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Authors: Mercedes Lackey

Storm Warning (9 page)

BOOK: Storm Warning
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Finally, as Rubrik turned to point out a wedge of geese flying overhead, pursued by a goshawk, the answer to all those questions came to him.
Rubrik’s right arm moved stiffly; he could not seem to raise it above his shoulder. There was a “dead” quality to the right side of his face. And although his right knee stuck out woodenly, his left leg showed the perfect form of an experienced rider.
Rubrik was injured somehow—or he’d had some kind of brainstorm. He was partially paralyzed; the stiffness of his right side and the little tic in the corner of his right eye were the last clues that Karal needed.
Rubrik would have to have such a mount, one trained to compensate for
his
weakness, if he was to be at all mobile. Now Karal’s admiration for the stunning horse increased a hundredfold, for a horse so trained must be as intelligent as one of the legendary Shin’a’in beasts.
His admiration turned to more surprise when he realized that Rubrik’s horse was not a gelding as he had assumed, but a full stallion. A full stallion—one which showed no interest in Honeybee who, although a mule, was still a mare? What kind of training could ever give a horse that kind of self-control?
He would have asked just that question if Ulrich had not engaged their escort’s attention completely, asking about some complex situation at the Valdemaran Court. A good half of the names Ulrich bandied about so casually completely eluded his secretary, although Karal recognized most of the rest from all the correspondence he had handled over the past few weeks.
I guess there was a lot more going on in those private conferences than Ulrich led me to believe. Not that that
should surprise him!
He suppressed his own curiosity and simply listened to the two men talk, for this, too, was part of his job—to learn as much as he could by listening.
Eventually, either Ulrich tired of asking questions, or the envoy decided that he wanted to think about what he had learned before he asked anything more. By this time, the last of the farmlands were behind them; if anyone used the hills on either side of the road for anything, it was probably to harvest timber and for grazing. Silence fell on the party, broken only by the sounds of wildlife out in the forested hills, and by the sound of the hooves of their mounts.
That was when Karal noticed something else. While Trenor and Honeybee had perfectly normal, dull, clopping hoofbeats, the sounds of the white horse’s hooves striking the ground had a bell-like tone to them.
Maybe the Valdemarans
did
treat the beast’s hooves in some way; how else could they be silver and have such a musical sound to them?
The road they were on generally followed the contour of the land itself, staying pretty much in the valleys between the hills. Once in a while Karal caught a whiff of he-goat musk, or spotted the white blobs of grazing sheep among the trees. Forest rose on either side of the road; tall trees that had been growing for decades at least. In places the limestone bones of these hills showed through the thin soil; the trees themselves were mostly goldenoak with a sprinkling of pine or other conifers, and the occasional beech or larch.
What the forest lacked in human inhabitants, it made up for in animals. Squirrels scolded them as they passed, and songbirds called off in the distance, their voices filtering through the leaves. Jays and crows followed them with rowdy catcalls, telling all the world that
interlopers
were passing through. Once a hawk stooped on something right at the edge of the road, and lumbered up out of the way just as they reached the spot, with a snake squirming in its talons.
The road met the path of a wide river as the sun westered and sank below the level of the treetops. Karal caught glimpses of the water through the screening of trees, reflecting the light in shiny bursts through the brush.
By this time, despite his master’s assertion that the two of them could stay in the saddle as long as need be, he was getting saddle sore and stiff. His buttocks ached; his back and shoulders were in knots. He began to wonder just when this Rubrik intended to stop—or did he want to ride all night?
There was no sign of a town or village, though, so there didn’t seem to be any place they could stop.
I don’t mind camping out

