The western edge of the Terril Forest ended abruptly, the lands beyond having once been cleared for farming. Those fields were overgrown now, with weeds, brush, and small trees that had sprung up after the humans abandoned the area over fifty years earlier, but there was still a stark divide between the former crop lands and the tall tershaya lining the border.
Shavala peered up at the sky through the spyglass sheâd taken from a dead mercenary at Tir Yadar. The tiny dot above her was certainly no bird, but it was difficult to track a moving target with the glass while simultaneously adjusting the lenses.
There was a faint brush of a footstep behind her, and she turned to find Dalanis, leader of one of the ranger patrols based at the western border camp.
âIs that it?â she asked him, pointing.
He glanced up. âYes, it flies this way a few times each week. Meritia asked me to find you. The group that visited the human village has returned, so the elders are calling everyone together.â
Shavala nodded and followed him back to the large temporary camp that had been assembled under cover of the forest. The conclave had been gathering for two weeks, scouting the western border and discussing the problem in small groups, but this would be the first time they all met together.
Shavala herself had only been there for a day. She and Meritia had stopped in Terrillia along the way and waited to escort the final group of druid elders on the journey.
From Terrillia, theyâd headed west, passing through the western border camp, then continuing on to the border itself. Now, eighty druids had gathered together in one location, including all of the elders who were capable of traveling. Over two hundred rangers had accompanied them, though most had been deployed along the border to watch for the dragon.
Back at the temporary camp, the elders had arranged themselves cross-legged on the ground in a loose circle. Younger druids were farther out and higher up, standing or sitting on rocks or fallen tree trunks so they could see what was happening.
Shavala joined them, climbing a tree and sitting on a low branch next to a young man whose name she didnât know. She gave him a quick smile, but before she could introduce herself, Gylvaren started speaking. He wasnât the most senior of the elders, but as the leader of the western border camp, he was the one whoâd called the conclave.
âWe all know why weâve come together,â he started. âSome of you have had the opportunity to view the burned remains of the nearest human settlements. Others have seen the dragon with your own eyes. A threat has come to the Terril Forest, of a sort we havenât seen in many years. The danger is only potential, not yet realized, but the dragon is now flying nearly a hundred miles into our borders on a regular basis. We must decide whether we will take action.â
âHas it made any move against the forest?â Elder Nariela asked, her graying hair tied in dozens of youthful braids.
âIt sometimes lands in a clearing, and twice itâs been observed to take an unlucky deer. Usually, it just flies over. The tree canopy seems to prevent further incursion.â
âItâs a living creature. Itâs not our place to stop it if it chooses to hunt a few deer. Even humans are allowed to hunt here as long as they stay beyond the outposts.â
âThe dragonâs behavior suggest itâs seeking to expand its territory,â Gylvaren said. âWhat if it decides the western forest belongs to it? Already our rangers must keep a careful watch at all times in case it flies overhead. The next time it hunts, it may not be a deer that it takes.â
âIn Cetos, the people live in balance with dragons,â said Zhailai, one of the more well-traveled druids, speaking out even though she wasnât an elder. âCan we not do that here?â
Old Arvillin, whoâd taught Shavala to call fire, made a curt chopping motion with his hand. âCetos has beasts of great size for the dragons to hunt,â he said. âThe dragons are drawn to the regions where those creatures make their homes. The people who live in that area understand the risks.â
âWeâve not all come together to fight back an intruder for hundreds of years,â said an elder Shavala didnât recognize. âNot since the last time the humans tried to invade the forest. What we did then, I will always regret. I advise caution in our approach. A measured response.â
âBut what if it sets fires?â someone called from the outermost circle, causing a discordant sensation within the tree bond. Up until that point, only the elders and the most senior of druids had spoken. âWe canât allow it to burn the forest.â
âItâs winter,â Meritia replied from where she was sitting with several other senior druids just outside the circle of elders. âThe woods are too wet to burn, and we can summon more rain if we need to.â
âCan we convince it to leave the area?â asked another of the elders. âOr at least return to its original territory?â
âWe canât speak to dragons,â Gylvaren reminded the man.
