Storm Rising (12 page)

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Authors: Mercedes Lackey

BOOK: Storm Rising
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So why should perfectly “innocent” soldiers suffer for the action of what was probably a single man?

They were already under more privation than they had any right to anticipate.

They’re far from home and all the things they know. They have no idea if they will ever find their way back again. They may not even be able to retreat in a conventional way. They must be afraid—how could they not be afraid? And winter is coming, more mage-storms. The storms created some terrifying creatures here before we built the breakwater. What can they possibly be making in Hardorn?

Since he was alone and far from home himself, he
couldn’t help but have some fellow feeling for them. Perhaps it was foolish, but there it was.

For that matter, it was only presumption on their part that the assassination orders originated with someone commanding the forces in Hardorn. There was no real reason to assume that was actually true.

After all, Talia and Selenay’s old nemesis, Hulda, had been getting
her
orders directly from the Imperial capital, possibly even from one of Emperor Charliss’ personal spymasters. Charliss was accustomed to sending in operatives who worked at an extreme distance, for with the magics the Empire used routinely, distance was no object. So who was to say that the assassin hadn’t been sent directly by Charliss or someone just below him, and had nothing to do with the forces in Hardorn at all?

The Imperial Army itself had never done anything overtly against Valdemar; they had only moved to take over a disorganized and demoralized country after its own ruler had been killed—

—by Valdemarans. Valdemar
assassins
, not to put too fine a point upon it.

Don’t we have trouble enough right now without adding to it by attacking the Imperials directly? We should be concentrating on the next step after the breakwater, not trying to get an army of our own halfway into Hardorn to attack someone we don’t even know is our enemy!

The general din seemed to have died down a bit, and he saw an opening. With shaking hands, which he disguised by keeping them clasped on the table in front of him, he spoke up.

“I’m not certain going after them is a good idea,” he said quietly. “We should be concentrating all of our effort on the mage-storms; the breakwater isn’t going to hold forever—in fact, if the storms change their pattern drastically, it won’t hold at all. The Imperials haven’t done anything we can prove, and they are going to have all they can take with the results of the magestorms over there. Why don’t we just leave them alone, at least for now, and see what happens?” Stunned
silence met his suggestions, and he added into the deathly quiet, “Our resources are limited, and things might get even worse. Who knows? They have so many mages with them—they know things we don’t—they might turn out to be valuable allies.”

“What?”
Jarim sprang to his feet, his face scarlet with outrage. Karal felt his heart stop, then start up again, and he knew that he had gone pale by the cold and stiff way his face felt. “Are you
mad?
Or are you so much of a coward that you won’t even face what these Imperial jackals have done to you? They slew
your
mentor,
your
envoy! Are you a fool, boy? Or—are you a traitor?” He put one hand on his knife hilt and drew the blade with a single swift motion. “Those assassin blades somehow mysteriously never touched you! Foul piece of
sketi
—have you been the traitor in our midst all along? By the Star-Eyed, I swear I—”

Karal kept himself from shrinking back only by iron will and the knowledge that Daren and the others wouldn’t let Jarim actually
do
anything to him. Darkwind rose malevolently and grabbed the Shin’a’in’s wrist in a grip of steel, roaring to drown out whatever Jarim was going to say.

“Stop that, you fool! Where are your senses! Drawing steel in the Grand Council, threatening the Karsite Envoy, are you
trying
to break the Alliance apart all by yourself?” He shook the man’s arm, rattling the startled Shin’a’in’s teeth. Karal was impressed; Darkwind did not give the impression of being stronger than any other normal man. Evidently there was a great deal about this Hawkbrother that was not obvious.

The Shin’a’ in was so startled that he dropped the knife, which clattered to the table. Firesong snatched it up before Jarim could reach for it.

