Storm Warning (15 page)

Read Storm Warning Online

Authors: Mercedes Lackey

BOOK: Storm Warning
6.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“Are you sure you can ride?” he asked his mentor anxiously. Ulrich had been moving with the slow, deliberate care that meant his joints were still stiff. Karal had more than a duty to Ulrich as his mentor, he was under
orders
to make certain Ulrich remained healthy during his tenure as Karse’s envoy.
He was fairly certain Ulrich was not aware of this, however.
Solaris had called Karal into her Presence just before they left, to make him promise he would take particular care of his mentor. One session with that formidable lady’s will concentrated on him and him alone was more than enough. He could not imagine that the Eye of Vkandis Himself would concentrate any more force than did His earthly representative’s. Karal did not ever want to report to her that Ulrich had come to any kind of grief.
“Oh, I shall live,” the Priest said, sighing. Then he smiled wanly. “Don’t be too concerned, Karal. These joint aches are not a sign of anything dangerous.”
But Karal continued to stare at his mentor with a frown of worry on his face until Ulrich grimaced. “I swear to you that I will ask our escort to stop for the day if I need rest. Will that suit you?”
“I suppose it will have to,” Karal told him, trying to sound as severe as one of his own instructors had, when he had tried to avoid making pledges. “Since I doubt I’m going to get anything more reasonable out of you.”
But Ulrich only raised a quelling eyebrow at him. “Don’t try to sound like Ophela, child; it doesn’t suit either your years or your personality.”
Suitably rebuked, Karal flushed with embarrassment and quickly turned his attention to his packing. Not that there was much to pack—most of what they would be needing at the Court had been sent on ahead with a merchant pack train, and should arrive shortly before they did. Ulrich had not wanted to attract attention by traveling with the number of wagons they would need to maintain their proper state as Officials of the Court. Wagons would mean armed guards, and guards would imply importance or value—and they would end up with the same problem that a large escort would have caused them.
By way of simultaneously showing his contrition and his rebellion, he packed up Ulrich’s gear as well, before his mentor could get to it himself. Ulrich only raised his eyebrow even higher at this implication that he was too feeble to deal with it on his own.
With packs assembled, Karal shouldered both, and stepped aside for his master to lead the way out to the courtyard.
As usual, Rubrik was already there, waiting for them in the gray light of false dawn, this time already astride his lovely white horse. Karal fastened the packs behind Honeybee’s saddle first, then Trenor’s, and swung quickly up onto Trenor’s back so that he could watch while Ulrich mounted.
At least Ulrich didn’t seem to be in any great difficulty. Maybe he was overreacting.
And maybe I really don’t ever want to have to face Her Holiness and confess to carelessness. Better safe than sorry, as the saying goes.
They were some few leagues down the road, when Rubrik pulled up his mount beside Ulrich, and motioned to Karal that he should stay abreast of them as well. “I had a rather interesting conversation with your young secretary last night,” he said, and waited for Ulrich’s reply.
“I know,” Ulrich said calmly. “He told me.”
“I rather thought he might,” came Rubrik’s amused response. “You and your leader have chosen well. If I may venture a guess, he told me
exactly
what he was permitted to—no lies, but nothing more and nothing less than what he had been granted leave to reveal.”
Ulrich laughed out loud. “Very good, friend! And now, since your appetite—or that of whomever it is you are reporting to—has been whetted, you are coming to me for more information than you think he is allowed to give, in the hopes that I have permission to tell you more. And knowing that young Karal would not have been permitted to tell you
anything
if we had not intended for you to come to me.”
Rubrik made a slight bow from the saddle, full of amused irony. “Now that we have both agreed that we are too clever for the usual diplomatic half-truths, if you will allow me to give you a starting point, perhaps you can tell me how the Karsites reacted to the alliance with Valdemar, especially after we got rid of Ancar. Do feel free to ignore anything you haven’t got leave to answer.”
“I shall,” the Priest replied with urbane courtesy. Then Ulrich nodded, as if to himself, and while the steady sound of hoofbeats filled the silence, spent a moment in thought. “Many of the Karsites felt the alliance would not endure past that moment,” he replied. “There was a sizable number, though not a majority, who believed that the alliance had never been a good idea. But then the army of the Empire appeared, already well into Hardorn, and heading for Karse and Valdemar.”
Rubrik snorted mirthlessly. “Indeed. An unpleasant surprise for all concerned.”
The sky to the east showed a hint of color; sunrise would be spectacular—which did not presage a very pleasant ride today. A colorful sunrise, at least in Karse, meant that there would be storms during the day. There was no reason to think that the weather had changed just because he was across a border.
“We knew of the Empire, of course, but probably no more than you,” Ulrich said after a moment. “Some had even dismissed the power of the Emperor and the size of the armies he controlled as nothing more than myth or exaggeration. But then—there he was, or rather, there his army was, even bigger than all the stories had claimed. Suddenly there was nothing standing between us and an Empire fabled for gobbling up entire countries. We had nothing that could stop them—except, perhaps, our own resourcefulness, our God—and that insignificant, inconvenient little alliance with Valdemar.”
“Which probably didn’t seem so insignificant or
nearly
so inconvenient, all things considered, when troop estimates came in,” Rubrik replied. And if there was a hint of smugness in his voice, well, Karal could hardly blame him.
“There was another side to all of this that you probably had no hint of,” Ulrich said, after another moment of thought. “And that is what the appearance of the Empire did for Her Holiness’ credibility.”
Ulrich nodded at his secretary, and Karal couldn’t resist the invitation to have a word of his own in the discussion. “She’d been saying all along that Vkandis was warning her of an even greater peril to come,” he offered proudly. “There weren’t too many people who believed her, Son of the Sun or not, except Ulrich and a few other Priests.”
He stopped then, afraid he might have overstepped himself, but the look Ulrich gave him was approving rather than the opposite. “Precisely. Now she showed that she was a true prophet, for no one could have predicted that the Empire would take an interest in Hardom—and everything beyond it, one presumes. There is not a soul in Karse who doubts her now.”
Well, that wasn’t quite true, but it was near enough. “Now our people as a whole are somewhat—bewildered,” Ulrich concluded. “They are having some difficulty with the various changes she has decreed, but it is obvious even to the worst of her detractors that she knows, in the broadest sense of the word, what must be done to save us. It is very clear that if her instructions—or rather, the instructions of Vkandis, as passed to her—are not followed, Karse will not survive the attentions of the Empire. For the people, it is a difficult time. For those of us who believed in Solaris and in our land and God, it is a time of vindication.”
“Interesting,” Rubrik replied, softly. “I hope you won’t mind if I think all this over for a while.”
“Be my guest,” Ulrich told him, with a hint of a smile. “I believe you might be having just as much difficulty with some of this as some Karsites I could mention.”
Rubrik gave him an oblique look but did not reply. Karal felt immensely cheered. It looked as if his mentor had given the Valdemaran more to chew on than he had reckoned possible. Karal had the feeling that the Valdemaran, for the first time, actually believed that Solaris truly was the Son of the Sun, and not just another power-hungry Priest. The Valdemarans would have been perfectly willing to deal with another False Son—provided he (or she) set policies that benefited Valdemar. Karal was not so naive as to think otherwise. But a ruler with the
true
power of the One God behind her—
now that
was another proposition altogether.
Seeing Vkandis as something other than an empty vessel or a puppet for the Priests to manipulate was something Karal guessed Rubrik had not been prepared to deal with.
One point scored for us,
he thought with satisfaction, and settled into the ride.
 
