THE ORDER WAR
by
L. E. Modesitt, Jr


Copyright 1995 Cover art by Darrell K. Sweet A Tor Book Published by
Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.  175 Fifth Avenue New York.  N.Y. 10010
Tor Books on the World Wide Web: http://www.tor.com

To Jeff, for being there and being a true brother, even when I failed
to understand.

Part I CHAOS-BUILDING

Justen watched from the smooth stones of the oldest pier in Nylan as
the Shierra pulled away and out into the channel.  The black iron plate
of the deck house and single turret glistened in the morning sunlight,
and the four-span gun pointed forward like a black staff aimed at
chaos.

A thin line of white water flowed aft from the newest warship of the
Mighty Ten as she eased out into the Gulf of Candar between the twin
breakwaters that dated back to the building of Nylan itself.

The young man in engineers' black brushed a hand through his short and
light brown hair before glancing at the three students.  "Watch
closely, with just your eyes, after she clears the breakwater."

"Watch what?"  asked the thin, redheaded boy.

"The ship, silly," answered the stocky girl.

"Why?"  questioned Norah, a petite and big-eyed blonde girl.

"Watch," repeated Justen.

As heat pulsed from the Shierra's funnel, visible only as a wavering of
the greenish-blue sky to the west, white streaks seemed to flow back
from the bow as the black warship built up speed.  Suddenly, both wake
and ship vanished, leaving only the heat lines across the western
sky.

"What happened?"  asked Daskin, the redhead, a hand raised to scratch
his thick, curly hair.

"The Brother raised his shields, of course, just like we're going to be
taught to do."  The stocky girl, Jyll, did not quite snort her disgust,
but flipped her hair away from Daskin.

Justen stepped back to avoid swallowing long, black, loose tresses.  He
did not contradict her statement about being taught shielding, but it
would be years before any of these three were ready-at least from what
he could tell, but that, thankfully, was not his decision.

"Let's go."  He turned uphill, and the three students followed, Norah
trailing, her eyes still turning seaward toward the heat lines that
were the only trace of the Shierra.  A light breeze, bearing a remnant
of chill from the later winter, ruffled his black over tunic

As they passed the armory, a lanky, red-haired woman in green
emerged.

"Krytella!"  Justen waved.

"Justen.  I'll walk up to the classroom building, if you're headed that
way."  Krytella smiled.  "Do you know if Gunnar's anywhere around?"

"No.  He's up at Land's End, studying the Founders' records of the
Change."  Justen tried to keep his voice level.  Gunnar, always Gunnar,
as if his older brother were the great Creslin himself.

"Are there any?  Real records, I mean?"

"I suppose there must be.  Dorrin certainly left records."  Justen
stopped outside of the long and low black stone building that almost
seemed part of the grassy hillside.

"But he was an engineer."

"He also wrote The Basis of Order.  Most of it, anyway."  Justen
gestured at the three students.  "You can get something from the fruit
table in the dining hall.  Then we'll meet in the corner room."

"Thank you, Magister Justen," the three chorused.

"I'm not a magister, just a junior engineer of sorts," Jus-ten
observed, but the three had already trooped off.

"How can you be happy offering beginning order-instruction to spoiled
kids?"  asked Krytella.

"Why not?  Someone has to, and-" Justen stopped, realizing that once
again Krytella had compared him, unfavorably, to his older brother.  He
forced a grin and continued.  "-and I'd better catch up with them
before they eat all the fruit."

"Tell Gunnar I need to talk to him."

"I will, but you'll likely see him before I do."

"Have fun with your students."

"Thank you."

The three had not eaten all the dried fruit, having left at least half
of it.  In passing the snack table, Justen grabbed several dried pear
apple sections and stuffed them in his mouth.  He chewed and swallowed
quickly.  Then he walked down the stairs to the below ground corridor
that bisected the sunken indoor garden.  The garden separated the
dining wing from the classrooms.

The three looked up from their cushions as he closed the door.

"Take out your Basis of Order.  Let's take a look at the third section
of the first part, page fifty-the part about the concentration of
order."  Justen waited as they paged through the books that were still
too stiff, as if the only time they read was when Justen insisted.
"Would you read it, Norah?"

The wide-eyed blonde cleared her throat.  "... a staff, or any other
object, may be infused with order.  If the Balance is maintained,
concentrating such order must result in a greater amount of chaos
somewhere else.  Therefore, the greater the effort to concentrate order
within material objects, the greater the amount of free chaos within
the world."

"What does that mean, Daskin?"

"I don't know, Magister."

"All right.  You read the words, the same words."

"The same words?"

Justen nodded.  "... a staff, or any other object..."  Daskin repeated
the words already read aloud by Norah.

"Now, what does it mean?"  Daskin sighed.  "I guess it's something
about why the engineers don't put order into everything they build."

Justen nodded at Jyll.

"Is that why there are only ten of the black iron ships?"  she asked.

"How much order goes into building a ship like the Shierra?"  Justen
probed.

"Lots, or you wouldn't have asked," Norah said, grinning.

"How much iron would it take to build a hundred ships?"

"But iron's stronger, isn't it?"  asked Daskin.

"You can grow more oaks and firs, but you can't grow more iron.  Once
you've taken iron out of the earth, it's used.  Once you remove that
iron from the high hills .. . then what?"

All three looked blankly at the floor.

"What holds Recluce together?"

"Order," the three muttered.

"What does iron do?"

"Holds order."

"Fine.  What happens if we take all the iron out of the high hills? Why
do you think we try to buy as much iron as we can from Hamor, or even
from Lydiar?"

"Oh .. . That keeps more order in Recluce?"

"Right."  Justen forced a smile.  "Let's look at the question of
limits.  Where will you find that, Jyll?"

The stocky girl shrugged.

Justen took a deep breath instead of yelling.  He waited before saying,
"Look toward the end of the opening chapters.  All of you.  Tell me
when you find something."

Justen walked from one corner of the room to the other.  Had he and
Gunnar been so slow?

The three students continued to page slowly through The Basis of
Order.

Finally, Norah raised a hand.  "Is this it?"  She cleared her throat,
then began to read slowly: "If order or chaos be without limits, then
common sense would indicate that each should have triumphed when the
great ones of each discipline have arisen.  Yet neither has so
triumphed, despite men and women of power, intelligence, and ambition.
Therefore, the scope of both order and chaos is in fact limited, and
the belief in the balance of forces demonstrated ..."

Justen nodded, "What does it mean?"

"I'm not sure."

The young engineer looked out the window, across the ridgeline and
northward to the blackstone walls that separated Nylan from the rest of
Recluce.  Then he looked downhill and out across the Eastern Ocean.
Maybe Krytella was correct.  Someone had to teach, but was he the right
one?

II

"The road has reached the old domain of Westwind."  The older counselor
rubbed her forehead for an instant, then dropped her arms onto the
ancient black-oak table of the Council Room.  The faint sound of surf
from the beach below the Black Holding hissed in through the half-open
windows on the early spring breeze.

"The road does not concern me so much as the troops that precede it,"
suggested the wispy-haired man.

"Ryltar ... the road is the key to the troops, and to the trade that
follows.  When that road is finished, it will be the only direct access
to Sarronnyn."

The third counselor pursed her thin lips, then coughed.  "So far, the
Sarronnese have lost nearly two thousand troops."

"The Spidlarians lost twice that, and there the Whites razed three
cities, and we did nothing," responded Ryltar dryly.  "No one can even
precisely locate Diev to this day."

"At the time, we didn't exactly have too much with which to respond."
The older woman, black-haired and broad-shouldered, shook her head.

"You are so good at keeping me honest, Claris."  Ryltar smiled.

"You're rather good at making me sick, Ryltar," added the younger
woman.  "The point is that Fairhaven has taken the next step in
implementing Cerryl the Great's master plan for conquering Candar.  The
question is what we intend to do about it?"

"Ah, yes.  The great master plan of which we have heard so much for so
many decades.  Thank you for reminding me, Jenna."

"Ryltar, be serious."  Jenna held back a sigh.

"I am being serious.  Why don't we face the facts?  First, with our
ships, even if all of Candar falls to Fairhaven, just how could the
White Wizards threaten us?  Second, we scarcely have the trained troops
to send an army to Sarronnyn, nor could we raise such a force without
conscription, and conscription would destroy us more surely than
Fairhaven would."  Ryltar turned toward Jenna.  "Just tell me.  What is
the threat to Recluce?  What can Fairhaven really do to us?"

"Destroy our basis of order, or reduce it to the point where our ships
can no longer defend us."

"Oh?  Have you been talking to old Gylart again?"

"I don't think that Gylart's age automatically discredits his logic,"
interjected Claris.  "Jenna's-or Gylart's- point is valid.  The Whites
are creating 'domesticated' order to increase their chaos power.  Once
they take Fairhaven, what is to keep them from taking Hamor?  Or for
the Hamorians to follow the same example?  How would that affect your
most profitable trade routes then, Ryltar?"

"We are talking centuries.  Besides, I return to my original point.
Just what can we do?"  Ryltar smiled again.

III

"Run up the ensign," ordered the captain.  On the staff above the iron
pilothouse fluttered the black rya ll on a white background.  "Looks to
be a Lydian trader."  Hyntal turned to the two engineers.  "We'll just
pull alongside for a mite, Brother Pendak, and you see if you sense
anything."

Pendak nodded.

"Captain!  She's turning!  Trying to run before the wind."

"Shields!"  snapped the captain.  "Just between us."

"Shit," muttered Pendak.

"Want help?"  asked Justen.

"Not now."

Justen sensed the effort Pendak marshaled to create the barrier that
blocked the Lydians' view of the Llyse.

"Starboard a quarter."

"Coming starboard a quarter," echoed the woman at the helm.

The Llyse turned downwind, and heavy turbines whined beneath the plated
decks, the sound so faint that Justen sensed the increased power rather
than heard it.  Ahead off the Llyse's starboard bow, Justen sensed the
Lydian ship, flying only the duke's banner, not the crimson-trimmed
white banner of Fairhaven, as it lumbered through the heavy swells.
What he and the crew saw off the bow was a black emptiness.  What the
Lydians saw was an empty sea off their port quarter.

"Course bearing on the Lydian?"  asked the captain.

"Steady on the starboard forequarter, Captain.  Three cables and
closing," answered Pendak, the ship's Brother.

"Bring her port an eighth.  What devil's trick are the Whites up to
now?"

Captain Hyntal had never forgotten that his great-great grandfather had
captained the Black Hammer.  Unfortunately, he had never let anyone
else forget it either, reflected Justen.

"Coming port an eighth."  The woman at the helm eased the wheel port to
parallel the Lydian's course.

Spray flashed across the deck, and tiny droplets misted into the
pilothouse where Justen stood beside Pendak.  The older engineer's
forehead remained beaded with sweat from the effort of holding the
single-edged shield in place.

Hyntal turned toward the gunnery chief.  "Ready, weapons?"

"Turret's ready.  Captain.  Shells and rockets on standby."

"Drop the shields, Brother Pendak," ordered Hyntal.  "Let's see what
those devil Whites have added to this stew."

The Lydian ship appeared off the starboard bow.  The carved plate over
the unused paddle wheel read Zemyla.  Pendak wiped his forehead and
reached for the water bottle.  "Harder to keep a single-edge shield
than a circular one, Jus-ten."

"I could tell," Justen whispered back.

Hyntal glared at the engineers but said nothing as the Llyse edged up
to the trader.

"She's not furling those sails."

"Put a signal rocket across her bow."

Flssttt..  . The signal rocket flared in front of the Zemyla.

The Llyse kept abreast of the trader until a blue-edged white banner
floated on the aft jack staff  Then a second parley flag flapped over
the mainmast as the trader shortened sail.

"Grapples."

"Aye, grapples."

"Boarding party."

The stern-faced, black-clad marines mustered on the starboard side,
then swarmed onto the merchantman.

"It's your turn, Brothers," suggested the captain.

"You wanted to see what it's all about, Justen," Pendak said.

The younger engineer followed Pendak up the ladder and onto the gently
pitching deck of the Zemyla, where the crew had already circled away
from the boarders and were clustering either on the poop or near the
bowsprit.

The black-clad marines marched the man in the captain's jacket to the
foot of the mast.  "They say he's the captain."

"Have you always been the captain of this ship?"  asked Pendak
wearily.

"Yes, Master."

The wrongness of the words twisted at Justen.  He looked at Pendak.
Pendak looked at the head marine, an intense-appearing young man named
Marten.  "Find the first mate."

Marten and another marine turned, but even before they took a full
step, a man jumped from the poop into the sea.

For a time, the marines and the two engineers watched the water below,
but no head appeared and Justen could sense no one there.

"Was that the captain?"  asked Pendak, turning to the pseudo-captain.

"No, Scr."

The wrongness still turned in the man's words.

"Find me the second mate."

"I'm the second."  A burly man stepped up to the marines, his face and
forearms tanned and leathery, his hair sun-bleached and his trimmed
beard a mixture of blond and white.  His words rang true to Justen.

"Is this man a convict?"

"Begging yer pardon.  Master ... but ye'll put us all in a terrible
stew if this goes on."

"Do you want us to sink the ship?"  snapped Pendak.

"We'd be fools to want that."

Justen cleared his throat softly.  Pendak looked at him, then nodded.

"Were all of you threatened if you didn't agree to call this man the
captain?"  asked Justen.

"I wouldn't say as it was a threat exactly."  Sweat appeared on the
burly mate's forehead.

"More like you didn't have much choice?"

"I don't know as how I could answer that."  The words choked forth, and
perspiration coated the mate's face.

The soaked shirt and red face made Justen's decision.  "That's all."

"We'll need to look around," Pendak added.  "Not that we expect we'll
find anything."

"As you wish, Order Masters."

"You want to take forward?"  Pendak pointed toward the bow.

"Fine."  Justen walked forward, and his senses ranged over the ship.
Pendak was right.  The ship felt orderly, too orderly.  Before long, he
walked back to the marines, where the older engineer waited.  "Nothing.
Baled Sligan and Montgren wool, dried fruits, perfume wood, and some
big jugs of oil."

Pendak shook his head.  "Let's go."  He nodded toward the marines, then
turned to the burly second.  "Good sailing.  Mate."

"Thanks be to ye, not that most will, Wizards."  The perspiring man
half-saluted.

IV

The dull clank of one hammer and yet another laid upon chisels echoed
through the chill air of the deep canyon.

A line of bent figures trudged back from the pile of rock that marked
the edge of the construction.  Each worker passed the deep, straight
clefts that separated one foundation block from another, each
foundation block a stone cube thirty cubits square.

Behind the laborers stretched the knife-edged raw slashes that marked
the great Westhorn Highway.  The base of that highway had been formed
from the mortared and fitted stones mat linked the foundation blocks.
Each long section was as straight as a quarrel, a segment of the road
that would run from Fairhaven to the Western Sea through Sarronnyn and
to Southwind.

A wall of solid stone terminated the western end of the canyon.  The
trees and soil more than two hundred cubits above had been removed, and
the dust and white ash from that removal sifted downward into the chill
depths.  Workers coughed, squinted, and blinked away the ash and grit.
But they kept walking, lugging their baskets of fractured stone from
the pile at the end of the canyon back to the unloading station.

Three figures in white-white boots, tunics, and trousers-stood halfway
between the unloading platform and me mountain wall that marked the end
of the road.

Their breath floated like white steam above the cold stone and over the
scattered patches of snow and ice.

Behind them, the stone-master directed the spout to spew the smaller
granite chunks into the space between two foundation blocks.  The
yet-unlined watercourse beside the leading edge of the road held no
water, nothing except powdered rock, grainy snow, and scattered ice
fragments.

Tweet."  Tweet!  A whistle split the chill.

"Stand clear!  Stand clear!"  The warning shrilled from the thin lips
of the overseer, a woman in white leathers who also wore a sword and a
white, bronze-plated skullcap.

"Close your eyes!  Close your eyes!"

The nameless workers huddled behind the movable plank barriers, eyes
closed.

Crack!  Crackkk!

A flash brighter than the noonday sun, sharper than the closest of
lightnings, flared across the stone wall that faced the end of the
highway.  Rock fifty cubits deep splintered, separated, and slid into a
rough pyramid at the base of the canyon.  Rock dust mushroomed, adding
a powdered white mist to the air, blurring the sharp edges of the
canyon walls.

"Head out.  Load up," called the overseer.

Two of the three wizards walked slowly, tiredly, back toward the amber
coach that waited where the smooth-finished paving stones ended.

The workers staggered from behind their barricade toward the pile of
granite that would be removed for fill, or for reshaping by the stone
cutters before the masons came and fitted and mortared the stones
together.

"Load up!"  came the command again.

The workers' steps carried them once more toward the tumbled rocks, as
workers' steps had carried nameless prisoners for centuries on the
great highway to the west.  Even before the dust had settled, those
steps carried them, as so many before them, forward toward the loading
rack that other prisoners had slid into place beside the tumbled
stones.

"Just the gray stones .. ."

The long line of workers edged forward, men and women bearing identical
baskets.

Clink... clink... Behind them, the stone masons resumed their work,
Grafting the flush-fitted gray walls and storm drains that linked the
base blocks of the road.

The loading crew began to place the squarish stones into the loading
bin, and the first porter eased his basket into the rack.

"Next!"

The workers shuffled forward, their leather boots scraping on
sharp-edged stones.

"Next!"

"What'll you have, gents?"

Gunnar coughed, cleared his throat, and motioned to Jus-ten.

"Dark beer."  Justen glanced past the serving woman toward the new gas
lamps by the door, still unlit in the afternoon light pouring through
the half-open windows of the inn.

The woman looked at his black tunic and trousers.

"Dark beer," he repeated.

"I don't even want to know about your day, Engineer."  The heavy,
gray-haired woman shook her head and glanced toward Gunnar.

"Greenberry."  The sandy-haired man's fingers drummed idly on the
polished dark oak.

"That's not much better.  You like anything to eat?  The mutton pie's
tasty, and even the chops are good today."

"No, thank you," the brothers said, almost in unison.

"Well ..."  murmured the woman, turning toward the kitchen.  "No
telling with wizards and engineers .. . just no telling, but what
they've done today, who'd really want to know?  Dark beer and green
berry ..."

Justen grinned.

"The beer's not good for you.  Why do you drink it?  Just to make
Father angry, or to annoy me?"  Gunnar smiled faintly.

"I suppose that annoying my terribly superior older brother is as good
a reason as any.  Except that it's not true.  I just happen to like the
taste.  Besides, I am not a great Order Master, a superior Air Wizard
such as you.  I'm just a lowly engineer who toils in the workrooms
under the scathing eye of Altara."

"Is she really that bad?"

"No.  She pays no attention when you do it right, and she gets hotter
than the Little Easthorns the day they were raised when you don't."

"Justen!  Gunnar!"  a bright voice interrupted.

Both men looked up as a black-haired young woman paused near their
table.

"Oh, Aedelia.  How are you?"  asked Gunnar.  "How's your brother?"

"His leg's much better, and Mother said to tell you hello when I saw
you."

"What are you doing in Nylan?"  asked Justen.

"Father was bringing in some timber for the shipwrights and I was
waiting, when I thought I saw you two come in.  So I told Father I'd be
back in a bit and came to say hello."  Aedelia smiled broadly.

"Could you join us?"  Justen motioned to one of the two empty chairs,
trying not to be too obvious in his admiration of her endowments.

"I wish I could, but Father's already delivered the timber and it's a
long drive back, even with an empty wagon ... or mostly empty.  We did
get some fresh fish and a bolt of Austran linen."  Aedelia straightened
up.  "I really do have to go."  With a last smile, she was gone.

Clunk..  . clunk .. . The two heavy mugs came down on me table.  "There
you be, honored young gents.  And that'll be five for the both of you,
three for the beer and two for the green stuff."

Gunnar extended a half-silver.  The woman nodded and took the coin.

Justen lifted his mug and took a deep swallow.  "Ah .. . that's
good."

"Do you do that just to annoy me?"

"No.  I do it because it tastes good, and it was a long day.  And
because Leave it at that."  Justen stopped and glanced into the corner,
where two white-haired men sat hunched over a Capture board.  The game
had clearly only just begun, since most of the white and black tokens
were still stacked beside the board.  He looked back at Gunnar.
"Krytella was looking for you the other day, when you were at Land's
End."

"And you're telling me now?"

"I haven't seen you since then," Justen pointed out before taking
another swig of the dark beer.

"You're drinking that too fast,"

"So?  Drink your damned green berry

"Justen ... I haven't done anything to you, have I?  We are brothers,
you know."  Gunnar's voice was lower, softer.

"No, it's not you.  It's just..."  Justen shrugged.

"Women problems?"

"I suppose so."  Justen took another swallow from the mug.  "And
student problems."

"I told you that teaching wasn't all that Verdel said it was."

"You've told me a great deal."

"Sorry."  Gunnar sipped the green berry  "Are you going for a ship's
Brother slot?"

"I went out with the Llyse the other day-"

"I know."

"I know you know.  You know everything.  Just let me talk, all
right?"

"Sorry."

