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Authors: Sevastian

BOOK: The Summoner
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“But mark my words,” he said, looking to Tris and the others, “we won’t be rid of bad luck until we’re rid of him.”

“Three…”

With an uncertain glance at the mercenary and his sword, Kaine raised his hands in surrender and backed away, disappearing in the throng as the caravaners returned to their ruined camp.

“I wouldn’t have minded seeing that troublemaker run through,” Soterius remarked darkly as Vahanian sheathed his sword.

“Not worth the effort,” Vahanian replied. Tris glanced back at Carina, who still sobbed in the crone’s arms.

“I’ll see to her,” the old grannywitch said, patting Carina’s back. “Be about your business.”

Vahanian walked a few paces and stopped. Tris caught up to him and looked down at the dead bandit at Vahanian’s feet. Vahanian looked from the dead man to Carina and back again. “That’s the same thief I ran out of camp yesterday, the one I thought was our prowler,” Vahanian said tonelessly. “Looks like we got him.” He swore. “I hate being right some times.” Vahanian started 173

to turn away, only to see Carina watching them. The look of loss and regret in her eyes silenced any comment he might have made. “Come on,” he said tiredly to the others. “It’s clean‐up time.”

By sunset, the ruined camp was quiet. Groggy with fatigue and still feeling the effects of the smoke, Tris kicked at a charred scrap of wood as he headed up the slope toward the caravan from the worker’s tents. His head itched below the bandage that covered his scalp wound, and the wound itself throbbed. Soterius and the others piled the bandits’ bodies to burn. The smell of burning flesh made Tris want to retch.

The caravan lay in complete disarray. Charred heaps were all that remained of many wagons. In the center of the clearing, the main tent smoldered, its remaining posts like burned bones thrusting up from the ground. Maynard Linton was wandering among the ruins, shaking his head.

“They cost us most of a season’s profit,” Linton said sadly, his jowled face the picture of misery.

“Whole wagons gone. I don’t know how many dead or injured. All this and winter coming on.”

He shook his head once more. “Not good,” he said, worried. “Not good.”

Tris spotted Carroway, weighed down by two buckets of water. His tunic was torn, one sleeve ripped shoulder to wrist. Soot‐streaked and splashed with blood, the bard smiled tiredly as he spotted Tris. “Good to see you in one piece,” Carroway hailed him, stopping. “Why don’t you come with me? Carina needs all the help she can get over at the tent.”

Tris accepted one of the buckets and headed toward the largest remaining tent. Burns in its roof opened it to the sun. Tris ducked under the sagging tent flap. The tent was a sick ward, with the injured laid out in neat rows on blankets. Of the nearly one hundred caravanners, it appeared that nearly half awaited Carina’s ministrations.

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Night fell. Tris and Carroway brought in torches to light the healer’s work. The old hearth witch, Alyzza, worked alongside Carina, making poultices and mixing healing teas. Both Cam and the old lady kept a protective eye on Carina, forcing the healer to rest, eat and drink. As Tris watched Carina, he realized that she and Cam shared an uncanny resemblance. Brother and sister, perhaps, he thought, not lovers?

By the time the night was well spent, Tris decided that an impromptu healer’s lot was nearly as exhausting as a fighter’s. Carroway stepped assuredly into the chaos, carrying the wounded, directing others who brought their comrades for healing, splitting wood for splints and crutches and ripping large pieces of cloth into bandages. In the center of the tent, a fire gave Carina the boiling water she required for potions and poultices. Tris followed Carroway’s lead, trying not to focus on his own throbbing head, or, in the moments when his head did not ache, on the questions that his battlefield vision raised.

As the first light of dawn streaked above the hills, Carina reached the last of her patients. Her face was drawn with exhaustion and dark circles rimmed her eyes. Tris surmised she was moving on sheer willpower, and his opinion of the healer doubled. Gently, Carina placed a hand over her patient’s wound and closed her eyes, leaning against Cam for support. In a few moments, the patient smiled in astonishment as Carina lifted her hand to reveal a wound that was well on its way to healing, normally the work of several weeks. As the man expressed his gratitude, the healer sagged against Cam, utterly exhausted.

