He did this on purpose, Razai fumed to herself after sheâd returned to the room sheâd rented. He wanted the warden to bond me! She was once again back in her Aden persona, since the cityfolk didnât know the demons were dead. Plus, that was how the innkeeper knew her.
What was she going to do? Sheâd spied on her targetâs conversations enough times to know that he and his friends were looking for a way to end the warden bond, but if she went with them, sheâd be playing her fatherâs game. What did Vatarxis want? Surely he didnât think a warden would aid him in his schemes, did he? She scratched at the itch on her forehead until she realized what she was doing.
There was a knock at her door and she opened it to find her quarry. After all the time sheâd spent tracking him in the shadows, it felt wrong to come face to face, despite the brief conversation theyâd had back at the warehouse.
âWhat do you want?â she asked.
He peered at her curiously. âYou look like Aden again.â
Razai grabbed his arm and pulled him inside the room, then shut the door before releasing her disguise. âThose people out there are scared, and Iâve been chased by enough angry mobs in my lifetime. Iâm not the only demonborn keeping out of sight.â
âHow are you doing that? Are you a wizard?â
âNo.â She didnât elaborate. âHow did you find me?â
âThe binding spell tells me where you are. Or what direction youâre in, at least.â
She stared at him. âPlease tell me thatâs a joke.â
âNo. Iâm sorry. It works in reverse too, but itâll probably take you a few weeks to get a feel for it.â He looked uncertain. âYou rushed off earlier. I wanted to make sure you understood what happened.â
âI know what a warden is, all right? I told you that. I just donât want to have anything to do with one.â
âBut how did you know about it before I told you?â
âWhat I know really isnât any of your business.â She had to keep him on the defensive so he wouldnât realize sheâd been following him. âBesides, it doesnât matterâweâll never see each other again.â
He sighed and nodded. âIf thatâs what you want. I just wanted to apologize again, and make sure youâre all right.â
âIâm fine, so you can go now.â
âWeâre looking for a way to end the binding spells. If I can do it on my own, I will. If you need to be there for it, Iâll find you.â
She nodded curtly, not wanting to give away that she already knew about their plans.
He waited, but when she didnât say anything else, he finally left. She closed the door behind him, then took a deep breath as she heard his footsteps move down the hall, toward the stairs.
What game was Vatarxis playing at? She doubted the warden was in on it, though she couldnât dismiss the idea just yet. Whatever was going on, she didnât intend to be part of it. The warden was going north, and he didnât seem inclined to chase after her. Her decision seemed simple enough. Sheâd go south at first light, as quickly as she could.
#
Two days later, Corec faced Yelena across a table, uncomfortably reminded of the way heâd felt when he was a boy and had failed to do the reading his tutors had assigned him. Yelenaâs ship had arrived the night before, and Venni had told her the whole story.
âYouâve got to get this under control,â the woman said with a resigned sigh.
âI know,â Corec said. âI was so surprised that I was able to recognize her as a mage, I didnât realize what was going on. Why didnât you tell me wardens could identify mages?â
She scowled at him. âDonât try to pin this on me.â
âI didnât mean it like that. I just wasnât paying enough attention, and I should have been. I thought Iâd stopped the spell, but then it started again.â
âHow did you not know we can recognize mages? I didnât mention it because thereâs no way you could have bonded fourâfiveâpeople without knowing they were mages first.â
âI guess I must have been doing it without realizing. It felt familiar, once I figured out what it was.â
Yelena shook her head. âYouâre doing everything backwards. Iâm starting to think the First is rightâsomeoneâs messing with the normal order of things.â
âYouâve talked to the First?â
âNot recently, but between you and Seven being chosen so closely together and you not knowing what the hell youâre doing, something odd is going on. I wonder if someoneâs figured out how to take control of the abandoned spell that chooses the wardens, so itâs no longer picking people randomly.â
âBut if itâs not random, then why pick me?â
âThatâs a good question.â Then she frowned at him. âAnd whatâs with only bonding women? Young, attractive womenâ¦at least the ones Iâve met.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI mean that if youâre doing this without realizing it, you probably need to take a good look at yourself and figure out why. Youâve almost certainly crossed paths with just as many male mages, so why pick the ones you did?â
âIâ¦donât know. I never thought about that.â The idea was disturbing. Corec had just assumed heâd cast the binding spell on any mage heâd encountered except for the ones heâd already known were mages, like the wizards heâd consulted. But if heâd had enough control to only target women, he didnât like to think about what that suggested.
