AS ZONE:


Translation of Andrzej Sapkowski's "Mniejsze zlo".


Lesser Evil
       I

       As  usual,  cats  and  children were the first to notice him. A tabby
  tomcat sleeping on a pile of logs warmed by the sun, twitched  and  raised
  his round head, pulled its ears back, spat and made away among the nettle.
  Three-year-old Drogomir, son of Trigla the fisherman, who  was  doing  his
  best  to  stain  his  flimsy  tunic,  already  smudged  and filthy, on the
  doorstep of their cottage, fell a-screaming, fixing his  tearful  eyes  on
  the horseman passing by.
       The  hexer  was  riding  slowly, not attempting to take over the hay-
  laden wagon which hogged the narrow street.  Behind  him,  with  its  neck
  stretched,  trotted  an  overladen  donkey  every  now  and  then strongly
  tautening the strap, attached to the pommel horn of his saddle. Apart from
  the  usual saddle-bags the beast was lugging a conspicuous form wrapped in
  a saddle-cloth on its back. One of the donkey's  greyish-white  sides  was
  covered in black streaks of coagulated gore.
       Eventually, the wagon turned into a side street, leading to a granary
  and wharf, from where breeze blew the smell of tar and  ox  urine.  Geralt
  sped  up. He did not react to the muffled cry of the vegetable stallholder
  wenches, her gaze fixed at the bony, clawed paw sticking  from  under  the
  saddle-cloth,  swinging  to  the  rhythm of the donkey's steps. He did not
  look back at the growing rabble following him, moving there  and  back  in
  anxiety.
       There  were  plenty of carts and wagons in front of the riff's house.
  Geralt alighted from his saddle, adjusted the sword on  his  back,  tossed
  the  reins  over  a  wooden balustrade. The crowd following him stood in a
  semicircle round the donkey.
       Shouting of the riff could already be heard some  distance  from  the
  entrance.
       "I'm  telling  you,  It's not allowed! Not allowed, dammit! Don't you
  understand common, you thickwit?"
       Geralt entered. In front of the little  pot-bellied  riff,  red  with
  anger,  there was a peasant standing and holding a struggling goose by the
  neck.
       "What... By all the gods! Is that you Geralt? Don't my  eyes  deceive
  me?" and then turning to the peasant, "Off with it, you villain! You deaf,
  or what?"
       "They said," mumbled  the  peasant  squinting  at  the  goose,  "that
  something must be brought to you, sir... or else..."
       "Who  said?,  shouted  the sheriff, "Who? Meaning what? That I can be
  greased? I do not allow, I'm telling you! Off, I'm telling  you!  Welcome,
  Geralt."
       "Welcome, Caldemeyn."
       Shaking  the hexer's hand, the sheriff gave him a tap on the arm with
  the other hand.
       "You must have been away for two years, Geralt. Eh? Must you be  such
  a  rolling  stone.  Where are you coming from? Well, to hell with it, what
  difference does it make, where from. Ho there! Someone bring a mug of ale!
  Sit down, Geralt, take a seat. We've got some commotion here, for it's the
  fair tomorrow. what's business like How's things with you! Tell me!"
       "Later, let's go out first."
       Outside, the crowd must have doubled but the free  space  around  the
  donkey  did not reduce. Geralt lifted the blanket energetically. The crowd
  gasped and backed. Caldemeyn opened his mouth wide.
       "By all the gods, Geralt! What is that?"
       "Kikimore. Isn't there a reward to be got for it, Mr Sheriff?"
       Caldemeyn moved his weight from one foot to the other, looking at the
  spidery  form,  covered  by  dried  black  hide,  at the glassy eye with a
  vertical pupil, at the needle-like fangs inside the blood-stained jaws.
       "Where... Where from did ..."
       "Up on the dike, four miles away  from  the  town.  On  the  marches.
  Caldemeyn, people must have been getting killed there. Children."
       "Well,  so  it's been. But no one... Who could presume... Hey, folks,
  go home, go to work!  This  is  not  a  circus!  cover  it,  Geralt.  It's
  gathering flies."
       Back  in  the chamber and without a word, the sheriff got hold of the
  tankard of ale and drank it dry, without taking it away from his lips.  He
  sighed deeply, and sniffed.
       "There  is no reward," he said cheerlessly "No one even supposed that
  something like that could be dwelling in those salt marshes. True,  a  few
  people  disappeared  thereabouts  but... There weren't many to wander over
  that dike. And how did you get there?  Why  didn't  you  follow  the  main
  road?"
       "It's   difficult  for  me  to  find  business  on  the  main  roads,
  Caldemeyn."
       "I forgot," the sheriff muffled a belch by blowing his  cheeks,  "And
  such  a  quiet place it used to be. Even the pixies didn't frequently piss
  into milk, here. And there it is! A stone's  throw  to  that  kinky  mare.
  Looks  like  I  would have to thank you. For to pay, I cannot. I've got no
  funds.
       "Bad luck. Some cash would come in handy for  spending  the  winter,"
  the  hexer  took  a gulp from the tankard, and the froth from his mouth. -
  I'm planning to be off to Yspaden but I don't know if I'll have made it by
  the  time  snow  blocks the roads. I may get stuck in one of the fortified
  boroughs along the Luton road.
       "Will you tarry long in Blaviken?"
       "Not long. I'm short of time to tarry. Winter is coming."
       "Where are you going to stay? How about my place? There's a free room
  in  the attic, why should you let yourself be ripped off by those thieving
  inn-keepers. We will talk, you'll tell me the news of the wide world."
       "With pleasure. But what will your Libushe say? Last time, one  could
  notice that she is not too fond of me."
       "In my home, women don't have their say. But, between me, you and the
  doorpost, in her presence don't do what you did last  time  during  supper
  again."
       "D'you mean throwing the fork at a rat?"
       "No, I mean hitting it though it was dark."
       "I thought it would be funny."
       "It  was  but do not do it in Libushe's presence. Listen, and that...
  whatchummacallit... Kiki..."
       "Kikimore."
       "D'you need it for anything?"
       "Pry, what for? If there is no reward you may have it thrown into the
  dung."
       "I quite like the idea. Hey, you, Karelka, Borg, Carrypebble! Anybody
  there?"
       A town guard entered, the partisan resting against his shoulder,  its
  blade loudly catching on the door-frame.
       "Carrypebble,"  said  Caldemeyn.  "Get  someone to help you, take the
  donkey that's in front of the cottage together with that shit wrapped in a
  blanket, take it behind the sties and drown in cow dung. Got it?
       "Following your order. But... Master riff ... "
       "What?"
       "Mabbe, before the horror is to be drowned... "
       "Well..."
       "Shan't we show it to Master Irion. Chance be that he may need it for
  something."
       Caldemeyn slapped his forehead with an open palm.
       "You're not that dumb, Carrypebble. Listen, Geralt, maybe  our  local
  sorcerer  kick  something  back  for that carcass. Fishermen carry various
  bizzarfish, octopi, clabatres or nerdfish; many a fisherman  got  rewarded
  for that. Come, let's take a stroll to the tower."
       "You've come by a sorcerer? For good, or for a while?"
       "For  good.  Master Irion. Has lived in Blaviken for a year. A mighty
  mage, Geralt, you can tell it just by the way he looks."
       "I doubt if a mighty mage will pay for a kikimore," Geralt made a wry
  face.  "As  far as I know, he needs it for making no potions. Quite likely
  your Irion will only abuse me. We, the hexers, are not fond of sorcerers."
       "I've  never  heard  Master  Irion to abuse anyone. I cannot swear he
  will pay but trying won't do any harm. There may be more of such kikimoros
  in the marshes, and what then? Let the wizard have a look at the creature,
  and just in case cast some spell on the marsh, or what."
       The hexer considered it for a little while.
       "Point for you, Caldemeyn. Well, let us risk a  meeting  with  Master
  Irion. Shall we be going?"
       "We  are.  Carrypebble,  chase these brats away and take the beast by
  the strap. Where's my cap?"