“The boy is only pointing out alternatives—
as is appropriate
. He
is
a priest, he
is
supposed to think beyond the obvious, and he
is
supposed to suggest peaceful possibilities rather than ones involving war!” Darkwind turned to glare at everyone around the table, and some of the representatives of other gods had the grace to look chagrined, since they had been doing
nothing of the sort. In fact, they had been calling for war as enthusiastically as Jarim. “He is absolutely right; in regard to what has happened here, we have no proof as to the origin. We have speculation, but no proof. For all we know, our real enemy could be someone we are not even aware of, someone who set all of this up to make it
look
like the Empire was the perpetrator!”

“Oh, that’s hardly likely,” the Lord Marshal scoffed. “Who would this nebulous enemy be? Some hypothetical evil shaman from the North, beyond the Ice Wall?”

“Not likely, I will grant you, but possible—and we have not even discussed the possibility. I remind you, before any of you accuse our own Council members of duplicity, that
outside
influences should be the first consideration. A history-proven means of destroying vital alliances is to sow dissension among its members,
from outside, by duplicity!”
Darkwind met the Lord Marshal’s eyes squarely, and it was the older man who dropped his gaze. “Furthermore, as a mage, I concur with his priority. You’ve all accepted the breakwater as the solution to the problem of the mage-storms, but it was never meant to be more than a stopgap measure to gain us time.”

“Now that is completely true and irrefutable,” Firesong drawled, toying with the Shin’a’in dagger. “Forgive me, Herald Captain, but this breakwater of ours is rather like its namesake—and the more storms that come to wash away at it, the faster it will erode. It is more like a levee made of sand than one made of stone. I know it seems to you as if this is a good time to strike at a
possible
menace, but believe me as a mage of some talent—they will have all they can handle and more as the mage-storms wreak havoc in Hardorn. If they are very, very lucky, the monsters that are conjured up will be stopped by walls and enough arrows. If they are not—” He shrugged. “—well, let me remind you that the breakwater may stop mage-storms, but it is no barrier against hungry creatures capable of decimating an army. What comes to dine on them might well move in to dine on
us
before all is
said and done. As mages and artificers—” he bowed ironically to Master Levy, “—we should be searching for the next level of protection against the storms. As military leaders,
you
should be searching for ways to hold off whatever might come at us
through
the Imperial Army. The likelihood is that, if you do not, it may be our Alliance that will be smashed like a particularly inconvenient bug.”

He held the dagger out to the sullen Shin’a’in, hilt first; Darkwind released the man’s wrist, and Jarim took the dagger and thrust it back into the sheath. He sat down again, his face still rebellious.

Karal drew a breath of relief; at least this crisis was over, for the moment anyway. Kerowyn had simply stood there through all of it, her own expression a study in passivity.

Finally, she spoke. “On the whole,” she said carefully, “I must admit that more energy should be put into finding another solution to the mage-storm than anything else. I wanted to point out the possibility that the Imperial Army
might be
vulnerable at this time. I do not want anyone to think that I am certain of that. After all, as Karal rightly pointed out, nothing is certain but those facts that we can verify for ourselves. He is also correct in pointing out that a great deal of what we think we know is only speculation.
Probability
is not fact, and I for one prefer not to send troops into battle while the home fronts are unprotected.”

She sat down amid heavy silence. Prince Daren cleared his throat. “In that case,” he said, with remarkable aplomb, considering that moments before, one of his allies had been stopped just short of declaring blood-feud on another, “Perhaps the next to speak should be Darkwind k’Sheyna.”

Darkwind seized the verbal “ball” that had been thrown to him, and proceeded to take over the meeting. The Hawkbrother did not have his bird with him, but he stood as if he was so accustomed to the weight of the forestgyre on his shoulder that he was always ready for it. He, too, sported the all-white hair of a Tayledras Adept, for he had been Elspeth’s original teacher of
magic, before he became her partner and beloved. He was a typical Tayledras; strongly handsome, rather than the sculptured beauty of Firesong. He tended to much less flamboyant clothing than his fellow Hawkbrother, but when he spoke, it was with authority, and people listened.

