station probably hadn't been visited since the resupply team had last inspected
and stocked it during the summer. A quick survey of the woodpile told them that
there wasn't enough stockpiled there to last for as long as they were likely to
be snowed in. In frantic haste, they left the chirras tied to the building,
removed everything from the packs on their Companions, fastened lead ropes from
their own belts to the snaffles on the saddles and went out with axes to look
for deadfall. It was
grueling work, especially coming on top of the previous crisis. Talia's arms
and shoulders ached with the unaccustomed work; what didn't ache, was nearly
numb with cold. Her cloak was caked with snow to the point where it creaked and
bits of snow fell off when she moved. Her world narrowed to the pain, the axe
in her hands, and the deadfall in front of her. More than anything else, she
longed to be able to lie down in the soft snow and rest, but she ARROW'S
FLIGHT 161 knew
that this was the very last thing she should do. Instead, she continued to
struggle against pain and the driving snow, using the numbing cold and the ache
of overtaxed muscles as a bulwark against despair—the despair that Healer
Kerithwyn had evoked with her brusque warning. She drove herself in the
gathering gloom until she became aware that she could barely see where her axe
was falling. It was nearly night now—true night. It was
time to give up. As Talia and Rolan hauled in the last load while full darkness
fell, it was all she could do to cling to his girth as he dragged her and the
wood back toward the station. The wind had picked up—something she wouldn't
have believed possible—and it was all but tearing her cloak from her body. Her
breath was sobbing in her lungs, sending needles of ice and pain through her
throat and chest. She
opened the door of the Station, only to blink in surprise—for there was nothing
before her but a gloom-shrouded little room with a door on the opposite wall.
After a moment, her fatigue-fogged mind managed to grasp the fact that this
Station, unlike any other she had seen previously, had an entranceway to buffer
the effect of the outside chill. She
fumbled the second door open, Rolan crowding into the entrance after her. Kris
had beaten her to the Station with his final load shortly before, and had
fumigated it and started a fire in the fireplace. He unfastened her from Rolan;
she stumbled thank--fully toward the yellow beacon of the fire with half-frozen
limbs. He led Rolan into the shelter of the Station itself, and as she
collapsed next to the warmth of the flames she saw that he had brought in
Tantris and the chirras as well. It made things a bit crowded until he got them
all settled, but Talia knew that there was no way anything could live long in
the howling winds outside. She
peeled off her snow-caked garments and hung 162 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 163 them
beside Kris' on pegs above the fireplace. Kris was already taking care of meal
preparations, so after she slipped into her woolen shift and old breeches
(feeling far too exhausted for a complete change of clothing) she made a nest
of the dun-colored blankets from both their bedrolls on top of dry straw in
front of the fire. This way they couJd warm their aching, shivering bodies in
comfort while waiting for whatever it was to cook. She
blinked stupidly at the fire, mind and body alike still numb and cold. She held
to that numbness, stubbornly, not wanting to face the alternative to numbness.
She succeeded; she remained sunk in exhausted apathy long after she normally
would have begun to show some signs of life. Kris was standing over her for
several minutes before she realized he was there. "Talia
.. ." he began awkwardly, "I know this isn't the time or the place,
but there isn't likely to be a better one. I have to talk to you." Without
really realizing it, she rose slowly to her still-benumbed feet, feeling a cold
that had nothing to do with the blizzard outside. "Ab-b-b-out what?"
she stuttered, fearing the worst. "Kerithwyn
had some words with me before we left," he said, as the despair she'd been
holding off with the last of her strength came down on her with the same
overwhelming power as storm—and with it, oddly enough, a hopeless kind of rage.
"Hell, Talia— she told me you've been holding back on me; that your Gift
is totally out of control!" Something
within her shattered, letting loose the storm she'd held pent up for so long. Kris
was expecting anger, denial—but not this! He was battered by alternating waves
of suicidal despair, and killing rage; the shock of it literally sent him to
his knees. His eyes filmed with a red mist. There was a
roaring in his ears, behind which he could dimly hear the squeal of an angry
horse and the clatter of hooves on stone. That
was what brought him out, before he grabbed a weapon and killed himself, her,
or both of them. He built up the strongest shield he could, fought his way to his
feet, and rushed her, literally slamming her into the wall behind her with
enough force to make his own teeth rattle. "Stop
it!" he shouted at the wild, inhuman thing struggling beneath his hands.
''Damn you, Stop it! Look what you're doing to us!" He wrenched her around
violently, so that she could see for herself the unbelievable sight of Rolan
backing Tantris into a corner, teeth bared and eyes wild and red-rimmed.
"Look what you're doing to them!" She
stared—and collapsed so suddenly he didn't even have time to catch her, for she
fell right through his hands. She fell and curled into a limp ball on the cold
stone floor of the Station, sobbing as if she had lost everything she ever held
dear. And the
storm within the Station walls faded away to nothing. He went
to his knees beside her, and gathered her against his shoulder. She didn't
resist—didn't even seem to know he was there. He held her while she cried,
horrible, tearing sobs that seemed to be ripping her apart inside, while the
fire he'd started burned lower and lower, and the storm outside echoed her
heartbroken weeping. Finally,
when it seemed possible that the fire might die altogether, he picked her up
and put her in the nest of blankets and hay. She curled up, facing away from him
and still crying, while he built up the fire, finished the tasks he'd left
undone, and returned to her. He got
in beside her, chilled to the bone, and took her equally cold body into his
arms again. The violence of her grief seemed to have worn itself out; he 164 MERCEDES
LACKEY shook
her a little. "Come on—" he said, feeling more than awkward.
"Talk to me, lady—" "I-I—"
she sobbed "I want to die!" "Why?
Because your Gift got out of control? What kind of attitude is that for a
Herald?" "I'm
no kind of Herald." "Like
bloody hell!" he interrupted. "Who says?" "Everyone—you
told me—" "Oh,
hell.. . ," Now he realized what it was that triggered this whole mess in
the first place—himself, telling her the rumors about her. Gods—he knew she
hadn't a high level of self-esteem—what he'd said back at the start of this
trip must have hit her like a punch in the kidneys. He must have started her on
a round of self-examination and self-doubt that turned into a downturning
spiral she hadn't the power to stop. Her Gift was the sort of thing that would
feed on doubt and make it reality—which in turn would feed her doubts,
reinforcing them as her loss of control turned rumor into truth. And
this was the result. A fully developed Gift without any controls on it
whatsoever, and a young woman ready to kill herself the minute he turned his
back. "Listen
to me—dammit Talia, listen!" He shook her again. "If things were that
bad, Rolan would have left you. He'd have repudiated anybody not worthy of her
Whites. Has he made any move like that at all?" "N-n-n-no
. .." "Has
he even warned you?" The
sobs were fading. "N-n-no." "He's
helped you, hasn't he? He's kept your damned secret. He thinks you're still a
Herald. So act like one, dammit! Stop emoting and start thinking. You're in a
mess; now how can we get you out of it?" She
looked up at him for the first time, eyes swollen and red. "We?" "We,"
he repeated. "I'm as much to blame for this as you are. I should never
have told you those damned ARROWS
FLIGHT 165 stories—should
have believed you when you told me they weren't true. I'd be willing to bet it
was my doubt that made all this worse. Hmm?" She
shook her head, then hid her face against his chest. He pulled her closer, and
began stroking her hair and rocking her a little. "Poor baby—" he
murmured, "—poor scared, lonely baby—here—try this." He reached out
and seized a small leather bottle from the top of his pile of belongings beside
them, and passed it to her. "One of the standard cures for sensitivity is
wine. This ought to blunt your edges good!" Talia
accepted the bottle, took a gulp and almost choked. The stuff was like drinking
sweet, liquid fire! "What—is—that?"
she asked when she'd stopped gasping for breath. "Something
the Healers make—spirits of wine, they call it. They make it by freezing the
wine they make from honey, and throwing away the ice; that's what's left. The
one that looks like a bear gave it to me before we left." Talia
took another drink, just a sip this time, and with more caution. It didn't burn
the way the first mouthful had, and left behind a very pleasant sensation in
her mouth and stomach. And it certainly did blunt the edges of both her
sensitivity and her raw nerves. That was the best thing that had happened to
her all day, so she took a third swallow. "Easy
there, little one," Kris laughed, sounding relieved. "That stuffs
potent!" "I
can tell," she said, feeling a bit giddy. "But I feel a lot better.
Not so raw." "That
was what I hoped," he replied, appropriating the bottle and drinking from
it himself. "I suppose we shouldn't be drinking it on an empty stomach,
but I figure you need it. Hell, after what I've been through, so do I!"
She had drunk enough that she was just aware of 166 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 167 Kris'
mental presence; his proximity was no longer painful. "Thanks."
"Don't mention it." She lay
quietly in the circle of his arms, feeling utterly drained, as they continued
to share sips of the bottle. The fire popped and crackled, with little bits of
blue and green flame among the red and orange. She was finally beginning to
feel warm all the way through—something she hadn't thought likely out there in
the snow—and relaxed—something she hadn't thought likely ever again. The fire
smelled of evergreens, like forest-green incense. The chirras and Companions
shifted a little from time to time, rustling the straw Kris had laid down for
them. Gods—what she'd almost done to them! She touched with Rolan just long
enough to assure herself that he was all right. ... His
forgiveness and love was so total that tears came to her eyes again. "Hey,"
Kris said gently "I thought we'd agreed there'd be no more of that." When
she didn't reply, he put one hand under her chin, tilted it up, and kissed her.
It was intended to be a brotherly kiss. It didn't stay brotherly for more than
an instant. "Bright Havens!" he breathed in surprise when they
finally moved apart. Talia
leaned back into his shoulder; her desire had surprised her as much as it had
him, although she knew that was a common enough reaction after great stress.
She wasn't aware of him as her counselor or even as a Herald at this
moment—only as a friend and an emotional shelter—and knew with certainty that
he was as aware of her need as she was of his own. This time she reached for
him. As
their mouths met and opened, he gently slipped the shift down past her waist.
She shivered in delight as his mouth brushed the back of her neck, the line of
her shoulders, as he kissed away her tears; he sighed
as she nibbled his earlobe timidly. With her shields gone, they seemed to be
feeling every tiny nuance of each other's reactions. As she traced the line of
his spine with a feather-like touch, she felt it as much as he—when she tensed
and gasped as he found an unexpectedly responsive spot, he tensed in sympathy
as well. Finally
their mutual desires grew too impatient to be put off any longer; he slowly let
her down on the blankets beside him, sank into her embrace, and entered her. He was
totally unprepared for the stab of pain that was shared as the pleasure had
been. He would have withdrawn from her at once, but she clung to him with
fierceness and would not let him go. She'd
expected pain, and endured it. What she had not expected was that he would curb
his own desire, to bring her past the pain, and finally to patiently wait on
her pleasure before taking his own. She shifted over as he collapsed, then
nestled into the curve of his arm again. They curled together in their warm
nest, spent and replete, and feeling no urgent need to do anything other than
savor the experience they'd shared. For long moments there was no sound at all
but the sounds of the fire, and the tiny stirrings of the four at the other end
of the station. He
turned his head to look into her dark eyes, wide and drowsy with content.
"Why didn't you tell me you were a virgin?" he asked softly. "You
didn't ask," she said sleepily. "Why? Is it that important?" "I
don't think I'd have loved you if I'd known." "All
the more reason not to tell you," she pointed out logically. She nestled
closer to him, her head on his chest, pulling blankets over both of them.
"But I'm glad it was you." "Why?" 168 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Among
other things, my gossiping Heraldic sisters were right. It was ... a lot nicer
than I'd been led to believe first times usually are." "A
compliment?" he asked, amused. "A
compliment." A
thought occurred to him. "Wait a minute. I thought you and Skif ..." She
smiled, the first real smile he'd gotten out of her in weeks. "That's what
you were supposed to think. It was awful—we both had horrid schedules, and we
were so exhausted that we kept falling asleep before we could get anywhere." She
told him the comic-frustrating tale of their abortive romance, and how it had
finally culminated in their swearing blood-brotherhood, rather than bed. "Poor
Skif! And poor Talia," he chuckled. "You knew he'd be teased half to
death if that tale got out, didn't you? So you let everyone think
otherwise." "Mrn-hmm.
Poor Skif .. ." she yawned, "victim of unrequited lust." She was
falling asleep in his arms, and as much as he hated to disturb her, he knew
that he'd better. "Wake
up, sleepy. If you don't want to greet the dawn with a headache, you'd better
have some food in you, and something to drink besides that devil's brew. The
last thing you need is a hangover in the morning, and as potent as that stuff
is, you're likely to wish you had died if you let it give you one. And we may
be warm now, but we're going to wake up cold and stiff in the middle of the
night if we don't make up a better bed. After all we've weathered, I'd hate to
see you cramped in knots for want of a litde sense." She
yawned hugely but didn't protest. They both rummaged out clean bedclothes and
pulled them on. While he ladled stew out of the pot over the fire, she remade
their "nest" with everything she could find to use as a blanket. He
made hot tea, and they drank it with their meal. ARROWS
FLJCHT 169 They
bedded down in each other's arms after he'd banked the fire, seeing no reason
now to return to their practice of separate beds. "I'm
awfully glad this happened now," she said before he drifted off to sleep. "Why's
that, little bird?" 'Two
sleep warmer together than two alone . .. and it's getting a lot colder." Kris
was pleased to discover that (unlike some lovers he'd had) Talia was a quiet
sleeper; not at all restless, and not inclined to steal the blankets (which
was, in his opinion, the quickest way to ruin an otherwise satisfactory
relationship). He found her presence oddly comforting, and an especially good
antidote to the howl of the wind outside. He woke
once when Tantris tickled his mind into wakefulness; he and Rolan wanted out.
He was very grateful for the tiny entranceway this Station possessed; it wasn't
part of the usual design, but with crowding he could fit one Companion and one
chirra inside and still close the door to the interior before opening the outer
door. If the exterior door had opened directly into the station as was usually
the case, every time he had to let them out he'd be letting most of the heat
they'd built up out with them. The
wind hadn't slackened in the least, and the snow was still coming down as
thickly as before. It was definitely daylight, but he couldn't even tell where
the sun was, much less see how high it was. It took all his strength to keep
the door from being blown out of his hands; he realized then that this was why
they'd awakened him and not Talia. He'd left halters and lead-reins on the
chirras, which the Companions used to lead them outside. One
more advantage of chirras, he reflected wryly. You can't housebreak mules. The
scrape of a hoof on the door signaled their 170 MERCEDES
LACKEY return.
He managed to hold to the door and slammed it behind them, but in spite of the
buffering of the entranceway, their exit and re-entrance had stolen a
noticeable amount of the heat from the room. He built the Fire back up after
filling the biggest pot they had with clean snow, then carefully groomed all
four of ice and snow. He made sure they were comfortable, and noticed with a
smile that all four of them lay in a close-packed group, with chirras on the
outside and Companions in the middle. "You're
too clever by half," he told Tantris, and smiled at the Companion's
amusement-laden reply. .-Given
the choice, would you take the outside? They've got the coats for this,
brother-in-soul—we haven't.1: He was
grateful for Tantris' nonchalance; both the Companions seemed to be taking the
events of the previous night as simply one more obstacle to be met and dealt
with, rather than an insurmountable disaster. That heartened him, for he expected
to need their help. He hung
the pot full of half-melted snow over the fire, then banked it again before
returning to the bed that was looking better by the moment. When he
slipped in beside Talia he got another delightful surprise. Instead of pulling
away, Talia actually hugged his chilled body to her warm one until he was no
longer shivering, despite being three-quarters asleep herself. There never, he
reflected as he drifted back to dreams, was a truer test of friendship! When he
finally woke of his own accord, he judged that several hours had passed; it was
probably late morning or early afternoon. There didn't seem to be any real
reason to get up; the winds still howled with the same ferocity outside. "I
wish these Stations had a window," he said drowsily, "It's impossible
to tell if it's still snowing or not." "No,
it isn't," Talia murmured sleepily in his ear. He
hadn't realized she was awake. "No, it isn't, what?" ARROWS
FLIGHT 171 "It's
not impossible to tell if snow's still coming down. Listen, and you can hear it
on the roof and windward walls. It has a different sound than wind alone. It
kind of hisses." Kris
listened; she was right. There was a hissing undertone to the storm outside.
"How did you know about that?" he asked, more than a little
surprised. "Comes
of sleeping in the attic. There're no windows in the attic of a Hold house, and
that's where all the littles sleep. If you wanted to know what kind of weather
to dress for, you learned to recognize all the sounds that weather makes. Where
are you going?" "Now
that we're awake, I'm going to get the fire built back up." He got
an armload of wood from the stack he'd brought inside earlier, exposed the
banked coals, and soon had it blazing again. In spite of the heat given off by
the banked coals, the room was icy; the chimney was cleverly baffled, but the
wind was still succeeding in stealing some of their heat. He was quite chilled
by the time he was satisfied with the state of the fire. When he slid back in
beside her, Talia again snuggled up to warm him. "That's
definitely above and beyond the call of duty," he said, when he'd stopped
shivering, "Thanks." "You're
welcome. Consider it payback for last night." He
deliberately misunderstood. "Bright Havens, little bird, you keep
surprising me! I hadn't the least notion there was such a sensualist under that
serene exterior." She
played along. "Why shouldn't there have been?" "You
surely didn't show any sign of it. And you certainly haven't been .. .
practicing, shall we say?" "I
hadn't found anyone I was enough at ease with before this except Skif, and that
liaison seemed to have a curse on it!" There was rueful laughter in her
voice. "But it wasn't that I lacked interest; I never told you about
Rolan." 172 MERCEDES
LACKEY "What's
Rolan got to do with this?" "Remember
I told you that he's always in the back of my mind? That I always know what
he's doing, and I can't shield him out at all?" Her expression was a
little shadowed as she realized she couldn't shield anyone out at the moment. "So?"
he prompted, "Why would you want to?" "Nighttime
in Companion's Field gets very interesting . .. and Companion mares share
another characteristic with humans besides the gestation period." When he
looked blank, she sighed. "They're always 'in season,' oh, wise
counselor." "Good
Lord. And if you can't shield him out. .." "That
means exactly what your Filthy mind is thinking." "Secondhand
experience?" "Something
like it." He pulled
her head to rest comfortably on his shoulder. "Talia, I'm sorry I didn't
see the state you were in, and I'm sorrier I didn't do anything about it." "Oh—I—"
She sobered immediately when he mentioned her emotion-storm. "Gods, Kris,
what am I going to do?" "We." "What?" "We.
You, me, Tantris and Rolan. This is not the total disaster you seem to think it
is. Let's take the easy things. First of all, you've learned something you
won't forget. Now let me tell you a little something, Queen's Own. The reason
you're out here is that you'll see every kind of problem you're likely to run
up against at Court—only out here it will be much more clear-cut, much simpler.
You learn how to handle it where it's easy to deal with, instead of plunging
right in and drowning. Take somebody who's held a grudge for so long it's an
obsession. You've seen it once now, would you recognize it again?" ARROW'S
FLIGHT 173 Talia
thought about how she'd felt when the girl looked into her eyes; the odd chill
she'd sensed. "Yes," she said at last. "And
do you think you could handle it?" "Maybe
... I think I'd have to get an assist though." "Good
for you. Before this you'd have said 'yes.' Now you realize you might need
help. You're learning, greenie. Now the hard part. Your Gift has gone out of
control; we have to get it back under control again. I'll be willing to bet
part of the reason for it going was that nobody recognized you need special
training—training to keep your own emotional state from feeding back on your
Gift. I'm not even certain there is such a thing." "Why
do you say that?" "Because
I can't think of another Queen's Own in living memory that has had as powerful
a Gift as yours. I've never heard of empathy strong enough to be used as a weapon.
Talamir certainly didn't have it—nor Keighvin before him. I don't even know
that there's a Healer around with empathy that strong. Maybe a Healer could
train you, but I wouldn't care to bet money on the idea." "Then
what. .." "We'll
bloody well invent the training. All four of us. First off, your shields are
gone. That's likely to be the hardest for you to get back, but I think maybe we
can deal with it in a different way for now. Hey, Fairyfoot—" Tantris
looked up and snorted. :Yes, master of the world!: "Go
ahead, be sarcastic." :You
started it.: "This
is serious, Hayburner. Can you impose shields on her from outside?" Tantris
looked at both of them thoughtfully. :Yes,: he said after a long pause, :but
not for very long.: "If
you can, then Rolan can—" :Has.: 174 MERCEDES
LACKEY Kris
raised one eyebrow. "Huh. I should have anticipated that. All right, I
know / can; I've reinforced shielding on the kids I was teaching. So if we take
it turn and turn about, can we keep her buffered so long as it's just the three
of us she's dealing with?" :/
would think so.: Tantris looked at the other Companion measuringly. :Rolan says
to tell you we can probably even handle small gatherings of people.: "Better
than I'd hoped. Fine. I'll take first watch. When I flag . . ." :/'//
catch,: came the confident answer, :My pleasure, brother-in-soul. : "Did
you get the drift of that?" He turned to Tafia, setting up shielding
around her as he spoke. "You're—oh,
Gods.'" The relief on her face was a revelation; until that moment he had
not realized how much strain she was under. "Right.
Now .. . having gotten that taken care of temporarily, we'll deal with the half
of the problem that's dangerous to others." "The
projecting—" "But
not now. You're too tired to project past the end of your nose unless I make
the mistake of frightening you half to death again, so that can wait. I'm
hungry, and I want a bath." Although
they had used the Waymeet village bathhouse frequently, choosing a scrub by way
of restorative over the sleep they had had little time for, it had been well
over a day since the last time they'd gotten clean. Since both of them had
fastidious natures, they were feeling it. "You
go first, then. I want to groom the four-feets, and I'll wash afterward. I can
start to smell them now, and if I don't get them pretty well clean, things
could get whiffy in here. Since I'm doing Rolan, I might as well do all four of
them. There's no need in both of us getting filthy." Kris
sniffed; the air was faintly perfumed with an odor of wet wool and horse-sweat.
"You don't have ARROW'S
FLIGHT 175 to do
all four, but if you insist, I'll let you. You're ruining my lovely
self-indulgence, though. If you're going to go all virtuous on me and work,
I'll have to find something to do as well." He sighed heavily, and made
sad eyes at her. She
made a face at him, feeling like her old self for the first time in weeks. She
got dressed, threw her cloak on, then took the first chirra's lead-rein. Chores
kept them occupied for the rest of the day, housekeeping and tending to mending
that had been left neglected while they ministered to the plague victims. Talia
was just as happy; she was reluctant to face her problems just now when she was
so emotionally raw. After a quiet bit of lunch, Kris went to take inventory of
their supplies. There
was a half-height door opposite the entrance to the station; it led to a
storage shed. Kris found far more supplies there than he had dared to hope—and
found some unfamiliar jars and barrels as well. He brought some of those into
the Station. The
jars held honey and oil. "Someone near here must have left these after
winter set in," Kris said in surprise. "It wouldn't be safe or wise
to leave them here in warm weather; they'd go bad or attract animals. That's
why they're not standard stock. What's in the barrel?" "The
oil can be used in the lamp, too." Talia opened her barrel. It held what
seemed to be dried beans. Kris was perplexed. "Now
why .. ." he began, when Talia remembered something Sherrill had told her. "Sprouts!"
she exclaimed. "To keep us from the winter sickness, if we get stuck here
longer than the fruit lasts. We're supposed to soak those in water until they
sprout, then eat the sprouts. They do that where Sherrill and Keren come
from." Kris
looked sober. "We may need them, too. Even if the fruit holds out, it's
dried; not as good for holding off winter-sickness as fresh." He made a 176 MERCEDES
LACKEY mental
tally of all their supplies. "I think we can hold out for a month or
so," he decided, from experience with being snowed in before. "And
from the looks of this storm, that's exactly what may happen. It's still going
strong, and by the way the sky looked today, I don't think it's going to be
slackening soon." "Do
we have enough fodder, though? Tantris and Rolan are big eaters, and we can't
feed them on bark and twigs the way we can with the chirras if supplies run
low." "There's
fodder and straw baled and stacked on the other side of the shed where you
can't see it, besides on the near side," Kris reassured her. "It
almost looks as though whoever was stocking this Station was expecting a storm
this bad. It seems odd, but I don't know enough about this area to tell you
whether or not this type of weather is typical for this time of year. Dirk
would know that better than I." "Whatever
the reason for the abundance of supplies, it's a good thing for us that they're
there." They
did something about supper, and Kris returned the harp. With an inquiring
glance in her direction, he began with a song that she'd sung at the Herald's
revel. Taking the glance as an invitation, she stretched herself next to him
and began to sing quietly. He hummed the low harmonic under his breath; his
voice, though no match for Dirk's, was reasonably melodic. Behind them the
Companions and chirras pricked their ears up to listen with every evidence of
interest. Suddenly
two new voices joined in, wordlessly crooning an eerie descant. Talia and Kris
jumped, startled, and stopped—the new voices stopped with the music. Puzzled,
they began again, this time peering into the darkened side of the Station.
After a moment, the descant resumed. "Well,
that's what I get for making fun of Dirk's ARROWS
FLIGHT 177 and
Harthen's tales!" Kri& said in surprise. "Chirras do sing!" : Rolan and Tantris were staring at their
stable-mates with a kind of ironic astonishment. Evidently they hadn't expected
the singing either. The chirras, oblivious to everything but the music around
them, were reclining with their eyes closed and their heads and necks stretched
upward as far as they could reach. Their throats were pulsing, and the humming
was, without a doubt, coming from them. "Don't
feel badly. I wouldn't have believed it either," Talia replied. "I
mean, they look like sheep, sort of, and sheep don't sing. Probably there
aren't too many people playing or singing around them, which would be why more
folks haven't heard them. We never did; they were always outside in the
lean-to." The
chirras joined in happily on almost everything they played, but they
particularly seemed to enjoy the livelier tunes. What was utterly amazing—apart
from the simple fact that they sang at all—was what they sang. They crooned
harmonics to the melody rather than following the melody itself, and usually
chose the upper range in a descant. They would listen for a verse or two before
joining in, but though very simple, their harmonizing always fit. Talia knew a
great many human singers who couldn't boast that ability. They
continued on for some time, so fascinated by this innuman choir that they
forgot any worries they had. They continued until Kris' fingers were much too
tired to play any more. Although he dearly wanted to go on, after a few
fumblings, which caused the chirras to flatten their ears and stare like a pair
of offended old women, he was forced to admit it was time to give his hands a
rest. "In
that case ..," "What
have I decided? This is going to be rather hard on you, little bird—" "And
the past few weeks haven't?" she replied bitterly. 178 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Not
like this; it's going to be pretty cruel. The way I figure it, the two of us
not shielding, and especially Rolan, are going to be watching you like cats at
a mousehole. The least little indication of projection, and we're going to jump
all over you. After a few days of that, I am willing to bet that you will by
damn not be doing any projecting without knowing that you're doing it!" "It
doesn't sound pleasant," she said slowly, "but it does sound like it
may work," "Then
once we've got you knowing when you're projecting, we'll move to handling the
projection consciously. Then we'll work on you controlling the level of it.
Finally we'll work on getting your shields back up." "If
you think I can...." "I
bloody damn know you can!" he said- "But we are not going to be doing
anything tonight. If you're as worn out as I am—and if you're not more worn
out, you're a better man than I, after all you've been through—you won't be
able to do anything, much less working something as delicate as a rogue
Gift." As he
spoke, he became acutely aware of his own mental fatigue, and the strain of
holding shields on her. Just as he felt his own control waver, he felt Tantris
slip into his place. :My
turn, brother,: the mental voice said firmly. He sighed and sent a wordless
thought of thanks. Talia
readied things for the morning, while he cared for their Companions. She had
shed her clothing and was lazily reaching for the woolen shift she was using as
a bedgown, when she found her wrist caught by Kris' hand. He had
come upon her quietly from behind, and now captured her other wrist, holding
her with her back pressed into his chest. "Surely you're not sleepy
already?" he breathed into her ear, sending delightful shivers up her
back. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 179 "No,"
she replied, leaning her head back as his lips touched the back of her neck and
moved around to the hollow below her ear. "Good,"
he drew her down beside him, on top of the blankets he'd spread on the
hearthstone, right next to the Fire. He stretched himself beside her so that
she was between him and the fireplace, feeling truly relaxed for the First time
since Elspeth was Chosen. He
cradled her shoulders while his free hand traced invisible patterns on her skin
that seemed to tingle— she moved her own hands in half-instinctual response to
what she felt from him; at first hesitantly, then with growing surety. Every
inch of skin seemed to be doubly sensitive, and she murmured in surprise and
delight as his hands did new and entrancing things. Just when she thought for
certain that he'd roused her to the uttermost, he moved his seeking mouth
elsewhere, and she learned how it was to be fully awakened to desire. Learning
from him, she followed his lead, as he roused her to fever pitch, let her cool
a little, then aroused her senses again. Finally, when she was certain neither
of them could bear any more, he sought her mouth again and joined with her. The
pain was less than nothing compared to what they shared. When at
last Kris disengaged himself from her, they lay twined together for a long,
euphoric moment, still deeply in rapport. He half-rose and handed her the
nearly-forgotten shift with one hand while pulling on his own robe. She slipped
it on, lazily gathered up the blankets, and remade their bed. She curled up in
it with utter contentment as he banked the fire against the night. "That
Gift of yours is not always a bad thing," he said, finally. "Should
you ever choose a life-partner, I think I would envy him, little friend. Now I
see what they mean about wedding or bedding Healers— 180 MERCEDES
LACKEY especially
if all of them have the same kind of Empathy that you do." "Oh?"
Her ears all but perked up with interest. "And what do they say?" "That
you may not get much time with them because they're always likely to be called
away—but what time you do get makes up for their frequent absences." She
reached up to pull the blankets more securely about the two of them, and
something odd about her hand caught his attention. He captured her wrist again,
and held it so that the palm would catch the last of the firelight, frowning a
little as he did so. Her
palm was disfigured by a deep, roughly circular scar. "That,"
she said quietly, answering the question he did not speak, "is the reason
why I was afraid of men for so long—and why I don't trust handsome ones. My
brother Justus, with the innocent face of a golden-haired angel and the heart
of a demon, did that to me when I was nine years old." "Why?"
The word held a world of shock and dismay. "He
wanted ... I don't know what he wanted; maybe just to see me hurting. He hated
anything he couldn't control. He used to inflict as much pain as he could on
the farm animals whenever something had to be done with them. He'd half-drown
the sheep, dipping them for insects; he'd cut them terribly, shearing them.
Horses he broke were broken; there was no spirit in them when he was done. I
think it galled him that I could have an escape from the boredom of Hold life
that he couldn't ruin—he couldn't stop my reading or dreaming. He ordered me
one day to drown a sack of kittens; I tore the sack open instead so that they
all escaped. I'm sure he knew that that was exactly what I would do. He
backhanded me, knocked me down flat, stepped on my wrist, and used a red-hot
poker on my hand. I ARROWS
FUCHT 181 think
that one time he overstepped what he'd intended; I don't think he meant to burn
me as badly as he did, at least not after he saw what he'd done. Gods, I'll
never, ever forget his face while he was burning me, though." She
shuddered, and he held her a little closer. "That—obscene joy—I still had
nightmares about it right up through my second year at the Collegium. I know
they heard me screaming, but no one came very fast because they knew he was
setting a task for me and figured I was being punished for slacking. When I
didn't stop after a couple minutes, though, one of the Underwives came to
check. After all the damage was done. When she saw me, he'd already thrown the
poker down. He told Keldar Firstwife that he'd hit me for disobedience and I'd
grabbed the poker to hit him back, but it had been in the fire too long. He
didn't even have to explain why it was that my palm was burned and not my
fingers. They believed him, of course, and not me." "Gods!"
He was sickened—and a little more understanding of why she hadn't confided in
him. "It
was ... a long time ago. I'm almost over what it did to me. I think if he were
still alive, and subjecting a wife or children to his sadism . .. well, he's
not. He managed to get himself killed a year or two after I was Chosen. There
was a raid, and he had to prove just how much braver he was than anyone else.
And Keltev, who was bidding fair to grow up like him, seems to have learned
better, so ..." She shrugged. "That's
the one who used to tease you about wanting to be a Herald—Keltev? Now I know
why you put up with the Blues for so long. You had practice; after Justus they
must.. ." "As
far as physical tormenting, they were amateurs. Mental, though ... they were
quite .. . adept. But I'd learned from my sibs that if you give them the
satisfaction of knowing they've hit home by acting as if they'd hurt you in any
way, they only get worse. And how was I to know I'd be believed?" 182 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Oh,
Talia—" he held her closely against his chest. "Poor little
bird!" "It
wasn't so bad as all that," she said softly into his shoulder.
"Besides, I've learned better now, I've got people I can love, friends I
can trust—my year-mates, my teachers—and now—" She looked up at him a
little shyly. "—you and Dirk." "And
everyone else in the Circle, little bird," he replied, kissing her softly
on the forehead, "I'm just sorry I didn't trust you. But we'll Fix it.
We'll Fix it." She
simply sighed assent. The
fire was now little more than glowing coals, and Kris stared at them while he
let his mind drift, not yet ready to sleep. "You
know, you and Dirk will get along beautifully," he mused. "Your minds
work almost the same way." "Why
do you say that?" "You
wouldn't do anything to save yourself pain, but you dared your brother's anger
to save the kittens. That's so much like Dirk it isn't funny. Hurt him .. .
he'll just go and hide in himself; but hurt a friend, or something
helpless—Gods! He'll sacrifice himself to save it, or he'll rip your heart out
because he couldn't. You're two of a kind; I really think you're going to be
more than casual friends." "Do
you really think so?" she said, a little too eagerly. All the
pieces fell together, and the suspicion he'd had earlier became a certainty.
"Why, Talia," he chuckled, "I do believe you're a bit smitten
with my partner!" He felt
the cheek resting on his shoulder grow warm. "A litde," she admitted,
knowing that it would be useless to deny it. "Only
a little?" "More
than a little," she replied almost inaudibly. "Serious?" ARROWS
FLIGHT 183 "I
... don't know. It depends on him, mostly," she was blushing furiously
now. "I'm afraid it could get that way very fast under the right
conditions." "But
now?" .She
sighed. "Kris, I don't know, I just don't know. And why am I bothering to
get my hopes up? I don't know how he feels . .. whether or not he's likely to
be the least bit interested in me. . .." "You
may not. I think maybe I do. If I'm reading him right, he's already
interested." Kris thought back on the way Dirk had acted right before he
and Talia had left. He couldn't stop talking about how envious he was that Kris
had gotten her as an intern, and he kept on at great length about her wonderful
voice. Normally, since that bitch at the Court had hurt him, he'd paid very
little attention to women, except for the occasional ribald remark. Then
he'd hinted that it would be a good notion if they'd all practice together so
they could do more as a trio. Holy Stars, he'd never once suggested that they
practice together with anyone before, not even Jadus. "For
one thing," Kris said slowly, "he wants us to play together on a
regular basis. I mean, he wants us to play, and you to sing." "He
does?" she said in bemusement. "He plays?" "As
well as I do, or better. Since my voice isn't very good, though, and his is,
he's kind enough to let me have the playing to myself. Out on the road we play
together quite often, but outside of myself hardly anyone in the Circle knows
he can." "And
he said I was full of surprises!" "Oh,
you are." He caressed her hair absently. Lord of Lights, they were so well
suited to each other. There was a great deal more to both of them than would
ever show on the surface. There were depths to both of them that he knew he'd
never see. He
chuckled a little. "What's
so funny?" 184 MERCEDES
MCKEY "Bright
Havens, I hardly dare think what you might be like in the arms of someone you
truly loved! He'd better have a strong heart, or he might not survive the
experience!" "Kris!"
she exclaimed indignantly, "You make me sound like the widowing-spider
that eats her mate!" He
ruffled her hair. "Maybe I'd better make certain that you and Dirk make a
pair of it. He's the strongest man I know." "Keep
this up much longer," she said warningly. "and I'll put snow down
your back after you fall asleep." "Cruel,
too. On second thought, maybe I'd better warn him off." "Do
thai, and I'll go directly to Nessa when we get back, tell her that you
confided your everlasting passion for her to me, but that you're too shy to
tell her yourself." "Not
just cruel—vicious!" "Self-defense,"
she countered. "Monster
of iniquity," he replied, tugging at her hair until it fell into her eyes.
"You know, of all the people I can think of, I can't imagine being able to
stand being snowed in with any of them except you and Dirk—especially for as
long as we're likely to be stuck here." She
grew serious. "Is it really likely to be that long?" "If
it doesn't stop snowing soon, it could easily be a month. This Station is down
in a valley and protected by trees. We're not getting the worst of it. I tried
to get past the trees earlier, and you can't. The snow has drifted as high as a
chirra in some places. Even after the snow stops, we'll have to wait for the
Guard to clear the road, because until they do we won't be going
anywhere." "How
will anyone know where we are?" "I
told that Healer—the bearish one, I think his name is Loris—where 1 intended us
to hole up. ARROWS
FLIGHT 185 Besides,
little bird, this may be all to the good. We may well need all that time to get
your Gift back under control again." "That,..
that's true," she said soberly. "Oh, Kris— do you really think we
can?" He
noted with a bit of pleasure, the "we," for it meant she was no
longer thinking in terms of dealing with the problem on her own. "Not only
do / think so, but Tantris and Rolan do. You're not going to argue with them,
are you?" "I
... I guess not." "1
hear a doubt. No doubts—that's what got you into this mess in the first place.
We will get you back in control. I may not be a Kyril or an Ylsa, but I am a
Gift-teacher. I know what I'm doing." "But—" "I
told you, but me no 'buts'I Believe, Talia. In yourself as much as in me.
That's the weakest leg your Gift has to stand on right now." She
didn't reply to that; just stared thoughtfully at the fire until her eyes
drooped and finally closed, and her slow, steady breathing told him she'd
fallen asleep. He
remained awake for much longer, engaged in a struggle with himself he had to
win, a struggle to set aside a Herald's impartiality and wholeheartedly believe
in her. For if
he could not—she was certainly doomed, and quite probably so was he. The moment
she sensed doubt in him, despair and betrayal would turn her wild Gift against
both of them. And he had no doubt of how that would end. Eight Kris
pursued an icy apparition through the storm-torn forest, a creature that was
now wolf, now wind, now an unholy amalgam of both. It glared back over its
shoulder at him through snow-swirls that half obscured it, baring icicle fangs
and radiating cold and evil. He shivered, unable to control the trembling of
his hands, though he clenched them on his weapons to still their shaking . .. His
weapons—he looked down, surprised to see that his bow was in his hands, an
arrow nocked and ready. The beast ahead of him snarled, dissolved into a spin
of air and sleet with hell-dark eyes, then transformed back into a leaping
vulpine snow-drift. He sighted on it, and more than once, but the thing never
gave him a clear target. Talia
was somewhere ahead of him, he could hear her weeping brokenly above the
wailing of the wind and the howling of the wind-wolf, and when he looked down
he could see her tracks—but he could not seem to spot her through the curtains
of snow that swirled around him. He realized then that the wind-wolf was
stalking her— He
quickened his pace, but the wind fought against him, throwing daggers of ice
and blinding snow-swarms into his eyes. The thing ahead of him howled, 186 ARROWS
FLIGHT 187 a long
note of triumph and insatiable hunger. It was outdistancing and outnianeuvering
him—and it would have Talia before he could reach her. He tried to shout a
warning— And
woke with a start. Outside the wind howled like a demented monster. Talia
touched his shoulder, and he jumped involuntarily. "Sorry,"
she said, "You—you were dreaming, I think." He
shook his head to clear it of the last shreds of nightmare. "Lord! I guess
I was. Did I wake you?" "Not
really. I wasn't sleeping very well." He
tried to settle himself, and found that he couldn't. A vague sense of
apprehension had him in its grip, and would not loose its hold on him. It had
nothing to do with Talia's problems; a quick exchange of thought with Tantris
confirmed that she was not at fault. "Kris,
do you think maybe we should move the supplies?" Talia said in a voice
soft and full of hesitation. "That
doesn't sound like a bad idea," he replied, feeling at once that somehow
his uneasiness was connected with just that. "Why? What made you think of
that?" "I
kept dreaming about it, except I couldn't shift anything. It was all too heavy
for me, and you wouldn't help. You just stood there staring at me." "Well
I won't just stand and stare at you now." He began unwinding himself from
the blankets. "I don't know why, but I think we'd better follow up on your
dream." They
moved everything from behind the Station to either side of the door on the
front. Rather than diminishing, the sense of urgency kept growing as they
worked, as if they had very little time. It was hard, chilling, bitter work, to
manhandle the clumsy bundles of hay and straw through the snow, but 188 MERCEDES
LACKEY neither
of them made any move to give up until the last stick and bale was in place. While
there was still light left to see by, they took turns clearing the valley of
deadfall. They finally had enough to satisfy Kris when they'd found the last
scrap of wood that hadn't vanished into snow too deep to be searched. It would
not outlast being snowed in, but there was more than enough to outlast the
storm. If, when the storm died, they couldn't reach any more deadfall, they
could cut one of the trees surrounding the station, evergreens with a resinous
sap that would allow them to burn, even though green. But
when they returned to their shelter, their work wasn't complete. For though
there seemed little rational reason to do so, they continued to follow their vague
premonitions and moved all the supplies from the storage shed into the
Waystation. It made things very crowded, but if they didn't plan on moving
around much, it would do. By the
time they finished, they were as chilled and weary as they had been the first
night.They huddled over the fire with their bowls of stew, too exhausted even
for conversation. The wind howling beyond the door seemed to have settled into
their minds, numbing and emptying them, chilling them to the marrow. They
huddled in their bed in a kind of stupor until sleep took them. The
wind suddenly strengthened early the next morning, causing even the sturdy
stone walls to vibrate. They woke simultaneously and cowered together, feeling
very small and very vulnerable as they listened with awe and fear to the fury
outside. Kris was very glad now that they'd trusted their instincts and moved
everything to the leeward side of the Station and within easy reach. "It's
a good thing this isn't a thatched roof like the last Station we were in,"
Talia whispered to him, shivering against him, and plainly much subdued by ARROWS
FLIGHT 189 the
scream of the wind outside. "Thatch would have been shredded and blown
away by now." Kris
nodded absently, listening mainly to the sound of the storm tearing at their
walls like a beast wanting to dig them out of their shelter. He was
half-frightened, half-fascinated; this was obviously a storm of legendary
proportions and nothing he'd ever seen or read could have prepared him for its
power. The Station was growing cold again, heat escaping with the wind. "I'd
better build up the fire now, and one of us should stay awake to watch it.
Talia, make a three-sided enclosure out of some of our supplies or the fodder,
and pile lots of straw in it. We need more between us and the cold stone floor
than we've been sleeping on. Leave room for the four-feets; if it gets too cold
they'll have to fit themselves in nearer the fire, somehow." Talia
followed his orders, building them a real nest; she also layered another two
bedgowns on over the woolen shift. Kris uncovered the coals and built the fire
back up—and when he saw the skin of ice forming on their water-kettles, he was
glad he had done so. They
crept back into their remade bed and held each other for extra warmth, staring
into the fire, mesmerized by the flames and the wail of the wind around the
walls. There didn't seem to be any room for human thought, it was all swept
away by that icy wind. Their
trance was broken by a hideous crashing sound. It sounded as though a giant out
of legend was approaching the Station, knocking down trees as he came. The
noise held them paralyzed, like rabbits frightened into immobility. There
wasn't anywhere to run to in any event. If something brought the Station down,
they'd freeze to death in hours without shelter. Neither of them could imagine
what the cause could be. It seemed to take several minutes, 190 MERCEDES
LACKEY approaching
the Station inexorably from the rear, finally ending with a roar that shook the
back wall and a splintering sound that came unmistakably from beyond the
half-door. They
sat shocked into complete immobility, hearts in their throats, for a very long
time. Finally—
"Bright Goddess! Was that where I thought it was?" Kris gulped and
tried to unclench his hands. "B-b-behind
the Station," Talia stuttered nervously, pupils dilated with true fear.
"Where the storage shed is." Kris
rose and tried the door. It wouldn't budge. "Was," he said, and
crawled back in beside her. She
didn't venture to contradict him. Twice
more they heard trees crashing to the ground, but never again so close. And as
if that show of force had finally worn it out, the wind began to slacken and
die. By noon or thereabouts, it had gone completely, and all that remained were
the faint ticking sounds of the falling snow. Without the wind to keep it off
the roof, it soon built up to a point where even that could no longer be heard. The
Station stopped losing heat. The temperature within rose until it was
comfortable again, and the rising warmth lulled them back into their
interrupted sleep before they realized it. The
Companions prodded them awake. How long they'd been asleep they had no idea;
the fire was dying, but by no means dead, and the silence gave no clue. Rolan
impressed Talia with his need to go out. Immediately. Talia could tell by Kris'
face that Tantris was doing likewise. He
looked at her and shrugged. "Might as well find out now as later. We're
still here, and under ARROW'S
FLIGHT 191 shelter
at least," he said, and pulled on fresh clothing while she did the same. It was
not long till dark. The stacked fodder had kept the door clear of snow or
they'd never have gotten it open. Beyond the shelter of the bales was a drift
that reached higher than Kris' head. The
chirras were not at all perturbed by the sight; they plowed right into it,
forcing their way almost as if they were swimming, their long necks keeping
their heads free of the snow. The Companions followed and the two Heralds
followed them. After making their way through drifts that rose from between the
level of Talia's waist to the height of the first one, they suddenly broke into
an area that had been scoured down to the grass by the wind. The
forest around them had a quality of age, of power held in check, that was
raising the hair on the back of Talia's neck. There was something here ... not
quite alive, but not dead either. Something . . . waiting. Watching. Weighing
them. Whatever it was, it brooded over them for several long moments. Talia
found herself searching the shadows under the trees until her eyes ached,
looking for some sign, and found nothing. But something was out there.
Something inhuman, almost elemental, and—and at one, in some strange way she
couldn't define and could only feel, with the forest itself. As if the forest
were providing it with a thousand eyes, a thousand ears. . .. "Where's
the road?" Talia asked in a small, frightened squeak. Kris
started at the sound of her voice, looked around, then turned slowly, evidently
getting his bearings. The Station from here seemed to be only one taller drift
among many. There were new gaps in the circle of trees that surrounded it.
"That way—" he finally pointed. "There was a tree just beside
the pathway in—" "Which
is now across the pathway in." 192 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Once
we get to it, we can have the chirras and Companions haul it clear ... I
hope." "What
about the back of the Station?" She was not certain that she wanted to
find out. "Let's
see if we can get back there." Working
their way among the drifts in the deepening gloom, they managed to get to a
point where they could see what had happened behind the Station, even though
they couldn't get to it yet. Kris whistled. Not
one, but nearly a dozen trees had gone over, each sent crashing by the one
behind it, the last landing hard against the side of the Station. The storage
shed was gone; splintered. "At
least we'll have plenty of firewood," Talia said with a strained laugh. "Talia—"
there was awe in Kris's voice. "I never believed those stories about
Sorrows and Vanyel's Curse before—but took at the way the trees fell!" Talia
subdued her near-hysterical fear and really took a good look. Sure enough, the
trees had fallen in a straight line, all in the direction of the force of the
wind—except the last. There was no reason why it should have deviated that she
could see, and had it fallen as its fellows it would have pulverized the
Station—and them. But it had not; it had fallen at an acute angle, missing the
Station entirely and destroying only the empty shed. It had almost fallen
against the wind. "Gods,"
Kris said, "I—I never would have believed this. I never believed in
miracles before." He looked around again. "I ... this sounds stupid
but, whatever you are . . . thanks." The
steady feeling of being watched vanished as he said it. Talia found she could
breathe easily again. "Look,
we'd better get back inside. It's nearly dark," Kris gazed up at the sky,
and the snow that still fell from it with no sign of slackening. Subdued
by their situation and the destruction ARROWS
FLIGHT 193 outside,
they made their meal, ate, and cleaned up in silence. Finally Talia broached
the subject that was troubling them both. "Can
we get out of here?" "I'd
like to be reassuring and optimistic, and say yes—but truthfully I don't
know," Kris replied, resting his chin on his knees and staring into the
fire. "It's a long way to the road, and as I've told you, it will be worse
beyond the trees. It's going to take us a long time to cut a path there, with
no certainty that the Guard will have gotten that far when we do make it." "Should
we try to force our way without cutting a path?" He
shook his head. "The chirras could do it, unburdened, but not Tantris and
Rolan. Even if they could, we'd need the supplies. I just don't know." "Maybe
we'd better just concentrate on digging our way out." "But
how can we dig ourselves out with no tools?" "There's
the tree blocking the way, too." Kris
stared at the fire without speaking for a long time. "Talia," he said
finally, "Holderfolk never buy anything if they can help it—their
miserliness is legendary. What do you know about making shovels?" "Not
much," she replied ruefully, "But I'll try." "Let's
take an inventory of our materials." They
had plenty of rawhide for lashings, lots of straight, heavy tree limbs for
handles and bracings, but nothing to use for blades. The unused bedboxes were so
stoutly built that it would be next to impossible to pull the bottoms out, and
the shelves were made of board too thick to be useful. There had been thinner
wood used in the shelves of the shed— but they were fragmented now. Finally
Talia sighed sadly and said with reluctance, "The only thing we have to
use is the harp case." "No!"
Kris protested. "There's
nothing else. When we leave here we can 194 MERCEDES
LACKEY detune
My Lady and wrap her in blankets and cloaks and she should be all right without
the case. The wood is light and strong, and it's been waterproofed. It's nearly
even the right size and shape. We haven't got a choice, Kris. Jadus wouldn't
thank us for being sentimental fools." "Damn!"
He was silent for a moment. "You're right. We haven't any choice." He got
the case from the corner on top of Talia's packs where he'd left it. Wincing a
little, he took his handaxe and carefully pried the front and back out of the
frame, and handed them to Talia. She
fished a bit of charcoal out of the fireplace and drew something like the blade
of a snow-shovel on each piece. She handed him one while she took up the other. "Try
and whittle it to that shape while I do the same." She
shaved delicately at the edges of the wood with the blade of her own axe, with
shavings falling in curls next to her. Kris watched her with care until he felt
he knew exactly what she was doing, then began on his own piece. There was one
blessing; the grain was fine enough that with sharp axes it was relatively easy
to shape. When both their pieces approximated the look of a shovel blade, Talia
marked holes in the boards for them to drill out with their knives. By the time
they'd finished, their wrists and hands were tired and sore. Talia
flexed her hands trying to get some feeling and movement back into them.
"Now I need two pieces about so wide," she said, gesturing with her
hands about two fingers' width apart, "And as long as the backs of the
blades. I expect you'll have to cut them out of the frame." While
Kris further demolished the harpcase, she rummaged in her packs for her pot of
glue. When she found it, she placed it in a pot half-filled with water, and put
that container over the fire so the ARROWS
FLIGHT 195 glue
would melt. Meanwhile she went through the dozen or so branches that looked to
be good handle material and picked out the two best. Once
the glue was ready, she showed Kris where to drill holes in the branches, and
how to taper the end that was going to be fastened to the blade. Her wrists
just weren't strong enough for the job. When he finished the first one, she
lashed it to the blade with wet rawhide, stretching the thong as tightly as she
could so that it would shrink and bind the shovel to blade as firmly as possible
when it dried. Then she cross-braced the back of the blade with a smaller
branch cut to fit, lashing it the same way to the handle. Lastly she glued the
piece of frame to the back of the shovel blade to act as a stop to keep the
snow from sliding off. She lashed another piece of branch to the handle behind
the stop to act as a brace, then she glued every join on the whole makeshift
shovel, saturating even the rawhide with glue. That finished all she knew how
to do; she set the whole thing aside to cure overnight, and started in on the
second. "They're
not going to hold up under much rough handling," she sighed wearily when
she'd finished. "We're going to have to treat them with a great deal of
care." "It's
better than trying to do it with bare hands," Kris replied, taking her
hands in his own and massaging them. "I
guess so," she tried to force herself to relax. "Kris, just how does
the Guard clear the roads off?" "They
recruit villagers. Then it's teams with shovels; they dig out the worst places,
and pack down the rest." "I
don't imagine that it's a very fast process." "No." The
single word hung in the air between him. Talia was afraid, but didn't want to
put more of a 196 MERCEDES
LACKEY burden
on Kris than he already had by giving way to her fears. The
silence between them grew. "I
hate to say this" he broke it reluctantly "but you're projecting. I
can feel it, and I know it isn't me, and Tantris just backed me up." Anger
flared a little, followed by despair— "Dammit
Talia, lock it down! You're not helping either of us!" She
gulped back a sob; bit her lip hard enough to draw blood, then steadied herself
by beginning a breathing exercise; it calmed her, calmed her enough that she
actually found the leakage, and blocked it. Kris heaved a sigh of relief, and
smiled at her, and she felt a tiny stirring of hope and accomplishment. Finally
he let her hands go and went after the harp; she wasn't in a mood to sing by
any means, but he chose nothing that she knew. He seemed more to be drifting
from melody to melody, perhaps finding his own release from distress in the
music he searched. She listened only; the chirras seemed to have caught the
somber mood and did not sing either. She used the harpsong to reinforce her own
ritual of calming and did not open her eyes until it stopped. Kris
had risen and was replacing the harp in its corner of the hearth. He returned
to her side and stretched himself next to her without speaking. She was
the one who broke the silence. "Kris,
I'm scared. Really afraid. Not just because of what's happening to me, but
because of all that—" she waved her hand "—out there." "I
know." A pause. "I'm scared, too. We ... haven't got a good situation
here. You—you could have killed us both the other night. You still could. And
out there . .. I've never felt so helpless in my life. Between the two, I just
wanted to give up. I just wanted to curl up in a ball and hope it all went
away." It cost
him to admit that, Talia knew. "I wish I wasn't so messed up; I wish I was
bigger and stronger. ARROWS
FLIGHT 197 Or a
Farspeaker like Kyril," she replied in a very small voice. "You
can't help what happened. As for being a Farspeaker, I don't think both of us
together could reach someone with the Gift to hear us, and if we could, I don't
know that it would do any good," he sighed. "We just have to keep on
as we have been, and hope we get out of here before the supplies run out.
That's the real problem, when it comes down to it—the supplies. Otherwise I
wouldn't worry. We've got about enough for a month, but not much more than
that. If we run out . . ." "Kris—you
know, we are in Sorrows—remember the tree? Maybe—maybe we'll be sent
game." "You
could be right," he mused, beginning to brighten. "It would take less
magic to send a few rabbits within reach of our bows than it did to divert that
tree." "And
maybe we'll get out before we have to worry about it. And you don't have to
worry about me, you know. I'm Borderbred. I can do with a lot less than I've
been used to eating." "Let's
not cut rations down unless we have to. We'll be using a lot of energy keeping
warm." Gloom
settled back over them. Talia decided that it was her turn to dispel it. "I
wonder what things are like back at Court right now. It's almost
Midwinter." "Pandemonium;
it's never less. Uncle hates Midwinter; there're so many people coming in for
the celebrations who 'just incidentally' have petitions that there are Council
meetings nearly every day." She looked
at him unhappily. "I don't get along with your uncle very well. No, that's
a lie. I don't get along with him at all. I know he doesn't like me, but
there's more to it than that. I keep having the feeling that he's looking for a
way to get rid of me." Kris
looked flatly astonished. "Whoa—wait just a 198 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 199 minute
here—you'd better start at the very beginning. I can hardly believe my
ears—" "All
right," she replied hesitantly, "but only if you promise to hear me
out completely." "That's
only fair, I guess." "All
right; when I first got to the Collegium I had a pretty miserable time of it as
you know. Dirty tricks, nasty anonymous notes, ambushes—it was the unaffiliated
students, the Blues, but they made it seem as if it was other trainees that
might be responsible so I wouldn't look inside the Collegium for help. It all
came to a head—" "When
they dumped you in the river just after Midwinter—" "And
they meant to kill me." "What?"
he exclaimed. "It
isn't common knowledge. Elcarth and Kyril know; and Sherrill, Keren, Skif,
Teren, and Jeri. Ylsa knew, so did Jadus; I think Alberich knows. Mero guessed.
I'm pretty sure one or more of the others told Selenay some time later. One of
the Blues told me to 'give their greetings to Talamir' just after they threw me
in—I think the meaning there is pretty clear. They expected me to drown, and if
it hadn't been that my bond with Rolan was strong enough for him to know what
had happened—well. But I was delirious with fever when they were caught and 1
couldn't tell anyone. They claimed it was all just a joke, that they hadn't
thought I'd get worse than a ducking. Your uncle backed them up before the
Council. So instead of being charged with trying to kill me, they got their
wrists slapped and were sent home to the familial bosoms." "That's
hardly an indication that—" "You
promised not to interrupt me." "Sorry." "The
next time we got into it was over Skif. It was right when Skif was helping me unmask
Elspeth's nurse Hulda. I needed to find out who had spon- sored
her into Valdemar besides Selenay and Elspeth's father. Skif went to the
Provost-Marshal's office to find the immigration records, and Orthallen caught
him there. He dragged him up in front of Selenay, accusing him of trying to
alter the Misdemeanor Book. And he demanded that Skif be given the maximum
punishment for it—stable duty with the Guard for the next two years on the
Border. You know what that could have meant. At worst, he could have been
killed; at best, he'd be two years behind the rest of us, and I'd have been
without one of my two best friends all that time—as well as being without the
only person in the Collegium who could possibly have helped me expose Huida. I
got Skif off, but I had to lie to do it; and I can tell you that Orthallen was
not pleased." Kris
looked as if he wanted to interject something, but held his peace. "Lastly
there's the matter of my internship. Orthallen 'in view of my youth and
inexperience' was trying to pressure the Council into ruling I should stay out
in the field for three years—double the normal time. Fortunately, neither
Selenay, Elcarth or Kyril were having any of that—and pointed out that
internships are subject only to the will of the Circle, not the Council."
, "Is that all?" "Isn't
it enough?" "Talia,
this all has very logical explanations if you know my uncle. Firstly he
couldn't possibly have known about the students' malice—I'm certain of it. He's
known most of them since they were in swaddling clothes; he even refers to
people grown and with babes of their own as 'the youngsters.' And he probably
felt obligated to act as their spokesperson. After all, you had two people to
speak for you on the Council, Elcarth and Kyril." "I
suppose that's logical," Talia said reluctandy. "But Skif—" 200 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Oh,
Skif—my uncle is a prude and a stickler for convention, I know that for a fact.
Skif has been a thorn in his side ever since he was Chosen. Before Skif came,
there was never any problem with Heraldic students getting involved in trouble
down in town—the unaffiliates and the Bardics, and once in a great while the
Healers, but never the Grays." "Never?"
Talia's right eyebrow rose markedly. "I Find that rather hard to
believe." "Well,
almost never. But after Skif started his little escapades—Lord and Lady, the
Grays are as bad as the Bardics! It's like the younger ones feel they have to
top him. Well, Uncle is not amused, not at all. He's a great believer in
military discipline as a cure for high spirits, and I'm certain he never meant
anything worse for Skif than that." "What
about me? Why does he keep trying to get between me and Selenay?" "He's
not. You are young; his idea of Queen's Own is someone like Talamir. I have no
doubt he truly felt a long internship was appropriate in your case."
"I wish I could believe you." "Holding a grudge is rather
childish—and unlike you—" "I
am not holding a grudge!" "Then why are you even refusing to consider
what I've told you?" Talia
drew a deep breath and forced herself to calm down. "There is a third
explanation for what he's been doing. It could be that he thinks of me as a
threat to his influence with Selenay. And I might point out one other thing to
you—and that is I am willing to bet the person who told you all about those
'rumors' is your uncle. And I'd be willing to bet he asked you to investigate
them. He knows what my Gift is. He could well know what the effect of hearing
that poison would be on me." Instead
of refuting her immediately, Kris looked thoughtful. "That is a
possibility; at least over the ARROWS
FLIGHT 201 internship
thing. He's very fond of power, my uncle; he's been Selenay's chief advisor for
a long time, and was her father's before that. And there isn't a great deal you
can do to change the fact that Queen's Own is always going to have more
influence than chief advisor. And I hate to admit it," he finished
reluctantly, "but you're right about my source of information on the rumors." Talia
figured that now that she'd got him thinking instead of just reacting, it was
time to change the subject. She would dearly have loved to have suggested that
Orthallen might well have originated the rumors, but Kris would never have
stood still for the implication that his uncle's conduct was less than
honorable. "Kris—let's
try and forget about it, for a few hours, anyway. We've got other things to
worry about." He
regarded her soberly. "Like the fact that you had enough energy to project;
like the fact that you could do it again." "Yes."
She drew a deep breath. "I could even break down again; I was right on the
verge of it this afternoon. If we hadn't had something to do, I might have. And
I was—maybe hallucinating out there." "Hell." "I'll—try.
But I thought you'd better be warned." "Featherfoot?"
He looked long at Tantris, then nodded in satisfaction. "He says he thinks
hie and Rolan can handle you, if it gets bad again. He says it was mostly that
Rolan was caught off-guard that things got out of hand the first time." She
felt a heavy burden fall from her heart. "Good. And—thanks.' He gave
her a wink. "I'll get it out of you." She
made a face at him, and curled up in the blankets to sleep with a much lighter
heart. They
woke at very close to their normal time; there would be no dallying today, nor
for many days to come, not if they wanted to reach the road before 202 MERCEDES
LACKEY their
supplies ran out. They suited up in their warmest clothes, took the shovels,
and began the long task of cutting a path to freedom. The
snow was wet and heavy—an advantage, since it stayed on their shovels better.
But the very weight of it made shoveling exhausting work. They took a break at
noon for a hot meal and a change of clothing, as what they'd put on this
morning was now quite soaked through. They shoveled until it was almost too
dark to see. "We've
got to get to that tree and get it moved out of the way while the snow's still
like it is now," Kris said over supper. "If it should turn colder and
freeze, we'll never be able to get that thing moved. It would be stuck in ice
like a cork in a bottle." "We'll
be all right as long as the snow keeps falling a little," Talia replied,
thinking back to her days watching the Hold flocks at lambing time. "We'll
only have to worry about the temperature falling if the weather changes." They
turned in early, hoping to get to the tree before the end of the next day. By late
afternoon they had reached it, and decided, after looking the massive trunk
over, that it would be best if they hacked it in half with their handaxes and
hitched the chirras and Companions to the lighter half. When darkness fell,
they were slightly more than halfway through the trunk. Again
they rose with the sun and returned to the tree. They managed to cut through it
by noon, and after lunch made their attempt to move it. They
had decided the previous night to leave nothing to chance and had made a set of
harnesses for themselves from spare rope. They hitched their own bodies right
in beside the chirras and Rolan and Tantris. It
turned out that it was just as well that they had decided to do so. Only when
all six of them dug in and strained with all their strength did it move at all. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 203 All of
them gasped and panted with the effort, and over-burdened muscles screamed out
in protest, while jhe tree shifted fraction by minute fraction. It took jtntil
dark to haul it clear of their escape route. :i. As darkness fell, they dragged
themselves back Iftto the Station, nearly weeping with aches and ex-liaustion.
Nevertheless, they rubbed the chirras dry and groomed their Companions, fed and
watered sind blanketed them. Only then did they strip off their own sodden
garments and collapse on their bed. They were too bone-weary to think of
anything but lying down—and their aching bodies. Finally,
"Do you really want supper?" Kris asked her dully; it was his turn to
make it. The
very idea of food was nauseating. "No," she replied in a voice fogged
with exhaustion. "Oh,
good," he said with relief. "Neither do I." "I
can't seem—to get warm." It took an effort to get the words out. "Me
either." Kris sat up with a low moan. "If you'll get the tea, I'll
dig out the honey." "It's
a bargain." They'd
left hot water for tea on the hearth, knowing they'd want it. Neither of them
rose any farther than their knees as they dragged themselves to their goals.
Talia poured water onto the herbal mixture, spilling half of it as her hands
shook with weariness. Kris returned with the jar of honey in one hand, and
Something else in the other. He put
the jar down with exaggerated care, and Talia spooned three generous dollops
into each mug. Fortunately, it was too thick to spill as the water had. She
pushed one mug toward Kris, who handed her something in exchange for it. <
It was one of the fruit and nut bars Kerithwyn had *»- ' forced
into them back at Waymeet. Talia felt sick at jhe sight of it. "I
know," Kris said apologetically. "I feel the same 204 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 205 way.
But if we don't eat something, we'll pay for it tomorrow." She
stirred the honey into her tea and drank it even though it was still so hot it
almost scorched her tongue. As heat spread through her, the food began to seem
a bit more appealing. As she finished the second mug of tea, she was actually
feeling hungry. Chewing
the tough, sticky thing took the last of her energy, though. From the look of
things, Kris was feeling the same way. The third cup of tea settled the
question entirely. She just barely managed to get underneath the blankets
before she was asleep. She
woke with every muscle screaming an angry protest. She shifted position a
little, and a groan escaped. "I
wish I was dead—I wouldn't hurt so much," Kris moaned forlornly in her
ear. "Me,
too. But I keep thinking of what Alberich always told us." "Must
you remind me? 'The cure that is best for the sore body is more of what made it
sore.' Oh, how I wish he was wrong!" "At
least we have to go out long enough to see what we have to deal with beyond the
tree." "You're
right." Kris uncoiled himself slowly and painfully. "And we have to
wrestle more wood inside." "And
more hay." "And
more hay, right. There's this much, little bird. If you feel like I feel, you
couldn't project past your own nose right now!" They
helped each other wash and dress; there were too many places they couldn't
reach for themselves without their stiff muscles screaming at them. Talia
managed to concoct porridge with fruit in it, making enough to feed them twice
more, and tea as well. They would probably be so tired they wouldn't taste
either, but it would be solid and warm, and hopefully
they wouldn't be so tired tonight that the very thought of food was revolting. When
they opened the door, the glare of the sun-fight on all that snow drove them
back—for the weather had changed overnight, and the sky was cloudless. Without
some kind of protection for their eyes they'd be snowblind in moments. "Now
what?" Talia asked, never having had to deal with this kind of situation
before. Kris
thought hard. "Keep your eyes shadowed from above by your cloak hood, and
I'll see if I can rig something for the snowglare." " He rummaged
through his pack, emerging with a roll of the thin gauze they used for
bandages. ''Wrap that around your head about twice. It should be thin enough to
see through." It
wasn't easy to see through, but it was better than glaring light that brought
tears to the eyes. The
tree lay where they had left it, and beyond it was the pathway out. Somewhere. It was
possible to see where it went by the lane between the trees and the absence of
underbrush. The problem was that it lay beneath drifts that from where they
were standing never seemed to be less than four feet deep. "Well,
at least there're no more downed trees," Talia said, trying to be
cheerful. Kris
just sighed. "Let's get the shovels." The
drifts were deep, but at least they were not as -wide as the ones in their
valley had been. Though the snow was seldom less than two feet deep, it also
was rarely more than six. They shoveled and tram-filed until dusk, then brought
in more wood and fodder, ate, and fell into bed. Talia woke
in the middle of the night feeling very cold .Puzzled, she huddled closer to
Kris, who mur-mured sleepily, but didn't wake. Despite this, she kept feeling
colder. Eventually she moved warily out of bed; as soon as she did so, the
chill of the air 204 MERCEDES
LACKEY way.
But if we don't eat something, we'll pay for it tomorrow." She
stirred the honey into her tea and drank it even though it was still so hot it
almost scorched her tongue. As heat spread through her, the food began to seem
a bit more appealing. As she finished the second mug of tea, she was actually
feeling hungry. Chewing
the tough, sticky thing took the last of her energy, though. From the look of
things, Kris was feeling the same way. The third cup of tea settled the question
entirely. She just barely man-aged to get underneath the blankets before she
was asleep. She
woke with every muscle screaming an angry protest. She shifted position a
little, and a groan escaped. "I
wish I was dead—I wouldn't hurt so much," Kris moaned forlornly in her
ear. "Me,
too. But I keep thinking of what Alberich always told us." "Must
you remind me? 'The cure that is best for the sore body is more of what made it
sore.' Oh, how I wish he was wrong!" "At
least we have to go out long enough to see what we have to deal with beyond the
tree." "You're
right." Kris uncoiled himself slowly and painfully. "And we have to
wrestle more wood inside." "And
more hay." "And
more hay, right. There's this much, little bird. If you feel like I feel, you
couldn't project past your own nose right now!" They
helped each other wash and dress; there were too many places they couldn't
reach for themselves without their stiff muscles screaming at them. Talia
managed to concoct porridge with fruit in it, making enough to feed them twice
more, and tea as well. They would probably be so tired they wouldn't taste
either, but it would be solid and warm, and ARROWS
FLIGHT 205 hopefully
they wouldn't be so tired tonight that the very thought of food was revolting. When
they opened the door, the glare of the sunlight on all that snow drove them
back—for the leather had changed overnight, and the sky was cloudless. Without
some kind of protection for their eyes they'd be snowblind in moments. "Now
what?" Talia asked, never having had to deal with this kind of situation
before. Kris
thought hard. "Keep your eyes shadowed from above by your cloak hood, and
I'll see if I can rig something for the snowglare." He
rummaged through his pack, emerging with a roll of the thin gauze they used for
bandages. "Wrap that around your head about twice. It should be thin
enough to see through." It
wasn't easy to see through, but it was better than glaring light that brought
tears to the eyes. The
tree lay where they had left it, and beyond it was the pathway out. Somewhere. It was
possible to see where it went by the lane between the trees and the absence of
underbrush. The problem was that it lay beneath drifts that from where they
were standing never seemed to be less than four feet deep. "Well,
at least there're no more downed trees," Talia said, trying to be
cheerful. Kris
just sighed. "Let's get the shovels." The
drifts were deep, but at least they were not as wide as the ones in their
valley had been. Though the snow was seldom less than two feet deep, it also
was rarely more than six. They shoveled and trampled until dusk, then brought
in more wood and fodder, ate, and fell into bed. Talia
woke in the middle of the night feeling very cold. Puzzled, she huddled closer
to Kris, who murmured sleepily, but didn't wake. Despite this, she kept feeling
colder. Eventually she moved warily out of bed; as soon as she did so, the
chill of the air 206 MERCEDES
LACKEY struck
her like a hammer blow. She slipped her feet into her sheepskin slippers,
wrapped her cloak around herself, and quickly moved to pile wood on the fire.
When the flames rose, she could see the eyes of the chirras and Companions
blinking at her—they had moved out of their corner and nearer to the heat.
" 'Smaller?" Kris asked sleepily. "Why's it so cold?"
"The weather changed again. The temperature's dropping," Talia said,
thinking about how the wet snow outside must be freezing into drifts like
out-croppings of white granite. "I think ihe luck-goddess just left
us." Nine When at
last they slept again, it was restlessly; they woke early, and with a
premonition of the worst. The icy chill of the Station did not encourage
dawdling; they dressed quickly and went out to discover just how bad the
situation truly was. It
wasn't good, by any stretch of the imagination. The snow had frozen, thickly
crusted on top, granular and hard underneath. The crust was capable of
supporting their weight, and even the weight of the chirras unladen (providing
that they held their pace to a snail's crawl), but it would never hold the
chirras with even a small pack, or the Companions. And as if that weren't bad
enough, it was obvious that their shovels were not sturdy enough to deal with
snow this obdurate. Both
Heralds stared hopelessly al the rock-hard place where they'd left off digging
the night before and at the now-useless shovels. Finally Talia swore
passionately, kicked at a lump of snow, and bit her lip to hold back tears of
frustration, and reminded herself not to let anything leak. "Look,
Talia, we're not getting anywhere like this," Kris said after a long
moment of silence. "You're tired; so am I. One day isn't going to make any
difference to us one way or the other—for that 207 208 MERCEDES
LACKEY matter,
neither will two or three. I'm your counselor; well, I counsel that we take a
rest, and let our bodies recover, until we can think of a plan that has some
chance of getting us out of here." Talia
agreed wearily. Once
back inside, she lit the little oil lamp and surveyed the shambles they'd made
of the interior of the Station. "We're obviously going to be here a while,
so it's time we stopped living in a goat pen. Look at this! We hardly have room
to move." Kris
looked around, and ruefully agreed. They
began cleaning and rearranging with a vengeance. Working in the comparatively
warm Station was by far and away easier than shoveling snow had been. Before
noon, the Station was cleaned and swept and all was in good order. "Had
any ideas?" Kris ventured over lunch. "Nothing
that pertains to the problem. I did think of something that needs doing,
though. Since we're stuck until we can think of a way to handle that snow, we
ought to do something about washing our clothing. The only warm things that I
have left to wear are what I've got on." "There's
saddle-soap in the Station supplies to clean the leathers," he said,
thinking out loud, "and we could empty two of the barrels to wash
in." "I
brought more than enough soap for all the rest," she told him, "And
the Lord knows we don't have to scrimp on water!" "All
right then, we'll do it! I'm in no better shape than you—and I hate wearing
filthy clothes." Under
the primitive conditions of the Station, cleaning white clothing was not an
easy chore. Again, however, it was easier than the digging and hauling they'd
been doing, and a great deal warmer as well. Eventually every clean surface
sported a drying garment. "I
never thought I'd want to see another set of ARROW'S
FLIGHT 209 student
Grays again," Talia said, sitting back on her heels and surveying her
handiwork. "I
know what you mean," Kris grinned, looking up from his last pair of boots.
"At least the damn things didn't show din quite so badly. How are you
doing?" "I'm
done, since I did my leathers while you were washing." This
finishes it for me." "Well,
I still have hot water left—enough for two really good baths. It's too bad we
can't fit ourselves into the barrels and soak, but at least we can get really
dean." "Good
thinking, little bird. Although after all the soap and water I've been immersed
in today, there isn't much that needs to soak!" Things
began to take on a more cheerful appearance once they were clean, especially
since they weren't aching from the punishing cold and muscle strain of the past
few days. Talia
combed her wet hair out in front of the fire, more than half mesmerized by the
flickering flames and the movement of the comb through her hair. The Station
had lost the slightly stale odor it had acquired during the blizzard, and now
smelled of soap and leather—very pleasant. Bits of old tales began to flicker
through her mind—unconnected images dealing with tales of battle, of all
things. Battles, and how the Companions themselves used to fight alongside
their Heralds. Or were those images unconnected? **Kris,"
she said slowly, an idea beginning to form, "the main problem is the hard
snow and the ice crust. Our shovels aren't strong enough to break it into
pieces. But if we wrapped their legs to keep them from being cut, Rolan and
Tantris could—like they were fighting." "By
the Stars of the Lady, you're right!" he ex-daimed with excitement.
"Not only that, remember now you wondered what good those huge claws did 210 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 211 the
chirras? They dig themselves hollows to lie in, in dirt or in snow. If we could
make'them understand what we wanted, we could have them dig out chunks of a
size we could manage!" "Havens,
Rolan and Tantris can do that!" Tantris
snorted, and Ro!an sent Talia a little mental caress. Kris
laughed. "All right, granther—" he said to his Companion, looking
happier than he had all day. He turned back to Talia. "The Source of all
Wisdom over there seems to think we'll be able to work faster than we did
before. He wanted to know why we hadn't thought of this until now." "Well
you two wouldn't have done us much good with the wet snow, now, would
you?" Talia asked the two sets of backward-pointing ears. Rolan tossed his
head. "And
the chirras would have made more of a mess than they'd have cleared. The
snowdrifts weren't stable enough until they froze," Kris added, a little
smugly. "So there." "Did
he say anything else?" Talia asked, a little envious of Kris' ability to
Mindspeak with his Companion. "He
just told me he's been worried about how hard we've been working—but then he
actually ordered me to rest tomorrow. You'd think we were trainees." Talia
shook her head ruefully, for there was no doubt that Rolan considered this to
be an excellent idea. There was a distinct undertone to his mental sending of
worry that both of them had been overworking. "Rolan
says the same. I don't think I want to argue. Oh, Bright Havens, I hurt!"
Talia stretched aching arms and shoulders. "This has hardly been the rest
stop we were ordered to take." Kris
groaned good-naturedly, stretching his own weary muscles. "If anything,
I'm more exhausted than I
was when we stopped, if that's possible. I'm certainly a lot sorer." "Then
I'll make you an offer; want a backrub?" "Do
you?" "Oh,
Lord, yes," she sighed. Til
work on you, then you work on me. Strip, wench—I can't work through four shirts
and a tunic!" "It's
only two," she protested with a laugh, "And they're summer-weight at
that. While I was cleaning, I wanted to clean everything!" Nevertheless,
she complied, stretching out on a pallet of blankets on the hearth. Kris seemed
to find every last ache, and drove each one out with deft fingers. Soothed by
the gentle hands, she drifted into a half-sleep. He
.woke her by tickling the back of her neck. "My turn," he said, as
she lazily turned her head. She
sighed with content and rose to her knees, and slipped on a shift (blessedly
clean, and warm from the fire) while he took her place on the hearth. She tried
to copy what he'd done to her, and hunted for the muscles that were the most
tense, and so hurt the most. Before very long she had him as soothed and
relaxed as she was, and they basked in the heat of the fire like a couple of
contented cats. "I'll
do anything you ask," he murmured happily, "Anything, so long as you
don't ask me to move. And as long as you don't stop." She
giggled at the tone of his voice as she gently rubbed his shoulders. "All
right, then—tell me about Dirk." "Promise
not to stop what you're doing?" "Surely." "Good,"
he said with satisfaction. "Because it's a very long story. For one thing,
I have to start with his grandfather." "Oh,
come now—" she said, raising an eyebrow. "Is this really necessary,
or are you just trying to ' prolong the backrub?" "I
promise you, it's absolutely necessary. Now, 'once 212 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 213 upon a
time' when Dirk's grandfather settled his Steading, he lived on the very Border
itself. He was quite ambitious, so he added a little more to his lands every
year, and only stopped when he had as much as one man could reasonably expect
to keep under cultivation with the aid of a moderate number of hands. By then
the Border had been pushed back by him and others like him. So now that it was
a safer place to live, he married." "Logical,
seeing as he had to have produced at least one offspring to be Dirk's
father." "Quiet,
wench. As it happened, their only child was female, but it didn't perturb him
that he would be leaving the Steading to her; he fully expected that she would
marry in due course, and the place would still be in the bloodline. However,
the gods had other ideas in mind." "Don't
they always?" "First
of all, it turned out that his daughter had a really powerful Gift of Healing.
Now this was as welcome as it was unexpected, since it's hard to get Healers to
station themselves near the Border. There's always more work there than they
can handle successfully unless they're stationed with a Temple, and you know
how Healers are—they'd rather die than leave something half-done. At any rate,
Borderbred Healers always seem to feel they have a duty to serve where they
were born, so there was little chance she'd end up anywhere else. Her proud and
happy father sent her off to Healer's Collegium, and in due course she returned
in her Greens. So far everything had gone according to expectation. However,
being the Healer put a crimp in her father's original plans for her. It seemed
that the young men of the area were somewhat reluctant to court a person whose
attentions could, because of her Gift, never be entirely devoted to any one
person. And this despite the tale I told you about them. Healers are, after
all, Healers first and anything else second." "Like
Heralds, or priests. Look at us." "Point
taken. At any rate, not even the rather substantial inducement of her
inheritance could lure any of the neighboring farmers or their sons to the
nuptial table. The old man began to despair of having his hard-won acreage
remain in the family. Then there came the second twist to the plot. Late one
autumn night there was a terrible storm." "I've
had my fill of storms." "Hush,
this is a required storm. In fact, it was the worst autumnal storm that part of
the Kingdom had ever seen. It began after sunset, and lightning downed so many
trees that it was completely unnecessary to cut any for firewood that fall.
Freezing rail fell from the heavens in sheets rather than drops. There was so
much thunder that it was impossible to hold a conversation and impossible to
sleep. And in the midst of all this chaos and confusion, there came a knocking
on the farmstead door." Kris was very obviously enjoying himself to the
hilt. "A
tall, dark, mysterious stranger, no doubt." "Who's
telling this story, you or me? As a matter of actual fact, it was a stranger;
half-drowned, half-frozen, half-dead and very much bedraggled, but blond, and
hardly mysterious. It was a young Bard, only recently graduated from his
Collegium and starting his journeyman period. He'd lost his way in the storm,
fallen into a river, and had all manner of uncomfortable things happen to him.
When he pounded on their door, he was already fevered, delirious, and well on
his way to a full-blown case of pneumonia." "I
smell a romance." "You
have an accurate nose. Naturally, the young Healer took him in and nursed him
back to health. Just as naturally, they fell head over heels in love. Being a
man of honor, as well as having his head stuffed full of all those romantic
ballads, the Bard begged the old man's permission to wed his daugh- 214 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 215 ter in
true heroic style. He needn't have worried, because by now the old fellow was
beginning to think that any son-in-law was better than none. However, he made
it a condition of his agreement that they remain on the Steading. It
rather surprised the old farmer when the—he thought—feckless, footloose Bard
agreed with all his heart—subject to the agreement of his Circle of course. How
could the old man have known that our Bard was born a farmer, and that entwined
with his love of music and his love of the daughter was his love and deep
understanding of the land? Well, the Circle agreed—provided he compose a
Master's ballad about the storm, courtship, and all; and he settled down
happily with all three of his loves—land, lady, and music. Then before the year
was out, he had a fourth." "Dirk.
So that's where he got that wonderful voice!" "And
where he learned to play so well Actually, though, you're a bit ahead of the
tale. The first child wasn't Dirk. He has three older sisters, two younger, and
a baby brother. When they can be sorted into some semblance of order and
organization, they have family concerts. You should hear them all singing
together, it's wonderful; I swear even the babies cry in the right keys! Well,
grandfather passed to his reward content in the knowledge that the land would
remain in the bloodline, since by the time he departed, two of the girls had
begun enthusiastically producing enormous broods of their own." "I
was asking about Dirk." "Talia,
my little bird, you can't separate Dirk from his family. They're all alike; see
one, you know what the rest are like. How things ever get done in that
household I have no idea, since it seems to be formed entirely of chaotic
elements." "Just
like a Bard." "Actually,
he's the most organized of the lot. If it weren't for him and the husbands of
the sisters, they'd
spend all their time flying in circles. There's an incredible amount of love
there, though; and it overflows generously on anyone who happens to find
himself dragged unwittingly into their midst." "Like
you." **Like
me. Dirk insisted on hauling me home with him the first holiday after we'd met
when he found out there wasn't going to be anyone home with me but the
servitors. They treated me exactly like one of the family, from bathing babies
to teary farewell kisses. I was rather overwhelmed. I certainly hadn't expected
anything like them!" Talia
chuckled, picturing to herself the reserved, slightly shy young boy that Kris
must have been, finding himself in the hands of what must have seemed like a
family of madmen. "Once
I got used to them, I had a lot of fun. That's why, every chance I've had, I've
gone home with Dirk when he went. Right now four of his asters are married.
Three of them live in extensions to the original house and their husbands share
the work on the Steading, because Dirk's father has developed bad knees. The
last has his own land to look after, but they're still on hand for every
holiday in die calendar. It's a good thing they all get along so well." "We
were talking about Dirk." "Right."
Kris' eyes gleamed with mischief at the impatience in her voice. "He was
Chosen even younger than I—only eleven; probably because at eleven 1*e was more
mature in a lot of ways than I was at thirteen. We were Chosen the same year,
and almost the same month. He told me that Ahrodie Chose him in the middle of
the marketplace on Fair Day, and he kept trying to direct her attention to his
sister because he thought he was too ugly to be a Herald!" "Poor
child." "So
we went through the Collegium as year-mates. He saw how lonely I was there, and
how unused to 216 MERCEDES
LACKEY dealing
with other children, and decided that I needed a friend. And since I couldn't
seem to make one by myself, he was going to do it for me! In classes, though, I
had to help him along, and he was never better than average. It was pretty well
accepted by all of us that after our internships he was going to work Border
Sectors and I was going to teach. Then we found out how our Gifts dovetailed,
and how incredibly well we work together, and everyone's plans were rather
abruptly changed." "And
you began working as a team." "Oh,
yes. And we discovered that we have a kind of Gift for intrigue as well. The
number of situations we've gotten ourselves into would astound you, yet we
always seem to extricate ourselves and come home covered in glory." "Kris,
what's he really like?" "Behind
the jester-mask? Very sensitive—that's his heritage coming out. Endlessly kind
to the helpless; you should see him some time with a lap full of kittens or
babies. Don't think he's soft and sentimental, though. I've seen him slit
people's throats in cold blood when they deserved it, and do it from behind in
the dark without a pretext of fair play. He says that if they're intending to
do the same to him, it doesn't make sense to give them warning. He can be
totally ruthless in the cause of Queen, Kingdom, and Circle. Let's see, what
else is there? You've danced with him, so you know that his bumbling farmer look
is totally deceiving. He's one of the few people that Alberich will accept to
act as a substitute with his advanced pupils when Alberich is sick. And for all
that, he's terribly vulnerable in certain areas. I helped him get over his
broken heart, and I promise you, Talia, that I will personally break the neck
of anyone who hurts him like that again." He was
lying with his head turned to one side and pillowed on his arms; Talia could
not help but see ARROW'S
FLIGHT 217 fierce,
cold hatred in his expression at that ; moment. ,
Kris's fierce tone as he spoke the last few words was completely unfeigned. He
remembered only too well what Dirk had been like then—broken, defeated— it had
been horrible to compare what that bitch had made bun into with what he had
been before she'd worked her wiles on him. Dirk seldom shed a tear— but he had
wept helplessly on Kris' shoulder when she'd ruined his life and his hopes for
him. It was a thine he never wanted to witness again. And if he *™
™" O *-* had any
say about it, he never would. ;Then a
painful thought occurred to him. He knew Dirk was more than interested in Talia
. .. and she had been showing evidence of the same sort of feeling. But he and
Talia had most of a year to go on her internship, and now that they were
intimate, it Tpras damned unlikely they'd go back to their earlier
relationship. What the hell was he going to do if she .Started getting
infatuated with him? It was
more than a possibility; after all, nearly every other female he'd spent any
time with had ended up in the same state. He
didn't want to think about it. ... "I
think it's time to do something about your problem," he said, thinking
that trouble might be less likely if he reasserted his position as a figure of
authority. "Like
what?" She sat up slowly, and shook her hair out of her eyes, her
expression in the flickering firelight a sober one. "I'm
going to take you absolutely back to basics. Back to the very first thing they
taught me." "Shielding?" Hell,
no, girl," he replied, astounded. "More basic that—and if shielding
was what they taught you , maybe that's one reason why you're having this . I'm
taking you right back to the first steps. ;GWwnd and center." 218 MERCEDES
LACKEY She
looked puzzled, and shifted a little, curling her legs under her. "Ground
and what?" "Oh,
Gods," he groaned. "How the hell did you get away with—of course.
