âWhereâre ya headed?â the man with the missing tooth asked. He wore chainmail and carried a mace on his belt. There was a small shield strapped to his back. âAnd why donât you got any shoes?â
âFour Roads,â Treya replied. âIâm visiting some friends. Iâve got shoes in my pack; Iâm just not wearing them.â
âFour Roads?â the other man said as he looked her up and down with a wide smile. He had long blonde hair and a bushy beard, and wore a leather breastplate. There was an arming sword sheathed on his left hip and a parrying dagger on the right. âThatâs a long way for a girl to go by herself. You should stick with us. Weâre headed in that direction ourselves, and we can make sure you get there safely.â
She considered that. They were walking slower than herâsheâd been catching up to them for the past half hour, and had just passed them when theyâd called out to her. On the other hand, he was right. It was a long way to Four Roads, and this was only her third day on her own. Sheâd been taught how to travel and sheâd been taught how to fight, but learning how to do a thing was different than knowing, for certain, that she could do it by herself. Perhaps it would be good to have some company in case something unexpected happened.
They kept staring at her chest, but men had been doing that for years, any time she went out into the city. Sheâd learned enough from the concubine training to know why men looked. As long as they didnât make nuisances of themselves, she could ignore it.
âAll right,â she said. âAt least for a while.â
They started walking again, and she slowed her pace to match theirs. As they walked, they talked, introducing themselves. The man with the missing tooth was named Arnol, and the blond man was Des.
âWeâre on our way to Larso,â Des said. âTheyâre hiring mercenaries, see? Good coin, too. Better than we could get up north.â
âYouâre from the north? Up toward Lanport?â
âNo, beyond the Storm Heights,â he said, referring to a mountain range north and west of Tyrsall.
Treya nodded. The towns and fiefdoms in the northern plains were constantly changing names and leaders, so when talking to southerners, the residents usually didnât provide details. âWhy is Larso hiring mercenaries?â
âI donât know and I donât care. As long as their coinâs good.â
âRumor is,â Arnol said, âweâll actually be working for the prince.â
âPrince Rusol?â Treya asked. Part of her schooling had been learning the leadership of all the kingdoms on the continent. Rusol was King Martenâs second son, born from a concubine of the Orders. Heâd become heir when his older brother had died in a riding accident. âWhy does he need his own men?â
âDonât know his name or why heâs hiring. I just go where they pay me.â
Treya suppressed a shiver. Shana hired herself out to fight, but never just for money. There had to be a good reason. It seemed wrong to fight without caring about the cause.
Des and Arnol told her more about the towns they were from and about the skirmishes theyâd fought back home, both against snow beasts and other fiefdoms. Treya mentioned that sheâd been born near Four Roads before moving to Tyrsall, but didnât say anything else about her life. The men kept staring at her with uncomfortably long glances, so she didnât want to talk about the Three Orders. Some people had funny ideas about concubines, and some thought any woman trained by the Orders was a concubine.
When the sun dropped below the horizon, they stopped to make camp. The men set up their tent while Treya started a fire, then unrolled her thin sleeping pad under the cover of a tree. She dropped her blanket on the pad, then started digging through her pack for something to eat.
âThatâs where youâre sleeping?â Des said. He and Arnol had come up behind her. âYou donât have a tent?â
That should have been obvious to them from the size of her pack.
âNo. Iâll be fine.â
âYou should stay in ours. Itâll be tight, but weâre all friendly here.â He gave her a smile that didnât extend to his eyes.
âI donât think so.â
âI wasnât asking, girl.â His fake smile had faded.
âYou really donât want to do this, Des.â
âCourse I do.â He reached for her arm.
Before she could stop it, her second blessing flooded her body, and her hands began to glow with a pale white light. She thrust forward and hit Desâs leather breastplate with her palm. He staggered back, stunned. Before Arnol could react, she spun and kicked him between the legs. As he collapsed to his knees, she punched him in the face, taking care to avoid his throat and templesâshe worried that hitting him in the wrong spot might kill him. At least the magic hadnât extended to her feet this time, or his crotch might have needed a healer after her kick.
Arnol fell to the ground and Treya turned back to Des, finding that heâd recovered. He glanced wide-eyed at her glowing fists, but came at her anyway, drawing his parrying dagger. She waited for him. Sheâd trained against weapons, but sheâd never been in a real fight before and was suddenly unsure. Her heart pounded in her chest.
As soon as Des was within reach, he tried to stab her. She twisted to her left to let the dagger go past, grasping his wrist with one hand and using her momentum to strike his radial nerve with her other fist as hard as she could. His breastplate didnât cover his arms, and the shock caused him to drop the weapon. She let go of him, hoping heâd stop fighting, but he simply took a moment to recover before charging at her. Treya dashed out of the way and kicked the back of his knee as he went past, but she didnât get a good angle. He turned and came at her again, not bothering to draw his sword, so she went after him with her fists, punching as quickly as possible.
