The ShadowSinger

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The ShadowSinger Page 54

by L. E. Modesitt Jr.


  Secca glanced toward Vyasal.

  “Only an honor guard,” The Rider replied. "We could not send you off without showing our support for you.” The emphasis on the pronoun was slight, but it was clear.

  Secca felt a chill at Vyasal’s words, but turned as Palian rode toward them.

  The chief player reined up, and declared, “The players stand ready, Lady Secca.” A knowing smile crossed her face. “Your mount . . . she is beautiful.”

  “A Sorceress Protector who must defend her land against the Sea-Priests must have a mount that declares who she is,” Vyasal said.

  Valya reappeared on her mount, carrying an oblong ob­ject, wrapped in a brown blanket of some sort, and rode toward Secca and her father. Alcaren intercepted her and took the replacement mirror, further wrapping it in the leath­as, before he eased his gelding beside the raider mare Secca rode. There he leaned over and fastened the new scrying mirror behind Secca’s saddle.

  “Lancers ready!” called out Wilten.

  “SouthWomen ready!” came from Delcetta.

  Secca nodded and eased Songfire toward the front of what would be a column. Vyasal rode beside her on the left, with Alcaren on the right, and Valya and Secca riding directly behind them. Secca had barely to touch the reins to signal the firegold mare to stop.

  Vyasal eased his mount closer beside Secca, and leaned toward her. “I trust you with my daughter and my heir. I would trust you with my life. All those in Defalk who think beyond their petty appetites would trust you, for you will not fail us, Sorceress-Protector.” He straightened, and pro­claimed loudly, “Go in victory!”

  The riders mounted as an honor guard repeated the cry. “Go in victory.”

  Secca swallowed, thought for a moment, then replied, “With your support and your faith, we will bring victory and peace to Defalk once more.” You hope you can. Even with the doubts inside her, she smiled as she touched the reins, and Songfire carried her toward the road that led southward toward Dubaria and Fussen and the Maitre, and toward all those who had already died . . . and those who would.

  121

  East of Fussen, Defalk

  The Maitre, jerClayne, and Marshal jerLeng sit on stools around the camp table under the silk canopy of the Maitre’s tent. A single oil lamp offers dim but adequate illumination, casting shadows across the faces of all three.

  “The Shadow Sorceress is traveling south. She has passed the grasslands and enters the hills to the south of Heinene. She has added no lancers from either Nordfels or from the raider chief.” JerClayne pauses. “Not in any numbers that we can see.”

  “That would show that even the western lords are less than fond of a woman with power,” points out the Maitre. “Or that they do not trust her not to lose their lancers in battle.”

  “I would that your scrying could show more,” says the marshal.

  “Her wards keep us from seeing her directly, or those close to her,” replies the younger Sea-Priest, "just as ours keep her from seeing the Maitre or us when we are close to him.”

  “Doubtless she heads for Dubaria,” the Maitre observes. “She can have Dubaria.”

  The younger Sea-Priest and the marshal wait

  "We have an invitation of sorts, do we not? From Lord Dostal of Aroch?” A hard smile curls across the lips of the Maitre.

  “You would leave Dubaria?" asks jerLeng.

  “Only for now, only for now. If we ride directly to Ar­och, we are closer to Falcor, and she must come to us to save the liedstadt. So we will go there and let her come to us. Then we will see.”

  “See what?” questions jerLeng.

  “Aroch controls the access to Falcor. It is time to draw Lord Robero into this. Holding Aroch will let us do so. From there we will send emissaries to Falcor. We will threaten to destroy Falcor unless Lord Robero orders the Shadow Sorceress to allow us to return to Neserea unmo­lested.”

  “Why would he do such when Stura is in ruins and we have no fleet?”

  The Maitre smiles crookedly. "Does he know such? Nei­ther sorceress is near him, and your scrying has shown that he paces and frets. There are no message tubes upon his desk. We do have sorcery and close to one hundred com­panies of lancers. He can muster less than a score, if that.”

  “So he thinks that he is likely to lose all unless he treats with us...”

  “We can hope that he sees matters in that light. From what we have seen, it is most likely.”

  “Still . . . will she not come after us?”

  “If she obeys one order, she will obey another. If she obeys neither, then we will level Aroch and move on Falcor. Either way, she will get no support from Lord Robero, and he will get none from her. We will destroy them each in turn.” The Maitre leans forward. “You, jerLeng, will take thirty companies and leave early in the morning to take ad­vantage of the good Lord Dostal’s invitation. I will send a younger sorcerer with you, should it be necessary to destroy a section of the wall or the gates.

  The marshal nods. “And . . . what of Lord Dostal?”

  “Once you have the hold well in hand . . . the usual. Leave the women, restrained suitably, of course. We will need serfs and servants in the years to come.”

