The Soprano Sorceress: The First Book of the Spellsong Cycle (47 page)

BOOK: The Soprano Sorceress: The First Book of the Spellsong Cycle
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ENCORA, RANUAK
“T
he Evult unleashed the headwaters of the Ost. Much of Wei was flooded,” reports Veria. “The entire trading area will have to be rebuilt.” She seats herself on a low cushion to the left of the Matriarch’s chair.
“He is a little man. Every time his plans are thwarted, he wants to destroy something,” observes the Matriarch. “He will have to unleash something even worse on Defalk before long.”
“Why? People still flee Falcor, and the border lords must buy our grain. Each week the land suffers more from the heat, and the harvest would hardly repay a third of what you loaned Barjim and lost.”
“She never loses,” points out Ulgar. “You only lose when you stop playing.”
Veria’s eyes flicker to the silver-haired consort who is bent over a board filled with pieces. “Father … this is not a game.”
“It is not … not exactly, but he is right, dear,” says the Matriarch, her round face still cheerful. “Lord Behlem plays the Lord of Defalk now, and he still holds the soprano sorceress.”
“I’d say she holds him, though neither knows it,” opines Ulgar.
“None of this makes sense,” protests Veria.
“Oh, it doesn’t make sense; but the parts of the harmonies are there, and there will be a harmonic resolution. That’s why the Evult is only making matters worse with all his fussing and fuming.”
“Mother—”
“Matriarch, dear. We are speaking officially.” The Matriarch offers a serious face for a moment, but the smile returns to the cherubic cheeks as she speaks. “Eladdrin will fail against the sorceress because he expects her to fight, and she will not, not on his terms. That will upset the Evult even more, and he will fly into a rage, and do something even more dissonant, and that will strengthen the rebounding harmonies. Really, it is quite clear.”
“What about the golds?” pursues Veria.
“I do not know, but a debt is a debt, and it will be paid one way or another.”
Veria looks to her father, but he only smiles.
E
ven before she washed or dressed, Anna was at the mirror, lutar out and envelope in hand, the envelope heavy with her letter, the gold and silver coins, her watch, and the small drawing.
“Mirror, mirror …”
This time the image was clear. Elizabetta was alone, standing in front of the dresser in the guest room at Avery’s vacation house, rubbing her eyes. Anna didn’t wait, but strummed the lutar and began the spell, hoping, somehow, that it would work.
“Bring this to my daughter, in her land,
Deliver it safely to her hand,
let her know that I love her … .”
The envelope vanished, and the tower room around Anna shivered, as though a distant chord had been plucked on a gigantic harp and reverberated through the entire tower, through all of Falcor. Yet Anna sensed she alone felt that chord.
Her head ached, and sharp needles stabbed through her eyes. Still, Anna, though her head was pounding, started to repeat the first spell, but the words caught in her throat as cracks rippled across the mirror and flames flickered along the wooden mirror frame.
She barely managed to empty the water basin across the burning wood before her knees shivered into jelly, and she half staggered, half fell toward the bed.
W
hen Anna woke again, her head ached, and her whole body ached, and her room was hot and dusty from the hot wind coming through the window. She could barely open gummy eyes and struggle upright.
Drinking nearly an entire pitcher of water—slowly, so slowly—helped reduce the headache. After easing the
cloth-covered breakfast tray from the landing, she began to eat. The stale bread and hard cheese helped, and, by the time she had finished, she only felt like Farinelli had ridden over her, as opposed to an entire army.
Ignoring a too-damp forehead, she looked to the window, no longer blocked by the unseen cooling filter she had earlier ensorcelled into place, then to the blackened and sagging rectangle that had been a mirror. She’d have to get another. Apparently, sending even the smallest package to earth had taken tremendous effort. Anna shivered, despite the heat. Everyone said she was the strongest sorceress around, and if she had that much trouble … She shivered again, then forced herself to her feet.
She needed clean water, and she needed a mirror. Slowly, she reached for the bellpull, and then shuffled to the door.
When she opened the door for the page, Skent’s mouth opened as he saw the wall past her shoulder.
“These things happen to sorceresses,” she said. “I need a new mirror—an old one—any kind of mirror—immediately, and I need more water.”
“Yes … Lady Anna.”
“I’m sorry, Skent. It’s hard, sometimes.” She stepped aside. “Could you take what’s left of the mirror?”
Skent just gawked for a moment.
“Not all spells work the way they should. People forget that.” She rubbed her forehead. “And, if you wouldn’t mind, could you bring me something more to eat?”
The page almost shook his head, but looked dumbly at the spidered lines and the blackened frame of the mirror before he stepped toward it.
