Corec galloped toward the line of archers, cursing himself for not having a lance. Heâd finally given in and bought a crossbow, but heâd never had need for a lance in real life before, not having used the bulky weapon since training with the knights. Heâd have to make do with his sword. He detached the weapon from the harness on his back and tossed the sheathe aside after drawing the blade.
He cast his combat spells as he rodeâshield spell, armor spell, and strength spell. Then, without thinking about it, he cast the spell to enhance his weapon. Just as he finished, he remembered that Venni had said sheâd stopped using that one once sheâd found Dart, her own enchanted sword. A blue light, matching the runes on his arms, slowly traveled up the blade, replacing the green light that normally shone from it.
The sounds of fighting erupted behind him, but he couldnât spare the time to turn and see what was happening. The archers had to be stoppedâarchers could turn the tide of any battle. Katrin, at least, was wearing the padded overcoat sheâd bought in Snow Crown, which would provide some protection. But she didnât have a helmet, and most of the others didnât wear any armor at all. They were all at risk until the bowmen were dealt with.
Luckily, the archers didnât attempt a third volley, probably not wanting to hit their own men. As Corec drew close, they parted ranks to avoid his charge, tossing their bows to the side and drawing melee weapons.
He wheeled his gray warhorseâwho Katrin had named Felix, after deciding it looked like her uncleâtoward the nearest group, scattering them. In the confusion, he dismounted, not wanting to risk the animal in battle. A full set of armored horse barding was too heavy and expensive to be practical outside of warfare, but without it, any well-placed blow could cripple or kill the beast.
The nearest target was within swordâs reach. Corec swung his glowing blade in a wide arc, decapitating the man. Then a spearman appeared, wearing brigandine armor and a helmet. He hadnât been one of the archers, which meant heâd stayed behind to protect them. That suggested that some thought had been put into the ambush.
Corec ignored the spear as it bounced off his barrier shield. He swung down at an angle toward the manâs neck, aiming for the gap between the armor and helmet. He hit the shoulder instead, his magic sword cutting through the armored plates and padding of the brigandine, and then into the flesh and bone. The spearman dropped his weapon and staggered back in shock.
Sarette arrived then, her staff-spear crackling with energy. She jumped from her saddle, somehow landing on her feet, then swung her weapon straight into a manâs head with a flash of blue light. He collapsed, his face a burned mess. Another of the ambushers snuck close, carrying a flanged mace.
âBehind you!â Corec yelled.
Sarette leapt up, backwards, over the manâs head. She landed behind him and thrust her blade deep into his back. There was another flash of light and he fell to the ground.
Corec was sure the lightning magic was overkill. The wounds were deep and the men would have been out of the fight magic or not. But then her next opponent was one of the guards wearing brigandine. Rather than trying to stab through the armor, Sarette simply touched her staff-spearâs blade against it. The man screeched in pain, his body twitching in place before falling. The crackling energy faded from Saretteâs spear.
She joined Corec and they fought back to back as more of the enemies surrounded them. Without their bows, the archers werenât difficult opponents, seeming more like hunters than trained warriors. The armsmen were trickier, at least for Sarette. With the magic gone from her spear, she had to face them as one soldier to another, and her weapon was better suited for offense than defense.
A competent leader would have ordered the armsmen to protect the archers as they retrieved their bows and withdrew to a safe distance, but no one was issuing any commands.
It didnât take Corec and Sarette long to come up with a system to switch places when one of the armsmen got too close. Between his plate armor and his defensive spells, Corec was in little danger from their weapons, and their armor and shields couldnât stand up to his enchanted and bespelled sword. The hardest part of the fight was making sure Sarette was directly behind him before he swung his sword out to the side.
Suddenly, three small darts of light struck Corec in the stomach, stinging despite his armor. He looked around, confused. Had Ellerie missed her target? Then he saw a man in a black robe whoâd been standing well clear of the battle. The manâs lips moved and he raised a hand, pointing at Corec. A wizard.