  122

  Gray clouds filled most of the afternoon sky, with oc­casional patches of blue. The wind came and went, as did quick pattering rain, never, enough to more than dampen the dust on the road stones before the rain stopped and the sun shone, if briefly, before another series of gusts and more showers scudded over the low and rolling hills that were mostly forest. While some of the scattered cottages had small fields ready to be tilled, most of the open ground was pasture, and here and there were some flocks of sheep.

  Secca had the green felt hat tucked in her belt but pre­ferred not to wear it. She bent forward slightly in the saddle and patted Songfire on the shoulder, still marveling that she was riding a raider beast and enjoying it.

  Abruptly, she straightened as she saw riders coming from the south along the great western road. She squinted to make them out, then relaxed as she saw the green uniforms mixed with several of blue and crimson. Some of the Lancers Wil­ten and Delcetta had sent out as scouts were returning.

  “They must have something to report,” Alcaren sug­gested.

  “I hope it’s good.” Secca shifted her weight in the saddle. As she continued to ride southward along the western road, she watched as Wilten finished talking to the scout.

  Then the overcaptain turned his mount and headed around the vanguard and back toward Secca and Alcaren. Wilten eased his mount around and rode beside Secca. “The scouts have returned with a messenger from Lord Tiersen. His forces are scattered through the lands ahead, but he will meet you at a small hamlet several deks farther to the south.” The overcaptain frowned, wrinkling his forehead. “The hamlet is called Sedak. It has a sawmill, and is in the woods a dek to the east of the road.”

  “Where it is more difficult to say,” Secca noted.

  “I would judge so, lady.”

  “Have they had any trouble with the Sturinnese?’

  “They attacked a scouting party,” Wilten reported. “None of the Sea-Priest lancers survived, but Lord Tiersen lost some of his lancers.”

  “Not too many, I hope.”

  “The messenger did not say.”

  “Send back a messenger to tell Lord Tiersen we will be there shortly.”

  Wilten nodded, if dubiously.

  “The glass showed no Sturinnese near here this morning. They cannot have reached here yet, and we have more than enough lancers and sorceresses to deal with anything else,” Secca pointed out.

  “You will let us send out an advance squad?’

  “Of course. You have my leave. Remember . . .” Secca shook her head. Wilten wouldn’t know what she was think­ing. “Tiersen and his consort saved my life when I was a child. She almost died in doing it. I owe them greatly.”

  Some of the stiffness left the overcaptain’s face.

  “Tiersen is
a good lord, and he will help us in any way he can,” Secca added. “Your squad should be careful, but I would doubt that the dangers lie with him.”

  Wilten bowed. “I will accompany them.”

  “Thank you.” Secca wasn’t about to countermand that decision by Wilten, not when doing so would have implied that all she had just said was false or misleading---and it wasn’t. “Tell Lord Tiersen I look forward to seeing him as soon as we arrive."

  “That I will, Lady Secca.”

  As Wilten rode back toward the vanguard, Alcaren laughed softly. “He still trusts not those he does not know.”

  “Better that than trusting blindly,” Secca replied.

  As they rode the next dek of the road, Secca did notice that she saw no flocks in the meadows and no smoke from chimneys. She glanced back over her shoulder. Had it been that way for a time, and she hadn’t noticed, or was there a change as they neared Dubaria?

  While the road was smooth and level, it did wind around the hills, and when they rode around another gentle curve, they came to a crossroads of sorts. There two lancers had reined up, one a SouthWoman and the other in the green of Loiseau. The lane led eastward into a heavy forest.

  Delcetta, who had taken over command of the vanguard in Wilten’s absence, rode back to Secca. “They say that the hamlet is a dek to the east.”

  “We might as well follow the lane, then,” Secca replied.

  “I would send the vanguard at least a half-dek ahead,” counseled the SouthWoman overcaptain.

  “As you see fit, overcaptain. I will also uncase my lutar.”

  “I trust we will need neither,” Delcetta replied, “yet I would be prepared.”

  Secca waited until the vanguard was almost out of sight on the lane that rose slowly along an ancient ridge, then urged Songfire forward. While the mare’s ear’s lifted slightly for a moment, she seemed relaxed.

  The lane had been cut through ancient oaks, whose trunks were a good fifteen yards back from each shoulder of the day track. The heavy trunks and the towering crowns over­shadowed the entire lane, and in the gloom the air was colder and far damper.

  “It would be hard to find someone hidden here with a glass,” Alcaren pointed out.

  “I’m certain Tiersen—or Lysara thought about that,” Secca replied.

  After less than a dek, the lane curved to the south and began to descend. Abruptly, the ancient trees ended, re­vealing a clumping of buildings set against a hillside, where an older building overlooked a millpond and millrace. Be­low the mill was a long lumber barn, and Secca could smell damp sawdust.

  Wilten’s advance squad was drawn up before another group of riders, headed by a tall and muscular blond figure.

  “Secca!” The call came from the muscular blond man.

  “Tiersen!” Secca replied, grinning in spite of herself as she rode toward the dwellings of the hamlet behind the SouthWomen. The lancers eased aside as Secca neared Tiersen and his lancers.