       II

       The tower, built from smooth-hewn granite  blocks,  with  crenellated
  battlements,  looked  impressively, towering over the broken roof-tiles of
  the houses and caved-in thatched roofs of the cottages.
       "Renewed it, as I see," said Geralt. "With magic, or did he  get  you
  to work?"
       "With magic, mostly."
       "What is he like - this Irion of yours?"
       "Decent.  Helps  people.  But  he's a recluse and a man of few words.
  Hardly leaves the tower."
       On the door, adored with a rosette intarsiated in light  wood,  there
  hung a giant knocker, shaped into a flat bulge-eyed head of a fish holding
  a brass ring in its toothed mouth. Caldemeyn, obviously  knowing  how  the
  mechanism worked, approached, cleared his throat and recited:
       "Greetings  from  Caldemeyn the riff, having a supplication to Master
  Irion. Together with him, greets hexer Geralt  of  Rivia,  also  having  a
  supplication."
       For a long while nothing happened, eventually the fish head moved its
  toothed jaw and discharged a puff of steam.
       "Master Irion sees no man. Go in peace, good men."
       Caldemeyn moved his feet uneasily, and looked at  Geralt.  The  hexer
  shrugged  his  arms. Carrypebble, now solemn and concentrated, was picking
  his nose.
       "Master Irion sees no man," repeated the knocker metallically, "Go in
  peace, good..."
       "I  am not a good man," interrupted Geralt loudly, "I am a hexer. The
  thing on the donkey is a kikimore, I killed by the town. It is a  duty  of
  every  resident  sorcerer  to care for security of his whereabouts. Master
  Irion does not have to honour me  with  a  talk,  and  does  not  have  to
  entertain  me,  if that's his will. Yet, let him see the kikimore and draw
  conclusions. Carrypebble, unstrap the kikimore and dump it  here,  by  the
  very door."
       "Geralt,  said the riff silently, "You'll leave and, I'll have to ...
  here..."
       "Let's go, Caldemeyn. Carrypebble, get your finger out of  your  nose
  and do as you've been told."
       "One  moment," answered the knocker in a totally different voice, "Is
  that really you, Geralt?"
       The hexer swore under his breath.
       "I'm losing my patience. Yes, it is  I,  indeed.  And  what  does  it
  change that it is I, indeed?"
       "Come  closer  to  the door," said the knocker, letting out a puff of
  smoke, "Just you. I shall let you in."
       "What about the kikimore?"
       "Screw the kikimore. I want to talk to you, Geralt.  Only  with  you.
  Please forgive, Sheriff."
       "What  do  I care, Master Irion?" Caldemeyn made a dismissive gesture
  with his hand, "Take care, Geralt. See you  later.  Carrypebble!  Get  the
  monster into cow dung!"
       "You say!"
       The  hexer  approached  the intarsiated door, which opened slightly -
  just enough for him to squeeze through -  and  immediately  slammed  shut,
  leaving him in complete darkness.
       "Hey!" he shouted, not concealing his anger.
       "Just a minute," answered a strangely familiar voice.
       The  sensation was so unexpected, that the hexer reeled and stretched
  out his hand to find a support. He found none.
       The orchard was in white and pink bloom, and smelled of rain. The sky
  was  crossed  by the multicolour arc of the rainbow, joining the crowns of
  the trees with the faraway deep-blue mountain  range.  The  house  in  the
  middle  of the orchard - little and modest - was bathed in mallows. Geralt
  looked under his feet and decided that he was standing up to his knees  in
  wild thyme.
       "Just come on, Geralt," said a voice. "I'm in front of the house."
       He  walked into the orchard, among the trees. He notice a movement on
  the left, and turned. A fair-haired girl, totally naked was walking  along
  a  row  of  bushes,  carrying  a basket full of apples. The hexer promised
  himself earnestly never to wonder again.
       "At last! Welcome, hexer."
       "Stregobor!?" Geralt was amazed.
       In his life, the  hexer  used  to  meet  thieves  looking  like  town
  councillors;  town  councillors,  looking  like  ragged  beggars,  harlots
  looking like princesses; princesses looking like cows about to  calve  and
  kings looking like thieves. But Stregobor always looked like, according to
  all standards and beliefs, a  sorcerer  should.  He  was  tall,  thin  and
  slouching.  He  had  huge,  grey, bushy eyebrows and a long, crooked nose.
  What is more, he was wearing a black flowing  robe  with  incredibly  wide
  sleeves,  and  in  his  hand he was holding a longish stave with a crystal
  orb. None of the sorcerers known to Geralt looked like Stregobor. What was
  even more weird: Stregobor was actually a sorcerer."
       They  sat  in wicker armchairs on a porch surrounded by mallows, by a
  table made of a slab of white marble. A naked blonde, carrying a basketful
  of  apples,  approached  them,  smiled,  turned  round and returned to the
  orchard, rocking and swaying her hips.
        "Is that also an illusion?" asked Geralt, admiring the sway.
       "Also. As everything around here. But it is, my dear,  a  first-class
  illusion.  The  blossom smells, you can eat the apples, the bees may sting
  you, and her," the sorcerer pointed at the blonde, "you can..."
       "Maybe later."
       "Well said. What are you doing  here,  Geralt?  Are  you  still  into
  killing  the  members of dying species for money? How much did you get for
  this kikimore? Presumably nothing: otherwise you wouldn't have come  here.
  And just think that there are people who do not believe in predestination!
  Unless you knew about me... Did you? "
       "No, I didn't. This is the last place where I'd expect to  meet  you.
  As  far as I can remember you used to live in a similar tower in Kovir, in
  the olden times."
       "Much has changed since then."
       "Like what they call you. You are said to be Master Irion."
       "That was the name of the builder of this tower, He passed away  some
  two  hundred  years ago. I decided he deserved being honoured in some way,
  when taking his seat over. I am on a residency here. Most  of  the  locals
  live  off  the sea and, as you may remember, apart from illusions, weather
  has been my cup of fish. Sometimes I  calm  a  storm,  sometimes  I  start
  another,  sometimes  with the western wind I'd drive the shoals of whiting
  and cods closer to the shore. You can make a living. That  is,"  he  added
  bitterly, "you could".
       "Why 'could'? And where's all that change of the name from?"
       "Destiny  has  got  many faces. Mine is beautiful on the outside, and
  horrible inside. And it has stretched its blood-dripping claws out towards
  me..."
       "You  haven't  changed  an  inch, Stregobor," Geralt made a wry face.
  "You're talking gibberish, making wise and meaningful faces  at  the  same
  time. Can't you just speak plainly?"
       "I can," sighed the sorcerer, "if this is to make you happy, I can. I
  reached this faraway place hiding and escaping from a  horrible  creature,
  which  wants  to  murder me. The flight was to no avail: she found me. All
  probabilities considered, she will try to kill me tomorrow, or at furthest
  the day after.
       "A-ha," said the hexer with no emotions. "Now I understand."
       "It seems to me, pending death does not impress you much?"
       "Stregobor,"  said  Geralt.  "That's  what the world is like. You see
  plenty travelling. Two peasants keep killing each other for  the  footpath
  in the middle of the field that tomorrow will be trampled by the horses of
  the knights of two barons trying to kill each other. Along the  roads,  up
  on  the  trees, the hanged are dangling; and in the woods highwaymen slash
  merchants' throats. With every step you take in the cities,  you  trip  on
  corpses  in  sewers. In palaces they stab one another with daggers, and at
  feasts every now and then someone crashes under  the  table,  pallid  from
  poison.  I  got used to. Why, then, the threat of death should impress me,
  especially if it threatens you?"
       "Especially if it threatens me," repeated Stregobor ironically,  "And
  I considered you a friend. I counted on your aid."
       "Our  last meeting," said Geralt "took place at the court of king Idi
  in Kovir. I came to collect the reward for killing  the  amphisbena  which
  used  to  browbeat  the  neighbourhood. Then you and your confrere Zavist,
  vying with each other, started  calling  me  a  charlatan,  a  thoughtless
  murdering machine and - if I recall well - a carrion crow. As a result not
  only did Idi fail to pay me a penny but he  granted  me  twelve  hours  to
  leave  Kovir  as  well.  And  as his hour-glass was out of order, I hardly
  managed. And now, you say that you're counting on my help. You  say  there
  is a monster after you. What are you afraid of, Stregobor? If it gets you,
  tell it that you like monsters, you protect them, and pay  attention  that
  no  carrion-eating hexer disturbs their peace. Indeed, it will turn out to
  be horribly ungrateful on the part of the monster, if it guts and  devours
  you."
       Having  turned  his  head  away, the sorcerer remained silent. Geralt
  laughed.
       "Don't you get puffed up like a toad,  magician.  Tell  me  what  the
  threat is. We'll see what can be done."
       "Have you heard of the Curse of the Black Sun?"
       "Surely,  I  did.  Though  it  was  called  the  Mania of Etibald the
  Deranged. For that was the name of the mage who started the whole  pickle,
  which  resulted  in having a few tens of girls, some of whom were of noble
  and even royal families, killed or imprisoned in towers. They were alleged
  to  be  possessed by demons, condemned, and contaminated by the Black Sun,
  as that is how you called an ordinary eclipse in that bombastic jargon  of
  yours."
       "Etibald, who was not deranged at all, deciphered the inscriptions on
  the menhirs of the  Dauks,  on  tombstones  in  the  necropolises  of  the
  Wozhgors,  researched  the  legends  and  lays  of the werebobos. They all
  mentioned the eclipse in a way leaving little place for doubt.  The  Black
  Sun was to announce the imminent return of Lilith, worshipped still in the
  East under the name of Niya, and the doom of the human race. The path  for
  Lilith was to be prepared by 'sixty maids in golden crowns, who with blood
  shall the valleys of rivers fill'."
       "Balderdash," said the hexer. "And what is more, unrhymed. All decent
  prophecies  rhyme.  It is generally known what Eltibald and the Sorcerers'
  Council aimed at then. You used the ravings of a moron, to strengthen your
  power.  To  break alliances, ruin marriage plans, stir in dynasties, or in
  other words to give the strings tied to all the puppets in crown a  hearty
  yank.  And  there you are, telling me about prophecies which a beggar at a
  fair would be ashamed of."
       "One  can  have   reservations   to   Eltibald's   theory,   to   the
  interpretation  of the prophecy. But it is impossible to question the fact
  of emergence of a horrible mutation among girls  born  shortly  after  the
  eclipse."
       "What  makes  it  unquestionable?  I  heard  something  just  to  the
  contrary."
       "I was at the  post-mortem  of  one  of  them,"  said  the  sorcerer.
  "Geralt,  what  we  found  inside  the  skull and the medulla, couldn't be
  unequivocally described. A sort of red sponge. Internal organs  all  mixed
  up, some of them absent altogether. Everything covered in motile cilia and
  pale-pink shreds. Six-chambered heart?  Two  practically  in  atrophy  but
  still. What'd you say to that?"
       "I  saw people with aquiline talons instead of hands, and people with
  lupine fangs. People with extra joints, extra organs and extra senses. All
  these were the effects of your dabbling with magic.
       "You saw different mutations, you say," the sorcerer raised his head.
  "And how many of them did you bludgeon for money, following  your  hexer's
  vocation?  Eh? For one may have lupine fangs and do no more than bare them
  before the maids in an inn, and one may also  have  a  lupine  nature  and
  attack  children.  And  that  was  the  case with the girls born after the
  eclipse. Among them a  simply  insane  tendency  to  cruelty,  aggression,
  sudden   outbursts   of   anger,  as  well  as  exuberant  appetites  were
  discovered."
       "Each woman may be found to have that." Geralt sneered "What are  you
  trying  to  peddle here?" You're asking how many mutants I've killed - why
  then you're not interested in the number of those I freed from a curse  or
  spell?  I,  a  hexer  you  despise  so  much. And what have you, oh potent
  wizards, done?
       "Higher levels of magic  were  resorted  to.  Ours  as  well  as  the
  priests',  in  various  shrines.  All  attempts have ended in death of the
  girls."
       "Which is only evidence against you, and not about the girls. So - we
  have  already  come to the first victims. I understand they all received a
  post-mortem?"
       "Not only. Don't look at me like that. You know too  well  that  more
  victims  followed.  Initially  it  was  decided  that  they  all should be
  eliminated. We disposed of a few... er... dozens. All  were  examined.  In