A few stragglers pressed forward with minor injuries. “Come back tomorrow,” Cam barked, folding Carina in his arms protectively. “She’s done everything she can tonight.” With a whispered word to Carina and an answering nod, the fighter lifted the healer like a child and with a grim expression that dared anyone to attempt to stop him, strode from the tent.

Maynard Linton followed Cam and laid a hand on his shoulder. “Will she be all right?” Cam nodded, gently rocking the healer in his arms like a tired child. “Almost good as new. Can’t say the same for all of them,” he said with a jerk of his head toward the tent.

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Linton stretched out a hand and gently brushed back the dark hair from the healer’s eyes.

“Thank her for me when she wakes up, please,” he said quietly.

Cam nodded. “That I will,” he promised, then shouldered his way through the crowd to the tent opening and disappeared.

Harrtuck and Soterius found Tris and Carroway a few moments later. Soterius offered them both trenchers laden with food. “Here. Eat. No matter how interesting it’s been, it doesn’t justify missing a meal,” Soterius said. For a moment, they were silent as they wolfed down the food.

“Linton always hires on the best cooks he can afford,” Harrtuck said, his words slurred by a full mouth. “Looks like it might be the only good thing about this trip,” he said, cleaning up the last of his food with a thick slice of bread.

“He must be doing very well to have a first‐class healer travel with them,” Tris mused. He looked around. “Where’s Vahanian?”

Harrtuck shrugged. “Last I saw he was helping burn the bodies. Wouldn’t be surprised to find him drinking with Linton in his tent when this is all over.”

Tris looked down the caravan midway toward the far end of the fields, where a pyre burned. The dangers of the road were becoming painfully clear. It would take more than a little luck for them to reach Dhasson alive.

Alone in his tent, exhausted and sore, Tris was too tired to sleep. He watched the flickering candle flame. The visions that came over him on the battlefield were disquieting and clear. By the Lady, he thought, if I can’t do better than that, I’m no use to anyone. I won’t live to get to Dhasson, let alone take back Margolan if I see every ghost on the battlefield! His stomach churned as he thought about his failure. He froze, making himself an easy target. Worse, he was 176

barely useful defending the camp. His mage power seemed more dangerous than defensive.

“Don’t be so hard on yourself, Tris,” came a voice, and Tris startled, looking around the small tent. Flickering and barely visible, was the image of Bava K’aa. “My time is short,” she warned. “I failed to prepare you for the time the power would come upon you. I should have expected…

circumstances like these… might have triggered the power. Forgive me.”

Tris held out his hand to the apparition, who glided closer and reached out for him. Tris felt a tingle as her insubstantial hand brushed past his outstretched fingers, and he closed his eyes, squeezing back tears. He felt the tingle through his whole body, and the overwhelming sense of his grandmother’s presence, as if, for an instant, she shared his mind. He opened his eyes and stared questioningly at the ghost, who smiled sadly.

“I cannot stay,” the spirit said regretfully. “Even now, dark power searches for you. Listen well, Tris. You have the power to become a great Summoner, more powerful even than I. But you must learn control.” She hesitated, and the image flickered and dimmed. “Already, Jared seeks a way to banish my spirit forever; else, I would train you myself. Go to the Library at Westmarch.

There, you will find a teacher for your training.” ‘

“But the Library at Westmarch was destroyed in the Mage Wars,” he protested. “It doesn’t exist anymore.”

“So we permitted people to believe,” Bava K’aa said with a knowing smile. “For those whom the Sisterhood vouchsafes, the Library will yield its secrets.”

“Show me how to control what I see,” Tris begged, his fears rising in his throat. “I’m no use to my friends if I can’t protect them.”

“I must go,” the spirit said. “I do not know if I can come again. At Westmarch, you will find a beginning to all that you seek. Ride with the blessing of the Lady,” she said, raising a hand in 177

farewell.

“Please, wait,” Tris called.

But by then, the ghost had faded to mist and then to nothing at all. Tris stared at the air where the spirit had been for a long time, until the guttering candle reminded him of the hour and he sought fitful sleep as the dawn began to light the sky.

CHAPTER TEN

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IT took two days after the bandit attack for Tris to find the opportunity to speak with Carina alone. He tried to arrange his tasks so that he could keep the healer’s tent in sight, but she did not leave the tent by herself for an exasperating length of time.