  Favoring Secca with a broad smile, Tiersen noted, “I see you’ve taken to riding raider beasts.” Even after more than a score of years, the Lord of Dubaria retained the same lankiness he had possessed as a youth.

  “Songfire was a gift from Lord Vyasal.” On the mount behind the Lord of Dubaria, Secca recognized another figure, although the red hair was now streaked with gray. ‘Ly­sara!”

  “You haven’t changed at all,” Lysara offered.

  “Not in some ways,” Secca replied. “I’m still small.” She paused. “I didn’t tell you, not directly.” She gestured to Alcaren. “This is Alcaren. We were consorted by the Ma­triarch in Encora at the turn of spring.”

  “By the Matriarch,” said Tiersen with a laugh. “I am im­pressed.” He smiled openly at Alcaren. ‘Welcome to the lands of Dubaria, such as they are. If Secca chose you, you must have many talents. She is very choosy; she even turned down the Lord of Defalk.”

  Alcaren glanced toward Secca.

  Secca flushed, in spite of herself.

  “She did,” Lysara insisted, with a mischievous grin. “She even once told him he was a worthless bully.”

  “I doubt that I can compare to the lord of a land,” Alcaren said.

  “He doesn’t compare to you, my love,” Secca replied. “Not in any way.”

  Tiersen cleared his throat.

  The others looked to him.

  “I saved the largest dwelling in the hamlet for you and your immediate party,” Tiersen offered.

  “Thank you.” Secca felt confused by all the crosscurrents. “Oh . . . you recall Palian, and Delvor. They head my play-ers. And Richina, and this is Valya, the oldest daughter of Vyasal.”

  “It has been years since we have seen Palian and Delvor,” Lysara said, “but it is good they are here.”

  Palian returned the pleasantry with a nod.

  “We have seen both Richina and Valya, if a few years back, when they were neither so old, nor so beautiful and capable,” Tiersen said.

  “It is a good thing you added the word ‘capable.’ " Lysara laughed.

  “I am slow, but over the years I have learned,” Tiersen replied. ‘Now . . . can we escort you to your dwelling, such as it is, and dismount? We have been riding since before dawn.”

  Both Lysara and Secca laughed. Secca turned in the sad­dle toward Wilten and Delcetta. “Can you work out some arrangements for all the lancers?”

  “They say the lumber barn is mostly empty,” Wilten called, back. "We will manage.”

  Delcetta nodded.

  Secca hoped so, but there was at least some shelter.

  Less than half a glass passed before a group of ten was crowded around a too-small table in the common room of the dwelling that Tiersen had commandeered for Secca. Be­sides Secca and Alcaren, Tiersen and Lysara, and the two younger women; Palian and Delvor had joined them, and last, Wilten and Delcetta. Richina and Valya stood, while the others sat on the battered wooden benches, except for Secca, who perched on a stool.

  "We have been trying to protect the road to Falcor by ambushing their scouts and foraging parties, but we pulled back when they sent thirty companies east,” Tiersen said. “Jolyn sent a messenger---she’s with Kinor now---saying that they had a sorcerer with them and to be careful.

  “Thirty companies? Where are they headed?”

  “To Aroch, it would appear. Dostal was in favor of at least talking to the Sturinnese.” Tiersen frowned. “Klestayr was cruel, but even he wasn’t that stupid. His son . . ."

  “Is a fool. He’s always been one,” Lysara said. “I warned Ruetha, but she wanted to leave Falcor no matter what”

  Secca looked at the mirror on the table. ‘We should see where the Maitre and the other Sturinnese lancers are.” After leaving the table and returning with the lutar, she quickly tuned it, then sang the seeking map spell.

  The dark-bordered mirror displayed a map of western De­falk, showing the Sturinnese in two places, the larger body being on the main road perhaps fifty deks west of Aroch, and the smaller body perhaps twenty deks from Lord Dos­tal's keep.

  The second spell, focused on the easternmost Sturinnese, showed a column of lancers in white riding along the stone road to Falcor.

  “More than twenty companies,” suggested Alcaren. “Could be thirty.”

  Secca pointed. “That’s a drum cart. Just one, though.”

  “They’re sending a sorcerer, then?” asked Lysara. ‘Poor stupid Dostal.”

  Tiersen glanced to Secca.

  “There’s nothing we can do,” she said. “It’s a good two-day ride from here, maybe three."

  “Two and a half,” Tiersen replied. “If it doesn’t rain. The stone roads go the longer way and are a hard four and an easy five.”

  ‘We’ll still have to go to Aroch,” Secca said. “Let them take it. We’ll bring it down around them.”

  “If it doesn’t rain,” said Delcetta. “If it does, they could be gone.”

  Secca frowned. “Perhaps. They may want us to come to them.”


  “So that they can fight where they want?” asked Lysara.

  “What is the land like there?” Alcaren looked at Tiersen.

  “The keep overlooks the town from the north, and the land slopes down. To attack the keep from the main road, you have to ride uphill.”

 

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