  one case it was a vivisection."
       "And  you, sons of the bitch, dare criticise hexers? Eh, Stregobor, a
  day will come when people will wizen and get you a good trashing."
       "I don't think such a day is near," - said  the  sorcerer  tartly.  -
  Don't  forget  that  we  were  acting  in  defence of people. These female
  mutants would drown whole kingdoms in blood."
       "That is what you, magicians, say looking  down  at  everything  from
  your  nimbus  of  infallibility.  Yet, as we're already talking about, you
  won't tell me that you mistook not even once, in that hunt for the  would-
  be mutants of yours, will you?"
       "Let  it  be,"  said Stregobor having stayed silent for a long while.
  "I'll be frank with you, although I shouldn't. In my very interest. We did
  mistake,  and  more  than  once  it  was.  Selecting  them  was  extremely
  difficult. Therefore we stopped...  disposing  of  them  and  we  took  to
  isolating them..
       "Your famed towers," the hexer snapped.
       "Our towers. That was yet another mistake. We underestimated them and
  quite a number of them escaped. Some mad fashion of setting the imprisoned
  beauties  free  developed  among princes and dukes, especially the younger
  ones, who did not have much to do, and even less to lose.  Most  of  them,
  luckily, broke their necks.
       "As  far  as  I  know,  having been imprisoned in towers they started
  passing away quickly. It was rumoured that it wasn't without your help."
       "A lie. Indeed, they quickly  became  apathetic,  refused  to  eat...
  What's interesting, shortly before their death they manifested the gift of
  clairvoyance. Another proof of mutation.
       "Each next proof is less and less convincing. Haven't you got  a  few
  more of them?"
       "I  have.  Silvena,  the  lady  of  Narok  -we  never managed even to
  approach her, as she seized the power really quick. Now horror is alive in
  that  country.  Fialka,  the  daughter of Evermir, escaped from the tower,
  using a rope braided from her plaits - at  present  she's  the  terror  of
  Northern  Velhad.  Bernica  of  Talgar  was freed by an idiot prince. Now,
  blinded, he's biding his time in  the  dungeon,  and  the  most  prominent
  element  of the Talgar countryside are gallows. There are other examples."
       "Naturally, there are," said the hexer. "Take Yamurlac for one, where
  the  old  Abrad  rules:  he's got scrofula and not a single tooth, he must
  have been born a good hundred years before all that eclipse, and  he  want
  fall  asleep,  unless  someone is cruelly murdered in his presence. He has
  butchered up all his relatives and depopulated a half of  his  country  in
  insane, as you put it, sudden outbursts of anger. There are also traces of
  exuberant appetites, he is said to have been called Abrad the Tearskirt in
  his  youth. Yeah, Stregobor, it would be great if the atrocities of rulers
  could be explained with a mutation or a curse.
       "Listen, Geralt..."
       "Don't you even think about it!" You'll never  convince  me  to  your
  point  of  view,  even less so that Eltibald wasn't a nefarious moron. But
  let us return to the monster which is allegedly threatening you. After the
  introduction  you have made, know that I don't like the whole story. Yet I
  will listen to you telling me the whole of it."
       "Butting in none of these caustic remarks of yours?"
       "This I can't promise."
       "Well, then," Stregobor shoved his palms in the sleeves of his robes.
  "The  longer  it  will  take. So, the whole business started in Creyden, a
  small duchy in the north. Fredefalk, duke of Creyden's wife was Aridea,  a
  wise  and  educated  woman.  She  had  in  her lineage a number of eminent
  sorcerers accomplished in the art,  and  she  most  probably  inherited  a
  potent  and  rather  uncommon artefact: the Looking-Glass of Nehalenia. As
  you know, the Looking-Glasses of Nehalenia were used  mostly  by  prophets
  and oracles, as they foretell the future with no mistake, though in a very
  muddled way. Aridea quite often addressed her Looking-Glass..."
       "With the customary question, as I deem," Geralt interrupted. "'Who's
  the  fairest  of  them  all?'  As  far  as  I  know all Looking-Glasses of
  Nehalenia can be divided into the polite and the broken ones."
       "You're wrong. Aridea was more interested in the fate of her country.
  And when asked, the Looking-Glass divined a nasty death of Aridea herself,
  and of plenty of people, either from the hand or Fredefalk's daughter from
  his  first  wife  or  due to her doings. Aridea did her best to spread the
  news to the Council, and the Council sent me to Creyden. I do not have  to
  mention  that  Fredefalk's firstborn was born shortly after the eclipse. I
  watched her secretly for a short time. In  the  meantime  she  managed  to
  tortured  to  death  a  canary  and  two puppies; she also plucked out her
  handmaid's eye with the handle of a comb. I  made  a  few  tests  with  my
  spells,  and  most of them confirmed that she was a mutant. I went to tell
  that to Aridea, as Fredefalk was too much infatuated  with  his  daughter.
  Aridea, as I have mentioned, was quite a wise woman..."
       "Sure,"  Geralt  interrupted  again. "She can't have been too fond of
  her step-daughter. She'd rather her own children inherited the  throne.  I
  can  guess  what  followed. Why was there nobody to break her neck. And by
  the way, yours as well."
       Stregobor Sighed, raised his eyes to heaven,  where  the  picturesque
  rainbow was still glimmering with its many colours.
       "I  was  in  favour  of isolating her only, by the duke's wife was of
  different opinion. She sent the little one to  the  forest  with  a  hired
  thug:  her Master of the Hunt. We found him later in the shrubs. He wasn't
  wearing any trousers, so it wasn't too difficult to guess  what  happened.
  She  shoved  the  pin  of  her brooch into his brain through the ear. Most
  probably when he had his attention turned to something else."
       "If you think I pity him," Geralt muttered. "You're mistaken."
       "We made a comb-out," Stregobor continued. "But we lost trace of her.
  And  I  had  to  hurry  away  from  Creyden, as Fredefalk began suspecting
  something. Only four years later I had news from  Aridea.  She  spied  the
  little one who was living in Mahakam with seven gnomes, whom she convinced
  that it paid better to waylay merchants than  to  chance  their  lungs  to
  anthracosis  in the mines. She's commonly called the Shrike, as she's been
  particularly partial to impaling  those  she  caught  alive  on  sharpened
  poles.  Aridea  hired  a few assassins, but none of them returned. Then it
  was difficult to find anyone willing to: the little one was quite  famous.
  She  learned  her sword so well that not many a man could face her. Having
  been summoned to Creyden, I arrived there in secrecy only  to  learn  that
  Aridea  had been poisoned. Fredefalk himself was commonly believed to have
  done so, as he had sought a younger and a fleshier msalliance for himself,
  but t seems to me it was Renfri."
       "Renfri?"
       "That's what she called herself. I told you, she had poisoned Aridea.
  Shortly afterwards  Duke  Fredefalk  died  in  a  strange  accident  while
  hunting, and Aridea's eldest son was lost without a trace. Those must have
  been the dealings of the little one as well. I call her 'little one',  yet
  she was seventeen at that time. And she was well developed.
       "At  that  time,"  the sorcerer continued after a while's break. "She
  and her gnomes were a true terror of the whole Mahakam. Yet, one day  they
  quarrelled  over  something,  I don't know what that was about, whether it
  was sharing the loot, or taking turns during the  nights  of  the  week  -
  enough  to  say  they  butchered  each  other with their knives. The seven
  gnomes failed to survive this knife business. Only the Shrike did. And she
  alone. But at that time, I was already in the vicinity. We met eye to eye:
  she recognised me in an instant and realised what role I  played  then  in
  Creyden.  I'm  telling  you, Geralt, I hardly had time to say the words of
  the spell, and my hands were trembling as anything, when that  wild  vixen
  was  running  at  me  with  her  sword.  I  wrapped her in a neat block of
  rhinestone: six ells by nine. When she became  lethargic,  I  dropped  the
  block into the gnomes' mine and caved the shaft in.
       "A  botch," Geralt commented. "That could be disspelled. Couldn't you
  incinerate her to cinder? You know so many well-suited spells."
       "Not me. Not my speciality. But you are right. I botched. An idiot of
  a  prince found her and spent a fortune for a counterspell, he brought her
  back and triumphantly carried her home, to some god-forgotten  kingdom  of
  the  east.  His father, an old brigand, turned out to be more sensible. He
  gave his son a thrashing, and decided to interrogate the Shrike. He  asked
  her  about  the  treasures  she  had  come by together with the gnomes and
  hidden deviously. The king's mistake was that when she - stark-naked - was
  stretched  on  the executioner's bench, he was assisted by his eldest son.
  It somehow happened that the very next day that son  of  his,  already  an
  orphan  bereft of all the siblings, ruled the kingdom, and the Shrike took
  the post of the first pet.
       "Which means she's not that ugly."
       "The question of taste. She wasn't a pet long. Until the first palace
  revolution,  as they pompously called it, as their palace seemed more like
  a cow-shed. It soon turned out that she did not forget about me either. In
  Kovir  she had three assassins hired to kill me. I decided not to risk and
  wait until all was over in Pontar. She found me again. That time I escaped
  to Angren, but she found me even there. I don't know how she does it, as I
  mask my trail well and leave no tracks.  It  must  be  a  feature  of  her
  mutation."
       "What  hindered  or  prevented you from repeating your crystal spell?
  Remorse?"
       "No. I had no such thing. It turned out that  she  became  immune  to
  magic."
       "This can't be."
       "It  is. It is enough to posses an appropriate artefact or aura. Yet,
  this may again be caused by her mutation, which  is  progressing.  I  fled
  from  Angren  and  I hid myself here in the Baycoves, in Blaviken. I had a
  year's rest, yet she tracked me again."
       "Where do you know it from? Is she already in the town?"
       "Yes. I've seen her in the crystal." The sorcerer  raised  his  wand.
  "She  is not alone. She's leading a gang, which means that she's preparing
  something grave. Geralt, I have nowhere to run, and I  know  of  no  place
  where  I  could  hide.  Yes.  The  fact that you arrived here in this very
  moment, cannot be a coincidence. It's destiny.
       The hexer raised his brows.
       "What do you mean?"
       "It's natural, isn't it? You'll kill her."
       "I'm not a hired thug, Stregobor."
       "You're not a thug. True."
       "It is monsters that I kill for  money.  Beasts  threatening  people.
  Abominations  summoned  by  magic  and  spells  of  the  likes of you. Not
  humans."
       "She is not a human. Verily, she is a monster,  a  mutant,  a  cursed
  freak.  You  brought  your  kikimore  here.  The  Shrike  is  worse than a
  kikimore. A kikimore kills because it is hungry, the Shrike for  pleasure.
  Kill  her, and I will pay you any sum you name. Reason is the limit, it is
  to be understood."
       "I told you I believe all this thing about the mutation and curse  of
  Lilith  to be rubbish. The girl has her reasons to pick a bone or two with
  you, and I will not meddle. Turn to the riff, to the magistrates. You  are
  the local sorcerer, you are protected by the local law.
       "I'm  spitting on law, on the riff and his aid!" Stregobor exclaimed.
  "I need no defence. I want you to kill her! No one will enter this  tower.
  I'm  fully  safe  here.  But  what good is it? I don't intend to stay here
  until the end of my days. The Shrike will not give up  as  long  as  I  am
  alive, I know that. Am I to stay in this tower and await death?"
       "They  stayed.  You know what, magician? You should have left hunting
  the girls to other, more potent sorcerers, you  should  have  foresee  the
  consequences."
       "Please, Geralt."
       "No, Stregobor."
       The  sorcerer  remained  silent. The un-true sun on the un-true skies
  moved towards the zenith, but the hexer knew that it was already  dusk  in
  Blaviken. He felt hungry.
       "Geralt,"  said  Stregobor. "When we listened to Eltibald, many of us
  had their doubts. Yet we decided to choose  the  lesser  evil.  Now  I  am
  asking you for a similar choice."
       "Evil  is evil, Stregobor," said the hexer solemnly, raising from his
  seat. "Lesser,  greater,  average,  it  doesn't  matter,  proportions  are
  debatable and the boundaries are blurred. I am not a saintly hermit and it
  is not only good that I have done in my  life.  But  if  I  am  to  choose
  between  one evil and another, I prefer to make no choice at all. Time for
  me. We'll see each other tomorrow."
       "Maybe," said the sorcerer. "If you make it on time."