Visa must have thought you knew the basics. Maybe you did , . .
instinctively." He bit his lip, thinking hard, staring off into the space
beyond his internee. Talia just sat quietly, peering anxiously at him through
the half-dark of the Station. "Trouble is, as my teacher used to say,
instinct is no substitute for conscious control." "I—I
guess I've rather well proved that, haven't I?" she replied bitterly. "Well,
once instinct goes, there's no basis for reorganizing yourself." He took a
deep breath, acutely aware of the faint smell of soap, straw, and animal that
pervaded the Station. "Gods."
She sighed, and rubbed her temple with one hand. "AH right—do your
worst." "Don't
'laugh," he replied grimly, "Before I'm through it may well seem like
just that. All right, are you comfortable? Absolutely comfortable?" She
frowned, shifted a little, then nodded. He
settled himself, folding his own legs under him, shifting until the straw under
his blanket moved to a more comfortable place. "Close your eyes. You can't
sort out what's coming in at you unless you can recognize what's you and what
isn't. That's what my teacher used to call 'the shape inside your skin.' Find
the place inside you that feels the most stable, and work out from there. Feel
everything—then put what you've felt away, because you can recognize it as
you." He was
using what he called "teaching voice" with her, a kind of soothing
monotone. She'd gone quite naturally into a half-trance, fairly well relaxed.
By unfocusing his eyes and depending on Sight rather than vision, he could See
every move she made by the shifting energy patterns within her. Sight was a
good Gift to have for this situation, maybe better ARROW'S
FLIGHT 219 ffran
her own would have been. By looking/not-Ipoking in a peculiar sort of way that
made his eyes Ifeel strained, he could see energy fields and fluxes. What he
Saw was difficult to describe; it was some-thtng like seeing multiple images or
"ghosts" of Talia, galfe' one haloed in a different
"color." When he Looked at the unGifted or Gifted but untrained, the
linages didn't quite mesh and the edges were fuzzy and indistinct. In Talia's
case the edges were almost pittnfully sharp and the images were given to
flaring at unpredictable intervals—and they were so unconnected they almost
seemed to belong to more than one person. If she could find her center, they
would fuse into one; if she could ground, the flaring would "All
right, once you've found that stable place, .•__ there's a simitar place
outside of you—in the earth f itself. When you feel that, connect yourself to
it, t; Finding the stable place is called 'centering,' connect-c ifltg yourself
to the earth is called 'grounding.' " •'^-.He
could tell, although his own Gift wasn't anything like hers, that she had
almost managed both actions. Almost—but not quite. The images were
over-lapping, but not fusing; and they dimmed and brightened and dimmed again.
And he could see that she '". was off-balance and not-connected, although
to her it probably seemed as if she'd done exactly as he asked. , PQor
lady—he was about to do a very cruel thing to •- her. He
sighed, and signaled Tantris—who gave her a .Tittle mental shove. A shove
that translated into a very physical top-over. iJ
"Not good enough," he said coldly, as she stared him from where she
was sprawled with a dazed Tession on her face. "If you'd done the thing
ly, he wouldn't have been able to budge you. in. Ground and center." tried—much
shaken, this time. If anything, 222 MERCEDES
LACKEY of
energy exhausted by the efforts of the day. Kris remained awake a bit longer,
trying to Figure how he was going to fit in the training with the
all-too-necessary effort of digging out. Just before he Finally slept, Tantris
had the last word. :Not
one day,: Tantris ordered. -.You're
more tired than you thought. You rest tomorrow, too.: "I'm Fine,"
Kris objected in a whisper. :Hah! You only think you are. Wait until tomorrow.
Besides, if you can get her centered, you'll be on the way to solving that
problem. That takes precedence, I think.: "I
hate to admit it," Kris yawned, "But you're right, Featherfoot." Kris
had not realized how truly bone-weary they were until he woke first the next
day to discover that it was well past noon. He woke Talia, and they Finished
mending all the now-dry garments, putting off the inevitable "lesson"
as long as possible by mutual unspoken accord. Finally
it was she who said, reluctantly, "I suppose we'd better . . ." "Unfortunate,
but true. Here—" he sat on the blankets of their "bed," and
patted a place in front of him. "—I told you I was going to try a
different tactic. You've linked in with me before, so you know what it's
like." She
seated herself cross-legged, their knees touching, and looked at him warily.
"I think I remember. Why?" "I'm
going to try and show you your center. Now, just relax, and let me do the work
this time." He waited until she had achieved that half-trance, closed his
own eyes long enough to trance down himself, then rested his hands lightly on
her wrists. It was little more than a moment's work to bring her into rapport;
that part of her Gift was still working, almost too well. He opened his eyes
slowly, and Looked, knowing she could see what he Saw. ARROWS
FLIGHT 223 She
looked, gasped, and grabbed—throwing both of them out of trance and out of
rapport. He had
been expecting something of the sort and had been prepared for a
"fall." She had not been, and sat shaking her head to clear it
afterward. "That
was a damnfoo! move," she said, when at last she could speak. "I
won't argue with that statement," he replied evenly. "Ready to try
again?" She
sighed, nodded, and setded herself once more. This time she did not grab; she
hardly moved at all. Finally
she broke the trance herself, unable to take the strain. "It's like trying
to draw by watching a mirror," she said through clenched teeth. "So?"
he replied, giving her no encouragement to pity herself. "So
I try again." It was
hours later when she met with victory; as Kris had suspected, when she centered
properly, it was with a nearly audible snap, a great deal like having a
dislocated joint pop back into place. There was a flare of energy—and a flash
of something almost like pain—followed by a flood of relief. Kris had Tantris
nudge her—then shove her, with no effect. "Ground!"
he ordered; she fumbled her way into a clumsy grounding with such an utter lack
of Finesse that his other suspicion—that she'd never done grounding and
centering properly before—were pretty much confirmed. It was then that he
realized that her shields hadn't just gone erratic, they'd collapsed; and the
reason they'd collapsed was that they'd never been properly based in the first
place. "All
right," he said quietly, "Now you're properly set up. Can you see now
why it's important?" "Because,"
she answered slowly, "You have to have something to use as a base to build
on?" 'Right,"
he agreed. "Now come out of there." 224 MERCEDES
LACKEY "But—" "You're
going to find it yourself, this time. Without my help. Ground and center,
greenie." "Ground
and center. Dammit, that's not right." "Do it again. Ground and
center." "Again, and faster." "Dammit, it should be reflex
by now! Again." Talia
held to her temper by the most tenuous of holds. If it hadn't been for the
concern he was feeling, so overwhelming that she could sense it with no effort
at all, she'd have lost her temper hours ago. Ground and center, over and over,
faster and faster— with Tantris and Rolan shoving at her when she least
expected it. The
first time they'd pushed her before she was properly settled, she'd literally
been knocked out for a moment; she came to with Kris propping her up,
expression impassive. "Tantris
hit me," she said indignantly. "He
was supposed to," Kris replied, letting her go. "But
I wasn't ready! It wasn't fair!" She stared at him, losing the tenuous
hold she'd had on her emotions. It felt like betrayal; it felt horribly like
betrayal— "Damn
right, it wasn't fair." He answered the anger and hurt in her voice with
cool contempt. "Life isn't fair. You learned that a long time ago."
He felt the anger then—hers; it couldn't be coming from anywhere else, since
beneath his veneer of contempt, he was worried and no little frightened. He was
taking his life in his hands by provoking her, and was all too conscious of the
fact. "Dammit, you're leaking again. Lock it down!" The anger died;
she flushed with shame. He didn't give her a chance to get back into the cycle
of doubt and self-pity. "Now; ground and center—and get centered before
they can knock you over." He
didn't even let her stop when they ate; snapping at her to center at unexpected
moments, letting ARROW'S
FLIGHT 225 Tantris
or Rolan judge when she was most off-guard and choosing then to push at her. It
wasn't until he was exhausted, so exhausted he couldn't properly See anymore,
that he called it quits for the night. She
undressed for bed in total silence; so barricaded that there was nothing to
read in her face or eyes. He waited for her to say something; waited in vain. "I'm
not sorry," he said finally. "I know it's not your fault you got out
of Grays half-trained, but I'm not sorry I'm doing this to you. If you don't
learn this the hard way, you won't learn it right." "I
know that," she replied, looking up at him sharply. "And I'm not
angry at you—not now, anyway. I'm mostly tired, and Gods, my head hurts so I
can hardly think." He
relaxed, and reached for the container of willowbark on the mantlepiece,
handing it to her with a rueful smile. "In that case, I can assume it's safe
to come to bed?" "I
wouldn't murder you there, anyway," she replied with a hint of her old
sense of humor. "It would get the blankets all sticky." He
laughed, and settled himself, watching her make herself a cup of herbal tea for
her headache. Before today he hadn't been sure—but now he dared to believe she
would tame that wild Gift of hers. It wouldn't be too much longer before
centering would be reflex. Then it was only a matter of time, to build back
what she'd lost. "Kris?
Are you still awake?" "Sort
of," he answered drowsily, lulled by the warmth and his own weariness. "I
just want to say that I appreciate this. At least, I do when you're not
pounding on me." He
chuckled, but made no other reply. "I
need you, Kris," she finished softly. "That's something I don't
forget even when I'm angriest. I really need you." 226 MERCEDES
LACKEY It took
a while for the sense of that to penetrate— and when it did, it almost shocked
him awake again. If he hadn't been so tired— As it was,
guilt followed him down into sleep. She needed him. Good Gods; what if it was
something more than need? Talia
waited until Kris' deep and even breathing told her he really had fallen
asleep, and carefully extricated herself from the bed without waking him. She
always thought better with some task in her hands, a holdover from her
childhood, so she took her cup of willowbark tea and set about polishing some
of the bright bits of metalwork on Rolan's tack. The cloak she'd wrapped around
herself kept the chill off her back, and the fire in front of her gave off just
enough heat to be pleasant. Thusly settled in, she put her mind to the myriad
of problems at hand. The
fire crackled cheerfully; she wished she could feel cheerful. Lord and Lady,
what an unholy mess she'd gotten into! The storm alone would have been bad
enough; any of the problems would have been bad enough. To have to deal with
all of them together . . . At
least she'd made a start, some kind of start, on getting herself retrained. Kris
seemed happier, after this afternoon's work. He had been right about one thing;
now that she knew what "being centered" felt like, she'd never lose
the ability to find that firm base again. She'd wanted to kill him this
afternoon, and more than once—but she was learning in a way that would make her
stronger, and now that she was calmer, she could appreciate that. She
needed him, more than she'd ever needed anyone else. But—Lord
and Lady—what if it was something more complicated than need, or even need and
the kind of feeling she had for Skif? ARROWS
FLIGHT 227 He was
handsome; handsome as an angel. And despite a certain smug vanity, a man she'd
be more than proud to have as a friend. Look at the way he was taking his life
in his hands—literally—for the sake of getting her back in control of herself
and her Gift. He was kind, he was gentle, he was considerate, and with the way
her mind had been playing tricks on her lately, it was more than a possibility
that she'd unconsciously used her Gift to influence the way he thought about
her. Even to the point of getting him into bed with her— Lady
knew she was no beauty. And if she had influenced him in that, she could have
caused an even deeper attraction. She
clenched her hands on her mug so hard they ached. That was one thing she had
not wanted. At least not originally. But now? She
liked Kris well enough. Well enough—but not that well. She was
attracted to Dirk, there was no question about that. And strongly; more
strongly than she'd ever felt about anyone. It was
almost, she decided a bit reluctantly, as if Dirk was some
hitherto-unrecognized, hitherto-unmissed, other half of herself, and that she'd
never again feel whole after having met him unless— Unless
what? Heralds
seldom made any kind of long-term commitment; contenting themselves with the
close friendship of the Circle, casual, strictly physical liaisons, and the
bonds of their Companions. And truly, few Heralds she knew were at all
dissatisfied with that kind of life. Realistically speaking, the job was far
too dangerous to make a lifebond possible or desir-. able. Look what had
happened to Keren when Ylsa died; if Sherrill hadn't had exactly what she
needed and been right on the spot, she might very well have death-willed
herself in bereavement. 228 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 229 And
she'd only seen Dirk a handful of times. But for Heralds, sometimes only once
was enough. Her mind drifted back years. It was
late one night that they'd all been gathered in Keren's room over hot mulled
wine and sometimes ribald conversation. Somehow the subject turned from bawdy
jokes to the truth behind some of the legends and tales told by outsiders about
Heralds: they were laughing at some of the more absurd exaggerations. "Take
that love-at-one-glance nonsense," Talia had giggled. "Someone ought
to really take the Bards to task over that one. How could anyone know from the
first meeting that someone they've just met will be a lifepartner?" "Oddly
enough, that's not an exaggeration," Sher-rill had replied soberly.
"When it happens with Heralds, that's generally exactly the way it
happens. It's almost as if there were something, something even deeper than
instinct, that recognizes the other soul." She'd shrugged. "Metaphysical,
sentimental, but still true." "Do
you mean to tell me that both of you had that happen?" Talia had been
incredulous. "As
a matter of fact, the very first time I set eyes on Keren," Sherrill
replied. "Notwithstanding the fact that I was just under fourteen at the
time." Keren
nodded. "Visa and I knew when we met midway through our third year—until
then we'd never done more than wave at each other across the room since we had
had very different schedules. We did wait, though, until we were both sure that
it was something solid and not ephemeral, and until we'd completed our
internships, before commiting to each other." "And
I didn't want to intrude on what was obviously a lifebond." I "You
would have been welcome. To tell you the truth, we'd wondered a little—" "But
I didn't know that at the time, did I?" Sherrill had laughed. "Truly,
though, Talia, anyone-I've ever talked to that has seen a lifebond has said the
same thing; that was the way it was for Selenay's parents, for instance. It
either happens the first time you meet, or never." "And
if it's not a lifebond, there's nothing you can do to make it one—to make it
more than a temporary relationship, no matter how much you want it to be
something more," Keren had continued. "My twin found that out." Talia
must have looked intensely curious, although she hadn't actually asked
anything, because Keren continued after a moment. "Remember
I've told you once or twice that I've got a niece and nephew almost your age?
Well, they're Teren's. Not only were we not Chosen at the same time, but it
took seven years for his Companion to come for him. By then I was a field
Herald—and he was married and working the sponge-boat. Then it happened. He was
Chosen. And the wife he had thought he was contented with turned out to mean
less to him than he'd ever dreamed. He wanted to love her, he really did. He
tried to make himself love her—it didn't work. He went through an incredible
amount of soul-searching and guilt before concluding that the emotion wasn't
there and wasn't going to be, and that his real life was with the Circle and
his Companion. And to tell the truth, his wife—now ex-wife—didn't really seem
to care. His children were adopted into our family and she turned around and married
into another with no sign of regret that / could see. So you see," she had
concluded, "if you're a Herald, you either have a tifebond and recognize
it at once, or you live your life without one." Talia
sighed. 230 MERCEDES
LACKEY If she
were going to be honest with herself, she had to admit that this seemed to be
exactly what had happened to her with regard to Dirk. Seemed to be—that was the
key. How did she know that this wasn't some fantasy she was building in her own
mind? It
didn't feel much like a fantasy, though. It was more like a toothache; or
perhaps the way Jadus had felt about his missing leg. He'd said it had often
seemed as if it were stilt there, and aching. Well,
there was something in Talia that ached, too. Fine.
What about Kris? What
she felt for Kris . .. just wasn't that deep. Yes, she needed him—his support,
his expertise, his encouragement. But "need" was just not the same as
"love." Or rather, the emotion she felt for him was a different kind
of love; a comradeship—actually closer to what she felt for Rolan or Skif or
even Keren than anything else. But if
Kris had become infatuated with her—Gods, it almost didn't bear thinking about. Granted,
he certainly wasn't acting very lover-like. And earlier—he almost seemed to be
throwing Dirk at her. Outside of bed he was treating her more like Alberich
treated a trainee who had gotten some bad early lessoning and needed to have it
beaten out of him. Except in the digging out, when he treated her as an
absolute equal; neither cosseting her nor allowing her to take more than her
share of the work. Provided
her mind hadn't been tricking both of them—which was a very real possibility. "Oh,
hellfire," she sighed. At
least she'd managed to clarify some of her feelings. And there wasn't anything
she could do about it anyway—not until she had her Gift under full control, and
could sort out what was "real" and what wasn't. She drank the last of
the stone-cold tea, and put up the harness, then slipped back into bed. Right ARROW'S
FLIGHT 231 now the
only thing to do was to enforce the sleep she knew she needed badly. It was
best to just try and take things a day at a time. Because
at this point, she had more pressing problems to deal with, if she couldn't get
her Gift back under control, this would all be very moot. .. . For she
was quite well aware of how close she'd come to driving both Kris and herself
over the edge. It could happen again, especially if he did something to badly
frighten her—and if it did— If it
did, it could end, only too easily, in his death, hers, or both. Ten Well,
there was one way, Talia knew, to keep herself under control—and that was to
work herself into a state of total exhaustion. So in the morning she rose
early, almost before the sun, and she began pressing herself to her
limits—making each day blur into the next in a haze of fatigue. It became
impossible to tell what day it was, or even how long they'd been there. Talia
usually woke first, at dawn, and would prod Kris into wakefulness. One or the
other of them would prepare not only breakfast, but unleavened cakes with some
form of soup or stew: something that could remain untended most of the day
without scorching, simply because they both knew that by the time they came in,
they would have barely enough energy to eat and perform a sketchy sort of wash
before collapsing into bed. After a
hearty breakfast of fruit and porridge, she would wrap the Companions' legs
against the sharp edges of the ice-crust while Kris haltered the chirras, and
all six occupants of the Station would troop out into the cold to begin the
day's work. Rolan
and Tantris would move up first, and break the crust of ice and the hard snow
beneath by rearing to their full heights and crashing down on it with their
forelegs, or backing up to it and kicking as 232 ARROW'S
FLIGHT 233 hard as
they could. They would move back, and Talia and Kris would then take their
places; picking up the chunks that had broken off and heaving them to either
side of the trail they were cutting. The chirras would use their powerful
foreclaws on what remained until they were halted by snow too packed for them
to dig or crust too slippery to get a grip on. Then the Heralds would move the
chunks they'd dislodged, scoop up the loose snow, and let the Companions take
over again. They
would work without a break until the sun reached its zenith, then take
begrudged time for a hasty lunch. On their return, they would work until
darkness. Each day the trips to and from the Station got longer; sometimes it
was only that which kept Talia working. There were times, too many times, when
their progress was limited to a few feet for a whole day of back-breaking
labor; and she knew the Station itself was furlongs from the road. It was when
their measured progress amounted to little more than a dozen paces that the
temptation to give up was the strongest. When
darkness fell, Kris would tend the Companions while Talia groomed the chirras,
checking them thoroughly for any sign of injury or muscle strain during the
process of grooming them. Rolan and Tantris, of course, could be relied upon to
tell their Chosen if they'd been hurt, but the chirras were another story. And
if one of the chirras had to drop out of the work, their progress would be
halved. Finally
Kris or Talia—usually Talia—would ensure that everyone was well supplied with
food and water and blanketed against the night chill before they wolfed down
their own dinners and sought their bed. It was
the hardest physical labor either of them had ever performed. The constant cold
seeped into their very bones, and their muscles never stopped aching. It wore
them down, a little more each day. They had strictly rationed their own
supplies, and 234 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 235 the
food they were taking in was not equaling the energy they were expending. They
were getting thinner, both of them, and tougher, physically. It was a change
Talia hardly noticed, because it was so gradual, but once in a while she would
think vaguely that her friends would have been surprised to the point of shock
by the way she looked. Kris
continued to hammer at her through the first week of digging out, until
centering and grounding had become reflexive. After that, he left her in peace,
only offering an occasional bit of weary advice. Talia's control over Empathic
projection came and went, at unpredictable intervals, although Kris evidently
never noticed her projecting involuntarily. If he had, he would have pounced on
her, of that she was certain. Her shielding was returning now that she had
something to form a firm base for it, but it was the thinnest of veils, hardly
even enough to know that it was there. She worked at control with nearly the
same single-minded obsession she was giving the physical labor of digging out. The
only pauses in their routine were the two occasions when they again ran out of
clean clothing. Those two days were given over to a repeat of their washday,
and to brave attempts to revive one another's faltering spirits. As tired as
Talia was, it was easy to become depressed. Kris wasn't quite so much the pawn
of his emotions, but there were times Talia found herself having to pull him
out of despair. The endless cold did not help matters any, nor did the fact
that they had, indeed, needed to cut green wood to use in their fire. The green
wood, even when mixed with seasoned, gave off much less heat. Talia felt as if
she'd never be warm again. But one
afternoon, nearly a month from the time they'd first reached the Station, she
looked up from their task in sudden bewilderment to realize that they'd finally
reached the road. And the
road was as drift-covered as the path out had been. "Now what?" Talia
asked dully. "Oh,
Gods." Kris sat down on a chunk of snow with none of his usual grace. This
was a scenario he'd never contemplated; he'd always assumed that once they
broke out, the main road would be cleared as well. He stared at the icy
wilderness in front of them and tried to think. "The
storm—it must have spread farther than I thought," he said at last.
"The road crews should have been within sensing distance by now,
otherwise." He felt
utterly bewildered and profoundly shaken— for once at a total loss for a course
of action. He just gazed numbly at the unbroken expanse of snow covering the
road, unable to even think clearly. Talia
tried to clear her mind—to stay calm—but the uncanny silence echoed in her
ears. And that feeling of someone watching was back. She
glanced apprehensively at Kris, wondering if he was sensing the same thing she
was—and in the next breath, certain it was all originating in her mind. The
feeling of being watched was, if anything, more intense than it had been
before. And ever-so-slightly ominous. It was very much akin to the uneasy
queasiness she used to have whenever Keldar would stand over her at some chore,
waiting and watching for her to make the tiniest mistake. Something out there
was unsure of her—mistrusted her— and was waiting for her to slip, somehow. And
when she did— Panic rose in her, and choked off the words she had intended to
say. Kris
stared at the unbroken ice crust as if entranced, unable to muster enough
energy to say anything more. Gradually, though, he became aware of a feeling of
uneasiness—exacdy as if someone were 236 MERCEDES
LACKEY watching
him from under cover of the brush beneath the snow-laden trees. He tried to
dismiss the feeling, but it continued to grow, until it was only by sheer force
of will that he was able to keep from whipping around to see who was staring at
the back of his neck— It
wasn't entirely an unfriendly regard . . . but it was a wary one. As if
whatever it was that was watching him wasn't quite sure of him. He
tried to shield, to clear his mind of the strange sensations, only to have them
intensify when he invoked shielding. And now
he was seeing and hearing things as well— slight forms that could only be
caught out of the corner of his eye, and slipped into invisibility when he
tried to look at them directly. And there seemed to be sibilant whisperings
just on the edges of his hearing— All of
which could well be from a single source. Talia had told him once already that
she thought she was hallucinating; she could well be drawing him into an
irrational little nightmare-world of her making. "Talia!"
he snapped angrily, more than a little frightened. "Lock it down!" And he
whipped around to glare at her, enraged, and just about ready to strike out at
her for her lack of control. Talia
forgot the strange watcher; forgot everything except Kris' angry—and
untrue—accusation. She flushed, then paled—then reacted. "It's
not me!" she snapped. Then, when he continued to stare at her with utter
disbelief, she lost the control she had been holding to with her psychic teeth
and toenails. This
time, at least, the Companions were prepared, and shielded themselves quickly.
Kris, however, got the full brunt of her fear of the situation and her anger at
him. He rose involuntarily to his feet and ARROW'S
FLIGHT 237 staggered
back five or six paces, to trip and fall backward into the hard snow, his face
as white as hers, and unable to do more than raise his arms in front of his
face in a futile gesture of warding. And the
watcher stirred— Talia
froze; the feeling that some power was uncoiling and contemplating striking her
down was so powerful that she was unable even to breathe. Somehow she cut off
the emotion-storm—and simultaneous with her resumption of control, Rolan paced
forward slowly, to stand beside her. He faced, not her, but the watching
forest, his whole posture a silent challenge. There
was a feeling of vague surprise—and the sensation of being watched vanished. Talia
felt released from her paralysis and wanted to die of shame for what she'd
nearly done to Kris. As he blinked in surprise, she turned blindly away from
him, leaned against a tree-trunk and wept, her face buried in her arms. Kris
stumbled to his feet, and put both arms around her. "Talia, little bird,
please don't—" he begged. "I'm sorry; I didn't mean—1 lost my temper.
It'll be all right. It's got to be all right—I'm sorry. I'm sorry—" But
dreary days of grinding labor and nights of too little rest had taken their
toll of his spirit as well. It was only when the tears started to freeze on
both their faces that they were able to stop sobbing in dejection and despair. "It—that
thing watching—" She
shook with more than cold. "I—don't want to talk about it," she said,
looking uneasily over her shoulder. "Not here—not now." "It
wasn't you—" "No.
I swear on my life." He
believed her. "All right, let's handle what we've got; the storm was worse
than we thought," he said, getting control of himself again. "This is
the very 238 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 239 northernmost
end of the road. They can't be more than a few days away, and we aren't running
short of food yet. We'll be all right—especially if we start rationing
ourselves," "We
won't need as much food if we rest," Talia said, drying her eyes on the
gauze she'd used to protect them from sunglare. "And
we can plant a signal so that they know we're here. I can get the crust to hold
me a good distance, and you're lighter than I am; about an hour's scramble will
do. Wait here," He
mounted Tantris and the two of them headed back to the Station, vanishing from
sight down the narrow little valley they'd cut. Talia waited for their return,
occasionally looking warily over her shoulder. Whatever had been watching her
had been within a hair of striking her; why she was certain of this, she had no
idea, but she could not rid herself of the thought. She had no idea what had
deterred it, but , she did not want
it to catch her unaware. She clung
I to Rolan's neck, and waited, exerting every bit of \ control she had. For it seemed to her
that the watcher had only acted when it appeared that she was attacking Kris.
If that was the case, she had no intention of inadvertently invoking it agin. It was
at least a candlemark—and far too long for her peace of mind—before she saw
Kris and Tantris trotting back. He carried four white arrows, two long
branches, and some bright blue rags. "These
will show up at a distance. Here, pattern these, will you?" He dismounted
and handed her two of the arrows, and began working on his two. "We tie
the arrows to the stick, and plant the stick out in the middle of where the
road is. When the crews find them, they'll know we're here, and still alive.
They'll even know for certain it's us if they happen to have a Herald with
them—surely anyone with them will have been given our patterns." "Why
are we doing this?" "If
we don't, they might not clear the road this far. This is just the northernmost
loop; it isn't strictly needed to get between Waymeet and Berrybay. It takes
longer to go around than to cut through Sorrows, but nobody travels much in the
winter except Heralds. And nobody knows where we've been 'lost.' " He
handed her one of his arrows in exchange for hers. Both of them tied the arrows
to one of the branches, and made them as conspicuous as possible with
fluttering rags. "You
go toward Waymeet, I'll go toward Berrybay," he said, preparing to climb
up on the snow crust. "Plant yours at the First crossroads you come to,
I'll do the same. Hopefully the road crews will find one of them before they
give up." "Kris—what
if it snows again?" "Talia,
for the love of the Goddess, don't even think that. Walk as far as you can, but
be back here by dusk." Talia
had never felt so lonely. There was scarcely a sound from the white woods on
either side. She could hear the creaking sounds of Kris carefully making his
way across the snow crust behind her, sliding his feet so as not to break it.
Even so, she heard the crunch that meant he'd fallen through at least once
before he got too far away for the sounds to carry to her. It was a measure of
his own dejection that he didn't even have the spirit to swear. She set
out herself, often having to detour around high drifts that she didn't dare try
and climb. Her eyes ached from tears and snowglare, and she was as tired as
she'd ever been in her life. She was grateful that she was lighter than Kris;
the snow crust was holding beneath her without any such mishaps as he had had. The
silence was eerie—frightening. As frightening 240 MERCEDES
LACKEY in its
way as the howl of the storm had been. Talia was shivering long before she
reached her turnaround point, and not just from cold. There were no sounds of
birds or animals, no indication that anything else lived and moved here besides
herself. That horrible feeling of something watching might be gone, but there
was still something uncanny about the Forest of Sorrows, something touched with
the chill of death and the ice of despair. Whatever power held sway here, it
was unsleeping and brooding; she knew it beyond doubt, and somehow knew she was
feeling only the barest touch of its power—and she didn't really want to trust
to the supposed protection of her Whites by venturing too far alone. She was
more than relieved to find a half-buried crossroads sign; that meant she could
plant her gaudy staff in the snowcrust at the peak of a drift and retrace her
steps. She was
never so glad to see another human being as she was to see Kris, picking his
way across the snow, coming toward her. Back in
the Station, Talia surveyed what was left of their supplies. "They'd
better come soon," she said, trying to keep doubt out of her voice.
"Even if we're careful, we don't have much. It'll probably last for a
week, but not much more." "If
they're as worried as I think—as I hope—they'll be working around the clock,
even by torchlight," Kris said, sheer exhaustion making his voice
toneless. "It just can't be too much longer." "They
may not recognize us as Heralds at all," she replied, trying to joke a
Hide. "I doubt they've ever seen Heralds looking so shabby. I've had to
practically rub holes in my things to get them white again. Our appearance is
hardly going to enhance the Heraldic image." She
screwed her face up in imitation of an old man's grimace, and croaked;
"Heralds? Yer be not ARROWS
FLIGHT 241 Heralds!
Yer be imposters, for certain sure! Gypsies! Scalawags! And where got ye them
whitewashed nags, eh? Eh?" Kris
just stared at her for a long moment, then suddenly began to laugh as
helplessly as he'd wept earlier. Perhaps it was their weariness that made them
as prone to near-hysterical hilarity as to tears. Talia began to giggle
herself, then crow with laughter. They collapsed into their bed-nest together,
legs too weak to stand up, and for a long time could hardly stop laughing long
enough to breathe. No sooner would one of them get himself under control, and
the other start to follow suit, when one look would set them both off again. "Enough—please—"
Kris gasped at last. "Then
don't keep looking at me," Talia replied, resolutely staring at a stain on
her boots until she got her breath back. "Berrybay
has a Resupply Station," Kris said, doing his best to maintain a serious
subject. "We can get new uniforms there, and we can get our leathers
bleached and re-treated. I'll warn you, though, the sizes will only be
approximate." "Just
so that the Whites are white and not gray, or full of holes." "I
don't suppose you know enough sewing to alter what we get?" Kris asked
wistfully. She could tell by his expression that his fastidious nature was
mildly disturbed by the notion that he would be looking considerably less than
immaculate in outsize uniforms. Talia
raised an eyebrow in his direction. "My dear Herald, I'll have you know
that by my third year at the Collegium I was making Whites. I may very well
have made some of your wardrobe." "Strange
thought." He pulled off his boots, slowly. "It—it wasn't you playing
tricks on my mind?" "No,"
she replied. "Not until you shouted at me." "Gods—I
think I must be going mad." She was
rubbing her white, cold feet, trying to 242 MERCEDES
LACKEY restore
circulation. "Don't—please—it's the isolation, the worry," she
responded, with a clutching of fear in her chest. "Not enough rest, not
enough food—" "Are
making me see things? Are^ou seeing things?" "No,"
she admitted, "But—it seems like the forest is—watching. Almost all the
time." Kris started.
Talia saw him jump, and bit her lip. "It's
nothing," he said. "Just—Tantris says you're right. He says the
forest is watching us. Dammit—I thought it was you, doing things to me.
Sorry." "Kris—I
lost it again—" Tears stung her eyes. "Hey,
not as bad as last time—and you got control back by yourself. Right?" "Sort
of. Whatever it was—when I turned on you, it suddenly felt like it was going to
do something to me if I touched you. That was when I got scared back into
sense." "And
you got control back. However it happened, you got control back. Don't give up
on me, little bird. And don't give up on yourself, either." "I'll
try," she said, a faint tremor in her voice. "I'll try." Leaden
silence hung between them, until he took it upon himself to break it.
"Jadus left you his harp, so I assume that you know how to play it, but
I've never once heard you do so. Would you?" "I'm
nowhere near as good as you are," she protested. "Humor
me," he insisted. "All
right, but you may be sorry," she curled into the blankets to try and keep
a little warmth in her legs and back and took the harp from him when he brought
it from its corner. This
was the first time she'd played in front of anyone but Jadus. The way the
firelight caught the golden grain of the wood brought back those days with a
poignant sadness. She rested her hands on the strings for a moment, then began
playing the first thing that came to memory. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 243 The
song was "Sun and Shadow," and Kris was very much aware from the
first few notes that she performed it quite differently than he did. Where he
and Dirk emphasized the optimistic foreshadowing of the ultimate solution to
the lovers' trials, and made the piece almost hopeful in spite of its somber
quality, she wandered the lonely paths of the song's "present," where
their respective curses seemed to be dooming the pair to live forever just out
of one another's reach. She was correct in insisting that she wasn't as
technically adept a player as Kris, but she played as she sang—with feeling,
feeling that she made you hear. In her hands "Sun and Shadow" could
tear your heart. The
last notes hung in the air between them for long moments before he could clear
his throat enough to say something. "I
keep telling you," he managed at last, "that you underestimate
yourself." "You're
a remarkably uncritical audience," she replied. "Would you like her
back, or shall I murder something else?" "I'd
like you to play more, if you would." She
shrugged, but secretly was rather pleased that he hadn't reclaimed My Lady. Her
mood was melancholy, and it was possible to find solitude by losing herself in
the music—solitude that it wasn't possible to create when he was playing or she
was singing. She continued, closing her eyes and letting her hands wander
through whatever came to mind, sometimes singing, sometimes not. Kris listened
quietly, without comment. The few times she looked up, his face was so shadowed
that she couldn't read his expression. Eventually she ran out of music fitting
her mood, and her hands fell from the harpstrings. "That's
all I know," she said into the silence that followed. "Then
that," he replied, taking the harp from her, 244 MERCEDES
LACKEY "is
enough for one night. I think it is more than time enough for bed." She had
doubted she'd be able to sleep, but the moment she relaxed, she was lost to
slumber. Three
days later the Station seemed to have shrunk around them and felt very
confining, especially to Talia, who had always had a touch of claustrophobia.
Her temper was shortened to near nonexistence ... and she feared losing it.
Greatly feared it. "Kris—"
she said, when his pacing became too much for her to bear. "Will you go
out? Will you please go somewhere?" He stopped
in midstep, and turned to eye her with speculation. "Am I driving you out
of patience?" "It's
more than that. It's—" "That
feeling of being watched. Is it back?" She
sagged with relief. "You feel it, too?" "Not
now. I did a little while back." "Am—I
sending both of us mad?" She clenched her hands so hard that her nails
left marks in her palms. He sat
on the floor at her feet, took her hands in his, and made her relax them.
"I don't think so. If you'll remember, Tantris told me that the forest was
watching us." "What
is it?" "I
only have a guess; it's Vanyel's Curse. It's made the whole forest aware
somehow." "I
don't think it likes me," she said, biting her lip. Kris
had the "listening" look he wore when Tantris Mindspoke him.
"Tantris says that he thinks it's disturbed by you; you're a Herald, but
you're a danger to me, another Herald. It isn't sure what to do with you." "So
as long as I stay in control, it will leave me alone ..." "I
would surmise." He rose to his feet. "And to keep you from losing
control, / am going out." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 245 Kris
had decided to flounder his way down the road toward Waymeet, in hopes of
meeting with a road crew. He entered the Station to have an entirely unexpected
and mouthwatering aroma hit him full in the face. "I'm
hallucinating," he said, haif-afraid that once again he really was.
"I'm smelling fresh meat cooking." "Pretty
substantial hallucinations, then, since you're going to have them for
supper," Talia replied, with a sober face. Then, unable to restrain
herself, she jumped up from the hearth to throw her arms around him in a joyful
hug. "Two squirrels and a rabbit, Kris! I got them all! And there'll be
more—the fodder is attracting them! I didn't even lose or break any
arrows!" "Bright
Havens—" he said, sitting down with a thump, hardly daring to believe it. There
was no denying the stewed meat and broth Talia ladled out to him, however. They
ate every scrap, the first fresh food they'd had in weeks, sucking the tiny
bones dry, then celebrated with exuberant loving. They fell asleep with
untroubled hearts for the first time in many days. They
were awakened the next morning very early; the chirras were stirring
restlessly, and both Companions seemed to be listening to something. Rolan
was overwhelmingly relieved and joyful, and Talia went deeper to find out why. "Tantris
says—" Kris began. "There're
people coming!" Talia finished excitedly. "Kris, it's the road
crew!" "There's
a Herald with them, too. Tantris thinks they'll reach us sometime after
noon." "Have
they reached our marker yet?" "Yes.
The Herald had his Companion broadcast a Mindcali to ours when he found it. I
might even 246 MERCEDES
LACKEY have
met them yesterday, if I hadn't gone in the wrong direction—idiot that I
am!" "How
were you to know? How many are there?" "Ten,
not counting the Herald." "Should
we go out and try to dig the path out farther to meet them?" "No,"
Kris said firmly. "The little we can do won't make much difference, and
I'm still tired. We'll pack up, straighten things up here, and meet them where
the path meets the road." It
seemed strange to see the Station barren of their belongings, with only the
empty containers that the supplies had been stored in to tell of their presence
there this past month. It took longer than Talia had thought it would to repack
everything; they did not leave the Station until almost noon. When
they reached the road, they could see the newcomers in the far distance. They
waved and shouted, and could tell by the agitated movements of the other
figures that they'd been spotted. The work crew redoubled their efforts, and
before too long— though not soon enough for Talia and Kris—the paths met. "Heralds
Talia and Kris?" The white-clad figure that was first through the gap was
unfamiliar to both of them, though his immaculate uniform made them
uncomfortably conscious of the pitiful condition of their own. "Yes,
Herald," Kris answered for both of them. "Praise
the Lady! When the Guard learned that you hadn't stayed at Waymeet and hadn't
arrived at Berrybay, and that you'd left on the very eve of the storm, we all
feared the worst. Had you been caught in it, I doubt you would have survived
even one night. This was the worst blizzard in these parts in recorded history.
Oh, I'm Tedric. How on earth did you manage?" "We
were warned by our chirras in time to make ARROW'S
FLIGHT 247 the
Waystation, but I doubt that we'd be in any shape to greet you now if it hadn't
been stocked by someone other than the regular Resupply crew," Kris
replied. "Whoever it was, he seems to have had an uncannily accurate idea
of how much provender we'd need, and what kinds." "That's
the Weatherwitch's doing," said one of the work crew, a stolid-looking
farmer. "Kept at us this fall till we got it stocked to her liking. Even
made us go back after first snow with some odd bits—honey 'n oil, salted meat
'n fish. We had it to spare, praise Kernos, and she's never yet been wrong when
she gets one o' these notions, so we went along with it. Happen it was a good
thing." "Praise
Kernos, in very deed! I see you've got your gear. Come along with me and I'll
have you warm and dry and fed before nightfall. I'm with the Re-supply Station
outside of Berrybay. I've got plenty of room for both of you, if you don't mind
sharing a bed." "Not
at all," Kris replied gravely, sensing Talia struggling with the effort of
maintaining what little shielding she had against the pressure of fifteen
minds. "We've been sleeping on straw next to the hearth for warmth. Right
now a camp cot would sound like heaven, even if I had to share it with
Tantris!" "Good.
Excellent!" Herald Tedric replied. "I'll guide you both back; these
good people know what they're doing, and they certainly don't need me in the
way now that we've found you." The
members of the work crew made polite noises, but they obviously agreed with
him. "Fact
is, Herald," the red-faced farmer whispered to Kris, "Old Tedric's a
good enough sort, but he don't belong out here. He's too old, and his heart's
more'n a mite touchy. Waystation Supply post was supposed to be a
pensioning-out position, if you catch my meaning. He ain't the kind to sit
idle, even 248 MERCEDES
LACKEY though
he hasn't the health to ride circuit no more. We're supposed to be keepin' an
eye on him, make sure he don't overdo-^job's set up so's he could feel useful,
but wouldn't have to do anything straining. Guard's supposed to do all his
fetching and carrying for him. But what with this storm and all, Guard's busy
clearing the roads, seein' to the emergencies— when he found out you two was
missin', nothing would do but that he go out with us. Gave us a real fright a
time or two, gettin' short of breath and blue-like when we thought we might've
found bodies. Good thing you turned up all right, or I reckon we'd have had a
third body on our hands." This
put things in an altogether different light. Kris felt a sudden increase in
respect for the talkative and seemingly feckless Herald. On closer examination
he saw that Tedric was a great deal older than he had first appeared, partially
because he was bald as an egg, and partially because he had the kind of
baby-soft face that tends not to wrinkle with age. His Companion cosseted him
tenderly, flatly refusing to race headlong down the road so that he could
prepare the Station for his guests. Talia
and Kris took turns telling him what had transpired from the time they
discovered the plague in Waymeet. "So
you're the Queen's Own, the one with the Gift for emotions and
mindHealing?" he asked Talia, peering at her short-sightedly. She could
sense his faint unease around her, even through the shields Rolan was holding,
and mentally shrank into herself. "I wonder if you could do something for
the Weather-witch?" "Considering
that we obviously owe her our lives, I'll certainly be glad to try," Talia
replied, trying not to show her own unease and her real dismay at being asked
to use her wayward Gift. "Just who is she, and why do you call her the
Weatherwitch?" ARROW'S
FLIGHT 249 i "Ah,
it's a sad story, that," he sighed. "A few years ago, it would be,
when I'd only just been assigned this post, there was a young woman named
Maeven in Berrybay who'd gone and had herself a Festival child—that's a babe
that no one will claim, and whose mother hasn't the faintest notion who the
father might be. People being what they are, there was a certain amount of
tsk-ing, and finger-pointing, until the poor girl heartily wished the babe had
never been conceived, much less born. That's what made what happened to her all
the worse, you see. You know, 'be careful what you ask for, you might get it'?
I'm sure she often wished the child gone, and when the accident happened, she
blamed herself. She was taking her turn working at the mill, and she left the
little one alone for longer than she should have. Poor mite was just beginning
to crawl about, and it managed to wriggle free of the basket she'd left it in.
It crawled straight to the millrace, fell in, and drowned. She was the one to
find the body, and she went quite mad." "But
why 'Weatherwitch'?" Kris asked. "She
must have had a Gift, and her going off her head freed it altogether, because
she started being able to predict the weather. She'd be acting just as usual,
dandling that rag-doll she got in place of her babe—then out of nowhere she'd
look straight through you, and tell you that you'd better see that the beans
got taken in because it was going to hail that night. Then, sure enough, it
would. People in Berrybay and for a bit around took to coming to her any time
the weather looked uncertain. She began to be able to See the weather that was
coming days, then weeks, then months in advance. That's why the villagers
heeded her when she told them to stock the Station. I wish they'd told me, I'd
have laid in a good deal more on my own." "You
stocked it very well, and we've nothing to find fault with," Kris replied
reassuringly. "I'm afraid, 250 MERCEDES
LACKEY though,
that you'll find we've used up just about everything that was there." "That
will be no problem," Tedric said cheerfully. "I'll be glad to have a
little task to turn my hand to. Most of my work's done in the summer, and
winter's a bit of a slow time for me. But it looks to me as if you could use a
full resupply yourselves." "I'm
afraid so," Talia said as Tedric shook his head over the state of their
uniforms. "I don't think the fabric is going to be good for much except
rags." "I've
got plenty of stock back at the Station, and I'm no bad hand with a
needle," Tedric replied. "I think I can refit you well enough so that
you won't be looking like crow-scares. I've got all the necessaries for
bleaching and refinishing your leathers, so we won't have to replace those, and
your cloaks still look in fairly good shape, or will be after we clean them. If
you don't mind staying a bit, I can turn you out looking almost like the day
you left to take this sector." "That
sounds fantastic!" Kris said with obvious thankfulness. "I
can help with the altering, sir," Talia added. The old
Herald twinkled at her. "But who tailors the tailor, then? And surely you
wouldn't deny an old man the pleasure of helping fit a pretty young lady, would
you?" Talia
blushed, and to cover it, settled My Lady wrapped in her biankets in a new
position on her lap. Without the harpcase to protect her, Talia elected to
carry her personally. "What's
this?" Tedric asked and brightened to learn it was a harp. "Which
of you is the musician?" he asked eagerly. "We
both are, sir," Kris replied. "But
he really plays a great deal better than I do," Talia added. "And
Herald Tedric, we'd truly appreciate it if you could find someone to make a new
traveling case for her while we're here. We had to destroy the old one to make
snow shovels." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 251 "The
cabinetmaker would be proud to oblige you," Tedric said with certainty.
"In fact, he may even have something already made that will fit. Midwinter
Fair is at the Sector capital in a few weeks, and he's been readying a few
instrument cases to take there, as well as his little carved boxes and similar
trumperies. He's known for his work on small pieces as well as furniture, you
see. I'll make a note to start stocking shovels in our Stations from now on.
Not every Herald has harpcases to sacrifice." They
passed the village of Berrybay just before sunset, Talia finding herself
grateful for the shielding Rolan was supplying her, and reached the Re-supply
Station with the coming of the dark. The place was much larger than Talia had
expected. "Bright
Havens!" she exclaimed. "You could house half the Collegium
here!" "Oh,
most of it isn't living quarters—it's mostly haybarn, warehouse, and granary. I
do have three extra rooms in case some need should bring a number of Heralds
this far north, but only one of those rooms has a bed; any more than two would
have to make up beds on the floor. But let's take first things first. I expect
you'd both appreciate a hot bath. It will pleasure both of you to know I have a
real bathing-room, just like the ones at the Palace and Collegium. While you're
getting washed, I'll find some clean clothing for you to wear until we get your
new outfits altered and your leathers cleaned. As soon as you're feeling ready,
there'll be supper. How does that strike you?" "It
sounds wonderful—especially the part about the hot bath!" Talia replied
fervently, as they dismounted in the station's stable. "Then
take yourselves right in that door over there—I'll tend to your beasts and
friends. Go up the staircase, then take a sharp right. The copper's all fired
up. I've been doing it every day on the 252 MERCEDES
LACKEY chance
that we'd find you. The room you'll be using is sharp left." They
each took a small pack and Talia took her harp, and entered the door he'd
indicated. Tedric hadn't exaggerated, though it only held a single tub, the
bathing-room was identical in every other way to the ones at the Palace. "Which
of us goes first?" Talia asked, thinking longingly of clean hair and a
good long soak. "You.
You look ready to die," Kris replied. "I'm
feeling the strain a bit," she admitted. "Then
get your bath. I can wait." When
tight muscles were finally relaxed, and the grime that had accumulated despite
her best efforts ruthlessly scrubbed away, she wrapped herself in towels and
sought their room. She found that Tedric had preceded them there; on the bed
were laid out fabric breeches and shirts of something approximating their
sizes. The
approximation was far from exact. It was obvious that if these articles were
representative of the kinds of clothing held in storage, there was a great deal
of work that was going to have to be done. She
stretched out on the bed for just a moment .. . only to fall completely asleep. Kris
had taken himself downstairs again to talk in private with Tedric. He hadn't
missed the older man's initial unease around Talia—nor the fact that he had
already know that Talia was Queen's Own and what her Gift was. The identity of
an internee was not supposed to be generally known, and the Gift of the Queen's
Own wasn't generally even a matter of public knowledge among the Heralds
themselves. He
decided that he was a bit too tired for diplomacy, and bluntly asked the older
man where he'd gotten his information about Talia. "Why
.. . rumors, mostly," Tedric supplied in astonishment, "Although I
didn't credit the half of ARROW'S
FLIGHT 253 them. I
can't imagine a Herald misusing a Gift, and I can't believe the Collegium would
allow anyone out who was poorly trained. And I've said so. But I must tell you,
there are a lot of eyes and thoughts up here—and, I regret to say, some of them
hoping to catch a Herald in failure." After a
covering exchange of pleasantries, Kris climbed the stairs with a worried soul.
He found Talia asleep on the bed, and took his towels without waking her. He lay
back in his hot bath to soak, his mind anything but relaxed. If anyone
discovered the state Talia was in, not only her reputation would be finished,
but the reputation of Heralds as a whole and that of the Collegium would be
badly damaged. The faith Heralds themselves had in the Collegium would be
shaken if they knew how poorly counseled she'd been. For
that reason, they dared not abort the circuit and head back; that would be the
signal of failure certain critics of the system had been waiting for. Nor could
Kris himself let any senior Herald know the true state of things and how poorly
controlled Talia was—for that would lead to a profound disturbance in the ranks
of the Heralds themselves, a disturbance that could only roll ail the way back
to Selenay and Elspeth, with ail the attendant problems it would cause them. It
would be up to Kris, and to Talia herself, to get her back to the functional
level she had before this whole mess blew up in their faces. It was
with that sobering reflection he finished his bath, and went to get dressed and
wake her. She
woke from her nap in a fairly good mood, giggling a little at the way she
looked in the outsized garments Tedric had supplied. "It's
because two-thirds of the Heralds are men, little bird," Kris replied.
"And all the Resupply Sta- 254 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 255 tions
get the same goods. So most of the clothing stored here will be made to fit
men. I expect when he gets a chance to look, he'll find some things closer to
your size. If you think you look silly, look at me!" The
waist of his breeches was a closer fit than hers, but the legs were huge and
baggy and much too long, and the sleeves of his shirt fell down far past his
fingertips. "I
expect most of what he has is in two categories— large, and 'tent.' At any
rate, it's better to have to cut down than try to piece on more fabric." They
descended the staircase to join their host; Kris barefoot and Talia in her
sheepskin slippers, since their boots were so stiff from repeated soaking and
drying that it was too much of an effort to try to pull them on. In any case,
the dwelling was very well heated, and Kris' bare feet caused him no
discomfort. They
found the old Herald puttering about in a room that seemed to combine the
functions of kitchen and common room. He chuckled to see them, looking like two
children clothed in their parents' cast-offs. "I
just took what was nearest to hand" he said apologetically. "I hope
you don't mind." "They're
clean, and dry, and warm," Kris smiled, "And right now, that's all we
care about. I must say that what I smell would have me pleased to come to table
in a grain sack, if that's all there was to wear." Tedric
looked very flattered, and seemed to have no recollection of Kris's earlier
interrogation. "When one lives alone, one acquires hobbies. Mine is cooking.
I hope you don't find it inferior to what you're used to." Talia
laughed. "Sir, what we're 'used to' has been porridge, stew made with
dried meat and old roots, half-burned bannocks, and more porridge. I have no
doubt after the past month that your meal will taste as wonderful as your
bathtub felt!" Venison
with herbs and mushrooms was a definite improvement over the meals they'd been
making. A i mental
check assured them that Tedric had seen to Rolan, Tantris, and the chirras in
the same generous fashion. Both the Companions were half-asleep, with filled
bellies, drowsing in heated stalls. When
their own hunger was truly satisfied, Kris helped Tedric clear away the remains
of the meal while Talia ran back upstairs for My Lady. "You
seemed so interested in which of us was the musician that I thought we'd repay
you for your hospitality," Kris said, taking the harp and beginning to
tune her. "One
doesn't hear a great deal of music out here." Tedric replied, not
troubling to keep the eagerness from his eyes. "I think it's the one thing
that I really miss by being stationed here. When I rode circuit I was always
running into Bards." The old
Herald listened with a face full of quiet happiness as they played and sang. It
was quite plain that he had missed the company of other Heralds, and equally
evident that he had told the simple truth about missing music out here on the
Border. Of course, it was very possible that the traveling Bards had simply not
noticed this Station, half-hidden off the road and placed at a bit of a
distance from Berrybay. It was just as possible that Tedric's work kept him so
busy during the summer (the only time journeyman Bards were likely to come this
way) that he could not spare the time to seek the village when Bards came
through. Kris made a mental note to send a few words to that effect when they
sent their next reports. Old Tedric should not have to do without song again if
he could help it. When
they finally confessed themselves played out, Tedric instantly rose and
insisted that they seek their bed. "I
don't know what possessed me, keeping you up like this," he said.
"After all, I'll have you here for as 256 MERCEDES
LACKEY long as
it takes to outfit you. Perhaps I'll hide all the needles for a week or
two!" When
they rose the next morning—somewhat reluctantly, as the featherbed they'd
shared had been warm and soft and hard to leave—they discovered that he had
already put their leathers and boots to soak in his vats of bleaching and
softening solution. Talia helped him take some of their ruined garments apart
to use as patterns, and they began altering the standard stock. Tedric was
every bit as good with a needle as he'd claimed. By day's end they were well on
the way to having their wardrobes replenished, and it was not possible to tell
that the garments had not been made at the Collegium; by week's end they were
totally re-outfitted. Once
their outfitting was complete, they set about discharging their duties to the
populace of Berrybay. The
rest and the tranquillity had been profoundly helpful in enabling Talia to firm
up what control she had gotten back over her Gift. She had enough shielding now
to hold against the worst of outside pressure on her own; that wasn't much, but
it was better than nothing. And she felt her control over her projective
ability would hold good unless she were frightened or startled—or attacked. If
any of those three eventualities took place, she wasn't entirely certain what
she'd do. But worrying about it wouldn't accomplish anything. She
almost lost her frail bulwarks when they entered the village. Kris had warned
her that the rumors had reached this far north, but the knowledge had not
prepared her. When
they set up in the village hall, she caught no few of the inhabitants giving
her sidelong, cautious glances. But what was worse, was that the very first
petitioners wore charms against dark magic into her presence. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 257 She
tried to keep up a pleasant, calm front, but the villagers' suspicion and even
fear battered at her thin shields and made her want to weep with vexation. Finally
it became too much to stand. "Kris—I've got to take a walk," she
whispered. He took one look at the lines of pain around her eyes, and nodded.
He might not be an Empath, but it didn't take that Gift to read what the people
were thinking when they wore evil-eye talismans around one particular Herald. "Go—come
back when you're ready, and not until." She and
Rolan went out past the outskirts of the village. Once away from people, she
swore and wept and kicked snow-hummocks until her feet were bruised and her
mind exhausted. Then
she returned, and took up the thread of her duties. By the
second day the unease was less. By the third, the evil-eye talismans were gone. But she
wondered what the reaction of the villagers was going to be when they sought
out the Weatherwitch on the morning of the fourth. The
depression surrounding the Weatherwitch's unkempt little cottage was so heavy
as to be nearly palpable to Talia, and to move through it was like groping
through a dark cloud. The Weatherwitch sat in one cobwebbed, dark, cold corner,
crooning to herself and rocking a bedraggled rag doll. She paid no heed at all
to the three who stood before her. Tedric whispered that the villagers brought
her food and cared for her cottage—that she was scarcely enough aware of her
surroundings to know when a meal was placed before her. Kris shook his head in
pity, feeling certain that there was little, if anything, that Talia could do
for her. Talia
was half-attracted, half-repelled by that shadowed mind. If this encounter had
taken place a year ago, she would have had no doubt but that she could have
accomplished something, but now? 258 MERCEDES
LACKEY But
having come, and having sensed this for herself, she could not turn away. She
half knelt, and half crouched, just within touching distance, on the dirty
wooden floor beside the woman. She let go of her frail barriers with a physical
shudder of apprehension, and let herself be drawn in. Kris
was more than a little afraid for her—knowing nothing, really, of how her Gift
worked, he feared it would be only too easy for her to be trapped by the
madwoman's mind—and then what would he do? Talia remained in that half-kneeling
stance for so long that Kris' own knees began to ache in sympathy. At length,
her breathing began to resume a more normal pace and her eyes slowly opened.
When she raised her head, Kris extended his hand to her and helped her to her
feet again. "Well?"
Tedric asked, not very hopefully. "The
gypsy family who died of snow-sickness two months ago—the ones in the Domesday
Book report; wasn't there a child left living?" she asked, her eyes still
a little glazed. "A
little boy, yes," Kris answered, as Tedric nodded. "Who
has him?" "Ifor
Smithwright; he wasn't particularly pleased, but somebody had to take the mite
in," Tedric said. "Can
you bring him here? Would this Smithwright have any objection if you found
another home for the child?" "He
wouldn't object—but here? Forgive me, but that sounds a bit mad." "It
is a bit mad," Talia said, slumping with weariness so that Kris couldn't
make out her expression in the shadows, "but it may take madness to cure
the mad. Just ... bring him here, would you? We'll see if my notion
works." Tedric
looked rather doubtful, but rode off and returned less than an hour later with
a warmly- ARROW'S
FLIGHT 259 wrapped
toddler. The child was colicky and crying to himself. "Now
get her out of the house; I don't care how," she told Tedric wearily,
taking the baby from him and soothing it into quiet. "But make sure that
she leaves that doll behind." Tedric
coaxed the Weatherwitch to follow him out with a bit of sweet, after persuading
her to leave her "infant" behind in the cradle by the smokey fire.
Talia slipped in when her back was turned. Seconds after that, a baby's wail
penetrated the walls of the cottage, and the madwoman started as if she'd been
struck. It was
the most incredible transformation Kris had ever seen. The half-crazed, wild
animal look left her eyes, and sense and intelligence flooded back in. In a few
seconds, she made the transition from "thing" to human. "J-Jethry?"
she faltered. The
baby cried again, louder this time. "Jethry!"
she cried in answer, and ran through the door. In the
cradle was the child Tedric had brought, perhaps something under a year old,
crying lustily. She scooped the child up and held it to her breast, holding it as
if it were her own soul given back to her, laughing and weeping at the same
time. No
sooner did her hands touch the child, when the last, and perhaps strangest
thing of all, happened. It stopped crying immediately, and began cooing back at
the woman. Talia
was not even watching; just sagging against the lintel, rubbing her temples.
The other two could only watch the transformation in bemusement. At last
the woman took her attention from the baby she held and focused on Talia. She
moved toward her hesitantly, and halted when she was a few steps away. "Herald,"
she said with absolute certainty, "you did 260 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 261 this—you
brought me my baby back. He was dead, but you found him again for me!" Talia looked
up at that, eyes like darker shadows on her face, and shook her head in denial.
"Not I, my lady. If anyone brought him back, it was you. And it was you
who showed me where to find him." The
woman reached out to touch Talia's cheek. Kris made as if to interfere, but
Talia motioned him away, signaling him that she was in no danger. "You
will reclaim what was yours," the Weatherwitch said tonelessly, her eyes
focused on something none of them could see, "and no one will ever shake
it from you again. You will find your heart's desire, but not until you have
seen the Havens. The Havens will call you, but duty and love will bar you from
them. Love will challenge death to reclaim you. Your greatest joy will be
preceded by your greatest sorrow, and your fulfillment will not be unshadowed
by grief." "
'There is no joy that has not tasted first of grief,' " Talia quoted
softly, as if to herself, so softly that Kris could barely hear the words. The
woman's eyes refocused. "Did
I say something? Did I see something?" she asked, confusion evident in her
eyes. "Was it the answer you were looking for?" "It
was answer enough," Talia replied with a smile. "But haven't you more
important things to think of?" "My
Jethry, my little love!" she exclaimed, holding the child closely, her
eyes bright with tears. "There's so much I have to do—to make it up to
you. Oh, Herald, how can I ever thank you enough?" "By
loving and caring for Jethry as much as you do now; and not worrying what
others may say about it," Talia told her, motioning to the other two to
leave, and following them quickly. "Bright
Havens!" Tedric exclaimed, a little uneasily, when they were out of
earshot of the cottage. "That
was like old tales of witchcraft and curse-lifting! What kind of strange magic
did you work back there?" "To
tell you the truth, I'm not very sure myself," Talia said, rubbing tired
eyes with the back of her hand. "When I touched her this morning, I seemed
to see a kind of—cord? tie?—something like that, anyway. It was binding her to
something, and I seemed to see that page in the report about the gypsies. I
know outlanders aren't terribly welcome here, so I took a chance that the
survivor wouldn't find a new home very easily. You confirmed what I guessed,
Tedric. And it just seemed to me that what she needed was a second chance to
make everything right. Am I making sense?" "More
sense than I hoped for. It's hardly possible that he could be—hers? Is
it?" Kris said hesitantly. "Kris,
I'm no priest! How on earth can I answer that? All I can tell you is what I saw
and felt. The little one is about the same age as hers would have been and they
certainly seem to recognize each other, if only as two lost ones needing love.
I won't hazard a guess after that." "This
is a terribly callous thing to ask, I know," Tedric said, looking a good
bit less anxious now that the "magic" was explained away as rational
common sense. "But—she won't lose her powers now that her mind is back,
will she?" "Set
your fears at rest; I think you and the people of Berrybay can count on their
Weatherwitch yet," Talia replied. "Speaking from personal experience,
I can tell you that such Gifts rarely lie back down to rest once you've roused
them. Look at what she said to me!" "
'Love will challenge death to reclaim you,' " Kris quoted.
"Strange—and rather ambiguous, it seems to me." "Prophecy
has a habit of being ambiguous," Tedric said wryly. "It's fortunate
that she's able to be more 262 MERCEDES
LACKEY exact
when it comes to giving us weather-warnings. Come now; you and Rolan are tired
and hungry, Talia, both of you. You deserve a good meal, and a good night's
rest before you take the road again," "And
prophecy to the contrary, my heart's desire at the moment is one of your
venison pies followed by a convivial quiet evening and a good sleep in your
featherbed, and I hardly think I need to seek out the Havens to find
that!" Talia laughed tiredly, linking arms with Tedric and Kris, while
Rolan followed behind. Well,
she had weathered this one. Now all she had to do was continue to survive. Seven "Well,
little bird," Kris said lazily. "It's almost Midsummer. You're
halfway done. Evaluation, please." Talia
picked idly at the grass beside her. "Is this serious, or facetious?" "Quite
serious." The sun
approached zenith, and a warm spot created when the white-gold rays found a gap
in the leaves of the tree overhead was planted just on Talia's right shoulder
blade. Insects droned in the long grass; occasionally a bird called, sleepily.
They were at the Station at the bottom of their Sector where they had first
entered, back last autumn. Today or the next day a courier-Herald would make a
rendezvous with them, bringing them the latest laws and news; until then, their
time was their own. They had been spending it in unaccustomed leisure. She
thought, long and hard, while Kris chewed on a grass stem, lying on his back in
the shade, eyes narrowed to slits. "It's
been horrid," she said finally, lying back and pillowing her head on her
arm. "I wish this past nine months had never happened. It's been awful,
especially when we first get into a town, and they've heard about me, but.
.." 263 264 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 265 "Hmm?"
he prompted when the silence had gone on too long. "But
. . . what if this . .. my Gift going rogue . .. had happened at Court? It
would have been worse." "You
would have been able to get help there," he pointed out, "better than
you've gotten from me." "Only
after I'd wrecked something. Gods, I hate to think—letting loose that storm in
a packed Court. . ." she shuddered. "At least I've got projection
under control consciously now, rather than instinctively. Even if my shields
aren't completely back." "Still
having shield problems?" "You
know so, you've seen me in crowds. There are times when I hate you for keeping
me out here, but then I realize that I can't go back until I have my shields
back. And we can't let anyone know about this mess until it's fixed; not even
Heralds." "So
you figured that out for yourself." "It
didn't take much; if people knew that the rumors were at least partially true,
they'd believe the rest of it. I've watched you playing protector for me every
time we meet another Herald. And there's something else. I can't go back until
I figure something out." "What?" "Not
just the 'how' of my Gift, but the 'why' and the 'when.' It's obsessing me,
because those rumors about manipulation come so close to the truth. I have used
my Gift to evaluate Councilors, and I have acted on that information. When does
it start becoming manipulation?" "I
don't know .. ." "Now
I'm more than half afraid to use the Gift." "Oh,
hell!" He flopped over onto his side, hair blowing into his eyes. "Now
that bothers me. Hellfire, none of this would have happened to you if I'd just
kept my mouth shut." "And
it might well have happened at a worse time—" "And
might not have." Those blue eyes bored into hers. "What's gone wrong
is as much my fault as yours." She had
no answer for him. "Well,
the situation went wrong, but I think we're turning it around," he said at
last. "I
hope so. I think so." "Well,
you're handling everything else fine." There
was an uneasiness under his words; she was sensitive enough now to tell that it
had something to do with her, personally, not her as a Herald. Oh,
Gods. She did her best to hide her dismay. She had done her level best to keep
their relationship on a friend/lover basis, and not let her Gift manipulate him
into infatuation, or worse. Most of the time she thought she'd succeeded—but
then came the times like these, the times when he looked at her with a shadowed
expression. She knew, now, that she didn't want anything more from him, for as
her need of him grew less, her feelings had mellowed into something very like
what she shared with Skif. But
what of him? "I
wonder what Dirk's up to," he said, out of the blue. "He's
Sector-riding this term, too." "If
he has any sense, being glad he's not having to eat your cooking." She
threw a handful of grass at him; he grinned back. "Tell me something, why
do you keep calling me 'little bird'?" "Good
question; it's Dirk's name for you. You remind him of a woodlark." "What's
a woodlark?" she asked curiously. "I've never seen one." "You
normally don't see them; you only hear them. Woodlarks are very shy, and you
have to know exactly what you're looking for when you're trying to spot one.
They're very small, brown, and blend almost perfectly with the bushes. For all
that they're not very striking, they're remarkably pretty in their own quiet
way. But he wasn't thinking about that 266 MERCEDES
LACKEY when he
named you; woodlarks have the most beautiful voices in the forest." "Oh,"
she said, surprised by the compliment, and not knowing quite how to respond. "I
can even tell you when he started using it. It was just after you'd fainted,
and he'd picked you up to carry you to your room. 'Bright Havens,' said he,
'she weighs no more than a little bird.' Then the night of the celebration,
when we all sang together, I caught him staring at you when you were watching
the dancers, and muttering under his breath—'A woodlark. She's a shy little
woodlark!' Then he saw me watching him, and glared for a minute, and said,
'Well, she is!' Not wanting to get my eyes blackened, I agreed. I would have
agreed anyway; I always do when he's right." "You
two," she said, "are crazy." "No
milady, we're Heralds. It's close, but not quite to the point of actual
craziness." "That
makes me crazy, too." "You
said it," he pointed out. "I didn't." Before
she could think of a suitable reply, they heard a hail from the path that led
to their Station and scrambled to their feet. It was their courier— and their
courier was Skif. "Welladay!"
he said, dismounting as they approached him. "You two certainly look hale
and healthy! Very much so, for a pair who were supposed to have come near
perishing in that Midwinter blizzard. Dirk was damned worried when I talked to
him." "If
you're going to be seeing him sometime soon, or can find a Bard to pass the
message, you can tell him that we're both fine, and the worst we suffered was
the loss of Talia's harpcase," Kris said with a laugh. "If?
Bright Havens, I haven't got any choice! I've been flat ordered to find him
when I'm done with briefing you, on pain of unspecified torture. You'd ARROW'S
FLIGHT 267 have
thought from the way he was acting that neither of you had the mother-wit to
save yourselves from a wetting, much less a blizzard." Kris
gave Talia another odd, sidelong glance. "You'd
best bring your Companion and whatever you've brought for us on up to the
Waystation," she said. "It's going to take you a while to pass
everything to us, and to make sure we've got it right." "A
while, O modest Talia? With you, I've got no fear that it'll take long,"
Skif grinned. "I know quite well that you can memorize faster than I can,
and Kris was my Farseeing teacher, so I know he's just as quick. I'll turn
Cymry loose and let her kick her heels up a little; I can lead the pack mule
afoot." "We'll
take her tack for you," Kris offered. "No use in you carrying it when
we're unburdened." Skif
accepted the offer gladly, and they strolled up the path toward the Station
together; Kris with the saddle and blanket balanced over one shoulder, Talia
with the rest of the tack, Skif with the saddlebags. "I've
brought you two quite a load," he told them as they approached the
station, "Both material and news. Hope you're ready." "More
than ready," Talia told him. "I'm getting pretty tired of telling the
same old tales." "Don't
I just know! Well, I've got plenty of news, personal and public, and more than
you may guess. Do you want your news first, or your packs?" "Both,"
Kris said with the charming smile of a child. "You can tell us the
personal news while we gloat over our goodies." "Why
not?" Skif chuckled. "I'll start with the Collegium and work my way
outward." The
first bit of news was that Gaytha and Mero had surprised nearly everyone by
suddenly deciding to wed. They had had themselves handfasted just before Skif
had left, and were to be wedded in the fall. Kris' jaw sagged over that piece
of news, but 268 MERCEDES
LACKEY Talia,
recalling things she'd seen over holidays while still a student, nodded without
much surprise. Keren
had broken her hip during the past winter. She'd slipped and taken a bad fall
trying to rescue a Companion foal from beneath a downed tree (the foal was
frightened silly, but otherwise emerged from the ordeal unscathed. The
same—obviously— could not be said for poor Keren). Sherrill had taken on
Keren's duties as riding instructor as well as her own scheduled classes. When
Keren's bones were healed, she decided that it was getting to be time to think
about training a successor anyway, so they were currently sharing the classes. Alberich
had at last retired from teaching all but the most advanced students; to no
one's surprise, he had appointed Jeri to take his place. Companions
had Chosen twenty youngsters this spring, the largest number yet. For the first
time in years the Collegium was completely full. No one knew whether there
should be rejoicing or apprehension over this sudden influx of Chosen; the last
time that the Collegium had been full had been in Selenay's father's time;
there had been the Tedrel Wars with Karse on the Eastern Border shortly
thereafter and every one of the students had been needed to replace those
Heralds that had sought the Havens when it was over. Elspeth
was doing unexpectedly well, and Talia rejoiced to hear it. Elcarth had taken
her heavy schedule and lightened it by a considerable amount, and she had
responded by working like a fiend incarnate on those classes that were left.
She seemed determined to prove that she was not ungrateful for the respite, and
that she did not intend to shirk her remaining responsibilities. There
was little news of the Court, but none of that was good. The rumor-mills had
been churning away; mostly working on the grist of Elspeth and the absent
Talia. About half of it was elaboration on the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 269 rumors
they already knew, the rest concerned Elspeth's supposed unfitness for the
Crown—that she was too pliant, too much of a hoyden, not bright enough— and too
dependent on the Heralds in general and Talia in particular to make all her
decisions for her. Kris
noted without comment the brief shadow of pain that veiled her face. "But
I've told anybody who's bothered to bring up the subject that whoever started
these tales had holes in his skull. Elspeth's nothing but a normal tomboy— like
Jeri, and they were perfectly willing to consider Jer as Heir! And I told 'em
nobody who knows you would even consider the idea that you might be misusing
your Gift! So that's that. All right, it's your turn," Skif ordered.
"You two have to tell me the whole tale of your blizzard. I've been
strictly charged by half the Circle to bring back every detail. If you leave
one thing out, I'm not entirely certain of my safety when I get back!" Kris
told most of it, from the plague at Waymeet to the arrival of Tedric—leaving
out the disintegration of Talia's control. "Sounds
grim," Skif said when they'd finished. "I'm surprised you didn't tear
each other's throats out—from boredom if nothing else. Of course, you were too
busy digging out to have time to be bored." Kris
inhaled his wine, and nearly choked to death trying to keep from laughing. Talia
covered her blushes by pounding his back— then took over the conversation with
a stern glance in his direction that almost sent him into another fit. "It
was a good thing we had the harp with us," she said, firmly restraining
the urge to set both her hands around his throat and strangle him. "Music
did a lot to keep us going. And we discovered something really strange, Skif.
Did you know that those stories the Northerners kept telling us about how
chiiras sing are true?" 270 MERCEDES
LACKEY "You've
been on circuit too long," he replied with a disbelieving grin. "She's
telling the truth, Skif," Kris asserted. "Chirras do sing—well, hum
is more like it. They do it intentionally, though, and I've heard worse
harmonics coming from human throats." "Can
you prove this? Otherwise I'm going to have a hard time convincing anyone else,
much less myself." "Are
you planning on spending the night with us?" "So
long as I'm not in the way." "You
can stay if you clean up dinner," Talia teased. "We'll cook for you,
but you'd better do your share of the work." "Anything
is better than having to eat my own cooking!" Skiff replied with a hearty
sigh. "When I was interning, Dirk absolutely refused to let me cook
anything after the first two meals I ruined. I don't blame him. I'm the only
person I know that can boil an egg for an hour, and have it turn out half
scorched and half raw." "Then
you'll get your demonstration after dinner." When
they had finished their evening meal, Talia called the chirras up from the lake
to the Waystation and gave the demonstration Skif had demanded. As the first
notes rose from the packbeasts' long throats, Skif s eyes widened in disbelief.
A quick look around, however, soon proved to him that there was no trickery
involved. After the first two songs he relaxed and admitted that he found the
wierd harmonics quite pleasant, if at first starding. When
they tired of singing, they began trading road-tales. Skif had by far the
largest stock of funny stories, since his assignment as courier put him in contact
with a wide variety of situations (in one case, he'd had to rescue his
contactee at the meeting point from an amorous and overly enthusiastic cow).
But in the midst of what Skiff had thought was one of his ARROWS
FLIGHT 271 more
amusing anecdotes, Talia suddenly excused herself and walked out into the night
with some haste. "Did
I say something wrong?" Skif said, bewildered, since she had been giving
every evidence of enjoying the story until then. "What's the matter with
her?" "I
have no more idea than you—" Kris started to say. Then he thought of
something. "Just
wait a moment." He closed his eyes and Mindcalled to Tantris. The answer
he got made him half-smile, although he spared a flash of pity for Talia. "She'll
be back in a little while," he told the puzzled Skif. "When she's
less—shall we say—uncomfortable." Skif
was annoyed. "Just what is that supposed to mean?" "Skif,
your Cymry's a mare." "That
was fairly obvious." "Rolan's
a stallion, a stallion that hasn't been near a Companion mare for several
months. Talia's Gift, in case you've forgotten, is Empathy; and unlike most of
us, she tells me that Rolan is always with her—'in the back of her head,' she
calls it." "What?"
Skif was bewildered; then realization dawned. "Oh-ho. I forgot a little
experiment we did. You can't shield out your Companion with a bond that tight,
can you?" "That's
it—not on that level, you can't. And with her Gift thrown in, it's even more .
. . overpowering. As I recall, you can barely Mindspeak, right? So you're
protected from Cymry's sporting. Needless to say, the same is not true for
Talia." SkiPs
chuckle was just a touch heartless. "Too bad your Tantris isn't a
mare." "I've
had that thought a time or two myself," Kris admitted, joining the
chuckle. Skif sobered abruptly. "Look—Kris, I know it's J 272 MERCEDES
LACKEY none of
my business, but are you and Talia—you know—?" "Damned
right it's none of your business," Kris said calmly. He'd been expecting
the question, assuming that Skif was only waiting to get him alone. "So
why are you asking?" "Kris,
it's part of my job to notice things. And I've noticed that while you aren't
cuddled up like courting doves, you're both a lot easier with each other than
I've ever seen either of you around anyone else." Skif paused, then
remained silent. "You
were obviously planning on saying more; go on." "I
owe Dirk. 1 owe him my life; by all rights he should have left us when Cymry
and I fell into that ravine while I was interning. He had no way of knowing we
were still alive, and the trail was washing out under him with every second he
stayed. But he didn't leave; he searched all through that downpour until he
found us, and if he hadn't, we wouldn't be here now. He's been acting damned
peculiar whenever anybody mentions Taiia. He was starting to act that way when
you two left, and it's gotten worse since then. Dear old
Tm-mdifferent-to-women' Dirk came close to tearing my heart out and feeding it
to me when I couldn't give him any more information about you two than
rumor—and I would bet my hope of the Havens that it wasn't over your welfare.
So if you two are more than friends, I want to know. Maybe I can break it to
him gently." "Oh,
Gods," Kris said weakly. "Oh Gods. I don't know, Skif—I mean, I know
how I feel, which is that I'm quite fond of her, and that's all; but I don't
know how she feels. I'm afraid to find out." "I
have the suspicion that there's a lot more going on here than you've told
me," Skif replied. "You want to make a full confession?" "Gods—I'd
better go back a few years—look, the reason Dirk pretends to be indifferent to
women is ARROW'S
FLIGHT 273 because
he was so badly hurt by one that he came within a hair of killing himself. It
was that bitch, Lady Naril; it was when we were first assigned to Court. She
wanted me, I wasn't having any. So she used Dirk to get at me." "Don't
tell me—she played the sweet innocent on him. She tried working that one on me,
but I'd had warning." "I
wish Dirk had. By the time I knew what was happening, it was too late. He was
flopping like a stranded fish. She used him to set up a meeting between us; and
at that point she handed me an ultimatum; either I became her lap-dog, or she
would make Dirk's life hell for him. Unfortunately she hadn't counted on the
fact that Dirk was jealous as well as devoted. He'd stayed within earshot, and
he heard the whole thing." "Good
Gods!" Skif couldn't manage more than that. "Verily."
Kris closed his eyes, trying to shut out the memory of how Dirk had looked when
he confronted them. It had been ghastly. Even his eyes had been dead. But what
had followed had been worse. Kris had made a hasty exit, and when he'd gone,
Naril had taken Dirk to pieces. If only he'd known, he'd never have left them
alone— "But—" "He
was shattered; absolutely shattered. I think it was only Ahrodie that kept him
from throwing himself in the river that night. Now you tell me he's acting
like—" "Like
a man with a lifebond, if you want to know the truth. He's close to being
obsessed." "Talia
was showing signs of the same thing, but now—I just don't know, Skif.
We—started sleeping together during that blizzard. There were a lot of other
complications that I can't go into, and now I don't know how she feels. But I'm
mortally afraid she's gotten fixated on me." 274 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 275 And he
was Dirk's best friend. Gods, Gods, it was happening all over again— "Well,
what are you going to do about it?" Skif asked. "I'm
going to break it off, that's what, before it gets too serious to be broken
off. If it is a lifebond, once the infatuation is nipped in the bud, she'll
swing back to Dirk like a compass needle. But for Lord's sake, don't let Dirk
know about any of this." Kris rubbed his forehead, feeling almost sick
with remorse. "No
fear of that—" Skif broke off what he was saying to nod significantly in
the direction of the door behind Kris. Talia
entered and resumed her abandoned seat, looking much cooler and more composed. "Better?"
Kris asked in a sympathetic undertone. "Much,"
she sighed, then faced Skif. "As for you, you troublemaker, I hope you're
prepared to cosset a pregnant Companion in another couple of months!" "Now
Talia," he chortled heartlessly, "Cymry's been at her games with
every stallion I've rendezvoused with, and nothing like that has happened
yet." "Every
other stallion wasn't Rolan," she said with a wry twist to her lips.
"Serves you right, too, for not warning me, you smug sadist. Or don't you
remember your history, and the extraordinary fertility of Grove
stallions—-particularly the Companion of the Queen's Own?" "Kernos'
Spear! I never once thought of that!" Both
Kris and Talia laughed at the expression on Skif s face. "I'd
be willing to bet a full wineskin that Cymry didn't think of that either,"
Kris added. "You
just won," Skif said, reaching behind him into his pile of belongings, and
throwing a leather bottle at the other Herald. "Oh, well—no harm without a
trace of good. This will keep me off the road, but it will also keep me from
having to do my own cooking.
I'd better start thinking of ways to make myself useful around the Court and
Collegium. Hope Teren likes being courier—he's the only one free at the moment,
now that the new babies are done with Orientation." He
settled into his bedroll with a much bemused expression. The
next day was involved in memorizing all Skif had to impart to them. When both
of them were letter-perfect, in the early afternoon, Skif packed up the few
bits he had of his own personal gear and supplies, and headed back the way he'd
come. "How
much did you tell him?" Talia asked, watching him depart. "Only
that we've had some complications I can't go into; I had to tell him, he
noticed you weren't looking too well. That's all." He gave her yet another
of those odd, sidelong glances. "Lord—poor
Elspeth, facing those damned rumor-mongers all by herself! Gods—I need to be
there— and I can't be there—" "That's
right. You can't. Going back now won't do you any good, and might do her
harm." "I
know, but it doesn't stop me from wanting to—" "Look
at it this way—with all the rumors that are bound to start about me and you,
maybe they'll forget about the others." "Oh,
Gods—" she blushed, "—have I no privacy?" "Not
as a Herald, you don't." They
walked back to the Station; Kris was brooding about something, Talia could see
it in the closed expression he wore, and sense it in the unhappy unease that
lurked below the surface of his thoughts. It was
an unease she shared. She couldn't tell exactly what was bothering him—except
that it had to do with her and with Dirk. She wondered if this was a sign that
her worst fear was true, that he had become far more involved with her than
he'd intended. 276 MERCEDES
LACKEY She
didn't want to hurt his feelings—but damn it all, it wasn't him she wanted! If
only he'd talk to her. .. . They
read their letter-packets in silence; Talia's was mostly brief notes, and not
very many of them. But the last letter had Talia very puzzled; it was enormous,
from the thickness of the packet, and yet she couldn't recognize the
handwriting on the outside. She frowned at it, recalling for a moment the evil
days when virulent and anonymous letters were a daily occurrence. Then she
steeled herself and broke open the seal, telling herself that there was no
reason why she shouldn't pitch it into the fire if it turned out to be of that
ilk. To her
shock and delight, it was from Dirk. The
actua! letter was not very long, and the phrasing was stilted and formal, yet
just to know that he'd written it gave her a delightfully shivery feeling. The
content was simple enough; he hoped that her close association with his partner
would lead to a closer friendship among the three of them, since they all
shared the common interest of music. It was in light of this common interest
that he had (he said) made bold to write her. He had been assigned to the
Sector that contained most of the Kingdom's papermills and printing houses and
was the headquarters of the Printer's and Engraver's Guild. This meant that
music and books that were difficult to obtain elsewhere were relatively common
there. He had bought himself a great deal of new music, and had thought that
Talia and Kris should have copies also. It was
what he hadn't said" that both excited and worried Talia. The letter was
so bland that it could have reflected either polite indifference to her, or
been an attempt to conceal the same sort of obsession that she was feeling. Still,
it was definitely odd for him to have sent the music manuscripts to Talia
instead of to Kris. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 277 Kris
coughed uneasily, and she looked up to meet his
eyes. "What's
the matter?" she asked. "Dirk's
letter," he replied, "I'm usually lucky to get a page, maybe two—but
this approaches perilously the size of an epic!" "That's
odd." "That's
an understatement. He rattles on about nothing like a granny-gossip at a Fair,
and it's what he doesn't write about that's the most interesting. He dances
verbally about doing his very best to avoid the subject of my internee. That's
not easy to do in a letter this size! He doesn't mention you until the very
end, and then only to say that he's sent you some music that we all might like
to try together some time. It's as if he's afraid to write your name for fear
he'll give something away." Talia
swallowed a lump that had suddenly appeared in her throat. "Here's
the music he sent," she replied, handing him the packet. "Bright
Havens, this must have cost him a fortune!" Kris began sorting it into two
piles, one for each of them—when something slipped out from amid the music
manuscripts. "Hm?
What's this?" He picked it up; it seemed to be a slim book bound in brown
leather. He leafed through it. "This—without
any doubt—is intended for you," he said soberly, handing it to her. It was
a book of ballads, among them, the long version of "Sun and Shadow." "How
do you know he didn't buy it for himself?" she asked doubtfully. "Or
you?" "Because
I happen to know he has two copies of that same book, both bound in blue, which
happens to be his favorite color. One he keeps at his room, the other travels
with him. And he knows I have the book, I'm the one that showed it to him. No,
it's no 278 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 279 accident
that this was among the manuscripts—and it's undoubtedly the reason why he sent
them to you instead of me." "But—" "Talia,
I have to talk to you. Seriously." Gods—here
it came. "I—"
he began, looking almost tortured. "Look, I like you a lot. I think you're
one of the sweetest ladies to wear Whites. And I probably should never have let
you get involved with me." "What?"
she said, unable for a moment to comprehend what he was trying to say. "Dirk
is worth twenty of me," he continued doggedly, "and if you stop to
think about it, you'll realize I'm right about that. You're seeing more in our
relationship than exists—than can exist. I just can't give you anything more
than friendship, Talia. And I can't let you ruin your life and Dirk's by
letting you go on thinking—" "Wait
just a damned minute here," she interrupted him. "You think that I'm
infatuated with )>ou?" He
looked surprised by her reaction. "Of course," he replied—in an
insultingly matter-of-fact tone. All the
tension that had been building up inside her came to a head. She'd been putting
up with his occasional air of superiority, the slight condescension he used
whenever later evidence proved that some decision of his that she'd opposed
turned out to be right. And there was an underlying resentment on her part at
his unvoiced attitude that getting her Gift under control was now largely a
matter of "will" and not the slow rebuilding of something that had
been shattered past recognition. It was
that "of course" that had been the spark to set the pyre alight. She
turned on him angrily, fists clenching unconsciously. "Of course? Just
because every other female falls languishing at your feet? You think I've no
mind of my own?" "Well,"
he replied, taken aback, and obviously intending to try to say something to
placate her. "You—you—"
she was at a total loss for words. All this time, she'd been wasting, worrying
about him, about hurting his feelings. And he had been blithely assuming that
just because she'd been sleeping with him, she was obviously going to be
fixated on him. Even now, he was still bewildered, perfect features blank with
perfect astonishment. She
pulled back her right arm, and landed a perfect punch right on the end of that
perfect chin. Kris
found himself staring up at her from the ground in front of the Station door,
with a jaw that felt dislocated. "You
conceited peacock! Humor me, will you? At least—" she snarled "—you
can't accuse me of misusing my Gift this time!" He
lifted one hand and felt along his jawline, a little dazed. "No. That was
a physical attack, all right . .." But by
the time he answered, she had turned on her heel and stalked off toward the
tiny lake, into the darkness. By the time he gathered his wits and came after
her, there was no sign of her beyond a little pile of clothing next to the
blankets they'd spread there earlier in the day. Now he
was beginning to become angry—after all, he hadn't meant to insult her!—and a
Tittle worried, as well. He began stripping off his own clothing to go in after
her. As he waded in through the shallows, he saw something moving across the
lake, coming toward him. Before he had any idea of what she intended, she
pulled both his legs out from beneath him and yanked him under the water.
