The Soprano Sorceress: The First Book of the Spellsong Cycle

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The Soprano Sorceress: The First Book of the Spellsong Cycle Page 60

by L. E. Modesitt Jr.


  She snorted. That—in a society where some lords could barely write and others questioned the wisdom of learning how.

  She also wanted to hear what Hanfor and Menares had been able to find out about events in Neserea. Perhaps their information would enable her to make sense out of her own scrying efforts.

  “Lady Anna … the overcaptain and the counselor.” Skent bowed as he delivered the message.

  “Have them come in.” She swallowed the last of the water in the goblet and refilled it before standing. With the weather returning to the hotter days that had ushered in the harvest weeks earlier, a warm breeze blew in through the high rear window.

  “Lady Anna …” murmured Menares, barely loud enough for her to hear.

  “Lady Anna—” Hanfor clipped off the salutation briskly.

  “Sit down.” She reseated herself and waited for them to settle around the conference table before she asked, “What do you know about what’s happening in Neserea?”

  “Nubara seems to be acting as regent for Rabyn,” offered Menares.

  “Nubara—he’s the one who set the assassins on me?”

  “Ah …” coughed Menares. “He was close to Cyndyth, but …”

  “That’s good enough for me,” said Anna. “Why is it unexpected that he is regent?”

  “We had thought that Ysel would be regent, but it appears that the Liedfuhr has insisted on Nubara … .” The heavy white-haired counselor shrugged. “Ysel would have been more … temperate.”

  “Ysel has disappeared,” said Hanfor dryly. “As many do when Konsstin becomes involved.” The weathered overcaptain glanced at Menares. “Better you took service with Lady Anna.”

  “That I can see,” replied Menares. “Still … one never thinks it might happen.”

  “I can’t detect any armsmen headed in our direction from there,” Anna said. “Not with a glass. Would Nubara send them now?”

  “Not now,” said Hanfor. “Even he would have to consult with Konsstin, and I would wager that Konsstin would not wish to start a war with a sorceress with winter coming on.”

  “You are hard on glasses, Lady Anna,” offered Menares. “You might consider a pool.”

  “After I return from my visit to Lord Jecks, I’ll consider it.” Anna regretted not letting Menares in on the full details of her “visit,” but she still didn’t fully trust Menares. He wouldn’t act against her, but he might pass on information, and the more information that was out, the less the chance of her efforts providing a surprise to the Evult. Her expedition couldn’t be a surprise once she neared the Ebran border, but no army could catch her if she could reach Ebra before the Evult knew, especially not where she was headed. Hanfor’s suppositions about Nubara and Konsstin reinforced her determination to try to defeat the Evult immediately. She could not fight on two borders at once.

  “Is this visit wise?” asked Menares. “You have not had a chance to complete …”

  “I know. Things aren’t really nailed down here, but I am the regent, and if I don’t visit young Lord Jimbob pretty quickly, the other lords are going to start saying that I’m really trying to be lord or master of Defalk in my own right. We just got a scroll from Lord Arkad of Cheor pretty much suggesting that.”

  “Some say he is a windy soul,” offered Menares.

  “Perhaps,” agreed Anna, “but what he says, others are thinking.”

  Hanfor nodded.

  “You have met with many lords—even Lord Nelmor recently,” said Menares.

  “There’s a difference between their coming here and my visiting them. I visited Lady Gatrune, and now we have the use of her levies—some of them. We also have a pledge of support from Lord Hryding, and he even sent his daughter to join us.”

  “When did that come?”

  “Last week, with her, I think,” Anna answered. Absently, she remembered that she hadn’t groomed Farinelli, either, and that seemed to be one of the things that she couldn’t delegate. Tirsik could partly clean the stall, but none of his stable boys, and no one else could so much as touch the palomino, only hold the reins once he was bridled and saddled.

  She smiled faintly, trying to pay full attention and to shuttle everything else she needed to do to the back of her mind—again.

