Trees, trees and more trees; an endless labyrinth of forest, dampened by skeins of rain. A storm broke, driving their flight with increasing urgency. It lashed their faces, rendering them water-blind. Trunks loomed out of the darkness and branches reached, slashing at unprotected skin, lashing the horses’ flanks. They shouldn’t have been able to outrun the Were, if not for the Ellyl.
Peldras drew deep on the ancient lore of Haomane’s Children, using the Shaper’s Gifts to master the horses’ fear, mastering all their fear. Such was the skill of the Rivenlost, first among the Lesser Shapers. It lent courage to their hearts, speed to their mounts’ heels. Onward and onward they followed him, a slender figure on horseback, lit with a faint silvery luminosity, forging a path through the impossible tangle.
Pursuit came, of course; the Were bounding at their sides, leaping and snapping. Not as many, no; only three. A deadly three. And they came with muzzles red with blood, howling for their slain Brethren, a keening sorrow tinged with the rage of betrayal.
Carfax, unarmed, could only follow blindly in the Ellyl’s wake, trying to protect Fianna with the simple bulk of his presence, turning his mount broadside and flailing in the saddle in a vain effort to fend off their attackers. It was Blaise who defended them, who brought up the rear, Blaise of the Borderguard. And he fought with a deadly, tireless efficiency, whirling time and time again to face the onslaught, his sodden hair lashing his cheeks. There was bitterness there, and fury; oh, yes! He was the appointed Protector of Malthus’ Company, now shattered. If he had to spend his last breath protecting what remained of it, he would do it Again and again his sword rose and fell, rain-washed and running with dark fluids, until the clouds broke and the grey light of dawn showed it ruddy, and the four of them alive.
When had Blaise slain the last of the Were?
Carfax could not say. Only that dawn had found them alone.
He sat quiet in the saddle, dripping, marveling at the steady throb of blood in his veins, at his hands on the reins, only his knuckles scratched, listening to their quarreling voices mingle with the rising birdsong while his exhausted mount hung its head low, too weary to lip at the undergrowth.
“But where should we go?” Fianna’s voice, tired and plaintive. “Blaise?”
“Beshtanag … Jakar …” The Borderguardsman gave a grim smile. “I cannot guess, Lady Archer. You heard him as well as I did, and as poorly. Peldras?”
Troubled, the Ellyl shook his head. “What I can do, I have done. The ways of the Counselor are the ways of Haomane, cousin, and even I cannot guess at them. It is for you to decide.”
“So be it.” Blaise drew a harsh breath, laying his sword across his pommel. Red blood dripped from its tip onto the forest floor. “We have lost Malthus—and the Bearer. The Company is broken, and we must go where we will best serve. Staccian?”
Startled, Carfax lifted his head. “My lord?” The words came unbidden.
“Where should we go?”
He averted his face from the Borderguardsman’s steady gaze, which said all his words did not. Hobard had given his life. A debt was owed. On a nearby tree a lone raven sat, cocking its head. Carfax swallowed hard and looked back at Blaise. “Beshtanag is a trap.”
Was that his voice that had spoken? The words sounded so flat, lacking emotion, nothing to do with his tongue, thick in his mouth. But Blaise Caveros only nodded, as if hearing confirmation of a long-held suspicion.
“Do we have time to warn them?”
“I … don’t know.” Carfax said the words and something in him eased as he met the Borderguardsman’s level gaze. “It may be. I don’t know.”
Blaise nodded again, surveying the remnants of their Company. Fianna straightened in the saddle, one hand reaching to check for Oronin’s Bow and the Arrow of Fire. “So be it, then,” he said. “To Beshtanag.”
On a nearby tree, a raven took wing.
So be it, Carfax thought.
He felt numb. Better to die with honor than to live without it. It was too late, now. It was done. In the space of a few heartbeats, in a few spoken words, he had irrevocably betrayed his oath of loyalty. The words he had exchanged with Blaise long ago rang in his memory. If he could have smiled, he would have, but the corners of his mouth refused to lift. He wanted to weep instead.
There was only one end awaiting him.
Why do you smile, Staccian?
To make a friend of death.
It was a cold dawn over the plains of Rukhar.
Ushahin lay curled among the rocks where he had dragged himself, his ill-knit bones aching and his teeth chattering. Behind him, in the cavern of the Marasoumië, the node-lights were as dead and grey as yesterday’s ashes. Unable to raise his head, he stared at the pocked face of a sandstone boulder until the rising light made his head ache beyond bearing and he closed his eyes.
He had failed to hold the Way open.
Footsteps sounded, and he squinted through swollen lids. A pair of booted feet came into view; Rukhari work, with soft leather soles and embroidered laces. The toe of one boot prodded his ribs. Childhood memories, half-forgotten, returned in a flood and filled his mouth with a bitter taste.
“Dream-stalker.” Above him was Makneen, the Rukhari commander. The rising sun silhouetted his head. “Where is your army?”
“Gone,” Ushahin croaked, squinting upward and wincing at the brightness.
The Rukhari nodded in understanding. Somewhere, near, horses stamped and men muttered in their own tongue. Yesterday, they had feared him. Today, they wanted to see him dead. Makneen’s hand shifted to the hilt of his curved sword, wrapped in bright copper wire. “So our bargain is broken.”
“No.” He spat, clearing his mouth of bile. “Wait …”
“It is broken.” Watching him like a wary hawk, the Rukhari raised one hand, then turned away, speaking over his shoulder with careless aplomb. “Tell the Glutton we kept faith. It is you who failed. Now, we go.”
They did, even as he struggled to sit upright, lifting the aching burden of his head. Horseflesh surged on either side of him, urged on with jeering cries. Hooves pounded, sending chips of sandstone flying. Ushahin lifted a hand to shield his face from laceration. Whatever Vorax had promised them, it was all gone, all lost. And there was no satisfaction, none at all, in knowing he had been right.
This was Malthus’ doing.
He had felt it, had known the instant the Counselor had entered the Ways, seizing control of the Marasoumië and wresting it to his own ends, severing all of Ushahin’s influence in one surge of the Soumanië. And he had known, in that instant, utter helplessness.
It should not have happened.
Something had gone terribly wrong.
Weary and defeated, Ushahin buried his face in his hands, taking solace in the familiar darkness, the misshapen bones beneath his fingertips. My Lord, he thought, I have failed you! In a moment, in a few moments, he would make the effort that was needful, freeing his mind from the bonds of what Men called sanity to sift through their dreams. Now—
Now was the sound of claws on sandstone.
Seated on barren rock, Ushahin lifted his weary head from his sheltering hands. A grey shadow shifted on the rocks, poking his head into view, muzzle twitching. He was young, this one, sent to bear an unwelcome message. Aching and bone-weary as he was, Ushahin observed the old courtesies, asking in his visitor’s tongue, “How fares Oronin’s Hunt?”
The young Were howled.