Coughing and spluttering, he broke the surface again to see her bobbing just
out of reach. She was
laughing at him. "Bitch!"
he yelled, and dove furiously after her. 280 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 281 But
when he reached the place where she had been, she was gone, and the surface of
the pond was undisturbed. He peered around in the dim light, trying to locate
her, when hands grasping his ankles gave him just enough warning to hold his
breath this time. Once again he was pulled under, and once again she escaped
without his laying a finger on her. This
time when he surfaced and gasped for air, he did not immediately set out after her.
When he didn't move, she called mockingly, "That's not going to save you,
you know," and dove under, vanishing. He
waited for her to surface, ready to catch her before she'd fully located him.
When she didn't, he waited for currents that would tell him she was somewhere
nearby, beneath the water. Nothing
happened, and he began to be a little concerned. She'd been under an awfully
long time. He struck out for the spot where he'd last seen her. He had
no sooner begun to move when she erupted from the water immediately behind him.
Hands on his shoulders drove him under. He kicked free and came thrashing back
up, tcrfind her a bare fingerlength out of reach. "Infatuated
fool, am I? Stupid, am I? Then why can't you catch me?" He
kicked off after her, windmilling the surface energetically. She didn't seem to
be expending half the effort he was, yet she sped through the water with ease,
remaining out of reach with a laziness that galled. From time to time she'd
vanish altogether, and this was the signal that he'd better hold his breath,
because shortly after her disappearance he would find himself pushed or pulled
under the surface again. And no
matter how hard he tried, he couldn't catch her even then. Finally
he took refuge in the shallows, and waited for her
to follow. Now he was angry; humiliated, and angry, and ready to take her
apart. She
rose, dripping, out of the water just out of reach. He glared at her— And
suddenly realized he'd put himself in a worse position than before. He was
stark naked—he could probably pound her into the ground like a tent peg if he
could get his hands on her—but if she could get even the tiniest amount of
leverage to get a knee in— Oh, she
could hurt him. Anger,
frustration, and acute embarrassment chased each other around inside of him
until he was nearly vibrating with conflicting impulses—while she glared back,
just as angry as he was. Until something of his inner confusion communicated
itself to her—and she collapsed to her knees, laughing helplessly. His
anger ran away like water. He was
completely exhausted; when anger stopped giving him an energy boost, he felt
it. He turned his back on her, climbed out of the water, and dragged himself
onto the waiting blanket without bothering to reach for a towel or his
clothing. As he
lay face down, panting, he heard footsteps behind him. "No
more—please!" he groaned. "You've won; I've lost. I'm an idiot. And a
boor. Truce!" "You
give up too easily." Talia laughed deep in her throat, like a cat purring,
"And you deserved what you got. Keren's right; every so often you start to
think you can have everything your own way, and you ought to have a
lesson." She sat
down beside him, and he moved his head enough to see that she'd donned her
short undershift and was toweling her hair vigorously. "Where
did you ever learn to swim like that?" "Sherrill,"
she replied. "Oh, I've been able to swim since I was very little, but my
efforts were a lot like yours; loads of thrashing to little purpose. After the 282 MERCEDES
LACKEY time I
was dumped in the river, Alberich detailed Sherrill to teach me the efficient
way to swim, and how to keep from drowning under most conditions. Next winter
she gave me a 'final exam' by pushing me off the bridge fully clothed.
Obviously, I passed— though a pair of my boots is still probably residing at
the bottom of the river. Good thing I'd almost outgrown them." "Remind
me never to anger either of you while swimming." "Count
Keren in on that, too. She's just as good. Poor, abused Kris." He could
almost see her eyes sparkling with mischief. "Are you half-drowned?" "Three-quarters.
And completely worn out." "Forgive
me, but I doubt that." She ran a delicate finger along his spine. He
gritted his teeth and remained unmoving, trying his best to ignore the
shivery-pleasant sensations she was causing. When he didn't respond, except for
goose bumps, she simply laughed again, and began stroking him delicately from
neck to knees. He was
determined not to yield, and held himself as quiet as possible. "Stubborn,
hmm?" she chuckled. Before
he had any notion of what she intended, she began fondling him in such a way
that his original intentions went flying off in every direction. "Witch!"
he said fiercely, and flipped over so quickly that he managed to get her pinned
beneath him. "I
thought you were supposed to be worn out." "I'll
show you how worn out I am," he muttered, and began tormenting her in
return, playing teas-ingly with every part of her that he could reach. She
simply chuckled throatily and returned kind for kind. He held out as long as he
physically could—but the conclusion was foregone. It left them both dripping
with sweat, and drained as well as sated. "Lord
of Lights," he said when he was able to speak. "If that's an example
of what Rolan does to ARROW'S
FLIGHT 283 you,
I'm glad Tantris isn't a mare! By the time we finished this circuit, I'd be
worn to a shadow." Instead
of replying, she sighed, rose, and took the few steps to the water's edge,
plunging gracefully back into the pond. When
she returned, clean and dripping, she seemed to have regained a more tranquil
mood. Kris took a brief dip himself, and by the time he got back she was dry
again, wearing her sleeveless tunic against the cooling breeze. He dried
himself off and handed her the bottle Skif had left with them. She took a long
pull at it and gave it back. "So
it's Midsummer's Eve, hmm? We never celebrated Midsummer on the Holdings,"
she said, "And I was always at the Collegium during holidays after I was
Chosen." "Not
celebrate Midsummer? Why not?" he asked in surprise. "Because,
according to the Elders, it has no religious significance and is only a
frivolous and lewd excuse for licentiousness. That's a quote, by the way. What
do people usually do, Midsummer's Eve?" "Your
Elders have a little right on their side." He couldn't help smiling.
"On Midsummer's Eve at sunset, there are picnics in the woods. People
always begin in large groups, but by this time of night they've usually paired
off. The excuse to sleep out tonight is that you need to sleep in the forest in
order to find the freshest flowers in the morning. Believe it or not, when
morning arrives, people do manage to pick flowers." She
took a long pull on the bottle. "For their lady-loves?" She probably
hadn't meant it to sound cynical, but it did. Kris
was too tired to take offense. "No, for every female, no matter who.
There's no female of any age that lacks a garland or bouquet; those that have
no relatives get them from anyone that can claim the remotest acquaintance with
them. No one is left out, P 284 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 285 old or
young. Women who have been or are about to be mothers get baskets of fruit as
well. That day there are more picnics in the woods—family picnics, this time,
with a bit more decorum—and music and tales in the evening. Bards love it;
they're sure to leave with their pockets full of coin, their hair full of
flowers, and a young lady or gentleman on each arm. It's rather like a
Birthing-Day celebration, but on a bigger scale." "Holderfolk
don't celebrate Birthing-Days either— except to deliver a lecture on
responsibility," she said tonelessly. "When
is your Birthing-Day?" he asked curiously. "Midsummer's
Eve. Tonight. Which is no doubt why Fm such a demon-child, having had the bad
taste to be born on such a licentious night." "So
that's why you've been so off-color!" Kris snatched at the excuse to turn
her mood around. "You should have told me!" "Fm
being more than a bit of a bitch, aren't I? Fm sorry. First I get mad and knock
you down, then I make a fool out of you, knowing damn well that I could
probably swim rings around you, then I half-drown you, and I conclude by doing
my best to ruin the rest of the evening by being sour. I'm being rotten, and I
apologize." "You've
put up with my moods often enough. You're entitled to have off times
yourself." "Well
I think I've caught up for the next hundred years or so." "Fm
sorry I didn't talk to you about—you and me—before," he said, as the
bottle came and went. "I
wish you had. You've been leaving me in knots because / was afraid I'd
manipulated you into being fixated on me. I couldn't imagine why you'd be
making love to me unless it was because my Gift had warped you. I'm not exactly
the gods' gift to men. And I've been mostly a problem to you on this
trip." "Oh,
Gods—" He was at a complete loss for words for a
long time. Finally he handed her the bottle, and caught her hand when she moved
to take it. "Talia, you are a completely lovable and lovely person; I care
for you because you deserve it, not because your Gift manipulated me. Dirk may
well be lifebonded to you—and if that's true, I couldn't be happier. It would
satisfy one of my dearest wishes, that both of you should find partners who
deserve you. And if those partners should be each other— that would make me one
of the happiest people in this Kingdom." "I—"
she said hesitantly, "I don't know quite what to say." "Just
don't hit me again. That's one response to being at a loss for words I'd rather
you didn't repeat. Now, what else is bothering you?" "I'm
tired. I'm tired of having to struggle for what seems to come easily to
everyone else. I'm tired of having responsibility for the whole damned Kingdom
on my back. Fm tired of being alone, and fighting my battles alone." "Well—" "Look,
I know it has to be this way, but I don't have to smile and pretend I like it!
And last of all, I'm feeling rotten because nobody has ever given me a
Midsummer garland or a Birthing-Day present." "Makes
sense." The
bottle was more than half empty; they'd shared it equally, and Kris was
beginning to see things through a very delightful haze. "How
does it make sense?" she demanded irritably. "Because
if you could have what you wanted, you wouldn't be upset, but you can't so you
are." It seemed like a brilliant deduction to Kris, and he examined the
statement with delight. Talia
shook her head as she tried to reason it out. "That just doesn't come out
right, somehow," she complained. 286 MERCEDES
LACKEY "It
will after another drink." He passed her the bottle. When
the last drop of liquor was gone, so was her ill temper. "I—am
fairy—very—glad that we've got something to shleep— sleep on right here,"
Kris said carefully, "Ish—it's much nicer, you can see the stars, and I
can't walk anymore anyway." "Stars
are nice," she agreed. "Not moving's nicer." "See
the Wain?" "Who?" "The
Wain—those stars jusht over the big pine there. Five for the bed ln the axle,
two for th' wheels, three for th' tongue." "Wait
a minute," she peered at the stars, trying to get them to form up
properly, and was delighted when she finally did. "What's the rest of
'em?" "Right
next t' the Wain's the Hunter. There's the two little stars for his belt, two
more for 's shoulders, four for's legs—" He realized by her steady
breathing that she had fallen asleep. He
reached over for the second blanket and covered them both with it, without
disturbing his floating head much. He lay back, intending to think a litde—but
a little thinking was all he managed, since he, too, was soon drowsing. The
next morning he woke before she did, and remembered the conversation of the
night before. He moved very carefully, hoping that he wouldn't wake her, and on
being successful moved off into the woods on a private search. Talia
woke to an incredibly subtle perfume wreathing around her. She opened
sleep-blurred eyes to see where it was coming from, to discover that someone
had placed a bouquet by her head. "What?"
she said sleepily, trying to think why there should be flowers beside her.
"Who?" "A
joyous Midsummer to you, Herald Talia, and a ARROW'S
FLIGHT 287 wonderful
Birthing-Day as well," Kris said cheerfully from a point behind her.
"It's a pity that more of your friends couldn't deliver trifles, but
you'll have to admit that we are a bit far from most of them. I trust you'll
accept this one as a token of my profound apology for insulting you last night.
I didn't intend to." "Kris!"
she exclaimed, as she sat up and took up the flowers, breathing the exquisite
fragrance with hedonistic delight. "You didn't need to do this—" "Ah,
but I did. It wouldn't be Midsummer unless I gathered at least one bouquet.
Besides, that scent you're enjoying is supposed to be a sovereign remedy for
hangover." "Is
it?" she laughed. "I
have no idea," he admitted. "Part of my hangover always includes a
stopped-up nose. Look at the stems, why don't you?" Holding
the bouquet together was a silver ring, of a design of two hands clasped
together. It was the token a Herald only gave to the friends he loved best. "Kris—I
don't know what to say—" "Then
say 'Thank you, Kris, and I accept your apology.' " "Thank
you, love, and I do accept your apology—if you'll accept mine." "I
would be only too pleased to," he said, giving her a cheerful grin.
"Dear heart, I'd intended to give you that at Midwinter, but since you
said you'd never had a Birthing-Day gift, the opportunity was too good to pass
by. And it had damn well better fit— you wouldn't believe how hard it is to get
someone's ring size without them knowing! It goes on the right hand, little
bird; the left is reserved for another purpose." Talia
slipped it on, vowing to discover when Kris' Birthing-Day was so as to return
the gesture with 288 MERCEDES
LACKEY interest.
"It's perfect," she said as he sat down next to her with a very
pleased expression. She
threw her arms around him, completely happy for the first time in months, and
opened a tiny channel of rapport deliberately so that he could know what she
couldn't say in words. "Hoo—that's
as intoxicating as what we were drinking last night, little bird!" She
took the hint and closed the channel down again, but she could tell that he had
enjoyed the brief thrill. "What
are these flowers? I've never smelled anything so wonderful in my life! I think
I could live on the scent alone." "A
little deep-woods northern flower that only blooms at this time of year. It's
called 'Maiden's Hope.' I thought you might like it." "I
love it." She continued to breathe in the scent of the flowers with her
eyes half-shut. Kris thought with amusement that she looked rather like a young
cat in her first encounter with catmint, and told her so. "I
can't explain it—it smells like sunrise, like a perfect spring day, like the
heart's desire—" "How
about like breakfast?" he replied comically. "Breakfast?
Oh well, if that's your heart's desire—" She laughed at him and rose
smoothly to her feet. "It is my turn, so I guess I'd better reward you for
being so outrageously nice to me after I tried to murder you last night." "And
since you seem so enamored of those flowers, I'll see that you have some in
your wedding garland if I have to nurture them in a hothouse myself." "I
thought you had a black thumb." She removed one of the creamy white
blossoms and tucked it behind one ear. "For
you, little bird, my thumb will turn green. I ARROW'S
FLIGHT 289 never
break my promises if I can help it, and this is one I definitely intend to
keep." "Then
I'd better keep my promise of breakfast. Where will I get my flowers if I let
you wither away of starvation?" They
gathered their scattered belongings and returned arm-in-arm to the Waystation. Twelve Geese
honked overhead, heading south. It had been one of those rare, glorious golden
autumn days—far too lovely a day to spend indoors, so Talia and Kris had been
hearing petitions stationed behind a wooden trestle table set out in front of
the inn door. Their last petitioner had been a small boy leading a very large
plowhorse, and he had given them a message. Talia
scanned the letter, and handed it without comment to Kris. He read it in
silence, while the scruffy child who had brought it scuffed his feet uneasily
through the pile of golden leaves at his feet. Kris
returned the message to her, as she braced her arm on the rough wood of the
trestle table and leaned her chin on one hand. "How long ago did all this
happen?" she asked the boy. "
'Bout two days," he said, combing dark hair out of his eyes with his
fingers. "Feud, though, tha's been on years. Wouldn't be s'bad this time
'cept fer th' poisoned well. Tha's why granther sent me. Reckons in settlin'
now, 'for somebody gets killed." Talia
looked up at the position of the sun, and added figures in her head. "I'm
for riding out now," she said, finally. "Advice?" Kris
brushed more leaves off the table, and glanced back over his shoulder at the
inn behind them. "We 290 ARROWS
FLIGHT 291 don't
have any more petitions to be heard, but riding out to a place that isolated is
going to take the rest of the afternoon. We'll have to ride half the night to
make up the time, and we won't have the chance to reprovision until we get to
Knowles Crossing." Talia's
shields chose that moment to go down; she felt the boy's anxiety with enough
force to make her nauseous while she fought them back into place. She couldn't
manage more than half strength; could still feel the child fretting after they
were up. "I take it that means you think we should reprovision now, and
wait until tomorrow morning." "More
or less." "Well,
I don't agree; let's wrap things up here and move out." She
could feel his disapproval as they followed behind the child, perched like a
toy on the back of an enormous, thick-legged horse that was more used to
pulling a plow than being ridden. "You
let the boy manipulate you," he said, finally, as their mounts and chirras
kicked up swirls of leaves. "I
didn't. A poisoned well is a serious business out here. It indicates a
situation gone out of control. Are you willing to have deaths on your
conscience because we dallied a day, buying supplies?" She whispered, but
her tone was angry. He
shrugged. "My opinion doesn't matter. You are the one giving the
orders." She
seethed. They argued frequently these days— now and again it was something a
bit more violent than an argument. Kris often seemed to take a stand opposing
hers just for sheer obstinacy. "You
bastard," she said as the reason occurred to her. The boy looked back at
her, startled. She lowered her voice. "You are just opposing me to see if
1 can be manipulated, aren't you?" He
grinned, ruefully. "Sorry, love. It was part of my orders. Including
manufacturing emotions, since you can sense them. Face it, if anybody is going
to be 292 MERCEDES
LACKEY able to
warp your decisions, it would be your counselor. But now that you know—" "You
can stop giving me headaches," she replied tartly. "Now, let's get
down to business." "You
could have used your Gift back there," he said, as they settled at last
into their bed. It had taken a long, hard ride through the moonless, frosty
night to reach their Station once the feud had been settled. And it had taken a
lot of negotiating to get it settled. "I—I
still haven't figured out the ethics of it," she answered slowly.
"Having it, and having people's emotional states shoved in my face is bad
enough. I still don't really know when it's right to use it." "Damn.
What if it had been the only way to take care of the problem? Then what would
you have done?" Kris was worried about this; he was afraid that if an
emergency arose and the only way to deal with it was by exercising that Gift,
she might well freeze. And if it came to using it offensively, the likelihood
of her freezing was all the greater. "I
don't know." A long pause, as she settled her head on his shoulder.
"The only other people I know of with Empathy are Healers—and they are
never going to come into contact with the situations / have to deal with. Where
are the boundaries?" He
sighed, and held her; that being the only comfort he could offer her. "I
don't know either, little bird. I just don't know." Kris
leaned his aching head against the cold stone mantelpiece of the Station
fireplace. This had not been a good day. By now the rumors about her had spread
everywhere they went. Although this was not their first visit to Langenfield,
the villagers met Talia with unease and a little fear—and often wearing
evil-eye talismans; they were obviously uncomfortable with her judgment and her
abilities. ARROWS
FLIGHT 293 Talia
had given no impression of anything but confidence, intelligence, and
rock-steady trustworthiness, despite the fact that Kris knew that she had been
trembling inside from the moment she passed the village gates. This
situation had been one she'd had to face over and over again, every time they
entered a new town. He felt
Talia's hand touch his shoulder. "I'm the -one that should have the
headache," she said softly, "not you." "Dammit,
I wish you'd let me do something about this—" "What?
What can you do? Give them a lecture? I have to win their trust, and win it so
firmly that all their mistrust starts to look foolish in their own eyes." "I
could make it seem like I'm the one taking the lead." "Oh,
that's a great idea. Then all they'll do is wonder if I'm manipulating you like
a puppet," she retorted bitingly. "Then
I could back you up, dammit!" He met her anger with anger of his own. They
glared at each other like a pair of angry cats, until Talia broke the tension
by glancing down. Kris followed her glance to see that her hands were clenched
into tight fists. "Damn.
I was all set to give you another love-pat, wasn't I?" she asked,
chagrined. "This—Gods, between my shields being erratic, and having to
face this same situation over and over—I'm like a harpstring tuned too
high." Kris
forcibly relaxed his own tight muscles, including his fists. "I should
know better than to provoke you. Intellectually, I understand. You have to face
the battle and win it on your own. But emotionally— it's a strain on both of
us, and I can't stop wanting to help." "That's
why I love you, peacock," she said, putting both hands around his face and
kissing him. "And— 294 MERCEDES
LACKEY Havens!
Wait here—it's been such a rotten day, I totally forgot!" He
stared after her in puzzlement, as she dashed out the Station door and
returned, brushing snow from her shoulders. "I left this in a pocket on my
saddle so I wouldn't forget it—and then I go and forget it!" She pressed a
tiny, wrapped parcel in his hand. "Happy Birthing-Day." "How
did you—" He was surprised. "I—" "Unwrap
it, silly." She looked inordinately pleased with herself. It was
a ring, identical to the one he'd given her months ago. "I—" He
swallowed the lump that had appeared in his throat. "I don't deserve
this." "In
a pig's eye! You've earned it a dozen times, and more, even if you do tempt me
to kill you once a week." "Only
once a week?" He managed a grin to match hers. "You're
improving—or I am. Now I did remember to get a nice fresh pair of quail,
honeycake, and a very good bottle of wine." She slid her arms around his,
stood on tiptoe, and kissed the end of his nose. "Now, shall we make this
a proper Birthing-Day celebration, or not?" Now
came the stop she was dreading above all the others; Hevenbeck. There
hadn't been a more pleasant winter afternoon on this entire trip; cold,
crystal-clear air, sunlight so pure it seemed white, a cloudless and vibrant
blue sky above the leafless, white boughs of the grove of birch they were
passing through. Snow on the ground sparkled; the air felt so clean and crisp
it was almost like drinking chilled wine. Talia let the cheer of the day and of
the others elevate her own spirits; after all, there was no reason to think
that the people of Hevenbeck would be any worse than the rest of what she'd
dealt with. It was unlikely in the ARROWS
FLIGHT 295 extreme
that anyone except the old miser and his wife would remember her or that she'd
nearly let her own troubles distract her from what could have become a serious
situation. They
were several miles from Hevenbeck, when Talia was suddenly struck by a wall of
fear, pain, and rage. She reeled in her saddle, actually graying out as Kris
steadied her. She came back to herself feeling as if she'd been hit with a
warhammer. Kris
was still holding her, keeping her from falling off of Rolan's back.
"Kris—" she gasped, "FarSee to Hevenbeck—" Then it
was her turn to steady him, as he willed himself into deep trance. Her head
still rang with the fierce anguish of the emotions she'd encountered; she
breathed deeply of the crisp air to try and clear it, and clamped down her
shields—and for once, they actually worked, right up to full strength. It
hardly seemed as if he'd dropped into his trance before he was struggling up
out of it again, blinking his eyes in confusion. "Northern
raiders—" he said with difficulty, still fogged with trance, "—though
how they got past Sorrows—" "Damn!
And no help nearer than two days. How many?" "Fifteen,
maybe twenty." "Not
too many for us to handle, I don't think—" "I'd
hoped you would ride your internship without seeing any fighting," he said
hesitantly. She
jumped down off Rolan and headed for the chirras, her feet cruching in the snow.
"Well, we haven't got a choice; trouble's there, we'd better deal with
it." "Talia,
I'm just a Herald, but you're the only Queen's Own we've got—" "I
also shoot better than you do," she said crisply, sliding his sword and
dagger out of his pack and reaching over the chirra's furry back to hand them 296 MERCEDES
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FLIGHT 297 to him.
"If it'll make you feel any better, I promise not to close in for
hand-to-hand unless I have to. But you handed over responsibility, and unless
you overrule me, I say I'm going. Ten to fifteen aren't too many for both of
us—but they could be for one alone." "All
right." Kris began strapping his weapons on, while Talia led the chirras
off the road entirely. With snow creaking beneath her feet, she took them into
the heart of a tangled evergreen thicket out of view of the roadway. There she
tethered them lightly, the scent of bruised needles sharp in her nostrils, and
backed out, breaking the snow-cake to powder and brushing it clear of footprints
with a broken branch. She
laid a gloved hand lightly on Rolan's neck, as his breath steamed in the cold
air. "Tell them to stay there until dark, loverling," she murmured.
"If we're not back by then, they can pull themselves loose and head back to
the last village." Rolan
snorted, his breath puffing out to hang in front of his nose, and stared
fixedly at the thicket. "Ready?" He
tossed his head. "How
about you?" She looked to Kris, whose face was pale, and whose mouth was
set and grim. "We'd
better hurry. They were about to break down the gate." She
stripped the bridle bells from both sets of harness, and vaulted into the
saddle with a creaking of leather. "Let's do it." They
made no effort to come up quietly, just set both Companions to a full gallop
and hung on for dear life. White hills and black trees flashed past them; twice
the Companions vaulted over fallen tree-trunks that the villagers had not yet
cleared away from the roadbed. As they galloped up over the last hill, the sun
revealed the plight of the village in merciless detail; black of ash, red of
blood, orange of flame, all in high contrast against the trampled snow. The
raiders were just breaking through the palisade gate as they came galloping up.
Enormous iron axes swung high, impacting against the tough iron-oak of the gate
with hollow thuds. The noise the bandits were making covered the approach of
the two Heralds entirely, between the sound of the axes against the wood and
the war-cries they were shrieking. Three or four of their number lay dead
outside the palisade, blood soaking into the snow about them. The gate came
down just as the Heralds got into arrow-range—most of the rest surged through
the gates and into the village. There were still a handful of reivers outside;
to her relief, Talia saw nothing among them but hand-weapons—no bows of any
kind. Rolan
skidded to a halt, hooves sending up a shower of snow, as Talia pulled an arrow
from the quiver at her saddle-bow without looking, and nocked it. She aimed
along the shaft, feeling her own hands strangely calm and steady, and
shouted—her high, young voice carrying over the baritone growls of the raiders.
They turned; she found her target almost without thinking about it, a flash of
pale skin above a shaggy dark fur—and loosed. One of
the raiders took her arrow squarely in the throat; he clutched at it, crimson
blood welling round his fingers and spotting the snow at his feet. Then he
fell, and she was choosing a second target; there was no time to think, only to
let trained reflexes take over. Talia's
next two arrows bounced harmlessly off leather chest-armor and a battered
wooden shield; Kris had not stopped when she had, but had sent Tantris hurtling
past her, charging headlong into the gap where the gate had been while the
reivers were busy protecting themselves from her covering fire. That seemed to
decide the ones still left outside; they rushed her. She got
off one more shot, picking off her second 298 MERCEDES
LACKEY man
with a hit in his right eye. He went down; then Rolan warned her he was going
to move. She clamped her legs tight around his barrel, as he pivoted and
scrambled through the churned-up mud and snow along the palisade. When they
were still within arrow-range he pivoted again, hindquarters slewing sideways a
little, mane whipping her chest. She already had an arrow nocked; she sighted
again, and brought down a third with a solid hit in his chest where an armor
plate had fallen off and not been replaced. A puff
of breeze blew a cloud of acrid smoke over the palisade; she coughed and her
eyes watered as she groped for another arrow. The remaining three men came on,
howling, spittle flecking beards and lips, as her fingers found another shaft
in the rapidly emptying quiver. The
nearest, bundled in greasy bearskins, stopped and poised to throw his axe. That
was long enough for her to sight and loose. Her arrow took him in the throat,
and he flung the axe wildly, hitting only the palisade, as he collapsed. Then
Rolan charged the two that were left. Talia
clung with aching legs and arrow-hand while he reared to his full height and
smashed in the head of the first one in his path. It was a horrible sound, like
a melon splitting open; Talia felt the shock as Rolan's hooves connected, heard
the surprised little grunt the man made. Blood and fear and stale
grease-and-sweat smell stank in their nostrils. The last one was too close for
arrow shot. Talia felt at her belt for her throwing dagger, pulled it loose,
and cast it at short range. This one had worn no chest-armor at all. He stopped
short, his eyes surprised; his sword dropped from his hand and his free hand
felt at his chest. He looked down stupidly at the dagger protruding from his
ribs, then his eyes glazed over, and he fell. Talia
and Rolan raced for the gate; she glanced ARROW'S
FLIGHT 299 behind
her for possible foes and saw they were leaving red hoofprints behind them. She was
met with a chaos of burning buildings and screaming people; they thundered
inside, and skidded to a halt, confused for a moment by the fear and smoke.
Talia felt, more than saw, a fear-maddened ox charging down the single street;
saw out of the corner of her eye a child running straight into its path. Roian
responded to her unspoken signal; whirled with joint-wrenching suddenness and
leapt forward; she leaned out of the saddle, clinging to the saddle-bow, and
scooped up the child as Rolan shouldered the oncoming animal aside. Then he
leapt again, giving Talia the chance to deposit the baby on a doorstep. Kris
was nowhere to be seen—but neither were the raiders. Talia
vaulted off Rolan's back and began grabbing hysterical townspeople; without
stopping to think about it she began forcibly calming them with her Gift, and
organizing them into a fire brigade. All the while she fought the urge to flee
away, to somewhere dark and quiet, and be sick. She kept seeing those surprised
eyes—feeling the fear and pain just outside of her shields. But
there was no time to think—just to act. And pray that her shields stayed up—or
she had no idea of what might happen under such a load. Kris
appeared when the fires were almost out; face smudged with smoke, Whites
liberally splashed with blood, eyes dull. Tantris stumbled along beside him. Talia
left her fire-brigade to deal with what was left, just as cheering villagers
appeared in his wake, waving gore-encrusted scythes and mattocks. She limped to
his side; only now was she noticing she'd sprained her left ankle, and wrenched
her right shoulder when she'd caught up that child. He lifted his eyes to meet
hers and she saw reflected in them her own bleak heart-sickness. 300 MERCEDES
LACKEY She
took the bloody sword from his unresisting hand, fought down her own revulsion,
and touched his hand; hoping to give him the ease she could not yet feel. He
sighed, and swayed; and leaned against Tantris for support. Tantris was as
blood-speckled as Rolan, and had a shallow cut along one shoulder. "They
wouldn't surrender, and wouldn't run," he said, voice harsh from the smoke
and the shouting. "I don't know why. The Healer's dead; that poor mad girl
with him. There's about ten more dead and twice as many wounded. Thank Gods,
thank Gods, no children. That couple—burned to death trying to save their
damned chickens. Three houses burned out at the other end of the village—"
He stared at the townsfolk cheering and laughing and dancing awkwardly in the
bloody snow and churned-up mud. "They think the battle's over. Goddess,
it's just beginning—the ruined foodstores, the burned out houses, and the worst
of winter yet to come—" "It—it's
not like in the ballads, is it?" "No,"
he sighed, rubbing his eyes with a filthy hand. "It never is—and we have a
job to do." "Then
let's get the chirras back and set about it." Their
second stopover at Waymeet, by contrast, was almost embarrassing, Kris being
hailed as the village's hero for having remained behind to tend the ill while
Talia went for help. It became necessary to remind the grateful people of the
rules that governed a Herald's behavior on circuit, else they would have been
feasted at a different house every night, slept in the best beds in the
village, and come away with more gifts than the chirras could carry. That
stop went a long way toward raising their spirits. Both their spirits—for there
were no evil-eye talismans on display in Waymeet, and there were no ARROW'S
FLIGHT 301 odd
sidelong glances at Talia. And her shields were holding—were still holding— They
stopped with Tedric at Berrybay; he proved to be more than delighted to welcome
them, and a two-day rest with him—and a chance to cry out their heart-sickness
on the shoulder of someone who would truly understand—completed their cure. When
they were back to making normal conversation Tedric mentioned, with the
pleasure of a child in a new toy, that since their visit, the wandering Bards
had taken to stopping overnight with him, and that scarcely a month went by now
without at least one arriving on his doorstep. Kris
thought of his report, and smiled to himself. Maeven
Weatherwitch and her adopted child were thriving. Her ability to Foresee had
actually grown. The grateful people of Berrybay allocated a portion of their
harvests to her so that she need not take the chance of losing the Gift to
hunger or an accident in the fields. Best of all, the local priestess of Astera
was training her to become her own successor. And
Talia's shields continued to hold. They
rode through the early Spring leaves (scarcely more than buds) on their last
few stops for this circuit. Come Vernal Equinox, scarcely more than a month
away, they would turn their chirras over to the next Herald assigned to this
circuit and would be on their way back to the Collegium. It was
over—it was almost over. Talia felt her control was back, and more certain than
before. Her shields were back, and stronger. Now if only .. . If only
she could ease the aching doubt in her mind ... the rights and the wrongs. ... The
unanswered questions kept her up nights, staring into the darkness long after
Kris had fallen asleep at her side. For if she could not find an answer for
herself, how could she ever again dare 302 MERCEDES
LACKEY use the
Gift she'd been born with, except in utterly circumscribed
circumstances? Birds
newly-arrived from the south sang in the budding bushes all around them; trees
seemed to be covered with a mist of green. Talia was not expecting trouble, so
when Kris asked her to deliberately drop her shields and cast her senses ahead
to Westmark, what she encountered caught her completely off-guard. The force of
emotion she felt sent her slumping forward as if from a blow to the head. Kris
urged Tantris in close beside her and steadied her in the saddle as she shook
her head to clear it. "What
is it?" he asked anxiously. "It can't be—" "It's
not raiders, but it's bad. There's death, and there's going to be more unless I
get there fast," she said. "You bring on the chirras while I go
ahead." She
sent Rolan into his fastest gallop, leaving Kris and the packbeasts far behind.
They flashed through beams oif sunlight cutting between the trees like spirits
of winter come to invade the spring. She narrowed her eyes against the rush of
greening wind in her face, and the whipping of Rolan's mane, trying to sort out
the images she'd gotten. She had touched the terrible, mindless violence of a
mob, and two sources of fear—one, the fear of the hunted; the other, the fear
of the hopeless. Underneath it, like a thin stream of something vile, had
lurked a source of true and gloating evil. Even
above the pounding of Rolan's hooves, she heard the mob as she neared the outer
wall of Westmark, a sturdy and skilled piece of brick-layer's work, dull red
behind the pale mist of opening leaves. She heard the hair-raising growl long
before she saw the mob itself. She had no need to be in trance to feel the
turmoil of emotions, though by the grace of the Lady they hadn't yet found
their victim. She could almost taste his fear, but it wasn't the panic of the
caught creature yet. ARROWS
FLIGHT 303 As she
came within sight of the mob, a single figure burst from under cover of the
town gates and ran for his life straight toward her, his feet kicking up yellow
road-dust as he ran toward her. At the sight of him, the people hunting him
howled and plunged through the gates after him. He
seemed determined to cast himself under Rolan's hooves if it was necessary to
do so in order to reach her. With all the skill burned into both of them by Keren,
she and Rolan avoided him and wheeled around in a wrenchingly tight circle,
putting Rolan's bulk between the fugitive and his hunters. The
stranger seized the pommel of her saddle in a white-knuckled death-grip and
gasped: "Justice—" She
remained in the saddle, certain that if all else failed, she could have him up
behind her and be away before any of the mob could react. But at the sight of
her Companion and her unmistakable uniform, the crowd slowed, began muttering
uncertainly, and finally stopped several feet away. When
she spoke, a silence fell upon them. "Why do you hound this man to his
death?" she demanded, pitching her voice to be carrying and trumpet-clear. The
crowd before her, no longer the mindless mob now that their momentum was
broken, stirred uneasily. Finally one man stepped forward; by his fine dark
umber wool and linen clothing, prosperous, and no farmer. "That
trader's a murderer, Herald," he said. "A foreigner and a murderer.
We reckon on giving him I " 1 jj
O O his
due. "Nay—"
the man at her saddle panted, olive skin gone yellow-pale, large dark eyes wide
with fear. "Trader, yes, and foreign. But no murderer. This I swear." An
angry growl arose at his words. "Hold!"
she shouted, pitching her voice to command before they could regain their mob
unity. "It is no crime to be a foreigner, and the Queen's word 304 MERCEDES
LACKEY grants
Herald's justice to anyone within the bounds of this Kingdom who would claim
it. This man has claimed justice of me; I will give it to him. You who call him
a murderer—did any of you see him kill?" "The
body was in his wagon, and still warm!" the spokesman protested, rubbing
his mustache uneasily. "So?
And was the wagon then so secured that none could enter it but he? No? Then how
can you be certain that the body was not put there to turn suspicion upon this
one—already suspect because of being foreign?" The
dismay she felt told her that they had not considered the possibility. These
were not evil people— that thread of viciousness she had sensed was not coming
from one of them—they were only thoughtless, and easily led while in the
herd-mentality of the mob. Confronted with someone who made them think, they
lost their taste for blood. "This
will be done by the law, or not at all," she said firmly. "Let every
man, woman and child not bedridden assemble in the square. At this point there
is not one of you above suspicion. Let the body be brought to me there." The man
clinging to her pommel was slowly regaining his courage and his breath. "I
have heard of your kind, Lady Herald," he said, obviously nervous, by the
sweat only now beginning to bead his generous forehead; but equally obviously
willing to trust her. "I swear to you that I did not do this evil deed.
You may put me to the ordeal, if you will." "There
will be no 'ordeal,' and nothing to fear if you are truly innocent," Talia
told him quietly. "I do not know what you have heard of us, but I pledge
you that you shall have exactly what you asked of me—justice." The
trader walked beside her as she rode Rolan into the town gates, past the substantial
bulks of the brick houses, and on to the cobblestoned square. Exactly as she
had ordered, every ambulatory person ARROW'S
FLIGHT 305 in the
town that day was assembled there. They had left an empty space for her in the
middle, and in this space there lay a long, dark-draped bundle—plainly, the
victim. Talia
picked out two dozen robust-looking, mortar-bespeckled citizens, and
ascertained by questioning them under her Gift that they could not have had
anything whatsoever to do with the crime, as they had all been engaged in
moving the town wall outward. She set these men, armed with cudgels, to
guarding the exits to the square, since once the killer realized that he or she
was about to be uncovered, he might try for an escape and Talia did not intend
that he should succeed. Then
she removed the blanket. The young woman— girl, almost—had been beaten
severely, and her neck was broken. She had been pretty; her clothing was
well-made, not badly worn, but had been ripped in many places. Whoever was
guilty of this was brutal and violent, and nothing Talia sensed in the trader
corresponded to the kind of mind that could batter a young girl to death. The
crime did match that thread of evil she'd sensed before she confronted the mob,
however. "Who
was this child?" she asked, after giving her own nerves a moment to
steady. "My
stepdaughter." A square-jawed, bearded man stepped forward, his face hard,
his brown eyes unreadable. Talia noted that he did not address her with the
honorific "Herald." This might mean much, or nothing. "When
was she found, and by whom?" "About
an hour ago, Herald," a thin, graying woman in a floury apron spoke up.
"My boy found her. I'd sent him to the trader with the money for some
things I'd asked him to set aside for me." She pushed forward a lanky
blond lad of about fifteen with a sick expression and greenish face. "Tell
me what you found, as exactly as you can 306 MERCEDES
LACKEY remember
it," Talia ordered, pity making her move to shield him from view of the
body. "Ma,"
he gulped, eyes fixed on her face, "Ma, she sent me like she said, with
egg money for some fripperies she'd asked the trader to hold for her. When I
got to the wagon, the trader weren't there, but he's told us to go in and wait
for him times afore when he weren't there, so I did. It were kinda dark inside,
and I stumbled over something. I flung the door open to see what I were
a-fallin' over. It were Karli—" he swallowed hard, his face growing
greener. "I thought maybe she were sick, maybe drunk even, so I shook her.
But her head rolled so funny—" He scrubbed his hand against his tunic in
an unconscious effort to rid it of the contamination he'd felt from touching a
corpse. "Enough,"
Talia said gently. The poor child could never have seen violent death before,
much less touched it. She remembered how she had felt after the fight at
Hevenbeck, and tried to put her sympathy in her eyes. "Have any of you
ever seen this girl with the trader before?" Several
people had, volunteering that she'd had huddled, whispered conferences with
him, conferences that broke off if any came near. Feet scuffled uneasily on the
cobblestones as she continued her interrogations as thoroughly and patiently as
she could, and she could hear little whispers at the edge of the crowd. She
wished she could hear them clearly, for they might tell her a great deal. The man
who claimed to be the murdered girl's stepfather spat angrily and interrupted.
"We're wasting time! Anyone with eyes and ears knows the scum killed her!
He wanted her, no doubt, then killed her when she refused him—or if she did not
refuse, for fear she'd make him wed her after." Talia's
eyes narrowed. This hardly sounded like a grief-stricken parent. "/
am the instrument of the Queen's Justice, and it ARROW'S
FLIGHT 307 is I
and no one else who will decide when we are wasting time," she said
coldly. "Thus far I have seen nothing to implicate this man, beyond him
speaking with the girl. I am sure she spoke to many. Did she not speak daily
even to you? Does this make you a suspect?" Was it
her imagination, or did he pale a trifle? "Trader,
what say you?" "May
I speak all the truth?" he asked. Now
that was an odd way to answer. "Why need you ask?" "Because
I would not malign the dead before her kith and kin, but what I would say may
not meet with the approval of those here." "Wait
but a moment, trader," she answered, and closed her eyes. She took a
moment to pass deeply into trance and invoke once again the "Truth Spell."
There were two stages of this spell. The first stage could be cast by any
Herald, even those with only a touch of a Gift. It caused a glow, invisible to
the speaker, but quite apparent to anyone else, to form about the speaker's
head and shoulders. The second stage, (and one which required not just a Gift,
but a powerful "communication" Gift), could, when invoked, force the
speaker to tell only the truth, regardless of his intentions. Talia's Gift was
sufficient to enable her to bring both forms of the Truth Spell into play, and
she invoked them now. As the blue glow formed about the trader's head, she
could hear a sudden intake of breath, then sighs of relief. These people might
never have seen Truth Spell in action in their lives, but they knew what it
was, and they trusted in the power of the spell and the honesty of the wielder. "Tell
all the truth freely. You cannot hurt her in the Havens, and it is your own
life you are defending." "She
came to me several times, yes," he said. "She wished me to take her
with me when I left here." 308 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Why?"
Talia asked. "Because
she wished to escape—what and why she would not say. She said that no one would
believe her if she were to say what it was. She first offered me money, but I
dared not risk the damage to my trade if these people were made wroth. Still,
she persisted. In the end, she agreed that she would 'disappear' a day before I
was to leave so that it would seem I had naught to do with it, and as payment
she offered herself," he sighed. "It was wrong, surely, but I am only
flesh, and she was comely. It did not seem so evil that I should have pleasure
of her in return for an escape she desired so badly. I was to have met her on
the road outside of town tomorrow night, after dusk. After I spoke to her this
morning, I did not see her again alive." The
glow did not falter, nor did Talia feel the drain of energy that would have
indicated that the trader was being forced to tell the truth. The crowd, which
had been watching the glow intently, sighed again. Now it was obvious to
everyone that the trader could not be guilty—but then, who was? "Lies!
All lies!" The stepfather broke free of his neighbors and plunged forward
with the apparent intent of strangling the trader with his bare hands. Rolan
reared, ears laid back, and snapped at him, keeping him away, as Taiia herself
drew her dagger with a hiss of metal—and in the rush of his anger and—and yes,
fear—Talia Saw the scene his emotions carried and knew the truth. "Hold
him!" she ordered, and several strong men rushed him and pinioned his arms
against his sides, despite his struggles. Despite
what she knew, she could not accuse him solely on the basis of what she'd Seen.
But from the rest of what she'd picked up, she might not need to. "Karli's
sister—where is she?" Talia demanded, and many hands pushed the pale,
shrinking girl forward, ARROW'S
FLIGHT 309 a girl
of about fourteen, with a sweet, timid face and dark eyes and hair. "I
don't want to force you to speak," Talia told her in a soft voice no one
else could hear, "but I will if I have to. Will you tell us the truth
about this man who calls himself your father, and be free?" She had
cringed when shoved before Talia, but the Herald's kindly voice and the
reassurance she was trying to show revived her—and the last words, "be
free," seemed to set new courage in her. She stood up straighter, and
stared at her stepfather with hate. "Yes.
Yes!" Her voice was shrill with defiance. "I'll tell the truth. It
was him—our so-kind father—that Karli wanted to escape from! And why? Because
he has been making us lie with him every night since mother died!" The
accusing words rang in the sudden silence. The villagers stared at the girl and
her stepfather in stunned amazement. "Lying
slut!" the man screamed into the shocked quietude, struggling against the
hands that held him. "I
speak nothing but the truth!" she shouted back, her eyes dilated with
fear—and something more, something of anger and rage and shame. "When we
cried, when we fought, he beat us, then he raped us. Karli swore she'd escape
somehow, but he found out, said he'd teach her to mend her ways." "She
lies!" "Do
I? Then hold him for six months and wait," she laughed wildly. "You
all know he hasn't let a male older than five near me since last winter. I
would have gone with Karli, but how could I earn a copper, bulging with child?
His child—his bastard!" She broke down, sobbing hysterically, and one of
the women darted forward without hesitation to throw a shawl around her in a
protective maternal gesture, followed by others, who formed a comforting circle
around the girl, shielding her from the sight of her 310 MERCEDES
LACKEY ravisher
and glaring at him with hate-filled and disgusted eyes. Talia
confronted him, shaking with outrage, but somehow controlling her own
revulsion. "You went seeking the child, and found her with the trader. You
decided to confront her, teach her a lesson. You became angry when she defied
you, thinking herself safe because she was in a public place. You beat her, and
killed her, then hid her body in the trader's wagon, knowing he'd be blamed,
knowing that if he was killed before I arrived no one would ever look farther
for the real murderer." She was
transferring the Truth Spell to him even as she accused him, forcing him to
speak his real thoughts when next he opened his mouth. It
worked more thoroughly than she had imagined it would. "Yes—and why not?
Do I not feed and clothe them? Am I not their owner? They are mine, like their
slut of a mother! She died without giving me my money's worth, and by the Gods,
it is their duty to fill her place!" Talia
was nauseated by the mind behind those words. No punishment seemed adequate to
her to fit what he had done. An odd, disinterested corner of her weighed all
the facts—and coldly made a thought-out, logical decision. Her
revulsion and anger built until she could no longer contain it—and then it
found the outlet that matched the decision she'd come to. She forced rapport on
him—not the gentle sharing she had had with Kris, but a brutal, mental rape
such as she had not dreamed she was capable of. Then with a sidewise twist, she
pulled the stepdaughter into the union— and forced her memories into his mind,
forced him to be her through all her pain-filled and horrified experiences. He gave
a single gargling howl, stiffened, then dropped to his knees. His startled
captors released him, but he was in no shape to take advantage of the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 311 situation.
When they pulled him to his feet, his mouth hung slack and drooling, and there
was no trace of sanity left in his eyes. Talia had locked him into a
never-ending loop, as he re-lived, over and over, every waking moment that his
stepdaughter had spent as his victim. The
villagers moved away from her, one involuntary pace. Now
she'd just shown them what she could do. "Herald?"
one of the men said timidly, looking at her with respect tinged with fear. They
knew that she had punished him herself even if they had no idea how. "What
must we do with him?" "What
you piease," she said wearily, "and according to your own customs.
Whether he lives or dies, he has been dealt with." As they
took him away, one of the women caught her attention. "Herald, we have
heard you have a mind-magic. Is there aught you can do for this girl? And—I am
a midwife. Would you take it amiss if she should 'lose' the child? Though I am
not Gifted, I learned my craft among Healers. It can be done with no harm to
her." In for
a lamb—she thought, and nodded. The
people were dispersing, too shocked and appalled even to whisper among
themselves. Talia stumbled wearily to the knot of women, and knelt beside the
shivering, sobbing girl. She eased into trance, and probed as Kerithwyn had
taught her. She could "read," though she could not act on what she
read. It was as she had suspected; the girl was too young, the not-born
malformed. She transferred her attention to the girl's mind and began laying the
foundation for a healing that time and courage could complete without any
further intervention on Talia's part— imprinting as forcefully as she could
that none of this had been the girl's own fault. Lastly, she sent the girl into
a half-trance which would last for several 312 MERCEDES
LACKEY days,
during which the damage done to her body, at least, could be mended. She
stood, bone-weary, and faced the midwife. "What you suggest would happen
eventually, and it will be easier on her body if it were to happen now. She
hates what she bears as much as she hates the father, and the cleansing of her
body may bring some ease to her heart. And—tell her that she was never to blame
for this. Tell her until she believes it." The
midwife nodded without speaking, and she and the others led the half-aware girl
to her house. Only
the trader was left. His eyes brimmed with tears and gratitude; the proximity
of his clean, normal mind was infinitely comforting to Talia. After the running
sewer of the stepfather he seemed like a clear, sparkling stream. "Lady
Herald—" he faltered at last, "—my life is yours." "Then
take it, and do good with it, trader," she replied, burying her face in
Rolan's neck, feeling her Companion's gentle touch slowly cleansing her of contamination. The
trader's footsteps receded. And the
sound of three sets of hooves was approaching. They rang with the unmistakable
chime of Companion hooves on stone—and were accompanied by the soft sound of
gently-moving bridle bells. Oh,
Goddess, help me! she thought. No more—/ can't bear any more. But the
hooves continued to approach, and then she heard footsteps and felt hands take
her shoulders. She looked up. It was Kris. "I
saw the end, and I heard the rest from the midwife," he said quiedy.
"But—" "But—you
made a judgment and a punishment, Herald," said a strange voice, a female
voice, age-roughened, but strong. Talia looked beyond Kris to see two
unfamiliar faces; a woman about Keren's ARROW'S
FLIGHT 313 age,
but strongly and squarely-built, and a young man perhaps a year or two older
than Kris, with mouse-brown hair. Both wore the arrows of Special Messengers on
the sleeves of their Whites. Special
couriers—their Companions must have sensed the trouble, and brought them to
help. And
they were senior Heralds. "You did use your Gift on that man, did you
not?" the young man asked, somberly. "Yes,"
she replied, meeting their eyes. "I did. And I would do the same if the
circumstances warranted it." "Do
you judge that to be an ethical use of your Gift?" "Is
shooting raiders an ethical use of my hands?" she countered. "It's
part of me; it is totally in my control, it does not control me. I made a
reasoned and thought-out decision—if the man ever accepts his own guilt and the
fact that what he did was wrong, he'll break free of the compulsion I put on
him. Until then he will suffer exactly as he made his victims suffer. That
seemed to me to be far more in keeping with his crime than imprisoning or
executing him. So I judged, and meted out punishment; I stand by it—and I would
do it again." She
regarded them both with a certain defiance, and somewhat to her surprise, they
both nodded with a certain amount of satisfaction. "Then
I think that we are not needed here after all," said the woman.
"Clear roads to you, brother— sister—" They
wheeled their Companions and rode back out the gates without a single backward
glance. That
left only Kris. "You
did very well, Herald Talia," he said gently. She
stood wearily in the firm grasp of his hands, with his voice recalling her to
duty. She longed beyond telling to lay that duty on him, and she knew that if
she asked, he would take it. 314 MERCEDES
LACKEY But if
she laid it on anyone, she would be proving false to her calling. If this were
a normal circuit, there would be no Kris to take up the burden of her tasks
because she felt too worn, too sickened, too exhausted—and yes, too cowardly,
too cowardly to face all those people and prove again to them that their trust
was not misplaced, that a Herald could bring healing as well as punishment. And
they must be shown yet again that though a Herald had powers the guilty had to
fear, the innocent would never feel them. She must face the fear in those faces
and turn it back into trust. Kris could not do that for her, and if he were not
here, she would not even have the brief luxury of imagining that he could. She
sighed, and hearing the weariness, the pain in that sigh, Kris almost wished
that she'd ask for him to take over. His heart ached for her, but this was the
trial by fire that every Herald had to face, soon or late, and she most of all.
No matter what the personal cost, a Herald's duty must come first. She had
proven that her Gift was under her control. She had proven that she was willing
to accept the ethical and moral responsibilities that particular Gift laid upon
her. Now she must prove she had the emotional and mental strength to carry any
job she undertook to its end. She had
no choice, and neither did he. They had accepted this responsibility along with
every other aspect of becoming a Herald. But—he hurt for her. She
looked up, and must have seen his thoughts writ plainly in his eyes. "I'd
better locate the Town Council, the Mayor and the Clerk," she said,
pulling herself up straight and schooling her face into calm. "There's
work to do." As Kris
watched her walk away, head high, carriage confident, nothing reflecting her
inner agony, he felt a glow of pride. Now she
was truly a Herald. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 315 Kris
preceded her to the Waystation nearest the town and had all in readiness when
she rode up, shoulders slumped in exhaustion. The rules governing both of them
allowed him to do that much for her, at least. She sought their bed long before
he, and was apparently asleep by the time he joined her, but in the darkness he
felt her shaken with silent tears, and gathered her into his arms to weep
herself to sleep on his shoulder. The
second day she took reports and news, and began settling grievances. Kris
winced to see how warily the townsfolk regarded her, like some creature from
legend—powerful, and not necessarily to be trusted. It was well that this was
such a large place, for after her performance of the previous day, it might
have been difficult to find those willing to have her sit in judgment over
them—except that there was no choice in the matter here. Anyone with a
grievance to settle before a Herald in a place this size must register that
fact in writing; with the witness of their own words, there was not one of them
bold enough to deny his original will. Talia
had the right to choose the order of their judgments; normally she did not
exercise that right, but she chose otherwise this time. Wisely, she picked
those cases to settle that required tact, understanding, and gentleness to come
first. Gradually the townsfolk began to relax in her presence, began to lose
their fear of her. By the third day, they were laughing at the occasional wry
jest she inserted into her comments. By day's end, the fear was forgotten. By
the fourth day, when she took her leave of them, she had regained their trust
in Heralds, and more. Kris was so proud of her that he fairly shone with it as
they rode on to their next stop. The
gods must have agreed with him, for they were kind to Talia in this much, at
least. There were no further crises for the rest of the circuit. 316 MERCEDES
LACKEY "I
can't believe it's over." "You'd
better," Kris laughed, "since that's the rendezvous point ahead of
us. And unless my eyes are deceiving me—" "They're
not. That's a Companion grazing, and I think I see two mules." "So
tonight is the last we'll spend in a Waystation for a while. Sorry?" "That
I won't be eating your cooking or mine, or sleeping on straw? Be serious!" Kris
chuckled, and squinted against the light of the westering sun.
"Hark!" he intoned melodramatically. "Methinks our relief hath
heard the silver sound of our Companions' hooves." "Or
the rattling of your few thoughts in your empty head—" Talia kneed Rolan
and they galloped into the lead. "It's Griffon!" Sure
enough, it was Talia's year-mate, who had gotten into Whites at the same time,
but evidently finished his own internship early. She slid off Rolan's back after
both of them had pulled up beside him with a clattering of hooves and jangling
of bridle bells, and delivered a hearty kiss and embrace that sent him blushing
as red as ever she had. He greeted Kris with such obvious relief that both of
them were hard put to keep from chuckling at his bashfulness. "There's
an inn just a half hour down the road from here," he told them, stammering
a trifle. "They're expecting you. I thought you'd probably rather sleep
soft tonight, so when Farist caught the edges of Rolan's sending, I rode down
there and warned them." "Right,
and thanks!" Kris answered for both of them, touched by the unexpected
courtesy. "Seems like it's been forever since we had real beds." "Not
true," Talia interrupted him. "We had a real bed just a bit over four
months ago, with Tedric." "So
we did, but it still seems like forever. That ARROW'S
FLIGHT 317 reminds
me though; my first bit of advice to you is to always plan to stop at the
northernmost Resupply Station; it's right near Berrybay. Tedric is a good host,
loves having company, and his cooking—!" Kris rolled his eyes heavenward
in mock ecstacy. "And
my first bit of advice is to watch out for the other northernmost
surprise—" Briefly Talia outlined the plague's symptoms and described how
it had decimated Waymeet. They
took turns detailing some of the hazards and pitfalls of this circuit, then
turned their chirras and their remaining supplies over to him. Griffon helped
them load their own gear on his mules, and by the time it was dusk, he was well
settled into the Station and they were ready to be on their way. As the
lights of the inn shone through the darkness ahead of them, Kris sensed Talia's
involuntary shiver. "I
know," he told her softly. "Now it's over—and now is when it really
starts to get hard. But you're ready. Trust me, little bird, you are
ready." "You're
sure?" she replied in a small, doubtful voice. "As
sure as I've ever been of anything in my life. You've been ready since
Westmark. If you can handle that, you can handle anything; touchy nobles, Heirs
with adolescent traumas, heart-wounded Heralds—" "Mooncalf
Heralds with lifebonds?" she asked with a tinge of sarcasm. "Even
that. Especially that. You haven't let it get in the way of anything yet, and
you won't now. You're ready, dearheart. And if you dare make a liar out of
me—" "You'll
what?" "I'll—I'll
commission a Bard to write you into something scathing." "Great
Goddess!" she reeled in the saddle, clutch- 318 MERCEDES
LACKEY ing her
heart as if stabbed, her high spirits restored. "A death worse than
Fate!" "See
that you behave yourself then," he grinned. "Now come on—there's
dinner waiting, and soft feather beds; and after that—" "Yes,"
she sighed, staring down the road to the south. "Home. At last." DAW A
Superstar in the DAW Firmament! Mercedes
Lackey THE
LAST HERALD-MAGE Vanyel,
last of the legendary Herald-Mages of Valdemar, faces a desperate struggle to
master his wild talents—talents which, untrained, could endanger all
Valdemar.... (UE2352—$3.95)
(UE2401—$4.50) (UE2426—$4.50) D
MAGIC'S PAWN: Book 1 D MAGIC'S PROMISE: Book 2 G MAGIC'S PRICE: Book 3 VOWS
AND HONOR Tarma
and Kethry ... swordswoman and mage ... united by the will of the Goddess—and a
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womankind! n THE
OATHBOUND: Book 1 D OATHBREAKERS: Book 2 (UE2285—$3.50)
(UE2318—$3.95) THE
HERALDS OF VALDEMAR Chosen
by a mysterious equine Companion, young Talia is awakened to her special mind
powers. But will her powers, courage, and skill be enough to save the realm
from the sor-cerous doom that is reaching out to engulf it? D
ARROWS OF THE QUEEN: Book 1 n ARROW'S FLIGHT: Book 2 D ARROW'S FALL: Book 3 (UE2378—$3.95)
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at Haven (Capital) Prologue Long
ago—so long ago that the details of the conflict are lost and only the merest
legends remain—the world of Velgarth was wracked by sorcerous wars. The
population was decimated. The land quickly turned to wilderness and was given
over to the forest and the magically-engendered creatures that had been used to
fight those wars, while the people who remained flecv^p the eastern coastline,
there to resume their shattered lives. Humans are resilient creatures, however,
and it was not overlong before the population once again was on the increase,
and folk began to move westward again, building new kingdoms out of the
wilderness. One
such kingdom was Valdemar. Founded by the once-Baron Valdemar and those of his
people who had chosen exile with him rather than facing the wrath of a selfish
and cruel monarch, it lay on the very western-and-northernmost edge of the
civilized world. In part due to the nature of its founders, the monarchs of
Valdemar welcomed fugitives and fellow exiles, and the customs and habits of
its people had over the years become a polyglot patchwork. In point of fact,
the one rule by which the monarchs of Valdemar governed their people was
"There is no 'one, true way.'" 8 MERCEDES
LACKEY Governing
such an ill-assorted lot of subjects might have been impossible—had it not been
for the Heralds of Valdemar. The
Heralds served many functions; they were administrative overseers, dispensers
of justice, information gatherers, even temporary military advisors; answerable
only to the Monarch and their own circle of peers. Such a system might have
seemed ripe for abuse—it would have been, but for the Companions, To the
unknowing eye, a Companion would seem little more than an extraordinarily
graceful white horse. They were far more than that. Sent by some unknown power
or powers at the pleading of King Valdemar himself, it was the Companions who
chose new Heralds, forging between themselves and their Chosen a mind-to-mind
bond that only death could sever. While no one knew precisely how intelligent
they were, it was generally agreed that their capabilities were at least as
high as those of their human partners. Companions could (and did) Choose
irrespective of age and sex, although they tended to Choose youngsters just
entering adolescence, and more boys were Chosen than girlvThe one commonality
among the Chosen (other than a specific personality type; patient, unselfish,
responsible, and capable of heroic devotion to duty) was at least a trace of
psychic ability. Contact with a Companion and continued development of the bond
enhanced whatever latent paranormal capabilities lay within the Chosen, With
time, as these Gifts became better understood, ways were developed to train and
use them to the fullest extent to which the individual was capable. Gradually
the Gifts displaced in importance whatever knowledge of "true magic"
was left in Valdemar, until there was no record of how such magic had ever been
learned or used. So the
governing of Valdemar evolved; the Monarch, advised by his Council, made the
laws; the Heralds dispensed the laws and saw that they were ARROWSFUCHT 9 observed.
The Heralds themselves were nearly incapable of becoming corrupted or potential
abusers of their temporal power; the Chosen were by nature remarkably
self-sacrificing—their training only reinforced this. They had to be—there was
a better than even chance that a Herald would die in the line of duty. But they
were human for all of that; mostly young, mostly living on the edge of
danger—so, it was inevitable that outside of their duty they tended to be a bit
hedonistic and anything but chaste. And only seldom did a Herald form a tie
beyond that of brotherhood and the pleasures of the moment—perhaps because the
bond of brotherhood was so very strong, and because the Herald-Companion bond
left little room for any other permanent ties. For the most part, few of the
common or noble folk held this against them—knowing that, no matter how wanton
a Herald might be on leave, the moment he donned his snowy uniform he was
another creature altogether, for a Herald in Whites was a Herald on duty, and a
Herald on duty had no time for anything outside of that duty, least c-^ «U the
frivolity of his own pleasures. Still, there were those who held other opinions
... some of them in high places. Laws
laid down by the first King decreed that the Monarch himself must also be a
Herald. Thus it was ensured that the ruler of Valdemar could never be the kind
of tyrant who had caused the founders to flee their own homes. Second
in importance to the Monarch was the Herald known as the "King's (or
Queen's) Own." Chosen by a special Companion—one that never seemed to age
(though it was possible to kill him) and was always a stallion—the Queen's Own
held the special position of confidant and most trusted friend and advisor to
the ruler. Thus the Monarchs of Valdemar were assured that they would always
have at least one person about them who could be trusted and counted on at all
times. This tended to make for 10 MERCEDES
LACKEY stable
and confident rulers—and thus, a stable and dependable government For
generations it seemed that King Valdemar had planned his government perfectly.
But the best-laid plans are still capable of being circumvented by accident or
chance. In the
reign of King Sendar, the kingdom of Karse (that bordered Valdemar to the
south-east) hired a nomadic nation of mercenaries to attack Valdemar, In the
ensuing war, Sendar was killed, and his daughter, Selenay, assumed the throne,
herself having only recently completed her Herald's training. The Queen's Own,
an aged Herald called Talamir, was frequently confused and embarrassed at
having to advise a young, headstrong, and attractive female. As a result, Selenay
made an ill-advised marriage, one that nearly cost her both her throne and her
life. The
issue of that marriage, the Heir-presumptive, was a female child whom Selenay
called Elspeth. Elspeth came under the influence of the nurse Selenay's husband
had brought jf$?m his own land, and became an intractable, spo&Ј ijrat. It
became obvious that if things went on as they were tending, the girl would
never be Chosen, and thus could never inherit. This would leave Seienay with
two choices; marry again (with the attendant risks) and attempt to produce
another, more suitable Heir, or declare someone already Chosen and with the
proper bloodline to be Heir. Or, somehow, salvage the Heir-presumptive. Talamir
had a plan—one that it seemed had a good chance of success—which involved
sending the child into fosterage in a remote province, away from the influence
of the nurse and Court, with those who could be counted upon to take no
nonsense from her. Then
Talamir was murdered, throwing the situation into confusion again. His
Companion, Rolan, Chose a new Queen's Own—but instead of picking ARROWS
FLIGHT 11 an
adult or someone already a full Herald, Chose an adolescent girl named Talia. Talia
was of Holderkin—a puritanical Border group which did its best to discourage
knowledge of outsiders. Talia had no idea what it meant to have a Herald's
Companion accost her, and then (apparently) carry her off. Among her people,
females held very subordinate positions, and nonconformity was punished
immediately and harshly. And since Talia herself was ill-suited to a
subordinate role, she was constantly being told that everything she said or did
was wrong at best, and evil at worst. She was ill-prepared for the new world of
the Heralds and their Collegium. The one thing she did have experience in was
the handling and schooling of children, for she had been the teacher to her
Holding's younger members from the time she was nine. But she
managed—to find a true home among the Heralds, and to civilize the Brat. Now
the year-and-a-half of Field duty awaited her—and a trial she never dreamed of
having to pass. One Thwack! The
flat of Alberich's practice-blade cracked against Talia's ill-guarded side. She
hadn't seen the blow coming, she truly hadn't. That had hurt, and she would lay
money on having a bruise despite the padded jerkin that had absorbed most of
the blow. The practice blades may have only been wood, but Alberich tended to
wield them{all the harder for that. "Faugh!"
he spat in disgust, and came at her again before she had recovered from the
last blow. This time he connected with her knife-arm, right at the elbow. She
yelped, the arm went numb, and she lost her blade entirely. The
hawklike eyes glared at her with no trace of pity, and the scar-seamed face was
a demonic mask as he passed judgment on her performance. He was
at least in his mid-forties, if not older, but he hadn't lost a fraction of his
edge or agility in the five years Talia had known him. She was panting with
exertion—he might as well have been taking a leisurely stroll. His well-worn,
dark leathers (he was the only working Herald in Talia's experience who never
wore Whites) showed not so much as a tiny sweat stain. The afternoon sun
pouring down on all 12 /ARROW'S
FLIGHT 13 of them
had made him look as thin and insubstantial as a shadow. And he had been just
as hard to catch. "A
pity it is that Skif is not here to see you. Die of lau^mer he surely
would!" he growled. "Eighteen you are—one would think you eight.
Slow, clumsy, and stupid! Paugh! Had I been a real assassin—" "I
would have died of fright before you touched me." "Now
it is jokes! This is a battle-practice—not a comedy. If I wish amusement, I
shall find a jester. Once again—and correctly, this time." Once
she was ready to drop with exhaustion, he turned his attention to Elspeth. Now
that both of them deserved special tutelage he had changed the hour of their
lessons to one shared by no one else, so that he could give his full devotion
to the Queen's Own and Heir-presumptive. Rather than being held on the training
grounds outside, the two had their drills in the salle. This was a barn-like
building with a sanded wooden floor, lined with mirrors, with high derestory
windows to admit the maximum amount of light. Lessons were always held here
during inclement weather, but it was too small for mass practices and classes
for the combined Heraldic-Bardic-Healer's Collegium students. Only those
"privileged" to receive private lessons with Alberich took those lessons
habitually in the salle. Now
that his attention was off her, Talia found her thoughts drifting back to her
surprise of this afternoon. Talia
tugged and wriggled impatiently until she had succeeded in getting the supple,
soft, white leather tunic over her head. Pulling it into place over the White
raime shirt and leather breeches, she finally turned to admire the effect in
the polished metal mirror in front of her. "Havens!"
she laughed, not a little surprised, "Why don't the Grays ever look like
this?" 14 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Because,"
a harsh voice drawled from the next room, "You youngsters would have your
minds on anything but your studies if they did!" Talia
laughed, turned back to the mirror, and preened. Today was the anniversary of
her first class at Herald's Collegium—a fact that she'd forgotten until Keren
and Sherrill (senior Heralds both, and instructors at the Collegium as well as
Talia's longtime friends) arrived at her room with their arms full of white
uniforms and wearing broad grins. For the
Heraldic Circle had considered—for less than five minutes, all told—had
voted—and had passed Talia into full Herald status with the rest of her
year-mates—no surprise to anyone in the Collegium, though by tradition the
trainees were not to know when they were to be evaluated until the evaluation
had already been made and they had passed. Keren
and Sherrill had claimed the right to give her the good news. They
didn't even give her a chance to think, either— just appeared at her door,
swept her up one on either side, and herded her down the long, dark
wood-paneled hall of the Collegium dormitory, down the stairs to the first
floor, and out the double doors at the
end. From
there they had taken her off to the Seneschal's office to claim her new
quarters. Now she stood in the bedroom of the suite she'd chosen, marveling at
her reflection. "I
look like a real grownup for a change!" "That
is the general idea, Sherrill laughed
richly. She
cocked her head to one side, regarding the tiny, slender figure in the mirror.
Her unruly red-brown curls were as tousled as ever, but somehow gave an
impression now of being tumbled the way they were on purpose. The huge,
deep-brown eyes that had been utterly guileless seemed somehow wiser; the
heart-shaped face no longer so childlike. And all that change wrought by the
magic of a new uniform! ARROWS
FLIGHT 15 "Talia,
your head is going to swell like a spongetoad in rainy season if you're not
careful." Keren interrupted her train of thought a second time. By craning
her neck to peer around the doorframe Talia could see the riding instructor
grinning sardonically from where she was sprawled on the wooden-backed,
red-cushioned couch in the other room. "Don't
you know what the Book of the One says?" Sherrill added piously over her
mate's shoulder. ** 'Great pride shall earn equal humiliation.' " Talia
left her bedroom to join them. They were lounging comfortably in her
sparsely-furnished outer room, sharing the lone couch. "I
suppose you're both going to claim that you never spent so much as a minute in
front of the mirror when you first got^our Whites," Talia taunted,
strolling toward them with her hands clasped behind her back. "Who?
Me?" Sherrill replied in artificial innocence, lifting an airy hand and
batting thick black lashes over wide hazel eyes. "And feed my vanity?
W-e-1-1, maybe a little" "I
happen to know for a fact that you spent half the day there. I'm told you were
trying every hairstyle you could twist that black mane of yours into, seeing
which one went best with the new outfits," Keren countered dryly, running
her fingers through her own close-cropped, graying brown hair. Sherrill
just grinned and crossed her legs elegantly, leaning back into the cushions.
"Since I can't claim equal knowledge of what you did on that august
occasion, that's hardly a fair blow." **Oh, I
did my share of mirror-gazing," Keren admitted with mock reluctance.
"When you're as scrawny as a sapling and flat as a boy, it's rather
astonishing to see yourself in something that actually flatters you. I swear I
don't know how they do it— .it's the same pattern for everybody, and not that
dissimilar from the Student Grays—" 16 MERCEDES
LACKEY "But
Lord, the difference!" Sheri concluded for her. "I don't know of
anybody who doesn't look fantastic in their Whites. Even Dirk manages to look
presentable. Rumpled, but presentable." "Well,
what do you think of me?" Talia asked, turning on her toes in front of
them, and grinning impishly into Keren's eyes. "What
do I think? That you look fabulous, you young demon. Keep fishing for
compliments, though, and I'll likely dump you in the horse trough. Have they
told you anything about your internship?" Talia
shook her head, and clasped her hands behind her again. "No. All they said
was that the Herald they want to pair me with is in the field, and they won't
tell me who it is." "That's
pretty much to be expected. They don't want you to have time to think of things
to impress him with," Sherrill replied. Suddenly her eyes sparkled with
mischief. "Oh, but I can think of one prospect that would give Nerrissa a
litter of kittens!" "Who?"
Talia asked, head to one side. "Kris
and Dirk are due back in the next few weeks, and Dirk got the last greenie—as
you should know, since it was Skif—so it's Kris' turn next! Nessa would
die!" "Sheri,
it's only my internship assignment." "A
year and a half Sector-riding, most of it spent alone together, and you say
it's only an assignment? Talia, you must have ice water for blood! Do you have
any notion of the number of hours Nessa—and half the females of the Circle, for
that matter—spend on their knees praying for an assignment like that? Are you
sure you don't have leanings our way?" Talia
chuckled, and wrinkled her nose at them. "Quite sure, darlings. Just what
is Kris' attraction for Nessa, anyway? She's got most of the males of the
Circle panting at her heels as it is," "The
lure of the unattainable, or so I would surmise," Keren supplied, lids
half-closed lazily with ARROWS
FLIGHT 17 only a
glint of brown iris showing. "He hasn't taken a vow of chastity, but he's
so circumspect about his dalliances you'd never know it. It drives Nessa wild,
and the harder she chases, the faster he runs. She's as caught up now by the
chase as by the face." "Well,
she can chase him all she wants. / am not at all impressed by Kris' handsome
face," Talia replied firmly. "Or
the gorgeous body—?" interjected Sherrill. "Or
the gorgeous body. Nessa can have all the gorgeous bodies in the Circle, for
all I care. Holderkin men are handsome specimens, and I can do without diem—my
father could have given Kris stiff competition in his younger days, and I've
told you what kind of a petty tyrant he was. And my late-but-not-Uunented
brother Justus was actually handsomer, if you favor blonds, and he was the
foulest person I've ever known. I'd rather have a good heart and plain
packaging." "Yes,
but Kris is a Herald—" Sherrill pointed out, tapping one long finger on
her knee for emphasis. "That guarantees the good heart without having to
settle for a homely exterior. No handsome, smiling bastards in our ranks—" "Sheri,
this is all sheer speculation. Until I find out who I'm interning with, I
refuse to worry about the subject," Talia replied firmly. "You
are no fun at all." "I
never said I was." "Hmm.
Dirk's interning that scalawag Skif—" Keren said thoughtfully. "You
and Skif were very thick there for a while. In fact, as I recall, you and he
had a rumor or two floating about your heads. Is that why you aren't interested
in Dirk's partner?" "Maybe,"
Talia smiled enigmatically. The fact that their "romance" had been
entirely without any result was Skif s secret—and hers. The streak of ill-luck
and accident that had plagued their meetings had not had any effect on tneir
friendship: except that 18 MERCEDES
LACKEY they
had never managed to be more than just that— friends. Oddly enough, though,
except for a brief period of anxiety when word had come that Skif had been hurt
during his first three months in the field, Talia had thought less of Skif, and
more of his counselor. To her own amazement—and for no reason, logical or
fanciful that she could think of—when her thoughts strayed in the direction of
the former thief and his internship assignment, it was in Dirk's direction that
they tended to wander. This was annoying; she'd met the man all of three times
in her life, and had never been in his company for more than an hour or two at
most. Yet, that homely face and those wonderful blue eyes kept lingering
stubbornly in her thoughts. It did not make sense. She
shook her head to free it of those fanciful images. She had little enough time,
and had none to spare in daydreams. "Well,
this little wardrobe change of yours ought to surprise little Elspeth,"
Sherrill said, changing the subject. "Oh,
Lady Bright—" Talia sat down with a thump on one of her cushions, joy
extinguished. It almost seemed to her at that moment that the bright sun-rays
pouring through her windows had dimmed. "Poor
Elspeth—" "Something up?" Keren asked, one eyebrow rising. "Just
the usual." "What's
usual? You know I don't get around the Court." "Intrigue
rising beyond gossip. She's almost fourteen and still not Chosen; there's
muttering in the Court that she's still the Brat under the skin and she'll
never be Chosen. In Council meetings one or more of the Councilors is usually
trying to pressure Selenay into naming an Heir—'pro tern,' as they put it—"
"Who?" Sherrill asked in alarm, sitting straight up. "Who's
stirring up the water?" ARROWS
FLIGHT 19 "You
know I can't tell you that! Anyway it isn't just those particular Councilors;
it's more than half of the Court. Elspeth doesn't say much, but it's got her
very depressed, poor baby. Their timing couldn't be worse. She's already moody
enough with the normal adolescent woes, and this has got her in near-tears on a
regular basis. When I'm not getting my shoulder soggy, I keep finding her at
Companion's Field whenever she's free, sort of lurking—" "Hoping
any minute to be Chosen. Gods, no wonder she's wearing a long face whenever I
see her. What's Rolan got to say about this?" "Be
damned if 1 know!" Talia gifted Keren with a look of exasperation. 'Tow
know he doesn't Mindspeak me in words." "Sorry,"
Keren winced, "I keep forgetting." "He's
worried, but it could be as much over the machinations and power-maneuverings
at Court as anything else. The current candidates are Jeri, Kemoc, and your
oh-so-lovely Kris." "Wonderful
people in and of themselves," Keren observed, "But with some
not-so-wonderful relatives lurking in the family trees. One would think Kris'
uncle Lord Orthallen would have his hands full enough as chief Councilor
without wanting to be the Heir's uncle—" "That
man will never have enough power to satisfy him," Talia snapped bitterly. Keren
raised an eyebrow at the outburst, and continued. "Kemoc's horde of lazy
cousins would swarm ihe Court, looking for sinecures—and Kemoc's such a soft
touch he'd try to manage it. And Jeri—Lady Bright! Her mother!" "We'd
have a battle royal every day between Jeri and Lady Indra over how Jeri's
Council votes should go. I wish her husband would lock her away. Or buy a gag
for her." "Amen.
Pity none of them come without baggage. 20 MERCEDES
LACKEY Not my
idea of a fun situation. And poor catling caught in the middle." Talia
sighed in agreement. "Speaking of no fun, I'd better scramble. Alberich
informed me in no uncertain terms that my new status does not exempt me from
his special lessons. I have the sinking feeling that he intends to slap my
inflated pride down to pre-student levels, and probably with the flat of his
blade." "Can
I watch?" Keren asked wickedly. "Why
not? Elspeth's always there, and there's nothing like being worse at something
than a thirteen-year-old girl to really deflate your opinions of yourself.
Well, that ought to reinflate her self-esteem a bit. Ah, me, it's a pity to
have to get these lovely new clothes all over dirt and sweat—" As they
descended the cool darkness of the spiral-ing staircase, Keren and Sherrill in
the lead with their arms casually linked, Talia reflected that bringing them
together was probably the best thing she'd ever done. The bond between them was
easily as strong as the one Keren had shared with Visa—and had Ylsa lived, they
might very well have formed one of the relatively rare, permanent threesomes.
There was no doubt that they were very good for each other. Poor Ylsa ... Talia's
chosen living quarters were at the very top of her tower at the end of the
Herald's wing. The suites in the four towers were seldom used—probably because
they were more than a bit inconvenient. The walk up and down the darkened stone
staircase was a long one, but she felt that the view (and the privacy) were
worth it. But the
trudge was likely to bring complaints from Talia's friends—and Keren voiced the
first of many. "I'll
tell you one thing, my fine young Herald," Keren grumbled a little when
they finally reached the ground floor. "Visiting with you on a regular ARROWS
FLIGHT 21 basis
is going to keep your friends in shape. Why you chose to roost with the birds
is beyond me." "Do
you truly want to know why I chose that particular suite?" Talia asked
with a grin. "Say
on." "Pray
remember, if you will, what my Gift is—I'm an empath, not a mindspeaker. Either
of you remember who my neighbor was?" "Mm.
Destria, wasn't it?" Sherrill replied after thought. "Turned out to
be a good Field Herald, despite her—ah—" "Randiness,"
Keren supplied with a hint of grin. "That girl! Anything in Grays or
Whites, so long as it was male! Havens, when did she ever have time to
study?" "Then
you both know about her habit of 'entertaining' with great frequency
and—um—enthusiasm. What I couldn't shield I could most certainly hear! Between
her nocturnal activities and Rolan's, I got a quite thorough education, let me
assure you! That's when I swore my privacy was worth any inconvenience. I don't
want to eavesdrop on anyone else's fun ever again, and I certainly don't want
anyone eavesdropping on mine!" "Talia,
I don't believe a word of it," Sherrill giggled. "What could you
possibly have to fear from eavesdroppers? You're practically a temple virgin
compared with the rest of us!" "You
ought to believe it, since it's all true. Well, here's where we part company.
Wish me luck—I'm going to need it!" Pity
that they hadn't wished her luck—she might have gotten a few less bruises.
Talia fanned herself with a towel while she paced back and forth to keep from
stiffening up, and watched Elspeth with un-: forced enjoyment. The girl was a
pleasure to observe, moving through the sparring bout with the grace and
agility of a dancer, and making it all seem 22 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FUGHT 23 effortless
and easy. She was much better even than Jeri had been at her age, but then she
had had the benefits of four years of Alberich's remorseless training; Jeri had
only had the finest arms-tutors money could obtain. No amount of money could
buy Alberich's expertise. She ran
through the assigned exercises with careless grace. Then, at the end of a bout,
she unexpectedly executed one of the spin-and-tumbling-rolls that Alberich had
been trying to train into Talia—a move that was not one Alberich had been
teaching her. And she scored a kill on him. He
stared at her in startled amazement for a long moment, as both Talia and
Elspeth waited breathlessly for the roar of disapproval they were certain would
come. "Good!"
he said at last, as Elspeth's jaw dropped in surprise. "Very good!"
Then, lest she dare to grow careless because of the compliment, "But next
time must be better." Despite
this unexpected kudo, Talia found when she brought Elspeth a damp towel at the
conclusion of the lesson that the girl was subdued and depressed. "What's
wrong, catling?" she asked, seeing how like her mother Elspeth was,
despite the brown hair and eyes rather than Selenay's blond and blue. At this
moment the shadow on her face matched the one the Queen wore when troubled. She
knew the answer already, but it would do the girl good to talk it out one more
time. "I
can't do anything right," Elspeth replied unhappily, "I'll never be
as good as you, no matter how hard I try." "You
can't be serious—" "No,
really, look at you! You spent half your life on a backwoods dirt-farm; now you
can't be told from Heralds that were highborn. You got good marks in your
classes; I'm abysmal in all of mine. And I can't even manage to be
Chosen...." "I
suspect it's the last that's eating at you the most." Elspeth
nodded, the corners of her mouth drooping. "Catling,
we're two different people with wildly different abilities and interests. In
the five years I've been here I've never once managed to earn a 'good' from
Alberich, much less a 'very good'! I'm still so stiff when I dance that they
say it's like dancing with a broom." "Oh,
huzzah, I'm a marvel of coordination. I can kill anything on two legs. That's a
terrific qualification for being Heir." "Catling,
you've got the qualifications. Look, if I Uvc to be two hundred, I will never
understand politics. Think back a minute. At the last Council meeting, I could
sense that Lord Cariodoc was irritated, but you were the one who not only knew
why and by whom, but managed to placate the old buzzard before he could start
an incident. And your teachers assure me that though you may not be the best in
your classes, you aren't the worst by any stretch of the imagination. As for
being Chosen, catling, thirteen is only the average age for that. Think of
Jadus—he was sixteen and had been at Bardic for three years! Or Teren, for
Lady's sake—a man grown and with two children! Look, it's probably only that
your Companion just hasn't been old enough, and you know very well they don't
Choose until they're ten or better." Elspeth's
mood seemed to be lightening a bit. "Come
on, love, cheer up, and we'll go see Rolan. If riding him will bring some sun
to your day, I'm Mire hell let you." Elspeth's
long face brightened considerably. She loved
riding as much as dancing and swordwork. It wasn't
often that a Companion would consent to bear
anyone but his Chosen; Rolan had done so for Elspeth in the past, and she obviously
counted those moments
among the finest in her life. It wasn't the same as
having her own Companion, but it was at 24 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 25 least a
little like it. Together they left the training salle, and headed for the
wooded enclosure that was home to the Companions at the Collegium (partnered,
unpartnered, and foals) and that also held the Grove, that place where the
Companions had first appeared hundreds of years ago. And
although she took pains not to show it, Talia was profoundly worried. This
situation with Elspeth's status hanging fire could not be maintained for much
longer. The strain was telling on the Queen, the girl, and the Heraldic Circle. But
Talia had no more notion of how to solve the problem than anyone else. Talia
woke with a start, momentarily confused by the strange feel and sounds of the
room in which she found herself. She couldn't see a blessed thing, and over her
head was a rattling— Then
she remembered where she was; and that the rattling was the shutter of the
window just over the head of her bed. She'd latched it open, and it was
rattling in the high wind that must have begun some time during the night. She
turned over and levered herself into a kneeling position on her pillow, peering
out into the darkness. She still couldn't see much; dark humps of foliage
against barely-lighter grass. The moon was less than half full, all the
buildings were dark, and clouds racing along in the wind obscured the stars and
the moonlight. The wind s me lied of dawn though, and sunrise couldn't be far
off. Talia
shivered in the chill, as wind whipped at her; she was about to crawl back
under her warm blankets when she saw something below her. A
person—a small person—hardly more than a dim figure moving beyond the fence of
Companion's Field, visible only because it was wearing something light-colored. ; And
she knew with sudden surety that the one below was Elspeth. She
slid out of bed, wincing at the cold wood under her feet, and grabbed clothing
by feel, not waiting to stop to light a candle. Confused thoughts tumbled, one
over the other. Was the girl sleepwalking? Was she ill? But when she reached
unthinkingly and tentatively with her Gift, she encountered neither the feel of
a sleeping mind, nor a disturbed one; only a deep and urgent sense of purpose. She
should, she realized in some dim, far-off corner of her mind, be alarmed. But
as soon as she had touched Elspeth with her Empathic Gift, that sense of calm
purpose had infected her as well, and she could no more have disobeyed its
promptings than have launched into flight from her tower window. In a
dreamlike state she half-stumbled out into the middle room, fumbled her way to
the door, and cautiously felt her way down the spiraling staircase with one
hand on the cold smoothness of the metal railing and the other on the rough
stone of the wall beside her. She was shivering so hard her teeth rat-tied, and
the thick darkness in the stairwell was slightly unnerving. There
was light at the foot of it, though, from a lamp set up on the wall. The dim
yellow light filled the entranceway. And the wood-paneled corridor beyond was
lighted well enough by farther wall-hung lamps that Talia felt safe in running down
the stone-floored passageways to the first door to the outside she could find. The
wind hit her with a shock; it was a physical blow so hard that she gasped. It
nearly wrenched the door out of her hands and she had to struggle for a moment
she had not wanted to spare to get it closed behind her. She realized that she
had gotten only a hint of its force from her window; her room was shetered from
the worst of it by the bulk of the Palace
itself. 26 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 27 She
found herself at the exterior bend of the L-shaped Herald's wing; just beyond
her bulked the Companion's stables. Elspeth was nowhere in sight. More
certain of her ground now than she had been in the unfamiliar wing of the
Palace, Talia would have run if she could, but the wind made that impossible.
