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Winds Of Change v(mw-2

Page 14

by Mercedes Lackey


  There would, doubtless, be more such in the future.

  So why must she prove that she was something other than she was to be accepted?

  No, she decided as she watched the moon rise above the horizon. It was not fair. Need wanted too much of her.

  She descended to her tower-top chamber only to find the fire burning down to coals and the sword silent. She watched it for a moment, then shrugged philosophically and heated just enough water for a sketchy sort of bath. One advantage of her breeding, besides her owl-keen nightsight, was that the pelt of very short, very fine fur that covered her body made bathing less of a chore than it was for full humans. And one had to be very, very close to her to learn that it was fur, and not just smooth skin.

  She wasn't entirely certain that either Skif or Darkwind had figured it out. Well-perhaps Skif had. He hadn't seemed to mind.

  Morning would arrive far too early. Although she intended to fish and not hunt, it would still be better to do so in the early morning when the fish were hungry. So as soon as she had cleaned herself, she banked the fire, and crawled into her bed of furs.

  Only then did Need speak, just as she was falling asleep.

  "Let's explore that business of 'fair, ": the sword said, with deceptive mildness. "Shall we?"

  Nyara was no longer Nyara; no longer a Changechild. In fact, she was no longer in the world or the body she knew.

  Except that she was Nyara; she was herself and someone else, too.

  She relaxed; this was something she had experienced in Need's dreamquests many times, although this was someone she'd never been before.

  Then she realized that this was different; strange, in a way she could not quite describe. This life-was ancient, heavy with years, and faded. She felt the experience as if through a series of muffling veils, each of which was a century.

  Her name was Vena; she was once a novice of the Sisterhood of Spell and Sword. Now she was alone, except for the sword that had once been her teacher, the Mage-Smith Sister Lashan-and ahead of her was an impossible task.

  A mage that Lashan identified as Wizard Heshain had come to the enclave of the Sisterhood with an army of men and lesser mages, capturing the Sisterhood's mage-novices and slaughtering everyone else.

  Vena had escaped mostly by luck, and by hiding in the forest surrounding the enclave until they all left. She had thought she was completely alone until Sister Lashan had come riding up, returning from her yearly trip to the trade-markets where she sold her bespelled blades to weapons' brokers to profit the Sisterhood.

  When she saw her teacher, she'd had no thought but to escape with her to somewhere safe. But Lashan had other ideas.

  She had questioned Vena very carefully, probing past the girl's hysteria to extract every possible detail from her. Then she had sat in silence for a long, long time.

  Her decision had not been the one that Vena had expected; to make their way to some other temple of the Twins, and seek shelter there, since it was plainly impossible for anyone to rescue the captured novices from such a powerful mage-lord. Sister Lashan had told her stunned apprentice that they-the two of them-were going to rescue their captive Sisters. She admitted that she did not know what he planned to do with the novices exactly-mostly because there were so many things he could do with a collection of variously mage-talented, untrained, mostly virginal young women. But all of the fates she outlined to her apprentice were horrible. Eventually, even Vena had to agree. They could not leave their Sisters in Heshain's hands.

  Rescue was possible. Especially if rescue could come before the caravan reached Heshain's stronghold. But there was no time to gather another small army to rescue them, assuming that anyone could be found willing to commit themselves and their troops against a mage like Heshain.

  That had left only Vena and Sister Lashan, who had decided, unbeknownst to her bewildered apprentice, that her old, worn-out human body was just not going to be up to the task. So instead, she had chosen a new one; a body of tempered steel. A sword ' to be precise; a bespelled blade, the kind she had been teaching Vena to make.

  Vena was still not certain how Sister Lashan, who had ordered her to forget that name and call her "Need" now, had ensorceled herself into the blade. She wasn't certain that she wanted to know. It had certainly involved the death of the mage herself, for she had found the Sister spitted on her own sword. She had thought that despair had overcome her mentor, and had been overwhelmed with grief-when the sword spoke into her mind.

  Now she was on the trail of Heshain and his minions, armed with a blade she scarcely knew how to use, ill-provisioned, and without the faintest idea of what she was doing. And winter was coming on. In fact, since the trail led northward, she would be walking straight into the very teeth of winter.

  But if she did not try to do something, no one would. She had no choice.

  No choice at all.

  All this, she knew in an instant, as if she had always known it. And then, she was no longer aware of Nyara-only of Vena. Only of a moment that was dim and distant, and yet, Now.

  Vena crouched above the road, belly-down in the snow, and tried to think of nothing. there was no sign that Heshain had any thought-seekers among his men-but no sign that he didn't, either. Despite her wool and fur-lined clothing, she was aching with cold. It had been a very long time since she'd last dared to light a fire, and she couldn't remember when she'd last been warm.

  She was hungry, too. the handful of nuts and dried berries she'd eaten had only sharpened her appetite. And down below her was everything she craved. Shelter, a roaring fire, hotfoodtrouble was, it was all in the hands of the enemy.

  And the enemy wasn't likely to share.