After only a few more strikes, he staggered back again, and this time fell to the ground. Unlike Arnol, he was still conscious, but he was dazed enough that he couldnât move.
With both of her opponents down, Treya let the tension drain from her muscles and took a deep breath to calm down. The pale glow faded from her hands.
Sheâd been shocked the first time her magic had done anything other than heal. Luckily, sheâd been sparring with Kelis at the time rather than Nina, and hadnât done any serious damage. It had taken her months to figure out how to summon the magic only when she wanted toâmostlyâbut in the end, sheâd decided the help it gave her was worth it. Treya was slender, and even after six years of training, she wasnât particularly strong. She could fight well enough without the magic, but it lent her enough extra power that she could match Kelis, who was stronger. A mysticâs abilities didnât require strength, but any advantage helped in a fight.
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Her hands started glowing again as she called on her first blessing. She didnât want to heal either of the men, but she touched each of them on the forehead long enough to sense the extent of their injuries. Des stared at her fearfully when she reached for him, but he wasnât able to move away.
Reassured the men would live, she quickly packed her things. Des managed to sit up while she slung her pack over her back, but he was coughing and wheezing, not yet able to stand.
She walked past him on her way back to the road and looked him in the eye. âI think, perhaps, I donât need any help getting to Four Roads after all.â
#
âIllâ¦usâ¦trant. Or trent?â Corec frowned at the book Deshin had sold him. It provided instructions on casting a few simple spells based on how they sounded, for apprentice wizards who were still learning to read the wizard language. Deshin had explained that in addition to pronouncing the words correctly, heâd have to have the talent for wizardry as well as a certain amount of magical strength for the spells to work. The problem was that the words werenât from any language that Corec knew, and the letters that had been chosen to spell them were often ambiguous, and could make different sounds in different contexts.
âTrant, I believe,â Bobo said, looking up from the other book about binding runes.
The two were sitting around the spot theyâd cleared for that nightâs campfire, though it hadnât been lit yet. Katrin sat farther away, practicing quietly on her flute, while Shavala was off searching for an ingredient Bobo had requested for one of his salves.
âYou know the wizard language?â Corec said.
âOnly a few words. Anyone can learn to read it; there just isnât much point. It uses a different symbol for each and every word, so it takes a long time to learn, and speaking it wonât do anything for most people.â
âDid you find anything?â Corec asked, pointing to the book Bobo held.
âNothing helpful, unless you learn enough from your book to become a wizard, and you want to create more binding runes.â
âI donât want to make moreâI want to get rid of the ones weâve got. Is there a spell in there for that?â
âI donât think so, but the spells themselves are written in the wizard language, and I donât know it well enough to tell if thereâs anything else on those pages.â
âDeshin probably would have mentioned it if there were,â Corec said, âbut we can ask the next wizard we come across. I think Iâve got this. Illustrant ac tenebras; tenebras atque illustrant.â
âThatâs not right,â Shavala said as she came up behind them and handed Bobo a batch of purple wildflowers. âI could hear what you were saying.â
âSheâs right,â Bobo said. âWhen a wizard casts a spell, anyone nearby can only hear indistinct whispers, no matter how loudly heâs speaking.â
Corec sighed. âWell, Deshin said I probably donât have the knack for it, especially if Iâve learned to cast spells some other way. But he said if thatâs the case, the spells I can cast will always be really limited. Maybe just the ones I know now.â
âThey seem useful enough. Especially those lights.â
âThatâs what this spell was supposed to do, summon a mage light.â Corec held his hand palm up and sent one of his lights to float above them. Then he dismissed it.
âIf you can already do it, why learn a different way?â Shavala asked.
âBecause if I can cast the light spell this way, then I can learn to cast other spells. Maybe I just have the pronunciation wrong. Illustrent ac tenebrasâ¦â
#
Late afternoon on their tenth day of travel, they reached Dalewood.
Corec stopped them at the edge of the town. âIâm going to go deliver that message for Senshall. Why donât the rest of you go find an inn? The Green Duck is good, and I can meet you there in a bit. Itâs on the other side of town, just before the road splits.â
âI didnât realize Dalewood was so large,â Katrin said, looking at the buildings spread around them.
âAbout ten thousand people in the town itself, I think.â
âWhatâs that big tower?â she asked, pointing to a tall, stone structure set off from everything else.
âSomething to do with refining iron ore. Thereâs a big mine to the northeast.â
âIt looks like a blast furnace to me,â Bobo said. âItâll turn ore to pig iron, which they can take to a finery forge to make wrought iron or steel.â
âThe finery forge is where Iâm headed,â Corec said. âItâs just on the other side. Iâll see you at the inn.â
The others headed down the main road to the center of town. Corec turned down a street to the left and reached the forge a few minutes later.