Yelena gave him a moment, then said, âNow, this demonbornâ¦what did you say her name was?â
âRazai.â
âRazai, then. How did she react?â
âShe laughed so hard she started crying,â Venni said, coming into the room and taking a seat.
âLaughed?â Yelena asked.
âShe wasnât just laughing, though,â Corec said. âShe realized what happened before I told her. She knew I was a warden and that Iâd cast a binding spell on her.â
âShe did? How?â
âShe refused to tell me anything helpful.â
Venni nodded. âI got the impression that someone sent her to help with the demons, but I donât know how she recognized Corec as a warden. Especially since the rune didnât appear.â
âDidnât appear?â Yelena said. âOh, that itch again? Thatâs really not supposed to happen. The rune is meant to show up as soon as the spell is complete, not a week or two later. Iâd hoped youâd be able to fix that after the practicing we did.â
Corec said, âMaybe if Iâd cast the spell on purpose, it would have worked right.â
âIn any case, this is disturbing. There arenât many people who would know the signs of the warden bond, particularly without the rune. Where is she now?â
âSheâs gone. I went to speak to her again after the fight, but she didnât want to talk. She practically slammed the door in my face. The next morning, she went south, and sheâs still heading that way.â
âYou may have to consider that she targeted you on purpose. She got you to bond her and now sheâs goneâthat could be exactly what she wanted. Thatâs one pick you wasted. Or maybe two or three, depending on what the others decide. Do you see why you need to be careful? You only get eight.â
âI didnât know that, but the First had eight runes. Well, four runes and four scars.â
âHeâs lost a few over the years.â Yelena looked down. âDonât ever ask him about them.â
âI wonât.â
âDo you think Jakar might know Razai?â Venni asked Yelena.
âJakar?â Corec said.
âHeâs one of my bondmates,â Yelena said. âHe keeps some contacts among the demonborn in Tyrsall. Their community is pretty tight-knit, so I canât just go talk to them myself, but heâs in Terevas right now, trying to find out whatâs going on there. The queen is ill and sheâs named her younger daughter as heir. There have been rumors of infighting within the High Council.â
Corec frowned. âDoes it matter? Terevas is two thousand miles away.â
âEverything is connected. The current queen has kept borders and trade open to outsiders, and both the duke and I have business interests there thatâll be affected if thereâs a coup. You need to be aware of whatâs happening around you. Donât you have a concubine to keep track of this sort of thing?â
âYou mean Treya? Sheâs not my concubine.â
âSheâs still your bondmate, isnât she? You have to learn to take advantage of everyoneâs abilitiesâthatâs part of being a warden.â
âHe needs a little time to get used to the idea,â Venni said. âYou remember what it was like back at the beginning.â
âHmm. I suppose.â Yelena pulled out a coin pouch. âAnyway, here you go. The baron gave me your pay this morning.â
âPay?â Corec asked, taking the pouch and peeking inside. âThis is all gold!â
âFifty gold pieces.â
âI didnât even know we were getting paid. This is a lot of money.â
âItâs not that muchâAnders is one of the richest men in the kingdom, and itâs his responsibility to protect High Cove.â
Venni grinned. âI told you you werenât a caravan guard anymore. You need to remember youâre a mage, and mages donât come cheap.â
Corec nodded. âThere were eight of us there, so I guess that comes to six gold and ten silver each? Iâll hold on to Razaiâs share in case I see her again.â He pulled six of the coins from the pouch and passed them to Venni, then dug in his own belt pouch for the silver.
âI hardly need the money,â Venni said.