but Ulrich is too old for that sort of thing,
he thought, a bit resentfully, but telling himself that concern for his master was more important than his own aches and pains. We don’t have tents, we don’t even have proper blanket rolls.
Surely this man isn’t going to expect the envoy of the Son of the Sun to sleep in leaves, rolled up in his own cloak like a vagabond!
“There’s a village I expect to reach just after sundown,” Rubrik said, startling Karal. It was almost as if the man had just read his own thoughts! “If you don’t think you can make it that far, please tell me, but I’ve made arrangements there for a private suite for you two.” He made an apologetic grimace. “I hope this doesn’t seem boorish, but I would rather that no one know your exact origin or your mission here until we reach Haven, and the best way to keep quiet is to keep the two of you away from people who might be a bit too curious about visitors to Valdemar.”
Ulrich waved away any apologies. “Those are my thoughts, precisely,” he replied. “The fewer folk who even know there are two Priests traveling here, the better. That was why I requested that Queen Selenay send only a single escort. But I must confess, I am not as confident of my stamina as I was when we met you.” He shook his head at his own weakness, then shrugged. “We are used to riding most of the day, but I have just begun to realize that ‘most’ of the day is not the same as ‘all’ of the day.”
“If it helps any, I have requested that a hot dinner be served in the suite as soon as you arrive,” Rubrik answered with an engaging smile. “And hot baths to follow.”
“I wouldn’t say no to a bottle of horse-liniment as well, sir,” Karal ventured, a little shy at inserting himself into the conversation.
“That I can supply myself—muscle-salve, and not horse-liniment, young sir,” the escort said, turning to look at him, as if surprised that he was back behind his master. Perhaps Rubrik had forgotten him?
Karal was far more pleased than offended, for if that was what had happened, it meant that he had achieved his end of being “invisible.” Ulrich had told him that a good secretary would develop the knack of vanishing into the background; that would make him less intrusive, especially to people who might be nervous about a third party being present at a delicate negotiation.
“That would be very much appreciated, my lord Rubrik,” Karal replied, ducking his head in an approximation of a bow.
But Rubrik shook an admonishing finger at Karal. “Not ‘my lord,’ youngling,” he chided gently. “Just ‘Rubrik.’ Among Heralds, there are no titles—with the sole exception of the Lady Elspeth, the Queen’s daughter. My father—was something of a landowner, a kind of farmer.”
“Ah?” That clearly caught his master’s attention. “And what did he farm, if I may ask?”
“Root crops, mostly, though he had some herds as well,” was the ready answer. That set the two of them off on a discussion of the condition of farms and farmers in both Valdemar and Karse, and it was Rubrik’s turn for questions, mostly about the weather, and whether or not it had affected the Karsites as badly as it had their Valdemaran counterparts.
Karal wondered if Rubrik realized how much information he was giving with the way he phrased his questions.
The moon rose, silvering the road before them. Karal listened and made mental notes for later. If all that Rubrik told them was true, Valdemar had been suffering from truly horrible weather until very recently—storms and disturbances out of season that were somehow connected with the magics Ancar of Hardorn had been working.
“But now that we’ve got a few mages doing weather-working, things are getting back to normal. In time to save the harvests, we hope,” Rubrik concluded.
If he hoped for a similar statement from Ulrich, he was not going to get one. “Vkandis has always cared personally for the welfare of His people,” Ulrich replied, and Karal was very glad that it was dark enough that he did not have to hide a smile.
That
was certainly a double-edged statement, and quite entirely the truth as well! It could be taken by an outsider as the simple pious mouthings of a Priest—but the bare fact was that Vkandis
did
care
personally
for the welfare of His people. What His Priests could not deal with, using the powers of magic He had granted them, He might very well take care of Himself. Karse had not suffered more than inconvenience from what Ulrich called “wizard weather,” precisely because Priests who could control the weather had been sent out to make certain that people, crops, and property were safeguarded properly.
If Rubrik was taken aback by this bland statement, he said nothing. Instead, he described some of the damage that had occurred in Hardorn, which was evidently much worse than that in Valdemar or what had been prevented in Karse.
Ulrich had taught his pupil that unshielded use of powerful magic disrupted the weather, but Karal had never had that lesson demonstrated for him. Now he
heard
what had happened, and he was appalled at the level of destruction that had taken place. And Ancar had done
nothing
to prevent it.
“Ah, look!” Rubrik said, pointing ahead of them. Karal squinted against the darkness and thought he saw lights. “There’s our inn at last. We’ll be there in less than a mark!”
“And it won’t be too soon for me,” Ulrich sighed, with feeling.
Nor for me,
Karal added silently. His behind hurt so much he was sure that he had saddle-sores, something that hadn’t happened since he was a child. The lights in the distance grew brighter and more welcoming with every moment, and the aches in his legs and back grew more persistent. No one had ever warned him that being the secretary to an envoy was going to involve this kind of work!
I hope this is the last time I ever have to ride like this for as long as I live!
Rubrik
Four
Karal didn’t get his wish, of course. He did, however, get possession of a bottle of muscle-salve that had such near-miraculous properties that he suspected magic, or the talents of a Healer-Priest in preparing it. When he woke the next morning, his aches were mostly gone, and the little pain that was left eased as he rubbed in a new application of the salve. It had a sharp scent somewhat like water-cress, not unpleasant, but nothing he recognized. Ulrich helped himself shamelessly to the potion as well, leaving the jar half empty.
They met in the courtyard of the inn, in the thin gray light of false dawn. Rubrik was already waiting, his cloud-white horse saddled and ready to ride. Rubrik himself looked quite disgustingly rested. One sleepy stableboy presented them with their mounts, already saddled, and a cook’s helper, powdered with flour, came out from the kitchen with a tray of buttered rolls and mugs of hot tea. Karal was glad he’d used that salve after he helped Rubrik to mount and climbed aboard Trenor. “Stiff’ simply wasn’t an adequate description for how he felt when he tried to actually make his muscles do some work. That reminded him of how little salve was left in the jar in his saddlebag—between himself and Ulrich, it wasn’t going to last more than another day or two.
The kitchen helper reappeared with a pair of cloth bags, and handed them to Rubrik, who slung them over his saddlebags. “Our noon meal,” their escort explained. “I hope you don’t mind eating on the road, but I want to make as much time as possible.”
Lovely. Which means
we’ll
probably be riding even longer today. Somehow he managed not to groan. “Excuse me, sir,” he said instead, anxiously. “But that salve you gave me last night worked very well—so well I don’t have much left. And—”
“And there’s more where that came from, young man,” Rubrik replied with a wink. “It’s very common in Valdemar; I have more, and I can make sure to get more when we stop for the night.”
“I can tell already that we both will require it,” Ulrich put in, with a rueful smile. “I purloined some of it myself. Perhaps you are used to riding all day, but we are not as sturdy as you. I fear the scholars’ life has left both of us ill prepared for this situation.”
Karal smiled at his mentor, grateful for Ulrich’s little comment. It made
him
look like less of a weakling. After all, how did it look, that a man who was half-crippled could ride longer and harder than a fellow half his age?
They left with the rising sun, completely avoiding any of the other guests at the inn by leaving before anyone else woke up. They didn’t stop until late morning, and by that time Karal and his master were both ready for another application of salve. How Rubrik managed such a pace, Karal could
not
fathom. Once they had stopped last night, he’d demonstrated his own physical weakness by needing help to dismount. On the ground, he had limped along with the help of a cane, his bad leg frozen with the knee locked, so that he had to swing it around from the hip, stiffly, in order to use it at all.
BOOK: Storm Warning
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