The Shadow Sorceress

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The Shadow Sorceress Page 10

by L. E. Modesitt Jr.


  “I won’t press. Still...”

  After another mouthful and a swallow of ale, Secca an­swered. “You know about the boiling of water, and how, if the peasants and trades people do so, then there is less flux. And how cleaning wounds and the tears of childbirth with distilled winterwine and boiled water..."

  “Of course.”

  “Where does one get the iron to make the kettles in Mencha?” asked Secca. “For there must be separate kettles in which to boil the water. How does one make sure that the water that goes into those kettles is clean enough that the boiling works? How does one make sure that the rain­water does not wash animal offings into the rivers and streams—or the wells?”

  The slightest frown crossed Richina’s brow, but the ap­prentice said nothing, for which Secca was most grateful.

  “You do not use sorcery to make kettles. Please don’t tell me that you do,” said Clayre dryly.

  “I use sorcery to take the iron from the Ostfels and cop­per and tin from the Silberfels. You know that. Would you care to try it often?” asked Secca.

  “How often?”

  “Enough,” replied Secca.

  “At least every three weeks,” suggested Richina.

  Clayre nodded “I am just as glad our Lord of Defalk does not know that.”

  “You do not wish to become a source of metals?"

  “Keeping the roads and rivers and bridges, and extend­ing them, is not only tiring enough, but tiresome as well,” Clayre countered. “Besides, there aren’t any metals close to Falcor”

  “And unlike Jolyn, you don’t mind being in the center of things,” Secca pointed out.

  “After spending almost half my life in Abenfel? An ancient ruin in the middle of nowhere?”

  Richina’s eyes had been flicking back and forth between the two older sorceresses.

  “Don’t mind us, Richina,” said Secca. “We always argue about this, Clayre wants me to believe her childhood was more lonely than mine.”

  “Not more lonely. Less valued.”

  "Perhaps. Anna rescued me when I was eight; you were near twice that.” Secca took another mouthful of bread, then a last swallow of the ale—it was easier to get down than bread and helped keep her from wasting away under the demands of the sorcery, demands that were bound to increase.

  We should go.” Clayre said, rising. “Our good Lord Robero’s message did say before the beginning of his af­ternoon audiences.” She glanced at Richina.

  “She should get used to Falcor and Lord Robero,” Secca replied as she stood, noting absently the faint sardonic tone in Clayre’s use of the phrase “our good Lord Robero.”

  “You’re right about that. Anandra still has trouble, and she’s lived here all her life.”

  “There are other reasons for that.”

  "True,” Clayre strode briskly out of the hall, not waiting to see if Secca and Richina followed.

  The three walked northward along the lower main cor­ridor until they came to the main audience hall, once the large dining hall, but which Robero had had rebuilt after Anna had turned Defalk over to him.

  Already, outside the audience chamber doors waited a handful of tradesmen, including a fuller, a boatman, a miller, from the flour and dust ground into a tunic so deeply that neither fullering nor brushing was likely to remove either.

  The five men all bowed. “Sorceresses..."

  Secca returned the bows immediately, followed by Ri­china and Clayre.

  “Lord Robero is expecting you,” said Dythya, emerging from the audience chamber.

  As the three stepped into the chamber, before the doors shut, Secca could hear a few words behind them.

  “... when the shadow sorceresses come from Men­cha . .."

  "...always trouble...”

  "...best you go first, Benan..."

  "...be a while, I’d wager..."

  “My sorceresses—and a new one, too,” boomed out Robero’s voice. The Lord of Defalk wore a purple satin jacket over a pale gold tunic. The purple of his trousers did not quite match that of the jacket. Unlike the day pre­vious, Alyssa was not present, and he was alone on the dais. From the large gilt chair, he glanced at the young sandy-haired apprentice. “You must be Richina. You’re Lady Dinfan’s second, aren’t you?"

  Richina bowed again before replying. “Yes, ser.”

  “Good woman, your mother. Strong lady, too. How do you like sorcery?”

  “I have learned much, ser.”

  “Good. Defalk needs its sorceresses.” Robero turned his eyes on the two older sorceresses, first Clayre, then Secca, momentarily, before speaking again, his eyes not seem­ingly looking at any of the three. “Yesterday, we discussed the happenings in Neserea. I have been considering the matter.” Robero looked sharply at Clayre. “Have you dis­covered anything else since yesterday?"

  "No, Lord."

  “And you, Lady Secca?”

  “Nothing that sheds any new light on matters."

  “I would think not. Whoever plotted this will wait, knowing you all will be using your reflecting pools.” Nod­ding to himself, he continued, “I think that Lady Clayre should pay a visit to offer our condolences and support to Lady Aerlya and her daughter, the heiress of Neserea.”

  “You wish that I travel to Esaria?" asked Clayre.

  “Someone must represent me, and you are the Sorceress of Defalk, as well as the sister of a noted member of the Thirty-three."