It plastered her clothing to her body, and drove unidentifiable debris at her
with the velocity of crossbow bolts. She couldn't hear anything now with it
howling in her ears; she knew no one would hear her calling. Now she became
vaguely alarmed; with the wind this strong and in the dark, it would be so easy
for Elspeth to misstep and find herself in the river— She
mindcalled Rolan for help—and could not reach him— Or
rather, she could reach him, but he was paying no attention to her whatsoever;
his whole being was focused on—what it was, she could not say, but it demanded
all his concentration; for he was absorbed in it with such intensity that he
was shutting everything and everyone else out. It was
up to her, then. She fought her way around the stables toward the bridge that
led across the river to the main portion of Companion's Field. It was with
incredible relief that she spotted the vague blur of Elspeth ahead of her,
already across the river, and headed with utter single-minded concentration in
the direction of— There
was only one place she could be heading for— the Grove. Talia
forced her pace to the fastest she could manage, leaning at an acute angle into
the wind, but the girl had a considerable head start on her, and had already
entered the Grove by the time she had crossed the bridge. The
pale blob was lost to sight as the foliage closed around it, and Talia stumbled
over the uneven ground, falling more than once and bruising hands and
knees on the stones hidden in the grass. The long grass itself whipped at her
booted legs, tangling iher feet with each step. She was halfway to the Grove
when she looked up from yet another fall to see that it was—gods!—glowing
faintly from within. She
shook her head, blinking, certain that her eyes ^ere playing tricks on her. The
glow remained, scarcely brighter than foxfire, but unmistakably there. She
started to rise, when the entire world seemed to give a gut-wrenching lurch,
disorienting her completely. She clutched at the grass beneath her hands, as
the only reality in a suddenly unreal world, the pain of her bruised palms
hardly registering. Everything seemed to be spinning, the way it had the one
time she'd fainted, and she was lost in the darkness with the wind wailing in a
whirlwind around her and the Grove. There was a sickening moment—or
eternity—when nothing was real. Then
the world settled, and normality returned with an almost audible snap; the wind
died away to nothing, sound returned, the disorientation vanished, ail in the
space of a single heartbeat. Talia
opened her eyes, unaware until that moment that she'd been clenching both eyes
and jaw so tightly her face ached. Less than five feet away stood Elspeth,
between the supporting shoulders of two Companions. The one on her left was
Rolan, and he was back id Talia's awareness again—tired, though; very tired,
but strangely contented. Talia
staggered to her feet; the gray light of the setting moon was lightening the
sky, and by it, she Could make out the girl's features. Elspeth seemed dazed,
and if the contrast between the dark mass of her hair and the paleness of her
skin meant any-thing, she was drained as white as paper. Talia
stumbled the few steps between them, grabbed her shoulders and shook her; until
that moment the girl didn't seem to realize she was there. 28 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Elspeth—"
was all she managed to choke out around her own nerveless shivering. "Talia?"
The girl blinked once, then dumbfounded her mentor by seeming to snap into
total wakefulness, smiling and throwing her arms around Talia's shoulders.
"Talia—I—" she laughed, almost hysterical with joy, and for one brief
moment Talia feared she'd lost her mind. Then
she let go of the Herald and threw both of her arms around the neck of the
Companion to her right. "Talia, Talia, it happened! Gwena Chose me! She
called me when I was asleep, and I came, and she Chose me!" Gwena? Talia
knew every Companion in residence, having spent nearly as much time with them
as Keren, and having helped to midwife many of the foals. That name didn't
belong to any of them. And
that could only mean one thing; Gwena, like Rolan—and unlike any other
Companion currently alive—was Grove-born. But why? For centuries only Monarch's
Own Companions had appeared in the Grove like Companions of old. Talia
started to say something—and abruptly felt Rolan's presence overwhelming her
mind, tinged with a feeling of gentle regret. Talia
shook her head, bewildered by the sensation that she'd forgotten something,
then dismissed the feeling. Elspeth had been Chosen; that was what mattered.
She remembered the mare vaguely now. Gwena had always been one of the shyer
Companions, staying well away from visitors. All her shyness seemed gone, as
she nuzzled Elspeth's hair with possessive pride. Rolan, who had been
supporting Elspeth on the left, now paced forward in time to give Talia a
shoulder to lean on, for her own knees were going weak with reaction, and she
felt as drained as if she'd had a three-candlemark workout with Alberich. Birds
were ARROW'S
FLIGHT 29 breaking
into morning-song all around them, and jhe first light of true dawn streaked
the sky to the east with festive ribbons of brightness among the clouds. "Oh,
catling!" Talia released her hold on Rolan's mane and flung both her arms
around Elspeth, nearly Hi tears with joy. It did
not occur to either of them to wonder why no one else had been mustered out of
bed by that imperative calling both of them had answered—and why no one else
had noticed anything at all out of the ordinary even yet. Talia
managed to convince Elspeth—not to go back to her bed, because that was an
impossibility—but to settle with Gwena in a sheltered little hollow, with a
blanket purloined from the stable around her shoulders. Talia hoped that when
her excitement faded the child would doze off again; the gods knew she'd be
safe enough in the Field with her own Companion standing protective guard over
her. She wished devoutly mat she could have done the same, but there Were far
too many things she had to attend to. The
first—and most important—was to inform the Queen. Even at this early hour
Selenay would be awake and working, and likely with one or more Councilors. That
meant a formal announcement, and not what Talia really wanted to do, which was
to burst into Selenay's chamber caroling for joy. However
pleased Selenay would be, that sort of ac-tion would only give the Councilors a
very poor impression of the Queen's Own's maturity. So
Talia stumbled back to her room again, through the sweet breeze of a perfect
dawn, through bird choruses that were only a faint, far echo of the joy in her
heart, to get redressed. And this time, as neatly and precisely as she could
manage, cringing inwardly at the grass stains left on the knees of the pair of
breeches she'd just peeled off. Then she walked— 30 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 31 walked—decorously
and soberly down through the silence of the Herald's wing to the "New
Palace" wing that held the suites of Queen and Court. As
usual, there were two blue-clad Guardsmen stationed outside the doors to the
Royal chambers. She nodded to them, dark Jon to the right, wizened Fess to the
left; she knew both of them well, and longed to be able to whisper her news,
but that wouldn't do. It wouldn't be dignified, and it would absolutely shatter
protocol. As Queen's Own, she had the right of entry to the Queen's chambers at
any time of night or day, and was quickly admitted beyond those heavy goldenoak
doors. As she
had expected, Selenay was already hard at work in her dark-paneled outer
chamber; dressed for the day in formal Whites, massive desk covered with
papers, and both Lord Orthallen and the Seneschal at her shoulders. She looked
up at Talia's entrance, startled, blue eyes seeming weary even this early in
the day. Whatever brought those two Councilors to her side, it did not look to
be pleasant.. .. Perhaps
Talia's news would change all that. She
clued Selenay to the gravity of her news by making the formal half-bow before
entering, and that it was good news by a cheerful wink so timed that only
Selenay noted it. Protocol demanded exactly five steps across that dark-blue
carpet, which took her to exactly within comfortable conversational distance of
the desk. Then she went to one knee, trying not to flinch as her bruises
encountered the floor. Selenay, tucking a strand of gold hair behind one ear
and straightening in expectation, nodded to indicate she could speak. "Majesty—I
have come to petition the right of a trainee to enter the Collegium,"
Talia said gravely, with both hands clasped upon the upright knee, while her
eyes danced at the nonsense of all this formality. That
got the attention not only of Selenay, but of both
Councilors. Only highborn trainees needed to have
petitions laid before the Crown, for becoming a Herald often meant renouncing titles and lands, ei- ther
actual or presumptive. Talia
could see the puzzlement in the Councilors' eyes—and the rising hope in
Selenay's. "What Companion has
Chosen—and what is the candidate's name and rank?" Selenay replied just as formally,
one hand clutching the goblet before her sp
tightly her knuckles went white. "The
Companion Gwena has Chosen," Talia barely Managed
to keep from singing the words, "And her Choice
is the Heir-presumptive, now Heir-In-Right, the Lady Elspeth. May I have the Queen's
leave to enter the trainee in the Collegium rolls?" Within
the hour Court and Collegium were buzz-ing, and Talia was up to her eyebrows in
all the tasks needed to transfer Elspeth from her mother's custody to that of
the Collegium. Elspeth spent the day in blissful ignorance of all the
fuss—which was only fair. The first few hours were critical in the formation of
the Herald-Companion bond, and should be spent
in as undisturbed a manner as possible. So it Was Talia's task to see to it
that when Elspeth finally drifted dreamily back through the gates of
Companion's Field, everything, from room assignment to having
her belongings transferred, had been taken care of
for her. And toward day's end it occurred to Talia
that it behooved her to take dinner with the Court rather than the Collegium.
The Queen might make dinner the occasion for the formal announcement of choice of
Heir. She finished setting up Elspeth's class
schedule with Dean Elcarth, and sprinted to her quarters and up the stairs as
fast as her sore knees would permit. After a quick wash, she rummaged in the
wooden wardrobe, cursing as she bumped her head against 32 MERCEDES
LACKEY one of
the doors. After making what she hoped was an appropriate selection, she
dressed hastily in one of the velvet outfits. With one hand brushing her hair,
half-skipping as she wedged her feet into the soft slippers that went with it,
she used the other hand to snatch the appropriate book of protocol from among
the others on her still-dusty desk. While wriggling to settle the clothing
properly and using both hands to smooth her hair, she reviewed the brief
ceremony attendant on the coronation of the Heir. She shot a quick look at
herself in the mirror, then took herself off to the Great Hall. She
slipped into her seldom-used seat between Elspeth and the Queen and whispered
"Well?" "She's
going to do it as soon as everyone arrives," Elspeth breathed back.
"I think I'm going to die. . .." "No
you won't," Talia answered in a conspiratorial manner, "You've been
doing things like this for ages. Now / may die!" Elspeth was relaxing
visibly now that Talia was there to share her ordeal. Talia
had only taken meals with the Court a handful of times since she'd arrived at
the Collegium, and the Great Hall never ceased to impress her. It was the
largest single room in the Palace, its high, vaulted ceiling supported by
slender-seeming pillars of ironoak that gleamed golden in the light from the
windows and the lamp- and candle-light. There were battle-banners and heraldic
pennons that went clear back to the Founding hanging from the rafters. Talia's
seat was at the table placed on the dais, which stood at right angle to the
rest of the tables in the Hall. Late sunlight streamed in through the tall,
narrow windows that filled the west wall, but the windows to the east were
already beginning to darken with the onset of nightfall. The courtiers seated
along the tables below her were as colorful as a bed of wild-flowers, and
formed a pleasing grouping against the panels and tables of golden ironoak. When
the Great Hall was filled, the Queen arose ARROW'S
FLIGHT 33 as the
stewards called for silence. It would have been possible
to hear a feather fall as she began. Every eye in the Hall was riveted on her
proud, White-clad figure, with the thin circlet of Royal red gold (it was all
she would wear as token of her rank) encircling her raival-leaf golden hair. "Since
the death of my father, we have been with-out an Heir. I can understand and
sympathize with those of you who found this a disquieting and frightening
situation. You may rejoice, for all uncertainty is at an end. This day was my
daughter Elspeth Chosen by the Companion Gwena, making her a fully eligible
candidate for the position of Heir. Rise, daughter." Elspeth and Talia both rose, Elspeth to stand
before her mother, Talia to take the silver coronet of the Heir from the
steward holding it. She presented it to the Queen, then retired to her proper
position as Queen's Own, behind and slightly to Selenay's right. She was
pleased to note that although Elspeth's hands trembled, her voice, as she
repeated her vows, Was strong and clear. Elspeth caught her eyes and held to
Talia's gaze as if to a lifeline. Elspeth
was frightened half to death, despite her lifelong preparation for this moment.
She could dearly see Talia's encouraging expression, and the presence of the
Queen's Own gave her comfort and courage For one panicked moment halfway
through her vows, she forgot what her mother had said just the instant before.
She felt a flood of gratitude when she noticed Talia's lips moving, and
realized that she was mouthing the words Elspeth had just forgotten. There was
more to it than just having a friend at hand, too—with her mental senses
sharpened and enhanced by having been Chosen, Elspeth could dimly feel Talia as
a solid, comforting presence, like a deply-rooted tree in a wild windstorm.
There would be shelter for her beneath those branches, 34 MERCEDES
LACKEY and as
she repeated the last words of her Oath, she suddenly realized how vital that
shelter would be to one, who as ruler, must inevitably face the gales; and more
often than not alone. There was also, distinctly, though distantly, the sense
that Talia loved her for herself, and as a true friend. And that in itself was
a comfort. As she finished the last words and her mother placed the silver
circlet on her head, she tried to put all her gratitude to her friend in the
smile she gave her. As the
Queen placed the coronet on her daughter's hair, a spontaneous cheer rose that
gladdened Talia's heart. Perhaps now the Brat could be forgotten. But as
they resumed their seats and the serving began, the unaccustomed dainties of
the Queen's table suddenly lost their appeal as Talia realized that there was
yet another ceremony to be endured, one about which she knew nothing. As soon
as the powers of the Kingdom could be gathered there must be a great ceremony
of fealty in which the Queen's Own would play a significant role. Talia reached
blindly for her goblet to moisten a mouth gone dry with panic. Then
she took herself firmly in hand; Kyril and Elcarth, as Seneschal's Herald and
Dean of the Collegium, would surely know everything about this occasion—and
just as surely would be aware that Talia didn't. There was no need to panic.
Not yet, anyway. The
meal seemed to be progressing with ponderous slowness. This was Talia's first
High Feast—and it seemed incredibly dull. She sighed, and the Queen caught the
sound. "Bored?"
she whispered out of the corner of her mouth. "Oh,
no!" Talia replied with a forced smile. "Liar,"
the Queen replied with a twinkle. "No one but a moron could avoid being
bored by all this. You ARROWS
FLIGHT 35 sit and
sit, and smile and smile, till your face and backside are both stiff. Then you
sit and smile some more." "How
do you manage this day after day?" Talia asked, trying not to laugh. "Father
taught me a game; Elspeth and I play it now. What are we doing this time,
catling?" "We're
back to animals," Elspeth replied, as her mother nodded to an elderly duke
in response to some comment he'd mumbled. "You try and decide what animal
the courtiers most remind you of. We change each time. Sometimes it's flowers,
trees, rocks, landmarks—even weather. This time it's animals, and he's a badger." "Well
if he's a badger, his lady's a watchdog. Look how she raises her hackles
whenever he smiles at that pretty serving girl," Talia said. "Oh,
I'd never have thought of that one!" Elspeth exclaimed. "You're going
to be good at this game!" They managed
to keep straight faces, but it wasn't easy. Talia
sought out Kyril the next day before the thrice-weekly Council meeting to learn
that she had three weeks in which to prepare for Elspeth's formal investiture.
He and Elcarth pledged to drill her in all she needed to know, from protocol to
politics, every day. The
Council meeting in itself was something of an ordeal. She and Elspeth had seats
on the far end of the horseshoe-shaped Council table, almost opposite Selenay
and the empty place beside her. That empty chair was the seat of the Queen's
Own, but Talia could not, under law, assume that place until she had passed her
own internship. She and Elspeth had voice on the Council, but no vote.
Elspeth's own voting rights were in abeyance until she passed internship. The
Councilors tended to ignore them because of that lack of voting rights—but not
today. 36 MERCEDES
LACKEY No,
today they interrogated both Talia and Elspeth with an ill-concealed eagerness
that bordered on greed. How soon did Talia think she'd be out in the
field—could the internship be cut back to a year? Or given the importance of
her position, and her lack of experience, should it be extended past the normal
year-and-a-half? Could Elspeth's education be rushed? What should she be
tutored in besides the normal curriculum of the Herald's Collegium? Did she
feel ready for her new position as Heir? And on and on .,. From
most of the Councilors Talia only received a well-intentioned (if irritating)
eagerness to help "the children" (and she cursed—not for the first
time— her slight stature that made her seem barely an adolescent). But from
others— Lord
Orthallen, one of Selenay's closest advisors (as he had been to her father)
regarded both of them with a cool, almost cold, gaze. And Talia felt very like
a prime specimen of some unusual beetle on the dissecting table. She got no
emotional impressions from him at all; she never had. That was profoundly
disturbing for one whose Gift was Empathy— and even more disturbing was the vague
feeling that he was not pleased that Elspeth had at last been Chosen. From
Bard Hyron, speaker for the Bardic Circle, she got a distinct feeling that all
this was happening far too quickly. And that not enough caution was being
exercised. And that he didn't quite trust her. Lord
Gartheser's feelings were of general displeasure over the whole affair, but she
couldn't pinpoint why. There was also a faint overtone of disappointment; he
was related to Kemoc, one of the three other contenders for the position. Could
that be all, though? Or was there something deeper in his motivation? Lady
Wyrist was downright annoyed, but why, Talia couldn't fathom. It might have
been simply that she was afraid that Talia would favor her own relations, ARROW'S
FLIGHT 37 the
Holderkin, who lived in the area Wyrist spoke for. She could hardly know that
there was small chance of that! Orthallen
was the one who bothered her most, but as the meeting broke up, she knew she
would mention this to no one. She had nothing of fact to report; and she and
Orthallen had bad blood between them over his treatment (and near-expulsion) of
her friend Skif from the Collegium. She knew better than to give Orthallen so
powerful a weapon if he was an enemy as to seem to be holding a grudge. Instead
she smiled sweetly and thanked him for his good wishes. Let him think her an
innocent idiot. Meanwhile she would make sure to have one eye on him. But
soon, very soon now, she would be gone, on her year-and-a-half internship, and
that would take her entirely out of the current intrigues at Court. It would
also make it impossible for her to deal with any of it. If Gartheser,
Orthallen, or any of the others had deeper schemes, there would be no one near
Elspeth who could detect the shadow of the scheming. She
would be gone—and who would watch them then? Two Three
weeks to the investiture. Only three weeks, but they seemed like three years,
at least to Talia. There
was an elaborate ceremony of oaths and bindings to memorize, but that wasn't
the worst of it. Talia's main function at this particular rite would be
apparently to perform the original duties of Heralds, the duties they had held
in the days before Valdemar founded his kingdom, to announce each dignitary by
name and all ranks and titles before escorting him or her to the foot of the
Throne. This
was, of course, the lesser of her twin functions. In reality the more important
would be using her empathic Gift to assess—and, one hoped, neutralize—any
danger to the Queen and Heir from those about to come within striking distance
of them. The full High Court ceremonial costumes included a wide variety of
instruments of potential mayhem and assassination. There
was one small problem with this; Talia was farmbred, not highborn. The
elaborate tabards of state that a highborn child could read as easily as a book
were little more than bewildering patterns of gold and embroidery to her eyes.
And she would be dealing with nobles who were very touchy over their titles, and
apt to take affront if even the least and littlest were eliminated. 38 ARROW'S
FLIGHT 39 That
meant hours closeted in Herald Kyril's office, sitting until her behind went
numb on one of the hard wooden chairs he favored, memorizing plate after plate
from the state book of devices until her eyes were watering. She fell asleep at
night with the wildly colored and imaginative beasts, birds, and plants
spinning in mad dances behind her eyes. She woke in the morning with Kyril's
voice echoing out of her dreams, inescapably drilling her. She
spent at least another hour of every day in the stuffy Council chamber, with
the Councilors engaged in pointless debate about this or that item of protocol
for the coming ceremony until she wanted to scream with frustration. Elspeth,
at least, was spared this nonsense; she had quite enough on her plate with her
new round of Collegium classes and duties. For the next five years or so, once
the ceremony was complete, she would be neither more nor less important nor
cosseted than any other trainee—within certain limitations. She would still be
attending Council sessions once she'd settled in, and certain High Court
functions. But these were far more in the nature of duties rather than
treats—and were, in fact, things Talia reckoned that Elspeth would really
rather have foregone if she'd had any choice in the matter. When
Talia had taken the opportunity to check on her, the girl seemed well-content.
She was surely enjoying the new-found bond with her Companion Gwena. Keren had
told Talia that every free moment saw the two of them out in the Field
together, which was exactly as it should be. But
there was one unsettling oddity about the Council sessions that kept them from
sending Talia to sleep—an oddity that, in fact, was contributing to an
uneasiness ill-suited to the general festive atmosphere that hovered over Court
and Collegium. Talia
was catching Councilors and courtiers alike giving her bewildered, almost
fearful glances when 40 MERCEDES
LACKEY they
thought she wasn't watching. If it had not happened so frequently, she might
have thought she was imagining it, but scarcely a day passed without someone
watching her with the same attention they might have given to some outre
creature that might prove to be dangerous. It troubled her—and she wished more
than once for Skif and his talents at spying and subterfuge. But Skif was
furlongs away at very best, so she knew she'd have to muddle along beneath the
suspicious glances, and hope that whatever rumors were being passed about her
(and she had no doubt that they were about her) would either be put to rest or
come to light where she coufd confront them. Another
goodly portion of each day she spent helping to train a young Healer, Rynee,
who was to substitute for her while she was gone on her internship circuit.
Rynee, like Talia, was a mindHealer; she could never replace Talia, not without
being a Herald herself, but she could (and would) try to keep her senses alert
for Heralds in stress and distress, and get them somewhat sorted out. And
last, but by no means least, there were exhausting bouts with Alberich, all
with the express purpose of getting both Talia and Elspeth prepared for any
kind of assassination attempts that might occur. "I
really don't understand why you're doing this," Elspeth said one day,
about a week from the date of the ceremony. "After all, I'm the one who's
the better fighter." She had been watching from a vantage point well out
of the way, sitting cross-legged on one of the benches in the salle, against
the wall. Talia was absolutely sodden with sweat, and bruised in more places
than she cared to think about—and for a wonder, Alberich wasn't in any better
condition than she. Alberich
motioned to Talia that she could rest, and she sagged to the floor where she
stood. "Appearances," he said, "partially. I do not wish that
any ARROW'S
FUGHT 41 save
the Heralds should know how skilled you truly are. That could be the saving of
your life, one day. Also it is tradition that crowned heads do not defend
themselves; that is the duty of others." "Unless
there's no other choice?" Alberich
nodded. Elspeth
sighed. "I'm beginning to wish I wasn't Heir, now. It doesn't look like
I'm going to be allowed to have any fun!" "Catling,"
Talia panted, "If this is your idea of fun—you're welcome to it!" Elspeth
and Alberich exchanged rueful glances that said as plainly as words, she'll
never understand, and made shrugs so nearly identical that Talia was hard put
to keep from laughing. Finally
the day arrived for the long awaited—and dreaded—rite of Elspeth's formal
investiture as Heir. The fealty ceremony was scheduled for the evening with a
revel to follow. Talia, as usual, was running late. She
dashed from her last drilling session with Kyril to the bathing-room, then up
to her tower suite, taking the steps two at a time. She thanked the gods when
she got there that one of the servants had had the foresight to lay out her
gown and all its accoutrements, else she'd have been later still. She
donned the magnificent silk and velvet creation with trepidation. She'd never
worn High Court ceremonials in her life, though she'd helped Elspeth into her
own often enough. She
faced the mirror, balancing on one foot while she tied the ribbons to the
matching slippers around the ankle of the other. "Oh,
bloody hell," she sighed. She knew what a courtier ought to look like—and
she didn't. "Well, it's going to have to do. I just wish ..." "You
wish what?" Jeri
and Keren rapped on the side of the tower 42 MERCEDES
LACKEY door
and poked their heads around the edge of it. Talia groaned; Jeri looked the way
she wished she looked, gowned and coiffed exquisitely, every chestnut hair
neatly twisted into a High Court confection and precisely in place. "I
wish I could look like you—stunning, instead of stunned." Jeri
laughed; to look at her, no one would ever guess this lady was nearly the equal
of Alberich in neatly dissecting an opponent with any weapon at hand.
"It's all practice, love. Want some help?" Her green eyes sparkled.
"I've been doing this sort of nonsense since I was old enough to walk, and
mama usually commandeered all the servants in the house to attend her
preparations, so I had to learn how to do it myself." "If
you can make me look less like a plowboy, I will love you forever!" "I
think," Jeri replied merrily, "that we can manage at least that
much." For the
next half hour Talia sat on her bed in nervous anticipation as arcane things
happened to her hair and face while Jeri and Keren exchanged mysterious
comments. Finally Jeri handed her a mirror. "Is
that me?" Talia asked in amazement, staring at the worldly sophisticate in
the mirror frame. She could scarcely find a trace of Jeri's handiwork, yet
somehow she had added experience and a certain dignity without adding years or
subtracting freshness. Replacing her usual disordered tumble of curls was a
fashionable creation threaded through with a silver ribbon. "Do
I dare move? Is it all going to come apart?" "Havens,
no!" Jeri laughed, "That's what the ribbon's for, love. It isn't
likely to happen this time, praise the Lord, but you know very well what your
duty is in an emergency. The Queen's Own is supposed to be able to defend her
monarch at swordpoint, ARROW'S
FLIGHT 43 then
calmly clean her blade on the loser's tunic and go right back to whatever
ceremony was taking place. That's why your dress is ankle-length instead of
floor-length, has no train, and the sleeves detach with one pull—yes, they do,
trust me! I ought to know; I supervised the making of it. It's been a long time
since we've had a female Monarch's Own, and nobody knew exactly how to modify
High Court gear to suit. At any rate, you could work out now with Alberich
without one lock coming loose or losing any part of the costume you didn't want
to lose. But don't rub your eyes, or you'll look like you've been beaten."
She gathered her things. "We'd better be moving if we don't want to get
caught in the mob." "And
you'd better take care of the important part of your costume, childing,"
Keren warned as they started down the stairs. Talia
had not needed the reminder. The rest of her accessories were already laid out
and waiting. A long dagger in a sheath strapped around her waist and along her
right thigh that she could reach—as she carefully determined—through a slit in
her dress was the first weapon she donned. Then came paired throwing knives in
quick-release sheaths for both arms—gifts from Skif, which he had shown her how
to use long ago. Even Alberich admitted that Skif had no peer when it came to
his chosen weapons. Lastly, were two delicate stilettos furnished with winking,
jeweled ornaments that she inserted carefully into Jeri's handiwork. No
Herald was ever without a weapon, especially not the Queen's Own, as Keren had
reminded her. The life of more than one Monarch had been saved by just such
precautions. Just as
Talia was about to depart, there was a knock at her door. She opened it to find
Dean Elcarth standing on her threshold. Towering over him, fair and raven heads
side by side, lit by the lantern that 44 MERCEDES
LACKEY cast
its light beside her door and looking like living representatives of Day and
Night, were Dirk and Kris. Talia had not heard that either of them had returned
from the field, and surprise stilled her voice as she stared at the unexpected
visitors. "Neither
of these gallants seems to have a lady," the Dean said with mischief in
his eyes. "And since you have no escort, I thought of you
immediately," "How
thoughtful," Talia said dryly, Finally regaining the use of her wits, and
knowing there was more to it than that. "I don't suppose you had any other
motives, did you?" "Well,
since you are interning under Kris, I thought you might like to get acquainted
under calmer circumstances than the last time you met." So Kris
was to be her counselor, Sheri had been right. "Calmer?"
Talia squeaked. "You call this calmer?" "Relatively
speaking." "Elcarth!"
Dirk exclaimed impatiently. "Herald Talia, he's teasing you. He asked us
to help you because we know most of the people here on sight, so we can prompt
you if you get lost." "We
also know who the possible troublemakers are—not that we expect any problems,"
Kris continued, a smile warming his sky-blue eyes. "But there's less
likely to be any trouble with two great hulking brutes like us standing behind
the Queen." "Oh,
bless you!" Talia exclaimed with relief. "I've been worried half to
death that I'll say something wrong or announce the wrong person and mortally
offend someone." She carefully avoided mentioning assassination attempts,
though she knew all four of them were thinking about how useful the pair would
be in that event. Kris
smiled broadly, and Dirk executed a courtly bow that was saved from absurdity
by the twinkle in his eyes as he glanced up at her. "We
are your servants, O fairest of Heralds," he ARROWS
FUQHT 45 intoned,
sounding a great deal like an over-acting player in some truly awful romantic
drama. "Oh,
don't be ridiculous." Talia flushed, feeling oddly flattered and yet
uncomfortable, "You know very well that Nessa and Sheri make me look like
a squirrel, and the last time you saw me, I was passing out at your feet like a
silly child and probably looked like leftover porridge. Among friends my name
is Talia. Just Talia." The
Dean pivoted and trotted down the staircases, seemingly very pleased with
himself. Kris chuckled and Dirk grinned; both of them offered her their arms.
She accepted both, feeling dwarfed between the two of them. There was barely
enough room for all three of them on the stairs. "Well,
you devil, you've done it again," Dirk said to his partner over her head,
blinking as they emerged from the half-dark of the staircase into the light of
the hall. "I get a scrawny ex-thief with an appetite like a horse for my
internee, and look what you get! It's just not fair." He looked down at
her from his lofty six-and-a-half feet, and said mournfully to her, "I
suppose now that you've gotten a good look at my partner's justifiably famous
face, the rest of us don't stand a chance with you." "I
wouldn't go making any bets if I were you," she replied with a hint of an
edge to her voice, "1 have seen him before, you know, and you don't see me
falling at his feet worshiping now, do you? My father and brothers were just as
handsome. No insult meant to you, Kris, but I've had ample cause to mistrust
handsome men. I'd rather you were cross-eyed, or had warts, or something. I'd
feel a great deal more comfortable around you if you were a little less than
perfect." Dirk
howled with laughter at the nonplussed expression on his friend's face.
"That's a new one for you, my old and rare! Rejected by a woman! How's it
feel to be in my shoes?" 46 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Odd,"
Kris replied with good humor, "distinctly odd. I must say though, I'm
rather relieved. I was afraid Elcarth's mind was going, assigning me a female
internee. I've only seen you once or twice, remember, and we weren't exchanging
much personal information at the time! I thought you might be like Nessa.
Around her I start to feel like a hunted stag!" He suddenly looked
sheepish. "I have the feeling I may have put my foot in it; I hope you
don't mind my being frank." "Not
at all. It's my besetting sin, too." "Well,
you seem unexpectedly sensible. I think we'll do all right together." "Provided
that / haven't taken a dislike to you," Talia was just a little nettled at
his easy assumption that she would fall swift prey to his admittedly charming
manner. "Haven't you ever been told not to count your eggs till the hens
lay them?" From
the look on Kris' face, that possibility hadn't occurred to him, and he was
rather at a loss to deal with it. Dirk didn't help matters by becoming
hysterical. "She's
got you there, old boy!" he choked. "Stars be praised, I've lived to
see the day when it's you that gets put in his place, and not me! "On,
Bright Havens, don't worry about it," Talia said, taking pity on him.
"We're Doth Heralds, for pity's sake! We'll manage to get along. It's just
for a year and a half. After all, it's not as if somebody were forcing me to
marry you!" Kris'
expression was indescribable when Talia spoke of being 'forced" to marry
him as if it were something distasteful. "I
m fairly sure you didn't insult me, but that certainly didn't sound like a
compliment!" he complained forlornly. "I'm beginning to think I
prefer Nessa's attitude after all!" By now
they'd had to stop in the middle of the hall, as Dirk was doubled over and
tears were streaming down his face. Both of them had to pound on his back in
order to help him catch his breath again. ARROWS
FLIGHT 47 "Holy—Astera—"
he gasped. "This is something I never expected to see. Or hear!
Whew!" He somehow managed to look both contrite and satisfied at the same
time. "Forgive me, partner. It's just that seeing you as the rejected one
for a change—you should have seen your own face!—you looked like you'd swallowed
a live toad!" "Which
means that nothing worse can happen to him for the rest of the week. Now look,
none of this is getting us to the ceremony," Talia pointed out, "and
we're already running late." "She's
right again," Dirk said, taking her arm. "What
do you mean, 'again?" Kris asked suspiciously, as they hurried to the
Great Hall. Fortunately,
their arrival at the door of the Great Hall prevented his having to answer that
question. Dirk
had been having a little trouble sorting out some very odd feelings from the
moment that Talia had answered her door. The last time he'd seen the Queen's
Own, she'd fainted from total exhaustion practically at his feet, after having
undergone a considerable mental and emotional ordeal. He had learned afterward
that she had experienced at firsthand the murder of the Herald-Courier Visa,
and saved Visa's lifemate Keren from death-willing herself in shock. Then,
without a pause for rest, she had mentally guided him and his partner to the
spot where Visa had been slain. This slight, fragile-seeming woman-child had
aroused all of his protective instincts as well as his admiration for her raw
courage. He'd carried her up to her room himself, and made certain she was
safely tucked into her bed; then left medicinal tea ready for her to brew to
counteract the inevitable reaction-headache she'd have when she woke. He'd
known at the time she'd exhausted all her resources—when he heard the whole
story later in the day he'd been flabbergasted at her courage and endurance. 48 MERCEDES
LACKEY And she
was so very frail-looking; it was easy to feel protective about her, even
though her actions gave lie to that frail appearance. At least, he'd thought at
the time that it was only his protective instincts that she aroused. But the sight
of her this time had seemed to stir something a bit more complicated than
that—something he wasn't entirely sure he'd wanted to acknowledge. So he
defused the situation as best he could, by clowning with Kris. But even while
he was bent double with laughter, there was a vague disquiet in the back of his
mind, as though his subconscious was trying to warn him that he wasn't going to
be able to delay acknowledgment for long. Talia
was refusing to allow her nerves to show, but they were certainly affecting her
despite her best efforts. She was rather guiltily hoping Kris had realized that
she had been taking some of that nervousness out on him. The
Great Hall, tables cleared away, and benches placed along the walls, with every
candle and lantern lit, gleamed like a box made of gold. The courtiers and
notables were dressed in their finest array, jewels and silver and gold
ornaments catching the light and throwing it back so that the assemblage
sparkled like the contents of a highborn dame's jewelbox. Prominent among the
gilded nobles were the bright scarlet of Bards, the emerald green of Healers,
the bright blue of the uniforms of high-ranking officers of the Guard and Army,
and the brilliant white of Heralds. Each of those to be presented wore over his
or her finery the stiff tabard, heavy with embroidery, that marked a family or
Guild association. The men and women of the Guards standing duty in their sober
midnight-blue and silver ringed the walls, a dark frame for the rest. The
Queen's Own and her escorts assumed their places behind the thrones, Talia in
her place behind and to Selenay's right, Kris and Dirk behind and to ARROW'S
FLIGHT 49 either
side of her. Talia had a feeling that the three of them made a very impressive
and reassuring sight to those who had come here fearing to see weakness. But
there was uneasiness, too—the uneasiness she had been sensing for the past
three weeks, magnified. And she could not, for the life of her, fathom the
reason. The
ceremony began; Talia determined to ignore what she could not change, and did
her best to appear somehow both harmless and competent. She wasn't sure just
how successful she was, but some of the background of general nervousness did
seem to decrease after a while. She
tried to will some confidence into the young Heir, who was beginning to wilt
under the strain. She tried to catch her eyes and give her a reassuring smile,
but Elspeth's expression was tight and nervous, and her eyes were beginning to
glaze. For
Elspeth was not faring as well as Talia. The ceremony demanded that she respond
to each of her new liegemen with some sort of personalized speech, and about
halfway through she began running out of things to say. Kris
was the first, with his musician's ear for cadence, to notice her stumbling and
hesitating over her speeches. As the next worthy was being brought before her,
he whispered, "His son's just presented him with his first
grandchild." Elspeth
cast him a look of undying gratitude as she moved to receive this oath. As the
gouty lord rose with difficulty from his knees, she congratulated him on the
blessed event. The gentleman's expression as he was escorted away was
compounded of equal parts of startlement and pleasure, for he'd no notion that
anyone knew other than the immediate members of his family. Elspeth
decided at that moment that Kris was fully qualified for elevation to
sainthood, and beamed 50 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 51 quickly
at both of the Heralds before the next notable arrived. Dirk
caught on immediately and supplied the information for the next. Kris countered
with intelligence for the following two. Elspeth began to sparkle under the
gratified looks of the courtiers, reviving as quickly as she'd wilted; and Kris
and Dirk began to keep score in the impromptu contest. The Queen seemed to find
it all she could do to keep a straight face. Finally,
the last dignitary made his oath, and all three Heralds took their places with
the Circle to swear their oaths en masse. The Healer's and Bardic Circles
followed them, then the various clerics and priests made vows on behalf of
their orders and devotees. And the
long ceremony was at last complete— without a mishap. The
Queen's party retired from the dais, leaving it to instrumentalists of the
Bardic Circle, who immediately struck up a dance melody. Talia
joined Elspeth in the window-alcove furnished with velvet-padded benches that
was reserved for the Queen's entourage. "What were you three up to?"
she asked curiously. "I was too far away to hear any of it, but you
certainly seemed to be having a good time!" "These
two Heralds that came as your escort—they were wonderful!" Elspeth
bubbled. "I ran out of things to say, and they told me exactly what I
needed to know. Not big things, but what was most important to them right
now—the lords and so forth, I mean. Then they started making a contest out of
it, and that was what was so funny, them arguing back and forth about how much
something was 'worth' in points. Mother could hardly keep from laughing." "I
can imagine," Talia grinned, "Who won?" "I
did," Kris said from behind her. "You
wouldn't have if I'd thought of the sheep first," Dirk retorted. "Sheep?"
Talia said inquisitively. "Sheep? Do I want to know about this?" Dirk
snickered, and Kris glared at him. "It's
perfectly harmless," Kris answered, with just a hint of irritation.
"When Lady Fiona's husband died, she and Guildmistress Arawell started a
joint project to boost the fortunes of her family and ArawelTs branch of the
Weaver's Guild. They imported some sheep with an especially soft and fine
fleece much like lambswool from outKingdom—quite far south. They've finally
succeeded in adapting them to our harsher winters; the spring lambing more than
doubled their flock, and it seems that everyone is going to want stock or
fabric of the wool." 'That's
not what we came here for," Dirk said firmly. "Sheep and discussions
of animal husbandry— keep your filthy thoughts to yourself, partner!—" "My
filthy thoughts? Who was the one doing all the chording a few minutes
ago?" "—do
not belong at a revel. I claim the first dance with you, Talia, by virtue of
the fact that my partner is going to have you all to himself for a year and
more." "And
since that leaves me partnerless," Kris added, "I would very much
like to claim our newest Chosen for the same purpose." "Mother?"
Elspeth looked pleadingly at the Queen. Kris' stunning good looks had made more
than a slight impression on her, and that he should want to dance with her was
a distinct thrill. "My
dear, this is your celebration. If you want to ride your Companion around the
Great Hall, you could even do that—provided you're willing to face the
Seneschal's wrath when he sees the hoofmarks on his precious wood floor." Without
waiting for further permission, Kris swept the girl into the dance. 52 MERCEDES
LACKEY Dirk
lifted an inquisitive eyebrow at Talia. "Oh,
no," Talia laughed, "You don't know what you're asking. I dance like
a plowboy, I have no sense of rhythm, and I ruin my partner's feet." "Nonsense,"
Dirk replied, shaking unruly blond hair out of his eyes. "You just never
had the right partner." "Which
is you? And I thought Kris was vain!" "My
dear Talia," he countered, swinging her onto the floor, "Truth can
hardly be considered in the same light as vanity. I have it on the best
authority that my dancing more than compensates for my looks." Shortly,
Talia was forced to admit that he was absolutely correct. For the first time in
her experience, she began to enjoy a dance—it was almost magical, the way they
seemed to move together. Dirk didn't seem displeased by her performance either,
as he yielded her to other partners with extreme reluctance. Kris,
on the other hand, despite yearning glances from nearly every young woman
present, danced only with women far older than himself, or with Elspeth or
Talia. "I
hope you don't mind being used like this," he said contritely, after the
sixth or seventh dance. "Used?"
she replied, puzzled. "As
a shield. I'm dancing with you to keep from being devoured by them," he
nodded toward a group of Court beauties languishing in his direction. "I
can't dance just with beldames, Elspeth has to take other partners, and the
only Heralds I can trust not to try to carry me off are Keren, Sheri, and you.
And those other two don't dance." "It's
nice to know I'm wanted," she laughed up at him, "Did
I just put my foot in it again?" "No,
not really. And I don't mind being 'used.' After all, by now they all know
we're assigned to- ARROWS
FLIGHT 53 gether,
so they'll assume we're getting acquainted. You can avoid people without
anyone's feelings being hurt." "You
do understand," he said, relieved. "I hate to hurt anyone's feelings,
but they all seem to think if they just throw themselves at me hard enough,
I'll have to take one of them—short-term, long-term, it doesn't seem to matter.
Nobody ever seems to wonder what / want." "Well,
what do you want?" Talia asked. "The
Collegium," he replied to Talia's amazement, "That's where most of my
time and energy go—and where I want them to go. I do a lot of studying on my
own: history, administration, law. I'd like to be Elcarth's replacement as Dean
and Historian when he retires, and that takes a lot of preparation. I don't
have much free time—certainly none to spend on games of courtly love. Or
shepherd-in-the-hay." Talia
looked at him with new respect. "That's mar-velous; Elcarth's job is the
hardest and most thankless I can think of. In some ways, it's even worse than
mine. You might just be the one to handle it. I don't think you can serve the
Collegium and still give another person a—a—" "The
amount of attention a decent pairing needs," he finished for her,
"Thank you—do you know, you're the first person besides Dirk who didn't
think I was out of my mind?" "But
what would you do if you did find someone you wanted?" "I
don't know—except that it isn't likely to happen. Face it, Talia, Heralds
seldom form permanent attachments to anyone or anything. We're friends, always,
and sometimes things get more intense than that, but it doesn't last for long.
Maybe it's because our hearts are given first to our Companions, then to our
duty—and I guess there aren't too many of us with hearts big enough for a third
love. Non-Heralds don't seem to be able to grasp that. Not too many 54 MERCEDES
LACKEY Heralds
do, for that matter. But look around you— Sherrill and Keren are the only
Hfebonded couple I can think of, and I wouldn't be willing to settle for less
than what they've got. Which is why I'm hiding behind you." "You
can't hide forever." "I
don't have to," he replied whimsically. "Just till the end of the
revel. After that, I'll be safely in the field, accompanied solely by the only
person I've met who thinks I'd be better off cross-eyed and covered with
warts!" Dirk
reclaimed her after that; it was during that dance that she noticed that the
number of white-clad bodies was rapidly diminishing. "Where's everyone
gone?" she asked him, puzzled. "It's
not often that we get this many of us together at one time," he replied,
"so as people get tired of dancing, we slip off to our own private party.
Want to go?" "Bright
Havens, yes!" she replied with enthusiasm. "Let
me catch Kris' eye." He moved them closer to where Kris was dancing with a
spritely grandmother, and tilted an eyebrow toward the door. When Kris nodded,
Dirk arranged for them to end the dance next to the exit as the musicians
played the final phrase. Kris
joined them after escorting his partner to her seat. "I like that one; she
kept threatening to take me home, feed me 'proper'—and then 'train me right,1
and I know she wasn't talking about dancing or manners!" He laughed
quiedy. "I take it Talia's ready to go? I am." "Good,
then we're all agreed," Dirk replied. "Talia, go get changed into
something comfortable, find something to sit on, and an old cloak in case we
end up outside. If you play any instruments, bring them, too—then meet us in the
Library." "This
is like the littles' game of 'Spy'!" she giggled. "You're
not far wrong," Kris answered, "We go to ARROWS
FLIGHT 55 great
lengths to keep these parties private. Now hurry, or we'll leave without
you!" She
gathered her skirts in both hands and ran lightly down the halls of the Palace.
When she reached her tower, she again took the steps two at a time. She paused
only long enough in her room to light a lamp before unlacing her dress and
sliding out of it. Even though she was in a hurry she hung it up with
care—there was no use in ruining it with creases. She changed into the first
things that came to hand. She freed her hair from the ribbon, letting it tumble
around her face while she carefully stored My Lady in her case, and stuck her
shepherd's pipe in her belt. She slung the carrying strap of the harpcase over
her shoulder, an old, worn wool cloak from her trainee days over all, picked up
one of her cushions, and was ready to go. Well,
almost. Remembering what Jeri had said about the cosmetics, she stopped at the
bathing room at the base of the tower for a quick wash, then ran for the
Library. When
she swung open the door to the Library, she discovered that the other two had
beaten her there— but then, they probably didn't have several flights of stairs
to climbs. Kris
was all in black, and looking too poetic for words. Dirk was in mismatched
bluish grays that looked rather as if he'd just left them in a heap when he'd
picked up his clean laundry (which, in fact, was probably the case). Both of
them looked up at the sound of the door opening. "Talia!
Good—you don't dawdle like my sisters do," Dirk greeted ner. "Come
over here, and we'll let you in on the secret." Talia
crossed the room to where they were standing; the first study cubicle. 'The
first to leave always meet here to decide where we're going to convene,"
Dirk explained, "And they leave something telling the rest of us where
that is. In this case—it's this." 56 MERCEDES
LACKEY He
showed her a book left on the table—on harness-making. "Let
me guess/' Tatia said. "The stable?" "Close.
The tackshed in Companion's Field; see, it's open at the chapter on the special
bridles we use," Kris explained. "Last time they had to leave a rock
on top of a copy of a religious text; we used the half-finished temple down
near the river because we'd met too often around here. A bit cold for my
liking, though I'm told those currently keeping company enjoyed keeping each
other warm." Talia
smothered giggles as they slipped outside. The
windows of the tackshed had been tightly shuttered so that no light leaked out
to betray the revelry within. Both fireplaces had been lighted against the
slight chill in the air and as the main source of illumination. The three of
them slipped in as quiedy as possible to avoid disturbing the entertainment in
progress—a tale being told with some skill by a middle-aged Herald whose twin
streaks of gray, one at each temple, stood out stardingly in the firelight. "It'll
be quiet tonight," Kris whispered in Talia's ear. "Probably because
the Palace revel turned into such a romp. Our revels tend to be the opposite of
the official ones." Heralds
were sprawled over the floor of the tackshed in various comfortable poses, all giving
rapt attention to the storyteller. There seemed to be close to seventy of them;
the most Talia had ever seen together at one time. Apparently every Herald
within riding distance had arranged to be here for the fealty ceremony. The
storyteller concluded his tale to the sighs of satisfaction of those around
him. Then, with the spell of the story gone, many of them leaped up to greet
the newcomers, hugging the two men or grasping their hands with warm and
heart-felt affection. Since they were uniformly strangers to Talia, she shrank
back shyly into the shadows by the door. ARROWS
FLIGHT 57 "Whoa,
there—slow down, friends!" Dirk chuckled, extricating himself from the
press of greeters. "We've brought someone to meet all of you." He
searched the shadows, found Talia, and reaching out a long arm, pulled her
fully into the light. "You all know we've finally got a true Queen's Own
again—and here she is!" Before
anyone could move to greet her, there was a whoop of joy from the far side of
the room, and a hurtling body bounced across it, vaulting over several Heralds
who laughed, ducked, and protected their heads with their arms. The leaper
reached Talia and picked her up bodily, lifting her high into the air, and
setting her down with an enthusiastic kiss. "Skif?"
she gasped. "Every
inch of me!" Skif crowed. "B-but—you're
so tall!" When he'd gotten his Whites, Skif hadn't topped her by more than
an inch or two. Now he could easily challenge Dirk's height. "I
guess something in the air of the south makes things grow, 'cause I sure did
last year," Skif chuckled. "Ask Dirk—he was my counselor." "Grow?
Bright Stars, grow is too tame a word!" Dirk groaned. "We spent half
our time keeping him fed; he ate more than our mules!" "You've
done pretty well yourself, I'd say," Skif went on, pointedly ignoring
Dirk. "You looked fine up there. Made us all damn proud." Talia
blushed, glad it wouldn't show in the dim light. "I've had a lot of
help," she said, almost apologetically. "It
takes more than a lot of help, and we both know it," he retorted.
"Well, hellfire, this isn't the time or place for talk about work. You
two—you know the rules. Entrance fee!" Dirk
and Kris were laughingly pushed to the center of the room, as the story teller vacated
his place for them. "Anybody bring a harp?" Kris called. "Mine's
still packed; I just got in today." 58 MERCEDES
LACKEY "I
did," Talia volunteered, and eager hands reached out to convey the harp,
still in the case, to Kris. "Is
this—this can't be My Lady, can it?" Kris asked as the firelight gleamed
on the golden wood and the clean, delicate lines. "I wondered who Jadus
had left her to." He ran his fingers reverently across the strings, and
they sighed sweetly. "She's in perfect tune, Talia. You've been caring for
her as she deserves." Without
waiting for an answer, he began playing an old lullaby. Jadus had been a better
player, but Kris was surprisingly good for an amateur, and much better than
Talia. He made an incredibly beautiful picture, with the golden wood gleaming
against his black tunic, and his raven head bent in concentration over the
strings. He was almost as much a pleasure to watch as to listen to. "Any
requests?" he asked when he'd finished. "
'Sun and Shadow,'" several people called out at once. "All
right," Dirk replied, "But I want a volunteer to sing Shadowdancer.
The last time I did it, I was hoarse for a month." "I
could," Talia heard herself saying, to her surprise. "You?"
Dirk seemed both pleased and equally surprised. "You're full of amazing
things, aren't you?" He made room beside himself; and Talia picked her way
across the crowded floor, to sit shyly in the shadow he cast in the firelight. "Sun
and Shadow" told of the meeting of two of the earliest Heralds, Rothas
Sunsinger and Lythe Shadowdancer; long before they were ever Chosen and while
their lives still remained tangled by strange curses. It was a duet for male
and female voice, though Dirk had often sung it all himself. It was one of those
odd songs that either made you hold your breath or bored you to tears,
depending on how it was sung. Dirk wondered which it would be tonight. As
Talia began her verse in answer to his,,Dirk ARROW'S
FLIGHT 59 stopped
wondering. There was no doubt who'd trained her—the deft phrasing that made the
most of her delicate, slightly breathy voice showed Jadus' touch as clearly as
the harp he'd left her. But she sang with something more than just her mind and
voice, something the finest training couldn't impart. This was going to be one
of the magic times. Dirk
surrendered himself to the song, little guessing that he was surpassing his own
best this night as well. Kris knew, as he accompanied them—and he wished there
was a way to capture the moment for all time. The
spontaneous applause that shook the rafters starded both Dirk and Talia out of
the spell the music had wrapped them in. Dirk smiled with more than usual
warmth at the tiny female half-hiding in his shadow, and felt his smile
returned. "Well,
we've paid our forfeit," Kris said, cutting short the demands for more.
"It's somebody else's turn now." "That's
not fair," a voice from the back complained, "How could any of us
possibly follow that?" Someone
did, of course, by changing the mood rather than ruining it by trying to
sustain it. A tall, bony fellow borrowed Talia's pipe to play a lively jig,
while two men and a woman bounded into the center to dance to it. That seemed
to decide everyone on a dancing-set; Talia reclaimed her pipe to join Kris,
someone with a gittern, and Jeri on tambour in a series of very lively round
dances of the village festival variety. As these were both strenuous and of an
accelerated tempo, those who had felt lively enough to dance were soon
exhausted and ready to become an audience again. Those
who didn't feel up to entertaining paid their "entrance fee" in food
and drink; Talia saw a good many small casks of wine, cider, and ale ranged
along the walls, and with them, baskets of fruit, sausages, or bread and
cheese. Stray mugs and odd 60 MERCEDES
LACKEY cups
were always accumulating in the tackshed, especially during the hot summer
months when Heralds and students were likely to need a draught of cool water
from the well that supplied the Companions' needs at this end of the Field.
These handy receptacles were filled and refilled and passed from hand to hand
with a gay disregard for the possibility of colds or fever being passed with
the drink. Like Talia, most of the Heralds had brought cushions from their
quarters; these and their saddles and packs were piled into comfortable lounges
that might be shared or not. A few murmurs from some of the darker corners made
Talia hastily avert her eyes and close her ears, and she recalled Dirk's
earlier comments about Heralds "keeping each other warm." From time
to time some of these rose from the dark, and either left for more private
surroundings or rejoined those by the two fires. And over all was an atmosphere
of—belonging. There was no one here that was not cared for and welcomed by all
the rest. It was Talia's first exposure to a gathering of her fellows under
pleasant circumstances, and she gradually realized that the feeling of oneness
extended outside the walls as well—to the Companions in the Field, and beyond
that, to those who could not be present this night. Small wonder, with such a
warmth of brotherhood to bask in, that the Heralds had deserted the main
revelry for this more intimate celebration of their joy at the Choosing of the
Heir. It was enough to make her forget the strange uneasiness that had been
shadowing her the past three weeks. As soon
as she could manage it, Talia retrieved Skif from a knot of year-mates who
seemed bent on emptying a particular cask by themselves. "Let's
go up to the loft," she said, after scanning that perch and ascertaining
that none of the amorous had chosen it themselves. "I don't want to
disturb anybody, but I don't want to leave, either." ARROWS
FLIGHT 61 The
"loft" was little more than a narrow balcony that ran the length of
one side and gave access to storage places in the rafters. Talia noticed
immediately that Skif—very uncharacteristically—kept to the wall on the stairs,
and put his back against it when they reached the loft itself. "Lord
and Lady, it's good to see you!" he exclaimed softly, giving her a repeat
of his earlier hug. "We weren't sure we'd make it back in time. In fact,
we left all the baggage and the mules back at a Resupply Station; took only
what Cymry and Ahrodie could carry besides ourselves. I've missed you, little
sister. The letters helped, but I'd rather have been able to talk with you,
especially—" Talia
could sense him fighting a surge of what could only be fear. "Especially?" "—after—the
accident." She moved
closer to him, resting both her hands on his. She didn't have to see him to
know he was pale and white-knuckled. "Tell me." "I—can't." She
lowered her shields; he was spiky inside with phobic fears; of storms, of
entrapment; and most of all, of falling. In the state he was in now, she
doubted he'd be able to look out a second-story window without exerting iron
control—and this from the young man who'd led her on a scramble across the face
of the second story of the Palace itself, one dark night! "Remember
me? What I am? Just start at the beginning; take it slowly. I'll help you face
it down." He
swallowed. "It—it started with a storm; we were caught out on the trail in
the hills. Hills, ha! More like mountains! Gods, it was dark; rain was pouring
down so hard I couldn't even see Cymry's ears. Dirk had point, the mules were
next, I was tail—it was supposed to be the safest place. We were more or less
feeling our way along; sheer rock on one side of us, ravine on the other." 62 MERCEDES
LACKEY Talia
had herself in half-trance, carefully extending herself into his mind. He was
fighting down his fear as he spoke and beginning to lose to it. "The
trail just—crumbled, right under Cymry's hooves. We fell; there wasn't even
time to yell for help." Gently,
Talia touched the fear, took it into herself, and began working away at it. It
was like knife-edged flint, all points and slicing surfaces. As softly as
flowing water, and as inexorably, she began wearing away at it, dulling it,
muting it. "We
ended up wedged halfway down. Cymry was stunned; I'd broken my arm and most of
my ribs, I think; I don't remember much. It hurt too much to think, and where I
was stuck, there was a flood of water pouring down the wall like a young
waterfall. You know I don't Mindspeak too well, and Dirk's Gift isn't
Mindspeech anyway; I couldn't get hold of myself enough to call for help that
way, and it was impossible to be heard over the storm." He was
shaking like a reed in a windstorm; she put her arm around his shoulders;
supplying a physical comfort as well as the mental. "But Dirk found
you," she pointed out. "The
Gods alone know how; he had no reason to think we were still alive." The
tension was rapidly draining out of him as Talia shielded him from the phobic
memories; not enough to make him forget, but enough to make them less real,
less obsessive. "He got ropes around both of us and anchored us where we
were; used something to divert the water away from me, and stayed with us,
hanging on with his teeth and toenails, until the storm was over. Then he got
blankets over us and sent Ahrodie off for help while he got me back up to the
trail. I don't remember that part at all; I must have blacked out from the
pain." His voice sounded less strained. The
fear was nearly conquered now; time to diffuse the rest of it. "You must
have looked like a ARROW'S
FLIGHT 63 drowned
rat," she replied with a hint of chuckle. "I know you have a fetish
for cleanliness, but don't you think that was overdoing it a bit?" He
stared at her in surprise, then began to laugh, shakily. The laughter was half
tears as the last of the tension was released. Hysterics—yes, but long needed. She
held him quietly until the worst passed, and he could see past the tears to her
face, childlike in the half-dark. The
paralysis of fear that Skif had lived with on a daily basis for the past
several months had all but choked the voice out of him as he tried to tell
Talia what had happened that awful night. He'd suffered nightmare replays of
the incident at least one night a week ever since. It had taken all of his
control to repeat it to her—at least at first. But then, gradually, the words
had begun to flow more freely; the fear had slowly loosed its grip on him. As
he neared the end of his narrative, he began to realize what Talia had done. It was
gratitude as much as release that shook the tears from him then. "You—you
did it to me, didn't you—fixed me like you did with Vostel and the rest of
them—?" "Mm-hm,"
she nodded, touching his hair in the dark. "I didn't think you'd
mind." "No
more nightmares?" "No
more nightmares, big brother. You won't find yourself wanting to hide in a
closet during storms anymore, and you'll be able to look down over cliffs
again. In fact, you'll even be able to tell the story in a week or two without
shaking like a day-old chick, and it should make a good tale to earn the
sympathy of a pretty lady with!" "You—you're
unbelievable," he said at last, holding her tightly. "So
are you, to have been coping with all that fear all this time, and not letting
it get the best of you." They
sat that way for some time, before the mur- 64 MERCEDES
LACKEY mur of
voices below them recalled them to their surroundings. "Hellfire!
This is supposed to be a party, and you're supposed to be enjoying it,"
Skif said at last. "I
am, now that you're all right." She rose to her feet, and gave him a hand
up. "Well, I'm going back to the singing, and it seems to me that your
year-mate Mavry is looking a bit lonely." "Hm.
So she is," he replied, peering down into the lighted area. "Think
I'll go keep her company. And—heart-sister—" "No
thanks needed, love." He
kissed her forehead by way of reply, then skipped lightly down the stairs of
the loft and took himself off to the other side of the room, where Mavry
willingly made a space for him beside her. Talia
rejoined the musicians just in time for Dirk to claim her for another duet She
had to plead a dry throat before they'd let someone else take the floor. She
didn't notice the passing of time until she caught herself yawning hard enough
to split her head in half. When she tried to reckon up how much time had
passed, she was shocked. Thinking
she surely must be mistaken, she slipped over to the door to look out to the
east. Sure enough, there on the horizon was the first hint of false dawn. True
dawn was less than an hour away. She
collected her things, feeling suddenly ready to collapse. Dirk, half-propped on
a backrest of saddle and several old saddleblankets, seemed to be asleep as she
slipped past him, but he cracked an eyelid open as she tried to ease herself
out. "Giving
up?" he asked softly. She
nodded, stifling another yawn with the back of her hand. "Enjoy
yourself?" At her enthusiastic nod, he smiled, another of those wonderful
warm smiles that seemed to embrace her and close everything and everyone ARROWS
FLIGHT 65 else
outside of it. "I'll be heading back to my own bed before long. About this
time things start to break up on their own. And don't worry about being
expected on duty today. No one will be up to notice before noon at the
earliest—look over there." He cocked an eyebrow to his left. Talia was
astonished to see the Queen, dressed in old, worn leathers, sharing a cloak and
resting her head in easy intimacy on the shoulder of the middle-aged
storyteller. And not far from her sat Alberich, finishing the last of a
wineskin with Keren, Sherrill, and Jeri. "How
did Selenay and Alberich get in without my noticing?" Talia asked him. "Easy.
You were singing at the time. See, though? You won't be missed. Have a good
long sleep—and pleasant dreams, Talia." "And
to you, Dirk," she said. "They
will be," he chuckled, and closed his eyes again. "They most
assuredly will be." Three Talia
didn't usually sleep long or heaviiy. Perhaps the cause was that she'd drunk
more wine than usual, or perhaps it was just the incredibly late hour at which
she'd sought her bed. At any rate, it took having the sun shine directly into
her eyes to wake her the next morning. Since
the window of her bedroom faced the east, she'd positioned her bed with the
headboard right under the windowsill. That way she always had the fresh air,
and her face should remain out of the sunlight until well after the time she
normally rose. No matter how cold the winter, she'd never been able to bear the
slight claustrophobia that closed shutters induced in her, so the glazed
windows themselves and the thin fabric curtaining them were all that stood
between her eyes and the sun's rays, and the windows themselves were open, with
the curtains moving slightly in the breeze. As she
squinted groggily through the glare, she realized that it must be nearly noon,
and as if to confirm this, the noon warning bell at the Collegium sounded
clearly through her open window. Well,
the wine she'd indulged in last night had given her a slight headache. She
muttered something to herself about fools and lack of judgment 66 ARROW'S
FLIGHT 67 and
pulled her pillow over her head, tempted to go right back to sleep again. But a
nagging sense of duty, (and, more urgently, a need to use the privy) denied her
further sloth. She'd
been so tired last night—this morning?—that all she'd been able to do was peel
off her clothing, leave it in a heap on the floor, and fall into bed. Now that
she felt a little more awake, her skin crawled with the need for a bath. Her
hair itched. Her mouth didn't bear thinking about. She groaned. It was
definitely time to get up. She
sighed, levered herself out of bed, and set about getting herself back into
working condition. Sitting
on the edge of the bed, she rubbed her eyes until they cooperated by focusing
properly, then reached for the robe hanging on one of the posts at the foot of
her bed. She wrapped it about herself, then collected the clothing on the
floor. The soiled clothing went into a hamper; the servant who tended to the
Heralds in this section of the wing collected it and sent it to the laundry as
part of her duties—and that was a luxury that was going to take some getting
used to! She'd been lowborn and at the bottom of her Holderkin family's pecking
order as a child, and once at the Collegium had fallen naturally in with the
tradition that trainees tended to their own needs and shared the common chores.
She had become habituated to doing the serving, and not to being waited on
herself! The
warmth of the smooth wood beneath her feet was very comforting, and she decided
then that she would not have any floor coverings in her new quarters. She liked
the way the sunwarmed boards felt to bare feet, and she liked the way the wood
glowed when the sun touched it. She
rummaged in her wardrobe, and draped a new, clean uniform over one arm, then
bundled her bathing things into the other arm and headed for the door. 68 MERCEDES
LACKEY The
bathing-room shared by the other tower occupants was on the bottom floor; that
was another disadvantage of having selected a tower room. It was a long walk, and
seemed longer for the thinking about it. Talia was the only current occupant
though. The other rooms were either unclaimed or their owners were out on
circuit. So at least there wasn't going to be any competition for the
facilities. Talia
saw a note waiting for her on her door as soon as she opened it. Rubbing her
temple in response to the ache behind her eyes, she wondered who could be the
early riser after the revelry of the previous night. She took it down and began
to skim through it as she headed down the stairs. What she read caused her to
stop dead and reread it thoroughly. It was
from Kyril. /
realize this is notice so short as to be nonexistent, he wrote, but we've had
an emergency since last night. The Herald currently riding one of the Northern
Border Sectors has had an accident, and we have no one free who knows anything
about the area to cover it. Dirk can't—he's already assigned to another Border
Sector that needs a Border-bred Herald too badly to reassign him elsewhere. The
closest we can come is this—since Dirk is a native of that area, Kris has
visited up there fairly often; and you're of Borderer upbringing. Since you
haven't been assigned a circuit yet, it seemed to me that assigning it to you
as your internship with Kris would solve our problems very neatly. However,
this means that you two will have to start as soon as we can get you on the
road north; tomorrow, I hope. Please report to me right after the noon meal—or
as soon as you read this note!—-for a briefing and some final information. Her
first thought was an irreverent and irrelevant one. She knew Kyril hadn't left
the revel before her— how could he have been awake and ready to handle crises
so blasted early in the morning after? Her next was more to the point. Tomorrow!
She hadn't expected assignment with so little warning. There wasn't any time to
waste; she ran downstairs to the bathing- ARROWS
FLIGHT 69 room.
The last thing she wanted to do was give Kyril an impression of carelessness or
incompetence. A good
hot bath did a great deal to revitalize her; a dose of willowbark tea took care
of the ache in her head. She couldn't do much for the half-cloudy feeling of
her mind, but she hoped that being aware that she wasn't quite at her best
would compensate for that. Rather than take the time for a full meal she begged
cheese, bread, and fruit from Mero. She was far too keyed up to eat much,
anyway. This would be the first time that she would meet with Kyril as an
equal; up until now, even though she had her Whites, it had still been very
much a teacher-student relationship. She
took a few moments of precious time to consult with Rolan before seeking Kyril.
It was frustrating not to be able to speak with him in words—but simply
Mindtouching with him gave her an added measure of calmness. He reassured her
that Kyril would never have expected her to report any earlier than this, and
prevented her from changing at the last minute into one of her formal uniforms.
And beneath it all was the solidity of knowing that he stood ready to help her
if she truly found herself out of her depth on this assignment. Feeling a good
bit more confident, she skipped down the tower steps and entered the Palace
proper. A few
moments later she had made her way to the administrative area. She paused
outside the door of the Records Room—which served as Kyril's office— for a
moment to order her mind and calm herself. She pulled the doeskin tunic
straight, smoothed her hair; took a deep breath, knocked once and entered. The
Records Room was as neat as Dean Elcarth's office was cluttered. Sun streamed
in through the two windows that looked out into the gardens on the west side of
the building. Both of them were wide open, and flower-scent wafted in through
them. The 70 MERCEDES
LACKEY room
was crammed as full of bookshelves as it was possible to be. Kyril's desk stood
just under one of the two windows, to take full advantage of the light. Kyril
himself was leaning in the window frame, absently watching courtiers stroll in
the gardens, and obviously waiting for her. She noticed something anomalous on
his desk as he turned from the window to greet her; a quiverful of white
arrows. "Sir?"
she said softly; and he turned to smile greeting at her. Kyril
was pleased to see that Talia was looking alert and ready for practically
anything. In the past few weeks of working with her, he had come to truly
believe all that her Collegium teachers had claimed for her. The Queen's Own
was always an outstanding person among Heralds, but Talia bid fair to be
outstanding among the ranks of her own kind. He could not for a moment fathom
why her reputation, even among her fellow Heralds, was one of being a sweet,
but somewhat simple creature. He wasn't altogether certain that he would have
been able to manage the feat of memorizing all the Kingdom's familial devices
and tides in the three weeks she'd taken. Perhaps it was because she was so
shy, even yet, and seldom spoke without first being spoken to. Perhaps it was
because of her ability with children in general, and the Heir in particular—a
strong maternal instinct was not necessarily coupled in anyone's mind with a
high intellectual level. Then
again, there weren't too many even among the Heralds who had been her teachers
who had seen the real Talia. She had not allowed very many of them to come
within arm's length, as it were. Kyril was just sorry he had had so little time
for her; and he sometimes worried a little about that strange Gift of hers.
Empathy that strong—and having seen her exert herself, he knew it was very
strong—was far more the Gift of Healers. He had been relieved when she'd begun
spending so much time with the ARROWS
FLIGHT 71 Healers;
they would know how to train her properly, if anybody would. If he had only had
the time—if Visa hadn't been killed— But
Talia seemed to have everything perfectly under control, and if even her own
peers tended to underestimate her, that surely wasn't going to harm her any. Perhaps,
though, that tendency to dismiss her lightly was not altogether a bad thing.
Kyril had been dealing with Court and Council on a daily basis for something
like twenty years, and being underestimated could be a potent and very useful
weapon. People might not see past the guileless eyes, and tend to let their
tongues run on longer leads in her presence. No, that reputation of hers might
well be a very good thing for all of them. Certainly the disturbing rumors he'd
heard lately about her would not survive much longer if people began comparing
the tales of machinations with her reputation as a sweet and uncomplicated
innocent. "Sit,
sit," he waved at a chair, taking one himself. "You look none the
worse for your late night. I remember my first Herald's revel; I thought my
hangover was going to last for the next week! I trust you enjoyed
yourself." He smiled again as she nodded shyly. "It's the first
chance I had to hear you sing. Jadus used to make us all curious, boasting
about your abilities. He was certainly right about you! Last night—to tell the
truth, I've heard Bards that didn't give performances that moving. You're as
good as Jadus claimed, maybe better." She blushed, and he chuckled.
"Well, that's neither here nor there. I am very sorry about all the hurry,
but we don't like to leave Border Sectors without a Herald for very long; in
this case, it's not that there's potential for trouble, but that the people of
the Sector feel isolated enough as it is, particularly in winter. They need to
know that they're as important to the life of this Kingdom as the capital
Sector itself." He regarded her stead- 72 MERCEDES
LACKEY ily;
her answer to his speech would tell him a great deal. The
eyes that met his squarely held faint surprise. "I—I
thought there was always potential for trouble in a Border Sector, sir,"
Talia ventured. "There're raiders, bandits—lots of problems even if the
people themselves never cause them." "In
the general run of things that's true, but the Border in this Sector runs
through the Forest of Sorrows, and that's no small protection." "Then
the tale of Vanyel's Curse is true?" Talia was amazed. "Sorrows does
protect the Kingdom? But . .. how?" "I
wish I knew," Kyril replied, musing half to himself, "They knew
things, those old ones, that we've forgotten or lost. They had magic then—real
magic, and not our mind-magic; the Truth Spell is just about all we have left
of that. Vanyel's Curse is as strong in Sorrows as the day he cast it with his
dying breath. Nothing that intends ill to this Kingdom or the people in it lives
more than five minutes there; I've seen some of the results with my own eyes. I
used to ride Northern myself, back in the days when I was still riding
circuits, and not Seneschal's Herald. I've seen bandits impaled on branches as
if on thrown spears. I've seen outlaws who starved to death, buried to their
waist in rock-hard earth, as if it opened beneath their feet, then closed on
them like a trap. What's more—and this is what was more frightening than the
other things—I've seen barbarian raiders dead without a mark on them, but their
faces twisted into an expression of complete and utter terror. I don't know
what it was that happened to them, but my guess is that they were truly
frightened to death." Talia
shook her head wonderingly, "It's hard to believe. How can a curse know
someone's intent?" "I
can't explain it, and neither can any of the old chronicles. It's true
nevertheless. You, or I, or any of ARROW'S
FLIGHT 73 the
people of the Sector can walk that forest totally without fear. A baby could
walk through there totally unharmed, because even the forest predators leave
humans alone in Sorrows—well, that's the only anomalous thing about the area.
The religion is fairly ordinary, the people follow the Lady as Astera of the
Stars, and the God as Kernos of the Northern Lights; there's no anti-woman
prejudice. In fact, because of Sorrows, we often have females riding circuit
there alone. The Herald you're replacing is a woman, in point of fact. You may
know her, she was two year-groups ahead of you—Destria." "Destria?
Havens—she isn't badly hurt, is she? What happened?" "The
injury is fairly serious, but not life-threatening. She was trying to rescue
half a dozen children during a flood—it's a hard land, Talia, that's the main
problem with it—and broke both legs." "Thank
the Goddess for Companions." "Amen
to that; without hers she'd have lain in sleet-born water for hours, probably
died of exposure. No, Destria's Sofi managed to get not only her Herald but all
the children to safety. All's well there except for the injury. So, that's the
gist of the situation, and as I said, I apologize for the short notice. I hope
you don't mind too much." "Not
at all sir," Talia replied, "After all, I had even less notice when I
was Chosen, didn't I?" "Good
for you!" Kyril chuckled. "Well, now we come to the reason why I
asked you to come here, instead of meeting you for lunch or asking you to meet
with both Kris and myself to be told about this. I'm sure you realized a long
time ago that there were things we wouldn't teach you until you got your
Whites. What I'm about to show you is the best-kept secret of the Heraldic
Circle. Haven't you ever wondered why all Heralds are required to become
archers?" "I
never thought about it," she confessed, looking 74 MERCEDES
LACKEY puzzled.
"It does seem a little odd, now that you mention it. We don't fight with
the royal Archers in battle; when we do fight, it's mostly sword or
hand-to-hand. We usually don't have to hunt to feed ourselves riding circuit;
we carry supplies or depend on the shelters. So why do we have to learn
bow?" "So
that you have an excuse to carry arrows wherever you go," Kyril replied.
"Not everyone has the kind of mind-reach I have; Lady knows things would
be much simpler if they did, because there are plenty of times when the
ordinary means of passing information wouldn't do at all. We have to have a
foolproof, unambiguous method of passing simple messages, but it has to be
impervious to tampering. That's why the Arrow-Code was developed, and thus far
no one has broken it. And it all starts with this— " With
skillful and practiced fingers, he carefully broke barbs from the Retchings of
a plain white arrow he pulled from the quiver. Talia could see that he was
being very precise about which barbs he broke from which fletchings, yet when
he was through, it looked as if the arrow had simply been handled too roughly. "So
that's why all our arrows are fletched with mud-gannet feathers!" Talia
said, enlightened. "Right.
They're nowhere near as suitable as goose, but the barbs are so thick, heavy,
and regular it's possible to have the fletching on every arrow we carry
absolutely identical—and it's possible to literally count barbs for the code.
Now this is my pattern. It's registered here, among the secret Records, and
even there it's in an encrypted form for added security. Outside of those
Records, only four people know it—the Queen, the Seneschal, Elcarth, and Teren,
who used to be my partner. Only the Queen, the Seneschal, and Elcarth know how
to translate the ciphers we've written the patterns in besides myself. When
your internship is over, you'll be given the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 75 encryption
key as part of what you need to know as Queen's Own. Only two people know every
pattern by heart; myself and Elcarth. Now you know why one of the primary
prerequisites of both our jobs is a perfect memory!" Talia
smiled, and bit her lip to keep from chuckling. "This
pattern identifies the message carried by the color of the banding on the arrow
as coming from me and no one else. Now—" He took a second arrow from the
quiver, and broke the barbs in a second pattern. "—this is your pattern.
When I'm satisfied that you can reproduce it in the dark and behind your back,
I'll give you a general idea of the rest of the code." She was
slightly nonplussed to discover that Kyril meant that literally. It took
several hours before she could perform that simple task without seeing the
arrow she was working on, and without truly thinking about it, with a speed and
accuracy that contented him. Meanwhile, the sun crept across Kyril's desk, and
her stomach began reminding her that it had been a long time since her last
real meal. Finally
Kyril pronounced her competent, and allowed her to give her tired fingers a
rest while he explained the remainder of the code to her. "The
rest of it," he told her, "is a bit more complicated, although we've
done our best to make the colors mnemonic to the message. Kris will drill you
on the full code on your way to your sector, but in general, this is what the
simple banding of one color means. White means there's nothing wrong—'all is
well, come ahead.' It's usually used just to identify that there's another
Herald about, and who it is. Green calls for a Healer to be sent, purple for a
priest, gray for another Herald. Brown tells the receiver to watch for a
message; there's trouble, not serious, but something that requires elaboration,
and something that may delay the Herald sending it in 76 MERCEDES
LACKEY keeping
his schedule. Blue means 'treachery.1 Yellow calls for military aid, the number
of yellow bands on the arrows tells how many units—if you send every
yellow-ringed arrow you've got, and we know exactly how many you have, we know
to send the entire Army! Red means 'great danger—come with all speed.' Then
there's black." He
paused, his eyes holding Talia's. "I pray to Heaven that you never have to
send a black arrow, Talia. Sending any black-ringed arrow means there's been or
will be death or catastrophe. And there's a variant on the code for black you
should also know now rather than later. The black arrow intact except for the
fletching pattern means 'total disaster, help or rescue needed.' Break the
arrow, send the pieces, and it reads 'disaster, all hope gone. Do not attempt
rescue.* Remove the head, and it means that the one whose pattern is in the
fletching is dead. The broken arrow, the headless arrow—those can actually be
of any color so long as the fletching pattern's there. Those are the two we'll
always understand—and the ones we never want to see." Talia
felt a peculiar chill thread her backbone, and suddenly the hot, sunny day
seemed unaccountably gray and chill. She shook off the feeling, and repeated
Kyril's words back to him, verbatim. "That's
all there is," he said, satisfied. "You're as well prepared as any of
us is for his first assignment— and you're one of the best Heralds the
Collegium has ever turned out. You ought to do just fine, even though this is going
to be a tough assignment. Good luck to you, Talia; 1 look forward to seeing you
in another year and a half." She
took her leave of him and despite her hunger, decided it would be a good idea
to hunt up Kris. The first place she looked for him, given the situation, was
the tackshed. After all, he was only just in from fieldwork; his first move
should be to see that needed repairs had already been made to his Com- ARROW'S
FUGHT 77 panion's
gear. That was exactly where he was, in company with Dirk, checking over his
harness and tack. As
alert as a wild thing to any hint of movement, Dirk was the first to notice
her. "It's our songbird!" he said genially, favoring her with one of
those smiles that was almost an embrace. "I expect you have the word? And
Kyril's given you the code?" She
nodded, feeling oddly shy, then searched for Rolan's never-used traveling
equipment. It was similar to the tack he'd worn when he'd found her, except
that the bridle bells were removable, and the saddle was a bit more
complicated. Besides the usual girth, it had breast and rump bands like those
on warriors' saddles, a far larger number of the snaffles by which objects
could be fastened to the skirting, and an arrangement of rings and straps that
made it possible for a rider—ill, injured, or unconscious, perhaps—to be belted
securely into his seat. Talia
rarely ever bothered with saddle or bridle around the Collegium, but she knew
from experience, both her own and Rolan's, that it would mean a great deal in the
way of comfort on a ride of more than an hour (for both of them) for her to use
the saddle. And as her near-fatal escapade in the river had shown, the
otherwise useless reins on the bridle had other functions than guiding her
Companion. Had Rolan been wearing his bridle, she could have twined her arms in
the reins and let him tow her to shore, for instance. "Everything
in good order?" Kris asked. She nodded an affirmative, feeling awkward and
tongue-tied now that she was less than twenty-four hours away from a long
journey spent mostly in his company. "Kris
and I haven't taken care of requistioning your supplies yet," Dirk said,
giving her an encouraging, lopsided grin, as if he sensed how she was feeling,
"We were waiting for you to catch up with us." 78 MERCEDES
LACKEY "We?"
Kris lifted an eyebrow at his partner. "What's this 'we' all about? She
happens to be my trainee, you know." "And
who's the one who can't ever remember how many furlongs it is to his Sector,
and whether or not you need high-energy rations, or even where he's going, half
the time?" "Your
guess is as good as mine—I don't know of anybody answering that
description," Kris grinned. Dirk
heaved a heavy sigh. "No gratitude, that's what it is. All right,
sieve-head, let's you and your trainee get over to the Quartermaster and show
her how it's done." They
arranged themselves with Talia walking between them, and strolled out of the
Collegium area of the Palace to the area reserved for the Guard. That is, they
strolled—Talia had to stretch her legs no small amount to keep up with them.
All the time she was constantly aware of the little, warm, sidelong glances
Dirk kept throwing at her when he thought she wasn't watching. She wasn't used
to being under such intense scrutiny, and it made her a little—not uneasy,
precisely—unsettled was perhaps the better word. Like
the Heralds, the Guard had their own area of the Palace, although they had
nothing that was quite like the Collegium. They did have a training center, and
a communal barracks, as well as officer's quarters, and they maintained a
number of small rooms as offices. Since the needs of the Heralds and the Guard
were quite similar in some areas of supply, the Quartermaster of the Guard also
dispensed initial supplies to outbound Heralds. Any other supplies were taken
care of at special Resupply Stations in the field. The
Offices of the Guard were entered by a door directly under the shadow of the
wall that encircled the entire Palace/Collegium complex. There were a dozen or
more officers seated at desks literally ARROWS
FLIGHT 79 crammed
together in the relatively small room, all busy with piles of paperwork, but
Kris and Dirk seemed to know exactly where they were going. Talia followed as
they threaded their way through the maze, while the officers whose work they
inadvertently disturbed gave them either glares or friendly winks. Their goal
was a desk at the very rear, whose occupant, a grizzled old veteran, looked
rather out of place among the younger, obviously townbred officers. He seemed
to be hard at his paperwork, but looked up and grinned broadly at the sight of
them. "Wot,
ye tired of our faces alriddy?" he jeered. "Or is't ye've got
somebody's daddy 'twould like t' see if Heralds bleed red?" "Neither,
you old pirate," Kris replied. "We've got a gap to fill up North, and
Kyril, in his infinite wisdom, has decreed that we're best suited to fill
it." The
man's face grew serious. "Ah didna hear the' Bell—" "Relax,
Levris, it wasn't fatal," Dirk assured him. "A pair of broken legs,
or so I'm told. Talia, this is Levris, he's the Quartermaster of the Guard, and
as such, those of us on circuit see a lot of him." The
wizened man stood, took her hand like a courtier, and bowed gracefully over it.
" Tis a pleasure," he said gravely, while Talia blushed. "An' a
privilege. Ye be Queen's Own, I'm thinkin'—" "Absolutely
right," Kris said, corners of his mouth twitching. "She's my
internee." "Oh,
so?" Levris let go of Talia's hand, rested both hands on his hips, and
gave him a stern look. "Ye'll not be tryin' any of yer seducin' tricks on
her, m'lad, or if Ah come t' hear of it..." Now it
was Kris' turn to blush, and Dirk's to hide a grin. Talia
decided to come to his rescue. "Herald Kyril surely wouldn't have assigned
us together if he thought there was any harm in the pairing," she pointed
out. "And this is duty, not a pleasure-jaunt." 80 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Well,
an' that's true," he admitted reluctantly, seating himself again. "So—what
Sector?" "North
Border, Sorrows Two," Kris told him, "And since we won't be meeting
the outgoing Herald, we'll need the whole kit." "By
t'morrow, Ah s'ppose? And ye'll be wantin' the special rations. Ye might give a
man some warnin', next time!" he grumbled, but there was a twinkle in his
eye. "Sure,
Levris. We'll make certain to schedule our broken legs from now on—and make
certain it's convenient for you." "See
that ye do, then," he chuckled; then pulled out a half-dozen forms, and had
Kris and Talia sign them all. That done, he shooed them out the way they had
come. "That's
all there is to it," Kris said as they returned to the Collegium side.
"He'll have everything we'll need ready for us in the morning." "Provided
Herald Sluggard can be persuaded to rise that early," Dirk grinned. "Now
that you've checked over your harness, all you need to do is pack your personal
things," Kris continued, ignoring him. "Keep in mind that where we're
going it gets cold sooner than here, stays that way for longer, and the cold is
more intense. The leaves are already falling up there, though they've just
started to turn here. We'll plan on staying mostly in Waystations near the
villages; we won't want to get too far from other people if we can help
it." "Nevertheless,"
Dirk warned both of them, "You'd better also plan on having to spend
several nights alone in the wilderness. I lived in that area; you didn't. The
villages are far apart, and winter storms can spring up out of nowhere. You may
get caught without a Waystation near, so pack the emergency supplies; if you
don't use them, there's no harm done, but if you need them, you'll be glad you
have them. Plan for the worst possible snow you've ever seen—then
overplan." ARROW'S
FVCHT 81 "Yes,
O graybeard," Kris made a face at him. "Holy Stars, Dirk, I visited
with your family up there often enough! The way you're fussing, you'd think
both of us were green as grass and totally untrained! Talia's no highborn
fragile flower, she's a Borderer, too, even if she's from farther south than
you." "Well,
better I should remind you needlessly .. ." "Stow
it and rope it down, granther! We'll be fine! Anyone would think you were my
keeper, not my partner." Now Kris cast a sly, sidelong glance at Talia,
who was feeling distinctly uncomfortable. "Or is it someone else you're
worrying about?" From
the surprise on Kris' face, even he hadn't expected the blush that reddened
Dirk's ears. "Look,"
Dirk said hastily, "I just don't want you two to get into any trouble. You
owe me for too many lost bets, and I'd rather not have to try to collect from
your lord father! Is there anything else you'd like advice for, Talia?" "N-no,"
she stammered. "I don't think so, anyway. I thank you both. I'd better get
back to my quarters and pack." "Don't
forget—take nothing but Whites!" Dirk called after her. "You're on
duty every minute in the field. And nothing fancy! It'll only get ruined." He
needn't have said that, about "nothing fancy," she thought a little
resentfully. After all, I'm not some silly townbred chit. And then she wondered
for a fleeting instant why his good opinion of her should seem so important. Dismissing
the thought from her mind, she ran back up the tower stairs and ransacked her wardrobe,
laying everything white she could find on the bed. That way she wouldn't
overlook a tunic or other article that she might find herself in need of out in
the field. She
packed nothing but the doeskin, with the summer and winter changes both—but she
packed every stitch of those she had. 82 MERCEDES
LACKEY Though
from the way Dirk talks, she thought wryly, you'd think it never got warm up
there. She
added a repair kit for leather and one for harness, and then for good measure
added a sealed pot of glue, just in case. There'd been times enough back on the
Holding when she was on sheep-watch that she'd needed a pot of glue, and not
had one to hand. She packed her sewing kit, and a brick of hard, concentrated
soap—the special kind that you needed for use on Whites to keep them pristine—
just in case it ever became necessary to do her own repairs and cleaning of her
clothing. Certainly the village laundrypeople normally tended those jobs, but
you never knew. She added a small metal traveling lamp, and extra wicks,
because she'd never seen a lamp in the Waystations, and if they stayed more
than one night, lamplight was easier on the eyes than firelight. Then her
personal gear, her weapons, a precious book or two, some writing supplies. Her
bedroll was next, and all the extra blankets she could find; with them, two
extra towels besides the others she carried, and a pair of thick sheepskin
slippers. Rolan's gear was all with his tack, but just the same she packed a
vial of ferris-oil. He liked it; it was good for his hooves and coat and kept
the insects away. Even
when she'd packed everything as compactly as she could, it still bulked
distressingly large. She stared at the clumsy packs in near-despair, trying to
think of something she dared leave behind. Kris would surely think she was an
idiot for wanting to bring all this stuff! "Good
packing job," Keren said from the open door behind her, "I intended
to come up here and help you cut down on the flotsam, but it looks like I'm not
needed." "Is
that meant ironically or seriously?' Talia asked, turning to greet the more
experienced Herald with relief. "Oh,
seriously. My counselor made me repack three ARROW'S
FUGHT 83 times
for my interning trip, and I never did get my packs down that small — I kept
thinking of things I was sure I'd miss. Know what? 1 ended up sending most of
them back here." "But
how is Rolan ever going to carry all this, the supply pack and me, too?" "Easy,
he won't have to. You'll each have a packbeast, probably a mule. Well, maybe
not; you're going north, they may give you chirras. Didn't anybody tell you
that? You're riding circuit, not carrying messages, so you don't need speed.