âNo, but perhaps someone from Cetos knows another way to communicate with it. Luring it away, perhaps?â
âI doubt luring it away will work if itâs expanding its range,â Gylvaren said. âIt already returns regularly to its lair at the humanâs trade keep. Where else could we convince it to go?â
The elder whoâd pushed for caution spoke up again. âThe dragon hasnât attempted to harm the forest or our people. We must allow it to follow its natural law.â
âNatural law applies if itâs not harming thinking beings or unbalancing an ecosystem,â one of the senior druids protested. âWhat about the humans itâs killed in the free lands?â
âItâs neither our place nor our duty to protect the humans.â
The man sitting next to Shavala spoke up. âAnd the elven villages in the free lands?â he called out. âShouldnât we protect them?â
Shavala had learned of the dorvasta settlements outside the forest from a leatherworker in Tyrsall, but judging by the quiet murmuring throughout the younger members of the crowd, it seemed not everyone knew. The elders went stone-faced.
âThey chose to leave the safety of the forest,â Nariela said. âTheyâve made it clear they donât want our protection.â
âMost are to the south or east, to avoid drawing too much attention,â said Tovali, another of the elders, directing her comments to those who hadnât been aware of the villages. âI donât know of any to the west.â
âThere was one once, but they relocated when the dragon first came to the free lands,â Gylvaren said in reluctant agreement.
As the newest full druid, it wasnât Shavalaâs place to speak up, but her friends were in the free lands already. They would be on their way to Four Roads. Did they know about the dragon yet? Were they in danger?
She ignored the tree bondâs urge to keep quiet. âAre human villages any less deserving of protection than our own?â she asked.
The elders kept their faces expressionless after that remark, but they couldnât mask their unease from the tree bond. There was a moment of silence as uncertainty rippled through the crowd.
But then the man whoâd argued against taking action spoke once more. âWithin the forest, natural law is clear,â he said. âOutside the forest, the humans will protect their own kind. Theyâve fought dragons before, and they wouldnât welcome our intrusion into their lands.â
That was true enough, and the unease faded as consensus was reached. The discussion continued, with plans to position druids along the border to watch for fires or any sort of attack, but everyone knew a decision had already been made.
Gylvaren kept quiet. He watched the proceedings with a look of disapproval, but appeared unwilling to fight against the accord achieved within the tree bond.
What would Shavalaâs friends do when they learned of the dragon? Would they continue on to Four Roads?
What should she do?
#
âWe now have two thousand soldiers and fifteen hundred mercenaries deployed to the northern border, Your Majesty,â Field Marshal Tregood said. âThose numbers include our standard garrisons as well as the reinforcements. And, of course, there are nearly two hundred knights at Fort Northtower, though they run their own patrols.â
âIs there any news out of Blue Vale?â Rusol asked.
âOur scouts report that theyâre still recruiting soldiers, but ⦠itâs Blue Vale, Your Majesty. They donât have the numbers to attack south. We can block the pass at Northtower with just the knights and the local garrison, and if they try a different crossing, weâll have time to move our troops around.â
That matched Yassiâs visions.
âWhat do you think theyâre doing?â
âI couldnât say, Sire.â
âIf you had to guess?â
Tregood pursed his lips. âWith Leonis dead, they might feel they need a stronger military to guard against the barbarian clans. They may not be looking south at all.â
âPerhaps youâre right, Lord Tregood, but letâs leave the reinforcements in place until weâre certain.â That sounded like a sufficiently kingly thing to say.
âYes, Sire. Now, along the eastern passes â¦â
The field marshal continued to drone on about troop dispositions, but Rusol had heard it all before. He stared out the window, across the garden, to where stonemasons were working to repair the section of the ramparts that had been destroyed in the lightning blast. Rusol remembered swinging his blade, but he couldnât remember if it had connected before the lighting bolt heâd accidentally called down had struck, hitting both him and Sharra. His divine defensive spells had snapped into place just in time, protecting him from his own elder magic as well as the twenty-foot drop to the gardens below. His mother had been killed instantly.
