âI remember there being more people here,â Sarette said as she and Katrin wandered through the market stalls.
âYouâve been to Lanport before?â the other woman asked.
âOnce, years ago.â Her parents had taken her so she could see the ocean.
âWell, itâs cold and wet today. Itâs not a surprise that the marketâs quiet.â
Sarette hadnât considered that. She hadnât even noticed it was raining, and the temperature would have to drop much lower before sheâd be bothered by it. Cold rain was a fact of life in Snow Crownâthe price they paid for the valley keeping the worst of the snowstorms out.
She nodded to a stormborn man as they passed him in the street, his pale, slightly blue skin and the purple markings along the sides of his head standing out even here, in the one human city that her people regularly visited. He nodded in return but didnât stop to talk, intent on his business.
Like her, he was armed, but with a quarterstaff rather than the more common staff-spear of their people. Stormborn always went armed in Lanport. The city guards were ineffective at dealing with the pirates and bandits that made their home here, far away from the laws of Tyrsall and the other southern kingdoms. Often, the guards were allied with them.
âHow long does it take to reach Tyrsall from here?â Sarette asked.
âIf we donât stay over in High Cove this time, it should be about twenty days, but it depends how muddy the roads are.â
âAre there really a million people there, all in one place?â That would make Tyrsall five times the size of Snow Crown.
âThatâs what they say. Itâs hugeâfrom north to south, itâs over twenty miles long.â Katrin stopped, facing a row of shops lined with a covered wooden walkway. A lone man was there playing a lively tune on the fiddle, using the walkway to stay out of the muddy street. âThis is where she used to play when it was raining. If sheâs not here and sheâs no longer at the inn she was staying at, sheâs probably left the city. I was hoping to convince her to come with us.â
âIs this the same bard that told you about Snow Crown?â
âYes. Anise visited there before us, and knew more about your people. Without her, we would have probably gone straight through Tarvist Pass. Ellerie wanted to get a look at the mountains from both the east and the west.â
Sarette laughed. âThatâs what Tarvist Pass is there forâso outsiders have an easy way through the mountains without getting stranded or stopping to visit Snow Crown. Other than traders, we try to discourage visitors.â
âI guess it worked out despite that. Her Royal Bitchiness seems excited, at least.â
It had been a week since the revelation that Ellerie was the daughter of the queen of Terevas, and of everyone in the group, Katrin had had the hardest time adjusting to the news.
Sarette didnât know either of the women well enough to speak up about it, so she changed the subject. âHow did you and Corec meet?â
Katrin frowned. âDo you really want to know?â Then she sighed. âEveryone else does, so I guess I might as well tell you. Letâs head back, though. I think we can reach our inn by heading directly west from here.â She was quiet at first as they walked, but then said, âCorec and I met when he captured me for a bounty that had been put out on me for theft.â
âOh,â Sarette replied, not sure how to reply.
âItâs a long story. I needed the money to get my brother out of prison. Iâd stopped stealing before that, but I took it up one last time to get him out, and it didnât go well. Or maybe it did go wellâCorec ended up paying Barzâs penalty fee and my own. I donât know how Iâll ever repay him. Maybe I should forgive him for not telling me about Ellerie right away. Anyway, weâd actually run into each other before that, and heâd cast the binding spell without realizing it, so the day after he caught me, the runes showed up. We were near the Terril Forest, so we went to ask the elves about it, and thatâs where we met Shavala.â
âI remember Treya saying something about the runes taking a long time to appear.â
âYes, over a week, and they itched the whole time, so be glad it didnât happen to you. I scratched my head so much, it almost started bleeding. Be glad you can hide it, too. Itâs no fun having people stare at you all the time.â
âWhat do you mean?â Sarette said. âYouâre hiding yours.â Katrin hadnât bothered to conceal her rune when they were in the mountains, but she was doing so now.
âOnly because itâs raining. I had to get better at hiding it because Iâm not supposed to get my hat wetâitâs made out of straw. But itâs still easier to wear the hat than focus on concealing the rune all the time. I donât know how the rest of you were able to figure it out so easily.â
âIt reminds me of the concentration exercises I learned during my stormrunner training.â
âTreya said something like that, too. So youâre saying Iâm bad at concentrating?â
âNo, I didnât meanâ¦â Sarette glanced at the other woman, worried sheâd offended her, but was relieved to find her grinning. âNo, but how does the warden bond work for you? Youâve never mentioned being a mage.â
âBardic abilities are magic of a sort, but I honestly donât know if the runeâs done anything for me. Other than singing for an audience, I never tried to use those abilities much until after I had it, so I donât know what I was able to do before that.â
They were following a quieter street away from the market when two rough-dressed men stepped out in front of them.
