CHAPTER
ONE
GIRL WITH A PONY
Each
year, at the end of March, a great fair was held in Cria, the capital of Galla.
Like thousands of others in the Eastern Lands, Onua Chamtong went there to do
business: buying ponies, in her case. This year she had another transaction to
make and was having no luck with it. By the end of her fifth day at the fair,
it seemed she would never find the assistant she required. The prospect of
taking her animals south, with no one to help, was an unpleasant one.
"Excuse
me—Trader Onua?" The speaker was a girl, shy and country bred. "I
heard you was hiring. I'm"—she paused, then went on—"a fair hand with
animals, all kinds." She waited as Onua looked her over: a girl in a green
wool dress, skirts short enough to show leggings and boots. Brown curls tamed
by a head-scarf fell to thin shoulders. A soft, full mouth said she was
vulnerable; her chin was entirely stubborn. A quiver filled with long arrows
hung on her back, a bow rested in her hand, unstrung.
"Is
that yours?" the trader asked, pointing.
Blue-gray
eyes flashed. "I'd not have the nerve to carry it otherwise."
"Hmph.
String it." The girl hesitated. "Just what I thought" Onua
jibed. "Whose is it, really?"
The
girl brought a coiled string out of her sash. With ease she fitted it to one
end of the bow and set it against her foot. Raising the free end of the string,
she brought the other end of the bow down, hooking them together neatly. The
bow strung and in her grip, she turned sideways to it, caught the string in two
fingers, and drew it back to her ear in a smooth, practiced gesture. Now Onua
could see she wore an archers wrist- and armguards.
"I'd
put an arrow up," the girl said, gently releasing the string, "but
I'd hit someone, surely."
Onua
grinned. "I'm impressed. I can't draw a bow that big."
The
girl took the string off the bow, coiled it, and put it away. "Nor did I,
at first. I keep this one limber, or I stiU couldn't draw it."
"Crossbow?"
The question was out before Onua remembered, I don't want to hire her — I want
to send her home to her mama. She's a runaway for sure.
"Yes'm.
We have—" Something flickered in her eyes. She looked down. "We had
bandits at home. I stood watch with the sheep, so I learned crossbow
and
longbow. And sling"—a half smile appeared;— "not that I'm
bragging."
We had,
Onua thought. Did she change it 'cause she wants me to think she's been gone
from home awhile? Or hasn't she got a home?
Something
looked around the girl, inspecting Onua with a large brown eye. It was a shaggy
mountain pony, a steel gray mare. She was plump and well combed, and bore two
packs easily.
"Yours?"
The girl nodded. "How much would you ask for her?" Onua motioned to a
pen filled with ponies at her back. "I'm in the market."
"I
can't sell Cloud. She's family—all the family I got." Again Onua saw a
flash of sorrow that was pushed aside.
"What's
your name?" The K'mir stuck her fingers into a pouch filled with a powder
known as "eyebright."
"Daine,
mum," came the soft reply. "Veralidaine Sarrasri."
The
eyebright made her fingers itch when Onua called on her magical Gift. "How
old are you, Daine?"
"Fifteen."
An aura of red fire, visible only to Onua, flared around the girl's face. The
lie was a good one—she must have practiced on the way, the trader thought
wryly—but a lie nevertheless. She looked about thirteen.
"Where
are you from?"
"Snowsdale,
up north. About two weeks' walk."
There
was no flare of red—she had told the truth. Onua sighed. "Are you a
runaway? From home, or a bad master—"
"No,
mum." The soft mouth trembled. "I got no family—just Cloud."
No red
fire this time. Onua dusted the powder from her hand. "I'm Onua Chamtong,
of the K'miri Raadeh."
Daine
looked puzzled. "The k-k—the what?"
"The
K'mir are a people to the east. Raadeh is the name of one of the K'miri
tribes." Daine looked only slightly less baffled. "Never mind. You
say you're good with animals. C'mere." She led the girl to her pen.
Inside, twenty-seven shaggy ponies in all colors and sizes milled around.
"I
buy horses. I had an assistant, but he got offered a better job working for a
horse merchant here, and I wasn't about to hold him back. Ij you hire on—and I
didn't say I'd hire you—you'll help me take these south. It's three weeks'
drive—if we don't bog down in mud, if we aren't hit by raiders, and if we go
before all these people take the road to the next fair. It'll be just you and
me, and my dog, Tahoi. Why don't you climb in and look 'em over? I want to see
how you manage 'em."
Daine
glanced back at her mare, Cloud. "Stay put, and no biting" she
ordered sternly, and clambered over the fence and into the pen.
Poor
thing must have been alone a long time, to be talking to a mare as if she could
answer back, Onua thought. She sat on the fence rail to watch.
The
ponies watched as Daine passed among them. Ears went back. Those close to her
appeared to wonder which would do better: a bite or a kick.
When a
yellow stallion, the king of the small herd, minced into place at her back, the
girl spun and put both hands under his muzzle, lifting his head to stare into
his face. "No, sir," she told him firmly. "I'll not stand for
any tricks. I may be human, but I'm not stupid." The stallion tried to
rear. She forced him down, then blew gently in his nostrils, to teach him her
scent. He shuffled, then fidgeted—then bowed his head in submission.
Horse
Lords, Onua thought. She's establishing domination over him and the entire
herd!
In
years of managing horses, she'd never seen the like. This particular breed was
famous for its fiery nature (one of the reasons she purchased them for her
employers). She had achieved peace—of a sort—with them using her strength, her
wits, and bribes. All horse folk handled their animals that way. Only this
child was different: Daine treated the stallion as if she were a pony herself,
a dominant one.
She
isn't lying about her folks or running away—just about her age. If I let her
go, she might get into trouble. There are too many predators around, looking
for a pretty like this one. The road isn't too safe—but what is?
She
watched the girl move among the ponies, running her hands over each one. She
was giving them bits of apple and sugar from her pockets. Onua was glad to see
she could deal with the animals in a normal way. One display like that with the
stallion was more than enough.
"D'you
ride?" she called.
Daine
came over to the fence. "Some. Mostly bareback, but I can use a saddle,
and I know how to look after tack,"
"What
about hunting, fishing, tracking?"
The
grin lit a face that was too thin and eyes that were too weary. "I do all
that—had to, to get this far. I couldn't trust folks on the road, Some looked
like—bandits."
As
Daine climbed over the rail, the shadow was back in her eyes: grief, Onua
decided, but anger too, "Tired of them already?"
The
girl shook her head. "I'm getting an oil I have, and a swab. The
strawberry has ear mites. They're not too bad—if I get them now, he won't
spread them to the herd." She went to the gray mare, who was plainly
sulking, and opened one of her packs.
"How
do you know you can trust me?"
Daine
shrugged. "I don't. How do you know you can trust meT
"Was
that a joke?" Onua's voice was stern, but her eyes laughed. Her last two assistants
had possessed no sense of humor.
Daine
gave her a quick smile and climbed into the pen, a clay bottle and swabs in one
hand. Onua watched, amazed, as the strawberry gelding trotted up to the girl.
If someone had said that morning she'd see one of her charges willingly submit
to an ear cleaning, she would have laughed herself sick.
I
shouldn't do it. She's a baby. There re all those rumors—no smoke without fire.
Still, my magic will keep us safe at night, and she can handle a bow.
"Daine." she called.
The
girl had finished the geldings ears. She came over. "Yes?"
"I'll
tell you right now—I've heard a lot of weird stories lately, about monsters in
the wild, attacking travelers. Things out of legend, so folk say. I haven't
seen any myself, but that doesn't mean I won't. Are you sure you want to hire
on?"
Daine
shrugged. "I hear talcs. I need work, mum. If I see monsters, I see
monsters. My family was killed and my home burned by human ones."
"All
right, then—here s the job," said the K'mir. "You, me, and my dog
take the herd south, like I said, I have the Gift, 'and I can shield our camp
at
night.
It's two coppers a day, two silver nobles as a bonus at the end. I pay all
expenses, and we share chores. No drinking, no drugs. If you leave me on the
trail, you'll wish you died as a child." Daine giggled. "At the end
of the road—we'll see. We're bound for the capital of Tortall—"
The
girl's face lit up. "Where a lady knight is the king's champion, right?
And they let girls in the army? That Tortall?"
"You
heard those stories too," the K'mir murmured. "Well, they don't let
girls in the regular army, mind—just the Queen's Riders. Why—have you a fancy
to be a soldier?"
Daine
shook her head. "Not me. But if they take girls for that, maybe they'll
let a girl be a hostler, or work around the camp, or some such." Her eyes
were filled with painful hope.
"As
it happens, they do let girls work as hostlers—or at least, they let me. I'm in
charge of the horses for the Riders,"
"Oh,
glory," the girl whispered. "I'll do whatever you want, if you'll
take me on—"
Onua
put a hand on Daines shoulder, touched by her eagerness. "We'll see. If we
don't get on, I'll make sure you have some kind of work. I won't leave you
stranded. Sound fair?"
Daine
nodded vigorously. "Yes, Mistress Onua."
Onua
offered a callused hand. "Then shake on it. And stop calling me
'Mistress.' My name's Onua."
Daine
returned the woman's firm grip. "Onua Chamtong, of the K'miri
Raadeh," she said. "I remember."
Onua
smiled. "Very good. Now, will your Cloud mix in with the others?"
"No
reason not to." Daine removed packs and saddle from Cloud s back.
"Stow
your things with mine." Onua pointed to a canvas-covered mound in one
corner. "They'll be safe—these ponies are better than guard dogs."
Daine
ushered Cloud into the pen and stored her packs with Onuas, She finished in
time to stop Cloud from biting the yellow stallion, and then from kicking a
bjood bay mare. "You behave," she ordered her pony. "I mean it."
Cloud
flicked an ear back, and lifted a hind foot experimentally. Daine leaned down
and whispered in her ear. The mare snorted, then stood on all fours, looking as
innocent as a summer sky.
"What
did you tell her?" Onua asked, letting the girl out of the pen.
"I
said I'd sell her to the man that makes dumplings down the way."
Onua
chuckled. "That's the threat my mother used on me. Look—I want you to meet
my dog, Tahoi." She put her fingers to her lips and whistled two short
notes. A large form surged over the rear wall of the pen and wound through the
ponies, ducking hooves and teeth with the ease of long practice. Coming over
the fence in another easy jump, he sat panting at Onua's feet. He was as tall
as his owners hip, and covered with curling gray fur.
"He's
near big enough to be a pony himself." Daine offered her open palm. The
dog rumbled in displeasure, and warily sniffed her fingers.
"
Tahoi means 'ox' in K'mir. Careful—he's a one-woman dog—" Onua shut up.
Tahoi s plumed tail had begun to wave. The wary guardian of her stock turned
into an eager-to-please pup that licked Daine's hand, then stood to sniff her
face. "He's supposed to be a guard dog," Onua continued, frowning.
"Not a pet. Not a dog who believes every humans his friend."
"Don't
blame him." Daine looked up at Onua apologetically. Her fingers scratched
Tahoi in a place he couldn't reach, while his tail thudded in the dust on the
ground. "Animals just take to me, is all,"
"Hmph,
Can you spare her, Majesty?" the woman said to Tahoi. "I'd like to
get some grub, saving your presence. And your new friend is coming with me.
Guard.'" She steered Daine away from the pen.
At one
of the cook tents littering the fairgrounds, Onua ordered a rich meal for them
both. When it was over, they explored. After a while
Daine's
eyes hurt from staring so much. Coming from a poor mountain village, she
couldn't believe the variety they found at every turn.
"How
are you fixed for gear?" her new employer asked. She was eyeing a pair of
boots in a leather-worker's stall.
"I'm
fine," Daine assured her. Meeting the K'mir's warning look, she insisted,
"Really. It was too wet"—she swallowed, trying to speak as if it were
someone else's farm that was attacked—"too wet for our place to burn much,
so I saved a lot. Clothes, boots, my sleeping gear. I really don't need
anything." Seeing the woman's gray green eyes remained suspicious, she
raised a hand. "Swear by the Goddess."
"All
right, then. Just remember, its my responsibility to keep you decently clothed
and outfitted, I don't want people saying I'm a skinflint."
Daine
thought of the huge meal she had consumed, "Just point them out to me, and
I'll set them straight," she offered,
Onua
chuckled, "Good enough."
On
their return, the K'mir raised a sleeping
platform
outside the pen. "Wcci best turn in," she advised. "We leave an
hour before dawn,"
Dame
laid the bedrolls out, wriggled into hers, and took off everything but her
shift under the sheltering blankets. "Onua?"
The woman
was nearly asleep already. "Yeah?" "Thanks."
They
had a cold breakfast: fruit, cheese, and bread. Onua said little as they ate
and packed. She split a pile of lead reins with Daine, indicating she was to
connect half of the ponies into a string, while she did the same with the
others. They worked quickly as the fair came to life and the air filled with
breakfast smells. When the ponies were ready, Onua placed their packs on the
first animal in each string.
"Aren't
you going to put her on a lead?" Onua pointed to Cloud, who stood free of
the others, wearing only a halter and a cross expression. The mare snorted and
shook her head.
"She'll
be fine," Daine assured the K'mir. "She's as good as a guard dog,
that way."
"You
know best," Onua said, dubious, "Let's move 'em out."
The
K'mir led them away from the fairgrounds and the traffic coming in. They had
reached open road when she called for a midmorning break. Digging apples out of
her pocket, she gave Daine one, "You eat this," she ordered,
"Ive more in a basket for the ponies. I should've warned you, by the
way—I'm a realrbear in the morning. It's no good talking to me—I'll only bite
your head off. You didn't take it personally, did you?"
Daine
had begun to wonder if the K'mir regretted hiring her. She smiled her relief.
"It's all right. Ma always says"—her lips tightened—"Ma always
said there was no living with me until lunchtime."
"You
miss her," Onua said gently.
Daine
twisted the stem off her apple. "Her, Grandda, our farm—" Her face
was grim. "They took my life, those bandits. I saved thingst like clothes
and food, but all my family was gone except Cloud. They wouldn't even have left
her, except she was with me and we weren't there." She got to her feet.
"I'm sorry. I didn't mean—"
"To
speak of it?" asked the K'mir. Daine-nodded. "You have to, just to
bleed off the poison from the memory." The girl shrugged. "Well, it
doesn't have to be today." She peered at the sun. "We'll be at
Coolspring by noon—a village, good-sized, Lets pass that before we stop
again."
If Onua
and Daine were now well awake, so were their charges. They fussed at every
turn. Luckily, many who them were
traders who knew mountain ponies: they kept a respectful distance. Only Cloud,
who seemed to realize she would go into a string the moment she misbehaved,
walked meekly beside Daine, The only time she offered violence to a bystander
was when he, or she, was too interested in how well the strings were tied
together.
Daine
worked on the ponies one by one, talking, pleading, cajoling. Repeatedly she
explained why she wanted them to follow Onua, without making a fuss. One after
another the ponies listened as she appealed to their better natures. Some
people would have said these creatures had no better nature, but—as Daine told
Onua—she had found most animals listened, if things were properly set out for
them.
Onua
had explained things to ponies and horses for twenty-eight years without the
success this thirteen-year-old was having. How does she do it? the K'mir
wondered, fascinated. They're ponies, by all the gods. They're wonderfully
clever animals, but they don't think, not the way people do.
Past
the village of Coolspring lay a rest stop, one of the springs that gave the
town its name, sheltered by elms. Picketing the animals, the two women sal down
to share a mead of btead and cheese,
"Tell
me if you get tired," the K'mir "I
can go for hours, once I get moving."
"I'm
fine," Daine said. It was the truth. It was good to be in fresh air,
headed away from the city. "It's easier than it was coming all the way
here. The roads were muddy, you know—with the spring floods,"
"Ever
been to Cria before?" Daine shook her head. "Never saw a village
bigger than Snowsdale, till yesterday." She sighed. "How can
folk live like that, all mashed together?" Onua shrugged. "City
people. They're different.
is all.
They look down their noses if you didn't grow up penned in." Getting to
her feet, she stretched. "Unless something goes wrong, we'll make Wishing
Hollow by dark—we'll camp there. We're making wonderful time, thanks to
you."
Daine
looked at her, baffled. "Me?" "This is the fastest I've gotten
clear of the fair in six years of trade. That's your doing. You must have the
Gift—though I never heard of it being put to such a use,"
Dame
laughed, "Oh, please! I've a knack with animals, but no Gift. Ma—"
She stopped, then made herself go on, "She tried to teach me, but I never
learned, I can't even start i fire, and Gifted babies that. She was so disappointed. Wanted me to follow her path, I
s'posc,"
Onua
touched the girls hair. "Your mother will be proud no matter what path you
take, Daine, I don't know you well, but anyone can see that," Daine smiled
at her. "Thanks." They sat quietly for a few moments, until Onua
remembered something. "I saw you draw that bow of yours, but I don't know
what kind of shot you are.
Daine
shrugged. "I'm good." "Mind giving me a demonstration?"
Daine got up and took her longbow from her packs. "Name your target."
The wood was warm
from
the sun and bent willingly for the string. She drew it a couple of times back
to her ear, loosening her muscles.
Looking
around, Onua spotted a fence that would serve. It lay well within the range of
such a powerful bow, but it wasn't so close that Daine would feel insulted.
Walking out to it, she fixed her handkerchief to a post with her belt-knife and
returned. "How about three arrows?"
"Fair
enough." Daine had already fitted one arrow to the string, and her quiver
was on her back. Carefully she set her feet, and gently she brought the string
back as she focused on her target. The arrow, when she loosed, flew straight
and true. Two more followed it.
Onua
gaped. All three arrows clustered neatly at the center of her handkerchief. Their
heads were buried so deeply she had to cut them loose.
"I
take it this is something else you have a 'knack' for," she said when
Daine came to help.
"Grandda
thought so." The girl shrugged. "It worked out for the best. His
bones got to hurting him so bad he couldn't even string a bow, so I brought in
all our game."
The
yellow stallion screamed a challenge to a passing draft horse and reared,
pawing the air. "Odd's bobs!" Daine yelled, exasperated. "Can't
a person take her eye off you for a moment without you acting up?" She ran
to the stallions head and dragged him back down to all fours, holding him until
the draft horse walked calmly past.
Onua
came up to them, smiling. "Time to get back to work."
Well
before dark, Onua led them out of sight of the road and into a grassy hollow
sheltered by trees. It was plain other travelers stopped here: the fire pit was
lined with stones, and a lean-to kept stacks of firewood dry.
"Toss
you to give the ponies a going-over," Onua suggested. "For ticks,
stones, whatever. Winner gets to dig the latrine trench and catch fish."
Daine
considered. "I druther check the ponies."
Onua
grinned. "Wonderful—I feel like a bit of fishing just now."
Smiling,
Daine went to work. It made no sense to give the ponies a thorough grooming
while they were on the road, but she got rid of the worst tangles and checked
the animals' hooves. The strawberry's ear mites had to be treated again, and
Cloud and Tahoi had picked up ticks in forays off the road.
The
girl was finished when Onua returned with two fat trout. "Think this'll
feed us?" the K'mir asked, holding them up.
"More
than. I'm so tired I couldn't eat but a mouthful." Daine saw that Onua's
hair was wet and her face pink from scrubbing. "It's safe to wash?"
"If
you make it fast."
"It's
too cold to be slow." She hesitated. "Need my help with supper?"
Onua
waved her away. "Tahoi'U keep watch for n you.
The
water was very cold. Daine scrubbed quickly and jumped out, feeling deep
respect for Onua's courage. Supper—fish and a pot of spiced white cereal grains
Onua called "rice"—was hot and filling. They ate without talking, but
the silence was a comfortable one.
After
the meal, Daine washed up. The fire was banked; their beds lay on the ground, ready
for slumber, when she finished. She got into hers with a sigh. It was warm, and
the heavy pad underneath eased the day's aches. As she watched, Onua got
several pouches out and tied them to her belt.
"I
told you I had the Gift, right? Well, I'm going to place the wards now. Last
call for the latrine."
Daine
yawned. "I'm set, thanks." She watched as Onua drew a circle around
the camp, ponies and all, first in salt, then in water. Soft chanting came from
the woman as she walked the circle a third time, calling on magic powers to
guard its contents. Red fire spilled from her hand to follow the circle and
complete it.
"Ma
did that," Daine commented sleepily when Onua finished. "She wasn't
very good with it, though." It was easier to speak of her mother when
she was
so tired. "Maybe she'd be alive now if she'd'a been better."
"Or
not," Onua said, sliding between her blankets. "There's always
somebody with stronger magic. Lots of raiders have their own witch or mage.
That's why every Rider group has at least one member with the Gift."
"Tell
me about the Riders. I only know they take girls. Aren't they like the regular
soldiers?"
"Not
exactly. The fancy name is 'irregulars.' Tortall has a bad time with bandits,
and the army's too big and too slow. Bandits hit and run. To fight 'em you need
to move the same way. The queen, Thayet, she started the Riders seven years
back. The groups run six or eight Riders each, male and female, mounted on
ponies. Right now there are six groups, posted all over Tortall. They live off
the land, protecting the small villages from raiders."
"Who
runs it?"
"Queen
Thayet is commander in chief. Her guard, Buri, handles day-to-day affairs, so
she has the title 'Commander.' A black man, Sarge, comes just under them. The
king's champion you heard of, Alanna, she helps out." Onua looked over and
saw that the girl was fast asleep. Smiling, she pulled up her covers and closed
her own eyes.
The
badger crawled in with Daine soon after that. Although he was big, he didn't
wake her: she was used to nighttime visitors. Without waking, she caressed the
animals head. He sighed gratefully and slept too, his muzzle pressed into her
palm.
She did
notice him when she woke later and was careful as she sat up.
"I
tell ye, I saw 'em. Two strings of ponies— gold on the hoof down in
Tortall." The speakers voice was rough and country bred.
Reaching
for the crossbow beside her, Daine saw that Onua and Tahoi were also awake. The
dog's hackles were up, his teeth bared in a snarl, but he made no sound. Seeing
her, the K'mir put a ringer to her lips. Daine nodded, easing the bow onto her
lap. Inside her bed her guest shifted nervously, quieting only when she rested
a hand on his head.
"If
ye saw 'em, then where'd they go?" Leaves rustled as men prowled the
hollow around their campsite.
"I'm
no witch, to guess such things! It's like they vanished off the face of the
world."
"Shut
up. They prob'ly found a farm, or kept movin. Let's get back t' the rest."
The new voice held authority; the others grumbled, but obeyed.
They
had been gone some minutes before Daine relaxed enough to put down her weapon.
Tahoi licked Onua s face, his tail wagging.
"It's
all right," Onua whispered. "Nobody can hear us if we're quiet."
"That's
some
protection," Daine breathed.
"With
Ma's circles, you couldn't get in, but you knew it was there."
The
K'mir grinned. "Now you know how I can take the road with just my
assistant and Tahoi." She curled up in her blankets. " 'Night."
The
badger grumbled as Daine settled, and walked in her dreams.
"It's
about time I found you" he said. Do you know how long I've been looking? I
actually bad to come into the Human Realms to get a scent of you!"
"I
don't wish to seem rude"she apologized, <{but why were you looking for
me? I don't believe we've met—have we?"
:Not
exactly" he admitted with an embarrassed snort, "You see; I promised
your father I'd keep an eye on you. So I looked in on you when you were a kit,
pink and noisy. Then when I looked for you again, you were gone. I forgot time
passes differently in the Human Realms."
If she
had been her waking self, his saying he knew her father would have made her
unbearably excited. Now, though, her dream self asked-—as if it weren't too important—"Have
you met my da, then?"
"Yes,
yes, of course. Now, see here—I'm not coming to the Human Realms any more than
I have to. If you're going to wander, we must be connected in some way."
He looked at a paw and sighed. "I know it barely hurts and it grows back
and all, but I still hate it. So messy."He began to chew at the base of
one of his claws.
"No,
don't—please!"she'protested. "I can't think—"
The
claw came off. He spat it into her lap. "There. Hang on to it no matter
what. This way I won't lose track of time, and I'll be able to find you.
Understand?"
She
nodded, then gulped. A silvery mist gathered around his paw, and vanished. A
new claw had appeared in the bed of the old one.
“Now go
back to sleep."
Cold
air on her feet woke Daine in the morning. Her guest, working earlier to leave
the bedroll, had pulled it apart entirely. She sat up with a yawn and a smile.
To think she'd dreamed of a badger who knew her father...
Her
hand was locked around something—a large animal's claw, or a semblance of one.
Complete and perfect, it was made of shiny silver.
"Goddess,"
she whispered.
"Daine?"
Onua was dressed and cooking breakfast. "Let's go."
No time
to think about it now, she told herself, and scrambled out of her bedroll.
Because if I do, I won't know what to think.
Later
that day, she wove a thong to grip the base of the claw tightly, and hung it
around her neck. Just because she wasn't entirely sure of where it came from
was no reason not to keep it close by—just in case.
CHAPTER TWO
THE HAWK
A week
later they crossed the River DreU into Tortall on a ferryboat. Watching the
Gallan shore pull away, Daine searched her soul. I should tell Onua all the
truth, she thought, (By then she had given her new friend the less painful
details of her life, and had come to see Onua was right—it felt better to
talk.) I should tell the rest—but won't she turn on me, like they did? Maybe
it's best to keep shut. The madness, the scandal—it s all back there. Maybe
that's where it should stay.
She
went forward to took at Tortall as it moved closer. I could start fresh. It
can't be worse than home, with folk calling me "bastard" and scorning
me. Nobody here knows I've no father, and they don't know about the other
thing—the bad thing. They don't need to know.
"You
worry too much." Onua ruffled the girl's hair. "It'll work out.
You'll see."
Cloud
butted Daines shoulder; Tahoi pawed her leg. Their concern and Onua s gave her
comfort. I'll manage, she told herself as the ferry bumped the
landing
dock on the Tortallan shore. Silence is best.
The
country beyond the crossing was a mixture
of
hills and wide valleys, some of it farmed and
grazed,
but most left to the woods. Towns here were
back
from the road, and traffic this early in the
spring
was thin. There was little to keep them from
their
usual routine of camp and march, riding the
'
ponies, hunting for game birds or fishing for their
supper.
The
third day from the river brought rain, slowing them and the animals down before
the sky cleared at day's end. Both women were up late, getting mud out of
shaggy coats and off their own skins and clothes.
It was
the first time on that trip that no animal crawled in with Daine overnight. She
slept badly, flipping back and forth, never quite waking or sleeping. Her
dreams were thin and worrisome. She remembered only one:
The
badger was in his lair, neatening up. "There you are. I'm glad to see the
claw works so well."
“Excuse
me, sir—"she began.
"No
questions. Kits must listen, not ask. Pay attention." He squinted at her
to make sure she was listening. "If you look hard and long, you can find
us. If you listen hard and long, you can bear any of us, call any of us, that
you want" Rolling onto his hack, he added, "The madness was to teach
you something. You should mind the lesson."
She
woke a little before dawn. The sky was gray and damp, the air sour.
"Onua."
When the woman only stirred and muttered, she went over and shook her. "I
think trouble's coming. Last time I felt this way, a rabid bear came out of the
woods and killed the blacksmith."
"A
rabid bear!" The K'mir yanked on her clothes and Daine followed suit.
"Goddess, how many of those do you see in a lifetime?"
"One's
more than enough." She rolled up her bed and fixed it to her pack. The
animals were restless and ill tempered. Tahoi paced the camp, his hackles up.
He stopped often to look down the road, only to resume pacing.
"Maybe
it's another storm?" Onua suggested over breakfast.
"I
don't think so." Daine gave her barely touched porridge to Cloud. "My
head aches—not aches, exactly. It's—itchy." She sniffed the breeze, but
picked up only the scent of water and plants. "The wind's not right,
either."
Onua
looked at her thoughtfully, then doused the fire. "Let's go." She
hitched the ponies to lead reins while Daine secured the packs. "There's a
fief on the other side of this next valley, near a marsh. If need be, we'll ask
for shelter. I'd prefer not to." She strung her curved bow. "Lord
Sinthya doesn't like the queen; he loathes the Riders. Still, we can wait a
storm out in his barns, particularly if no one tells him we re there. If we're
caught in the marsh, we're in trouble. I don't have any marsh craft."
Daine
warmed her longbow and strung it. The quiver's weight on her back made her feel
better as they took the road. Past the next ridge she saw a wide, shallow
valley filled with reeds and water, with nowhere to hide.
By the
time they reached the center of the green expanse, the hair was standing
straight out on the back of her neck. Where are the frogs, and the birds? she
wondered when they stopped for a. breather, I don't even see dragonflies.
Something
made her glance at the wood that bordered the far edge of the marsh.
"Onua!" She pointed as a bird shot from the cover of the trees. It
was black and hawk-shaped, flying crazily, as if drunk.
Shrieks,
metallic and shrill, tore the air. Eight giant things—they looked like birds at
first— chased the hawk out of the cover of the trees. Immense wings beat the
air that reached the women and ponies, filling their noses with a stink so foul
it made Daine retch. The ponies screamed in panic.
Daine
tried to soothe them, though she wanted to scream too. These were monsters. No
animal combined a human head and chest with a bird's legs and
wings.
Sunlight bounded off talons and feathers that shone like steel. She counted
five males, three females: one female wore a crown of black glass.
Onua
gave a two-fingered whistle that could be heard the length of the valley. When
the monsters turned to find the source of the noise, their quarry dropped into
the cover of the reeds and vanished. The monsters swept the area, over and
over, trying to find the black hawk, without success.
"Look
at them," Onua whispered. "They use a grid pattern to search
by—they're working that part of the marsh in squares. They're
intelligent,"
"And
they can't land easy on level ground/' Daine pointed out, "Those claws
aren't meant to flatten out, They have to fly—they can t walk,"
When
the creatures gave up, they turned on the women.
Daine
watched them come, her bow—like Onua's—ready to fire. The attackers were
smeared with filth. When they spoke or smiled, she saw razor-sharp teeth caked
with what she knew was old blood. Halting over the road, they fanned their
wings to stay aloft. Their smell was suffocating.
"We
almost had the motherless spy," one of them snarled.
"But
you had to interfere," another said. "Never interfere with us."
It lifted its wings above its head and stooped. The others followed.
"Daine,
jirel" Onua shot: her arrow struck the
first,
hitting a wing with a sound of metal on metal, and bounced off. Daine struck a
man-thing square in the throat. He dropped with a cry that brought sweat to her
face.
Onua
and Daine fired steadily, aiming for the flesh of heads and chests. A female
almost grabbed Daine by the hair before Onua killed her. Cloud got one by a
leg, and Tahoi seized its other foot. Together pony and dog tore the monster
apart. Birds—herons, bitterns, plovers, larks—rose from hiding places to fight
the creatures, blinding some, pecking others, clogging the air so the enemy
couldn't see. Many paid for their help with their lives.
The
glass-crowned one was finally the only monster alive. She hovered just out of
Onua's range, one of the K'mir's arrows lodged in her shoulder.
"Pink
pigsl" she snarled. "How dare you defy me, maggots! Youfilthl"
"Look
who's talking," Daine shouted, sliding an arrow onto her string. She lowered
her bow, wanting the creature to think she was done. "Your ma was a leech
with bad teeth," she taunted. Onua laughed in spite of herself. "Your
da was a peahen. I know chickens with more brains than you!"
The queen
screamed and dropped,
claws
extended.
Daine brought the bow up, loosing as she
reached
the best point in her swing. Her arrow
buried
itself in the queen's eye as Onua cheered.
Daine
had another arrow on the string and in
the
air, but the queen pulled away. Blood dripped from her ruined eye. If she felt
pain, she ignored it, hovering well out of bow-shot, her good eye furious.
"Ohhh,
I'll remember you, girlie." The hate in her voice forced Daine back a
step. "Your name on my heart." She looked at Onua, "I'll return
for you two ground crawlers. You belong to Zhaneh Bitterclaws now," She
launched herself into higher air and was gone.
"I
can't believe it." Onua sounded as if she were talking to herself.
"The rumors said there were monsters abroad, but these"? Where did
they come from?" She went to examine the body of one of the creatures, the
stink so bad she had to cover her nose to get close to it.
Limping,
Daine followed. She was unhurt, but she Jelt battered and cut and torn in a
thousand places.
A
chickadee lay in the road. She picked it up, to find a wing was attached by
only a bit of skin. Tears rolled down her cheeks to fall on the dying bird. All
around her, birds lay in the rushes, bleeding, dead.
"I'm
sorry, little ones," she whispered. "You should've stayed hid."
Her temples pounded. Stripes of black-and-yellow fire crossed her vision. Her
ears filled with a roaring sound, and she fainted.
Onua
saw her fall. The bird that had been in Daine's hand jumped into the air and
zipped past, nearly missing the K'mir s nose. In the marsh, she heard a rush of
song. Birds took off, clumsily at first, as if they were stiff. An owl that lay
in the road moved, then flew away as she stared. She was positive that the
bird's head had been cut half off.
Shaking
her head, she went to the fallen girl. As far as she could tell, Daine was
unhurt. With a grunt the K'mir levered her onto a shoulder, surprised by how
light she was, "You need to eat more," she told her burden as she
carried her to the ponies. Cloud trotted over to nuzzle Daine, worry in every
line of the pony's body,
"I
don't suppose you know a place where we can get off the road," Onua asked,
half jesting, never thinking these animals would understand her as they did the
girl. Cloud trotted into a nearby stand of reeds. Just beyond her Onua saw a
clearing, floored in solid ground.
This
was food for thought. Onua followed Cloud. The remainder of the ponies followed
her, Tahoi bringing up the rear.
Coarse
hairs tickled Daine's face. Opening her eyes, she saw nothing but Cloud's nose.
"Let
me up." Her voice emerged as a croak. "I'm fine." She wasn't
really—her whole body ached—but the pain that had knocked her out was over,
"Swallow
this." Onua brought over a cup of water. Drinking it, Daine tasted herbs.
A tingling filled her veins and left her feeling much improved. The only sign
of the pain that had knocked her down was mild stiffness.
"I
didn't faint 'cause I'm a baby or anything—" she began, afraid the K'mir
would be disgusted by her weakness. She struggled to sit up, and finished the
water.
"Don't
be silly." Onua gave her a silvery feather, "Don't touch the
edges," she warned. "They're razor sharp."
It was
metal, etched and shaped like a feather. If it was steel, as it seemed to be,
it was paper thin, impossible to bend. Moreover, itjelt wrong, as the sight of
the creatures had felt wrong. If she knew nothing else, she knew nature. Such
creations did not belong in the world: seeing them made her feel wobbly and
sick, "What were those things? Do you know?"
"I've
heard tales, but-—they aren't supposed to exist, not here. They're called
Stormwings," She heard awe and fear in Onua's voice.
"What
are Stormwings?"
"The
Eaters," Onua wrapped the feather and put it away. "But they're
legends. No one's seen them for three, four centuries. They lived on
battlefields, desecrating bodies—eating them, fouling them, scattering the
pieces." She crouched beside Daine again, "Listen—I need to leave you
and the ponies for a while—I hope not too long. I can't tell you why."
"Then
I'll follow." Daine was comfortable enough with her now to be blunt.
"This is a marsh, remember? Quicksand, mud bogs, snakes—you told me you
don't know anything about marshes."
"I
can't help that. What I must do is important. You stay put—"
A
picture of the Stormwings as they'd first seen them flashed into Daine's mind.
"It's that hawk, isn't it?" she asked, and Onua looked away.
"That black one. You tried to call him, but he couldn't make it, so he hid
in the reeds. Now you want to go after him. Why is a bird so important?"
Onua's
eyes glittered with annoyance. "Never you mind. He is, that's aU—he's
+more important than you could imagine. If something happens to me, take the
ponies to the Riders. Tell Buri or Sarge what happened—"
Daine
saw how she might repay some of what she owed this woman for taking her in.
"I'll go." "Out of the question."
She
retrieved her crossbow and quiver from the packs. "Don't be silly. It's
only a few hundred yards out. How much trouble can I get into? Besides, I know
about bogs. And I can find lost animals." If she waited, the K'mir would
find a good reason to keep her back. She saw a game trail leading into the
reeds and took it. "I'll yell for Tahoi if I get stuck," she called.
"Daine!"
There was no answer, "When I was that age, / listened to my elders,"
Onua muttered, conveniently forgetting she had done no such thing. She grabbed
Cloud's rein as the pony tried to follow her mistress. "No, you stay here.
And don't try to argue." She tied the mare's rein into a string for the
first time since they'd left the fair, and settled down to wait.
The
trail took Daine to a pond. She skirted it, always making for the spot where
the monsters had left the wood. A grouse darted out of the brush. Following it,
she walked a trail that lay on firm ground to reach the trees at the marsh's
edge. There she sat on a rock, wondering what to do next. If the bird was
alive, it had come down somewhere nearby to hide from the Stormwings.
It was
nice, this green wilderness. The scents of growing things filled her nostrils;
the sounds of animals and plants waking from their winter sleep filled her
ears. What had the badger said, in her dream? If you listen hard and long, you
can bear any of us, call any of us, that you 'want,
Surely
listening wouldn't bring on the madness. She wasn't trying to be an animal; she
just wanted to hear them. Definitely she'd taken advice from worse people than
badgers in her time,
Besides,
if the hawk was alive and hurt, it might be thrashing or crying its pain. She'd
hear it, if she listened,
She'd
have to be very quiet, then.
She
settled herself and slowed her breathing. Her blouse itched; she eased it. A
burn throbbed on a ringer; she put it out of her mind.
A
breeze fanned the tips of the reeds, making them sigh.
Two
plops ahead: a pair of mating frogs. She had no interest in that.
A
rustle on her left, some feet behind: a pair of nesting ducks. Didn't people
think of anything else?
A
gritty noise at her side was a grass snake,
coring
up to sun. It was nice on the tock, the warmth just perfect on her face and on
the snake.
There—left,
closet to the trees. She howned.lt didn't sound like a bird—like the hawks and
falcons back home. She felt dizzy and befuddled, almost like the time she had
swiped a drink of her mothers home-brewed mead.
That
yip was a fox, who had found a black bird. A large one.
Daine
headed in his direction. The fox yipped again when she almost made a wrong
turn. She found him next to a large, hollow log. The hawk had concealed itself
inside,
"Thank
you," she said. The fox grinned at her and vanished into the reeds while
Daine looked at her new patient. "Clever lad, to think of hiding
there," she murmured, (And since when did hawks ever think of concealing
themselves?) "Come on out—they're gone." She put her hands into the
log's opening, praying she wasn't about to get slashed.
The
bird waddled forward, easing himself onto her palms. Moving very slowly, she
lifted him out and placed him on top of his hiding place.
He
stared at her, beak open as he panted. One outspread wing seemed broken in two
places, maybe even three. Her hair prickled at the back of her neck. Anyone
less familiar with hawks might have taken this bird for one: she could not. He
was too big, and hawks were not solid black. His color was dull, like
velvet—there was no gloss to his feathers at all. He wasn't wrong as those
Stormwings were wrong, but he was not right, either.
She cut
reeds for splints, "I'm from Qnua— Onua Chamtong of the K'miri
Raadeh" she told him. "You recognize the name?" She didn't
expect an answer, but she knew a kind voice was something any hurt creature
responded to. "I have to splint that wing. It's broken." She cursed
herself for not having bandages of any kind, and cut strips out of a petticoat.
"It'll
hurt," she warned, "Try not to peck me, or we'll never get you
fixed." Ignoring his gaze, she gently spread the wing. The hawk cried out
only once. That was another strange thing, she thought; other birds had savaged
her for less pain than she was giving this one. She secured the outspread limb
onto its reed framework, feeling him shake under her
hands.
"You're being a fine, brave lad," she crooned, securing the last
cotton ties. "Your ma'd be fair proud of you—wherever she is. Whatever she
is."
Repairs
made, she slung the crossbow on her back. "I've got to carry you,"
she explained. "Try to keep still." When she gathered him up, taking
care not to bump the wing, he trembled but didn't bite or slash. "You're
the oddest bird I've met in my life," she murmured as she followed the
trail back to the road. "Heavy too." She was sweating by the time she
found Onua. "His wing's busted."
"Horse
Lords be praised, you found him!" The relief on the K'mir's face was
scary, as if he's a friend or something, Daine thought. Onua lifted the hawk
from Daine's arms, examining him with delicate fingers. Somehow Daine wasn't
surprised to see that he was as calm with Onua as he'd been with her.
"If
we move the packs onto one of the gentler
ponies.
He can ride on them, have to get well
away before we camp." Daine nodded and shifted the packs to a
mild-mannered chestnut gelding. On the road, the bird rode quietly, panting
without making any other sound.
They
left the marshy valley and entered the wood, moving on after dark, Onua lit the
way ahead with her magic. They had walked for hours before she took them off
the road, onto a small path.
Here
she lit a torch and gave it to Daine,
"Farther
up there's an open shed for drying wood. It's big enough to shelter us and the
ponies." She dug out the materials she used to work her magic. "Get a
fire going. I'll be there as soon as I can." She went back to the road, a
bag of powder in her hand. Tahoi started to follow: she ordered him to go with
Daine.