The royal guards on duty the day of the coronation were all part of the group that regularly watched over the familyâs quarters. Over the years, Marten had influenced them to keep quiet about any magic they saw, and Rusol had reestablished his fatherâs fading compulsion spells in the weeks before the coronation. When the men from the nearest guard towers had rushed down to check on what had happened, it had been easy enough to make them forget Rusol had been on the battlements, convincing them his mother had gone up alone. Coming so soon after his fatherâs death, it seemed prudent to avoid any awkward questions that would come up if anyone knew heâd been present when his mother died.
So far, it was working. Most people seemed to believe Sharra was killed by a sudden and unexpected lightning storm. There was some muttering about bad omens, but no one had suggested the presence of magicâother than Kolvi, of course, whoâd sensed the storm forming. Rusol had told her the truth, and Yassi, but he hadnât decided whether to tell Merice. She deserved to know she wasnât responsible for her husbandâs death, but sheâd still been duped into administering the fatal dose. The truth might just make things worse. And Merice wasnât in her right mind; if Rusol told her what had actually happened, heâd have to put her under a compulsion spell to keep her from talking. He couldnât do that to herâshe was the last living member of his family.
His family. His father was dead, and his brother. His brotherâs mother was half mad with grief. Merice hadnât quite been a second mother to Rusol, but sheâd always had sweets for him when he was growing up. There was little left of the woman he remembered.
And his own mother. He should have felt grief for her death, but instead there was only a yawning emptiness in his gut when he thought about her betrayal.
The wardens hadnât killed Rikard. For five years, Rusol had believed the wardens had murdered his brother as a warningâcoming so soon, as it had, after the Firstâs threats. But it had been Sharra all along.
Did it change anything, though? The First was a rambling lunatic, attacking Rusol in that strange dream, angered about a demonborn joining the ranks of the wardens. Leonis had been insane too, and mad with power. If his plan had worked, the Church of Pallisur would have ruled supreme throughout all the lands. Heâd had to be stopped.
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The wardens were dangerous, wielding too much power without any sort of oversight.
But they hadnât killed Rikard.
A stray word caught Rusolâs attention. âWait,â he told Tregood. âWhat did you say about a dragon?â
âThe dragon in the free lands, Sire, at Matagorâs old trade keep. Itâs attacking farther out than normal. Four Roads sent a formal request for aid, but I turned them down.â
âShouldnât we do something?â Rusol asked. âThe knights are trained to fight dragons.â Though it had been over two hundred years since theyâd last fought one, so the quality of that training was questionable.
âYes, Sire, they are, but Sir Noris has looked over the old records, and he doesnât believe thereâs any chance the creature will reach the kingdom. If it does, itâll hit Fort Hightower first, which has sturdy walls and defensesâan excellent spot from which to face it. Most likely, though, itâll stop somewhere in the hills.â Tregood smirked. âThat should keep the hillfolk too busy to go on raids.â
âAnd Four Roads?â
The field marshal shrugged. âThey chose to live in the free lands. Half of them probably ended up there on the run from the law. I donât see any reason to spend the lives of our men to protect them. Iâd advise that we allow Matagor to handle it. Its their keep.â
Rusol frowned. Wouldnât that give Matagor more influence in the region?
Then again, Marten had always stressed that the kingâs role was to protect Larso and its own citizens, not their neighbors. Currying favor with the free lands was pointlessâit was the weakest region in the north, with no government larger than a town council. What could they offer?
Rusol nodded. âVery well. Let Four Roads fend for itself, but check with Sir Noris that the knights at Fort Hightower are making preparations in case the dragon does reach us. Ask him to send a detachment of a hundred knights from Telfort to join them.â
âYes, Sire.â
âDo you have any other news for me today?â
âNo, Sire.â
âThen I have one last order for you.â Rusol laid his hand on the manâs shoulders and quickly layered in the levels of the newest hunter compulsion.
Rusol had made a mistake before. Heâd taken control of every knight at Fort Northtower. Then, after learning that the newest warden had returned to Aravor, heâd created a new unit of hunters among the mercenaries so theyâd be ready if he needed them.
But heâd gone about it all wrong. Even the strongest demonborn faced limitations on the numbers they could influence, and with the priests, the knights, the hunters, the royal guards, and the familyâs servants, Rusol was rapidly approaching his limit.
Controlling the individuals was a waste of power. The way to control the masses was to control the leaders.