When Tris finally saw his chance, Carina was heading toward her tent, coming from the far side of the caravan camp. It was the last day before they moved on, and the crews were already starting to break down tents and booths. Setup and teardown were the times when the most accidents occurred, and when Carina was the busiest. No surprise then, Tris thought, that she was difficult to find.

“I wanted to thank you for what you did,” Tris said, catching up with her and touching the gash 178

on his forehead that was well on its way to healing. Carina looked at him tiredly, and frowned slightly as if trying to place him.

“You’re one of the hired guards, aren’t you?” she asked. “You helped me get the patients out, when the building was on fire.” Tris nodded. She looked at him a moment longer, as if trying to put something into words, then looked away.

“My friends call me Tris,” he said. There was no hiding his Margolan accent, he knew, but at least the name was common. His mother, Queen Serae, had quickly gained the affection of the people of Margolan, making her name and the names of her children embarrassingly fashionable when he was a boy. No one, it seemed, fancied Eldra or Jared enough to use their names, and that had been one more thing Jared held against Tris and Kait. Now Tris was grateful that it was not remarkable that a laborer might share the same name with a prince.

The healer smiled tentatively. “You saved my life in that building. Thank you.”

Tris dismissed the words, embarrassed. “I’d like to talk to you.” He paused, then forged on. “I’d like to talk to you… about how you do what you do.”

Carina stopped and met his eyes. “That’s an unusual request from a swordsman,” she said neutrally. “I don’t bless swords or curse enemies, and I wouldn’t show you how if I could.”

“That isn’t what I meant.”

Carina looked at him closely, as if taking his measure. “What you did… in the fire… using magic to throw that beam… Have you ever done that before?”

“No,” Tris replied uncomfortably. “But my granny was a hedge witch.” Tris begged the forgiveness of Bava K’aa’s spirit for the gross understatement. “I need to learn… to understand…

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how to control my power before I kill someone, and how to block out the spirits before they drive me mad.”

“Come inside,” Carina said, gesturing for him to join her in her tent. He’r voice was brusque with exhaustion but not unkind, and Tris imagined that she was often besieged by questions from the curious. She motioned him to be seated and nudged a small clay teapot closer to the fire in the center of the tent floor. “Why do you think I can help you?”

“I don’t know where else to go,” Tris said, forcing himself to meet her eyes. “When I was young, my grandmother taught me some of her magic—like lighting a fire without a spark. But now, it’s like a floodgate opened,” he said, his growing desperation clear in his voice. “Every time I dream, I remember something else she taught me. I can feel the magic, but when I touch it, I’m not sure whether I’m using it or it’s using me.” He paused. “Carina, when did you know that you could do what you do?”

Carina paused before answering. “I think at some level, I’ve always known,” she said quietly.

“But I didn’t start to train for it until after—” S he stopped abruptly. “Until I was in my teens.”

“But how did you know?” Tris pressed, and she looked at him for a moment before she spoke.

“I just… knew,” she answered quietly. “I can’t describe it. Maybe it’s different for different people. I felt the power, but I didn’t know what it was for, or how to make it do anything. Then once, when my favorite horse was hurt, I was caring for him and I was thinking about what it would take to heal him, and things happened.” She smiled. “Scared me half to death.”

“How did you know where to go, to learn more?”

Carina’s face hardened and she looked away. “That wasn’t a problem,” she answered, her tone cold. “It was taken care of.”

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“I’m sorry,” Tris said gently. “I didn’t mean to pry.”

Carina shook her head. “It’s all right; It’s just that, where I come from, people are superstitious.

They don’t like mages.” She gave a sad smile. “In fact, they like them even less than they like twins.”

So that was why such a talented healer and an expert swordsman traveled with an obscure caravan, Tris thought.

“Look, Tris, there isn’t anything else I can tell you,” she said, uncomfortable, as if she’d said too much.

“It’s not that simple,” Tris said, shaking his head stubbornly. “When the bandits attacked, right before I got hit, I saw the bandits die,” he said, the words tumbling out, “I saw their spirits rise up out of their bodies,” he confessed in a whisper. “I thought I was going mad. It happened everywhere I looked, until one of the raiders

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