You can easily hold your speed down to match your packbeasts' without sacrificing
anything." Talia
heaved a sigh of relief. "Nobody told me. Kris either assumed that I knew,
or left it out deliberately to keep me from overpacking." "Well
don't go crazy now that you know," Keren warned. "I
won't. In fact, other than begging a couple more blankets and a pillow from
Supply, packing all three pairs of my boots, and adding a bit more in the way
of towels and soap and the like, there's only one thing more I want to
add." Talia tucked her third pair of boots into a pack, tied it shut, and
turned to the hearthcorner. There, where she'd left her last night still in her
carrying case, was My Lady. She opened the case, detuned the strings for safety
in traveling, and added her to the pile. "Good
notion," Keren said. "You may be snowbound at any time, and that'll
keep you from tearing out each other's throats from boredom. Not only that,
folks up there seldom see a Bard except in summer. You'll be like gifts from
the Gods." "Keren
— I'll — " Talia suddenly had a lump in her throat. Now it came home to
her; she was leaving, leaving the only place that had ever felt like home, and
the only friends she'd ever had. " — I'll miss Keren
reached out and hugged her shoulders. 84 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Don't
you worry. You'll be fine, I know you will. Kris is a good lad, if a bit too
conscious of his own good looks. Little centaur—I'll miss you, too. But don't
you dare cry—" she warned, caught between a chuckle and a tear, "—or
I'll start! Come on, we've just enough time to catch the end of supper, and you
must be ready to chew harness." Supper
was rather subdued; nearly everyone had long since eaten and gone, and of those
that were left Talia really knew only Keren well. Talia kept glancing around
her, realizing how much she was going to miss this place, that had been her
first real home. She had
expected that Keren would leave her afterward, but to her surprise, the older
woman insisted that she come with her to Keren's rooms. She was even more
surprised when Keren insisted Talia precede her through the door. Then
she saw who was waiting for them there; almost more people than would fit into
the room: Elcarth, Sherri, Jeri, Skif, Teren—even Alberich. Devan made a
brilliant patch of green among the Whites in his Healer's robes; the students
were well represented by Elspeth. Keren pushed her into the room from behind as
she hesitated on the threshold. "You
really didn't think we'd let you go without a proper good-bye, did you?"
Skif teased as Talia stared in dumb amazement. "Besides, I know you—you
were all set to mope away your last night here alone. Goose! Well, we're not
having any of that!" Since
that was exactly what she'd expected to be doing, Talia blushed rose-pink, then
stuck her tongue out at him. Skif,
knowing very well how prone Talia was to isolating herself just when she needed
others the most, had accosted Keren as soon as the news of Talia's assignment
had gotten to him. The two of them had put their heads together and quickly put ARROW'S
FLIGHT 85 together
this little "fare-thee-well" party, designed to keep her from falling
into a last-minute melancholy. When Skif saw the expression on Talia's face as
she'd realized what they'd done, he felt more than repaid for his effort. He did
his level best the whole evening to project how much his "little
sister" meant to him, knowing she'd pick it up. The warmth in her eyes
made him feel that he'd at least begun to give her an honest return for the
help she'd given him last night. In some ways he was just as glad now that
they'd never become lovers, for there was nothing that could have been more
satisfying, in the long run, than the open, loving relationship they had
instead. He had more than a suspicion that she felt the same. "So,
songbird, how about a tune or three?" While it wasn't precisely as festive
as the celebration the night before had been, everything had been geared to
setting her mind at rest and making her feel confident about the morrow. Each
of them, with the exception of Devan and Elspeth, had faced the same moment—and
each knew some way to make the prospect a positive one. There was a great deal
of laughter, plenty of absurd stories, and a palpable aura of caring. They sent
her off to bed in good time to get a full night's sleep, and she left with a
smile on her face. Kris
answered the tap on his door late that evening, expecting to see Dirk; in fact,
he'd already gotten out a bottle of wine and two glasses, figuring that his
partner wouldn't let the evening pass without coming by for a farewell drink
and chat. He got a fair shock to find his uncle, the Councilor Lord Orthallen,
standing in the dim hallway instead. He
managed to stammer out a surprised greeting, which Orthallen took as an
invitation to enter. The silver-haired, velvet-robed noble wore a grave
expression on his still-handsome, square-jawed face, so 86 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 87 Kris
had more than a faint suspicion that his visit was not just to bid farewell to
his nephew. He
directed his uncle to the most comfortable chair in the room and supplied him
with the glass of wine intended for Dirk before taking the chair opposite him. "Well,
uncle?" he said, deciding he was too tired to dance diplomatically around
the subject. "What brings you here? I know it wasn't just to bid me a fond
farewell." Orthallen
raised one eyebrow at his bluntness. "I understand you have the new
Queen's Own as your internee." Kris
shrugged. "It's no secret." "How
well do you know her?" "Not
at all," he admitted. "I've seen her twice, worked with her once. She
seems nice enough—quite well balanced, all told. Her Gift is an odd one,
but—" "That
is exactly what is worrying me." Orthallen all but pounced on the opening.
"Her Gift. From all anyone has been able to tell me, it is a very unusual
one for a Herald, much less the Queen's Own. It seems to be one that the
Heralds themselves know very little about, and I'm not entirely happy that an
inexperienced child should be in her position with a power so ... out-of-the-ordinary." "Rolan
Chose her," Kris replied warily. "That should be proof enough that
she's capable of handling it." "Yes,
but—emotions—it's such a volatile area. No black-and-white there, only gray.
There are rumors in the Court. . ." "Such
as?" "That
she has fostered an unnatural dependence in the Heir. After all, the child is
vulnerable to that sort of thing. It was her unnatural dependence on that
foreign nurse, Hulda, that led to her nearly being disallowed in the first
place. And there are other rumors." Kris
bit back an angry retort; best hear his uncle out. "Go on." "That
Talia has used her power to influence the Council; you can imagine for yourself
how easy that would be. If a Councilor were wavering ... it would be very easy
to nudge his emotions, make him feel happier about one side or the other. Or
not even that.. . simply sense that he is wavering, and use that knowledge to
persuade him in a more ordinary fashion. By knowing how Councilors stood, it
would make it quite simple for her to manipulate them just by tone of voice. ..
." "That's
absurd! No Herald would ever use her Gift in any such fashion!" "So
/ have maintained," Orthallen replied smoothly, "But—the only others
Gifted with Empathy are the Healers; Healers put it to very specific and
humanitarian use. There is no corresponding protocol of use among Heralds. And,
nephew—what if she truly were not aware she was using her abilities? These
powers are not material properties one can weigh or measure or hold in one's hand.
What if she were doing this sort of thing without even realizing it?" Kris
felt as if he had been hit with a pail of cold water. "I—I suppose it's
just barely possible. I don't think it's at all likely, but I can't dismiss the
notion out of hand." Orthallen
rose, a satisfied smile creasing his lips. "That is what I hoped you would
tell me, I'm counting on you, nephew, to lay these phantoms of doubt to rest.
You'll be with her night and day for the next eighteen months, and I'm sure you
will be able to tell me on your return that all these rumors are no more than
smoke." "I'm
sure I will, uncle," Kris replied, letting him out—but not at all sure in
his own mind. It was
just false dawn when Talia woke, and she dressed as quickly as she could, discovering
that someone had left a breakfast tray for her outside her door. She had only
just finished it when a Guards- 88 MERCEDES
LACKEY man
tapped discreetly on the doorframe, explaining that he was there to help her
carry her packs down. With his aid she managed to get everything down to the
tackshed in one trip. Bright
tight from oil lamps along the wall dazzled her eyes as she entered. Waiting in
the very center was Rolan; his harness was piled beside him. Next to him was a
second Companion stallion, and Talia could see Kris' legs behind him as she and
the Guard approached. Tethered beside the strange Companion were two most
unusual pack animals. Talia
had never seen chirras before except in pictures, for their heavy coats made
summer at the Collegium far too uncomfortable for them. Rather than keep them
there, the Circle had a northern farm where they were bred and stabled, and
only brought them down on rare occasions like this. Had this been within the
normal order of things they would have taken mules from the Collegium stables
for the first part of the journey. Then they would have met the Herald they
were replacing at the edge of her Sector and exchanged their mules for her
chirras. Talia
discovered that pictures and descriptions were inadequate to convey the charm
of the northern beasts. The chirras were as tall at the shoulder as a horse,
but a much longer neck put their heads on a level with the head of a human on
horseback. Instead of hooves they had doglike, clawed feet, except that the
feet were almost round and far bigger than Talia would have expected from the
overall size of the animal. Both chirras were creamy white with black markings;
one had a little cap-like spot on the top of its head, and a matching
saddle-marking on its back, the other had a collar of black fur that ran around
its throat and down its chest. Their ears were large, resembling rabbit ears,
but rounder, with tips that flopped over. Their ears were set on the tops of
their skulls and faced forward. Their faces were ARROW'S
FLIGHT 89 vaguely
rabbit-like. Their brown eyes were very large, gentle, and intelligent. When
Talia approached them with her hand held out to them, they scrutinized her
closely, then politely took turns whuffling her palm. Kris
was already halfway through his inspection of the beasts and their gear. "Kind
of cute, aren't they? Anybody ever tell you how they manage to live through
those blizzards? They've got three layers of fur," he said, bent over and
adjusting the girth of the pack-harness, half-hidden by the chirra's bulk.
"The outermost is long and coarse, and pretty much waterproof—even frost
won't form on it. The middle layer is shorter, and not quite so coarse. The
inner layer is what they shed every year; it's dense, very soft and fine, and
is what does most of the work of keeping them warm. We'll have to groom them
very carefully every night to keep all that fur from getting matted, or they'll
lose the warming and waterproofing effect." "Why
are their feet so big?" "To
hold them up on the snow; they'll be able to walk on snow crusts that the
Companions will break right through." He moved to the front of his and
picked up its forefoot while it whiffled his hair. "Look here—see all the
hair between the toes? If you think their feet look big now, wait till they
spread them out on snow. You'd think that hair wouldn't make any difference,
but it does, like the webbing on snow-shoes. I much prefer chirras over mules
in any kind of climate that they can tolerate. They've got sweet tempers, and
they're really quite intelligent. If a mule balks, you can't tell half the time
if he's being stubborn, or if there's really something wrong. A chirra never
balks unless there's something wrong." The
chirra next to Talia stretched out his neck and nudged her hand, obviously
wanting to be petted. "How much can they carry?" she asked, complying
by scratching behind the chirra's ears. It sighed happily and closed its eyes
in content. 90 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Almost
half their own weight—as good or better than a mule. Well, look at the packs
they're bringing now, and you can see." Talia
was astonished at the size of the pack the stablehands were loading on the
chirra she was scratching. It didn't seem the least bit uncomfortable. Kris
looked it over, then eyed the packs Talia had brought down from her room.
"They've left enough leeway for you to load those on him as well, Talia.
Don't worry, he's smart. If it's going to be more than he can carry, he'll just
lie down until we lighten the load." To her
relief, the chirra showed no sign of wanting to lie down after her packs had
been strapped on top of the supplies. Kris saw to the distribution of the rest
of the supplies and his own belongings, while Talia made sure the chirra's
harness was firm, but comfortable, with nothing twisted or binding. She
harnessed Rolan herself, then double-checked her work, and asked him in an
undertone, "You don't mind traveling with these beasties, do you?" He
seemed pleased that she had asked the question but conveyed the impression that
he was quite pleased with the packbeasts. Without words, Talia got the distinct
impression that the chirras, sporting those thick, warm coats, would be more
than welcome company on cold winter nights. She
fastened the lead rope of the chirra to the back of Rolan's saddle, and
mounted. Kris mounted a fraction of a second later. "Ready?" he
asked. "As
ready as any internee, I guess." "Then
let's go." Four Kris
took the lead; they had to go single file in the city. Talia and Rolan followed
his chirra out of the gates of the courtyard, past the Collegium and Palace
buildings, gray and silent in the early morning light, then down the
cobblestoned road to the iron gates leading to city streets themselves, the
road she'd ridden up five and a half years previously. She looked back over her
shoulder for a last glimpse of the dear, familiar stone buildings, and wondered
what she'd be like when she saw them again. The
guard at the gate let them out; it was scarcely an hour until dawn and the
streets were not yet crowded. They followed the long spiral outward, passing
first through the residential areas that were nearest the Palace—huge buildings
belonging to the highest ranked of the nobly-born, some nearly rivaling the
size of Bardic or Healer's Collegium, though not that of the Palace itself.
Then, crowded far more closely together, the homes of the rich—merchants and
craftsmen and Guild officials. Unlike the Palace and the edifices of the
nobles, which were the same gray granite as the city walls, these buildings
were wooden. Since land within the walls was at a premium, they crowded so
closely the eaves touched— and when there was a need to expand, the only 91 92 MERCEDES
LACKEY direction
to take was up, which sometimes produced some very strange results. Most of
these houses had been constructed of ironoak, a wood nearly as tough and
indestructible as steel, but that was where any similarity among them ended.
They had been built to some highly individual styles, and often had been added
to in years and styles varying wildly from the original. Had the spiraling main
street not been wide enough for three carriages, it would never have gotten any
sun; as it was, riding through this district so early in the morning was rather
like riding down a canyon with sides carved in the most fantastic of shapes.
Talia had to fight to keep from giggling as she passed some of these houses,
for Skif—to "keep his hand in," or so he claimed—had often paid uninvited
visits to the upper stories of some of these places. He'd usually left unsigned
notes to be found later, chiding the owners for their lack of security. That
was one prank the Provost-Marshal would never have forgiven him if it had been
discovered. After
the street took a sharp right-angle turn, the purely residential district came
to an end. Now the lower stories of the buildings were devoted to shops and the
work-places of fine craftsmen, or offices, with an occasional expensive
hostelry. The upper floors were comprised of apartments or lodgings. At this
point they began encountering what little traffic there was this early in the
morning. Nearly the only people about were the farmers who had brought their
produce in to market, for the only cityfolk moving were those who were buying
fresh supplies for their inns. Talia and Kris were able to move at a brisk
pace, not having to stop for traffic more than once or twice. The streets were
so quiet at this hour that they were the chief sources of sound; the ringing of
the Companions' hooves, the chime of their bridle-bells, and the click of the
chirras' claws on the cobblestones. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 93 It took
them nearly an hour to reach the Northern gate; the farther from the center of
the city they went, the less wealth was displayed. There were no slums within
the Old City; those were outside the city gates, huddling against the walls as
if in hopes that those sturdy stone structures might shelter them from the
elements. It was in one such district that Skif had grown up, the rather odd
section along Exile's Road that led into the West. Talia had never been there;
she had seldom been out of the Old City, much less into the New. The one time
she'd asked to be taken there, Skif had turned white, and refused. She'd never
asked again. Nor
would she go anywhere near that section this time, for Kris1 chosen route led
past the warehouses and the shipwrights, after crossing over the River just
inside the Old City walls and exiting through the North Point Gate. Here there
was no activity at all; workers had not yet arrived, and deliveries to the
warehouses had yet to be made. So once again, they rode in silence after a
sleepy Guardswoman waved them on their way. Beyond
the gate the road widened and changed from stone to that odd substance that
wasn't stone and wasn't clay. Talia hadn't thought about it in years, but it
occurred to her now to wonder just what it was that paved some of the roadways
of this Kingdom. "Kris?"
she called, and he motioned to her to ride up alongside him, now that they were
out of the city. "What
is this stuff?" she asked, pointing to the surface of the road. He
shrugged. "Another lost secret. Some of the roads leading to the capital
are paved with it, a few all the way to the Border; but any roads made later
than Elspeth the Peacemaker's time are just packed gravel at best." He saw
she was looking about her with unconcealed curiosity. "Haven't you ever
been out of the city before?" 94 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Not
very often since I was Chosen," she replied, "And never in this
direction." "Didn't
you even go back home for holidays?" he asked, astonished. "My
parents weren't exactly pleased with me, even—or perhaps especially—when they
learned I was Chosen," she replied dryly. "Not to put too fine a
point upon it, they disowned me. In Hold terms, that means they denied the very
fact of my existence. I spent all my holidays here, with Jadus while he was
still alive, then with Keren and Visa, or with Gaytha Housekeeper and Mero the
Collegium cook." "You've
been rather sheltered, then." "At
the Collegium, yes, except for the first year. Not at the Hold, though. Know
anything about Holderkin?" "Not
much," Kris admitted. "They seemed so dull, I'm afraid I've forgotten
most of what I learned about them as a student." "Whether
or not it's dull depends on whether you were born male or female. Holderkin are
originally from outKingdom—Karse, if you're curious. They fled from religious
persecution; their religion is based on a dominating, ruling God and a passive,
submissive Goddess, and the Karsites are monotheistic. That was . .. oh, two
generations ago. They are very secretive, and very intent on maintaining their
ways intact. Men have some choice in their lives; women are given exactly two
choices—serve the Goddess as a cloistered, isolated votary under a vow of
silence, or marry. You make that choice at the mature age of thirteen, or
thereabouts." "Thirteen!"
Kris looked aghast. "Hellfire,
Kris, life is hard on the Border! You ought to know that, with your partner
being a Borderer. There were raiders every winter I can remember. The land is
stony and hard to farm. Holderkin don't believe in going to Healers, so a lot ARROW'S
FLIGHT 95 of
simple injuries and illnesses end in death. If you're not wedded by fifteen,
you may not leave any offspring—and they need every working hand they can
get." .
"You sound like you enjoyed that kind of life—like you approve of
it!" Kris was plainly astonished by her attitude. "I
hated it," she said flatly. "I hated every minute that I didn't spend
reading or daydreaming. Rolan's Choosing me was the only thing that saved me
from a forced marriage with some stranger picked out by my father. I think that
the way they confine themselves, their children, and most especially their
minds is something approaching a crime. But most of the Holderfolk I knew
seemed content, even happy, and I have no right to judge for them." "Fine;
you don't judge for them, but what about others who are unhappy as you were,
with no Rolan to rescue them?" "A
good point—and fortunately for those would-be rebels, one Elcarth and Selenay
thought of after hearing my story. The Holderfolk got their landgrants on
condition that they obey the Queen and the laws of this Kingdom. Shortly after
I arrived at the Collegium, Selenay had a law passed through the Council that
Heralds must be allowed free access to children at ail times, in order that
they can be certain that the children of this Kingdom are properly educated in
our laws, history, and traditions. Heralds whose Gift is Thought-sensing go
right into the Holdings now. Anyone willing to sacrifice family ties and
standing as I did is free to leave with them, and they make sure the unhappy
ones know this. The amazing thing to me is that there was very little objection
to the practice after the initial outrage died down. I suppose the Hold Elders
are only too pleased that their potential troublemakers are leaving on their
own." Kris
seemed a bit bemused. "I can't imagine why anyone would not want to leave
conditions like that." 96 MERCEDES
LACKEY Talia
shook her head sadly, remembering. It wasn't quite true that she hadn't gone
back to the Hold— she had, once, last year. She'd gone back in the hopes of
rescuing her sister Vrisa—to discover Vris had changed, changed past all
recognition. Vris was a Firstwife now, with status, and three Underwives to
rule. She'd regarded Talia as if she were a demon— when she thought Talia
wasn't looking, she'd made holy signs against her. In point of fact, she looked
and acted enough like Keldar, the Firstwife who'd done her best to break
Talia's rebellious spirit, to have been Keldar's younger self. She not only
didn't want rescue, she'd been horrified by the idea. "Kris,
it's not my choice to make," she answered wearily, "it's theirs. All
that I care about is that the ones like me now have the option I didn't have
before I was Chosen—to escape." Kris
looked at her with curiosity. "Just when I think I have you neatly
categorized, you say or do something that turns it all upside down again. I'd
have bet that you'd have been willing to lead an army into the Holds to free
the women, given the chance." "Maybe
when I didn't know as much about people as I do now," she sighed. They
rode on in silence. The sun rose on their right, turning the sky pink, rose and
blue, casting long shadows across their path from the buildings. Before long
they had passed beyond the edge of the New City, and there was nothing before
them but the occasional farmhouse. Cows were gathering outside barns, lowing to
be milked. Now they saw people working; and a light breeze carried to them the
smell of cut grain and drying hay, and the sounds of birds and farmbeasts. "Tell
me about yourself," Kris said, finally. "When you're tired of
talking, I'll tell you about me. Start with what it was like on the Hold,
before you were Chosen." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 97 "It's
boring," she cautioned him. "Maybe—but
it's part of you. As your counselor, I need to know about you." He did
his best to keep his opinions to himself while she talked, but he frequently
looked surprised by some of what she told him, and actually horrified once or
twice. He had, she thought, a hard time conceiving of a culture so alien to his
own, so confining and repressive. Talia herself spoke in a kind of detached
tone. She felt very distant from the Hold-erkin and all they meant now. She
could think of them without much animosity; as something foreign. It was
noon when she finally grew tired of explaining Hold customs to Kris. She paused
for a long drink from her waterskin, suddenly aware that her mouth was very
dry, and said firmly, "I think I've talked enough." "More
than that; it's time to break for lunch," he replied. "While we keep
to this pace the chirras can go on indefinitely, so whether or not we break
depends on whether or not we want to take a rest from riding. How are you
feeling?" "Like
I'd like to get off for a while," she admitted, "It's been a long,
long time since I spent this many hours riding." "I'm
glad you said that." His answering smile was completely ingenuous and
quite charming. "I'm not all that fond of eating in the saddle unless
there's no choice. As soon as I spot a place where we can water the chirras and
our Companions, we'll take a rest." They
found a Waystation within the half-hour. This one was watered by a well rather
than a stream; they took turns hauling up enough water to satisfy the
four-footed members of the party, then tethered the chirras so that both
Companions and chirras could graze for a bit while they ate their own lunch. They
ate in silence, and Kris seemed to be in no great hurry to move on afterward.
He lay back in the 98 MERCEDES
LACKEY soft grass
instead, thoughts evidently elsewhere, though he glanced over at Talia once or
twice. Kris
was worried, though he was taking pains not to show it. His uncle's words kept
coming back to him, and he could not, in all conscience, dismiss them. He'd made
a number of assumptions about his trainee, most of them based on her apparent
youth and inexperience—and now what she'd told him seemed to indicate that she
was anything but inexperienced, and certainly was not the simple creature he'd
pictured to himself. This child—no, woman; he began to wonder now if she'd ever
had anything like a "childhood" as he knew the meaning of the term—
had been functionally the Queen's Own long before she ever attained her Whites.
But she was so tiny, and so guileless, and so very innocent-seeming, that you
forgot all about that, and tended to think of her as much younger than she
really was. He
didn't think any of that surface was a deliberate act—but he also couldn't tell
what lay below the surface, either. Was she
capable of the kind of deliberate misuse of her Gift that Orthallen had
described? "I've
got to ask you a question," he said at last. "And please, I don't
mean this as any kind of insult. There are some rather unpleasant rumors
circulating the Court, and I'd like to know the truth. Have— have you ever used
your Gift to influence Elspeth?" Her reaction was far more violent than he
would have expected. "No!" she shouted, sitting bolt upright, and
actually startling Companions and chirras into shying. "How can you even
think such a thing?" Her eyes were hot with anger; her face as white as
her uniform. He met
that angry gaze as best he could, acutely aware of how still it was, of the
grass under his hands, of the sun on his head. "It's a rumor, I told you;
I have to know." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 99 UI have
never—I would never—do anything like that to anyone. It's—the whole idea is
perverted," she choked. "Dammit, I knew there had to be some odd
things being said about me. I mean, I could tell, people were acting very
strangely when they thought I wasn't looking. But this! It's—it's disgusting.
Does Elspeth know about this?" "Not
so far as I know—" He broke off at the sudden, pained look she gave him. She
rose to her feet, abruptly. "I've—I've got to go back; I can't leave her
to face that alone." "That's
just what you can't do," he said, jumping up and catching hold of both her
arms. "Don't you see? If you did that, you'd just be confirming the idea
in people's heads. Besides, you've been given an assignment, and a set of
orders. It's not up to you to decide whether or not you're going to obey
them." She
buried her face in her hands for a moment; when she took her hands away he
could see her fighting to exert control over herself. "All right,"
she said, sinking back to the ground, "You're right. You said that there
were other rumors. What are they?" "That
you've been using your Gift to influence other people—specifically Councilors
on crucial votes. The kindest version of that rumor says that you're not doing
it consciously, that you don't realize you're doing it." "Good
God. How am I supposed to answer that one?" Kris
didn't have an adequate reply, so he continued. "Another rumor is that
you're using your Gift just to read people, then using the knowledge of their
emotional state to manipulate them into doing what you want." "Goddess.
That's almost close to the truth . .." "Again,
the kindest version is that you don't realize that you're doing it. People are
frightened; your Gift isn't one they've seen outside of a Healer; 100 MERCEDES
LACKEY Mindspeakers
have an ethical code they understand, but this?" "So
far as I know, there is no ethical code," she said, and looked up at him.
Her eyes were full of a pain he didn't understand, and a confusion he wished he
could resolve. "Is that al!?" "Isn't
it enough? They say you're young, you're inexperienced—some say too young to be
in the position of power that you are, and to be wielding such a strange
mindGift." "As
if," she replied bitterly, "I have any choice in the matter." And she
did not speak to him again until long after they had mounted up and gotten back
on the North Road. Kris
bore with her lack of communication up to a point, but finally decided to try
and break the deadlock himself. He Mindtouched Tantris, asking him to move in
closer to Rolan, until he and Talia were almost knee to knee. "Just
exactly how does your Gift work?" he asked, unwilling to bear the tense
silence. "I
feel emotions the way Farspeakers hear words," she replied, after turning
in her saddle to give him a sober look, one that seemed to be weighing him for
some quality. "If the emotions are connected with something strongly
enough, I See that. If they're twisted or wrong, or very negative, sometimes I
can fix them, like a Healer with a wound. Visa said it's a pretty rare Gift to
see crop up alone, that it's usually tied up with the Healing Gifts. As you
know." "Interesting,"
he replied as casually as he could. "So that's how you were able to lead
me to where Ylsa died. Most Heralds are Mindspeakers, you know, and most of the
rest are Farseers, like me. Only a few of us have odd Gifts like yours and
Dirk's. And Griffon's— birr!—-that's one I wouldn't want." The sun lost
some ARROWS
FLIGHT 101 of its
warmth for him as he thought of the demonstration Griffon and Dirk had given
him. "Firestarting is a terrible burden, and it's so easy for the power to
get out of control .. . and when it does, well, you end up with barrens like at
Burning Pines. And it isn't really useful at all except as a weapon. I hope his
being born with it now doesn't mean something; Heralds with the really odd
Gifts tend to appear when there's going to be a need for them. The last
Flrestarter was Lavan Firestorm, and you know what his era was like—" He
flushed, beginning to realize that he was pontificating—but, damn—he wanted to
get her mind off the rumors so she'd act normally again. "Sorry. I tend to
get carried away when I start discussing Gifts. It's a hobby of mine, one I
share with Kyril. It's fascinating to see what kinds of Gifts we have, and to
try and see if there are patterns." "Really?"
She perked up a little, a bit more color coming into her cheeks. "Has
anybody else ever had my kind of Gift before?" "Not
that I'm aware of among the Heralds, but I must admit that I've only looked
into the Gifts of living Heralds, or the really spectacular ones of the past. I
can't say that I've ever heard of that ability to Heal the mind, except in a
true Healer, but it wouldn't surprise me much to discover that this one's the
Gift that distinguishes the Queen's Own from the rest of us. And you seem to
have it mostly by itself, and maybe much stronger even than in Healers.
Probably the others have had it, but not so strongly that anyone noticed it.
Nobody seems to have made a study of the Monarch's Own—not like they have with
the more ordinary Gifts. And now that I think about it, your primary job is to
ensure the mental stability of the Monarch—an ability like the one you have
could come in very useful if something really went wrong." He was doing
his best to imply that he believed her—that he was certain the rumors weren't 102 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 103 true.
He only wished that he really could be that certain. "I
can see that." She was silent, and seemed to be thinking hard. Late
afternoon sun was gilding everything, and the early breeze had died. The
chirras' eyes were half-closed in the drowsy warmth, and the few sounds to
either side of them were those of farmworkers cutting hay and grain, and
insects droning in the grass. "So you See, and Dirk Fetches?" "Right.
That's why we work together, and generally don't ride Sectors except when we're
shorthanded, the way we have been lately. To put it bluntly, we're Selenay's
thieves." He laughed a little. "If I know what I'm looking for, I can
generally find where it is from several miles away—more, if I get a 'ride,'
like I got from you. Once I know exactly where it is and can fix the location
in my mind, Dirk can read the location to Fetch whatever it is to where we
happen to be. That's how he retrieved Visa's arrows." "That
seems to be a lot harder than it sounds .. . rather wearing, too, from the
little I've seen." "Gods,
that's an understatement. In a lot of ways, it would be less tiring to run on
foot to where it is, get it, and run back. And the heavier the object, the more
difficult it is to Fetch. We haven't tried anything much larger than a building
brick—and that gave him a reaction-headache that lasted for a week. I was
pretty surprised when he had enough energy left to carry you to your room after
retrieving those arrows." "Aha!"
She seemed please that it had been Dirk who had cared for her. "A mystery
solved! I've wondered about that for the last two years. So he was the
one!" "He
was like a hen with one chick—wouldn't let me do more than trail along, and I
was in better shape than he, Said that with all those girls in his family, he
knew better than I did what to do with a sick one." "Can
he work with anyone but you?" "We don't know; he's never tried, since
he gets such a good 'fix' from me. Probably, though. One Farseer's a lot like
another." "How
long have you two been working together?" she asked curiously. "Since
we both got our Whites. That was another year they were shorthanded, and sent
us both out to intern with the same counselor—Gerick. Well, you know Gerick,
he's absentminded; he left a small, but valuable ring at one of the
Waystations—it was the Queen's gift to one of the Guildmasters. Rather than
spend two hours going back for it, Dirk offered to try Fetching it. I Looked
for it, found it had rolled under the bed while we were packing, and gave Dirk
the location. That was when we discovered that I gave him the clearest 'fix'
he'd ever had to work from. He Fetched the ring, no problem; we started working
as a team, and we've been doing things that way ever since." "It's
just that you seem so unlike each other, I find it hard to imagine you two
staying together." Kris
laughed, pleased to have gotten onto a safe subject.
"You might be surprised. Underneath that jester
mask he wears, Dirk's a very serious gentle- .V man.
And we have pretty much the same taste in music,
reading, even food. . . ." "In
women?" she teased. "Well
... that, too," he admitted with a reluctant smile. "And it's really
pretty unfair. Poor Dirk—it doesn't matter if he finds the lady first. Once
she's seen me she usually goes all 'sisterly' on him. He's mostly pretty
good-natured about it, but if I were in his shoes, I'd be damned annoyed!" "Well,
he knows you can't help it. You were born looking like an angel, and he ...
well, he wasn't, and that's all there is to say." "It's
still not fair. You'd think that at least one 104 MERCEDES
LACKEY woman
would figure out that Dirk the man is worth ten faces like mine." "I
expect someday someone will," Talia replied noncommittally, avoiding his
eyes. "Where is he from?" Her
reply was just a bit too casual; her attempt at nonchalance immediately set off
mental alerts in Kris1 mind, especially following all those questions about his
partner. Part of him followed up on the puzzle while he answered her question.
He had a very faint suspicion, too tenuous to be even a guess. It was rather
like trying to remember a name he'd forgotten. It would probably take a while
before he had enough information to make a surmise . . . but now he'd be
subconsciously watching for clues. "The
Sector right next to ours, Sorrows One. He's got a huge family up there. He
used to haul me home with him for holidays—still does when we're free. Three of
his married sisters and their families live with their parents and help run the
farm. It's like a madhouse; people everywhere, babies and cats constantly
underfoot. It's marvelous madness though. They're wonderful people, and there's
never a lonely or dull moment." He
smiled half to himself as he recalled some of those visits, his earlier
thoughts gone on the breeze. Dirk's family—they should have been gypsies! All
of them crazy, and all of them delightful. He'd been looking forward to another
Midwinter Festival with them, but it obviously wasn't going to be this year.
Well, there was always another time. Talia's
next question broke the strange, apprehensive chill he felt at that thought. "What
about you?" "Well,
let me think. My father is Lord Peregrine; I'm the second son, but my brother
is ten years older than I am, and I have nephews and nieces that aren't much
younger than you. My parents are both very wrapped up in matters of state, so I
was left pretty ARROW'S
FLIGHT 105 much in
the hands of my tutors, back on the family estate." "I
think I know your father; he's one of the Seneschal's chief assistants. And
your mother?" "She
organizes the resupply of the Waystations. I think she would have liked to have
been a Herald, but since she wasn't Chosen, this is the closest she can
get." "Weren't
there any children your own age on the estate?" "Not
many; their parents seemed to think mine would be angry if their offspring were
allowed to 'contaminate* me. I spent a great deal of my time reading." "Like
me—only you didn't have to hide to do it!" she laughed. "You're
wrong there! My tutors seemed to think that my every waking moment should be
spent learning something serious, dull, and practical. I had a hiding place up
in the oldest tree in the garden. I fixed it up until it was quite impossible
to see me from the ground. I smuggled my tales and poetry up there, and escaped
at every opportunity." A breeze that stirred the leaves of the trees
lining the road to either side of them seemed to chuckle at Kris' childish
escapes. "Then, when I was twelve, my parents took me to Court. I don't
think it ever entered their heads that the Collegium stood on the same
grounds." He smiled. "Even if they'd forgotten, though, I hadn't. I
hoped—but when no Companion met me at the Palace gate, I gave the dream up. I
was supposed to be presented at Vernal Equinox Festival, and I can remember
everything, right down to the fact that one of my boot-lacings didn't quite
match the other. I was standing next to my father, outside, in the gardens, you
know—when there was an unexpected visitor to the Festivities." Tantris
shook his head, making the bells on his bridle sing. Kris chuckled, and reached
forward to 106 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 107 scratch
behind his ears. "I knew what the appearance of a Companion meant, and I
kept looking around to see who he had come to Choose. I nearly went out of my
mind with happiness, when I finally stopped craning my head around and found he
was standing right in front of me! Then, when I looked into his eyes. ..
." His voice trailed off. "It's
not like anything else, is it?" Talia prompted sofdy. "and it isn't
something you ever lose the wonder of." "That
it's not," he agreed, speaking half to himself, "and I knew then that
I'd never be lonely again...." He shook off the spell, and became
matter-of-fact. "Well, my parents were both very proud. They had me
installed at the Collegium before I had a chance to turn around. Oddly enough,
it's easier to deal with them now that I'm an adult. My father can relate to me
as an equal, and I think that my mother forgets half the time that I'm one of
her offspring. I really don't think they ever knew what to do with a
child." "They
probably didn't, especially with so much time between you and your
brother." "Dirk
has no notion how much I envy him his family," he sighed. "You
think not?" Talia smiled. "Then why does he keep bringing you home
with him?" "I
never thought about that." They
rode silently for a mile or so. "Talia,
do you ever miss your family?" "Not
after I found other people who really cared about me. I was the scarlet jay
among the crows with them; I was more of an outsider among my own family than I
ever was at the Collegium. One of those pretty brothers of mine used to steal
my books, and call me 'Herald Talia1 to make me cry. I'd like to have seen his
face when I was Chosen." "Do
you ever think about going back?" "You
know, that used to be a daydream of mine, that
I'd somehow magically become a Herald—remember, I didn't know about being
Chosen—and I'd come back dressed in my Whites and covered in glory. Then they'd
all be envious, and sorry that they were mean to me." . "And
now?" "Well,
I went back long enough to try and 'rescue' the sister I'd been closest to only
to find she had turned into a stranger. I didn't go any farther into the Holdings,
just turned around and came back home. I didn't want to see any of them again.
Why bother? My parents pretended I was an outsider, my sibs were either afraid
or contemptuous; Heralds are very immoral, you know. What is it Mero's Book
says? About how the people you grow up with react to your fame?" "
'No one honors a saint on his hearthstone.1 " "It's true, too. I'm
resigned to letting things rest as they are, knowing that my example shows
misfits that there is an escape." He
didn't seem inclined to further conversation, so she turned her attention back
to those unsettling rumors. Poisonous,
that's what they were. Ugly, and poisonous. And
true? said a niggling little doubt. She
wanted to deny any truth to it at all—vehemently. But could she? In all
conscience, could she? The
business about Elspeth—no, she could not believe she'd been fostering
dependence in the child, not even unconsciously. Once Elspeth had begun acting
like a human being again, she'd been pushing her toward independence, driving
her to make her own decisions and take responsibility for the results. But the
rest—oh, insidious. For a Mindspeaker, it was obvious when he was projecting;
it sounded to the recipient a great deal like the Mindspeaker's 108 MERCEDES
LACKEY normal
voice, but as if the words were coming from deep inside his own ear. But when
she projected— would anyone be able to tell she was doing so? She
could tell; sending emotion cost her effort and energy. But if
she were excited or agitated—would she notice the energy expense? Did she
even need to be doing it while she was awake? What about when she was asleep?
How could she possibly be sure what her irrational sleeping mind was doing? And
what about simply reading people's emotional states? Was she transgressing by
doing so, and acting on the knowledge? How
could she avoid doing it? It was like seeing color; it was just there unless
someone was deliberately shielding. Doubt
followed doubt in an insidious circle, each feeding on the one preceding it,
until Kris broke the silence. "This
is our first stop—this close to the capital they won't be hungry for news, and
it's very unlikely they'd need us to work in any official capacity. Still, it's
only good manners to repay them in some way for their hospitality. Small
villages don't see trained Bards oftener than once a month, so they're very
receptive to even amateur music. Would you be willing to sing if I
played?" "Of
course," she replied, grateful for the interruption. "It's only fair
that I share the work. Did you notice that I brought My Lady?" "No!"
he exclaimed with delight. "You'll let me play her? I have a smaller
traveling harp with me, but it hasn't half the range or the tone of My
Lady." "I
let you have her the other night, didn't I? You'll have to retune her. I
detuned the strings so they wouldn't snap if the weather changed
suddenly." She smiled shyly. "I have good instrument etiquette. Jadus
taught me quite well, I assure you." ARROW'S
FUGHT 109 "He
couldn't do otherwise when it came to music. He's the one who taught me in the
first place." "Really?
I wonder why he didn't leave her to you?" "That's
easy enough to answer. I didn't take the time, to keep him company the way you
did," Kris rplied with a slightly shamed expression. "He may have
given me a little of his skill, but he gave his harp where he'd given his
heart—to a lonely little girl, because she'd given him her own." The
village came into view before a surprised Talia had time to form a reply.
Children swarmed upon them, chattering and calling questions that both Heralds
fielded with chuckles and smiles. Older children ran ahead to alert their
elders that there were two Heralds taking the road north, who were clearly
planning on spending the night. Long
before they reached the inn at the center of the village square, a crowd had
gathered to meet them. The village itself was a large one, with cobble-stoned
streets and white-plastered buildings of two and even three stories high. Rather
than thatched, the roofs were tiled—something Talia had read was more common
the farther north one went. With all the shutters thrown open, soft yellow
light gleamed through the windows of the houses, as the sun set and candles and
lamps were lit. As Kris
had indicated, this village was close enough to the capital that Heralds
stopped with fair regularity. Heralds traveling to their Sectors were housed in
inns rather than the Waystations, unless they were caught without other
shelter, and inns got back a percentage of their taxes for every Herald they
entertained. It was possible for an inn on a busy road to be rebated all of its
tax if enough Heralds stayed there—and that made Heralds welcomed and
sought-after guests. Under
all those strange eyes, Talia regained an outward control, at least; putting on
her "public" face and pushing her self-doubts into the back of her no MERCEDES
LACKEY mind.
It would not do for these people to see her disturbed. The
Innmaster himself welcomed them at his front step and escorted them to the
stables. Stablehands tended to the chirras, but the Heralds themselves cared
for their Companions. Kris chuckled once or twice—apparently at something that
Tantris "said" to him—and Talia felt a tiny twinge of jealousy at
their ability to Mindspeak one another. Once
back inside, the Innmaster escorted them personally to their quarters, and gave
Talia and Kris small rooms on the second floor—rooms scrupulously, almost
painfully clean. Their rooms adjoined one another and each boasted a window, a
small table, and a narrow bed that looked surprisingly comfortable. They
were courteously given the use of the bathhouse without anyone pestering them.
But once they joined the rest of the guests in the common room for supper, the
questions began. The dark-paneled common room overflowed to near-bursting with
villagers; tallow-dips in sconces on the walls cast a dim but clear light, so
it was easy to see and be seen, The air was seasoned with a pleasant aroma of
bread and roasting meat and wood smoke. Though the furnishings were only rough
wooden tables and benches, they, and the floor, were sanded smooth and scrubbed
clean. The Heralds took their places at a table near the fire, and the rest of
the guests gathered around them. Kris
took it upon himself to try and answer them, but when it seemed as if he'd
never get more than a mouthful of dinner before it got cold, Talia took her own
turn. As Kris had told her, the common people were very well informed this
close to the capital: what they wanted most was detail. Much of what they
wanted to know centered on the new Heir, a subject Talia knew very well indeed.
She satisfied ARROWS
FLIGHT 111 MJbem
enough that eventually she and Kris were able ; to finish their dinners in
peace. Talia
had brought My Lady down with her; while Kris tuned her, she took the time to
answer questions from a different source—the children. They seemed to sense
that this Herald would not brush them off, ignore them, or give them light answers.
They had a thousand questions concerning Heralds and what it took to be one. Some of
the questions gave her pause for thought. "Why
don't Heralds ever stay in one place?" one young boy asked. "We
always have the same priest— why don't we keep the same Herald?" "For
one thing, there just aren't enough of us to send one to each village, or even
one to each group of villages," Talia told him. "For another—tell me,
what will happen when your priest grows old and retires, or perhaps dies?" "They'll
send us a new one, of course." "And
hell be a stranger to all of you. Do you think he'll fit in and be accepted
right away?" "No."
The lad grinned impudently. "A lot of the grannies won't really trust him
until he's been here for years—if then." "But
a Herald has to have your trust right away, don't you see? If you come to trust
the person more than the office, the way you do with your priest, there would
be trouble for every new Herald in a Sector." The boy
looked thoughtful at this. "So you move all the time, to make sure it's
the job that stays important, not the person doing it. I bet if you stayed in
one place too long, you'd get too bound up with the people to judge right,
too." A
little startled by this observation, so very accurate, she sent a fleeting
thought toward the stable. ; Since
she wasn't in trance, Rolan couldn't give her tjnore than a vague feeling—but
the impression was pthat he had already noted this boy, and it was very 112 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 113 probable
that the child was going to receive a hooved visitor in the next year or two. Armed
with this knowledge, she answered the rest of this boy's questions with special
care and watched him afterward. She noted that he seemed to be the mentor and
protector of some of the little children, urging them forward to talk to her
when he knew that they were too shy to go alone. He wasn't above his share of
pranking about, she noticed with relief, but his tricks were never those that
could hurt anyone. Kris
soon had the harp in tune; Talia let him take center stage alone for a while,
knowing how much the approving attention would please him. The guests and
villagers were loud in their appreciation, and only when Kris was glowing from
their applause did Talia add her voice to the harpsong. The
host of the inn eventually decreed they'd tired the Heralds out long enough,
and mock-ordered both of them to their beds. Talia was just as pleased; she was
feeling the effects of a long day in the saddle, and she thought of her pillow
and warm bed with longing. When
they mounted the next morning, just as the sun arose, Talia winced a little as
she climbed into her saddle. "Sore?"
Kris asked with a slight smile. She
groaned faintly. "Before this trip is over I'll probably be in agony. I
didn't realize I was this badly out of riding trim. I may never be able to get
my legs closed again." "That
would make some people happy," he teased, and ducked as she threw an apple
core left from her breakfast at him, "Just
for that, maybe I won't give you this." He held up a pouch that jingled
faintly. "Why?
What is it?" she asked, curiosity aroused. "When
I picked up our expense money, I thought ^perhaps
you might have forgotten your stipend," he replied, tossing the pouch over
to her. '"You had, so I drew it for you. You're a full Herald now,
remember? You earn a stipend." "Bright
Havens!" Her hand flew to her head in embarrassment. "I did
forget." "Don't
feel badly. After five years of no pocket money, most of us forget. I did. But
it comes in very handy, especially when you happen to be at a fair, and see
something you just know So-and-so would love. Or, for that matter, that you
can't live without." "It's
a good thing I've got you for a counselor," she replied ruefully.
"I'd probably have left my own head back at the Collegium." Kris
just chuckled as he led the way out the gates of the inn onto the road. As they
traveled northward, the road changed from the strange, gray material to packed
gravel, to clay, to finally a simple raised and cleared strip between the
trees, all the grass worn down by travelers and their mounts and carts. As the
roadway changed, so did the landscape to either side. Farms covered more
area—and there were greater stretches of uncultivated land between them, from
wide meadows to nearly virgin forest. The
weather changed, growing slowly, but steadily, worse. It rained almost every
day, in a steady, penetrating shower. And soon the rains lasted all day, never becoming
less than a drippy drizzle, so that the chill water soaked through even their
oiled-wool cloaks. The chirras whined in protest at being made to travel at
all, and they rode enveloped in miasmas of soggy leaves and wet wool. By the
time they reached their chosen resting place each night, they were aching with
cold, sodden clear through, ; and longing for hot wine, hot food, and hotter
baths. Talia's
mood was at one with the weather. Her mind kept running in circles on the same
subject. 114 MERCEDES
LACKEY Was she
misusing her Gift? How could she tell? What were the ethics of Empathic
sensing, anyway? From
time to time, long skeins of waterbirds called from overhead, flying south,
high and fast, their cries coming down on the wind like the calls of lonely
spirits. The lost calls echoed in Talia's mind long after they'd passed; sad
callings for the answers to questions that could not be answered. And
when, at dismal day's end, they saw the lights of the next village and heard
the cheerful noise of the inn, those were welcome sights and sounds indeed. And yet
for Talia, the sight of the inn became a prospect she almost dreaded. She found
herself scanning the faces of those around her, seeking almost obsessively for
some sign that she was influencing their moods. The
only interruption to her rounds of intense self-scrutiny came when Kris drilled
her in the intricacies of the Arrow Code, or coaxed her into some kind of
conversation while they rode. The
farther north they came, the farther apart the villages were. Finally there was
little choice as to which village they would rest in overnight; often there
would be only one within striking distance. The cultivated areas began to be
fewer, the woods and forests thicker and showing less evidence of the hand of
man. At long last the weather cleared a bit; the rain stopped, although most
days were overcast. At the beginning of the trip, the workers they saw in the
fields had hailed them cheerfully, then gotten on with what they were doing.
Now almost invariably the farmfolk called them to the roadside and offered them
a drink of sweet cider or cold spring water in exchange for a bit of news. This
evidence alone made it plain that they were on the very edge of the Kingdom,
for at this time of year, there wasn't much time left to get the last of the
crops in; and it took a great deal to pull a farmer's attention away ARROW'S
FLIGHT 115 to from
that goal, even for the little time it took drink a glass and pass a trifle of
information. Talia
was just as glad that they met with so few people. Her circling self-doubts
were beginning to have an effect on her; her shields were wearing thin and she
could feel the press of Kris' emotional state just beyond them—though he was
trained to mind-block without thinking about it. With ordinary folk it was far
worse. It
didn't help her doubts at all that to sense that he was still uneasy about her, Kris
had done his best to shove his uncle's words into the back of his mind, but he
wasn't overly successful. He wanted to bring up the subject with Talia again,
but hadn't dared. She seemed edgy and preoccupied in general—and nervous
whenever they were around large groups of people, although he doubted that
anyone but another Herald would have noticed the nerves behind her
"public" face. So he tried to keep the conversation going on other
topics. But
behind it all were the unanswered questions. Was she misusing her Gift? Was she
doing so without realizing it? And—much
more sobering—was she using it to manipulate him? It was
distressing, because he was coming to like her—like her a great deal, more so
even than the usual hail-fellow good comradeship that was the norm among
Heralds. They were very much alike in many ways. It was horrible to have to
suspect a friend of something so insidious. Because
she was becoming that—a friend of the same order as Dirk. "You
know .. ." he said one day, out of the blue, "you're like the sister
I never had." "You're
like the brother I wish I had .. ." she replied without seeming to think
about it. "That I * might have had if Andrean hadn't died in that raid. 116 MERCEDES
LACKEY He was
the only one of my sibs who was kind to me, excepting Vrisa. If I'd had you
instead of Justus and Keltev, things might have been easier." "They
also might have turned out a lot differently. Would you have been willing to
run away if life had been more pleasant?" "A
good point," she conceded. "Probably not. And then where would I
be?" He
grinned, while Tantris shook his head mirthfully and made his bridle bells
ring. "If what you've told me is true, six years married, and the mother
of as many children." She
grimaced, and shifted in the saddle with a creak of leather. "Thank you,
no. Hectic as it is, I like the life I'm leading now. Speaking of which, don't
we cross into our new Sector today?" He
pulled the map they'd been given out of a pocket on the front of his saddle,
consulted it, and peered around under the lowering sky, looking for landmarks.
Finally he spotted one, a cluster of three flat-topped hills off to the west of
the road. "We'll cross the border before nightfall, and we'll be staying
tonight at our first Waystation." "Because—"
she put on a somber mien. "—Heralds do not stay at inns in the Sector they
serve, unless weather prevents them from reaching a Station; this insures that
they keep a proper distance and maintain impartiality with the people of their
Sector.' I remember." "You
certainly do!" he laughed, cheered by her apparent return to good humor.
"That's old Werda to the life!" "And
that's also the reason we either buy the supplies we run out of outright, or
wait until we reach a Resupply Station; assuming they're not in the
Way-station. Right?" "High
marks; completely correct." He looked about him at the falling leaves, at
trees whose branches were almost bare. "I'm sorry that this isn't going to ARROWS
FLIGHT 111 an easy
beginning for you. This is a bad time of ytar to start riding this Sector.
There's going to be snow in the next couple of weeks. Trainees usually aren't
faced with conditions this hard at the beginning of their internships." "I'm
Borderbred, remember? This is a lot more like the kind of life I was bred to
than my life at the Collegium. I'll manage." "You
know," he said soberly, "I know you'll do your best. I know you'll
try your hardest. That's all anyone can ask. I trust you. Talia." At
least, he thought to himself, / think I do. ARROWS
FLIGHT 119 Five The
boughs of the nearly-leafless trees arched above them, skeletal hands reaching
for the gray sky. The road continued before them, a leaf-carpeted tunnel
through the bleak, gray-brown forest. The sodden leaves had been flattened by
so many rains that the Companions didn't even kick them up; the dense mat only
served to muffle the sounds of their hooves. There were no birds, only the
occasional sound of a branch cracking somewhere off in the shadows of the
underbrush. Talia
and Kris rode well past sunset and on into the dark to reach the Waystation
Kris intended to use as their first stop in their new Sector. With the last
rays of the sun went the last hint of warmth; as the last dim, red light
filtered through the branches, a cold wind began to sigh among them. Kris took
the lead, but it was Tantris, with the superior night-sight of Companions, who
was really picking out their way, through cold and dark that was enough to
drive just about any other consideration from human minds. Talia was strongly
considering unpacking her heavy cloak and was definitely glad that all
Waystations, however small or primitive, had fireplaces. The wind had a sharp
bit to it, and carried a hint of snow along with the cold. 118 This
Station, as it loomed up out of the shadows in front of them, did not appear to
be all that small. Hopefully, it was not primitive either. One thing was always the first order of
business, no
matter how late the hour, nor how foul the weather, when Heralds opened a
Waystation. Talia dismounted, felt along Rolan's saddle, and took out her
firestarter and tinderbox. After no little fumbling and cursing, she managed to
get a tiny flame going in the tinder. Protecting it carefully from the wind,
she removed a small, fibrous bundle from one of the packs; it had a waxed wick
sticking out of it, which she lit at the tiny flame. While Kris pulled off the
packs and saddlebags, she tossed it inside and shut the door. He left the packs
at her feet, and took Companions and chirras around to the side of the building.
While she waited, she shivered in the cold wind, and started a little when an
owl cried in the distance. The little, homely sounds Kris was making in the
lean-to stable were very welcome against all that dark, with the wind sighing
in the boughs of the trees. She
nursed the tiny fire she had going; if it went out, the whole rigamarole was to
do over again. When she had counted to one hundred, slowly, she opened the door
again. The Station was full of a pungent, oily smoke that was now being swiftly
drawn up the chimney with the help of the draft from the open door. And any
vermin that had been within the Station were either dead or fled. Talia
hauled the packs and bedrolls inside, then began to get them set up while Kris
ducked inside long enough to get grain for the Companions and ,the chirras who
were now in the stabling at the side ,of the building. She took a rushlight
from her saddlebag by feel, and lit it from her bit of tinder. To her immense
relief, the place seemed to be quite sturdy, and well maintained and supplied.
She threw the
bedrolls into the twin bedboxes, then proceeded (wistfully wishing for just a
touch of Griffon's Gift) to get a fire going. It took several false starts, but
eventually she managed to get a respectable blaze on the cold hearth. Once the
flames were high enough to provide illumination as well as warmth, she
extinguished the light she'd lit; no sense in wasting what wasn't really
necessary, and the rushlights took up so much space in the packs that they
didn't carry many of them. She unpacked some of their food supplies and
unsealed the vermin-proof cendal-wood bins the Station staples were kept in to
put together a reasonable meal, then took two of the larger pots outside to the
well to get water for washing and cooking. Kris
seemed to be taking overly long with bedding down the chirras and Companions;
she'd managed to heat enough water for both of them to wash, had fixed a meal,
and had cleaned herself up and changed into a worn shift and old breeches she
kept for sleeping in before he finally appeared. She was about to chide him for
being so slow, when she realized that he'd dawdled on purpose. "Kris,
you don't have to be so thrice-blessed chivalrous, you know," she said
instead, feeling his reticence sharply, and being irrationally irritated by it.
"All the children on the Holdings sleep in the same room until they're
thirteen, and you know very well I've shared Waystations and tents with my
whole year-group while we were in training. I can't possibly nave something
you've never seen before—and the same goes for you." "I'm
. .. just not used to having a woman as a partner," he said. "Then
stop thinking of me as a woman," she yawned, bundling herself into her
bedroll and blinking at him sleepily through the firelight. Her irritation was
gone as quickly as it had come, once she'd reinforced her shielding—although
the fact that she'd had to do the latter bothered her; she shouldn't have
needed to. "That's
easy for you to say!" he retorted. .
"Then pretend I'm Keren, with no interest in men whatsoever.
Because if you don't, one of these evenings I'm going to find an ice statue
waiting outside the door—and it'll be you!" He
chuckled, and admitted that she just might be right. Her
heart pounded a little the next day as they approached their first village of
their Sector. There was no telling what reception awaited them—or what
requests. This far from the capital, a village often didn't even boast its own
priest, but shared one with several other villages; and the only
representatives of Kingdom law were the Heralds. Her
shields were so very thin; she'd discovered that last night. She couldn't
fathom why; shielding had always been second-nature, nearly instinctive— and
now they seemed to be eroding, slowly, inexorably. She was frightened by the
loss of control and was afraid to tell Kris, afraid her confession would simply
reinforce his own doubts about her, and create more stress than she already
had. As they
rode in, it appeared as though the entire population of the area had asssembled
to meet them. Talia thought they must have had lookouts posted, perhaps for the
last week or so, waiting for the Heralds they knew were replacing the injured
one. The emotional atmosphere—which she felt in spite of her best efforts to
shield—was tense, with no hint of why. The village was a small one,
single-storied houses of gray wood and darker gray stone, topped with tile
roofs, all clustered about a central square. There were no bright-painted
shutters here; the wind-driven ice of winter storms would have etched the paint
off in a single season. The inn was so small it obviously had no guest-rooms;
those overnighting Would have to sleep in the common room on the benches when
the inn closed for the night. There 122 MERCEDES
LACKEY was no
sign of damage to any of the buildings, no hint of disorder; whatever had these
folk anxious had nothing to do with their material life. The village folk,
though—they were dressed in gaudy colors, as if for a festival. So why the
feeling of apprehension so thick she could almost smell it? "Thanks
be to the Lady, you've finally come!" A plump
woman who reminded Talia for all the world of a hen bustled forward, pushing
before her a young couple of about sixteen or so until they stood less than a
foot from Kris' stirrup. Both were dressed in heavily embroidered finery, and
the girl was roundly pregnant. They clutched each other's hands as if they were
afraid, and neither of them would look at the Heralds. Talia was puzzled beyond
her own worries. What was it that could be wrong— that she hadn't sensed? "The
priest took sick and hasn't been able to make his rounds since eight weeks
ago," continued the plump woman, tucking a stray strand of hair behind the
girl's ear, "and in any case, he hasn't been here since before Midsummer.
There hasn't been anyone to marry these two in all that time!" "Were
they properly year-and-day handfasted?" Talia asked, knowing the Border
custom, meant to ensure fertility before a permanent bond was made. "Bright
Stars, yes—the priest did it himself last Midwinter!" the woman exclaimed
impatiently, while the other villagers nodded in agreement. Enlightenment
dawned on Talia, though Kris was obviously still perplexed about the reason for
their obvious apprehension. "You're
both still willing?" he asked. Both gave a very shy assent, but one
obviously unforced. "They're
just victims of very bad timing," Talia whispered to him. "And
they're afraid we'll disapprove—maybe even refuse to wed them—because they left
the formal ceremony so long. They should have wedded as soon as they knew she
was with ARROW'S
FLIGHT 123 child,
but I'll bet a pretty they were so busy with planting that they put it off
until after Midsummer, assuming the priest would get here in plenty of time—
Except that they hadn't counted on him falling HI. Poor babies! They're
terribly in awe of us, and they're afraid we'll make difficulties for them
because they didn't take care of it right away. We'd be within our right to do
so ... by the letter of the law." "But
not by the spirit," Kris whispered back, relieved that it was so simple.
"Well, since everyone's agreed," he said loudly enough for everyone
to hear, smiling broadly, "what's holding up the celebration?" There
was a general sigh of tension vanishing, and trestle tables and food began
appearing as if conjured by a spell. Before very long the square had been
transformed and a proper wedding celebration was in full swing. To save them
any further embarrassment, Kris took the young couple off to one side and
witnessed their vows, signing their wedding contract as officiating Herald in
lieu of a priest. The
young couple returned to enjoy their feast, their shyness nearly gone. They
were obviously comforted on two counts: that the Heralds had made no difficulty
over the lateness of their vows, and that now their Firstborn would have no
taint of illegitimacy about it. The
remainder of that day they spent in relative idleness, since there was no use
whatsoever in trying to get any official business conducted. The press of
people was putting a considerable strain on Talia, but she thought she was
succeeding in keeping the strain from showing, even to Kris. She sat mostly on
the edge of things, speaking pleasantly when spoken to, but letting Kris take
the lion's share of the attention. And she
was even more worried than when they'd first entered this village; her shields
hadn't been this fragile since before she'd learned the full use of her Gift.
Virtually anything would bring them down, and 124 MERCEDES
LACKEY she had
to expend ridiculous amounts of energy to put them back up again. If only
she'd never heard those filthy rumors. .. . The
thought of the rumors brought her back full circle to her self-doubt and fear,
and the press of emotions became almost painful, until she finally resorted to
an old expedient; drinking enough wine to blur the edges of her sensing, and
make it all bearable. It was rather too bad that it left her sober enough to
negotiate the dark path back to the Waystation with no trouble at all—for that
meant she was still sober enough to think. They
returned the next day, ready for business. The people of the village had no
grievances that needed settling, but they were eager to hear the news from the
capital and the other towns of the Sector. The common room of the inn, dark and
smokey as it was, was the only "public" room in the whole village, so
that was where they conducted their business. The village storyteller—who
doubled as the clerk—sat drinking in every word they spoke, and making copious
notes, for it would be his duty to repeat all that the Heralds related for
those who were absent from the village, or for those small holders who seldom
came to town. They gave
the morning to the decisions of the Queen and Council, how and why those
decisions had been reached, and what, if any, laws had been passed to uphold
and enforce those decisions; and the afternoon they spent relating the news of
the Court and events of major importance to the entire Kingdom—all of which
took them until darkness fell, and they returned to the Station again. This
day had lain easier on Talia's wire-taunt nerves, for there was nothing to
excite anyone's emotions in the dry news they recited, and even if there had
been, the storyteller/clerk was too intent on mem-ori/ing every word to allow
his feelings to intrude. ARROW'S
FUGHT 125 the two
of them returned to the Waystation, made herself a cup of double-strength
shamile tea, a strong soporific. She was determined to get to sleep, and to
sleep deeply, thinking perhaps weari-ness was part of the cause of her
troubles. But her
dreams were uneasy, and she woke feeling more drained than she had been when
she'd gone to sleep. They
spent the third day on the reports of the headman and clerk, and taking the
verbal news of the village to be passed on up the line. Kris would carry the
headman's written reports until they came to a center of population large
enough to boast a messsenger, or until they arrived at a Resupply Station, at
which point he could send what he had collected south to the capital, together
with his own observations on the probable truth or falsehood of the information
contained in them. That
was Kris' job. Talia remained in the background the entire time, hoping to be
noticed as little as possible, for it seemed that the strain was worst when she
was interacting with someone. But
that evening at the Waystation, Kris insisted on hearing Talia's opinion on the
reports they'd been given, and the reliability of the headman and clerk who had
given them. "They
seemed honest to me," she told him, hoping he had no notion of how much
she had sensed, against her will. "I didn't have any feeling they were
trying to mislead us, hide anything, or hold anything back. As far as I can
judge, the only mistakes in their records are honest errors. They were quick
enough to correct them, in any event, when you pointed them out." "Good,"
Kris said with satisfaction. "That tallies with what I saw. I'm just as
glad; I hate calling people out—even when it's blatantly obvious that they're
lying to me," He noted both their observations on 126 MERCEDES
LACKEY the
cover page of the reports, and sealed them in a waterproof wrapper. To
Talia's relief, he had not seemed to note how much strain she was under. "I
didn't realize we took tax records, too," she said, attempting to distract
herself—and him—with questions about routine. "Always,
in Border Sectors; almost never in the interior. We take a duplicate of what
they're supposed to give the taxmen when they come next spring. This way, if
some disaster should destroy their records, they have at least a partial
reckoning on file. It's to their advantage, since if there's a disaster of that
magnitude, the village may have lost quite a bit more than the records, and the
Queen will be able to judge what aid to give them based on what would have been
taxed." She did
not make the same mistake with the tea this night, but instead lay in the
darkness of the Station, staring up at the blackness above her head, listening
to Kris' quiet breathing and going back to her earliest lessons in
shield-discipline. She thought, when she finally was weary enough to sleep,
that she might have reinforced her shields enough to carry her through the
final day. The
fourth day they went over the clerk-storyteller's accounts of what they'd told
him, making corrections or elaborations as required. When the fifth day dawned
(much to Talia's relief), they were back on the road again; headed through the
village on their way out, but not to do more than pick up their laundry and
visit the village bathhouse. By the
time they were well past the village and out into the wilds, it was growing
noticeably colder, and both of them were wearing their heavier winter cloaks.
The trees were now totally barren of leaves, and the warm, friendly scents of
autumn were gone from the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 127 wind.
Although it seldom rained anymore, the skies continued to be overcast—a
featureless slate-gray. They crunched their way through a carpet of dead, brown
leaves that had collected on the roadway. Most of the birds and beasts were
gone, hibernating, or in hiding now; the loss of foliage and cover made them
cautious and quiet, those that were left. The Heralds seldom saw more than the
occasional rabbit or squirrel, and never heard much besides the wind in the
naked boughs of the trees and the scream of a crow or two. The Companions'
bridle bells made a lonely chime against the silence of the sleeping forest. So far
as Talia was concerned, that was all to the good; at least she wasn't having to
be continually on guard against her shields failing. But her nerves continued
to fray; and as they traveled onward through the bleak woods, she wasn't sure
which was worse, being alone in this gloom-ridden wilderness, where the gray
and empty forest only fed her depression, or being surrounded by people, with
shields slowly going to pieces. Kris
wasn't much happier; he kept wondering if— and how much—of his general feelings
of approval toward Talia were manufactured. Was she consciously or
unconsciously augmenting them? He was beginning to examine every nuance of
feeling, trying to detect if she had had a hand in it. He
liked her—Bright Havens, he wanted to like her, she was so much like him in so
many ways. She was a good partner, taking on tasks without complaining, without
needing to be prompted, striving to be a full equal and pull her own weight ..
. and yet,
and yet... Yet there were those rumors, and his own
feelings that he could well have been tampered with without his ever noticing
it. "No smoke without fire?" Perhaps. It was so damned hard to tell .
.. and the way she was withdrawing wasn't helping. 128 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 129 The
next stop was two days distant, which meant an overnight stay in a Waystation
midway between the two villages. Kris was no longer even thinking of his
partner in terms of being female; now the strain on his nerves was because of
his suspicions. They repeated their routine of the first night; Talia readying
the shelter while Kris took care of the four-footed members of the party. His
night-vision was much better than hers; it only seemed logical. And it gave him
a chance to consult with Tantris without her around. Tantris
was puzzled, and worried. ;/ haven't felt anything, little brother, but . . .: "But?"
Kris asked aloud. .7 am
not certain that I would. Rolan is disturbed, and refuses to discuss it.: "Great." :He is
senior to me, as you are senior to Talia. If he does not wish to discuss the
private affairs of his Chosen, that is his business, and his right.: "I
know, I know. Look, at least tell me if you pick up anything, all right?" :You
have my word.: his Companion replied, :but I think perhaps "Perhaps
what?" :You
need more expert aid,: came the reluctant reply. "Tell
me from where, and I'll get it! There isn't anybody in the Circle with a Gift
like hers—and I rather doubt that Healer's Empathy is identical." :True,:
came the sigh in his mind, and after that, he could coax nothing more out of
Tantris on the subject. It
troubled him deeply. If a Companion didn't feel up to the problem . . . And
they did not even have time to reach the gate of the next village before they
were met on the road by two different parties demanding justice. ""'.;
They saw it coming easily enough. "Steady," Kris said as they rode
into a press of farmers in heavy brown homespun, who crowded up against the
sides of the Companions with their petitions. Talia went pale and strained, and
sat Rolan's back absolutely motionless and with lips tightly compressed. Kris
did his best to sort out the arguments, then finally lost patience and sharply
ordered them all to hold their tongues. When
the clamor died down, he finally managed to ascertain that there were two
aggrieved parties, both as alike to his eyes as a pair of crows—brown hair,
thick brown beards, nearly identical clothing of brown homespun. After
listening to both sides, and putting up with each one interrupting the other
until he was ready to take a stick to both of them, he decreed that the
argument was moot until third parries could be questioned. The
dispute was a trivial one by his lights, over a cow and her calf. The facts
were that a bull had somehow made its way into a field containing a cow in
season; not surprisingly, the calf resulted. The calf was quite plainly the
offspring of the bull in question, nor did the cow's owner deny this. What was
under dispute was how the bull had gotten at the cow in the first place. The
cow's owner claimed angrily that the owner of the bull had allowed it to stray,
and that it had found its own way there, and thus he had incurred no stud fee.
He pointed to the damage done to his hedges, and inquired with self-righteous
wrath if anyone thought he'd ruin his own enclosure to save himself the fee. The
bull's owner claimed just as vociferously that Ae owner of the cow had enticed
the bull into the pasture with the express purpose of saving himself the stud
fee. Kris
felt absolutely helpless; this was not an area in which he had any expertise at
all. He glanced en- 130 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 131 treatingiy
at his internee, who was farmbred, after all, and should have some notion of
how to sort it out. Talia was looking a bit white around the lips and eyes, but
otherwise seemed in control. He nudged Tantris up beside her, and whispered,
"All right, trainee—you know more about this sort of thing than I do. Got
any ideas?" She
started just a litde; possibly only someone watching for reactions would have
noticed it. "I ... I think so," she said, slowly. "It's like a
dispute we had once back at Sensholding." "Then
take over. I'm out of my depth." She
asked a few questions of the disputants, then went among the rest of the
villagers, making inquiries into the habits of each of the parties in question.
It was generally agreed that, while the owner of the cow was parsimonious, he
was far too stingy to have ruined his own fences just to save a stud fee. And
the bull's owner had a habit of allowing it to stray, being too lazy to fix
breaks in his own enclosures until after the beast had escaped yet another time. But
then she surprised Kris by asking a source he never would have considered—some
of the children gathered at the edge of the crowd. After sidelong glances to be
certain that no one was likely to tell them to hold their tongues, they told
Talia that this particular cow was never kept in the field where the bull had
supposedly found her. She was quite valuable, and her owner always kept her
where he could keep an eye on her. Talia
returned to the disputants. "This
is my first judgment;" she said, slowly, and with an oddly expressionless
tone. "There is no doubt that your bull did stray, and since it is quite
probable that it did the damage claimed to the fences, you owe this man for the
repairs he had to make." The
owner of the bull looked extremely disgrun-ded; the cow's owner gloated. Talia
did not allow him to gloat for long. •E
"You, on the other hand," she told him—not quite Jpoking at him,
"have never kept your cow in that ticular field. You must have seen that
the bull broken in, and decided that since the damage already done, you might
as well save yourself the Stud fee. So you moved your cow to the field where
the bull was. Because of this, my second judgment is that you owe him half the
stud fee he would normally have charged you." Now
both of them looked chagrined. "AH
things considered, I should think that you are probably even." They
grudgingly agreed that this was the case. "Don't
you leave yet!" she said, turning to the owner of the bull, and showing a
little more animation. "You have been letting a potentially dangerous
animal roam loose. My third judgment is that anyone who finds your bull roaming
and confines it in a safe place for you to take home is entitled to have his
cows serviced for nothing to pay him for his trouble. That should induce you to
take better care of your stock in the future." The
grins creasing the faces of the rest of the villagers made it clear that they
considered Talia's rulings to have been equitable and appropriate—and they were
certainly popular. Kris smiled and gave her a little nod of approval; she
smiled back, tentatively, some of the strain gone from around her eyes. With
children ranging along before and behind them, they continued down to the
village itself, which was a slightly larger version of the first village they
had served, and actually boasted a "town hall" of sorts. It was there
that they set up shop in the single large room that served as a meeting hall,
behind an ancient and battered marble-topped table that might well be the
oldest object in the village. It was an improvement on the common room of the
inn in that it wasn't as smoky or cramped; but the fireplace cUd little to heat
it, and Kris found himself hoping 132 MERCEDES
LACKEY that
they would be able to deal with their business and be on their way before he
got frostbitten feet and Fingers. But
another dispute for arbitration landed on them almost immediately; a problem of
the location of the boundary between two neighboring farms. The farmers themselves
were not overly concerned about the matter, as they were old freinds and had
settled the problem over the years by sharing equally both the work and the
fruits of the Fields in question. They confided to Kris, however, that they
feared this could not continue for very much longer; both had more than one son
to be provided for, and they feared that tempers were already growing heated on
the subject among their offspring. Kris, after a glance at Talia showed him she
had no opinion in this matter, agreed that the matter should be settled now,
before it developed into a full-blown feud. He promised that they would attend
to it as soon as they had discharged their other duties. The
disputants were obliged to be content with that. Kris called for the village
records, and while each of them took a turn at relaying the news and the laws,
the other searched the records provided by the village clerk for clues to the
ownership of the properties in question. Regrettably,
the clues were few, and contradictory. It seemed that both claims were equally
valid. Talia
was increasingly reluctant to take any part in the affairs at hand. Her
shielding was disintegrating, slowly, but steadily; she was positive of that
now. What was worse, she was no longer certain that she was able to keep her
own feelings from intruding and influencing those around her, for her
instinct-level control over projection was going, too. Kris was trying to put
her at ease, but she could sense his own doubts as clearly as if he were
shouting them aloud. And
when, the night before they were due to ARROW'S
FLIGHT 133 ye,
they discussed the problem of the disputed IJelds at length in the privacy of
the Waystation, she ^pas keeping herself under such tight control that she
ItJtew she was going to have a reaction-headache from the strain. vThe
problem is that the stream they used as the original dividing line has changed
its bed so many times that I can't see any way of reconstructing what it was
originally," Kris sighed. "And you can't cast a Truth Spell on a
stream!" She
hesitated a long moment, drawing invisible patterns on the hearthstone of the
Station with a twig. "Do you suppose they'd settle for dividing it
equally? You've talked with them more than I have." "Not
a chance," Kris replied flatly, firelight casting ever-changing shadows
across his face. "I've talked with the eldest sons, and they're just about
ready to come to blows over it. The fathers would be perfectly willing, but the
children would never stand for it, and it's the children who will make trouble
if they're not satisfied." "I
can't see making this an all-or-nothing proposition," she sighed, after a
long pause. "Neither
can I," Kris stared into the flames, thinking. "Among the highborn
the way to settle this would be to marry two of the younger children, then deed
the land in question to them." "There's
not enough land there to support even one person, much less a family,"
Talia felt impelled to point out, "even if we could Find two of the
children willing to marry." Kris
played absently with one of the arrows from his quiver—then looked down at it
suddenly, and smiled in inspiration. "What about the hand of Fate?" "What
do you mean by that?" "Suppose
we each took a stand on the opposite sides of the area and shot arrows straight
up—then drew a line between where they landed for the new border. If there's no
wind tomorrow, where they fall 134 MERCEDES
LACKEY is
going to be pretty much at the whim of the Lady. Do you think that would satisfy
everyone?" "That
.. . that's no bad notion," she said, thinking hard. "Especially if
we have the priest bless the arrows, pray over the fields, that sort of thing.
It wouldn't be human decision anymore; it would be in the hands of the gods—and
who's going to dispute the will of the gods? I think both families will be
willing to abide by it. Kris, that's a wonderful idea!" She sighed, rather
sadly. "I wouldn't have thought of that." "You
did fine yourself, earlier," he said, more forcefully than he had
intended. "I was totally out of my depth." "Well,
I don't like the idea of anyone allowing livestock to roam at will. Out here on
the Border if cattle or hogs get into the forested areas, they're likely to go
feral, and then you've got a real problem on your hands." "Hmn.
I knew dogs gone wild could be a problem, but I never knew livestock
could." Kris filed that piece of information away for future reference. "It's
a fairly serious problem," she replied absently. "When domestic
animals go feral, they have no fear of man the way wild animals do, and what's
more, they're familiar with how people act. There was more than one person
among Holderkin killed or maimed by feral stock." "Well,
I repeat, you did fine. You shouldn't be afraid to put your say in. That's what
this internship is all about." "I—"
she started, then shrank back into herself. "What?" "Nothing,"
she replied, moving back into the shadows where he couldn't read her
expression. "I'm just tired, that's all. We should get some rest." That
withdrawal troubled him badly ... but there didn't seem to be anything he could
do about it. ARROWS
FUGHT 135 On
their way out of town the next day, they stopped *0 acquire the clerk and the
priest; when they presented their solution to the two families in question,
both sides were heartily in favor of it. The farmers themselves were willing to
agree to any solution to the problem that would defuse the potentially
explosive situation between their children. The children of both families were
equally certain that the gods would be with them when the arrows flew. For
something that had been under dispute for so long, the end came almost as an
anticlimax. The priest blessed arrows, bows, Heralds, fields, families—
anything that could possibly pertain to or be interested in the problem.
("If it moves, I'm blessing it," he told the Heralds with a twinkle
in his eyes. "And if it doesn't move, I'm praying over it!") Talia
and Kris each took a stand on the exact midpoint of the northern and southern
boundaries of the disputed dot and launched their arrows; the priest marked the
landing point of one, the clerk 01 the other. The landing places were
permanently designated with stone cairns and newly-planted trees, the new
border was made and drawn on the maps and deeds. Both sides professed
themselves satisfied. The Heralds went on their way. But by
now Talia was so withdrawn that Kris could not read her at all; she might as
well have been a statue of a Herald. She seemed to have wrapped herself in a
cocoon of self-imposed isolation, and nothing he could do or say seemed to be
able to break her out of it. And as
for himself, he found himself wondering if both those disputes hadn't been
solved a little too easily. It would have been child's play for her to have
nudged the disputants ever so slightly into a more friendly—or at least less
antagonistic—attitude toward one another. And once she was gone, if that was
indeed what she had done, the quarrels would break out all over again. 136 MERCEDES
LACKEY Had he
been overly impressed with the way she had handled the first case? Had she been
adjusting his attitude? There
was simply no way of being sure ... no way at all. Talia
was coming to realize that all her control had been on a purely instinctive
level; that she really didn't understand how her own Gift worked. The training
Visa had given her was the sort given to Mindspeakers, and in the face of this
disintegration of control, very little of Visa's teaching seemed directly
applicable to her current problem. The Healers she'd worked with had never said
anything to her . .. perhaps because they'd seen the control and assumed it was
conscious rather than instinctive. For
that matter, her Gift might not be much like theirs except in effect. They
certainly didn't use their Empathy as primary Gift; it was used mostly as an
adjunct to Healing. They
certainly weren't confronted with the ethical considerations she found herself
facing. When they weren't Healing, they simply shielded. And they didn't work
with law and politics. She
longed to tell Kris—and feared to. It would only make things worse, and what
could he do, after ail? His Gift wasn't even of the same type as hers, and what
training he had been given could hardly apply to her. So she
said nothing, endured in miserable self-doubt, and did her best to reverse a
situation that was moving increasingly out of control. Six There
was little of note in any of the towns and villages they passed through on
their meandering way to the Border. The worst that they encountered were three
cases where the village headmen were obviously trying to cover something up;
twice they were lining their own pockets with tax money, once die headman was
deliberately omitting his farms and those of his kin from the survey and tax
rolls. In all three cases they actually did nothing when the cheats were
uncovered; that was not their job. Instead, they noted these facts on their
reports. When the taxmen arrived in the spring, they would come armed with the
truth, and the guilty parties would find themselves paying a stiff penalty.
This kept the onus of tax enforcement off the Heralds. One
thing was notable; the farther north they went, the greater the distance grew
between communities, and the smaller the communities were. Now it was taking
nearly a week's ride to pass from village to village. Talia
remained withdrawn and silent, responding only when spoken to, and never
volunteering any opinion. She seemed to warm up a little when they were between
villages. She'd talk to Kris then, on her own; she even could be persuaded to
sing a little. 137 138 MERCEDES
LACKEY But as
soon as they came within a day's ride of a populated area, the shutters came
down, and she locked everything and everyone outside. When she spoke, she had
an odd, flat, indifferent quality to her tone. She reminded Kris of himself the
first time he'd walked the two-rope bridge on the obstacle course; there was
that kind of tautness underneath the mask, as if she expected to fall at any
moment. Tantris could tell him nothing, but even Rolan seemed unusually on
edge. There
was one other thing to observe about the countryside; these northernmost
communities were not only smaller, but they kept themselves behind palisades of
strong logs, with gates that were barred at night. There were wolves and other
wild beasts prowling the winter nights—and some of those beasts were on two
legs. The Forest of Sorrows didn't keep everything out of this Sector, and
couldn't prevent outlaws from coming in from the three directions other than
the forest Border. Talia and Kris rode with all senses alert and their weapons
loose and to hand now, and they bolted the Waystation doors at night. All of
which might have accounted for Talia's nerves; except that she supposedly came
from Border country herself, and should be used to keeping watch for raiders.
Still, Kris reasoned, it had been a long time, and she had never been part of
the defenders—she had been part of what was being protected. But
that wouldn't account for Roian's nerves. The Companions were both
combat-trained and combat-experienced; they were more than guard enough for
themselves, their Chosen, and the chirras. Kris watched Talia—unobtrusively, he
hoped—and worried, and wondered. They
progressed through several towns and villages; Talia was beginning to feel as
if she were falling to pieces, bit by bit. Her shields were eroding ARROW'S
FLIGHT 139 to the
point where she had very little control over them, and nearly everything was
getting through; she knew she was not only reading, she was inadvertantly
projecting, because Rolan was becoming as nervous as she was. Her only defense
was to withdraw into herself as much as possible, and Kris seemed bound and determined
to prevent that. She felt lost, and frightened, and utterly alone. There was no
one she could turn to for help; Kris himself had said that he thought her Gift
was unique. She was certain now that he couldn't give her any advice on how to
handle it; his own Gift was very nearly the kind that could be weighed and
measured. Hers wasn't even necessarily detectable. And now it was becoming
utterly unpredictable. Her feeling of panic and entrapment grew. Finally
they reached the town of Hevenbeck, very nearly on the Border itself. Tailia's
unhappiness was a hard knot within her now; the petty problems of the townfolk
seemed trivial at this point. In the
previous village they'd had some of their messages catch up with them; one of
them had been a brief note to Talia from Elspeth. She'd said only that she was
doing well, hoped Talia was the same, and that Talia wasn't to worry about her.
And that added to Talia's troubles. She had no notion of what prompted the
note, or what could be happening back at the capital at this moment. Elspeth
was in her first year as a trainee; like Talia she was the only girl in her
year-group. She was probably confused—most certainly overwhelmed—and just
entering adolescence to top it all off. And she would be having to cope with
all the rumors Talia already knew, and whatever had sprung up in her absence.
It was quite likely she needed Talia more now than she ever had since she'd
been the Brat. Not to
mention the effect of the rumors on the rest of the Heralds. Would
they, like Kris, be tempted to believe them? 140 MERCEDES
LACKEY Or
would they dismiss them out of hand and ignore the matter—leaving Elspeth to
face them alone? How was
Selenay getting along without her? What if the Queen was turning to Orthallen
for advice— Orthallen, whom Talia somehow could not bring herself to trust? She was
so engrossed in trying to hold control and deal with these other worries that
had begun occurring to her that she was paying scant attention to the
petitioners before her—a grim and straitlaced couple who reminded Talia
unpleasantly of her own Holderkin relatives. They
were dressed in clothing of faded black and dusty brown; carefully mended and
patched as if they were two of the town's poorest inhabitants, although Talia
and Kris had been informed by the headman that they were actually one of the
wealthiest couples Hevenbeck boasted. Their mouths were set in identical
disapproving grimaces as they harked over their grievances in thin, whining
voices. Those
voices irritated her no end; their petty spite-fulness rasped at her through
what was left of her shields, like having sandpaper rubbing over a sunburn. She
was grateful when Kris interrupted them. "You're
quite certain this girl is responsible for the missing poultry? There's no
chance it could be foxes or other vermin?" "Our
coops are as tight as our house, Herald," the man whined. "More so!
She's done it; done it in spite of the good wages we've paid her and the
comfortable job she's had with us. I don't doubt she's been selling them—" "But
to whom? You said yourself no one in town will admit to buying fowl from
her." "Then
she's been eating them!" the woman retorted. "Greedy she is, that I
know for certain—" Talia
forced herself to turn her attention to the serving maid; her garb was even
more threadbare than her employers, she was thin and pale, and looked ARROW'S
FLIGHT 141 ill-used.
She certainly didn't look to Talia as if she'd been feasting on stolen chickens
and geese! The girl
briefly raised her eyes—and a disquieting chill threaded Talia's backbone at
the strange blank, gray gaze. Then she dropped her regard again, and Talia
dismissed her misgiving as another manifestation of her lack of control over
her Gift. She wanted away from them all; they made her skin crawl, and all she
wanted was to have this nonsense over with so that she could retreat back into
the relatively safe haven of the Station. She
spoke without thinking about anything except getting rid of them. "I
can't see where you have any proof of what you're claiming," she
interrupted sharply, "and I can't see why you're bringing it before
Heralds—" "Talia,
you haven't been listening," Kris said in a low, warning voice. "It
isn't just the missing birds— though that's all they seem to be worrying about.