       III

       The Golden Manor, the representative inn of the town, was crowded and
  noisy.  Patrons,  locals and travellers alike, were mostly busy with doing
  things  typical  for  their  nations  or  professions.  Very  professional
  merchants  were  haggling  with  dwarves  about  the  prices  of  goods or
  interests from loans. Not very professional merchants  kept  pinching  the
  bottoms  of  the  girls  carrying  around  beer and pork stew. Local fools
  pretended to be well informed. Girlies were trying to  look  agreeable  to
  those  who  had  money,  at the same time discouraging those who had none.
  Coachmen and fishermen drank as if tomorrow  a  ban  on  hops  was  to  be
  introduced.  Sailors  were  singing  a song praising sea waves, courage of
  captains, and the beauty  of  mermaids  -  the  last  being  described  in
  stimulating detail.
       "Cudgel  thy  brains  some  more,  Centurion  - said Caldemeyn to the
  keeper, leaning over the bar, so that he could be  heard  in  the  general
  humdrum.  -  Six lads and a minx, black clad in silver studded leather, as
  is the fashion in Novigrad. I saw them at the toll-gates. Are they staying
  here or at the Tuna?
       Wrinkles  could  be  seen  on  the bulging forehead of the inn-keeper
  busily wiping a mug with his striped apron.
       "Here, riff," - he eventually said. - "They spake that  they  arrived
  for the fair, yet all at swords, even the damsel. Black, as thou speakest,
  clad.
       "Well," the riff nodded. "Where are they now? I can't see them here."
       "In the lesser alcove. They paid in gold."
       "I'll go there alone." said Geralt. "There's no point in making it an
  official case, at least not yet, and not with all of these  present.  I'll
  get here to here.
       "It  may  be  a  right thing to do. But be careful! I want no turmoil
  here."
       "I shall be careful."
       "Judging by the increasing concentration of obscenities, the sailors'
  song  was  already  close  to  its great finale. Geralt lifted the curtain
  covering the entrance to the alcove - stiff and clammy with dirt.
       There were six men at the table in the alcove. She whom  he  expected
  to see was not there.
       "What?"  yelled  the one who noticed him first, thinning on top, with
  his face disfigured by a scar running across the left brow,  base  of  the
  nose and the right cheek.
       "I want to see the Shrike."
       Two  identical  people  stood  up  from  the  table. Their faces were
  identically immobile, fair hair reaching their shoulders  was  identically
  dishevelled;  they  were  clad  in  the  same tight black leather clothes,
  glistening with silver ornaments. With the  same  type  of  movement,  the
  twins raised their identical swords from the bench.
       "Easy, Vyr. Sit down, Nimir." That was said by the man with the scar,
  who placed his elbows on the table. "Who's that, that you say, you want to
  see, brother? Who is that Shrike?"
       "You know well who I mean."
       "Who's  he?"  asked  the  half-naked  roughneck,  sweating and cross-
  belted, with spiked gauntlets on his forearms. "D'you know him, Nohorn?"
       "I don't." Replied the man with the scar.
       "Must be an albino," giggled a slim dark-haired  man  sitting  beside
  Nohorn.  Delicate  features,  huge black eyes and sharply-tipped ears were
  unmistakable signs of a half-elf. "An albino, a mutant, a prank of  mother
  nature. Why are the likes of him allowed in an inn, among decent folks."
       "I  Must  have  seen  him already somewhere," said the stout weather-
  beaten fellow with plaited hair, scanning Geralt with an evil stare of his
  half-closed eyes.
       "It  doesn't matter where you've seen him, Tavik." Nohorn said. "Just
  listen, brother. Civril has dreadfully offended you a  moment  ago.  Won't
  you challenge him? Such a boring evening."
       "No," said the hexer calmly.
       "And  will you challenge me, if I pour this fish soup on your noddle?
  the half-naked one chuckled.
       "Easy, Fifteen," said Nohorn. "No means no, and  he  said  it.  Well,
  brother,  say what you've got to say and out you are!. It's your chance to
  go out by yourself. If you don't jump at it,  the  staff  will  carry  you
  out."
       "I have nothing to tell you. I want to see the Shrike. Renfri."
       "Have you heard, lads?" Nohorn looked round at the company. "He wants
  to see Renfri. And why is that so, brother, if one may know, eh?"
       "One may not."
       Nohorn raised his head and looked at the  twins,  they  took  a  step
  forward, the silver buckles of their high boots jingling.
       "I know," said the one with the plait suddenly. "Now I remember where
  I saw him!"
       "What are you muttering, Tavik?"
       "In front of the riff's house. He brought some kind of a  dragon  for
  sale, such a cross between a spider and a crocodile. People thought him to
  be a hexer."
       "What is a hexer?" asked Fifteen, the naked one. "Eh? Civril?"
       "A hired witch," answered the half-elf. "A trickster for a handful of
  silver  coins.  Told you he was a prank of mother nature. An abhorrence in
  the eyes of gods and people. Such as him should be burnt."
       "We don't like witches, Tavik grinned, unrelentingly scanning  Geralt
  with  his  half-closed  bloodshot eyes. - Something tells me, Civril, that
  we'll have more work in this dump than we thought we would. There must  be
  more than one of them, and they are known to keep company."
       "Birds of a feather flock together," the half-caste grinned. "How can
  earth bear the likes of you? Who spawns you, freaks?"
       "More tolerance, if you could," said Geralt calmly. "Your mother,  as
  far as I can see must have used to walk in the forest often enough for you
  to have reasons to reflect over your own ancestry."
       "That may be," answered the half-elf without losing his smile. "But I
  at least knew my mother. As a hexer you cannot say it about yourself."
       Geralt  went  slightly pale and bit his lips. Nohorn, who didn't fail
  to notice that, laughed loudly."
       "Uh, brother! An offence like this! You just can't let it pass.  What
  you've  got  on  your  back  seems to be a sword. So? Will you go out with
  Civril? The evening's so boring."
       The hexer did not react.
       "A shitting chicken!" Tavik hissed.
       "What  has  he  said  about  Civril's   mother?"   Nohorn   continued
  monotonously,  resting  his  chin  on  clasped hands. - Something horrible
  gross, as far as I am concerned. That she was  smutty,  or  whatnot?  Hey,
  Fifteen,  does  it become to listen how some rover offends the mother of a
  companion? Mother's motherfirkng holy!"
       Fifteen eagerly stood up, unbuckled the sword and hurled it onto  the
  table.  He  inhaled  and  adjusted the his silver-studded gauntlets on the
  forearms, spat and took one step forward.
       "If you've got any doubts," said Nohorn. "Fifteen is just challenging
  you to a fist-fight. I told you you'd be carried out. Make room."
       Fifteen  got closer, raising his fists. Geralt placed his hand on the
  handle of the sword.
       "Beware," he said. "One more step, and you'll  be  looking  for  your
  hand on the floor."
       Nohorn  and  Tavik  sprang to their feet, clutching their swords. The
  silent twins unsheathed theirs with  identical  motions.  Fifteen  backed.
  Only Civril made no move.
       "Dammit!  What's going on in here? Can't you just be left alone for a
  moment?"
       Geralt turned back very slowly  and  looked  into  the  eyes  of  the
  colour of sea water.
       She  was  nearly as tall as he. Her hair, of the colour of straw, she
  had cut unevenly just over the  ears.  She  was  standing  with  one  hand
  leaning against the door, in a short tight velvet doublet, girdled tightly
  by an ornamented belt. Her skirt was uneven, asymmetrical: on the left  it
  reached  the  calf,  and  on  the right it exposed a strong thigh over the
  bootleg of a high boot made of elk skin. There was a  sword  at  her  left
  side, and a dagger with a large ruby in the pommel at the right.
       "You lost speech?"
       "This is a hexer," Nohorn ventured.
       "So what?"
       "He wanted to talk to you."
       "So what?"
       "He's a witch," thundered Fifteen.
       "We don't like witches, growl Tavik.
       "Easy,  boys,"  said the girl. "He wants to talk to me, and that's no
  crime. You, go on with  having  fun  on  your  own.  And  no  disturbance.
  Tomorrow's  a  fair  day. You can't possibly want your pranks to spoil the
  fair, it's such an important event in the life of this nice little  town?"
       In  the silence that followed a silent, nasty snigger could be heard.
  Civril, still carelessly sprawling on his bench, was laughing."
       "Eh, you, Renfri," the half-caste grumbled. "Important......  event!"
       "Shut up, Civril. This instant!"
       Civril  stopped  laughing.  In  an  instant. Geralt wasn't surprised.
  There was a very peculiar note sounding in Renfri's voice. Something  that
  could be associated with red reflections of a fire on the blades, yells of
  the murdered, neighing of horses and the smell of blood. Others must  have
  had similar associations, as there was paleness creeping even over Tavik's
  weather-beaten kisser.
       "Well, chalkhaired," Renfri broke  the  silence.  "Let's  go  into  a
  larger  room,  let's  join  the  riff, with whom you came here. He must be
  willing to talk to me as well."
       As soon as he noticed them Caldemeyn, waiting at the bar,  broke  his
  silent  dialogue with the inn-keeper, stood straight and crossed his hands
  on the chest.
       "Listen, ma'am," he said harshly, losing no time for exchanging brief
  cordialities. - I know from the Rivian hexer present here, what brings you
  to here, to Blaviken. Allegedly, you bear our sorcerer a grudge."
       "I may. So what?" asked Renfri quietly, also  in  not  too  polite  a
  manner.
       "So  that  for  such  grudges  we  have either borough or castellan's
  courts. And ho wants to use iron to avenge a grudge here, in the Baycoves,
  is oft considered a common thug. And also that either early in the morning
  you leave Blaviken together with your black company, or I'll put you  into
  the hole, pre... How d'you say that, Geralt?
       "Preventively."
       "That's it. Got it, lass?
       Renfri  reached  into the purse she had at her belt, and fished out a
  folded parchment.
       "Just read that riff, if you're  literate.  And  call  me  'lass'  no
  more."
       Caldemeyn  took the parchment and having read it for a long while, he
  passed it to Geralt without a word.
       "'To my barons, knights and free subjects,'" the  hexer  read  aloud.
  "'I  am  making it known to all and the sundry that Renfri, the Duchess of
  Creyden, at our service remains and is pleasant to our eyes, therefore our
  anger  shall  follow  the one who should raise difficultys to her. Audoen,
  the king...' 'Difficulties' spells  differently.  Though  the  seal  looks
  authentic."
       "For  it is authentic," said Renfri, wrenching the parchment from his
  hands. "It was sealed by Audoen, your graceful  sire.  Therefore  I  would
  advise  raising  me  no difficulties whatsoever. However you spell it, the
  results may be pitiful for you. You will not, my riff,  put  me  into  the
  hole. Nor address me as 'lass'. I have not disobey any law. For now."
       "If you violate it even an inch," Caldemeyn looked as if he wanted to
  spit. "I'll have you in  the hole together with the parchment. I swear  by
  all gods, lass. Come, Geralt."
       "With you, hexer," Renfri touched Geralt's arm "one more word."
       "Don't be late for supper," said the riff over his shoulder. "Because
  Libushe will be furious."
       "I won't be late."
       Geralt leaned against the bar. Playing with the medallion with wolf's
  head  that  was hanging on his neck, he was looking in the blue-green eyes
  of the girl.
       "I've heard about you," she said.  "You  are  Geralt  of  Rivia,  the
  white-haired hexer. Stregobor's your friend?"
       "No."
       "This makes the matter easier."
       "Not too much. I'm not going to watch it idly."
       Renfri's eyes narrowed.
       "Stregobor will die tomorrow," she said quietly, casting her unevenly
  cut hair off the forehead. "It would be a lesser evil if only he died."
       "If, or rather before Stregobor dies, a few other people will. I  see
  no other way out."
       "A few, hexer, is an understatement."
       "I need more than words to be alarmed, Shrike."
       "Don't call me Shrike. I don't like it. The thing is that I see other
  ways out. They'd be worth a talk, but - well - Libushe's waiting.  Is  she
  at least pretty, that Libushe?"
       "Is that all you've had to tell me?"
       "No. But now go. Libushe's waiting."


