Haught and the witch stood facing each other, Stilcho was down on his knees by the writhing Stepson, but no fire flew.
"You"ve a bit to leam," Tasfalen said. "Most of all, a sense of perspective. But I"m willing to take an apprentice."
From Haught, a long silence: then, quietly: "Is it mistress or master?"
Tasfalen"s right eyebrow jerked in wrath. Then a grin spread over his face. "Oh, I like you well, upstart. I do like you." The pottery globe vanished from his/her hands. "First lesson: don"t leave a thing like that in reach."
"Where is it?" There was the ghost of panic in Haught"s voice, and Tasfalen"s grin widened. Male hand touched male chest.
"Here," Tasfalen said. "Or as close as hardly matters. I learned that trick of a Bandaran." He-Moria shuddered: it was impossible to look at that virile body and think she- walked closer and stood looking down at the Stepson, who lay white and still by Stilcho"s knee. "Ischade"s lover. Oh, you are a find, aren"t you?
And you"re not going to die on us, oh, no, not a chance of that-"
"... A chance of that," a strange voice said; and another, hated: "I"ve no intentions of it. Not with what he knows."
"He has uses other than that. Her lover, after all. It has to play havoc with her concentration. Even if personal pride is all that bothers her."
"Oh, it"s more than that." A grip closed on Strat"s wrist, lifted that, let go and lifted the other, the wounded hand, with a pain that drove Strat far under for a moment; he came back with the feeling of someone"s hands on him, roughly probing among his clothing. "Ah. Here it is."
"Hers?"
"I gave it to him. It should have come to you. In your other life."
He thought what it was then. He would have kept the ring. He was sorry to lose it. He had been a fool. He was sorry for that too. Play havoc with her concentration.
With what he knows.
He understood that well too. He had asked the questions for years. His turn now.
He thought of a dozen of his own cases and had no illusions about himself. He tried to die. He thought of it as hard as he could. Probably his own cases had thought the identical thought at some stage.
"He wants to leave us," the one voice said. A feathery touch came at Strat"s throat, over the great artery. "That won"t do." A warmth spread out from it, his heart sped, a hateful, momentary surge of strength, like a tide carrying him up out of the dark. "Wake up, come on. We"re not even started yet. Open the eyes.
Or just think about what I"d like to know about your friends. Where they are, what they"ll do-it"s awfully hard, isn"t it, not to think about a thing?"
Crit. 0 G.o.ds. Crit. Was it you after all?
"We can take him into the kitchen," one suggested. "Plenty of room to work in there."
"No," a woman cried.
"Let"s not be difficult, shall we? There"s a love. Go wash. You"d rather be taking a bath than stay for this, wouldn"t you? You do look a mess, Moria."
THE SMALL POWERS THAT ENDURE.
Lynn Abbey
Battlefield chaos reigned in what had once been Molin Torchholder"s private retreat from disorder. Niko lay on the worktable while Jihan brought her healing energies to bear on one tortured joint after another. Now and again the mercenary"s eyes would bulge open and the sounds of h.e.l.l would explode from his mouth. The others would cease their arguings until the Froth Daughter had him quiet; then the frantic bickering would begin again.
Crit"s simple statement, "We fouled up," applied to everyone in the room-none of whom were accustomed to failure on such a grand scale. Niko"s physical pain was the least of their worries. The demon erupting in his moat- molded rest-place had the power to reshape all creation-if Roxane didn"t do something preemptive with the Globe of Power or the mortal anarchy of the PFLS-inspired riots didn"t overwhelm them all first.
None of then noticed a new shadow at the threshold.
"Divine Mother! This is intolerable!"
Shupansea, exiled Beysib Empress and, by virtue of foreign gold and the strong arms of clan Burek, de facto ruler of Sanctuary, stopped short in the open doorway. She stared- knowing that it discomfitted these drylanders, but there was no other way. Her mind, moving behind glazed, amber eyes, scanned from one shadowed comer of the room to the other, from the floor to the ceiling, absorbing every detail without the distraction of movement.