  Secca repressed a smile. Robero avoided using Birke’s name whenever possible.

  “What of Anandra?" questioned Clayre.

  “I would suggest that she remain here in Falcor. While road-building is ever more necessary, Jolyn perhaps should return to Falcor, so that a full sorceress remains in residence in the liedburg,” concluded Robero. “Your Anandra can assist Jolyn, can she not?”

  “Anandra is a most capable young sorceress. I will also send Jolyn a message,” said Clayre. “She might have to wait a day or so, since it would be foolish, if she is already working on a part of the road, not to finish that section.”

  “As you see fit.” Robero turned to Secca, not quite meeting the redhead’s eyes. “I think that you, Lady Secca, might be well advised to act as my representative to Lord High Counselor Hadrenn.”

  “If you think that necessary, I would be most pleased to do so,” Secca agreed politely.

  “Good.” Robero smiled. “Lady Clayre ... Richina... if you would excuse us, I need a word with Lady Secca.”

  “Of course.” Clayre bowed.

  Richina bowed almost as quickly, and the two turned.

  Robero waited until the heavy doors closed again. “Have you thought more about Lythner?”

  “He was most charming, and, no, I have not, not that much. With Lady Anna’s death... and all these mat­ters... “Secca shook her head.

  “I would that you give the matter some thought.”

  “In a short time, I will. Anna was more my mother than Anientta was. If you hear from Lythner, you may point that out”

  “With your permission, I will.” Robero smiled, half­ wryly. “There is one other matter to consider.” The balding lord fingered his chin before going on. ‘Now that you hold Mencha, Secca, have you thought about an heir for flossbend?” asked Robero.

  Secca blocked the question she wanted to offer in re­turn—asking if Robero had thought about naming another heir for his holding at Synfal—the hold Anna had taken by sorcery and bestowed upon him. Instead, she frowned. “I cannot say I have given it much thought, not so closely upon Anna’s death. After all, none of us had expected her to die... and not so suddenly.”

  “There is that,” mused the Lord of Defalk. He smiled the false smile Secca had grown up learning to see through. “Perhaps you should.”

  “I will give it that thought...although...I've also been thinking that, unlike Anna, I may not wish to practice sorcery until it spells my end. In that case, Mencha might better go to Clayre or Jolyn. . . or perhaps young Anandra in a half-score of
years or so.

  The smile remained upon Robero’s face as he nodded. I can see that might be for the best, but, in time, you would still need heirs for both holdings. There is no great hurry, for you are young as sorceresses go. Yet I would not wish to decide where your lands would go... against your wishes.”

  “You are most thoughtful, Robero. As always.” Secca smiled pleasantly. “I will consider the matter as I return to Mencha.” She paused. “You have not said what you wish me to convey to Hadrenn.”

  “I leave the words to you. The message must be that times may become difficult, but that he must support De­falk.”

  “And not someone like Mynntar?”

  “Exactly.”

  "I will convey your message.” Secca bowed her head, very slightly.

  “There is one last matter.” Robero cleared his throat.

  Secca waited.

  “Liedgeld. If matters continue as they have, and usurp-ers raise forces in Ebra or Neserea, we may need to raise more armsmen and lancers, and that will require raising the liedgeld.” Rabero smiled apologetically.

  Secca nodded. She understood the troubles that would cause. She also understood the message behind the information. If the sorceresses of Defalk did not support Robero in one way, they would certainly have to support him more directly against those traditional lords still holding lands in Defalk.

  “We will have some appropriate gifts for you to convey to Hadrenn. By tomorrow, or the next day, so that you could leave an the day following.” Robero stood. “I know it is a troubling time for you, for Anna was close to you, but we cannot squander what she gave us by failing to act."

  Secca understood that, she suspected, far better than Robero, as she bowed before departing the audience cham­ber.

  23

  As the two sorceresses stood beside the reflecting pool in the liedburg of Falcor, Clayre’s voice filled the chamber.

  “Show us now, and as you can,

  the acts of Belmar, lord and man..."

  The waters of the pool rippled, then silvered before presenting an image. The dark-haired young lord stood in a chamber, apparently an audience hall that had been emptied, with six players behind him. Secca squinted to make out the room. Then her eyes focused on the pair of players to the left side of the group.

  “That’s a dancing hall... or it was,” Clayre said. “Just like the one that once was at Abenfel.”

  “Two of those players are using small thunder­drums,” Secca said. “I can’t tell how, but that would allow him to mix Clearsong and Darksong.”

  After a moment, Clayre released the image and turned to the younger sorceress. "It’s a good thing I’m taking the players from Falcor.”

  “You keep checking on him. You don’t want him sneaking up on you. You know what trouble Anna had with drums and Darksong. And he comes from a heri­tage where drums and dancing run in the blood. That is not good.”

  “I will be very careful. He is a sorcerer.