"I
think she wants to hide our trail," Daine told the dog. She led the pack
pony, and the others followed obediently. "But why? The monster—what s her
name? Zhaneh Bitterclaws—can she see in the dark? Apart from revenge, why
follow us?" She glanced at the hawk. Meeting his eyes directly still made
her head spin. "Not for you, surely."
The
bird shuddered.
The
shed was big, with three walls to keep out the wind. Moreover, it had a fire pit
inside, and a well outside. With relief she freed the ponies, watered them, and
fed them grain from the extra stores,
Tahoi
had brought in three rabbits that afternoon. As soon as the fire was going,
Daine skinned and gutted them. Two went on the spit for her and Onua; Tahoi got
half of the third. Cutting strips from the remaining half, she offered it to
her patient. He turned his head away.
Perhaps
he hadn't gotten the scent, Daine waved it in front of him. Again he turned his
head aside.
She sniffed
the meat; it was no different from
what
Tahoi crunched so happily nearby. She laid it on the pack in front of the bird,
having moved his travel arrangements to the floor of the shed. The hawk picked
the morsel up in his beak and threw it away.
Getting
the rejected meat, she offered it to Tahoi. The dog ate it and returned to his
bones. Planting her hands on her hips, Daine scowled at the bird. She'd heard
of captive animals refusing to eat, but such a thing had never happened to her.
"There's
many a hawk would be happy for a nice bit of rabbit," she told him, not
even realizing she sounded like her ma, "Now, I'll give you another piece.
Don't you go throwing that away, for I won't give you any more." She
offered a fresh strip to the bird, who sniffed it—and turned his head. She
placed it before him, and he threw it to Tahoi.
"He
won't eat," she told Onua when the K'mir joined them. "What's the
matter with him? I never had an animal that wouldn't eat for me."
The
woman crouched near the hawk, her gray green eyes puzzled. "Let me try,
Maybe it's 'cause he doesn't know you,"
"I've
fed plenty of animals that never met me first," Daine snapped, cutting
another strip of meat for Onua. The hawk refused it as well.
Onua
scratched her head. "Try cooked meat. I have to ward this place. There're
armed men all over the road, searching." She walked outside the shed.
"For
us?" Daine asked. Onua shook her head and began the now-familiar spell.
"Not for you, surely," the girl whispered to the hawk. Cutting meat
off the spit, she cooled it with water and offered it to her patient. He
sniffed it for a while, but refused it in the end.
"Maybe
he's sick," Onua suggested as she ate. "I broke my collarbone once,
and I was queasy for a day or two."
"That's
shock," Daine rested her chin on her knees, "I s'pose that might be
it."
"He's
not just any creature." Onua finished her meal. "He may be a little
strange to care for, Daine, Just do your best—please?"
The
girl awoke in the night to hear a quiet murmur. Peeking with a half-closed eye,
she saw that Onua sat with the hawk, talking softly to him. And Ma said / was
fair foolish with animals, she thought. Rolling over, she went back to sleep.
They
moved on in the morning. Searchers passed them on the road, men on horseback
and men afoot, but none appeared to see the bird riding in state on ponyback.
"I can't throw fire or heal," Onua told Daine, "but when I hide
a thing, it stays hidden."
For
three days they pushed on. The hawk s eyes still would not focus, and his
balance was poor. After some debate with herself, Daine lightly bound his claws
to the pack he rested on. He didn't seem to mind, which bothered her still
more. Even the mildest sparrow would have fought the ties.
Her
patient worsened. He refused any and all meat, raw or cooked. Their third day
together she offered him raw egg and then cheese. He ate both, to her joy, but
vomited it up later. That night she woke to hear Onua chanting a spell over
him, but it didn't seem to help. The FC'mir still talked to him about human
things — road conditions, the fair in Cria, the doings of the Queens Riders.
Once,
after meeting the bird's eyes, Daine walked into a ditch. Another time she fell
over her own feet. After that, she avoided his gaze and resented it. Why
couldn't she look at this bird? And why did she not feel connected to him, as
she felt with other creatures?
His
wing did not heal. The fourth night she stayed up with him, coaxing water mixed
with honey into his beak. It did no good. The fever she had fought to prevent
set in and began to climb.
She
woke Onua sometime after midnight. "He's going to die. Not today —
tomorrow, maybe. I hate losing one I've nursed!" To her shame, she felt
tears on her cheeks, and wiped them away with an impatient hand. "He's not
right! He's not like any bird I ever met, and / can't fix himl Can we stop at a
village or town, and find a sorcerer who might — "
Onua
shook her head. "Out of the question." When Daine opened her mouth to
argue, the woman said, "There are reasons. Important ones." She
tugged at her lip, and came to a decision. "All right. Get some rest—I'm
calling for help. Horse Lords willing, somebody will be in range."
Daine
was too exhausted to protest or ask questions. It was hard even to crawl into
her bedroll. The last thing she saw was Onua, kneeling before a fire that now
burned scarlet, hands palm up in a summoning.
She
slept until dawn, and Onua greeted her cheerfully. "I got lucky—help is
closer than I thought. Eat something, and you might want to wash up. There's a
bathing pool behind that hill. They'll be here around noon."
"They
who?" Daine's voice came from her throat as a croak.
Onua
shook her head.
"Wonderful.
More secrets. My favorite," Daine muttered grumpily as she found towels
and soap. Since the day was warm, she washed her hair and took extra time to
scrub every inch of her skin. Why hurry? she thought, still feeling grouchy.
They won't get here till noon—whoever they are.
The
hawk's eyes were closed when she returned, and he was shivering. She warmed
small rocks and wrapped them in cloths—towels, scarves, handkerchiefs.
Carefully, talking to him the whole time, she cocooned bird and rocks in a
blanket, hoping to sweat the fever out. After an hour of the extra
warmth,
he took some heated water and honey when she coaxed.
Onua
had worn herself out with her magical efforts, and slept all morning. Daine had
to content herself with frequent trips to the road, looking for the promised
help. Cloud and Tahoi followed her, as worried as she was.
The sun
was at its height, covered by thickening clouds, when she saw movement to the
east. She raced back to camp. "Onua, there are people coming.
The
K'mir grabbed her bow and arrows; Daine got hers. They went to the road to
wait. It wasn't long before Onua said, "It's my friends. The ones in white
are in the King's Own. They answer directly to King Jonathan."
Daine
gaped at the company that approached. Mail-clad warriors on beautiful horses
rode in four rows, their white, hooded capes flapping grandly at their backs.
The earth shook with the pounding of their steeds' hooves. Before them came a
standard-bearer, his flag a silver blade and crown on a royal blue field.
Beside
him was a full knight in gold-washed mail, his gold helm mirror bright. He bore
a lance; on his left arm was a red shield with a device like a gold cat rearing
on its hind paws. The knight's horse was larger than those of the white-caped
warriors, though not as large as the chargers normally used by
those
who wore full mail or plate armor. It was as gold as the cat on the knight's
shield, with a black mane and tail.
Together
the company made a picture out of legends. "Oh, glory," whispered
Daine.
Reaching
Onua, the knight halted the warriors with a raised hand. His horse refused to
stop and walked up to butt his head against Daine s chest.
"You
beauty," she whispered, running her hand along his mane. "Oh, you
pretty, pretty thing."
Laughing,
Onua went to the war-horse's head and gently made him back up. The knight
peered down at the K'mir through his open visor. "Are you camped
here?" Onua nodded, and he turned to his company. "Hakim, this is
it."
A brown
man in the front rank of the white-caped riders nodded and called out
instructions. The result was instant activity: men dismounted, giving their
reins over to a few of their number while others removed packs from their
mounts and from the spares. Within seconds they were off the road, erecting
tents to share the clearing with the ponies and Tahoi.
The
knight secured shield and helm to his saddle. Dismounting, he gave the reins to
one of the others, then stripped amethyst-decorated gauntlets from his hands.
"I should've changed to leather," he complained. "My back has been
one whole itch the last mile." He grinned at Daine. "The outfit
looks
nice, but it's not very comfortable."
Daine
was very confused. Out of the saddle, the knight was two whole inches shorter
than she was, and built on stocky, not muscular, lines. His cropped, coppery
hair was tousled from being inside a helmet. Amethysts winked at his earlobes,
stones that matched the color of his eyes.
"My
wits have gone begging," Onua said. "Daine, this is Sir Alanna of
Pirates Swoop and Olau—the kings champion. Alanna, this is Daine. Wait till you
see what she can do with animals."
Daine
stared at the hand offered her, then into purple eyes. "The champion! The
knight they call 'the Lioness'?"
"Don't
tell me," Alanna said. "You expected someone bigger."
Daine
took the offered hand. Remembering her patient, she asked, "Can you help?
I can't fix 'im at all."
Onua
took the champion's elbow. "Alanna's a healer and a sorceress—if she can't
come up with something, no one can."
"Aren't
you going to be sorry if I can't?" the knight asked as Onua steered her
toward the ailing hawk.
Daine
unwound the bird from his wraps. "He won't eat anything but a little honey
and water," she explained. "Not meat or fish. And he's dizzy all the
time."
The
purple eyes looked at her sharply. "How would you know that?"
Daine
met that gaze squarely. "I just do. I've—"
"A
knack with animals,'" Onua chorused along with her, and grinned.
Alanna
lifted the bird with a care for the splinted wing. The hawk blinked, looked at
her— and buried his head against her chest. "He knows me. Good." She
carried him to a tent the warriors had set up, and went inside.
"Wait
here," Onua told Daine. "Don't let these men bully Tahoi or the
ponies." She followed the knight inside.
Daine
realized she ought to picket the strings so the smaller horses wouldn't disturb
the big ones. Tahoi stuck close to her as she worked, and Cloud was on her best
behavior. The warriors smiled at her as they set up more tents and built cook
fires. A handful went to the nearby river with fishing lines in their hands.
She would have liked to go too, but she couldn't bring herself to ask these
businesslike Tortallans.
"Great
merciful Goddess.'" The shout came from the tent where Alanna and Onua had
taken the hawk. "Of all the gods-cursed, simpleminded—"
Daine
gaped. The man the knight had called Hakim smiled. "The Lioness has a
temper," he told the girl. "Sometimes it gets the better of
her."
The
knight stamped out of the tent. She had
discarded
mail for breeches and a white shirt. At her throat a red gem burned like a coal
in the fire. "I can't see—" Her purple eyes lit on Daine. "You,
girl—come here!"
Tahoi
growled, bristling. He didn't like the knights tone.
Alanna
stared at the dog, and then smiled. "I'm sorry. Daine, would you come
here, please? I think I need your help." Steering the girl into the tent,
she said, "Onua says you found him under—unusual conditions." The
hawk lay on a man-size cot, his eyes wide and frightened. "How?"
There
was something here that pounded on her ears, making her nervous. "Honest,
Your Ladyship—"
"Alanna,"
was the firm interruption.
She
thought of calling the champion, the only lady knight in living memory, by her
first name, and winced. "I listened for him, is all. I sat down and
just—listened."
"Would
you do it for me now, please?"
Daine
swallowed. "But he's right there, mum. Lioness."
"Turn
your back to him, if that helps." Alanna fiddled with the red gem at her
throat. "Listen for him exactly as you listened back then."
Listening's
fine, Daine thought nervously. You only listened before, and had no trouble.
And the badger said it was all right. Well, then!
Closing
her eyes, she emptied her mind, letting her breath slow until she couldn't hear
it. She concentrated on her ears. Outside, Cloud chewed on a clump of grass,
thinking she ought to check on Daine, alone with strangers. The gold war-horse
shifted; he wanted to run some more.
There!
A strange and distant voice, one that sounded like no animal she knew. That had
to be the hawk. Was he muttering to himself?
"!
hear him." That sleepy voice was hers. "He's a prisoner, He can't get
out. But he's just on the bed—"
"Hush."
Purple fires played inside her eyelids. "Call him, Daine—with your mind.
His name is Numair Salmalin."
"Alanna—maybe
Arrams better" That was Onua, sounding distant. "He's only been
Numair for eight years—he's been Arram all his life."
"True.
Call to him as Arram, Daine." The fires evened into a steady purple light,
warming her face like the sun.
"Why—"
"Call
him." The knight's voice was gentle, but firm.
Daine
sighed. "Arram Salmalin? Arram—come on. You're too far off. It's all
right, Arram—it's safe—"
Something
behind her snapped, breaking her concentration. She opened her eyes as wooden
sticks hit.the tent wall in front of her: the hawk's splints. "Now look at
this," she scolded, picking them up. "His wing won't get any better
that way." She turned to show them the evidence.
The
hawk was gone. Onua pulled a sheet up to cover a large, naked man.
He
smiled drowsily at the three of them. "Can I have something to eat?"
Daine's
jaw fell open. "Where did he come from?"
Alanna
bent over the newcomer, peering into his eyes. Onua grabbed the girl's elbow
and steered her out of the tent. "Explanations later," the K'mir
said. "There's a lot to be done for him still."
"Onua,
where's my hawk? Where'd that man come from?" Her knees shook.
Onua
put a hand on Daine's mouth. "Hush. No more questions. I'll explain
everything—later." She went back into the tent, pulling the flap tightly
shut behind her.
"Later,"
Daine muttered to herself. "Wonderful. Hawks disappearing, men
appearing—why not? Later." She stamped off to look after the ponies, who
at least would tell her things and not wait for any "laters."
THREE
SPIDRENS AND MEDITATION
Hedgehogs
woke Daine as they wriggled into her bedroll, shaking in terror. It wasn't the
controlled fear they felt around hunters, but the wild panic that made them run
before a fire. She eased out of the covers. "It's all right" she
whispered. "Stay here."
She
dragged on her clothes and boots. She felt it now, heaviness in the air and in
her mind—not like the Stormwings or the rabid bear, but there was a flavor in
it that reminded her of the winged monsters. In the camp around her, the men
slept quietly—no snorers like Grandda. Onua was mumbling in her sleep. Tahoi
was not with her or the ponies.
"Stay,"
Daine told Cloud, who wanted to follow. She fitted the string to her bow and
checked its draw as she looked around. A light burned in the Lioness's tent.
The other one, where the man who'd been a hawk lay, was dark.
The
wood outside their camp was thick with fear. Tiny beasts dug as far into burrows
as they could. The big ones were gone. An owl sitting over-
head
was almost mindless with terror. That was bad: owls didn't scare.
Tahoi
sat at the edge of the trees, nose to the wind. When Daine rested a hand on his
shoulder, the dog flinched. "What is it?"
He knew
only that it was bad, and it was coming.
"Stay
with the ponies. Guard them." Tahoi whimpered a protest. Waiting for
trouble to reach him was hard; better to hunt it out. "Go on," He
obeyed, reluctantly.
A
sentry nearby raised a hand in greeting. Looking past him, Daine saw another.
"Do you hear anything?" she asked. "I think something bad is
coming. Something wrong,"
"I
hear nothing." It was Hakim. He didn't take his eyes off the woods beyond.
"Go back to your sleep."
There was
no sleeping, not now. Checking the ponies, Daine found they were afraid too.
Beyond them the horses were alert, watching the trees like sentries. The
war-horse pawed the air: he knew danger was close. Wanting to fight it, he
pulled his tether to see if it could be yanked from the ground.
"Not
yet," she said, patting his withers. "Watch. Wait." She walked
toward the forest.
"Don't
go alone."
Daine
wrenched around and lost her balance. A strong hand grabbed her elbow and
raised her to her feet. It was the Lioness, wearing a shirt, breeches, and
boots. The Ted gem at her throat glowed steadily; a naked sword lay in her
right hand.
"Easy,"
the knight cautioned. "What brings you out here?" They walked to a
small clearing almost thirty feet away.
Daine
took a deep breath and made herself calm down. "There's something close by
that isn't right. I can't explain better'n that,"
The
Lioness scanned the trees all around them, "I feel it too," She
tapped her gem. "This warns me of trouble, sometimes."
"Look."
Her ma had said she had an owl's nightsight. That was how she saw the rabbit in
the clearing, when someone else would miss it. Kneeling
to lift
the body, she found it was still warm.
White
light—Alanna's magic—appeared over her hands. The knight touched the body with
a palm and felt its warmth, then touched the red drops at the rabbits nose. She
sniffed her fingers. "Blood? Its heart burst—"
"It
was scared to death." Daine was sure of it Gently she lay the dead
creature atop a nearby stump. "There's something else. Lioness. The big
animals—there isn't a one within a mile of this place right now. Listen,"
The
knight doused her light and obeyed. "Nothings moving out—"
A bat
darted between them, chittering a warning. Startled, the knight and the girl
jumped back— and a rope that glowed a sickly yellow green dropped into the
space where Alanna had been standing.
Noise
overhead made Daine look up as she put an arrow on the string. A monstrous
spider hurtled down at them. She shot it before she even knew what she fired
at. A man screamed above; black fluid fell onto her hand, burning like acid.
She put two more arrows into the thing and jumped aside when it hit the ground.
Alanna
was shouting a warning to the camp. Daine was about to wipe her hand on a leaf
when something moved on the edge of her vision. She leaped out of the way and
the Lioness moved in, as smoothly as butter. Her sword flashed once—a powerful
cut sliced two of the near legs off a new attacker—then twice, beheading the
thing. It happened so fast Daine wasn't quite sure it happened, till Alanna
dragged her out of the way of the monsters death throes. Knight and girl
waited, breathless, for a moment or two, to see if another giant spider would
appear.
"I
don't think there are more," Daine said at last. "It felt—wrong—out
here, before. That's almost gone now."
Many-jointed
legs moved, and she knew the one she'd shot was alive. Gulping down nausea, she
drew her dagger and walked around front to kill the
thing—cutting
off its head was best.
She had
thought they were spiders, almost as big as she was, with bodies dressed in
dull black fur. That was bad enough, until she saw this one from the front.
Head and neck were human—its teeth as sharp and pointed as a giant cat's. It
screamed with a man's voice, enraged at seeing the knife.
Her
mouth dropped open; a cry of fright and repulsion came out as a strangled
croak. Her knife dropped from numb fingers. No wonder these had felt like
Stormwings in the night. They were just as wrong, an eerie mating of animal and
human that had no reason to exist.
"Great
merciful Goddess." Alanna came up behind her. It made Daine feel better to
know the paleness of the knight's face wasn't due entirely to the light she had
called so they could see. "Have you ever heard, or—"
"Never."
She turned her back on it—let it die slowly—and found a log where she could
sit, shuddering in horror. Grandda had told her stories about monsters,
human-headed and spider-bodied, named spidrens. A brave man hunted them best at
night, he'd said: their webs glowed in the dark.
A hand
rested on her shoulder. "Little girl, your ancestors are proud
tonight." It was the sentry, the man Hakim. "You are the best archer
I have ever seen—better even than the Lioness."
Alanna
nodded. She knelt beside the thing, examining it with a stick rather than
touching it herself. "We're lucky you sensed them coming, Daine."
The
girl swallowed, thinking, You couldn't pay me to touch that, even with a stick.
"The hedgehogs woke me. They didn't know what was out there. I could feel
something wrong was close, but I didn't think it'd look like—like this,"
Wincing as the knight pulled the things head back by the hair—it was dead
now—she added, "Grandda told me stories about spidrens, but he said they
were killed, ages and ages ago."
"Not
killed." Hakim's voice was steady, but his face glowed with sweat,
"They were imprisoned in the Divine Realms four hundred years ago, by the
greatest of shamans."
"You
mean they're gods?" Daine asked, horrified.
"Immortals
and gods aren't the same. They just live in the same place." Alanna dusted
her hands. "Like the Stormwings, Daine. They were shut into the Divine
Realms at the same time, along with a great many other creatures. Griffins,
dragons, and so on."
Daine
swallowed: there were more of these? What if they were loose too, escaped from
the prison where they'd been locked for so long?
"Horse
Lords." Onua had found them. "Lioness, what—"
"They're
called spidrens." The knight's voice was almost matter-of-fact.
"Goddess knows how many of us they would have killed and dragged off to
munch on if your Daine hadn't been alert."
"You
killed one too," Daine reminded her. She went to the clearing's edge and
listened to the woods beyond, just in case. All around she heard creatures
stirring, large and small, as they resumed their nights business. 1 don't know
if I'd ever come out of my burrow again, she thought.
Remembering
an obligation, she glanced behind her. Hakim and Onua were going over the
spidren, using sticks. Most of the camp had come to watch,
and to
marvel. One of the soldiers was vomiting at
the
edge of the clearing, which made her feel better. At least she hadn't thrown
up.
She
faced the trees where the bat had fled after warning them. "Thanks,
wing-friend," she whispered. "Thank you for both of us." In the
darkness ahead, a bat squeaked in reply, Daine smiled and went back to the
humans.
"It's
over," she told Alanna. "The animals are coming out." She felt
suddenly exhausted; the burn on her hand throbbed.
Onua
put an arm around her. "We've both had enough excitement. Come on,"
She steered her to their fire. "Are you all right?" She hissed in
sympathy when Daine showed her the burn, and got her
medicines.
Daine barely remembered having the burn cleansed and bandaged, she was so
tired. The pain gone, she got into bed.
"You're
certain you're all right?" The woman was plainly concerned.
Daine
smiled at her. "I think so." The hedgehogs snuggled in around her
once more. "I'll have nightmares, for sure."
"Me
too," Onua sighed. "At least were alive to have them." She eased
into her own bed.
"What
of him? The hawk—the man?" Daine pointed at the patients tent.
Onua
smiled, "Master Salmalin slept through the whole thing. He'll be mad as
fire when he hears too. Spidrens are more his line than ours,"
Daine
said shyly, "Why didn't you tell me the truth? About the hawk?"
A sigh
came from the other bedroll. "His shape-shifting—it's a secret. Only a few
people know, and we re not supposed to tell. It isn't that I don't trust you—I
do."
He s a
spy?
"Only
sometimes, when the king's spymaster can't send anyone else."
"He
was just supposed to get well and fly off, and I'd never know."
"That
was the plan." There was a rueful note in Onua's voice.
"I
know now."
"Yes.
You planning to tell somebody?" Daine thought about that. "You just
said it's a secret, didn't you? I won't tell." "Good. Now go to
sleep."
No one
left the camp by the river the next day The men of the King's Own burned the
dead monsters and searched the woods for more. The Lioness and Onua sat with
their patient aH morning. In the afternoon they summoned Hakim and another
soldier who carried a writing desk.
Daine
kept out of the way of the men. She wasn't used to being noticed and greeted by
so many people. Her caution did not extend to their mounts, of course. Once
she'd cared for her ponies, she looked at the big horses. Her favorite was
Alanna's mount, the young stallion who had greeted her so happily the day
before. She examined every inch of him, crooning praises into his ear.
"I
think the feeling s mutual."
Daine
jumped—-once again the Lioness had come up unheard. She grinned at the knight.
"He's a beauty."
"His
name is Darkmoon." The stallion lipped Alanna's breech pockets. "He's
spoiled rotten." Fishing a lump of sugar out, she fed it to him. "His
grandam was my first horse—a fine mare, true to the bone." Giving Darkmoon
another sugar lump, she added, "You saved my life last night."
Daine
blushed. "You saved mine." Purple eyes are very discomforting when
they look at you, she thought. Or is it that she's got so much Gift it leaks
over to all she does?
"Where
did you learn to shoot like that?" "My grandda taught me. Carved me
that bow too."
"You'd
think, your size, you'd only be able to manage a smaller one."
Daine
shrugged. "I've always been a fair shot." The woman snorted, but her
eyes never left Daine's face. She toyed with the gem around her neck.
"Three times you shot overhead and hit a mark that moved, in the dark.
That's more than 'fair' shooting."
Daine
shrugged again. "I practice a lot." Alanna grinned. "I'll stop.
I didn't mean to interrogate you. I've been so busy getting Arram's story out
of him that I forgot I just wanted to say thanks. You saved my life, and the
life of one of my best friends. Arram wouldn't be here if you hadn't nursed
him. I'll remember it."
Daine
swallowed. "It was no trouble—" Alanna took her hand. "If you
need anything, come to me. A place to stay, money, work—I don't care. If I'm
not around, go to my husband." Startled, Daine looked at Alanna's ring
finger and saw a wide silver band. "He's the baron of Pirate's Swoop.
He'll do anything for you I would."
Daine
gulped. A king's champion in debt to her? An offer with no limits, and she to
apply to the lady or her baron husband? People like her had no business
bothering the great and wealthy! And if Alanna knew the truth about her, about
what she'd done once, she'd hate Daine. She'd have to.
The
knight must have seen refusal in her face.
Promise
me.
Daine
wondered if there was any way to get out of it, Alanna had the look of someone
who wouldn't let this go, however. "I promise. Lioness."
"Alanna,"
Onua called from the tent. "We need you for a minute."
"Coming,"
the knight replied. "By the way—-can you wield a sword?"
"Me?
Gods, no!" she said, shocked, A sword was a weapon for nobles!
The
Lioness grinned. "I shouldn't be glad, but I am." Seeing Daine's
puzzlement, she explained, "If you were as good with the sword as you are
with a bow, I couldn't take the competition," She clapped Daine on the
shoulder and returned to her patient.
The
next day everyone rose at first light, Onua and Daine from habit, the others
from necessity. "You're staying here?" Alanna wanted to know.
Onua
spooned porridge into a bowl and gave it to her. "Just for today—give
Arram a little more time before we go west. How about you?"
"I'll
see the local magistrate, now I have Arram s information," Alanna
explained, drizzling honey into her bowl. "Once I get a writ of arrest
from him, Sinthya s mine."
"So
that's why you were so near when I called for help," said Onua.
"Springtime you're usually at Pirate s Swoop. You were waiting for
Arram?"
Alanna
nodded. "He has proof now that Sinthya is dealing with Carthak."
Onua
smiled grimly. "I knew it!"
The
knight frowned. "I'm sending word to the king, to tell him about our
visitors last night, and the Stormwings." She shook her head. "I
can't understand why these immortals are reappearing now. We've had reports
from all over Tortall, and from our neighbors as well. Also, I don't like it
that they were on hand to chase our friend when he escaped."
"You
don't think it was a coincidence?" Onua asked. "Or does Sinthya have
an arrangement with those—things?"
Daine
winced. The idea of humans welcoming such creatures was chilling.
Alanna
sighed. "I don't know. That's one of the questions I'll ask His
Lordship—when I arrest him. In the meantime, I leave you to your travels. Don't
let Arram overdo things. And it might be best if he kept from shape-shifting
for a while, not that I think he'll have the strength to try." The knight
finished her breakfast and got to her feet. "Time to ride."
With
the consent of the man who tended Darkmoon, Daine brought the saddled horse to
his mistress and held him as the Lioness mounted. This time the knight wore a
leather jerkin studded with metal rings, instead of her mail. Seeing Daine look
at it, she said, "I drew it from our spares. They always bring one in my
size. It doesn't look as nice as the mail, but it's more comfortable." She
offered Daine a gloved hand to shake. "I'll see you again— if not at the
palace, then later on. Take care of my friends, and take care of yourself?'
Daine
returned the woman's firm grip. "Safe journey, Lioness. Give that Sinthya
man a few lumps for me."
Alanna
laughed. "I hope to do just that." She looked back: the men of the
King's Own were in the saddle. "Forward!"
Daine,
in awe, watched them go. This was what she'd dreamed when Onua said they were
going to Tortall. Well, some things are different, she thought as the riders
retreated from view. Pulling the badger's claw out of her shirt, she polished
it with a thumb. She's shorter than I expected. And I never thought she'd
swear, or make jokes. She's a legend, sure enough, but she's so human.
An idea
made her jaw drop: if she's a legend, and a hero, then anyone could be a hero.
Tucking the claw back into her shirt, she ran back to camp. If anyone might be
a hero—could I? she asked herself, and smiled. No, not me.
Still,
she mulled it over as she started on a pile of reins that needed mending. Onua
joined her at their fire with leatherwork of her own. They worked quietly until
she heard her friend say, "Look who's UP-"
Their patient
stood in front
of his tent.
Someone—Daine
assumed one of the men—had given him a shirt and breeches, as well as a pair of
boots.
She
stared up at him. He was five inches over six feet in height, with broad
shoulders and a well-muscled body. His mass of coal black hair was combed back
and tied into a horse tail to show a face that was dark and sensitive. He moved
with die ease of a giant cat as he sat on a log beside Onua, but Daine
suspected that he hadn't always been so graceful. As a boy he must have
resembled a stork, all elbows and knees. In his late twenties now, he had grown
into his looks, and he seemed completely at home with himself.
"How'd
you find a pair that fits?" Onua pointed at his feet with the awl she'd
been using on her tack, "There's tea in the kettle, and a clean mug right
there."
His
lips parted to reveal white teeth in a shy smile. "Thanks." He poured and blew gently on hi tea to cool it.
"Alanna witched them so they'd fit." He regarded his boots with a
wistful grin. "Nobody else had a pair even near big enough."
"What
about your own magic?" Onua asked.
"I'm
dry for the moment. Tapped out." His voice was midrange for a man's, warm
and a little hesitant—nice to listen to, Daine thought. She kept her eyes away
from him as she wrestled with her leatherwork.
A pair
of large hands came into her field of vision to hold the strap while she set
the final stitches.
"Thanks,"
she whispered, blushing.
"You
look different."
Startled,
she looked up into long, shadowy eyes, "What?"
He
smiled. "You were a lot bigger."
She
grinned in spite of her shyness, "Seems to me you was a bit smaller, now I
think of it."
The
strap was fixed. He gave it back and returned to his seat on the log. "I'd
be dead if it weren't for you. You're called Daine?"
She
nodded,
"I'm
glad to meet you, Daine. I'm Numair Salmalin."
"I
thought it was Arram."
His
eyes flicked to Onua and back to her, "Arram s my boyhood name. I go by
Numair now."
Daine took
the hint. "The
honors mine.
Master
Numair." Then, because she had to know, she asked, "Why didn't you
change back?"
"I
was stuck."
"Stuck?"
"When
Sinthya caught me, his mage fed me drugs. I panicked, and shape-shifted. I
didn't remember I was full of all the drugs it takes to knock out somebody my
size."
"You're
lucky they didn't kill you," Onua pointed out.
"You're
right. By the time you found me, I couldn't tell ground from air anymore. The
food you offered? I didn't know it was food. Not that I was able to keep
anything down." He sipped the tea. "It'll be a long time before I
take hawk shape again."
"That's
why you had funny eyes," breathed Daine. "And that's why you made me
dizzy."
"I
wanted to ask you about that. Onua says you got sick, disoriented. I can't
understand />ow. She says you don't have the Gift—"
"Odd's
bobs!" Daine snapped. Would all her new friends harp on that one thing,
like Ma? "I don't see why this Gift is so grand. It comes and goes. You
can't do too much at once, and you need all kinds of rules. It's more trouble
than it's worth." She got up. "But whenever I turn round, somebody
asks if I have it. I'm good with animals—isn't that enough?" Furious, not
knowing there were tears on her cheeks, she stamped off into the woods.
Numair
looked at Onua. "What did I say?"
The
K'mir sighed and put down her work. "Her mother was a hedgewitch."
(She meant someone with basic Gifts, taught by other hedgewitches, never hoping
to be more than village healer-mid-wives.) "She and Daine's grandfather
were killed by raiders in January. She wanted Daine to have the Gift, not just
whatever she has with animals. Fool woman kept testing her, as if she thought
the girl would develop it overnight. I'd better go after her."
"No—when
she cools off, I'll go. You and Alanna were right. She has real power. Not the
Gift, though." He tapped a pair of twigs together, looking thoughtful.
"It's wild magic, pure and simple. She's brimming with it. I've never seen
a human with so much."
"You
felt it then "
He
smiled. "I felt it when I was a bird, half-crazy and dying."
Onua
sighed. "Be careful with her, Arram. She's hurting."
"I
will." He rose, unfolding his length with a groan. "Use Numair, will
you? I know you trust Daine, but there's no telling who else might overhear. I
still have enemies in Carthak who'd like to know where I am."
Onua
made a face. "You're right—Numair."
He
grinned. "Come on—what great sorcerer has a name like Arram Draper? I have
to have a name to fit my calling, don't you think?"
"All
you mages are Players at heart, I swear. Can't do the magic unless you have all
kinds of robes and props and a big audience to cheer you." She waved him
off and returned to her work, smiling.
Numair
found Daine greeting a woodchuck, and stayed in the trees to watch. The girl
lay on the ground, her eyes on a level with the chuck's. The animal stood on
his hind legs, chattering to her. She giggled, then offered a hand: the chuck
snuggled against it for a moment. Then he chirped a farewell and trotted off
into the brush.
Numair
came forward slowly. "He seemed to have a lot to say."
Daine
was thinking about the chuck, how nice he was after the monsters two nights
before. "Oh, it's the usual spring talk. Freshening up the burrow, getting
nice-smelling leaves, I told him where to find some wild mint." Her memory
returned, and she felt her cheeks get hot. "Master Numair. I—"
He
smiled. "No offense taken—if you stop calling me 'Master.' If I'm to help
with the ponies the rest of the way, we may as well use first names."
"Is
Onua mad at me? For losing my temper?"
He
shook his head. The motion popped open the tie that held his black locks, and
it fell, "Gods bless it..."
Daine
came to help him look. By the time they
found
the tie, she'd forgotten to be nervous with him. "It's easier if you wet
it before using it on your hair," she explained as they returned to camp.
"When it dries, then it shrinks."
"Good
advice. Your hair gives you trouble?"
"Oh,
Goddess, my hair's so dratted thick I don't even bother with ties." She
giggled suddenly. "This is a very strange talk we're having."
He
grinned down at her. "Boys worry just as much about their looks as girls
do. We only hidi it better"
"Seriously?"
she asked, delighted. Living with only Grandda and Ma, away from die males of
the village, she'd begun to think young men were totally alien.
"Seriously,"
he assured her. "You should see the lotions I put on my hair to get it to
behave." He winked at Onua when they reached the campfire,
Onua
and Daine spent the next day exercising the ponies and practicing hand-to-hand
combat, something Onua said a woman alone should know. Numair dozed, mended his
spare shirt, or did exercises with the arm that had been broken. "Is he up
to the road?" Daine asked during one of his naps. She kept her voice
low—he was stretched out under a nearby ttee. "He maybe should ride, but
he's too big for the ponies,"
"We'll
take it easy" the K'mir replied. "Alanna
laid a
slow healing on him, to fix the arm and build his strength. She said in two or
three days he'll be fine."
"Did
you know him, from before?"
"Were
old friends." Seeing the look on Daines face, Onua said, "Not that
kind of friend! He goes for shapely blondes, and I like a man that likes
horses. No, our hawk took pity on me when I didn't know anyone but the queen
and Buri. If he likes you, he's the best of friends. Horse Lords help you if
you get on his bad side." Seeing that Daine looked puzzled, she explained,
"He is the most powerful sorcerer in TortalL"
Daine
stared. A boyish man who talked hair-ties? Looking over, she saw a butterfly
hovering over Numair s long nose. "Him?"
Onua
chuckled. "Yes, him. It takes a powerrul Gift to shape-change."
Numair
opened his eyes, "You're talking about me. I can tell."
"He's
vain too," Onua said loudly. "He takes as much time to dress for
cqurt functions as any lady. Which is bad enough, but then he ruins his clothes
sitting on the grass to watch meteor showers."
"But
that's my good side," protested Numair. "You really should teU her
some of my faults." He paused then added, "Then again—please don't. I
forgot you actually know my faults "
Daine
laughed. She could see the rest of the trip would be fun.
The
adults were arguing about protective circles when she began to think of supper.
It wasn't fair to let Onua hunt all the time. Like her predator friends, Daine
ate meat, taking care to make her kills swift and clean. Now she got hooks and
line, and told the adults where she would be. There was a big tree on the
riverbank where she could sit and mind her lines in comfort, and Onua had a
very good way of preparing trout.
It
wasn't long before her lines were baited and set in the deep pool under the
tree. With the hard part done, she watched the sky and daydreamed, rousing
herself only to greet the animals who came to say hello. Cloud found a nearby
patch of clover and grazed, keeping her company.
Tahoi
joined them, looking disgusted. He lay down where Daine could easily scratch
his ears. Onua and Numair were doing the sitting thing, not talking or working
or paying attention to him. It bored him silly.
"What's
the sitting thing?" Daine asked.
The dog
showed her an image in his mind: Onua, seated with her legs crossed, hands
resting on her knees, eyes closed. To that picture he added Numair, doing the
same thing. A shimmering, pearly light gleamed around each of them, rippling
over their faces.
"What's
that?" Daine asked him. "That light, there?"
Tahoi
didn't know. It was a thing some humans had and others didn't.
Magic,
Cloud said. Your dam had it, and some of the others back home. Not so bright as
these two—more like a glitter. But it's magic, all right.
Onua
only does the sitting thing with humans that have the light, Tahoi commented,
and sighed.
The
girl smiled. "Find a stick—I'll play with you. Not here, though—I don't
want to scare the fish." Tahoi wagged his tail and hunted for a stick that
wouldn't hurt his mouth. "Cloud? Do / have the light inside?"
No, the
mare replied. The lights only for humans. You may look like a human, but you
aren't. You're of the People: the folk of claw and fur, wing and scale.
"Impossible,"
the girl said flatly. "Look at me. I'm pink, my fur's patchy, I walk on
two legs. I'm human, human all over."
On the
outside, the pony insisted. Not inside. Inside you're People.
Tahoi
brought a stick, and Daine went to play with him. Cloud was joking, of course.
She was human. Ma would have told her, if she weren't.
They
left their camp the next day. Onua set an easy pace, stopping twice in the
morning to rest. Numair kept up without appearing to tire. Catching Daine's eye
on him once, he thumped himself on the chest and said, "When the Lioness
puts a healing on a man, he stays healed!"
"Does
your ma know you're this silly?" she demanded tartly.
He
nodded, comically sad. "The few gray hairs she has on her head are my
doing. But"—with an exaggerated change of mood—"I send her plenty of
money, so she can pay to have them dyed!"
"I
hope she beat you as a child," Onua grumbled.
The day
passed quickly. Numair and Onua told stories about the people they knew at the
palace. The man even juggled for her, a most unmagelike feat. By the time they
made camp, she felt she had known him for years.
Building
their fire, she ran into trouble. No matter what she did with flint and steel,
the wood was too damp to catch. At last she coaxed it into a tiny flame and
held her breath.
"How
does it go?" he asked over her shoulder, and the flame went out
"Gods
bless it!" she snapped.
"What's
the matter?"
"Oh,
they mustve had rain here yesterday. Everything's damp"
"Sit
back."
She did
as she was told, and the tinder burst into flame. She had to put large sticks
of wood on it fast, before the fire used up the tinder. "But you didn't
point, or make circles, or chant anything—"
He
shrugged. "Some people need those things. I don't."
She
gasped at his arrogance. "Well, excuse me for breathing!"
His
laugh was full throated and made her grin. "What—did they have to enact
fire-making rituals before anything would burn, where you came from?"
Her
spirits dropped. "Things burned easy back home," she said flatly.
"Rtal easy." She'd been having a good time while her family lay in
the ground. Grabbing the shovel, she went to dig the latrine.
Teeth
dug into the mage's elbow, making him yelp. He looked down at his attacker,
Cloud. "Stop that, or I'll light a fire under your tail." The mare
squeezed a little harder and released his arm.
"It
was going so well." Onua was grooming the ponies. "She laughed"
Numair
rubbed his elbow. He'd gotten off lightly—Cloud had only barely nicked the
skin. "She'll laugh again."
Daine
kept to herself, and the adults left her alone, talking quietly. When cleanup
was done, they did the sitting thing. It was as Tahoi had shown her: with eyes
closed and legs crossed they sat, hands on
their
knees, breathing as if they were asleep. In fact, Daine went to sleep watching
them.
That
night it came to her that Ma and Grandda probably wouldn't mind if she had fun
now and then. They'd been partial to fun, making berry strings or playing catch
with the bread dough. In her packs were two of the dancing puppets Grandda had
made for her birthdays: the horse and one that looked just like Ma. The others
had been ruined, but she had saved these.
She got
up in the morning with caution and sent the raccoon and the marten who had
spent that night with her on their way. She hated apologies, but if Onua and
Numair were angry, she would make some.
Luck
was on her side. Their grouchiness seemed to be normal morning grouchiness; all
they wanted to do was drink their tea, eat their food, and get moving. Daine
let it go at that If they weren't angry about how she'd behaved, why remind
them?
They
made good progress that day. Once supper and cleanup were done, Numair
stretched. "Let's go, Onua. You won't improve without practice."
Daine
knew what came next. "What's the sitting thing?" They looked at her
blankly. "You know—what you're going to do now."
"Meditation,"
Numair said. "It clears the mind, and rests it. If you have the Gift,
meditation helps your discipline." His eyes were thoughtful as they rested
on her. "Would you like to learn?"