There's other things—the runes on their doorstep in blood—the—" "Kris,
this is ridiculous!" she exploded. "All they want is an excuse to
dismiss that poor child without her wages! Havens, Keldar used to pull that
filthy trick once every year—hire some pathetic wench and dismiss her on some
trumped-up excuse before her year's wage came due!" "Talia,"
Kris said after a pause, his voice full of reluctance, "I hate to have to
pull rank on you, but I'm going to have to insist—because you can work
Second-stage Truth Spell and I can't. I want you to cast it on all three of
them in turn." "I
can't believe you're wasting Truth Spell on something this petty!" "That's
an order, Herald." She bit
her lip at the cold tone of his voice, and obeyed without another word. The
First-stage Truth Spell only revealed whether or not the speaker was telling
the truth. Second-stage forced him to tell it. 142 MERCEDES
LACKEY Much to
her surprise, when Kris questioned the couple at some length while she held the
spell on them, their story was the same. Then
she transferred the spell to the timid-seeming servant-girl—and mouse became a
rabid weasel. The
girl underwent a complete personality change when Talia's spell touched her
mind. She stared at her employers, eyes bright and feral, a fierce snarl
twisting her lips. "Oh, yes," she hissed softly. "Oh yes, I've
been taking their birds. It's little enough for all they've done to me—" "What
have they done to you?" Kris prompted. "Beatings
for the least little clumsiness—bread and barley-broth and moldy cheese, meal
after meal. They own the biggest flock of hens in the town, and I haven't
tasted an egg or a bit of chicken in half a year! My pledged clothing is her
castoffs, and worn to nothing by the time I get them. When I'm not bruised, I'm
hungry, when I'm not hungry, I'm cold! But I'll have my revenge—" The
look of mad hatred she turned on the two made them shrink back away from her,
frightened at the transformation in her. And Talia clenched her hands until her
nails bit into her palms, endeavoring to hold control in the storm of the rage
and hatr/ed she was experiencing. "—oh,
yes, I'll have my revenge! That's what the birds were for, you know. I've not been
eating them. I've been sacrificing them—giving them to the wolves. They come to
me every night now. Soon now, soon they 11 teach me how to change my skin for
one of theirs, and when I learn—when I learn—" The mad
light in her eyes told clearly what she expected to do to her employers when
she'd learned to shift her shape. Talia went cold all over, shaking from head
to foot. The beat of the girl's emotions against her crumbling barriers was
almost enough to send her fleeing in panic. Her breath froze in her throat, and
she could feel herself coming perilously close to insanity herself. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 143 "—and
after them, the rest. And my gray brothers and sisters will help, oh,
yes—" The maid began to raise her voice, and her words disintegrated into
babbling; raving fragments of hatred and imagination. It was
too much for Talia to bear. The girl was shattering her barriers, and about to
draw her down into madness. She reached out blindly, without thinking, using
her Gift in instinctive self-defense, and touched the girl, putting her into a
sudden sleep. The
plaintiff couple was speechless; for a long moment, so was Kris. "I
think," Kris said carefully, at last, "That we had better take her
and put her into the care of a Healer. I don't know how much of what she said
about the way you treated her was the truth, and how much she imagined, but I
think perhaps you'd better agree to pay all the Healer's expenses. And if you
take another servant—you'd best be careful about her working conditions." Kris
was ominously silent as they rode back to the Station in the gathering dusk.
The disposition of the mad girl had occupied all the rest of the afternoon. It
had taken the Healer nearly a candlemark to wake her from the deep sleep Talia
had thrown over her. And Talia was profoundly shamed, as much for her panicked,
unthinking reaction as for the self-centered, willful irresponsibility that had
led her to neglect her duty. "Kris
... I'm sorry," she said in a subdued, unhappy voice as soon as they were
past the city gates. "I didn't mean—I—" Kris
said nothing, and Talia shrank back into herself, the last of her
carefully-built self-confidence shattered. He
guesses—surely he guesses. I'm a failure; I can't even control myself enough to
complete half a circuit. I can't do anything right. But he
made no reply, not even to condemn; she 144 MERCEDES
LACKEY could
only sense that he was thinking, but not what he was thinking about. She rode
silently at his side, waiting for the axe to fall, all the way back to the
Station. And the fact that it did not fall only made things worse. Kris
rode in silence, only now beginning to realize that by not giving her a little
comfort and encouragement that he had made a nearly fatal mistake. Her
self-esteem was far more fragile than he had guessed. And her nerves were
plainly gone. Now he thought he knew why she would venture no judgments at all,
and gave him her opinions hesitantly, and only when directly asked for them.
When he asked her, back at the Station, she avoided answering all questions
about how she was feeling, answering only that she was "all right."
He began to wonder if she'd ever recover from the incident . .. and he began to
fear that he'd ruined her. And
then, deep in the darkness of the night, the disturbing thought occurred to him
that she was slowly going mad, and perhaps taking him with her. There
was snow on the ground as they rode toward the tiny hamlet that bore the
dubious distinction of being the settlement that was farthest north and nearest
the Border, right up against the Forest of Sorrows itself. Talia, more used to
having to exert herself to bolster what was left of her shields than to stretch
out to sense the population centers, began wondering if her powers had finally
failed her altogether. But, no—there was Kris, so clear to her raw mind that
his proximity was almost painful. So it had to be something else. She
Finally got up her courage and confided what she had not sensed to Kris.
"There's just too much ... well, 'silence' is the only way I can put it. I
can hardly feel anything, and the little I can pick up is as if everyone were
sleeping, or unconscious." ARROWS
FLIGHT 145 "You're
certain that the cold's not affecting you?" he asked. / only wish
it would, she thought wistfully, then answered him. "No ... I don't think
so. It was no colder back at Greenhaven, and I could feel the people from a day
away." He
considered. "All right then, we'd better pick up our pace to the fastest
the chirras can maintain. If there's something wrong, the sooner we get there,
the better." The
snow creaked underfoot, and the bridle-bells rang madly as they picked up the
pace to a trot. The air was utterly still; the sky cloudless and an intense
blue that almost hurt the eyes. Sun filtered through the bare branches of the
trees, leaving shadows like blue lace on the snowbanks. It was a beautiful day,
and the strange uneasiness Talia was feeling was entirely out of place in it. The
village itself was very quiet as they came within sight of it—too quiet by far.
Sheltered between two hills, the cleared area in which it stood showed no
tracks on the snow whatsoever, neither coming nor going. The gates stood open,
and unattended. Kris' face showed his alarm so clearly that Talia knew without
having his emotions battering her that he was as fearful as she. He ordered
Talia to remain where she was, and descended the hill they were on to the
village gates, taking his chirra inside with him. He
hadn't been inside long when she saw the gates slam shut, and heard the bar
slide into its slots. Immediately following this, she saw an arrow arc over the
palisade to land in the snow on her side of the wall. She ran
to where it had landed. It bore four rings; three were green, one was red. She
checked the fletching pattern; it was Kris' without a doubt. It might have
seemed silly for him to have patterned the arrow when she'd watched him enter
the village with her own eyes, but this was truly the only way for 146 MERCEDES
LACKEY her to
be certain that when the gate slammed shut it had been because he had shut it,
and not outlaws lairing within. This
could only mean one thing. The entire village had fallen victim to some kind of
plague. Lord
and Lady—what do I do— she thought frantically, then staggered as Rolan pushed
her impatiently with his nose. She felt his annoyance as plainly as if he'd
spoken it. He'd had more than enough of her self-indulgent nerves; this
required action, simple action. She knew very well what she had to do, and
she'd damn well better get about doing it! It was
as if something within her that had been broken was being splinted together.
She forced herself to regain calm, to plan. She wrote a note, telling Kris that
she was leaving her chirra tethered to the gate, and that he should take it
inside when he saw that she'd left. She took a plain white arrow of her own,
tied the note to it, and sent it back across the wall. She went through her
packs, removing a map, a skin of water, and a bag of meal for herself and Rolan
to share. Consulting
the map, she saw that the nearest Healing Temple lay five days by horse to the
east. That meant that she and Rolan could make it in two. She
tethered the chirra, swung herself onto Rolan's back, and they were off. This
was where the ground-devouring pace of the Herald's Companion was worth more
than gold or gems. A Companion could travel at the equivalent of an ordinary
horse's gallop for hours without tiring. If need be, he could subsist for several
days at this punishing pace with little more than water and a handful or two of
meal. He would need several days of heavy feeding and rest when the ordeal was
over, but a Companion never faltered, and seldom even strained muscles or
tendons under the conditions that would kill a horse. Any place a hooved animal
could go, a Companion could go, including scram- ARROWS
FLIGHT 147 bling
over icy, hazardous rock-falls only goats would dare. The only thing his Herald
need worry about was whether he was capable of staying on his back! Talia
and Rolan pushed their pace far into the night; she ate and drank in the
saddle, even dozed a bit. Their road was clear, and relatively dry; the footing
was good, so Rolan exerted himself to the uttermost. There was even a full
moon, so they could see their way quite clearly. The noise of their passing
disturbed whatever wildlife there was, so they rode in a silence broken only by
the sound of Rolan's hooves pounding on the frozen ground. It was an eerie journey,
like something out of a dream, a wild ride that never seemed to get anywhere.
Rolan was relatively fresh, so they continued on until even after the moon had
set. Finally, however, even he had to take a brief rest. Not long before dawn,
they broke their journey in a tiny clearing alongside the road, beside a stream
crowned with an ice-covered waterfall. Rolan
halted right next to the pool below the waterfall, his flanks heaving, his
sides steaming in the cold, his breath puffing out and frosting around his
nostrils. Talia broke the ice for him, but the water was too cold for him to
drink safely. She gave him water from her own waterskin instead, filling it
when it was empty, warming it against her body, and letting him drink until
he'd had enough. She filled the skin one last time, and had a long drink
herself after giving him about a third of the meal she was carrying. Just as
the sun rose, striking fire from the be-jeweled waterfall, they were ready to
resume the grueling run. They
stopped again near noon, for both of them had needs of nature to attend to.
That did not take them long at all, and Talia took advantage of the daylight
and relatively warm sun to strip his tack off him long enough for it to dry,
rubbing him down with the towel she always kept in his saddlebag. She
leaned her head against his flank, knees feeling weak, and not just from the
long ride. 148 MERCEDES
LACKEY Lady
help me—Heaters have my Gift—how am I ever going to face them? How can I face
anyone, falling apart like this? Oh, gods—/ can't bear it— Rolan
nudged her shoulder gently; she could almost hear him in words, so clearly did
his message come to her. I'll help you, the feeling said. "Oh,
Gods—can you?" The
reply was an unqualified affirmative. She sighed, and relaxed, and reached out
to him— And
felt her shields coming up, held up by a force from outside herself; felt a
calm come over her, and a kind of numbness that was so much better than the
pain and stress she'd been living with that she nearly cried. "How
long—?" His
regret seemed to say that he couldn't hold things for very long at all. "Just
make it long enough for us to get there and back. I'll work so hard I'll wear
myself out, and that will keep things under control. I can't project if I don't
have the strength to spare. I'll figure out what's gone wrong, I know I will—if
I can just stay away from people for a while—" Then
let's go, his impatient headshake said. The
tack, including the saddle blanket, was dry to the touch, so she lost no time
in getting him saddled again and getting on their way, with anxiety riding
pillion behind her. They
galloped into the courtyard of the Healing Temple shortly after dusk. Her
Whites and her Companion gave her instant attention; Rolan had not even halted
when a green-clad novice Healer was at her stirrup to receive her orders.
Immediately behind him came two more, one with hot wine with herbs in it for
Taiia, the other with fresh, warm gruel for Rolan. Both of them consumed their
portions with gratitude, while a messenger went to arouse the two Heralds
posted to this Temple. Meanwhile ARROWS
FLIGHT 149 another
novice lit torches all around the courtyard, and before Talia had finished her
wine, a fragile, slender woman whose close-cropped hair flamed red even in the
uncertain torchlight came at a dead run across the cobbled court. She had a
heavy satchel slung over one shoulder, her green robes were flying, and she was
tying a cloak on as she ran. "I'm
Kerithwyn;" she said as she reached Talia. "I'm the most experienced
Healer here in plague diseases. The other two you asked for will follow as soon
as our Heralds are ready, but I'm ready to leave now." "All
right, then; the sooner we get back to Kris the happier I'll be. You're used to
riding pillion with a Herald?" Talia held out her hand to aid the Healer
astride Rolan. "You
could say that," the woman replied, taking Talia's outstretched hand. She
gave Talia an odd look when their hands touched, hesitated a moment, then set her
foot on top of the Herald's, and lifted herself onto the pillion pad behind
Talia with practiced ease. "Rolan
is a good bit faster than most Companions— so be prepared." Despite
the advance warning, Talia heard the woman gasp a little in surprise as Rolan
launched himself back the way they had come. It was
obvious, however, that the woman was no stranger to this kind of
transportation. She held her seat without losing her grip on her medicinals or
on Talia's belt, but also without any panic-stricken clutching. She kept her
cloak tucked in all around her, and kept her head down, taking advantage of the
small shelter behind Talia from the wind of their passing. Talia was relieved
to learn that she was prepared to eat and doze a-horse, and if anything, was
even less willing than Rolan to stop for rest. They
reached the village shortly after midday of 150 MERCEDES
LACKEY the
second day of their return. It was still utterly lifeless, and Talia's
unpredictable shields had shut down on her, so that she couldn't even sense
Kris within. She had
the Healer dismount, then backed Rolan up to the gate to beat a tattoo on it
with one of his hind hooves. No matter where Kris was, waking or sleeping, so
long as he hadn't fallen ill himself, he'd hear that. She
fretted, hands clenching on the reins, when he didn't appear immediately after
the pounding. He could so easily have caught the plague himself; they were
anything but immune. Kerithwyn stirred uneasily by her stirrup, the same
thoughts obviously occurring to her, by the worried look on her face. But
then she heard the bar slide back and the gate cracked open just enough to
admit them. She rode straight in without stopping to dismount, the Healer
following, and only slid off when they were inside the gates. "The
other two are less than a day behind us, but I was ready immediately, so I came
on ahead," Kerithwyn told Kris briskly. "What is the situation?" Kris
was sliding the bar back into place, and when he turned to face them, Talia wanted
to weep with pity for him. She could hardly believe how worn-looking he was; he
must have been on his feet since she'd left. "It's
bad," Kris said wearily, "It looks like the entire population was hit
within a day or two. There were five dead when I got here, and I've lost three
more since." "Symptoms?" "High
fever, delirium, a red rash, and swelling under the jaw and the arms." Kerithwyn
nodded. "Snow fever—that's what we call it anyway. It generally shows up
right after the first few snowfalls; after Midwinter it seems to vanish and it
never appears in warm weather. How have you been treating them?" ARROW'S
FLIGHT 151 "Trying
to get liquids down them, especially wil-lowbark tea, although when the fever
seemed to be getting too high, especially in the children, I packed them in
snow for a bit to bring it down." "Excellent
job! I couldn't have done better myself," she applauded. "I've got
some specific remedy with me, but it will take 3 litde time to do any good, so
we'll be doing more of the same with the ones not in immediate danger. I'll
start with Healing the worst victims now. Have either of you ever assisted a
Healer before?" "I
can't," Kris replied shaking his head, so that his lank hair fell onto his
forehead. "The last Healer I spoke to said my Gifts were all wrong. I'm
afraid I'll be of more use as a simple pair of hands." Kerithwyn
turned to look at Talia, her look oddly measuring. She
swallowed hard, but answered. "I've never tried, but my Gifts are Empathy
and Mind healing. My instructor said they were Healing types." If I'm
going to be assisting, I can't have shields up anyway, and this is going to
take so much energy I won't be projecting either. "Empathy
in a Herald?" Kerithwyn raised one eyebrow. "Well, you ought to be a
great deal of help, then. We'll try it, anyway; the worst that can happen is
nothing. Herald, have you isolated the worst cases?" "They're
all in here," Kris pointed to a small house immediately next to the gate.
"When it didn't seem to harm them to move them, I put all of the worst of
them together." "Excellent."
Kerithwyn gave him about a pound of an herbal mixture, instructing him to make
a cauldron of tea with it. He was to give every victim at least a cupful, and
drink some himself. As Kris left to follow her instructions and care for Rolan,
Kerithwyn entered the house with Talia. The
house was cramped and dark, with the windows kept shuttered against the cold
air. Kris had 152 MERCEDES
LACKEY moved
as many beds and pallets into the three rooms of the house as he could fit. He
had done his best to keep his patients clean and had herbal incense burning on
the hearth against the miasma of sickness, but there was still a faint but
noticeable odor of illness. So many people crowded together made Talia feel
claustrophobic, and the smell made her faintly nauseous. She was only grateful
that these people were apparently so deeply unconscious that there was nothing
for her to have to try to shield against. Kerithwyn appeared not to notice any
of this. The
worst of the sick ones was a frail old woman whose bloated jaws looked
grotesque on her thin face. "Take
a chair and sit next to me, Herald," the Healer instructed. "Make
yourself comfortable, take my free hand, and drop your shielding—" Again
that measuring look. "—and do whatever it is that you do when you prepare
to Mindspeak. I'll take care of the rest." Talia
closed her eyes and forcibly ignored her surroundings and put her anxieties
into abeyance by concentrating on an old breathing exercise. It took
her a long, considering moment to determine that she was still capable of going
into deep-trance. With everything else going merrily to hell, she wasn't
entirely certain she'd be able to perform even such a rudimentary exercise as
deep-trancing. Tentative
trial proved that fear, at least, was groundless. Once
she achieved the appropriate level of trance-state, the Healer appeared to her
inner eyes as a nearly solid core of calming green-and-gold energy. Gods be
thanked, she thought with detached gratitude, Kerithwyn must be even more of an
expert than she claimed. It
wasn't just that the Healer possessed a controlled power the equal of any of
the teaching Healers Talia had dealt with—it was also that Talia herself ARROW'S
FLIGHT 153 had
nothing to fear from the Healer's presence. Kerithwyn was allowing no negative
emotions to ruf-fie the surface of her mind! The
patient seemed to be roiling with something dark, muddy-red. Talia observed
with detached fascination as the Healer sent lances of light into these sullen
eddies, cleaning and dispersing them, and feeding the tiny, flickering sparks
she uncovered beneath them until they burned strongly again. As Kerithwyn
worked, Talia could both see and feel energy draining from herself to the
Healer, replacing what Kerithwyn spent. Now
that she understood what the Healer required, she opened the channel between
them to its fullest possible extent and reached for Rolan's support. Energy
flowed to the Healer in a steady, powerful stream from the two of them, and the
work picked up in pace and sureness. It was all finished in a moment, and Talia
felt the contact between them break. She sped up her own breathing, turned her
concentration outward, and opened her eyes. The
Healer's gray eyes were filled with approval "Very good, Herald; you
grasped the concept quite quickly. Can you continue as well as you have
begun?" 'Til
give you all I have." "In
that case, I think that the plague will claim no more victims. As you can see,
we have done quite well with this one." The old
woman bore little resemblance to the sick creature she had been when they
started. The swelling in her jaws was already more than half gone, and it was
clear that her fever was nearly broken. Talia was immensely cheered by the
sight. This was the first time in so long that she'd done something right. . .. They
treated every person in the house before the Healer insisted that Talia rest.
Talia sought out their packs, remembering that she had seen them when 154 MERCEDES
LACKEY she had
entered. Kris had left them all in a heap by the fire. She dug out some dried
meat and fruit, but found she had so little appetite that she couldn't even
raise enough interest to bite into the radons. Instead of eating, she sagged
cross-legged on the hearthstone with her back to the fire, soaking up the heat
with her eyes closed, too exhausted to sense anything, and so grateful for the
respite that all she wanted to do was enjoy the stillness in her mind. "Foolish
girl! Didn't you learn anything about Gifts at that Collegium of yours?" Talia
opened her eyes in surprise; Kerithwyn was standing over her with a steaming
mug in one hand and a bar of something in the other. "You
should know perfectly well that if you don't replenish your energy reserves,
you'll be of no use to anyone!" She thrust both articles into Talia's
hands. "I know you aren't hungry—eat anyway! Finish these, then go find
your partner and make him eat and sleep. He doesn't look like he's done either
for a week. Don't worry, when I want you, I'll find you. And make sure your
Companions are all right as well." The
block proved to be dried fruit and nuts pressed together with honey. Under
other conditions Talia would probably have found it to be revoltingly sweet,
but once she'd forced down the first bite, it seemed to gain enormously in
appeal and the rest followed rather quickly. She recognized the liquid for the
tea Kris had been feeding the plague victims, and saved one bite of the bar to
take the nasty taste out of her mouth. She
looked first for Rolan; Kris had removed his tack, thrown several blankets over
him, and led him to the stabling area of the inn. Kris had left food and water
within reach, but that was all he'd had time to do. She
groomed and cleaned him, grateful that Com- ARROWS
FLIGHT 155 panions
were intelligent creatures that could be trusted to walk themselves cool. He
was obviously tired for the first time in her experience, and equally obviously
hungry, but otherwise none the worse for the run. She blanketed him warmly
against chill and hunted until she found the grain storage area. She added
dried fruit to the sweet-feed and put plenty within easy reach, then made a pot
of hot gruel, which Rolan slurped up greedily as soon as it had cooled enought
to eat. It
occurred to her, tired as she was, that she ought to check on Tantris. Kris'
Companion whickered a welcome and ratded his grain bucket entreatingly. She
laughed—how long it had been since the last time she'd laughed!—he had hay, he
wasn't about to starve, but he obviously wanted some of the same treatment
Rolan was getting. She obliged him as he nuzzled her in thanks. The chirras,
loose in a large enclosure that gave them access to the outside and which
contained enough fodder for them for a week, were in fine fettle. She changed
their water, and went to look for Kris. It
didn't take much persuasion on her part to get him into the bedroll she had
laid out on the hearth. He actually fell asleep before he'd finished the
rations she'd given him; she gently removed the half-finished meal from his
hands and placed it where he would see it when he woke, then took up the task
she'd pulled him away from. All
three of them worked like slaves far into the night, snatching food and sleep
in stolen moments when no one seemed to need aid too urgently. Oddly enough,
the frail-seeming Kerithwyn exhibited the least amount of wear. She showed
incredible stamina and tirelessness; she frequently scolded them into taking a
rest when she herself had taken fewer breaks than either of them. All
three of them were worn and wan when the longed-for sound of hooves pounding on
the gate 156 MERCEDES
LACKEY signaled
the arrival of the other two Healers and their Herald-escorts. The two
new Healers—a great, hairy bear of a man, and a round-faced girl who seemed
scardy old enough to have attained full Greens—quickly assumed control from
Kerithwyn, who found a flat space, a few blankets, and promptly went to sleep.
Both Heralds were experienced in assisting Healers, and sent Talia and Kris to
their bedrolls for their first steady night of sleep since they'd arrived here. All of
them were on their feet the next day, and back to the job at hand. They took it
in turn to eat and sleep, and by the end of the week several of their former
patients were in good enough shape to begin helping them care for their fellow
victims. At that point Kerithwyn told Kris gently but firmly to be on their
way. "We
don't need you anymore—no, not even for the usual," she insisted.
"Our own Heralds can take care of any disputes; we get the laws and news
at least once every month, and we're perfectly capable of relaying reports. I
want you two out of here before you catch this plague yourselves." "But—"
Kris protested. "Out!"
she replied. "I've had this sort of thing happen to me six times already;
this is the seventh. You are not shirking your duty. Loris and Herald Pelsin
are going to be staying here until Midwinter; these people are not going to
need you! Now go!" Kris
gathered his belongings, acquired some fresh food to supplement the dried—it
would stay perfectly sound in the cold—left their reports with the Heralds who
had brought the Healers, as well as giving them the written reports on the
villages they had already visited to be sent back to the capital. But
Talia did not escape so easily. While Kris was conferring with the other two
Heralds, Kerithwyn took her aside just before she was ready to mount ARROWS
FLIGHT 157 Rolan.
"Child," she said bluntly, "Your shields are as full of holes as
last week's target, and if you weren't exhausted, you'd be projecting
everything under the sun! You're in such a state that if I had any time, I
wouldn't let you leave this place. But I don't have either the time or the
energy to spare. I don't know what you've been doing, or what you think you're
doing, but whatever it is, it's dead wrong. You'd better get yourself in hand,
girl, and quickly, or you'll be affecting even the unGifted. Now go—and start
working on that control." With
those blunt words she turned on her heel and left; leaving Talia torn between
running after her and begging her help, and slitting her wrists on the spot. In the
end, though, she gathered the ragged bits of her courage around her, and headed
out the gate after Kris. Kris
consulted the map; Kerithwyn had ordered him to find a layover point where the
two of them could take a long rest. He told Talia that he thought he'd found a
particularly good Waystation for them to use as their resting-place. Talia
nodded, sunk in her own misery; Kris was preoccupied with making certain of
their current location, and hadn't noticed anything—or at least, he hadn't said
anything to her about it. But after what Kerithwyn said .. . Well,
she was going to have to be twice as careful as before, that was all. They
were a full half-day from the village now, and well into the Forest of Sorrows
itself. Kris had called a halt around midday, so that they could all get a bite
to eat while he checked his bearings. There were several narrow roads through
Sorrows, and if they had missed theirs, or mistaken the road for a herd-track,
they could get into trouble before nightfall. But
they were on the right road, and the Waystation was within easy striking
distance. 158 MERCEDES
LACKEY It was
fortunate that it was not too far distant, for just after they had dismounted
and taken rations from their packs, the chirras began whuffing, and dancing uneasily. "Talia,
chirras don't misbehave unless there's a good reason," Kris said with a
frown of worry, as his jerked the lead rope from his hands for the third time.
"Can you tell what's wrong?" "I
don't know . . ." she said doubtfully, still shaking from her
confrontation with the Healer, and never having done a great deal of work with
animals. "I'll give it a try, though." She
braced herself, and sent herself into the deep-trance in which she had been
able to touch animals' minds before. The image of what was causing their
unhappiness was clear and sharp—and enough to send her flying back to
consciousness with speed. "Snow," she said succinctly, for the image
had been crystal clear and highly sharpened by fear. "Lots of it—a big
blizzard coming down out of the north. It'll hit us before dusk." Kris
swore. "Then we haven't much time. Let's get moving." Seven The
chirras resumed their good behavior, as if they understood that Talia had
learned what was troubling them. They all pushed on as quickly as they could,
but the icy road made it hard for both chirras and Companions to keep their
footing, and the clouds piling up from the north were making it as dark as if
it were already dusk. Then a bitter wind began, cutting through the trees with
an eerie moan. The road they were following had taken a turn to the north about
a furlong back, which put the wind right in their faces. Kris and Talia
dismounted and fought against it alongside the Companions and chirras. When the
first fat flakes began falling, they were already in difficulty. Within
moments it was no longer possible for either Herald to see more than a few feet
ahead, and the wind was strong enough to whip the edges of their cloaks out of
their benumbed hands. It howled among the tree branches, and ravened on the
ground, shrieking like the damned. The trees groaned and creaked in protest,
the thinner branches whipping wildly above their heads. It was so hard to be
heard above the storm that neither of them bothered to speak, using only hand
signals when there was something that had to be communicated. This was like no 159 160 MERCEDES
LACKEY storm
Talia had ever seen before, and she hoped (when she had any thoughts at all
through the numbing cold) that it wasn't typical for this Sector. The
snow piled up with frightening speed; ankle-deep, then knee-deep. They
completely lost track of distance and time in the simple struggle to place one
foot in front of the other. Kris and Tantris found the lane that led to the
Waystation more by accident than anything else, literally stumbling into it as
they probed the bushes at the side of the road. The
lane soon plunged down between two shallow ridges where they were sheltered
from the worst of the wind. They let go of the girths they'd clung to and
stumbled along in their Companions' wake, trusting to their mounts' better
senses to guide them all to the Station. By the time they achieved it, they
could hardly see the path ahead of them. The bulk of the Station loomed up
before them out of the gray-white wall of snow only when they were practically
on top of it. The
Station probably hadn't been visited since the resupply team had last inspected
and stocked it during the summer. A quick survey of the woodpile told them that
there wasn't enough stockpiled there to last for as long as they were likely to
be snowed in. In frantic haste, they left the chirras tied to the building,
removed everything from the packs on their Companions, fastened lead ropes from
their own belts to the snaffles on the saddles and went out with axes to look
for deadfall. It was
grueling work, especially coming on top of the previous crisis. Talia's arms
and shoulders ached with the unaccustomed work; what didn't ache, was nearly
numb with cold. Her cloak was caked with snow to the point where it creaked and
bits of snow fell off when she moved. Her world narrowed to the pain, the axe
in her hands, and the deadfall in front of her. More than anything else, she
longed to be able to lie down in the soft snow and rest, but she ARROW'S
FLIGHT 161 knew
that this was the very last thing she should do. Instead, she continued to
struggle against pain and the driving snow, using the numbing cold and the ache
of overtaxed muscles as a bulwark against despair—the despair that Healer
Kerithwyn had evoked with her brusque warning. She drove herself in the
gathering gloom until she became aware that she could barely see where her axe
was falling. It was nearly night now—true night. It was
time to give up. As Talia and Rolan hauled in the last load while full darkness
fell, it was all she could do to cling to his girth as he dragged her and the
wood back toward the station. The wind had picked up—something she wouldn't
have believed possible—and it was all but tearing her cloak from her body. Her
breath was sobbing in her lungs, sending needles of ice and pain through her
throat and chest. She
opened the door of the Station, only to blink in surprise—for there was nothing
before her but a gloom-shrouded little room with a door on the opposite wall.
After a moment, her fatigue-fogged mind managed to grasp the fact that this
Station, unlike any other she had seen previously, had an entranceway to buffer
the effect of the outside chill. She
fumbled the second door open, Rolan crowding into the entrance after her. Kris
had beaten her to the Station with his final load shortly before, and had
fumigated it and started a fire in the fireplace. He unfastened her from Rolan;
she stumbled thank--fully toward the yellow beacon of the fire with half-frozen
limbs. He led Rolan into the shelter of the Station itself, and as she
collapsed next to the warmth of the flames she saw that he had brought in
Tantris and the chirras as well. It made things a bit crowded until he got them
all settled, but Talia knew that there was no way anything could live long in
the howling winds outside. She
peeled off her snow-caked garments and hung 162 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 163 them
beside Kris' on pegs above the fireplace. Kris was already taking care of meal
preparations, so after she slipped into her woolen shift and old breeches
(feeling far too exhausted for a complete change of clothing) she made a nest
of the dun-colored blankets from both their bedrolls on top of dry straw in
front of the fire. This way they couJd warm their aching, shivering bodies in
comfort while waiting for whatever it was to cook. She
blinked stupidly at the fire, mind and body alike still numb and cold. She held
to that numbness, stubbornly, not wanting to face the alternative to numbness.
She succeeded; she remained sunk in exhausted apathy long after she normally
would have begun to show some signs of life. Kris was standing over her for
several minutes before she realized he was there. "Talia
.. ." he began awkwardly, "I know this isn't the time or the place,
but there isn't likely to be a better one. I have to talk to you." Without
really realizing it, she rose slowly to her still-benumbed feet, feeling a cold
that had nothing to do with the blizzard outside. "Ab-b-b-out what?"
she stuttered, fearing the worst. "Kerithwyn
had some words with me before we left," he said, as the despair she'd been
holding off with the last of her strength came down on her with the same
overwhelming power as storm—and with it, oddly enough, a hopeless kind of rage.
"Hell, Talia— she told me you've been holding back on me; that your Gift
is totally out of control!" Something
within her shattered, letting loose the storm she'd held pent up for so long. Kris
was expecting anger, denial—but not this! He was battered by alternating waves
of suicidal despair, and killing rage; the shock of it literally sent him to
his knees. His eyes filmed with a red mist. There was a
roaring in his ears, behind which he could dimly hear the squeal of an angry
horse and the clatter of hooves on stone. That
was what brought him out, before he grabbed a weapon and killed himself, her,
or both of them. He built up the strongest shield he could, fought his way to his
feet, and rushed her, literally slamming her into the wall behind her with
enough force to make his own teeth rattle. "Stop
it!" he shouted at the wild, inhuman thing struggling beneath his hands.
''Damn you, Stop it! Look what you're doing to us!" He wrenched her around
violently, so that she could see for herself the unbelievable sight of Rolan
backing Tantris into a corner, teeth bared and eyes wild and red-rimmed.
"Look what you're doing to them!" She
stared—and collapsed so suddenly he didn't even have time to catch her, for she
fell right through his hands. She fell and curled into a limp ball on the cold
stone floor of the Station, sobbing as if she had lost everything she ever held
dear. And the
storm within the Station walls faded away to nothing. He went
to his knees beside her, and gathered her against his shoulder. She didn't
resist—didn't even seem to know he was there. He held her while she cried,
horrible, tearing sobs that seemed to be ripping her apart inside, while the
fire he'd started burned lower and lower, and the storm outside echoed her
heartbroken weeping. Finally,
when it seemed possible that the fire might die altogether, he picked her up
and put her in the nest of blankets and hay. She curled up, facing away from him
and still crying, while he built up the fire, finished the tasks he'd left
undone, and returned to her. He got
in beside her, chilled to the bone, and took her equally cold body into his
arms again. The violence of her grief seemed to have worn itself out; he 164 MERCEDES
LACKEY shook
her a little. "Come on—" he said, feeling more than awkward.
"Talk to me, lady—" "I-I—"
she sobbed "I want to die!" "Why?
Because your Gift got out of control? What kind of attitude is that for a
Herald?" "I'm
no kind of Herald." "Like
bloody hell!" he interrupted. "Who says?" "Everyone—you
told me—" "Oh,
hell.. . ," Now he realized what it was that triggered this whole mess in
the first place—himself, telling her the rumors about her. Gods—he knew she
hadn't a high level of self-esteem—what he'd said back at the start of this
trip must have hit her like a punch in the kidneys. He must have started her on
a round of self-examination and self-doubt that turned into a downturning
spiral she hadn't the power to stop. Her Gift was the sort of thing that would
feed on doubt and make it reality—which in turn would feed her doubts,
reinforcing them as her loss of control turned rumor into truth. And
this was the result. A fully developed Gift without any controls on it
whatsoever, and a young woman ready to kill herself the minute he turned his
back. "Listen
to me—dammit Talia, listen!" He shook her again. "If things were that
bad, Rolan would have left you. He'd have repudiated anybody not worthy of her
Whites. Has he made any move like that at all?" "N-n-n-no
. .." "Has
he even warned you?" The
sobs were fading. "N-n-no." "He's
helped you, hasn't he? He's kept your damned secret. He thinks you're still a
Herald. So act like one, dammit! Stop emoting and start thinking. You're in a
mess; now how can we get you out of it?" She
looked up at him for the first time, eyes swollen and red. "We?" "We,"
he repeated. "I'm as much to blame for this as you are. I should never
have told you those damned ARROWS
FLIGHT 165 stories—should
have believed you when you told me they weren't true. I'd be willing to bet it
was my doubt that made all this worse. Hmm?" She
shook her head, then hid her face against his chest. He pulled her closer, and
began stroking her hair and rocking her a little. "Poor baby—" he
murmured, "—poor scared, lonely baby—here—try this." He reached out
and seized a small leather bottle from the top of his pile of belongings beside
them, and passed it to her. "One of the standard cures for sensitivity is
wine. This ought to blunt your edges good!" Talia
accepted the bottle, took a gulp and almost choked. The stuff was like drinking
sweet, liquid fire! "What—is—that?"
she asked when she'd stopped gasping for breath. "Something
the Healers make—spirits of wine, they call it. They make it by freezing the
wine they make from honey, and throwing away the ice; that's what's left. The
one that looks like a bear gave it to me before we left." Talia
took another drink, just a sip this time, and with more caution. It didn't burn
the way the first mouthful had, and left behind a very pleasant sensation in
her mouth and stomach. And it certainly did blunt the edges of both her
sensitivity and her raw nerves. That was the best thing that had happened to
her all day, so she took a third swallow. "Easy
there, little one," Kris laughed, sounding relieved. "That stuffs
potent!" "I
can tell," she said, feeling a bit giddy. "But I feel a lot better.
Not so raw." "That
was what I hoped," he replied, appropriating the bottle and drinking from
it himself. "I suppose we shouldn't be drinking it on an empty stomach,
but I figure you need it. Hell, after what I've been through, so do I!"
She had drunk enough that she was just aware of 166 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 167 Kris'
mental presence; his proximity was no longer painful. "Thanks."
"Don't mention it." She lay
quietly in the circle of his arms, feeling utterly drained, as they continued
to share sips of the bottle. The fire popped and crackled, with little bits of
blue and green flame among the red and orange. She was finally beginning to
feel warm all the way through—something she hadn't thought likely out there in
the snow—and relaxed—something she hadn't thought likely ever again. The fire
smelled of evergreens, like forest-green incense. The chirras and Companions
shifted a little from time to time, rustling the straw Kris had laid down for
them. Gods—what she'd almost done to them! She touched with Rolan just long
enough to assure herself that he was all right. ... His
forgiveness and love was so total that tears came to her eyes again. "Hey,"
Kris said gently "I thought we'd agreed there'd be no more of that." When
she didn't reply, he put one hand under her chin, tilted it up, and kissed her.
It was intended to be a brotherly kiss. It didn't stay brotherly for more than
an instant. "Bright Havens!" he breathed in surprise when they
finally moved apart. Talia
leaned back into his shoulder; her desire had surprised her as much as it had
him, although she knew that was a common enough reaction after great stress.
She wasn't aware of him as her counselor or even as a Herald at this
moment—only as a friend and an emotional shelter—and knew with certainty that
he was as aware of her need as she was of his own. This time she reached for
him. As
their mouths met and opened, he gently slipped the shift down past her waist.
She shivered in delight as his mouth brushed the back of her neck, the line of
her shoulders, as he kissed away her tears; he sighed
as she nibbled his earlobe timidly. With her shields gone, they seemed to be
feeling every tiny nuance of each other's reactions. As she traced the line of
his spine with a feather-like touch, she felt it as much as he—when she tensed
and gasped as he found an unexpectedly responsive spot, he tensed in sympathy
as well. Finally
their mutual desires grew too impatient to be put off any longer; he slowly let
her down on the blankets beside him, sank into her embrace, and entered her. He was
totally unprepared for the stab of pain that was shared as the pleasure had
been. He would have withdrawn from her at once, but she clung to him with
fierceness and would not let him go. She'd
expected pain, and endured it. What she had not expected was that he would curb
his own desire, to bring her past the pain, and finally to patiently wait on
her pleasure before taking his own. She shifted over as he collapsed, then
nestled into the curve of his arm again. They curled together in their warm
nest, spent and replete, and feeling no urgent need to do anything other than
savor the experience they'd shared. For long moments there was no sound at all
but the sounds of the fire, and the tiny stirrings of the four at the other end
of the station. He
turned his head to look into her dark eyes, wide and drowsy with content.
"Why didn't you tell me you were a virgin?" he asked softly. "You
didn't ask," she said sleepily. "Why? Is it that important?" "I
don't think I'd have loved you if I'd known." "All
the more reason not to tell you," she pointed out logically. She nestled
closer to him, her head on his chest, pulling blankets over both of them.
"But I'm glad it was you." "Why?" 168 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Among
other things, my gossiping Heraldic sisters were right. It was ... a lot nicer
than I'd been led to believe first times usually are." "A
compliment?" he asked, amused. "A
compliment." A
thought occurred to him. "Wait a minute. I thought you and Skif ..." She
smiled, the first real smile he'd gotten out of her in weeks. "That's what
you were supposed to think. It was awful—we both had horrid schedules, and we
were so exhausted that we kept falling asleep before we could get anywhere." She
told him the comic-frustrating tale of their abortive romance, and how it had
finally culminated in their swearing blood-brotherhood, rather than bed. "Poor
Skif! And poor Talia," he chuckled. "You knew he'd be teased half to
death if that tale got out, didn't you? So you let everyone think
otherwise." "Mrn-hmm.
Poor Skif .. ." she yawned, "victim of unrequited lust." She was
falling asleep in his arms, and as much as he hated to disturb her, he knew
that he'd better. "Wake
up, sleepy. If you don't want to greet the dawn with a headache, you'd better
have some food in you, and something to drink besides that devil's brew. The
last thing you need is a hangover in the morning, and as potent as that stuff
is, you're likely to wish you had died if you let it give you one. And we may
be warm now, but we're going to wake up cold and stiff in the middle of the
night if we don't make up a better bed. After all we've weathered, I'd hate to
see you cramped in knots for want of a litde sense." She
yawned hugely but didn't protest. They both rummaged out clean bedclothes and
pulled them on. While he ladled stew out of the pot over the fire, she remade
their "nest" with everything she could find to use as a blanket. He
made hot tea, and they drank it with their meal. ARROWS
FLJCHT 169 They
bedded down in each other's arms after he'd banked the fire, seeing no reason
now to return to their practice of separate beds. "I'm
awfully glad this happened now," she said before he drifted off to sleep. "Why's
that, little bird?" 'Two
sleep warmer together than two alone . .. and it's getting a lot colder." Kris
was pleased to discover that (unlike some lovers he'd had) Talia was a quiet
sleeper; not at all restless, and not inclined to steal the blankets (which
was, in his opinion, the quickest way to ruin an otherwise satisfactory
relationship). He found her presence oddly comforting, and an especially good
antidote to the howl of the wind outside. He woke
once when Tantris tickled his mind into wakefulness; he and Rolan wanted out.
He was very grateful for the tiny entranceway this Station possessed; it wasn't
part of the usual design, but with crowding he could fit one Companion and one
chirra inside and still close the door to the interior before opening the outer
door. If the exterior door had opened directly into the station as was usually
the case, every time he had to let them out he'd be letting most of the heat
they'd built up out with them. The
wind hadn't slackened in the least, and the snow was still coming down as
thickly as before. It was definitely daylight, but he couldn't even tell where
the sun was, much less see how high it was. It took all his strength to keep
the door from being blown out of his hands; he realized then that this was why
they'd awakened him and not Talia. He'd left halters and lead-reins on the
chirras, which the Companions used to lead them outside. One
more advantage of chirras, he reflected wryly. You can't housebreak mules. The
scrape of a hoof on the door signaled their 170 MERCEDES
LACKEY return.
He managed to hold to the door and slammed it behind them, but in spite of the
buffering of the entranceway, their exit and re-entrance had stolen a
noticeable amount of the heat from the room. He built the Fire back up after
filling the biggest pot they had with clean snow, then carefully groomed all
four of ice and snow. He made sure they were comfortable, and noticed with a
smile that all four of them lay in a close-packed group, with chirras on the
outside and Companions in the middle. "You're
too clever by half," he told Tantris, and smiled at the Companion's
amusement-laden reply. .-Given
the choice, would you take the outside? They've got the coats for this,
brother-in-soul—we haven't.1: He was
grateful for Tantris' nonchalance; both the Companions seemed to be taking the
events of the previous night as simply one more obstacle to be met and dealt
with, rather than an insurmountable disaster. That heartened him, for he expected
to need their help. He hung
the pot full of half-melted snow over the fire, then banked it again before
returning to the bed that was looking better by the moment. When he
slipped in beside Talia he got another delightful surprise. Instead of pulling
away, Talia actually hugged his chilled body to her warm one until he was no
longer shivering, despite being three-quarters asleep herself. There never, he
reflected as he drifted back to dreams, was a truer test of friendship! When he
finally woke of his own accord, he judged that several hours had passed; it was
probably late morning or early afternoon. There didn't seem to be any real
reason to get up; the winds still howled with the same ferocity outside. "I
wish these Stations had a window," he said drowsily, "It's impossible
to tell if it's still snowing or not." "No,
it isn't," Talia murmured sleepily in his ear. He
hadn't realized she was awake. "No, it isn't, what?" ARROWS
FLIGHT 171 "It's
not impossible to tell if snow's still coming down. Listen, and you can hear it
on the roof and windward walls. It has a different sound than wind alone. It
kind of hisses." Kris
listened; she was right. There was a hissing undertone to the storm outside.
"How did you know about that?" he asked, more than a little
surprised. "Comes
of sleeping in the attic. There're no windows in the attic of a Hold house, and
that's where all the littles sleep. If you wanted to know what kind of weather
to dress for, you learned to recognize all the sounds that weather makes. Where
are you going?" "Now
that we're awake, I'm going to get the fire built back up." He got
an armload of wood from the stack he'd brought inside earlier, exposed the
banked coals, and soon had it blazing again. In spite of the heat given off by
the banked coals, the room was icy; the chimney was cleverly baffled, but the
wind was still succeeding in stealing some of their heat. He was quite chilled
by the time he was satisfied with the state of the fire. When he slid back in
beside her, Talia again snuggled up to warm him. "That's
definitely above and beyond the call of duty," he said, when he'd stopped
shivering, "Thanks." "You're
welcome. Consider it payback for last night." He
deliberately misunderstood. "Bright Havens, little bird, you keep
surprising me! I hadn't the least notion there was such a sensualist under that
serene exterior." She
played along. "Why shouldn't there have been?" "You
surely didn't show any sign of it. And you certainly haven't been .. .
practicing, shall we say?" "I
hadn't found anyone I was enough at ease with before this except Skif, and that
liaison seemed to have a curse on it!" There was rueful laughter in her
voice. "But it wasn't that I lacked interest; I never told you about
Rolan." 172 MERCEDES
LACKEY "What's
Rolan got to do with this?" "Remember
I told you that he's always in the back of my mind? That I always know what
he's doing, and I can't shield him out at all?" Her expression was a
little shadowed as she realized she couldn't shield anyone out at the moment. "So?"
he prompted, "Why would you want to?" "Nighttime
in Companion's Field gets very interesting . .. and Companion mares share
another characteristic with humans besides the gestation period." When he
looked blank, she sighed. "They're always 'in season,' oh, wise
counselor." "Good
Lord. And if you can't shield him out. .." "That
means exactly what your Filthy mind is thinking." "Secondhand
experience?" "Something
like it." He pulled
her head to rest comfortably on his shoulder. "Talia, I'm sorry I didn't
see the state you were in, and I'm sorrier I didn't do anything about it." "Oh—I—"
She sobered immediately when he mentioned her emotion-storm. "Gods, Kris,
what am I going to do?" "We." "What?" "We.
You, me, Tantris and Rolan. This is not the total disaster you seem to think it
is. Let's take the easy things. First of all, you've learned something you
won't forget. Now let me tell you a little something, Queen's Own. The reason
you're out here is that you'll see every kind of problem you're likely to run
up against at Court—only out here it will be much more clear-cut, much simpler.
You learn how to handle it where it's easy to deal with, instead of plunging
right in and drowning. Take somebody who's held a grudge for so long it's an
obsession. You've seen it once now, would you recognize it again?" ARROW'S
FLIGHT 173 Talia
thought about how she'd felt when the girl looked into her eyes; the odd chill
she'd sensed. "Yes," she said at last. "And
do you think you could handle it?" "Maybe
... I think I'd have to get an assist though." "Good
for you. Before this you'd have said 'yes.' Now you realize you might need
help. You're learning, greenie. Now the hard part. Your Gift has gone out of
control; we have to get it back under control again. I'll be willing to bet
part of the reason for it going was that nobody recognized you need special
training—training to keep your own emotional state from feeding back on your
Gift. I'm not even certain there is such a thing." "Why
do you say that?" "Because
I can't think of another Queen's Own in living memory that has had as powerful
a Gift as yours. I've never heard of empathy strong enough to be used as a weapon.
Talamir certainly didn't have it—nor Keighvin before him. I don't even know
that there's a Healer around with empathy that strong. Maybe a Healer could
train you, but I wouldn't care to bet money on the idea." "Then
what. .." "We'll
bloody well invent the training. All four of us. First off, your shields are
gone. That's likely to be the hardest for you to get back, but I think maybe we
can deal with it in a different way for now. Hey, Fairyfoot—" Tantris
looked up and snorted. :Yes, master of the world!: "Go
ahead, be sarcastic." :You
started it.: "This
is serious, Hayburner. Can you impose shields on her from outside?" Tantris
looked at both of them thoughtfully. :Yes,: he said after a long pause, :but
not for very long.: "If
you can, then Rolan can—" :Has.: 174 MERCEDES
LACKEY Kris
raised one eyebrow. "Huh. I should have anticipated that. All right, I
know / can; I've reinforced shielding on the kids I was teaching. So if we take
it turn and turn about, can we keep her buffered so long as it's just the three
of us she's dealing with?" :/
would think so.: Tantris looked at the other Companion measuringly. :Rolan says
to tell you we can probably even handle small gatherings of people.: "Better
than I'd hoped. Fine. I'll take first watch. When I flag . . ." :/'//
catch,: came the confident answer, :My pleasure, brother-in-soul. : "Did
you get the drift of that?" He turned to Tafia, setting up shielding
around her as he spoke. "You're—oh,
Gods.'" The relief on her face was a revelation; until that moment he had
not realized how much strain she was under. "Right.
Now .. . having gotten that taken care of temporarily, we'll deal with the half
of the problem that's dangerous to others." "The
projecting—" "But
not now. You're too tired to project past the end of your nose unless I make
the mistake of frightening you half to death again, so that can wait. I'm
hungry, and I want a bath." Although
they had used the Waymeet village bathhouse frequently, choosing a scrub by way
of restorative over the sleep they had had little time for, it had been well
over a day since the last time they'd gotten clean. Since both of them had
fastidious natures, they were feeling it. "You
go first, then. I want to groom the four-feets, and I'll wash afterward. I can
start to smell them now, and if I don't get them pretty well clean, things
could get whiffy in here. Since I'm doing Rolan, I might as well do all four of
them. There's no need in both of us getting filthy." Kris
sniffed; the air was faintly perfumed with an odor of wet wool and horse-sweat.
"You don't have ARROW'S
FLIGHT 175 to do
all four, but if you insist, I'll let you. You're ruining my lovely
self-indulgence, though. If you're going to go all virtuous on me and work,
I'll have to find something to do as well." He sighed heavily, and made
sad eyes at her. She
made a face at him, feeling like her old self for the first time in weeks. She
got dressed, threw her cloak on, then took the first chirra's lead-rein. Chores
kept them occupied for the rest of the day, housekeeping and tending to mending
that had been left neglected while they ministered to the plague victims. Talia
was just as happy; she was reluctant to face her problems just now when she was
so emotionally raw. After a quiet bit of lunch, Kris went to take inventory of
their supplies. There
was a half-height door opposite the entrance to the station; it led to a
storage shed. Kris found far more supplies there than he had dared to hope—and
found some unfamiliar jars and barrels as well. He brought some of those into
the Station. The
jars held honey and oil. "Someone near here must have left these after
winter set in," Kris said in surprise. "It wouldn't be safe or wise
to leave them here in warm weather; they'd go bad or attract animals. That's
why they're not standard stock. What's in the barrel?" "The
oil can be used in the lamp, too." Talia opened her barrel. It held what
seemed to be dried beans. Kris was perplexed. "Now
why .. ." he began, when Talia remembered something Sherrill had told her. "Sprouts!"
she exclaimed. "To keep us from the winter sickness, if we get stuck here
longer than the fruit lasts. We're supposed to soak those in water until they
sprout, then eat the sprouts. They do that where Sherrill and Keren come
from." Kris
looked sober. "We may need them, too. Even if the fruit holds out, it's
dried; not as good for holding off winter-sickness as fresh." He made a 176 MERCEDES
LACKEY mental
tally of all their supplies. "I think we can hold out for a month or
so," he decided, from experience with being snowed in before. "And
from the looks of this storm, that's exactly what may happen. It's still going
strong, and by the way the sky looked today, I don't think it's going to be
slackening soon." "Do
we have enough fodder, though? Tantris and Rolan are big eaters, and we can't
feed them on bark and twigs the way we can with the chirras if supplies run
low." "There's
fodder and straw baled and stacked on the other side of the shed where you
can't see it, besides on the near side," Kris reassured her. "It
almost looks as though whoever was stocking this Station was expecting a storm
this bad. It seems odd, but I don't know enough about this area to tell you
whether or not this type of weather is typical for this time of year. Dirk
would know that better than I." "Whatever
the reason for the abundance of supplies, it's a good thing for us that they're
there." They
did something about supper, and Kris returned the harp. With an inquiring
glance in her direction, he began with a song that she'd sung at the Herald's
revel. Taking the glance as an invitation, she stretched herself next to him
and began to sing quietly. He hummed the low harmonic under his breath; his
voice, though no match for Dirk's, was reasonably melodic. Behind them the
Companions and chirras pricked their ears up to listen with every evidence of
interest. Suddenly
two new voices joined in, wordlessly crooning an eerie descant. Talia and Kris
jumped, startled, and stopped—the new voices stopped with the music. Puzzled,
they began again, this time peering into the darkened side of the Station.
After a moment, the descant resumed. "Well,
that's what I get for making fun of Dirk's ARROWS
FLIGHT 177 and
Harthen's tales!" Kri& said in surprise. "Chirras do sing!" : Rolan and Tantris were staring at their
stable-mates with a kind of ironic astonishment. Evidently they hadn't expected
the singing either. The chirras, oblivious to everything but the music around
them, were reclining with their eyes closed and their heads and necks stretched
upward as far as they could reach. Their throats were pulsing, and the humming
was, without a doubt, coming from them. "Don't
feel badly. I wouldn't have believed it either," Talia replied. "I
mean, they look like sheep, sort of, and sheep don't sing. Probably there
aren't too many people playing or singing around them, which would be why more
folks haven't heard them. We never did; they were always outside in the
lean-to." The
chirras joined in happily on almost everything they played, but they
particularly seemed to enjoy the livelier tunes. What was utterly amazing—apart
from the simple fact that they sang at all—was what they sang. They crooned
harmonics to the melody rather than following the melody itself, and usually
chose the upper range in a descant. They would listen for a verse or two before
joining in, but though very simple, their harmonizing always fit. Talia knew a
great many human singers who couldn't boast that ability. They
continued on for some time, so fascinated by this innuman choir that they
forgot any worries they had. They continued until Kris' fingers were much too
tired to play any more. Although he dearly wanted to go on, after a few
fumblings, which caused the chirras to flatten their ears and stare like a pair
of offended old women, he was forced to admit it was time to give his hands a
rest. "In
that case ..," "What
have I decided? This is going to be rather hard on you, little bird—" "And
the past few weeks haven't?" she replied bitterly. 178 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Not
like this; it's going to be pretty cruel. The way I figure it, the two of us
not shielding, and especially Rolan, are going to be watching you like cats at
a mousehole. The least little indication of projection, and we're going to jump
all over you. After a few days of that, I am willing to bet that you will by
damn not be doing any projecting without knowing that you're doing it!" "It
doesn't sound pleasant," she said slowly, "but it does sound like it
may work," "Then
once we've got you knowing when you're projecting, we'll move to handling the
projection consciously. Then we'll work on you controlling the level of it.
Finally we'll work on getting your shields back up." "If
you think I can...." "I
bloody damn know you can!" he said- "But we are not going to be doing
anything tonight. If you're as worn out as I am—and if you're not more worn
out, you're a better man than I, after all you've been through—you won't be
able to do anything, much less working something as delicate as a rogue
Gift." As he
spoke, he became acutely aware of his own mental fatigue, and the strain of
holding shields on her. Just as he felt his own control waver, he felt Tantris
slip into his place. :My
turn, brother,: the mental voice said firmly. He sighed and sent a wordless
thought of thanks. Talia
readied things for the morning, while he cared for their Companions. She had
shed her clothing and was lazily reaching for the woolen shift she was using as
a bedgown, when she found her wrist caught by Kris' hand. He had
come upon her quietly from behind, and now captured her other wrist, holding
her with her back pressed into his chest. "Surely you're not sleepy
already?" he breathed into her ear, sending delightful shivers up her
back. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 179 "No,"
she replied, leaning her head back as his lips touched the back of her neck and
moved around to the hollow below her ear. "Good,"
he drew her down beside him, on top of the blankets he'd spread on the
hearthstone, right next to the Fire. He stretched himself beside her so that
she was between him and the fireplace, feeling truly relaxed for the First time
since Elspeth was Chosen. He
cradled her shoulders while his free hand traced invisible patterns on her skin
that seemed to tingle— she moved her own hands in half-instinctual response to
what she felt from him; at first hesitantly, then with growing surety. Every
inch of skin seemed to be doubly sensitive, and she murmured in surprise and
delight as his hands did new and entrancing things. Just when she thought for
certain that he'd roused her to the uttermost, he moved his seeking mouth
elsewhere, and she learned how it was to be fully awakened to desire. Learning
from him, she followed his lead, as he roused her to fever pitch, let her cool
a little, then aroused her senses again. Finally, when she was certain neither
of them could bear any more, he sought her mouth again and joined with her. The
pain was less than nothing compared to what they shared. When at
last Kris disengaged himself from her, they lay twined together for a long,
euphoric moment, still deeply in rapport. He half-rose and handed her the
nearly-forgotten shift with one hand while pulling on his own robe. She slipped
it on, lazily gathered up the blankets, and remade their bed. She curled up in
it with utter contentment as he banked the fire against the night. "That
Gift of yours is not always a bad thing," he said, finally. "Should
you ever choose a life-partner, I think I would envy him, little friend. Now I
see what they mean about wedding or bedding Healers— 180 MERCEDES
LACKEY especially
if all of them have the same kind of Empathy that you do." "Oh?"
Her ears all but perked up with interest. "And what do they say?" "That
you may not get much time with them because they're always likely to be called
away—but what time you do get makes up for their frequent absences." She
reached up to pull the blankets more securely about the two of them, and
something odd about her hand caught his attention. He captured her wrist again,
and held it so that the palm would catch the last of the firelight, frowning a
little as he did so. Her
palm was disfigured by a deep, roughly circular scar. "That,"
she said quietly, answering the question he did not speak, "is the reason
why I was afraid of men for so long—and why I don't trust handsome ones. My
brother Justus, with the innocent face of a golden-haired angel and the heart
of a demon, did that to me when I was nine years old." "Why?"
The word held a world of shock and dismay. "He
wanted ... I don't know what he wanted; maybe just to see me hurting. He hated
anything he couldn't control. He used to inflict as much pain as he could on
the farm animals whenever something had to be done with them. He'd half-drown
the sheep, dipping them for insects; he'd cut them terribly, shearing them.
Horses he broke were broken; there was no spirit in them when he was done. I
think it galled him that I could have an escape from the boredom of Hold life
that he couldn't ruin—he couldn't stop my reading or dreaming. He ordered me
one day to drown a sack of kittens; I tore the sack open instead so that they
all escaped. I'm sure he knew that that was exactly what I would do. He
backhanded me, knocked me down flat, stepped on my wrist, and used a red-hot
poker on my hand. I ARROWS
FUCHT 181 think
that one time he overstepped what he'd intended; I don't think he meant to burn
me as badly as he did, at least not after he saw what he'd done. Gods, I'll
never, ever forget his face while he was burning me, though." She
shuddered, and he held her a little closer. "That—obscene joy—I still had
nightmares about it right up through my second year at the Collegium. I know
they heard me screaming, but no one came very fast because they knew he was
setting a task for me and figured I was being punished for slacking. When I
didn't stop after a couple minutes, though, one of the Underwives came to
check. After all the damage was done. When she saw me, he'd already thrown the
poker down. He told Keldar Firstwife that he'd hit me for disobedience and I'd
grabbed the poker to hit him back, but it had been in the fire too long. He
didn't even have to explain why it was that my palm was burned and not my
fingers. They believed him, of course, and not me." "Gods!"
He was sickened—and a little more understanding of why she hadn't confided in
him. "It
was ... a long time ago. I'm almost over what it did to me. I think if he were
still alive, and subjecting a wife or children to his sadism . .. well, he's
not. He managed to get himself killed a year or two after I was Chosen. There
was a raid, and he had to prove just how much braver he was than anyone else.
And Keltev, who was bidding fair to grow up like him, seems to have learned
better, so ..." She shrugged. "That's
the one who used to tease you about wanting to be a Herald—Keltev? Now I know
why you put up with the Blues for so long. You had practice; after Justus they
must.. ." "As
far as physical tormenting, they were amateurs. Mental, though ... they were
quite .. . adept. But I'd learned from my sibs that if you give them the
satisfaction of knowing they've hit home by acting as if they'd hurt you in any
way, they only get worse. And how was I to know I'd be believed?" 182 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Oh,
Talia—" he held her closely against his chest. "Poor little
bird!" "It
wasn't so bad as all that," she said softly into his shoulder.
"Besides, I've learned better now, I've got people I can love, friends I
can trust—my year-mates, my teachers—and now—" She looked up at him a
little shyly. "—you and Dirk." "And
everyone else in the Circle, little bird," he replied, kissing her softly
on the forehead, "I'm just sorry I didn't trust you. But we'll Fix it.
We'll Fix it." She
simply sighed assent. The
fire was now little more than glowing coals, and Kris stared at them while he
let his mind drift, not yet ready to sleep. "You
know, you and Dirk will get along beautifully," he mused. "Your minds
work almost the same way." "Why
do you say that?" "You
wouldn't do anything to save yourself pain, but you dared your brother's anger
to save the kittens. That's so much like Dirk it isn't funny. Hurt him .. .
he'll just go and hide in himself; but hurt a friend, or something
helpless—Gods! He'll sacrifice himself to save it, or he'll rip your heart out
because he couldn't. You're two of a kind; I really think you're going to be
more than casual friends." "Do
you really think so?" she said, a little too eagerly. All the
pieces fell together, and the suspicion he'd had earlier became a certainty.
"Why, Talia," he chuckled, "I do believe you're a bit smitten
with my partner!" He felt
the cheek resting on his shoulder grow warm. "A litde," she admitted,
knowing that it would be useless to deny it. "Only
a little?" "More
than a little," she replied almost inaudibly. "Serious?" ARROWS
FLIGHT 183 "I
... don't know. It depends on him, mostly," she was blushing furiously
now. "I'm afraid it could get that way very fast under the right
conditions." "But
now?" .She
sighed. "Kris, I don't know, I just don't know. And why am I bothering to
get my hopes up? I don't know how he feels . .. whether or not he's likely to
be the least bit interested in me. . .." "You
may not. I think maybe I do. If I'm reading him right, he's already
interested." Kris thought back on the way Dirk had acted right before he
and Talia had left. He couldn't stop talking about how envious he was that Kris
had gotten her as an intern, and he kept on at great length about her wonderful
voice. Normally, since that bitch at the Court had hurt him, he'd paid very
little attention to women, except for the occasional ribald remark. Then
he'd hinted that it would be a good notion if they'd all practice together so
they could do more as a trio. Holy Stars, he'd never once suggested that they
practice together with anyone before, not even Jadus. "For
one thing," Kris said slowly, "he wants us to play together on a
regular basis. I mean, he wants us to play, and you to sing." "He
does?" she said in bemusement. "He plays?" "As
well as I do, or better. Since my voice isn't very good, though, and his is,
he's kind enough to let me have the playing to myself. Out on the road we play
together quite often, but outside of myself hardly anyone in the Circle knows
he can." "And
he said I was full of surprises!" "Oh,
you are." He caressed her hair absently. Lord of Lights, they were so well
suited to each other. There was a great deal more to both of them than would
ever show on the surface. There were depths to both of them that he knew he'd
never see. He
chuckled a little. "What's
so funny?" 184 MERCEDES
MCKEY "Bright
Havens, I hardly dare think what you might be like in the arms of someone you
truly loved! He'd better have a strong heart, or he might not survive the
experience!" "Kris!"
she exclaimed indignantly, "You make me sound like the widowing-spider
that eats her mate!" He
ruffled her hair. "Maybe I'd better make certain that you and Dirk make a
pair of it. He's the strongest man I know." "Keep
this up much longer," she said warningly. "and I'll put snow down
your back after you fall asleep." "Cruel,
too. On second thought, maybe I'd better warn him off." "Do
thai, and I'll go directly to Nessa when we get back, tell her that you
confided your everlasting passion for her to me, but that you're too shy to
tell her yourself." "Not
just cruel—vicious!" "Self-defense,"
she countered. "Monster
of iniquity," he replied, tugging at her hair until it fell into her eyes.
"You know, of all the people I can think of, I can't imagine being able to
stand being snowed in with any of them except you and Dirk—especially for as
long as we're likely to be stuck here." She
grew serious. "Is it really likely to be that long?" "If
it doesn't stop snowing soon, it could easily be a month. This Station is down
in a valley and protected by trees. We're not getting the worst of it. I tried
to get past the trees earlier, and you can't. The snow has drifted as high as a
chirra in some places. Even after the snow stops, we'll have to wait for the
Guard to clear the road, because until they do we won't be going
anywhere." "How
will anyone know where we are?" "I
told that Healer—the bearish one, I think his name is Loris—where 1 intended us
to hole up. ARROWS
FLIGHT 185 Besides,
little bird, this may be all to the good. We may well need all that time to get
your Gift back under control again." "That,..
that's true," she said soberly. "Oh, Kris— do you really think we
can?" He
noted with a bit of pleasure, the "we," for it meant she was no
longer thinking in terms of dealing with the problem on her own. "Not only
do / think so, but Tantris and Rolan do. You're not going to argue with them,
are you?" "I
... I guess not." "1
hear a doubt. No doubts—that's what got you into this mess in the first place.
We will get you back in control. I may not be a Kyril or an Ylsa, but I am a
Gift-teacher. I know what I'm doing." "But—" "I
told you, but me no 'buts'I Believe, Talia. In yourself as much as in me.
That's the weakest leg your Gift has to stand on right now." She
didn't reply to that; just stared thoughtfully at the fire until her eyes
drooped and finally closed, and her slow, steady breathing told him she'd
fallen asleep. He
remained awake for much longer, engaged in a struggle with himself he had to
win, a struggle to set aside a Herald's impartiality and wholeheartedly believe
in her. For if
he could not—she was certainly doomed, and quite probably so was he. The moment
she sensed doubt in him, despair and betrayal would turn her wild Gift against
both of them. And he had no doubt of how that would end. Eight Kris
pursued an icy apparition through the storm-torn forest, a creature that was
now wolf, now wind, now an unholy amalgam of both. It glared back over its
shoulder at him through snow-swirls that half obscured it, baring icicle fangs
and radiating cold and evil. He shivered, unable to control the trembling of
his hands, though he clenched them on his weapons to still their shaking . .. His
weapons—he looked down, surprised to see that his bow was in his hands, an
arrow nocked and ready. The beast ahead of him snarled, dissolved into a spin
of air and sleet with hell-dark eyes, then transformed back into a leaping
vulpine snow-drift. He sighted on it, and more than once, but the thing never
gave him a clear target. Talia
was somewhere ahead of him, he could hear her weeping brokenly above the
wailing of the wind and the howling of the wind-wolf, and when he looked down
he could see her tracks—but he could not seem to spot her through the curtains
of snow that swirled around him. He realized then that the wind-wolf was
stalking her— He
quickened his pace, but the wind fought against him, throwing daggers of ice
and blinding snow-swarms into his eyes. The thing ahead of him howled, 186 ARROWS
FLIGHT 187 a long
note of triumph and insatiable hunger. It was outdistancing and outnianeuvering
him—and it would have Talia before he could reach her. He tried to shout a
warning— And
woke with a start. Outside the wind howled like a demented monster. Talia
touched his shoulder, and he jumped involuntarily. "Sorry,"
she said, "You—you were dreaming, I think." He
shook his head to clear it of the last shreds of nightmare. "Lord! I guess
I was. Did I wake you?" "Not
really. I wasn't sleeping very well." He
tried to settle himself, and found that he couldn't. A vague sense of
apprehension had him in its grip, and would not loose its hold on him. It had
nothing to do with Talia's problems; a quick exchange of thought with Tantris
confirmed that she was not at fault. "Kris,
do you think maybe we should move the supplies?" Talia said in a voice
soft and full of hesitation. "That
doesn't sound like a bad idea," he replied, feeling at once that somehow
his uneasiness was connected with just that. "Why? What made you think of
that?" "I
kept dreaming about it, except I couldn't shift anything. It was all too heavy
for me, and you wouldn't help. You just stood there staring at me." "Well
I won't just stand and stare at you now." He began unwinding himself from
the blankets. "I don't know why, but I think we'd better follow up on your
dream." They
moved everything from behind the Station to either side of the door on the
front. Rather than diminishing, the sense of urgency kept growing as they
worked, as if they had very little time. It was hard, chilling, bitter work, to
manhandle the clumsy bundles of hay and straw through the snow, but 188 MERCEDES
LACKEY neither
of them made any move to give up until the last stick and bale was in place. While
there was still light left to see by, they took turns clearing the valley of
deadfall. They finally had enough to satisfy Kris when they'd found the last
scrap of wood that hadn't vanished into snow too deep to be searched. It would
not outlast being snowed in, but there was more than enough to outlast the
storm. If, when the storm died, they couldn't reach any more deadfall, they
could cut one of the trees surrounding the station, evergreens with a resinous
sap that would allow them to burn, even though green. But
when they returned to their shelter, their work wasn't complete. For though
there seemed little rational reason to do so, they continued to follow their vague
premonitions and moved all the supplies from the storage shed into the
Waystation. It made things very crowded, but if they didn't plan on moving
around much, it would do. By the
time they finished, they were as chilled and weary as they had been the first
night.They huddled over the fire with their bowls of stew, too exhausted even
for conversation. The wind howling beyond the door seemed to have settled into
their minds, numbing and emptying them, chilling them to the marrow. They
huddled in their bed in a kind of stupor until sleep took them. The
wind suddenly strengthened early the next morning, causing even the sturdy
stone walls to vibrate. They woke simultaneously and cowered together, feeling
very small and very vulnerable as they listened with awe and fear to the fury
outside. Kris was very glad now that they'd trusted their instincts and moved
everything to the leeward side of the Station and within easy reach. "It's
a good thing this isn't a thatched roof like the last Station we were in,"
Talia whispered to him, shivering against him, and plainly much subdued by ARROWS
FLIGHT 189 the
scream of the wind outside. "Thatch would have been shredded and blown
away by now." Kris
nodded absently, listening mainly to the sound of the storm tearing at their
walls like a beast wanting to dig them out of their shelter. He was
half-frightened, half-fascinated; this was obviously a storm of legendary
proportions and nothing he'd ever seen or read could have prepared him for its
power. The Station was growing cold again, heat escaping with the wind. "I'd
better build up the fire now, and one of us should stay awake to watch it.
Talia, make a three-sided enclosure out of some of our supplies or the fodder,
and pile lots of straw in it. We need more between us and the cold stone floor
than we've been sleeping on. Leave room for the four-feets; if it gets too cold
they'll have to fit themselves in nearer the fire, somehow." Talia
followed his orders, building them a real nest; she also layered another two
bedgowns on over the woolen shift. Kris uncovered the coals and built the fire
back up—and when he saw the skin of ice forming on their water-kettles, he was
glad he had done so. They
crept back into their remade bed and held each other for extra warmth, staring
into the fire, mesmerized by the flames and the wail of the wind around the
walls. There didn't seem to be any room for human thought, it was all swept
away by that icy wind. Their
trance was broken by a hideous crashing sound. It sounded as though a giant out
of legend was approaching the Station, knocking down trees as he came. The
noise held them paralyzed, like rabbits frightened into immobility. There
wasn't anywhere to run to in any event. If something brought the Station down,
they'd freeze to death in hours without shelter. Neither of them could imagine
what the cause could be. It seemed to take several minutes, 190 MERCEDES
LACKEY approaching
the Station inexorably from the rear, finally ending with a roar that shook the
back wall and a splintering sound that came unmistakably from beyond the
half-door. They
sat shocked into complete immobility, hearts in their throats, for a very long
time. Finally—
"Bright Goddess! Was that where I thought it was?" Kris gulped and
tried to unclench his hands. "B-b-behind
the Station," Talia stuttered nervously, pupils dilated with true fear.
"Where the storage shed is." Kris
rose and tried the door. It wouldn't budge. "Was," he said, and
crawled back in beside her. She
didn't venture to contradict him. Twice
more they heard trees crashing to the ground, but never again so close. And as
if that show of force had finally worn it out, the wind began to slacken and
die. By noon or thereabouts, it had gone completely, and all that remained were
the faint ticking sounds of the falling snow. Without the wind to keep it off
the roof, it soon built up to a point where even that could no longer be heard. The
Station stopped losing heat. The temperature within rose until it was
comfortable again, and the rising warmth lulled them back into their
interrupted sleep before they realized it. The
Companions prodded them awake. How long they'd been asleep they had no idea;
the fire was dying, but by no means dead, and the silence gave no clue. Rolan
impressed Talia with his need to go out. Immediately. Talia could tell by Kris'
face that Tantris was doing likewise. He
looked at her and shrugged. "Might as well find out now as later. We're
still here, and under ARROW'S
FLIGHT 191 shelter
at least," he said, and pulled on fresh clothing while she did the same. It was
not long till dark. The stacked fodder had kept the door clear of snow or
they'd never have gotten it open. Beyond the shelter of the bales was a drift
that reached higher than Kris' head. The
chirras were not at all perturbed by the sight; they plowed right into it,
forcing their way almost as if they were swimming, their long necks keeping
their heads free of the snow. The Companions followed and the two Heralds
followed them. After making their way through drifts that rose from between the
level of Talia's waist to the height of the first one, they suddenly broke into
an area that had been scoured down to the grass by the wind. The
forest around them had a quality of age, of power held in check, that was
raising the hair on the back of Talia's neck. There was something here ... not
quite alive, but not dead either. Something . . . waiting. Watching. Weighing
them. Whatever it was, it brooded over them for several long moments. Talia
found herself searching the shadows under the trees until her eyes ached,
looking for some sign, and found nothing. But something was out there.
Something inhuman, almost elemental, and—and at one, in some strange way she
couldn't define and could only feel, with the forest itself. As if the forest
were providing it with a thousand eyes, a thousand ears. . .. "Where's
the road?" Talia asked in a small, frightened squeak. Kris
started at the sound of her voice, looked around, then turned slowly, evidently
getting his bearings. The Station from here seemed to be only one taller drift
among many. There were new gaps in the circle of trees that surrounded it.
"That way—" he finally pointed. "There was a tree just beside
the pathway in—" "Which
is now across the pathway in." 192 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Once
we get to it, we can have the chirras and Companions haul it clear ... I
hope." "What
about the back of the Station?" She was not certain that she wanted to
find out. "Let's
see if we can get back there." Working
their way among the drifts in the deepening gloom, they managed to get to a
point where they could see what had happened behind the Station, even though
they couldn't get to it yet. Kris whistled. Not
one, but nearly a dozen trees had gone over, each sent crashing by the one
behind it, the last landing hard against the side of the Station. The storage
shed was gone; splintered. "At
least we'll have plenty of firewood," Talia said with a strained laugh. "Talia—"
there was awe in Kris's voice. "I never believed those stories about
Sorrows and Vanyel's Curse before—but took at the way the trees fell!" Talia
subdued her near-hysterical fear and really took a good look. Sure enough, the
trees had fallen in a straight line, all in the direction of the force of the
wind—except the last. There was no reason why it should have deviated that she
could see, and had it fallen as its fellows it would have pulverized the
Station—and them. But it had not; it had fallen at an acute angle, missing the
Station entirely and destroying only the empty shed. It had almost fallen
against the wind. "Gods,"
Kris said, "I—I never would have believed this. I never believed in
miracles before." He looked around again. "I ... this sounds stupid
but, whatever you are . . . thanks." The
steady feeling of being watched vanished as he said it. Talia found she could
breathe easily again. "Look,
we'd better get back inside. It's nearly dark," Kris gazed up at the sky,
and the snow that still fell from it with no sign of slackening. Subdued
by their situation and the destruction ARROWS
FLIGHT 193 outside,
they made their meal, ate, and cleaned up in silence. Finally Talia broached
the subject that was troubling them both. "Can
we get out of here?" "I'd
like to be reassuring and optimistic, and say yes—but truthfully I don't
know," Kris replied, resting his chin on his knees and staring into the
fire. "It's a long way to the road, and as I've told you, it will be worse
beyond the trees. It's going to take us a long time to cut a path there, with
no certainty that the Guard will have gotten that far when we do make it." "Should
we try to force our way without cutting a path?" He
shook his head. "The chirras could do it, unburdened, but not Tantris and
Rolan. Even if they could, we'd need the supplies. I just don't know." "Maybe
we'd better just concentrate on digging our way out." "But
how can we dig ourselves out with no tools?" "There's
the tree blocking the way, too." Kris
stared at the fire without speaking for a long time. "Talia," he said
finally, "Holderfolk never buy anything if they can help it—their
miserliness is legendary. What do you know about making shovels?" "Not
much," she replied ruefully, "But I'll try." "Let's
take an inventory of our materials." They
had plenty of rawhide for lashings, lots of straight, heavy tree limbs for
handles and bracings, but nothing to use for blades. The unused bedboxes were so
stoutly built that it would be next to impossible to pull the bottoms out, and
the shelves were made of board too thick to be useful. There had been thinner
wood used in the shelves of the shed— but they were fragmented now. Finally
Talia sighed sadly and said with reluctance, "The only thing we have to
use is the harp case." "No!"
Kris protested. "There's
nothing else. When we leave here we can 194 MERCEDES
LACKEY detune
My Lady and wrap her in blankets and cloaks and she should be all right without
the case. The wood is light and strong, and it's been waterproofed. It's nearly
even the right size and shape. We haven't got a choice, Kris. Jadus wouldn't
thank us for being sentimental fools." "Damn!"
He was silent for a moment. "You're right. We haven't any choice." He got
the case from the corner on top of Talia's packs where he'd left it. Wincing a
little, he took his handaxe and carefully pried the front and back out of the
frame, and handed them to Talia. She
fished a bit of charcoal out of the fireplace and drew something like the blade
of a snow-shovel on each piece. She handed him one while she took up the other. "Try
and whittle it to that shape while I do the same." She
shaved delicately at the edges of the wood with the blade of her own axe, with
shavings falling in curls next to her. Kris watched her with care until he felt
he knew exactly what she was doing, then began on his own piece. There was one
blessing; the grain was fine enough that with sharp axes it was relatively easy
to shape. When both their pieces approximated the look of a shovel blade, Talia
marked holes in the boards for them to drill out with their knives. By the time
they'd finished, their wrists and hands were tired and sore. Talia
flexed her hands trying to get some feeling and movement back into them.
"Now I need two pieces about so wide," she said, gesturing with her
hands about two fingers' width apart, "And as long as the backs of the
blades. I expect you'll have to cut them out of the frame." While
Kris further demolished the harpcase, she rummaged in her packs for her pot of
glue. When she found it, she placed it in a pot half-filled with water, and put
that container over the fire so the ARROWS
FLIGHT 195 glue
would melt. Meanwhile she went through the dozen or so branches that looked to
be good handle material and picked out the two best. Once
the glue was ready, she showed Kris where to drill holes in the branches, and
how to taper the end that was going to be fastened to the blade. Her wrists
just weren't strong enough for the job. When he finished the first one, she
lashed it to the blade with wet rawhide, stretching the thong as tightly as she
could so that it would shrink and bind the shovel to blade as firmly as possible
when it dried. Then she cross-braced the back of the blade with a smaller
branch cut to fit, lashing it the same way to the handle. Lastly she glued the
piece of frame to the back of the shovel blade to act as a stop to keep the
snow from sliding off. She lashed another piece of branch to the handle behind
the stop to act as a brace, then she glued every join on the whole makeshift
shovel, saturating even the rawhide with glue. That finished all she knew how
to do; she set the whole thing aside to cure overnight, and started in on the
second. "They're
not going to hold up under much rough handling," she sighed wearily when
she'd finished. "We're going to have to treat them with a great deal of
care." "It's
better than trying to do it with bare hands," Kris replied, taking her
hands in his own and massaging them. "I
guess so," she tried to force herself to relax. "Kris, just how does
the Guard clear the roads off?" "They
recruit villagers. Then it's teams with shovels; they dig out the worst places,
and pack down the rest." "I
don't imagine that it's a very fast process." "No." The
single word hung in the air between him. Talia was afraid, but didn't want to
put more of a 196 MERCEDES
LACKEY burden
on Kris than he already had by giving way to her fears. The
silence between them grew. "I
hate to say this" he broke it reluctantly "but you're projecting. I
can feel it, and I know it isn't me, and Tantris just backed me up." Anger
flared a little, followed by despair— "Dammit
Talia, lock it down! You're not helping either of us!" She
gulped back a sob; bit her lip hard enough to draw blood, then steadied herself
by beginning a breathing exercise; it calmed her, calmed her enough that she
actually found the leakage, and blocked it. Kris heaved a sigh of relief, and
smiled at her, and she felt a tiny stirring of hope and accomplishment. Finally
he let her hands go and went after the harp; she wasn't in a mood to sing by
any means, but he chose nothing that she knew. He seemed more to be drifting
from melody to melody, perhaps finding his own release from distress in the
music he searched. She listened only; the chirras seemed to have caught the
somber mood and did not sing either. She used the harpsong to reinforce her own
ritual of calming and did not open her eyes until it stopped. Kris
had risen and was replacing the harp in its corner of the hearth. He returned
to her side and stretched himself next to her without speaking. She was
the one who broke the silence. "Kris,
I'm scared. Really afraid. Not just because of what's happening to me, but
because of all that—" she waved her hand "—out there." "I
know." A pause. "I'm scared, too. We ... haven't got a good situation
here. You—you could have killed us both the other night. You still could. And
out there . .. I've never felt so helpless in my life. Between the two, I just
wanted to give up. I just wanted to curl up in a ball and hope it all went
away." It cost
him to admit that, Talia knew. "I wish I wasn't so messed up; I wish I was
bigger and stronger. ARROWS
FLIGHT 197 Or a
Farspeaker like Kyril," she replied in a very small voice. "You
can't help what happened. As for being a Farspeaker, I don't think both of us
together could reach someone with the Gift to hear us, and if we could, I don't
know that it would do any good," he sighed. "We just have to keep on
as we have been, and hope we get out of here before the supplies run out.
That's the real problem, when it comes down to it—the supplies. Otherwise I
wouldn't worry. We've got about enough for a month, but not much more than
that. If we run out . . ." "Kris—you
know, we are in Sorrows—remember the tree? Maybe—maybe we'll be sent
game." "You
could be right," he mused, beginning to brighten. "It would take less
magic to send a few rabbits within reach of our bows than it did to divert that
tree." "And
maybe we'll get out before we have to worry about it. And you don't have to
worry about me, you know. I'm Borderbred. I can do with a lot less than I've
been used to eating." "Let's
not cut rations down unless we have to. We'll be using a lot of energy keeping
warm." Gloom
settled back over them. Talia decided that it was her turn to dispel it. "I
wonder what things are like back at Court right now. It's almost
Midwinter." "Pandemonium;
it's never less. Uncle hates Midwinter; there're so many people coming in for
the celebrations who 'just incidentally' have petitions that there are Council
meetings nearly every day." She looked
at him unhappily. "I don't get along with your uncle very well. No, that's
a lie. I don't get along with him at all. I know he doesn't like me, but
there's more to it than that. I keep having the feeling that he's looking for a
way to get rid of me." Kris
looked flatly astonished. "Whoa—wait just a 198 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 199 minute
here—you'd better start at the very beginning. I can hardly believe my
ears—" "All
right," she replied hesitantly, "but only if you promise to hear me
out completely." "That's
only fair, I guess." "All
right; when I first got to the Collegium I had a pretty miserable time of it as
you know. Dirty tricks, nasty anonymous notes, ambushes—it was the unaffiliated
students, the Blues, but they made it seem as if it was other trainees that
might be responsible so I wouldn't look inside the Collegium for help. It all
came to a head—" "When
they dumped you in the river just after Midwinter—" "And
they meant to kill me." "What?"
he exclaimed. "It
isn't common knowledge. Elcarth and Kyril know; and Sherrill, Keren, Skif,
Teren, and Jeri. Ylsa knew, so did Jadus; I think Alberich knows. Mero guessed.
I'm pretty sure one or more of the others told Selenay some time later. One of
the Blues told me to 'give their greetings to Talamir' just after they threw me
in—I think the meaning there is pretty clear. They expected me to drown, and if
it hadn't been that my bond with Rolan was strong enough for him to know what
had happened—well. But I was delirious with fever when they were caught and 1
couldn't tell anyone. They claimed it was all just a joke, that they hadn't
thought I'd get worse than a ducking. Your uncle backed them up before the
Council. So instead of being charged with trying to kill me, they got their
wrists slapped and were sent home to the familial bosoms." "That's
hardly an indication that—" "You
promised not to interrupt me." "Sorry." "The
next time we got into it was over Skif. It was right when Skif was helping me unmask
Elspeth's nurse Hulda. I needed to find out who had spon- sored
her into Valdemar besides Selenay and Elspeth's father. Skif went to the
Provost-Marshal's office to find the immigration records, and Orthallen caught
him there. He dragged him up in front of Selenay, accusing him of trying to
alter the Misdemeanor Book. And he demanded that Skif be given the maximum
punishment for it—stable duty with the Guard for the next two years on the
Border. You know what that could have meant. At worst, he could have been
killed; at best, he'd be two years behind the rest of us, and I'd have been
without one of my two best friends all that time—as well as being without the
only person in the Collegium who could possibly have helped me expose Huida. I
got Skif off, but I had to lie to do it; and I can tell you that Orthallen was
not pleased." Kris
looked as if he wanted to interject something, but held his peace. "Lastly
there's the matter of my internship. Orthallen 'in view of my youth and
inexperience' was trying to pressure the Council into ruling I should stay out
in the field for three years—double the normal time. Fortunately, neither
Selenay, Elcarth or Kyril were having any of that—and pointed out that
internships are subject only to the will of the Circle, not the Council."