       IV

       Someone was in his little room in the attic. Geralt knew it before he
  approached  the  door,  he  understood  it  from  the  hardly  perceptible
  vibration  of  the  medallion.  He extinguished the oil lamp, which he had
  used to light the stairs. He got a dagger out of his bootleg, and stuck it
  behind  the  belt  on  the back. He pressed the handle. It was dark in the
  room. Not for a hexer.
       Purposefully, he stepped casually over  the  threshold,  closing  the
  door  behind  him at a leisurely pace. Next second, he took a mighty push,
  made one long leap, and landed on the someone sitting on his bed, pressing
  the  person  into  the bedding; thrusting his left forearm under the man's
  chin, he reached for the dagger. He did not draw it. Something was  wrong.
       "Quite  well  begun,"  she  said in a muffled voice, lying motionless
  under him. "I took this into consideration, but I did not think we'll land
  in bed so soon. Please, take this hand off my throat, if you could."
       "That's you."
       "That's me. Listen: there are two things we can do. The first is: you
  go off me and we have a chat. The other: we remain in this  position,  but
  you will at least let me take my boots off."
       The  hexer  chose  the  first  option. The girl sighed, stood up, and
  adjusted her hair and skirt.
       "Light a candle," she said. "I cannot see in darkness like you, and I
  like seeing the man I talk to."
       She  approached  the  table, tall, slender, and nimble, and sat down,
  stretching her legs in high boots in front of  her.  She  had  no  weapons
  visible.
       "Got something to drink here?"
       "Nope."
       "In that case, it's good I have brought some," she laughed, placing a
  travel wineskin and two leather cups on the table.
       "It's almost midnight," said Geralt coldly. "May we  proceed  to  the
  matter?"
       "In a while. Take it, drink. Your health, Geralt."
       "Same to you, Shrike."
       "Shit!  My  name's  Renfri," she tossed her head. "I let you skip the
  ducal title, but stop calling me Shrike!"
       "Hush, or you'll wake all the house up. Will I finally learn what you
  stole into here through the window for?"
       "How  dumb  you are, hexer. I want to save Blaviken from a slaughter.
  And to discuss that with you I crept along roofs,  like  a  tabby  cat  in
  March. Just you appreciate it!
       "I  do,"  said  Geralt.  "Yet  I  know not what such a discussion may
  yield. Everything's fair. Stregobor is in his sorcerer's tower,  in  order
  to  get  him  you would have to besiege him there. If you do so, your writ
  will be of no help. Audoen will not be protecting you if you openly  break
  the law. The riff, the guards, all of Blaviken will stand against you.
       "If  all  of  Blaviken  do  so, they will be seriously sorry they had
  not." Renfri smiled, presenting her predatory white teeth. "Have you had a
  good  look  at  my  boys?  I guarantee they know their craft well. Can you
  imagine what will happen if there  is  a  fight  between  them  and  those
  numskulls  from the guard, who trip on their halberds with every step they
  make?"
       "And do you, Renfri,  imagine  that  I  will  be  standing  and  idly
  watching  such a fight? As you see, I am staying at the riff's. In case of
  need it would become to stand at his side."
       "And I do not doubt that you would,"  Renfri  became  serious.  "You,
  probably alone, as all the rest will be hiding in the cellars. There is no
  warrior in this world who would manage against seven swordsmen. No man can
  accomplish  this.  But,  chalkhaired, let's stop frightening each other. I
  said: slaughter and bloodshed can be  prevented.  Namely,  there  are  two
  people who can achieve that."
       "I'm all ears."
       "One," said Renfri. "Is Stregobor himself. He will leave his tower of
  his own will, and I will take him to some wilderness, and Blaviken will be
  allowed  to  plunge in blessed bucolic idleness again and will soon forget
  the whole affair."
       "Stregobor may make the impression of a deranged, yet not to such  an
  extent."
       "Who  knows,  hexer,  who  knows. There are arguments which cannot be
  opposed or resisted, there are also offers which cannot be  reject.  Among
  these there's for instance the Tridamian ultimatum. I will offer the witch
  Tridamian ultimatum.
       "What is such an ultimatum?"
       "My sweet secret."
       "Let it be. Yet I doubt if it's going to  be  effective.  Stregobor's
  teeth  chatter, when talking about you. An ultimatum, which would convince
  him to surrender of his own accord into your beautiful hands would have to
  be  a  mighty one, indeed. Let us then proceed to the other person who can
  prevent carnage in Blaviken. I shall try to guess who this person is."
       "Your sagacity makes me wonder, chalkhaired."
       "It's you, Renfri. You yourself. You will display ducal - what  am  I
  saying  - regal magnanimity indeed and you will renounce vengeance. Have I
  guessed right?"
       Renfri tossed her head back and laughed loudly, timely  covering  her
  mouth with her hand. Then she became serious again and, fixed her gleaming
  yes at the hexer."
       "Geralt," she said. "I was a duchess, but in Creyden.  I  had  all  I
  dreamt  about,  and  I didn't even need to ask. Servants at every request,
  dresses, shoes. Batiste panties. Jewels and other trinkets, a sorrel pony,
  goldfish  in  a pond. Dolls and a house for them, larger than this room of
  yours here. And it went on till the day when that Stregobor of  yours  and
  that  whore  Aridea made her Master of the Hunt take me to the forest, cut
  my throat and bring the heart and liver to them. Lovely, wasn't it?"
       "No. Rather disgusting. I am happy you managed with the Master of the
  Hunt, Renfri."
       "Shit, I didn't. He pitied me and let me go. But before that he raped
  me, the bastard, and stole my earrings and a golden coronet.
       Geralt looked her straight in the eye, playing  with  the  medallion.
  She didn't look down.
       "And  that  was  the  end of the little duchess," she continued. "The
  dress was torn, the whiteness of batiste was lost never  to  return.  Then
  came  the  dirt,  the  hunger,  the  stench,  the  cudgels, and the kicks.
  Agreeing to being bonked by any nitwit for a bowl of soup or  a  place  to
  sleep.  Do you know what hair I had? Like silk. And they reached well over
  an ell beyond my bum. When I contracted lice, it was cut with scissors for
  sheep-shearing,  close  at  the  very skin. They have never grew back that
  much."
       She went silent for a while, and removed the uneven  locks  from  her
  forehead.
       I  used  to  steal,  just not to perish of hunger," she continued. "I
  used to kill, so that I weren't killed myself. I spent my time in dungeons
  reeking of urine, not knowing if I were to be hanged the next day, or only
  whipped and exiled. And all that time my step-mother  and  that  witch  of
  ours  were  close on my heels, paying assassins, and attempting to poison.
  They cast spells. To show magnanimity? To forgive him royally? I will tear
  his head off royally, but maybe both the legs first - we shall see."
       "Aridea and Stregobor tried to poison you?"
       "True.  With an apple, laced with banewort essence. A gnome saved me.
  He gave me an emetic, after which I thought I would turn  my  insides  out
  like a stocking. But I survived."
       "He was one of the seven gnomes, wasn't he?"
       Renfri, who was busily pouring, froze with the wineskin over the cup.
       "A-ha," she said "You know quite  a  lot  about  me.  And  what?  Got
  something  against gnomes? Or other humanoids? If I am to be precise, they
  were better for me than most people. But you shouldn't  care  about  that.
  I've told you: Stregobor and Aridea chased me like a wild beast as long as
  they were able to do so. Then they stopped being able, and I myself turned
  into  the  hunter.  Aridea kicked the bucket in her own bed, she was lucky
  that I hadn't reached her earlier, I had prepared a special programme  for
  her.  And  now  I've  got one for the witch. Geralt, has he deserved death
  according to you? Tell me."
       "I am not a judge. I am a hexer."
       "That is right. I said that there are  two  people  who  can  prevent
  bloodshed  in Blaviken. You are the other. The witch will let you into the
  tower, and then you kill him."
       "Renfri," said Geralt calmly. "Didn't you, by any chance,  coming  to
  my room slip off the roof head down?"
       "Are you a hexer, or not, dammit? They say you killed a kikimore, and
  brought it here on a  donkey  for  pricing.  Stregobor  is  worse  than  a
  kikimore,  which  is  a mindless beast: it kills for so it was designed by
  the gods. Stregobor is a savage, a maniac, a monster. Bring him to me on a