âMage!â Corec yelled to Sarette before charging. As he ran, he cast the spell that let him move faster in armor. It wouldnât be enough to get him there before the wizard finished his own spell, but the darts didnât seem to have done any lasting damage the first time. Perhaps once more wouldnât be a problem.
Then a wide beam of light shot from the wizardâs hand. It wasnât the dart spell. The beam hit Corecâs chest with a burning unlike anything heâd ever felt before. He stopped in his tracks.
âCorec!â Sarette shouted.
A lighting bolt struck out of the clear sky, knocking the wizard onto his back.
Corec dropped to his knees, staring down at the hole melted through his breastplate. His vision went black as he collapsed.
A voice called out before he lost consciousness. âTreya! We need help!â
#
Treyaâs horse panicked when the men rushed them. She hopped off the saddle before the beast could run away, then quickly glanced around. Despite the chaos of the sudden battle, none of her friends appeared to be hurt. Shavala was already calling out to the animals, trying to calm them.
With a tingling of her senses, Treya dodged to the left, barely evading a battle axe that swung through the space sheâd just been occupying. She twisted around to see a huge, gap-toothed man grinning evilly at her. He lifted the axe up for another swing. Without thinking about it, Treya called on her second blessing. Her hands blazed with white light, and she thrust her palm against the manâs chest. He flew off his feet, landing twenty feet away in a broken heap. He didnât move.
Stunned, Treya could only stare at what sheâd done. It wasnât supposed to work like that. Shana had insisted that transferring kinetic energy in that way required intense concentration, and doing so in the middle of a fight was difficult. The glow on Treyaâs hands faded back to its normal level. Had her divine magic interfered with her mystic abilities?
Shaking off her surprise, she ran toward a group of ambushers to her right, finding Josip there before her. He threw his hand axe at one of the men, splitting his head open, then waded into the fight with his pickaxe in one hand and a belt knife in the other.
The man nearest Treya wasnât wearing any armor, so she struck at his radial nerve. With his arm numb, he couldnât swing his weapon. She punched him in the throat as hard as she could and he fell to the ground. The next man backed away, staring at her glowing fists in fear. Treya planted her right foot and spun around, kicking his jaw in. He fell to his knees and she kicked him again, this time in the temple. He collapsed.
She moved on to the next man but one of Shavalaâs arrows suddenly sprouted from his chest, and then Ellerieâs beam spell took the head off of another. Josip had already killed the last one in that group. Farther out, Boktar had dismounted, bashing one man down with his shield while hitting another in the knee with his warhammer. A third ambusher approached him from behind but suddenly burst into a pillar of flame, screaming as he died.
Treyaâs friends had things under control here, and Kelis and Shana had always insisted that, tactically, archers should be eliminated first. Treya turned and ran after Corec and Sarette, whoâd reached the line of bowmen and dismounted to fight them. Reaching deep inside herself, she called on a reserve of power and found herself moving faster than sheâd ever run before.
She soon caught up, but most of the enemies were already down. Still running, she barreled into a man who was facing Sarette, knocking him to the ground. She straddled his chest and hit him in the face, her magic-powered strikes knocking his head from side to side.
Then there was a flash of light and a thundering boom.
Sarette shouted, âTreya! We need help!â
Corec was collapsing onto his side. Treya rushed over to him.
âThere was a wizard,â Sarette said. âIt was one of those beam spells Ellerie uses.â She thrust her spear out, keeping the last two men at bay.
Treya rolled Corec over onto his back, not sure she wanted to see the injury. She knew what Ellerieâs beam spell did to a person, and she couldnât control the wave of fear and sorrow that washed over her. Treya had come to look forward to the future she and Corec had discussed, building a life with Katrin and Shavala as the four of them decided what being a warden meant to them. If Corec died, would that future die with him?