âYou did most of the work. You, Boktar, and Ellerie. The rest of us wouldnât have had a chance without you three.â
âSpeaking of which,â Yelena said, glaring at her wife, âyou couldnât have waited one more day for me to get here?â
âAnd let more people die?â Venni asked. It sounded like an argument theyâd had before.
Yelena shook her head in annoyance. âWhat if there had been more demons?â
âI was with a warden and four of his bondmates.â
âAll of them barely trained!â
âNobody can live forever,â Venni said.
Yelenaâs eyes flashed with anger.
Corec stood up before she could reply. âWhy donât I leave the two of you alone,â he said, and quickly left the room.
In the hallway, he found Boktar and showed him the coin purse. âWe got paid for taking care of the demons. Itâll be enough to keep us going for quite a while.â
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âThatâll be helpful,â the dwarf said. âElle and I havenât had any money coming in since we left Matagor. Oh, and I asked around and got a recommendation for another weapon smith.â
âGreat. Iâll go check it out now.â
#
Corec browsed through the shop. âAre these the only ones you have?â he asked the clerk, who was hovering by his side. There were only two greatswords, and one looked ceremonialâtoo large and heavy to wield in a fight.
âIf you need something special, you can ask the smith,â the clerk replied.
âI wonât be in town long enough for that.â Corec pointed to the usable blade. âWhat do you call that?â Near the end of the ricassoâthe unsharpened part of the blade closest to the hiltâthere was what looked like a second, smaller crossguard.
âThose are parrying hooks. Do you grip the ricasso when youâre fighting close up?â
âOf course.â
âTheyâll help you parry, and theyâll protect your fingers on the ricasso. The style started in the northern plains, but itâs been spreading for a few years now.â
âDo you have a scabbard for it?â
âFor a sword this large? No. Who would carry it around like that?â
âI keep it attached to a harness on my back, and detach it when I need to draw it.â
The clerk shook his head. âSorry, I canât help you with that.â
âHow much for just the sword, then?â
âThirty-five silver.â
Corec managed to keep from coughing in surprise. He could probably bargain that down to thirty, but heâd only paid twenty for his last sword. The weapon looked impressive, but he didnât have enough knowledge about smithing to know if it was truly worth that much. There wasnât much choice though, since this was the first smith heâd found who had a greatsword for sale. It wasnât a common weapon.
Every smith heâd spoken to had been willing to make one for him, but for a blade of the size he used, it would take at least a week, even without any decoration, and the group was planning to leave High Cove the next morning.
âIâll give you twenty-five.â
âTwenty-five?â the clerk said in an offended tone. âJust look here at the metalworkâ¦â
#
A few days after theyâd left High Cove, Boktar brought the procession to a halt in the middle of the afternoon. Shavala rode Socks up to the front of the group so she could listen in on his conversation with Corec and Ellerie.
âI saw a stream right up ahead,â Boktar said, âand the map doesnât mention any settlements in the next twenty miles. I think we should go ahead and stop early for the day.â
âThat sounds good to me,â Corec said.
Shavala nodded. It was still light out, so she could do some foraging. The shorter the days grew, the less often she had a chance to do so.
Ellerie sighed. âI suppose we need to get used to camping in the cold anyway. Thereâll be fewer towns and villages once we get closer to the mountains.â
After the group had moved to a clearing near the stream, Shavala dismounted and removed her saddle and tack, then ran her hands up and down Socksâs legs and checked his shoes for pebbles and caked-up mud.
When she was finished, she spoke to the horse. âGo wait for Corec. Heâll take you to water and brush you. Be good or heâll put your halter on. Iâll be back after dark.â Socks gave her a look, but then trotted off in Corecâs direction. While the horse couldnât understand other people the way he could with Shavala, he did know enough voice commands that Corec would let him stay loose as long as he behaved himself.
Shavala leaned her bags against a tree, but didnât start setting up her tent. She could do that later, under the mage lights Corec and Ellerie would cast. If she wanted to get any foraging done, it was best to get to it while there was still light out. Bobo was busy setting up a fire pit, so she cast her eyes around for Katrin, finding the other woman laying out out the tent she shared with Corec.