"Anyway, I watched Pendak.  He seems pretty good with the shields, and
he can tell when someone's not telling the truth.  But I don't know.
The whole business really bothered me.  That poor crew had been
manipulated.  They didn't even know who the captain was."

Gunnar nodded.  "Pendak told me about that.  He was upset."

"Why would someone do something like that?"  Justen took another
swallow of the dark beer.

The blond man shook his head.  "Maybe the White Wizards are trying to
provoke us again."

"Why would they do that?  It's never been terribly effective before."

"People's memories are short."  Gunnar paused.  "What did Pendak do?"

"What could he do?  The real captain jumped overboard.  And the ship
hadn't really done anything."

"I don't like this," Gunnar muttered, slowly sipping his green berry

"That's what Pendak and Captain Hyntal said.  Why would a merchant ship
try to get away when we were just on a routine patrol?  It doesn't make
sense."  Justen took another swallow of the dark beer, licking the
remnants off his lips before setting the mug on the table.

"It has to make sense.  We just don't know how."  Gunnar looked up.
"There's Krytella."

"Of course."

Gunnar frowned, but stood and waved.  "Krytella!"

The redhead smiled broadly and hurried across the room, gracefully
stepping around the unoccupied tables.  "I was looking for you."  She
leaned forward and kissed Gunnar on the cheek.

"That's what Justen told me.  It took a while to wind up the search of
the archives."  Gunnar gestured toward one of the empty chairs.

Justen took a last sip of the dark beer and motioned to the serving
woman.  Gunnar was so damned noble.  He hadn't even tried to point out
that Justen had waited three days to mention Krytella's inquiry.

"Thank you for remembering, Justen."  Krytella's smile was warm, her
pleasure genuine.  That Justen knew even with his merely average-for an
engineer-order-senses.

"Yes, folks?  Would the healer like red berry or green berry

"Redberry," Krytella answered.

"Another dark beer," Justen added.

The serving woman raised her eyebrows but only said, "Coming up-one red
berry and a dark beer."

"You shouldn't-" began Krytella.

"I know.  Good engineers and good wizards don't drink alcohol because
it's bad for their order-senses."

"Oh, Justen ... I didn't mean to be short with you.  But I am a healer,
and ."  The redhead shrugged.

Clunk .. . clunk .. . Two more heavy mugs arrived.  "That'll be another
five for the two."

Justen handed over a half-silver.

"Thank you."  Krytella inclined her head, then took a swallow of her
red berry

"Just before you arrived, we were talking about how the White Wizards
were playing games with a Lydian ship."  Gunnar sipped from his green
berry as Krytella waited for him to continue.  "They planted some
illusions in the crew's minds about who was captain, and then they
conditioned the crew to run from the Llyse."

"That doesn't make sense."

"The real captain jumped overboard and drowned.  He never came up."

"Are you sure?"  Krytella set her red berry down.

"I was there," Justen answered.  "There wasn't any sign of life.  I
suppose that could have been an illusion, too.  But it really doesn't
matter, does it?  The damage was already done."

The redhead nodded slowly.  "I see what you mean.  Recluce drove a poor
captain to suicide.  But I still don't see why the White Wizards would
bother."

"It has to have something to do with their effort to take over western
Candar."  Justen looked at the mug without lifting it.  He really
hadn't wanted a second dark beer.

"But what?"

"It doesn't matter," suggested Gunnar.  "They can't control the sea.
There's too much basic order in the oceans."

"Maybe that's not their objective," Justen pointed out, all too
conscious of how alive and vibrant Krytella seemed, sitting there
between them .. . even as she leaned toward Gunnar.

"What other aim would they have?"  Krytella took a small sip from her
mug.

"If they build distrust of us ... and then if we do commit any forces
to Sarronnyn or Suthya, wouldn't the Sarronnese be worrying as much
about Recluce as about Fairhaven?"

Krytella looked at the older brother.  "What do you think, Gunnar?  Is
that possible?"

"It could be."  The blond man shrugged, then grinned.  "But we
certainly won't solve that one this afternoon."  He took a deep swallow
of the green berry

Justen glanced toward the Capture game in the corner.  "Is that old
Gylart over there?"

"The Gylart who's Counselor Jenna's uncle?  Or the fisherman?" Krytella
asked.

"The former counselor."  Justen took a sip of the second beer.  It did
taste good, he decided.

Gunnar nodded.  "It's the old counselor."

"He's good at Capture."

"How can you tell?"

Justen lifted his shoulders and smiled sheepishly.  "He just is."

"Would you two like to come to dinner?"  Krytella smiled.  "I mink it's
a fish stew, but it smelled good, and there's plenty of it.  Mother and
Aunt Arline baked pear apple bread, too."

Justen's stomach growled.  "I think that's my answer."

"Justen .. ."  Gunnar sighed.

"Fine.  I need to help them.  Just show up after the second evening
bell."  Krytella flashed another smile and pushed back her chair.

"Do you have to go?"  asked Gunnar.

"If I'm having company, I do."

Justen watched as the redhead left the public room.  Then he took
another sip of beer before turning to his brother.  "You lucky
bastard."

"Why?"

Justen shook his head.  For all that he could see storms an ocean away,
Gunnar was sometimes so dense.  Was that why the girls swarmed around
him?  Justen took another sip of the second beer mat he hadn't wanted
at first.  At least a home-cooked dinner would be better than eating in
the engineers' mess.

VI

"The Iron Guard has secured the Roof of the World, and Zerchas is
studying the remains of the Westwind archives .. ."  The tall, older
wizard at the speaker's podium coughed.

"Couldn't be much left after ten centuries."  The sotto voce murmur
echoed through the momentary silence before the tall wizard continued.
"... and has discovered that the Sarronnese garrisons had preserved
some of the original manuscripts, Cerryl's name be praised."  A young,
broad-shouldered, clean-shaven and black-haired White Wizard stood just
inside the doorway.  He pursed his lips and motioned to another young
wizard before stepping through the archway and walking down to the row
of couches in the antechamber.

The second wizard, round-cheeked and fair-haired, followed.

"Cerryl's name be praised, Cerryl's name be praised!  It wants to make
me puke, Eldiren.  Did you know mat Cerryl was a fifth-rate White
Wizard, if that?  He wasn't fit to carry the great Jeslek's boots." 
The young black-haired White Wizard who spoke glanced toward the
archway to the Council Chamber.  "Let's walk down to Vislo's."

"It's scarcely fashionable, Beltar."  Eldiren scuffed a white-leather
boot on the granite floor.

"Fine.  Then no one fashionable will be there."

The two young men waited out into the warm spring and the white light
of Fairhaven, out into the shadow cast by the Tower.  Beltar paused
momentarily, then marched across the short, wiry grass of the new
Wizards' Square, for all that it was three centuries old.  Eldiren
scurried to keep up.

"Why are you so upset by old Histen?"

"First, he's playing games with Lydian ships.  What good will that
do?"

"He's trying to force the Blacks into being seen as tyrants."

"Has that ever worked before?"  snorted Beltar.  "And then all this
praise of Cerryl the Great-Cerryl the Great!  I can raise the chaos
springs from the rock beneath Candar and no one cares.  Worse than
that, Zerchas and Histen have threatened to turn the Iron Guard and the
White Company on me if I try."  Beltar halted at the far side of the
square and took several quick breaths.  "Forget Vislo's."

A young boy silting on a passing farm wagon pointed toward the
white-clad wizards.  "There's one!  And another one.  Real White
Wizards!"

Eldiren raised a hand and waved.

"He waved.  He waved!"

"That's it," muttered Beltar.  "Play to the peasants."

"Why not?  It doesn't hurt, and it certainly costs nothing."

"You sound like Zerchas and Histen and Renwek."  Eldiren touched Beltar
op the shoulder, "Sometimes .. . what they say makes sense."

"Oh?"  The black-haired wizard turned and looked back at the glittering
White Tower.

"You're bitter because they don't need your powers now.  They will."

"They don't think so."

"Does it matter what they think?  Do you really believe that Recluce
will stand idly by as we finish the Great Highway through the Westhorns
and take over the entire west of Candar?"

"Why not?  They didn't do a damned thing after Spidlar or south
Kyphros, or the islands."

"They weren't ruled by the Legend.  They also weren't the home of
Megaera.  Besides, once we take Suthya, Southwind will fall-"

"Suthya!  We haven't even attacked Sarronnyn."

Eldiren shook his head.  "Recluce can't stop us in Sarronnyn.  You know
that.  What's really left after that?  Suthya, Southwind, and a bunch
of druids in Naclos.  No one lives in the Empty Lands or the Stone
Hills."

"No one ever will."

"When Recluce finally marshals order, then they'll need you.  Don't
throw it away by giving them any excuses now.  That was your idol
Jeslek's problem.  He forced his power on them, and that made him a
target too early.  Let Histen and Zerchas be the targets."

Beltar pursed his lips.  "I don't know."

"Think about it.  You have time.  They don't.  Anyway, you might as
well enjoy Fairhaven now.  Look at the Council members.  They meet, and
then they have to go back to their posts all across Candar."

"Another one of Cerryl the Great's wonderful ideas.  Scatter the able
away from Fairhaven."  Beltar scuffed a boot against the curbstone.

Eldiren shook his head, then waved back to another small boy.

VII

The wide porch of the house low on the hill and its location in the
older section of Nylan-barely above the armory and practice fields, and
overlooking the warehouses that served the port-were the only aspects
that confirmed the structure's age.  The varnish on the recently
refinished red-oak flooring of the porch was clear, and the oil-stain
preservative on the wood framing the wide windows was fresh.  The black
stones of the exterior wall shimmered with calm and order.

"Is this the place?"  asked Gunnar, oblivious to the straggly nature of
his fine, sandy hair.

Justen grinned.  "We'll find out."  He rapped on the door, then
waited.

After the sound of scuffing footsteps, the door opened.  "Oh .. . you
must be Krytella's friends.  Let's see.  The tall one is Gunnar. That's
you, young man.  And you must be Justen."  The gray-haired and
round-faced woman smiled.  "I'm her Aunt Arline.  She's down at the
port-master's getting Dagud.  He's the assistant port-master, you
know."

"I am very pleased to meet you," Justen gave a slight bow to Arline.

"We appreciate the invitation.  Home-cooked meals are a treat for us,"
added Gunnar.

"Do come in.  Come in."  Arline stepped back into the front hallway.
"There's the parlor.  Now just have a seat.  It won't be a moment, I'm
sure, before Krytella is back.  And this is Wenda.  Her task is to
entertain you fine young gentlemen."  Arline continued through the
parlor and past the archway into the large kitchen with its long
table.

Wenda, whose short red hair cascaded in every direction, stood next to
the lamp table on the right side of the window overlooking the harbor,
striker in hand.  She wore a linen shirt, and faded brown trousers over
scarred and scuffed brown boots.  "It's early, but you're company, and
that means I can light one lamp."  The parlor contained a low, padded
bench with a back and armrests, three wooden armchairs, a rocking
chair, several straight chairs, and two narrow lamp tables.  The red
light from the setting sun cast a deep, reddish shadow across the
room.

"I'm Justen, and this is my brother Gunnar."

"I know.  He's the Storm Wizard, Krytella talks about him when she
thinks I'm not listening."

Justen grinned as Gunnar blushed.

Wenda squeezed the striker twice before the lamp wick caught, and she
deftly adjusted the flame to keep it from smoking.  She set the striker
next to the base of the lamp and plopped into the rocking chair.

Gunnar took one of the armchairs, while Justen sat sideways on the
corner of the bench, from where he could see the front porch.

"I like it when Aunt Arline's here and when we have company.  Then I
don't have to help as much in the kitchen."  Wenda looked straight at
Gunnar.  "Can you make storms, big ones?"

Gunnar coughed and shifted his weight in the oak chair.  "There
hasn't... well, making big storms isn't a very good idea.  Lots of
people died all over the world when the great Creslin did that."

"I know.  I just wanted to know if you could.  Can you?"

"I suppose so ... if I had to."

Justen caught sight of two figures and a glint of red hair turning from
the walk beside the highway onto the stones that led to the house.  "I
think your sister and father are home."

"She always comes home too soon when we have company.  So does Father."
Wenda rocked forward in the chair and stood.

Justen rose, and Gunnar followed his example as Krytella entered the
parlor.  "This is my father, Dagud.  Father, this is Gunnar, and
Justen."  Krytella smiled at both young men.  "Did you meet Wenda, and
my mother, Carnela, and Aunt Arline?"

"Not your mother," Justen responded as he nodded.  "She's been in the
kitchen."

"I see you lit the lamp."  Krytella's eyes pinned Wenda.

"We have company."

"I made that rule."  Dagud grinned.  "Besides, we don't have company
that often."  He looked at the two guests.  "Would you care to wash
up?"

"Yes, if you please."

"Yes."

Dagud led the way to the alcove off the kitchen, where there was a
second sink, clearly added after the original house had been built.  He
leaned back toward the kitchen.  "How soon before dinner?"

"You can sit down as soon as you wash up," answered a tall, thin,
dark-haired woman standing before the stove.

"Go ahead," suggested Justen, nodding to Krytella after Dagud had dried
his hands.

"You are always the gentleman, Justen."

Justen wished she saw more than that in him, but smiled in return.

"Wenda ..."  called Krytella as the smallest redhead headed toward the
table.

"Do I have to?"

"Yes," chorused Dagud and Krytella.

Wenda washed her hands after Gunnar, then trailed the others to the
table.

"You sit there, Justen, and Wenda will be next to you..."

Justen followed Krytella's directions, although he wished he were the
one sitting beside the healer instead of Gunnar.

Carnela set two baskets of warm bread and a huge tureen of stew on the
long, polished-oak table.  "Sit down, for darkness' sake.  Things are
hot."

When the two guests had been introduced to Carnela and everyone had
been seated, Dagud cleared his throat for silence, then spoke.  "In the
spirit of order, and in keeping with the Balance, those of us gathered
together this evening dedicate ourselves and our souls to the
preservation of order in our lives and thoughts."  Dagud looked up from
his plate and smiled, reaching for the ladle in the off-white pottery
bowl before him.  Steam rose from the stew.  "It's been a long day." He
dipped twice and filled his bowl nearly to the brim, then served
Carnela.

In turn, she broke off a chunk of the fresh and crusty bread and laid
it beside his bowl before taking a chunk for herself and passing the
basket to Krytella.  The tureen of stew followed.

Justen found himself swallowing from the aroma of spices, especially
those of rya ll and pepper, overlaid with something else.  When the
huge serving tureen arrived, he followed Dagud's example, carefully
ladling the thick fish and vegetable mixture into his bowl.  Then he
turned to Krytella's younger sister.  "How much would you like, young
lady?"

"My name is Wenda, and I would like it half full,"

"Then you shall have it exactly half full, precisely half full, as only
an engineer can ensure."

"I would hope so."

Gunnar coughed, and Krytella grinned before speaking.  "Good luck,
Justen."

Justen ladled the stew, extending his order-senses and trying to ensure
that the bowl was precisely half full.

"That was pretty good," conceded Wenda.

Justen smiled.

"You just might be a good engineer," she teased.

"Wenda.  Do you wish to have the remainder of dinner with us?"  Carnela
glanced at her daughter, and Justen felt the chill.

The littlest redhead turned to Justen, her words earnest.  "I beg your
pardon, Magister Justen."

"Thank you, Wenda."  Justen nodded.

In turn, Carnela nodded at her daughter.

"Might I have some bread, please?"  asked Wenda in a small voice.

"Just a moment, dear."

Justen broke off a chunk from a fresh loaf and offered the basket to
Wenda.

"Thank you."

"You are welcome."

"The white pitcher is red berry and the gray one is dark beer,"
announced Krytella.

Justen waited until the gray pitcher arrived before filling his mug.
Gunnar watched and shook his head minutely.  Jus-ten grinned.  Krytella
frowned momentarily.  Justen stopped grinning.

"How is the port business?"  asked Gunnar, looking at Dagud.

Justen took a mouthful of the hot stew, followed by a quick swallow of
the lukewarm beer.  His second spoonful of stew was smaller, and he
chewed off a corner of the warm, crusty bread.

"It's slowed down a bit, maybe because of the problems in Sarronnyn.
Haven't seen a spring this slow in a mess of years.  Only ones with the
same number of ships are the Hamorians."

"All they care about is the gold in their pouches," sniffed Arline. "No
sense of propriety or decency there."

"Well, some of ours trade that sharp," laughed Dagud.

"The good Counselor Ryltar and his family, you be saying?"  asked
Arline.

"He beats the Hamorians at their own.  Fastest on the east-west Hamor
route.  They say he makes a devilish lot there."  Dagud sipped from his
mug.

"What about the Nordlans?"  pursued Gunnar.  "Some say they still
prefer to trade at Land's End."

"Aye, some say that, and a few more ships put in there, but that's as
much because of the winds from Nordla as because of the port
facilities."  Dagud paused to take several mouthfuls of stew and a
chunk of bread.

"They say the Council's talking about expanding the old port at Land's
End, but that's foolishness, chaos-tinged foolishness at that.  You
look at the weather records and you'll see that the number of days you
can't get in there goes up every decade.  It was only two years ago
when that Lydian side-wheeler got her back snapped on the breakwater."
Dagud took a noisy slurp of the dark beer.

Justen took a quieter sip, his eyes lighting on Krytella's flashing
green eyes and wide, mobile mouth.

"Would you like some more of the stew?"  Arline lifted the deep bowl
and handed it to Justen.

Justen looked at his empty bowl, grinning sheepishly.  "I guess I
would."

"And have some more bread, too."  Justen accepted the bread, took a
chunk and passed the basket back toward Gunnar, who had also taken a
second helping of stew.  "The stew is wonderful.  Thank you."  He
inclined his head to Carnela.

"It's a real treat," Gunnar added.  "Is your mother a good cook?" asked
Arline.  "She must be.  You boys-pardon me, I know you're older than
that- you appreciate good food."

"Actually," Gunnar ventured, "our father is the cook, and he's very
good."

"Well, I've heard of that.  It's good to know."  Arline took a small
chunk of bread from the loaf in the basket.

"What do engineers do, Magister Justen?"  asked Wenda in a high voice
that squeaked between wide-gapped front teeth.  "You wear black .. .
does that mean an engineer is like a magister?"

"Engineers make things for ships."

"You're too old for me.  Do you have any other brothers, younger
ones?"

Krytella grinned as Justen shifted his weight in the red-oak chair.
"No.  We do have a little sister.  Her name is Elisabet."

"Why isn't she here?"

"She lives in Wandernaught with our parents," interjected Gunnar.

"If your father cooks, what does your mother do?"  asked Wenda
politely.  "She's a smith."  Carnela raised an eyebrow.

"She could have been an engineer," explained Justen after swallowing
more stew, "but she said she wasn't interested in building ships or
living in Nylan."

"Sensible woman," offered Arline.  "She has been called that," Justen
said.  Krytella glanced sideways at Gunnar, who continued to watch
Justen.  The young engineer looked at the red-haired healer before
finishing the last of his stew and turning his eyes to Dagud.  "Do you
think trade here in Nylan will pick up?"

"Trade always picks up.  Just a matter of time.  Could be years.  But
then, it could be seasons, too.  Might take until the nastiness in
Sarronnyn's over."

"What will happen there?"  asked Wenda.  "Will the Whiles win?"

A silence fell across the table.  Arline coughed softly.  Jus-ten took
a small sip from his mug.

"I don't know that anyone can say, child," Dagud finally answered.
"That's a matter for the Council, I'd guess."

"It is getting late, and we mustn't keep you out too late," said
Carnela, rising from the table.

Gunnar followed her lead and stood.  "You've been very thoughtful to
have us."

Justen gulped down the last of the beer in his mug and swallowed too
rapidly, the liquid hurting his throat as it went down.  He stood as
quickly as he could.  "Very thoughtful," he echoed, trying not to cough
... or to laugh as he saw the glint in Krytella's eyes as she stood.

Carnela and Krytella followed the brothers through the parlor and to
the front door.

His hand on the heavy iron of the door handle, Gunnar bowed to Carnela.
"Thank you again for the dinner.  I enjoyed it very much."

Justen looked at Krytella's mother, seeing the same lanky figure and
mobile mouth that so resembled her eldest daughter's.  "It was
delicious, and I had a very good time."  He glanced back toward the
parlor.  "And a delightful dinner companion."

"I won't tell her that," replied Krytella.  "It would make her
insufferable.  More insufferable," she added.  "I'm glad you could
come."

"So are we," Gunnar said, taking another step back on the porch.

Justen nodded and followed.

Then the brothers turned and began to walk toward the Brotherhood
quarters.

"They're a nice family," mused Gunnar.

"Yes," agreed Justen.  Especially the older daughter.  He kept pace
with his long-legged brother as they passed under the lamp that neither
needed to make his way in the dark.

Finally, Justen spoke again.  "Do you think everyone in Recluce is
trying to avoid thinking about Sarronnyn?"

"What can we do?  We don't have an army.  Besides, what can they really
do to us?"

"I don't think it's that simple."

"It probably isn't That's why people don't want to think about it. It's
troublesome and far away.  They hope it will stay away.  But we wear
the black, and they don't want to talk about it."