  “He’s probably very sneaky because he’s not that strong. If he were strong enough to wrest gold or silver from the earth, we would probably know it from dis­ruptions in the Harmonies.”

  Clayre raised her eyebrows.

  Without answering, Secca thought for several mo­ments. then lifted her own lutar.

  “Show us now, whether near or far,

  who pays and stands behind this Belmar...”

  The water shivered, then silvered over, then presented two separate circular images that barely touched. The first was a thin figure in gray, who stood at the railing of a ship. The second showed a man with a blonde beard seated at a writing table in a lamp-lit and paneled library of some sort

  “He could be any holder anywhere that we don’t know,” offered Clayre.

  “He’s probably Neserean,” Secca suggested. “Only Kinor and Robero have libraries like that in Defalk.”

  “That looks like a Sturinnese vessel.” Clayre pointed at the ship and the figure on the deck. “You don’t even look surprised.”

  “Who else besides Sturinn?" asked Secca. “The Council of Wei likes the stability a strong Defalk pro­vides. They wouldn’t cause trouble in Neserea. Belmar can’t possibly pay for armsmen and all those players. We know the Sturinnese have always wanted a foothold in Liedwahr. Why would they change now?” She cleared her throat and sang the release spell.

  “Let this scene of scrying, silver filled with light,

  vanish like the darkness when the sun bright...”

  “What about the Ladies of the Shadows?’ asked Clayre as the image in the pool died away. “They don’t like sorcery.”

  “No, but there don’t seem to be many in Defalk.”

  “That we know of,” Clayre pointed out.

  “That’s because Brill was the only sorcerer in the whole land for a generation, and because the Corians banned sorcery from the beginning—and they won.”

  Clayre shook her head. “Why did you think about the second spell?”

  “If Belmar happened to be that strong a sorcerer, he wouldn’t need backing from anyone. He isn’t.” Secca shrugged. “I thought I’d seek his backer, just to see if he had one.”

  “Because you can sense disruptions in the Harmonies as far away as Worlan?”

  “Sometimes I can. Can’t you?"

  “You know I can’t. I don’t know why you’re merely the Sorceress of Mencha.”

  Secca laughed gently. “You couldn’t stand the quiet of Loiseau. Anna knew that.” Just as she had known that leaving Secca in the same liedburg as Robero would have created too much friction.

  “You and Robero don’t do well together, either,” Clayre acknowledged. “Redheads seldom do, and Robero’s more stubborn even than Birke and Lysara put together."

  Secca didn’t comment.

  “I heard he introduced you to Lythner.”

  “How did you find that out?"

  "I have my ways.” Clayre grinned.

  “Lythner didn’t seem that interested. He was most polite.”

  “How could he be otherwise? He’s very handsome, and all say he was most kind and loving to Cynelya.”

  “You, too?”

  Clayre shrugged.

  Secca wondered. Did all of Defalk think she was mis­erable? Or somehow needed a man? Almost any man? “What do you plan to do with Belmar?"

  “Whatever I must, I suppose.” Clayre lifted her shoul­ders, then let them drop in a gesture that was not exactly a shrug.

  “He’ll be waiting for you.”

  “He would not try a sneak attack on a mere sorceress, do you think? He is, after all, a Neserean holder and a direct descendant of the Prophets of Music, the most rightful heirs to Neserea,” said Clayre mockingly.

  “How do you know he’s in the line of descent?” questioned Secca, an amused tone in her voice.

  “Besides his claim? I don’t, except that I understood all holders in Neserea claimed to be descendants of the Prophets.” Clayre grinned. “In some ways, I worry about the man in the study more. When I get to Esaria, I’ll call up that image for Aerlya and Annayal and see if they recognize him. Someone has to know who he is.

  “You’d best be careful getting there.”

  “I will be. I’m insisting on two companies of Rob­ero's best lancers. He must be worried. He didn’t even quibble.” Clayre looked at the blank waters of the re­flecting pool, then at Secca. “It must be nice to have your own lancers."

  "It’s still hard to believe they’re mine. Paying them amounts to most of the rent coins. Five companies do not come cheaply.” Secca hating hedging the answer, but Anna always had, and seldom had following Anna’s example hurt Secca.

  “That must be why she kept Loiseau so small,” offered Clayre.

  “It’s one reason.” Secca gave Clayre a wry smile. “Also, it makes it less attractive for those with large entourages to come and visit.”

  “Birke has observed that, but he’s the lord of Aben­fel, and that comes with having the largest liedburg
in Liedwahr. Every time Robero visits, Reylana begs ser­vitors from her father.”

  “Do you know how Gylaron is doing?”

  “He’s getting weaker. Gylan takes his father’s guid­ance, but he really runs Lerona on a daily basis. Reylana has been traveling back and forth since summer. She usually takes one of the children on each trip.”

  “I always liked her,” Secca said.

 

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