Karal simply sat very still during most of the rest of it. It was all to the good that Darkwind managed to get across the fact that the breakwater was
temporary
, and get the attention of the allies centered on that rather than anything else, though he did not seem to Karal to be getting the urgency of the situation across to them. But Karal could not ignore the smoldering glances of Jarim, or the dismissive glances of many of the rest of the people at the table. Once again, his youth was speaking against him. People assumed that because he was young he was inexperienced. And Jarim clearly assumed that because he was not ready to rush out and slaughter every Imperial that came his way, he was, at the least, a coward.

Well, Darkwind and Firesong seem to think I’ve got a point. Maybe I ought to work through them instead of trying to make my points myself.

But if he did that, he’d just look ineffectual, and how would
that
serve Karse?

When the Grand Council broke up, it was with very little accomplished and nothing really settled.

As usual.

He returned to his suite feeling as if he had failed in his duty.

As he closed the door, shoulders slumping beneath his elaborate black robes, a patch of golden sunlight in the middle of the floor rose up to greet him.

:You look as if you could use a friend,:
Altra observed, as what had been golden light resolved itself into a huge cat, cream colored, with reddish-gold mask, paws, and tail—and vivid blue eyes.
:Did the meeting go badly?:

Karal managed to dredge up a ghost of a smile and sagged into a chair as Altra padded across the floor and sat regally down at his feet. At least it was comfortably
warm in here, with the sunlight streaming in the windows and a fire in the fireplace. The Valdemarans took good care of their guests, and sometimes it seemed as if the one commodity that Valdemarans treasured above all others was warmth. He had a suite of three rooms, including his own bathroom—not the same suite he had shared with Ulrich, which would have been too painful to return to. That suite had been given, ironically enough, to Jarim. “It didn’t
end badly
—but if you were paying any attention to the meeting, you’ll know I was within a hair of having Shin’a’in blood-feud declared against me.”

The Firecat blinked.
:I was eavesdropping a bit, and I must say
you’re
certainly talented. No Sun-priest has had Shin’a’in blood-feud declared against him in the entire history of Karse.:

Karal just sighed at this display of Altra’s rather sardonic sense of humor. “It’s not funny, cat. I guess the important thing is that this all proves that I am in far past my depth, here, and I might as well admit it. It’s one thing to have Solaris send a piece of paper making me the envoy, but it’s quite another to get people to
accept
me as the envoy.”

Restlessness overcame his lassitude and weariness. He lurched out of his chair and began pacing. “I’m too young, I’m inexperienced, and if I was a place-holder, neither of those things would matter. But I’m not just a cipher. I’m supposed to be making decisions here; I’m supposed to be representing Karse’s best interests. But how can I
possibly
do that when I’m young enough to be the
son
of half the people in the room, and the
grandson
of the other half?”

He was so frustrated and so very, very tired! His repressed emotions boiled over and came pouring out of him in a torrent of impassioned words. At least Altra was listening, rather than cutting him off. “The worst thing is, I know I’m too young, and
that
shows, too! Altra, these responsibilities are driving me mad! I don’t want to sound as if I’m whining, but I am
not suited
to this! I thought this would only be for a few weeks—that Solaris would send someone else, some-one
the others would listen to. When we were trying to catch the assassin, it was reasonable to have me as the envoy. It was even reasonable when I was only interacting with the people on Selenay’s internal Council—after all, Darkwind and Elspeth and a couple of the others know that I have a good idea now and then and are willing to listen to me because they know me. But now I’m supposed to be dealing with all of these other allies, and they all look at me and see a—a child!” He turned toward the Firecat and held out his hands, imploring Altra to see the dilemma he was in. “Altra, I can’t do the task I was given, and there is nothing that is going to make that possible, short of aging me twenty years overnight. I’m doing my best, but this is akin to asking a blind man to sort beads by color. Trying to do what no one will let me do is going to drive me insane without helping Karse!”

Altra had remained silent during this entire outburst. When he finally subsided, Karal bitterly expected the Firecat to deliver a crisp lecture on growing some backbone. After all, that was what he had done on similar occasions in the past.

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