  119

  Anna led Farinelli out into the courtyard, her eyes once more checking the saddlebags and the extra water botties, her left hand touching her belt and overlarge belt wallet, and then her knife.

  Hanfor waited in the long shadows and gloom of dawn, his fingers going to his trimmed salt and pepper beard. Behind him, Alvar stood on the stones of the courtyard, reins in hand.

  Anna could sense the mounted lancers of Alvar’s company beyond the portcullis, waiting for her and the players.

  “You didn’t have to see us off,” Anna began as she stopped short of Hanfor. Then she smiled. “You’re the armsmaster of Falcor and arms commander of Defalk. You have to, don’t you?”

  “It would be remarked upon—not favorably—if I failed to be properly respectful to the regent of Defalk.” The older-looking man smiled wryly. “Never let it be said that I am not respectful.” The smile dropped. “I cannot say I am pleased to remain here while others bear the brunt of what must be done.”

  “I know.” Anna looked at her commander. “But if you accompany me, especially with armsmen …”

  “I understand, and I agree. I do not like it. You are wagering on surprise and your own powers. I can only hope to the harmonies that they will be enough.”

  “They have been before, but this will probably be the last chance. If this works, then every movement I make will be followed through all the scrying ponds and glasses of Liedwahr, and the fishbowl will be even worse.”

  “Fishbowl?”

  “Everyone will watch—forever. Also, I can’t fight the Evult and Nubara both next year. We know that. So I have to go.” Anna shook her head. “And how could I leave anyone else in charge? Everyone knows you are honest and that you represent me. The armsmen will obey you, and even Lady Essan wishes that her consort had had a commander such as you.” She shrugged. “That means you’re the one.”

  “Such an honor I had not expected.” The commander accented “honor” slightly, and followed his statement with a gentle laugh.

  “You earned it.”

  “I must be more careful in the future.” Hanfor lowered his voice. “Do take care, lady. Much rests on you, much more than you wish to believe.”

  The sorceress didn’t need that reminder. It was easier to believe she was just a stranger who had a few useful talents. “I also don’t need such honor.”

  Hanfor smiled briefly.

  A light breeze, almost cool, wafted down from over the walls, and she hoped that the Ostfels would not be too cold. Was she totally insane to try her campaign?

  Not totally, but what else could she do? The Evult continued to rebuild the Ebran armies, and enlist more and more souls into the massed darksingers. As time passed, more and more would be pressed on Anna and her regency.

  Anna mounted Farinelli, then bent forward in the saddle and patted his shoulder, getting a whuff in response. “I know. You’re ready for more exercise than I’ve been giving you. We both may be getting more than we want before it’s over.” She looked around the courtyard as the gray sky lightened.

  The players were already mounted, as was Daffyd. As she surveyed the group inside the walls, Alvar and Spirda vaulted into their saddles.

  “The regent’s players are ready, Lady Anna,” said the young violist.

  “Are you ready, lady?” asked Alvar.

  “Let’s go,” she said, and flicked the reins, urging Farinelli toward the raised portcullis, with Daffyd, Alvar, and Spirda closing up behind her.

  Once they were outside the liedburg walls, the rest of the lancers eased their mounts in behind Anna, and the sound of hoofs echoed from the stones of the road.

  A few faces peered from a handful of windows in Falcor as the regent’s party rod
e northward through the still mostly deserted city. The sorceress wanted to shake her head. She had so much to do.

  Could she use sorcery to rebuild the bridge across the Falche? And the ford at Sorprat?

  Those would have to wait—but not long, because the Falche would regain its normal flow by the spring runoff, if she were successful. Nothing was likely to wait, not long enough, anyway. She tightened her lips, then forced herself to relax.

  She patted Farinelli, which somehow helped, and continued to study Falcor, from the red dust in the corners where walls and ground met, overlying dried mud, to the cracking and unrepaired mortar, to the broken and dangling shutters on too many windows.