  donkey, and I will not spare gold."
       "I am not a mercenary rogue, Shrike."
       "You aren't," she agreed with a smile. She leaned against the back of
  her chair and crossed her legs up on the table, making not a least  effort
  to  cover  her  thighs  with  the skirt. "You are a hexer, the defender of
  people, whom you defend from Evil. And in this case the Evil is  the  fire
  and  iron  which  shall start playing havoc here, when we stand eye to eye
  against each other. Don't you think that what  I  have  to  offer  is  the
  lesser  evil,  the best solution? Even for that bastard Stregobor. You can
  kill him with mercy - just one unexpected thrust. He will die not  knowing
  he is dying. And I won't vouchsafe that to him. Just the contrary."
       Geralt remained silent. Renfri stretched, raising her hands.
       "I understand your hesitation," she said. "But I must know the answer
  this instant."
       "Do you know why Stregobor and the Duchess wanted to kill  you,  then
  in Creyden, and later?"
       Renfri suddenly straightened up and took her legs off the table.
       "It's  quite  obvious,"  she  burst.  "They  wanted to get rid of the
  first-born daughter of Fredefalk, as I was heir apparent  to  the  throne.
  The  children  of  Aridea  were  of a morganatic wedlock and had no rights
  to..."
       "Renfri, this is not what I meant."
       The girl dropped her head but only for a moment Her eyes flashed.
       "Well then. I am supposed to be accursed. Corrupted  in  my  mother's
  womb. I am to be..."
       "Finish it."
       "A monster."
       "And are you?"
       For  a  moment,  though  a very short one, she looked defenceless and
  broken down. And very sad too.
       "I don't know, Geralt," she whispered. Then her  features  went  hard
  again.  "For  how, the hell, should I know? If I hurt my finger I bleed. I
  also bleed every month. When I pig out, I have a stomach-ache,  and  if  I
  get  drunk  -  a headache. Jolly I sing; sad I swear. If I hate one I kill
  him, and if... Well, sod it, it's enough... Your answer, hexer."
       "My answer is 'No.'"
       "Do you remember what I said?" she asked after  a  moment's  silence.
  "There are offers one cannot reject, for the results may be terrible. I am
  warning you in earnest: mine was one of these.
       "I have made up my mind. And treat me seriously, as I am also  giving
  you a serious warning."
       Renfri  remained  silent  for  some  time, fidgeting with a string of
  pearls running three times around her shapely neck, and teasingly dropping
  between  the  two  shapely  spheres visible in the low cut neckline of her
  doublet.
       "Geralt," she said "Has Stregobor asked you to kill me?"
       "Yes. He considered it to be lesser evil."
       "Can I take it for granted that  you  refused  then,  just  like  you
  refused a moment ago?"
       "You can."
       "Why?"
       "Because I don't believe in lesser evil."
       After  Renfri  smiled delicately, her lips was contorted by a grimace
  looking nastily in the yellowish glow of the candle.
       "You don't believe, you say. You see, you are right, but  only  to  a
  certain  extent.  There  is  Evil and the Greater Evil, and behind both of
  them, in the shade, there is the Very Great Evil. Very Great Evil, Geralt,
  is one which you cannot even imagine, even though you thought that nothing
  can surprise you. And you see, Geralt, sometimes it goes so that this Very
  Great  Evil clutches you by the throat and says: "Choose, fella, either me
  or that one, slightly lesser".
       "May I know what you are aiming at?"
       "At nothing. I've had some drink and I'm  preaching  philosophy,  I'm
  looking  for  general  truths.  And  I've  just found one: the lesser evil
  exists, yet we do not have to choose it by ourselves. This Very Great Evil
  is capable of forcing us into such a choice. Whether we want it or not."
       "I  must  have  drunk  too  little,"  the  hexer  smiled tartly. "And
  midnight has just passed, like midnights do. Let us proceed to the matter.
  You  won't  kill  Stregobor in Blaviken, I won't let you do it. I will not
  allow fighting and slaughter here. I'm suggesting  for  the  second  time:
  renounce  your  vengeance. Give up killing him. In this way you will prove
  it to him, and not only to him, that you are not an inhuman,  bloodthirsty
  monster,  a mutant and a freak. You'll prove to him that he was wrong. And
  that he wronged you terribly with his mistake."
       For a while, Renfri looked at the hexer's medallion spinning  on  the
  chain turned by his fingers.
       "And  if  I  tell  you, hexer, that I am unable to forgive, nor can I
  renounce my vengeance, will it be the same as if I admitted  to  him,  and
  not  only  to him, that they are right, won't it? In this way I will prove
  that I am a monster, an inhuman demon cursed by gods?  Listen,  hexer.  At
  the  very  beginning of my banishment I was taken by one freeman under his
  roof. He fancied me. Yet, I did not fancy him, on the contrary, every time
  he  wanted  me to be his, he used to thrash me so hard I could hardly drag
  myself off the bunk in the morning. Once I got up when it was  still  dark
  and  I slit that ceorl's throat. With a scythe. Then I did not yet have my
  skill, and a knife seemed too small. And you see, Geralt, listening to the
  ceorl  gurgling  and  choking,  looking at him jerking his legs. I felt no
  pain whatsoever in the bruises his cudgel and fists left. And I felt good,
  so  good  that  even... I went away, whistling cheerfully, healthy, joyful
  and happy. And each next time it was the same I. If it were different, who
  would waste time on vengeance?"
       "Renfri,"  said Geralt, "Whatever your justification and reasons are,
  you shall not leave from here whistling and you will not feel so good that
  even. You will not leave joyful and happy but you shall leave alive. Early
  in the morning tomorrow, as the sheriff ordered. I have told you that  but
  I shall repeat. You shall not kill Stregobor in Blaviken.
       Renfri's  eyes were glowing in the light of the candle, the pearls in
  the neckline of her short doublet  were  glistening;  the  medallion  with
  wolf's head was glimmering and whirling on its silver chain.
       "I  pity  you,"  said  the  girl  suddenly and slowly, staring at the
  shimmering silver disk, "You claim  that  there  is  lesser  evil.  You're
  standing  on  a  market, on the cobbles bathed in blood, alone, so lonely,
  because you were not able to make a choice. You were not able but you made
  it.  You shall never know: you shall never be sure - you hear me? And your
  pay shall be a stone and an unkind word. I pity you."
       "And you?" asked the hexer quietly, almost in whisper.
       "I cannot choose either."
       "Who are you?"
       "I am what I am."
       "Where are you?"
       "I'm cold."
       "Renfri!" Geralt clasped the medallion in his hand.
       She lifted her head up as if suddenly  woken  up  from  a  dream  and
  blinked her eyes a few times in amazement. For a moment - a very short one
  - she looked frightened.
       "You've won," she said in a sudden harsh tone,  "You've  won,  hexer.
  Tomorrow  morning  I  am  leaving  Blaviken, never to return to this lousy
  little town. Never. Fill up, if there is anything left in the bottle."
       Her usual mocking teasing smile returned to her  lips  when  she  was
  putting the empty cup back on the table.
       "Geralt?"
       "I'm here."
       "This  bloody roof is steep. I'd rather leave at dawn. When it's dark
  I can fall down and hurt myself. I am a duchess,  and  I  have  a  fragile
  body, I can sense a pea through a mattress. Unless it is well stuffed with
  straw, naturally. What will you say?"
       "Renfri," Geralt smiled, willy-nilly, "does what  you  say  become  a
  duchess?"
       "Hell!  What  can you know about duchesses? I was one and I know that
  all the pleasure that there is in being one is the  possibility  of  doing
  what one feels like. Am I to tell you openly, or will you guess yourself?"
       Still smiling, Geralt didn't answer.
       "I do not even want to accept the thought that you don't  fancy  me,"
  the  girl  frowned. "I prefer to presume that you are scared of walking in
  the footsteps of that freeman. Eh, white-haired. I've got nothing sharp on
  me. Well, just see for yourself.
       She put her legs on his knees.
       "Take my boots off. The bootleg's the best place to hide a knife."
       Barefoot, she stood up and tugged at the clasp of her belt.
       "I hide nothing here, as you see. Nor here, as you see. Put down that
  damned candle.
       Outside, in the darkness, a cat was caterwauling.
       "Renfri?"
       "Yes?"
       "Is that batiste?"
       "Blast it! Naturally! I am a duchess, aren't I?"


