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“Not that exactly. If she left her pack, she had good reason.”

“Maybe she got curious and set out to explore,” suggested Marc. “The way you did from the Holt to King Kruin’s court in Kothifir.”

“I was older, though, and had an invitation. Anyway, she wasn’t satisfied with my pack. Maybe I wasn’t wolf enough for her.”

“So she latched onto me? Don’t be silly.”

“I’m not. I told you: Deep Weald wolvers are attracted primarily to strength. That’s you.”

Torisen laughed, but Marc only smiled.

“So, should I send her back to her father?”

“Only if you want her to be killed. That’s the other reason why she may have run. The rest of her litter were slaughtered, and all the ones before it. The Wood King doesn’t want any rivals. So it’s been ever since he came to power. Before that, he passed for human in Kothifir. I wasn’t the first wolver to accept King Kruin’s invitation.”

Torisen put down his knife, a cold chill running up his spine. “Grimly, are you talking about Gnasher?”

“I think so. Until his scouts contacted me, I had no idea that he’d returned to the Weald, much less that he’d become king there. I’m here now in part to warn you, for the pup’s sake. He’s bound, sooner or later, to find out where she is. Whether or not he’ll come after her is another matter.”

“If I might ask,” said Marc, “who is this Gnasher?”

Torisen remembered that hulking presence and those cold, blue eyes, a big man with the shadow and teeth of a wolf.

“When King Kruin was ill, he employed Gnasher as an executioner and an assassin, to thin the herd of his own potential heirs.”

Grimly snorted. “Thin? He was out to exterminate the lot of them. Kruin seemed to think that if no one was left to inherit, he would live forever.”

“But Krothen survived,” said Marc.

“Yes, with some help.”

Torisen and Grimly looked up at the map, remembering those desperate days. There was the chaotic swirl of glass that represented Kothifir, and below it in more orderly array, the Southern Host’s permanent camp, a small city in its own right.

Torisen suddenly chuckled. “I just recalled my attempt to scry and that dream of Harn in a pink dress.”

The wolver and Burr exchanged quick glances. They weren’t used to Torisen speaking casually about even his most trivial dreams, given how he had once half killed himself trying to avoid them.

“What,” said Grimly cautiously, testing his ground, “like the one you made your sister wear after the Cataracts?”

“I’d forgotten about that.”

“If so,” said Grimly dryly, “you’re the only one who has. Not for a moment do I see Harn Grip-hard tarted up like a Hurlen whore—unless I’ve seriously misjudged the man. I wonder, though: is it possible that, bound to you as he is, you accidentally scryed one of his nightmares?”

Torisen sought to brush this away, even as he remembered dreams stranger yet that he had shared with his sister, not that he was about to share any of those. “Even if I did, why should he dream something so absurd?”

“Well, when your sister passes Tentir, she’s likely to join his command. For that matter, isn’t the Knorth Lordan usually the commandant of the Southern Host?”

“Not Jame,” said Torisen firmly. “She doesn’t have the experience.”

“Neither did Pereden. His was purely a political assignment, to please his father.”

“And a fine mess he made of it.”

“True, but think what revenge Harn might unconsciously fear your sister would take for her treatment back then.”

“Harn had nothing to do with it. She’d be more likely to stuff me in pink flounces.”

“Now that,” said the wolver, “I’d like to see.”

Torisen’s laughter died. “You said ‘when she passes Tentir.’ Perhaps that should be ‘if.’ Sheth has warned me that as the Knorth Lordan she will face a final, potentially lethal challenge. I thought we were past that after the High Council meeting, but apparently not. Greshan died during his.”

“The lass has faced challenges before,” said Marc gently. “No one has gotten the better of her yet.”

There it was again, the subtle reminder that the big Kendar knew more about his sister’s past than he did. He could ask Marc now, or wait until they were alone. No. They were Jame’s secrets, to tell or not. He would ask her if she passed her challenge, if he allowed her to face it at all.

Torisen looked up at the map of the Riverland, at the piece marked with the glow of his own blood in the cast that represented Tentir.

And if you interfere at this late date, will she ever forgive you? Will the randon? Yet alive is better than dead . . . isn’t it?

So Torisen’s thoughts revolved, twisting this way and that. When the others fell silent, watching him, he didn’t notice.

XIV

In Sodden Fields

Spring 45–47
1

The next morning brought another letter from Holly, Lord Danior, almost illegible in his agitation.

“Either his fields are overrun with frogs wearing light armor,” said Torisen to Burr, scanning the note by the slanting rays of a rising sun, “or the Randir have invaded. He’s begging for the Highlord’s immediate intercession. This is going to be messy. Tell Rowan to assemble a war-guard and provision it for a week at least.”

While the garrison scrambled to obey, Torisen knocked politely on the door to the Women’s Halls to request an interview with the Jaran Matriarch. To his amusement, the guards insisted on blindfolding him, as if he didn’t know the way by heart, although usually his path led over the rooftops.

Trishien, greeting him and Yce in her airy study, also laughed. “At least this time you came through the door, not the window.” She swept him a deep bow, the lenses in her mask flashing. “To what do I owe this unexpected pleasure?”

He told her about Holly’s summons. She frowned behind her mask.

“I don’t know much about the rules governing borders in the Riverland, except that the Silver usually establishes them. Then again, the river has shifted several times in recent memory, if never before directly between keeps. Consequently, there should be some established precedence.”

“So I had hoped. Would you please write to your grandniece to ask if any scrollsman at the college is an expert in such matters? If so, I would like to meet him or her between the Danior and Randir keeps two days from now.”

Trishien tapped her pen with long, ink-stained fingers, mildly amused. “So. You deign to resort to our Shanir skills.”

Torisen fidgeted. “I would send a post rider, but that might be too slow, and this is important.”

“Not just a woman’s trifle, you mean.”

“Lady, I didn’t mean to belittle your skills. They just . . . make me uncomfortable.”

“You may be grateful for them yet.”

He regarded her curiously. “Has something happened? What have you heard from Kirien?”

“News that you should rather hear from your sister or cousin as it concerns your house. My own involvement was a breach of faith with my sisters.”

Torisen saw that she was deeply embarrassed, which confused him even more. How could women’s secrets involve him?

“You do know, I suppose, that this dispute will be seen as a test of your leadership.”

If she wished to change the subject, so be it, although he found this new topic no more comfortable.

“I do seem to rule by fits and starts,” he admitted wryly. “In this case, I really do need expert advice, hence my request to you.”

“Which will of course be honored.”

“But not my curiosity satisfied.”

“I repeat: ask Jameth or Kindrie.”

With that he had to be content.

By early that afternoon Torisen set off with a hastily assembled war-guard, Yce and Grimly trotting on either side of him. It was some fifty miles to the disputed territory, a two-day ride over the broken River Road. When the pup tired, she crouched and sprang up onto Storm’s flanks behind the saddle, nearly causing the stallion to bolt. Torisen found a pair of stubby hands gripping his waist. Sharp nails bit into him until Storm settled down with a snort and a toss of his head, as if in disparagement of the company whom his master chose to keep.