After Skent left, Anna sat down and drank some more water while she waited for the wash water, the food, and another mirror. From the way she felt, she didn’t even want to consider how she looked.
Before long Birke brought the wash water, and a small tray of dried apples and bread.
“Thank you.”
The page nodded and backed away.
When she had eaten some of the apples, she spelled the water. Laboriously, she washed and began to pull on her clothes.
She stood dressed but barefooted in the middle of the room, forcing more of the rubbery apples past her lips, when the knocker thunked.
“Yes?” She half walked, half staggered toward the door.
“It is Menares, Lady Anna.”
She suppressed a groan and opened the door.
With a smile, the white-haired counselor marched into the chaos of the room and looked around. “What mighty sorcery have you tried this morning?” asked Menares pleasantly.
“What?”
“Lady Anna, I am not powerful, but I am not without wit. You appear as though you have wrestled with dissonance. Your room is hot, and your composure is less than perfect.” The counselor smiled. “And your page has removed a burned mass of glass and wood.”
“Trying to bridge worlds,” Anna admitted. “It takes more effort than I thought.”
“Were … you successful?” Menares’s eyes narrowed.
“Not so much as I would have liked.” Anna didn’t want to say more. So she walked to the table and took another swallow of water. “What did you have in mind?”
“Since you will lead the vanguard, the Prophet wanted to inform you that you will leave at dawn tomorrow.”
“What is the vanguard?”
“You will have some two companies of lancers, in addition to Subofficer Spirda and your personal guard.”
“A company?” asked Anna.
“Five squads.”
Anna tried to calculate mentally, then just approximated—something like one hundred and fifty mounted armsmen.
“You will be ready?”
“I’ll be ready.” She paused. “Wait. I’ll need messengers, some sort of way to communicate, and once we get there—”
Menares held up a hand. “You should talk to Overcaptain Hanfor. He will be coordinating the Prophet’s forces.” The counselor stood. “You have much to do, as do I.” He bowed once more before departing.
Anna closed the door slowly, rubbed her forehead, then the back of her neck, far too tight and stiff. She didn’t pretend to be a military expert, but what Menares had told her didn’t seem to show any great organization. Either that or, once again, the good old boys were trying to keep her in the dark. She rubbed her forehead and looked around the room for her boots. She definitely needed to see Hanfor.
But where had she left the boots?
One was under the bed, the other in the corner halfcovered by laundry she had meant to do. The thought of doing anything else with sorcery sent another stab of fire through her eyes. Who would have thought … ? She started to shake her head, then stopped. Why was it so damned hard just to send one lousy envelope to Elizabetta? She could churn up the subsurface, murder people, and destroy armies, but sending one message to her daughter put her out of commission and ruined her ability to do sorcery.
Her eyes burned.
Stop it!
she swore at herself.
You can’t change the way this stupid world works.
After blotting her eyes, she yanked the bellpull, almost angrily, and waited for a page to appear. This time, the unlucky youth was Birke.
“Birke, do you know where I can find Overcaptain Hanfor?”
“He stays somewhere in the east quarters.”
“Fine. Let’s go.”
Birke looked at the floor stones with resignation. “Yes, lady.”
Anna followed the redhead down the tower steps and into a courtyard filled with the chaos of supply wagons, armsmen seemingly riding back and forth endlessly, dust, and the odor of fresh horse dung. They hugged the hall walls to avoid the riders that seemed to fill most of the space. Over the clicking of hoofs, and the growl of armsmen’s
voices, Anna could hear the muffled
brawwk
ing of the liedburg’s chickens, although she saw none.
“Might I help you, Lady Anna?”
She looked up to see a familiar, black-bearded face mounted on a dark chestnut.
“We’re headed to see Overcaptain Hanfor.” Anna paused.
“Over there.” Fhurgen pointed to the open-shuttered building to the east of the hall. “Just walk beside me.” The armsman raised his voice. “Give way. Give way.”
Anna almost blushed, but Fhurgen knew what he was doing, and she walked straight across the courtyard, faintly amused as the mounted armsmen halted for her.
Outside the designated door, she turned. “Thank you, Fhurgen.”
“My pleasure, Lady Anna.” The armsman gave a head bow and turned his mount away.
Anna walked through the door and into a narrow hallway. Less than five yards back was a closed door with a sentry.
As she neared, the young armsman looked from the page to Anna, then swallowed, and said, even before Anna could speak. “The overcaptain is expecting you, lady. Might I tell him you are here?”
Anna nodded. Somehow it didn’t surprise her that Hanfor expected her; it would have surprised her if he had not.
The guard opened the battered and stained wooden door. “The lady … sorceress is here, ser.”
“Have her come in.”