  She Felt Sister Lashan-or rather, Need-studying the situation through her eyes. She wasn't certain how Need felt about it, but it looked pretty hopeless from here. the group that had captured the novices seemed to have divided up. This was the hindmost bunch, and the girls they guarded seemed to be the ones in the worst shape. Most were in deep shock; some were comatose, and carried on wagons. the rest hardly seemed aware of their surroundings.

  None of them were going to be of any help at all-at least, not until Vena could physically get Need into their hands, for contact-Healing was one of Need's abilities. But that could only happen after they were rescued, and not before, So just how was one half-trained Mage-Smith apprentice going to successfuly take on twenty or more well-trained fighters?

  "Cleverly, of course," Need's voice grated in her mind. "There are twenty or more tired, bored, careless males down there. What do you think would distract them the most?"

  "Women?" she whispered tentatively, thinking of conjuring an illusion of scantily-clad girls, and getting into the camp under the cover of the excitement.

  But then what? the illusion wouldn't hold past the first attempt to touch one of the girls, unless Need could somehow make it more than a mere illusionher teacher made a mental sound of contempt. "And a troupe of dancing girls rides up out of nowhere. I don't think so, dear. These are also seasoned fighters; they're suspicious of anything and everything. Try to think like one of them. Look at their camp; what are they doing?" As if she hadn't been doing just that, ever since they cleared a space for the first tent, and freezing her rear off, too. "they're eating," she offered tentatively.

  "Closer. What are they eating?" Vena's mouth watered as she stared down at the common fire. "Looks like winter-rations. Beans and bread, I think." Oh, she would gladly have killed for some of those hot spiced beans and a piece of bread I don't see-"

  "Meat, Vena. They don't have any. They're on winter-rations, and they haven't been allowed time to hunt, so they don't have any meat.

  And these are fighters; they're used to having it. They don't seem to have any wine, either, but I can't think of a way to get that to them without making them suspicious of their good fortune. Back down the ridge, slowly. I'm going to try calling in an elk. I used to be good at this."

  In the end, it was a deer Need mana
ged to attract, and not an elk, but in all other ways it was precisely what she wanted. Old, with broken antlers, already looking thin this early in the winter, the aged animal would not have outlasted the snows. Vena followed her directions carefully, as they poisoned the poor beast by means of counter-Healing, hamstrung one leg, as if it had just escaped from a wolf, and drove it over the ridge and down into the enemy camp. the men there fell on the weakened beast, seeing only their good luck, and never thinking that there might be something wrong with it other than exhaustion and injury. The toxin Need had infused into the deer's blood and flesh was only slightly weakened by cooking. A clever poison, there was little or no warning to the victims of their fate; most ate, fell asleep, and never woke. By daybreak, all twenty men were dead or dying~and Vena came down into the camp to dispatch the dying, and found herself in charge of eleven of her fellow novices.

  Not one of whom could be trusted even to look after the others, much less find her own way back to safety.

  Confidently, she turned to Need for advice.

  "Damned if I know what to do with them," the blade replied. "I can Heal their injuries, but the rest is up to you. Demonsbane, girl, I only made blades before I made myself into one! You're the one with the hands and feet, and they know you, they probably never even met me!

  I'm fresh out of clever ideas. Time for you to come up with one or two." So it was up to Vena to deal with the girls; to try to rouse some of them from their apathy, and to figure out what to do with the rest. And to drag the bodies of the poisoned fighters out of the camp, to get her eleven charges fed and sheltered, to make sure the horses were tended to.

  It was nothing less than hard labor, although she gave herself a selfish moment to build the fire back up, and warm herself by that fire until her bones ",no longer ached. then she took a little more time to stuff herself on the bread and oat porridge (not beans, after all) that was cooking over the fire-avoiding the charred venison and the pot of venison stew.

  She freed the novices from their cages in the four prison wagons, but most of them didn't recognize her, and the ones that did reacted to her as if they'd seen a ghost-terrified and huddling speechless in the corners. She tried not to look too closely at them after the first encounter; the girl wasn't one she had known, but her eyes were so wild, and yet so terrified, that she hardly seemed human anymore.

  She led the girl, coaxingly, away from there, across the snow, and into the only wagon without bars and chains; the one that held the provisions. When she offered the girl a blanket, taken as an afterthought from one of the bedrolls beside the fire, the poor child snatched it from her, and went to hide in the darkest corner of the wagon.

  She repeated the process until she got them all herded into the wagon, where they huddled together like terrified rabbits, their eyes glinting round and panicstricken from the darkness of the back.

  During the long process of getting her former fellow students into the provision wagon, she'd tossed out everything else that had been in there. Now, in the last of the daylight, she sat on a sack of beans and went through everything she had thrown on the ground, and all the personal belongings that were still in the camp. She felt very strange, rifling through other peoples' possessions, at least at first. But soon sheer exhaustion caught up with her and she no longer saw them as anything other than objects to be kept or discarded in the snow. Blankets went straight into the wagon behind her; hopefully, the girls still had enough wit left to take them. the best blankets she kept for herself, as well enough food for the girls for a few days more, and in a separate pack, provisions for herself.