Shavala helped Katrin stretch the canvas to its full length, then said, âDid you still want to go out foraging with me? I think Boboâs going to be too busy to come.â
Katrin looked down at the disassembled tent. âI suppose I can finish this later.â
Before they left, Shavala picked up her bow, and slung her quiver over her shoulder once more. She liked to keep them with her when she was exploring, in case she ran into trouble or saw anything worth hunting.
On their way out, they passed by Ellerie, who stood peering to the west through a break between the trees. âI thought weâd be able to see the mountains from here,â the nilvasta woman said.
âNo,â Boktar said. âWeâre two hundred miles away. There should be a road heading west once we reach Lanport.â
âShould we have taken the Mountain Road instead?â
âI figured it was better to approach from the east. If the city was here, itâs more likely to have been between the mountains and the sea than out on the northern plains. We can head south along the mountains, and if we find it, itâll save us a trip up the other side. Otherwise, weâll go back up north along the plains side, and hopefully find a route through the Heights so we can avoid backtracking afterward.â
Shavala waved to the two of them, and then she and Katrin continued out of the camp.
âWhat are we looking for?â Katrin asked once theyâd reached the tree line. âCan you really find much in the winter?â
âYes, many things. Iâm not looking for anything specific, but if there are crab apples, we should try them out.â
âCrab apples?â
âSome types become less sour after a few freezing nights, and even the sour ones are better if we cook them. It would give us some variety from the dried fruit we bought in High Cove. Stay away from the bitter ones, though.â
âOhââ Katrin started, but sheâd turned her head to reply, and walked straight into a branch full of pine needles. She grimaced with distaste and held it back with two fingers to keep it out of her way.
âYouâve never wanted to come out here with me before,â Shavala mentioned, hiding a smile. Her friend preferred cities to wilderness.
âI wanted to talk to you without everyone else around. Youâve been really quiet lately. More than usual, I mean.â
Shavala shrugged. âSometimes thereâs too much going on in the group,â she said. âToo many people talking at once. Iâd rather not add to it unless I have something to say.â
âItâs not that many people. Itâs less than the place where we found you.â
âThe border outpost? That was different.â Shavala wasnât sure how to explain it. In a group of dorvasta, everyone knew who would speak nextâ¦and theyâd have a good idea of what that person would say. It was different with these othersâeven with Ellerie, though Shavala wasnât sure if that was because the other woman was nilvasta or because sheâd lived among the humans for so long. Shavala enjoyed the differences when she was just speaking to Corec and Katrin, but the larger the group grew, the harder it was for her to figure out when to interject something.
âYouâre sure youâre all right, though?â
Shavala hugged her friendâs shoulders. âIâm fine. And look,â she said, pointing. âA rose bush.â
Katrinâs brow furrowed. âWhat about it?â
The rose petals had long since died and fallen to the ground, but small, bulb-like fruits still adorned the bush.
âBobo wanted me to look for rose hips. He thinks he can make a tea thatâll help with an upset stomach.â
âOh. How many does he need?â
âProbably not many, but we should get extra so we have them.â Shavala handed over one of the thin cloth bags she used for her gathering. âFill this about half full. I see some chicory, so Iâm going to dig up the roots.â
âFor that drink you and Boktar like? I donât know how you can stand it.â
Shavala shrugged. âIt reminds me of home.â The chicory brew had been a favorite of hers since sheâd first gone to the border camp to study under Meritia. The rangers drank it all the time, and sheâd picked up the habit herself.
