‘He used it first when threatening Styliann, would you believe. Funny how Xeteskians always seem to be on the receiving end.’
‘And who do you think will be getting the benefit of his advice this time?’ asked Darrick.
Hirad shrugged. ‘Could be Dystran, though I don’t think that particular Lord of the Mount will be available to us. Put it this way, anyone who can affect the safety of Diera and Jonas is in the target area.’
‘Got to get in first, though,’ said Darrick.
‘The TaiGethen will help,’ said Hirad. ‘Should be fun.’
Darrick eyed him oddly then and Hirad knew all over again why he would miss Ilkar so much. The Julatsan elf would have lost no time commenting on how only Hirad would describe invading the Dark College as ‘fun’. Something to make him laugh and make him believe even more that they would succeed.
No one could do that now. Denser tried but he had a lot to learn. Ilkar was irreplaceable. But at least Darrick could read Hirad’s mood and thoughts right now.
‘That’s why we’re doing all this,’ he said. ‘To make Ilkar’s sacrifice meaningful.’
‘Yeah,’ said Hirad, voice gruff. ‘Can we talk about something else?’
The agreement to a daily Communion had seemed a small price to pay and a sensible measure in Lystern and Dordover’s latest military alliance against Xetesk but there had been times when Heryst rued sense. Today was one of those days. He’d had no sleep since The Raven’s audacious liberation of Darrick and he’d known that Vuldaroq, High Arch Mage of Dordover, would have questions, if not outright accusations. It didn’t help that it was his, Heryst’s, turn to seek Communion, so depleting his mana reserves further in a contact he had no wish to make.
‘At least you do me the honour of contact at the appointed time,’ said Vuldaroq, his tone cold, saying everything about his assumed knowledge.
‘There is no reason why I would not,’ said Heryst carefully, sensing already so many echoes of their past conversations.
‘Really? I had thought you might be engrossed in the search for a common enemy.’
‘I have people I can trust to conduct necessary investigations.’
‘Are they as good as your jailers?’
‘Vuldaroq, you will not tax me about events wholly within the legal compass of my college,’ said Heryst. ‘We have more pressing matters to discuss. Particularly the situation at Xetesk’s east gate.’
It was a deflection Heryst had assumed would fail but he had to try it anyway.
‘That situation, while unfortunate, is static and no more of our forces are currently at risk from further failures in the Julatsan magic system. What is surely a risk to us all, however, is the use of the One magic within your college borders last night and the escape of the likely practitioner. An escape you did little to oppose.’
‘And this view was given to you by men watching from windows how far away . . . a hundred yards? Perhaps a little less if I’m generous.’ Heryst felt ready for a fight. Dordover deserved nothing less.
‘Are you disputing The Raven escaped from your college around midnight last night?’ asked Vuldaroq.
‘No.’
‘And Erienne was with them.’
‘She was one of The Raven last time I checked,’ said Heryst.
‘Don’t get clever, Heryst, it does not become you when you are on the defensive.’ Vuldaroq’s voice in his head was full of righteous indignation. ‘I know the One magic was cast in your college grounds around the time The Raven escaped. My analysts have pinpointed the area closely enough. Gods burning, man, it wasn’t very difficult. I also know that The Raven were in your college and that Erienne is the only likely suspect as someone able to perform such a casting.’
‘And how do you work that out, Vuldaroq?’ Heryst clamped down hard on his irritation. ‘Recent history has informed us that the reason Erienne and Denser conceived the child was precisely because Erienne, in particular, had no way of casting such magic but wanted to produce an offspring that could. Perhaps you’d like to enlighten me as to how you know different. Is there something pertinent to our alliance that you have accidentally omitted to tell me?’
Silence in Dordover. Vuldaroq considered his response. Had Heryst not seen Erienne’s casting with his own eyes he would not have believed it possible she could harbour any knowledge of the One. But she did. The question was, given Vuldaroq had already guessed her to be the practitioner, as Heryst had thought he would, how would he back up his claim? What exactly did Dordover know that he was prepared to share?
‘It is the only logical explanation,’ said Vuldaroq carefully. ‘I was on Herendeneth when the Nightchild died. Erienne was with her as were the Al-Drechar. Something must have been passed to her or else she has somehow been able to use some knowledge of the Al-Drechar’s teachings. Heryst, I am not an expert. No one is. We have to work together.’
‘We are working together,’ said Heryst.
‘Damn you, we are not!’ snapped Vuldaroq. ‘You know something and you are not telling me. What did you see?’
‘I was too busy attempting to stay alive. Hirad Coldheart had a knife to my throat.’
‘That they could escape with Darrick from under your nose.’ Vuldaroq chuckled, returning to his preferred line of provocation.
‘Well, you’d know all about defeat at the hands of The Raven,’ said Heryst. ‘Remind me how many men you committed to the offensive on Herendeneth?’
‘It is hardly the same order of magnitude as being outwitted in your own college grounds.’
‘You still lost. One thing we can agree on. It hurts.’
‘So help me, Heryst, damn you. Did Erienne cast a spell of the One?’
‘I don’t know,’ Heryst replied. ‘The One was used but by whom, why and to what effect we are still investigating. In case it is The Raven, we have them under observation. We know where they are headed. They are only six. They cannot evade us forever, should we wish to stop them.’
‘I would have thought that your main priority. After all, Darrick is with them.’
‘That is an internal matter I am dealing with separately,’ said Heryst coolly. ‘You will not intercept them. You don’t understand.’
‘Oh, I understand, my Lord Heryst. I understand that you know Erienne performed the casting in question. I understand that you were not strong enough to stop her escaping you and I understand that my forces are all ordered to arrest The Raven on sight.’
‘Vuldaroq you—’
‘And before you protest, I understand something else too. If I were Xetesk, and I had pinpointed the One casting, I might be taking a detour on my way north, to ensure Julatsa never rises. Care to guess where that might be if I believed the ultimate weapon resided there?’
Heryst had no answer. There was none that left him with any credibility in this debate.
‘Lucky, then, my dear Heryst, that we are friends and allies, isn’t it? With me at your side, you might just stop them destroying your college. I think it’s time you were completely straight with me, don’t you?’
Thraun pointed away to their left and up on to the ridge along which the supply wagons had passed earlier that morning. Heading for Xetesk and heavily defended, the train had rattled past with a cloud of dust, squealing axles and hard-driven horses. Seeing the signs from over a mile away, The Raven had simply ridden further from the trail and rested their mounts while they watched it go by.
But now, galloping hard away from the Dark College, horsemen were approaching fast. The Unknown dragged his reins right, turning his horse on the canter and digging in his heels, demanding more speed. The Raven followed him, angling away from the ridge and trail, hoping to hide themselves in the folds of land. Here, the ravages of Lyanna’s uncontrolled elemental power had wreaked terrible damage. Barely a bush or shrub stood tall. Trees lay broken and rotting. And criss-crossing like whip scars across the back of the land, the top soil was torn away, leaving dark slashes in the green of spring grass.