  Finally, the unpleasant job she had been avoiding could be put off no longer. She tethered all the horses next to the wagon, then harnessed up one, the gentlest, the one she had marked for her own. Trying not to look at the bodies of her former enemies, she threw a hitch of rope around their stiffening feet, and towed them one by one to a Point far beyond the camp, leaving them scattered around a tiny cup of a valley like dolls left by a careless child. then she returned to the shelter of the wagon, and the non-company of her charges. All of that work had taken another precious day. She got the girls fed and bundled up in blankets as best she could, spending a sleepless night listening to the screams of scavengers when they found the bodies, and making sure none of the eleven wandered off somewhere on her own. It was, possibly, worse even than the nights she had spent waiting for the raiders to return.

  In the end, it was the horses that gave her the idea of how to move them, and what to do afterward. Vena was a country girl; where she came from, a horse was a decent dowry for any girl. A pair of horses apiece ought to be enough to pay for their care until someone could come get them, later.

  She roused six of the girls to enough self-awareness and enerjy that they could cling to the saddle-bow of a horse-even if half the time they stared in apathy, and the other half, wept without ceasing. the other five she put in one wagon, with the rest of the horses following behind, tethered in a long string. then she coaxed Need into using her magic to find the nearest farm.

  It proved to be a sheep-farmer's holding rather than a true farm; hidden away in a tiny pocket-valley, she would never have found it if not for Need.

  To the landowner she told the truth-but cautioned him to tell any other inquirers a tale she and Need concocted, about a plague that caused death and feeble-mindedness, killing all the men of a village where she had relatives, and leaving only the healthiest of the girls alive. She offered him the entire herd of horses (save only the one she had chosen for herself) to tend to the novices. Her only other condition was that as soon as possible he was to send a message to the nearest temple of the Twins, telling what had happened and asking for their aid for the girls.

  As she had expected, the offer was more than he could possibly refuse, and when Need read his thoughts to be certain he would keep the bargain, she found no dishonesty. Winter was an idle time for farmers and herders; he had a houseful of daughters and servants to help tend the girls. And sons to find wives for... it would be no bad thing to have a mage-talented girl for a bride for one of his boys. Such things tended to breed true even if shock made the girl lose her own talent, and a man could do much worse than have a wife who could work bits of magic to help protect herself and her home, and to enrich the family, if she was able to keep practicing. Hedge-wizardry and kitchen-witchery was easy to learn; it was having the power to make it work that was granted to only a few.

  She agreed on their behalf that if any of them chose to stay with him and his boys, there would be no demands for reparations from the Sisterhood. then she saddled and mounted her horse, and turned back to the hunt. they were now weeks, not days, behind the enemy, but he was burdened with wagons and hysterical girls, and Vena was alone, and now a-horse. As she turned her mare's head back along the trail, Need finally spoke.

  "Demonsbane, girl! Why didn't you put that fatuous sheep-brain in his place? Brides for his sons-what did he think you were, some kind of marriage-broker? And where did he ever get the idea any of them would want to live out their lives making herb-charms and tending brats and lambs?" the sword grumbled on, for a while, and Vena let her. The novice had plenty of other things to think about; most notably, finding the now-cold trail of the rest of the captives. It wasn't easy, not with two weeks' worth of wind and weather eating at the signs.

  But she had the right gear for the job, at last. Sheepskin boots and coat, woolen leggings, sweater and cotton undertunic. And all the provisions and equipment she needed.

  Or at least, all that she needed until the next encounter.

  But she told herself she wasn't going to think about that until it happened.

  Finally she found the track, half-melted prints of hooves and wagon-wheels in the snow, and Need finally finished venting her spleen.

  Vena waited for a moment, both to be sure she had the trail and to be certain Need was talked out. "Look," she pointed out, "After everything those girls have been through, one or more
of them are bound to change their minds about a life dedicated to High Magery and the Sisterhood. that farmer was trustworthy and kindhearted; not a bad thing in a father-in-law. And the boys were a little rough around the edges, but no worse than the lads in my home village. You and I can never give back what those girls-our Sistershave lost, but we can at least give them options." Need stayed silent for a moment. "You could be right," she finally said, grudgingly. "I don't like it, but you could be right." Vena decided not to tell her that she was having second thoughts, herself she doubted she'd survive long enough to consider being a farmer's wife.

  Right now, despite this early success, she wasn't going to give herself odds on that.

  Nyara woke with the sun in her eyes, and for a moment, her arms and legs still ached with that long-ago cold; her hands expected to encounter those heavy blankets instead of furs, and she was exhausted with a phantom weariness that vanished as soon as she realized who she was, and where.

  Phantom weariness was replaced by real weariness. She lay where she was for a moment, despite her resolution of the night before to get up early to fish. Dream-quests did not, as a rule, leave her tired. Nor did they leave her feeling a weight of years..."that's because I never took you back so far before," Need said, and it seemed as if the sword was just as tired as her student. "I've granted you what I seldom grant my bearers; now you know the name I had forgotten, MY name as a human." But that wasn't what mattered to Nyara; suddenly she sat bolt upright and stared at the sword leaning against the wall with a feeling of anger and betrayal. "You didn't help her!" she accused. "You didn't help her at all!"

 

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