And it was her own fault. Priest Telkin had told her about a magical protection spell, but she hadnât managed to cast it yet. Sheâd learned the spells to protect against flame and lightning first, thinking theyâd be more useful, but even with those, she had to touch the target first. She hadnât taught herself the right spell, and she hadnât learned how to cast any of the protection spells in a way that would actually be useful in the middle of a fight.
There was a wide hole burnt through the center of Corecâs breastplate, the edges still glowing red. Beneath it was a mess of still-molten metal and shredded padding. Ellerieâs beam spell was pure magical energy, and the damage it caused wasnât due to heat, but the result was similar to burningâor in the case of metal, melting.
Treyaâs healing senses told her Corec was still alive, but she wanted to see the damage with her own eyes. She scraped away the remains of his armor and clothing, healing her fingers as they burned from the hot metal. His chest was red, with angry scorch marks where the metal had burned into the skin, but there was far less damage than sheâd expected. Had this other wizardâs spell been weaker than Ellerieâs?
She healed the skin, then dove deeper with her senses. There was more damage underneathânot any one specific injury, but general trauma to his body. That was what had caused him to fall unconscious. She lost track of time as she set about healing him bit by bit.
#
Ellerie pulled her rapier from the blond manâs stomach, then stabbed him in the heart for good measure. Dismissing him as a threat, she spun to look around the battlefield, but there didnât appear to be anyone left to fight.
âIs it over?â she called out to Boktar.
He nodded, then shouted, âNedley, Iâve got a live one here. Bring me some rope!â The boy limped over to one of the pack mules that hadnât run away.
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âIâll go after the animals,â Shavala said, then whispered to her horse before the two of them trotted off. Sheâd managed to stay seated during the battle.
Strangely, Ellerieâs own horse hadnât panicked with the others, and was now standing calmly but alertly near Boktarâs warhorse and the smarter of the mules. Ellerie pulled a rag out of her saddlebag to wipe off her rapier so she could sheathe it.
âSomebody help me!â Marco called out, holding his left arm. His sleeve was bloody. He hadnât been in the fight, and Ellerie had never seen him carry a weapon.
âWhat happened to you?â she asked.
âOne of those lunatics stabbed me with a knife! Were they bandits?â
âNo,â she said flatly. âHow did you get away?â
âOh, Bobo was there. If they arenât bandits, who are they?â
Bobo, still carrying his heavy walking cudgel, shrugged and rolled his eyes when Marco wasnât looking. That at least explained where Marco had beenâBobo had stayed back with Katrin and Leena to keep out of everyoneâs way. Nedley had been with them too, under orders from Corec and Boktar to protect Katrin. At least the boy had done what he was told, but Ellerie had heard Katrin singing during the battle just before several of the enemies ran away. It had probably been Katrin whoâd done most of the protecting.
Ellerie ignored Marcoâs last question. âWe need Treya. Where is she?â
âShe went after the archers,â Razai replied, patting dust out of her clothing.
Ellerie saw Treyaâs form in the distance, kneeling over a man in plate armor. Was that Corec? Katrin must have seen them, tooâshe was already running that way. Ellerie froze for a second, then checked the warden bond in her mind, finding Corec still alive. She breathed a sigh of relief. It had been less than a year since sheâd wanted to kill him herself, but things had changed in the Storm Heights. Sheâd gotten used to him.
âBoktar, will you watch over things here?â she said. âIâm going to go check on them. Bobo, take a look at Marcoâs arm, will you? Treyaâs busy.â
By the time she reached the others, Corec was sitting up, but he was leaning back against Katrin and his eyes were unfocused. There was a gaping hole in his breastplate.
âAre you all right?â Ellerie asked.
He tried to look up at her, but turned away when the sun got in his eyes. âI ⦠uh â¦â He trailed off.
âHe will be, but give me a few more minutes,â Treya said.
âThere was a wizard,â Sarette added. âIt was one of those beam spells, like yours.â The stormborn woman was standing over one of the archers with her staff-spear, keeping him from running.
