She was not certain what she should do, so she merely waited. What would happen would happen. It might be a quick end, or a lingering one.
"Wait, Private!"
The young man wore mail over his uniform of a Kelvinian guardsman. He was covered head to toe with battle dust. The quarter-moon painted on his helmet proclaimed him officer, though she did not know the rank.
"Lomax! You want her first?" The toothy grin on the Herman was at least as disturbing as his drawn sword.
"I don"t like your tone, Private! I know this woman."
"Do, huh." The Herman"s horse came closer to Lomax"s. "I suppose that means you want her all for yourself."
Without warning the Herman"s sword swung at the guardsman. But Lomax ducked aside and sustained a bright coppery slash on his left shoulder. The mail he wore protected him, but barely. His own sword snaked out, and with more luck than science he speared the Herman through the throat.
The Herman toppled and crashed to the ground. He lay there on the gra.s.s, just another casualty.
Lomax cleaned his sword, then inspected his injury and the damage to his mail. Finally he turned his eyes to her. He studied her face for several long heartbeats. Then he said: "Mrs. Hackleberry? Kelvin"s mother?"
"Why yes." She was astonished at being recognized. "But how do you know? We"ve never met, have we?"
"We have met, but a long time ago. Remember when you read cards for people? You told me I"d be a soldier and do many brave deeds. I thought you were wrong and my mother thought you wrong. But then we had our war for freedom and afterward I became a guardsman for King Rufurt. Today, as you see, I"m a soldier, wearing Hermandy mail."
She shook her head, amazed. Sometimes even she didn"t believe in the power of prophecy. "You and your mother. She wanted to know if you"d finish school and I said yes. Then I saw the other, the battle card, and I had to say."
"And you told her my father would die and she"d remarry. You were right."
"The cards were right. The cards that unfortunately can only indicate. They could not have told me how your father was to die or when, or if there was a way of saving him."
"Nothing"s perfect. The cards indicated, and they were correct."
"It is always thus. There"s nothing truer than prophecy."
There was silence between them, as pregnant as thought. Soldiers came up and dragged away the body of the private; they had seen what had happened. Then Lomax broke it with the logical question: "Why are you here, Mrs. Hackleberry?"
"It isn"t Mrs. Hackleberry any longer," she said. "Hal and I are divorced."
"Oh." His face turned grave. "I"m sorry to hear it."
"Don"t be. It was in the cards. I feared that he would meet an early death, and I"m happy he didn"t. It was only his love for another woman that ended our marriage. It could have been much worse. But as to why I am here-"
"That too was in the cards?"
She smiled. She had been about to say something about Lester, but Lomax had put it correctly. Without the cards" suggestion that she might affect things here, she would not have come. She had no experience in war, but well understood the risk she took coming here.
"We have many wounded," Lomax said, wiping blood. "Our only doctor was killed. Would you-could you possibly help?"
"I"m not skilled," she said. But Lester might be among the wounded. Besides, there would be others like this young guardsman. "I"ll do what I can." She would have to trust the cards to guide her correctly.
She followed him, detouring around a horse and a man that were beyond help. She knew a little herbal lore, she knew how to suture and bind up wounds. If nothing else, she could do as her daughter had done at another place, and mop fevered brows and hold chilly hands.
They reached the bottom of the hill as the daylight faded and the sun eased down. The signs of battle were all around: dead men, dead horses, dropped weapons, and the groans and moans of injured and dying.
"This way, Mrs.-eh, Knight."
"Charlain will do." She followed him meekly to an isolated tent. He pulled back the tent flap and there, lying on a blood-soaked blanket, was what appeared to be a schoolboy. The lad"s eyes were gla.s.sy and filled with terror and suffering.
"A witch! A witch!" the youth cried, pointing feebly at her.
"Not a witch, Phillip," Lomax said. "This is Charlain, Kelvin"s mother."
"Don"t let her touch me! Don"t let her!" He struggled to sit up, blood spurting through knotted bandages. He shrieked at the top of a weakened voice: "Go Way! Burn her, Lomax! Burn-" His eyes rolled up until only the whites showed. He stiffened and fell back.
Hurriedly Charlain grabbed his wrist. There was still a heartbeat, but it was faint. A lot of his blood was missing.
"Why is he here?" she asked. She couldn"t help but rage that such a young boy had been allowed to fight. It was her motherly instinct.
"He"s St. Helens" friend. Former king of Aratex."
"Ah." Formerly the enemy, though it had really been Melbah who governed that country. Kings did get their way, ex or current. "Is there bloodfruit around?"
"There is, back a way in the forest."
