A gentle breeze rustled the leaves of the tree, but the young
girl seated beneath it did not seem to notice. An adolescent of
thirteen or thereabouts, she was, by her plain costume, a
member of one of the solemn and straight-laced Hold families
that lived in this Borderland of Valdemar -- come there to
settle a bare two generations ago.
She was dressed (as any young Holdgirl would be) in plain brown breeches and a long,
sleeved tunic. Her unruly brown curls had been cut short in an
unsuccessful attempt to tame them to conform to Hold
standards. She would have presented a strange sight to
anyone familiar with Holderfolk; for while she sat and carded
the undyed wool she had earlier cleaned, she was reading.
Few Hold girls could read, and none did so for pleasure. That
was a privilege normally reserved, by longstanding tradition,
for the men and boys of the Holdings. A female's place was
not to be learned; a girl reading -- even if she was doing a
womanly task at the same time -- was as out of place as a
scarlet jay among crows.
If anyone could have seen her thoughts at that moment, they
would have known her to be even more of a misfit than her
reading implied.
Vanyel was a dim shape in the darkness beside her; there
was no moon, and only the dim light of the stars penetrated
the boughs of the hemlock bushes they hid beneath. She only
knew he was there by the faint sound of his breathing, though
they lay so closely together that had she moved her hand a
fraction of an inch, she'd have touched him. Training and
discipline held her quiet, though under other circumstances
she'd have been shivering so hard her teeth would have
rattled. The starlight reflected on the snow beneath them
was enough to see by -- enough to see the deadly danger to
Valdemar that moved below them.
Beneath their ledge, in the narrow pass between DeUcrag and
Mount Thurlos, the army of the Dark Servants was passing.
They were nearly as silent as the two who watched them;
only a creak of snow, the occasional crack of a broken
branch, or the faint jingling of armor or harness betrayed
them. She marveled at the discipline their silent passage
revealed; marveled, and feared. How could the tiny outpost
of the Border Guard that lay to the south of them ever hope
to make a stand against these warriors who were also
magicians? Bad enough that they were outnumbered a
hundred to one -- these were no simple barbarians coming
against the forces of Valdemar this time, who could be
defeated by their own refusal to acknowledge any one of their
own as overall leader. No, these fighters bowed to an
iron-willed leader the equal of any in Valdemar, and their
ranks held only the trained and seasoned.
She started as Vanyel's hand lightly touched the back of her
neck, and came out of her half-trance. He tugged slightly at
her sleeve; she backed carefully out of the thicket, obedient
to his signal.
"Now what?"
"One of us has to alert the King, while the other holds them
off at the other end of the pass--"
"With what army?"
"You forget, little sister -- I need no army --"
"Between us, my Companion and I are a match for any
thousand of their witch-masters,"
She bowed her head, yielding to his reasoning. "I can't like
it--"
"I know, little sister -- but you have precious little magic,
while Evalie does have speed. The sooner you go, the sooner
you'll have help here for me."
"Vanyel--"
"As safe as may be, little sister. I swear to you, I will risk
nothing I am not forced to."
A heartbeat later she was firmly in the saddle, Evalie galloping
beneath her like a blizzard wind in horse-shape. Behind her
she could feel Bard Stefen clinging to her waist, and was
conscious of a moment of pity for him-- to him, Evalie was
strange, he could not move with her, only cling awkwardly;
while she felt almost as one with the Companion, touched
with a magic only another Herald could share.
Their speed was reckless; breakneck. Skeletal tree limbs
reached hungrily for them, trying to seize them as they
passed and pull them from Evalie's back. Always the
Companion avoided them, writhing away from the claw-like
branches like a ferret.
"The Dark Servants--" Stefen shouted in her ear "
She realized, as Evalie escaped yet another trap set for
them, that Stefen was right-- the trees were indeed moving
with a will of their own, and not just random waving in the
wind. They reached out, hungrily, angrily; she felt the hot
breath of dark magic on the back of her neck, like the
noisome breath of a carrion-eater. Evalie's eyes were wide
power, too.
She urged Evalie on; the Companion responded with new
speed, sweat breaking out on her neck and flanks to freeze
almost immediately. The trees seemed to thrash with anger
and frustration as they eluded the last of them and broke out
on the bank above the road.
The road to the capital lay straight and open before them
now, and Evalie leaped over a fallen forest giant to gain the
surface of it with a neigh of triumph...
she whispered, when they were safely around
the ledge with the bulk of a stone outcropping between them
and the Dark Servants.
she asked, fear making her voice sharp
with sarcasm.
the sudden
flare of light from Vanyel's outstretched hand illuminated his
ironic smile, and bathed his white uniform in an eerie blue
wash for one moment. She shuddered; his saturnine features
had always looked faintly sinister to her, and in the blue light
his face had looked demonic. Vanyel held a morbid fascination
for her -- dangerous, the man was; not like his gentle
lifemate, Bard Stefen. Possibly the last -- and some said the
best-- of the Herald-mages. The Servants of Darkness had
destroyed the others, one by one. Only Vanyel had been
strong enough to withstand their united powers. She who had
little magic in her soul could almost feel the strength of his
even when he wasn't exerting it.
he continued arrogantly.
"Besides-- at the far end of the pass there isn't room for
more than three to walk side by side. We can hold them there
easily. And I want Stefen well out of this; Yfandes couldn't
carry us double, but you're light enough that Evalie could
easily manage both of you."
she touched his gloved hand with one fur mitten.
"Be-- be safe--"
She suddenly feared more for him than for
herself. He had looked so fey when the King had placed this
mission in their hands-- like a man who has seen his own
death.
-- they
must know someone's gone for help. They're animating the
trees against us!"