  120

  Anna readjusted the floppy-brimmed hat. Disreputable as it looked, even after some sorcerous cleaning, it was comfortable and did the job. Besides, any hat worn on the dusty roads of Defalk would end as a worn and dirty mess.

  The cool breeze still blew out of the north, and the sun still shone through clear blue-green skies, and the dust still rose from the hoofs of the horses. The one better thing about being regent was that she didn’t have to eat anyone else’s dust.

  She studied the road ahead—a long arcing curve to the east, following the course of the almost-empty Fal River.

  “I take it the river was once much larger?” Anna asked Daffyd, who rode directly to her right.

  “Much larger. Even two years ago, well after the rains stopped, the water covered the center there, the sandy part.” The player pointed to the sand flats where only a thin trickle of brown water had etched a narrow curving channel in the middle of the river bed. Dried grasses, broken and bleached tree limbs lay scattered across the depression that had once held a far larger and mightier river.

  “It is not much of a river now,” observed Alvar.

  “No,” Anna agreed. From what she could tell, most of the flow of the Falche River at Falcor now came from the Chean River—and she hadn’t exactly helped that.

  Somehow, as her explorations of the upper Fal with her glass had shown—she had no problems scrying so long as she confined her attempts to Erde—the Evult had created the flood that had rampaged down the Fal by melting off most of the snowpack of the Ostfels around the headwaters. Since the headwaters weren’t that far from Vult, the Evult’s action might make Anna’s efforts easier—there certainly wasn’t any snow to block them—not yet.

  “It is sad,” Alvar said.

  Beside him, Spirda nodded.

  The sorceress repressed a smile. From all his initial complaining about providing a protection detail, the blonde subofficer had certainly changed, and Anna doubted that he would ever willingly give up his position. She found it interesting how she had less trouble with the professionals than with the amateurs, but that had been true back on earth. She had developed great relationships with conductors and performers—it was only the academics who were mediocre performers, and often worse teachers, who created the problems.

  She chuckled to herself as she reached for her water bottle. Some things didn’t change.

  The chuckle stopped as she looked along the seemingly endless red clay road that stretched to the northeast horizon, bordered on the left by empty lands filled with browned grass, bleached weeds, and dust, by empty peasant cots, and by low hills crowned with dead and dying trees.

  After two full days, they still had not reached Ohal, the small hamlet supposedly two thirds of the way to Elhi.

  She opened her water bottle and drank, slowly, then stoppered it, and replaced it, before patting the palomino. “A long ways to go, fellow. A long ways.”

  That was true in more ways than one. She straightened in the saddle and blotted her forehead.

  121

  “That’d be Elhi, I wager,” offered Alvar.

  Anna glanced from the red clay of the road and to her left at the Fal River, still but a muddy trickle winding through sun-bleached devastation, and then beyond the river to a collection of structures rising above the river farther to the east.

  Closer to the regent and her lancers and players, on the north side of the river, were what appeared to be wharves, long stone piers that had survived the Evult’s flood—except even the base of the stone pillars stood at least two yards above the thin line of water that ran through the river bed. A closer look revealed to Anna that some of the piers had been planked, and that the planks had been ripped away. The irregular piles of debris—branches, boards, and mud—above and behind the piers represented the remains of warehouses, Anna surmised.

  The river docks were yet another measure of how much Defalk had suffered from the magic of the Ebrans.

  “Dissonant mess,” said Spirda, his voice rising above the dull clop of hoofs.

  Anna brushed away a fly—once, twice. Now that the breezes had subsided, and the temperature was higher, the flies were back, and they were horseflies with a nasty bite.

  “This poor land.” Alvar shook his head and glanced sideways at Anna.

  What had she gotten herself into? Had she had much choice? She nodded. Everyone had choices, but she couldn’t stand back, in the way she felt Brill had, and let things go to hell—or dissonance.

  She glanced eastward along the road as Farinelli continued to carry her at an even pace.