Rubrik inevitably came back with more questions, of course, but they were not about the political situation in Karse, but rather, about Ulrich himself. Gradually Karal came to see the pattern to those questions. Rubrik was trying to discover what the envoy
himself
was made of, the kind of man that the Valdemaran government would be dealing with—and just how much trust Solaris placed in the hands of that envoy.
It was sometimes hard to tell what Rubrik was thinking, but Karal judged that on the whole he was satisfied—and rather surprised to be satisfied. Whatever he had been expecting, it had not been a pair like Karal and his master.
Karal found it amusing to speculate on what he
might
have been expecting. An oily, professional politician like the last False Son had been, interested only in power and prestige? An ascetic, like Ophela, with no personal interests whatsoever, blind and deaf to anything other than God and Karse?
Throughout the morning, storm clouds had threatened to unleash another torrent; by the time they stopped at an inn for a meal at noon, it was obvious that they were going to ride right down the throat of another storm like the one yesterday.
This time their escort had found them a decent inn, which had its own share of travelers, and none of them paid any attention to a pair of black-clad clergy and their white-liveried escort. Most seemed too concerned with eating and getting on their way again to waste any time in idle curiosity about other travelers. While Karal and his master lingered over a final cup of ale, Rubrik went out to the courtyard, brooded over the state of the weather, then stared at his horse’s head for a long time.
Finally he signaled to the stableboy to come and take his horse, Honeybee, and Trenor to the shelter of the stables, then limped back to the inn. “There’s no use going any farther today,” he said, clearly annoyed, but not with them. “This storm reaches from here past the inn where I intended us to stop. I wish that Elspeth had a few more Herald-Mages to go around. It seems that this so-called ‘wizard-weather’ is getting worse, not better.”
Now how did he know all that?
Karal wondered. He hadn’t spoken to anyone. Then again, he was very familiar with this area, as he had already demonstrated more than once. Maybe he could tell what the weather was doing by looking for clues too subtle for Karal to catch.
“I can’t speak for your situation here,” Ulrich replied carefully, “but I can tell you that in magic, sometimes things do have to get worse before they get better.”