"I
don't have the Gift." Was he going to start on that?
He
shrugged. "It's not only for the Gifted. 1 told you, it rests the mind. It
helps you get a—a grip on the way you think."
"It
helps you decide what you want," Onua added. "And how to get
it."
Daine
scuffed her foot in the dust. "Is it hard?"
Both of
them smiled. "You won't know till you try," Numair pointed out.
Daine
shrugged and sat as they did, tailor-style. "Now what?"
"Hands
on your knees. Sit straight. Close your eyes. Let the thoughts empty out. For
tonight, that s enough. Just let your thoughts go."
Daine
heard Tahoi sigh. Now he had no one to play with.
The
next morning they weren't far from their camp
xrtvta
tvfc Qmtook tkm ou tk mi Kkvm ind
the men
of the King's Own, Daine was startled to see that the Lioness, so friendly
before, was now pale with fury. Darkmoon was as angry as his mistress. He
pranced and fidgeted until Daine went to his head. He calmed slowly under her
hands.
"He's
gone" the knight told them. "From the
looks
of it, he fled the minute he knew you were safe. Curse him! Those dungeons of
his—"
"I
know," whispered Numair. He looked suddenly tired.
"I
don't understand," Onua protested. "You searched?"
"We
did." Alanna rubbed her neck. "His servants claimed Stormwings came,
with a box, like a sedan chair. They flew off with him in it,"
"Then
they can be talked to," Numair said. "They're intelligent."
"Sure
they are," Daine said. "They talked to Onua and me in the
marsh."
"She's
right," the K'mir told them. "And they searched for Numair in
patterns after they lost him,"
The
Lioness sighed, "Lovely. More fun. All right—we have to see the king. Come
along as soon as you can now. Be sure to ward your camp at night!"
"We'll
do fine," Numatr told her. "See you at
The
knight and Hakim nodded, and within a few moments the company was galloping out
of sight.
Four
mornings later Onua and her companions topped a rise, and Daine thought her
eyes would fall from her head. Before them a river halved a valley that cupped
a walled city and more houses than she could count. At the heart of the valley
three bridges linked the northern and southern banks, and roads entered the
city from every angle. In the west, the city broke through its wall to climb a
long slope dotted with estates and temples.
Above
everything stood a huge castle shielded by high walls. Its towers, flying
bright-colored flags, shone in the early sun. A small dome placed among them
glowed silver like a giant pearl. Black dots like ants climbed a broad,
white-paved road from the city below, to scatter before the walls and stream in
through several gates.
"That's
the palace," Numair said, "Home of the most unusual royal couple in
all history and their peculiar court."
"I
don't think 'unusual' and 'peculiar' are the right words," protested Onua,
and Tahoi barked agreement.
"Do
you live there?" Daine asked the marr.
He
shook his head. "I live south, along the coast. They have rooms for me
here, though." He looked at Onua. "Press on?" She nodded.
Their
road took them around the city until they reached a bridge over a deep moat.
Here the palace wall was only ten feet high; the gate was a simple affair of
wood and iron. Inside lay a small town, its air scented with molten copper,
pine, cows, and baking. All this, Numair said, supported the palace. Daine
shook her head in awe.
Guards
in maroon and beige waved them across the bridge. Inside the gate, Numair
pointed at the palace. "I go that way—I need to report in."
Tears
stung Daine s eyes. You knew he'd leave sometime, she scolded herself. This is
it. Don't be a baby. He's got important things to do!
A big
hand patted her shoulder. "Just for now," the man said quietly,
"I'll see you again soon,"
Onua
grinned when he kissed her cheek. "You just can't wait to lay hands on
your books again. Z know that look in your eye."
"She
does too/' Numair admitted, "Take care of our Daine." He waved and
headed toward the palace, hands in his pockets.
"Come
on," Onua told her. "Its this way."
Following
her out of the gates inner yard, Daine saw more wonders. Around them soared the
levels of the palace, with wings and turrets in many styles telling of
additions over time. She saw more glass in a look than she'd seen in her life.
Her nose smelled flowers, both plain and exotic; her ears were filled with
creaking wagons, shouting people, and the clang of metal.
Onua led
them downhill. Chief among the buildings they passed were large stables, rich
with horse smells. Daine would have stopped there, but Onua walked on. Before
them lay meadows dotted with grazing animals. Behind the herds were masses of
trees—the Royal Forest, said the K'mir.
The
road ended at the meadows, where two long, wooden buildings had been built. One
was a stable, a neat and quiet one. The other, connected to the stable by a
covered walk, was a two-story barracks. Before it was a tall pole, a flag at
its tip. As if showing the banner off, the wind lifted it up with a pop. A red
horse reared on a gold brown field.
"The
Queens Riders," said Onua. "Home, or at least as much of one as /
need. Let's put the ponies in the meadow, and then we'll talk."
FOUR
THE QUEEN'S RIDERS
Unloading
the packs, they shooed the ponies into the meadow, and Daine followed Onua into
the barracks. Climbing stairs, Onua led them through a door painted a
brighn-ed. Inside was a big room with two rows of beds, six in each row.
Taking
a key from her belt-purse, the K'mir unlocked a room near the door to reveal a
single bed, several chests, a desk, and a shelf of books. With a sigh, she
dropped her packs on the floor and motioned for Daine to do the same. "I'm
not here often, but I'm always glad to see it" She opened the shutters and
flopped onto the bed. "Pull up a chair." Daine obeyed.
The
woman smiled at her. "As to your future. I'd like you to stay with
me—you're the best assistant I've ever had. If you don't want that, you have
other opportunities. Alanna would give you work, here or at Pirates Swoop.
Numair could do the same. Both of them say they'll mention you to the
king."
Daine
shook her head. The road was one thing; people might forget their station in
life there. Here they'd go on with their real lives. Exalted persons like
Alanna would not bother their heads over a homeless Gallan. Surrounded by
wealth and magic, Numair would have better things to think of.
Onua
drew a leather bag out of her purse and gave it to Daine. "There's your
pay, and the bonus. You can sleep here till you decide what you want."
"Don't
be silly," Daine informed her. "I'll work for you."
Onua's
face lit, and she grinned. "Don't you want to know the terms?"
Daine
had opened the bag and was gaping at the contents: a handful of silver coins
and two gold ones. "Did you overpay me?" she accused.
Onua
laughed. "You earned every penny, girl-child." She ticked points off
on her fingers. "You fought Stormwings and spider-monsters. You found
Numair and nursed him. That's besides what I said I'd pay you for. No, don't
argue. Listen. The job's two coppers a day, plus room and board and bonuses for
unusual duty. You help me with the trainees— selecting mounts, handling 'em,
grooming 'em, and so on. They get two, so they have a spare ready all the time.
But you know these ponies—if one's a handful for most people, think what two
are like!"
Daine
giggled. "I feel sorry for your trainees."
"Don't.
They learn—or they wash out. You and
I take
care of the rest of the herd. In a few weeks we all go to the field training
camp, and we make sure the recruits don't abuse their ponies. You have lots of
free time. Socially, you're as good as a trainee— better, 'cause you're trusted
to know what to do with a horse, and they aren't. Don't let them order you
around. Most of the bad apples will go home crying after a week or so, anyway/'
Onua grinned. "What d you think?"
Her
head spun. Take today as it is, she thought, making herself calm down. Tomorrow
I'll deal with tomorrow. "I'll stay." They shook hands.
"You're
back!" Two people came in. One was a short K'mir, her face broader, less
friendly, than Onua's, her black instead of gray green. The other was a big
man, taller even than Numair and powerfully built. His skin was dark brown,*
his close-cut hair looked like black wire. Pink, shiny skin like old scars
wrapped around his wrists.
Onua
hugged the visitors. "Daine, this is Buriram Tourakom—Buri, die commander
of the Riders. And this is Sarge." To the adults she said, "Daine is
my assistant. She's young, but she's worth her weight in gold."
Blushing,
Daine looked at the floor. "OnuaT
"She
isn't free with praise," Buri told her. A smile lit her face and made her
less forbidding. "If Onua says good things about you, then they're true.
Welcome." She offered a hand for Daine to shake,
and
Sarge did the same. Daine was relieved to find
both
had the palm calluses of those who worked, and worked hard.
"Actually," Buri told Onua, "we just saw Numair. Sounds like you
had a rough time coming home."
"It
wasn't so bad," Onua replied. "Pretty uneventful, in fact, after
Numair reached us. How are things?"
"Same-same."
Buri leaned against the wall. "The new class is ready. We'll start after
lunch. There's the usual lot of soft-hands merchanters and farmers' babies. A
Player—George recommended him. He's pretty solid, though he's tall for
ponyback. We may have to give him a horse."
"We
lost two from the Third Rider Group, one from the Fifth," Sarge added.
Sitting on the floor, he still came up to Daine's waist. "Half of the
First Rider Group is on the casualty list, but nothing permanent."
Plainly
these people had a lot to catch up on. Daine got up. "Excuse me," she
said. "Onua, I'm going to look at the herd."
Her
friend smiled. "Don't stray far."
"It's
good to meet you, Daine," Sarge told her. "We'll get acquainted
later. It's just—"
Daine
smiled and waved good-bye. She was a little envious of Onua, with her home and
friends, but she forced that envy down. For certain she didn't want Onua to be
alone in the world as she was.
Leaving
the barracks, she climbed the fence into the horse meadow. The animals she and
Onua had brought hung back. Strange ponies, who had never met anyone like her,
crowded around. Heads were thrust under her hands. Colors passed before her
eyes: cream, dun, roan, chestnut, gray, odd-colors. She saw stars, blazes and
masks, stockings and the spine-long stripe called a list; mares, geldings,
stallions. All were the shaggy-coated mountain breed.
Now the
ponies who knew her mixed with the strangers, bragging that she was their
herdmaster. Daine giggled as they butted her with their heads and flicked her
with their tails. There was no need to be envious of Onua, not with friends
like these.
Time
passed—she wasn't sure how much. When a great bell chimed, she jumped.
"It's
the noon bell." Daine hadn't seen the woman on the fence.
"Lunchtime." She smiled. "Or will you just graze with the
herd?" Her voice was low and clear.
Daine
grinned and disentangled herself from her friends. Nearing the stranger, she
had a good look at her and stopped. The woman was dressed simply in breeches
and a shirt, but she turned them into the richest garments ever worn. Masses of
coal black hair had been woven into a braid and coiled around her head. She had
green hazel eyes set beneath level brows, ivory skin, and a full, red mouth.
Her proudly arched nose was strong for
classic
beauty, but it fit her. Her only ornaments were a diamond on her gold marriage
band and diamonds on her earlobes, but she didn't need any more decoration. She
was the most beautiful female Daine had seen, lovelier even than Ma.
The
woman had said something. Daine wiped her hands nervously on her skirts and
went to the fence. "I'm sorry, mum—I didn't hear."
"You
look like Chavi West-wind." She mistook Daines surprise and explained,
"Chavi is known for horse magic. She's a goddess, where I come from, one
of the four—"
"Horse
Lords. Onua told me. Bian North-wind, Shai South-wind, Vau East-wind, and
Chavi. But they're K'miri gods. Excuse my saying so, but you don't look
K'miri."
The
woman fingered the arch of her nose. "There's bad blood in my family. I'm
half K'mir, anyway. You're a friend of Onua's?"
"I
work for her."
The
hazel eyes sharpened. "You're Daine." With a smile she explained,
"Word travels fast here. You'll get used to it." She offered a small,
delicate hand. Shaking it, Daine found calluses on the soft palm and smiled
with relief. For a moment she'd been afraid she was talking to some kind of
noble. She had never met a noble, apart from the Lioness, and she wasn't sure
she wanted to. What would she say to one?
"Let's
go eat," the woman told her. "I'm starving—you must be too."
Daine
climbed the fence. "I think the whole city knows my name," she
grumbled as they set off toward the barracks. "Did you tell me
yours?"
"No.It'sThayet."
"The
queen?"
"Only
when I can't avoid it," said Thayet of Tortall. "Please don't get all
formal on me now. We were having such a nice talk."
Daine
scowled. "Odd's bobs, this is a strange place! Knights who say call 'em by
their first name and wizards that light tinder and queens that run around
dressed like real people—"
Thayet laughed.
"No wonder Alanna and Numair like you. You have a very unusual way of
looking at things!"
Daine
blushed. "I'm sorry. I'm just so—confused, here."
"That's
normal," the queen assured her. "I felt the same, once." They
entered the barracks. "Some lunch will make you feel better." She
steered Daine through a door and into chaos. This room was filled with long
wooden tables and benches. A third of them were occupied by men and women in
their late teens and early twenties, who created enough noise to fill the
place.
Daine
copied Thayet as the queen picked up a wooden tray and went to the servers at
the back of the room. These people confirmed the woman's identity: each bobbed
respectfully and called her "Majesty" as they put bread, cheese,
bowls of stew, fruit, and mugs of cider on her tray and Daine s.
'"Thayet,
there you are!" Buri came up as they left the servers. "We've been
looking for you. Onua says she and Daine here met up with Stormwings, and some
kind of spiders with human heads—" Talking, she led the queen to a table
at the head of the room, where Onua and Sarge waited.
Onua
beckoned to Daine, but the girl didn't want to be there, under the eyes of
everyone. Shaking her head, she went to the corner of an unoccupied table and
sat with her lunch. I'm younger'n anyone here, she thought, buttering a roll.
How can I make them mind what I say about the horses?
A girl
sat down across from her. "Hello!" She had dark hair cut boyishly
short, and a pair of dancing green eyes. With a tip-tilted nose, a cleft chin,
and a dusting of freckles, she looked like pure mischief. "I'm Miri. Are
you a new trainee?"
Daine
shook her head. "I work for Onua, the horsemistress. I'll be helping you
with the ponies, I guess."
"Good—we
need more girls. There are too many boys." Miri stuck her tongue out at
the tall, blond youth who settled his tray beside Daine.
He
smiled. "Do you mind if I sit here?"
She
shook her head. He had a very kind smile and bright blue eyes.
"Evin
Larse." He sat and offered a hand.
Daine
accepted it, "Daine Sarrasri."
He
reached for her ear and seemed to pull a roll out of it. "Didn't wash this
morning, did you?" He smeared cheese on the roll and grinned at Daine's
openmouthed surprise. "My family's Player folk," he explained.
"I have all sorts of useless talents."
"She's
going to help us with the ponies," Miri said. "I need all the help I
can get," she informed Daine. "Up till two weeks ago I could count on
one hand the times I've been on a horse."
"You're
doing fine," Evin told her soothingly. He looked at Daine. "She's
been grooming and riding up at the palace stables."
"But
these ponies are different," Miri protested. "You^ heard
Sarge—they're picked to be fussy and mean, and they bite."
Daine
grinned. "They're not so bad. Me'n Onua brought some down from Galla, and
I've been with the herd. There's nice ones. You'll see." Looking around,
she thought that the last time she'd seen such a mixed herd of humans was at
the fair in Cria. There were two other blacks, three very brown youths, and
five more as blond, pale skinned, and blue eyed as Scanrans. The rest could
have come from any of the realms around the River Drell.
"You look
overwhelmed," Evin told
her.
"They're
just trainees, like Miri and me."
"Yes,
but what does it take to be a trainee?" she asked. "How did you two
join up, if you don't mind my asking?"
"Oh,
joining's the easy part," Miri said. "They post the rules in all the
schools and at recruiting stations in the towns."
"You
have to be fifteen or more," Evin said. "Healthy, with all your body
parts still attached-no missing hands or eyes."
"Single,"
added Miri. "No spouse and children. It helps if you ride, but it's not
required—they took me, and the only thing I ever rode in my life was a fishing
boat. That's what my people do, fish."
"You
need good reflexes," Evin went on. "You have to read and write. For
Tortallans that's no problem—schools have been open to everyone for nine years
now. For the ones that can't read, the Riders'11 give you work in the palace
till you learn. I think that's all. Oh, and you have to be here by the March
full moon. That's when training starts every year.
"That's
a//?" Daine asked, shocked. "That doesn't seem like much!"
"It
isn't," said Evin. "The problem isn't getting into the Riders—it's
staying. We've lost ten in the last two weeks—sick, wouldn't take orders,
couldn't handle the schedule. We'll lose more by summer's end."
Sarge
rose and thundered, "Listen up, darlings! Today is your last day of fun at
the king's expense." ("He calls running us around the meadow every
day 'fun,'" Miri whispered to Daine.) "Here's Onua, our
horsemistress." Onua stood and nodded to everyone. "Daine—stand up,
girl"—she obeyed—"is her assistant." Daine sat when Onua did.
"They brought the rest of the ponies we need," Sarge went on,
"so we're ready to start the real work. You have till the bells chime one
stroke to do what needs doing. At the bell, come to the horse meadow." He
clapped his hands. "Don't sit there gawping, children—you pick your mounts
today. Get those trays to the kitchen and get out of here!"
Onua
took Daine aside. "What about sleeping arrangements? I can put a cot for
you in my room or a storeroom, or you can sleep with the trainee girls. Your
choice."
"Please,
Horsemistress—" It was Miri. "If nobody minds, Daine could bunk with
me—if you want to, Daine."
Daine
thought it over and nodded.
"Fine,"
Onua said. "After supper you can show Daine the bed. Would you excuse us now,
though? I want to ask her something."
The
girl nodded and raced upstairs. Onua and Daine followed at a slower pace.
"I'm glad you're making friends," the K'mir said. "Its good for
you to meet people your own age. Listen—I have to ask"—she pointed to
Daine's skirts—"doesn't that outfit get hot?"
She'd
hit on the burden of Daine's life. The girl scowled: the litany she'd given Ma
and Grandda for years bubbled to her lips. "Hot in summer, cold in winter,
always getting tangled and ripped and soaked, clumsy, heavy—"
Onua
smiled. She knew an old grievance when she heard one. "Then why wear 'em?
Get yourself breeches and a shirt like me."
Daine
gaped at her. "Men's gear? With folk talking about me all the time as
is?"
Onua
shook her head. "You're not home now. The rules have changed."
Daine
opened her mouth to object—then closed it. She looked at her skirts. To be rid
of them, and the petticoats.. .it hit her, really hit her, that she was free of
Snowsdale. What could they do to her now? 1&**
From
what Evin and Miri said, Riders came from all walks of life. In Galla she was
strange. Here, everyone was different. These people wouldn't care if Ma was a
hedgewitch. Maybe they wouldn't even care that, her father was unknown, someone
her ma met one Beltane night and never saw again.
But
they'll care if they know you went mad, a tiny voice inside her cautioned. Best
keep shut about that!
Onua
let her think, and was rewarded when Daine's blue-gray eyes shone like
lanterns. "I'd love to put on breeches."
"Come
on, then." Onua took her out of the girls' dormitory and down the hall.
"That's men's country," she said, pointing to a bright yellow door.
"Off-limits to females, like we're off-limits to them."
In the
supply room, a tall woman with red-bronze hair and great kindness in her face
looked up from her desk. "Onua, welcome!" She came over to hug the
K'mir. "Your assistant?" she asked.
"Daine,
this is Kuri Tailor—she's in charge of the girls. If there's anything you need,
Kuri's the woman to ask." Onua hugged Daine around the shoulders.
"Kuri, she needs breeches and shirts. Daine, I hate to rush, but I need to
talk with Sarge. You'll be all right?" The girl nodded. "When you're
done, come out to the meadow and we'll get these two-leggers mounted." She
left the room.
"The
first day or so is crazy," explained Kuri. "They always start as soon
as Onua comes, so she has to move fast. You'll be rushing too, once the Riders
see how much work they can get from you— my word on it." She measured
Daine quickly and wrote down her findings. "I'll have others tonight, but
take these for now." From stacks of homespun garments on one side of the
room, she chose a pair of worn breeches and a patched white shirt. "No use
wearing good clothes when you're with the horses," she explained.
"Step behind that screen and try these on—let's see how they fit."
Behind
the screen, Daine drew the shirt and breeches on with trembling hands.
Doubtless the trainee girls were used to such things. She had seen they all
wore breeches, But she was a little scared. Dressed, she stepped out into the
open.
"What
the matter?" Kuri walked over to tug and adjust the garments.
"Its—men's
gear," she explained shyly, "At home, the priests and the
headman—they'd never approve,"
"Forget
them." Kuri turned her, checking the clothes. "You're ours, now. I'm
not saying there won't be people to carp and pinch at you. That's human nature,
alas." Daine nodded. She knew. "But here life's what you make it^ Who
you used to be doesn't matter. Look at Sarge—he was a slave, once. Onua was
beaten by her husband and left to die. Her Majesty and Commander Buri had to
flee Saraine. Do you catch my drift?"
It was
a lot to digest. Onua? It was impossible to think of Onua as beaten and abandoned
by anyone. And Sarge? "I—I think so."
Palace
bells chimed one stroke, making Daine jump. "The bells take getting used
to" the woman informed her with a sigh.
"How often
do they ring?"
the girl asked, pulling on her boots.
"Every
hour until late in the evening." Kuri smiled. "All set?"
"Yes'rn."
Daine grinned at her. "Thank you."
"Welcome
to Corus, dear," the woman said as Daine ran out the door.
Onua,
Buri, and Sarge waited at the fence with a barrel of apples. Daine arrived just
as Onua stuffed fruit into every pocket Miri had. "Bribe them," she
said, and shooed the reluctant girl through the gate Sarge held open.
"What
do I do?" Daine asked.
"Use
your instincts." Onua watched the field as she spoke. "You have to
make your own authority with the trainees. Not that I think that will be a
problem. Just keep an eye out. Remember they have to pick two,"
"One
for morning, one for afternoon," Sarge added with a grin.
It was
one thing to say "Make your own authority," another to start doing
it. For the moment Daine watched. Most trainees met the ponies cautiously or
easily, depending on their natures. A mouse-gray mare twined about Evin as if
she were a cat.
Looking
for Miri, she saw trouble. Some of the more wicked animals had gone to torment
the girl, who was plainly scared. Stopping an arm's reach from her, they
frolicked, showing more tooth and hoof than was necessary.
This
won't do! Daine thought, jumping into the meadow. She bore down on the
mischief-makers with a scowl, Cloud following like a lonely dog. "Stop
that.'" she ordered. "What would your mas say if they saw you acting
bad? Shame on you! Scat—and don't come back till you've learnt manners!"
The ponies shook their heads, looking properly ashamed, and fled,
"If
she wanted to be a Rider, she ought to know how to ride" a female voice
muttered, Daine looked for the source, but none of the nearby trainees met
her
eyes.
"At
home only lords or couriers ride," Miri explained, shamefaced, "I've
been practicing, It's just—there's so many, and they're SQ frisky."
Daine
put a hand on her shoulder. Her new friend was solid, muscular, with a love of
life she could almost feel. "Look—there's some you'll like." She
pointed to a cluster of ponies milling around a tree in the open meadow.
"I'd
have to go through the herd," the older girl whispered.
Daine
stuck her hands in her pockets. "See how you kept to the fence, because
you're shy?"
"I
didn't think 'shy' was the right word," Miri confessed.
"Hush.
Those ponies are nice, but they're shy too. If you want to meet them, you have
to do the walking. They're just animals. They can't know
you've
kept to the fence because you're shy."
"It
can't be worse than sailing through a storm," Evin said from nearby.
"I
only did that once." Miri looked at the herd and the shy ponies,
swallowed—and walked forward. Daine and Cloud followed her to the tree.
"Here,
boy." The pony Daine beckoned forward was a gelding, his body hairs a
mixture of black and white, his mane, tail, face, and socks black, "I want
you to meet someone." The pony sidled around until he was behind Daine,
peering at her human friend. "This fellow is what we call a blue roan, We
came south together." Dame looked over her shoulder. "Come out here
and meet Miri. If you ask nice, she might give you an apple,"
The
roans ears pricked forward at the word apple, Carerully he emerged from behind
Daine to approach the older girl.
"He's
beautiful." Timidly Miri offered him a fruit. Within seconds it was gone
and he was inspecting her pockets for more. Daine instructed, "Now blow in
his nostrils, gentle like. It's how you get acquainted."
"It
seems rude to me." Miri obeyed, and giggled when the blue returned the
courtesy. "You know, they aren't as scary as I thought."
"Animals
are easy to understand," Daine told her. "You just have to know how
to talk to them."
"You
talk to them like they really are people,"
Miri
smiled as the roan leaned into her hands.
"Don't
say it's like I have magic," Daine said. "I hear it all the time, and
it makes me crazy."
"Depends
on what you mean," Miri commented. "The sea's full of magic, but we
can't use it like the Gift. It isn't the same. My uncle is a wave-speaker—he
swims with dolphins. He talks to them, whole conversations. Have an
apple," she told a tan mare who had come near. The pony took one daintily.
Soon they were breathing into each others faces.
"Walk
with them a bit," Evin suggested, joining them. The reins he held belonged
to the mouse-gray mare and to a tall stallion, a cream-colored beauty with a
white mane and tail. "Daine, what do you think?"
She
went over both. Evin had chosen well: they were tall for ponies, which meant
they would suit his long legs. The stallion was a showy, life-loving fellow,
reflecting the Player's extravagance of character. The mare was smitten with
him, matching the sweetness that lay close to Evin's bones.
"You
got lucky," she said when sh^was done. "This pair will do anything
for you, if you handle them right."
Evin
grinned. "I'm glad you approve." Another trainee called her for help,
a redheaded youth named Padrach. She gave it to him, then to another. Before
she knew it the afternoon was done, and the trainees were taking their new
mounts to the stables for grooming. Daine, Onua, Buri, and Sarge helped then
too, though Daine couldn't see how she could ever be comfortable telling a
twenty-year-old man he was missing spots on the pony he was grooming.
She did
try it: "Excuse me, trainee—what did you say your name was?"
Blue
gray eyes twinkled at her over his cream-colored mare's back. "I didn't.
It's Farant." His blond hair curled thickly over his head, almost matching
the pony's in color.
"Thank
you. Trainee Farant, you're missing spots."
"Not
at all, sweetheart. I'm just combing too fast for you to see."
"Trainee
Farant, you're missing spots!" Sarge boomed just behind Daine. She thought
later she actually might have levitated at that moment—certainly Farant had.
((Next time the assistant horsemistress tells you something, don't
flirt—correct it!"
He
moved on, and Daine pressed her hands against her burning cheeks. Farant leaned
on his mare and sighed. "Yes, Assistant Horsemistress. Right away."
He winked at her and went back to work.
Daine
went to Sarge as the trainees were finishing up. "Sarge, I—"
He
shook his head. Daine thought if he leaned
against
the stable wall any harder, it would collapse. How did a human, without bear
blood in him, get to be so large? "Not your fault. These city boys see
you, you're young, sweet-lookin'"—he winked at her—"they're gonna try
to take advantage. If they can't keep their minds on the job after I've had
them two weeks already in my patty-paws, then I ain't been doing my job right"
His grin was wolfish. "But that can be fixed." Seeing her openmouthed
stare, he asked, "Something the matter, my lamb?"
She
closed her jaw. "No, sir. I just never met nobody like you."
"And
if you're lucky, you won't again," muttered Buri, passing by.
After
the stables there was a bath, a hot one, Bathing with other females in a tub as
large as a pond would take getting used to, Daine thought, but at least she had
plenty of soap and shampoo.
Dressed
in clean clothes, she went to the mess hall, where Evin and Miri waved for her
to join them. She noticed there was much less talk than at lunch. Afterward,
the trainees cleared and scrubbed the tables, and Kuri went to the head of the
room. Buri and Sarge were moving a map of Tortall into place behind her as she laid
bundles of plants onto the table before her.
"Tonight
it's medicinal herbs," she told them, and the trainees groaned. She
smiled. "That's not so jeTtvemke-t, last week. I was te.acKmg, you how
to sew
your own cuts — without anything to numb the pain."
Daine
saw Onua slip out the back, and followed. "Do I have to stay?"
"No,
indeed not. You aren't a trainee. You can help me unpack."
That
sounded like something she could get her exhausted muscles and brain to do. She
followed Onua up the stairs to her room, "Do they have to study all the
time?"
She sat
on the bed while the K'mir opened her packs. "Clothes in a pile by the
door. Don't get up— just throw them. Packages on the bed next to you. Hand me
scrolls and papers." Daine hoisted a pack onto her lap and went to work.
"Well, they have to get their book learning now, while they're here. They
won't have much time, once we head for the summer training site. You'll like
the one this year: Pirate s Swoop"
Daine s
face lit, "Lady Alannas home?"
"The
very same."
Returning
to the subject on her mind, she asked, "What do they study? The
trainees?"
Onua
numbered the topics on her fingers. "Poisons, medicines, edible plants.
Tracking and hunting, all terrains. Reading maps, drawing them — maps here are
a lot more accurate, now that Riders help draw them. Battle tactics. Weapons
an4
c.om.oat: and. tics—they show villagers how to
protect themselves. The ones with the Gift have to learn all they can do with
it. Veterinary medicine. I think that's most of it."
"And they
learn all this?" the girl asked, shocked.
The
K'mir laughed. "They do their best. They have to. At the end of fall they
go to groups in the field to start their trial year. If they survive, and most
do these days, they're assigned a permanent group. Why? Were you thinking of
going for a Rider after all?"
"Not
anymore!" Daine said emphatically, Onua grinned, "I have trouble
seeing you play soldier, even so odd a soldier as the Riders turn out."
Later,
tucked into a bed next to Miri's, Daine thought Onua was probably right. It
must be hard, having to account for every minute of the day as the trainees
did. Why, she'd never get to meet any new animals!
Dozing
off, she woke abruptly, feeling trapped. At first she didn't even remember
where she was. Sitting up, she looked around: the five girl trainees were in
their beds, asleep. The barracks were silent.
If she
didn't get some air, she'd suffocate.
A
window opened over her bed. She pried the shutters apart in time to hear a
watchman's distant cry: "The midnight hour, and all is well!"
Her bed
was too soft after so much sleeping on the ground. She cursed under her breath
and took blankets and pillow to the floor That at least was firm, and the air
was cooler too. She waited for sleep again.
Miri
turned over and said clearly, "But I love to ride." Daine sat up to
peer at her. The girl was fast asleep.
She lay
back. The badger s claw weighed heavy on her chest. When she turned onto her
side, the thong half-choked her. She eased it and closed her eyes. Sheets and
blankets rustled, A blond girl who had snubbed her in the baths snored. Another
tossed and turned for what seemed like hours before she settled. Outside, Daine
heard a dog's bark,
A headache
grew in her temples. She missed having animals close by. At home, she'd had a
ground-floor room. Even in winter she left the shutters open a crack, and never
slept cold. Her friends always kept her warm.
Disgusted,
she grabbed her breeches from the chest in front of her bed. Her traveling gear
was there, including her bedroll. It was the work of a second to dress and
stuff her feet into boots. With her bedroll under her arm, she slipped
downstairs and outside.
The
night air was a relief. She inhaled the scents of field and forest happily,
feeling sleepy and content as she crossed the open pasture. The tree that
had
sheltered the shy ponies that afternoon was there, the ground underneath
mercifully free of manure. She spread out her bedroll and, already half-asleep,
crawled in. Cloud lay down to support her back. Someone—a pony she didn't know—
lipped the foot of her covers.
"This
is much better," Daine said. "Good night, everybody," Falling
asleep, she knew the free ponies had come to stand nearby and keep her company.
In her
dream, she walked down the road with Onua. Instead of ponies, they led
people—the trainees—in chains. The night air was thick and sour, and marsh
creatures made an incredible noise.
The
noise stopped abruptly, cut off. Onua halted. "What's that
A
stench jell on them in waves. "Stormwings!" Daine
cried,
She was
awake and sitting up. Dawn shone between clouds in the east. The ponies milled
nearby, restless and afraid. She drew a deep breath, feeling air pour into her
chest like soup. Lurching to her feet, she peered overhead. The sky was empty,
but that meant nothing. They were coming.
She
dragged her boots on and ran for the building; the ponies ran with her.
"Ho, the barracks!" she yelled, knowing she was too far away.
"Riders!" On the second floor a window was open—her own. "Miri!
Onua, wake up!"
A
tousled head appeared. "Daine, what's wrong?" Kuri yelled.
"Get
Onua!" Daine screamed. "Tell her Stormwings are coming!" She
gasped for breath. At her back she felt wrongness surge.
Kuri
vanished from the window. The girl turned, knowing she could never reach the
barracks in time. They rose from the trees, the suns first thin rays striking
off metal wings. The familiar stink fell over her.
Zhaneh
Bitterclaws led her flock, homing in on Daine. "Kill it!" she
screeched, Her left eye was a black and oozing ruin. "Kill this
beast!"
More
than fifty Stormwings stooped to the attack. Cold with terror, Daine crouched
against the ground. Cloud reared, ordering the Stormwing queen to come down and
fight like a horse. Steel claws groped for her as the mare struck at the
creature with her hooves. The ponies crowded around Daine, lunging at the
Stormwings when they came too close.
Goddess,
Horse Lords, get me out of this and I will never, ever sleep without a bow
again, she promised.
Tahoi
raced onto the field with a pack of hounds, alJ of them as big as he was. More
dogs followed, baying. Seeing rocks nearby, three of them as big as her fist,
Daine grabbed them. Her first struck Zhaneh Bitterclaws square on the nose.
"There,
you monster!" she yelled, shaking her fist at the Stormwings. "Come
close, so I can do it again!" A little dog that came with the hounds wove
in and out of the ponies' hooves to bring her more ammunition.
Black
fire filled with silver lights wrapped around a Stormwing. The creature
struggled, trying to throw it off: the fire crept into its mouth and blew it
apart. More clouds of black fire chased Stormwings to kill them.
Darkmoon
came, saddled and trailing his reins. He leaped to seize a Stormwing by the
leg. Shaking his prize like a terrier, he snapped its neck.
Other
war-horses followed. Behind them ran Sarge in only a breechclout, armed with a
fistful of javelins. He threw the first with a yell. Daine gaped when a
Stormwing dropped, trying to drag the weapon from its chest. The black man
fixed on a new target and waited for his best shot, as calm as he'd been at
lunch. Each time he threw, a Stormwing went down.
Onua
raced onto the field in her nightgown, her small bow and quiver in her hands.
She had an arrow on the string: lining up her shot, she dropped the Stormwing
that was her target. Zhaneh Bitterclaws saw the K'mir and screeched her triumph
as she attacked.
Daine
yelled. Half of the animals went to Onua, ringing her as the others ringed
Daine. More horses and dogs leaped the fence to cover Sarge.
Purple
fire—Alanna's magic—appeared, weaving a net around a pair of attackers. They
screamed and beat at it uselessly: it dragged them to earth and the hounds.
Thunder that was more than thunder pealed. The dogs howled—Daine clapped her
hands over smarting ears. The Stormwings shrieked, trying to do the same thing
with their steel feathers. Blue lightning darted from the top of the field,
consuming each Stormwing it struck.
Near
the fence a bearded man in shirt and breeches was the source of the blue fire.
It shone around him, and pooled in his hands. Beside him was Alanna, dressed as
he was, for riding. Numair was there too, in what looked like a nightshirt.
Fire lashed from their hands—purple for the Lioness, black for Numair—to cut
the enemy in two.
Zhaneh
spoke in her odd language and began to climb; those that were able followed. A
wall of their own fire wrapped around them, coloring them scarlet with an edge
of gold light.
The
bearded man threw a fistful of blue. The red shield consumed it, but the man
continued to hurl bolts until the monsters were specks in the sky.
Daine's
knees buckled from exhaustion and shock. Numair came down the rise, looking as
tired as when she had first seen him as a man. "I said I'd see you
again," he joked, leaning on the tree.
She
grinned at him. "You timed it perfect."
Darkmoon
and the other horses, ponies, and hounds sat where they were, trembling with
nerves. Many were cut and bleeding, but—miraculously— none were dead.
The
bearded man crouched beside a Stormwing corpse. He must have discovered their
smell: he sneezed and put a hand over his nose. Alanna and Onua went to him,
Onua leaning on Tahoi for support. A liver chestnut and an iron gray horse
nuzzled Sarge, making sure he was in one piece. Daine giggled, and found she
was getting the same treatment from Cloud.
Numair
offered Daine his hand. Cloud supported her on her free side, and a stranger
mare let Numair prop himself on her. "The trainees usually wait till
they're away from the palace before starting any wars," Numair told her.
"The nobles will complain you got them out of bed."
Daine
looked up at him, worried. "Will I get in
trouble?"
Sarge
had heard. He laughed. "Let 'em complain. It's good for them to be up in
time for breakfast."
When
she was calmer, she thanked the dogs, horses, and ponies who had come to her
rescue. Only when the men who worked in the palace stables and kennels arrived
to retrieve their charges did she return to the Rider barracks.
"Should
I go help them?" she asked Onua as she cleaned up. "Some of the
animals were hurt. They'll need stitching and bandaging—"
"Calm
down," the woman said. "There's a sorcerer attached to each of the
stables and kennels, to do any healing. Your animals will be fine."
Daine
followed her to breakfast, envious. Wouldn't that be a wonderful thing, to be
able to wave her hands and put an end to a creature s hurts?
Evin
and Miri besieged her with questions as she joined them. Why was she in the
field? Hadn't she been scared? Why did the animals fight for her and Onua? She
answered as well as she could, but when Padrach and Farant came to ask the same
things, she felt embarrassed.
After
breakfast, Sarge ordered the trainees to report to the horse meadow for
cleanup. Daine helped Kuri to clear a ground-floor storeroom, freeing it to
serve as her bedroom. Its best feature was a door to the outside she could
leave open. Other than that, it was tiny, just big enough to hold a bed, a
storage chest, a chair, and a small table.
That
afternoon she helped the trainees saddle and ride their new mounts. By the time
everyone took their days-end bath, she was exhausted. She was content, at
supper, just to listen to her new friends talk. Afterward, as the trainees got
ready for their nights lessons, Onua beckoned.
"What's
up?" Daine asked.
The
K'mir led her to a room across the hall from the mess. "There's somebody
who'd like to meet you." She opened the doo, "I brought her^ she
announced, following Dame inside. Are
we late?"
CHAPTER FIVE
WILD MAGIC
Seated at the table was the bearded man Daine
had seen that morning. "I just got here," he said in a deep, gentle
voice. "I took the liberty of ordering refreshments from the cooks, by the
way."
Close
up, he was a sight to wring any female heart. His close-cropped hair and beard
were blue black, his eyes sapphire blue, his teeth white against the blackness
of his beard. Daine gulped. She felt ten feet tall and clumsy. Her face was
probably breaking out in pimples as she looked at him.
He got
to his feet and smiled down at her. "You must be Daine. You may not
remember me from before—you were busy."
Looking
up into those eyes, the girl felt her heart melt like butter in the sun.
"No, sir, I remember. You threw blue lightning."
He held
a chair out for her. "Sit down, please." She obeyed and was glad when
he sat again. Having him behind her was wonderful but terrifying. What if she
had forgotten to scrub the back of her neck?
A cook
entered with a tray loaded with cakes, fruit, and a pitcher of juice. Placing
it on the table, he bowed to the man. "Your Majesty."
"Exactly
what we need," the stranger told him. "My thanks." The cook
bowed again and made his escape.
Daine
gaped at her host. "You're the kingl" she cried. Belatedly
remembering she ought to bow, or kneel, or something, she jumped to her feet.
Jonathan—King
Jonathan—grinned. "It's all right. Please sit. Otherwise good manners say
I have to get up again, and I'm tired."
She
sat, trembling. This is a very strange country, she told herself, not for the
first time. Back home, you couldn't pay a noble to speak to a commoner!
The
king selected a cake and bit into it. "Wonderful," he said with his
mouth full. "The Riders eat better than I do."
"It
just seems as if we do. We don't have six footmen asking if you're sure you
don't want a taster," Onua teased. She poured juice for all of them.
King
Jonathan snorted. "Don't remind me." He looked at Daine. "Seers
can tell, sometimes, if the immortals will attack a place. You, however, are
the first I know of to sense them nearby. Are there seers or fortune-tellers in
your family?" He smiled at her, just at her.
She'd
tell him anything for another smile. "Ma was a hedgewitch, Your Honor. She
had the Gift for birthing, healing. Protection spells—not as good as Onua's.
She was best with plants. She never could see any future things, though."
"Did
she have the Gift from her family?" he asked.
She
nodded, fiddling with the lacing of her shirt. "All the girls in her
family was healers but me." She swallowed a throat-lump, remembering how
disappointed Ma had been that Daine couldn't follow in her steps.
"What
of your father?" His voice was kind, but the question hurt. The king saw
it in her face and said gently, "I'm sorry, but I must know. If your
father was a peddler or a vagabond, perhaps he sired other children with your
ability. We can use more people like you."
"Why?
Sir—Your Majesty, that is?"
"Winged
horses were seen in Saraine this winter." The grimness in his eyes caught
and held her. "Griffins nest in the cliffs of the Copper Isles. There are
spidrens throughout the hill country this spring."