"I"m not sure he can swallow the juice, but-"
"We"ll make him. St. Helens wouldn"t like it if he died."
"St. Helens is-" She wanted to avoid the word, but found no way. "Captured?"
"Yes. Or dead. He could be in the same state as this." His eyes flicked down to the boy. "Phillip here killed the witch."
"Helbah? Killed?" she asked, appalled.
"Yes. He wasn"t supposed to."
"But Helbah is a good witch!"
"But on the other side. That"s how the enemy got St. Helens. We broke the truce, and they seized him."
She thought: Helbah"s still alive. I know, I"ve read her cards. But she may not remain so long.
"Can you get the bloodfruit?" she asked, turning to the immediate business. "A lot of it? If you have other wounded who have lost blood it could save their lives."
"I"ll send some men back. It"s a big grove, but a long ride. They might not be able to get the fruit back until daybreak."
"That will have to do." She gave the former boy-king a final check. Unconscious, colorless, he appeared dead. "Are there wounded to whom I can give immediate help?"
"Many. Some not this bad."
"I"ll need help setting bones and severing limbs. Get me your doctor"s supplies."
Lomax nodded, went outside, and began issuing orders. She joined him, and he took her to more wounded and dying than she had seen before in her life.
Men sought their foolish glory, she thought, but for too many this was the reality. It was a shame, but they never seemed to learn.
It was nearing dawn when the riders Lomax had dispatched arrived back with the bloodfruit. At her direction the fruit was boiled and the red syrup cooled and administered. First young Phillip, then man after man weakly swallowed a spoonful or a cupful depending on his need. In a surprisingly short time pale faces flushed and men were restored to full vigor.
It was magic fruit, the bloodfruit. The doctor had had the foresight to see it gathered, but in the fighting the wagon with the fruit was set ablaze and destroyed. The doctor had died trying to put out the fire. So until this new supply arrived, wounded men had continually died.
At first she did not recognize him. She had only met him twice, and that under better circ.u.mstances. But then the pale, big man she was working on gasped a word, and the word caused her astonishment and joy.
"Jon!" the pale lips gasped.
Lester! This was Lester, her daughter"s husband! He had lost a lot of blood but he should be all right once the syrup took effect. Revived by the prospect, she held the brimful cup to his lips and ma.s.saged his throat to force him to drink.
"You"ll be all right, Lester," she murmured. "You will be, for Jon"s sake."
He did not respond verbally. His pulse jumped. From his mouth a trickle of blood issued, thicker and darker than the syrup.
G.o.ds, he was dying! Jon"s husband was dying, and she didn"t know how she could save him. Yet there had to be a way of restoring him. There had to be!
Desperately she checked through the doctor"s bag. Containers of herbs, properly labeled, but often a mystery to her. She wished she had absorbed more herbal lore. Which herb, properly administered, would seal his internal wound and allow the bloodfruit to do its work? There had to be an herb that would do this, but was it the sealant root or the st.i.tching flower? Desperately she tried to remember. She had never antic.i.p.ated being in a position like this! Her arms and legs felt weighted down. Fog filled her head. Invisible bees hummed in it. She was in need of reviving herself.
She took out the jar of sealant root. Should she try this? Suppose it was wrong? It just might be that sealant root was for some other use. Yet to do nothing, or to delay doing something, might mean Lester"s doom. She had come to help him! If only she knew how!
When in doubt, ask the cards. It had been the one thing she had always believed in. Without hesitation she took the deck from her pack, shuffled it, and thought of Lester. Then, head swimming, body protesting more than the disapproving glances of a.s.sistants, she dealt out the column.
A single p.a.w.n card, representing Lester. A new card representing Lester"s fate if she did nothing. It was the death card, skull and crossbones. Tell her something she did not already know!
She dealt again. She laid out the card, there on the b.l.o.o.d.y canvas. The Lester p.a.w.n. Now, administer the sealant root, and his fate would be-the death card.
Her hands shook as she riffled the cards and started the third layout. This time it was the Lester p.a.w.n card and the thought of the st.i.tching flower. She held a jar of pink blossoms in her left hand, concentrating. She turned up a card: death card.
No, no, no! There had to be a restorative! Back in the palace she had read uncertainty. Here she read death, only death. Was she too late?
She checked the labels on the jars. Here was a jar filled with white flower blossoms, well dried. But this couldn"t be the st.i.tching flower! Yet it was! What then were the pink blossoms in the jar she had held as she turned the card? She read the label, her tired eyes squinting hard: "Stretching flower." She had had the wrong jar!