Not
the sort of thing that your escort cares to hear, my friend,” Rubrik replied with a weary laugh as he turned to look at the lowering clouds. He shook his head for, if anything, they were darker and thicker than before. Even Karal could tell they were in for a blow. “I was hoping to make up some time—”
“Not today, friend,” Ulrich said with regret. “If we do not stop here, we would have to stop soon. I’m afraid that my old bones are not dealing well with this weather of yours.”
Inwardly Karal cheered. At least Ulrich was going to keep his promise!
Rubrik looked around for the innkeeper. “Well, I might as well bespeak some chambers. At least we are well ahead of anyone else.”
So it seemed, for he returned to them in a much more cheerful frame of mind, just as the stableboy brought up their packs from the stable. “I think you’ll enjoy this stay. This may make up for the fool who sold our rooms out from under us,” he said—then told the boy, “Bard Cottage.”
The horseboy led them around to a door at the rear of the inn, which seemed a little odd to Karal. Such doors were normally used only at night, by servants, and he could not begin to imagine why the boy had taken them this way.
Then the boy led them outside, and there, connected to the inn by a covered walkway, was a neat little building standing all by itself. It was
probably
supposed to look like a farmer’s cottage, but no farmer had ever built anything like this. Toylike, cheerfully painted, and far too perfect; if Karal was any judge, it had probably cost more than any three real cottages put together.
It’s more like the way a highborn would think a farmer’s cottage looks,
Karal decided, regarding the gingerbread carvings, the window boxes full of flowers, and the freshly-painted, spotless exterior with a jaundiced eye.
“This place is usually taken,” Rubrik said with satisfaction. “It’s very popular with those with the silver for absolute privacy. There’s a small bedroom for each of us, beds fit for a prince, cozy little parlor, private bathing room, and they’ll bring dinner over from the inn. If we’re going to have to wait out a storm, this is the way to do it.”
The rooms were tiny, but the beds were as soft as promised; Karal had the absurd feeling that he was sequestered in a doll house, but the place was comfortable, no doubt about that. The cottage would be hideously confining for a long stay, especially for three adults who did not know each other very well.
By the time they’d each taken a turn at soaking in the huge bathtub, however, Karal was quite prepared to agree with Rubrik’s earlier statement. For waiting out a storm, this was the best of all possible venues. He was the last to take his bath, and when he got out, the smell of fresh muffins and hot tea greeted his nose.

Other books

Body Copy by Michael Craven
The Bone Collector by Jeffery Deaver
To Catch a Mermaid by Suzanne Selfors
Death Takes a Holiday by Elisabeth Crabtree
Unexpected by J.J. Lore
Past Due by Seckman, Elizabeth
Glass House by Patrick Reinken