Winged
horses? Griffins? "Where do they come from, do you know?"
"The
Divine Realms—the home of the gods. Four hundred years ago, powerful mages
locked the immortals into them. Only the greatest gods have been able to
leave—until now."
An arm
crossed Daine's vision to pick up a cake. Numair took an empty seat, and the
king went on. "Our neighbors—Galla, Scanra, Tusaine— report unicorns,
giant birds, even winged people as small as wrens. We are plagued by monsters,
ogres, and trolls." He drummed his fingers on the table. "It's
interesting that a weak mage like Sinthya could send rare creatures like
Stormwings after you. Where did he get such power? As far as we know, he had
only one secret worth protecting: he was dealing with Carthak,"
"Carthak's
another country?" Daine asked, blushing for her ignorance.
"Across
the Inland Sea," Numair said, "They're desperate. Their crops failed
two years in a row— not enough rain, and tornadoes that ripped up the fields.
There were food riots in the capital last winter. The emperor needs good
farmland, and we re the closest target."
"Carthak
has the university, its school for mages, and its library—the same library used
by the mages who sealed the Divine Realms." The king looked at Numair.
"I think the Carthaki mages found those spells."
Numair
was rolling a cake into a ball. "And spells to compel immortals to obey
humans. How else could Sinthya get Stormwings to chase me?"
"We
have nothing like those spells," Jonathan told Daine. "Sinthya's
papers vanished. We're searching our own libraries, but it might take
months.
In the meantime, the warnings foretellers give us aren't enough. If we could
send those with your ability to sense immortals to our villages and towns, we
could better protect our people. If we can find your father—"
It had
come back to that. She shook her head, humiliated.
"Daine?"
It was Onua, who had given her trust and work that she loved. She owed this
woman, at least, an answer.
She
looked down. "I don't know who he is. Its in my name. Sarrasri—Sarra's
daughter. Only bastards are named for their mothers," She spat out the
hated word, but its taste stayed on her tongue,
"Why
don't you know?"
She
didn't look up to see who had asked, "Ma never told me. She never told
anybody. She kept saying 'someday, someday/"
"Do
you know anything?" Onua rested a hand on Daine s shoulder.
She
fought to get herself under control. "It was Beltane. They light fires,
and couples jump over the embers when they burn down." So they'll have
babies in the coming year, she thought, but she wasn't going to say that.
"We
do the same thing," the king remarked.
Daine
looked at him, startled. "You never jumped over no embers," she
accused before she knew what she was saying.
The
others laughed. She ducked her head to Hide her blush.
"The
ruler takes part in all great feasts, to show respect for the gods,"
Jonathan told her gravely. His eyes danced. "Thayet and I do it every
year."
"I
didn't mean—I wasn't trying to be—disrespectful—"
He
patted her knee. "I didn't think you were. Go on."
"Ma
wasn't sweet on anybody, so she went walking in the wood alone. She met
someone, I used to think it was a man that was already married, but when I
asked last year, she said no. And I don't look like anyone from Snowsdale. Most
of 'em are blond and blue eyed, being's we're so near Scanra and all."
The
king sat back with a sigh. "Well, it was an idea," he said to no one
in particular.
"I'll
help if I can," she said, knowing that she had disappointed them. "I
just don't know what 1 could do. And the warnings aren't that, exactly. I know
something wro«gJ5 coming, but I knew that much about the rabid bear."
"A
rabid bear}" the king asked in horror and awe. "Mithros—that's not
something I'd ever want to see!"
Daine
smiled. "I didn't want to see him, either, sir. I just got to."
"Did
you get the identical sensation from the
bear as
you got with the Stormwings or the spi-drens?" asked Numair.
"Oh,
no. It was different. Bad, but in a brown kind of way."
"In
a what?" Onua asked.
"Well,
animals—I think of 'em in colors, sometimes." She tapped her head,
"To me, bears feel brown, only this one had red and black lights. Very
sick, he was. I get the monsters as colors too, but they're gold with black and
green lights in them. I never felt any real creature as gold."
"I
told you she has magic," the mage told the king triumphantly.
"No!"
she retorted, jumping to her feet. "Didn't Ma test me and test me? Don't
you think I'd've grabbed at magic, if I had it, just to please Ma?"
"Easy,
little one." The king put a hand on her arm, guiding her back into her
chair. "Numair believes—and I agree—you have magic. You may have no Gift,
but there are other magics, 'wild magics.' The Bazhir tribes use one kind to
unite their people. The Doi read the future with another. There are creatures
we call 'elementals,' whose very nature is composed of wild magic."
Daine
frowned. "Miri told me the sea people know about it. Some of them use it
to talk to fish and dolphins."
"Exactly.
From what your friends say"—the
king
nodded to Onua and Numair—"your wild magic gives you a bond with animals.
Your mother might not have recognized it. Only a few people know it even exists."
Daine
frowned. "Can't you see it on someone, like them with the Gift can see it
on other folk that have it?"
"I
can" Numair said. "And you
do." Daine stared at him.
Jonathan
said, "He's perhaps the only living expert on wild magic."
Daine
scowled at Numair. "You never mentioned this on the road."
He
smiled. "If you were trying to get a deer to come to you, would you make
any sudden noises?"
Her
scowl deepened. "That's different. I'm no deer.
Jonathan
took Daine's hands. "Will you let Numair help you study wild magic? It may
help expand your awareness of the immortals, for one thing"
"Wouldn't
it be easier to tell creatures to obey you?" Onua added. "All the way
here you coaxed the ponies to mind you. You're dominant—you proved that on the
stallion, the day you and I met. Why prove it to each pony in the herd, if you
could do it just once and never again?"
"Daine."
Something in Numair's voice made her look at him, and only him. At the
expression in his dark eyes, she even forgot that the king still held her
hands. "I can teach you to heal."
"Animals?"
It came out as a squeak. "You mean—like Ma did humans? But how do you know
if I can?"
"Because
I saw you do it once." That wasn't Numair; it was Onua. "At the
marsh, after the fight. You were holding a bird, and you fainted,
remember?" Daine nodded. "I was looking right at an owl with its head
cut almost off. The wound healed; he flew away. So did a lot of birds that
shouldn't have been able to fly. I think it happened because their need just
pulled the healing out of you." The K'mir nodded to Numair. "He can
teach you to heal of your own will, without burning yourself up so you
faint."
All her
life she had splinted, sewed, bandaged. Most of her patients had mended, but some
had not. She felt the badger s claw heavy on her chest. To fix her friends,
like he'd fixed himself after giving the claw to her...
She
looked at the king. "I still think it sounds crazy, but I'll try."
He
squeezed her hands. "You will?" he asked quietly.
I'm in
love, she thought, and nodded. "Oh, wait, I hired on with Onua for the
summer."
"That
isn't a problem," said Numair. "The trainees will be going to
Pirate's Swoop. I live near there. Why don't I just go along?" When the
king frowned, he added, "Hag's bones, Jon, there's nothing I can do here
right now that you don't have a hundred other mages doing already. If I work
with
Daine,
maybe I can devise a spell to warn people that immortals are coming."
The
king made a face. "You just say that so I'll let you go."
"You
have too many mages eating their heads off around here as is," Onua
pointed out, "It's not as if you can't contact him if something comes
up."
"Whose
side are you on?" the king asked. The woman grinned. He sighed and looked
at Daine once more. Squeezing her hands, he let them go. "Thank you."
He got up. "Onua, Numair, keep me posted?" They nodded. "I'd
best go then. I have to dance with the Carthaki ambassador's wife."
Numair
grinned at him. "Wear iron shoes. Your Majesty."
Daine
said, "Excuse me—Your Majesty?" The king looked back at her.
"Yes, my dear?" No one had ever called her that. She blushed, and
managed to say, "I'm sorry I can't help more. With the sensing, and my da,
and all."
Jonathan
of Conte smiled at her. "If I've learned anything as a king, it's been I
never know when someone will be able to help me. I have a feeling you'll be
most welcome in this realm, Veralidaine Sarrasri."
And he
was gone, which was really just as well, because it was suddenly hard for her
to breathe.
Onua
patted her back. "He has this effect on most of us, if it helps."
Numair
rose, nibbling on one last cake. "No time like the present to begin.
Daine, will you get Cloud, please? We'll meet you by the stables,"
Dazed,
she went out and called her mare, With the nights so fine, Cloud had asked to
stay with the free ponies instead of being stabled with the trainees' mounts.
She came racing over at Daines summons and leaped the fence rather than wait
for the girl to open the gate.
Overwhelmed
by the day's events, Dame buried her face in Clouds mane: it smelled of night
air, ferns, and horse. "Things are so weird here," she whispered,
"You ever hear of 'wild magic'? They say I have it."
You
have something, and you know it. Who cares what name it has? Or did you really
think the wild creatures visit because they like humans?
"But
magifi"
Did you
call me to worry about the names of things? If you did, I'm going back. There's
a salt lick over by that big rock I want to taste.
"Daine?"
Numair and Onua were coming. "Good, you have her," Numair said.
"If you can persuade her to come with me, I'd like to check your range
with an animal you know well."
"What
do you mean, my 'range'?" she asked.
"I've
observed that when you say you 'hear' an animal, you actually mean hearing in
your mind— not with your ears. I want to see how far I can walk with Cloud
before you stop hearing her."
"But
how will you know?" the girl asked reasonably. "Should I have her
tell you when we lose touch or something?"
"No!"
Onua said, and laughed. "Daine, knowing Cloud, she'd do it by kicking him.
Numair will do a speech spell with me. You and I will sit here, and you tell me
what you hear from Cloud, and when you stop hearing her."
"Ij
Cloud will do it," amended Numair.
"Of
course she will." Won't you? the girl asked Cloud silently. The mare
switched her tail, thinking it over. Daine didn't rush her. Sometimes, if she
was too eager, Cloud would refuse just to keep her in her place.
Very
well. The pony trotted off down the fence, away from the palace.
"I
think you're to follow her," Daine told the
mage
with a grin.
Numair
sighed and trotted off after the pony. "Only one of us can lead here, and
that has to be me," he called.
Onua
and Daine hoisted themselves to the top rail of the fence, and Onua held her
palm out between them. In it glowed a ball of ruby-colored
fire.
"Numair will take a moment to set up his end of the spell."
"Onua—if
the king's on the bad side of these Carthaks, why does he have to dance with
the ambassadors wife?"
"Politics,"
Onua said. "We don't have to mess with that, thanks be to Father Storm and
Mother Rain. It means you sit down to dinner with enemies and ask how their
children are."
"Aren't
we at war, then?"
"Nah,"
the woman replied. "We aren't at war till both sides sign a paper saying
it's a war. The Carthaki emperor can raid us and send monsters against us, but
there's no war. Yet."
"That's
crazy" Daine said, and Onua nodded. They waited, enjoying the night.
Uphill the palace glittered, its lights blurring the stars overhead. Downhill
lay the forest, dark, moist, and quiet. The free ponies had come to graze near
the two women, their soft movements a comforting sound.
In the
distance the girl heard the callings of a pack of wolves. Did I hear them on
the road? she wondered. Not so close, that's for certain. I wonder if they miss
me, Brokefang and Rattail and the others.
Listen
to these wolves. Is it hunt-song? No, pack-song. They're just singing to be
doing it, not to celebrate the kill.
If I
could just run.. .dive into the forest. Go to them, be hunt-sister and one with
the pack—
"Daine?
Daine!" Onua was shaking her with one hand.
"Onua?
What's wrong?" Numair's voice came
from
the fire in the K'mir's other hand.
Great
Goddess—I almost forgot who I am! "I'm fine," she told Onua, forcing
herself to sound calm, "Can you hear them?"
"The
wolves? Of course," Onua replied. The pack had sensed her^their voices were
approaching through the trees. The ponies snorted anxiously, huddling near the
women and the fence, "I'll be right back," Daine said, and jumped
into the meadow. "Calm down and stay put," she ordered the herd. She
walked until she was halfway between trees and fence, knowing the ponies would
not come closer to the wolves.
"Go
away!" she yelled. "There are hunters here, and dogs! Go!" There
was that other way to speak to them, but she didn't dare try it. Not after she
had almost forgotten, just listening to them!
Their
calling stopped: they'd heard a human and run. It was against their own better
judgment to approach human dwellings in the first place.
Daine
returned to Onua, glad that the night hid the sparkle of tears on her cheeks.
"I'm too tired for this—I'm sorry. It hit me all of a sudden."
Onua
spoke into the red fire on her hand, then closed her fingers on it. The globe
vanished. "Go to bed, then. Numair will let Cloud back into the
meadow.
I'll get someone to come watch the herds, in case the wolves return."
Daine
watched her go. "I'm sorry," she whispered though only the ponies
could hear. They crowded around, needing reassurance after hearing wolves. She
couldn't leave them scared. It took her several minutes to pat and'soothe them into
calmness once more. It wasn't their fault the wolves thought they'd heard a
wolf-sister in the night
She was
climbing the fence out of the meadow when Numair and Cloud arrived. Cloud came
right up to her, sniffing Daine all over for wolf smell,
"Are
you all right?" the man asked, panting as he rested a hand on Daine s
shoulder, "I should have remembered you might be tired after this morning.
I get carried away sometimes. I forget that not everyone has my academic
enthusiasm,"
She
stared at him, patting Cloud. He was a sorcerer. He'd cut his eyeteeth on the
impossible. He'd understand if anyone did, she thought, and opened her mouth to
tell him.
"'Evenin,
sir, miss." A burly man climbed over the fence, holding a crossbow out of
harm's way. Two big dogs wriggled through the rails and came over, tails
wagging, to sniff Daine. "Mistress Onua tells me wolves are near the
forest rim tonight Must be a new pack. Most of 'em know t' stay clear of the
palace. Me'n my lads'll keep watch for a bit, to discourage 'em, like,"
Daine
scratched the ears of both "lads" dogs almost as big as Tahoi. Run,
pack-brothers! she called to the wolves, under her breath, hoping they'd
somehow hear her. Run and keep running—there are hunters here!
She and
Numair said good night to the man, and Numair walked her to her new room in the
bar-s. She let herself in, waving to
him as he the hill to the palace. The chance to tell him the truth had gone.
Just as
well, she told herself as she changed into her nightshirt. What he don't know
won't hurt him—or me.
As she
was crawling under the covers, three palace cats entered through the partly
open door and climbed in with her, Daine smiled as they made themselves
comfortable. It would have been nice, talking with Miri after lights-out, but
this was better. Miri didn't know how to purr.
She
didn't realize her new room was beneath the boys' dorm until thunder the next
morning crashed through the ceiling overhead: "Trainees, turn twtl"
She sat up, tumbling cats right and left and scaring an owl out the door. That
thunder had been Sarge s voice. It must have had an equally powerful effect on
the male trainees. They were dressed and stumbling blindly on their way to the
stable by the time Daine had pulled on her breeches. Neither Onua
nor
Buri, who slept in the girls' dorm, could roar, but whatever they did seemed
just as effective. The female trainees were just as quick down the stairs.
Once
the stabled ponies were groomed and fed, the humans performed the same chores
for themselves. "You'll work afoot," Onua told Daine as they ate.
"Keep an eye on what's low, hooves to hocks, but if you see a trainee
misusing an animal or a problem with the tack, don't be afraid to sing out. The
rest of us will be mounted, so you'll see things we miss.'1 She clapped Daine
on the shoulder with a grin as she got up. "We'll have some run,"
Going
to the meadow while everyone else saddled up, Daine was startled to find the
queen already there, patting a savage-looking yellow dun mare. Soon the
trainees, Onua, and Buri arrived on ponies, and Sarge joined them on a horse, a
strongly built liver chestnut gelding. The four mounted officers put the
trainees through a mornings hard work, trying the ponies at different
gaits—walk, trot, canter, gallop—with and without saddles. After lunch,
everyone switched to his spare mount and went through it all over again.
Daine
soon learned a polite "excuse me" went unheard. She also learned she
wasn't shy if she thought a pony had picked up a stone or had strained a
muscle. By mornings end she had developed a bellow—not as shattering as
Sarge's, perhaps, but loud enough for her purposes.
Numair
found her after lunch. "How's it going?" he asked, leaning on the
meadow fence next to her.
When
she opened her mouth, a croak emerged. She cleared her throat and tried again.
"Fine. It's all fine."
"I
was wondering—about that range-finding experiment"—he squinted up at the
sky—"you're too busy to try it now, I suppose."
Cloud
trotted over to them. Tell the stork-man / will go with him.
Numair
looked oddly at Daine as the girl laughed at the pony's name for him. When she
caught her breath, she said, "No, don't ask me. You really don't want to
know!" To the pony she said, "But there's no hearing spell for me to
talk to him with. I can't ask Onua, not now. I shouldn't even really try it
myself, not if I'm to earn my pay with these people."
The
pony stamped impatiently. You act as if you're the only clever one. I will tell
the stork-man when I can no longer hear you.
Daine
relayed the pony's offer to Numair. "You mean she'll undertake the test
situation without dealing through you? Can she do that?" he asked,
fascinated.
"She
says she can. I know she always finds me if
one of
us wanders off."
"All
right, then." He bowed to the pony. "Lead on." As they walked
off, Daine heard Numair say, "And no biting."
The
trainees left the stable with their spare ponies, followed by the queen and the
other officers. Soon Daine was busy: she forgot about Cloud and Numair. The
afternoon followed the morning's pattern, with one difference: the officers
were still fresh, but the pace had begun to tell on the trainees.
"Come
on, Evin!" yelled the queen, circling the Player at a gallop.
"Raiders won't give you a break for lunch, laddy!"
"I
don't want to see air between butt and saddle, trainee.'" Sarge roared at
Miri's heels. "You ride that gelding like he's a separate creature! He
ain't! He's part of you, so connect the parts again!"
Onua
swooped down on a brunette, Selda, and scooped the bow out of her hand.
Circling back, she told the girl, "An enemy might do that with an ax.
Every time you have to concentrate on your mount you give a foe a chance."
"Your
stirrups too long!" Daine yelled at one of the men. "Stop and fix
it!" He didn't seem to hear. Within seconds Buri, slung low on her pony's
side, came up unwatched to grab the stirrup in question. The trainee s pony
wheeled away from the K'mir; her rider, Tarrus, slipped off and down.
Buri
righted herself on her pony's back and
looked at Tarrus.
"Your stirrup was
too long, trainee. Fix it."
She rode off calmly.
"I'm
sorry," Daine said as the young man struggled out of the mud. She gave him
a hand. "I tried to warn you—"
He
grinned at her, his small, pointed nose quivering like a rabbit's. "I
figured I'd fix it the next break. Next time I'll do it right off." He
looked at his behind and the backs of his legs, where he sported a coat of mud.
"It's an ill wind that blows no good. With a mudpack like this, my skin
will be lily soft." He fixed the stirrup and mounted up again.
Daine
was tired when it came time to stable the trainees' mounts at day's end, but
she knew she couldn't be as tired as the others. They moved stiffly as they
groomed and fed their ponies, without joking or arguing as the officers and
Daine corrected them. Only when each pony had been tended and the trainees had
retreated to the baths did the queen say farewell and trudge up the long slope
to the palace. She had groomed her mounts while the trainees groomed theirs,
still finishing with enough time to criticize their work.
"She
does this every day?" Daine asked Buri as she followed the Rider officers
to the barracks.
The
stocky K'mir nodded. "In the fall and winter she can't be out in the
field. That's the social season. She has to travel around being queen. She
works
with the trainees to make up for when she can't be with the groups."
"But
there's times she'll leave a ball or dinner to go to a Rider group in trouble,"
Onua remarked. "Remember the pink tissue dress?"
Buri
rolled her eyes. "Three hundred gold nobles that thing cost, just for
cloth and sewing. That's not counting pearls in the collar and cuffs— gray
ones, almost perfectly matched in size."
Daine
whistled in awe. She couldn't imagine a garment that cost so much. She couldn't
even imagine what such a dress would look like. "What happened?"
"Two
years ago," Buri said, "the Fifth Rider Group chased outlaws into a
swamp and got bogged down. Thayet was visiting some earl nearby"
Daine
winced. "And the dress?"
The two
K'mir shook their heads as they led the way into the baths. "What happened
to the group and the outlaws?" Daine asked as they undressed.
"The
Rider group lost two. The outlaws didn't make it, but Thayet and the Riders
saved the village girls they'd kidnapped." Buri plunged into the heated
pool, and the girl trainees yelped as a wave almost swamped them. Onua and
Daine entered more decorously. Buri surfaced and gasped, "Thayet always
said it was worth losing the dress."
"And
the king wasn't mad?" Daine wanted to know.
Onua
replied, "He just told her next time, try to change clothes."
It
wasn't until supper was almost over and the mage had come to the mess hall door
that Daine remembered he'd gone off to experiment with Cloud. "Ready for
lessons?" he asked, sitting next to her. "How was it this
afternoon?" she asked. "We determined that your range, with Cloud at
least, is a mile and a half. It may be more or less than that with animals who
haven't been exposed to you for a prolonged period of time,"
"You
make her sound like a disease," Evin commented with a laugh. "Are we
going to need healers or something?"
Numair
smiled. "No. But Daine, have you found that animals you spend a lot of
time with are, well, smarter than others? Smarter in a human sense?"
She
played with her spoon. A friend of Ma's had said as much, when she had nursed
one of his falcons. Some of the local herdsmen had liked her to train their
dogs for that reason. "Is it bad?"
"No,
how could it be? It doesn't make your animals less able to survive in the wild;
quite the opposite." Numair took her food tray and stood. "Come on.
We're going for a walk." He took her tray to the servants who cleaned up.
Daine
rose with a sigh, tired muscles creaking.
Miri
winked. "If you don't want lessons, I'll take them," the girl
offered. "He's cute!"
Daine
followed her teacher, shaking her head. Numair was well enough, as men went,
but he wasn't the king.
The
mage steered her out of the barracks and through the horse meadow gate. In
silence they crossed the wide swath of green, letting their eyes get accustomed
to the night. They had to stop every few feet while Daine greeted the grazing
ponies and horses. Each time she patted them and excused herself, saying she
would visit with them another time.
The
horses stayed back as the man and the girl went into the forest along a trail.
There was just enough light to follow it without stumbling into trees. Here,
away from the torches of the palace, the dark-clad mage turned into a large
shadow, a slightly ominous one.
The
trail opened onto a grassy clearing. The animals who normally would have been
drinking from the large pond in its center had fled on hearing them, but Daine
could feel their eyes. Overhead a bat squeaked.
"Have
a seat." Numair motioned to a rock near the pond. She obeyed a little
nervously. He came up behind her to rest his hands on her shoulders. "I'm
going to use my Gift, but through you. You must understand that. If I did this
with the king or Alanna, they wouldn't see what you will."
"If
you say so." The hair on the back of her neck was standing up, and she was
quivering. It wasn't fear, exactly, because she wasn't afraid of him. On the
other hand, the dark was rilled with strange currents that flowed into and out
of the presence at her back.
He put
his fingers on her temples. "Now, do just as we do when we're
meditating," the soft voice over her head commanded. "Slow, deep
breath— inhale." He inhaled with her. "Hold it. Let it go, carefully.
Again, in.. .and., .out..." Eyes closed, she breathed at his command.
Her
mind filled with vines of sparkling light wrapped in darkness—or was it the
other way around? When the space behind her eyes was full, the magic spilled
out of her. She felt it ripple through the clearing, soaking grass and trees.
It dripped into the pond, following the water into the ground.
"Open
your eyes." His whisper seemed to come from inside her head.
She obeyed.
The clearing, so dark before, was veined with shimmering fibers. All that was
green by day grew from emerald threads now. Awed, she reached down and plucked
a blade of grass. The needle of green fire that formed its spine flared, and
went dark.
She
gasped, remorseful. "I didn't mean to—"
"Hush,"
Numair said quietly. "Look at the earth."
A pale
bronze mist lay on the piles of dead matter under the trees. When she let the
blade of grass fall, its spine turned the same dim bronze as it touched the
ground. "It returns to the Goddess," she whispered.
The
stone beneath her and the other rocks she could see were veined with dark
silver, An owl on a nearby branch gleamed with a tracery of copper fire. A vole
grubbed beneath a bush near the spring, a point of copper light,
Daine
looked at her hands. They were through with strands of reddish light, almost as
if her veins had the power to glow. Intertwined with the red were strands of
copper fire. She looked at the owl, at the vole, and at her hands—-aU die same
shade of copper.
Half
twisting, she managed to see part of Numair. He too was laced with red fire. In
addition a white, pearly glow flickered over his skin like a veil. She
recognized the light Tahoi had shown her once,
"Sit
straight," the mage ordered her quietly. "I have to remain in contact
with you to keep the spell going."
She
obeyed. "I wish I could see this by myself?'
"You
can learn. The vision is in your mind, like the power to heal. Just remember
what your magic feels like, and practice reaching for it."
"Reaching
for it /xnv?"
Something
between them shifted, and she knew she looked into herself. At her center, deep
inside, welled a spring of copper fire.
She
called, and a slender thread rose from it to her. She caught it, opened her
eyes, and threw it out to the owl.
"You
don't need the hand motion," Numair said. "In magic, the thought is
the deed."
"If
you want it bad enough," she added. "That's what Ma said."
"She
was right."
The owl
glided down through the air. She held out her arm, and it perched, looking her
over with solemn eyes. He was a barn owl a little more than a foot tall, with
the white ghost-face of his kind and a
You
called to me, night-sister?
His
voice was cold and precise. It was also clearer than tVve \o\ct of any animal
she'd ever spoken to, except Cloud s.
"Only
to greet you, silent one," she replied with
respect.
"You
don't need to say it aloud," Numair commented.
Daine
shook her head. "Can we do this a little bit at a time?" she asked,
not looking away from the owl. "Please?"
Slit
felt him smile. "Whatever you say."
The owl
ruffled his feathers in disapproval. It is not for the nestling to decide the
proper time for lessons, he said, and flew off.
"I
heard that" Numair remarked. "He's right. And it's time to
stop." The ending of the spell felt to Daine as if she were a waterskin
and the water was trickling out. She opened her eyes.
"How
do you feel?" he asked.
She
didn't reply. She felt a tickling in her mind—a feeling similar to the one
caused by Stormwings, only faint and far more pleasant—and looked around for
its source. It came from the .pond. A tiny figure not much bigger than the owl,
glittering with scales, was levering itself out of the water.
Numair
saw what she was looking at. He spoke
a word
Daine couldn't understand, and tKe clearing
filled
with bright light. The little female creature in the pond whistled shrilly and
vanished into the water again.
"Her
hair was blue." Daine said it calmly. She had used up her excitement for
the day. "She was all over scales and her hair was blue."
"Undine,"
Numair whispered. His dark face glowed with awe. "I think we just saw an
undine—a water sprite." He walked over to the pond and knelt beside it.
"I'm sorry, little one. Won't you come up again?"
"Maybe
if you doused the light," Daine recommended. She sat back down on her
rock. Her knees felt a little weak.
"Oh—of
course." He said something, and the clearing was dark once more.
They
waited until Daine was half-asleep, but the undine did not return. Finally
Numair gave up his vigil and roused the girl, "I'll have to tell the
king," he said as she stretched, "Or maybe not. She wont harm anyone.
They're said to be incredibly shy of humans."
"I
noticed," she said dryly.
He
produced a globe of light so they could see the trail: they both were tired and
needed the help. "To see a water sprite," he murmured, steering her
down the path. "We live in marvelous times, my little magelet."
"What's
a magelet?" she asked, and yawned.
"Nothing,
really. Well, 'little mage.' Isn't that what you are?"
As they
left the clearing, Daine saw movement out of the corner of her eye. Another
tiny person, a green female, watched them go from the branch of a tall oak. She
decided not to mention tree sprites to Numair just now. She wasn't sure that
she liked being called "magelet."
The
next day passed in the same manner—driving the trainees morning and
afternoon—with one difference. As if her time in the undine s clearing had
opened a door in her mind, Daine saw glimpses of copper fire in every furred
and feathered creature to come near her. It was very distracting until she got
used to it. Most alarming were the flashes at the corner of her eye, the ones
that made her turn to look.
"Why
do you keep twitching?" the brunette
Selda
wanted to know. "You look like you have a
palsy,
Daine
glared at Selda but held her tongue. The older girl was like some people back
home, never happy unless she had something to complain about Still, the comment
was enough to make her guard
herself
so she wouldn't jump at the hint of copper light. She came to like seeing it.
Her only regret was that copper was the only magical.glitter she saw— no blue
or green threads, no bronze mists and pearly shimmers.
She had
a fresh shock that day: when she saw Onua with the ponies, the same copper
color threaded the K'mir s head and hands,
"Why
so surprised?" Numair asked that night,, when Daine told him. They were on
their way to the horse meadow once more. "She's—what's the K'rniri
term?—horse-hearted. Did you think Thayet would commission just anyone to
obtain mounts? The Riders depend on horses more than any other military
company. Onua ensures they have the best,"
"Does
she know?" Daine asked. "Of course." He boosted himself up to
sit on the top rail of the fence. "She doesn't have it enough that she
needed training in it, like you. There are a few people here with it: a man and
his grandson in the palace mews, two sisters at the kennels, some of the
hostlers. Stefan, the chief hostler, has a lot of it. He breeds
great-horses—the extra-large mounts many knights need to ride in combat. I
trained him."
Shaking
her head, Daine sat on the rail beside him, looking at the animals grazing in
the meadow. "And I only heard of all this two days ago."
He
tweaked her nose. "Being all of thirteen, of course you should be
omniscient," he teased. "Now, magelet—to work." He pointed to a
pony grazing by itself nearly three hundred yards away. "Call to it."
She
opened her mouth, and he clapped his hand over it. " Without sound."
She
glared at him. "Then how'm I supposed to call her?" she asked, his
palm tickling her moving lips.
"With
your mind. One thing I've noticed is that you tend to be contused about how you
speak to and hear animals. We're going to break you of the habit of assigning
concrete manifestation to magical phenomena."
"What?"
"Believing
you actually hear or speak with your body when all of it is done with your
mind. Call that pony."
"'That
pony' is a mare. Why can't I just talk to her?"
He
sighed. "A time may come when being heard will get you killed. Also, your
mind needs discipline. If your thinking is more direct, what you can do with
your thoughts will happen more direcdy. Learn to focus your mind: focus creates
strength. Meditation helps you reach the same end.
"We're
doing spring cleaning up here." He tapped her forehead with a long finger.
"Once you put everything into its proper place—once you organize your
mind—you'll be able to find what you want quickly. Now call her, please."
Daine
clenched her teeth and thought, as loudly as she could, Come here, please! The
mare continued to graze peacefully.
"Think
of the magic," Numair said calmly.
try
again.
An hour
or so later they gave it up and went inside. Daine's head ached fiercely, and
the pony had not come closer by so much as a step.
"We'll
keep practicing," Numair said calmly.
"Lucky
me," she muttered, following him into her room. A large book lay on her
writing table. "What's this?" She opened it to a colored page and
gasped
in awe: it was a precise drawing of the bones of a wild pig.
"It's
a book on mammalian anatomy," he said,
sitting
down on her bed.
"A
book on what?"
He
sighed. "I keep forgetting you're not a scholar—sorry. Anatomy is what's
inside a body: muscles, veins, organs, and so on. 'Mammalian' refers to
mammals. You know what they are; you just don't know the fancy term.
Warm-blooded animals with hair-covered bodies that suckle their young are
mammals."
"That's
most of my friends." She said it quietly, turning page after page of
drawings with fingers she had scrubbed on her shirt. *
"Exactly.
If you're to learn healing, you need to understand how animals are put
together."
"I
already know some." Here was a bear's skeleton; here the veins and organs
of a cat. Every drawing was done with an eye to the finest detail.
"This
book will help you to organize what you know and add to your present knowledge."
She
made a face. "Why? My friends don't organize their minds. Everything they
think about is all tumbled together, willy-nilly."
"For
them that's enough," he said patiently. "As animals they remember the
past only vaguely. They are unable to visualize a future, apart from the change
of seasons. They have no comprehension of
mortality—of
their deaths. They don't learn from books or teachers, so they have no need to
structure their minds in order to find what they learn. You, however, are human
and different. If you do not find a way to organize your mind, at worst you
might go mad. At best, you'll be stupid."
She
made a face—she didn't like the sound of either fate. With a sigh she looked at
the page before her. The artist had drawn a bat, its frame spread so she saw
how bones fitted together. "You'd take this when you go. My friends come
in every night, I wouldn't want it soiled."
"The
book is spelled against dirt and tearing. It's yours. I want you to use it, not
admire it"
It took
a moment for her to realize what he'd said, "Mine!" she gasped.
"No! It's—its too valuable. The likes of me don't keep such things!"
Her fingers shook, she wanted it so much, but peasant girls didn't own books.
He
caught her hand, his eyes earnest. "Daine, listen to me." He pulled
her down to sit beside him. "You're a student mage. You need books like
this to do your work. I am your master. It's my duty—in this case it's my
pleasure—to give you whatever books and scrolls I believe you require to learn.
Unless you don't want to learn?"
"Odd's
bobs, of course I do!"
"Good.
Then get your book. We'll start at page one.
They
ended some time later, when Onua knocked and stuck her head in. "We're
about to meditate. Come on, if you're coming."
"Do
we have to?" Daine asked, closing the wonderful book.
"Spring
cleaning," he replied, getting to his feet.
She
followed him to the Rider mess. She'd been surprised to learn that meditation
was required of all trainees, not just Gifted ones. They worked at it every
night before they went to bed, along with all their officers, Daine, and
Numair, "whether we need it or not," Evin commented once, in a
whisper.
That
day set the pattern for the next tnree weeks. It took Daine six days to learn
how to deliberately call the nearest pony without using words. Numair then had
her summon a pony farther away but still within sight, until she could do that.
Next she had to call an animal from inside the barracks or stables, where she
couldn't see it: often that was Tahoi or one of the cats that slept in her
room. She worked hard. Each task took less time to master.
Anatomy
lessons she swallowed in gulps. Every spare moment she had went into studying
her beloved book and memorizing its contents.
Meditation
was the hardest. She did her best, wanting to control the copper fire that was
her kind of wild magic, but clearing her mind was hard. Stray thoughts popped
into her head; something would itch; a muscle would cramp, and she would have
to start over. Often she fell asleep. The best thing about meditating with the
trainees was the knowledge that she wasn't the only one who was easily
distracted or who dozed off.
Slowly
they all grew used to their work. She saw it in the trainees before noticing it
in herself, as their bodies hardened and the hard routine became habit. After
two weeks she was taken off watching them on foot and put to teaching archery,
something even the officers had to work to beat her at. It wasn't until she saw
that few trainees were falling asleep in meditation that she realized she no
longer fell asleep, either. With practice it got easier to learn to think of
nothing at all. The deep breaths emptied her thoughts and quieted her body
rhythms. Her mind learned to drift. She began to feel as she had in the marsh,
when she had listened for the hawk.
Is that
what it is? she thought one night, lying awake in bed. She grasped the badger's
claw. "I wish you'd come and tell me," she whispered, earning a
curious look from the pine marten who had arranged herself and her kits on the
girl's blanket-covered legs.
If the
badger heard, he did not answer the summons. "Typical," Daine told
the martens, and went to sleep.
CHAPTER SIX
MAGELET
The
next day, a month after her arrival, she was waiting for the trainees to finish
their morning workout when she heard a low persistent rumble. For a week the
hill above the barracks had swarmed with men loading empty wagons. Now draft
horses had been hitched to the wagons; one by one, they towed the laden vehicles
up the hill. -
Sarge
clapped Daine on the shoulder. "This is it," he said cheerfully.
"The king is on his way, so w can be on ours. I'm ready!"
"I'm
confused," she said, craning to see his face. "He's on what
way?"
"See,
my lamb, in summer the king goes on progress, to see how fares the kingdom.
Soon as he goes, the queen takes the trainees to our summer
camp—"
"Pirates
Swoop this year," Alanna put in. Shed been training with the Riders for
the last week. "We set out tomorrow."
"That
isn't much notice," remarked Farant, who
had
overheard.
"How
much notice do you need, trainee?" Sarge asked. "You have half a day
to prepare. One day you'll have to roll out of bed ready for a long ride. Then
you'll appreciate this leisurely pace."
Technically,
Daine thought that night, the trainees didn't have even half a day to get
ready. They'd put in their usual afternoon's work with their spare mounts. The
only change in their routine was that they were excused from their lessons
before meditation to pack. She hadn't been excused from her lessons, but she
had little packing to do.
Meditation
was held, as always, in the mess hall, and everyone attended. When Numair gave
the word to begin, she decided to try her idea from the night before. Instead
of thinking of nothing, she closed her eyes and listened.
How
could breathing be so hudl She concentrated, putting the sound of her lungs
aside. As the noise lessened, her nerves calmed. Her neck itched, but it was a
distant feeling, not a distracting one. She scratched, lazily, and let her hand
settle into her lap. A drumlike thud in her ears was her own heart. Easy, she
told it in her mind, and the sound retreated.
Something
bumped steadily at the front of the mess: Tahoi, lying near Onua, was wagging
his tail. Daine peeked and saw the dog shining with copper fire. She looked at
Onua — the K'mir was veined with fine copper threads.
Taking
a deep breath, she looked inside. The wellspring of her own power was there,
just as it had been the night by the undine's pool.
Remembering
Numairs lectures, she trapped how it had felt just now, to listen and to find
her power, and memorized it. When she placed the feeling in her mind, she knew
exactly where it was and how to find it again, quickly. It's organized, she
thought with an inner smile.
She let
the excitement fade and listened again. In the closed and dark kitchen at her
back, mice hunted for scraps. She directed them to a rind of cheese she'd
hidden for them beneath the long table, then sent her hearing out of the mess
hall, into the night. Sounds crashed into her skull: bats seeking insects, cats
on the hunt, kenneled dogs settling for sleep, horses relaxing, the hawks in
the palace mews. It was too much to hear all at once: she almost lost her inner
silence in panic. Stopping, she pushed the animal sounds back with her mind
until they didn't overpower her. Only when she was sure they were under control
did she send her hearing out to the horse meadow once more.
A herd
of ponies, including Cloud, grazed there. All of them knew her by now, from the
silent-calling lessons. She joined with them, entering the herd. A breeze
filled the air, bringing lush scents: ripe grass, leaves, the heady, rich smell
of the earth. Around her were the others, her brothers and sisters.
A king
stallion watched over their family, ready to lead them to safety at the
smallest hint of danger.
Spring
made them all coltish. With a snort, the king horse broke into a run, just to
be running. The herd and Daine followed, racing, black earth thudding under
their hooves, the night air in their nostrils. With the herd she was safe; with
the herd she had all she could need of comrades and family...
Cloud
knew the instant Daine came into the herd. She'd seen this coming, as the
stork-man encouraged the girl to venture farther and farther from herself.
Tonight the feel of Daine's presence was stronger than it had been since they
came to this giant human stable, making Cloud edgy. When Daine's spirit began
to change, to take on the scent of the herd, the mare knew they were in trouble
again.
She ran
for the fence and jumped it. From the meadow she felt the herd call her to go
with them. She wavered, wanting to follow. Then, with an angry neigh at the
part of her that made her think unhorselike things, she broke free of the call
and ran to the stable where Daine's body was.
The
gate was barred. She flung herself at it, flailing with her hooves. Putting her
hindquarters to it she kicked the gate once, and again, until the large human,
the wood brown man, yanked it open. She shoved past him—no time to be
polite—and looked around this room that smelled of human food.
Sure
enough, there Daine sat on the ground, front hooves limp in her lap, eyes
closed. Cloud went to the girl and knocked her over.
A warm
force slammed into Daine's body. Suddenly she was free of the herd, safe inside
fter own mind. Opening her eyes, she saw Cloud standing over her. People around
them were talking.
"I
did it again, didn't I?" she whispered.
Numair
knelt beside her, dark eyes worried. "What happened? She nearly kicked
down the door to get at you—"
Daine
was shaking. They didn't know. They didn't know what Cloud had prevented. Thank
you, she told the mare.
Don't
run with the People again until you remember to hold on to yourself, the mare
ordered. I won't always be here to wake you up!
Daine
fumbled in her pocket and produced two lumps of sugar. "You'd best go
outside now," she whispered, and Cloud obeyed.
Numair
helped the girl to her feet. "It's all right," he told everyone.
"We were just trying an experiment. I didn't realize it would work so
well." Shielding her from the stares of the trainees, he guided Daine out
of the mess and into her own room. "What happened?" he asked, closing
the door.
"I
felt sick," she lied. "Just a headache, that's
all."
"Cloud
wouldn't come here for that," he retorted. "She was in a panic. What
went wrong? And what's this?" The badger's token had fallen outside her
shirt. He picked it up, squinting at it. "From its appearance, it's a
claw."
"It's
mine," she retorted, yanking it away from him. "It's private. Can't I
have anything private anymore?"