Katrin was quiet for a moment as she worked, but then spoke up again. âIs that whatâs been bothering you? If you want to go home, it would be all right. You donât have to stay just because of this whole warden thing. Corec would understand.â
âIâm not ready to go back yetâI want to keep traveling. I miss home, but Meritia says thatâs normal. Maybe Iâll send some letters to my family, letting them know what Iâve been doing.â
âI was thinking of doing that too, but Barz and Felix will just get mad when I tell them Iâm not settling down in Tyrsall after all, so Iâll probably wait a bit.â
âAnd Iâm not worried about the binding spell,â Shavala said. âVenni mentioned that she and the others donât spend all their time with Yelena. They go off on their own when they want to.â
âThey do? That demonborn woman did, but I thought she was different. If itâs normal, we should tell Treya and Ellerie. Theyâll be relieved.â
Shavala cocked her head to the side. âI hadnât considered that. I should have mentioned it earlier.â To Shavalaâs mind, what was done was done, and there was no sense worrying about it, but she should have remembered that the others were less accepting of the warden bond. She needed to pay more attention to what was going on around her. âWe talked about something else, tooâabout how old she is.â
Katrin grew still.
When the redhead didnât reply, Shavala continued. âI believe her.â
âItâs not that I didnât believe them,â Katrin said. âI just donât know what to think about it. What do you say to something like that?â
âItâs not that weird. Even that elven wardenâShaylielâis only a thousand years old, according to Venni. Itâs not that much older than other elves.â
Katrin laughed. âI think you and I have a different perspective on that sort of thing. But if she is telling the truthâ¦the reason you decided not to tell Corec you were interested in him was because humans donât live as long as elves.â
âAnd because you didnât like the idea,â Shavala pointed out. Katrin had been shocked to find out that elves sometimes shared their lovers with their friends. Apparently humans didnât usually follow the same custom.
âUmm, well, if you still want to, it might be all right.â Katrin looked down, blushing in embarrassment.
âI donât know,â Shavala said. âIâll think about it.â She was still attracted to Corec, but would it make things awkward if the warden bond linked them together for the next thousand years? And why had Katrin changed her mind? âPerhaps we can discuss it later. Someoneâs coming.â
âWho?â
Shavala pointed toward a thicker batch of trees to the south. âNot who. What. Donât make any sudden moves.â
âWhatâs going on?â Katrin asked.
âThereâs a wolf out there.â
âAgain?â
âCome closer!â Shavala called out to the animal.
âNot closer!â Katrin hissed. âScare it off!â
âWeâll be all right.â
As the wolf approached, Shavala examined it with her elder senses. It was a male, nearly full grown, and seemed familiar somehow. When it came into view and saw her, it wagged its tail.
âYou?â she said, startled. âHow did you get here?â
The wolf didnât answer, of course, but Katrin said, âWhat are you talking about?â
âItâs the same one we saw before, but weâre too far away. Wolves can go far when theyâre looking for a new territory, but not this far.â She spoke to the wolf again. âHave you learned how to hunt yet?â
He stretched his front legs out before him and wagged his tail again.
âWell,â she said, âI suppose I could go with you for a little while.â She handed her bag of chicory root to Katrin. âCould you take this back to the camp?â
âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm going to hunt with him. Iâll be back in a few hours, and if we find enough, Iâll try to bring back something for tomorrow.â
âShavala! Are you crazy?â
âIâve hunted with him before. Heâs not as scrawny as he was, so he must have learned something, but a single wolf canât bring down larger prey by himself. They like to hunt as a pack, and he hasnât started a pack yet. Save me some supper.â
#
Leena stalked out of the shallow marsh, glaring at Sarlo, who was trying to hide his laughter.
âYou said that would be safe!â she exclaimed. Sheâd followed him in teleporting across a meadow to a spot sheâd been able to see from where she started. Now, her feet and shoes were soaked up to the ankles with icy water.
âIt was, wasnât it?â he replied. âI admit, maybe we should have walked over here first to check out the ground more closely, but you ended up where you wanted to. Come on, weâd better get a fire started so your feet donât freeze.â
She just grunted and followed him to look for firewood. Hopefully if she dried her new shoes out soon enough, sheâd be able to save them.
Once the fire was going, they took a break for their midday meal, though they stuck to cold trail rations rather than cooking.
âIâm never going to learn this,â she complained. Being able to teleport at all had come as a surprise. This was their fifth day of attempting the small hops, and it was the first time sheâd been successful. Sarlo was convinced that sheâd built up a block in her mind due to fear after her previous attempts, so heâd made her keep at it until it worked.
