She shook her head.
"Taryl?"
Rahl could sense the sadness. How could she have done it? "You?"
"He was stunned, but he was going to wake up before you or Taryl did, and he would have killed you both. I couldn't… I couldn't lose you again, and…" She shook her head once more. "I couldn't touch all the chaos in him. It burned too much. So I just… moved the order out of him, enough anyway, that his own chaos killed him."
"Are… you all right?"
"It helps… to heal, and to see you."
He could still sense the sadness and unshed tears, and he finally rolled onto his side and sat up, ignoring the dirt and soot on his uniform. He did wipe his hands on his trousers before he reached out and took her hand. What could he say?
"It helps to know you care and understand. I'm glad your shields are down right now."
Rahl doubted he could have raised a shield if he'd had to.
"I know," Deybri replied, "but it still helps."
"Where's Taryl?"
"He recovered sooner than you did. He was just knocked out. You used almost every last bit of order and strength you had against the Triads."
What else could he have done? He'd just been trying to keep them from killing Taryl.
Rahl slowly stood, and Deybri rose from her knees as well. Rahl squeezed her hand.
"I need to go."
"Now?"
Before Deybri could say more, someone else came forward, leading a mount. In the darkness, Rahl made out Drakeyt, leading Rahl's gelding.
"Glad to see you on your feet, Majer. We got here as fast as we could, but without the healer…"
Drakeyt didn't say more, but he didn't have to.
"I'm glad you were here." Rahl stepped forward and just held on to the edge of the saddle for several moments.
"You took out both Triads, didn't you?" asked the captain.
Rahl could sense the restrained awe and fear and started to say that he hadn't done it all alone, but he caught the sense of pleading from Deybri. "I took out Triad Fieryn… and Dhoryk. I didn't want to, but they wanted to kill the overcommander and replace the Emperor."
"I wondered about that when they turned on the overcommander at the end."
"Rahl… others need me," murmured Deybri.
Rahl looked to her. "You're leaving?"
"Just for now. You'll be fine, and there are so many others…"
"Could I help?" He didn't want to leave her.
"Rahl… you have so little order… please don't even think about that, not for days."
Rahl could sense the stark fear behind her words. Drakeyt's words had suggested he'd been in danger, but had he come that close to dying?
"Yes."
Rahl swallowed. "Please… don't do more than you can." He knew he was pleading, but he also understood what she needed to do now, what she had to do. At least, she could heal, to atone for what she-and mostly he-had done.
"I won't. I'll see you later. I promise."
Rahl slowly climbed into the saddle. He had to leave it to Drakeyt as to where they were going. He was so tired he could sense nothing.
He glanced back once he was mounted, but Deybri was already moving away, her stride purposeful, but he was glad to see the two troopers flanking her. He wished he could have been one of them.
XCVI
In the late afternoon of fourday, Rahl walked along the polished white-marble floors of Golyat's mansion in Sastak. Taryl had taken over the mansion as a temporary headquarters, while he and Commander Muyr organized the return of the port city to Imperial control and arranged for the sea transport of the High Command troopers to Swartheld… and then to Cigoerne, or to wherever their previous station had been.
Rahl hadn't seen Taryl since the afternoon before, when he and the overcommander had fought Golyat and Ulmaryt-and the two Triads. Nor had he seen Deybri since the night before.
Taryl had sent an undercaptain to find Rahl, and it had taken the officer half a day in the chaos and confusion to run down Third Company. Still… Rahl wasn't all that sure he wanted to see Taryl. What if he had misjudged the situation, and Taryl could have handled it without his ill-advised attempts to help? Had he just made matters worse?
The undercaptain outside the study door bolted to his feet. "He said for you to go right in, ser."
Rahl didn't have to be reminded to close the door. He didn't want anyone overhearing what Taryl had to say.
The overcommander sat at a broad table desk with neat stacks of paper set around him in a nearly perfect semicircle. The double doors to the balcony to the left were open, and a gentle breeze cooled the study.
Taryl looked up. His bloodshot eyes were set in deep black circles, but his shields were as tight as ever, and his first words did not offer Rahl any great comfort. "As usual, Rahl, you did the right thing in the wrong way, and someone had to clean up after you." Then the angular and stern-faced mage-guard smiled warmly. "And I'm very glad that you and Deybri were there. Without the two of you, Hamor would be in sad straits indeed."
"I did my best, ser." Rahl swallowed. "Without Deybri… it wouldn't have been enough."
Taryl nodded. "I'm glad to see that you recognize that. But, without your efforts, hers would not have been possible."
"Fieryn and Dhoryk were conspiring to remove the Emperor, weren't they?" Rahl looked at Taryl, hoping to change the subject.
The older mage-guard nodded again.
"That means…" Rahl paused. "Jubyl, he couldn't have been part of it. If he had been…"
"Why do you say that?" Taryl's tone was almost idle. Almost.
"If all the Triad agreed, then why would they have needed a rebellion? They could have removed Golyat without fighting."
"Could they? Was that the reason for the revolt?"
What could else could have been the reason? Rahl knew Taryl was testing him in yet another way. What else would make sense? Then he thought about Captain Gheryk, Regional Commander Chaslyk, the regional commander in Matlana…
"They wanted a revolt in order to conceal their removal of mage-guards loyal to the Emperor?"
"Who could prove that?" asked Taryl. "But yes, that fitted into their plans."
"Couldn't you have…?"
"How?"
Rahl understood, then. "You ran the whole campaign in a way that drew the two Triads here because you couldn't have checked every regional officer-not in time-and not without alerting them, and you hoped that you could do something against them when they acted against you. And if you hadn't succeeded, they would have named Cyphryt to replace Jubyl."
"Possibly. Or perhaps Welleyn."
"Not the Mage-Guard Overcommander?"
"That has always been almost a ceremonial post, and Kurtweyl was loyal to… the Emperor." Taryl smiled, still tiredly. "When he wasn't involved in his musical compositions."
"What happens now, ser?"
"That is up to the Emperor and the new Triads."
Once again, Taryl was not really answering the questions, and Rahl still wasn't thinking as clearly as he would have liked as he asked, "Who will be the Regional Administrator for Merowey?"
"That hasn't been decided, but I'm certain it will be some cousin of Mythalt's."
"After all this? They wouldn't consider you?"
"Mage-guards are never permanent regional administrators. The position will be filled with a pleasant man with the proper connections who understands fully that, when in doubt, he is to ask the Mage-Guard Overcommander of Merowey for advice, and who will understand that he is never to cross his regional overcommander. Who that administrator will be is not for either of us to say."
With the firmness of Taryl's tone, Rahl decided not to press that issue.
"What about Deybri?" Taryl asked, almost idly, although Rahl doubted that there was anything idle at all about the question, since Taryl's shields hid whatever the older mage might be feeling.