"Krytella's a healer."  Justen paused to look toward the harbor, empty
in the starlight except for the Llyse.

"Healers are different."  Gunnar kept walking.

So is Krytella, thought Justen.  He turned back and hurried to catch up
with Gunnar, not that he had more to say at the moment.

VIII

The slight White Wizard inclined his head toward the man seated at the
table.  "Were you aware, Scr, that the Sarronnese have sent an envoy to
Land's End?"

"Sit down, Renwek.  Don't be so formal."  Histen gestured to the seat
across the table, then poured wine from the pitcher into the second
glass.

Renwek seated himself, nodded to the High Wizard, and took a small sip
from the goblet.  "You do not sound terribly worried."

"At the present time, I doubt that the Black Council will commit any
great presence to rescuing Sarronnyn."  Histen sipped his wine and
looked toward the half-open Tower window and the pale white glow of
Fairhaven in the darkness.

"How can you be sure your ..."

"My spy ... my agent?  Is that what you mean?"  '

Renwek nodded.  "How can you be sure that your 'gifts' will remain
effective?"

"They won't.  One can never ensure that aid which is purchased will
remain purchased.  But these purchases are so recent that it's most
unlikely that the Black Council will act hastily on Sarronnyn's
request, or that Recluce will provide a great deal of assistance."

"Are you certain that our .. . 'influence' cannot be traced?"

"Gold, so long as we do not touch it, is actually order-based, Renwek.
Honest and non-magical corruption does not require the touch of chaos."
Histen took another sip from the goblet.  "And compared to the
alternatives, buying even a season's delay in action by Recluce is
cheap at the price."

"Would Recluce have acted in any case?"  Renwek set his goblet on the
table.

"With the Blacks, one can never be certain."  Histen shrugged.

"What about your .. . recruiting efforts?"

"They go well.  The Blacks never should have abandoned their policy of
exiling malcontents.  They lack our discipline."  Histen laughed.  "You
see the irony of that?  The mages of order lack discipline in governing
themselves, while we masters of chaos champion discipline."

Renwek looked into the depths of the red wine.

"Heresy, Renwek?  Chaos is indeed heresy."  Histen lifted his glass.

IX

Justen hung the leather apron on one of the pegs and pulled on the
ragged exercise shirt.  Then he took the battered red-oak staff from
where it leaned in the back corner of his narrow, open closet.

"The armory all right?"  asked Warin.

"Fine.  It's old enough."

"What does that have to do with anything?"  The older engineer pulled
on a loose, padded tunic, then lifted a gleaming black staff, bound
with recessed iron bands, from his closet.

"Practicing with staffs is good exercise, but it's quaint, like the
armory.  What good is a staff when you're faced with rockets or
shells-or with that fire the White Wizards throw?  It's just a relic
from the time when anyone who had a different thought was tossed into
exile."  Justen twirled the staff close enough to Warin that the older
engineer stepped back.  Then he thrust the battered red-oak length
theatrically toward his closet, "Take that, you White villain!"

Warin laughed.  "Let's go."

With an exaggerated shrug, Justen followed him out of the engineering
hall and onto the front porch.

"Going to get some exercise?"  asked the tall, muscular woman.  "Must
be that you don't work hard enough here.  We'll let you two take the
place of the rolling mill, if you need the work."

"You need a different kind of workout, Altara honey," replied Warin.

"I'm willing, Warin, but you'd be in two kinds of trouble.  Even if you
could walk home, Estil wouldn't leave enough of you to feed the
crabs."

The two apprentices behind the senior engineer laughed.

"You got me there, Altara.  Even young Justen's kinder and easier on
me."  Warin took three dancing steps down the stone stairs to the stone
walkway.  A stiff breeze ruffled the wispy blond hair that remained on
his head.

"Don't let him fool you, Justen," called Altara as Justen followed
Warin down the stone-paved walk that led to and across the High Road,
the grand highway that connected both ends of the island nation.

"Don't let her fool you," Warin said, then paused and looked up the
long slope.  The highway was clear in the spring twilight, no wagons,
no horses, just stone blocks still close-fitted after centuries of use.
"She'll be over practicing with us before long."

Justen suppressed a grin.  Almost every day after work, he and Warin
sparred while Altara made wise remarks before joining the dozen or so
regulars working out with staffs or wands.  And almost every day, Warin
said that Altara would be following them to exercise.  Was all life a
long series of repeated words and actions?  Shaking his head, Justen
twirled the staff, then dropped it against the stone and caught it on
the rebound.

"Hard on the staff," Warin commented.

"But it's fun.  After all, it's not as though I'll ever have to use a
staff for anything serious."  Justen paused before the open doors of
the armory, glancing at the black stone that showed no apparent age for
all of the centuries that had passed since Dorrin or one of the other
original engineers had ordered and laid it-except that probably the
great Dorrin hadn't done much of the stonework himself.  He'd doubtless
been too busy building the famous Black Hammer.

Warin continued into the armory, and Justen hurried his steps to catch
up.

"You never know."  Warin stepped onto the open expanse of the practice
floor, setting his staff against the wall and beginning a limbering
routine.

"Know what?"  asked Justen, following the older man's example and
swinging his arms to loosen the tightness in his shoulders.

"When you might need that staff, young fellow."

In the far corner, a group of ships' marines exercised, led by Firbek,
a big blond giant with the build of a Feyn River farmer.  Justen paused
and checked his boot laces, then watched as the marines swarmed up the
ropes hung from the high beams.

He snorted, thinking to himself: It's been years, maybe centuries,
since we've had to board anyone's ships in real force.  Then he
frowned, recalling his adventure on the Llyse, before chuckling as he
realized how grumpy and serious his thoughts were.  And what are you
doing, Justen, old man?  Waving around an oak toothpick that's just as
obsolete.

He continued stretching, grunting as the exercises pulled at muscles
tightened by his work at the engineering forge.

"Already you're showing how out of trim you are.  You should be easy
pickings," gloated Warin before walking toward the empty northeast
corner, farthest from the marines.

Justen picked up his staff and followed.  He wiped his hands dry,
squared his feet and raised his battered staff, nearly a cubit shorter
than the shimmering black wood lifted by Warin.

"How you manage with that little twig, I don't know."  The black staff
whistled around.

Justen parried, then slid his staff and countered.

Warin stepped back, off balance, and Justen eased forward, feet
balanced.  For a time, the thrusts, blocks, and parries alternated.

"Darkness ... good ... for a young fellow.  Who... says it's... useless
..."

"Need ... the exercise ..."  Justen panted in return, barely managing a
parry of Warin's thrust, sliding under the older man's guard and
tapping his ribs.

"Ooooo .. . that could have hurt."  Warin straightened and took several
deep breaths.

Justen bent forward and gasped for air.  As he repositioned himself,
his eyes flicked to the open armory door to see Altara enter, alone and
carrying both a staff and the hilled wand used for blade practice.
"Ready?"  asked Warin.  "All right."

Warin's staff swept forward, and Justen danced backward, his eyes half
on the other side of the armory.

The blond marine had detached himself from his troops and walked over
to Altara.  "Altara?"  Firbek bowed deeply.  "Would you care to
spar?"

"Not with staffs."

"I'd be honored to use wands."

At the word "wands," Justen glanced toward the center of the armory,
then dropped his shoulder and barely managed to deflect Warin's staff.
"Justen?  Are you all right?"

"Sorry .. . just wasn't paying attention."

"We can stop."

"For a moment..  ."  Justen let the end of his staff rest on the clay
floor, packed hard by the feet of generations of practicing
engineers.

Warin followed Justen's eyes toward the pair in the middle of the
armory.

"Wands?"  mused Altara.  "I suppose so ... if you're not out for
blood."

"Would I attempt that against a master engineer?"  Firbek smiled
broadly.

Justen shook his head.  Firbek's words felt wrong.

Warin looked from Justen to the center of the armory.  "They're just
sparring."

"I hope so."  Justen lifted his staff and walked toward the marine and
the engineer as their wands crossed, uncrossed, and crossed.

With a sudden thrust and slash motion, Firbek's wand brushed past
Altara's and slammed into her right shoulder.

Altara dropped her wand, stepping sideways involuntarily.

Firbek's follow-through continued as if he had not been able to halt
the motion, and the wand snapped toward Altara's leg.

"Oooo .. ."  The engineer glared at Firbek.  "That's enough.  I won't
be able to lift the arm without hurting, and probably won't walk
straight for weeks."

Justen turned and handed his staff to Warin.  "Hold this."

Warin opened his mouth, then shut it and nodded.  "Be careful."

"Nonsense.  I'm never careful.  That would get me in trouble," Justen
bent and picked up Altara's wand.  He inclined his head toward her.
"Might I borrow this?"

"I'd prefer to fight my own battles."

Justen smiled politely.  "I'm scarcely fighting.  You know that I think
swords and staffs are totally obsolete, Altara.  They're only good for
exercise."  He flipped the wand into the air, catching it by the hilt
and making a mock thrust, all in the same smooth motion.  Almost
without stopping, he completed the thrust, then grinned at Firbek and
saluted the marine with Altara's wand.  "Here's to you, and to obsolete
weapons and traditions,.  Firbek.  A friendly match."

"Ah, Justen .. . you clown too much.  You need a lesson- or three. Even
in a friendly match."  The tall marine smiled and lifted his wand,
returning the salute with far greater formality than Justen had
offered.

The wands crossed.  With his greater height and reach, Firbek attempted
to keep Justen beyond striking range.  Justen stepped inside, pressing
the more heavily muscled marine back with the quickness of his wand.

The wands continued to cross, uncross, and slide across each other,
Justen's moving ever so slightly faster than Firbek's.

Then, with a burst of speed, Justen stepped completely inside the
marine's guard and knocked the wand from his hand, almost casually.
"Got you that time."

Firbek massaged his hand for a moment, then retrieved his wand.
"Another round?"

"Why not?"  Justen offered the semi-mocking salute again, but cut it
short as Firbek slashed at him with the oak wand.  Instead of pressing
the attack as before, Justen concentrated on defense, on weaving a web
that Firbek was unable to penetrate.

The wands continued to cross and recross.  Sweat beaded on Firbek's
brow, and he slashed wildly, leaving his chest exposed.  Justen smiled
but merely continued to hold the marine at bay, deflecting each thrust
or slash.  Firbek's slashes became wilder, stronger, until he appeared
almost as though he were hacking at Justen.

The smaller man danced aside, letting his wand slide the other's aside
or down, or merely avoiding the heavier wand.

"You .. . seem to ... feel you're pretty .. . good, Engineer ..."

"I'm all right... for an engineer playing... with obsolete toys ..."

Firbek slashed again.

This time, Justen's wand slipped behind the hilt of Firbek's and
twisted.  The marine tottered, then stumbled and pitched forward.

"I'm so sorry, Firbek."  Justen grinned.  "I need to be going, but
perhaps we could have another round at some other time.  Just for run,
of course."  He turned and extended the wand to Altara, who frowned.
"My thanks for the loan, Master Engineer."

"My pleasure, Justen."  Altara's words were low as she accepted the
practice wand.  "But you still have to be in the hall tomorrow.  We're
going to start work on the new heat-exchangers that Gunnar and Blyss
designed."

Justen forced a smile.  Gunnar even showed up in the armory, for all
that he never deigned to lift a blade or a staff.  "I'll be there."

He turned, but Firbek had vanished.

"That was .. . interesting, but Estil's probably expecting me by now."
Warin handed Justen the battered red-oak staff.

"I'll walk back with you."

Outside, the clouds had moved in from the Gulf, and a light, drizzling
rain seeped over Nylan.  Justen stopped on the stones halfway to the
road and wiped his dripping forehead on his sleeve.

"That was dangerous, Justen."  Warin looked back at the armory.  "He is
Counselor Ryltar's cousin."

"What can he do?"  Justen shrugged.  "It was just a friendly match.  He
said so himself."

"Do you ever take anything in life seriously?"

"Not much.  After all, we're not exactly going to get out of it alive."
Justen bounced the staff off the road stones and caught it.  "Might as
well try to enjoy things along the way."

"You have a warped sense of enjoyment."  Warin paused.  "Estil's
probably waiting.  I'll see you tomorrow.  And I'll lay a staff on you
yet."

"Only if you catch me watching a pretty girl."

"I'll make sure one walks in."

"Who?"

"I could have Estil stop by."

"That's not fair."

"So?"  Warin half-waved and began to trot uphill toward the line of
houses along the ridgeline south of the black stone wall that marked
the edge of Nylan.

Justen twirled the staff, then turned downhill.

Jagged-edged, red-sandstone up thrusts formed a circular amphitheater
between the gray stone hills to the north and west and the rolling
dunes to the south.  A narrow strip of browned grass wound eastward
from the red sandstone, gradually widening and greening as it neared
the great forests.

Within the small, natural-appearing theatre were three women.  The
three rested upon knee-high stones, smoothed either by nature or by
hand into shapes comfortable for sitting.  The silver-haired woman in
the center rocked slightly, eyes closed.  The red granules within the
square formed by the five-cubit-long sandstone border stones shifted,
slowly rearranging themselves.

In lime, the map appeared, the granules faithfully depicting in
miniature the very peaks of the Westhorns themselves.  A white line
arrowed through the peaks, the whiteness tinged with the dull ugliness
of dried blood.

Slowly, white-sparkled granules of sand dotted the tiny peaks and
valleys, growing and spreading westward until the entire map glimmered
an ugly white.

After a time, the mapmaker in the center released a deep breath and the
depiction lost its sharpness as the sands slumped into their natural
state.  But the whiteness remained.

XI

Justen adjusted the lamp wick.  Although gas lamps were coming into
vogue, the quarters of the Brotherhood still used oil, generally from
the carnot nut.

A rapping sounded on his door.

"Yes?"

"It's your big brother."

"Come on in."

Gunnar eased into the room, carrying a pitcher.  "I can tell you're
getting ready for a big night.  I've got some red berry here."

"I thought you and Turmin were headed back to Land's End."  '"That's
tomorrow now.  Counselor Ryltar asked Turmin to his house for dinner.
He wanted to get Turmin's opinions on the mess in Sarronnyn."  Gunnar
set the pitcher on the lamp table.  "You have any mugs?"

"Over on the second shelf."  Justen finished adjusting the lamp's wick.
"Doesn't Ryltar live somewhere near Feyn?  Why Turmin?  From what I
heard, Ryltar isn't exactly fond of the Sarronnese, and Turmin's mother
was born in Sarronnyn."

"Ryltar lives on the ridge just outside the black wall.  It's toward
Feyn, but not that far."  Gunnar shrugged.  "You know as much as I do.
I suppose Turmin will tell me sooner or later.  Anyway, I'll have to
leave early tomorrow to meet him there, but it's better than playing
lap cat at Ryltar's."  Gunnar took the mugs and filled them.  "Let's
play Capture."

Justen grinned.  "Why not?"  He walked over to the small bookcase and
took the board and the box containing the black and white tokens from
the top.  "What are you doing this time?"

"Turmin thinks the weather's still changing, but more slowly."  Gunnar
handed a mug to his brother.  "He thinks that there will be signs in
the plants on the high hills to the west of Land's End-something about
places where the weather is right on the edge."  Gunnar pulled one of
the two straight-backed chairs up to the desk.

After setting down his mug, Justen put the board on the desk and the
token box beside it.  Then he pulled his chair up and sat down while
Gunnar divided the white and black tokens.

"White or black?"  asked the older brother.

"White this time."

Gunnar nodded, and Justen set a token in one of the depressions in a
rear lattice-the three-token one.  Gunnar ignored the lattice and
placed his first token in the center point of the main lattice on his
side of the board.

Justen dropped a token in the four-point lattice to the rear of
Gunnar's.

"You're doing it again."  Gunnar added a second token to his lattice.

Justen put his second token in the three lattice and added the third to
complete it.

Gunnar added the third to his main lattice.  "Shouldn't have let me get
this far.  Now you can't catch me."

Justen frowned, then set a white stone in the other three lattice
behind Gunnar's lattice.

Gunnar added another token, and they continued until Justen had both
three and four lattices, and Gunnar had six tokens in one twelve and
five in the other.

Gunnar smiled and dropped a black stone into place, followed by five to
complete the first, and the bonus that allowed him to complete the
second.

Justen shrugged.  "It's yours."

"You don't want to play it out?"

"Why bother?"

"I still don't understand why you build three or four groupings rather
than concentrate your efforts."

"It seems to make more sense.  Nothing in life lets you concentrate on
just one thing."  Justen laughed.  "Besides, it's only a game.  Life's
serious enough."

Gunnar frowned momentarily, then lifted the pitcher.  "Some more red
berry

"Certainly.  Why not?  Another game?"

"Of course."  Gunnar finished pouring the red berry and took a sip from
his mug.

XII

"Tryessa D'Frewya, the envoy from Sarronnyn," announced the young man
in black who had opened the dark-oak door to the Council Chamber, once
the study shared by Creslin and Megaera, the Founders, whose joint
portraits framed the wide window behind the table.

The Sarronnese envoy entered and bowed deeply, her emerald silk sheen
trousers and blouse rustling.  "Honored Council members."  She
straightened.

Claris motioned to the table.  "Please have a seat.  Would you care for
some of the green brandy?"

"I would be delighted.  Tradition or not, it is always a treat."
Tryessa slipped into the oak armchair.  The young man in black
carefully poured the pale green liquid into the crystal goblet beside
her, then retreated to his position by the door.

The youngest counselor brushed a strand of red hair off her forehead
and took a sip from an identical goblet.

"What brings you to meet with the Council?"  asked Ryltar, his casual
tone a contrast to the order of his dress and his precisely brushed,
thin blond hair.

"Surely you must know, honored Counselor.  As we speak, the White
Company and its Iron Guard have taken the old domains of Westwind-"

"As you took them in the time of Dorrin," countered Ryltar lightly.

Claris cleared her throat.

Jenna half-turned.  "I don't think that was the question, Ryltar.
Tryessa was attempting to suggest something, I believe.  Were you
not?"

"I was suggesting that Fairhaven's efforts are a matter of concern."

"To whom?"  inquired Ryltar politely.

Claris raised her eyebrows but did not speak.  Jenna turned toward the
blond man.

"It is certainly a concern to all of us in western Candar," Tryessa
said.  "Even the Naclans sent us an envoy suggesting that we ask for
the aid of mighty Recluce."

"The reputed druids of Naclos?  They actually exist?"

"They have existed for centuries, perhaps even from before the time of
the Angels."  Tryessa's voice was wry.  "They produce exquisite
woodworking, although it's not carved.  Apparently they can persuade
the trees to grow in a certain way.  I have a bench I inherited.  It
doesn't age much.  It was my great-grandmother's.  But I wander.  When
the druids are interested, it is clearly due to a concern that goes
beyond Sarronnyn."

"You make a strong case for the concerns of western Candar," admitted
Ryltar.

"Ryltar..."

"I believe that the envoy has clearly stated the urgency of the matter,
Ryltar," declared Claris coldly.

"Thank you, Counselor.  In view of those concerns, the Tyrant would
hope that you would recall Sarronnyn's steadfast support of the
open-trade policies long espoused by Recluce."

"The Tyrants have always been fair in matters of trade."  Claris kept
her voice level.

"Although it is certainly of mutual benefit," Ryltar added smoothly.

"The Tyrants of Sarronnyn have been more than scrupulous in dealing
with Recluce," responded Tryessa.

"What would you have us do?"  asked Claris.  "You know we do not
maintain a standing army large enough to send much in the way of
troops.  And our ships cannot help you with a conflict in the
Westhorns."

"Not directly, but Fairhaven still must use the oceans."

"Are you suggesting that we employ our ships to restrain trade to
Fairhaven?  After all the years of working to ensure fair and open
trade on the seas?"  inquired Claris.

"The Tyrant understands the difficulty of such a suggestion."

"What of Suthya and Southwind?"  asked Jenna.

"They have sent significant commitments of troops and supplies.
"But..."  Tryessa shrugged.

"You doubt that such troops will be adequate?"  Ryltar cleared his
throat and sipped his brandy.

"The White Wizards have over five thousand troops in the Iron Guard
alone."

"That does make it difficult," observed Claris.  "Yet you suggest we
give up a long-held belief in the freedom of trade.  Are there not
other options?"

The Sarronnese envoy sipped from the goblet once more before speaking.
"Even some sort of token would help.  Perhaps a group of Order Masters,
healers, a small squad of warriors-they are the descendants of the
Westwind Guards."

"We see your concerns, and we share many of them.  What you ask is
difficult, and we must consider-"

"I see."  Tryessa rose, leaving most of her brandy within the glass. "I
see.  Then I will retire and allow you to discuss the matter freely. I
will be at the old inn.  It is one of the few lasting memorials to the
commitment to and belief in someone of Sarronnyn.  Except, of course,
your Black Holding here."

"You are sharp for one seeking favors."  Ryltar smiled.

"I do not seek favors.  I seek justice and perception.  I seek those
who would look beyond blind devotion to custom to a deeper meaning and
belief."  Tryessa returned the smile with one equally false.

"We will indeed discuss this, Envoy Tryessa," declared Claris as she
rose from her chair behind the table.  The two other Council members
rose with her.