Field Marshal Tregood was in overall command of Larsoâs army, and he even had oversight of the mercenary army, though the mercenary commanders also reported directly to Rusol. While the knights and the lords would step in during times of war to coordinate units of soldiers, particularly as the army swelled to include conscripts and the lordsâ own guardsmen, in peacetime the entire chain of command led to Tregood.
Influencing him and a few other key officers would give Rusol more complete control over the army than he had even as king.
Tregoodâs eyes flashed red, then returned to their natural color. He shook his head and blinked as the spell took hold. âYes, Your Majesty?â
#
Melithar pushed the stack of papers aside and rubbed his temples. It had been months and he hadnât made any further progress on his investigation into the assassination attempts against the royal family.
Retavin diâYedda had maintained until the end that heâd worked alone, but the man was too stupid to have masterminded the whole thing. There was a strange dichotomy between the careful planning surrounding the assassination attempts versus the careless execution of those plans. Retavin had been questioned under the truth spell, but Melithar had seen him nearly resist the questioning once. Had he managed to withstand certain questions? Or had Melithar simply asked the wrong ones?
There was a knock at the door to his suite in the ambassadorial wing of the Glass Palace. Even though he was no longer traveling to foreign nations, he still maintained his masquerade as Ambassador Melithar. It was now one of his longest-lasting identities, if he added up all the different times heâd gone by that name. It was almost starting to feel like his own.
He opened the door to find one of the queenâs personal spies on the other side. The man was young, no more than a hundred fifty years old, and was dressed as a low-ranking representative of the diâValla trading concerns, but Melithar had observed him several times over the years taking on other identities.
âLord Vilar,â the man said. âMy name is Arisu.â The spy had been around the palace long enough to know the name Melithar was using. Substituting an older name could only mean heâd realized that Melithar, too, was an agent.
Melithar let him into the room and closed the door before responding. âNot bad, considering it was before you were born, but Vilar wasnât a lordâhe was merely a secretary. Youâre thinking of Lord Eltaris.â It was best not to let the spy think about the name Vilar for too long, or what it might mean. Many of the High Councilors had guessed, correctly, that Commandant Jorel was Ellerieâs father. Some assumed he was Vilisaâs as well. As a minor noble, Jorel was an acceptable choice. Vilar, a commoner whoâd become one of Revanaâs closest confidantes long before she was crowned queen, was not.
âYou played both roles,â Arisu said. âAt the same time.â
âThat was a very long time ago, but yes. Youâve done your research. Or the queen told you.â
Arisu grimaced. âThe sentinels wonât allow me in to speak to Her Exalted Majesty. She sent me north to look into something, and I need to give her my report. Can you help?â
âReport to me, and Iâll see that she gets the message,â Melithar said. Not that he was permitted to see Revana any longer either, but he was at least allowed into the same room. Her condition had grown worse. Sheâd ordered a row of dressing panels installed to hide her bed, and only her personal maid was allowed behind the panels to see and care for her decaying body.
The spy gave a short bow of acknowledgement. âThe man who used to rule Blue Vale, a priest of Pallisur by the name of Leonis, is dead. A group of his underling priests has taken charge of the city, but they answer to a woman.â
Melithar raised an eyebrow. âPallisur doesnât choose female priests. Leonisâs wife, perhaps?â
âI donât know, though I did see her wearing a sword belt. Theyâve started marshaling an army, but neither she nor the priests would speak to me about it, even after I explained that Terevas would like to open diplomatic relations. Leonis died at Fort Northtower, so Iâd guess that may be related.â
âHow did he die?â Melithar asked. Heâd heard of Leonis beforeâhad even been to Blue Vale onceâbut he hadnât been paying attention to recent events. There was seldom any interesting news out of the northern plains.
The spy held his hands out in a wide shrug. âNobody seems to know for sure, but the rumor in Blue Vale is that he was killed by soldiers from Larso.â
Melithar considered that. âAnd you think theyâll strike back? Blue Vale is stronger than most cities on the plains, but a war against Larso wonât go well for them.â
âWhat if they attacked along the border, trying to draw the Larsonian forces north? They could ambush smaller groups and disrupt their supply lines. After the North Border War, the barbarian clans might help.â
The new kid didnât know everything, it seemed. He was thinking like a dorvasta skirmisher, not a Knight of Pallisur.