âHello, ladies,â one said with a grin. âLooking for company?â
âNo,â Katrin said flatly.
They tried to walk around, but the men blocked them.
Katrin drew in a deep breath, but before she could do anything, Sarette rapped the butt of her staff-spear against the ground, charging it. The clouds in the sky provided extra power, despite the lack of a lightning storm.
Strands of blue and white light flickered over the spear, and the men backed away, their eyes wide. One fell into the mud and scrambled backwards, trying to get to his feet.
You could be reading stolen content. Head to Royal Road for the genuine story.
âStorm witch!â the other said. âIâm sorry! We werenât gonna do nothing!â He turned and ran, and his friend managed to stand and follow after.
âThey must be locals if they know about stormrunners,â Sarette said, staring after them.
âThey were afraid of you.â
âVartus says the people around here still tell stories about the wars. It was a long time ago, but humans used to try to conquer the Heights. I hope I didnât interfere with whatever you were going to do.â
âIt was pretty much the same as what you did,â Katrin said. Then she grinned. âExcept they wouldnât have known why they were running.â
#
âBurton isnât hurting Kerris?â
âOr, at least, he didnât do so on the days I spent watching,â Razai replied. After sheâd gotten the information she needed from Tobin Senshallâs home, sheâd moved on to his brother. âTheir problems arenât much better, though. Everyone in that family hates each other. Burton, Kerris, the wife. Thereâs a lot of yelling at night.â
Renny chewed on her lip. âI suppose that might explain Kerrisâs behavior. Do you think seven days is enough time to know for sure?â
âHow would I know? But if I keep going back, Iâll get caught.â Without a job opening up in Burtonâs home, or any other legitimate reason to be there, sheâd been forced to sneak in, spending long stretches of time invisible while spying on the family.
âI guess Iâll only report Tobin, then,â the concubine said.
âTo who?â
âMother Ola. Sheâs in charge of the Three Orders chapter house here in Tyrsall. She can terminate Elbaâs contract and assess Tobin with a penalty. If she convinces Elba to complain to the constabulary, he might even get arrested, though thatâs not likelyâthe family holds too much power. But if we let people know why the contract was terminated, heâll be publicly humiliated. Thatâs probably the best we can hope for.â
âIf you can do all that, then why didnât Elba complain before now?â
âAnd admit that her relationship is a failure? They warn us about this sort of thing in our classes, but even with the warnings, not everyone comes forward. You should listen to my old roommate sometime. She can talk for hours about the problems with the institution of concubinage.â
âYouâre not going to do anything about Burton?â
âIâll report that too, but if nobodyâs at fault, it gets messy. Especially because Kerris has two children with him. She or Burton can end the contract, but they may not want to. Someone will talk to her, though, to see if she needs any help. Not meâthereâs too much of an age difference. She doesnât think much of me.â
Razai hadnât thought much of Renny at first either, but the girl was more than she seemed.
âThe jobâs over, then?â
âYes, but please donât say anything to anyone. Iâm obligated to watch out for my sisters, but Varsin may not appreciate it if he finds out Iâm the one who reported his brother. I havenât been able to bring myself to ask him about it.â
âI wonât talk,â Razai said, standing up. âThatâs why you hired me, after all.â
âWait! Donât go. I still have work for you.â
âI thought Senshall doesnât hire women to work the caravans.â Vash and Wotar had accepted Rennyâs offer to be caravan guards, but the girl hadnât sent Razai with them.
âWe donât, but something else might open up. The caravans arenât our only business, and youâre good at what you do. In the meantime, how about being one of my bodyguards? It doesnât pay as much as the last job, but itâs something.â
âWhat about Stavo and the others?â
âStavo works for me; I pay him out of my earnings from the diversâ collective. The others work for Varsin. He didnât think one guard was enough when the gangs were active. Now that the gangs are gone, Iâm down to one guard at a time, but Stavo canât work all day every day. I told Varsin Iâd like him to hire you to take the other shifts. It would be handy to have a female guardâStavo canât go everywhere with me. And it would get you on Senshallâs payroll, which would help in finding you a better position.â
Yes, the whispers said in Razaiâs mind. Theyâd been absent for weeks, uninterested in the gangs or spying on the Senshall brothers.
She considered the offer. There wasnât anywhere else she needed to be, other than avoiding Corec. According to the new sense from the warden bond, he was somewhere due north of her now. He was on the move, so sheâd have to check more frequently in case he headed back to Tyrsall, but she wasnât likely to run into him working as Rennyâs bodyguard, and it would provide a steady income.