"My thanks to you."  Tryessa bowed and departed.

The three reseated themselves.  Claris motioned to the trainee in
black.  "You may go, Mryten."

As the door closed, Ryltar said, "Rather demanding, your envoy."

"Rather accurate."  Jenna sipped her brandy.  Her lips tightened as she
set down the goblet.

"Without principle, we have nothing."  Claris's fingers brushed the
stem of the goblet before her.

Jenna glanced through the window at the whitecaps rising far out on the
Eastern Ocean.  "If we follow that principle, Fairhaven will take all
of Candar... and then who will stand between the wizards and us?"

"No one else has ever stood between us.  No one ever will.  You're both
deluding yourselves if you think that's a possibility."  Ryltar looked
only at the dark oak before him.

"Then perhaps we should change our devotion to principle and let our
use of principle serve us instead of binding us," snapped Jenna.

"We could take a middle course," interposed Claris.  "We could ask for
volunteers to help Sarronnyn.  I think many would wish to help.  It is
an adventure, and many seek adventures, especially since we no longer
need to use exile as a tool."

"That would be acceptable to me, certainly."  Ryltar smiled.  "Let
those who wish to get involved with the White devils do so."

"That's not enough," said the youngest Counselor.  "Even those the most
interested could not do so without some compensation."

"I'm sure that if the Tyrant is so concerned, she would provide
supplies and a modest stipend," suggested Ryltar mildly.

"That would seem agreeable to me.  Then we could offer this as a first
step and wait to see what happens, or if a greater commitment is
needed."  Claris's fingers tightened around the goblet's stem.

Finally, Jenna nodded.

XIII

"You need to study the preface again."  Justen fixed his eyes on
Daskin.

"But it's boring.  The stuff in the back's more interesting.  I can't
wait until I can do that."  The boy squirmed on the leather pillow, his
eyes finally resting on the polished gray stone floor.

"Have you tried any of it?"  Justen continued to stare at the
student.

Daskin flushed.

"It doesn't work for you, does it?"

"I'm not grown up ... not full wise, anyhow."

"Daskin ..."  Justen's voice was soft.  lNot everyone can be an Order
Master.  And for some, it takes years."

"You just won't teach me."

"Don't be silly, Daskin.  He's paid to teach you."  Jyll flipped her
long black hair back over her shoulders with a practiced gesture.

Norah's fingers continued to rub the smooth gray worry stone, her eyes
vacant while her senses focused on the clouds above Nylan.

"If everyone can't be an Order Master, why do we have to learn this
stuff?  It's boring!"  Daskin threw the black-covered book on the
floor.

"Now you've done it," whispered Jyll.

"I don't care!  It's stupid.  It's boring ... and I hate it."

"It's going to rain all day and all night, and maybe tomorrow,"
announced Norah, her words and the glint in her eyes proclaiming her
mental return to the classroom.

"How come stupid old Norah can find the clouds and I can't?"  Tears
streaked from Daskin's eyes.

Justen knelt in front of the boy.  "We're all different, Daskin.  My
brother can find the clouds over Lydiar and play in the winds that flow
from the Roof of the World.  I can't.  lean forge things and work black
iron, but every time Gunnar picks up a hammer, we're all afraid he'll
smash his fingers.  Even Dorrin's brother was a fisherman.  And without
his brother, Dorrin would never have founded Nylan.  We have to do what
we can."  The engineer patted the youth's shoulder.

"It's still stupid," muttered Daskin, but he wiped his face on his
sleeve and scooped up the book.

"Read the first part again.  I'll see you tomorrow."

Daskin trudged out the door, lagging behind Jyll, who had hurried out
first.  Justen slipped his own copy of The Basis of Order into the pack
he still carried rather than the satchel that some of the older
engineers affected.

"It is going to keep raining," insisted Norah.

Justen smiled ruefully.  "I'm sorry, Norah.  I should have paid more
attention to you.  You're very talented with following the weather, and
you should be pleased that you do so well,"

"It might even rain for two days."

"We'll have to see.  You can already do that better than I can."

"I can?"  Norah stood, still rubbing the worry stone.

Justen nodded.  "I'm an engineer, not an Air Wizard.  I can make black
iron, and rockets, and parts for engines and cannons, though."

"I like the clouds, especially the misty ones."  Norah bent and picked
up her pack.  The heavy brown canvas, battered and scuffed and stained,
had been new when Justen had begun to teach her a season earlier. "What
are we supposed to read?"

"The preface again."

"That's fuzzy, like the soft clouds."  Norah shouldered the pack and
half-walked, half-skipped, toward the open door.  There she stopped and
turned.  "Good-bye, Magister Justen."  Then she was gone.

Justen shook his head.  Why were all the Air Wizards so ... he groped
for a word, then decided that Norah's term "fuzzy" fit as well as any.
Even Gunnar was fuzzy sometimes, as if he weren't there even when he
was.  Then again, who could tell where an Air Wizard really was?  He
snorted, closed his pack and lifted the heavy leather pillows onto the
table before picking his dark-gray waterproof from the peg beside the
doorway.  After closing the door, he walked down the half-dozen steps
and along the sunken corridor until he reached the stairs to the west
wing.

He took the steps two at a time.  The smell of mutton stew oozed from
the dining hall that served the older students, many of whom would have
been candidates for exile in Dorrin's time.

Before he went outside into the rain, Justen pulled on the dark-gray
waterproof but left the hood down.  Stepping carefully around the
puddles in the road, he walked downhill toward the engineering hall.

The soft, warm rain had plastered his hair to his skull, and he was
sweating by the time he climbed the four stone steps to the building.
Stopping under the wide porch, he brushed the water from his face with
the back of his left hand.  Then he stamped his boots and wiped them on
the rush mats before stepping into the anteroom that contained the open
closets where the engineers left their aprons, gloves, and work
clothes.

Justen pulled off his tunic and the good shirt he used for teaching and
hung them on the pegs in one of the doorless and narrow closets.  Then
he took down his leather apron, fastened it on, and stepped through the
archway into the hall and walked toward the smaller forge in the right
rear corner of the hall.  His apprentice, Clerve, was working on bolt
blanks.

Justen grinned.  He'd hated making bolts.  The cutters made threading
them easy, but the bolts were still a pain- even when using the metal
lathe to true the blanks.  Threading the nuts had been worse .. . and
still was.

"How soon will you have the new evaporators worked out?"  asked Warin,
pushing his too-long wispy hair back off his forehead with his
forearm.

Justen grinned ruefully.  "When we figure out how to keep the cooling
side from corroding the system so badly.  They still leak too quickly."
The idea of using seawater evaporators to get continuous fresh water
had been used on only the last two black ships, and the Brothers on
both ships, including Pendak, were spending more time and order-mastery
on holding the evaporators together than on the rest of the power
plants, including even the newer turbines.

"Good luck."  Warin turned back to the milling table.

"Thanks."

Clerve looked up from the anvil toward Justen.

"Yes .. . you can stop working on the bolts for now," Justen told him.
"Lay out the plans on the board there."  He nodded toward the inclined
drafting board set back from the forge, then walked over to his bench,
where he checked his tools.

As Clerve laid out the drawings of the flash chamber.  Jus-ten checked
the hoist and crane that held the flash-chamber assembly, then lowered
the circular, black iron structure another two cubits so that the
curved base rested less than a cubit above the packed clay floor.  He
checked the space where the vapor separator would go, using his
calipers, locking them and setting them on the full-scale drawing.  The
actual length between the flange brackets designed to hold the
separator was a tenth of a span smaller than the measurements on the
parchment sheet.  Justen nodded, suspecting that the cold iron had
contracted more than calculated, as it usually did.  The question lay
in calculating the contraction that would take place on the smaller
vapor-separation assembly.

Clerve watched as Justen measured again.

"We'll need a half-span thickness in the two-cubit-square plate."  As
Clerve started toward the plate storage room behind the hall, Justen
added, "Use a cart.  That's four-and-a-half-stone worth of iron."

"Yes, Scr."

While he waited for his apprentice to return, Justen added more hard
coal to the forge, readjusted the air nozzle with the long iron rod,
and pumped the bellows slowly, checking to ensure that the sprinkling
can was full.  Charcoal would have been easier to use, but Recluce
still had insufficient forests for resupplying all its charcoal needs.
The compromise was the use of charcoal by the town smiths, while the
engineers bought coal from Nordla or Sarronnyn, despite the high
shipping costs.

Justen watched the glowing of the coals.  At least he didn't have to
work on re smelting the plate from the old Hyel.  In a way, the Mighty
Ten were really the Mighty Eleven, with the oldest warship being
broken, resmelted, and recycled to provide the materials for the
warship under construction.

The cart creaked across the floor; Clerve used a leather harness to
pull it easily.

After taking a deep breath, Justen took the calipers and transferred
the measurements to the iron plate.  With a light hammer and a chisel,
he marked the rough-cut lines.  "There.  Swing the crane..."

Clerve positioned the forge crane.

"Easy now," cautioned Justen as the two swung the plate into position
over the forge fire.

Then Justen wrestled the special cutting plate into place over the
anvil, wiping his forehead with the back of his forearm.  The way
things were going, finishing the one flash chamber would probably take
half a season, not that the engineers were in any hurry.  The new Hyel
was not planned for launching for another four years.

After ensuring that the special hot set was laid by the long anvil, he
checked the heat of the iron, watching as the area he had marked turned
dull red, then began to lighten slowly.  Justen waited until the iron
along the cut line was nearly orange-white before he nodded to Clerve.
They swung the plate over and lowered it onto the anvil.

Clung .. . dung .. . Justen's hammer strokes were even, steady,
splitting the iron along its grain.

"All right."  The engineer and his apprentice used the crane to lift
the plate, which they rotated and swung back over the fire.  "Next line
is a crosscut."

"How many heats, do you think?"  asked Clerve.

"Two, I hope."

Once again Justen watched the iron color until he nodded and they
positioned the metal on the cutting plate.

"I was wrong.  Three," the engineer added as they replaced the iron
over the forge fire.

Two heats later, the oblong shape that would be one side of the base of
the vapor separator lay on the cutting plate.  Justen used heavy tongs
to set it on the brick annealing shelf at the back of the forge, not
wanting it to cool too slowly.

Then they readjusted the brackets on the plate, and Justen measured the
metal for the second cut.

"Why don't we use something like the bench shears?"  asked Clerve.

Justen grinned.  "Forget already?"  He swung the metal over the forge
fire once more.

Clerve blushed.  "It seems so silly."

Justen silently watched the iron heat for a time, then nodded.  In
moments, the orange-white section of the iron rested on the cutting
plate and Justen's hammer lifted and fell .. . lifted and fell .. .
until they swung the iron back onto the forge.

"The reason for not using shears on engine parts isn't silly.  It's a
question of what works.  You cut the iron with something like that and
you twist the fiber too much.  We have the same problem with casting
iron, or even steel.  You need a wrought-iron base for black iron."

"They say the Nordlans can make a steel that's almost as good as black
iron," ventured Clerve.

"Almost as good isn't always good enough."  They swung the iron back
onto the cutting plate, and Jus-ten took up the hammer again.  "A
little better this time.  Only two heats."  He set aside the hammer and
used the tongs again to set the second iron section next to the first
on the forge bricks.  "Let's readjust the brackets.  A couple more
sections and we won't need the crane."  He wiped his forehead, but did
not swing the metal onto the forge.

"I suppose I'm like an old magister, but I need to finish what I was
telling you about the shears.  After using shears or some sort of
wrenching cut, when you try to order the metal into black iron, the
order bonds don't match and you have to tear the whole thing apart.
That's why it took ten years to build the Dylyss."

Clerve shook his head.  "Just because they used shears?"

"No .. . because they used violence to cut the metal.  There's a
difference between force and violence."

"Teaching again, Justen?  Here in the engineering hall?"  Altara stood
behind Clerve, who stepped aside with an averted glance.

Justen blushed.

Altara smiled at Clerve.  "I don't eat apprentices, Clerve.  Really, I
don't.  Nibble perhaps."

Clerve, in turn, blushed.

"You can take a break."  Justen nodded at the apprentice.

"Are you where you can stop?"  asked the master engineer.

Justen nodded.  "It's slow going."

"Most engineering is."

The two engineers watched as Clerve trudged toward the side porch,
where both a breeze and the water spigot provided cooling and where the
apprentices usually gathered.

"Have you thought about joining the engineering group that's going to
Sarronnyn?"  asked Altara.  "No."  Justen blinked, trying to dislodge a
speck of grit from his left eye.

"Do you want to come with us?"  asked Altara.

Justen looked at the thin-faced master engineer with the muscular
shoulders and dancing green eyes.  "Why are you going?  Dorrin couldn't
stop the Whites.  How do you think you can?"

"Do you want to sit around Nylan for the rest of your life mooning
after Krytella while she hunts down Gunnar?"  Altara grinned and
waited.

"Hunts down?  You make her seem like a mountain cat."  Justen felt
himself flush again, and not from the heat of the forges.

"I know women, Justen.  After all, I am one, you know."

"You don't let most of us forget it."  He managed a grin.  "That's what
I like about you.  You can say something like that and it doesn't sound
nasty.  You almost-almost-make it sound like a compliment.  I also
enjoyed your little match with Firbek."

"How's the arm?"

"Still a bit sore."  Altara paused.  "Why didn't you join the marines?
You're certainly officer material, and you're the kind that people
would follow."

"You know what I think about hand weapons."

"I know."  Altara sighed.  "That's one of the few things I think you're
wrong about."

"Why?"

She gestured around the engineering hall.  "We're cheating on Dorrin.
We still have only ten ships-except that we don't.  We have eleven for
purposes of the Balance.  And if you-Have you ever compared the size
and tonnage of the Black Hammer?"

"How could I?  I'm not a master engineer with access to the most
venerable records."

"Sorry.  Well, take my word for it.  The new Hyel will displace nearly
three times what the original Black Hammer did."

"I don't see Chaos Wizards sprouting all over Candar," observed
Justen.

"No ... just an Iron Guard with twice the strength of our marines, plus
the Whites, both of them overrunning Sarronnyn, and our beloved Council
suggesting that volunteers to help the beleaguered Sarronnese would be
in order."  Altara shrugged.  "I'd be pleased if you'd think about it;"
She smiled politely though not warmly, as she headed toward Warm and
his milling machine.

Justen took a deep breath.  Did he really have a choice ... if he
wanted to stay an engineer?  He trudged after Clerve to get a drink of
water himself, and to reclaim his apprentice.

XIV

Severa handed over the leather post bag to a young man Jus-ten did not
know, apparently old Hawy's replacement as the local post agent. Justen
slipped down from the damp leather of the post wagon's seat and stood
beside the wagon, trying to use his limited order-senses to remove the
moisture from the seat of his trousers.  Finally, he shook the rain off
his oiled waterproof and lifted his pack out of the wagon bed behind
the second seat.

Gunnar was dry-somehow, rain never landed on Weather Wizards, even
though none of them ever talked about it.  At least Gunnar's pack had a
sprinkling of water on the canvas.  Gunnar brushed away the droplets
before swinging the pack onto his back.

"Thank you."  Justen handed two coppers to Severa.

"My pleasure, young magisters."  The wagon-mistress's face crinkled
into a smile.  "I hope you will enjoy your holiday, and give your
mother my greetings."

Justen nodded.

"Perhaps someday you'll be as good a smith as she is."  Severa's smile
faded into mere politeness as Gunnar extended his coppers.

"Thank you," Gunnar said, and inclined his head.

"Just don't take yourself too seriously, Gunnar.  You may be the finest
Storm Wizard since Creslin, but a good smith's of more use to most than
either an engineer or a wizard."

"Yes, Severa."

The woman grinned.  "Don't mind me, boys.  Been riding wagons too long.
Off with you!"  She watched as the post youth placed another leather
post bag with the half-dozen already in the wagon bed.

Gunnar waved, turned, and started walking.  Justen paused, taking in
the town for a moment.  Not much changed in Wandernaught.  Severa had
stopped at the post house, next to The Broken Wheel, a two-story stone
and timber structure, and the only inn.  Old Hernon had died right
after Justen had gone to Nylan, and Justen didn't know the couple who
ran the inn now, but the facade and sign were the same-even down to the
cracked spokes on the broken wagon wheel.

A young woman and a child stood under the small awning outside the
coppersmith's, waiting for the gentle rain to stop, and two men
wrestled barrels from a wagon into Basta's Dry and Leather Goods.

Justen shifted his pack, stretched his legs, and began to walk on the
rain-slicked but level paving stones-west, past the inn, past Seldit's
copper shop.  He didn't catch up with Gunnar until they were out of
town and abreast of Shrezsan's, the house-with its attached
barn-sitting next to the stream where the family had woven wool and
linen for generations.

Actually, Justen recalled with a smile, Shrezsan had been one of the
few girls who had liked him better than she did Gunnar-even if she
finally had married Yousal, in the Temple no less.

On the south side of the road rose the gentle, rolling hills that held
the groves: cherry, apple, and pear apple  The rain had not quite
stripped the flowers from the branches, which still held thin green
leaves.

Gunnar slowed and crossed the road, putting a leg up on the low stone
wall separating the grass on the road's shoulder from the orchard
grounds.

Justen waited, brushing water from his short hair.

"I think I miss the groves the most.  Even the pear apples in Land's
End aren't the same."  Gunnar stroked his bare chin.  "Wandemaught's a
better place than either Nylan or Land's End.  It's peaceful."

"I suppose you'd put a big temple here, and move the Council to
Wandernaught."  Gunnar smiled.  "Why not?  Maybe I will."

Justen swallowed.  Did Gunnar really think he was going to be on the
Council?

The blond man sighed and turned back to the road.  "Elisabet's already
getting worried."

Justen wondered how Gunnar knew that.  Did he feel it?

The two resumed walking.  They reached the fork in the road and took
the left branch.  The timbered, black-stone and slate-tiled house stood
on the south side of the road, the smithy behind it in a separate
building.  Two small groves flanked the buildings.  A wiry figure in
brown waved from the base of a tree and began to walk toward the
house.

"Gunnar!  Justen!  Mother!  They're here."  Elisabet bounced off the
wide porch and down the crisply cut stones of the walk.  She threw her
arms around Justen, squeezed, and released him, then offered Gunnar the
same treatment.  "You're here.  Right when Mother said you would be."

"Of course they are.  Severa always makes the post house by
mid-afternoon."  Cirlin, still wearing her learner apron, had quietly
appeared behind her daughter.

"Good to see you," boomed Horas, his dark hair plastered to his skull.
"I won't give you a hug.  I've been out working with the trees, and I'm
dirty and soaked."

Elisabet, sandy-haired and slender, resembling Gunnar, reached for her
brothers' hands.  "Let's get out of the rain.  I can't push it away for
very long."

Gunnar glanced at his mother and raised his eyebrows.

"I think we've got three of you."  Cirlin's voice was wry.  "I'll be in
soon.  I need to finish some latches."

"Do you need any help?"  Justen asked.

"I'm not running an engineering hall."  Cirlin laughed.  "Nerla's a
good apprentice.  It won't take long."

Justen let his sister lead him up onto the covered porch, where he took
off his waterproof.

Elisabet waited for Gunnar to remove his, too, then took both garments
and headed for the rear porch that served as a sheltered place for
drying coats and laundry.

"Some things don't change.  The youngest still gets stuck with the
coats."  Justen grinned.

"Not always."

"Dinner's going to be late," announced Horas, standing in a corner of
the porch and shaking water from the short, oiled-leather jacket he had
worn.  "Late, but good."

"It's always good," Justen agreed.

"Not always," retorted Elisabet, sticking her head out through the open
doorway from the parlor.  "Not when he makes the fish stew."

"Fish has a long and honorable tradition, but I'm not fixing that
tonight."

"What are you fixing?"  asked Elisabet suspiciously.

"A surprise."

"I hope it's the spiced-lamb casserole."  Elisabet turned to their
father.  "It's chilly.  Can I heat up some cider with the spices?"

"So long as you use the striker and not magic," called Horas.  "And
would you start the kindling in the oven, please?"

"Even if that's not funny, Father, I will.  I'll make sure to use the
striker for both.  It might take all evening."  Elisabet squared her
shoulders and marched back into the house.

Gunnar raised his eyebrows.

Horas grinned.  "I just teased her about that.  I tell her that if
she's not careful, I might find out that she's a throwback to Megaera.
Not that she's got the slightest flicker of the White about her, at
least according to your mother."  He nodded toward the parlor.

His sons followed him inside and he closed the door, then moved to the
ceramic heat-stove in the corner, where he used an older striker.  "I
can't ward off the chill with all that order-mastery.  An old man like
me needs his heat on days like today.  It's almost like winter hasn't
quite gone."

"Old man?  Hardly."  Justen laughed.

"He's setting us up for something, Justen.  You need more wood
split?"

"Well, it wouldn't hurt if you did some before you left.  Of course, I
wouldn't ask that as soon as you got here."

"But he couldn't wait to make sure we know."  Justen seated himself on
the padded stool nearest the stove.  Unlike Gunnar, for him, the
internal order-mastery necessary to raise his body heat to ward off the
cold was work.  And the heat of the stove was always relaxing.