They had been arguing, singly and severally, but the sight of her united them in silence. She knew them all, except for the dark-clad, disheveled woman sitting on a low stool with a half-full goblet leaning out of her hands. Their combined presence in such a small, private room could only mean disaster.
Shupansea was caught in an undertow of emotion as the images of violence patterned themselves against her memories of the Beysa"s court those last few days before her supporters in clan Burek had effected her rescue, and exile. Not even the silken touch of her familiar serpent moving between her b.r.e.a.s.t.s could break her horror-struck fascination with Niko"s broken, blood-streaked body. The tears and shrieks of terror she had resolutely concealed from her own people could not be withheld from this insignificant drylander.
Divine Mother, she repeated, this time a prayer as the silent undertow swept her back toward incapacitating fear. Help me!
The downward surge was broken by the soft strength of Mother Bey cradling her mortal daughter. Shupansea felt her pulse quicken as the G.o.ddess" vitality flowed within her own envenomed blood. She ascended through the Aspects: Girl, Maiden, Mother and Crone, to Sisterhood, then broke through to Self-ness. She blinked and stared across the room again.
"He yet lives," the Presence said to her, and through her to the still-silent a.s.sembly. "The mortal soul survives."
Shupansea took long, gliding steps toward Niko. Tempus moved away from his self a.s.signed post at Niko"s side in a slow, graceful fury, determined to stop her.
She paused and stared-seeing him clearly for the first time: this nearly supernatural man now spiritually naked and silently invoking the names of puny, man-shaped G.o.ds. She lifted a finger of Power but was spared its use when Another reached out to restrain him.
"That"s the snake-b.i.t.c.h G.o.ddess within her," Jinan hissed, getting a handful of Tempus"s biceps and squeezing it hard.
The Beysa reached out to catch a drop of Niko"s blood in the curve of her long fingernail, then brought it to her lips. Blood was sacred to Mother Bey. She savored the taste of it and absorbed all it told about Niko, his rest-place, and the uneasy truce which held there. Visions of the handiwork of moat, the Bandaran imitation of divine paradise, came as an unwelcome-indeed, unimaginable-surprise.
You should be ashamed of yourselves, she, who tolerated no other deities in that portion of paradise she called her own, roared at the pantheons and protoG.o.ds who shared a suddenly imperfect omniscience with her. THAT. An ephemeral finger pointed toward the blazing column that was Janni and the ominous bulge beneath it. That is what comes of giving mortals their own dreams. That is what they have built with free will: a gateway for demons-for the destruction of us all!
Mother Bey reserved special ire for her erstwhile lover, Stormbringer, but her mortal avatar was spared that confrontation. The G.o.ddess withdrew, leaving Shupansea somewhat flushed and tingling with righteous indignation.
"How could you allow this to happen?" she demanded of Molin.
Molin straightened his robe and his dignity. "You knew all that we knew. Roxane took control of Niko"s body; another magician has stolen the Globe of Power. The rest, the consequences, we are only just beginning to understand."
"I have seen with my mother"s eye, and the force within that young man," she gestured toward Niko with a bloodstained finger, "has nothing to do with witches! Can"t you fools tell the difference between a demon and a witch?"
Tempus freed himself from Jihan"s restraint. He towered over Shupansea. "We know exactly what we"re dealing with, b.i.t.c.h," he said in a softly menacing voice.
"Well, what are we dealing with?" Shupansea replied, her head tilted back and glowering with a stare he could not hope to break. Her serpent made its way up the stiff wires of her headdress. Its tongue flickered; Tempus blinked and Molin spoke instead.
"Roxane promised the Stormchildren to the demon. She poisoned the children but she couldn"t deliver their souls and got herself wounded in the bargain. We knew she was hiding; some of us thought she had a hold on Niko but we didn"t guess she"d gotten behind him until it was too late and the demon"d come to collect its payment from her. That was ASkelon"s message for Tempus: that she"d gotten behind him somehow."
Ischade shook her head. "It was never so simple. Roxane promised the demon a gateway in exchange for Niko. The only gateway she knew about was the Stormchildren. She thought she was safe from everything where she was-and that Niko was safe as well. Now that it"s trying to take Niko, as it would have taken the Stormchildren, she"s frantic herself. She understands less than we do-but, with a globe again, she has vastly more power."