âNonsense,â he said. âYouâre learning the same way I did. If you stick to these short jumps so you can see where youâre going, it eliminates the danger from the training. Uhâ¦mostly.â
âBut whatâs the point? If I can only do it once or twice a day, Iâm saving, what, ten or twenty minutes of walking?â
âOnce you get more comfortable, then you can start trying longer jumps. And itâs easier to teleport to a place you know well. I canât go very far, but if you can go from Sanvar to Larso in a single jump, then you can return the same way.â
She shivered in fear. âMaybe these little hops are better after all.â
âWith how much you hate Traveling, how did you end up in Larso at all? It doesnât seem like youâd have just tried to teleport on a whim.â
Leena stared into the fire, trying to ignore the images that flooded her mind. âI was walking home from the bakery and a group of men chased me into an alley. They had knives, and they were wearing sand veils so I couldnât see their faces. I thought they were thieves, so I gave them my coin pouch, but then they tried to stab me.â She rubbed her shoulder in remembrance. Sheâd jerked away, so the cut hadnât been deep, but when the same fellow had raised his knife again, sheâd teleported in desperation. Sheâd been aiming for home, but had ended up about as far away from it as possible without crossing the sea.
âSand veils?â Sarlo asked. âI thought you lived in Sanvara City.â
âA town just outside there, but yes, itâs nowhere near the desert. I donât know why they had the veils.â
âExcept to make sure anyone who saw them couldnât identify them.â Sarlo shook his head. âWhich makes it even more important for you to learn this. What if you run into them again?â
âMatihar is a safe place,â Leena insisted, âat least since the war ended. And they werenât dwarves or lizardfolk, so it wasnât that. It was just a random attack. Besides, itâs not like Larso was any better.â
Sarlo nodded. âLarso doesnât like mages. Youâre sure the fellows who came for you said they were taking you to somebody whoâd protect you from the church?â
âOnly if I served someone. They spoke in trade tongue, not Western, so I understood them fine.â
âBut they were wearing guard uniforms?â
âYes.â
âI suppose one of the nobles in Telfort might be recruiting mages for some reason. Iâll have to tellâ¦some friends of mine. They like to keep an eye on things in the area. Speaking of that, I may know someone who could help you with your magic.â
âAnother Traveler?â
âNo, this is different. Sheâsâ¦another type of mage. She can make it so that itâs easier for you to use your magic, and easier to learn how to use it. She did it for me a long time ago. I wasnât much of a Seeker or a Traveler before that. All she would ask in return is that after you master your skills, you help us out occasionally. As a Traveler, youâd be able to do that even living in Sanvar, at least once we figured out a way to communicate with you. That shouldnât be a problem.â
âI just want to go home and never think about magic again.â
Sarlo looked disappointed, but nodded. âWell, Iâll write down how to find us in case you ever change your mind. For now, though, letâs get back to it. I wonder if we might be going about this all wrong. What if we have you Seek a safe place to Travel?â
âIâm not a Seeker.â
âThereâs a reason why Seeing, Seeking, and Traveling are relatedâthey all rely on finding something far away. Thereâs often some overlap between the three gifts. The Zidari just donât bother training the weak gifts because they usually have someone stronger nearby. Youâre on your own now, though, so if you can do a bit of Seeking, it would be a big help.â
âHow do I do it?â she asked.
Sarlo thought for a moment, then rummaged around in his belt pouch before holding his hands out in front of him, clenched into fists. âWhich hand is the coin in?â
She pointed to the right. âThat one, maybe?â
âAre you guessing or Seeking?â
âGuessing.â
âGood, because youâre wrong.â He opened his left hand to show her a copper coin. âWhereâs your favorite hairbrush?â
âI suppose itâs back home. No, wait, itâs been more than a month, and I didnât pay my rent in advance. The landlord must have thrown my things out by now, unless my parents got there first.â
âThat gives you three places it can be. Which one is the truth?â
âHow do I tell?â
âMore practice,â Sarlo said with a grin.
Leena sighed. It looked like her run-in with magic was going to continue for a while longer.