"Watch the fire for me, Justen, while I start in on dinner?"  Horas
closed the heat-stove and eased toward the kitchen.

"I'd be happy to."

Gunnar settled into the old rocking chair that had been their
grandmother's, the one she had rocked in while she told them all the
stories about Creslin and Megaera, and even the near-mythic tales about
Ryba and the Angels of Darkness and the Demons of Light.

Justen smiled, recalling her words: "It's real enough if people believe
.. . The truth behind the words is what matters, child."

Elisabet's steps on the polished hardwood floors broke .  Justen's
reverie.  His sister carried two steaming mugs.

"Thank you."  Both brothers spoke simultaneously.

"Justen, will you play Capture with me until dinner?"  Elisabet looked
at the floor.

"Aren't you supposed to help Father?"

Gunnar slid out of the rocking chair.  "I'll go help.  Maybe by now,
he'll let me in on just how he does it."

"Gunnar cooks almost as well as Father."  Elisabet brought the board to
the low game table and drew up a stool.  "Wait.  I forgot my cider."

While she retrieved her mug and set out the board and the tokens,
Justen rose and added several already-split chunks of wood to the fire
in the stove.  Then he took the small broom and swept the wood dust and
splinters into the dustpan and emptied them into the stove before
carefully re latching the door.

"White or black?"  Elisabet sat with her back to the stove.

"You can have black," he offered.

"Goody!"

Justen set his token in the right rear three-token lattice.

"Gunnar says not to bite on that."  Elisabet placed her first token on
the left point of her main lattice.

Justen dropped a token in the other four-point lattice on Elisabet's
side of the board.

Elisabet added a second token on the other point of her lattice.

Justen added his second token in the three lattice and dropped the
third to complete it.

Elisabet edged another token into the main lattice, right in the
center.

Justen frowned, then set a white stone in the other far-side three
lattice.

Elisabet pursed her lips, looking at Justen's completed small lattice,
but added another token to her centerpiece.  "One more ..."

Justen shrugged and sipped the hot cider.  "This tastes good."

"Thank you."  Elisabet placed another black token.

They alternated placing tokens until Justen had four lattices, all the
threes and fours.

Elisabet put the seventh token in her first twelve and grinned, adding
five more stones to complete it and then using the bonus to complete
the second twelve.

Justen added a token to the nine block, while Elisabet concentrated on
the single seven.

Token followed token.

"I've got the four!"

Justen grinned.  "You certainly do."

Elisabet used the capture bonus to cut off the rear three.

"That fire feels good."  Cirlin stepped into the parlor from the
porch.

"I beat Justen!  I beat him, Mother!"  Elisabet bounced from her
stool.

"Aren't you supposed to help your father with dinner?"

"Gunnar said he'd do it.  I don't often get to play Capture with Justen
or Gunnar anymore.  And I beat him!"

"She did," Justen admitted.  "She plays a lot like Gunnar does.  Maybe
all Air Wizards play alike."

"I need to wash up," Cirlin said.

Justen rose.  "So do I."  He turned to Elisabet.  "Since you won, you
may have the honor of putting away the board."

"But you have to wash up, too, Elisabet."

"Yes, Mother."

Cirlin shook her head.  Justen eased his stool back into its usual
place and followed her into the kitchen.

"Things are looking good," announced Horas.

Justen sniffed.  Aromas of spices and lamb filled his nostrils.  "You
didn't just fix that?"

"Darkness, no.  It's been simmering all afternoon.  It won't be long
now."

Gunnar carried two baskets of bread to the big circular table.  "He's
even got the cherry conserve for you, Justen."

The younger brother walked to the corner pump and sink and began to
wash his hands.  Cirlin dried hers and motioned to Elisabet.

"Can I help?"  Justen asked Gunnar.

"All this goes on the table."

Justen carried over the pot of conserve and the stack of plates,
setting one plate in front of each chair.

"Sit down, everyone," Horas invited.

"I get to sit between Justen and Gunnar," Elisabet announced.

When all five had been seated, Horas coughed, then spoke softly, so
softly that Justen found himself leaning forward to catch the words:
"Let us not take order so seriously that love and hope are lost, nor so
lightly that chaos enters our lives, but live our lives so that each
day reflects harmony and joy in living."

Horas set the casserole in front of Gunnar.  "Help yourself.  The dark
bread just came out of the oven, specially for the lamb, and there's
the conserve, and ajar of pickled pear apples and don't forget the
spice sauce in the pitcher..."

After refilling his mug with warm cider, Justen waited for the brown
stone casserole to be passed around.  He ladled out a large helping for
his mother and then one for Elisabet.  He took and even larger portion
for himself.

"It's a good thing I made plenty," Horas observed.

"You always make plenty.  That's why my forge is never cool."  Cirlin
laughed.  "Men householders feel like they have to feed armies, even
when only the three of us are here."

Justen offered the bread to his mother, then to his sister.  He inhaled
deeply as he broke off a chunk and smelled the heavy warmth of the dark
loaf.  "Smells good."

"No one bakes the dark bread the way he does."  Cirlin dipped a corner
of bread into the casserole and lifted it to her lips.

Justen dipped his bread into the thick sauce, letting the spicy warmth,
the mixed tang of rosemary and citril and bert il ease down his
throat.

For a time, only the sound of eating rose from the table.

"I can tell that no one was hungry."

"Not at all."

"Would you pass the casserole, Elisabet?"  asked Gunnar.

"You ate too fast, and you had a whole plateful."

"I was hungry.  I've been working hard.  Searching out the weather
takes just as much food as smithing or engineering do."

"I suspect all good work takes energy."  Cirlin lifted the casserole
dish and handed it to Gunnar.

"Thank you."

Justen broke off another chunk of the warm, dark bread and slathered it
with cherry conserve.

"Something's bothering you."  Cirlin looked at her younger son.

Gunnar nodded in agreement.

"I'm probably going to have to go to Sarronnyn," Justen acknowledged.

"You have to go?"  The smith raised her eyebrows.  "I thought the
Council asked for volunteers."

"One of the master engineers has suggested that it would do me good."

"Altara?"  mumbled Gunnar.

"Not with your mouth full, son," suggested Horas, "even if you are a
great and mighty Weather Wizard."

"Of course."  Justen sipped the last of the hot cider and reached for
the covered pot.

"I can't say as I'm surprised.  We've played too loose with the Balance
for too long."  Cirlin coughed and took a mouthful of cider.  "You know
that Dorrin warned about that."

"He did?"  Elisabet sat up straight in her chair.

The smith nodded.  "But it doesn't matter.  He knew that people
wouldn't listen.  They never do.  That's why I'm glad I'm just a simple
smith."

"Simple?"  Justen's eyes darted to the wall and the interlocking
black-iron circles that formed an image of the sunrise over the Eastern
Ocean.

"When will you leave?"  asked his mother.

"That hasn't been decided."

"I still don't think it's a good idea," Gunnar said, tugging at his
chin.

"Most adventures aren't.  I think Justen's saying he doesn't have much
choice," Cirlin said.

Justen chewed another mouthful of the warm, dark bread and cherry
conserve, enjoying the taste before answering.  "I don't have to go. No
one could make me go, but I don't feel right about saying no.  I can't
quite say why."

"What do you think, Gunnar?  Not in your heart, but considering your
sense of order."  Cirlin held her mug in both callused hands, letting
the warm vapor drift across her face.

Gunnar frowned before answering.  "I trust Justen's feelings.  I don't
like his going to Sarronnyn.  The whole business reeks of more than
normal chaos."

"If there's much chaos at all there, that's a problem," added Horas.

Cirlin lifted her mug and drank slowly before lowering it.  "It could
be a problem for everyone in Recluce."

Silence dropped across the table.

"Can you really catch the rain?"  asked Gunnar, turning to Elisabet.

"Yes, I can."  Elisabet laughed.  "But I get tired soon.  There's so
much rain.  I don't know how you do it."

"I don't, silly little sister.  I-"

"I'm not silly."  Elisabet looked at her father.  "Is there another
surprise?"

"I can't keep anything a secret, I guess, not with four Order Wizards
around this place.  I had hoped you might be coming."  Horas grinned at
his sons.  "So I baked a couple of cherry-pear apple pies."  Justen had
to smile in return, trying not to think about engineering and Sarronnyn
and the chaos that awaited him, looking at the golden-brown crust of
the pie Elisabet set before her father.

XV

Stones here and there had tumbled from the wall of the ancient
causeway, but the structure across the gap from the Roof of the World
to the ridgeline leading down toward Suthya and Sarronnyn remained
sound enough that even the heavy steps of the Iron Guard neither shook
it nor displaced another stone.

With its gray uniforms, gray banners trimmed in crimson, dark-gray
boots, dark-hiked weapons in gray scabbards, the Iron Guard of
Fairhaven marched northwest down the causeway.  Behind the gray
assemblage waved the crimson-trimmed white banners of the White
Company, crackling in the chill winds that whipped off the snow-covered
peaks encircling the high plateau and the rebuilt citadel once called
Westwind.

Like a gray-headed white snake, the column wound lower.

In the narrow defile leading to Sarronnyn, behind heaped lines of stone
and under blue and cream banners, waited groups of women and a few
men.

No parley flags were offered or sought as the Fairhaven forces reached
the rock-strewn narrow valley, where patches of snow and ice huddled on
the north side of each boulder.

The wind howled, and the Iron Guard marched forward.

"Archers!  Fire!"  A wave of iron-shafted missies arced into the
blue-green sky and dropped into the long column.

"Shields up!"  The small iron shields of the gray-clad warriors rose.
Men fell, those in gray mostly silent, those in white screaming as the
iron shafts burned through them.

A dull rumbling echoed down the valley.  A spray of boulders bounced
toward the gray figures.

Hsssttt..  . hssstttt..  . From behind the Guard, fire bolts lanced up
the rocky walls.  White rock dust sprayed down like rain.

Soldiers in gray, white, and blue coughed.

"Archers ..."

"Shields..."

Hssstttt..  .

Soldiers continued to cough and die.  Some screamed- either Whites
struck with iron arrows, or Sarronnese burned with fire bolts when
their positions were overrun and they were forced from behind their
stone barricades.

The cold wind whipped the fine white rock dust across the valley long
after the fires died.

Two White Wizards studied the overrun Sarronnese position.

"They know how to use the stone to block the fire bolts

"It didn't help them much."  The heavier man glanced at a charred body
with mere blue tatters cloaking the black obscenity that had been a
woman.  Only the gray blade remained intact, almost untouched.

"Not this time.  We still lost two score of the Guard and probably four
times that in the lancers and the White archers."  Zerchas looked back
east to the high peaks of the Westhorns.  "And we're barely into
Sarronnyn."

"We can replace the lancers and archers."

"I know.  That's not what bothers me."

"The Guard, isn't it?"

"Of course it's the Guard.  If I had my way, the White lancers would
lead.  They'll be useless if we ever fight a really good Black
force-like Westwind was, or like the legion of Southwind.  That's when
we'll need the Guard.  Or if Recluce ever acts.  But the Council seems
to think that the Guard was developed to safeguard cowardly wizards. Or
shirttail relatives in white coats."  Zerchas snorted.  "Bah!"

"What could we do?"

"Bring up a couple of those young, impatient hotheads.  Like Derba
or-what's the arrogant one's name-Beltar, that's it.  Let them use
themselves up."

"I don't know.  That..  . what about the chaos reserves?"

"Why did Cerryl insist on them?  So we'd have them to use.  Besides,
Recluce has cheated anyway.  Their fleet probably uses five times the
order the first fleet did-the ships are three times bigger and almost
of all-black iron."

"Beltar doesn't like you."

"I don't like him.  But he'll come.  Just flatter him.  Tell him he's
indispensable.  Young, self-important men always like to feel that way.
He'll come."  Zerchas stepped around another pile of charred bodies.
"Send a message to Histen.  He's good at that sort of flattery."

"You think Histen will-He's not overly fond of you, either."

"Of course he will.  Beltar's a danger to him in Fairhaven.  Ever since
Cerryl, you'll notice that damned few High Wizards leave powerful
Whites in Fairhaven.  They say that's because concentrating chaos is
dangerous."  Zerchas laughed.  "It is, and not just because of the
corrosive effect on the city.  It's also dangerous to the health of the
High Wizard."

"You're a cynical bastard."

"So?"  The White Wizard leaned into the wind as he walked toward the
white-oak coach that flew his banner.

XVI

Justen looked at the traveling clothes on the bed, wondering if he
could get them all in his pack.

Thrap .. .

"Come on in, Gunnar."  It had to be Gunnar.  Even Justen could sense
the order in the figure out in the hallway.

The sandy-haired wizard stepped into the clutter of the room.  "You're
still packing at the last moment, I see."

"Why do it any earlier than I have to?"  Justen shrugged and cleared
off the desk chair.  "Have a seat."  He began to fold a heavy pair of
work trousers.

Gunnar turned the chair to rest his arms across the back.  "I've been
thinking, Justen."

Justen folded the shirt and stuffed it into the big brown pack.  "Now,
where are those-"

"I don't like your going off to Sarronnyn.  It doesn't feel right."

"You want me to back Out?"  Justen pulled the trousers and shirt back
out of the pack.  The spare boots had to go in first.

"No.  I know you can't do that.  I talked to Turmin.  He agreed with
me.  You engineers could benefit from a good Weather Wizard."

"You're going with us?"

Gunnar shook his head.  "I can't leave that quickly.  I'll come with
the next group."

Justen folded the shirt over the toes of the boots, then refolded the
trousers.  "What changed your mind?  You seemed to think we
wouldn't.have much effect."

"I don't know if we will.  But you need a Weather Wizard.  So I'm
coming."

Justen folded a work shirt into the pack.

Gunnar stood up.  "You've got a lot to do.  I'll see you in the
morning."  He patted Justen on the shoulder before leaving.

The engineer looked at the mess on the bed, wondering what he would do
with it all.  Gunnar was right, of course.  He should not have waited
so long to pack.  He shrugged.  Weather Wizard, indeed.  He swallowed,
then picked up the clean underclothes.  They would fit in the pack.
Somehow.

XVII

Justen walked up to the tree, old but un gnarled  Its spreading, heavy
limbs arched into the green-blue sky, and the ground around the trunk
was flat and covered with a carpet of short green grass.

Wondering, he looked down at the grass, for most old trees had roots
that visibly twisted into the ground, and grass seldom grew close to
those roots.  And Recluce had no lorken that old, not as slowly as the
black-wooded trees grew.

"Some things are indeed what they seem."  A slender young woman,
dressed in brown, appeared beside the tree.  Her hair was spun-silver,
not the silver of age but a glowing silver, the color shown in the few
portraits of the great Creslin.

"Are you Llyse?"  he asked, thinking that the weather mage's sister had
had spun-silver hair, according to the legends.

"No."  The melody of her voice rang a melancholy silver.  "She died a
long time ago.  For you."

"She died for Creslin, I think."  Justen wondered why he was
explaining.  He swallowed.  "Who are you?"

"You order-wielders always put such stock in names."  She smiled.  "You
will know me when the time comes."

"When will that be?"

"After Sarronnyn, you will find me ... if you choose the true way.  You
cannot continue to hold chaos at bay with black iron.  Look to the
trees."

Justen glanced at the tree.  When he glanced back, the silver-haired
woman was gone.

Darkness fell then, and Justen found himself lying on his back.

"Mmmhhh .. ."  The words tumbled from his mouth before he sat up in his
bed.  His packs waited on the desk, looming there in the predawn
darkness like two small mountains.

After Sarronnyn ?  He squinted.  The dream had seemed so real: the
silver-haired woman, the enormous lorken, the mysterious conversation.
After Sarronnyn.  Look to the trees.  What had she meant?

He lay back on the bed, but his eyes remained open as the grayness of
dawn seeped into the room.  What was the meaning of the dream?  Was
there any?  Or was he just worried about the trip to Sarronnyn?

XVIII

The Clartham, almost two hundred cubits of red oak and fir, stretched
nearly the length of the western pier, her bright-work glistening in
the midday sun.  She carried but two masts, and a pair of high funnels
rose just forward of where the mizzenmast would be on most ships.

"That's a big ship," murmured Clerve.  An overstuffed pack and a
black-leather case bearing his guitar rested by his feet.

"The Hamorians have bigger vessels.  It takes something that big or
bigger to handle even the Eastern Ocean.  The Great Western Ocean's
supposed to be wider and rougher, though."  Justen brushed his hair
from his forehead, glad of the cool morning breeze as he stood in the
bright sunlight.

While he waited for Altara to finish her discussion with the blond
Norland cargo-master, he studied the side paddle wheels, protruding
another five cubits from the gently rounded midships curve of the
trader, forward of the funnels.  The paddle wheels necessitated the use
of longer, braced gangways to reach the ship's deck, and even a special
crane for cargo loading and offloading.

Beside Altara rested three large and heavy-looking crates.  In front of
the crates waited the other four engineers: Nicos, Berol, Jirrl, and
Quentel.  On the other side of the engineering group stood Krytella and
the two other healers, an older, wide-faced man and a stocky woman.
Beside the three were their packs and two small crates.

Justen motioned to Krytella.

"Where's Gunnar?"  Krytella mouthed the words to avoid interrupting the
discussion between Altara and the cargo-master.

Justen provided an exaggerated shrug.  "He said he would be here," he
mouthed back, trying not to frown.  Gunnar was never late; without
fail, he planned ahead, even if he didn't always look as if his mind
followed his body.

Krytella looked uphill toward the Brotherhood barracks, then back to
the pier stones at her feet.  Justen admired the planes of her cheeks,
the clear, glowing skin.

"How long will it take?"  asked Clerve, his Adam's apple bobbing in his
thin throat, his straw-colored hair spraying in every direction.

"To reach Rulyarth?  From what I've heard, a good ten days.  That's if
they don't port someplace like Tyrhavven or Spidlaria."

"That's a long time to be on a ship, isn't it?"

Behind Clerve, the cargo-master grinned even as he listened to
Altara.

Justen grinned back.  "It takes three to four times that long on the
trip west from Jera to the eastern most point of Hamor.  It's even
farther if you go that way to Nordla."

Clerve shook his head and glanced beyond the black stones of the
breakwater and out into the nearly flat waters of the Gulf of Candar.

"Those crates of tools?"  asked the blond Nordlan officer, his eyes
moving from Altara to the wooden boxes.

"They're about seven stones apiece."  Altara looked down at the
Nordlan, a man well above the average height of most from Recluce.

Justen buried a grin.  Altara overtopped the tall Nordlan, and he
suspected that the man was finding it hard to look up to the older
engineer.

"Seven stones?"

"Metal-working tools.  You can certainly handle a mere three crates on
this monster.  And don't stick them in the bilges where they'll rust.
Then you can put the healers' two small crates on top of ours."

"And where, Honored Engineer, would you have me place them?"

"Never mind."  Altara squatted and picked up one of the crates,
slinging it up onto a broad shoulder.  "I'll just put it where it
belongs.  Then you can put the others next to it."

"Uh..."

"Engineers!  Get your gear.  You, too, Justen, Clerve.  Don't gape like
some back hill type from Mattra."

"We'll follow the engineers."  Ninca, the chief healer, picked up her
pack, as did the wide-faced man.  Then she looked at Altara.  "You'll
make sure the supplies-"

"I'll make sure," Altara affirmed.

Krytella bent down for her pack.

Justen stooped and picked up the pair of heavy waterproofed canvas
packs, wondering how he had gotten suckered into volunteering to stand
off Fairhaven and the fearsome Iron Guard.  The strange dream still
lingered.  Who or what was the silver-baked woman?

"Let's gel moving."  Altara marched toward the gangway.

Justen looked at the cargo-master trailing Altara and grinned.  Even
the Nordlans were finding it hard to deny her, and it was their ship.

"Justen!"  Both Justen and Krytella looked up as Gunnar's lanky figure
marched along the pier.  He waved a black staff.

"Get on board after your good-byes."  Altara shook her head.  "Clerve
.. . follow me."

The apprentice looked at Justen.  Justen nodded, then turned.

After a moment, Ninca inclined her head to Krytella before following
the engineers.

"I'm sorry I'm late," Gunnar began, "but Turmin caught me at the dining
hall .  and then Warin stopped by to give me this for you."  Gunnar
handed the shining black-iron-and-lorken staff to Justen.  "He said
you'd need it, even if you do think personal weapons are obsolete
antiques."

"But .. ."  Justen shook his head as he took the staff.  Warin?  Giving
up his prized staff?  "I can't take this."

"You have to.  He said he'd build a black-iron rocket and aim it at me
if you didn't.  Anyway, that's why I was late."

"You're here."  Justen grinned at his older brother.  "And I'm sure
that whatever Turmin said was important, too."  He shook his head
again.  "Warin ... I can't believe it."

"What did Turmin say?"  asked Krytella.

"He thinks it's important that I take the next ship to Rulyarth."  The
sandy-haired wizard shrugged and looked along the pier, where a
half-score of port workers and Nordlans loaded boxes and bales into the
cargo net of the crane, and lowered his voice.  "He's talked to Gylart,
and the old counselor told him something that has Turmin stirred up.
Turmin wouldn't tell me what, but he's switched from reluctant
agreement with my going to Sarronnyn to something like enthusiasm."