"Daine—"
Her
voice rose. She knew she was about to cry. "Would you phase go away? I'm
tired and my head hurts! Can't you leave me alone for once?"
"Very
well." His was grave and sad. "But I wish you would trust me."
He left, quietly shutting the door.
Daine
sat on her bed, tears on her cheeks. What could she do? If she went too deep in
meditation, she risked madness. If she didn't go deep—He said I might learn to
heal, she thought desperately, squeezing the claw tight. But I have to master
this first— or I'll never be able to heal.
Caught
between fear of losing control and wanting the power Numair said she could
have, the girl tossed and turned all night. She would doze off, only to dream
of running down a forest trail on all fours. Behind her would be the trainees,
or the King's Own, or Stormwings, tracking her so they could tear her to
pieces.
Habit
woke her at dawn, the hour Sarge usually
bellowed
for everyone to turn out. That morning the trainees had been given an extra
hour to sleep, which meant if she hurried, she'd have the stable to herself.
Soundlessly she called Cloud in for a thorough grooming and breakfast: there'd
be no time for it later on. Onua had asked her to handle the supply wagon, and
Daine expected her time before they left would be spent looking over the cart
horse and making sure any last-minute additions to her load were safely stowed
away.
A
stranger was in the stable, a potbellied man
the
ponies greeted with enthusiasm from their stalls.
Copper
fire shone inside his red face. When he saw
her,
his head flew up as if he were a surprised horse. Suddenly shy, Daine halted
just inside the door.
"Excuse me—might
you be Stefan? The chief
hostler?"
"Maybe.
Who re you?"
He
can't see it in me, she realized. I can see his magic, but he can't see mine.
"Daine, sir. Master Numair said you have wild magic. So do I."
The man
relaxed—slightly. "You're the one, then. I brung ye a cart horse." He
led her to a newcomer, a sturdy bay cob. "This be Mangle."
Daine
offered the gelding her hands to sniff. "MangleP" she asked with a
grin. The cob felt like a calm well-behaved sort of horse to her.
Stefan
smiled and ducked his head. "Oh, well," he muttered by way of
explanation. "Anyways, he's good for whatever ye need in th' way of
work." Daine leaned down to blow in Mangles nostrils. "He likes ye.
Onua said I needn't worry if you was in charge of 'im." Cloud butted him
from behind. "Who's this fine lady?" He bent to the task of greeting
the mare, while Daine finished getting acquainted with the cob. When she
finished, Stefan was looking at her oddly. "You know this little beauty's
changed, 'cause of you."
She
couldn't tell what the emotion in his pale blue eyes was. "Me'n Cloud have
been through a lot together."
He gave
the mare a last pat. "It shows." With a wave to Daine, he walked to
the stable door.
"Master
Stefan?" He turned to look at her. "D'you ever want to run with the
herd? To just—be a horse? Do what the herd does?" She sweated, waiting for
an answer. It had cost a lot to ask.
"'Course
I do," was the mild reply. "Don't everybody?"
She
gripped the badgers claw hidden under her shirt. "What keeps you from
doing it?"
He
rubbed his strawlike hair. "I'm a man. I can't be runnin with the herd,
now can I?" He left, closing the door behind him.
He
makes it sound easy, but it's not. There's something wrong with me, she
decided. It's the madness, just waiting for me to drop my guard so it can take
me again. That's how he can protect him- self—he never forgets what he really
is. And I can t remember.
Taking
Cloud into an empty stall, the girl swore she would never let her guard down
again. Better to disappoint Numair in her studies than to run wild and lose the
friendships and respect she had found in this new country.
She was
almost done with Cloud when Onua came into the stable. "There you are. Did
Stefan bring our cart horse?"
Daine
jerked a thumb at him. "His name's
Mangle."
Onua
grinned as the bay sniffed her pockets. "Is that so?" Looking at
Daine as she fed the cob an apple, she asked, "Did you meet Stefan?"
The
girl nodded. "Onua—about last night—
It >i m sorry.
"For
what?" The K'mir gave Mangle a last pat and went to see to her own two
ponies. "Daine, your magic is taking you down a different road from most
folk. Your friends understand that, if you don't Stop worrying so much,"
"Thank
you," she whispered.
"Don't
thank me—get moving. We want to be assembled and ready to go when the first
morning bell rings,"
Once
she'd eaten a quick breakfast, Daine finished stowing the officers' packs in
the wagon, harnessed Mangle to it, and drove it to the flat area in
front
of the horse meadow gate where the Riders would assemble. The queen, Buri,
Onua, and Sarge turned their spare mounts over to her to lead, so they would be
free to range along the trainee column during the ride. The girl considered
roping the three ponies and Sarge s horse together for appearances* sake and
decided not to: all four mounts knew her weU and promised to walk in their own
column on one side of die wagon,
Alanna
waved as she rode past on Darkmoon, going to wait with the queen, Daine
grinned, knowing the Lioness would be more talkative after lunch,
She had
started to wonder about Numair when several packs thudded into the back of the
wagon. The mage rode up on a black-and-white gelding, looking tired. As if to
prove it, once he stopped, he lay along his horses neck. "Wake me when we
stop for lunch," he said, and — to all appearances — went to sleep.
Daine
looked at him, smiling. Dressed in a brown tunic, white shirt, and green
breeches, he looked like the man she had known on the road to Corus, not the
silk-clad friend of kings who'd been giving her lessons. The jeweled pins and
rings he'd worn since his return to court were nowhere to be seen. The only
hint of his apparent wealth was a large amber drop dangling from one earlobe.
Slowly
twenty-three trainees assembled ahead of Daine in two columns, leading their
spares on the outside. Each was inspected by the queen, Buri, Sarge, or Onua;
some, including Farant and Selda, were sent to the barracks to lighten their
packs. Four trainees, again including Selda, were sent back twice, this time
with Sarge to harry them. Daine could hear his bellowed "Riders travel
light!" when he was inside the barracks with his victims.
At last
everyone was ready. Alanna and Buri took places on the left, Sarge and Onua on
the right, outside the columns. Thayet rode to the head of the company, and
Daine nudged Numair. He opened a bloodshot eye. "I think this is it,"
she whispered. He nodded and straightened in the saddle.
It was.
Thayet unsheathed her slightly curved blade and held it aloft. "Riders,
move out!" she cried, her clear voice rippling through the columns, and
started forward. The trainees followed, keeping the prescribed distance between
their mounts as they took a well-marked road into the Royal Forest.
Daine's
skin quivered with goose bumps. "That's fair beautiful," she said to
no one in particular. "Gi* up, Mangle!" His ears pointing forward
with eagerness, the cob obeyed.
The
company stopped at noon for lunch. After cleanup, the trainees and officers
switched mounts. Daine, her shame about the previous night put aside, tried not
to smile when Numair asked if she minded if he rode with her. She agreed
instantly. It was hard to be aloof from a man whose seat on a horse was so bad
that he had to feel every bump in the road. Making friends with his patient
gelding, Spots, she told the horse he deserved a carrot for bearing with such
an ungraceful rider, and gave it to him.
Things
went better during the afternoon: they picked up speed, covering some distance
before camping for the night. Supper came from kettles that had been stowed in
her wagon, their contents gently reheated over that night's fires.
"Tomorrow
you hunt for your meal," Sarge warned as they filled their bowls with
stew. "Youd best make less noise, my lambs, or you won't eat." Daine,
settling between Miri and Evin, fought to hide a smile.
Returning
to the fires after she had cleaned and put away her things, she was intercepted
by Numair and led away from the trainees to an isolated clearing.
"Lessons," he said firmly. "As long as you and I are within
riding distance of each other, my magelet, we will have lessons."
She
couldn't protest, really. She knew the trainees were having lessons and, unlike
them, she didn't have the excuse of having fought two spirited ponies all day.
With a sigh she took a seat on a nearby rock.
Numair
put her book on another rock, where Cloud—who'd joined them—couldn't nibble on
it, and took a tailor's seat next to Daine. He rubbed his large hands together.
"Tonight we'll try something a bit different. While you were washing up, I
unteth-ered Mangle and Spots. I want you to call them both to us, at the same
time."
"Why
can't I call them one at a time?"
"You're being difficult/' was the forbidding
"It
don't make sense." "Remember the Stormwing attack in the horse
meadow? You called quite a few animals to you, all at once. You might need to
do something like that again one day. Wouldn't it be nice if— instead of
calling entire herds — you only called enough horses to keep you safe?"
He had
her there.
She
found the copper thread in her mind, the one she wrapped around a call to an
animal, and held it.
Mangle
— Spots, she called. Would you come here, please?
They
crashed through the brush, coming up to nuzzle her and Numair.
"See?
That wasn't so bad" he told her. "Send
them
back, please."
With an
apology and a short explanation to the
horses,
Daine obeyed.
Numair
held up thumb and forefinger: between them sparkled a tiny ball of his magic.
"Onua, now, if you please," he said calmly. Putting thumb and
forefinger together, he snuffed the ball out. "Our friend is releasing
some of the other mounts," he told Daine. "How many has she
loosed?"
Daine
listened—not with my ears, she reminded herself. "Spots and Mangle are
still free. Onua's loosed—lets see, Ox and General, Sarge's two horses, and her
pair, Whisper and Silk, and also Darkmoon,"
"Call
them," Numair said,
She
struggled with the calling magic. It only worked for one creature, or two at
best, because all she did was focus the magic on an easy-to-hear mind. To call
several minds, she had to open her mind to her surroundings. She tried it, and
lost her concentration when an owl screeched overhead.
"Relax,"
Numair said, his voice pitched low. "It gets easier with practice. Find
them, and call them—softly. You don't need too much."
She
nodded, wiped her face on her sleeve, and tried again. Closing her eyes, she
listened for the ones who were free of their ropes. That was easy—a tethered
horse was always aware of the thing that kept him from getting that extra-juicy
clump of grass just out of reach. There—she had them. She opened the cupboard
in her mind where she'd put all her calling skill....
A scent
of deer on the breeze; a frog croaking in the distance; the soft patter of bats
hunting overhead. The herd was around her, contentedly browsing on lush, fat
grasses that had been amazingly overlooked by the deer. Ox and General were
with her, then Whisper, Silk, Spots, Mangle. Darkmoon,
young and
blood-proud, fought her
command.
She'd
teach him to obey with teeth and hooves if need be, to give way to her
domination—
She
gasped and threw herself out of the magic.
The
herd had caught her up so much easier than last
night!
"I can't," she told Numair, her voice shaking.
"My
head aches."
"You
must learn this." For the first time since he started her lessons, his
voice was stern. "You didn't have a headache before. Try again."
I
can't, she thought, but there was no sense in telling him that—not unless she
wanted to tell him everything. Desperate, she cheated, and hated herself for
cheating. She wrinkled her face, clenched her teeth, shut her eyes, all so he'd
think she was trying—but she kept her mind blank. She did this over and over,
until he sighed.
"Perhaps
I push too hard. You've done well— too well, perhaps. Most apprentice mages
take over a year to make the progress you have in a month."
She
stared at him. "But I thought I wasn't— How can you tell?" Scared,
she added, "Can you see in my mind?"
"No.
I wouldn't if I could. We all have secrets." Sadness moved over his face,
making her wonder what his secrets were. Then he smiled. "I'm a mage, a
well-educated one. When I wish, I can see things hidden from normal vision—like
a person's magical aura. See mine?" He lifted his hands. White fire laced
with shadows outlined his fingers. "The first day I was strong enough to
do it, I examined your aura." He let the brilliance fade. "Your magic
was like a tangle of vines around you, going in a hundred directions. You've
been getting that tangle under control, pulling it inside your skin, and you're
doing it faster than anyone I've ever known. Well, perhaps you've earned a
night of rest. Come on— let's go back to the others. We'll meditate and stop
there for the night,"
She
started to protest the meditation, and kept her silence. I'll just pretend,
like with the calling, she told herself.
When
they stepped into the clearing where the Riders were camped, Padrach was saying
in his mountain burr, "Why won't he declare war, then?"
"It's
true Carthak has the largest standing army in the world," the Lioness
replied. Sarge was rolling up a large map that liad been spread out on the
ground. "But to attack us they have to cross water at every turn—the
Inland Sea, or come up our coast on the Emerald Ocean. We have the advantage,
being firmly on land when they have to come ashore to engage us."
"The
navy's grown since my lord came to the
throne,"
Thayet put in. The queen was dressed like the others in homespun breeches and
tunic and a plain white shirt. Her glorious hair was severely pinned down, but
nothing could dim the beauty of her face and clear, level eyes. "The
emperor's policy of coastal raiding and paying bandits to attack in the
mountains and hills has made the people in those areas determined to fight.
Also, since His Majesty built his university outside Corus, we've brought a lot
of mages to Tortall—enough even to make
Emperor Ozorne's trained sorcerers think twice about taking us on."
"And
only a fool would want to attack King Jonathan without some kind of real
advantage," Numair said. "Not onTortallan soil."
"Why's
that, Master Numair?" asked Miri. "Jonathan's magic, and the magic of
the crown, are tied into every grain
of soil in this land," explained
the mage. "Unless an enemy has some kind of advantage that will hurt the
king, or keep him from calling on his magic, it's possible that every tree,
stream, and rock would form death traps for an enemy." Daine could see it
in the trainees' faces, the fear a warrior would live with when the land itself
fought him. The thought gave her goose bumps.
"Very
well, my doves, it's that time again," Sarge barked after giving the
trainees a moment to reflect on such warfare. "Seat yourselves
comfortably, but not too comfortably."
Daine
settled near the edge of trees around the clearing. Within a few moments the
only sound to be heard was the breathing of the others. She watched them,
envious. In the month she'd been with the Riders, she'd come to see that
meditation supplied them with something they got nowhere else: a time to be
calm, a time to find quiet inside themselves. It would be useful when they were
living in the wilderness, hunting raiders and being hunted, she realized.
Tonight especially she envied them that serenity. She wished she could find
some measure of quiet in herself.
Carefully,
gingerly, she closed her eyes and drew a breath. It was all right; she was
safe. She released the breath, took another. Peace wrapped her like her mothers
arms. She opened her ears to the night.
In the
distance, a wolf howled, and got no answer.
Poor
wind-brother, she thought sadly. No one to sing with, no brothers and sisters
to hunt with.. .like me. It's so lonely, outside the pack.
As she
breathed, her body fell into the habit she'd been making for it. Her mind
cleared, her heartbeat slowed. Forgetting her danger, she opened herself to the
music of the forest:
The
swish of tails, the shifting of feet, the crunch of grass under broad teeth. A
sense of peace and solidity flowed out from the humans to infect their mounts.
The herd was content...
Once
again she forced herself awake, to find she'd sweated her clothes through. What
am I going to do? she asked Cloud as the mare nuzzled her. I can't even close
my eyes without it happening!
It
doesn't happen when you sleep, Cloud reminded her. It's only when you use that
fire-stuff—the thing that makes you People—or when you do the sitting thing.
Leave the fire-stuff ^and the sitting thing alone, and you'll be fine.
Daine
shook her head. It seems like I can't win for losing, she told Cloud silently.
Sometimes I think I never should have left home.
The
next day the Riders picked up the pace. There were fewer stops as they headed
through the coastal hills; those that were made were shorter.
Daine
faked her lessons that night, as she faked her meditation. She thought she'd
handled it well too, until Numair stopped her just before she climbed into her
bedroll.
"Are
you all right?" he asked, feeling her forehead. "Is something
wrong?"
Looking
up at him, she swallowed hard. "What's wrong, except for me being worked
to death?" she asked, trying to put him off by being rude. "Honestly,
can't you stop fussing at me for one day!"
Tahoi
whined from his spot near Onua's bed,
worried
by Daine's tone. Glancing over at him, Daine saw that Onua, Evin, Miri, and the
Lioness had heard her as well and were staring at her as if she'd just grown
horns. "I'm tired of being watched all the time too!" She struggled
into her blankets and wrapped herself in them, not wanting to see how they
reacted to that.
She
heard Numair sigh. He patted her shoulder. "Sleep well, magelet." He
walked away as Tahoi came to lie down next to her.
Tears
rolled down her cheeks as she hid her face in her covers. I'm afraid, she
wanted to tell her human friends. I'm afraid if I go any deeper in my magic,
I'll forget who I am.
She
woke in the morning to a campsite draped in fog. Without speaking to anyone,
she groomed and fed Mangle and Cloud, and hitched Mangle to the wagon. She
drove in silence all day, ignoring the worry she saw on Onua's and Numair's
faces. The fog burned off by midmorning, leaving the air crisp. By afternoon
the breeze coming out of the west bore a new scent to it, tangy and strange.
She sniffed it often, wondering what it was.
"That's
the sea," Miri told her when she saw Daine lift her nose to the air. Her
cheeks were flushed; her green eyes sparkled. "It's close. That's brine
you smell, and seaweed. I can't believe how much I missed it!"
"If
she starts to talk nautical, plug your ears," Evin advised. "She's
just showing off." Miri stuck her tongue out at him.
Their
road topped a rise, and a new world spread itself before them. Daine dropped
her reins. "Goddess and glory" she breathed.
Miri
beamed with pride. "I told you." Nothing had prepared her for this.
Endless blue-gray water stretched north to south, and*waves pounded the rocky
coast. Salt winds nearly plucked off her head-scarf before she retied it. In
the distance a toy with a dab of sail bobbed along—a boat, she realized, but
far off.
Soon
they reached the coast road, crossing it to pitch camp in a sandy cove.
Automatically she cared for Mangle and Cloud, barely able to take her eyes off
the water that smashed against the sand. Every time she blinked, something new
appeared. Even Cloud's accusation that she looked like a cow, standing about
with her jaw open, had no impact. She was entranced.
As soon
as archery practice was done, Miri and Alanna took the trainees to find supper
in the rock pools of the northern curve of the beach, leaving the officers and
Daine to entertain themselves. Thayet removed her boots and stockings, rolling
up the lees of her breeches. "Come on," she told
Daine.
"We'll go for a walk."
She ran
to join the queen, trying to shed her
boots
at the same time. The woman laughed and steadied her as Daine wrestled her
footgear off. "It won't go away," she said. "Slow down. Onua
says you never saw it before?"
"No,
mum." She made sure her breeches, rolled above the knee like the queen's,
were tucked in securely.
"Then
look. See how steep the beach is? It means waves pound it hard. They create a
force called 'undertow* that grabs you and drags you out if you aren't careful.
The easier a beach slopes into the water, the less undertow you'll find. Never
forget it's there, Daine." Thayet s low voice was stern, "Plenty of
good swimmers drown because they can't fight that drag,"
Daine
nodded soberly. This place had dangers, like any other part of the world—that
made sense.
"Then,
let's go." The queen stepped down as a wave hit the shore, and let foaming
water surround her ankles.
Daine
took a breath and followed. The water was icy. When it met her skin, she heard
singing. Gasping, she jumped back.
Thayet
stood ankle deep in the retreating waves, fighting to keep her balance as they
ate the sand under her feet. "Too cold?" she asked, grinning.
She
doesn't hear it, Daine thought.
"Come
on," the queen urged. "You'll be numb before long." She walked
forward, stopping when the water swirled around her knees. Lifting her face
to the
sun, she gave a loud, bloodcurdling war cry. "Thayet, stop
that," Numair called.
His breeches rolled up, he had gone to explore a lumpy and pitted block
of stone at the northern edge of the beach. He held up something. "Come
look at this."
Thayet
went to him. Daine walked forward,
immersing
her feet to the ankles as a wave overtook her. A few steps more: she was far
enough in the water that a wave's backward crawl didn't leave her
dry.
"Singing"
was not right, but she had no idea of what the proper term might be. Part of it
was a croon, the speech of a wolf mother to her cubs, but held past a wolf's
ability to hang on to a note. A moaning whistle followed, then a series of
short, high notes. The quality of the eerie calls was something like sound
carried inside a cave—almost, but not entirely.
Hello?
she cried silently (all she needed was for Numair to ask why she was talking to
the ocean).
Who are
you?
There
was no answer, not even the shift of attention she felt in most animals. Were
these monsters? No—there was no gold fire in her mind. She gripped a thread of
her magic, as much as she dared
Is
anyone there? It's me—it's daine.' Can you hear me?
The
songs — there were many, all beautiful and different — faltered.
— Call?
— The voice was faint and alien, unlike any animal voice she'd heard in her
life.
She
strained to hear without using her power to help her listen. Yes! I'm calling!
Me, here by the rocks —
I
called! / did! Where are you? Who are you?
—
Calf-call?—
—No
call—
I'm not
loud enough, she realized. If I used my magic, maybe they could hear me, but I
don't dare.
Thayet
yelled, trying to get Daine's attention. Daine turned, but before she could
answer a heavy form slammed into her. Down she went, mouth filling with brine.
Trying to rise, she was slammed again and thrust deeper in the water by the
animal's impact.
She
opened her mouth to scream, and breathed seawater.
Miri
and Evin said later she popped into the air to hang upside down from an unseen
hand, pouring water as she fought. She only knew she was free to cough and
vomit out the liquid that had nearly killed her. Looking down, she shrieked,
clawing at the invisible grip on her ankles. Then the hands that weren't there
whisked her to the beach, where Onua
waited
with a blanket. Daine was put gently on her
feet,
but her knees gave. Onua caught her before she
fel1' j u
Numair strode down the beach toward them,
J,;*
£,<-<• J&* * thundercloud. Black fire shot with
white
light gathered around his ouCscrefc/if£//i^nc/
Sarge
grabbed up a quiver of javelins, Buri her double-curved bow. ftoth raced to
attack the btown creature lumbering up onto shore.
Daine
saw them just in time. "No, don't!" She threw herself in front of the
animal. "Don't!" she screeched when fire left Numair's fingers,
flying at them. He twisted his hand, and it vanished.
Clutching
the blanket around her, she faced the one who had tried to kill her. He
returned her look with huge, liquid brown eyes set in a pointed face capped by
a small crest. His body was wide in the center and pointed at both ends.
Covered with slick, blond brown fur that went light and shaggy around his head,
he waddled toward her on fins that ended in claws. Curiously she touched his
chin and lifted his head, the better to see his slitlike nostrils and small,
curled-leaf ears.
Like
most of the big predators she had met, he chose to speak in sounds. He
chattered away in sharp, varied barks. He was confused: he'd thought she was a
rival male, come to take his harem. She looked where he did: twelve furry
lumps, all a fourth to a third smaller than the male, watched her from the most
southern arm of the cove.
"Why
did you think I was another male?" she asked, curious.
She/c/f
like one, a king bull. He'd been terrified. He was young, and the power of her
mind had convinced him she could easily take his females.
"Well,
I'm no king bull," Dame assured him, tickling his curving whiskers until
he calmed down. "I'm just me—whatever that is."
He was
relieved. His harem was safe.
"May
I visit after supper?" she asked.
Food?
Pictures of fat, juicy fish were in his mind, and the knowledge he couldn't
leave the females to hunt.
She
promised to bring something. It seemed the least she could do, after giving him
such a scare. He barked his thanks and slipped into the water, anxious to
return to his mates before another male sneaked up on them,
"I
forgot to ask what he was," Daine muttered to herself.
"Sea
lion." Miri had come to stand beside her. "They're touchy in the
breeding season. The way he went for you, it looked like he thought you were
another
male, coming to steal his wives." o
"Do
they eat in the breeding season?" Daine asked, curious.
"Not
the beachmasters. If they hunt, another male will take their harems. They can
go two months without food—Wave-walker defend us—
look!"
A huge
shape, far bigger than the sea lions, shot
out of
the water at the mouth of the cove: a great, lumpy gray thing that cleared the
water and plunged back in with a tremendous splash.
"I
cant belreve they came so close to the land," Miri whispered.
"They
who?" Daine's heart was thudding. "Is that a fish?"
Miri
shook her head. "They suckle their young,
like
furred animals."
"Mammals," Daine
supplied, from what Numair had taught her.
"Oh.
That was a humpback whale—whales are the biggest things in the sea. They sing,
you know."
Daine
grabbed her friend's arm. "What d'you mean, sing?"
"Well,
not singing, not like us. They talk in sounds—whistles, some of them, and
moans—eerie noises. You should hear them from a boat in the middle of the
ocean. It comes right through the wood, and fills the air."
Supper
was ready by the time Daine had washed in a freshwater creek and put on dry
clothes. She ate little, pondering the whale songs and her failure to
reach
the singers. After chores, she gathered up extra food and her bedroll.
"No
lessons?" Numair asked quietly.
"I
promised I'd bring him something to eat. And I do need a holiday." She
looked away, rather than meet his eyes and see the disappointment in them.
"If
that's what you want. Good night, then." But he watched her all the way as
she walked down to • the sea lions.
The
beachmaster greeted her—and her food— with enthusiasm, and let one of his wives
show the girl the first of that spring's new pups. When she slept, it was with
her cheek pillowed on a yearling's flank, and with heavy, fishy-smelling bodies
ranged all around her.
The badger
came. His fur was puffed out; be was very, very angry.
"I
have lost patience with you," be snarled. "If you were my kit, I'd
knock you tail over snout. When will you stop being stubborn? I didn't guide
you all this way so you could fail to learn what you must! Tell these people
what happened at that town of yours. Tell them what you're afraid of! Did you
think I would send you to more hunters?"
"Predators"she
told him.
With a
smack of one heavy paw he knocked her onto her behind and jumped onto her
chest. ecDon't talk back, youngster.
Have
you no sense? Your time is running out! Soon the storm "will be here.
Lives depend on learning your lessons. I realize you are only a kit, hut even
you must see more is at stake than your fear of the hunt. Now, promise me you
will tell them." She hesitated, and the badger snarled. "Promise
me!"
He hore
down on her with his will, thrusting his face into hers. She wondered later if
it was the force of his mind, or the overpowering reek of his supper (decayed
rabbit and a few worms), that made her surrender. "I promise,"
"Tomorrow,
and not one day later." He climbed ojf her • chest, and she could breathe.
She sat up, pulling air into \xr squashed lungs.
"Well,
you're a good enough girl," he grumbled. It was as much of an apology from
him as she would get. "I just worry about you, and things are moving so
fast."He lifted his nose and sniffed. "Phew—these friends of yours
stink offish!"
She
woke to fog, dense and wet, beading in the sea lions' fur. Sitting up, she
winced. She felt like one large bruise. Luck had been with her the day before.
If she hadn't been in shallow water, she would have died, smashed by four
hundred and fifty pounds of fast-moving sea lion. On top of the bruised ache
were new, sharp pains. Peering inside her shirt, she found deep gouges, four on
each shoulder—as if a badger had rested his weight there.
The
morning fog turned into rain, and Thayet announced they would remain in their
present camp. Steeling herself, Daine approached Onua and
Numair
as breakfast was being served. "Can I talk to you later?" she asked.
"Alone?" She swallowed. "There's something about me you ought to
know."
A few
words to Thayet and Buri were all that was needed. Numair and Onua followed her
to the south end of the cove, where a rock overhang kept a strip of sand dry.
Numair built a fire. Tahoi sprawled between him and Onua, head on Onua's lap,
his belly to the warmth of the flames. Cloud lay down so Daine could lean
against her, encouraging the girl silently.
"Is
it so hard to begin?" Onua asked,
Daine
looked at the high waves, reeling her chin quiver. She gripped the badgers claw
for reassurance. "Oh, yes. Don't interrupt me. If I'm stopped, I don't
know if I'd have the courage to go on," Drawing a breath through a chest
that had gone all tight, she began, "When the thaw came, end of January,
nothing would do for Ma but I go to the next valley over, and visit her friend
that married a shepherd there. She heard that Lory—her friend— was coughing a
lot, and Ma had a syrup to give her. She made me promise not to come home in
the dark, but stay over till morning. Sometimes I wonder if she just knew..
.but prob'ly not. As a foreteller, Ma always made a good cook.
"So,
I saddled Cloud and went. Lory was glad to see me. Her 'n' Rand, her husband,
always treat me nice. There was a new baby she let me play with.
They're
sweet when they're that little. And Rand wanted me to take a look at his best
ewe. Good thing I did. She was getting set to give him twin lambs, only breech
birth, which might've killed them and their ma. So I was up late, and Lory let
me sleep till noon.
"Coming
out of their place, I couldn't see anything anywhere but fog, couldn't smell,
couldn't hear. I was clear to our village before I knew.
"They
hit around dawn. The mill was burned, the miller dead. They took the
wheelwright's oldest girl and the headman's wife. Really, they mighta passed my
house by, Ma having the Gift, but they remembered she was pretty too, see.
"They
fought—all of them. Ma, Grandda, dogs, ponies, horses—even the stupid chickens.
Even Ma's geese. Not the rabbits. They left. Well, they never fight, and you
can't ask them to go against their nature. But the rest fought. They killed
some of the bandits.
"The
bandits went crazy. They killed everything on the farm and didn't carry any of
it away, Mammoth told me. Mammoth was my boss dog. He said they was too scared
of animals who fought like that.
"Mammoth
told me what happened, and died.
"So
we buried them, me and Cloud, every last one of our family. Cloud's dam and
sire, her brothers are in those graves.
"I
straightened up the house, what was left. The* raiders had tried to burn it,
but only the upper story and the roof were gone. Ma had a bunch of charms
against fire in the kitchen, so most of the downstairs was saved.
"It
was two days before anyone came to see. After Ma helped them birth their
children, and nursed them when they was sick. Two days! She could've been alive
and hurt all that time! If the bandits had passed us by, Ma would have been at
the village with medicines and bandages, making me and Grandda help.
"When
I saw them, I just—popped. I said get out. I threw rocks, and they ran. You got
to understand, there was all this mad inside me, all this hate and wildness. I
couldn't hold it. My animal friends, they're the only ones who came right off
to see if / was alive. I was going to them when I found the blood trail the
bandits left.
"I
knew where the pack of wolves was. The boss male and female thought I was
smart, for a two-legger. It took explaining—they don't hunt their own kind.
It's one thing to run another pack off your territory, but to hunt each other
like they're prey, that makes them sick. When I showed them our farm, well, it
made them crazy. We picked up the bandit trail and found them, in some caves.
"It
was hard, keeping the pack from taking the bandits all at once, but I didn't
want the wolves to get killed. We picked off three shifts of sentries, 'cause
nobody was awake or sober enough to remember if the old sentries came back.
When the other bandits came out in the morning, we took them. I remembered
enough to let the women taken from the village loose, and kept my pack-brothers
from killing them too.
"By
then I was gone wild entirely. I went to all fours, and me and the pack denned
in the bandit caves. I was safe with the pack. Cloud couldn't even talk to me.
It scared her silly, being around the wolves, but I remembered she was family
and I wouldn't let them get her. There was plenty of meat, anyway, from all the
bandits stole.
"We
heard the humans coming. I told the pack to go to the old den. 1 waited to see
what was what. Maybe I was getting human again, a little.
"I
hid in the brush. They sent Hakkon Falconer ahead to talk to me. He used to
visit Ma and stay over, before he married again. He'd've wed Ma, but I heard
her tell him my da wouldn't like it. She always spoke of my da that way, as if
he was just around the corner. Anyway, Hakkon treated me all right, even after
he married, because I helped with the birds.
"He
said the women we set loose made it home and told what we did. He said I'd best
come in now, before I took sick. He said he'd put me up, and I could earn my
keep with him. He trained falcons for our lord.
"I
came out onto the road. They'd've had me, but Cloud snuck up on one of the
archers and kicked him. He shot too soon, and I ran.
"Hakkon
said I was crazy, it was for my own good. He said I was like the rabid bear. I
had to be put down merciful. If I'd come out, it'd be over in a minute—wouldn't
hurt at all. The rest of them were calling me a monster,
"Then
they tried to set the dogs on me, but the dogs wouldn't go. When them with
ponies tried to come after me, the ponies threw them and lit out for home. The
men should ve known they couldn't get their animals to come after me.
"Me
and Cloud headed up into the rocks. Trouble was, they were mountain men, fair
trackers even without dogs. I wasn't thinking like a human, so I didn't
remember to hide my trail. The weather didn't help, either.
"I
don't know how long they hunted me. I think it was most of a week. I got pretty
tired and cold and hungry. Cloud saved me. She started to nip and bite my arms.
See—this one left a scar, above my elbow. She only left me alone when I got on
my hind feet. When I got used to walking like that, I remembered I was human,
and I knew I had to get out of Snowsdale. I snuck back home, got the things I
had left, and came south.
"That's
why I've been scared with the lessons. It never happened before my folks got
killed, but now when I go deep in my magic or the meditating, when I'm by
myself, I start thinking like the closest group of animals—like a herd of
horses, or a pack. I forget I'm human. I forget I'm me.
"I
was afraid to tell the truth. You don't know what it's like, having them you
knew all your life hunt you like you was a deer. Hearing them on your trail and
knowing if you don't start running, your hide'll get stretched on a frame and
the rest of you goes into someone's stewpot. And I was crazy, running on all
fours, hunting with a pack. I wanted to forget all that, if I could, I wanted
to be all new here, all normal, just like everyone else,
"Only
I guess I can't. The badger says I have to learn."
SEVEN
BUZZARD ROCKS
She
hadn't watched them as she talked, and she was afraid to look now. Suddenly
Onua hugged her tight. The tears that had stopped coming when she buried her
family came again, in a hot and silent flood,
"What
about the badger?" asked Numair, when she was calm again,
Daine
shrugged, "He comes in my dreams, sort of." She described the badgers
visits, showing the silver claw and the marks in her shoulders as evidence.
Onua shook her head over the wounds and fetched her medicines.
As she
tended Daine's scratches, Numair thought. Finally he said, " 'Time is
running out'— 'the storm will be here.' What time? What storm?" He sighed.
"I hate omens. They depend on translation, and I never was good at it. If
he tells you anything more solid, let me know," Daine nodded. "As for
the rest.. .1 never heard of a human with wild magic losing contact with his
essence—the part that tells us we are human.
"On
the other hand, I've never met anyone with wild magic as powerful as yours. It
is conceivable that your bond to animals overwhelms your humanity." He
rubbed his hands together. "Well, that's easy enough to fix."
She
gaped at him. "It t's? All this time I've been afraid of joining a herd or
a pack or a flock or whatever, and I could've^bc^ it?"
"With
help from your humble servant." He stretched his arms. "Are you up to
meditating now? I won't let you swim off with the sea lions." He smiled
warmly at the girl, and she smiled back.
Onua
patted her knee. "I leave you mages to it. I'm going to camp and torture
some trainees." Quietly she added, "Thanks for trusting me,
Daine."
"I
wish I'd told before," Daine replied guiltily.
"Only
I was scared—"
The
K'mir stood and dusted sand off her bottom. "After your village hunting
you, I'm surprised you made yourself talk to another human again. Don't worry
about it. And don't let him work you too hard." With a wave, she set off
down the beach. Tahoi watched her go: he refused to leave the warmth of the
fire to be drenched by the rain.
"She's
quite a woman," said Numair. "You have a good friend in her."
"I
know," Daine admitted.
"Now—just
like meditation." She nodded and closed her eyes, feeling his fingers come
to rest on her temples. His hands were warm. Carefully she breathed, pushing
the sounds of her heart and lungs out of her mind until she barely heard them.
Her muscles relaxed one by one.
Now she
heard a thundering—Numair's heart. She pushed the sound back and let her
hearing spread. Tahoi slept, dreaming of rabbits. A sea lion cow had started
labor nearby, bringing a new pup into the world. Another pup, already born,
suckled at his mother's teat. She heard doubled heartbeats in some of the other
cows, signs of pups to come.
Inside,
Numair said. Obediently she looked for her wellspring of copper fire. She
dropped in and they fell through it, until she saw a white core to the fire. It
bled into the copper as the wild magic bled tendrils into it. Suddenly she was
inside the white column, looking out.
A
shadow glittering with bits of light came between her and the magic. In its
tracks flowed a glass wall, its surface etched with odd runes. When the shadow
had circled her, the beginning and end of the glass connected.
Her
head was clear: for the first time in weeks she felt sure of herself. Examining
the white fire around her, she found it untainted by her magic, just as the
magic was entirely apart now from her
inner
self. She also knew that she was alone— Nurnair had gone. She followed him to the
real world and opened her eyes.
"How
do you feel?" asked the mage.
She
tried to stand and nearly fell over. She was stiff! "A bit rusty, but
aside from that, wonderful. Am I fixed? Am I all right?"
"You
tell me," he said. "Try the listening again. Sea lions live in groups
like wolves and horses. If you're going to lose yourself, you should be able to
with them. If not, the Rider ponies are just down the beach."
Daine
closed her eyes, took a breath—and she was among the females of the harem, hearing
their sleepy talk of fish and weather. The cow in labor had given birth: her
new pup suckled contentedly. The mother barked at him, teaching him the sound
of her voice so he'd always know which female she was.
Daine
opened her eyes and grinned at Numair.
The
mage smiled back. "Did you forget who Daine is?"
"Nope,"
she said gleefully.
"Sure
you don't want to plunge into salty water and eat live octopi? That's what they
eat, among other things."
She
looked at him suspiciously.
"What's an octopi?"
"One
octopus is an octopus. Two octopuses or
more
are octopi."
"So
what's an octopus?"
"I
take it what all this means is you were able to stay Daine."
"It
does. What's an octopus?"
He
laughed. "All right, magelet. Let's go to sea."
She
worked the day through, learning about ocean animals (no whales were within
range, she was disappointed to learn) and about calling groups of sea animals
to her. Afterward, it was a pleasure just to eat, clean, and mend tack with the
others, and listen to Sarge talk about daily life in Carthak. Onua had to wake
her up to get her into her bedroll.
The sea
otter found her in the night, hobbling on three paws. The fourth dangled
uselessly. She told Daine she'd been hunting in a tidal pool when a wave
slammed into her, jamming her into a rock crevice. A second wave had yanked her
free, but the paw got caught and broke. Cradling her patient and whispering
reassurances, the girl eased out of the tent where she'd been sleeping.
Sticking her head into the small tent the trainees had pitched for the mage,
she said, "Numair?"
He sat
up in his bedroll. "Daine? Is something the matter?"
"I've
an otter with a broken leg here. I hate to disturb you, but—now I'm doing
better with the magic, I thought there might be a chance I could—"
"Of
course. Come in." Light filled the inside of the tent, making Daine and
the otter blink. "Sit."
She
obeyed, cradling the otter in her lap with a care to the broken leg.
"You'll go deep, but into your patient instead of yourself You need to see
her bones from the inside—do you understand?"
"I
understand right enough. I'm just not sure I
can do
it."
"I
can help with that part. What you must do on your own is apply your magic to
the break and wt// it to heal. You need to burn out any infection. Make sure
the muscles, veins, and nerves knit together, not just the bone.
"The
strength of your desire is what will complete the task. You must want this to
work more than anything, and keep on wanting it, no matter how weary you
become. That's the hard part—maintaining the concentration to finish. As it
tires, your mind will want to attend to something else, just as it does in
meditation. You'll get a muscle spasm or an itch, and you'll want to see to it.
You can't—not unless you plan to resume splinting your friends and hoping you
can keep them quiet long enough for an injury to mend."
Daine
looked at her patient. The otter gazed up at her calmly. She had sensed that
Daine could help her, and she was content.
"I'll
do it," the girl said grimly. "Lets go," The magic came swiftly
into her hold. Numair guided her into the copper-laced animal in her lap and to
the broken limb. Gently he shaped the grip
of her
mind around the injury and showed her an extra-bright strand of copper fire
from the deepest part of her magic. She grabbed it and brought it to bear on
the shattered bone.
It
w<u hard work. She was tired; her head began to ache. It required patience.
For a while it seemed nothing was happening. Once she almost gave up, but she
remembered the otters wholehearted trust and the promise to heal her. Ma had
always said, Never break a promise to an animal. They're like babies—they won't
understand. Daine hung on.'
At last
she saw movement. Tiny bone spurs grew across the break, slpwly at first, then
quicker. Marrow formed, building itself inside the protection of the spurs.
Bruising in the muscles around the break began to vanish.
She got
sleepy. Her back cramped almost unbearably. Nuh-uh, she thought fiercely. No
quitting—not ever. If I'd known this, I could ve saved Mammoth. If I learn it,
I can save others.
She did
not allow herself to think of anything else until marrow, bone, nerve, vein,
and muscles were whole and healthy.
When
she opened her eyes, she was cocooned in blankets and fiercely hungry. The
otter was gone; so was Numair. She crawled out of the tent to see the trainees
practicing hand-to-hand combat in the rain. Day had come.
"How
do you feel?" Numair was sitting under a
canvas awning,
writing in
a fat notebook. He. capped his
ink bottle and put his quill aside.
"How
is she?" Daine asked.
"She's
fine. I saw her swim off a while ago. We had lunch. I kept some for you."
He passed a small bag to her.
She
fell on the contents—chunks of smoked ham, bread, cheese, dried figs, an
orange—and polished them off in record time. "1 can't believe how hungry I
was," she said when she finished at last. "You worked hard. Of course
you're hungry." "How long did it take?" she asked, running her
fingers through her hair.