, "Is that all?" "Isn't
it enough?" "Talia,
this all has very logical explanations if you know my uncle. Firstly he
couldn't possibly have known about the students' malice—I'm certain of it. He's
known most of them since they were in swaddling clothes; he even refers to
people grown and with babes of their own as 'the youngsters.' And he probably
felt obligated to act as their spokesperson. After all, you had two people to
speak for you on the Council, Elcarth and Kyril." "I
suppose that's logical," Talia said reluctandy. "But Skif—" 200 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Oh,
Skif—my uncle is a prude and a stickler for convention, I know that for a fact.
Skif has been a thorn in his side ever since he was Chosen. Before Skif came,
there was never any problem with Heraldic students getting involved in trouble
down in town—the unaffiliates and the Bardics, and once in a great while the
Healers, but never the Grays." "Never?"
Talia's right eyebrow rose markedly. "I Find that rather hard to
believe." "Well,
almost never. But after Skif started his little escapades—Lord and Lady, the
Grays are as bad as the Bardics! It's like the younger ones feel they have to
top him. Well, Uncle is not amused, not at all. He's a great believer in
military discipline as a cure for high spirits, and I'm certain he never meant
anything worse for Skif than that." "What
about me? Why does he keep trying to get between me and Selenay?" "He's
not. You are young; his idea of Queen's Own is someone like Talamir. I have no
doubt he truly felt a long internship was appropriate in your case."
"I wish I could believe you." "Holding a grudge is rather
childish—and unlike you—" "I
am not holding a grudge!" "Then why are you even refusing to consider
what I've told you?" Talia
drew a deep breath and forced herself to calm down. "There is a third
explanation for what he's been doing. It could be that he thinks of me as a
threat to his influence with Selenay. And I might point out one other thing to
you—and that is I am willing to bet the person who told you all about those
'rumors' is your uncle. And I'd be willing to bet he asked you to investigate
them. He knows what my Gift is. He could well know what the effect of hearing
that poison would be on me." Instead
of refuting her immediately, Kris looked thoughtful. "That is a
possibility; at least over the ARROWS
FLIGHT 201 internship
thing. He's very fond of power, my uncle; he's been Selenay's chief advisor for
a long time, and was her father's before that. And there isn't a great deal you
can do to change the fact that Queen's Own is always going to have more
influence than chief advisor. And I hate to admit it," he finished
reluctantly, "but you're right about my source of information on the rumors." Talia
figured that now that she'd got him thinking instead of just reacting, it was
time to change the subject. She would dearly have loved to have suggested that
Orthallen might well have originated the rumors, but Kris would never have
stood still for the implication that his uncle's conduct was less than
honorable. "Kris—let's
try and forget about it, for a few hours, anyway. We've got other things to
worry about." He
regarded her soberly. "Like the fact that you had enough energy to project;
like the fact that you could do it again." "Yes."
She drew a deep breath. "I could even break down again; I was right on the
verge of it this afternoon. If we hadn't had something to do, I might have. And
I was—maybe hallucinating out there." "Hell." "I'll—try.
But I thought you'd better be warned." "Featherfoot?"
He looked long at Tantris, then nodded in satisfaction. "He says he thinks
hie and Rolan can handle you, if it gets bad again. He says it was mostly that
Rolan was caught off-guard that things got out of hand the first time." She
felt a heavy burden fall from her heart. "Good. And—thanks.' He gave
her a wink. "I'll get it out of you." She
made a face at him, and curled up in the blankets to sleep with a much lighter
heart. They
woke at very close to their normal time; there would be no dallying today, nor
for many days to come, not if they wanted to reach the road before 202 MERCEDES
LACKEY their
supplies ran out. They suited up in their warmest clothes, took the shovels,
and began the long task of cutting a path to freedom. The
snow was wet and heavy—an advantage, since it stayed on their shovels better.
But the very weight of it made shoveling exhausting work. They took a break at
noon for a hot meal and a change of clothing, as what they'd put on this
morning was now quite soaked through. They shoveled until it was almost too
dark to see. "We've
got to get to that tree and get it moved out of the way while the snow's still
like it is now," Kris said over supper. "If it should turn colder and
freeze, we'll never be able to get that thing moved. It would be stuck in ice
like a cork in a bottle." "We'll
be all right as long as the snow keeps falling a little," Talia replied,
thinking back to her days watching the Hold flocks at lambing time. "We'll
only have to worry about the temperature falling if the weather changes." They
turned in early, hoping to get to the tree before the end of the next day. By late
afternoon they had reached it, and decided, after looking the massive trunk
over, that it would be best if they hacked it in half with their handaxes and
hitched the chirras and Companions to the lighter half. When darkness fell,
they were slightly more than halfway through the trunk. Again
they rose with the sun and returned to the tree. They managed to cut through it
by noon, and after lunch made their attempt to move it. They
had decided the previous night to leave nothing to chance and had made a set of
harnesses for themselves from spare rope. They hitched their own bodies right
in beside the chirras and Rolan and Tantris. It
turned out that it was just as well that they had decided to do so. Only when
all six of them dug in and strained with all their strength did it move at all. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 203 All of
them gasped and panted with the effort, and over-burdened muscles screamed out
in protest, while jhe tree shifted fraction by minute fraction. It took jtntil
dark to haul it clear of their escape route. :i. As darkness fell, they dragged
themselves back Iftto the Station, nearly weeping with aches and ex-liaustion.
Nevertheless, they rubbed the chirras dry and groomed their Companions, fed and
watered sind blanketed them. Only then did they strip off their own sodden
garments and collapse on their bed. They were too bone-weary to think of
anything but lying down—and their aching bodies. Finally,
"Do you really want supper?" Kris asked her dully; it was his turn to
make it. The
very idea of food was nauseating. "No," she replied in a voice fogged
with exhaustion. "Oh,
good," he said with relief. "Neither do I." "I
can't seem—to get warm." It took an effort to get the words out. "Me
either." Kris sat up with a low moan. "If you'll get the tea, I'll
dig out the honey." "It's
a bargain." They'd
left hot water for tea on the hearth, knowing they'd want it. Neither of them
rose any farther than their knees as they dragged themselves to their goals.
Talia poured water onto the herbal mixture, spilling half of it as her hands
shook with weariness. Kris returned with the jar of honey in one hand, and
Something else in the other. He put
the jar down with exaggerated care, and Talia spooned three generous dollops
into each mug. Fortunately, it was too thick to spill as the water had. She
pushed one mug toward Kris, who handed her something in exchange for it. <
It was one of the fruit and nut bars Kerithwyn had *»- ' forced
into them back at Waymeet. Talia felt sick at jhe sight of it. "I
know," Kris said apologetically. "I feel the same 204 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 205 way.
But if we don't eat something, we'll pay for it tomorrow." She
stirred the honey into her tea and drank it even though it was still so hot it
almost scorched her tongue. As heat spread through her, the food began to seem
a bit more appealing. As she finished the second mug of tea, she was actually
feeling hungry. Chewing
the tough, sticky thing took the last of her energy, though. From the look of
things, Kris was feeling the same way. The third cup of tea settled the
question entirely. She just barely managed to get underneath the blankets
before she was asleep. She
woke with every muscle screaming an angry protest. She shifted position a
little, and a groan escaped. "I
wish I was dead—I wouldn't hurt so much," Kris moaned forlornly in her
ear. "Me,
too. But I keep thinking of what Alberich always told us." "Must
you remind me? 'The cure that is best for the sore body is more of what made it
sore.' Oh, how I wish he was wrong!" "At
least we have to go out long enough to see what we have to deal with beyond the
tree." "You're
right." Kris uncoiled himself slowly and painfully. "And we have to
wrestle more wood inside." "And
more hay." "And
more hay, right. There's this much, little bird. If you feel like I feel, you
couldn't project past your own nose right now!" They
helped each other wash and dress; there were too many places they couldn't
reach for themselves without their stiff muscles screaming at them. Talia
managed to concoct porridge with fruit in it, making enough to feed them twice
more, and tea as well. They would probably be so tired they wouldn't taste
either, but it would be solid and warm, and hopefully
they wouldn't be so tired tonight that the very thought of food was revolting. When
they opened the door, the glare of the sun-fight on all that snow drove them
back—for the weather had changed overnight, and the sky was cloudless. Without
some kind of protection for their eyes they'd be snowblind in moments. "Now
what?" Talia asked, never having had to deal with this kind of situation
before. Kris
thought hard. "Keep your eyes shadowed from above by your cloak hood, and
I'll see if I can rig something for the snowglare." " He rummaged
through his pack, emerging with a roll of the thin gauze they used for
bandages. ''Wrap that around your head about twice. It should be thin enough to
see through." It
wasn't easy to see through, but it was better than glaring light that brought
tears to the eyes. The
tree lay where they had left it, and beyond it was the pathway out. Somewhere. It was
possible to see where it went by the lane between the trees and the absence of
underbrush. The problem was that it lay beneath drifts that from where they
were standing never seemed to be less than four feet deep. "Well,
at least there're no more downed trees," Talia said, trying to be
cheerful. Kris
just sighed. "Let's get the shovels." The
drifts were deep, but at least they were not as -wide as the ones in their
valley had been. Though the snow was seldom less than two feet deep, it also
was rarely more than six. They shoveled and tram-filed until dusk, then brought
in more wood and fodder, ate, and fell into bed. Talia woke
in the middle of the night feeling very cold .Puzzled, she huddled closer to
Kris, who mur-mured sleepily, but didn't wake. Despite this, she kept feeling
colder. Eventually she moved warily out of bed; as soon as she did so, the
chill of the air 204 MERCEDES
LACKEY way.
But if we don't eat something, we'll pay for it tomorrow." She
stirred the honey into her tea and drank it even though it was still so hot it
almost scorched her tongue. As heat spread through her, the food began to seem
a bit more appealing. As she finished the second mug of tea, she was actually
feeling hungry. Chewing
the tough, sticky thing took the last of her energy, though. From the look of
things, Kris was feeling the same way. The third cup of tea settled the question
entirely. She just barely man-aged to get underneath the blankets before she
was asleep. She
woke with every muscle screaming an angry protest. She shifted position a
little, and a groan escaped. "I
wish I was dead—I wouldn't hurt so much," Kris moaned forlornly in her
ear. "Me,
too. But I keep thinking of what Alberich always told us." "Must
you remind me? 'The cure that is best for the sore body is more of what made it
sore.' Oh, how I wish he was wrong!" "At
least we have to go out long enough to see what we have to deal with beyond the
tree." "You're
right." Kris uncoiled himself slowly and painfully. "And we have to
wrestle more wood inside." "And
more hay." "And
more hay, right. There's this much, little bird. If you feel like I feel, you
couldn't project past your own nose right now!" They
helped each other wash and dress; there were too many places they couldn't
reach for themselves without their stiff muscles screaming at them. Talia
managed to concoct porridge with fruit in it, making enough to feed them twice
more, and tea as well. They would probably be so tired they wouldn't taste
either, but it would be solid and warm, and ARROWS
FLIGHT 205 hopefully
they wouldn't be so tired tonight that the very thought of food was revolting. When
they opened the door, the glare of the sunlight on all that snow drove them
back—for the leather had changed overnight, and the sky was cloudless. Without
some kind of protection for their eyes they'd be snowblind in moments. "Now
what?" Talia asked, never having had to deal with this kind of situation
before. Kris
thought hard. "Keep your eyes shadowed from above by your cloak hood, and
I'll see if I can rig something for the snowglare." He
rummaged through his pack, emerging with a roll of the thin gauze they used for
bandages. "Wrap that around your head about twice. It should be thin
enough to see through." It
wasn't easy to see through, but it was better than glaring light that brought
tears to the eyes. The
tree lay where they had left it, and beyond it was the pathway out. Somewhere. It was
possible to see where it went by the lane between the trees and the absence of
underbrush. The problem was that it lay beneath drifts that from where they
were standing never seemed to be less than four feet deep. "Well,
at least there're no more downed trees," Talia said, trying to be
cheerful. Kris
just sighed. "Let's get the shovels." The
drifts were deep, but at least they were not as wide as the ones in their
valley had been. Though the snow was seldom less than two feet deep, it also
was rarely more than six. They shoveled and trampled until dusk, then brought
in more wood and fodder, ate, and fell into bed. Talia
woke in the middle of the night feeling very cold. Puzzled, she huddled closer
to Kris, who murmured sleepily, but didn't wake. Despite this, she kept feeling
colder. Eventually she moved warily out of bed; as soon as she did so, the
chill of the air 206 MERCEDES
LACKEY struck
her like a hammer blow. She slipped her feet into her sheepskin slippers,
wrapped her cloak around herself, and quickly moved to pile wood on the fire.
When the flames rose, she could see the eyes of the chirras and Companions
blinking at her—they had moved out of their corner and nearer to the heat.
" 'Smaller?" Kris asked sleepily. "Why's it so cold?"
"The weather changed again. The temperature's dropping," Talia said,
thinking about how the wet snow outside must be freezing into drifts like
out-croppings of white granite. "I think ihe luck-goddess just left
us." Nine When at
last they slept again, it was restlessly; they woke early, and with a
premonition of the worst. The icy chill of the Station did not encourage
dawdling; they dressed quickly and went out to discover just how bad the
situation truly was. It
wasn't good, by any stretch of the imagination. The snow had frozen, thickly
crusted on top, granular and hard underneath. The crust was capable of
supporting their weight, and even the weight of the chirras unladen (providing
that they held their pace to a snail's crawl), but it would never hold the
chirras with even a small pack, or the Companions. And as if that weren't bad
enough, it was obvious that their shovels were not sturdy enough to deal with
snow this obdurate. Both
Heralds stared hopelessly al the rock-hard place where they'd left off digging
the night before and at the now-useless shovels. Finally Talia swore
passionately, kicked at a lump of snow, and bit her lip to hold back tears of
frustration, and reminded herself not to let anything leak. "Look,
Talia, we're not getting anywhere like this," Kris said after a long
moment of silence. "You're tired; so am I. One day isn't going to make any
difference to us one way or the other—for that 207 208 MERCEDES
LACKEY matter,
neither will two or three. I'm your counselor; well, I counsel that we take a
rest, and let our bodies recover, until we can think of a plan that has some
chance of getting us out of here." Talia
agreed wearily. Once
back inside, she lit the little oil lamp and surveyed the shambles they'd made
of the interior of the Station. "We're obviously going to be here a while,
so it's time we stopped living in a goat pen. Look at this! We hardly have room
to move." Kris
looked around, and ruefully agreed. They
began cleaning and rearranging with a vengeance. Working in the comparatively
warm Station was by far and away easier than shoveling snow had been. Before
noon, the Station was cleaned and swept and all was in good order. "Had
any ideas?" Kris ventured over lunch. "Nothing
that pertains to the problem. I did think of something that needs doing,
though. Since we're stuck until we can think of a way to handle that snow, we
ought to do something about washing our clothing. The only warm things that I
have left to wear are what I've got on." "There's
saddle-soap in the Station supplies to clean the leathers," he said,
thinking out loud, "and we could empty two of the barrels to wash
in." "I
brought more than enough soap for all the rest," she told him, "And
the Lord knows we don't have to scrimp on water!" "All
right then, we'll do it! I'm in no better shape than you—and I hate wearing
filthy clothes." Under
the primitive conditions of the Station, cleaning white clothing was not an
easy chore. Again, however, it was easier than the digging and hauling they'd
been doing, and a great deal warmer as well. Eventually every clean surface
sported a drying garment. "I
never thought I'd want to see another set of ARROW'S
FLIGHT 209 student
Grays again," Talia said, sitting back on her heels and surveying her
handiwork. "I
know what you mean," Kris grinned, looking up from his last pair of boots.
"At least the damn things didn't show din quite so badly. How are you
doing?" "I'm
done, since I did my leathers while you were washing." This
finishes it for me." "Well,
I still have hot water left—enough for two really good baths. It's too bad we
can't fit ourselves into the barrels and soak, but at least we can get really
dean." "Good
thinking, little bird. Although after all the soap and water I've been immersed
in today, there isn't much that needs to soak!" Things
began to take on a more cheerful appearance once they were clean, especially
since they weren't aching from the punishing cold and muscle strain of the past
few days. Talia
combed her wet hair out in front of the fire, more than half mesmerized by the
flickering flames and the movement of the comb through her hair. The Station
had lost the slightly stale odor it had acquired during the blizzard, and now
smelled of soap and leather—very pleasant. Bits of old tales began to flicker
through her mind—unconnected images dealing with tales of battle, of all
things. Battles, and how the Companions themselves used to fight alongside
their Heralds. Or were those images unconnected? **Kris,"
she said slowly, an idea beginning to form, "the main problem is the hard
snow and the ice crust. Our shovels aren't strong enough to break it into
pieces. But if we wrapped their legs to keep them from being cut, Rolan and
Tantris could—like they were fighting." "By
the Stars of the Lady, you're right!" he ex-daimed with excitement.
"Not only that, remember now you wondered what good those huge claws did 210 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 211 the
chirras? They dig themselves hollows to lie in, in dirt or in snow. If we could
make'them understand what we wanted, we could have them dig out chunks of a
size we could manage!" "Havens,
Rolan and Tantris can do that!" Tantris
snorted, and Ro!an sent Talia a little mental caress. Kris
laughed. "All right, granther—" he said to his Companion, looking
happier than he had all day. He turned back to Talia. "The Source of all
Wisdom over there seems to think we'll be able to work faster than we did
before. He wanted to know why we hadn't thought of this until now." "Well
you two wouldn't have done us much good with the wet snow, now, would
you?" Talia asked the two sets of backward-pointing ears. Rolan tossed his
head. "And
the chirras would have made more of a mess than they'd have cleared. The
snowdrifts weren't stable enough until they froze," Kris added, a little
smugly. "So there." "Did
he say anything else?" Talia asked, a little envious of Kris' ability to
Mindspeak with his Companion. "He
just told me he's been worried about how hard we've been working—but then he
actually ordered me to rest tomorrow. You'd think we were trainees." Talia
shook her head ruefully, for there was no doubt that Rolan considered this to
be an excellent idea. There was a distinct undertone to his mental sending of
worry that both of them had been overworking. "Rolan
says the same. I don't think I want to argue. Oh, Bright Havens, I hurt!"
Talia stretched aching arms and shoulders. "This has hardly been the rest
stop we were ordered to take." Kris
groaned good-naturedly, stretching his own weary muscles. "If anything,
I'm more exhausted than I
was when we stopped, if that's possible. I'm certainly a lot sorer." "Then
I'll make you an offer; want a backrub?" "Do
you?" "Oh,
Lord, yes," she sighed. Til
work on you, then you work on me. Strip, wench—I can't work through four shirts
and a tunic!" "It's
only two," she protested with a laugh, "And they're summer-weight at
that. While I was cleaning, I wanted to clean everything!" Nevertheless,
she complied, stretching out on a pallet of blankets on the hearth. Kris seemed
to find every last ache, and drove each one out with deft fingers. Soothed by
the gentle hands, she drifted into a half-sleep. He
.woke her by tickling the back of her neck. "My turn," he said, as
she lazily turned her head. She
sighed with content and rose to her knees, and slipped on a shift (blessedly
clean, and warm from the fire) while he took her place on the hearth. She tried
to copy what he'd done to her, and hunted for the muscles that were the most
tense, and so hurt the most. Before very long she had him as soothed and
relaxed as she was, and they basked in the heat of the fire like a couple of
contented cats. "I'll
do anything you ask," he murmured happily, "Anything, so long as you
don't ask me to move. And as long as you don't stop." She
giggled at the tone of his voice as she gently rubbed his shoulders. "All
right, then—tell me about Dirk." "Promise
not to stop what you're doing?" "Surely." "Good,"
he said with satisfaction. "Because it's a very long story. For one thing,
I have to start with his grandfather." "Oh,
come now—" she said, raising an eyebrow. "Is this really necessary,
or are you just trying to ' prolong the backrub?" "I
promise you, it's absolutely necessary. Now, 'once 212 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 213 upon a
time' when Dirk's grandfather settled his Steading, he lived on the very Border
itself. He was quite ambitious, so he added a little more to his lands every
year, and only stopped when he had as much as one man could reasonably expect
to keep under cultivation with the aid of a moderate number of hands. By then
the Border had been pushed back by him and others like him. So now that it was
a safer place to live, he married." "Logical,
seeing as he had to have produced at least one offspring to be Dirk's
father." "Quiet,
wench. As it happened, their only child was female, but it didn't perturb him
that he would be leaving the Steading to her; he fully expected that she would
marry in due course, and the place would still be in the bloodline. However,
the gods had other ideas in mind." "Don't
they always?" "First
of all, it turned out that his daughter had a really powerful Gift of Healing.
Now this was as welcome as it was unexpected, since it's hard to get Healers to
station themselves near the Border. There's always more work there than they
can handle successfully unless they're stationed with a Temple, and you know
how Healers are—they'd rather die than leave something half-done. At any rate,
Borderbred Healers always seem to feel they have a duty to serve where they
were born, so there was little chance she'd end up anywhere else. Her proud and
happy father sent her off to Healer's Collegium, and in due course she returned
in her Greens. So far everything had gone according to expectation. However,
being the Healer put a crimp in her father's original plans for her. It seemed
that the young men of the area were somewhat reluctant to court a person whose
attentions could, because of her Gift, never be entirely devoted to any one
person. And this despite the tale I told you about them. Healers are, after
all, Healers first and anything else second." "Like
Heralds, or priests. Look at us." "Point
taken. At any rate, not even the rather substantial inducement of her
inheritance could lure any of the neighboring farmers or their sons to the
nuptial table. The old man began to despair of having his hard-won acreage
remain in the family. Then there came the second twist to the plot. Late one
autumn night there was a terrible storm." "I've
had my fill of storms." "Hush,
this is a required storm. In fact, it was the worst autumnal storm that part of
the Kingdom had ever seen. It began after sunset, and lightning downed so many
trees that it was completely unnecessary to cut any for firewood that fall.
Freezing rail fell from the heavens in sheets rather than drops. There was so
much thunder that it was impossible to hold a conversation and impossible to
sleep. And in the midst of all this chaos and confusion, there came a knocking
on the farmstead door." Kris was very obviously enjoying himself to the
hilt. "A
tall, dark, mysterious stranger, no doubt." "Who's
telling this story, you or me? As a matter of actual fact, it was a stranger;
half-drowned, half-frozen, half-dead and very much bedraggled, but blond, and
hardly mysterious. It was a young Bard, only recently graduated from his
Collegium and starting his journeyman period. He'd lost his way in the storm,
fallen into a river, and had all manner of uncomfortable things happen to him.
When he pounded on their door, he was already fevered, delirious, and well on
his way to a full-blown case of pneumonia." "I
smell a romance." "You
have an accurate nose. Naturally, the young Healer took him in and nursed him
back to health. Just as naturally, they fell head over heels in love. Being a
man of honor, as well as having his head stuffed full of all those romantic
ballads, the Bard begged the old man's permission to wed his daugh- 214 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 215 ter in
true heroic style. He needn't have worried, because by now the old fellow was
beginning to think that any son-in-law was better than none. However, he made
it a condition of his agreement that they remain on the Steading. It
rather surprised the old farmer when the—he thought—feckless, footloose Bard
agreed with all his heart—subject to the agreement of his Circle of course. How
could the old man have known that our Bard was born a farmer, and that entwined
with his love of music and his love of the daughter was his love and deep
understanding of the land? Well, the Circle agreed—provided he compose a
Master's ballad about the storm, courtship, and all; and he settled down
happily with all three of his loves—land, lady, and music. Then before the year
was out, he had a fourth." "Dirk.
So that's where he got that wonderful voice!" "And
where he learned to play so well Actually, though, you're a bit ahead of the
tale. The first child wasn't Dirk. He has three older sisters, two younger, and
a baby brother. When they can be sorted into some semblance of order and
organization, they have family concerts. You should hear them all singing
together, it's wonderful; I swear even the babies cry in the right keys! Well,
grandfather passed to his reward content in the knowledge that the land would
remain in the bloodline, since by the time he departed, two of the girls had
begun enthusiastically producing enormous broods of their own." "I
was asking about Dirk." "Talia,
my little bird, you can't separate Dirk from his family. They're all alike; see
one, you know what the rest are like. How things ever get done in that
household I have no idea, since it seems to be formed entirely of chaotic
elements." "Just
like a Bard." "Actually,
he's the most organized of the lot. If it weren't for him and the husbands of
the sisters, they'd
spend all their time flying in circles. There's an incredible amount of love
there, though; and it overflows generously on anyone who happens to find
himself dragged unwittingly into their midst." "Like
you." **Like
me. Dirk insisted on hauling me home with him the first holiday after we'd met
when he found out there wasn't going to be anyone home with me but the
servitors. They treated me exactly like one of the family, from bathing babies
to teary farewell kisses. I was rather overwhelmed. I certainly hadn't expected
anything like them!" Talia
chuckled, picturing to herself the reserved, slightly shy young boy that Kris
must have been, finding himself in the hands of what must have seemed like a
family of madmen. "Once
I got used to them, I had a lot of fun. That's why, every chance I've had, I've
gone home with Dirk when he went. Right now four of his asters are married.
Three of them live in extensions to the original house and their husbands share
the work on the Steading, because Dirk's father has developed bad knees. The
last has his own land to look after, but they're still on hand for every
holiday in die calendar. It's a good thing they all get along so well." "We
were talking about Dirk." "Right."
Kris' eyes gleamed with mischief at the impatience in her voice. "He was
Chosen even younger than I—only eleven; probably because at eleven 1*e was more
mature in a lot of ways than I was at thirteen. We were Chosen the same year,
and almost the same month. He told me that Ahrodie Chose him in the middle of
the marketplace on Fair Day, and he kept trying to direct her attention to his
sister because he thought he was too ugly to be a Herald!" "Poor
child." "So
we went through the Collegium as year-mates. He saw how lonely I was there, and
how unused to 216 MERCEDES
LACKEY dealing
with other children, and decided that I needed a friend. And since I couldn't
seem to make one by myself, he was going to do it for me! In classes, though, I
had to help him along, and he was never better than average. It was pretty well
accepted by all of us that after our internships he was going to work Border
Sectors and I was going to teach. Then we found out how our Gifts dovetailed,
and how incredibly well we work together, and everyone's plans were rather
abruptly changed." "And
you began working as a team." "Oh,
yes. And we discovered that we have a kind of Gift for intrigue as well. The
number of situations we've gotten ourselves into would astound you, yet we
always seem to extricate ourselves and come home covered in glory." "Kris,
what's he really like?" "Behind
the jester-mask? Very sensitive—that's his heritage coming out. Endlessly kind
to the helpless; you should see him some time with a lap full of kittens or
babies. Don't think he's soft and sentimental, though. I've seen him slit
people's throats in cold blood when they deserved it, and do it from behind in
the dark without a pretext of fair play. He says that if they're intending to
do the same to him, it doesn't make sense to give them warning. He can be
totally ruthless in the cause of Queen, Kingdom, and Circle. Let's see, what
else is there? You've danced with him, so you know that his bumbling farmer look
is totally deceiving. He's one of the few people that Alberich will accept to
act as a substitute with his advanced pupils when Alberich is sick. And for all
that, he's terribly vulnerable in certain areas. I helped him get over his
broken heart, and I promise you, Talia, that I will personally break the neck
of anyone who hurts him like that again." He was
lying with his head turned to one side and pillowed on his arms; Talia could
not help but see ARROW'S
FLIGHT 217 fierce,
cold hatred in his expression at that ; moment. ,
Kris's fierce tone as he spoke the last few words was completely unfeigned. He
remembered only too well what Dirk had been like then—broken, defeated— it had
been horrible to compare what that bitch had made bun into with what he had
been before she'd worked her wiles on him. Dirk seldom shed a tear— but he had
wept helplessly on Kris' shoulder when she'd ruined his life and his hopes for
him. It was a thine he never wanted to witness again. And if he *™
™" O *-* had any
say about it, he never would. ;Then a
painful thought occurred to him. He knew Dirk was more than interested in Talia
. .. and she had been showing evidence of the same sort of feeling. But he and
Talia had most of a year to go on her internship, and now that they were
intimate, it Tpras damned unlikely they'd go back to their earlier
relationship. What the hell was he going to do if she .Started getting
infatuated with him? It was
more than a possibility; after all, nearly every other female he'd spent any
time with had ended up in the same state. He
didn't want to think about it. ... "I
think it's time to do something about your problem," he said, thinking
that trouble might be less likely if he reasserted his position as a figure of
authority. "Like
what?" She sat up slowly, and shook her hair out of her eyes, her
expression in the flickering firelight a sober one. "I'm
going to take you absolutely back to basics. Back to the very first thing they
taught me." "Shielding?" Hell,
no, girl," he replied, astounded. "More basic that—and if shielding
was what they taught you , maybe that's one reason why you're having this . I'm
taking you right back to the first steps. ;GWwnd and center." 218 MERCEDES
LACKEY She
looked puzzled, and shifted a little, curling her legs under her. "Ground
and what?" "Oh,
Gods," he groaned. "How the hell did you get away with—of course.
Visa must have thought you knew the basics. Maybe you did , . .
instinctively." He bit his lip, thinking hard, staring off into the space
beyond his internee. Talia just sat quietly, peering anxiously at him through
the half-dark of the Station. "Trouble is, as my teacher used to say,
instinct is no substitute for conscious control." "I—I
guess I've rather well proved that, haven't I?" she replied bitterly. "Well,
once instinct goes, there's no basis for reorganizing yourself." He took a
deep breath, acutely aware of the faint smell of soap, straw, and animal that
pervaded the Station. "Gods."
She sighed, and rubbed her temple with one hand. "AH right—do your
worst." "Don't
'laugh," he replied grimly, "Before I'm through it may well seem like
just that. All right, are you comfortable? Absolutely comfortable?" She
frowned, shifted a little, then nodded. He
settled himself, folding his own legs under him, shifting until the straw under
his blanket moved to a more comfortable place. "Close your eyes. You can't
sort out what's coming in at you unless you can recognize what's you and what
isn't. That's what my teacher used to call 'the shape inside your skin.' Find
the place inside you that feels the most stable, and work out from there. Feel
everything—then put what you've felt away, because you can recognize it as
you." He was
using what he called "teaching voice" with her, a kind of soothing
monotone. She'd gone quite naturally into a half-trance, fairly well relaxed.
By unfocusing his eyes and depending on Sight rather than vision, he could See
every move she made by the shifting energy patterns within her. Sight was a
good Gift to have for this situation, maybe better ARROW'S
FLIGHT 219 ffran
her own would have been. By looking/not-Ipoking in a peculiar sort of way that
made his eyes Ifeel strained, he could see energy fields and fluxes. What he
Saw was difficult to describe; it was some-thtng like seeing multiple images or
"ghosts" of Talia, galfe' one haloed in a different
"color." When he Looked at the unGifted or Gifted but untrained, the
linages didn't quite mesh and the edges were fuzzy and indistinct. In Talia's
case the edges were almost pittnfully sharp and the images were given to
flaring at unpredictable intervals—and they were so unconnected they almost
seemed to belong to more than one person. If she could find her center, they
would fuse into one; if she could ground, the flaring would "All
right, once you've found that stable place, .•__ there's a simitar place
outside of you—in the earth f itself. When you feel that, connect yourself to
it, t; Finding the stable place is called 'centering,' connect-c ifltg yourself
to the earth is called 'grounding.' " •'^-.He
could tell, although his own Gift wasn't anything like hers, that she had
almost managed both actions. Almost—but not quite. The images were
over-lapping, but not fusing; and they dimmed and brightened and dimmed again.
And he could see that she '". was off-balance and not-connected, although
to her it probably seemed as if she'd done exactly as he asked. , PQor
lady—he was about to do a very cruel thing to •- her. He
sighed, and signaled Tantris—who gave her a .Tittle mental shove. A shove
that translated into a very physical top-over. iJ
"Not good enough," he said coldly, as she stared him from where she
was sprawled with a dazed Tession on her face. "If you'd done the thing
ly, he wouldn't have been able to budge you. in. Ground and center." tried—much
shaken, this time. If anything, 222 MERCEDES
LACKEY of
energy exhausted by the efforts of the day. Kris remained awake a bit longer,
trying to Figure how he was going to fit in the training with the
all-too-necessary effort of digging out. Just before he Finally slept, Tantris
had the last word. :Not
one day,: Tantris ordered. -.You're
more tired than you thought. You rest tomorrow, too.: "I'm Fine,"
Kris objected in a whisper. :Hah! You only think you are. Wait until tomorrow.
Besides, if you can get her centered, you'll be on the way to solving that
problem. That takes precedence, I think.: "I
hate to admit it," Kris yawned, "But you're right, Featherfoot." Kris
had not realized how truly bone-weary they were until he woke first the next
day to discover that it was well past noon. He woke Talia, and they Finished
mending all the now-dry garments, putting off the inevitable "lesson"
as long as possible by mutual unspoken accord. Finally
it was she who said, reluctantly, "I suppose we'd better . . ." "Unfortunate,
but true. Here—" he sat on the blankets of their "bed," and
patted a place in front of him. "—I told you I was going to try a
different tactic. You've linked in with me before, so you know what it's
like." She
seated herself cross-legged, their knees touching, and looked at him warily.
"I think I remember. Why?" "I'm
going to try and show you your center. Now, just relax, and let me do the work
this time." He waited until she had achieved that half-trance, closed his
own eyes long enough to trance down himself, then rested his hands lightly on
her wrists. It was little more than a moment's work to bring her into rapport;
that part of her Gift was still working, almost too well. He opened his eyes
slowly, and Looked, knowing she could see what he Saw. ARROWS
FLIGHT 223 She
looked, gasped, and grabbed—throwing both of them out of trance and out of
rapport. He had
been expecting something of the sort and had been prepared for a
"fall." She had not been, and sat shaking her head to clear it
afterward. "That
was a damnfoo! move," she said, when at last she could speak. "I
won't argue with that statement," he replied evenly. "Ready to try
again?" She
sighed, nodded, and setded herself once more. This time she did not grab; she
hardly moved at all. Finally
she broke the trance herself, unable to take the strain. "It's like trying
to draw by watching a mirror," she said through clenched teeth. "So?"
he replied, giving her no encouragement to pity herself. "So
I try again." It was
hours later when she met with victory; as Kris had suspected, when she centered
properly, it was with a nearly audible snap, a great deal like having a
dislocated joint pop back into place. There was a flare of energy—and a flash
of something almost like pain—followed by a flood of relief. Kris had Tantris
nudge her—then shove her, with no effect. "Ground!"
he ordered; she fumbled her way into a clumsy grounding with such an utter lack
of Finesse that his other suspicion—that she'd never done grounding and
centering properly before—were pretty much confirmed. It was then that he
realized that her shields hadn't just gone erratic, they'd collapsed; and the
reason they'd collapsed was that they'd never been properly based in the first
place. "All
right," he said quietly, "Now you're properly set up. Can you see now
why it's important?" "Because,"
she answered slowly, "You have to have something to use as a base to build
on?" 'Right,"
he agreed. "Now come out of there." 224 MERCEDES
LACKEY "But—" "You're
going to find it yourself, this time. Without my help. Ground and center,
greenie." "Ground
and center. Dammit, that's not right." "Do it again. Ground and
center." "Again, and faster." "Dammit, it should be reflex
by now! Again." Talia
held to her temper by the most tenuous of holds. If it hadn't been for the
concern he was feeling, so overwhelming that she could sense it with no effort
at all, she'd have lost her temper hours ago. Ground and center, over and over,
faster and faster— with Tantris and Rolan shoving at her when she least
expected it. The
first time they'd pushed her before she was properly settled, she'd literally
been knocked out for a moment; she came to with Kris propping her up,
expression impassive. "Tantris
hit me," she said indignantly. "He
was supposed to," Kris replied, letting her go. "But
I wasn't ready! It wasn't fair!" She stared at him, losing the tenuous
hold she'd had on her emotions. It felt like betrayal; it felt horribly like
betrayal— "Damn
right, it wasn't fair." He answered the anger and hurt in her voice with
cool contempt. "Life isn't fair. You learned that a long time ago."
He felt the anger then—hers; it couldn't be coming from anywhere else, since
beneath his veneer of contempt, he was worried and no little frightened. He was
taking his life in his hands by provoking her, and was all too conscious of the
fact. "Dammit, you're leaking again. Lock it down!" The anger died;
she flushed with shame. He didn't give her a chance to get back into the cycle
of doubt and self-pity. "Now; ground and center—and get centered before
they can knock you over." He
didn't even let her stop when they ate; snapping at her to center at unexpected
moments, letting ARROW'S
FLIGHT 225 Tantris
or Rolan judge when she was most off-guard and choosing then to push at her. It
wasn't until he was exhausted, so exhausted he couldn't properly See anymore,
that he called it quits for the night. She
undressed for bed in total silence; so barricaded that there was nothing to
read in her face or eyes. He waited for her to say something; waited in vain. "I'm
not sorry," he said finally. "I know it's not your fault you got out
of Grays half-trained, but I'm not sorry I'm doing this to you. If you don't
learn this the hard way, you won't learn it right." "I
know that," she replied, looking up at him sharply. "And I'm not
angry at you—not now, anyway. I'm mostly tired, and Gods, my head hurts so I
can hardly think." He
relaxed, and reached for the container of willowbark on the mantlepiece,
handing it to her with a rueful smile. "In that case, I can assume it's safe
to come to bed?" "I
wouldn't murder you there, anyway," she replied with a hint of her old
sense of humor. "It would get the blankets all sticky." He
laughed, and settled himself, watching her make herself a cup of herbal tea for
her headache. Before today he hadn't been sure—but now he dared to believe she
would tame that wild Gift of hers. It wouldn't be too much longer before
centering would be reflex. Then it was only a matter of time, to build back
what she'd lost. "Kris?
Are you still awake?" "Sort
of," he answered drowsily, lulled by the warmth and his own weariness. "I
just want to say that I appreciate this. At least, I do when you're not
pounding on me." He
chuckled, but made no other reply. "I
need you, Kris," she finished softly. "That's something I don't
forget even when I'm angriest. I really need you." 226 MERCEDES
LACKEY It took
a while for the sense of that to penetrate— and when it did, it almost shocked
him awake again. If he hadn't been so tired— As it was,
guilt followed him down into sleep. She needed him. Good Gods; what if it was
something more than need? Talia
waited until Kris' deep and even breathing told her he really had fallen
asleep, and carefully extricated herself from the bed without waking him. She
always thought better with some task in her hands, a holdover from her
childhood, so she took her cup of willowbark tea and set about polishing some
of the bright bits of metalwork on Rolan's tack. The cloak she'd wrapped around
herself kept the chill off her back, and the fire in front of her gave off just
enough heat to be pleasant. Thusly settled in, she put her mind to the myriad
of problems at hand. The
fire crackled cheerfully; she wished she could feel cheerful. Lord and Lady,
what an unholy mess she'd gotten into! The storm alone would have been bad
enough; any of the problems would have been bad enough. To have to deal with
all of them together . . . At
least she'd made a start, some kind of start, on getting herself retrained. Kris
seemed happier, after this afternoon's work. He had been right about one thing;
now that she knew what "being centered" felt like, she'd never lose
the ability to find that firm base again. She'd wanted to kill him this
afternoon, and more than once—but she was learning in a way that would make her
stronger, and now that she was calmer, she could appreciate that. She
needed him, more than she'd ever needed anyone else. But—Lord
and Lady—what if it was something more complicated than need, or even need and
the kind of feeling she had for Skif? ARROWS
FLIGHT 227 He was
handsome; handsome as an angel. And despite a certain smug vanity, a man she'd
be more than proud to have as a friend. Look at the way he was taking his life
in his hands—literally—for the sake of getting her back in control of herself
and her Gift. He was kind, he was gentle, he was considerate, and with the way
her mind had been playing tricks on her lately, it was more than a possibility
that she'd unconsciously used her Gift to influence the way he thought about
her. Even to the point of getting him into bed with her— Lady
knew she was no beauty. And if she had influenced him in that, she could have
caused an even deeper attraction. She
clenched her hands on her mug so hard they ached. That was one thing she had
not wanted. At least not originally. But now? She
liked Kris well enough. Well enough—but not that well. She was
attracted to Dirk, there was no question about that. And strongly; more
strongly than she'd ever felt about anyone. It was
almost, she decided a bit reluctantly, as if Dirk was some
hitherto-unrecognized, hitherto-unmissed, other half of herself, and that she'd
never again feel whole after having met him unless— Unless
what? Heralds
seldom made any kind of long-term commitment; contenting themselves with the
close friendship of the Circle, casual, strictly physical liaisons, and the
bonds of their Companions. And truly, few Heralds she knew were at all
dissatisfied with that kind of life. Realistically speaking, the job was far
too dangerous to make a lifebond possible or desir-. able. Look what had
happened to Keren when Ylsa died; if Sherrill hadn't had exactly what she
needed and been right on the spot, she might very well have death-willed
herself in bereavement. 228 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 229 And
she'd only seen Dirk a handful of times. But for Heralds, sometimes only once
was enough. Her mind drifted back years. It was
late one night that they'd all been gathered in Keren's room over hot mulled
wine and sometimes ribald conversation. Somehow the subject turned from bawdy
jokes to the truth behind some of the legends and tales told by outsiders about
Heralds: they were laughing at some of the more absurd exaggerations. "Take
that love-at-one-glance nonsense," Talia had giggled. "Someone ought
to really take the Bards to task over that one. How could anyone know from the
first meeting that someone they've just met will be a lifepartner?" "Oddly
enough, that's not an exaggeration," Sher-rill had replied soberly.
"When it happens with Heralds, that's generally exactly the way it
happens. It's almost as if there were something, something even deeper than
instinct, that recognizes the other soul." She'd shrugged. "Metaphysical,
sentimental, but still true." "Do
you mean to tell me that both of you had that happen?" Talia had been
incredulous. "As
a matter of fact, the very first time I set eyes on Keren," Sherrill
replied. "Notwithstanding the fact that I was just under fourteen at the
time." Keren
nodded. "Visa and I knew when we met midway through our third year—until
then we'd never done more than wave at each other across the room since we had
had very different schedules. We did wait, though, until we were both sure that
it was something solid and not ephemeral, and until we'd completed our
internships, before commiting to each other." "And
I didn't want to intrude on what was obviously a lifebond." I "You
would have been welcome. To tell you the truth, we'd wondered a little—" "But
I didn't know that at the time, did I?" Sherrill had laughed. "Truly,
though, Talia, anyone-I've ever talked to that has seen a lifebond has said the
same thing; that was the way it was for Selenay's parents, for instance. It
either happens the first time you meet, or never." "And
if it's not a lifebond, there's nothing you can do to make it one—to make it
more than a temporary relationship, no matter how much you want it to be
something more," Keren had continued. "My twin found that out." Talia
must have looked intensely curious, although she hadn't actually asked
anything, because Keren continued after a moment. "Remember
I've told you once or twice that I've got a niece and nephew almost your age?
Well, they're Teren's. Not only were we not Chosen at the same time, but it
took seven years for his Companion to come for him. By then I was a field
Herald—and he was married and working the sponge-boat. Then it happened. He was
Chosen. And the wife he had thought he was contented with turned out to mean
less to him than he'd ever dreamed. He wanted to love her, he really did. He
tried to make himself love her—it didn't work. He went through an incredible
amount of soul-searching and guilt before concluding that the emotion wasn't
there and wasn't going to be, and that his real life was with the Circle and
his Companion. And to tell the truth, his wife—now ex-wife—didn't really seem
to care. His children were adopted into our family and she turned around and married
into another with no sign of regret that / could see. So you see," she had
concluded, "if you're a Herald, you either have a tifebond and recognize
it at once, or you live your life without one." Talia
sighed. 230 MERCEDES
LACKEY If she
were going to be honest with herself, she had to admit that this seemed to be
exactly what had happened to her with regard to Dirk. Seemed to be—that was the
key. How did she know that this wasn't some fantasy she was building in her own
mind? It
didn't feel much like a fantasy, though. It was more like a toothache; or
perhaps the way Jadus had felt about his missing leg. He'd said it had often
seemed as if it were stilt there, and aching. Well,
there was something in Talia that ached, too. Fine.
What about Kris? What
she felt for Kris . .. just wasn't that deep. Yes, she needed him—his support,
his expertise, his encouragement. But "need" was just not the same as
"love." Or rather, the emotion she felt for him was a different kind
of love; a comradeship—actually closer to what she felt for Rolan or Skif or
even Keren than anything else. But if
Kris had become infatuated with her—Gods, it almost didn't bear thinking about. Granted,
he certainly wasn't acting very lover-like. And earlier—he almost seemed to be
throwing Dirk at her. Outside of bed he was treating her more like Alberich
treated a trainee who had gotten some bad early lessoning and needed to have it
beaten out of him. Except in the digging out, when he treated her as an
absolute equal; neither cosseting her nor allowing her to take more than her
share of the work. Provided
her mind hadn't been tricking both of them—which was a very real possibility. "Oh,
hellfire," she sighed. At
least she'd managed to clarify some of her feelings. And there wasn't anything
she could do about it anyway—not until she had her Gift under full control, and
could sort out what was "real" and what wasn't. She drank the last of
the stone-cold tea, and put up the harness, then slipped back into bed. Right ARROW'S
FLIGHT 231 now the
only thing to do was to enforce the sleep she knew she needed badly. It was
best to just try and take things a day at a time. Because
at this point, she had more pressing problems to deal with, if she couldn't get
her Gift back under control, this would all be very moot. .. . For she
was quite well aware of how close she'd come to driving both Kris and herself
over the edge. It could happen again, especially if he did something to badly
frighten her—and if it did— If it
did, it could end, only too easily, in his death, hers, or both. Ten Well,
there was one way, Talia knew, to keep herself under control—and that was to
work herself into a state of total exhaustion. So in the morning she rose
early, almost before the sun, and she began pressing herself to her
limits—making each day blur into the next in a haze of fatigue. It became
impossible to tell what day it was, or even how long they'd been there. Talia
usually woke first, at dawn, and would prod Kris into wakefulness. One or the
other of them would prepare not only breakfast, but unleavened cakes with some
form of soup or stew: something that could remain untended most of the day
without scorching, simply because they both knew that by the time they came in,
they would have barely enough energy to eat and perform a sketchy sort of wash
before collapsing into bed. After a
hearty breakfast of fruit and porridge, she would wrap the Companions' legs
against the sharp edges of the ice-crust while Kris haltered the chirras, and
all six occupants of the Station would troop out into the cold to begin the
day's work. Rolan
and Tantris would move up first, and break the crust of ice and the hard snow
beneath by rearing to their full heights and crashing down on it with their
forelegs, or backing up to it and kicking as 232 ARROW'S
FLIGHT 233 hard as
they could. They would move back, and Talia and Kris would then take their
places; picking up the chunks that had broken off and heaving them to either
side of the trail they were cutting. The chirras would use their powerful
foreclaws on what remained until they were halted by snow too packed for them
to dig or crust too slippery to get a grip on. Then the Heralds would move the
chunks they'd dislodged, scoop up the loose snow, and let the Companions take
over again. They
would work without a break until the sun reached its zenith, then take
begrudged time for a hasty lunch. On their return, they would work until
darkness. Each day the trips to and from the Station got longer; sometimes it
was only that which kept Talia working. There were times, too many times, when
their progress was limited to a few feet for a whole day of back-breaking
labor; and she knew the Station itself was furlongs from the road. It was when
their measured progress amounted to little more than a dozen paces that the
temptation to give up was the strongest. When
darkness fell, Kris would tend the Companions while Talia groomed the chirras,
checking them thoroughly for any sign of injury or muscle strain during the
process of grooming them. Rolan and Tantris, of course, could be relied upon to
tell their Chosen if they'd been hurt, but the chirras were another story. And
if one of the chirras had to drop out of the work, their progress would be
halved. Finally
Kris or Talia—usually Talia—would ensure that everyone was well supplied with
food and water and blanketed against the night chill before they wolfed down
their own dinners and sought their bed. It was
the hardest physical labor either of them had ever performed. The constant cold
seeped into their very bones, and their muscles never stopped aching. It wore
them down, a little more each day. They had strictly rationed their own
supplies, and 234 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 235 the
food they were taking in was not equaling the energy they were expending. They
were getting thinner, both of them, and tougher, physically. It was a change
Talia hardly noticed, because it was so gradual, but once in a while she would
think vaguely that her friends would have been surprised to the point of shock
by the way she looked. Kris
continued to hammer at her through the first week of digging out, until
centering and grounding had become reflexive. After that, he left her in peace,
only offering an occasional bit of weary advice. Talia's control over Empathic
projection came and went, at unpredictable intervals, although Kris evidently
never noticed her projecting involuntarily. If he had, he would have pounced on
her, of that she was certain. Her shielding was returning now that she had
something to form a firm base for it, but it was the thinnest of veils, hardly
even enough to know that it was there. She worked at control with nearly the
same single-minded obsession she was giving the physical labor of digging out. The
only pauses in their routine were the two occasions when they again ran out of
clean clothing. Those two days were given over to a repeat of their washday,
and to brave attempts to revive one another's faltering spirits. As tired as
Talia was, it was easy to become depressed. Kris wasn't quite so much the pawn
of his emotions, but there were times Talia found herself having to pull him
out of despair. The endless cold did not help matters any, nor did the fact
that they had, indeed, needed to cut green wood to use in their fire. The green
wood, even when mixed with seasoned, gave off much less heat. Talia felt as if
she'd never be warm again. But one
afternoon, nearly a month from the time they'd first reached the Station, she
looked up from their task in sudden bewilderment to realize that they'd finally
reached the road. And the
road was as drift-covered as the path out had been. "Now what?" Talia
asked dully. "Oh,
Gods." Kris sat down on a chunk of snow with none of his usual grace. This
was a scenario he'd never contemplated; he'd always assumed that once they
broke out, the main road would be cleared as well. He stared at the icy
wilderness in front of them and tried to think. "The
storm—it must have spread farther than I thought," he said at last.
"The road crews should have been within sensing distance by now,
otherwise." He felt
utterly bewildered and profoundly shaken— for once at a total loss for a course
of action. He just gazed numbly at the unbroken expanse of snow covering the
road, unable to even think clearly. Talia
tried to clear her mind—to stay calm—but the uncanny silence echoed in her
ears. And that feeling of someone watching was back. She
glanced apprehensively at Kris, wondering if he was sensing the same thing she
was—and in the next breath, certain it was all originating in her mind. The
feeling of being watched was, if anything, more intense than it had been
before. And ever-so-slightly ominous. It was very much akin to the uneasy
queasiness she used to have whenever Keldar would stand over her at some chore,
waiting and watching for her to make the tiniest mistake. Something out there
was unsure of her—mistrusted her— and was waiting for her to slip, somehow. And
when she did— Panic rose in her, and choked off the words she had intended to
say. Kris
stared at the unbroken ice crust as if entranced, unable to muster enough
energy to say anything more. Gradually, though, he became aware of a feeling of
uneasiness—exacdy as if someone were 236 MERCEDES
LACKEY watching
him from under cover of the brush beneath the snow-laden trees. He tried to
dismiss the feeling, but it continued to grow, until it was only by sheer force
of will that he was able to keep from whipping around to see who was staring at
the back of his neck— It
wasn't entirely an unfriendly regard . . . but it was a wary one. As if
whatever it was that was watching him wasn't quite sure of him. He
tried to shield, to clear his mind of the strange sensations, only to have them
intensify when he invoked shielding. And now
he was seeing and hearing things as well— slight forms that could only be
caught out of the corner of his eye, and slipped into invisibility when he
tried to look at them directly. And there seemed to be sibilant whisperings
just on the edges of his hearing— All of
which could well be from a single source. Talia had told him once already that
she thought she was hallucinating; she could well be drawing him into an
irrational little nightmare-world of her making. "Talia!"
he snapped angrily, more than a little frightened. "Lock it down!" And he
whipped around to glare at her, enraged, and just about ready to strike out at
her for her lack of control. Talia
forgot the strange watcher; forgot everything except Kris' angry—and
untrue—accusation. She flushed, then paled—then reacted. "It's
not me!" she snapped. Then, when he continued to stare at her with utter
disbelief, she lost the control she had been holding to with her psychic teeth
and toenails. This
time, at least, the Companions were prepared, and shielded themselves quickly.
Kris, however, got the full brunt of her fear of the situation and her anger at
him. He rose involuntarily to his feet and ARROW'S
FLIGHT 237 staggered
back five or six paces, to trip and fall backward into the hard snow, his face
as white as hers, and unable to do more than raise his arms in front of his
face in a futile gesture of warding. And the
watcher stirred— Talia
froze; the feeling that some power was uncoiling and contemplating striking her
down was so powerful that she was unable even to breathe. Somehow she cut off
the emotion-storm—and simultaneous with her resumption of control, Rolan paced
forward slowly, to stand beside her. He faced, not her, but the watching
forest, his whole posture a silent challenge. There
was a feeling of vague surprise—and the sensation of being watched vanished. Talia
felt released from her paralysis and wanted to die of shame for what she'd
nearly done to Kris. As he blinked in surprise, she turned blindly away from
him, leaned against a tree-trunk and wept, her face buried in her arms. Kris
stumbled to his feet, and put both arms around her. "Talia, little bird,
please don't—" he begged. "I'm sorry; I didn't mean—1 lost my temper.
It'll be all right. It's got to be all right—I'm sorry. I'm sorry—" But
dreary days of grinding labor and nights of too little rest had taken their
toll of his spirit as well. It was only when the tears started to freeze on
both their faces that they were able to stop sobbing in dejection and despair. "It—that
thing watching—" She
shook with more than cold. "I—don't want to talk about it," she said,
looking uneasily over her shoulder. "Not here—not now." "It
wasn't you—" "No.
I swear on my life." He
believed her. "All right, let's handle what we've got; the storm was worse
than we thought," he said, getting control of himself again. "This is
the very 238 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 239 northernmost
end of the road. They can't be more than a few days away, and we aren't running
short of food yet. We'll be all right—especially if we start rationing
ourselves," "We
won't need as much food if we rest," Talia said, drying her eyes on the
gauze she'd used to protect them from sunglare. "And
we can plant a signal so that they know we're here. I can get the crust to hold
me a good distance, and you're lighter than I am; about an hour's scramble will
do. Wait here," He
mounted Tantris and the two of them headed back to the Station, vanishing from
sight down the narrow little valley they'd cut. Talia waited for their return,
occasionally looking warily over her shoulder. Whatever had been watching her
had been within a hair of striking her; why she was certain of this, she had no
idea, but she could not rid herself of the thought. She had no idea what had
deterred it, but , she did not want
it to catch her unaware. She clung
I to Rolan's neck, and waited, exerting every bit of \ control she had. For it seemed to her
that the watcher had only acted when it appeared that she was attacking Kris.
If that was the case, she had no intention of inadvertently invoking it agin. It was
at least a candlemark—and far too long for her peace of mind—before she saw
Kris and Tantris trotting back. He carried four white arrows, two long
branches, and some bright blue rags. "These
will show up at a distance. Here, pattern these, will you?" He dismounted
and handed her two of the arrows, and began working on his two. "We tie
the arrows to the stick, and plant the stick out in the middle of where the
road is. When the crews find them, they'll know we're here, and still alive.
They'll even know for certain it's us if they happen to have a Herald with
them—surely anyone with them will have been given our patterns." "Why
are we doing this?" "If
we don't, they might not clear the road this far. This is just the northernmost
loop; it isn't strictly needed to get between Waymeet and Berrybay. It takes
longer to go around than to cut through Sorrows, but nobody travels much in the
winter except Heralds. And nobody knows where we've been 'lost.' " He
handed her one of his arrows in exchange for hers. Both of them tied the arrows
to one of the branches, and made them as conspicuous as possible with
fluttering rags. "You
go toward Waymeet, I'll go toward Berrybay," he said, preparing to climb
up on the snow crust. "Plant yours at the First crossroads you come to,
I'll do the same. Hopefully the road crews will find one of them before they
give up." "Kris—what
if it snows again?" "Talia,
for the love of the Goddess, don't even think that. Walk as far as you can, but
be back here by dusk." Talia
had never felt so lonely. There was scarcely a sound from the white woods on
either side. She could hear the creaking sounds of Kris carefully making his
way across the snow crust behind her, sliding his feet so as not to break it.
Even so, she heard the crunch that meant he'd fallen through at least once
before he got too far away for the sounds to carry to her. It was a measure of
his own dejection that he didn't even have the spirit to swear. She set
out herself, often having to detour around high drifts that she didn't dare try
and climb. Her eyes ached from tears and snowglare, and she was as tired as
she'd ever been in her life. She was grateful that she was lighter than Kris;
the snow crust was holding beneath her without any such mishaps as he had had. The
silence was eerie—frightening. As frightening 240 MERCEDES
LACKEY in its
way as the howl of the storm had been. Talia was shivering long before she
reached her turnaround point, and not just from cold. There were no sounds of
birds or animals, no indication that anything else lived and moved here besides
herself. That horrible feeling of something watching might be gone, but there
was still something uncanny about the Forest of Sorrows, something touched with
the chill of death and the ice of despair. Whatever power held sway here, it
was unsleeping and brooding; she knew it beyond doubt, and somehow knew she was
feeling only the barest touch of its power—and she didn't really want to trust
to the supposed protection of her Whites by venturing too far alone. She was
more than relieved to find a half-buried crossroads sign; that meant she could
plant her gaudy staff in the snowcrust at the peak of a drift and retrace her
steps. She was
never so glad to see another human being as she was to see Kris, picking his
way across the snow, coming toward her. Back in
the Station, Talia surveyed what was left of their supplies. "They'd
better come soon," she said, trying to keep doubt out of her voice.
"Even if we're careful, we don't have much. It'll probably last for a
week, but not much more." "If
they're as worried as I think—as I hope—they'll be working around the clock,
even by torchlight," Kris said, sheer exhaustion making his voice
toneless. "It just can't be too much longer." "They
may not recognize us as Heralds at all," she replied, trying to joke a
Hide. "I doubt they've ever seen Heralds looking so shabby. I've had to
practically rub holes in my things to get them white again. Our appearance is
hardly going to enhance the Heraldic image." She
screwed her face up in imitation of an old man's grimace, and croaked;
"Heralds? Yer be not ARROWS
FLIGHT 241 Heralds!
Yer be imposters, for certain sure! Gypsies! Scalawags! And where got ye them
whitewashed nags, eh? Eh?" Kris
just stared at her for a long moment, then suddenly began to laugh as
helplessly as he'd wept earlier. Perhaps it was their weariness that made them
as prone to near-hysterical hilarity as to tears. Talia began to giggle
herself, then crow with laughter. They collapsed into their bed-nest together,
legs too weak to stand up, and for a long time could hardly stop laughing long
enough to breathe. No sooner would one of them get himself under control, and
the other start to follow suit, when one look would set them both off again. "Enough—please—"
Kris gasped at last. "Then
don't keep looking at me," Talia replied, resolutely staring at a stain on
her boots until she got her breath back. "Berrybay
has a Resupply Station," Kris said, doing his best to maintain a serious
subject. "We can get new uniforms there, and we can get our leathers
bleached and re-treated. I'll warn you, though, the sizes will only be
approximate." "Just
so that the Whites are white and not gray, or full of holes." "I
don't suppose you know enough sewing to alter what we get?" Kris asked
wistfully. She could tell by his expression that his fastidious nature was
mildly disturbed by the notion that he would be looking considerably less than
immaculate in outsize uniforms. Talia
raised an eyebrow in his direction. "My dear Herald, I'll have you know
that by my third year at the Collegium I was making Whites. I may very well
have made some of your wardrobe." "Strange
thought." He pulled off his boots, slowly. "It—it wasn't you playing
tricks on my mind?" "No,"
she replied. "Not until you shouted at me." "Gods—I
think I must be going mad." She was
rubbing her white, cold feet, trying to 242 MERCEDES
LACKEY restore
circulation. "Don't—please—it's the isolation, the worry," she
responded, with a clutching of fear in her chest. "Not enough rest, not
enough food—" "Are
making me see things? Are^ou seeing things?" "No,"
she admitted, "But—it seems like the forest is—watching. Almost all the
time." Kris started.
Talia saw him jump, and bit her lip. "It's
nothing," he said. "Just—Tantris says you're right. He says the
forest is watching us. Dammit—I thought it was you, doing things to me.
Sorry." "Kris—I
lost it again—" Tears stung her eyes. "Hey,
not as bad as last time—and you got control back by yourself. Right?" "Sort
of. Whatever it was—when I turned on you, it suddenly felt like it was going to
do something to me if I touched you. That was when I got scared back into
sense." "And
you got control back. However it happened, you got control back. Don't give up
on me, little bird. And don't give up on yourself, either." "I'll
try," she said, a faint tremor in her voice. "I'll try." Leaden
silence hung between them, until he took it upon himself to break it.
"Jadus left you his harp, so I assume that you know how to play it, but
I've never once heard you do so. Would you?" "I'm
nowhere near as good as you are," she protested. "Humor
me," he insisted. "All
right, but you may be sorry," she curled into the blankets to try and keep
a little warmth in her legs and back and took the harp from him when he brought
it from its corner. This
was the first time she'd played in front of anyone but Jadus. The way the
firelight caught the golden grain of the wood brought back those days with a
poignant sadness. She rested her hands on the strings for a moment, then began
playing the first thing that came to memory. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 243 The
song was "Sun and Shadow," and Kris was very much aware from the
first few notes that she performed it quite differently than he did. Where he
and Dirk emphasized the optimistic foreshadowing of the ultimate solution to
the lovers' trials, and made the piece almost hopeful in spite of its somber
quality, she wandered the lonely paths of the song's "present," where
their respective curses seemed to be dooming the pair to live forever just out
of one another's reach. She was correct in insisting that she wasn't as
technically adept a player as Kris, but she played as she sang—with feeling,
feeling that she made you hear. In her hands "Sun and Shadow" could
tear your heart. The
last notes hung in the air between them for long moments before he could clear
his throat enough to say something. "I
keep telling you," he managed at last, "that you underestimate
yourself." "You're
a remarkably uncritical audience," she replied. "Would you like her
back, or shall I murder something else?" "I'd
like you to play more, if you would." She
shrugged, but secretly was rather pleased that he hadn't reclaimed My Lady. Her
mood was melancholy, and it was possible to find solitude by losing herself in
the music—solitude that it wasn't possible to create when he was playing or she
was singing. She continued, closing her eyes and letting her hands wander
through whatever came to mind, sometimes singing, sometimes not. Kris listened
quietly, without comment. The few times she looked up, his face was so shadowed
that she couldn't read his expression. Eventually she ran out of music fitting
her mood, and her hands fell from the harpstrings. "That's
all I know," she said into the silence that followed. "Then
that," he replied, taking the harp from her, 244 MERCEDES
LACKEY "is
enough for one night. I think it is more than time enough for bed." She had
doubted she'd be able to sleep, but the moment she relaxed, she was lost to
slumber. Three
days later the Station seemed to have shrunk around them and felt very
confining, especially to Talia, who had always had a touch of claustrophobia.
Her temper was shortened to near nonexistence ... and she feared losing it.
Greatly feared it. "Kris—"
she said, when his pacing became too much for her to bear. "Will you go
out? Will you please go somewhere?" He stopped
in midstep, and turned to eye her with speculation. "Am I driving you out
of patience?" "It's
more than that. It's—" "That
feeling of being watched. Is it back?" She
sagged with relief. "You feel it, too?" "Not
now. I did a little while back." "Am—I
sending both of us mad?" She clenched her hands so hard that her nails
left marks in her palms. He sat
on the floor at her feet, took her hands in his, and made her relax them.
"I don't think so. If you'll remember, Tantris told me that the forest was
watching us." "What
is it?" "I
only have a guess; it's Vanyel's Curse. It's made the whole forest aware
somehow." "I
don't think it likes me," she said, biting her lip. Kris
had the "listening" look he wore when Tantris Mindspoke him.
"Tantris says that he thinks it's disturbed by you; you're a Herald, but
you're a danger to me, another Herald. It isn't sure what to do with you." "So
as long as I stay in control, it will leave me alone ..." "I
would surmise." He rose to his feet. "And to keep you from losing
control, / am going out." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 245 Kris
had decided to flounder his way down the road toward Waymeet, in hopes of
meeting with a road crew. He entered the Station to have an entirely unexpected
and mouthwatering aroma hit him full in the face. "I'm
hallucinating," he said, haif-afraid that once again he really was.
"I'm smelling fresh meat cooking." "Pretty
substantial hallucinations, then, since you're going to have them for
supper," Talia replied, with a sober face. Then, unable to restrain
herself, she jumped up from the hearth to throw her arms around him in a joyful
hug. "Two squirrels and a rabbit, Kris! I got them all! And there'll be
more—the fodder is attracting them! I didn't even lose or break any
arrows!" "Bright
Havens—" he said, sitting down with a thump, hardly daring to believe it. There
was no denying the stewed meat and broth Talia ladled out to him, however. They
ate every scrap, the first fresh food they'd had in weeks, sucking the tiny
bones dry, then celebrated with exuberant loving. They fell asleep with
untroubled hearts for the first time in many days. They
were awakened the next morning very early; the chirras were stirring
restlessly, and both Companions seemed to be listening to something. Rolan
was overwhelmingly relieved and joyful, and Talia went deeper to find out why. "Tantris
says—" Kris began. "There're
people coming!" Talia finished excitedly. "Kris, it's the road
crew!" "There's
a Herald with them, too. Tantris thinks they'll reach us sometime after
noon." "Have
they reached our marker yet?" "Yes.
The Herald had his Companion broadcast a Mindcali to ours when he found it. I
might even 246 MERCEDES
LACKEY have
met them yesterday, if I hadn't gone in the wrong direction—idiot that I
am!" "How
were you to know? How many are there?" "Ten,
not counting the Herald." "Should
we go out and try to dig the path out farther to meet them?" "No,"
Kris said firmly. "The little we can do won't make much difference, and
I'm still tired. We'll pack up, straighten things up here, and meet them where
the path meets the road." It
seemed strange to see the Station barren of their belongings, with only the
empty containers that the supplies had been stored in to tell of their presence
there this past month. It took longer than Talia had thought it would to repack
everything; they did not leave the Station until almost noon. When
they reached the road, they could see the newcomers in the far distance. They
waved and shouted, and could tell by the agitated movements of the other
figures that they'd been spotted. The work crew redoubled their efforts, and
before too long— though not soon enough for Talia and Kris—the paths met. "Heralds
Talia and Kris?" The white-clad figure that was first through the gap was
unfamiliar to both of them, though his immaculate uniform made them
uncomfortably conscious of the pitiful condition of their own. "Yes,
Herald," Kris answered for both of them. "Praise
the Lady! When the Guard learned that you hadn't stayed at Waymeet and hadn't
arrived at Berrybay, and that you'd left on the very eve of the storm, we all
feared the worst. Had you been caught in it, I doubt you would have survived
even one night. This was the worst blizzard in these parts in recorded history.
Oh, I'm Tedric. How on earth did you manage?" "We
were warned by our chirras in time to make ARROW'S
FLIGHT 247 the
Waystation, but I doubt that we'd be in any shape to greet you now if it hadn't
been stocked by someone other than the regular Resupply crew," Kris
replied. "Whoever it was, he seems to have had an uncannily accurate idea
of how much provender we'd need, and what kinds." "That's
the Weatherwitch's doing," said one of the work crew, a stolid-looking
farmer. "Kept at us this fall till we got it stocked to her liking. Even
made us go back after first snow with some odd bits—honey 'n oil, salted meat
'n fish. We had it to spare, praise Kernos, and she's never yet been wrong when
she gets one o' these notions, so we went along with it. Happen it was a good
thing." "Praise
Kernos, in very deed! I see you've got your gear. Come along with me and I'll
have you warm and dry and fed before nightfall. I'm with the Re-supply Station
outside of Berrybay. I've got plenty of room for both of you, if you don't mind
sharing a bed." "Not
at all," Kris replied gravely, sensing Talia struggling with the effort of
maintaining what little shielding she had against the pressure of fifteen
minds. "We've been sleeping on straw next to the hearth for warmth. Right
now a camp cot would sound like heaven, even if I had to share it with
Tantris!" "Good.
Excellent!" Herald Tedric replied. "I'll guide you both back; these
good people know what they're doing, and they certainly don't need me in the
way now that we've found you." The
members of the work crew made polite noises, but they obviously agreed with
him. "Fact
is, Herald," the red-faced farmer whispered to Kris, "Old Tedric's a
good enough sort, but he don't belong out here. He's too old, and his heart's
more'n a mite touchy. Waystation Supply post was supposed to be a
pensioning-out position, if you catch my meaning. He ain't the kind to sit
idle, even 248 MERCEDES
LACKEY though
he hasn't the health to ride circuit no more. We're supposed to be keepin' an
eye on him, make sure he don't overdo-^job's set up so's he could feel useful,
but wouldn't have to do anything straining. Guard's supposed to do all his
fetching and carrying for him. But what with this storm and all, Guard's busy
clearing the roads, seein' to the emergencies— when he found out you two was
missin', nothing would do but that he go out with us. Gave us a real fright a
time or two, gettin' short of breath and blue-like when we thought we might've
found bodies. Good thing you turned up all right, or I reckon we'd have had a
third body on our hands." This
put things in an altogether different light. Kris felt a sudden increase in
respect for the talkative and seemingly feckless Herald. On closer examination
he saw that Tedric was a great deal older than he had first appeared, partially
because he was bald as an egg, and partially because he had the kind of
baby-soft face that tends not to wrinkle with age. His Companion cosseted him
tenderly, flatly refusing to race headlong down the road so that he could
prepare the Station for his guests. Talia
and Kris took turns telling him what had transpired from the time they
discovered the plague in Waymeet. "So
you're the Queen's Own, the one with the Gift for emotions and
mindHealing?" he asked Talia, peering at her short-sightedly. She could
sense his faint unease around her, even through the shields Rolan was holding,
and mentally shrank into herself. "I wonder if you could do something for
the Weather-witch?" "Considering
that we obviously owe her our lives, I'll certainly be glad to try," Talia
replied, trying not to show her own unease and her real dismay at being asked
to use her wayward Gift. "Just who is she, and why do you call her the
Weatherwitch?" ARROW'S
FLIGHT 249 i "Ah,
it's a sad story, that," he sighed. "A few years ago, it would be,
when I'd only just been assigned this post, there was a young woman named
Maeven in Berrybay who'd gone and had herself a Festival child—that's a babe
that no one will claim, and whose mother hasn't the faintest notion who the
father might be. People being what they are, there was a certain amount of
tsk-ing, and finger-pointing, until the poor girl heartily wished the babe had
never been conceived, much less born. That's what made what happened to her all
the worse, you see. You know, 'be careful what you ask for, you might get it'?
I'm sure she often wished the child gone, and when the accident happened, she
blamed herself. She was taking her turn working at the mill, and she left the
little one alone for longer than she should have. Poor mite was just beginning
to crawl about, and it managed to wriggle free of the basket she'd left it in.
It crawled straight to the millrace, fell in, and drowned. She was the one to
find the body, and she went quite mad." "But
why 'Weatherwitch'?" Kris asked. "She
must have had a Gift, and her going off her head freed it altogether, because
she started being able to predict the weather. She'd be acting just as usual,
dandling that rag-doll she got in place of her babe—then out of nowhere she'd
look straight through you, and tell you that you'd better see that the beans
got taken in because it was going to hail that night. Then, sure enough, it
would. People in Berrybay and for a bit around took to coming to her any time
the weather looked uncertain. She began to be able to See the weather that was
coming days, then weeks, then months in advance. That's why the villagers
heeded her when she told them to stock the Station. I wish they'd told me, I'd
have laid in a good deal more on my own." "You
stocked it very well, and we've nothing to find fault with," Kris replied
reassuringly. "I'm afraid, 250 MERCEDES
LACKEY though,
that you'll find we've used up just about everything that was there." "That
will be no problem," Tedric said cheerfully. "I'll be glad to have a
little task to turn my hand to. Most of my work's done in the summer, and
winter's a bit of a slow time for me. But it looks to me as if you could use a
full resupply yourselves." "I'm
afraid so," Talia said as Tedric shook his head over the state of their
uniforms. "I don't think the fabric is going to be good for much except
rags." "I've
got plenty of stock back at the Station, and I'm no bad hand with a
needle," Tedric replied. "I think I can refit you well enough so that
you won't be looking like crow-scares. I've got all the necessaries for
bleaching and refinishing your leathers, so we won't have to replace those, and
your cloaks still look in fairly good shape, or will be after we clean them. If
you don't mind staying a bit, I can turn you out looking almost like the day
you left to take this sector." "That
sounds fantastic!" Kris said with obvious thankfulness. "I
can help with the altering, sir," Talia added. The old
Herald twinkled at her. "But who tailors the tailor, then? And surely you
wouldn't deny an old man the pleasure of helping fit a pretty young lady, would
you?" Talia
blushed, and to cover it, settled My Lady wrapped in her biankets in a new
position on her lap. Without the harpcase to protect her, Talia elected to
carry her personally. "What's
this?" Tedric asked and brightened to learn it was a harp. "Which
of you is the musician?" he asked eagerly. "We
both are, sir," Kris replied. "But
he really plays a great deal better than I do," Talia added. "And
Herald Tedric, we'd truly appreciate it if you could find someone to make a new
traveling case for her while we're here. We had to destroy the old one to make
snow shovels." ARROW'S
FLIGHT 251 "The
cabinetmaker would be proud to oblige you," Tedric said with certainty.
"In fact, he may even have something already made that will fit. Midwinter
Fair is at the Sector capital in a few weeks, and he's been readying a few
instrument cases to take there, as well as his little carved boxes and similar
trumperies. He's known for his work on small pieces as well as furniture, you
see. I'll make a note to start stocking shovels in our Stations from now on.
Not every Herald has harpcases to sacrifice." They
passed the village of Berrybay just before sunset, Talia finding herself
grateful for the shielding Rolan was supplying her, and reached the Re-supply
Station with the coming of the dark. The place was much larger than Talia had
expected. "Bright
Havens!" she exclaimed. "You could house half the Collegium
here!" "Oh,
most of it isn't living quarters—it's mostly haybarn, warehouse, and granary. I
do have three extra rooms in case some need should bring a number of Heralds
this far north, but only one of those rooms has a bed; any more than two would
have to make up beds on the floor. But let's take first things first. I expect
you'd both appreciate a hot bath. It will pleasure both of you to know I have a
real bathing-room, just like the ones at the Palace and Collegium. While you're
getting washed, I'll find some clean clothing for you to wear until we get your
new outfits altered and your leathers cleaned. As soon as you're feeling ready,
there'll be supper. How does that strike you?" "It
sounds wonderful—especially the part about the hot bath!" Talia replied
fervently, as they dismounted in the station's stable. "Then
take yourselves right in that door over there—I'll tend to your beasts and
friends. Go up the staircase, then take a sharp right. The copper's all fired
up. I've been doing it every day on the 252 MERCEDES
LACKEY chance
that we'd find you. The room you'll be using is sharp left." They
each took a small pack and Talia took her harp, and entered the door he'd
indicated. Tedric hadn't exaggerated, though it only held a single tub, the
bathing-room was identical in every other way to the ones at the Palace. "Which
of us goes first?" Talia asked, thinking longingly of clean hair and a
good long soak. "You.
You look ready to die," Kris replied. "I'm
feeling the strain a bit," she admitted. "Then
get your bath. I can wait." When
tight muscles were finally relaxed, and the grime that had accumulated despite
her best efforts ruthlessly scrubbed away, she wrapped herself in towels and
sought their room. She found that Tedric had preceded them there; on the bed
were laid out fabric breeches and shirts of something approximating their
sizes. The
approximation was far from exact. It was obvious that if these articles were
representative of the kinds of clothing held in storage, there was a great deal
of work that was going to have to be done. She
stretched out on the bed for just a moment .. . only to fall completely asleep. Kris
had taken himself downstairs again to talk in private with Tedric. He hadn't
missed the older man's initial unease around Talia—nor the fact that he had
already know that Talia was Queen's Own and what her Gift was. The identity of
an internee was not supposed to be generally known, and the Gift of the Queen's
Own wasn't generally even a matter of public knowledge among the Heralds
themselves. He
decided that he was a bit too tired for diplomacy, and bluntly asked the older
man where he'd gotten his information about Talia. "Why
.. . rumors, mostly," Tedric supplied in astonishment, "Although I
didn't credit the half of ARROW'S
FLIGHT 253 them. I
can't imagine a Herald misusing a Gift, and I can't believe the Collegium would
allow anyone out who was poorly trained. And I've said so. But I must tell you,
there are a lot of eyes and thoughts up here—and, I regret to say, some of them
hoping to catch a Herald in failure." After a
covering exchange of pleasantries, Kris climbed the stairs with a worried soul.
He found Talia asleep on the bed, and took his towels without waking her. He lay
back in his hot bath to soak, his mind anything but relaxed. If anyone
discovered the state Talia was in, not only her reputation would be finished,
but the reputation of Heralds as a whole and that of the Collegium would be
badly damaged. The faith Heralds themselves had in the Collegium would be
shaken if they knew how poorly counseled she'd been. For
that reason, they dared not abort the circuit and head back; that would be the
signal of failure certain critics of the system had been waiting for. Nor could
Kris himself let any senior Herald know the true state of things and how poorly
controlled Talia was—for that would lead to a profound disturbance in the ranks
of the Heralds themselves, a disturbance that could only roll ail the way back
to Selenay and Elspeth, with ail the attendant problems it would cause them. It
would be up to Kris, and to Talia herself, to get her back to the functional
level she had before this whole mess blew up in their faces. It was
with that sobering reflection he finished his bath, and went to get dressed and
wake her. She
woke from her nap in a fairly good mood, giggling a little at the way she
looked in the outsized garments Tedric had supplied. "It's
because two-thirds of the Heralds are men, little bird," Kris replied.
"And all the Resupply Sta- 254 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FUGHT 255 tions
get the same goods. So most of the clothing stored here will be made to fit
men. I expect when he gets a chance to look, he'll find some things closer to
your size. If you think you look silly, look at me!" The
waist of his breeches was a closer fit than hers, but the legs were huge and
baggy and much too long, and the sleeves of his shirt fell down far past his
fingertips. "I
expect most of what he has is in two categories— large, and 'tent.' At any
rate, it's better to have to cut down than try to piece on more fabric." They
descended the staircase to join their host; Kris barefoot and Talia in her
sheepskin slippers, since their boots were so stiff from repeated soaking and
drying that it was too much of an effort to try to pull them on. In any case,
the dwelling was very well heated, and Kris' bare feet caused him no
discomfort. They
found the old Herald puttering about in a room that seemed to combine the
functions of kitchen and common room. He chuckled to see them, looking like two
children clothed in their parents' cast-offs. "I
just took what was nearest to hand" he said apologetically. "I hope
you don't mind." "They're
clean, and dry, and warm," Kris smiled, "And right now, that's all we
care about. I must say that what I smell would have me pleased to come to table
in a grain sack, if that's all there was to wear." Tedric
looked very flattered, and seemed to have no recollection of Kris's earlier
interrogation. "When one lives alone, one acquires hobbies. Mine is cooking.
I hope you don't find it inferior to what you're used to." Talia
laughed. "Sir, what we're 'used to' has been porridge, stew made with
dried meat and old roots, half-burned bannocks, and more porridge. I have no
doubt after the past month that your meal will taste as wonderful as your
bathtub felt!" Venison
with herbs and mushrooms was a definite improvement over the meals they'd been
making. A i mental
check assured them that Tedric had seen to Rolan, Tantris, and the chirras in
the same generous fashion. Both the Companions were half-asleep, with filled
bellies, drowsing in heated stalls. When
their own hunger was truly satisfied, Kris helped Tedric clear away the remains
of the meal while Talia ran back upstairs for My Lady. "You
seemed so interested in which of us was the musician that I thought we'd repay
you for your hospitality," Kris said, taking the harp and beginning to
tune her. "One
doesn't hear a great deal of music out here." Tedric replied, not
troubling to keep the eagerness from his eyes. "I think it's the one thing
that I really miss by being stationed here. When I rode circuit I was always
running into Bards." The old
Herald listened with a face full of quiet happiness as they played and sang. It
was quite plain that he had missed the company of other Heralds, and equally
evident that he had told the simple truth about missing music out here on the
Border. Of course, it was very possible that the traveling Bards had simply not
noticed this Station, half-hidden off the road and placed at a bit of a
distance from Berrybay. It was just as possible that Tedric's work kept him so
busy during the summer (the only time journeyman Bards were likely to come this
way) that he could not spare the time to seek the village when Bards came
through. Kris made a mental note to send a few words to that effect when they
sent their next reports. Old Tedric should not have to do without song again if
he could help it. When
they finally confessed themselves played out, Tedric instantly rose and
insisted that they seek their bed. "I
don't know what possessed me, keeping you up like this," he said.
"After all, I'll have you here for as 256 MERCEDES
LACKEY long as
it takes to outfit you. Perhaps I'll hide all the needles for a week or
two!" When
they rose the next morning—somewhat reluctantly, as the featherbed they'd
shared had been warm and soft and hard to leave—they discovered that he had
already put their leathers and boots to soak in his vats of bleaching and
softening solution. Talia helped him take some of their ruined garments apart
to use as patterns, and they began altering the standard stock. Tedric was
every bit as good with a needle as he'd claimed. By day's end they were well on
the way to having their wardrobes replenished, and it was not possible to tell
that the garments had not been made at the Collegium; by week's end they were
totally re-outfitted. Once
their outfitting was complete, they set about discharging their duties to the
populace of Berrybay. The
rest and the tranquillity had been profoundly helpful in enabling Talia to firm
up what control she had gotten back over her Gift. She had enough shielding now
to hold against the worst of outside pressure on her own; that wasn't much, but
it was better than nothing. And she felt her control over her projective
ability would hold good unless she were frightened or startled—or attacked. If
any of those three eventualities took place, she wasn't entirely certain what
she'd do. But worrying about it wouldn't accomplish anything. She
almost lost her frail bulwarks when they entered the village. Kris had warned
her that the rumors had reached this far north, but the knowledge had not
prepared her. When
they set up in the village hall, she caught no few of the inhabitants giving
her sidelong, cautious glances. But what was worse, was that the very first
petitioners wore charms against dark magic into her presence. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 257 She
tried to keep up a pleasant, calm front, but the villagers' suspicion and even
fear battered at her thin shields and made her want to weep with vexation. Finally
it became too much to stand. "Kris—I've got to take a walk," she
whispered. He took one look at the lines of pain around her eyes, and nodded.
He might not be an Empath, but it didn't take that Gift to read what the people
were thinking when they wore evil-eye talismans around one particular Herald. "Go—come
back when you're ready, and not until." She and
Rolan went out past the outskirts of the village. Once away from people, she
swore and wept and kicked snow-hummocks until her feet were bruised and her
mind exhausted. Then
she returned, and took up the thread of her duties. By the
second day the unease was less. By the third, the evil-eye talismans were gone. But she
wondered what the reaction of the villagers was going to be when they sought
out the Weatherwitch on the morning of the fourth. The
depression surrounding the Weatherwitch's unkempt little cottage was so heavy
as to be nearly palpable to Talia, and to move through it was like groping
through a dark cloud. The Weatherwitch sat in one cobwebbed, dark, cold corner,
crooning to herself and rocking a bedraggled rag doll. She paid no heed at all
to the three who stood before her. Tedric whispered that the villagers brought
her food and cared for her cottage—that she was scarcely enough aware of her
surroundings to know when a meal was placed before her. Kris shook his head in
pity, feeling certain that there was little, if anything, that Talia could do
for her. Talia
was half-attracted, half-repelled by that shadowed mind. If this encounter had
taken place a year ago, she would have had no doubt but that she could have
accomplished something, but now? 258 MERCEDES
LACKEY But
having come, and having sensed this for herself, she could not turn away. She
half knelt, and half crouched, just within touching distance, on the dirty
wooden floor beside the woman. She let go of her frail barriers with a physical
shudder of apprehension, and let herself be drawn in. Kris
was more than a little afraid for her—knowing nothing, really, of how her Gift
worked, he feared it would be only too easy for her to be trapped by the
madwoman's mind—and then what would he do? Talia remained in that half-kneeling
stance for so long that Kris' own knees began to ache in sympathy. At length,
her breathing began to resume a more normal pace and her eyes slowly opened.
When she raised her head, Kris extended his hand to her and helped her to her
feet again. "Well?"
Tedric asked, not very hopefully. "The
gypsy family who died of snow-sickness two months ago—the ones in the Domesday
Book report; wasn't there a child left living?" she asked, her eyes still
a little glazed. "A
little boy, yes," Kris answered, as Tedric nodded. "Who
has him?" "Ifor
Smithwright; he wasn't particularly pleased, but somebody had to take the mite
in," Tedric said. "Can
you bring him here? Would this Smithwright have any objection if you found
another home for the child?" "He
wouldn't object—but here? Forgive me, but that sounds a bit mad." "It
is a bit mad," Talia said, slumping with weariness so that Kris couldn't
make out her expression in the shadows, "but it may take madness to cure
the mad. Just ... bring him here, would you? We'll see if my notion
works." Tedric
looked rather doubtful, but rode off and returned less than an hour later with
a warmly- ARROW'S
FLIGHT 259 wrapped
toddler. The child was colicky and crying to himself. "Now
get her out of the house; I don't care how," she told Tedric wearily,
taking the baby from him and soothing it into quiet. "But make sure that
she leaves that doll behind." Tedric
coaxed the Weatherwitch to follow him out with a bit of sweet, after persuading
her to leave her "infant" behind in the cradle by the smokey fire.