"How do you feel about it?"  Although Justen felt Krytella at his
elbow, smelled the soft scent of trilia, and sensed her warmth, he
continued to face his older brother.

"Worried, I guess."  Gunnar kept looking straight at Jus-ten.  "But
you, younger brother .. . just take care of yourself."

"At least until you get there?"  Justen chuckled.

Gunnar hugged Justen for an instant before releasing him.  "At least
that long," admitted the Black magician before looking at Krytella.
"And you, Healer .  make sure he takes care of himself."  He smiled
quickly.

"I will, Gunnar."  Krytella's eyes flicked to the stones of the pier
for a moment.  "And you take care of yourself on your trip."

Justen swallowed at the not-so-hidden worry in the woman's voice.

"We weather types have a little advantage there, but I'll do what I can
to see that your trip isn't too rough."  Gunnar grinned, then added,
inclining his head toward the gangway, "You'd better go."

Justen glanced toward the ship and saw Altara striding back down the
railed gangway, still trailed by the Nordlan cargo-master.  "I suppose
so."

Gunnar stepped forward and gave Justen another hug, a quick one, which
Justen returned.  Then the weather mage patted Krytella on the shoulder
and stepped back, watching as the two shouldered their packs.  Justen
held the staff in his left hand.

Altara marched up to the remaining crates.  "Clerve's waiting up there
to show you our spaces."  She lifted another crate and turned to the
cargo-master.  "Can you or your boys get the last one of ours and the
two for the healers and put them all together?"

"We can manage, Engineer.  We have loaded the ship a few times."

"You know .. . you Nordlans didn't invent the steamship."

"But we're the best long-haul traders in the world, Honorable
Engineer."

"Well said!"  Altara grinned, turned, and paused, looking at the three
still standing on the pier.  "I said to stop gawking."

Justen motioned to Krytella, and the healer led the way up the
gangway.

Clerve stood just forward of the funnels and waved as he saw Justen.
"Over here, Scr."

Krytella and Justen followed the apprentice down an open staircase.

"It's a ladder, they say," explained Clerve.

The Recluce contingent shared three narrow rooms, each with four bunks.
The forward bunk room was for Altara and the chief healer, Ninca, and
her consort Castin, the broad-faced healer.  Justen found himself
assigned the bunk over Clerve in the room with Nicos and Quentel.
Krytella shared the aft-most cabin with Berol and Jirrl, the two women
engineers,

After stuffing his packs into a doorless cubby at the foot of his
too-short bunk and laying the black staff to one side, Justen made his
way topside, where he joined Krytella at the starboard railing of the
Clartham, midway between the bowsprit and the paddles.  They watched
silently as the lines were singled up, then reeled in, and as smoke
poured from the funnels and the paddles slowly turned.

The vibration from the heavy iron engines crept through the timbers of
the ship and through Justen's heavy boots.  Slowly, slowly, the
Clartham pulled away from the pier and eased into the channel.

"I wish Gunnar were coming with us instead of traveling later."
Krytella watched the pier from where Gunnar had waved before turning
and walking back up the hill, apparently oblivious to Krytella's tears
and her eyes focused upon him.

How could Gunnar know the weather hundreds or thousands of kays distant
and not see the love in a woman's eyes from less than two cubits away?
Justen refrained from shaking his head.

"To begin with, he hadn't planned on coming at all."

"I know.  He decided to come because he worries about you."

"That doesn't make a lot of sense.  I can take care of myself."

"I'm sure you can."  Krytella sniffed.  "But caring about someone
doesn't have to make a lot of sense."

Justen wanted to bite his tongue.  Instead, he said softly, "You're
right.  We don't always think of things that way."

"Excuse me, Justen.  I need to find Ninca."  Krytella turned and headed
aft.

Justen watched until her green-clad figure disappeared down the ladder.
He looked back at the sun hanging over the stone pillars marking the
channel and then westward at the gentle swells of the Gulf of Candar.

After he'd turned back and studied the twin funnels, which reached
nearly fifty cubits above the deck, Justen eased past two seamen
coiling a line and made his way aft to the ladder that led toward the
huge steam engine.  He climbed down and ducked through a narrow
doorway.

The metal boiler walls already panted like a spent dog, even as the
Clartham's engine man checked the wedges bracing the iron.  The smell
of hot oil permeating the space, the muted hissing of the huge pistons,
and the low rumble of the gears assaulted Justen.

"Who ye be?"  shouted a heavy voice.

"Justen."  ' lAh, you're a Black engineer!  We'll have no secrets from
ye!"  shouted the Clartham's engine man  The wizened gnome grinned at
Justen.  "What think ye, Engineer?"

"Impressive."  Justen let his senses drift across the engine and the
firebox, recoiling slightly at the high level of chaos and the small
margin of safety between the order of the iron and the power it
contained.  "You run close to the limits."

"She'll hold.  Captain Verlew says trade goes to the swift, and the
Clartham's one of the swiftest, save for your ships, of course.  But
we're close, leastwise, to your traders.  Except for that demon
Ryltar-he drives his ships closer to the edge than we do."  The engine
man frowned.  "Wouldn't want to run engines for him.  Black ship or no.
Suppose that's why he holds the east-west Hamor runs."  The engine man
checked the gauge and added another wedge.

Justen tried not to wince at the stresses on the boiler.  Instead, he
nodded and let his senses run over the gears and the shafts to the
paddle wheels, much simpler than the turbines of the latest Recluce
ships.  But without order-strengthened black iron, the Nordlans were
limited in what their boilers could handle.

He frowned, recalling a passage from one of Dorrin's old texts,
claiming that anything other than low-pressure steam engines would be
impossible without using black iron.  Yet the Clartham's boiler was
certainly not low-pressure, not with a fifty-cubit draft on three
funnels.

As the engine man adjusted the steam flow and checked the bearings and
lubrication, Justen leaned back against the ladder and continued to
study the engine system.

XIX

The wind cut out of the northeast like a cold knife, slashing across
Justen's uncovered face.  The morning sun, bright in the green-blue
sky, provided light but little heat.  Justen flexed his fingers inside
his heavy leather gloves, thankful that he had brought both the warm
sheepskin coat and the gloves.

Altara stood on the lookout's catwalk, halfway between the bridge and
the port lookout's station, one gloved hand on the railing, gesturing
with the other as she talked to the blond cargo-master, who
occasionally leaned out of the bridge house.

Berol and Nicos hung over the starboard railing, clearly miserable from
the twisting and pitching of the trader.

Overhead, the sails billowed, occasionally cracking in the wind, and
the engine beneath the deck lay silent, only enough heat in the boiler
to allow for a quick firing up.

North of the Clartham, a Black ship kept station, having joined the
Nordlan trader as she passed north of the Sligan coast.  The dark bow
of the older Black ship-the Dorrin- cut through the chop of the
Northern Ocean.  White spray cascaded across the bow, occasionally
reaching the single gun of the turret.

"Some escort," observed the Nordlan seaman who recoiled the line he had
coiled the afternoon before.  "Looks mean.  Glad it's on our side.
Leastwise, we won't have any boarding parties from the Whites this
trip."

"Do they do that often?"  asked Justen, grabbing the rail to keep from
being tossed against the bearded sailor.

"Nan just to remind us that they're the boss.  You bow and scrape and
they leave you alone."

"Like you do in Nylan?"  Justen kept his face straight.

"Well..."

Justen grinned.

"Yeah.  We're just traders, and we need to get along."

"Serren!  Stop jawing.  Get moving!"  The lean female third mate
gestured toward the mainmast, where a handful of men and women swarmed
upward.  "Looks like a bad squall's moving in."

The seaman gave a last twist to the rope and eased languidly toward the
mast.

Justen turned back to watch the Dorrin.  Would the first engineer have
wanted a ship named after him?  Somehow, Justen doubted it.

XX

Clerve, Altara, Justen, Berol, and Krytella stood near the bow as the
Clartham's paddle wheels carried the trader into Rulyarth.

Once again Justen sensed the thin edge between chaos and order within
the heavy iron engine below.  He doubted that the ship would make more
than a handful of trips before the boiler or the cylinders or the steam
lines-or something blew apart.  He wiped his forehead in the still
air.

"It's bigger than Nylan or Land's End.  A whole bunch bigger."  Clerve
pointed toward the four long piers jutting out into the harbor.  "Look
at the ships.  What's the big one?"

"That's a Hamorian trader."  The lean third mate paused by the Recluce
group, a grin creasing her wide mouth.  "Big and sloppy."

The air over Rulyarth was clear, with the pink stone buildings of the
port silhouetted against the blue-green sky.

"It's pretty," offered Berol.  "They build mostly with stone, don't
they?"

Justen sniffed once, then again.  The harbor smelled faintly of dead
fish and seaweed.

"Everything important's built of stone, and the stone's just like
Sarronnyn and the Sarronnese," offered the third mate.  "Pretty, hard,
and backward.  They don't do much with steam or engines.  That's
probably why they're going to lose to Fairhaven."  Standing by Justen's
shoulder, she stopped, then nudged him.  "What's a handsome young
fellow like you doing here?  Just going out to throw your life away
against those White devils?"

"The Whites aren't exactly invincible."  Justen flashed a smile, then
continued to study the heavy-timbered wharves as the paddle wheels
reversed to kill the ship's momentum.  The words of the dream" after
Sarronnyn"popped into his head.  What would happen in Sarronnyn?  Could
they help the Sarronnese stop the Whites, or would it be a futile
effort?

"Maybe not, but a handful of you are going to stop them when the best
troops left in Candar aren't succeeding?  What a waste."  The third
glanced toward the bowsprit, then marched toward a sailor.  "Get that
back in shape!"  Her arm pointed at an uncoiled line.  The seaman's
shoulders slumped.

"She's rather sweet on you."  Krytella edged closer to the worn wood of
the railing and looked at the gray harbor water churned up by the
paddle wheels.

"She also has a tongue sharper than a blade."

The faintest hint of sulfur and cinders mixed with the odor of dead
fish as a gust of wind whipped across the deck.  The paddles slowed,
and the Clartham eased against the rope-covered bumpers of the pier; a
strained creaking joined the whistle of the wind and the muffled
splashes of the paddle wheels.

"Lines tight!  Now!"  The third's voice rasped over the background
noises like a file across cold iron.

"Her voice is more like a file," observed Altara from behind Justen.

"Justen has such charm."  Krytella laughed gently, openly.  "Especially
with the savage beasts."

"Thank you."  Justen bowed, then grasped the railing to catch his
balance as the ship, after rebounding from the pier, shuddered at the
end of the taut mooring lines.

"Double up, and walk her in!"

"Get your gear on deck."  Altara walked toward the ladder below without
waiting for an acknowledgment.

The others followed.

In time, the Recluce contingent marched down the gangway to the pier.
Justen's pack rested easily on his back, cushioned by wide straps.  He
carried Warin's black staff in his left hand.  Already the staff had
begun to feel as though it belonged to him.  After stepping onto the
pier, he shook his head at the thought-an obsolete staff, his?

An officer in a gold-braided jacket, accompanied by two Sarronnese
troopers-all of them in the traditional blue and cream-waited on the
weathered planks of the wharf.  The officer's eyes darted from Justen's
black staff to Altara.  Then she bowed slightly to the senior engineer.
"Section Leader Merwha."

"Altara.  I'm the chief engineer of the group.  This is .Ninca.  She is
the chief healer."

The dark-haired and stocky healer nodded curtly.

"Only ten of you?"  the officer asked.

"That's seven engineers and three healers."  Altara looked down on the
officer.  "Dorrin was only one, and he managed to destroy half of the
White forces in Spidlar."

"He also failed to win."

"You have a point."  Altara grinned.  "There will also be a Black
marine detachment following, as well as a Weather Wizard."

"How soon?"

Altara shrugged.  "Whenever the next ship from Nylan gets here."

"Trusting the Legend, let's hope it won't be too long.  Now a Weather
Wizard, one like the great Creslin-that would be a help."

Justen shook his head.  Trust the Balance to set Gunnar up as the
saving hero.

"So when will this great wizard be arriving?"

"When the great winds arrive, of course," added Justen with a faint
grin.

Altara shook her head, half in affirmation.

"Can you all ride?"  Merwha gestured toward a stone and timber building
standing on a rise behind the pier.  "That's where we're headed.  The
horses are stabled there."

"One way or another," responded Altara.  "Some of the engineers, I
suspect, haven't had much practice lately."

"Practice they'll get.  It's a seven-day ride to the capital at Sarron.
How much cargo did you bring?"

"I'd guess about a wagon's worth.  Twenty stone-worth of tools and
materials, and-" Altara gestured toward Ninca.  "How much in the way of
healing goods and equipment?"

The green-clad healer inclined her head.  "We did not weigh it all, but
we have two large crates and two small ones.  Certainly less than the
twenty stone of the engineers."

"Sirle, have them bring the wagon here," ordered Merwha.

The darker of the two Sarronnese troopers turned from the Clartham and
began to walk shoreward, her steps light on the weathered timbers
despite her heavy boots.

Merwha shifted her attention back to Altara.  "Once they have your
crates unshipped, the wagon crew can load while we get you mounted and
ready to travel."

"There is one thing," Altara added.  "According to the agreement, there
is a stipend for food .. . and, of course, all iron and charcoal are to
be supplied."

"You sure you're not from Nordla?"  asked Merwha.

"I'd rather have it straight before we've ridden six days."

"The Tyrant suspected you might."  Merwha unstrapped a leather purse
and offered it.  That was for a larger contingent.  I trust it will
last somewhat longer."

"We always stick to our agreements."

Merwha nodded.  "Unlike some."

"Unlike some," Altara agreed.

Justen glanced back at the Clartham before studying the pier: a long
structure anchored on round wooden posts- logs stripped and planed
roughly into shape-nearly a cubit across.  He tapped his staff on the
heavy planks, weathered and gray.  The dull thud and vibration of the
staff against his hand confirmed the pier's solidity.

At the end of the pier, Trooper Sirle reached the waiting wagon, and
with a flick of a whip, the teamster on the seat started the two-horse
team toward the Clartham.

Only the faintest vibration traveled up through Justen's boots.  Even
with the heavy wagon rolling out to the ship, the pier felt nearly as
solid as if it had been built of stone.

XXI

"Easy, horse.  Easy ..."  Justen patted the beast's neck, taking care
not to lean too far forward.  According to his limited order-senses,
his mount was old, docile, and without even a rudimentary sense of
self-identity.  Justen's lips twisted.  He'd known statues with more
awareness, but at least the gray had no interest in contesting who
might be master-a contest Justen felt he probably wouldn't win with a
more spirited mount such as the one Altara rode.

The chief engineer edged the bay up beside him.  "How are you doing?"

"That depends on how far we have to go."  The junior engineer glanced
at the hard-packed clay that ran in a gentle curve roughly south for
about a kay before swinging southwest toward what appeared to be a
bridge.  His eyes flicked to the heavy gray sky.  "I just hope it
doesn't rain for a while."

"I'm no Weather Wizard, but it probably won't rain until later, not
until after we're off the road.  Merwha says we'll be staying in the
inn next to the barracks in that town ahead.  "

"What town?"  snorted Nicos.  "There's a bridge and a wide spot in the
road."

"It's at least as wide as Turnhill," quipped Jirrl.  "Maybe even wider,
and this place has a river worthy of the name."

Nicos opened his mouth, closed it, and grinned.  "Fair enough.  I
suppose I deserved that, even if..."  He shook his head.  "But Turnhill
is a prettier sight, I daresay."

Clerve, riding behind Nicos on a mare even more swaybacked than
Justen's, smiled broadly.  Altara urged the bay forward to rejoin the
Sarronnese officer.

Justen's smile slipped as he swatted at a large fly that buzzed around
his right ear.  The fly evaded the motion and headed for the other ear,
but Justen's fingers were quicker.  "Got you!"  He wiped off his
fingers on the gray's shoulder.  The horse plodded on.

Another fly buzzed toward him.  Justen swatted, but missed.

"Why don't you set a ward?"  suggested Krytella, riding up beside
him.

"Wards aren't exactly that easy when you're moving.  Besides, I'm an
engineer, not a mage or a healer."

"It's not that hard.  It didn't take Gunnar very long to learn.  Let me
show you."  Krytella eased her mount closer to Justen and brushed a
stray red hair back off her forehead.  "Just let your senses feel the
pattern."

Justen closed his eyes and tried to block out visual distractions and
the conversations of the other riders.  Even so, he couldn't help but
overhear parts of what was being said.  "..  . not see a lovelier
stream than the Eddywash ... not like this flowing brown bog they call
a river..  ."  "... Iron Guard and the White lancers ... isn't much
left of Deneris ..."

Justen wrenched his senses back to the patterns Krytella wove.

"Do you see?"  the healer asked.

"Can you do it again?"  As she repeated the gentle order-spinning,
Justen tried to mimic her manipulations.

"You almost had it!  Try it again."

Justen tried once more.

"Not quite.  I'll do it again."

After several more demonstrations by the redheaded healer, Justen
finally wove a thin order-web around the gray and himself.

"Thank you ever so much, Master Justen."  Clerve swatted at several
flies and nearly fell from his swaybacked mount, his hand swinging past
the guitar case as he regained his balance.

"I'm sorry."  Justen concentrated, then sighed and wiped the sweat from
his forehead as he set a second ward around the apprentice engineer.

"That won't last," warned Krytella.  "He didn't set it himself."

"I know, but maybe the flies will bother someone else and forget about
Clerve."

"How did you do that, Justen?"  asked the apprentice.

"I followed the healer's instructions.  But it won't stay too long, so
enjoy it."  Justen pursed his lips.  Something about the wards bothered
him, not that he could exactly understand why.

"I told you that you could do it."

Justen grinned.

"You might make a mage or a wizard yet."

"Hardly."

"Here comes the bridge.  Will we really get to stop?"  asked Clerve.

"Of course."  Krytella glanced to her right, where the sun still hung
well above the river and the western horizon.  "We might even get to
see what we're eating for dinner."

"It's supper here."  Berol's voice drifted forward above the muffled
thuds of hooves on the damp clay of the road.

Less than fifty cubits from the bridge stood a kay stone bearing a
single name: Lornth.  Merwha reined in until the Recluce contingent
closed up, then eased her chestnut forward.

More of the hard pink stones formed the two-span bridge over the River
Sarron, now scarcely a hundred cubits wide.  The paving blocks that
comprised the roadway were hollowed with use.  An old man with a broom
watched from the far end as the Sarronnese officer led her charges
across.

Justen glanced over his shoulder after crossing.  The sweeper was back
at work.  "I wonder if each bridge has a sweeper."

"Probably," said Nicos.  "They're all clean, and that's more than I
could say about the ones I saw in Lydiar last year.  Most of them
filthy and grimy."

On each side of the road stood single-storied buildings.  Each
building's walls were smooth-finished, as if plastered, in a pink so
pale that it was almost white.

Justen extended his senses to discover that each wall was in fact brick
covered with a hard surface.  "How do they finish the walls?"  He
turned in the saddle toward Nicos.

The other engineer shrugged.

"It's a local cement, I think."  Berol's voice carried over the echo of
hooves on the stone pavement of the town street leading toward a
square.  "Clay and burned limestone crushed together into a powder.
Some of the red clays allow it to dry even underwater.  They probably
use it for the bridge piers."

Nicos shrugged; Justen grinned.

The murmur of voices in the central square died away as Merwha led the
contingent around to the right.  Neither grass nor sculpture graced the
square, which was merely an open, stone-paved expanse surrounded by
two- and three-storied buildings.  Justen saw a chandlery, a cooper's
shop, and a dry-goods store-where one of the traditional maroon
Sarronnese carpets, showing four-pointed curled stars, hung in the
window.  A handful of carts stood in a rough rectangle on the stones in
the middle of the square.  Less than a score of Sarronnese-peddlers and
their customers-were scattered about.  All remained silent as Merwha
led the double line of riders out of the square and down another
stone-paved street.  "..  . Black bastards."

"Hush .. . maybe they'll help .. ."  "..  . don't know who's worse
..."

Once they had left the square, the murmurs behind increased.

"And they want more of us?"  Quentel's voice carried back from near the
head of the column.

A small boy darted from an alley, saw the horses and the seven
black-clad riders, and dashed back into the shadows.

Merwha reined up before a long timber and brick building.  Tour mounts
will be stabled here."  She pointed across the street to a two-story
building whose facade bore the image of a tilted bowl with liquid
flowing out.  Under the faded image were the words.  The Overflowing
Bowl, in Temple script.  "You'll stay there tonight.  The Tyrant pays
for your lodging, but your meals are yours."

Justen nodded at the almost ritualistic phrases that Merwha had uttered
every night.

"We leave at the second morning bell.  Tomorrow night, with luck, we'll
be in Sarron itself."

Gingerly, Justen dismounted.  His legs did hold him, although the
muscles above his knees cramped for a moment.

"Use the end stalls!"  Merwha added with a motion toward the section of
the stable farthest from the inn.