"Some
hours—that's to be expected. Healing in
wild
magic is more difficult than it is with the Gift.
Wild
magic depends on the body's own power to
mend
what's damaged. The Gift simply restores
health
that was lost."
"One
thing I don't understand. Onua said I must've healed the birds in the
marsh—remember? But I didn't know how to heal then, and it took me hours to do
it now." She bit back a yawn. "I'm also worn out. Maybe I fainted in
the marsh, but I never felt like this."
"Hmm."
Numair fingered the bridge of his nose. "Several possible theories exist,
but only one fits both of the limitations you just described. I'd have to say
the birds' need to be healed pulled the magic out of you in raw form. You
didn't force it to work within the limits of your strength then—you served only
as a channel. The magnitude of the power transfer made you lose consciousness,
but your overall health and reserves of strength were unaffected. That is the
problem with wild magic—it has been known to act without the cooperation of the
bearer."
"You
mean it could happen again, and I couldn't stop it."
"I'm
afraid so. If it's any help, I imagine the need in those connected to you by
wild magic would have to be overwhelming. It's only happened once that you know
of? No fainting spells as a child?" She shook her head. "Once in
thirteen years, then. I wouldn't worry, if I were you." He smiled when she
yawned outright. "Go back to sleep. I'll wake you for supper."
He was
as good as his word. She was still tired, but forced herself to bathe in the
stream and visit with the ponies. By the time the trainees had begun their
meditation, she was in her bedroll, asleep.
The
otters return awoke her late that night. She had brought Daine a sea urchin
shell, one that was cleaned of its original inhabitant and dried.
"Thank
you," Daine whispered, touched. "I'll treasure it." The otter
chirped her own thanks, and squirmed out through the gap in the tent wall.
Daine smiled and snuggled into her covers, feeling
the
bumps of the shell with her fingers. I can bed, she thought. Ma, I wish you
were here to see!
They
moved out in the morning under a clear sky. Daine's studies went on. Slowly,
she honed her ability to speak with groups of animals so no other creatures
might hear. She learned to put her will on four, then five, then six animals,
to make them obey. She used whoever was closest: a flock of gulls, dogs in a
village where the company stopped for eggs, harbor seals. Her greatest success came
when a herd of mule deer came down to graze near their camp one morning. When
Daine rose, she saw them. She watched, keeping Tahoi with her, simply enjoying
the sight of deer so close to humans.
At
Sarge's " Turn outl" the flock prepared to flee. "Stop!"
Daine called, throwing up her arm. The deer stopped and did not move until she
said, "What'm I doing? Go on, scat!" She took her will off them, and
they ran. Feeling pleased with herself, she turned around, to find the trainees
out of their beds and staring at her oddly.
"It's
a good idea not to say anything out loud," Numair murmured, coming up
beside her. She looked up at him and was rewarded with a smile. "It keeps
the uninitiated from noticing. Just a little professional advice."
The
Lioness walked over to them. "Congratulations, Numair. Your student learns
fast."
"I
have a good teacher," Daine said, and the mage tousled her hair.
"Come
on, children, you aren't paid to gawp like a bunch of yokels!" Sarge's
training voice could cut through stone, Daine was sure.
Evin
was so close that she heard his soft: "We aren't paid at all, yet."
Sarge's
eyes flicked his way, and a corner of his mouth twitched. "Let's move it
or lose it, people!"
They
pushed hard that day, stopping only once, to change mounts. By noon Daine felt
as if her teeth would never stop rattling from the wagon, even though she'd
switched to riding Cloud twice. About then she found a brush rabbit by the
road: he'd been slashed by a goshawk and was dying. Daine took him into her
lap, giving Mangle control of the wagon, and went to work.
The
healing was harder than before, partly because concentration in a wagon
traveling over a rutted road was more difficult than it had been in Numair's
tent, late at night. Several times Daine was banged out of her meditation.
Finally she switched places with Numair, asking Spots to give her as easy a
ride as possible. On a large and placid horse, her luck was better than it
would have been on a pony, or than it had been in the wagon. Still, by the time
she finished, she had drenched her clothes in sweat, and she had been working
throughout the early afternoon.
Weary
to the bone, she freed the rabbit. He thanked her and fled, promising to keep a
better eye out for predator birds in the future. She watched him go, elated in
spite of her exhaustion.
They
camped on a wide, open space that ended in a bluff over a tumble of rocks.
"Daine, look!"'' Miri said as they were caring for the horses. She
pointed out to sea. Three long, sleek, gray shapes broke from the waves and
plunged in again, then four shapes, then two. "Dolphins!"
Once
her chores were over, she went to the edge of the bluff. This was her first
sighting of dolphins, and she wanted to talk to them. Sitting on the grass, she
reached for her magic—and felt it slip from her grip. Working on the rabbit had
tired her to the point of being unable to bear down with her mind. She closed
her eyes and tried again. Tahoi barked. One of the trainees loosed an
ear-piercing whistle. "Concentrate," she ordered herself through
gritted teeth. "You can do this!"
Slowly
she discarded every sound nearby, until the only one left was her own
heartbeat. Bearing down, she pushed it away, and farther. Perversely, it
hammered in her ears louder than ever. She forced it back one more time.
Numair
saw her collapse. "Alanna!" he roared. "Come quick!"
A wide,
smooth path sloped ahead, bordered in wildflowers. At the top of the hill two
people waited in the shade of an old and gnarled oak.
"Ma?"
she whispered, her eyes filling, and the woman held out open arms. Daine
floated up the path toward her. The man was unfamiliar: he stood by Ma lazily,
wearing only a loincloth. He was very brown, heavily muscled, and carried an
unstrung bow like a man born with it in his hand. With so much of his skin
bare, she could see that there were streaks of green in his tan, a deep green
that gleamed in his eyes. Strangest of all, she could see what looked like
antlers planted firmly in his curling brown hair.
"New
friend, Ma?" she asked dryly.
The
woman laughed. "Still mothering me, Daine?"
A bolt
of lightning shot through her chest once, twice.
Her
mothers face saddened. "No!" she cried. Daine fought, but a force was
pulling her away.
"Ma!"
she yelled.
"Sarra!"
The man's voice was commanding. "It isn't time. Let her go."
Suddenly
she felt reality shatter. Now she hung in open air, high over a rocky bluff
where ants gathered around a purple fire. She looked back toward the hill, and
a Stormwing dropped between her and her mother.
He
looked her over, a nasty grin showing fikhy teeth. "Well, well—what a
surprise. What brings you here, little pigeon? Aren't you the darling Queen
Zhaneh has offered so much to have brought to her
alive}"
"Your
queen can eat my arrows!" she screamed.
"I
want my ma!"
"Kiss
my claws and say 'pretty please,'" he taunted, and vanished. Daine fell to
earth and back into her body.
Numair
shook Daine as he held her. "You fiend!" he yelled. "What on
earth possessed you? You were dea& I ought to kill you myself!"
"Numair,
calm down." The Lioness bent over Daine, looking white and drawn.
"How are you, youngling? You gave us a scare."
Daine
grabbed her hand. "You're the purple fire. You brought me back?"
"I
gave you a direct jolt to the heart. We
thought
we'd lost you."
"My
heart?" She frowned, remembering. "It made too much noise. I wanted
it to quiet down so I could talk with the dolphins."
"Do
you hear her?" Numair asked the clouds. "She wanted to talk to
dolphins, so she stopped her own blessed heart! Mithros, Mynoss, and
Shakith!"
Daine
sat up. "I never."
Numair
opened his mouth and Onua, behind him, covered it. "Not until you can talk
without screaming," she said firmly.
"Daine,
meditation is done for control over body responses, and thus over the
mind." Alanna's purple eyes were amused, but serious as well. "In
cutting back the sound of your heart, you were cutting the heartbeat
itself."
"Well,
I won't do that again," Daine promised, sitting up. "I feel like a
mule kicked me in the ribs,"
The
knight chuckled. "In a way, one did. I gave you quite a shot,
youngster." She reached a hand to Evin, who helped her get to her feet.
"WiU
you behave now?" Onua asked Numair. He nodded, and sighed as she took her
hands from his mouth. "And men say we're emotional," the K'mir told
Daine. "Don't do that again. I'd hate to find another assistant at this
time of year." Wiping her hands on her breeches, she went back to the
trainees.
"May
I ask why you couldn't hear dolphins in the usual way?" Numairs voice was
dangerously pleasant.
Daine
rubbed her eyes with her fists. "I was tired."
"You
were tired—ah. That makes it much dearer. Listen, magelet. The next time you're
tired, try resting for a while. If you simply can't rest, go where you'll get
nice and chilled, or step into salt water." He indicated the ocean below.
"As you can see, there is quite a bit of it down there."
"I
don't get it."
He
sighed. "Reductions in temperature or contact with salt water can act as
amplifiers for magic "
"So
that's why the whale songs are so loud in the water!"
"Yes,
that's why they're loud. Daine, you must realize—these things you're doing when
you meditate are real When you reduce the inner sound of your breathing, you
are reducing your breath. When you quiet your heart, you're slowing it down.
Your body will react—understand?"
"Yes,
sir." She got to her feet with a groan. "Do people have visions when
they think they're dead?"
His
control vanished. "I don't llmow! I've never tried it!"
"Oh,
well, I can see there's no talking to you the rest of the night," she said
wisely. "Not till you're out of this pet you're in."
"The
pet I'm in?" he bellowed.
Definitely
time to go groom the horses, she thought.
She
fell asleep during supper, and slept through the night. She felt rested when
she woke, an hour before dawn, with something already on her mind.
It was
the Stormwing. He had been nastily real, in a way Ma and her friend had not
been. Even now she could smell that thing's reek, fouling the salt air-
There
had been no scent to the hill in her vision. She had a good nose, and she would
have remembered. There had been flowers. Ma always wore wood's lily or sweet
pea sachets, and Daine had smelled nothing at all. But the Stormwing had come
when she was in the air over this place. She had smelled him.
Standing
outside the tent, in a cold wind, she reached out.
She was
too tired to go far—less than a mile, only part of her usual range. She brushed
the mind of an albatross that wheeled just over the rocks, but that was as far
as her senses went. At that distance, she could trust her eyes as much as her
magic, and they told her there were no Stormwings about.
Cloud
followed her to the ocean, as cross as Numair had been. Haven't you had enough
fun? she asked, gracefully picking her way down the bluff while her mistress
slid and scrambled.
"Not
near," Daine replied. She sighed in relief when she reached the strip of
sand between cliff and water. "Don't distract me, either."
I
wouldn't dream of it, the mare retorted.
If I
think about it, I'll only chicken out, Daine told herself firmly. Like as not
it isn't near as cold as
it
looks, either. Yanking off boots and stockings, she plunged into the waves up
to her knees. Once her feet were numb she tried again, gripping a rock to keep
from being knocked off balance.
There—far
overhead, hovering behind a long cloud, a tiny dot of wrongness. The hackles
went up on the back of her neck.
Why so
far up? she wondered. He just hangs
there,
waiting. Watching?
She sat
down. "Cloud, keep me from being
sucked under!"
I will
do no such thing, the mare replied. Come out this instant.
Daine
turned and fixed her eyes on Cloud. "Now, please." She used her
will—just a touch of it.
"It's
important"
Grumbling,
the pony waded in and gripped the back of Daine's shirt in her teeth, I hope it
rips, she grumbled.
Daine
reached behind herself to grab the pony's mane. If I go, you go, she retorted.
Numb to the waist, she closed her eyes and sent her magic out.
There
was her nasty friend, a jarring note in the sky. He was far from a single note,
however. He was part of a thin, jangling chord that reached north and south
where the waves boomed, as far as her hearing could go.
She
dragged herself out of the water. "Get me to the others? Please?" she
gasped, crawling onto Cloud's back. "Not the trainees. Umm—"
To
Numair's tent? The mare sounded worried in spite of herself.
"Good.
Yes. Have Tahoi bring Onua. It's important."
Just
hang on and be quiet.
Daine
collapsed over her friend's neck. "Of course." Cloud's mane was
delightfully warm on her face.
"I'm
sure" she repeated. All the adults were gathered around Numair's small
fire. "They're up and down the coast as far as I can hear."
"How
can they stay in one place like that?" Bun asked.
"They
have their own magic," Numair replied, drying his feet from his own
seawater dip, taken once he'd heard what Daine had to say.
"Can
they see everything?" Alanna wanted to know. "Can they look through
walls or stone?"
"I
think they see like hawks," Daine guessed. "I don't know what they
can do with their magic."
"They
can use only a little without being noticed." Numair was still shivering.
"If a sorcerer knows where to look, he can see the aura of their magic for
miles. All they dare risk is the bit that holds them aloft." He made a
face. "Once I thought to look that far, of course."
"Don't
blame yourself," Alanna said tardy. "I
see
magic too, and I never spotted them." She patted Daine's shoulder.
"Good work." She got to her feet. "I have to let Jonathan know.
He won't be pleased." She walked away, far from the noise made by the
trainees getting up. Within minutes a small fire blazed where she had gone,
burning first orange, then purple.
Buri
fed their fire more wood. "What now?" she asked the queen,
Thayet
sighed. "I wanted to stay a few days at Buzzard Rocks, but maybe that's
not a good idea. We'll move them along today, camp early at the Rocks, and go
before dawn. Onua can ward the camp. There's not much else we can do, once my
lord gets Alanna's message."
"We've
seen fishing boats and villages," Onua said thoughtfully. "They
aren't raiding. They aren't raiding, and they aren't killing."
"You
sound almost sorry," Buri commented. "In a way I am. That would make
sense." Onua got to her feet. "They're watching the coast like cats
at mouseholes, but who's the mouse?"
The
Riders moved out briskly, and kept up the pace of the day before. Numair,
apparently over his bad temper of the previous night, taught and questioned
Daine on the habits of dolphins and whales.
Late in
the day, when they took a side road to
the
village of Buzzard Rocks, Daine picked up a growing hum. With it came a feeling
of otherness, though not that of monsters, or even of the water and tree
sprites of the Royal Forest. She intended to tell Numair once they had pitched
camp.
Their
talk was postponed. When they reached the cluster of huts and sheds that marked
the town, they found it was deserted. Thayet broke the trainees up into groups,
and they fanned out to search the cluster of buildings. Daine and Cloud
followed Numair, who did a search of his own.
"It
happened fast, whatever it was," he said, almost to himself, as he peered
into barns, wells, and chicken coops, "Yet they did have a chance to pack
and gather livestock," Then turning he asked, "What's the matter with
your ears?"
She
blushed and stopped rubbing them. "I keep hearing this—sound."
"Oh?"
His look was skeptical. "Hearing with your ears, or your mind?"
She
listened for a moment. "With my mind. Sorry."
"Is
it like the Stormwings?"
"No—more
like the undine, but not like her exactly. And I have this feeling, as if—I
don't know—when I see a juggler or something mar-velous." She looked up at
him miserably. "I'm sorry—I can't tell you anything else."
"Don't
worry. Come on—maybe the others have learned something. Tell me right away if
anything changes."
They
joined the Riders in the village square. No one had found any clues. "They
had time to pack," Alanna said. "It wasn't a raid or disease—"
The hum
turned into a roaring chime in Daine s head. Selda shrieked.
They
came in low over the beach where the fishing boats lay, giant things too large
for birds. The mounts went crazy with fear, needing all their riders'
attention. Spots, Cloud, and Tahoi shrank close to Daine and Numair, who were
frozen with awe. Selda s ponies broke from her hold and tan into the rocVs—fcve
otWt pom« swiS^ts GeaetdL dul d\e same.
Daine
realized poor Mangle was having hysterics, and went to grip his bridle.
"Shush," she told him absently. "Calm down." Trembling, he
obeyed.
"Weapons!"
barked Thayet. Those who could do so grabbed their bows.
The
birds—if they were birds—banked and came for another pass, giant wings shining
like dim gold in the sun. This time they gave voice to shuddering, screaming
roars. One of them raked the cart's roof with its claws, slicing the canvas as
neatly as butter.
Daine
saw what was about to happen. "Stop!" she called, to attackers and
defenders.
Buri
got in the first shot, Thayet the second. The great creatures were out of
range, but already they were curving around again. "No!" Daine yelled
now to the humans. "Leave them be!"
"We're
under attackl" Buri yelled.
"Don't
shoot! They don't understand. If you'll give me a second—" But she could
see fifteen arrows were fitted to strings. She screamed her fury.
Ponies
and horses grabbed for the arrows, breaking them in their teeth. Sarge's Ox
actually knocked him over. Daine wasted no time watching something she knew she
could catch trouble for later. She ran toward the sea and the incoming
creatures, waving her arms. "No! Stop! It's not what you think! It's not
what they think!" Closing her eyes, she gabbed her power and threw (( out
like a. net, pleading, Listen to me!
They
broke off their attack two wingbeats in front of her, curving to each side.
Rising above the lapping waves, the female flew out to a rock at the foot of a
nearby cliff and perched. The male stalled with his wings and came down, scant
yards away from Daine. He cocked his head, predator's eyes glittering down at
her, and waited. Sitting on his haunches, he was as tall at the shoulder as
Numair; each of his claws as large as a small sword. His body was that of a
giant, feathered cat, blending harmoniously into the head, beak, and wings of
an eagle. His eyes spoke of a nature that was alien to
hers,
but intelligent. His voice in her mind was deafening.
"It's all
right to put
down the weapons?" Numair asked.
The
griffin—it had to be a griffin—nodded regally.
The
mage's eyes lit with wonder. "You
can understand me?"
The
great haunches rippled.
"A
little, he says," Daine translated. "It's ideas he gets, like
'weapons' and 'safety.'"
"Thank
you," Numair told the griffin. He went to the Riders as Daine examined the
two creatures. The female was gray silver in color, her mate brown threaded
in,gold. Both gleamed and shimmered in the dying light of the sun. In her
magical vision, they blazed copper.
"I
don't suppose you could tone down your voice? No," she said when the
griffin looked at her arrogantly.
Footsteps
crunched in the sand. Alanna came up on Darkmoon, shield on her arm, bared
sword in hand. The great horse stopped a few feet away, his sides streaked with
sweat. Daine knew the knight had brought him so close to a creature that scared
him witless because she would need the advantage of Darkmoons height if the
griffin attacked; but she wished Alanna had tried for less advantage and the
horse's peace of mind. She went to the stallion
and
stroked his muzzle, assuring him he was safe. He believed her—barely.
"Ask
him where the village is," Alanna told Daine, her voice hard.
The
great head cocked, and the griffin examined the knight. Daine swallowed as the
chiming in her head broke into a handful of notes. "What?" she
whispered. "Please, sir, I'm very new at this. You have to—" He
chimed again, impatient. From the fire that was his presence in her mind, she
picked out an image: Alanna s shield. She shook her head, and the griffin
repeated the question/image. "Lioness, I—I think he wants you to explain
the device on your shield. He won't talk about anything else till you do."
The
woman's eyes were hard jewels in the light. "It's a lioness, my own sign.
A female lion."
The
male stretched his wings, and settled. Could you speak more gently? Daine asked
him. Your voice hurts—I feel your answers in my bones. It makes translation
difficult-Pressure—a broad hand—settled at the nape of her neck. Suddenly she
was inside a circle of light, shielded from the worst noise of the griffins
speech. "Calm down," Numair said gently. "Relax. I'm shielding
you. Take a deep breath—r-good girji. You can manage this—just go easily."
She
ordered her mind, sorting out what was griffin and what came from other
animals. Focusing on the griffin, she reached more directly into his mind until
each ringing note became a symbol or an idea. Once she could manage what her
mind heard, Numair carefully freed her from his shield. Now she had control of
the translation. The griffin spoke again.
"He
says there're too many griffins held captive on human shields," Daine told
Alanna, "That's why they attacked the village—no, 'attack' isn't right.
They flew over, like they did with us, to warn the people not to raid the nest
and steal the little ones for shields. They're nesting atop that large spire of
rock." She pointed to where the female sat at its, base.
"How
many villagers did they kill in this 'warning'?" Alanna wanted to know.
"And Daine, you'd best not lie to protect them."
She
listened to something the griffin was telling her. "I couldn't lie if I wanted
to, Lioness. He won't let us." His correction boomed in her mind, and she
sighed. "That's not right. Lies can't be told near a griffin. He's
surprised we didn't know. That's why they were captured for shields."
"There
haven't been griffins here in centuries," Numair put in. "We've
forgotten the lore. Does he know how long it's been since they were seen in
human
lands?"
Daine
struggled with the answer. "He—sorry, Numair—he doesn't know what you
mean. I think he doesn't understand time as we use it. He does say they killed
no one. The villagers screamed a lot, then they ran. They're at a great stone
house about a day's ride down the coast."
"Pirates
Swoop," Alanna said, relaxing. "That's easy enough to check. Is it
true, about lying around them, Numair?"
"I'd
heard it. You could try."
Alanna
opened her mouth—-and no sound came out. Her throat worked, but nothing
happened. At last she smiled. "I can't."
"How
do they live?" Thayet came to stand with them. "What do they
eat?"
That at
least was easy to understand, "Fish" Daine said. "Dolphins if
they can get them, seals, sea lions—but mostly fish. He says therere big ones
in the open ocean."
"No
cattle? No sheep or pigs?" the queen wanted to know.
Another
easy one. "No, mum. They think grass-eaters taste nasty."
The
queen hooked her hands in her sword belt, thinking. "Will he agree to let
the villagers come back and not harass them?"
The
griffin's reply was emphatic.
"Ouch!
As long as they keep away from their nest, he doesn't care what people
do." Daine smiled weakly at the queen. "Their voices—our voices—
discomfort their ears. They don't want to come any closer to us than they must,
to protect the little ones.
Alanna
sighed, leaning on the pommel of her saddle. "It'd be a shame to destroy
such magnificence" she said, admiring the great creatures.
The
griffin preened his chest feathers and stood a little straighter.
Thayet
laughed. "All right. I'll talk to the locals when we see them. Tell your
friend we wt'W fight them if they harm a human or any livestock."
The
griffin's reply was so loud that Daine's temples throbbed. "He says don't
insult him by calling me his friend. His kind has better things to do than
associate with humans." She knew she was blushing. "He says at least
my voice doesn't hurt his ears."
Alanna
saluted the griffin with her sword. "Your point is taken, sir. Return to
your nest, and we won't inflict our voices on you again."
Opening
his beak, the male loosed a great, ringing cry. Before the echoes had faded he
and his mate were in the air, spiraling up to their nest.
The
humans made camp in the village square. Once the trainees were busy, the
officers and Numair took Daine aside. "You shouldn't have turned our
mounts against us." Thayet's green hazel eyes were serious.
She
gulped. "I didn't—honest. They did it without me asking. If you don't
believe me, maybe we could bring the griffins back—"
"No,"
Alanna said firmly. "We just got the ponies calmed down."
The
queen pursed her lips. "You had best study control, mistress," she
warned Daine. "If we can't trust our mounts, we're in trouble."
"There's
only so much she can do," Numair put in. "This is wild magic, Your
Majesty—not the Gift. She can't help animals knowing her feelings any more than
she can help breathing. I've tested her control. It's as good as she can make
it. Wild magic is unpredictable—thus the name."
Onua
slung an arm around Daine's shoulders. "It's got to be harder on her than
on us, Majesty. She's a good girl."
Daine
bit her lip, glad she had friends—human ones, not just animals.
Thayet
rubbed her neck. "I'll be so glad when we reach Pirate's Swoop," she
said. "A hot bath and a night's sleep in a bed, and I'll be a new
woman." She smiled at Daine. "I'm not going to bite you, youngster.
I'm not even angry, not really. I will say this—riding with you has been an
eye-opener.'"
"Welcome
to the club," muttered Numair.
"You
know," Alanna remarked, "I have a feeling, if the people come back,
this is going to be a very honest village from now on."
Onua
said, "If so, a lot of husbands will be sleeping in the barn."
In the
morning the road swung away from the coast. Daine watched with disappointment
as trees blocked her view of the sea. Her sadness grew when Numair left them
after noon. He lived in a tower visible to the west; it would take him an extra
three hours to reach it if he followed the Riders. He promised that he'd see
her soon. She had to be content with that.
By
midafternoon the trees thinned and vanished. The main road sloped downhill from
there to pass a large, prosperous-looking village on the shore. The road they
followed left the main one to approach a strong-looking fortress built around
three towers, one much thicker than the others.
"Pirate's
Swoop," Evin said. He had fallen back to keep Daine company. "You'll
like this place. I think you'll like the baron too. He and my father have been
friends for years. He's—different."
The
gates ahead opened to reveal the baron's— and Alanna's—domain.
EIGHT
PIRATE'S SWOOP
They
climbed a taU mound to enter the castle, Daine was impressed by the thickness
of the walls around the outer court and by the alert and well-armed guardsmen,
The baron of Pirates Swoop kept his home in fighting order,
A
man in gold-trimmed brown
ran up to Thayet, bowing repeatedly as he talked to her. The queen
signaled Buri, and the second-in-command " tied in her saddle. "Riders, this way/" She and led
the trainees to long, low buildings along ic wall: stables, by the look of one,
and the guard •racks.
Onua
came up beside Daine. "Wait here, I want n to stable their mounts so they
can unload the t," She grinned. "A bit of advice, for what its worth.
Never do anything you can order a recruit to for you."
Daine
grinned. "I'll remember that," Movement ?ht her eye: a flag was being
run up on one of ic three towers. When the breeze caught it, she ted: it was a
gold lioness rampant on a red field,
the
same as Alanna's shield. On the tower next to it was a brown flag decorated
with a gold key.
"The
barons flag," Onua said, noticing the direction of her gaze. "Those
flags mean the baron and the lady knight are both in residence." "No
flag for the queen?" she asked. Onua shuddered. "Gods, no! It's bad
enough the whole palace knows where the summer training camp is, without crying
it from the towers. George has made this place strong, but why ask for trouble
if you don't need it?"
Grooms
took Thayet's and Alanna's mounts as the women stretched. Suddenly shrieks
filled the air. It took Daine a moment to realize the sound was not birds but
children screaming, "Mama, Mama!" A pack of them dashed through the
inner court's gate and separated: three to Alanna, two to the queen. Thayet's
pair—both dark haired, a boy and a girl—bowed when they were a foot away from
their mother, then threw themselves at her.
"The
prince is nine, the princess eight," Onua explained. "They asked to
watch the training this year instead of staying with the younger children in
the summer palace."
Alanna's
three—the tallest a true redhead, the younger two blondes with a touch of red
in their locks—.-didn't even stop to bow. She laughed and knelt to return their
hugs, disappearing for a moment under their bodies.
"You'd
think they'd been brought up in a barn, wouldn't you?" a lilting voice
asked nearby. "Climbin' on their ma like she was a hobbyhorse." Daine
looked down from her seat on the wagon. The speaker was a tall,
broad-shouldered man with brown hair lightened by the sun. His nose was too big
for good looks, but there was a wicked twinkle in his large, green hazel eyes,
and his grin was catching. He wore a shirt and breeches, and had come from
watching the sea, to judge from his tousled hair and the spyglass in his hand.
She had
to return his smile. "They must love her very much."
"She's
easy to love," he replied
"For
you, maybe," Onua said, dismounting. "I know threescore offenders
against the king's law who don't find her at all lovable. Hello, Baron."
"Onua,
every time I see you, gods be my witness, you make me wish I wasn't
married." They hugged vigorously, slapping each other on the back.
"You'd
never pull in my harness, George. Daine, this gentleman—"
"Don't
call me 'gentleman.' I work for a livin'," he interrupted. Daine grinned.
Sarge often said the same thing.
"This
nobleman is Baron George of Pirate's Swoop. George, this is Daine, my
assistant."
A large
hand was offered. Daine shook it. Like all the nobles she'd met in this strange
country, his palm was callused. "Welcome to Pirates Swoop, Mistress Daine.
How did you fall into such bad company?"
She
blushed, not knowing how to take this charming man.
"Stop
flirting with her, George—you'll only break her heart." Onua winked at
Daine, who winked back, thankful for the rescue. "How long have the prince
and the princess been here?"
"A
week only," the baron replied, taking his sharp eyes off Daine.
In a
quieter tone, Onua asked, "Any trouble?" George's eyes flicked to
Daine. "You can trust her," the K'mir assured him. "We all
do."
Daine
blushed again when George raised his eyebrows, "That's quite a
recommendation, young lady. I didn't think Onua even liked two-leggers"
Looking around, he said, "Bless me—so you did take on Evin Larse "
Seeing
them, Evin waved and loped over, his long legs taking him across the outer ward
court in seconds. "George, I made it," he said, panting as he offered
his hand. "I told you I would. Wait till you hear about the trip we've
had! Did you know you have griffins nesting up the coast?"
"I've
got the whole village quartered here," George said, making a face.
"Eatin our food and beggin me to send soldiers after them. Tell me
true—is
it really griffins, or just a pair of mean albatrosses?"
"Its
griffins, and you don't have to send a company," Evin assured him.
"Daine here got them to make peace."
"I
didn't 'get' them to do anything," Daine retorted. With the charming baron
she might be tongue-tied, but never with Evin. "They don't do anything
they don't want to. But they promised the queen not to attack people or
livestock," she told George. "And they can't lie, so I believe
them,"
"Wait,"
he ordered, "You've had speech with them, and made a treaty—"
"This
is a fine welcome you've given me, laddy-buck," Alanna said, trying to
imitate her husband's speech as she approached. She bore a gold-haired child on
each hip. "Here I am, home from the wars, and you let me be swarmed over
by barbarians whilst you flirt with my friends."
"Excuse
me," George said gravely to the adults, and to the children he plucked
from his wife's hold. Gripping the Lioness firmly, he bent her back in a
prolonged kiss that looked like a romantic scene in a play. Everyone, even the
men-at-arms posted along the walls, clapped, whistled, and cheered.
"Does
anyone in this land act like they're supposed to?" muttered Daine.
Onua
heard her question. "They do in lots of
places,"
she said, eyes twinkling. "But this isn't lots of places,' it's Pirate's
Swoop. And if you think this is strange, just wait till you've been here a
couple of days."
Exploring
after the evening meal in the castle's great hall, Daine got directions to the
observation deck on top of the third, largest tower. Here the wall rose out of
stone cliffs. Looking down, she saw rocks, a thread of beach, and heavy waves.
Relaxed, she watched the sun dip itself into the ocean as a cool breeze blew
across her face. She liked the Swoop, she decided. If she had to live within
stone walls all her days, this would be the kind of place she'd want.
"Beautiful, isn't it?" The Lioness relaxed against the stone wall at
Daine's side. "I'm so glad to be home."
You
have a home to go to, the girl thought, and was immediately ashamed of herself.
How could she begrudge the knight a place of her own? "I don't see how you
could ever leave this," she admitted.
"I
don't, either, except I took an oath as a knight, then as champion, long before
I came here. And I keep my oaths."
They
fell silent again. It's odd to see her in a dress, Daine thought. Wearing
perfume—it's pretty, whatever it is—and pearl earbobs and silk. And yet she
fits here. She sighed. I wish this were my place, she thought wistfully. I bet
I could fit here too.
A
distant cry fell upon her ears. She and Alanna looked north and saw a bird
shape wheeling over the ocean. "Griffins," the Lioness remarked.
"It's like a story, or a bard's tale."
So are
lady knights, thought Daine, but she kept that to herself. "If only the
griffins were all of it."
They
looked up. Only a handful of clouds were in the sky, but they knew there was a
Stormwing behind one, and that more waited up and down the coast.
"My
father is a scholar." The woman's voice was soft. "The king asked him
to report on what he could learn about Stormwings. He says they live for
destruction and the fear that destruction provides. They eat only the products
of war, famine, and disease—the bodies of the dead. They drink only the energy
of human suffering and fury. They've had a long fast—four hundred years' worth,
in the Divine Realms. I have the feeling they won't be as easy to send back as
they were to set free."
"Send
back?" Daine had a thought, and she didn't like it. "If they had to
be locked in the Divine Realms, maybe they were never supposed to be there.
Maybe they're our predators."
"Our
predators?"
"Surely."
She tugged one of her curls. "You speak of locking them up again as if it
can be done. What if the gods don't allow it, because the
Stormwings
are supposed to be here, not there?" Alanna winced. "That's a very
cheerful thought. I wish you hadn't come up with it. If you're right,
we have
a lot of battles ahead."
Daine
slept in the stable loft, cushioned by the bodies of the castle's many dogs and
cats. At breakfast, she listened as the trainees were given a day off (except
from caring for their mounts). That meant a day off for her as well, and she
could use one. All her shirts needed mending, and a wash wouldn't hurt any of
her clothes.
Getting
directions to the castle laundry, she returned to her loft and gathered her
clothes. On the way back from the laundry, she found Selda checking the
saddlebags that had been issued to each trainee for the trip south.
"Smile,"
the brunette said, shoving her belongings into a pack. "I'm quitting. I've
had enough fun in the wilderness."
Daine
glanced away. She wouldn't miss the girl at all.
"Don't
look so pleased." Selda folded the bags and hung them next to her tack.
"One of these days you'll be packing yourself." "Me? Whatever for?"
The
older girl's smile was bitter as she looked Daine over. "Are you blind?
How long can they afford to keep you on, do you suppose? After that
thing
with the griffins, I figured it was all over for you."
Daine
felt cold. "I've no notion what you mean."
"What
happens if they're in a battle and you get hurt? You think they can risk their
mounts coming to your rescue? I don't." The girl shouldered her pack as
Onua came in. "Don't say I didn't warn you."
Onua
looked at her suspiciously. "You'd best get to the wharf. That boat won't
wait."
Selda
gave both of them an ironic salute, and was gone.
Onua
rolled up her sleeves. "This is a surprise inspection. Let's see how the
trainees' mounts look while they're off relaxing. You start on that side; I'll
start here," she ordered. "We can talk while we work. Look at
everything, mind—nose to tail. What poison was she dripping in your ear?"
Daine
stroked the muzzle of the first pony with a hand that shook. "She said the
Riders can't afford to keep me. She's right, isn't she? If animals know I'm in
trouble, they will come to me. Numair himself said I couldn't shield all my
wild magic."
"Maybe
that's so." Onua ran a brush over Padrach's Minchi to see if extra hair
fell out after a morning grooming. "But it wasn't the Riders that hired
you. It was me. As long as I say so, you work for me, not them."
"How
can you do that?" she whispered. "You're a Rider."
"No,
I'm a civilian expert. I deal with whatever concerns horses, and that's all I'm
no soldier." Onua pointed at her with a brush. "You saved my life in
the marsh and at the palace, when the Storm wings hit. You saved Numair—he was
the first person here I knew liked me for myself. I wont let you down."
She reached over and dabbed at a tear rolling down Daine's cheek. Those of us
that's horse-hearted have to stick together, all right?"
Daine
nodded. "But you'd tell me if I wasn't
giving
satisfaction?"
Onua
grinned. "If we spend more than the morning checking these mounts, I will
be most unhappy. I was planning to take the afternoon off."
Daine
went to work, smiling. They had just finished when hoofbeats rang outside and a
voice yelled, "Daine? They said you were in here."
She ran
outside as Numair climbed off his sweat stained gelding. "Come with
me," he ordered. "We have to find the Stormwings."
She
shaded her eyes to look up at him. "What d'you mean? Aren't they behind
their little clouds, being sneaky?"
He
shook his head. "They're gone. Vanished."
She
spent the afternoon on the observation deck with Numair and Alanna, searching
as far out as she
could
drive her magic for any sign of the immortals. The Gifted ones applied
themselves to scrying, or looking. Numair used a round crystal he carried in a
pouch, Alanna a mirror with (Daine was tickled to see) roses painted on the
back.
"It's
not my taste," the knight said dryly. "This is from Thorn—my oldest.
A birthday gift. It's the thought that matters." She glanced at the back
of the mirror, winced, and turned it to the reflecting side. "That's what
I keep telling myself, anyway. And it makes a very good scrying tool."
For
herself, Daine sank deep into meditation, listening up and down the coast. She
heard the griffin female return to the nest with food: griffin males, it
seemed, helped to brood eggs. Her friends among the sea lions were prospering,
as were other seals and sea lions. A number of whales had come to swim in the
waters around the Swoop, but she didn't have time to attempt to speak with
them. Crossing her fingers, she hoped they'd stay close long enough for her to
get a chance. Other sounds she identified as two groups—Miri called them
"pods"—of dolphins.
At last
she drew her senses back to the castle. "Nothing."
Alanna
grimaced. "No luck for us, either."
"So
our friends have given us the bag." The baron had joined them at some
point. Seeing Daine's puzzled look, he said, "They've escaped us.
It's
thieves' cant, meanin' a delightful trick whereby
you
wait for your pursuer and slip a large bag over
his
head to blind him."
Daine
scowled. "Well, I'm not blinded,
and they aren't there."
George
smiled at her. "I believe you." He looked at Numair. "Is there a
way to nab one of these beasties for questionin ?"
Numair
frowned. "I'm not really sure. If we can kill them, I assume we can
capture them....You know, it's moments like this that I really miss the
university
library."
"We're
working on ours," Alanna pointed out. "Maybe the king has the proper
books already. And wait—what about the Golden Net?"
Numair's
face lit. "You know, with a few adjustments—"
"My
lords and ladies." A proper man in the livery of a castle servant had come
up to the deck, "We dine in half an hour."
"I
think I have the basic spell in a book I've been reading," Alanna told
Numair. "If you want to come take a look—" They followed the servant
down into the tower, talking about spells and their variations.
Daine
looked at the sun; it was low. "No wonder I'm hungry."
"If
you hear one of those nasties again, let's
<-atrh
it." George said.
"I
don't think we'll get anywhere talking to one," she pointed out.
The
barons grin was neither warm nor friendly. "You leave that to me."
They studied the ocean together. "It's strange how folk look at a thing.
Numair sees what's comin' to us—he thinks of the return of old magic, magic
that's controlled by none and understood only by a few. My wife sees a threat
to her kingdom. Me, I'm a commoner born and bred, title or no. You know what I
think of? Omens and portents—like the red star that blazed over us when the
emperor Ozorne was crowned, seven years back."
"Then
maybe we're lucky the Stormwings are giving us so much time to think about them
before they do something really nasty," Daine said. .
George
laughed. "Now there's a practical way to look at it, and I thank you. It
does no good to brood about what might come." He offered his arm with a
bow. "Let's go to supper and drink to the confusion of our enemies."
Numair
kept her at her lessons until the midnight hour was called. She trudged back to
the stable the Riders used, yawning heartily as she climbed to her loft bed.
Her mind spinning with new animal groups, she kept her eyes open barely long
enough to pull on her nightshirt.
She
awoke to a stable cat giving birth near her ear and three children—a girl and
two boys— watching her solemnly.
"I
s'pose you're fair proud of yourself," Daine told the cat. "My wondrous book says you're a feline,
and a carnivore, and a vertebrate, and a mammal. I wish them that wrote it
could smell around here right now and maybe they wouldn't call you all those
pretty names." The girl wriggled out from between her blankets and grabbed
her clothes. The feline was busy cleaning the last of the new kittens and
refused to reply. "It's too early to be paying social calls," she
told the children.
"Our
mamas said you're a mage." That was Thayet's daughter, Kalasin. She took
after her handsome father, sharing his blue eyes and coal black hair.
Daine
sat on her bed. "I'm no mage." She grinned. "Numair calls me a
magelet, but that's just for fun. It's too early to be answering
questions."
"Ma
says you help animals." Thorn's hair was redder than Alanna's, and he had
George's green hazel eyes. "We brung you him. He was on the wall."
The two older children lifted a basket and offered it to Daine. Inside lay an
osprey, a fishing hawk, glaring at her over a broken leg. If the cat hadn't
been giving birth close by, she would have known about him already.
She
sighed and took the basket. "It's all right, then. You can go now."
Turning her attention to the bird, she carefully took him from the basket.
"How'd you manage this, sir?"
He
shrieked and slashed at her when she joggled his leg. "I'm sorry,"
she murmured, gentling him with her mind. "I'll make it better—I
hope."
She
went to work, unaware that the children watched her, fascinated. Bird bone was
easier than otter bone to mend: it was thinner and hollow. Better still, it
wasn't a clean break, but one of the greenstick kind, which meant the bone
simply had to be fused together again.
Opening
her eyes, she saw that the break was healed, the bird's pain gone. She was
dripping sweat onto him. "Sorry," she murmured as he shook himself.
He
cocked his head, looking at the mended leg,
He was
impressed, and intrigued by what she had done. At the moment, however, what he
was most interested in was a nap.
She
smiled. "Just, when you wake up, obey the rules—no hunting or teasing any
other creatures in this castle. They're all my friends too."
The
osprey understood. She settled him on a wooden rail and brought water from the
stables below. Promising she'd see him later, she gathered her things again and
left.
Her
early visitors waited for her by the stable door. "You missed breakfast,"
Prince Roald said. "We brought you some." He handed over a napkin
wrapped around sweet rolls.
"Thank
you," Daine said. "That was very kind."