Quickly she tried a fourth layout, holding the jar of white blossoms. p.a.w.n card representing Lester Crumb, her daughter"s husband. Now I will administer the blossoms in this jar, and- The sun with a smiling face: recovery card! Lester would recover if she got the herbal medicine inside him in time.
How to administer it? She didn"t know, but she had to be swift. Hastily she unscrewed the jar, shook dried blossoms into a cup, added water and a few drops of raspberry wine, stirred it, and held it to Lester"s lips.
She ma.s.saged his throat, edging up the cup. Slowly, lest he choke, she poured.
He sighed. His color deepened. His eyes blinked. "Jon? Jon? I love you, Jon! I want you close. Please, Jon, come to bed."
"Hush, Son," she said, stroking his forehead. "It"s only your old biddy mother-in-law."
His eyes unglazed and focused on her. His color deepened until it was a bright red. "Thank you, Mrs. Hackleberry," he said. Then, exhausted, he closed his eyes.
She had won this one, she thought, and with the thought she realized how tired she actually was. She had worked through the night and into the day, seeing nothing but wounds and blood. She closed her eyes, sank back against the doctor bag, and thoroughly relaxed.
Sleep, sleep, sleep, the natural restorative.
Helbah remained weak, but revived enough to take some of her own medicines, and they restored her greatly. But her hours of injury had put her dangerously out of touch. She fetched her crystal and oriented on the enemy battle camp. Soon she ferreted out the woman with the violet eyes doctoring the Kelvinian and Hermandy wounded.
A witch, that young man had called her. She looked the part, but Helbah had never heard of another practiced in these arts. She frowned, watching the healings, wishing that she were herself well enough to do more. Magic restoratives were wonderful, but at her age they could do only so much.
Later the woman in the crystal was reading cards beside a dying man and an open doctor case. She watched as the woman laid out a file three times and three times took up the cards. So that was how she was doing it! She was not trained in witchcraft or healing magic, only in the cards-but they were guiding her well. On the fourth try she found her answer.
Helbah watched as the woman gave the medication and restored the young man to life. Then, exhausted as only someone practicing the art could be, for it drew from the soul as well as the body, the woman sank to the floor of the tent, closed her eyes, and went instantly to sleep.
Interesting. She has the talent. Largely untrained, but there. Another enemy? Or could she-dare I think it?-become a colleague? An apprentice, someone to help me fight?
Without quite willing it, she fell asleep herself, dreaming a witch"s dreams.
Sometime next morning Katbah entered the room with tail held straight up above his shiny back. He was lean from his ordeal of lending her his life force, but he had taken restoratives and was strengthening. He walked straight to her and stared into her face.
"Those two in trouble again?" She sighed. "Think what we"d have to put up with if they hadn"t the minds of grown men!" Actually she was often in doubt about the maturity of their minds; sometimes they were just so confoundedly juvenile that she wished she could take a switch to their little posteriors.
With difficulty she got to her feet, using her cane, and followed her familiar.
St. Helens kept his eyes barely slitted and pretended to sleep. He had successfully ignored the pebbles and the lumps of dried dirt. Now a feather danced before his nose and threatened to make him sneeze. He considered grabbing the string and breaking it, and would have done so in another moment. But then the feather wafted out of his sight, mercifully.
From above he heard them whispering. Little d.i.c.kens, what would they try next?
Suddenly moisture trickled down on the back of his neck, the side of his face, and on his beard. Horrified, he rolled over and roared. "You brats! You filthy brats!"
At the window, two young faces with golden crowns above peered down, grinning.
"That got him, Kildom."
"You"re right, Kildee. Guess this is where we should come next time we have to pee."
"We can fill up with appleberry juice. Come with a big load. Make him smell sweet."
St. Helens mopped at the back of his neck. If there had been anything in the cell to throw, he would have thrown it. He sniffed at his hand, shook some yellow drops from it, and swore an oath so villainous it threatened to char the walls.
"Oh listen to the bad words, Kildom!"
"He"s a bad man, Kildee; what do you expect?"
The two dissolved into giggling. St. Helens felt like showing them just how bad he could be. Instead he fought to control himself. This was most difficult because his inner nature urged him to rave and rant and make a spectacular scene. It wasn"t through having a saintly disposition that he was called St. Helens, but because his temper had once been as explosive as a famous Earth volcano.
"You brats are going to be in trouble!" he shouted. "You can"t do this to a general! You"re going to be punished! When I get out I"ll warm your b.u.t.ts!"
"Listen to him, Kildom. He thinks he"s getting out."
"Never, Kildee. He"ll be here forever! Every day we"ll come water him like an ugly weed."
"Until the whole cell fills up with appleberry pee!"