       V

       "Daddy," Marilka wailed monotonously. "When will we go to  the  fair?
  To the fair, Daddy!"
       "Be  quiet, Marilka." Caldemeyn rumbled, wiping his plate with bread.
  "So, what are you saying, Geralt? Are they moving out from the town?"
       "Yes."
       "Well, I didn't think it will go that smoothly. They held me  by  the
  throat with this parchment sealed by Audeon. I was trying to grin and bear
  it, but - to tell you the truth - I could do nothing at all to them."
       "Even if they openly broke the law? Started a brawl, mutiny,  fight?"
       "Even then. Audoen, Geralt, is an easily irritable king, he sends you
  up the gallows for anything. I am married, I have a daughter,  I  like  my
  job, and I don't have to trouble where to get something to go well with my
  tomorrow's groats. In one word: it's good  they're  leaving.  How  did  it
  really happen?"
       "Daddy I want to the fair!"
       "Libushe!  Take  Marilka  away!  Well,  Geralt,  I didn't think so. I
  questioned Centurion, the  innkeeper  of  the  Golden  Manor,  about  that
  Novigrad company. They are quite a bunch. Some have been identified."
       "Well?"
       "The  one  with  a  scar across his face is Nohorn, former Abergard's
  sidekick, from the so-called free Angren  company.  You've  heard  of  the
  company,  haven't  you?  Apparently you have; who hasn't... That bull of a
  man, they call Fifteen, too. Even if not, I don't think his name refers to
  the  fifteen  good  turns he's done in his life. That blackish half-elf is
  Civril, a highwayman and assassin. He's said to have had something  to  do
  with the Tridam massacre."
       "Where?"
       "In  Tridam.  You  haven't heard? It was common gossip about three...
  Well, yes, must have been three years ago, for Marilka was two  then.  The
  Baron of Tridam kept some thugs in his dungeon. Their companions, they say
  that that cur, Civril, was also among them, they captured  a  river  ferry
  teeming  with  pilgrims, it was at the time of Nis Festivity. They sent to
  the baron demanded liberation of those. The Baron, as was to be  expected,
  refused,  and  then  they  started murdering the pilgrims, one by one, one
  after another. Before the  Baron  yielded  and  released  those  from  the
  dungeon,  they  let more than ten go down with the current. Exile, or even
  the block loomed over the Baron, some were  vexed  by  the  fact  that  he
  yielded  only when so many had been killed; others were agitated, claiming
  that he had done a great evil: that it was a pre... precedent or what, and
  that  those  should  have  been shot down with crossbows together with the
  hostages, or be suddenly assaulted from boats, and he should not  have  go
  even  an  inch their way. At the court, the Baron maintained that he chose
  the lesser evil, for there were over a quarter of a hundred people on  the
  ferry: women, brats.
       "The Tridam ultimatum." hexer whispered. "Renfri..."
       "What?"
       "Caldemeyn - the fair!"
       "What?"
       "Can't  you  understand,  Caldemeyn?  She  deceived me. They will not
  leave. They will force Stregobor to leave the tower, just like they forced
  the  Baron  of  Tridam. Or, they will force me to... Don't you understand?
  They will start murdering people at the fair.  Your  market,  here  within
  these walls is a true trap!"
       "By all the gods, Geralt! Sit down! Where to, Geralt?"
       Marilka, frightened by the uproar, sobbed huddling in a corner of the
  kitchen
       "I told you," shouted Libushe, pointing her hand  at  the  hexer,  "I
  told you! He brings only evil."
       "Shut up, woman! Geralt! Sit down!"
       "They  must be prevented. Now, before they enter the market. Call the
  guards. As soon as they leave the tavern, get good hold of them, and  have
  them bound or fettered."
       "Geralt,  be  sensible.  It  cannot be done. We mustn't touch them if
  they have done nothing. They will resist, blood will  be  shed.  They  are
  professionals: they'll slaughter my people. If Audeon learns that, my head
  will be forfeit. All right, I'll gather my men, I'll go to the  fair,  and
  there I'll keep my eye on them..."
       "It's  good  for  nothing, Caldemeyn. As soon as the crowd enters the
  square, you won't prevent panic and carnage.  They  must  be  pacified  at
  once, while the market is still empty.
       "It's  defiance  of the law! I may not allow for that. All about this
  half-elven and Tridam may be only gossip. You may be  mistaken,  and  what
  then? Audoen will skin me alive."
       "One must choose lesser evil!"
       "Geralt!  I forbid! As the sheriff, I forbid! Leave the sword! Halt!"
       Marilka was shouting, having put her little hands over her mouth.