Talia slipped in when her back was turned. Seconds after that, a baby's wail
penetrated the walls of the cottage, and the madwoman started as if she'd been
struck. It was
the most incredible transformation Kris had ever seen. The half-crazed, wild
animal look left her eyes, and sense and intelligence flooded back in. In a few
seconds, she made the transition from "thing" to human. "J-Jethry?"
she faltered. The
baby cried again, louder this time. "Jethry!"
she cried in answer, and ran through the door. In the
cradle was the child Tedric had brought, perhaps something under a year old,
crying lustily. She scooped the child up and held it to her breast, holding it as
if it were her own soul given back to her, laughing and weeping at the same
time. No
sooner did her hands touch the child, when the last, and perhaps strangest
thing of all, happened. It stopped crying immediately, and began cooing back at
the woman. Talia
was not even watching; just sagging against the lintel, rubbing her temples.
The other two could only watch the transformation in bemusement. At last
the woman took her attention from the baby she held and focused on Talia. She
moved toward her hesitantly, and halted when she was a few steps away. "Herald,"
she said with absolute certainty, "you did 260 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 261 this—you
brought me my baby back. He was dead, but you found him again for me!" Talia looked
up at that, eyes like darker shadows on her face, and shook her head in denial.
"Not I, my lady. If anyone brought him back, it was you. And it was you
who showed me where to find him." The
woman reached out to touch Talia's cheek. Kris made as if to interfere, but
Talia motioned him away, signaling him that she was in no danger. "You
will reclaim what was yours," the Weatherwitch said tonelessly, her eyes
focused on something none of them could see, "and no one will ever shake
it from you again. You will find your heart's desire, but not until you have
seen the Havens. The Havens will call you, but duty and love will bar you from
them. Love will challenge death to reclaim you. Your greatest joy will be
preceded by your greatest sorrow, and your fulfillment will not be unshadowed
by grief." "
'There is no joy that has not tasted first of grief,' " Talia quoted
softly, as if to herself, so softly that Kris could barely hear the words. The
woman's eyes refocused. "Did
I say something? Did I see something?" she asked, confusion evident in her
eyes. "Was it the answer you were looking for?" "It
was answer enough," Talia replied with a smile. "But haven't you more
important things to think of?" "My
Jethry, my little love!" she exclaimed, holding the child closely, her
eyes bright with tears. "There's so much I have to do—to make it up to
you. Oh, Herald, how can I ever thank you enough?" "By
loving and caring for Jethry as much as you do now; and not worrying what
others may say about it," Talia told her, motioning to the other two to
leave, and following them quickly. "Bright
Havens!" Tedric exclaimed, a little uneasily, when they were out of
earshot of the cottage. "That
was like old tales of witchcraft and curse-lifting! What kind of strange magic
did you work back there?" "To
tell you the truth, I'm not very sure myself," Talia said, rubbing tired
eyes with the back of her hand. "When I touched her this morning, I seemed
to see a kind of—cord? tie?—something like that, anyway. It was binding her to
something, and I seemed to see that page in the report about the gypsies. I
know outlanders aren't terribly welcome here, so I took a chance that the
survivor wouldn't find a new home very easily. You confirmed what I guessed,
Tedric. And it just seemed to me that what she needed was a second chance to
make everything right. Am I making sense?" "More
sense than I hoped for. It's hardly possible that he could be—hers? Is
it?" Kris said hesitantly. "Kris,
I'm no priest! How on earth can I answer that? All I can tell you is what I saw
and felt. The little one is about the same age as hers would have been and they
certainly seem to recognize each other, if only as two lost ones needing love.
I won't hazard a guess after that." "This
is a terribly callous thing to ask, I know," Tedric said, looking a good
bit less anxious now that the "magic" was explained away as rational
common sense. "But—she won't lose her powers now that her mind is back,
will she?" "Set
your fears at rest; I think you and the people of Berrybay can count on their
Weatherwitch yet," Talia replied. "Speaking from personal experience,
I can tell you that such Gifts rarely lie back down to rest once you've roused
them. Look at what she said to me!" "
'Love will challenge death to reclaim you,' " Kris quoted.
"Strange—and rather ambiguous, it seems to me." "Prophecy
has a habit of being ambiguous," Tedric said wryly. "It's fortunate
that she's able to be more 262 MERCEDES
LACKEY exact
when it comes to giving us weather-warnings. Come now; you and Rolan are tired
and hungry, Talia, both of you. You deserve a good meal, and a good night's
rest before you take the road again," "And
prophecy to the contrary, my heart's desire at the moment is one of your
venison pies followed by a convivial quiet evening and a good sleep in your
featherbed, and I hardly think I need to seek out the Havens to find
that!" Talia laughed tiredly, linking arms with Tedric and Kris, while
Rolan followed behind. Well,
she had weathered this one. Now all she had to do was continue to survive. Seven "Well,
little bird," Kris said lazily. "It's almost Midsummer. You're
halfway done. Evaluation, please." Talia
picked idly at the grass beside her. "Is this serious, or facetious?" "Quite
serious." The sun
approached zenith, and a warm spot created when the white-gold rays found a gap
in the leaves of the tree overhead was planted just on Talia's right shoulder
blade. Insects droned in the long grass; occasionally a bird called, sleepily.
They were at the Station at the bottom of their Sector where they had first
entered, back last autumn. Today or the next day a courier-Herald would make a
rendezvous with them, bringing them the latest laws and news; until then, their
time was their own. They had been spending it in unaccustomed leisure. She
thought, long and hard, while Kris chewed on a grass stem, lying on his back in
the shade, eyes narrowed to slits. "It's
been horrid," she said finally, lying back and pillowing her head on her
arm. "I wish this past nine months had never happened. It's been awful,
especially when we first get into a town, and they've heard about me, but.
.." 263 264 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 265 "Hmm?"
he prompted when the silence had gone on too long. "But
. . . what if this . .. my Gift going rogue . .. had happened at Court? It
would have been worse." "You
would have been able to get help there," he pointed out, "better than
you've gotten from me." "Only
after I'd wrecked something. Gods, I hate to think—letting loose that storm in
a packed Court. . ." she shuddered. "At least I've got projection
under control consciously now, rather than instinctively. Even if my shields
aren't completely back." "Still
having shield problems?" "You
know so, you've seen me in crowds. There are times when I hate you for keeping
me out here, but then I realize that I can't go back until I have my shields
back. And we can't let anyone know about this mess until it's fixed; not even
Heralds." "So
you figured that out for yourself." "It
didn't take much; if people knew that the rumors were at least partially true,
they'd believe the rest of it. I've watched you playing protector for me every
time we meet another Herald. And there's something else. I can't go back until
I figure something out." "What?" "Not
just the 'how' of my Gift, but the 'why' and the 'when.' It's obsessing me,
because those rumors about manipulation come so close to the truth. I have used
my Gift to evaluate Councilors, and I have acted on that information. When does
it start becoming manipulation?" "I
don't know .. ." "Now
I'm more than half afraid to use the Gift." "Oh,
hell!" He flopped over onto his side, hair blowing into his eyes. "Now
that bothers me. Hellfire, none of this would have happened to you if I'd just
kept my mouth shut." "And
it might well have happened at a worse time—" "And
might not have." Those blue eyes bored into hers. "What's gone wrong
is as much my fault as yours." She had
no answer for him. "Well,
the situation went wrong, but I think we're turning it around," he said at
last. "I
hope so. I think so." "Well,
you're handling everything else fine." There
was an uneasiness under his words; she was sensitive enough now to tell that it
had something to do with her, personally, not her as a Herald. Oh,
Gods. She did her best to hide her dismay. She had done her level best to keep
their relationship on a friend/lover basis, and not let her Gift manipulate him
into infatuation, or worse. Most of the time she thought she'd succeeded—but
then came the times like these, the times when he looked at her with a shadowed
expression. She knew, now, that she didn't want anything more from him, for as
her need of him grew less, her feelings had mellowed into something very like
what she shared with Skif. But
what of him? "I
wonder what Dirk's up to," he said, out of the blue. "He's
Sector-riding this term, too." "If
he has any sense, being glad he's not having to eat your cooking." She
threw a handful of grass at him; he grinned back. "Tell me something, why
do you keep calling me 'little bird'?" "Good
question; it's Dirk's name for you. You remind him of a woodlark." "What's
a woodlark?" she asked curiously. "I've never seen one." "You
normally don't see them; you only hear them. Woodlarks are very shy, and you
have to know exactly what you're looking for when you're trying to spot one.
They're very small, brown, and blend almost perfectly with the bushes. For all
that they're not very striking, they're remarkably pretty in their own quiet
way. But he wasn't thinking about that 266 MERCEDES
LACKEY when he
named you; woodlarks have the most beautiful voices in the forest." "Oh,"
she said, surprised by the compliment, and not knowing quite how to respond. "I
can even tell you when he started using it. It was just after you'd fainted,
and he'd picked you up to carry you to your room. 'Bright Havens,' said he,
'she weighs no more than a little bird.' Then the night of the celebration,
when we all sang together, I caught him staring at you when you were watching
the dancers, and muttering under his breath—'A woodlark. She's a shy little
woodlark!' Then he saw me watching him, and glared for a minute, and said,
'Well, she is!' Not wanting to get my eyes blackened, I agreed. I would have
agreed anyway; I always do when he's right." "You
two," she said, "are crazy." "No
milady, we're Heralds. It's close, but not quite to the point of actual
craziness." "That
makes me crazy, too." "You
said it," he pointed out. "I didn't." Before
she could think of a suitable reply, they heard a hail from the path that led
to their Station and scrambled to their feet. It was their courier— and their
courier was Skif. "Welladay!"
he said, dismounting as they approached him. "You two certainly look hale
and healthy! Very much so, for a pair who were supposed to have come near
perishing in that Midwinter blizzard. Dirk was damned worried when I talked to
him." "If
you're going to be seeing him sometime soon, or can find a Bard to pass the
message, you can tell him that we're both fine, and the worst we suffered was
the loss of Talia's harpcase," Kris said with a laugh. "If?
Bright Havens, I haven't got any choice! I've been flat ordered to find him
when I'm done with briefing you, on pain of unspecified torture. You'd ARROW'S
FLIGHT 267 have
thought from the way he was acting that neither of you had the mother-wit to
save yourselves from a wetting, much less a blizzard." Kris
gave Talia another odd, sidelong glance. "You'd
best bring your Companion and whatever you've brought for us on up to the
Waystation," she said. "It's going to take you a while to pass
everything to us, and to make sure we've got it right." "A
while, O modest Talia? With you, I've got no fear that it'll take long,"
Skif grinned. "I know quite well that you can memorize faster than I can,
and Kris was my Farseeing teacher, so I know he's just as quick. I'll turn
Cymry loose and let her kick her heels up a little; I can lead the pack mule
afoot." "We'll
take her tack for you," Kris offered. "No use in you carrying it when
we're unburdened." Skif
accepted the offer gladly, and they strolled up the path toward the Station
together; Kris with the saddle and blanket balanced over one shoulder, Talia
with the rest of the tack, Skif with the saddlebags. "I've
brought you two quite a load," he told them as they approached the
station, "Both material and news. Hope you're ready." "More
than ready," Talia told him. "I'm getting pretty tired of telling the
same old tales." "Don't
I just know! Well, I've got plenty of news, personal and public, and more than
you may guess. Do you want your news first, or your packs?" "Both,"
Kris said with the charming smile of a child. "You can tell us the
personal news while we gloat over our goodies." "Why
not?" Skif chuckled. "I'll start with the Collegium and work my way
outward." The
first bit of news was that Gaytha and Mero had surprised nearly everyone by
suddenly deciding to wed. They had had themselves handfasted just before Skif
had left, and were to be wedded in the fall. Kris' jaw sagged over that piece
of news, but 268 MERCEDES
LACKEY Talia,
recalling things she'd seen over holidays while still a student, nodded without
much surprise. Keren
had broken her hip during the past winter. She'd slipped and taken a bad fall
trying to rescue a Companion foal from beneath a downed tree (the foal was
frightened silly, but otherwise emerged from the ordeal unscathed. The
same—obviously— could not be said for poor Keren). Sherrill had taken on
Keren's duties as riding instructor as well as her own scheduled classes. When
Keren's bones were healed, she decided that it was getting to be time to think
about training a successor anyway, so they were currently sharing the classes. Alberich
had at last retired from teaching all but the most advanced students; to no
one's surprise, he had appointed Jeri to take his place. Companions
had Chosen twenty youngsters this spring, the largest number yet. For the first
time in years the Collegium was completely full. No one knew whether there
should be rejoicing or apprehension over this sudden influx of Chosen; the last
time that the Collegium had been full had been in Selenay's father's time;
there had been the Tedrel Wars with Karse on the Eastern Border shortly
thereafter and every one of the students had been needed to replace those
Heralds that had sought the Havens when it was over. Elspeth
was doing unexpectedly well, and Talia rejoiced to hear it. Elcarth had taken
her heavy schedule and lightened it by a considerable amount, and she had
responded by working like a fiend incarnate on those classes that were left.
She seemed determined to prove that she was not ungrateful for the respite, and
that she did not intend to shirk her remaining responsibilities. There
was little news of the Court, but none of that was good. The rumor-mills had
been churning away; mostly working on the grist of Elspeth and the absent
Talia. About half of it was elaboration on the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 269 rumors
they already knew, the rest concerned Elspeth's supposed unfitness for the
Crown—that she was too pliant, too much of a hoyden, not bright enough— and too
dependent on the Heralds in general and Talia in particular to make all her
decisions for her. Kris
noted without comment the brief shadow of pain that veiled her face. "But
I've told anybody who's bothered to bring up the subject that whoever started
these tales had holes in his skull. Elspeth's nothing but a normal tomboy— like
Jeri, and they were perfectly willing to consider Jer as Heir! And I told 'em
nobody who knows you would even consider the idea that you might be misusing
your Gift! So that's that. All right, it's your turn," Skif ordered.
"You two have to tell me the whole tale of your blizzard. I've been
strictly charged by half the Circle to bring back every detail. If you leave
one thing out, I'm not entirely certain of my safety when I get back!" Kris
told most of it, from the plague at Waymeet to the arrival of Tedric—leaving
out the disintegration of Talia's control. "Sounds
grim," Skif said when they'd finished. "I'm surprised you didn't tear
each other's throats out—from boredom if nothing else. Of course, you were too
busy digging out to have time to be bored." Kris
inhaled his wine, and nearly choked to death trying to keep from laughing. Talia
covered her blushes by pounding his back— then took over the conversation with
a stern glance in his direction that almost sent him into another fit. "It
was a good thing we had the harp with us," she said, firmly restraining
the urge to set both her hands around his throat and strangle him. "Music
did a lot to keep us going. And we discovered something really strange, Skif.
Did you know that those stories the Northerners kept telling us about how
chiiras sing are true?" 270 MERCEDES
LACKEY "You've
been on circuit too long," he replied with a disbelieving grin. "She's
telling the truth, Skif," Kris asserted. "Chirras do sing—well, hum
is more like it. They do it intentionally, though, and I've heard worse
harmonics coming from human throats." "Can
you prove this? Otherwise I'm going to have a hard time convincing anyone else,
much less myself." "Are
you planning on spending the night with us?" "So
long as I'm not in the way." "You
can stay if you clean up dinner," Talia teased. "We'll cook for you,
but you'd better do your share of the work." "Anything
is better than having to eat my own cooking!" Skiff replied with a hearty
sigh. "When I was interning, Dirk absolutely refused to let me cook
anything after the first two meals I ruined. I don't blame him. I'm the only
person I know that can boil an egg for an hour, and have it turn out half
scorched and half raw." "Then
you'll get your demonstration after dinner." When
they had finished their evening meal, Talia called the chirras up from the lake
to the Waystation and gave the demonstration Skif had demanded. As the first
notes rose from the packbeasts' long throats, Skif s eyes widened in disbelief.
A quick look around, however, soon proved to him that there was no trickery
involved. After the first two songs he relaxed and admitted that he found the
wierd harmonics quite pleasant, if at first starding. When
they tired of singing, they began trading road-tales. Skif had by far the
largest stock of funny stories, since his assignment as courier put him in contact
with a wide variety of situations (in one case, he'd had to rescue his
contactee at the meeting point from an amorous and overly enthusiastic cow).
But in the midst of what Skiff had thought was one of his ARROWS
FLIGHT 271 more
amusing anecdotes, Talia suddenly excused herself and walked out into the night
with some haste. "Did
I say something wrong?" Skif said, bewildered, since she had been giving
every evidence of enjoying the story until then. "What's the matter with
her?" "I
have no more idea than you—" Kris started to say. Then he thought of
something. "Just
wait a moment." He closed his eyes and Mindcalled to Tantris. The answer
he got made him half-smile, although he spared a flash of pity for Talia. "She'll
be back in a little while," he told the puzzled Skif. "When she's
less—shall we say—uncomfortable." Skif
was annoyed. "Just what is that supposed to mean?" "Skif,
your Cymry's a mare." "That
was fairly obvious." "Rolan's
a stallion, a stallion that hasn't been near a Companion mare for several
months. Talia's Gift, in case you've forgotten, is Empathy; and unlike most of
us, she tells me that Rolan is always with her—'in the back of her head,' she
calls it." "What?"
Skif was bewildered; then realization dawned. "Oh-ho. I forgot a little
experiment we did. You can't shield out your Companion with a bond that tight,
can you?" "That's
it—not on that level, you can't. And with her Gift thrown in, it's even more .
. . overpowering. As I recall, you can barely Mindspeak, right? So you're
protected from Cymry's sporting. Needless to say, the same is not true for
Talia." SkiPs
chuckle was just a touch heartless. "Too bad your Tantris isn't a
mare." "I've
had that thought a time or two myself," Kris admitted, joining the
chuckle. Skif sobered abruptly. "Look—Kris, I know it's J 272 MERCEDES
LACKEY none of
my business, but are you and Talia—you know—?" "Damned
right it's none of your business," Kris said calmly. He'd been expecting
the question, assuming that Skif was only waiting to get him alone. "So
why are you asking?" "Kris,
it's part of my job to notice things. And I've noticed that while you aren't
cuddled up like courting doves, you're both a lot easier with each other than
I've ever seen either of you around anyone else." Skif paused, then
remained silent. "You
were obviously planning on saying more; go on." "I
owe Dirk. 1 owe him my life; by all rights he should have left us when Cymry
and I fell into that ravine while I was interning. He had no way of knowing we
were still alive, and the trail was washing out under him with every second he
stayed. But he didn't leave; he searched all through that downpour until he
found us, and if he hadn't, we wouldn't be here now. He's been acting damned
peculiar whenever anybody mentions Taiia. He was starting to act that way when
you two left, and it's gotten worse since then. Dear old
Tm-mdifferent-to-women' Dirk came close to tearing my heart out and feeding it
to me when I couldn't give him any more information about you two than
rumor—and I would bet my hope of the Havens that it wasn't over your welfare.
So if you two are more than friends, I want to know. Maybe I can break it to
him gently." "Oh,
Gods," Kris said weakly. "Oh Gods. I don't know, Skif—I mean, I know
how I feel, which is that I'm quite fond of her, and that's all; but I don't
know how she feels. I'm afraid to find out." "I
have the suspicion that there's a lot more going on here than you've told
me," Skif replied. "You want to make a full confession?" "Gods—I'd
better go back a few years—look, the reason Dirk pretends to be indifferent to
women is ARROW'S
FLIGHT 273 because
he was so badly hurt by one that he came within a hair of killing himself. It
was that bitch, Lady Naril; it was when we were first assigned to Court. She
wanted me, I wasn't having any. So she used Dirk to get at me." "Don't
tell me—she played the sweet innocent on him. She tried working that one on me,
but I'd had warning." "I
wish Dirk had. By the time I knew what was happening, it was too late. He was
flopping like a stranded fish. She used him to set up a meeting between us; and
at that point she handed me an ultimatum; either I became her lap-dog, or she
would make Dirk's life hell for him. Unfortunately she hadn't counted on the
fact that Dirk was jealous as well as devoted. He'd stayed within earshot, and
he heard the whole thing." "Good
Gods!" Skif couldn't manage more than that. "Verily."
Kris closed his eyes, trying to shut out the memory of how Dirk had looked when
he confronted them. It had been ghastly. Even his eyes had been dead. But what
had followed had been worse. Kris had made a hasty exit, and when he'd gone,
Naril had taken Dirk to pieces. If only he'd known, he'd never have left them
alone— "But—" "He
was shattered; absolutely shattered. I think it was only Ahrodie that kept him
from throwing himself in the river that night. Now you tell me he's acting
like—" "Like
a man with a lifebond, if you want to know the truth. He's close to being
obsessed." "Talia
was showing signs of the same thing, but now—I just don't know, Skif.
We—started sleeping together during that blizzard. There were a lot of other
complications that I can't go into, and now I don't know how she feels. But I'm
mortally afraid she's gotten fixated on me." 274 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROWS
FLIGHT 275 And he
was Dirk's best friend. Gods, Gods, it was happening all over again— "Well,
what are you going to do about it?" Skif asked. "I'm
going to break it off, that's what, before it gets too serious to be broken
off. If it is a lifebond, once the infatuation is nipped in the bud, she'll
swing back to Dirk like a compass needle. But for Lord's sake, don't let Dirk
know about any of this." Kris rubbed his forehead, feeling almost sick
with remorse. "No
fear of that—" Skif broke off what he was saying to nod significantly in
the direction of the door behind Kris. Talia
entered and resumed her abandoned seat, looking much cooler and more composed. "Better?"
Kris asked in a sympathetic undertone. "Much,"
she sighed, then faced Skif. "As for you, you troublemaker, I hope you're
prepared to cosset a pregnant Companion in another couple of months!" "Now
Talia," he chortled heartlessly, "Cymry's been at her games with
every stallion I've rendezvoused with, and nothing like that has happened
yet." "Every
other stallion wasn't Rolan," she said with a wry twist to her lips.
"Serves you right, too, for not warning me, you smug sadist. Or don't you
remember your history, and the extraordinary fertility of Grove
stallions—-particularly the Companion of the Queen's Own?" "Kernos'
Spear! I never once thought of that!" Both
Kris and Talia laughed at the expression on Skif s face. "I'd
be willing to bet a full wineskin that Cymry didn't think of that either,"
Kris added. "You
just won," Skif said, reaching behind him into his pile of belongings, and
throwing a leather bottle at the other Herald. "Oh, well—no harm without a
trace of good. This will keep me off the road, but it will also keep me from
having to do my own cooking.
I'd better start thinking of ways to make myself useful around the Court and
Collegium. Hope Teren likes being courier—he's the only one free at the moment,
now that the new babies are done with Orientation." He
settled into his bedroll with a much bemused expression. The
next day was involved in memorizing all Skif had to impart to them. When both
of them were letter-perfect, in the early afternoon, Skif packed up the few
bits he had of his own personal gear and supplies, and headed back the way he'd
come. "How
much did you tell him?" Talia asked, watching him depart. "Only
that we've had some complications I can't go into; I had to tell him, he
noticed you weren't looking too well. That's all." He gave her yet another
of those odd, sidelong glances. "Lord—poor
Elspeth, facing those damned rumor-mongers all by herself! Gods—I need to be
there— and I can't be there—" "That's
right. You can't. Going back now won't do you any good, and might do her
harm." "I
know, but it doesn't stop me from wanting to—" "Look
at it this way—with all the rumors that are bound to start about me and you,
maybe they'll forget about the others." "Oh,
Gods—" she blushed, "—have I no privacy?" "Not
as a Herald, you don't." They
walked back to the Station; Kris was brooding about something, Talia could see
it in the closed expression he wore, and sense it in the unhappy unease that
lurked below the surface of his thoughts. It was
an unease she shared. She couldn't tell exactly what was bothering him—except
that it had to do with her and with Dirk. She wondered if this was a sign that
her worst fear was true, that he had become far more involved with her than
he'd intended. 276 MERCEDES
LACKEY She
didn't want to hurt his feelings—but damn it all, it wasn't him she wanted! If
only he'd talk to her. .. . They
read their letter-packets in silence; Talia's was mostly brief notes, and not
very many of them. But the last letter had Talia very puzzled; it was enormous,
from the thickness of the packet, and yet she couldn't recognize the
handwriting on the outside. She frowned at it, recalling for a moment the evil
days when virulent and anonymous letters were a daily occurrence. Then she
steeled herself and broke open the seal, telling herself that there was no
reason why she shouldn't pitch it into the fire if it turned out to be of that
ilk. To her
shock and delight, it was from Dirk. The
actua! letter was not very long, and the phrasing was stilted and formal, yet
just to know that he'd written it gave her a delightfully shivery feeling. The
content was simple enough; he hoped that her close association with his partner
would lead to a closer friendship among the three of them, since they all
shared the common interest of music. It was in light of this common interest
that he had (he said) made bold to write her. He had been assigned to the
Sector that contained most of the Kingdom's papermills and printing houses and
was the headquarters of the Printer's and Engraver's Guild. This meant that
music and books that were difficult to obtain elsewhere were relatively common
there. He had bought himself a great deal of new music, and had thought that
Talia and Kris should have copies also. It was
what he hadn't said" that both excited and worried Talia. The letter was
so bland that it could have reflected either polite indifference to her, or
been an attempt to conceal the same sort of obsession that she was feeling. Still,
it was definitely odd for him to have sent the music manuscripts to Talia
instead of to Kris. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 277 Kris
coughed uneasily, and she looked up to meet his
eyes. "What's
the matter?" she asked. "Dirk's
letter," he replied, "I'm usually lucky to get a page, maybe two—but
this approaches perilously the size of an epic!" "That's
odd." "That's
an understatement. He rattles on about nothing like a granny-gossip at a Fair,
and it's what he doesn't write about that's the most interesting. He dances
verbally about doing his very best to avoid the subject of my internee. That's
not easy to do in a letter this size! He doesn't mention you until the very
end, and then only to say that he's sent you some music that we all might like
to try together some time. It's as if he's afraid to write your name for fear
he'll give something away." Talia
swallowed a lump that had suddenly appeared in her throat. "Here's
the music he sent," she replied, handing him the packet. "Bright
Havens, this must have cost him a fortune!" Kris began sorting it into two
piles, one for each of them—when something slipped out from amid the music
manuscripts. "Hm?
What's this?" He picked it up; it seemed to be a slim book bound in brown
leather. He leafed through it. "This—without
any doubt—is intended for you," he said soberly, handing it to her. It was
a book of ballads, among them, the long version of "Sun and Shadow." "How
do you know he didn't buy it for himself?" she asked doubtfully. "Or
you?" "Because
I happen to know he has two copies of that same book, both bound in blue, which
happens to be his favorite color. One he keeps at his room, the other travels
with him. And he knows I have the book, I'm the one that showed it to him. No,
it's no 278 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 279 accident
that this was among the manuscripts—and it's undoubtedly the reason why he sent
them to you instead of me." "But—" "Talia,
I have to talk to you. Seriously." Gods—here
it came. "I—"
he began, looking almost tortured. "Look, I like you a lot. I think you're
one of the sweetest ladies to wear Whites. And I probably should never have let
you get involved with me." "What?"
she said, unable for a moment to comprehend what he was trying to say. "Dirk
is worth twenty of me," he continued doggedly, "and if you stop to
think about it, you'll realize I'm right about that. You're seeing more in our
relationship than exists—than can exist. I just can't give you anything more
than friendship, Talia. And I can't let you ruin your life and Dirk's by
letting you go on thinking—" "Wait
just a damned minute here," she interrupted him. "You think that I'm
infatuated with )>ou?" He
looked surprised by her reaction. "Of course," he replied—in an
insultingly matter-of-fact tone. All the
tension that had been building up inside her came to a head. She'd been putting
up with his occasional air of superiority, the slight condescension he used
whenever later evidence proved that some decision of his that she'd opposed
turned out to be right. And there was an underlying resentment on her part at
his unvoiced attitude that getting her Gift under control was now largely a
matter of "will" and not the slow rebuilding of something that had
been shattered past recognition. It was
that "of course" that had been the spark to set the pyre alight. She
turned on him angrily, fists clenching unconsciously. "Of course? Just
because every other female falls languishing at your feet? You think I've no
mind of my own?" "Well,"
he replied, taken aback, and obviously intending to try to say something to
placate her. "You—you—"
she was at a total loss for words. All this time, she'd been wasting, worrying
about him, about hurting his feelings. And he had been blithely assuming that
just because she'd been sleeping with him, she was obviously going to be
fixated on him. Even now, he was still bewildered, perfect features blank with
perfect astonishment. She
pulled back her right arm, and landed a perfect punch right on the end of that
perfect chin. Kris
found himself staring up at her from the ground in front of the Station door,
with a jaw that felt dislocated. "You
conceited peacock! Humor me, will you? At least—" she snarled "—you
can't accuse me of misusing my Gift this time!" He
lifted one hand and felt along his jawline, a little dazed. "No. That was
a physical attack, all right . .." But by
the time he answered, she had turned on her heel and stalked off toward the
tiny lake, into the darkness. By the time he gathered his wits and came after
her, there was no sign of her beyond a little pile of clothing next to the
blankets they'd spread there earlier in the day. Now he
was beginning to become angry—after all, he hadn't meant to insult her!—and a
Tittle worried, as well. He began stripping off his own clothing to go in after
her. As he waded in through the shallows, he saw something moving across the
lake, coming toward him. Before he had any idea of what she intended, she
pulled both his legs out from beneath him and yanked him under the water.
Coughing and spluttering, he broke the surface again to see her bobbing just
out of reach. She was
laughing at him. "Bitch!"
he yelled, and dove furiously after her. 280 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 281 But
when he reached the place where she had been, she was gone, and the surface of
the pond was undisturbed. He peered around in the dim light, trying to locate
her, when hands grasping his ankles gave him just enough warning to hold his
breath this time. Once again he was pulled under, and once again she escaped
without his laying a finger on her. This
time when he surfaced and gasped for air, he did not immediately set out after her.
When he didn't move, she called mockingly, "That's not going to save you,
you know," and dove under, vanishing. He
waited for her to surface, ready to catch her before she'd fully located him.
When she didn't, he waited for currents that would tell him she was somewhere
nearby, beneath the water. Nothing
happened, and he began to be a little concerned. She'd been under an awfully
long time. He struck out for the spot where he'd last seen her. He had
no sooner begun to move when she erupted from the water immediately behind him.
Hands on his shoulders drove him under. He kicked free and came thrashing back
up, tcrfind her a bare fingerlength out of reach. "Infatuated
fool, am I? Stupid, am I? Then why can't you catch me?" He
kicked off after her, windmilling the surface energetically. She didn't seem to
be expending half the effort he was, yet she sped through the water with ease,
remaining out of reach with a laziness that galled. From time to time she'd
vanish altogether, and this was the signal that he'd better hold his breath,
because shortly after her disappearance he would find himself pushed or pulled
under the surface again. And no
matter how hard he tried, he couldn't catch her even then. Finally
he took refuge in the shallows, and waited for her
to follow. Now he was angry; humiliated, and angry, and ready to take her
apart. She
rose, dripping, out of the water just out of reach. He glared at her— And
suddenly realized he'd put himself in a worse position than before. He was
stark naked—he could probably pound her into the ground like a tent peg if he
could get his hands on her—but if she could get even the tiniest amount of
leverage to get a knee in— Oh, she
could hurt him. Anger,
frustration, and acute embarrassment chased each other around inside of him
until he was nearly vibrating with conflicting impulses—while she glared back,
just as angry as he was. Until something of his inner confusion communicated
itself to her—and she collapsed to her knees, laughing helplessly. His
anger ran away like water. He was
completely exhausted; when anger stopped giving him an energy boost, he felt
it. He turned his back on her, climbed out of the water, and dragged himself
onto the waiting blanket without bothering to reach for a towel or his
clothing. As he
lay face down, panting, he heard footsteps behind him. "No
more—please!" he groaned. "You've won; I've lost. I'm an idiot. And a
boor. Truce!" "You
give up too easily." Talia laughed deep in her throat, like a cat purring,
"And you deserved what you got. Keren's right; every so often you start to
think you can have everything your own way, and you ought to have a
lesson." She sat
down beside him, and he moved his head enough to see that she'd donned her
short undershift and was toweling her hair vigorously. "Where
did you ever learn to swim like that?" "Sherrill,"
she replied. "Oh, I've been able to swim since I was very little, but my
efforts were a lot like yours; loads of thrashing to little purpose. After the 282 MERCEDES
LACKEY time I
was dumped in the river, Alberich detailed Sherrill to teach me the efficient
way to swim, and how to keep from drowning under most conditions. Next winter
she gave me a 'final exam' by pushing me off the bridge fully clothed.
Obviously, I passed— though a pair of my boots is still probably residing at
the bottom of the river. Good thing I'd almost outgrown them." "Remind
me never to anger either of you while swimming." "Count
Keren in on that, too. She's just as good. Poor, abused Kris." He could
almost see her eyes sparkling with mischief. "Are you half-drowned?" "Three-quarters.
And completely worn out." "Forgive
me, but I doubt that." She ran a delicate finger along his spine. He
gritted his teeth and remained unmoving, trying his best to ignore the
shivery-pleasant sensations she was causing. When he didn't respond, except for
goose bumps, she simply laughed again, and began stroking him delicately from
neck to knees. He was
determined not to yield, and held himself as quiet as possible. "Stubborn,
hmm?" she chuckled. Before
he had any notion of what she intended, she began fondling him in such a way
that his original intentions went flying off in every direction. "Witch!"
he said fiercely, and flipped over so quickly that he managed to get her pinned
beneath him. "I
thought you were supposed to be worn out." "I'll
show you how worn out I am," he muttered, and began tormenting her in
return, playing teas-ingly with every part of her that he could reach. She
simply chuckled throatily and returned kind for kind. He held out as long as he
physically could—but the conclusion was foregone. It left them both dripping
with sweat, and drained as well as sated. "Lord
of Lights," he said when he was able to speak. "If that's an example
of what Rolan does to ARROW'S
FLIGHT 283 you,
I'm glad Tantris isn't a mare! By the time we finished this circuit, I'd be
worn to a shadow." Instead
of replying, she sighed, rose, and took the few steps to the water's edge,
plunging gracefully back into the pond. When
she returned, clean and dripping, she seemed to have regained a more tranquil
mood. Kris took a brief dip himself, and by the time he got back she was dry
again, wearing her sleeveless tunic against the cooling breeze. He dried
himself off and handed her the bottle Skif had left with them. She took a long
pull at it and gave it back. "So
it's Midsummer's Eve, hmm? We never celebrated Midsummer on the Holdings,"
she said, "And I was always at the Collegium during holidays after I was
Chosen." "Not
celebrate Midsummer? Why not?" he asked in surprise. "Because,
according to the Elders, it has no religious significance and is only a
frivolous and lewd excuse for licentiousness. That's a quote, by the way. What
do people usually do, Midsummer's Eve?" "Your
Elders have a little right on their side." He couldn't help smiling.
"On Midsummer's Eve at sunset, there are picnics in the woods. People
always begin in large groups, but by this time of night they've usually paired
off. The excuse to sleep out tonight is that you need to sleep in the forest in
order to find the freshest flowers in the morning. Believe it or not, when
morning arrives, people do manage to pick flowers." She
took a long pull on the bottle. "For their lady-loves?" She probably
hadn't meant it to sound cynical, but it did. Kris
was too tired to take offense. "No, for every female, no matter who.
There's no female of any age that lacks a garland or bouquet; those that have
no relatives get them from anyone that can claim the remotest acquaintance with
them. No one is left out, P 284 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 285 old or
young. Women who have been or are about to be mothers get baskets of fruit as
well. That day there are more picnics in the woods—family picnics, this time,
with a bit more decorum—and music and tales in the evening. Bards love it;
they're sure to leave with their pockets full of coin, their hair full of
flowers, and a young lady or gentleman on each arm. It's rather like a
Birthing-Day celebration, but on a bigger scale." "Holderfolk
don't celebrate Birthing-Days either— except to deliver a lecture on
responsibility," she said tonelessly. "When
is your Birthing-Day?" he asked curiously. "Midsummer's
Eve. Tonight. Which is no doubt why Fm such a demon-child, having had the bad
taste to be born on such a licentious night." "So
that's why you've been so off-color!" Kris snatched at the excuse to turn
her mood around. "You should have told me!" "Fm
being more than a bit of a bitch, aren't I? Fm sorry. First I get mad and knock
you down, then I make a fool out of you, knowing damn well that I could
probably swim rings around you, then I half-drown you, and I conclude by doing
my best to ruin the rest of the evening by being sour. I'm being rotten, and I
apologize." "You've
put up with my moods often enough. You're entitled to have off times
yourself." "Well
I think I've caught up for the next hundred years or so." "Fm
sorry I didn't talk to you about—you and me—before," he said, as the
bottle came and went. "I
wish you had. You've been leaving me in knots because / was afraid I'd
manipulated you into being fixated on me. I couldn't imagine why you'd be
making love to me unless it was because my Gift had warped you. I'm not exactly
the gods' gift to men. And I've been mostly a problem to you on this
trip." "Oh,
Gods—" He was at a complete loss for words for a
long time. Finally he handed her the bottle, and caught her hand when she moved
to take it. "Talia, you are a completely lovable and lovely person; I care
for you because you deserve it, not because your Gift manipulated me. Dirk may
well be lifebonded to you—and if that's true, I couldn't be happier. It would
satisfy one of my dearest wishes, that both of you should find partners who
deserve you. And if those partners should be each other— that would make me one
of the happiest people in this Kingdom." "I—"
she said hesitantly, "I don't know quite what to say." "Just
don't hit me again. That's one response to being at a loss for words I'd rather
you didn't repeat. Now, what else is bothering you?" "I'm
tired. I'm tired of having to struggle for what seems to come easily to
everyone else. I'm tired of having responsibility for the whole damned Kingdom
on my back. Fm tired of being alone, and fighting my battles alone." "Well—" "Look,
I know it has to be this way, but I don't have to smile and pretend I like it!
And last of all, I'm feeling rotten because nobody has ever given me a
Midsummer garland or a Birthing-Day present." "Makes
sense." The
bottle was more than half empty; they'd shared it equally, and Kris was
beginning to see things through a very delightful haze. "How
does it make sense?" she demanded irritably. "Because
if you could have what you wanted, you wouldn't be upset, but you can't so you
are." It seemed like a brilliant deduction to Kris, and he examined the
statement with delight. Talia
shook her head as she tried to reason it out. "That just doesn't come out
right, somehow," she complained. 286 MERCEDES
LACKEY "It
will after another drink." He passed her the bottle. When
the last drop of liquor was gone, so was her ill temper. "I—am
fairy—very—glad that we've got something to shleep— sleep on right here,"
Kris said carefully, "Ish—it's much nicer, you can see the stars, and I
can't walk anymore anyway." "Stars
are nice," she agreed. "Not moving's nicer." "See
the Wain?" "Who?" "The
Wain—those stars jusht over the big pine there. Five for the bed ln the axle,
two for th' wheels, three for th' tongue." "Wait
a minute," she peered at the stars, trying to get them to form up
properly, and was delighted when she finally did. "What's the rest of
'em?" "Right
next t' the Wain's the Hunter. There's the two little stars for his belt, two
more for 's shoulders, four for's legs—" He realized by her steady
breathing that she had fallen asleep. He
reached over for the second blanket and covered them both with it, without
disturbing his floating head much. He lay back, intending to think a litde—but
a little thinking was all he managed, since he, too, was soon drowsing. The
next morning he woke before she did, and remembered the conversation of the
night before. He moved very carefully, hoping that he wouldn't wake her, and on
being successful moved off into the woods on a private search. Talia
woke to an incredibly subtle perfume wreathing around her. She opened
sleep-blurred eyes to see where it was coming from, to discover that someone
had placed a bouquet by her head. "What?"
she said sleepily, trying to think why there should be flowers beside her.
"Who?" "A
joyous Midsummer to you, Herald Talia, and a ARROW'S
FLIGHT 287 wonderful
Birthing-Day as well," Kris said cheerfully from a point behind her.
"It's a pity that more of your friends couldn't deliver trifles, but
you'll have to admit that we are a bit far from most of them. I trust you'll
accept this one as a token of my profound apology for insulting you last night.
I didn't intend to." "Kris!"
she exclaimed, as she sat up and took up the flowers, breathing the exquisite
fragrance with hedonistic delight. "You didn't need to do this—" "Ah,
but I did. It wouldn't be Midsummer unless I gathered at least one bouquet.
Besides, that scent you're enjoying is supposed to be a sovereign remedy for
hangover." "Is
it?" she laughed. "I
have no idea," he admitted. "Part of my hangover always includes a
stopped-up nose. Look at the stems, why don't you?" Holding
the bouquet together was a silver ring, of a design of two hands clasped
together. It was the token a Herald only gave to the friends he loved best. "Kris—I
don't know what to say—" "Then
say 'Thank you, Kris, and I accept your apology.' " "Thank
you, love, and I do accept your apology—if you'll accept mine." "I
would be only too pleased to," he said, giving her a cheerful grin.
"Dear heart, I'd intended to give you that at Midwinter, but since you
said you'd never had a Birthing-Day gift, the opportunity was too good to pass
by. And it had damn well better fit— you wouldn't believe how hard it is to get
someone's ring size without them knowing! It goes on the right hand, little
bird; the left is reserved for another purpose." Talia
slipped it on, vowing to discover when Kris' Birthing-Day was so as to return
the gesture with 288 MERCEDES
LACKEY interest.
"It's perfect," she said as he sat down next to her with a very
pleased expression. She
threw her arms around him, completely happy for the first time in months, and
opened a tiny channel of rapport deliberately so that he could know what she
couldn't say in words. "Hoo—that's
as intoxicating as what we were drinking last night, little bird!" She
took the hint and closed the channel down again, but she could tell that he had
enjoyed the brief thrill. "What
are these flowers? I've never smelled anything so wonderful in my life! I think
I could live on the scent alone." "A
little deep-woods northern flower that only blooms at this time of year. It's
called 'Maiden's Hope.' I thought you might like it." "I
love it." She continued to breathe in the scent of the flowers with her
eyes half-shut. Kris thought with amusement that she looked rather like a young
cat in her first encounter with catmint, and told her so. "I
can't explain it—it smells like sunrise, like a perfect spring day, like the
heart's desire—" "How
about like breakfast?" he replied comically. "Breakfast?
Oh well, if that's your heart's desire—" She laughed at him and rose
smoothly to her feet. "It is my turn, so I guess I'd better reward you for
being so outrageously nice to me after I tried to murder you last night." "And
since you seem so enamored of those flowers, I'll see that you have some in
your wedding garland if I have to nurture them in a hothouse myself." "I
thought you had a black thumb." She removed one of the creamy white
blossoms and tucked it behind one ear. "For
you, little bird, my thumb will turn green. I ARROW'S
FLIGHT 289 never
break my promises if I can help it, and this is one I definitely intend to
keep." "Then
I'd better keep my promise of breakfast. Where will I get my flowers if I let
you wither away of starvation?" They
gathered their scattered belongings and returned arm-in-arm to the Waystation. Twelve Geese
honked overhead, heading south. It had been one of those rare, glorious golden
autumn days—far too lovely a day to spend indoors, so Talia and Kris had been
hearing petitions stationed behind a wooden trestle table set out in front of
the inn door. Their last petitioner had been a small boy leading a very large
plowhorse, and he had given them a message. Talia
scanned the letter, and handed it without comment to Kris. He read it in
silence, while the scruffy child who had brought it scuffed his feet uneasily
through the pile of golden leaves at his feet. Kris
returned the message to her, as she braced her arm on the rough wood of the
trestle table and leaned her chin on one hand. "How long ago did all this
happen?" she asked the boy. "
'Bout two days," he said, combing dark hair out of his eyes with his
fingers. "Feud, though, tha's been on years. Wouldn't be s'bad this time
'cept fer th' poisoned well. Tha's why granther sent me. Reckons in settlin'
now, 'for somebody gets killed." Talia
looked up at the position of the sun, and added figures in her head. "I'm
for riding out now," she said, finally. "Advice?" Kris
brushed more leaves off the table, and glanced back over his shoulder at the
inn behind them. "We 290 ARROWS
FLIGHT 291 don't
have any more petitions to be heard, but riding out to a place that isolated is
going to take the rest of the afternoon. We'll have to ride half the night to
make up the time, and we won't have the chance to reprovision until we get to
Knowles Crossing." Talia's
shields chose that moment to go down; she felt the boy's anxiety with enough
force to make her nauseous while she fought them back into place. She couldn't
manage more than half strength; could still feel the child fretting after they
were up. "I take it that means you think we should reprovision now, and
wait until tomorrow morning." "More
or less." "Well,
I don't agree; let's wrap things up here and move out." She
could feel his disapproval as they followed behind the child, perched like a
toy on the back of an enormous, thick-legged horse that was more used to
pulling a plow than being ridden. "You
let the boy manipulate you," he said, finally, as their mounts and chirras
kicked up swirls of leaves. "I
didn't. A poisoned well is a serious business out here. It indicates a
situation gone out of control. Are you willing to have deaths on your
conscience because we dallied a day, buying supplies?" She whispered, but
her tone was angry. He
shrugged. "My opinion doesn't matter. You are the one giving the
orders." She
seethed. They argued frequently these days— now and again it was something a
bit more violent than an argument. Kris often seemed to take a stand opposing
hers just for sheer obstinacy. "You
bastard," she said as the reason occurred to her. The boy looked back at
her, startled. She lowered her voice. "You are just opposing me to see if
1 can be manipulated, aren't you?" He
grinned, ruefully. "Sorry, love. It was part of my orders. Including
manufacturing emotions, since you can sense them. Face it, if anybody is going
to be 292 MERCEDES
LACKEY able to
warp your decisions, it would be your counselor. But now that you know—" "You
can stop giving me headaches," she replied tartly. "Now, let's get
down to business." "You
could have used your Gift back there," he said, as they settled at last
into their bed. It had taken a long, hard ride through the moonless, frosty
night to reach their Station once the feud had been settled. And it had taken a
lot of negotiating to get it settled. "I—I
still haven't figured out the ethics of it," she answered slowly.
"Having it, and having people's emotional states shoved in my face is bad
enough. I still don't really know when it's right to use it." "Damn.
What if it had been the only way to take care of the problem? Then what would
you have done?" Kris was worried about this; he was afraid that if an
emergency arose and the only way to deal with it was by exercising that Gift,
she might well freeze. And if it came to using it offensively, the likelihood
of her freezing was all the greater. "I
don't know." A long pause, as she settled her head on his shoulder.
"The only other people I know of with Empathy are Healers—and they are
never going to come into contact with the situations / have to deal with. Where
are the boundaries?" He
sighed, and held her; that being the only comfort he could offer her. "I
don't know either, little bird. I just don't know." Kris
leaned his aching head against the cold stone mantelpiece of the Station
fireplace. This had not been a good day. By now the rumors about her had spread
everywhere they went. Although this was not their first visit to Langenfield,
the villagers met Talia with unease and a little fear—and often wearing
evil-eye talismans; they were obviously uncomfortable with her judgment and her
abilities. ARROWS
FLIGHT 293 Talia
had given no impression of anything but confidence, intelligence, and
rock-steady trustworthiness, despite the fact that Kris knew that she had been
trembling inside from the moment she passed the village gates. This
situation had been one she'd had to face over and over again, every time they
entered a new town. He felt
Talia's hand touch his shoulder. "I'm the -one that should have the
headache," she said softly, "not you." "Dammit,
I wish you'd let me do something about this—" "What?
What can you do? Give them a lecture? I have to win their trust, and win it so
firmly that all their mistrust starts to look foolish in their own eyes." "I
could make it seem like I'm the one taking the lead." "Oh,
that's a great idea. Then all they'll do is wonder if I'm manipulating you like
a puppet," she retorted bitingly. "Then
I could back you up, dammit!" He met her anger with anger of his own. They
glared at each other like a pair of angry cats, until Talia broke the tension
by glancing down. Kris followed her glance to see that her hands were clenched
into tight fists. "Damn.
I was all set to give you another love-pat, wasn't I?" she asked,
chagrined. "This—Gods, between my shields being erratic, and having to
face this same situation over and over—I'm like a harpstring tuned too
high." Kris
forcibly relaxed his own tight muscles, including his fists. "I should
know better than to provoke you. Intellectually, I understand. You have to face
the battle and win it on your own. But emotionally— it's a strain on both of
us, and I can't stop wanting to help." "That's
why I love you, peacock," she said, putting both hands around his face and
kissing him. "And— 294 MERCEDES
LACKEY Havens!
Wait here—it's been such a rotten day, I totally forgot!" He
stared after her in puzzlement, as she dashed out the Station door and
returned, brushing snow from her shoulders. "I left this in a pocket on my
saddle so I wouldn't forget it—and then I go and forget it!" She pressed a
tiny, wrapped parcel in his hand. "Happy Birthing-Day." "How
did you—" He was surprised. "I—" "Unwrap
it, silly." She looked inordinately pleased with herself. It was
a ring, identical to the one he'd given her months ago. "I—" He
swallowed the lump that had appeared in his throat. "I don't deserve
this." "In
a pig's eye! You've earned it a dozen times, and more, even if you do tempt me
to kill you once a week." "Only
once a week?" He managed a grin to match hers. "You're
improving—or I am. Now I did remember to get a nice fresh pair of quail,
honeycake, and a very good bottle of wine." She slid her arms around his,
stood on tiptoe, and kissed the end of his nose. "Now, shall we make this
a proper Birthing-Day celebration, or not?" Now
came the stop she was dreading above all the others; Hevenbeck. There
hadn't been a more pleasant winter afternoon on this entire trip; cold,
crystal-clear air, sunlight so pure it seemed white, a cloudless and vibrant
blue sky above the leafless, white boughs of the grove of birch they were
passing through. Snow on the ground sparkled; the air felt so clean and crisp
it was almost like drinking chilled wine. Talia let the cheer of the day and of
the others elevate her own spirits; after all, there was no reason to think
that the people of Hevenbeck would be any worse than the rest of what she'd
dealt with. It was unlikely in the ARROWS
FLIGHT 295 extreme
that anyone except the old miser and his wife would remember her or that she'd
nearly let her own troubles distract her from what could have become a serious
situation. They
were several miles from Hevenbeck, when Talia was suddenly struck by a wall of
fear, pain, and rage. She reeled in her saddle, actually graying out as Kris
steadied her. She came back to herself feeling as if she'd been hit with a
warhammer. Kris
was still holding her, keeping her from falling off of Rolan's back.
"Kris—" she gasped, "FarSee to Hevenbeck—" Then it
was her turn to steady him, as he willed himself into deep trance. Her head
still rang with the fierce anguish of the emotions she'd encountered; she
breathed deeply of the crisp air to try and clear it, and clamped down her
shields—and for once, they actually worked, right up to full strength. It
hardly seemed as if he'd dropped into his trance before he was struggling up
out of it again, blinking his eyes in confusion. "Northern
raiders—" he said with difficulty, still fogged with trance, "—though
how they got past Sorrows—" "Damn!
And no help nearer than two days. How many?" "Fifteen,
maybe twenty." "Not
too many for us to handle, I don't think—" "I'd
hoped you would ride your internship without seeing any fighting," he said
hesitantly. She
jumped down off Rolan and headed for the chirras, her feet cruching in the snow.
"Well, we haven't got a choice; trouble's there, we'd better deal with
it." "Talia,
I'm just a Herald, but you're the only Queen's Own we've got—" "I
also shoot better than you do," she said crisply, sliding his sword and
dagger out of his pack and reaching over the chirra's furry back to hand them 296 MERCEDES
LACKEY ARROW'S
FLIGHT 297 to him.
"If it'll make you feel any better, I promise not to close in for
hand-to-hand unless I have to. But you handed over responsibility, and unless
you overrule me, I say I'm going. Ten to fifteen aren't too many for both of
us—but they could be for one alone." "All
right." Kris began strapping his weapons on, while Talia led the chirras
off the road entirely. With snow creaking beneath her feet, she took them into
the heart of a tangled evergreen thicket out of view of the roadway. There she
tethered them lightly, the scent of bruised needles sharp in her nostrils, and
backed out, breaking the snow-cake to powder and brushing it clear of footprints
with a broken branch. She
laid a gloved hand lightly on Rolan's neck, as his breath steamed in the cold
air. "Tell them to stay there until dark, loverling," she murmured.
"If we're not back by then, they can pull themselves loose and head back to
the last village." Rolan
snorted, his breath puffing out to hang in front of his nose, and stared
fixedly at the thicket. "Ready?" He
tossed his head. "How
about you?" She looked to Kris, whose face was pale, and whose mouth was
set and grim. "We'd
better hurry. They were about to break down the gate." She
stripped the bridle bells from both sets of harness, and vaulted into the
saddle with a creaking of leather. "Let's do it." They
made no effort to come up quietly, just set both Companions to a full gallop
and hung on for dear life. White hills and black trees flashed past them; twice
the Companions vaulted over fallen tree-trunks that the villagers had not yet
cleared away from the roadbed. As they galloped up over the last hill, the sun
revealed the plight of the village in merciless detail; black of ash, red of
blood, orange of flame, all in high contrast against the trampled snow. The
raiders were just breaking through the palisade gate as they came galloping up.
Enormous iron axes swung high, impacting against the tough iron-oak of the gate
with hollow thuds. The noise the bandits were making covered the approach of
the two Heralds entirely, between the sound of the axes against the wood and
the war-cries they were shrieking. Three or four of their number lay dead
outside the palisade, blood soaking into the snow about them. The gate came
down just as the Heralds got into arrow-range—most of the rest surged through
the gates and into the village. There were still a handful of reivers outside;
to her relief, Talia saw nothing among them but hand-weapons—no bows of any
kind. Rolan
skidded to a halt, hooves sending up a shower of snow, as Talia pulled an arrow
from the quiver at her saddle-bow without looking, and nocked it. She aimed
along the shaft, feeling her own hands strangely calm and steady, and
shouted—her high, young voice carrying over the baritone growls of the raiders.
They turned; she found her target almost without thinking about it, a flash of
pale skin above a shaggy dark fur—and loosed. One of
the raiders took her arrow squarely in the throat; he clutched at it, crimson
blood welling round his fingers and spotting the snow at his feet. Then he
fell, and she was choosing a second target; there was no time to think, only to
let trained reflexes take over. Talia's
next two arrows bounced harmlessly off leather chest-armor and a battered
wooden shield; Kris had not stopped when she had, but had sent Tantris hurtling
past her, charging headlong into the gap where the gate had been while the
reivers were busy protecting themselves from her covering fire. That seemed to
decide the ones still left outside; they rushed her. She got
off one more shot, picking off her second 298 MERCEDES
LACKEY man
with a hit in his right eye. He went down; then Rolan warned her he was going
to move. She clamped her legs tight around his barrel, as he pivoted and
scrambled through the churned-up mud and snow along the palisade. When they
were still within arrow-range he pivoted again, hindquarters slewing sideways a
little, mane whipping her chest. She already had an arrow nocked; she sighted
again, and brought down a third with a solid hit in his chest where an armor
plate had fallen off and not been replaced. A puff
of breeze blew a cloud of acrid smoke over the palisade; she coughed and her
eyes watered as she groped for another arrow. The remaining three men came on,
howling, spittle flecking beards and lips, as her fingers found another shaft
in the rapidly emptying quiver. The
nearest, bundled in greasy bearskins, stopped and poised to throw his axe. That
was long enough for her to sight and loose. Her arrow took him in the throat,
and he flung the axe wildly, hitting only the palisade, as he collapsed. Then
Rolan charged the two that were left. Talia
clung with aching legs and arrow-hand while he reared to his full height and
smashed in the head of the first one in his path. It was a horrible sound, like
a melon splitting open; Talia felt the shock as Rolan's hooves connected, heard
the surprised little grunt the man made. Blood and fear and stale
grease-and-sweat smell stank in their nostrils. The last one was too close for
arrow shot. Talia felt at her belt for her throwing dagger, pulled it loose,
and cast it at short range. This one had worn no chest-armor at all. He stopped
short, his eyes surprised; his sword dropped from his hand and his free hand
felt at his chest. He looked down stupidly at the dagger protruding from his
ribs, then his eyes glazed over, and he fell. Talia
and Rolan raced for the gate; she glanced ARROW'S
FLIGHT 299 behind
her for possible foes and saw they were leaving red hoofprints behind them. She was
met with a chaos of burning buildings and screaming people; they thundered
inside, and skidded to a halt, confused for a moment by the fear and smoke.
Talia felt, more than saw, a fear-maddened ox charging down the single street;
saw out of the corner of her eye a child running straight into its path. Roian
responded to her unspoken signal; whirled with joint-wrenching suddenness and
leapt forward; she leaned out of the saddle, clinging to the saddle-bow, and
scooped up the child as Rolan shouldered the oncoming animal aside. Then he
leapt again, giving Talia the chance to deposit the baby on a doorstep. Kris
was nowhere to be seen—but neither were the raiders. Talia
vaulted off Rolan's back and began grabbing hysterical townspeople; without
stopping to think about it she began forcibly calming them with her Gift, and
organizing them into a fire brigade. All the while she fought the urge to flee
away, to somewhere dark and quiet, and be sick. She kept seeing those surprised
eyes—feeling the fear and pain just outside of her shields. But
there was no time to think—just to act. And pray that her shields stayed up—or
she had no idea of what might happen under such a load. Kris
appeared when the fires were almost out; face smudged with smoke, Whites
liberally splashed with blood, eyes dull. Tantris stumbled along beside him. Talia
left her fire-brigade to deal with what was left, just as cheering villagers
appeared in his wake, waving gore-encrusted scythes and mattocks. She limped to
his side; only now was she noticing she'd sprained her left ankle, and wrenched
her right shoulder when she'd caught up that child. He lifted his eyes to meet
hers and she saw reflected in them her own bleak heart-sickness. 300 MERCEDES
LACKEY She
took the bloody sword from his unresisting hand, fought down her own revulsion,
and touched his hand; hoping to give him the ease she could not yet feel. He
sighed, and swayed; and leaned against Tantris for support. Tantris was as
blood-speckled as Rolan, and had a shallow cut along one shoulder. "They
wouldn't surrender, and wouldn't run," he said, voice harsh from the smoke
and the shouting. "I don't know why. The Healer's dead; that poor mad girl
with him. There's about ten more dead and twice as many wounded. Thank Gods,
thank Gods, no children. That couple—burned to death trying to save their
damned chickens. Three houses burned out at the other end of the village—"
He stared at the townsfolk cheering and laughing and dancing awkwardly in the
bloody snow and churned-up mud. "They think the battle's over. Goddess,
it's just beginning—the ruined foodstores, the burned out houses, and the worst
of winter yet to come—" "It—it's
not like in the ballads, is it?" "No,"
he sighed, rubbing his eyes with a filthy hand. "It never is—and we have a
job to do." "Then
let's get the chirras back and set about it." Their
second stopover at Waymeet, by contrast, was almost embarrassing, Kris being
hailed as the village's hero for having remained behind to tend the ill while
Talia went for help. It became necessary to remind the grateful people of the
rules that governed a Herald's behavior on circuit, else they would have been
feasted at a different house every night, slept in the best beds in the
village, and come away with more gifts than the chirras could carry. That
stop went a long way toward raising their spirits. Both their spirits—for there
were no evil-eye talismans on display in Waymeet, and there were no ARROW'S
FLIGHT 301 odd
sidelong glances at Talia. And her shields were holding—were still holding— They
stopped with Tedric at Berrybay; he proved to be more than delighted to welcome
them, and a two-day rest with him—and a chance to cry out their heart-sickness
on the shoulder of someone who would truly understand—completed their cure. When
they were back to making normal conversation Tedric mentioned, with the
pleasure of a child in a new toy, that since their visit, the wandering Bards
had taken to stopping overnight with him, and that scarcely a month went by now
without at least one arriving on his doorstep. Kris
thought of his report, and smiled to himself. Maeven
Weatherwitch and her adopted child were thriving. Her ability to Foresee had
actually grown. The grateful people of Berrybay allocated a portion of their
harvests to her so that she need not take the chance of losing the Gift to
hunger or an accident in the fields. Best of all, the local priestess of Astera
was training her to become her own successor. And
Talia's shields continued to hold. They
rode through the early Spring leaves (scarcely more than buds) on their last
few stops for this circuit. Come Vernal Equinox, scarcely more than a month
away, they would turn their chirras over to the next Herald assigned to this
circuit and would be on their way back to the Collegium. It was
over—it was almost over. Talia felt her control was back, and more certain than
before. Her shields were back, and stronger. Now if only .. . If only
she could ease the aching doubt in her mind ... the rights and the wrongs. ... The
unanswered questions kept her up nights, staring into the darkness long after
Kris had fallen asleep at her side. For if she could not find an answer for
herself, how could she ever again dare 302 MERCEDES
LACKEY use the
Gift she'd been born with, except in utterly circumscribed
circumstances? Birds
newly-arrived from the south sang in the budding bushes all around them; trees
seemed to be covered with a mist of green. Talia was not expecting trouble, so
when Kris asked her to deliberately drop her shields and cast her senses ahead
to Westmark, what she encountered caught her completely off-guard. The force of
emotion she felt sent her slumping forward as if from a blow to the head. Kris
urged Tantris in close beside her and steadied her in the saddle as she shook
her head to clear it. "What
is it?" he asked anxiously. "It can't be—" "It's
not raiders, but it's bad. There's death, and there's going to be more unless I
get there fast," she said. "You bring on the chirras while I go
ahead." She
sent Rolan into his fastest gallop, leaving Kris and the packbeasts far behind.
They flashed through beams oif sunlight cutting between the trees like spirits
of winter come to invade the spring. She narrowed her eyes against the rush of
greening wind in her face, and the whipping of Rolan's mane, trying to sort out
the images she'd gotten. She had touched the terrible, mindless violence of a
mob, and two sources of fear—one, the fear of the hunted; the other, the fear
of the hopeless. Underneath it, like a thin stream of something vile, had
lurked a source of true and gloating evil. Even
above the pounding of Rolan's hooves, she heard the mob as she neared the outer
wall of Westmark, a sturdy and skilled piece of brick-layer's work, dull red
behind the pale mist of opening leaves. She heard the hair-raising growl long
before she saw the mob itself. She had no need to be in trance to feel the
turmoil of emotions, though by the grace of the Lady they hadn't yet found
their victim. She could almost taste his fear, but it wasn't the panic of the
caught creature yet. ARROWS
FLIGHT 303 As she
came within sight of the mob, a single figure burst from under cover of the
town gates and ran for his life straight toward her, his feet kicking up yellow
road-dust as he ran toward her. At the sight of him, the people hunting him
howled and plunged through the gates after him. He
seemed determined to cast himself under Rolan's hooves if it was necessary to
do so in order to reach her. With all the skill burned into both of them by Keren,
she and Rolan avoided him and wheeled around in a wrenchingly tight circle,
putting Rolan's bulk between the fugitive and his hunters. The
stranger seized the pommel of her saddle in a white-knuckled death-grip and
gasped: "Justice—" She
remained in the saddle, certain that if all else failed, she could have him up
behind her and be away before any of the mob could react. But at the sight of
her Companion and her unmistakable uniform, the crowd slowed, began muttering
uncertainly, and finally stopped several feet away. When
she spoke, a silence fell upon them. "Why do you hound this man to his
death?" she demanded, pitching her voice to be carrying and trumpet-clear. The
crowd before her, no longer the mindless mob now that their momentum was
broken, stirred uneasily. Finally one man stepped forward; by his fine dark
umber wool and linen clothing, prosperous, and no farmer. "That
trader's a murderer, Herald," he said. "A foreigner and a murderer.
We reckon on giving him I " 1 jj
O O his
due. "Nay—"
the man at her saddle panted, olive skin gone yellow-pale, large dark eyes wide
with fear. "Trader, yes, and foreign. But no murderer. This I swear." An
angry growl arose at his words. "Hold!"
she shouted, pitching her voice to command before they could regain their mob
unity. "It is no crime to be a foreigner, and the Queen's word 304 MERCEDES
LACKEY grants
Herald's justice to anyone within the bounds of this Kingdom who would claim
it. This man has claimed justice of me; I will give it to him. You who call him
a murderer—did any of you see him kill?" "The
body was in his wagon, and still warm!" the spokesman protested, rubbing
his mustache uneasily. "So?
And was the wagon then so secured that none could enter it but he? No? Then how
can you be certain that the body was not put there to turn suspicion upon this
one—already suspect because of being foreign?" The
dismay she felt told her that they had not considered the possibility. These
were not evil people— that thread of viciousness she had sensed was not coming
from one of them—they were only thoughtless, and easily led while in the
herd-mentality of the mob. Confronted with someone who made them think, they
lost their taste for blood. "This
will be done by the law, or not at all," she said firmly. "Let every
man, woman and child not bedridden assemble in the square. At this point there
is not one of you above suspicion. Let the body be brought to me there." The man
clinging to her pommel was slowly regaining his courage and his breath. "I
have heard of your kind, Lady Herald," he said, obviously nervous, by the
sweat only now beginning to bead his generous forehead; but equally obviously
willing to trust her. "I swear to you that I did not do this evil deed.
You may put me to the ordeal, if you will." "There
will be no 'ordeal,' and nothing to fear if you are truly innocent," Talia
told him quietly. "I do not know what you have heard of us, but I pledge
you that you shall have exactly what you asked of me—justice." The
trader walked beside her as she rode Rolan into the town gates, past the substantial
bulks of the brick houses, and on to the cobblestoned square. Exactly as she
had ordered, every ambulatory person ARROW'S
FLIGHT 305 in the
town that day was assembled there. They had left an empty space for her in the
middle, and in this space there lay a long, dark-draped bundle—plainly, the
victim. Talia
picked out two dozen robust-looking, mortar-bespeckled citizens, and
ascertained by questioning them under her Gift that they could not have had
anything whatsoever to do with the crime, as they had all been engaged in
moving the town wall outward. She set these men, armed with cudgels, to
guarding the exits to the square, since once the killer realized that he or she
was about to be uncovered, he might try for an escape and Talia did not intend
that he should succeed. Then
she removed the blanket. The young woman— girl, almost—had been beaten
severely, and her neck was broken. She had been pretty; her clothing was
well-made, not badly worn, but had been ripped in many places. Whoever was
guilty of this was brutal and violent, and nothing Talia sensed in the trader
corresponded to the kind of mind that could batter a young girl to death. The
crime did match that thread of evil she'd sensed before she confronted the mob,
however. "Who
was this child?" she asked, after giving her own nerves a moment to
steady. "My
stepdaughter." A square-jawed, bearded man stepped forward, his face hard,
his brown eyes unreadable. Talia noted that he did not address her with the
honorific "Herald." This might mean much, or nothing. "When
was she found, and by whom?" "About
an hour ago, Herald," a thin, graying woman in a floury apron spoke up.
"My boy found her. I'd sent him to the trader with the money for some
things I'd asked him to set aside for me." She pushed forward a lanky
blond lad of about fifteen with a sick expression and greenish face. "Tell
me what you found, as exactly as you can 306 MERCEDES
LACKEY remember
it," Talia ordered, pity making her move to shield him from view of the
body. "Ma,"
he gulped, eyes fixed on her face, "Ma, she sent me like she said, with
egg money for some fripperies she'd asked the trader to hold for her. When I
got to the wagon, the trader weren't there, but he's told us to go in and wait
for him times afore when he weren't there, so I did. It were kinda dark inside,
and I stumbled over something. I flung the door open to see what I were
a-fallin' over. It were Karli—" he swallowed hard, his face growing
greener. "I thought maybe she were sick, maybe drunk even, so I shook her.
But her head rolled so funny—" He scrubbed his hand against his tunic in
an unconscious effort to rid it of the contamination he'd felt from touching a
corpse. "Enough,"
Talia said gently. The poor child could never have seen violent death before,
much less touched it. She remembered how she had felt after the fight at
Hevenbeck, and tried to put her sympathy in her eyes. "Have any of you
ever seen this girl with the trader before?" Several
people had, volunteering that she'd had huddled, whispered conferences with
him, conferences that broke off if any came near. Feet scuffled uneasily on the
cobblestones as she continued her interrogations as thoroughly and patiently as
she could, and she could hear little whispers at the edge of the crowd. She
wished she could hear them clearly, for they might tell her a great deal. The man
who claimed to be the murdered girl's stepfather spat angrily and interrupted.
"We're wasting time! Anyone with eyes and ears knows the scum killed her!
He wanted her, no doubt, then killed her when she refused him—or if she did not
refuse, for fear she'd make him wed her after." Talia's
eyes narrowed. This hardly sounded like a grief-stricken parent. "/
am the instrument of the Queen's Justice, and it ARROW'S
FLIGHT 307 is I
and no one else who will decide when we are wasting time," she said
coldly. "Thus far I have seen nothing to implicate this man, beyond him
speaking with the girl. I am sure she spoke to many. Did she not speak daily
even to you? Does this make you a suspect?" Was it
her imagination, or did he pale a trifle? "Trader,
what say you?" "May
I speak all the truth?" he asked. Now
that was an odd way to answer. "Why need you ask?" "Because
I would not malign the dead before her kith and kin, but what I would say may
not meet with the approval of those here." "Wait
but a moment, trader," she answered, and closed her eyes. She took a
moment to pass deeply into trance and invoke once again the "Truth Spell."
There were two stages of this spell. The first stage could be cast by any
Herald, even those with only a touch of a Gift. It caused a glow, invisible to
the speaker, but quite apparent to anyone else, to form about the speaker's
head and shoulders. The second stage, (and one which required not just a Gift,
but a powerful "communication" Gift), could, when invoked, force the
speaker to tell only the truth, regardless of his intentions. Talia's Gift was
sufficient to enable her to bring both forms of the Truth Spell into play, and
she invoked them now. As the blue glow formed about the trader's head, she
could hear a sudden intake of breath, then sighs of relief. These people might
never have seen Truth Spell in action in their lives, but they knew what it
was, and they trusted in the power of the spell and the honesty of the wielder. "Tell
all the truth freely. You cannot hurt her in the Havens, and it is your own
life you are defending." "She
came to me several times, yes," he said. "She wished me to take her
with me when I left here." 308 MERCEDES
LACKEY "Why?"
Talia asked. "Because
she wished to escape—what and why she would not say. She said that no one would
believe her if she were to say what it was. She first offered me money, but I
dared not risk the damage to my trade if these people were made wroth. Still,
she persisted. In the end, she agreed that she would 'disappear' a day before I
was to leave so that it would seem I had naught to do with it, and as payment
she offered herself," he sighed. "It was wrong, surely, but I am only
flesh, and she was comely. It did not seem so evil that I should have pleasure
of her in return for an escape she desired so badly. I was to have met her on
the road outside of town tomorrow night, after dusk. After I spoke to her this
morning, I did not see her again alive." The
glow did not falter, nor did Talia feel the drain of energy that would have
indicated that the trader was being forced to tell the truth. The crowd, which
had been watching the glow intently, sighed again. Now it was obvious to
everyone that the trader could not be guilty—but then, who was? "Lies!
All lies!" The stepfather broke free of his neighbors and plunged forward
with the apparent intent of strangling the trader with his bare hands. Rolan
reared, ears laid back, and snapped at him, keeping him away, as Taiia herself
drew her dagger with a hiss of metal—and in the rush of his anger and—and yes,
fear—Talia Saw the scene his emotions carried and knew the truth. "Hold
him!" she ordered, and several strong men rushed him and pinioned his arms
against his sides, despite his struggles. Despite
what she knew, she could not accuse him solely on the basis of what she'd Seen.
But from the rest of what she'd picked up, she might not need to. "Karli's
sister—where is she?" Talia demanded, and many hands pushed the pale,
shrinking girl forward, ARROW'S
FLIGHT 309 a girl
of about fourteen, with a sweet, timid face and dark eyes and hair. "I
don't want to force you to speak," Talia told her in a soft voice no one
else could hear, "but I will if I have to. Will you tell us the truth
about this man who calls himself your father, and be free?" She had
cringed when shoved before Talia, but the Herald's kindly voice and the
reassurance she was trying to show revived her—and the last words, "be
free," seemed to set new courage in her. She stood up straighter, and
stared at her stepfather with hate. "Yes.
Yes!" Her voice was shrill with defiance. "I'll tell the truth. It
was him—our so-kind father—that Karli wanted to escape from! And why? Because
he has been making us lie with him every night since mother died!" The
accusing words rang in the sudden silence. The villagers stared at the girl and
her stepfather in stunned amazement. "Lying
slut!" the man screamed into the shocked quietude, struggling against the
hands that held him. "I
speak nothing but the truth!" she shouted back, her eyes dilated with
fear—and something more, something of anger and rage and shame. "When we
cried, when we fought, he beat us, then he raped us. Karli swore she'd escape
somehow, but he found out, said he'd teach her to mend her ways." "She
lies!" "Do
I? Then hold him for six months and wait," she laughed wildly. "You
all know he hasn't let a male older than five near me since last winter. I
would have gone with Karli, but how could I earn a copper, bulging with child?
His child—his bastard!" She broke down, sobbing hysterically, and one of
the women darted forward without hesitation to throw a shawl around her in a
protective maternal gesture, followed by others, who formed a comforting circle
around the girl, shielding her from the sight of her 310 MERCEDES
LACKEY ravisher
and glaring at him with hate-filled and disgusted eyes. Talia
confronted him, shaking with outrage, but somehow controlling her own
revulsion. "You went seeking the child, and found her with the trader. You
decided to confront her, teach her a lesson. You became angry when she defied
you, thinking herself safe because she was in a public place. You beat her, and
killed her, then hid her body in the trader's wagon, knowing he'd be blamed,
knowing that if he was killed before I arrived no one would ever look farther
for the real murderer." She was
transferring the Truth Spell to him even as she accused him, forcing him to
speak his real thoughts when next he opened his mouth. It
worked more thoroughly than she had imagined it would. "Yes—and why not?
Do I not feed and clothe them? Am I not their owner? They are mine, like their
slut of a mother! She died without giving me my money's worth, and by the Gods,
it is their duty to fill her place!" Talia
was nauseated by the mind behind those words. No punishment seemed adequate to
her to fit what he had done. An odd, disinterested corner of her weighed all
the facts—and coldly made a thought-out, logical decision. Her
revulsion and anger built until she could no longer contain it—and then it
found the outlet that matched the decision she'd come to. She forced rapport on
him—not the gentle sharing she had had with Kris, but a brutal, mental rape
such as she had not dreamed she was capable of. Then with a sidewise twist, she
pulled the stepdaughter into the union— and forced her memories into his mind,
forced him to be her through all her pain-filled and horrified experiences. He gave
a single gargling howl, stiffened, then dropped to his knees. His startled
captors released him, but he was in no shape to take advantage of the ARROW'S
FLIGHT 311 situation.
When they pulled him to his feet, his mouth hung slack and drooling, and there
was no trace of sanity left in his eyes. Talia had locked him into a
never-ending loop, as he re-lived, over and over, every waking moment that his
stepdaughter had spent as his victim. The
villagers moved away from her, one involuntary pace. Now
she'd just shown them what she could do. "Herald?"
one of the men said timidly, looking at her with respect tinged with fear. They
knew that she had punished him herself even if they had no idea how. "What
must we do with him?" "What
you piease," she said wearily, "and according to your own customs.
Whether he lives or dies, he has been dealt with." As they
took him away, one of the women caught her attention. "Herald, we have
heard you have a mind-magic. Is there aught you can do for this girl? And—I am
a midwife. Would you take it amiss if she should 'lose' the child? Though I am
not Gifted, I learned my craft among Healers. It can be done with no harm to
her." In for
a lamb—she thought, and nodded. The
people were dispersing, too shocked and appalled even to whisper among
themselves. Talia stumbled wearily to the knot of women, and knelt beside the
shivering, sobbing girl. She eased into trance, and probed as Kerithwyn had
taught her. She could "read," though she could not act on what she
read. It was as she had suspected; the girl was too young, the not-born
malformed. She transferred her attention to the girl's mind and began laying the
foundation for a healing that time and courage could complete without any
further intervention on Talia's part— imprinting as forcefully as she could
that none of this had been the girl's own fault. Lastly, she sent the girl into
a half-trance which would last for several 312 MERCEDES
LACKEY days,
during which the damage done to her body, at least, could be mended. She
stood, bone-weary, and faced the midwife. "What you suggest would happen
eventually, and it will be easier on her body if it were to happen now. She
hates what she bears as much as she hates the father, and the cleansing of her
body may bring some ease to her heart. And—tell her that she was never to blame
for this. Tell her until she believes it." The
midwife nodded without speaking, and she and the others led the half-aware girl
to her house. Only
the trader was left. His eyes brimmed with tears and gratitude; the proximity
of his clean, normal mind was infinitely comforting to Talia. After the running
sewer of the stepfather he seemed like a clear, sparkling stream. "Lady
Herald—" he faltered at last, "—my life is yours." "Then
take it, and do good with it, trader," she replied, burying her face in
Rolan's neck, feeling her Companion's gentle touch slowly cleansing her of contamination. The
trader's footsteps receded. And the
sound of three sets of hooves was approaching. They rang with the unmistakable
chime of Companion hooves on stone—and were accompanied by the soft sound of
gently-moving bridle bells. Oh,
Goddess, help me! she thought. No more—/ can't bear any more. But the
hooves continued to approach, and then she heard footsteps and felt hands take
her shoulders. She looked up. It was Kris. "I
saw the end, and I heard the rest from the midwife," he said quiedy.
"But—" "But—you
made a judgment and a punishment, Herald," said a strange voice, a female
voice, age-roughened, but strong. Talia looked beyond Kris to see two
unfamiliar faces; a woman about Keren's ARROW'S
FLIGHT 313 age,
but strongly and squarely-built, and a young man perhaps a year or two older
than Kris, with mouse-brown hair. Both wore the arrows of Special Messengers on
the sleeves of their Whites. Special
couriers—their Companions must have sensed the trouble, and brought them to
help. And
they were senior Heralds. "You did use your Gift on that man, did you
not?" the young man asked, somberly. "Yes,"
she replied, meeting their eyes. "I did. And I would do the same if the
circumstances warranted it." "Do
you judge that to be an ethical use of your Gift?" "Is
shooting raiders an ethical use of my hands?" she countered. "It's
part of me; it is totally in my control, it does not control me. I made a
reasoned and thought-out decision—if the man ever accepts his own guilt and the
fact that what he did was wrong, he'll break free of the compulsion I put on
him. Until then he will suffer exactly as he made his victims suffer. That
seemed to me to be far more in keeping with his crime than imprisoning or
executing him. So I judged, and meted out punishment; I stand by it—and I would
do it again." She
regarded them both with a certain defiance, and somewhat to her surprise, they
both nodded with a certain amount of satisfaction. "Then
I think that we are not needed here after all," said the woman.
"Clear roads to you, brother— sister—" They
wheeled their Companions and rode back out the gates without a single backward
glance. That
left only Kris. "You
did very well, Herald Talia," he said gently. She
stood wearily in the firm grasp of his hands, with his voice recalling her to
duty. She longed beyond telling to lay that duty on him, and she knew that if
she asked, he would take it. 314 MERCEDES
LACKEY But if
she laid it on anyone, she would be proving false to her calling. If this were
a normal circuit, there would be no Kris to take up the burden of her tasks
because she felt too worn, too sickened, too exhausted—and yes, too cowardly,
too cowardly to face all those people and prove again to them that their trust
was not misplaced, that a Herald could bring healing as well as punishment. And
they must be shown yet again that though a Herald had powers the guilty had to
fear, the innocent would never feel them. She must face the fear in those faces
and turn it back into trust. Kris could not do that for her, and if he were not
here, she would not even have the brief luxury of imagining that he could. She
sighed, and hearing the weariness, the pain in that sigh, Kris almost wished
that she'd ask for him to take over. His heart ached for her, but this was the
trial by fire that every Herald had to face, soon or late, and she most of all.
No matter what the personal cost, a Herald's duty must come first. She had
proven that her Gift was under her control. She had proven that she was willing
to accept the ethical and moral responsibilities that particular Gift laid upon
her. Now she must prove she had the emotional and mental strength to carry any
job she undertook to its end. She had
no choice, and neither did he. They had accepted this responsibility along with
every other aspect of becoming a Herald. But—he hurt for her. She
looked up, and must have seen his thoughts writ plainly in his eyes. "I'd
better locate the Town Council, the Mayor and the Clerk," she said,
pulling herself up straight and schooling her face into calm. "There's
work to do." As Kris
watched her walk away, head high, carriage confident, nothing reflecting her
inner agony, he felt a glow of pride. Now she
was truly a Herald. ARROW'S
FLIGHT 315 Kris
preceded her to the Waystation nearest the town and had all in readiness when
she rode up, shoulders slumped in exhaustion. The rules governing both of them
allowed him to do that much for her, at least. She sought their bed long before
he, and was apparently asleep by the time he joined her, but in the darkness he
felt her shaken with silent tears, and gathered her into his arms to weep
herself to sleep on his shoulder. The
second day she took reports and news, and began settling grievances. Kris
winced to see how warily the townsfolk regarded her, like some creature from
legend—powerful, and not necessarily to be trusted. It was well that this was
such a large place, for after her performance of the previous day, it might
have been difficult to find those willing to have her sit in judgment over
them—except that there was no choice in the matter here. Anyone with a
grievance to settle before a Herald in a place this size must register that
fact in writing; with the witness of their own words, there was not one of them
bold enough to deny his original will. Talia
had the right to choose the order of their judgments; normally she did not
exercise that right, but she chose otherwise this time. Wisely, she picked
those cases to settle that required tact, understanding, and gentleness to come
first. Gradually the townsfolk began to relax in her presence, began to lose
their fear of her. By the third day, they were laughing at the occasional wry
jest she inserted into her comments. By day's end, the fear was forgotten. By
the fourth day, when she took her leave of them, she had regained their trust
in Heralds, and more. Kris was so proud of her that he fairly shone with it as
they rode on to their next stop. The
gods must have agreed with him, for they were kind to Talia in this much, at
least. There were no further crises for the rest of the circuit. 316 MERCEDES
LACKEY "I
can't believe it's over." "You'd
better," Kris laughed, "since that's the rendezvous point ahead of
us. And unless my eyes are deceiving me—" "They're
not. That's a Companion grazing, and I think I see two mules." "So
tonight is the last we'll spend in a Waystation for a while. Sorry?" "That
I won't be eating your cooking or mine, or sleeping on straw? Be serious!" Kris
chuckled, and squinted against the light of the westering sun.
"Hark!" he intoned melodramatically. "Methinks our relief hath
heard the silver sound of our Companions' hooves." "Or
the rattling of your few thoughts in your empty head—" Talia kneed Rolan
and they galloped into the lead. "It's Griffon!" Sure
enough, it was Talia's year-mate, who had gotten into Whites at the same time,
but evidently finished his own internship early. She slid off Rolan's back after
both of them had pulled up beside him with a clattering of hooves and jangling
of bridle bells, and delivered a hearty kiss and embrace that sent him blushing
as red as ever she had. He greeted Kris with such obvious relief that both of
them were hard put to keep from chuckling at his bashfulness. "There's
an inn just a half hour down the road from here," he told them, stammering
a trifle. "They're expecting you. I thought you'd probably rather sleep
soft tonight, so when Farist caught the edges of Rolan's sending, I rode down
there and warned them." "Right,
and thanks!" Kris answered for both of them, touched by the unexpected
courtesy. "Seems like it's been forever since we had real beds." "Not
true," Talia interrupted him. "We had a real bed just a bit over four
months ago, with Tedric." "So
we did, but it still seems like forever. That ARROW'S
FLIGHT 317 reminds
me though; my first bit of advice to you is to always plan to stop at the
northernmost Resupply Station; it's right near Berrybay. Tedric is a good host,
loves having company, and his cooking—!" Kris rolled his eyes heavenward
in mock ecstacy. "And
my first bit of advice is to watch out for the other northernmost
surprise—" Briefly Talia outlined the plague's symptoms and described how
it had decimated Waymeet. They
took turns detailing some of the hazards and pitfalls of this circuit, then
turned their chirras and their remaining supplies over to him. Griffon helped
them load their own gear on his mules, and by the time it was dusk, he was well
settled into the Station and they were ready to be on their way. As the
lights of the inn shone through the darkness ahead of them, Kris sensed Talia's
involuntary shiver. "I
know," he told her softly. "Now it's over—and now is when it really
starts to get hard. But you're ready. Trust me, little bird, you are
ready." "You're
sure?" she replied in a small, doubtful voice. "As
sure as I've ever been of anything in my life. You've been ready since
Westmark. If you can handle that, you can handle anything; touchy nobles, Heirs
with adolescent traumas, heart-wounded Heralds—" "Mooncalf
Heralds with lifebonds?" she asked with a tinge of sarcasm. "Even
that. Especially that. You haven't let it get in the way of anything yet, and
you won't now. You're ready, dearheart. And if you dare make a liar out of
me—" "You'll
what?" "I'll—I'll
commission a Bard to write you into something scathing." "Great
Goddess!" she reeled in the saddle, clutch- 318 MERCEDES
LACKEY ing her
heart as if stabbed, her high spirits restored. "A death worse than
Fate!" "See
that you behave yourself then," he grinned. "Now come on—there's
dinner waiting, and soft feather beds; and after that—" "Yes,"
she sighed, staring down the road to the south. "Home. At last." DAW A
Superstar in the DAW Firmament! Mercedes
Lackey THE
LAST HERALD-MAGE Vanyel,
last of the legendary Herald-Mages of Valdemar, faces a desperate struggle to
master his wild talents—talents which, untrained, could endanger all
Valdemar.... (UE2352—$3.95)
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HERALDS OF VALDEMAR Chosen
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ARROWS OF THE QUEEN: Book 1 n ARROW'S FLIGHT: Book 2 D ARROW'S FALL: Book 3 (UE2378—$3.95)
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