âWhatever we might think of Larso, their generals arenât stupid,â Melithar said. âThey follow the teachings of the God of War. Their armies will only cross the border if they have enough force to defeat their enemy. And Blue Vale has spent the last few years chasing off the nearest barbarian clans. Common enemy or not, I doubt theyâll cooperate.â
Arisu frowned. âBlue Vale follows the God of War too. Why would they attack if you think they canât win?â
âWho says theyâre actually planning to attack? Blue Vale doesnât amount to much with its leader dead, and the Carved Basin was never much of a nation to begin with. Without Leonis, itâll probably fracture into independent towns again, like the rest of the northern plains ⦠unless the people are given some reason to remain united against a common threat. They might not be planning a war at all; they might just be posturing to keep the region under their control.â
âWe donât know that for sure.â
âNo, itâll be something for our military minds to puzzle out. Our role is to report what we observe.â
âYouâll tell Her Exalted Majesty, then?â
âOf course,â Melithar said, though he had no intention of bothering the queen with news about a conflict happening more than a thousand miles away. Heâd tell Vilisa, but Revana had enough to worry about already. âWhat about the new king in Larso?â he continued. âRusol? The old king must have died around the same time you were passing through Telfort.â
âI took the country roads to get back faster,â Arisu said. âI didnât hear the news about King Marten until Iâd reached Matagor.â
Melithar nodded. âThen I have another task for you,â he said.
Half an hour later, he was alone once more and had just returned to looking through his notes when the door flew open and Vilisa stormed in. âWhere is it?â she demanded.
âWhere is what?â he asked, quickly standing to show respect. There was no telling what might set her off these days.
âMy spell book!â
âWhat are you talking about?â
âThe book is missing!â Vilisa said. âYou took it!â
âNo, I didnât.â
âYouâre the one who keeps trying to convince me to get rid of it!â
Melithar looked his daughter directly in the eye. âI promise you, Exalted, I had nothing to do with it.â
She stared back at him for a moment, and then the fight left her. âThen who did? Who could have gotten into the palace? Into my chambers? Was it one of our own people? Only the sentinels and my maids are allowed into my rooms.â
âPerhaps Retavinâs assassins werenât only after your life, but the book as well. We need to find out who was truly behind the attempts. They may have sent another team.â
âAnother of your conspiracies? Retavin is dead, and there havenât been any other attacks. He was working alone, except for his hirelings.â
âOr so he claimed.â
Vilisa waved that off. âEnough. Unless you have new evidence to present, Iâm not going to discuss this with you againâand Mother agrees. Youâve wasted enough time on it already. You can help me find out who actually took the book instead.â
Melithar gave a mocking half-bow. âAs you wish, Exalted,â he said. âOr perhaps you could consider this a blessing.â
Vilisa sighed. âNot this again. Mother had that spell book for two centuries and it didnât hurt her any.â
âDo you really believe that? Think back to what you were like before Ellerie left, or even just a year ago, and compare that to now.â
She furrowed her brow. âWhat do you mean?â
âIâm sure if you think about it, youâll understand. Youâve changed.â
She scowled at him. âI donât know why my mother tolerates your behavior, but she wonât be around forever. Consider carefully whether you wish to continue your role in the future.â
âThe book is dangerousâitâs dark magic.â
âThereâs no such thing,â Vilisa said. âMagic is a tool like any other. All that matters is the intention of the person who wields it.â
âThereâs a lot more to the world than you can see here in the palace. Iâve been a wizard for longer than youâve been alive, Exalted, and Iâm telling you that thereâs something wrong with the spells in that book.â
âTheyâre just spells.â
âDo you want to end up like Revana? Dying slowly and painfully from a wasting disease that no priest can heal? How do you think she got sick?â That was just a guess on Melitharâs part, but he suspected he was right.
âYou go too far!â Vilisa snapped, but her voice wavered. For a moment, she looked like the child she still was, and Melithar silently cursed Ellerie for leaving her sister behind to deal with everything by herself. If Ellerie had remained in Terevas as the heir, the book would have gone to her, and Vilisa would still be the studious but carefree girl sheâd been just a few short years ago.