Ellerieâs eyes grew wide. âThatâs impossible. Heâd be dead.â
âHis armor protected him,â Katrin said.
âNo, you donât understand. Armor wouldnât have helped at all. Look at what it did to his breastplate. Are you sure it was the same spell?â
Sarette shrugged. âI donât know. It looked like what you did to the pirate ship.â
âMaybe he had some way to stop it,â Treya said. âLike those protection spells Iâve been practicing. Maybe he learned a new spell of his own.â
Ellerie nodded. She didnât know of any arcane spell that could block direct magical attacks, but it wasnât impossible. Sheâd heard of one that could deflect them.
âNot a new spell,â Corec murmured, then had a coughing fit. âOr maybe there was. I donât always know right away when I learn one. What happened?â
âYou went up against a wizard, apparently,â Ellerie said.
âOh. Right.â He looked down at himself. âShit. Thatâs a waste of an expensive suit of armor. My father wonât be happy.â He scratched at his chest. âIt itches. It got my mail, too?â
âBe glad your armor is all it got,â Treya said. âIt could have been a lot worse.â
âWhat happened to the wizard?â
âHeâs dead,â Sarette said.
âGood. Help me up.â
Treya and Katrin helped Corec to his feet. He stooped to pick up his sword, which immediately began glowing with a green light. As he held it, the green was replaced by blue, moving down the blade from the hilt to the tip.
Corec walked unsteadily over to the kneeling man Sarette was holding prisoner and kicked him in the chest, knocking him onto his back. Then he stomped on his stomach. The man exhaled with a wailing grunt.
âTalk!â Corec ordered, pointing his sword at the archerâs face. âWhy did you attack us? Who sent you?â
The man glared at them but didnât speak.
âI donât think he can understand you,â Katrin said.
âBloody hell. Where are Marco and Josip?â
âIâll get them,â Ellerie said. âAnd Boktar captured another one.â
In short order, everyone had gathered together other than Shavala, who was rounding up the horses and mules, and Nedley, whoâd gone to help her.
âAre these the only survivors?â Corec asked. Heâd removed his armor and pulled on a clean shirt from out of his saddlebag, but was holding onto Katrinâs shoulder for support.
âSome of them ran away, and there are a few wounded that Treya might be able to heal,â Boktar said. âThese are the only two that are conscious.â
Corec nodded. âAsk them who theyâre working for,â he told the translators. âWhy did they attack us?â
Marco did the speaking. The archer, kneeling under Saretteâs watchful gaze, replied first, repeating the same phrase over and over until he was screaming. He frothed at the mouth and spasmed, his arms jerking around. Then he fell back and his body grew still, his eyes staring blankly up at the sky.
Even the second prisonerâone of the better armed menâlooked shocked. He backed away from the first man.
âHe just kept saying a snake will protect me from the infidels,â Marco said, his voice wavering.
âNot a snake,â Josip contradicted. âJust snake.â
Marco shrugged. âWhatâs the difference?â
âI think he was poisoned,â Treya said, standing up from the body. âIâve never sensed a poisoning before, but I canât think of what else it might be.â
âWhat about the other one?â Corec said.
Marco prompted the second prisoner again. The man replied quickly, still staring at the dead archer.
âHeâs a mercenary,â Marco said. He pointed to a dead man in a black robe. âThat one over there hired him to stop a group of bandits that he claimed were attacking the local villages.â
âHow do we know heâs telling the truth?â Boktar asked.
Razai growled. âWho cares? He tried to kill us. Slit his throat and leave him with the rest.â
âWell?â Corec asked Marco. âIs he telling the truth or not?â
âI donât know.â
âI think he is,â Josip said.
âThen weâll let him go,â Corec said. He ignored Razaiâs exasperated sigh. âFirst, make sure he understands weâre not bandits. I donât want him leading another group back to us. Let him know he was the one working with bandits.â
âThey werenât bandits,â Ellerie pointed out.