Justen flicked the reins and walked tiredly toward the end of the
stable.  The gray lumbered after him.

"It feels good to walk."  Altara fell in beside the younger engineer.

"It will feel better to sit down .. . I think."  Justen turned toward,
an open stall, leading the gray to the manger and tying the reins. Then
he unfastened his pack and the black staff and leaned them against the
wall before beginning to loosen the saddle girth.

By the time he had unsaddled, watered, fed, and brushed the placid
gray, thrown his gear over his shoulder, picked up the staff, and
closed the stall door, most of the others were waiting, except for
Nicos and Clerve, who straggled out as he watched.

"Men .. . always bringing up the rear."  Altara smiled after she spoke,
then gestured toward the inn.  "Let's go."

"You'd rather we brought up ... the front?"  asked Justen with a wide
smile.

"Justen .. . you might be promising more than you.  can deliver."

"It could be fun to see," added Jirrl.

Even before they reached the sign above the double doors, a young woman
in trousers emerged and bowed to Altara.  Her eyes flicked from
Altara's blade to Justen's black staff.  "You are the travelers from
far Recluce?"

"That's one way of putting it," answered the chief engineer.

"If you would follow me ..."

"Lead on," Altara's voice was cheerfully resigned.

"They expect miracles," muttered Quentel.

"Then we'll have to deliver them," answered Jirrl.

"Easy enough for you to say, woman," retorted Nicos.  "Most of us can't
charm the iron the way you can.  We need hammers."

Justen grinned.  The only things soft about Jirrl were her manners and
her voice.  Her arms were as hard as the black iron she forged with
such apparent ease.

The entry foyer was vacant except for those from Recluce and their
guide.

"The five rooms on the second floor are yours.  No one else is staying
here tonight, but the public room-" she turned and pointed through the
archway-"serves some of the officers from the Tyrant's forces.  Some
others, too.  Supper begins at the first bell.  That's not long."  She
bowed to Altara.

"Thank you."  Altara returned the bow.  "Put your gear in your rooms,
and wash up, if you're so minded.  Then we'll eat together."

The narrow stairs creaked, and the dark wood, although recently re
stained was worn.

Altara and Krytella took the corner room, while Clerve and Justen ended
up in the one that resembled a large pantry and contained just two beds
and an open cabinet with three shelves.  An empty basin and pitcher
stood on the cabinet, and two worn towels were folded beside them.

After testing the beds, Justen tossed his pack on the one that seemed
marginally harder and set the staff in the corner.  Then he opened the
shutters and looked out at the back wall of the barracks, then down at
the narrow alley separating the two buildings.

"I'll get the water, scr," Clerve offered.

"Thanks."  Justen nodded and sat on the edge of the bed.  He really
wanted a shower, or even a bath.  Neither seemed popular in Candar,
although his nose was slowly becoming accustomed to the local variety
of odors, most of them vaguely disagreeable.

He stood up and took two steps back to the window, trying not to sneeze
at the dust raised when his sleeve brushed the dusty sill.  If he sat,
his buttocks ached.  If he stood, his legs ached.

"Here's the water."  Clerve grinned.  "I brought a bucket-full, too."

Justen turned and smiled back, reaching for the bucket.

Cold as the water was, he not only washed, but shaved, and felt almost
rested by the time he tossed the last of the wash water out the window
and descended to meet the others in the foyer.

Even though the first bell had sounded, only two small tables were
occupied, one by a Sarronnese officer, the other by a local couple.

Altara studied the public room.  "No large tables.  Those two in the
corner"

Nicos, Berol, and Jirrl sat with Ninca and her husband Castin at the
corner table.  Krytelia joined the other engineers -Altara, Clerve,
Justen, and Quentel-at the next table, set along the wall of rough-hewn
pink stone.  A fresh-faced serving girl, her flame-red hair braided
into a single pigtail that fell between her shoulder blades, stepped up
to the table.  "We have dark ale, pale beer .. . some red berry and red
wine."

"What about food?"  asked Altara.

"We have fish stew or burkha.  There might be a mutton chop or two
still left..."  She looked toward the kitchen and lowered her voice.
"But the chops are a mite strong, if you know what I mean."

Justen nodded wryly.  Strong mutton chops would have him tasting sheep
for days.

Altara pursed her lips.  "What's best-the burkha or the stew?"

"They are both tasty, although our .. . travelers .. . often prefer the
stew.  The burkha is spicy.  They're both three pennies, and so are the
drinks, except for the red berry  That's two."

"Does the fish stew taste like fish?"  asked Justen.

The serving girl smiled.  "It is a fish stew, Scr."

"I'll have the burkha and the dark ale."

Altara raised an eyebrow, but added, "The fish stew and the red berry

All the others had red berry and only Castin, in addition to Justen,
chose burkha.

"Redheads are rare here," observed Krytelia as the serving girl headed
for the kitchen.

"She's got hair more flamed than yours, Healer," said Jirrl.  "Would
you not say so, Justen?"

Justen fingered the battered edge of the table and nodded.  He
preferred the darker red of Krytella's hair.

In the far corner, the local couple, a gray-haired man and a younger
woman, glanced again toward the Recluce tables, then stood abruptly and
walked out.

The Sarronnese officer grinned and shook her head before taking a last
swallow from her mug and raising it to indicate the need for a
refill.

"Dark ale."  The words accompanied the thump as the serving girl set a
heavy mug before Justen.  "Redberry the rest Of the way around."  She
looked at Justen.  "Three for you, Scr, and two for each of the
others."

Justen fumbled in his pouch for a moment before extracting the three
coins.  The serving girl scooped up the coins in a swift, sweeping
movement, then turned and recovered the empty mug from the Sarronnese
officer.

After taking a sip of the warm and bitter brew, the junior engineer
massaged the muscles above his left knee.  They had stopped aching for
the moment, at least.  For the first days of the trip, he hadn't been
sure if they ever would.

"Still sore?"  Quentel set his mug-almost completely hidden by his
massive hands-back on the table.

"It's getting better."

"You should have practiced a few other antique skills, like riding,"
suggested Altara.  "Do you want to spar after supper?"

"No.  I want to rest."

"I'll spar," Quentel volunteered.

Altara winced.  "Countering your wand or staff is like hitting an iron
bar."

"I could try," suggested Krytella.

"I suppose it would be good for me," Justen admitted.

Altara grinned.  "You and Quentel together.  I'll work with the
healer."

"More bruises," grumped Justen.

"I doubt it," rumbled Quentel.  "You never stand still long enough."

"I'm not quite as nimble now."

"Good!"

Justen groaned.

The serving girl slid a brown stoneware plate in front of Justen, and a
second before Altara, sitting to his right, then continued around the
tables, dropping the plates quickly.  Last, she placed a still-steaming
loaf of brown bread in the middle of each table.

Altara looked at her platter and then at Justen's.  "You do have a way
with them, don't you?"

Justen looked from his plate to the chipped stoneware before Altara,
from the heaping stack of browned meat covered with a white sauce to
the two slices before the senior engineer.  A stack of green leaves
rested next to Justen's meat, compared to three small leaves on
Altara's plate.

"He certainly does."  Krytella glanced at her platter, nearly a mirror
of Altara's.  Both women shook their head.

Justen speared a small section of the meat, sliced it in two and
stuffed half in his mouth.  He grabbed for the ale and took a quick
swallow.

"I see you're enjoying the burkha."  A hint of laughter pervaded
Altara's words.  "Try the bread, if it's too hot."

Justen took another swallow from the mug, followed with a mouthful of
warm bread.  Then, still chewing, he held the empty mug aloft to catch
the serving girl's eye.  "Bread helps ... didn't realize it was that
hot," he mumbled.

"There are lots of things we often don't realize," added Ninca.  The
older healer leaned toward Altara from the adjoining table and asked
the chief engineer, "Do you know what sort of quarters we'll have in
Sarron?"

"I've been assured that they're more than adequate."  Altara's tone was
dry.  "And there's plenty of clean water, Merwha told me.  They think
we have some sort of obsession with washing."

"We do," laughed Quentel.

The serving girl took Justen's empty mug, flipping her braid by his
face as she left to get a refill.

Justen shook his head.  The ones he didn't want wanted him, and the one
he wanted didn't even seem to acknowledge that he was anything other
than Gunnar's younger brother.  And, of course, Gunnar wasn't
interested in Krytella except as a friend, just as Krytella wasn't more
than friendly to Justen himself.  Is life always so perverse ?  Or is
it that people always want what they can't have ?  He looked at the
remaining chunks of meat and carved off a thinner slice, slipping it
into his mouth carefully.  His forehead still perspired, but he was
beginning to enjoy the taste: a strange mixture of sweetness,
nuttiness, and fire.

He ate another piece of burkha, nodding as the serving girl replaced
his empty mug with a full one.  Even the leaves in the burkha didn't
taste too bad.

"I think he actually likes that stuff, Krytella," said Altara.

"Hot breath won't help you in sparring," added Quentel.

Justen thought about Krytella's adoring looks at his absent brother
Gunnar and took another slice of burkha.  Sparring might be a relief of
sorts.

XXII

Justen reined up the gray and looked uphill at the south wall of the
smithy.  Beside the wall ran an antique millrace.  Was it still
serviceable, or merely an ancient miller's dream?

A jagged line of white planks contrasted with the weathered boards that
comprised the majority of the smithy's wall.  He glanced toward the
sprawling house, then at the outbuildings.  All bore similar patterns
of rebuilding, including a scattering of fresh red tiles on the house
roof that stood out from the faded, almost rose color of the older
tiles.

"Rather hasty repairs."

"Scr?"  asked Clerve.

Beyond the smithy was a single new building, low and long, a repetition
of the Sarronnese barracks they had been quartered near for almost
every night of their trip.  The entire holding lay close to two kays
below the outer wall to Sarron proper and stood by itself in the middle
of hillside meadows that sloped up toward the pink granite of the city.
Justen nodded.  The Tyrant might accept help, but the Blacks of Recluce
would be quartered outside the city.  "This is your..  . area, Chief
Engineer," announced Merwha.

"Safely outside Sarron, I see."  Altara's tone was dry.

"The people of Recluce are known for their desire for privacy."

"Far be it from us to disabuse that notion."  Altara nudged her mount
toward the smithy.

Justen and Clerve followed, with the Sarronnese officers trailing.

After dismounting and tying her mount, Altara slid open the wide door
to the smithy.  Her eyes swept around the twin forges.  Although the
smithy had been recently cleaned and the hard-packed clay floor was
swept bare, Justen could sense bits of metal buried deep in the clay.
Both of the great bellows showed new leather and bright metalwork.

"Not used in years, then cleaned up in a hurry."  The chief engineer
snorted.  "Still, it'll do for a start.  We'll need another forge,
probably."  She turned to Nicos.  "Let's get everything unloaded. We've
got work to do-lot's of it, from what we've seen already."  She paused.
"Justen, you and Clerve take care of the tools.  Get them out and put
together some racks and what have you."

Justen nodded.

The chief engineer turned to Quentel.  "Can you unload the wagon and
get the crates in there for Justen to organize?"

Justen looked toward the healers and watched Castin unstrap a large
bag, which he lifted single-handedly.  Justen frowned, then grinned as
he realized that the bag held flower petals for the chickens that
Castin insisted he would be raising.

Clerve sighed.  His fingers strayed across the leather guitar case.

"It's not that bad."  Justen grinned.  "Do you want to sweep out the
old farmhouse?"

"I'll help with the tools, Scr."

XXIII

Justen tapped on the flatter, trying to smooth the plate on the anvil.
He wished Clerve would get back with the charcoal.  Working with a
striker was far easier than working alone to fuller the plates into the
thin sheets necessary for the rocket casings.

Toward the back of the smithy, Altara and Quentel wrestled with the big
wheel they were attempting to install as part of a makeshift hammer
mill.  Justen took a deep breath.  Having a hammer mill might help in
the rough fullering.  But without the use of a blast furnace, the
hammer mill would be essentially cold-forming, even with the power from
the small millrace, and almost as tedious as hot fullering.

Berol and Jirrl were alternating use of the small lathe, truing the
rocket heads and waiting for Justen and Nicos to form more casings.
Then they would slip the flush-riveted casings over the molding frame
and true and smooth the outsides to reduce the chaos created by the air
when the rocket was fired.

Justen lifted the hammer and repositioned the flatter.  Maybe the
hammer mill would help.

Hoofbeats drummed into the smithy between the strokes of the hammer,
and some of the red dust of Sarronnyn seemed to precede the Sarronnese
messenger.  She strode into the smithy, glanced around at the
engineers, then drew herself up.  "I seek Chief Engineer Altara."

Altara set aside the tongs and wiped her forehead.  "Yes?"

"You are ... the chief engineer?"

"None other.  We're working.  Engineers' work is dirty work.  What
would you like?"

"Ah .. . Scr .. . Section Leader Merwha would like to inform you that
the detachment of Recluce marines and the Weather Wizard will be here
shortly.  They have just turned off the river road onto the Tyrant's
Highway."

Altara nodded.  "Thank you."

The messenger waited.

"Thank you," Altara repeated.  "I can't do much until they actually get
here.  Convey our thanks and respects to Section Leader Merwha."

Justen grinned as the messenger looked at the packed clay floor, then
saluted and departed.

"No wonder they can't win a war .  , .  always interested in
announcements ."."  mumbled Nicos from the adjoining forge.

"That goes for all of you.  You can greet them when they get here."

Justen lifted the hammer again .. . and again.

Even after the clopping of hooves and two blasts from a trumpet, Justen
continued to hammer out the last casing section until it needed another
heat.  Then he set aside the hammer and wiped his dripping forehead on
his ragged upper sleeve.

"You don't believe much in formalities and ritual, do you?"  asked
Quentel.

Justen jumped, so silently had the big engineer slipped up beside
him.

"Wish I could get that kind of jump on you in sparring," Quentel
joked.

"You did well enough."  Justen fingered the still-healing bruise on his
shoulder.

Quentel laughed.  "I have half a dozen.  For a man who says that
personal weapons are obsolete, Master Justen, you do rather well.
Darkness help us if you took them seriously."

"But I do."  Justen shrugged.  "I have to, since everyone else does."
He blotted his face on his sleeve.  "Shall we go greet the new
arrivals?"

The two were the last to leave the smithy.

Krytella was already talking to Gunnar.  "... Sarronnese .. . don't
even understand how much astra adds to the effect of boiling water ...
and ..."

"Justen!"  Gunnar looked over the healer's head toward his brother.
"You look like you've been sweating up a good storm."

"We've been busy.  How was your trip?  Not that you'd let it get too
rough."  ' Turmin insisted that I not meddle with the weather unless
the ship was threatened."  Gunnar shrugged.  "It was fine, so I enjoyed
the sunshine."

"Our crossing was too chill to enjoy any warmth."  Justen gave his
brother a wry smile.  "How was the ride from Rulyarth?"

"Horses are horses.  I'm sore."

"So was I. It passes."  A figure in marine blacks caught Justen's eye,
leading a horse toward the stables at the end of the recently built
barracks.  Justen studied the marine for a moment before turning back
to Gunnar.

"Why's Firbek here?"

"He's a marine, and this is the first real fight in centuries."  Gunnar
glanced toward the barracks, where the marines continued to unload.  "I
also understand that the good Counselor Ryltar prevailed upon
Firbek."

"But why?"

"I thought you knew," interjected Krytella.  "Firbek and Ryltar are
cousins.  He wanted Firbek to be here so he could get a firsthand
report he could trust.  Ryltar's not at all in favor of anyone from
Recluce being here.  People say there was quite an argument in the
Council."

"Hmmm .. ."  Justen pursed his lips.

"Well, Council politics aren't going to get this beast curried and
watered."  Gunnar laughed.

"I'll help," offered Krytella.

"I suppose I'd better get back to the forge!"  Justen took a deep
breath.  "I'll talk to you at dinner-supper, I guess they call it
here." He watched for a moment as Gunnar and Krytella led the the bay
toward the stables.  He cleared his throat and headed back into the
smithy.

XXIV

Thankful for the high clouds that reduced the midday heat from
oppressive to merely uncomfortable, Justen crossed the yard from the
smithy to the old house that quartered the healers and held the
makeshift dining room-public room for both the marines and the
engineers.

Cheeep..  . eeeep..  . eeeppp..  .

On the north side of the house was the small pen that had held the
chicks.  Now half-grown and half-feathered, they pecked in the clay
like soil between their feedings.  One came up with a fragment of a
dried flower petal, cheeping with success.

"How long do you think before we can have some fowl?"  asked Clerve.

Justen glanced at the parti-colored birds.  "A while yet, I'd say."

"I'm getting tired of potato soup and noodles and dried beef."

Justen nodded, then wiped his forehead.  Clouds or no clouds, it was
still hot, and much hotter than on Recluce.  His eyes flicked toward
the garden, flourishing despite the heavy, clayey soil.  He clumped up
the steps onto the porch and toward the open door, stepping aside as
one of the younger marines left, shaking water from his hands.

"Good luck.  Engineers.  More noodles and spiced beef, if you can call
it beef."

The engineer nodded politely at the marine.  Castin's cooking wasn't
nearly so bad as the marine said, but Justen suspected that some of the
judgment lay in the marine's assignment to clean-up duty.  The marines
always ate first, since, even with two long trestle tables crammed into
the room, it wasn't really big enough for the score of marines alone,
let alone the engineers and healers.

Most of the engineers and the others had already seated themselves by
the time Justen and Clerve entered.  With the heat from the hearth that
Castin had converted to a makeshift stove, and with the inevitable
burning grease, the ends of the two long trestle tables nearest the
kitchen remained empty.  Justen suspected that in winter, the ends by
the drafty windows would be empty, not that any of the engineers really
anticipated being in Sarronnyn through the winter-one way or the
other.

"Well, if it isn't Justen."

Justen tried to keep from blushing, but failed.  It wasn't his fault if
there were always more things to do than he had time for.  He seated
himself next to Jirrl and across the table from Gunnar and Krytella.
Clerve sat on his left.

Eyes turned toward Castin as he set a large bowl of noodles on the end
of each table.

"Noodles again?"  asked Berol,

"They're egg noodles.  They're good for you.  My hens are laying
now."

"They're still noodles," said Nicos.

"I know, I know," expounded Castin.  "It's only noodles and seasoned
beef.  But the noodles are much better than you'll find in Sarron-"

"That's not saying much, Master Cook."  Quentel's voice was gruff, but
his eyes smiled.

Castin shrugged and turned back toward his kitchen, returning almost
immediately with two more bowls filled with a steaming brown gravy in
which swam small chunks of meat.

Justen poured the lukewarm water into his mug, wishing for a dark beer,
or even for red berry  Still, the water cut through some of the dust.

In his last trip, Castin brought back two large baskets filled with
fresh-baked bread and sat down at the end of the table, next to
Ninca.

"Are you sure this stuff is beef and not seaweed?  And how do we know
your noodles are real noodles and not some strange form of quilla
beaten into the shape of noodles?"  Nicos mock-glared at the
dark-haired and broad-faced" older healer.

"No engineer has ever had to eat cactus roots at my table."  Castin
paused, frowning.  "Still, it is an idea ..."

Gunnar guffawed.

"How about those chickens?"  asked Clerve.

"Those are not chickens, young man.  They are the most delicate of
fowl, with a tenderness you will not believe."

"I'll believe it when I get to eat one," cracked Nicos.

"Could we just let Master Castin eat?"  Altara's voice was acerbic. "Or
would you like to help grind some quilla roots into noodles?  Or would
you rather run the kitchen for Firbek and the marines?"

"Not me, thank you," muttered Clerve, his voice barely loud enough for
Justen to hear.

"Castin does very well, and he's awfully good-hearted to put up with
all this."  Jirrl reached for the noodles and served herself before
passing them to Krytella.

The healer served Gunnar and took a smaller portion for herself before
handing the bowl to Justen.

"Noodles again?"  asked Berol, sliding onto the bench beside Clerve.

"Of course.  But they're egg noodles, not just plain noodles."  Justen
filled the chipped crockery plate before him and grinned at the big
woman.  "Actually, his sauces are splendid.  With those sauces, even
quilla would taste good."  He handed the bowl to Clerve.

Krytella doled out a small amount of the sauce and raised her eyebrows.
"I believe you also like burhka, and ... ah ... spice .. ."

Gunnar swallowed hard, then coughed.  "It's a good thing she's a
healer, Brother."  '"Now what did you do, Justen?"  asked Berol.

"Nothing.  I just said that Castin makes good sauces."

"Are you sure you didn't say that you liked things saucy?"

Justen felt himself flush.  Was all the teasing because of that tavern
girl in Lornth?

"He must have a guilty conscience, Krytella.  Look at him."  Berol
slapped the table.

Justen finally gave an exaggerated shrug and turned to Clerve.  "This
is what you have to look forward to."

"Only if you like it spicy and saucy."

Justen claimed the bowl with the meat and sauce and ladled a liberal
amount across the pile of noodles.

"He does like the sauce."

"Don't all men?"

"Even wizards ... I'll bet," added Jirrl.

Justen grinned as he watched Gunnar flush.