âIâve known your mother for hundreds of years,â Melithar said. âI saw how she changed after she found that book. She didnât believe me at first either, and then later, she didnât care. And now the same thing is happening to you.â
Vilisa was trembling. âI donât believe you,â she said.
âAsk her.â
She stalked out of the room, slamming the door behind her.
Once Melithar was certain she wasnât going to return, he activated the mage lock on the door, then went into the bedroom and knelt down to reach up and under the frame of a wooden wardrobe. From the leather pocket heâd nailed to the undersideâout of view of anyone who might be peeking under the furnitureâhe retrieved Vilisaâs spell book.
Heâd expected to be rid of it before she noticed it was missing, but it was warded against both regular and magical fireâa common protection for spell books. A direct magical attack hadnât worked either, and he hadnât been able to tear the pages in half or cut them out of the book with a knife, and those protections were much less common. His attempt to banish the warding spells had been unsuccessful.
After considering his options, he dropped the book into the washbasin in the corner of the room. The ambassadorial wing was well appointed, and each suite had an indoor hand pump for water. Melithar filled the basin until the water covered the book, then waited several minutes before retrieving it. There was no damage at allâthe ink hadnât run and the pages werenât waterlogged. The spell book was apparently warded against water as well.
He was running out of ideas, and all the warding-spell experts he knew worked for either the queen herself or one of the other noble houses. He couldnât risk asking them. The book was too dangerous to sell or toss away, and he couldnât bury it or leave it hidden indefinitely. If Vilisa ever convinced Eloina to cast the truth spell on him, heâd end up telling her where to find it.
Melithar still had contacts in the city, thoughâcontacts who werenât above breaking the law. He couldnât tell them the whole truth, but he could put out word that he was looking for someone able to break wards. With luck, that would be enough to find what he needed.
For now, heâd have to look for a new hiding place, perhaps somewhere outside the palace, and hope Vilisa didnât catch on until after the book had been destroyed.
#
It was after dark when the group finally arrived in Four Roads. The inns on the east side of town were full, so Corec led his friends to Mama Wennaâs boarding house. Along the way, they passed two new large, hastily built structures with thin wooden walls, the lumber not having had time yet to weather. Judging by the silent, dirt-smudged faces of the people huddling near the entrances, the buildings were being used to shelter refugees from the biting winter winds.
The boarding house was on the outskirts of town. Wenna must have heard the horses and wagonsâshe rushed out of the house to greet them, wiping her hands against her apron.
âCorec!â she said. âYouâre back! Itâs been so long!â
Corec dismounted and gave the stout woman a quick hug. âItâs good to see you, Mama Wenna. How have you been?â
âOh, itâs been so crazy with all the people and the talk about the dragon, and all my rooms are full. I â¦â She paused and glanced behind him. Corec and Ellerie had dismissed most of their mage lights so they wouldnât draw attention, but theyâd kept a few hidden in lanterns to light their way. It was enough to allow Wenna to see the full size of the group. âOh, my,â she said. âI donât have enough space. Even your room has an entire family in it. I put your things in the attic.â
âItâs all right, Wenna. Weâll just camp out in your garden plot if you donât mind. Weâll pay you for it. You donât have any winter vegetables planted, do you?â
Wenna took a moment, looking from the group to the garden behind her house. âI suppose that would be all right. There are just some carrots and cabbages, but theyâre off to the side.â
âWeâll keep the horses out of them.â
âOh, but Corec, I canât cook for so many people! I can barely keep up with the new boarders as it is!â
âWeâll take care of our own cooking,â Corec said. âWe really just need a place to pitch our tents for a few days while we decide what to do next. Weâll probably head north soon, but weâll find a stable for the animals tomorrow so you donât have to worry about them mucking up your yard.â
âThe stables are full, all those poor people coming from down south. Some of them only managed to bring a horse or a few cows, but how are they going to pay the stable fees over the winter?â Wenna shook her head. âWhat am I saying? You surprised me so much Iâm forgetting my manners. Why donât you introduce me to your friends?â