âNo, but letâs make sure he believes they were.â
âWho were they actually?â Bobo asked.
âI donât know,â Corec said, giving Ellerie and Boktar meaningful glances.
Ellerie got the messageâCorec was worried Rusol had sent them, but didnât want to discuss it in front of outsiders.
âDid he mean a snake was going to bite him?â Bobo asked, still pushing for answers. âIs that what poisoned him? I didnât see a snake. Does infidel mean the same thing in Nysan that it means in Western?â
A new voice spoke up. âI think they were after me.â
#
Leena forced herself to look everyone in the eye when they turned to her.
âWhat do you mean?â Ellerie asked. âWhy would they be after you?â
Leena held up the knife sheâd found after the battle, with the snake etched into the handle. âMen with these knives attacked my clan in Sanvar. Thatâs why I came here.â
âYou knew about this?â Marco said.
âI only knew I was supposed to come here; I didnât know theyâd attack us. I didnât even know Iâd still be traveling with you. I thought I would ⦠well, it doesnât matter now. There are more of these knives over there.â She pointed back to the main ambush.
âWhy were you supposed to come?â Ellerie asked.
âI canât let them attack my people again. The Seeking sent me here to find a way to stop them.â
She was about to explain what she meant by that when Corec spoke up. âYouâre a Seeker?â he asked.
There were looks of recognition on some of the faces. They knew of her peopleâs abilities? Corec didnât seem angry with her, but she hadnât had much interaction with him before.
âA Traveler and a Seeker, but I never finished my training. I went to Tyrsall because I know someone there who has a friend who can help me learn, but when I got there, the Seeking sent me here instead.â
âThe person in Tyrsall who can train youâwhatâs his name?â
âHer name. I think it was Yelena. The man I met is called Sarlo.â
Corec shared a concerned glance with Ellerie. âSarloâs the Seeker,â he said. âNot Yelena. Did he tell you how she was going to train you?â
âWait,â Marco said. âAre you talking about the dukeâs wizard? That Yelena? Whatâs a Seeker?â
Leena couldnât control her surprise. Tyrsall was even larger than Sanvara City. What were the chances theyâd know the people sheâd gone there to find?
âUmm, I donât know who she is,â she said. âI never met her. Sarlo didnât really say she could train me. He said she had a way to help me learn.â
âI think I know how,â Corec said. âI couldââ He stopped abruptly.
âWe knew you were a mage,â Ellerie admitted. âYou didnât seem to want to talk about it so I didnât ask, but if weâd known that you knew Yelena and Sarlo, weâd have said something.â
Theyâd already known she was a mage? Leena glanced at Razai, who shook her head discreetly. The demonborn woman hadnât told them.
âIâm sorry,â Leena said. âI didnât mean for this to happen. Iâll go.â
âNo,â Corec said. âThey werenât after you. They wouldnât send this many men for one person. If theyâd just wanted to kill you, they could have done that easily enough back in Tir Shar, or once we reach Aencyr. They were after all of us.â
âWhy?â Marco asked. âSenshallâs never had any trouble in Bancyra other than the occasional bandit.â
âWeâre obviously not a Senshall caravan. Maybe these fellows donât like what weâre doing here. Leena, do you know who they are?â
âNo, none of the Zidari camps recognized them. Other Seekers are looking for them too, but they hadnât found anything by the time I left Sanvar.â
âWhy did they attack your people?â Ellerie asked.
âThey came after the Travelers. They killed as many as they could before we fought back.â
The others stared at her blankly, and Leena realized what had happened. It was the same problem sheâd had when speaking to Gylvaren in the elven outpost in Terril Forest. In trade tongue, the word Traveler was indistinguishable from its mundane counterpart.