âSure. Why not?â
#
âNo,â Corec said. âKeep the shield in front of your body when you attack. Turn it so itâs protecting your arm as you extend, but keep it near your chest. Donât swing it out to the side.â
Nedley repositioned his shield as he faced off against Boktar, his brown hair plastered to his forehead with sweat. Theyâd picked up the shield and an arming sword for him from the stash of red-eye weapons theyâd left in Jolâs Brook, but theyâd soon realized the boy didnât know how to use either.
Boktar bashed Nedleyâs shield to the side with his own, then whacked his arm with the stick he held in place of his warhammer. âDo something! Donât just wait for me to hit you.â
âYes, sir!â the boy said, panting from the exertion. He slashed forward and down, and Boktar deflected the blow with his shield but didnât counter. Nedley tried again and again to get around Boktarâs defenses, while his own shield gradually swung back to his side and behind him.
âItâs not a dueling sword!â Corec said. âLead with the shield, not the weapon!â He had to keep himself from laughingâhe understood the use of a shield just fine, but heâd never mastered it himself. Nedley wasnât that much worse with it than he was.
Ellerie cleared her throat from the side of the stable yard.
âI think thatâs enough for today,â Boktar said. âNedley, go get a bath and put on some clean clothes before supper.â
With the boy gone, the two men joined Ellerie.
âWhatâd you find out?â Corec asked.
âI went to the constabulary building, but they said there havenât been any more demon attacks since we dealt with the last group.â Theyâd reached High Cove that morning, and Ellerie had gone to make sure the demons hadnât returned.
âSince you two and Venni dealt with them, you mean,â Corec said. âMaybe this new sword will work better than the last one if we ever run into them again.â
âDid you find any sign of that demonborn woman?â
âI went to the edge of the city, but Razaiâs still farther south. I donât think she returned here after we left.â
Ellerie nodded. âWhy bother looking for her? Sheâs the one who ran away.â
âWell, I wonât go out of my way to find her, but Iâve still got her share of the demon bounty. If sheâs nearby, itâs only fair to give it to her.â
âI suppose. I was almost hoping the demons had come back, so we could get paid again. I donât know how weâre going to afford the trip to Tir Yadar.â
âWeâll figure something out,â Boktar said.
âFor nine people? Ten, if we hire a translator? Are you sure Nedley still wants to come?â
âIâll ask him again, but I promised him a job if he wants one.â
Ellerie raised an eyebrow. âDoing what? We canât put him out in a fightâheâd get killed.â
âHeâsâ¦getting better,â Corec said. âA little. If we find him some armor in Tyrsall, he could probably handle an untrained bandit. He can stay in the back and keep people away from Katrin and Shavala.â
âHeâs doing better with his numbers and letters, too,â Boktar said. âAnd he can help out around the campâthe group is getting big enough that we need the help. I just wish he could cook.â
âIf you insist,â Ellerie said. âBut ten peopleâ¦are there any ships that even have room for that many passengers?â
Corec said, âThe ship we took to Circle Bay had eight passenger bunks, but they were four to a cabin, and the cabins were small. That would be awfully tight quarters if weâre talking about being at sea for a month or two.â His stomach roiled at the thought.
âWhat we need is a ship that doesnât transport cargo, just people,â Boktar said. âItâd be faster, too.â
âI donât think there are any ships like that working privately,â Ellerie said. âThose are mostly diplomatic and naval vessels, and I doubt the King of Tyrsall would lend us a ship and crew.â
âWhat about your mother?â
She glared at him. âTerevas has an ambassadorial ship, but itâs on the other side of the continent. And she wouldnât help even if I asked, which I wonât.â
It had taken some time, but everyone had mostly gotten used to the idea of Ellerieâs true identity. Boktar and Shavala had already known, so their behavior had remained the same. Most of the others had eventually adopted Corecâs method of pretending nothing had changed, except for Bobo, whoâd started cornering Ellerie for long debates about Terevassian politics when she couldnât think of an excuse to avoid him. Katrin was taking the longest to come around, but at least sheâd stopped blaming Corec for the few hours where heâd known about it without telling her.
âWhat about Venniâs wife?â Boktar asked. âYelena was her name, right?â
Corec hesitated. âI donât know. I canât keep going to Yelena with every question I have. If thereâs a good time to ask about it when Iâm talking to her, I guess I could, but this feels like a problem we should be able to handle on our own.â