She
wolfed two of the rolls, knowing her manners
were
terrible and not caring.
"Papa
gets hungry when he's been using his Gift," remarked the princess.
Daine
wiped her mouth. "It was good of you to bring the osprey, and the food. I
thank you. Now, I think you should go back to the nursery, please. Won't the
servants be missing you?"
"We're
too old for the nursery," replied Thorn, with all the dignity of his six
years. "Only the twins have to stay there. They're four."
"Poor
things. Listen—I have to bathe, and then I work for the Riders, which means
I've no time to chat. Good-bye."
They looked
at her hopefully. What was she supposed to say? At home she'd never spoken with
a child. Parents had always kept them from her. If I ignore them, they'll go
away, she decided, and went to the baths.
When
she came out, they were waiting. They trailed her to the stable, admiring the
new kittens while she stowed her gear. They followed her back down to the
ponies and helped as she looked after Selda's old pair as well as Mangle and
Cloud, holding brushes, pails, and rakes for her. They were still with Daine as
the trainees, subdued after a morning conference with their officers, came to
look after their mounts.
Thayet
broke out laughing when she saw what
was
going on. "I'm sorry, Daine," she said, giggling, "but it's like
ducklings. No offense, children."
"You
said we ought to learn more about the stables, Mama." Kalasin was more
outspoken than her brother. "You said if we wanted to come with you and
the Riders when we're older, we'd have to take care of our gear and all."
"Daine
has to decide if you can stay, however," the queen said.
The
girl wished the children wouldn't look at her piteously. Thayet was right—it
was like ducklings. She could have shot them easier than resist those eyes.
"Onua? Sarge?" she asked, hoping. They shook their heads.
"Look
at it this way," Buri said. "You'll need help with the new
extras—Jacy and Kenelm handed in resignations a little while ago. Starting
tomorrow we're taking groups outside the castle walls for days at a stretch.
You won t even have Onua then."
Selda
had been right, Daine thought, looking at Buri and the queen. They know I won't
be helpful in the field, not if the ponies obey me first.
A
gentle hand rested on her shoulder—Onua's. "Somebody does have to care for
the washouts' horses," the K'mir whispered. "It's real work, not just
something to do because we haven't the heart to throw you out. And you need to
stay close and study with Numair, remember?"
"Once
you start, no quitting," Thayet told her
children.
"If you agree to help Daine, that's what you do. It's a responsibility.
You can't stop just because you're tired of it." The two coal black heads
nodded seriously.
"Thorn?"
the Lioness asked. I don't think he's old enough to bind him, Daine thought,
but Thorn was already promising. She recognized the expression on his face. He
might be only six, but he would keep up with Roald and Kalasin or die trying.
Which means
I'll have to
watch him, she thought with a sigh. Ducklings.
A week
passed. It was easier to manage them than she expected. Being able to meet wild
animals was a powerful attraction, one the "ducklings" did not tire
of and would not risk losing. Though she incurred the wrath of all the nursery
helpers but the chief one, Maude, by introducing their charges to savage
beasts, she presented her friends to weasels, crows, bats, and deer. She let
them watch as she worked to heal one of the dogs, who'd had a paw smashed by a
passing wagon.
She was
surprised to find Roald and Kalasin did help in the stable, and that only
Thorn's size kept him from doing as much. She knew from her meetings with the
twins that his maturity came from the possession of two appallingly lively
younger siblings. Roald and Kalasin also had younger sibs, but their maturity
seemed to result from what people
expected
Tortallan royalty to do. She was surprised, and a bit shocked, to learn that
they fed and groomed their ponies at home. She had never heard of princes and
princesses who had chores.
"I'll
be a page in a year," Roald pointed out one day as they helped with the
constant chore of mending tack. They had settled on the flat area in front of
Daine s stable (as she had come to think of it) as a place for such chores.
"I'd have to learn then, anyway. Its best to know as much as I can ahead
of time. Papa says later the other lessons will keep me busy."
"I'll
be a page too." Kalasin had insisted Daine call her "Kally" as
the children did. "Papa said girls can be knights, so that's what I'll
do."
Daine
was about to ask Thorn if he wanted his shield when a messenger came through
the gate at full gallop. Covered with dust, the man slid from his horse as
hostlers came to take it.
"Lioness,"
he gasped. "Message for the Lioness."
A
servant bowed. "This way."
Thorn,
the princess, and the prince watched, all looking grim. "Great,"
Thorn said. "She has to go away again."
Kally
sighed. "It's like Mama in raiding season," she told him. "We're
lucky to have mothers who fight. Our fathers must stay home and protect their
people."
"Da
fights when they hit the village." Thorn was
a
stickler for fact.
"Papa
fights if he can," Roald tried to smile and
failed.
Poor
things, Daine thought. They miss their folks, coming and going all the time. At
least while Ma and Grandda were alive, they were there.
"How
about a run to the beach?" she asked. "The seals aren't that far out.
If we ask nice, maybe they'll come in."
"Maybe
I should wait," replied the redheaded boy.
"I'll
have Gimpy keep watch" Daine wheedled. Usually the bloodhound's name made
Thorn smile, but not now. "He'll fetch us if they saddle Darkmoon."
"I'm
not a baby. I won't cry or anything. It's just—I keep having bad dreams
anymore." Thorn looked down, biting his lip.
"Let's
go look at the seals," Daine urged gently. Gimpy was coming for them when
the Lioness and Darkmoon passed him on the slope to the beach. The minute she
stopped they knew it was serious: she wore full mail. A company of the Swoop's
guards waited by the gate, wearing combat gear. One of them carried a banner,
crimson silk with a gold lioness rampant—the personal flag of the king's
champion.
The
knight slid from the saddle, hanging shield
and
sword from the pommel before kneeling to embrace her son. Thorn fought tears.
"You
know Fief Mandash?" She spoke to all three. Roald and Kally liked her and
didn't look any happier than her son. "They've got ogres—three of them.
They killed the lord and his son and have the rest of the family trapped in the
keep. I have to go. We're the closest king's representatives."
Thorn
swallowed. "Ma, ogres are bug."
"Not
buge, huge. The messenger says the male is eight feet or so. That's not bad,
and he's the biggest." Alanna smiled, but her eyes spoke of worry and
watchfulness. "I'm taking some men, all right?" That seemed to
reassure the children. "Thorn, mind your father and Maude, and don't get
under people's feet. A hug and a kiss"—she took them—"and you be
good." She tousled his hair and shook hands with Roald and Kally. "Tell
your seal guests good night," she advised. "You need to clean up
before supper."
All of
them went to obey. The knight watched them pat the seals, pulling on an
amethyst-stitched glove.
"Should
I go with you, Lioness?" offered Daine. "If it's immortals?"
"No,
with twenty men I should be fine. What gets me angry is I told Mandash to arm
his people, if he was too cheap to hire soldiers. But no, we can't teach
peasants to use weapons—what if they decide they don't like their
overlords?" She sighed. "I shouldn't speak ill of the dead. I just
don't like the timing, and I don't like it being immortals." She took one
of Daine's hands in both of hers. Her grip was powerful. "Will you and
Numair look after my family? Don't let anything happen to them."
Chills
crept up the girl's spine. "We
won't, Lioness."
Alanna
smiled. "Thank you" She drew a deep breath and went to bid good-bye
to the children once more.
The
Lioness had been gone for two days. Daine had collapsed early into her loft
bed, worn out from her evening's lessons.
She
dreamed: it was a pleasant night in her badger set. With her belly fall, she
listened to the kits play. She was about to go for a cool drink of water when
her dreams changed. Trees and a moonlit sky tumbled around her. Boats filled
with men came onto the beaches, and men crept among the trees. Speaking softly
and fast, they lit fires, scorching the roosts and blinding her. Into flight
she tumbled, over the roaring cold and salty place with panic in her throat.
There was the light ahead, the one the forest bats had sung about, a beacon of
safety. She was the greatest of the People—she (ould protect them when strange
men broke the night rituals!
Daine
gasped and sat up. "Odd's bobs, what was that about?"
With
her excellent night vision and the light of the full moon that came in the
windows under the eaves, she saw that
the rafters overhead were thick with bats. A good thirty of them, mixed breeds,
watched her with nervous eyes. Three were hoary bats, named for the frost on
their brown fur. By themselves they would not have been a surprise: they
weren't sociable bats, not like the clusters of big and little brown bats that
hung with them, or the handful of pipistrelles.
"Wing-friends,
what's amiss?" she asked softly. "Come and tell me."
Within
seconds she was a bat tree, with little bodies festooned on her curls and parts
of her nightshirt. All of them trembled in terror.
"Hush,"
she told them. Closing her eyes, she thought of deep and even breaths, of
safety in caves, of the drip and echo of water in high chambers. Slowly the
bats took her calm into themselves. Small talons changed their grip, this time
so flesh was not caught along with the cloth. The trembling eased and became a
thin vibration. Some of the bolder ones returned to the rafters, to give her
air. She sent the calm out with them, enticing more of those who clung to her
to take the perches they were used to, hanging from wood. The ones left were
the hoary bats and the leaders of each group.
Daine
opened her eyes. "Now. Let's hear it— one at a time."
It was
all she could do to stay calm when they described what they had seen. It was
her dream: men, strangers, coming from the woods and from boats on the water,
hiding under the trees. She had to clamp down on her witnesses a little to make
sure of the numbers they were describing. Bats tended to count by the way they
roosted: their idea of numbers was flexible, and depended on the breed of bat.
Daine knew she couldn't tell the baron or the Riders her friends had seen six
quarter-colonies or whatever the total was. Not only would that not be helpful,
but they would think she was crazy.
To the
hoary bats, who roosted alone, the men had arrived in flocks, like deer they
saw grazing at night. Moreover, each bat had come from a different part of the
wood that ran along the coast. After scribbling with a stick of charcoal on her
drawing pad and squinting to read her own marks, she concluded that each hoary
bat had seen nearly fifty men.
The big
brown bats had seen at least two colonies—sixty men or so. Most of the
pipistrelles were from one place and had seen less than half of one of their
colonies—almost fifty. One lone pip-istrelle from the wood north of the Swoop
identified another half-colony. The little brown bats had come from the east
and south. Each of their sight-ings came to two tenth-colonies; for them that
meant two hundred men, all told.
All the
bats assured her their counts had not
overlapped,
and that she took as truth. Their concepts of numbers might be odd, but a bat's
knowledge of territory was precise to a pin.
Daine
looked at the numbers, her skin tingling in shock. If the bats were right, they
had seen more than five hundred strange men coming overland or by sea and
landing near the cove. The bats were more familiar with the locals than those
humans might have believed possible. The little animals insisted the strangers
were not their humans. Moreover, the strangers all wore metal over some parts
of their bodies, and all carried or wore wood tipped with metal, and bars of
metal. Daine could see their faces in the bats' minds: they were the hard faces
of warriors.
Carefully,
without frightening the animals, she eased into her breeches and boots. In the
process she talked two of the hoary bats into staying behind. The others, the
head of each colony, the lone pipistrelle and one particularly scared hoary,
clung to her nightshirt and hair. They would go with her, they said.
Sarge,
who ran the trainees on night watch, and Kally sat in front of the stable,
talking. From the look of things, the princess had been unable to sleep.
"Daine?" Sarge asked when she emerged. The girl's blue eyes widened.
Abruptly Daine
saw herself as
they—as
humans—must
see her: small, wriggling animals swarming on her, clinging to hair and
clothes. They tried their best to be clean, but a couple of them had lost
control of their bowels.
I must
look like a monster. Daine swallowed a lump in her throat. She hadn't realized
how much Kally s opinion—or Sarge's—had come to mean to her.
"I
have to talk to the baron," she whispered without looking at them.
Kally
walked over hesitantly. She stopped, then reached out to touch a furry body.
The little brown bat transferred his affections to her in a leap. She squeaked,
then let him snuggle into her collar. "He smells you on me." Her tiny
smile trembled and held.
Sarge
got up, his brown eyes kind. "Come on, girls."
The
master of the Swoop was in his study. The queen and Josua, the captain of the
Swoop's guards, were there as well, seated in comfortable chairs, while Numair
stared out one of the windows.
"What's
all this?" George asked. His sharp eyes took in Daine's riders as well as
Rally's small hanger-on. Thayet yelped when she saw Daine; Josua was on his
feet, dagger half-drawn. Numair looked around, frowning.
"Please—don't
startle them." The bats caught
the
surge of her own fears. She made herself take a deep breath and get under
control. Don't open your eyes, she cautioned the bats. The room was cozily lit
from a human standpoint, but not from theirs. "They won't hurt
anyone."
"It's
only bats, Mama." Sarge's mouth twitched: it was impossible to tell that
Kally herself had been upset by them only a few minutes ago,
Thayet
and Josua stared at Daine,
"It's
important, sir," she told the baron, "I wouldn't have brought them if
it wasn't,"
"May
I?" Numair asked, pointing to the hoary bat.
The
animal's nose was already questing, having located interesting smells on the
sorcerers clothes. Gently Dame handed him over: in one of Numair's gigantic
palms, the bat was dwarfed.
"What
news have your friends brought for me?" George asked, Daine looked at his
face, but saw no trace of mockery or disbelief.
Either
he's the world's finest Player or he believes in me, she thought. "Have
you a map?"
He
gestured behind her. She turned and saw a table covered with sheets of
parchment: on top was a map of Pirate's Swoop, Holding down a corner of it was
a box of small, colored pebbles. Consulting with her friends, she put one at
each location where strangers had been seen, explaining to the adults as
she
worked. "All this since twilight," she said when she finished.
"We think it's more'n five hundred, all told." She looked at the
picture she'd made, and blanched. The stones formed a half circle a mile away
from the castle and village of Pirate's Swoop. They had been surrounded in the
dark.
NINE
SIEGE
Things
moved so fast Daine's head spun: Pirates Swoop was more than prepared for night
attacks. Within minutes Captain Josua, Thayet, and Sarge had left to quietly
wake the village and bring the people back to the castle.
With
them they took Daine's promise the livestock would move quietly. Once she had
explained things to them, the village animals were eager to help. She felt
ashamed of herself for showing them
images
of the raiders' imaginary stewpots in such gruesome detail, but told herself
the cause was a good one. Even the geese and chickens had been willing to go
along after that.
Next
she asked the bats to return to their friends in her stable. You won't like the
people I'm going to talk to now, she assured them, and they believed her.
George had asked her for spies who would spook less easily than the bats, and
that meant only one thing: owls. Daine had to admit owls were unnerving to deal
with, and she liked them—the bats did not. While they weren't natural
enemies,
there was always a chance an owl could make a mistake, and apologies meant
nothing to a dead bat.
With
the bats gone, she went to the limits of her range, contacting owls and
explaining her problem. She wasn't surprised to find that the silent predators
were already angry about the invasion: the strangers had chased all the game
worth hunting into burrows in earth and tree.
Waiting
for the owls' report, she and Numair went to the observation deck. From there
they watched as the Swoop's gates quietly opened and guards and Riders headed
for the village, to help the people pack and move. Daine noted with approval
that the hooves of all the horses and ponies were muffled. With the moon full
and the night clear, they didn't need torches—a small blessing, since the
invaders also had used moonlight to keep their arrival secret.
The owls
reported, and Daine
wrote their information on her
paper. When they finished, she added the total with fingers that shook. She
checked
her
numbers and came up with the same total. A third check bore the same result.
Her
voice emerged as a squeak. "Lord Baron?"
He had
come while she was working. "I have the whole thing."
He
raised his eyebrows. "So soon?"
"Owls
are fast." She pointed out the total—a little more than six hundred men
had infiltrated the woods. "The owls say they aren't moving. They're
camped. No fires, but they've settled."
"Waitin'
for dawn," the baron said. "Waitin' for that!' He nodded at the sea.
Two miles out a fog bank lay on the ocean, its top as high as the tower on
which they stood. It took her a minute of looking before she saw what was
wrong: the curved dome was clean, as if the thing were shaped by a sculptor. It
was also dead on the water. Fog was neither tidy nor slow. It moved fast and
overwhelmed everything in its way. This close, she should not have been able to
see the sky, and she ought to have seen it move by now.
"Numair?"
George asked. The sorcerer was leaning on the wall, his eyes closed. A
transparent black cloud surrounded him; bits of light flickered in it like
fireflies.
He
shook his head. "Its opaque. I can't even feel the weather-working spells
that are holding it in place, and there have to be spells. Fog is defined by
natural law like any atmospheric creation. In the absence of those laws, we
have to assume magic, which I should be able to detect. Since I can't detect
it, that argues the presence of dampening spells in the fog."
"Dampenin'
spells." Georges face was tight. "We're boxed in, then—like rats in a
trap. Whatever s in that fog will hit us in the mornin',
sure as
the Crooked God cheats. Why'd we have no idea this was cornin ?"
The
mage looked at his friend, "George, there are more illusion spells and
diffusion spells than there are stars. Scrying is an inexact magic: I have to
know what to look for. All right, I'm good, but even I can be overwhelmed or
outflanked. Alanna and Jon would tell you the same thing."
George
put a hand on Numair's shoulder. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean you failed at
your job. It's just been a long time since I've been sucker-punched. I don't
like it." His face had taken on harsh new lines, "They'll crush us,
between what's out there and those six hundred at our backs,"
"And
the army won't come before we're bruised at least," Numair said.
Aye.
"How
many warriors here?"
"Eighty—not
countin the Riders" George drew a deep breath and looked at Daine.
"What can your friends do to help?"
She
swallowed, "Don't ask me to make them fight," she pleaded.
"They're not—this isn't about them. I can't ask them to fight and die for
humans." Shivering, the girl remembered the marsh and the slaughtered
birds. "Please say you understand."
George's
silence drew out for a long moment and it was impossible to read what was in
his face. At last he smiled and patted her arm. "I don't,
entirely,
but then I'm all too human. Will you ask them to watch, then? To let us know if
more soldiers come, or if the ones out there start to move?"
She
nodded, and whispered, "Thanks." Sending out her request, Daine
settled to wait for her friends' reports from the woods. As she listened,
guards and Riders began to return with the villagers. Never before had an
evacuation gone so well. The livestock had been waiting for their owners to
come out. There were no problems with catching animals, not even chickens. The
trainees, at least, had a good idea of why this was so. The villagers did not,
and fled to the castle as if their own animals had turned to ghosts.
Dawn.
The first raiders came into sight, to find the village empty and the castle
gates closed. The battlements were lined with warriors who did not look surprised
in the least to see raiders outside their walls.
When
the sun rose above the horizon, fog rolled over Pirates Swoop.
A
gentle hand was shaking her, and a wet tongue was bathing her face. Daine
looked up and saw Onua, Kalasin, and Tahoi. "I'm sorry, I must've gone to
sleep." She turned scarlet with embarrassment and tried to get up. Her
knees buckled. "Goddess! How long have I been here?"
Onua
caught her on one side, Kally on the
other.
"Since the middle of the night. The baron says we owe the warning to you
and your friends."
"Thank
my friends. I just passed the word on." She massaged the cramps from her
legs. Kally gave her a roll stuffed with fruit and held a jug full of juice to
go with it. Daine was still hungry when she finished. "What's going on
now?" she asked, accepting a sausage roll from her young friend.
"We're
in trouble. This"—Onua's wave took in the fog surrounding them—"isn't
just fog. It carries dampening spells for the Gift—plenty of 'em. We're not
sure how many sorcerers are out there holding it, but there have to be a lot of
them. Whoever engineered this planned for everything."
Daine
looked at the two humans. "That hurts you both, right? You're both
Gifted."
Onua
nodded. "Lucky for us, there's no need for magic just yet. Numair got word
out to the palace and to the king before the fog came in."
Daine
looked at the woman, wondering if the mage had found anyone nearby who could
help. Reading her, Onua shook her head.
"I'd
best put on clean clothes, then, and get my bow." She caught an angry call
from below. "And let Cloud know I'm alive. She's upset with me."
"Can I go with her?" asked Kally. Onua smiled. "Of course. Just
make sure you stay with Daine. If you run into your brother, have him report to
me."
Daine
glanced around to see who was there, and saw the queen, Numair, and the baron,
with trainees and guardsmen armed and keeping watch. "Where should /
report to?"
"Here.
Take your time. Nothing can happen as long as this mess hangs over us."
She
nodded. "Let's go, Kally. I need to clean UP<
Roald
and Thorn were waiting for Daine in her
loft.
She shooed them downstairs while she changed, combed her hair, got her weapons,
and comforted the frightened bats. In the stable below she soothed the ponies,
all of whom knew something bad was going on. She was uneasy, herself. She'd
been fogged in before at the Swoop, but it wasn't the same. The mist felt
dirty, and the hackles were up on the back of her neck. The two boys, both
Gifted, were in worse condition than Onua and Kally, and clung to Daine's hands
as she walked them back to the inner court.
On her
trip down she hadn't looked at the new arrangements: now she did. Long tents
were set up for healers. Water barrels were stacked everywhere. Temporary corrals
held the village animals. Seeing them, Daine went to thank them, assure them
they were safe, and reinforce the need for their good behavior. It was the
first time anyone had explained that raider attacks were the reason why they
were so often dragged up to the castle without warning.
Understanding
that, they were more than eager to help.
"Honestly,
you'd think people would have told them before now and saved everyone
trouble," Daine growled. "Speaking of people, where's their
masters?"
"Some
are on the wall," Thorn said. Looking up, Daine saw villagers armed with
bows, shields, and metal caps among the guards and Riders. "The rest are
in the lower levels. We're dug into the rock. There's plenty of room down
below."
She was
startled. She'd never dreamed there might be more to the castle than what she
saw. "How many more surprises does your da have up his sleeve?"
Thorn
grinned. "A lot"
Sarge
waved to her from the wall. She waved back, hoping her face didn't reveal her
thoughts. She had human friends here too—friends who might be hurt, or die.
With Ma and Grandda gone, she'd thought she was free of that kind of pain, but
she was less free than ever. She'd never love anyone as she had her family, but
others had come to be important to her: Evin and Miri, who gave her acceptance;
Onua, an elder sister; the Rider officers, respect for her judgment. Each of
those people now was a potential wound.
Thinking
grim thoughts, she climbed the outside stair to the deck, the children
following her. I should've stayed wild, she told herself. I never should've got
back up on my hind legs.
Never?
another part of her asked. Never means not meeting sea lions and griffins.
Never means not hearing whales sing. Never means not learning how to heal. She
sighed.
On deck
once more, she saw two guards and two trainees, Elnore and Padrach, on duty
with bows strung and ready. The queen and Onua were armed as well. Buri, like
Sarge, was elsewhere on the walls, keeping an eye on the other trainees. Baron
George was talking quietly to one of the guards.
Thayet
smiled at her and crooked a finger at her son and daughter, "Come talk to
me," she ordered, and they obeyed. Thorn went to stand with his father,
and Daine sought out Numair,
"Are
you all right?"
He
looked tired and strained. His mouth was tight, as if he were afraid he might
say too much if he opened it. He barely managed a smile for her. "I'm
scared," he said quietly.
She
looked up at him. I'm the only one who understands, she thought. If the Lioness
were here, he'd've said it to her, but she's not and I am. There's magic in the
air, lots of it, and everyone looks to him for a miracle. Right now he can't
even teU if his magic is the right kind, and he's afraid.
She put
her hand in his, and he squeezed it tight. "I hate to theorize without
information, but I need a working plan," he told her softly. "As it
is, I either hold the spells off the Swoop so the others can function, or I
leave the dampeners on them and punch through myself, to fight with what /
have. The problem is that as a warrior-mage my talents are limited, and I have
no healing magic at all. If Alanna were here, we could work off each other,
but—" His face tightened again.
"That's
it, then," she said, trying to think aloud as he did. "They lured the
Lioness off and put an army between her and us just for that." He nodded.
"Which
means they've been watchin us all along." Daine and Numair both jumped
when George spoke behind them. "They know we've the queen here, and the
next two in line for the throne." Daine and Numair looked at each other
and chorused, "The Stormwings."
"That's
why they were spying out the seacoast," Numair went on. "They were
waiting for us to arrive and get settled. I'll bet they also made sure none of
our army or navy was close enough to help." Something occurred to him, and
his eyes lit. "Daine—your magic. How is it?"
She was
surprised he even asked. "It's the same as ever. You told me, yourself, I
couldn't turn it off" "Wild magic," Numair breathed. "It's
in everything. No matter how many dampeners they lay on us, you'll be able to
function!"
Something
tugged at the back of her eyes— something ugly and sour. "I can't send my
friends to die," she warned, but already her attention had shifted.
"Bows!" she yelled, getting hers off her back and putting an arrow to
the string. "Bows! Stormwing in the air!"
George
shoved Thorn down between the wall and the floor of the deck, grabbed the
prince and princess and did the same with them, Thayet and Onua had their
weapons in hand. The trainees and guards were armed and ready. The baron had
drawn his sword and dagger.
Numair
swore so vividly that the children looked at him in awe and delight and added,
"The wind's shifting. They don t need the fog anymore."
"The
dampeners?" George asked hopefully.
The
mage shook his head. "Still there. The fog laid them down. Now the spells
wtU stick to all that the fog touched."
Within
minutes the fog was gone, and the world around them was lit by a midmorning sun.
Daine gasped at the scene that lay before them. A ; fleet lay in the cove: five
long boats, or galleys, rowed by chained men belowdecks, and seven smaller
vessels, all bristling with warriors and their arms. Behind them lay four
barges, huge, flat-bottomed boats with no apparent way to move. Large wooden
structures sat in the middle of each, things that were wood, rawhide, and rope
knit together.
Each
barge carried a stock of round stone balls, and a complement of barrels. Around
their rims, and around the weird structures, were huge bags of sand.
"Such
a big siege for such a little castle," Thayet murmured. "Where could
they have sailed from?"
"Copper
Isles," George replied quietly. "They're Carthak s allies now."
"What
are the big, flat ones?" Daine asked, searching the air for the Stormwing
she had felt.
The
queen raised a spyglass to her eye. "War barges—the terror of the Carthaki
navy." She offered the glass so Daine could see clearly. "The things
in the middle are catapults. Each barge is counterbalanced with magic and
ballast so the catapults can hurl stone balls-or liquid fire. They can pound
the walls of a place like this to rubble in the space of a day."
"So
this emperor has declared war?" Daine asked. She had found the Stormwing,
high above. He stooped, dropping onto the deck of the largest of the galleys,
laughing as humans scrambled away from him.
"No
Carthaki flags," Onua said.
"This isn't official."
Daine
stared at her. "Surely that makes no difference. A flag's only a bit of
cloth, after all."
"A
war's not a war until an official declaration is made and the armies march
under flags." Onua pursed her mouth cynically. "None of those men or
our
friends in the woods are wearing uniforms, either."
"And
he can do that?" Daine asked, outraged.
"Its
not a war till this emperor fellow says it is?"
"Or
until His Majesty does," Numair remarked.
Onua
said, "We can't expect any help from our navy?"
"A
week ago Scanran wolf-boats hit all along the north coast," George told
them. "Most of the navy is up there, or on our part of the Inland
Sea."
"How
nice," Prince Roald muttered.
"Heads
up, darlin's," George said. "I think we're about to hear terms."
The Stormwing was taking flight again, an elegant white flag in one claw and
something much smaller in the other.
"This
is not good." Numair too had a spyglass. "See the red robes at the
bow of each ship? And there are at least four yellow robes per barge?" He
lowered his glass. "A scarlet robe from the university in Carthak means
you have your mastery—the same level as the Mithran black-and-gold robe.
University yellow robes are adepts. They brought the barges here, and their
spells keep them afloat and working."
"What
robe are you?" Daine asked, watching the Storm wing's approach.
"None,"
he replied. "Ever put one of those things on? They're hot"
"He's
a black robe," Onua said, hands tight on
her bow
as she watched the monster. "There are only seven of them in the
world."
The
Stormwing was a hundred feet away.
"Bows,"
Thayet said quietly. In the same movement she and all the archers on the deck
raised their weapons, sighting on the messenger.
He
hovered in the air before them, smirking. "Now, is that nice?"
Daine
clenched her teeth. This was the one who'd come between her and her ma. This
close, she could put an arrow clean through him.
The
creature dropped a scroll onto the stone between Thayet and George. The queen
didn't blink; it was the baron who picked it up and opened it. "'To Queen
Thayet of Tor tall and Baron George Cooper of Pirate's Swoop, from the Lord of
the Free Corsairs, Mahil Eddace, greetings. By virtue of superior numbers and
armament, I claim the castle, village, point, and waters of Pirate's Swoop for
the League of Free Corsairs. Should you prove obdurate — '"
"Obdurate?"
Daine whispered without taking
her
eyes from her target.
"Stubborn,"
supplied Numair.
George
continued to read, '" — I shall have no choice but to reduce the castle,
enslave the survivors, kill all beasts, and sow its fields with salt. You have
one chance only to avoid death, capture, or enslavement: surrender to me the
person and effects of Thayet of Tortall and her children, Prince Roald and
Princess Kalasin. You have what remains of this day and tonight to reflect. If
the three persons named are not given over to us by such time as the dawn sun
will clear the horizon, we will commence bombardment by catapult. If you wish
to signify acceptance of these terms, you may do so by runnin' up three white
pennants.'" Calmly he rolled the message up again, and as calmly ripped it
to pieces and tossed them over the wall.
"Looks
like Ozorne decided what advantage he needs against the king," muttered
Onua.
"There
was a time when your folk were no one's errand boys," the baron told the
Stormwing. His voice was even and almost friendly.
"We
don't mind helping out," the Stormwing told him, baring his filthy teeth
in a grin. "In a good cause, you understand." He looked at Daine.
"Hello, pink pig. Zhaneh Bitterclaws will be here to see you soon."
He nodded at Onua. "Both of you." Turning back to George and Thayet,
he said, "Well? Your answer?"
The
baron spat on the stone near his feet. "Get out, before I let them make
you into a pin cushion."
The
Stormwing's giggle was high and grating. "Oh, good. We hoped you'd say
that." He pumped his wings, pulling away from them fast.
A
hunter's screech split the air, and Daine's osprey friend shot past the humans.
He tangled his
feet in
the monster's hair and hung on, pecking for the monster's eyes. The Stormwing
shrieked in fury and tried to dislodge the bird from his head, but lacked the
arms with which to do it.
"Daine,
call him off," Numair said, his voice suddenly tight.
"I
didn't call him on—"
"Do
it!" her friend yelled. Before them gold fire was stretching above the
galleys to form a great square, anchored by the red robes below.
"Come
back," Daine yelled, putting her will behind it. "It's not worth it,
come back!" Something was pounding through the air, making her ears hurt.
The
osprey broke off the attack and returned. Onua grabbed the children and hustled
them off the deck.
I
almost had his eyes, the bird complained. Just one more wingbeat—
The
gold fire in the square exploded, knocking everyone down. Like a
nightmare, a horde
of Stormwings blasted through,
led by Zhaneh
Bitterclaws.
They filled the air with a degree of
stench
and evil that had not been felt in the world in
four
centuries. To that they added pure fear in a
weight that
crushed the humans
before them.
Something—something
huge and red in color—
almost
seemed to shove the gigantic flock through
the
gate, but it vanished. It had only
been an
impression;
Daine was too busy trying to breathe
with a
full pack of terror on her mind to think about it for more than a second.
She
straightened: an act of will that took all the courage she had. At the palace
she'd had a taste of what a flock of the monsters could be like, but it was
nothing like this. She brought up her longbow. At the edge of her vision she
saw Numair, then the baron, struggle to their feet. She smiled, blinked the
sweat from her eyes, and loosed her arrow.
The
messenger had chosen to attack with the flock. As she suspected, her arrow went
clean through him. Before he had struck the rocks below she had another arrow
on the string and loosed. It flew in a volley as the other humans released
their arrows.
Battle
raged. Archers, Daine included, fired bolt after bolt, making sure of the
target before they loosed. Numair made a hard decision fast sitting against the
wall, where he'd trip no one up, he lifted the dampener spells. The people with
lesser Gifts, including those who knew fire- and war-spells, got to work. Onua
quickly drew a protective circle around the mage to hide him from the
Stormwings.
Daine
fought two wars. Her animal friends wanted to rescue her, but she refused to
let them. She soon learned that keeping her will on so many species, in the
woods, the castle, and the air, was impossible. Pain shot through her head:
twice she lost control of the gulls and ospreys. With triumphant screams the
birds leaped into the air to harry the Stormwings. With claws and beaks they
attacked, trying to drive the monsters onto the rocks or into each other.
Tears
rolled down Daine's cheeks. Mechanically she fired as birds fought and died,
cut by steel wings or torn to pieces by steel claws and teeth. There was no
chance that her power to heal would be pulled from her in this battle as it had
been in the marsh: a wound here was death on the rocks below.
When
the Stormwings attacked, so did the land raiders, reinforced by the fleet once
the fog lifted. For the rest of the morning and into the long afternoon they tried
to bring rams and ladders up to the castle walls, and were driven back.
Eventually
the Stormwings lost interest in the battle and went to feast on the enemy dead
outside the walls. They had what they wanted, no matter who won. They left the
air over the deck first, not wanting to go on defending themselves against the
archers and the birds.
When
the deck had been quiet for a while, George ordered Daine to rest. She found
some shade close to Numair and sat, leaning her throbbing head on her updrawn
knees. No! she told the animals, who wanted to fight. No, no, no! With her last
refusal she tightened her grip, until they gave in. "Look at you."
While she'd battled her friends, Miri had come to the deck with Kalasin and one
of the maids. All three carried laden trays and wineskins. The fisher-girl came
to Daine, frowning. "Your skin's a nice lobster red. You landlubbers don't
think about reflected glare—" She rubbed a cool salve into Daine's hot
face and arms. "Kally, where s the tonic?"
The
princess filled a tankard from her wineskin and handed it over,
"Drink,
or you'll be sick." Miri put the tankard to Daine's lips. She took a gulp
and choked—it was tomato juice laden with salt and other things. "Drink it
all"
"Goddess,
that's nasty!" she croaked. She had the Smith-god s own headache. Her
hands throbbed, and her fingers refused to close. The muscles of both arms were
screaming. She had never shot so much in her life.
"Nasty
it may be, but it'll keep you from collapsing on us. Have some more. Maude
brewed it up special for you. Only think how her feelings would be hurt if you
refused it."
She sat
up, wincing as her head pounded. Maude?—the old woman in charge of the nursery,
"That's right—she's a healer, isn't she?" From her cradle Daine had
been taught to do as a healer said. She drew a deep breath and drank what was
in the tankard as fast as possible. For a moment her stomach surged and her
head screamed; then most of the pain and sickness were gone. "Goddess
bless all
healers," Daine whispered. Even her hands
had improved a little.
She sat
up, and the maid gave her a bowl of stew and a roll. Daine took them and began
to eat as Miri and the servant looked at Numair. "Should you even be out
here?" she asked Kally.
"Onua
put a protective circle around this place," Miri said over her shoulder.
Daine
smiled at Kally, then looked at Miri.
"How's
it going?"
"Not
bad." That came from Numair. He sat with his head tilted back against the
wall, his eyes closed, his face pouring sweat. Pillows had been put around his
sides to make him comfortable. Someone—a redheaded six-year-old, Daine
suspected—had tucked his prize stuffed bear under one of the mage's big hands.
"They can't breach the walls—can't even get near them. They're having a
korribk time with the archers. We're holding our own,
"Can
you drink or eat?" Kally asked. "Maude says you should if it won't
distract you from the spells."
He
nodded. The girl fetched a cup of water from a nearby barrel and held it to his
lips. He drank without opening his eyes. "How are you doing, Your
Highness?"
"Please
don't call me that." The girl's voice cracked. "It's 'cause of me
being a princess that all this is happening. It's my fault and I hate it!"
Daine
rolled to her knees and went to the child. "Here, now—stop that," she
said, patting Kally's shoulder. The girl turned and buried her head in Daine's
shirt. She was crying, and fighting hard to keep from making any sound. She's
only eight, Daine thought sadly. "You got it all wrong, sweet-ling. Those
men would do this no matter who they're after. They could have asked for
Numair, here, who's in trouble in that Carthak place, or Sarge, that's a
runaway slave. It isn't 'cause of you or Roald or anybody. You're just the
excuse. If you must blame somebody, blame them Carthaks."
"Carthakis,"
Numair corrected. He was smiling a little. "Daine's right, Kalasin. The
person who commits an action is the one responsible for it, not the people he
commits the action upon."
"But
they said it was 'cause of Mama and Roald and me." Kally blew her nose and
wiped her face.
"So
they would," Daine burned with fury. The Riders, the guards—even she had
put herself in spots where a fight might sometimes be the only answer. They all
knew the risks. But to twist a little girls mind so she blamed herself for the
fight—that was horrible. "Evil people say evil things to make good people
cry and doubt. Don't let them get that hold on you. It's because they're too
cheap to buy food. They druther steal it if they can. That's really what it's
about."
"Kalasin?"
Maude was at the stair, calling. "I
need
you below. There's healing to be done."
Kally sniffed
and wiped her
face again.
"Coming."
Daine
watched her go. "But she's only a child" "That child is a
strong, natural healer." Numair hadn't once opened his eyes. "She's
partly untrained,
still,
but Maude can talk her through whatever has to be done. How are you
managing?"
Daine looked
at him warily. "What d'you mean?"
"I
mean your friends out there must be dying to go after the raiders, and I
definitely recall you saying you won't let them fight. The birds got away from
you this morning, didn't they?"
Daine
clenched her fists and immediately regretted it. "I'm all right."
"Liar."
He said it almost with amusement. "Is it a strain?"
The air
was singing to her. "What?" She got to her feet. Where was it coming
from? "Numair, do you hear it?"
"Hear
what?"
It was
like the griffins, only different, a singing coming from the north, low and
close. It filled her eyes and ears and beat against the sore palms of her
hands.
Onua
was with George and Captain Josua, trying to talk Thayet into going below, when
she felt her circle of protection on the deck evaporate.
"Down!"
She pushed the queen to the floor. George and Josua had their swords out as the
source of the music came thundering up from below to surge over their heads.
Numair was on his feet instantly, his watch over the castle shattered.
The
dragon shrieked its fury and broke away, to head out to sea; she turned and
came back. Everyone was on the floor but Daine. She stood on the wall, scant
inches between her toes and empty air, awed by the glory before her. Scarlet
wings and scales glittered like rubies along that long and graceful form. The
wings, fashioned like a bat's, were huge, delicate structures of deep red, lit
from within by silver bones. As the dragon passed inches over her head, almost
knocking her onto the deck, she could see orange and yellow scales decorating
the great creature's belly. Like the Stormwings, her claws and teeth were
silver, but not the hard silver of metal.
Her
song almost deafened^the girl. She struggled to force the notes into a form she
could understand, until she heard: —Kidnappers! Filthy kidnappers! Rend them,
take the raven-haired one to a cape on the ships!'—
Daine
shook her aching head. What was she hearing?
The
dragon came in low and almost seized Thayet before having to reverse her
flight. —Bring me here? You will send me home with your human tricks!—
The girl
closed her eyes. What
tricks? She shouted with her
magic, as loudly as she could. Tahoi yelped. Below the horses screamed, their
delicate ears in pain.
The
dragon came in again and yanked the sword from Josua's fist. The rrian was
flung to the stone, where he lay stunned.
"Stop!"
Daine yelled. "Stop! What kidnappers? What lies?"
The
dragon was coming again, —Send me home! I demand it!-—
Numair
threw fire at her, fire that settled on her like a cloak and blew away.
The
long head twisted around to focus on him. —Human mage, you will pay
for
stealing me—
Daine
threw herself at Numair and knocked him down. The long shadow fell over them,
and stayed. The stone beneath them quivered. Somewhere distant a number of
people screamed.
The
deck was sixty feet across. The dragon had taken twenty of those feet for her
person, forefeet to hind legs, and cluttered a good twenty feet more with her
tail and wings. Everyone but Daine and Numair, between her forepaws, was
pressed to the wall or had made it to the stairs.
Daine
jumped to her feet and raised her hands.
I think
I have the knack of it now, she thought, or
please
Goddess I hope I do... .Putting her hands on
that
scarlet breast, she called, —Listen, wing-sister!-—
Information flooded
into her mind
as the
dragon
let out an ear-rending screech. Daine's nose began to bleed; the intensity of
her contact with the dragons mind had overloaded her body's limits.
—Who
speaks?—
Daine
drew a breath, forcing her heart and lungs to slow down. —Me.—
—Joking,—
Disbelief was loud in the dragon's mind and in hers.
—No
joke,— Daine said, —What did they tell you, the red robes on the ships?—
Why did
she feel as if she were healing something? A quick look inside showed her
copper fire streaming through her hands, being pulled out of her and into the
dragon. When she tugged, she realized she couldn't yank away. Her palms were
locked against the dragons scales.