"We understand the demon must be destroyed and the rest-place with it,"
Shupansea agreed.
Randal staggered forward, his face swollen and glistening from the fire, bits of charred canvas and flesh trailing from his clawed fingers. "Not destroyed." He had breathed the flames; his voice rasped and gurgled in his throat. "It will go someplace less defended. We need the globe. We can make it right with the globe." Pa.s.sion exhausted him; he slumped forward into Jihan"s outstretched arms.
"Is this true?" the Beysa demanded.
"It is likely," Jihan admitted, trying to divide her ministrations between the "stricken mage and Niko, who moaned when her hands weren"t resting against his flesh. "We can defend the rest-place, or the Stormchildren, but if Roxane has the globe she"ll always be one step ahead."
"Roxane, Niko, or your son, Riddler," Ischade interrupted, focusing her own, and everyone else"s, attention on Tempus. "You must make your choice. No matter what I do, I will need time. I cannot wait any longer!"
But Tempus only shook his head. He took Niko"s hand and the unconscious Stepson seemed to breathe easier. "Go where you want," he said slowly.
Ischade set the goblet down and made ready to leave the room.
"Guards!" Shupansea shouted, and a pair of the shaven-pated Burek warriors appeared in the doorway. "Provide her with shoes and clothing. Escort her wherever she wishes to go-"
The necromant stared across the room, h.e.l.l-dark eyes flashing rejection of Beysib hospitality.
"You ought not squander yourself by leaving the same way you arrived," the Beysa said gently, a faint smile on her lips; her eyes still defended against the power of that stare.
Ischade lowered her eyes and picked her way carefully across the shattered gla.s.s. The great black raven, which had arrived moments after the first Globe of Power had been shattered and had held itself aloof from all the commotion since, spread its wings and flapped out the window its mistress had broken by her entrance.
"How did Roxane get in there?" Tempus asked once Ischade was gone. "How? Not even the G.o.ds can violate moat"s sanctuary."
"Randal?" Molin asked.
The mage pushed himself away from Jihan"s healing hands. He started to speak but the words were too great an effort. Quivering, he sank back to his knees; tears ate their way down his cheeks. "They had him for a year, Riddler," he pleaded for understanding. "He hates her. He remembers and he hates her but when she comes for him.... A year, Riddler. 0 G.o.ds, after a year he remembers; he hates but he can"t-won"t-refuse."
Critias pounded the windowframe. "Seh!" he said, watching the smoke rising from the city"s rooftops. The Nisi obscenity was somehow appropriate. If the G.o.ds, what remained of them, had intended to cripple what remained of order and competence in Sanctuary they could not have done a better job. He had even allowed the fatal thought-that the situation could not possibly get worse-to percolate through his consciousness.
"Commander," he said with a heavy sigh. "You"d better take a look at this."
Tempus followed the lines of his lieutenant"s outstretched arm. He said nothing, so the others-Molin, Jihan, Shupansea, and finally Randal-crowded around the broken window.
"It"s all up now." Torchholder turned away and slouched against the wall.
Jihan closed her eyes, reaching deep into her primal knowledge of all water and salt water in particular. "We"ve got a bit of time. With the tides they won"t be able to enter the harbor until after sundown."
"I don"t expect you"d be able to send them back the way they came?" Molin asked.
Shupansea tried looking, staring, and leaning perilously far out the window and saw nothing but the myopic fuzziness of the wharves and the ocean beyond it.
"Send what back?" she inquired with evident irritation.
"The Rankan Empire, my lady," Tempus explained. "Come to find out what"s going on in this forsaken backwater."
"How many ships?"
"Lots," the big man said with a feral grin.
The Beysa stepped back from the window, suddenly remembering that she had dismissed her guard and that none of those between herself and the door could be considered willing allies to her cause. "We must make preparations," she said, edging backward toward escape.
"You put the fear of Ranke"s strong right arm into her," Crit snorted, once the nervous woman had disappeared down the narrow steps. The lone ship fighting its way through the tidal currents carried no more than two hundred men, including oarsmen, and was equipped for tribute, not combat.