  Upstream, to the right of where the river docks stood, were a set of redstone piers—all that remained of the bridge that had led into Elhi. A rough path or trail, as at Falcor, wound down through the river bed and then up to the town. On a low rise, north of the town itself and barely visible above the roofs of Elhi, rose another set of low walls, presumably those of Elheld, Lord Jecks’ hold.

  As the sorceress reined up at the top of the path through the river, she turned to Alvar. “It’s probably time to bring out the regency banner. We don’t need to have someone thinking we’re another invasion force.”

  “Some may think that with the banner,” said Daffyd.

  “The regency banner!” called the swarthy captain.

  “Ready arms,” called Spirda.

  “Ready it is,” answered Fhurgen.

  A young armsman trotted up beside Spirda, riding on the shoulder of the road, and unfurled the purple oblong that bore the golden crossed spears of Defalk—the basic design of Barjim’s ensign—with a golden crown beneath. The only indication of the regency for Jimbob was an R under the crown. If he wished, Jimbob would only have to remove the R to have a banner derived from his sire’s, yet his own.

  Farinelli picked his way down the trail and back up onto the dried mud that covered the stone pavement that led to the washed out bridge.

  Anna looked at the bridge, wishing she could repair it with sorcery. She shook her head. Not now. Not yet. Using that much power would only further alert the Evult and call attention to where she was. Better that she keep any demonstrations of her abilities minimal until she had dealt with Ebra.

  The line of riders followed the main street past structures that seemed mostly abandoned structures—until Anna could see the central square ahead. By then, the shutters of the structures hung squarely, and even a few had been painted recently.

  The central square of Elhi, like that of Synope, squatted around a dusty, oblong redstone platform with a balustrade that ringed the two short sides and one long side. Another roofless town bandstand, Anna thought, easing Farinelli along the street on the north side of the square.

  The handful of people in the square just stopped. A thin, white-haired woman pointed toward the banner.

  “ … the sorceress … the regent …”

  “ … what’s another one? Won’t stop the dark ones … no sense in getting hopes up …”

  Anna understood, but wanted to wince. Instead, she forced herself to study the square as Farinelli carried her onward.

  Chandler proclaimed a dull black sign bearing two crossed candles. Under the sign was a shop with recently washed and white-trimmed windows. To the south of the chandlery was a smaller building, with an open door, but no signs. Acro
ss the square from the chandlery was an inn, with a sign bearing a golden bear, clearly an attempt to curry favor with Lord Jecks. Some things didn’t change, Anna reflected.

  A tall and lanky woman in calf-length gray trousers and a gray work shirt hurried across the square toward the regent. Her feet were bare.

  “Welein … she be mad!”

  “ … little enough to lose …”

  The woman began to run, ignoring the comments from the other townspeople, then stumbled to a halt several yards before Farinelli.

  The sorceress reined up, even as she could sense Spirda’s and Fhurgen’s blades being raised. “Let her talk.” Behind her, the clop of hoofs died away as the lancers halted their mounts.

  The lanky and barefoot brunette offered a rough bow, but her gray eyes immediately met Anna’s. “Lady? You are the new regent?”

  “I am.”

  “You are said to be a sorceress. Can you not bring back the rains and the river? My sons have died, and my consort has fled. You say you are the lady of Defalk. You must do something, or we cannot be your people.” The gray eyes were firm, fixed on Anna, who scarcely felt regal or like a regent.

  “You’re right.” That was easy enough, but what else could she say? Especially without promising more than she could deliver or without tipping off the Evult?

  The woman waited in the dusty stillness of the square, and Anna felt like the whole world was filled with people holding their breath, looking to her.

  Finally, she spoke. “The dark sorcery took years to bring down Defalk. I am working to undo that evil, but I cannot undo those evils all at once.” Anna fumbled in her wallet, then came up with a silver. She eased Farinelli toward the woman who watched, eyes still cold and gray. “I hope this will help until times are better.” She extended the coin. “You may take it or not, as you wish, but you have my word that I have not forgotten what must be done.” The sorceress continued to look at the supplicant.

 

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