The
dragon was hesitant now. —They say—they say, raven-haired one and her kits
stole me from home, brought me here to destroy boats.—
—Can't
you smell a lie?— Daine asked. She was getting a sense of the mind behind the
huge, catlike eyes, This dragon was not much older than a human of Miris age,
say, and very frightened: panic-stricken, in fact.
—Only
smell on red robes was Eaters,— The Stormwings were vivid in the dragons mind.
—They
brought you, the robes. They brought you with the Eaters.—
—Do
not understand...— The dragon was confused and scared. She was quivering under
Daine's hands. —Tired. Sick. Little one... —
Daine
felt the dragons hide ripple. It was like a convulsion—or a contraction! Ma's
daughter realized.
—You're
having a baby'/— she cried. Suddenly the dragons mind filled with a hot
excitement that shattered Daine's magical hearing. Her hands dropped free of
the dragon, and she clapped them to her ears.
The
dragon screeched and launched herself into the air. Before Daine realized she
was leaving, she had gone, flying north along the cliffs. Her image
blurred,
then vanished.
She can
do magic, the girl realized with awe, Numair got to his feet and jerked her
into his arms. "You little idiot," he whispered, hugging her so
tightly she squeaked.
"She
was in labor and on her way home," Daine told him, feeling mashed.
"They opened the gate nearby, and it pulled her in. I think it killed her
baby. Maybe it would've killed her—but it was just what you said, the wild
magic was just sucked right out of me, so I think she's healing. And she's been
educated, Numair, from books! Her mind—it's all organized, like you've been
after me to do—"
Around
them the others were coming forward. In Josua's and the guards' eyes she saw an
emotion that looked like fear.
Someone
ran up to the deck—Farant. "Master Numair? The healers are asking if
somethings wrong. If you don't shield them now, we'll lose Sarge."
"Oh
no,"Thayet whispered.
Numair
released Daine and sat against the wall once more. His eyes closed, and the
quality of air around him changed.
Daine
decided she might like to sit down for a while herself. Her legs folded before
she told them to, and she never remembered hitting the ground.
CHAPTER TEN
LISTENING FAR ENOUGH
Someone
had carried her below and put her on a cot in what she realized was the baron's
study. Tahoi lay nearby, worried; a couple of the bats clung discreetly to the
hangings. The osprey— missing an eye, but miraculously alive—sat on the perch,
letting Onua feed him raw fish. Daine sat up. Her head pounded worse than ever,
and she felt her stomach heave. "I think I'm going to be sick," she
whispered.
Onua
got a basin to her just in time. "What's the matter?" she asked when
Daine finished vomit- • ing. "Was it the dragon?"
"No,"
she croaked. "How long've I been out?" "Not too long. It's just
after sunset." Looking at her shirt, Daine saw it was a gory mess.
"What happened?"
"You
had a nosebleed. What's wrong with your head? Can you tell?" Onua smoothed
her hair. "It's important. You're important."
They
knew she was awake and their struggle to get free increased. She didn't even
know she'd stopped answering the K'mir until coolness entered her veins,
driving back the hot fire of the headache. She opened her eyes. Kally held one
of her hands, Thorn another. The coolness had been theirs.
"Hello,"
she said. Her voice sounded like a rusty gate. "Thank you."
"You're
wearing yourself out." Maude stood behind the children, looking stern.
"You have to let some spells go. I know your magic is different, but your
body's just like anybody else s. You're doing too much. Release some of your
spells, or we can't answer for the consequences."
Daine
looked at Onua as the old woman steered Kally and Thorn out. "Easy for her
to say," she muttered when the door was safely closed.
Onua
brought over a tray of food and put it on the table beside her cot. "Eat.
What magic do you have going, anyway?"
Hotcakes,
drenched in butter and syrup, fruit juice, hot cocoa. The sugar cleared her
head as she ate. "I can't let them fight," she said, her mouth fidL
"Let
who fight?" Onua scratched Tahoi's ears, and patiently allowed the bats to
settle on her shoulders as they listened to Daine.
There
was cold water, to cut the sweetness. She drank half a tankard in a gulp.
"Them." She waved her fork in the direction of the woods outside the
castle. "The wild creatures—they won't let me be.
They
want to fight the raiders—they've been wanting to all day."
Onua
moved her fingers to Tahoi's spine, and the great dog sighed. "I don't
understand. Is it so bad if they fight? It's their home too."
Daine
glared at her. "They'll get killedl They're animals. It's not for them to
get tangled in human stupidness!"
"You
won't like any of that," Onua told the bat that sniffed the tray. To the
girl she said, "It seems to me we tangle them in our stupidity all the
time. At least if you tell them how to fight, they have a chance."
Daine
got up and paced. "You don't understand! Once I meet them or talk to them,
I know them. They're my friends; they're part of me. When they get hurt and
die, it hurts me" She pounded her chest to make her point.
"You
think it doesn't hurt me, when one of my horses dies?"
Daine blushed,
embarrassed. "I forgot.
I'm sorry."
The
older woman sighed. "We share this world, Daine. We can't hold apart from
each other— humans and animals are meant to be partners. Aren't we,
Tahoi?" The dog wagged his tail. "He knows. He saved my life, when my
husband left me to die. I've saved his life since. He can't cook or sing, and I
can't chase rabbits, but we're partners all the
same.
The Riders' ponies are full partners with their master. They have to be, and
that's what I train them to be, so everyone has a better chance of surviving.
"The
Swoops animals are in the same trap we are. Men broke into their homes, killed
their families, threatened you—and you won't let them do anything for fear
you'll be hurt. That's selfish. How would you like it if I took your bow and
said I cared too much about you to let you fight?"
Daine
winced. "I see your point."
"You've
made your friends helpless, just like bandits made you helpless when they
killed your family. Of course the animals fight you." Onua sighed.
"We have no choice in being hunted—not animals, not humans. That's how the
world is. The choice we do have is to take it—or fight. Why don't you show them
how not to get killed, and let them decide?" She studied her nails and
added, "I'll be honest with you. We need all the help we can get."
Daine
went to the window, fingering her badger's claw. I know what she means, she
realized. They'll start with the catapults in the morning and smash our walls.
Then they'll come take Thayet and the children if they're alive. And the
rest—Thorn, the twins, Gimpy and Cloud and Mangle...
There's
got to be something my friends can do to help.
Suddenly
she remembered a talk she'd heard Buri give the trainees. "If your numbers
are small a Rider Group, say—it's idiotic to attack face-on when the enemy has
superior numbers. But, enemies are only men, and men scare easy. Use booby
traps: snares, pits covered with branches, pebbles strewn across the road to
cripple them and their mounts. Foul their water sources. Sneak into camp and
ruin their food, if you can. Keep up a racket all night so nobody gets any
rest, and you've got the sentries shooting at ghosts. Do they buy or steal food
from the locals:1 Make sure the food they get their mitts on is moldy, stale,
or wet.
"An
enemy that's tired, ill fed, and scared is an
enemy
who's half beat."
We
could do that, Daine thought now. If the soldiers here on land are crippled,
Thayet and everybody else might be able to fight their way through and escape
before the ships get their warriors to the castle.
Closing
her eyes, she opened her mind to the extent of her range. The countless animals
in the woods around Pirate's Swoop began to
clamor. They wanted her to release them. They wanted to tear, and gnaw,
and leap— Quiet! she yelled. They obeyed.
She
reached first for minks, weasels, and martens—clever, small animals with sharp
claws and teeth. They were quick to grasp the images of i^Kor wraoDings, rope,
and bowstrings. They must not be seen, she said over and over, with all her will
behind it; they mustn't be caught. She pressed the image of bows, knives, and
swords into their minds, until they knew to run or hide if they saw a human
with a weapon in his hand.
Bears,
wild boars, and woodchucks went after supplies, once she'd made them promise to
run at any signs of human attack. She left them pulling apart sacks and boxes
of grain, cheese, salted meat, and vegetables. Shrews and voles offered to take
care of the tea and coffee supplies. If there was an edible or drinkable scrap
in the camp by morning, she would be surprised.
Foxes
she asked to free the picketed horses and mules. Once she had explained things,
the strangers' mounts were happy to leave their masters and run for the woods.
Some of the enemy's mules, once they were freed, came back to give water
barrels a kick or a roll downhill. Owls and bats volunteered to keep the guards
busy. Sentry after sentry had the unpleasant experience of an owl dropping on
him silently from above, or of a bat flying directly into his face. Raccoons
walked away with arrows and knives. Wolves howled on the fringes of the camp,
to be answered by wildcats of all sizes.
Gods go
with all of you, she thought sadly, and broke off the contact.
The
room was empty. Surprisingly, it hadn't taken long to muster her army at all:
the candle that marked the time had burned down one hour's mark and half of
another. I guess it's easier to get them to do what they want than it is
keeping them from doing it, she thought.
Please
Goddess, don't let my friends be hurt. She put on the clean clothes that lay on
the cot, and let herself out.
Numair
was right down the hall, in a room filled with books. The skin around his face
was slack and gray; his nose thrust out like the prow of a sinking ship. His crisp
mane was matted with sweat, his face drenched with it. Checking the water jug
on the table beside him, she saw it was empty. She went back and brought her
own water to him. This time, when she came in, his eyes were open. They were
dull and tired.
"Thanks,"
he whispered as she poured water for him.
His hands shook when she
gave him the tankard.
"Wait."
She supported his head and shoulders, steadying his grip on the tankard with
her free hand. "You're still keeping those dampeners off?"
He nodded
as he drank, and gasped when he was done.
It hurt
to talk casually when he looked half-dead. You won't help him if you turn into
a baby, she told herself sternly. "Can 1 get you some food?"
"I'll
just throw up." He smiled. "How do you like your first siege?"
"That's
very funny," she told him sourly. "I'm so glad you've hung on to your
sense of humor. Only think how scared I'd be if you hadn't."
He
closed his eyes and smiled. "That's my magelet."
"Can't
you let up awhile?"
He
shook his head. "The healers. They're still going. Daine—this afternoon.
You said the dragon can think? It's educated?"
"She.
She's educated. Even the griffins are like my animals, with all that's in their
heads jumbled together higgledy-piggledy. Not her. She's read things in
scrolls—I saw them in her mind,"
"Amazing,"
he whispered. "I'd heard stories—-just never believed them."
"What
stories?"
"They're
mages. Well, we saw that. She came right up on us. Even you didn't hear her
until she was close. And she vanished. Do you hear her now?"
Daine
listened, hard, "No, sir. But like you said—I didn't hear her until the
last" She pulled off his boots and put a cushion under his feet, More
cushions went behind his head. She noticed that he still clung to the toy Thorn
had put in his hand. "There's got to be something else I can try. I let
the land animals go. They'll do some damage. There's not enough creatures on
the ships to work with, though. It's mostly rats out there. I can't work with
rats.
I've tried, but they don't even want to listen to me.
"Whales;1
Ask them to swim up under the barges—capsize them. The catapults are the
biggest danger. Then the red robes on the galleys."
She
thought it over. "If whales're out there, I can't hear 'em. They're not in
range." She chewed on a thumbnail until he knocked her hand away.
"I'm fair tired too. The dragon sucked me almost dry." This time she
didn't even get the thumbnail to her mouth before he grabbed her wrist.
"Pity I can't reach the sea. If there's a cold spot in the cellars-—"
"Find George. He'll figure out a way to get you to the water."
She saw
another danger. "What if the mages on the ships catch me?"
"It's
a risk, but you stand a better chance than anyone with the Gift. Only a very
few can detect wild magic. It's a skill mages in Carthak are discouraged from
acquiring. Remember, they think it's old wives' tales. If someone out there
could sense it, he'd have a difficult time convincing the others. If you're
detected, you can escape among the seals and sea lions." He sighed.
"I know it's dangerous, and I hate to drive you this way, but—we need a
miracle. I'm hoping you can come up with one."
She got
up. "Wish me luck." She hesitated, then kissed his cheek.
He gave
her a feeble hug. "Luck, magelet."
Daine
looked down the length of rock at the castle's rear. George and Evin stood by
with ropes and a sling. "You sent folk down this way before?"
"It's
a better ride than it looks," the baron assured her. "They won't see
you from the water, because you're goin' down a rock chimney. When you return,
just get in the sling and give the rope three big tugs" — he showed her
what he meant— "and three little tugs. I'll have someone I trust on watch
here for you. Got it?"
She
nodded and fitted herself into the rope sling between the two men. "Good
thing I grew up in the mountains and I'm not afraid of heights," she said
with false cheerfulness, easing herself out over the edge of the wall. "I
told you this is a long shot, didn't I?"
"Several
times," the baron assured her. "Don't worry, I'm expert in long
shots, youngling. Been takin them all my life."
"What
will you do for light?" asked Evin.
She
looked at him in surprise. "I don't need any. There's the moon, after all.
And I see well in the dark."
George
nodded. "Try to be topside when the fun starts in the mornin ."
She
smiled up at him. "Wouldn't miss it for the world."
The
trip down the rock chimney seemed over almost before it started. At the bottom
she found herself on the beach. Here she climbed out of the sling, pulled off
her boots, and rolled up her breeches. At a brisk walk, she followed a strip of
beach north, along the cliff face. She needed a place where she could anchor
herself among the rocks. It wasn't her intention to be washed out to sea.
Finally
she reached a spot that looked good. The cliffs were at her back. To the north
lay more rock. The castle bluff shielded her from all sight of the enemy fleet,
riding at anchor in the mouth of the Swoop's cove.
Gripping
her badger's claw for luck, she wedged herself between two boulders and lowered
herself into the ocean. She had to bite a lip to keep from shrieking at the
cold wetness. Within seconds she was numb to the waist. For good measure she
immersed her hands and sent her magic out.
The
salt water made her feel as if the dragon had never drained her magic. Her mind
raced past tumbles of rocks and kelp, past quite a few sunken ships. So that's
why this is Pirate's Swoop, she thought. They swooped out from the cove.
She
found the seals first and called a greeting. They wanted to play, but she
explained she hadn't the time just now. On she went, beyond her normal range
and into deep water.
Whale
songs rose all around her to fill the sea
with
their magic. She had found a pod of nearly forty blue whales. Three quarters of
them were adults, each at least eighty feet long and weighing over one hundred
and forty tons. Daine faltered, awed by their magnificence, then called,
—Hello!-—
In a
cave high over Daine's head, the dragon stopped nuzzling her little one. It was
the mage-child, the one who had restored her baby to life when she had thought
it dead in her body. The dragon couldn't mistake that atrocious accent.
Whales
came into Daine's mind, huge shadows staring at a girl-shadow. One—a hundred
feet if he's an inch, Daine thought, a bit frightened— moved ahead of the
others with grace and majesty. —Who calls!—
This
was nothing like talking with land animals, seals, or fish. Whales seemed wise,
in their own fashion, and words only partly conveyed the things they said. To
their question she gave them what she was, or how she saw herself, and image
embroidered with feeling and ideas.
They
were amused. —Why do you seek us out, tiny human calf?—
With
images and ideas she explained the siege, the Carthakis, the release of the
Stormwings and the dragon. —They want to take our freedom and they're hurting
my friends. 1 came to ask your help. If jour or Jive of you came up under the
barges and overset them, and maybe one or two of the large boats, we'd have a
chance. I know it's a big
favor
to ask. I can't say they won't hurt you——maybe they can. But you're my best
hope, you see.—
The
chief whale heard her out politely. His answer, when it came, blasted into her
mind and ears. —No.—
She
barely remembered that she was out in the open in time to choke back a scream.
She bit deep into her own wrist to smother it.
—You
don't understand!-— How could she explain so they would care? She gave them
Onua's wry humor, Thayet's leadership, Miri's love of the sea, George's intelligence, Numair's curiosity. —The enemy kills bumans and animals who
never hurt anyone. They brought monsters here. (She gave them spidrens as well
as Stormwings—it never occurred to her to add the griffins or the dragon.) We
have calves there— little ones -who depend on us to keep them safe. (Roald,
Kally, and Thorn were as fresh in her mind as if they stood with her. She
offered them to these distant, cold judges.)
You wouldn't let your calves die. Grown humans may hunt you, but not
these. Help me save them!—
The
dragon looked at her newborn. Knowing the kit was dead in her belly had sent
her in a rage to attack the humans. She had blamed them for stealing her from
home at the start of her labor, had blamed them for the magic voyage that had
killed the life in her. Her kit, her first, had been dead— until this
girl-child had put her hands on her breast The pangs had begun again—her kit
had been
born.
Dragons do not give birth lightly, do not face the loss of young lightly.
—You do
not understand, mortal calf,— said the whale leader.
—Explain
it to me, phase?— She struggled to be polite. There had to be a way she could
talk them around.
—We
will not fight or kill. Not for your cause—not for any cause. Violence against
higher life-forms is disgusting. For centuries the People have vowed that the
taking of a higher life is an abomination.—
—But
Miri told me, you've attacked ships that kill your kind....—
—No.——
Once again the force of the reply hurt. —There have been accidents. There are
times when one will go insane. Always, when the one who has fought understands
what took place, that one starves himself, herself to death, to pay for the
sin. We will not fight. We will not kill—
She had
never heard such absolute refusal. It sounded in the marrow of her bones and
through her nerve endings. Under its pressure her head began to pound again.
—We'll die, then. Their machines will break our walls—they'll have us out as an
octopus has a hermit crab out of its shell. My friends, in the air, on the
land—they'll have died for nothing.—
—You
should not have asked them to fight.—
—I
didn't ask them! They wanted to—because they're my friends!:—
—There
is no pood reason to fipht. There is no pood reason
to
kill—The whales' voices were growing faint.
—Where
are you going?— Tears rolled down her cheeks. They were her last chance, and
they wouldn't even listen.
—If
ships are here, there is a chance of an accident. We cannot accept that risk.
We go, Jar from this place where you make a killing-ground.—
—I
didn't make it!— she yelled, furious. —They came to me!—
The
whales were gone. The only sound in her mind and ears was the lapping of waves.
It would happen again, just like at home. The queen would die before she'd let
Carthakis take her or her children. Numair would burn out. The raiders would
win. If she'd learned her lessons better, if she'd explained things at the
palace instead of waiting till the badger came to her at the beach... She put
her face in her hands and sobbed.
IJ you
listen hard and long, you can hear any of us, call any of us, that you want. It
sounded now, so clearly that she looked up, trying to find the badger. He was
nowhere to be seen.
IJ you
listen hard and long, you can hear any of us, c any of us, that you want.
That's what he had told her. Maybe she could catch up to the whales, convince
them. Maybe she could bring them under her will. Surely that was like calling
anyone she wanted to, wasn't it? I
It's wrong to force the whales to fight, a small voice in her mind argued. Not
when they hate it so.
I won't
let my people die, she told the voice. I can't.
She
took a deep breath, and another. She let go of herself, opening her mind
entirely to wild magic. Grabbing her up, the copper fire took her west.
She
rolled along the oceans bottom like a wave, hearing each click and gurgle the
sea creatures made. Her awareness spread in a half circle, hearing the fleet,
finding the departing whales. She would have talked to them, but the copper
fire wrapped tighter around her mind and kept moving. Deeper and deeper the
ocean floor sank. With dreamy surprise she slid around a patch of islands—where
had they come from?
She
dropped into ice water that was black as ink in her mind. In the west, past the
islands, he lay— ship killer, man-eater, old as time. The mages had missed him
when they sealed the Divine Realms, centuries ago. He had lain on the bottom,
the ultimate predator, dining on whales and human ships. His immense tentacles,
each a mile long, stirred with interest.
The
kraken had never seen a little fish like her.
Daine
stared at him, aghast. His was the body of an octopus with far too many arms,
his mantle a mile and a half across.
—/
will kill any fleet you like, littlijish.— His voice was filled with soft,
deadly good humor. —You were talking to the whales. Pacifists, all of
them—enough to make me vomit. Just show me where those nasty raiders are. I can
guarantee they won't trouble you Jor long.—
—You'd
never make it on time,—she said, to cover her real thought: I could never get
rid of him!
—Leave
that to me. Come, my dear——this is no time to be saueamish.—
Deals
with demons, she thought nervously. It's a deal with a demon... .Wait—what
about Numair? Once he returns to full strength, he'll be a match for this
monster. I hope he will, anyway, because this kraken is the only hope I have
left.
Please
Goddess and Horse Lords, let this be a good choice!
Daine
thrust what she knew of the fleet at the giant thing, and fled as his laugh
echoed all around her. She flashed through the water faster than she would have
believed possible. It was hard to say what she was doing: running from the
kraken or racing to get to the Swoop before sunrise.
It was
too late. When she opened her eyes, the incoming tide was up to her chin, and
the sky overhead was pink.
She
struggled, fighting to get her tightly wedged body out from between the rocks.
Everything was numb; her hands couldn't get a purchase anywhere. How can I
reach the castle, let alone the deck? she wondered, panting as she tried to
free herself. And what can I tell them, anyway? If those islands are
what I
think they are, they're the Copper Isles, four days' sail out. If I didn't
dream that whatsits, that kraken, there won't be anything here in four days for
him to eat—
Curved
silver bars closed around her middle, gently. She looked up into the dragon's
catlike eyes.
—/
will take you to your jriends, little mage.—
The
dragon wrapped her other forepaw around the one that gripped Daine. The girl
held on to those silver claws, running her hands over them in awe. There was a
tremendous jolt, and they were airborne. She screamed in delight to see the
earth fall away below them, forgetting briefly all she had been through, and
all that was coming, in the joy of flight. Behind her she could feel the surge
of the dragon's wings as they soared higher and higher. To their left she saw
the enemy, and the Stormwing that dropped to Mahil Eddace's ship. The red robes
in the galleys and transports sat or lay at the prows of theirs ships, many
clutching their heads in their hands. Slaves, bare but for a loincloth and a
collar, ministered to the red robes.
Her
appearance—the dragon's appearance— had dramatic results. Men pointed and
screamed; archers scrambled for their weapons. One red robe got up and did
something that involved waving hands. It resulted in a yellowish cloud that
boiled their way.
—Amateurs,—
the dragon said coldly.
When
the cloud reached them, she blew on it, and it vanished. She banked gracefully,
heading for the Swoop. Tiny figures on the deck pointed at them, while any of
the archers who might be in range had their bows up. Someone on the deck
recognized Daine and called an order. Slowly the weapons came down.
She
peered at one of the dragon's toes, examining the bone structure and the violet
scales. (She picked up several tiny cuts on the scale edges, which were razor
sharp.) "Excuse me—weren't you red yesterday?"
—1
-was angry. We may change ro/or, to suit our wills— or ro reflect strong
emotion.— The great creature hesitated, then went on, —I beard you speak to the
whales.—
She
swiveled to face her bearer, "You did? But these days nobody else hears
when I'm talking to just one species."
—That
may he so) among mortal creatures.— (It occurred to Daine her rescuer was a
snob.) — We are mages of the air.—Sounding anxious, she added, — Could you send
me homer11 do not understand how 1 came to be here, and I wish to he with my family,—
"We
don't know how," Daine replied sadly as they descended. "Were trying
to learn, though. If you stay with us, we'll find a way to send you home—if we
survive, that is."
The
dragon touched down, more gracefully than she had the day before, and released
Daine. Onua, Roald, Kally, and Thorn ran to hold her up
as the
great creature rose into the air and flew back along the cliff. Once more she
vanished in midair.
"Any
luck?" the baron asked as he and Thayet came over, their faces worn and
exhausted. Daine looked around and saw Numair, seated on the wall. He waved a
shaky hand.
"No,"
she told her audience quietly. "The whales said no." She couldn't
even bring herself to look at Numair again. "There—there might be
something, but—I don't know. I don't think it can be here in time. I'm
sorry"
The
queen patted her arm. "You tried. You've done so much already. I don't
think the men from the camp outside the walls are fit to go into battle today,
thanks to your friends."
"The
dragon?" George asked Daine,
"I
don't know. She's not very strong. I could try and call her back—"
"Well,
well. All the little pigs tidy in one pen." Zhaneh Bitterclaws hovered overhead,
just out of bow-shot for the deck's guards. The Stormwing queens looks had not
improved: her eye socket continued to ooze. Whatever other magic they've got,
Daine thought to herself, healing isn't part of it.
Daine
glanced around for her own bow and quiver: they were in Numair's lap. Thorn
sidled away , from their group, backing up toward the mage with his hands open
behind him. "What's the answer, mortals? Will you surrender the three we
want?"
"We
surrender nothing to you and your handlers" Thayet spat. "Tell them
they've just bought my husband's eternal enmity—and mine "
"You
won't live long enough to care about enmity!" Bitterclaws snarled.
Something
hard and something leathery pressed against Daine s cold fingers. Thorn had
brought her bow, already strung, and her quiver. The girl's numb muscles
couldn't respond fast enough. The Stormwing laughed and climbed away when she
tried to get her bow into a firing position. Daine swore, flexing her hands to
get them limber again.
"Children,
get below!" Thayet snapped. They wavered, and the queen roared,
"Now/" They obeyed at a run.
The
girl looked seaward to find what had made the woman raise her voice so
uncharacteristically. In the night, the four barges had been moved to the
front, ahead of the ships, and each catapult was assembled and loaded with a
stone ball. Two of them fired; the balls struck the cliff face below the tower
with an earsplitting boom. The stone beneath their feet shook.
The two
remaining barges shifted. Must be the sorcerers that move them, Daine thought,
since there were no oars and no sails. Their catapults let fly. The first stone
ball smashed into one of the other towers; the second hit the curtain wall.
Already
men were reloading the first two catapults.
The
dragon, her scales flaming gold, dropped on them from what had looked like
empty sky. She immediately put flight to the stories that her kind spat flame
from their mouths. The fire came from her forepaws, and devoured the sails on
Eddaces flagship. Banking hard, she cut directly across the face of one of the
catapults to seize the stone ball loaded in it. Her flight sagged from the
weight of the stone, but only momentarily. She dropped it on the next barge.
The flat boat immediately listed to the side.
Numair
propped himself on Daine's shoulder. "Wasn't she red yesterday?"
"They
change color. Numair, she's not big enough."
"Maybe
she's big enough to stop them. And its justice, my magelet. They're the ones
who brought her here in the first place."
Archers
shot at the dragon uselessly. The red robes tried their magic, but like Numairs
it washed off her. She hurled fire at a transport, burning it entirely, before
heading back to the catapults.
Stormwings
broke out of the woods on land and streaked to defend the ships. Daine watched,
sobbing, as their claws cut deep into the dragon's sides. "Can't you
help?" she demanded, forgetting the state he was in.
"I
wish I could. Call her back this way, if you can. Our archers can swat the
Stormwings away from her."
Daine
called, hard. The dragon ignored her to fall on the red robe at the prow of
Eddace's vessel. With him in her grip, she rose into the air and dropped him
among a knot of Stormwings.
They
exploded. Scared for the lovely creature though she was, Daine cheered as the
other red robes fled to more protected parts of their ships.
Another
catapult fired. Moving fast, the dragon was on the missile and had it in her
talons. This time, when she dropped it onto a barge, she waited until she was
much higher over it. When the stone hit, it went straight through the wooden
bottom. With the other stone balls off-balance and rolling everywhere, the
barge began to sink.
"Oh,
gods," Numair whispered. "Call her in, Daine. Quick!"
"She
won't listen! What's wrong?"
"They're
loading the slings with liquid fire. Call her in fast!"
Daine
screamed with all the wild magic she could find.
The
dragon's only reply was a vision of a cavt, high above the sea, with light
coming out of its mouth.
"She
won't come," Daine whispered, and tried again.
The
Stormwings gathered before the dragon, forcing her back. She fought to rise
above them or fall below, but
they blocked her.
At the right moment, the two remaining catapults fired—not stones this
time, But Saffs of a dear, jellylike substance. They splattered over the
dragon, and burst into flames.
She
uttered an ear-tearing shriek that none who saw the battle would ever forget,
and dropped. Her flaming body crashed into a barge, and sank it.
Daine
wailed her grief. "I'll kill them/" she screamed, putting an arrow to
her bow with fingers that shook. "Let 'em get near enough and I'll kill i
hem!"
The
catapult that remained in action fired. Its stone thudded into the wall at the
base of the tower. Fall
back!" George ordered
their guards, who obeyed, "Onua, Daine, Numair—lets
go!"
Numair
looked out to sea and froze, his hand locked tight on Daines shoulder. His eyes
opened so wide they started to bulge. "What dice did the jraveyard Hag
roll?"
Someone
on the wall below screamed as a huge,
Mack
tentacle darted out of the water to grip the
catapult
that had just fired. Clutching it as a baby
might
hold a rattle, the tentacle Yanked the catapult
nncrtn^Daj^e
it was^tastene^ to onto its sule.
Another
tentacle shot out of the water beside Eddace's flagship. Up and up it soared,
until it reached the crow's nest. Delicately, with precision, it gripped the
nest—and the man inside—and snapped it off the mast.
"Friend
of yours?" Numair asked. His voice was very quiet, but she could hear him
perfectly. No one at the castle was making a sound.
"Not
exactly," she whispered. "I guess he moves faster than 1
thought."
A third
tentacle crawled over the rim of the last barge, the one the dragon had knocked
off-balance. It snaked all the way across the bed, gripped the opposite rim,
and flipped the entire thing over.
Daine
gulped. "Oh, dear—I think he's going to be nasty."
"How
big did you say it was?" George had come to stand with them, his face
white under its tan. "I didn't," she replied.
Tentacles
sprang up around the fleet like a forest of snakes, hemming it in. More
tentacles groped into the boats, to begin a systematic destruction.
Numair
straightened, blinking. "The dampening spells are breaking up."
Thayet
had run to the opposite side of the deck, the part that looked out over the
rest of the castle. "Listen!" she yelled.
Horn
calls split the air. From the woods to the east came a company of the King's
Own and the rest of the Swoop's guards, the Lioness at their head. From the
northern woods came another cornpany of the King's Own. They fell on the
raiders outside the wall, as the Stormwings converged on that battle.
Onua,
Thayet, and George raced down the stairs to reach the curtain wall, where they'd
have a better view. Numair sagged to the floor of the deck. "I'm all used
up," he told Dame, smiling at her. His eyes fluttered shut.
"Rest
quick," she told him. "You and Lady Alanna are going to have to get
rid of Himself, out there,"
He
fluttered his hand at her—of course, of course-—and let it fall. Within seconds
he was out cold.
To her
surprise, she heard the sound of hooves on stone. Cloud emerged from the stair,
her withers streaked with sweat. I have been looking all over for you, the pony
told her crossly, coming to sniff Daine from top to toe. First they tell me you
got sick, then they tell me you went down to the ocean, then—uh-oh.
Daine
looked up. Zhaneh Bitterclaws had returned.
"I
suppose you think very well of yourself, girlie. I suppose you think you did
something wonderful, calling up that greedy-guts." She jerked her head in
the direction of the kraken, who continued his breakfast of ships.
The
girl shook with fury. She hadn't taken her
arrow
off the string, but it would do no good. Even supposing she could aim her bow,
she had lost the strength to draw it. Nurnair wasn't the only one to
be all
used up.
The
Stormwing queen knew it too. She fluttered closer. "You're mine," she
said with a grin. "I'll be on you before you make the stair. And maybe
I'll cut up your long friend here too, before I go. You think about that a
moment—it'll be your fault that he dies."
"Liar,"
Daine spat. "Folk like you always lay the blame on somebody else. If I'd
listened to talk like that, I'd've let myself get killed by my own people
months
ago."
"They
should have killed you, girlie." The Stormwing drew in closer yet.
"You call me a monster—what are you? My gods made me. You're just a freak.
All you do is get your friends killed, like that poor dragon. They'd be better
off if you just threw yourself off the cliff right now."
Cloud
leaned against Daine's thigh. Suddenly the girl was filled with energy; she was
as fresh and strong as if she'd had a full night's sleep. Lightning fast, she
swung her bow up and loosed.
The arrow
went clean through
Zhaneh Bitterclaws' neck as the creature gave voice to a choked scream.
She dropped, trying to claw the
arrow
out of her flesh, until her body smashed
—
-u" ™<-\e<i Kelow. As she tumbled end over end to
the
sea, her own wing feathers cut her to pieces.
Daine
and Cloud stuck their heads over the low wall, watching the Stormwing die in
silence. Finally the girl straightened. Her newfound strength was gone.
"Is she right?" Daine asked her pony.
She
isn't, Cloud said firmly. Your friends all make their own choices to live or
die for you. I've yet to see you force death on a friend.
Carefully,
muscles aching, Daine unstrung her bow and coiled the string, tucking it into
her pocket. "Did / know you could do that?" she asked. "Give me
strength like you did?"
Of
course not, was the pony's smug reply. We People don't have to give you all our
secrets.
"Now
she tells me." Daine sat with Numair and curled up against him. "Wake
me in time for supper," she told Cloud tiredly.
Of
course, the mare said, knowing her human was already asleep. There was a
blanket where Numair had been sitting when the dragon returned Daine to the
castle. Cloud dragged it over, covering the man and the girl. She assumed a
guard stance near the two of them and waited for the rest of the fighting to
end.
EPILOGUE
Her
dreams were filled with the vision, the one the dragon had given her of a hole
in the cliff. At first, the silvery light from the cave had been strong, almost
enough to read by. As she dreamed the same thing, over and over, the light
dimmed. Just before she awoke, it was almost gone.
"How
long?" Her voice emerged in a whispering croak. Her throat was so dry she
began to cough,
Numair
hauled her into a sitting position and
put a
canteen to her lips. "Drink!"
Daine
gasped, swallowed a mouthful of liquid, gasped again, and drank some more.
Finally she drained the canteen. "How long?" she asked again.
"The
rest of the day the kraken arrived, then yesterday and today." He gave her
a cake, sweet with honey and filled with raisins and nuts.
Daine
ate it and took another. "I have to go out"
"Don't
be silly," he told her.
"You're weak. You're staying here."
"That's
where you're wrong," she replied. She swung her feet off the bed and
stood. For a moment the room spun, then settled into place.
She was
in the stable. They had placed her cot in an empty stall, where the ponies
could watch her. Her bat friends hung in the rafters overhead, where the loft
ended, leaving plenty of room for the one-eyed osprey to perch. None of the
animals were pleased when Daine started to pull on her clothes. Cloud in
particular glared at her over the partition.
Remembering
something, she froze. "My friends—-the woods creatures—"
"Some
were killed," Numair said gently. "Once the enemy was driven off, we
found the injured ones. They've been cared for. There weren't as many
casualties as you'd think. You gave them the right advice."
"Good,"
she said, a weight off her mind. She went on dressing.
"You
need to rest and eat. I'm still weak on my pins myself."
"There's
something I have to take care of*" Daine said. "Now." She
stuffed her feet into her boots.
Her
friend sighed. "Then wait a moment We need an armed escort. There may
still be enemies out there. And let's get horses. Where are we going?"
She
closed her eyes and recalled the vision.
"Northwest,"
she said finally. "Along the cliff. We have to hurry."
He
smiled at her. "Then we'll hurry." She couldn't even manage Cloud's
tack. Soon after the mage had left, Miri raced in. "Master Numair says you
need someone to help you saddle up." She gave Cloud a wary look. "You
behave," she told the mare, "or Wave-walker help me, I'll singe your
tail."
Cloud
stood meekly and did as she was told.
Daine
was glad to sit on her cot and watch. "What time is it?"
"Afternoon,"
the older girl said. "You beat Master Numair by half a day. He got up this
mornii mg.
"He
looks a lot better" She gasped. "I forgot— the kraken!"
Miri
grinned. "Don't worry about that one," she said, tightening cinches.
"Once Master Numair was up, him and Lady Alanna had a talk with that old
ship killer. You should have seen him scuttle out of the cove! He sucked the
water after him and left the bottom dry. The Lioness had to pull it back
in!" She patted Cloud's withers. "There you are—aU set."
Daine
rose and took the reins. "You've come a long way since we met."
Miri
grinned shyly. "Thanks. It means a lot to hear you say so."
They
waited in the courtyard as castle hostlers brought out Darkmoon, Spots, and
horses belonging to the King's Own. Here, shading her eyes from the sun, the
girl saw the first repercussions of what she had done. The stable hands had
liked to talk to her, before the enemy invasion. Now they avoided her glance
and kept well away from her.
A small
explosion struck her back and almost knocked her off her feet. It was followed
by a second, and a third. Whatever the hostlers might think, Roald, Kally, and
Thorn were glad to see her up. Her eyes stinging, Daine knelt to return the
hug, "There, there," she whispered, more to herself than the
children. "Its all right. It's over."
"Can
we go too, Ma?" Thorn asked the Lioness as she approached,
"No,
my dears. Some other time, We re not sure the enemy is completely gone."
The knight grinned at Daine. "You've been a busy girl."
Daine
grinned back, "So have you." Looking at the men of the King's Own who
followed Alanna, she recognized Hakim and his companions. "Its good to see
you " she told them,
"The
honor is ours," Hakim replied gravely.
"You
said it was urgent?" Numair reminded her.
The
group left the castle at a trot, following 'Daine. The visions lure was
powerful in her mind. Following it, she guided Cloud onto a road that ran along
the cliff face, high above the sea. Gulls
followed
them, filling the air with their cries.
Alanna
drew level with the girl. "I've yet to thank you," she said quietly.
"I never thought you'd have to keep your promise in such a way."
She
smiled at the knight. "What happened? They lured you off, didn't
they?"
Alanna
nodded. "The ogres were real enough. They kept us busy for more than a
day. By the time
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return, there was a small army >tVY<vA,U us and home. Lucky for me Hakim
rode in with two compsrm <& ^xfc Owtv.TV^ mtt st\Vv vc\ Corus when
Numair sent word you were up to your eyeballs in trouble."
Daine
held up a hand: they were close. Listening, she dismounted. "Stay
put" she ordered Cloud.
Numair
came after her on foot. "What are we looking for, exactly?"
She was
about to say she wasn't sure when the ground dropped under her. For a second
time she had the doubtful pleasure of being picked up to hang in midair—this
time, at least, she wasn't half-drowned. Looking down, she saw she had almost
gone through the roof of a cave that opened in the
cliff
face.
"Can
you set me down in there?" She wasn't sure who had her, Alanna or Numair.
"I found it."
The
Lioness chuckled. "You have a unique way of finding things." Gently
Daine was lowered through the hole she had made,
until she was on the stone floor of the cave below.
There
was a rustle nearby, and a chirp. A silver shape, no bigger than a large cat,
came over on legs that hadn't yet mastered the skill of walking.
She
knelt. The little creature stared at her with slit-pupiled blue eyes. Tiny,
scaled forepaws gripped her breeches: the baby dragon pulled herself up onto
her hind legs.
Dame's
eyes 6rannvecC wvtrv tears. Tin sorry," she told the dragonet. "1
guess I'm your ma now." She scooped up the armful of kit and looked up at
the hole she'd made in the roof. Alanna, Numair, and Hakim stared down at her.
"The dragon had a little one," she explained. "She's
hungry."
Carefully
the Lioness raised her and the dragonet up through the hole, to stand them on
solid ground.
Daine
managed to construct a bottle that would hold up under the kit's small, but
sharp, teeth. After consulting with the healer Maude, she warmed goat's milk
and loaded it with butter, to make it even richer. The dragonet gulped a pint
of the mess, burped, and fell asleep in Daine s lap.
The
entire operation was watched, in awe and fascination, by the queen, Alanna,
George, Numair, Buri, Onua, Maude, and the children.
Gently
Kally ran a finger along the sleeping ani-
mal's flank.
"She so soft" the girl whispered.
"What's
her name?"
"Skysong,"
Daine said. She frowned—where had that knowledge come from? "I guess her
ma passed that on to me too, before she—died." Coming to a decision, she
looked at Onua. "I don't think I can stay with the Riders past the summer.
My duty's to this little one, now."
"You
can still make your home with us," Thayet told her. "That is, if you
wish. I know my lord and 1 would prefer to have you in the palace." Daine
stared at her. "Me?" "You." Thayet took
her hand. "Veralidaine Sarrasri, you saved my
life and the lives of my children. A home is the very least we can offer
you." Daine lowered her head, to hide her beet red face.
"But
we want her to live here," objected George.
"Surely
we're more suited as a home, bein on the sea and near Master Numair and
all." He grinned. "And bein's how our girl's made so many friends in
our
woods."
"1
don't see why she can't live in my tower," Numair protested. "She is
my apprentice, after all."
"A
girl's got to have females to talk to," Alanna informed him. "You
haven't even gotten a new housekeeper since the last one interrupted one of
your
experiments."
"Come
live in the palace," Kally and Roald
begged,
tugging her arm. "We'll be good forever and ever if you will."
Skysong
sneezed and shifted in Daine s lap.
"Shh,"
Maude ordered. "You'll wake the baby." The children hushed, guilty
faced.
"You
don't have to decide now," Onua pointed out. "I don't see why rearing
Skysong should interfere with helping me this summer."
Daine
looked at these unusual people who had become friends, and laughed. "It's
fair funny," she explained. "I've gone from having no home to having
too many.'"
The
Lioness smiled and put a hand on her shoulder. "Welcome to Tortall,"
she said.