Entering the small office, he spoke to the apprentice manning the desk. âIâm looking for someone named Marcus.â
The boy took in his armor and sword with wide eyes. âYes, sir. Iâll go get him.â He took off running, and a minute later, heavier footsteps approached.
âIâm Marcus,â a muscular, older man said. âBenni said youâre looking for me?â
âIâm Corec, a courier from Senshall. I have a package for you.â He handed over the letter, along with a chit for the man to sign to confirm the delivery.
Marcus signed the chit and handed it back. âWait here for a moment, will you? Let me see if this is something that needs a response.â He opened the wax seal and looked over the document. âThey want me to send shipments to Larso rather than Tyrsall or Terril? What kind of sense does that make? Larso has its own iron mines.â
Corec shrugged. âThe fellow who gave it to me said the kingâs hiring mercenaries.â
âHmm. War, then? I suppose itâll be Senshall that loses money if they make a bad gamble, not me. Anyway, I donât need to send a reply, so you can go.â
âDo you have any packages for Four Roads? Iâm headed that way next.â
Marcus shook his head. âI donât. You might check at The Smiling Jester. If anyone needs something like that, theyâll usually leave word there.â
#
âI swear those donkeys are evil,â Ellerie said, as they took seats in the innâs common room.
âTheyâre not evil, Elle,â Boktar replied.
âLeft bit me!â
âHe nibbled on you because you kept touching his ear. He doesnât like that. And maybe heâd like you better if you hadnât named him Left.â
âHow else am I supposed to tell them apart? He always wants to walk on the left.â
âThey were probably trained together. Once donkeys learn something, they like to keep doing it the same way.â
The serving girl brought over a flagon of ale and two mugs, bending over in front of Boktar to show off her cleavage. Ellerie looked her over with a smile.
After sheâd gone, Boktar said, âSheâs cute, for a human. Should I tell her sheâll have better luck with you?â
âDonât tempt me. Iâm trying to make our coin last as long as possible.â
âSpeaking of which, you need to decide where weâre going next.â
Ellerie nodded. Theyâd reached South Corner, a large town east of Matagor that lay on the intersection of several major roads. Sheâd kept putting off the decision of which direction to go, hoping some sort of inspiration would come to her.
âWell, I guess weâve eliminated the west,â she said. âThe amulet doesnât match any mountains in Matagor, Terevas, or the Black Crows.â
âJust how sure are you? Even mountains can change given enough time, and that amulet is pretty old.â
âIt canât be that old. And anyway, it shows seven peaks. Even if they donât match the old shape exactly, we should still be able to judge relative distances. What about south, to Stone Home?â
Boktar frowned. âStone Home is more hills than mountains, and has been for as long as itâs been settled. I donât think anyone could have made the amulet there. Besides, if we go to Stone Home, my mother will try to marry me off again.â
Ellerie was careful not to laugh, since she knew her partner was sensitive about the issue. âWell, then where? North, to the Storm Heights?â
âStorm Heights is a good choice, but itâs a long trip and we canât go north from here.â
âWhy not?â
âIt takes us past the dragonâs keep. Weâd have to skirt way around off the main roads, up through the hills or near Terril.â
âDragon? Thereâs a dragon in the free lands?â
âYes. It took over an old keep at one of the major crossings about fifty years ago, and hunts all around there. The roads have gotten overgrown for about a hundred miles around in all directions, since nobody wants to risk it.â
Ellerie considered the options. âSo, either we head north and skirt around the edge of the forest, or we go east first. Are there mountains in that direction?â
âThereâs another range between Stone Home and the coast, south of Circle Bay. We could look there, then head north to the Storm Heights, then back west across the plains to see whatâs north of Larso. You havenât looked farther north than the Black Crows, right?â
âI went as far as Fort Northtower, but I didnât cross the border. The knights said it wasnât safe.â
âThe plains can be funny that wayâyou never know whoâs in charge. But itâs not all that dangerous as long as you donât go poking your nose where it doesnât belong.â
Ellerie wasnât sure what sheâd do without Boktar. For all that he was younger than her, heâd been on his own for a lot longer and had traveled widely.
âIf itâs just plains, why go there?â
Boktar chuckled. âItâs only called that because nobody knows what else to call it. Itâs not all plains. There are some mountains, but the Storm Heights are the biggest.â
âWhat about south of Stone Home?â
âIâve never been that direction. They didnât teach you geography in that palace of yours?â
Ellerie rolled her eyes. âI know the southern kingdoms. I just donât know which ones have mountain ranges.â
âThere might be some traders here from down south who could tell us. If not, we can find a map in Circle Bay.â
âEast to Circle Bay, then?â
âEast,â Boktar agreed.