âTravelers,â she repeated. âThey can move from one place to another with magic.â
Ellerie nodded as if recognizing the concept. âYou said Traveler earlier, too. Thatâs why you think theyâre after you?â
âTheyâve come for me before.â
âThen you need to leave,â Marco said.
âNo!â Ellerie replied. âWeâre not going to leave her out here alone!â
âBesides,â Corec added, âI told you, theyâre after all of us. If Leenaâs run into them before, she may be our best chance at finding out why.â
Boktar said, âMaybe one of the others will tell us something. Treya, I can show you where the wounded ones are. Marco, weâll need you to translate.â
âIâll come too, if you can wait for me,â Corec said. âIâm not up to moving too quickly just yet.â
As the group split up, Ellerie stayed nearby. âBoktar distracted Marco so I could speak to you privately,â the elven woman murmured. âWhy didnât you tell me?â
âI didnât know how youâd react,â Leena said. Ellerieâs mood had remained mercurial as theyâd traveledâsometimes she was friendly and sometimes she was distant, focused on the task at hand. âI only came with you because the Seeking told me to, and I wasnât sure when Iâd have to leave.â
Razai had taken a spot not far away, ostensibly helping Sarette guard the remaining prisoner, but keeping a watchful eye on the conversation.
âWe can make sure they donât hurt you,â Ellerie said. âYou had to fight them before?â
âIt wasnât really a fight. I was in Matihar, outside Sanvara City. They caught me alone, and I Traveled to get away. I ended up in Larso. It took me months to get home.â Leena didnât mention her parentsâ deaths. Sheâd told Razaiâeventuallyâbut she wasnât ready to open up about it to Ellerie.
âWhy not just ⦠Travel back?â
âItâs dangerous, and I quit my training before I could do it safely. I met Sarlo on my way home and he taught me a few things, but I still have to be very careful or Iâll end up somewhere I wasnât expecting. Iâve fallen twice and I broke my arm both times. Once, I ended up in the ocean.â
âOh. Thatâs why you were looking for Yelena?â
Leena nodded.
âWill you stay with us?â Ellerie asked.
âDo you really want me to?â Leenaâs Seeking was still sending her in the same direction as the group. She could move faster on her own, but what if she got to Aencyr and the magic wanted her to return to the others?
âYes. We can protect you, and maybe Treya and Marco will find out who these people are.â
âThen Iâll stay for as long as I can.â
#
Ellerie led the group through the streets of Aencyr, trying to find a better view. As theyâd approached the city, the Skotinos Mountains had loomed in the distance. Sheâd grown more and more hopeful, exchanging meaningful glances with Corec and Bobo, who were both familiar with the design on the amulet.
âWhere are we going?â Marco asked her. âWhat are you looking for? Weâve passed a dozen inns.â
Theyâd been wandering eastward into the city for three hours, leading the horses and mules, but Ellerie refused to stop. Not when she was so close.
âIâll know it when I see it,â she said.
Aencyr rivaled Tyrsall in size. While it wasnât near the sea, it stood in approximately the geographic center of Cordaea, with major trade roads to the north, south, and west. Waterways provided another trade route. Two parallel rivers bracketed Aencyr to the north and south, merging together just southwest of the city and continuing south to the ocean. River barges floated downstream, and were then towed back upstream by draft horses following a towpath.
The city was filled with rotundas of gleaming white stone, complete with towers, domed roofs, and gilded spires, as impressive as anything back in Terevas. The buildings obstructed most views of the mountains, but there were enough glimpses to lead Ellerie in the right direction. She pushed through the crowd, wishing she was tallerâhumans and stoneborn alike wore conical hats that blocked her view. The menâs hats had brims to keep the rain off, while the womenâs trailed colorful scarves behind them. She had to wait for gaps between groups of people to see what she was looking for.
Finally, she came to a stop in front of a massive temple to Allosur, its huge domed roof towering over them.
âThis is it,â she said. âIf the temple wasnât blocking the view, it would be a perfect match. Aencyr is Tir a Tir.â