Anna inclined her head to Birke, then to the guard, and stepped into the dark and low-ceilinged room that contained little more than a pallet in the corner, a three-legged table, four stools, and Hanfor’s arms and gear, neatly stacked against the wall on the inside corner.
The two younger officers with Hanfor stood abruptly, yet stiffly, as Anna entered the small room, stuffy despite the open window.
“Lady Anna.” Hanfor bowed. “Might I present you two of my officers? Captain Alvar.” He nodded to the short,
wiry man with the black hair and beard. “This is Lady Anna.” He turned to the taller and stockier man with curling sandy hair, clean-shaven except for a curling and drooping mustache. “Captain Himar, Lady Anna.”
“My pleasure, Lady Anna,” responded Alvar. His black eyes showed a trace of a twinkle, and he had a warm voice.
“My honor,” said Himar, more formally.
Hanfor nodded, and the two bowed again to Anna and eased out of the room. Alvar bowed once more and shut the door.
“These are the best I can offer.” Hanfor gestured to the stools.
Anna sat, gratefully. “We need to talk.”
“I would agree.” Hanfor’s voice was droll, but not condescending.
“Menares just told me that I would be leading some lancers out of here tomorrow morning. I’m a sorceress and a few other things, but I’m not a military leader.” Anna paused. “Menares said you were in charge.”
“Subject to the orders of the Prophet,” the weathered officer answered. ‘But I am the one who will get the blame should anything go wrong. I try to avoid that.”
“What are the plans, and how do you suggest I handle my part?”
“I was told you were very effective at the Sand Pass.”
“So I’m told. But I went where I was told, and I did my best to destroy the enemy.” Anna shrugged. “It worked.”
“Menares told me that you had wanted the Prophet’s troops marshaled in Pamr? Is that so?”
“Not exactly … .” Anna explained, without giving details of the spells or their precise hoped-for effect, how she would try to use the river to decimate the Ebran forces, but how that required that Eladdrin stay on the south side of the Chean, and close to the bluffs.
Hanfor spread out a small map. “Show me.”
“Here—see, there’s the ford, and the trail runs along here. This map doesn’t show it, but it’s there.”
The overcaptain pursed his lips, then asked as he straightened
from the map on the small table, “So you do not have any real tactical plans?”
“Heavens, no. I thought that was up to whoever commanded the troops. And I probably messed things up because I’m not a military person.” Anna spread her hands. “I should have come to you sooner, I suppose, but I was trying not to do anything to offend Lord Behlem. A few things have happened, and I’m not used to everything in Liedwahr.”
“Lady Anna, I had hoped it would be a pleasure to work with you, and it appears as though it will be.” Hanfor smiled, warmly.
“Why?” Anna tried not to sound skeptical at Hanfor’s pleasure.
“You know what you need to be effective. You tell me, but you do not insist on how I must create the situation. You do not pretend to know what you do not. That makes my life much easier. It is also much easier on the armsmen.” Hanfor stood and paced to the small window, not looking at Anna. “I can see certain problems, however.”
“Such as?”
“You need an escort strong enough to fend off their heavy scouts, yet you will need to be close enough to where you do your sorcery, and you do not wish to be detected. Can you throw a concealment spell?”
“I don’t know. I’ve never tried.” Anna frowned. “I could test one later today. I have time. What else?”
“I see that as the single largest problem.” The overcaptain turned. “You can ride, quickly, I hope.”
“I have learned that.”
“Can you use spells while riding?”
“I have used them from the saddle, not while riding.”
“Hmmm … that should work with that beast of yours. You are taking just the one player?”
“Daffyd? Yes. I need his support.”
And more, but if I had to rely on players like Fiena … forget it.
“What if the Ebrans do not come near your river, but detect your actions and circle around you?”
“Then I move back and use what I have. It won’t be as effective, but it should work as well as at the Sand Pass. I have some other spells as well, in case they have some way of stopping what I used there.”
“I wish some armsmen thought in those terms.” Hanfor shook his head. “I must think about the best way to work this out. I will talk to you in the morning before you go. Now … you should know the order line—”
“Order line?”
“Captain Alvar will be the senior captain, and all orders actually must go through him to the lancers.”
“So I don’t order anything stupid?”
“He is a brave man, Lady Anna. And experienced.”
Anna thought for a moment. Anyone who agreed to serve under a sorceress in this culture was probably brave—to say the least. “Did you choose him?”
“I told him that you were reasonable, and that you were loyal to those who support you. Was I wrong?”
“No,” Anna admitted. “I don’t think so.”
“In his absence, or if something occurs to him, the orders would go through Captain Himar—except for your personal guard under Subofficer Spirda. Spirda answers to you, directly, and I will emphasize that to him again, and to the captains. You will not have trouble there.”

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