"I should have killed her," Jihan muttered.
"You would never have left this room alive," Tempus informed her.
"I? I would never have left this room? I could have frozen that little b.i.t.c.h before she knew what happened to her."
"And what would your father have said to that?" Tempos retorted.
The Froth Daughter went red-eyed and icy for a moment. She raised a fist toward the Stepson"s commander and shook it at him. Her scale armor creaked as she stomped back to the table where Niko was moaning softly. Molin peered intently out the window lest she see his smile; Crit was fighting laughter himself and nearly lost the battle when he glimpsed the priest biting his lower lip.
"I"m taking Stealth back downstairs," Stormbringer"s daughter announced, effortlessly holding the grown man in her arms. "Is anyone coming with me?"
She had strength and power it was dangerous to mock, however immature its manifestation. Not even Randal, who of the men was the most clearly respectful of G.o.ds and magic, dared to answer her.
"What now?" Randal asked, easing himself onto the stool Ischade had used.
Jihan"s touch had cleansed and sealed the surfaces of his wounds; he had his own healing resources to call on but his continuing tremors indicated that the little mage had not yet paid the full price for the day"s exertions.
With the last of the women departed, Tempus felt his confidence returning: "For you-rest. If we need you again we"ll need you healthy. Go stay with Jihan and Niko if you can"t finish the job yourself over at the Mageguild. Crit, you get someone in that d.a.m.n house others. And get Kama-however you have to do it. The rest of us will see about restoring the appearance of order in this d.a.m.n place before that ship docks."
He looked out the window again as trumpets blared from the gateways; Shupansea had evidently reached her advisors. Squads of Burek fighters, deadly swordsmen and archers despite their baggy silk pantaloons and polished scalps, were double-timing across the courtyards. Either all Beysib were nearsighted like their empress and believed the entire Rankan fleet loomed beyond the horizon, or they were taking no chances.
When the triple portrait had burned, the fire had touched Tempus-not as it had touched Randal, but purging him of the dark a.s.sociations between Death"s Queen, Niko, and himself. The shock, and the pain, were still strong-he"d kill the witch when he could for the crippling scars she"d left in Niko- but the compulsion he"d felt since the black storms in the capital was fading.
"d.a.m.n plague town," he said to himself. "Infecting everything it touches with its disease. Let the fish people have it."
Torchholder looked over at him. "You just. might have something there, Riddler."
He liked the idea coalescing in his thoughts; unconsciously he tugged at his sleeves as a sense of competence returned to him. "Now, then-whatever we might feel about the long-term implications of Theron"s delegation I think we all agree that this is not the time to have any outsider wandering around. Right?"
The other men nodded reluctant agreement.
"We also know them well enough to know that once they suspect we"re hiding anything they"ll make imperial nuisances out of themselves. And they"re suspicious right now just from the smoke." He didn"t wait for them to nod this time. "They"ll want to be out there unless we give them a b.l.o.o.d.y good reason for staying exactly where we put them: plague-quarantined for their own protection."
Critias arched an eyebrow. "Priest, I could find myself liking you."
Ischade made her way to the White Foal alone. She"d separated from her Beysib escort near the Peres house when the anarchists and so-called revolutionaries had challenged them. With their twirling swords they"d seemed more than a match for the poorly-armed quartet that had come charging out of the alley and she had been grateful for the opportunity to slide into the shadows unnoticed.
The house had called out to her: her possessions, her lover, her magic, the tiny ring now on Haught"s slender finger. Not long before-before her explosive journey to the palace-the call would have been irresistible. She would have had the power to sunder any wards Roxane had concocted. And she would have done just that: gone blundering into another abortive confrontation with the Nisi witch.
If the battle within Niko"s rest-place had done nothing else it had vented the excess of power which had blighted her vision since Tempus had returned to Sanctuary and ordered the destruction of the Globes of Power. Purged and refreshed, she perceived the wards not simply as Haught"s betrayal or Rox-ane"s arrogance but as the finely strung trap that they were.