       VI

       Shading his eyes with his hand, Civril was looking at the sun  coming
  out  from behind the trees. The market was beginning to come alive. Wagons
  and carts were rambling, the first merchants  were  already  beginning  to
  display  their  goods  on the stalls. A hammer was banging, a cockerel was
  crowing, seagulls were crying loud.
       "A fine day this is going to  be,"  said  Fifteen  deep  in  thought.
  Civril looked at him with disgust but said nothing.
       "What  about  the  horses,  Tavik?"  asked  Nohorn,  pulling  on  his
  gauntlets.
       "Ready and saddled. Civril, there are  still  few  of  them  in  that
  market."
       "More will come."
       "We should eat something."
       "Later."
       "Sure. You'll have time, later. And you'll feel like it."
       "Look," said Fifteen suddenly.
       The  hexer  was approaching from the direction of main street. Now he
  was walking among the stalls and making straight for them.
       "A-ha." said  Civril,  "Renfri  was  right.  Give  me  the  crossbow,
  Nohorn."
       He  bowed  down,  and pulled the string back, putting his foot on the
  weapon's stirrup. Then he carefully placed the bolt  in  its  groove.  The
  hexer was walking. Civril raised the crossbow.
       "Not a step further, hexer!"
       "Geralt halted. He was about forty paces away from the group.
       "Where is Renfri?"
       The half-caste had a scowl written across his pretty face.
       "She's at the tower, making a certain proposal to the witch. She knew
  you would come. She told me to pass two things to you.
       "Speak."
       "The first is the following message: 'I am what I am. Choose.  Either
  me,  or  the  other,  lesser one.' I've been told you sort of know what it
  means."
       The hexer nodded, then raised his hand,  grasping  the  hilt  of  his
  sword  peeking from over his right shoulder. The blade flashed, drawing an
  arc over his head. Then he slowly advanced towards the group.
       Civril chuckled with evil, mischievous laughter.
       "So, still. She anticipated that too, hexer. Then, in a  moment,  you
  will  get  the  other thing she asked to pass to you. Straight between the
  eyes."
       The hexer was walking. The half-elven  raised  the  crossbow  to  his
  cheek. Everything became very quiet.
       The  bowstring  twanged. The hexer waved his sword, a prolonged whine
  of stricken metal could be heard,  and  the  bolt  flew  up  and,  turning
  somersaults, clattered on the roof, and thudded in the rainwater pipe. The
  hexer was walking.
       "Diverted it..." Fifteen groaned. "Diverted it in flight..."
       "Round up," commanded Civril. Swords,  being  unsheathed,  sang;  the
  group  closed  their  ranks:  now  standing  hand in hand, with their many
  blades pointing outward.
       The hexer quickened his pace, his gait now amazingly soft and smooth,
  he changed into a run - not headlong onto the group spiked with swords but
  to its side, encircling it in a closing spiral.
       Tavik couldn't stand it and moved on quickly, cutting  the  distance.
  The twins followed close.
       "Don't disperse!" yelled Civril turning his head and losing the sight
  of the hexer. He swore and jumped aside, seeing that the group went apart,
  and were dancing a mad dance among the stalls.
       Tavik was first. A moment earlier he had been chasing Geralt, and now
  all of a sudden he noticed the hexer,  running  by  him  in  the  opposite
  direction,  to  the  left. He made a few little steps to lessen the impact
  but the hexer had sped by, before he had time to raise  the  sword.  Tavik
  felt a mighty stroke just over his hip. He turned to find himself falling.
  Already down on his knees, Tavik looked at his  hip  in  bewilderment  and
  started to yell.
       Attacking  simultaneously  the black shape rushing at them, the twins
  ran into each other, and collided with their shoulders, losing the  rhythm
  for  a  moment. It was enough. Vyr, slashed across the whole chest, folded
  in half, and with his head bent low took a  few  steps  and  fell  into  a
  vegetable  stall.  Nimir  was  hit  on  the temple, turned on the spot and
  dropped into the sewer: heavily, inertly.
       The market swarmed with fleeing salesmen, the collapsing stalls  gave
  a  groan, raising dust and cries. Tremor in his hands, Tavik tried to lift
  his weight on them once again and fell.
       "From the left, Fifteen!" roared Nohorn, running in a semicircle,  to
  get the hexer from behind.
       Fifteen  turned  fast.  Not  fast  enough.  He was slashed across the
  abdomen; he withstood and prepared a blow. Then  he  was  caught  for  the
  second  time:  on  the  side of his neck, just below the ear. With muscles
  tensed, he took four staggering paces and fell heavily on a cart  full  of
  fish.  The cart wheeled away. Fifteen slid down to the cobbles silver with
  the scales.
       Civril and Nohorn attacked simultaneously from both  sides,  the  elf
  with  a  powerful  cut from above, Nohorn kneeling, low and flat. Both the
  blows were parried, two metallic clangs resounding together. Civril jumped
  to  the  side,  tripped,  managed to balance on his legs, clutching to the
  wooden framework of a stall. Nohorn rushed forward and  covered  him  with
  his  sword  held  vertically. He deflected a blow, so powerful that he was
  thrust back, and forced to kneel. Springing to his feet, he got  ready  to
  parry, yet he was too slow. He got a slash across the face, symmetrical to
  his old scar.
       Civril used his back to push himself back from the stall, jumped over
  the  falling  Nohorn, and attacked with both hands, half-turned. He missed
  and immediately jumped back. He did not feel the blow. His legs  gave  way
  only  when, after a subconscious parry, he was trying to pass from a feint
  to another attack. His sword fell off his hand, slashed on the inner side,
  just  above  the  elbow.  He fell down to his knees, tried to stand up but
  failed. Dropping his head on his knees, he froze  in  a  red  pool,  among
  scattered cabbage, pretzels and fish.
       Renfri entered the market.
       She was coming slowly, with catlike steps, meandering among the carts
  and stalls. The crowd, previously buzzing like a swarm of hornets  in  the
  streets  and  by  the  walls of the houses, now quietened down. Geralt was
  standing motionless, sword in his lowered hand. The  girl  approached  him
  and  stopped  ten paces away. He noticed that she had chain-mail under her
  short doublet. It was short, hardly covering the hips.
       "You have made a choice," she declared. "You sure  it  is  the  right
  one?"
       "There will be not another Tridam here," said Geralt with effort.
       "There  wouldn't  be  one.  Stregobor  jeered  at me. He said I could
  slaughter all of Blaviken and add a few nearby villages, and yet, he shall
  not  leave the tower. And he shall let nobody - you included - in. Why are
  you staring like that? Yes, I have cheated you. I have cheated  throughout
  my  life,  if  there  was  a need, why should I have made an exception for
  you?"
       "Go away from here, Renfri."
       She laughed.
       "No, Geralt," she unsheathed her sword quickly and smoothly.
       "Renfri."
       "No, Geralt. You have made your choice. Now, it is my turn."
       With one sharp move she tore her skirt off her hips,  whirled  it  in
  the air, wrapping the cloth around her left forearm. Geralt backed, raised
  his hand, shaping his fingers together into a Sign. Renfri  laughed  again
  in a short sniggering laughter.
       "To  no avail, white-haired. Can't hurt me this way. Only the sword."
       "Renfri," he repeated, "go away. If we but let the blades cross, I...
  will no longer... be able ..."
       "I know," she said. "But I cannot... I cannot do otherwise, either. I
  just cannot. We are what we are. You and me."
       She advanced in light swaying paces. In her right, outstretched  hand
  there  was  her  sword glistening, in the left one, she had the skirt: its
  end trailing in the dust. Geralt took two steps back.
       She jumped forward, waved her left hand: the  skirt  swished  in  the
  air.  Following it close, partially out of sight, the sword flickered in a
  short, sparing cut. Geralt retreated, the cloth not even touching him, and
  Renfri's  blade  sliding  down  his  inclined  parry.  Geralt mechanically
  parried it with the middle of the blade, and engaged both the swords in  a
  short  tierce,  trying to wrench her weapon. It was a mistake. She parried
  his blow and immediately - her knees bent, and  her  hips  swaying  -  she
  attacked,  aiming  at  the face. Geralt hardly managed to parry that blow,
  and jumped aside from the cloth of the  skirt  falling  down  on  him.  He
  whirled  in a pirouette, avoiding the blade flashing in rapid slashes, and
  jumped aside again. She bore straight into him, thrusting her  skirt  into
  his eyes and, half-turned, she made a flat cut from a reduced distance. He
  avoided being hit, turning close to her. He knew that  trick.  She  turned
  together with him so that he felt her breath. She ran her blade across his
  chest. He felt the pain jerking his body, yet it didn't break his  rhythm.
  He  turned once again, this time the other way, deflected the blade driven
  towards his temple, and attacked after a fast feint. Renfri jumped to  the
  side, and prepared for a cut at head. Geralt, kneeling in a lunge, swiftly
  slashed her from  below,  with  the  foible  of  his  sword,  through  the
  unprotected thigh and the groin.
       She did not cry. Falling to her knee, she let her sword go, and clung
  with both her hands to the slashed thigh. Blood spurted in a bright stream
  from  between  her fingers onto her ornamented belt, onto the elken shoes,
  on the filthy cobbles. The mob, pressed into the little streets swayed and
  cried out.
       Geralt sheathed the sword.
       "Don't go!" she moaned, curling into a ball.
       He did not answer.
       "I... am... cold..."
       He  did not answer. Renfri moaned again, curling up even more. Little
  quick torrents of blood were filling the cracks between stones.
       "Geralt... embrace me..."
       He did not answer.
       She turned her head and went still with a cheek touching the cobbles.
  An  extremely  thin-bladed  stiletto,  so  far  concealed  under her body,
  slipped from her stiffening fingers.
       After a while, long as eternity itself, the  hexer  raised  his  head
  hearing  the  tattoo of Stregobor's stave on the cobbles. The sorcerer was
  hastily approaching, making his way among the corpses.
       "What a carnage," he  gasped,  "I  saw  all  of  it,  Geralt,  I  saw
  everything in the crystal..."
       He  came  closer  and  bent down. In his flowing robe, leaning on the
  stave, he looked old, very old.
       "One would not believe" he turned his head. "The Shrike, quite dead."
       Geralt did not answer.
       "Well,  Geralt,"  the  sorcerer  stood  up straight, "Go, get a cart.
  We'll take her to the tower. Post-mortem is waiting."
       He looked at the hexer and, having received no answer, bent down over
  the body.
       Someone the hexer didn't know, reached for the hilt of his sword, and
  unsheathed it very quickly, indeed.
       "Just touch her, you witch," said  someone  the  hexer  didn't  know,
  "Just touch her, and your head rolls down to the cobbles."
       "What?  Geralt?  Have you gone mad? You're wounded, in a shock! Post-
  mortem is the only way to prove..."
       "Do not touch her!"
       Seeing the rising blade, Stregobor jumped aside and waved his  stave.
       "Right!"  He shouted, "as you wish! But you will never know! You will
  never be sure! Never, you hear me, hexer?"
       "Away!"
       "As you wish," the sorcerer turned and  hit  his  stave  against  the
  cobbles.  "I  am  going back to Kovir. I'm not staying another day in this
  whistlestop. Come with me and stay not here! These  people  know  nothing:
  they  only  saw  you  kill. And you kill in a nasty way, Geralt. What, you
  coming?"
       Geralt did not answer, he didn't even look at him. He  put  back  his
  sword.  Stregobor shrugged his arms, and left making fast strides, tapping
  his stave rhythmically.
       A stone sailed from the crowd and thudded on the cobbles. Another one
  followed,  flying  low  over  Geralt's  arm. The hexer, standing straight,
  raised both the hands and made  a  quick  gesture  with  them.  The  crowd
  murmured, and more stones were hurled but the Sign pushed them aside: they
  were passing by their target, protected with an invisible convex shield.
       "Enough!!!" yelled Caldemeyn, "End it, dammit all!"
       The crowd made a sound like a wave of the tide but the stones did not
  stop flying. The hexer did not move.
       The sheriff approached him.
       "Is  that,"  he  said,  pointing with a sweeping gesture at the still
  bodies strewn all over the little square,  "All  over  now?  Is  that  the
  lesser  evil  you  have  chosen?  Have  you  settled  everything  you deem
  necessary?"
       "Yes." Answered Geralt, with an effort, after a pause.
       "Is your wound serious?"
       "No."
       "Then, away with thee."
       "Yes," said the hexer. He kept standing for one more moment, avoiding
  the sheriff's gaze. Then he turned slowly. Very slowly.
       "Geralt."
       The hexer looked round.
       "Never return," said Caldemeyn, "Never."


                                                           Andrzej Sapkowski

                                           Translation by Piotr Krasnowolski

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© '99 by John MacKanacKy (aka Jacek Suliga)
mkk@sapkowski.fantasy.art.pl