Clerve ladled only a small portion of the sauce, but fished out several
chunks of beef.

"At least the younger men are more .. . choosy about their sauce."

Justen and Gunnar began to laugh.

XXV

"So.  The Tyrant has agreed to provide lodgings, supplies, and
compensation for those whom Recluce sends to oppose us?"  Histen
laughed harshly.

"It would seem that is the case."  Renwek looked back toward the draped
arches that led to the empty Council Chamber.

"And how many have been sent?"

"Only a few handfuls have volunteered, most of them engineers and
healers.  Just one young Storm Wizard."

"Just one young Storm Wizard?  Enlighten me, Renwek.  Was there not
just one young Black Storm Wizard in the time of Jenred the Traitor?"
Histen's lips turned at the corners as he waited for an answer.

"Ah .. . yes.  High Wizard.  But this one does not seem so great as
Creslin"

"Creslin could not stop Fairhaven in Candar itself for all his power,
and I doubt he could do so even today.  Clearly, Recluce does not wish
to offend Sarronnyn.  Just as clearly, they do not intend to make a
great commitment.  Still, it is a good idea to be wary when Storm
Wizards are involved."  Histen shook his head.  "I had a message from
Zerchas."  '

"And what does the honorable Zerchas want?"

"He suggests that some of the stronger and more vocal young
hotheads-like Derba and Beltar-be dispatched to help in taking
Sarronnyn."

"Is he that honorable?  Or does he have something else in mind?"

"Probably, but he's also being careful.  He worries about casualties to
the Iron Guard."

"What about the lancers?"

Histen's eyes narrowed.  "Zerchas is absolutely correct.  The Iron
Guard is the key to our success, especially if those engineers from
Recluce forge a great deal of black iron."

"But the lancers routed the rebels in Kyphros ..."

Histen sighed, once and loudly.  "Renwek, please consider your words
before uttering them.  Others may not have my patience."  He
half-turned, then looked back.  "Find out exactly what Derba and Beltar
have been doing lately.  Let me know.  I will be in the Tower this
evening."

Renwek bowed.

The High Wizard turned and walked toward the Tower.

XXVI

Justen set aside the hammer as he saw Gunnar standing just inside the
smithy.  He wiped his forehead on his sleeve and waited for his brother
to step closer.

"What are you working on?"  Gunnar asked.

"Part of a launching frame.  Firbek thinks that the rockets will be
very useful against the Iron Guard."  Justen stretched out his fingers,
then ran them idly over the smooth wood of the hammer's haft, his eyes
drifting to the adjoining forge, where Clerve was helping Nicos.  The
apprentice lifted the hammer and struck.  Justen smiled faintly and
focused on his brother.

"Maybe."  Gunnar ran his thumb along his jaw.  "Maybe.  Do you want to
go into Sarron?"

"When?"  Justen wiped the dampness from his forehead again and glanced
toward the rear of the smithy, where Altara had just straightened up
from readjusting and leveling the shaft bearings for the
still-unfinished hammer mill.  "We've got a lot to do."

"Later .. . right after you finish."

Both men paused as Clerve delivered a series of blows to the metal on
Nicos's anvil.  Justen wrinkled his nose to forestall a sneeze from the
combined odors of metal, soot, and hot oil.

"That'll be a while."

"It certainly will be."  Altara had walked in behind Gunnar.  "He'll be
on that section of the frame until the shadows have dropped on those
pink walls.  And he's going to have to go with you on with that
Sarronnese detachment the day after tomorrow.  So here you are, cutting
into productive-" Gunnar looked apologetic.  "I didn't mean .. ."  He
paused.  "But he would be helpful-"

"You two."  Altara shook her head.  "All right.  He can leave-this
time-when that cross brace is welded and the brackets are set.  That's
still going to be a while."

"Thank you."  Gunnar inclined his head.  "Why do you .. ."  Altara
paused.  "It's not as though you're exactly a drinker, young wizard.
Did Justen put you up to this?"

"Not this time."  Gunnar closed his lips tightly for a moment, as if
holding a grin.

"What are you up to that you need Justen?"

"I just want to get a feel for Sarron.  If I go alone ..."  The blond
man shrugged.

"I don't know as that's a good notion, going into Sarron itself, since
it's more than a little clear that the Sarronnese are not overly fond
of our getting too close.  Still, I couldn't keep you here, Gunnar, if
I wanted to, and maybe the two of you together will get into less
trouble."

"How about three?"  asked Justen, looking toward the corner of the
barracks building where the green banner flew.  "Besides, having a lady
with us-"

"You want to take the young healer, strip away all our talent?"

"It's a good idea," added Gunnar.  "This is one of the last bastions of
the Legend."

"Fine.  Assuming that Krytella wants to accompany you two young
scoundrels.  Just let Justen get on with his work for now."

Gunnar nodded, bowed, and left.

Altara pursed her lips, then blotted her brow, leaving a damp streak of
soot.  She frowned and rubbed the smudge off with the back of one
heavily muscled and lightly tanned forearm.

"When I look at you two ..."  she shook her head "..  . I just feel
trouble.  Not the ordinary kind of trouble.  Something different."  The
chief engineer coughed.  "Then, maybe it's this place."

Justen nodded and swung the pieces of the cross brace back into the
forge.

"But you do good welds, and your casings don't need much polishing,
Berol tells me."  Altara looked straight at the young engineer.  "Don't
let that go to your head.  You're still not that good at really fine
work, like turbine blades."

"Yes, Chief Engineer."  Justen grinned.  "Do you want to help me with
the ... fine work?"

"Justen, your work there probably isn't that fine."  Her lips quirked
before she turned toward Nicos and Clerve.  The apprentice set down his
hammer as the chief engineer approached and passed him.

When the metal sections in the forge began to glow even brighter than
the cherry red needed for fullering, Justen let his perceptions wash
over the metal, waiting until the temperature eased slightly higher.
Then he swung both pieces into position and completed the scarfing
before the metal cooled.  Following that, he slipped the sections back
into the forge.  After watching and adjusting the sections through
another reheating, waiting as the iron reached even higher
temperatures, he replaced them on the anvil and with three even strokes
of the hammer, completed the first weld.

The sun was still above the horizon, if only by a few hands, when at
last he left the smithy, washed, and changed.

Gunnar and Krytella sat on stools on the narrow porch of the old
farmhouse that the healers-and Gunnar-shared.  The engineers, Justen
reflected, had the dubious privilege of smaller, if newer, cubicles in
the roughly constructed barracks provided by the Tyrant.  In the rain,
all the rooms smelled of the stable at the north end.

"Sorry," Justen offered as he stopped at the bottom step.  "The braces
took longer.  Most iron work does, I think."

"No matter.  Got your weekly pay?"  asked Gunnar.

"All five pennies' worth?  That won't go far.  The Tyrant is so
generous ..."

"We're supposed to be helping them, not behaving like mercenaries for
hire."  Krytella stood and adjusted her belt, the green tunic, and the
knife.  She also carried a short staff, half the length of the black
one Justen had left in his room.

"I sometimes think help means different things to different people."
Gunnar climbed off the stool, which rocked on the warped and uneven
planks until he put out a hand to steady it.

"It's a long walk."  Justen's eyes flicked from the dusty road up the
hill toward the granite walls of Sarron, shaded even more toward the
pink by the late-afternoon sun.

"It's better to leave the horses here, and you could use the exercise,
anyway."  Gunnar headed toward the road.

"You haven't been hammering heavy iron all day."

"I rode out past the Klynstatt Marshes and spent half the day grubbing
through the ironwood forests."

"Would you two stop trying to convince each other that you had the
harder day?"  Krytella stopped at the edge of the road to let a horse
cart pass.

"Men .. . they're all the same."  The driver, a flaxen-haired older
woman, grinned at the healer, then flicked the reins, and the cart full
of rushes wobbled past the three, the left axle squealing so painfully
that Justen winced at the lack of order in even that simple mechanical
device.

"You can sense disorder in machines as well as healers do in people."
Gunnar pulled at his chin as he resumed his long strides uphill.

"At times."  Justen shrugged his shoulders, trying to relieve some of
their tightness.

By the time the three reached the stone causeway leading to the walls,
they were damp from the effort and the humid air.

The sentry studied the two men in black and the woman in green.
"Recluce types?  From down there?"  He gestured down the long incline
toward the Recluce enclave, whose roofs just peeked above a grassy
hill.

"Yes."  Gunnar smiled politely.  "We've never been in a city this large
and prosperous."

The woman in stark, dark-blue leathers ignored Gunnar and turned toward
the healer.  "Where are you bound?"

Krytella swallowed and then grinned.  "To the market.  The boys have
never seen a real market.  Then for a good dinner.  Is there anyplace
you'd recommend?"

"Any of the taverns off the traders' square are pretty good ... except
for the Brass Bull.  I wouldn't take two nice young fellows there."

"The square?  Is that just off-"

"Take the main way until you get to the Guard barracks.  The traders'
square is just past there to the left."  The sentry stepped back and
motioned them on.  ' Take care of those two, lady.  We don't want
trouble here."  She nodded to Krytella as die three passed.

"I'm beginning to understand why Creslin didn't think much about the
idea of coming to Sarronnyn."  Justen grinned.

"Or why he worried about being tied up with a redhead?"  asked
Gunnar.

Krytella blushed.

Even late in the afternoon, the avenue toward the main square was
half-filled.  They eased past a wagon full of tanned hides that were
being unloaded into a large building.  Justen wrinkled his nose at the
acrid smell that seeped from the wagon bed.

"They must have used it for more than tanned leather," Gunnar
observed.

Justen let his perceptions touch the wood.  "It feels similar to some
quenches, except with an edge."

Krytella and Gunnar exchanged a quick glance that Justen ignored as the
three stepped into the market square, still nearly filled with vendors
despite the nearness of twilight.

"Carpets .. . carpets from the best midland wool..."

"Blades .. . the best blades this side of Hamor..."

"See the best carpets in Sarron ... soft as a baby's cheek .. .
stronger than spun brass."

"Spices .. . fresh spices.  Get your astra here .. . fresher than the
Blacks' best..  ."

At the last boast, Krytella paused and turned toward the hawker, her
eyebrows raised for a moment.  The woman who stood before a small,
dark-wood cart with nearly a dozen cloth bags spread out on the sale
board fell silent.

"All the way from Hamor, and they're fresher than from Recluce?" probed
Krytella.

"They are fresh ... lady."

Krytella smiled faintly, then nodded first toward Gunnar, then toward
Justen.  She began to walk toward the far side of the square, toward a
narrow, gray building that topped the two beside it by a handful of
cubits.

Justen held back a frown, but turned and followed the other two.

"Look at that lady ... two hunks like that!"

"Like the blond one ..."

"No ... the darker one's got a nicer ass.  The blond's a little
thin."

Justen glanced sideways at Gunnar, grinning, but his brother's thoughts
were off somewhere, certainly not focusing on the local conversation.

"A little thin?  He makes your Friedner look like an underweight calf.
Bet you wouldn't turn him out of your bed, Cerla.  Of course, the dark
one's definitely something .. ."

Justen felt himself flushing and turned to catch Krytella's eyes.  The
healer was also flushing.

"They're rather .. . direct here."  Justen caught sight of a tasteful
inn board displaying a silver shield rimmed in black, "There's an inn,
and it's not the Brass Bull."

The Silver Shield's public room, despite a faint smokiness that
recalled burned grease, had unshuttered windows and a faint breeze that
Justen appreciated on a close afternoon.  Most of the tables were
empty, and the three sat in the corner at a circular table that offered
each of them a view of the doorway.

Gunnar gestured to a serving boy, thin and younger than most
apprentices on Recluce.  "Could we have some drinks?"

The serving boy ignored Gunnar and turned to Krytella.  "Yes, my
lady?"

Krytella grinned at Gunnar, then looked to the youth.  "What do you
offer?"

"We have red wine, dark beer, lager, and red berry  The youth's voice
almost squeaked.  He cleared his throat and waited.

Krytella nodded toward Gunnar, then toward Justen.

"I'd like a dark beer," Justen said, trying not to grin.

"I'll have a red berry Gunnar said.

The youth looked to Krytella, then finally asked, "Your wish, lady?"

"A red berry

The youth looked from her to the two men, raising an eyebrow.

"Two red berries and a dark beer," Krytella told him.

"Thank you."  The youth hurried toward the back room, his slippered
feet whispering on the worn and wide-plank floors.

Two white-haired women sat at a table along one wall with a game board
between them, nursing mugs of something.  Justen glanced toward the
pair, trying to determine the game, which seemed to employ red and
black counters.

"Are you finding out anything?"  Krytella lowered her voice,

"Besides too much chaos for a home of the Legend?"  Gunnar's voice was
equally low.  "No."

Justen licked his lips and tried to let his thoughts go blank, to let
his perceptions pick up a sense of what might be happening in Sarron.

Near the door, a single woman, dressed in the blue leathers that
indicated a soldier in service to the Tyrant, sipped from a chipped,
gray-crockery mug.  Her gray and black hair was cropped short, and a
white scar crossed her left cheekbone.  Two empty mugs stood on the
corner of the table.

As his perceptions drifted past the older soldier, Justen caught a
sense of regret, almost of emptiness, but the emptiness was honest,
close to ordered sadness.

Justen could catch hints of something out in the square, like a faint
but unseen white mist that tugged at the corners of buildings and
drifted along the gutters and peered from the covered sewers.

"Your beer, scr."  The serving boy set a mug before Krytella.

"That's for my friend."  She nodded toward Justen, who sat up with a
twitch at the thump of the mugs on the table.

The youth smiled politely and set one red berry before the healer, and
the other before Gunnar.  "That will be a silver and four, scr."  The
beer stayed put.

"A silver and four?"

"With the White devils coming through the mountains, there's been some
hoarding.  They say they burn anyone who's a Legend-holder."

Justen handed Krytella a half-silver, as did Gunnar.  The healer handed
the server three half-silvers.  "The extra is yours."

"My pleasure, lady."  He blinked long, sooty eyelashes at the healer.
"My pleasure."

Justen watched as the boy minced back toward the kitchen.

"Don't glare, Justen, dear.  It's not becoming."  Krytella's voice was
pitched loud enough to carry to the other corner table, where two
round-faced traders-one in gray, the other in brown-gestured at each
other across a tray of glittering stones.  Both women paused for an
instant and studied the three from Recluce.  Then the one in brown
flashed a quick smile to Krytella before turning back to her
dickering.

"Was that totally necessary?"  Justen didn't know whether to grin or be
annoyed.

"Absolutely."  Krytella winked, then looked at Gunnar.

"There's too much chaos under the surface here, but I haven't been able
to really link it to any one place."  The Air Wizard lifted his mug to
his lips and sipped.  "There's also a lot of fear."  Krytella slid the
beer in front of Justen, who decided to say nothing about his own,
obviously far weaker, attempts to track the underlying chaos.  Instead,
he took.a long swallow from the mug and listened to the low-voiced
conversation.

"You think the Whites already have the city?"  Krytella asked.

Gunnar shook his head.  "The traces aren't that strong.  But if they
get here, I don't think there will be much resistance."

"Why not?"

Justen could have answered that easily enough, but he took another sip
of the dark beer, more bitter with its hints of chaos than it should
have been, and an illustration of the answer.

"Order, especially, needs a focus.  If you start bribing or removing
the people around whom order would build ..."  Gunnar shrugged.

Justen nodded.  Gunnar had explained even more clearly than he could
have.

Krytella paused and took another sip of red berry  The three sat silent
for a time, occasionally sipping from their mugs.

"Would you like anything else?"  The serving boy batted the long, sooty
eyelashes at Krytella.

The blatant nature of the come-on twisted Justen's stomach, especially
when he realized that the youth was not chaos-driven, at least not
beyond the normal desires of young men.

"I should think not, thank you."  Krytella offered a smile, patently
false, but the youth batted his eyelashes back in return before bowing
and departing.

"This place is different," admitted Gunnar.

"I can see why Creslin didn't want to come here," added Justen, trying
not to grin as he baited the healer.

"If that's the way you feel, well .. ."  mused Krytella "... I think it
makes me glad we're helping the Legend."

"Are we?"  Gunnar asked.

The soldier at the farther table set her third mug on the corner of the
table, then stood and walked with exaggerated care toward the open
doorway to the square.  The serving boy reclaimed the mugs and the coin
that rested beside them.

"I would hope so."  Krytella lowered her voice.  "The Sarronnese
haven't been able to slow the Whites, and that's why they asked for
Firbek and the marines to join them on the north road that leads to
Middlevale.  I wanted to go with you and Justen, but Ninca said someone
has to stay."

"I wasn't exactly given much choice."  Justen's voice was wry.  "And no
one can tell me exactly what I'm supposed to do, except to try to
figure out some way to help.  Gunnar here can at least use the winds to
spy out where the Whites are, or to bring in a fog or something."

"I'm sure you'll do just fine, Justen.  Dorrin was very successful at
that," Krytella reassured him.

"That was centuries ago.  Who knows how successful he really was?"

"You sound somewhat skeptical, Brother."

"I'm always skeptical of legends and tales of long-dead heroes."

The scraping of a chair interrupted the low-voiced conversation as the
two traders rose from their table and left.  Justen glanced around the
near-empty public room, vacant now except for them-and the long-lashed
serving boy, who waited by the doorway to the back room.  "Everyone
else has left."

"I'm done," Krytella said.  "I hope your feelings about Sarron were
worth the overpriced red berry

"Probably not."  Gunnar swallowed the last of his drink.

"The beer wasn't bad," Justen added.  "Bitter, but not bad."

"How you can drink that..."  muttered Gunnar.

The healer shook her head but said nothing, ignoring even the last
flirtatious smile and batted eyelashes from the serving boy.

Only a handful of hawkers remained in the square outside the Silver
Shield, and even those were packing their wares into cases or packs as
the three headed back toward the main gate-except for the carpet
merchants, who had rolled their wares into long, heavy tubes.  Although
the tannery wagon had long since left, Justen could still smell a
lingering odor of solvents and manure as they passed the barred door of
the leather shop.

The gate guards scarcely looked at the three leaving Sarron and walking
down the causeway behind an empty farm wagon pulled by a single
swaybacked chestnut.

Gunnar jumped aside to avoid a steaming pile of just-delivered dung.
"It doesn't pay to follow horses too closely."

"Not on foot, anyway."  Justen shivered as once again he felt the
miasma of chaos that seemed to lurk beyond the pale pink granite walls
of Sarron, like a too-early winter fog seeping out of the Westhorns and
across the unharvested green of the land.

"Are you cold?  You aren't sick, are you?"  asked Krytella.

"I will be if you'll take care of me."  He forced a semi-lecherous
grin, then let it drop away as he caught the worried expression on his
brother's face.

The sound of a single horse echoed through the twilight, and the three
glanced downhill toward the rider in black who swung past the farm
wagon.

"Healer!"  Firbek reined up.  "The chief engineer needs you.  One of
the engineers got an arm caught in the mill."

Something about the marine bothered Justen, even though he could sense
that the man told the truth.

"Give me a ride."

Krytella took the marine's hand and swung up behind the saddle with a
quick boost from Gunnar.  The two brothers watched as the heavy-laden
horse headed back downhill.

"Where are the other two healers?"  asked Justen, brushing away an
unseen mosquito.  He swatted again, too distracted to try to set up a
ward against the hungry insects.

"They were requested to visit the Tyrant.  Apparently her daughter, the
heir, had some difficulty that Ninca thought they could help.  In the
interests of harmony and goodwill, the chief engineer agreed."  Gunnar
motioned toward the enclave.  "We probably ought to get back."

Justen nodded, and they began to walk more quickly downhill.

"You felt it, too, didn't you?"  asked Gunnar.  "What?"

"Firbek.  He doesn't feel quite right.  It's not chaos, but it's .. .
something."

"I've always felt that way about Firbek."  Justen laughed harshly.

"You may have a reason.  Still .. ."  Gunnar shrugged.  "We'll have to
watch him when we head into the West-horns."

The brothers kept walking.

XXVII

Justen rubbed the muscles above his right knee, then his left. Finally,
he slipped one foot out of the stirrup, flexing it and trying to reduce
the cramping.  Even with all the riding he'd done lately, he wondered
if he'd ever get used to horses.

He glanced down the sloping hill to the right, where the stream that
eventually fed into the River Sarron wound its way through the rocky
foothills of southeast Sarronnyn.  To his left rose the Westhorns,
their heights still glittering in the summer air with ice that even the
Great Change had not been able to erase.  Sarron itself lay nearly five
days behind.

How had he gotten into this mess?  His limited experience on horseback
had certainly not prepared him for so many days in the saddle.  The
gray plodded around another narrow turn in the road.  And why was he
here?  With Quentel's right arm shattered and useless for seasons, if
not forever, why was he riding with armed soldiers who certainly knew
far more about the business of slaughter than he could ever pick up in
watching a fight or two?

A chill breeze whipped down the canyon and ripped at his jacket.  He
shook his head.

"Cold, isn't it?"  asked Yonada, the black-haired officer who rode up
beside him.

Justen turned and shifted his weight in the saddle.  "It's not the
chill.  -It's the riding."  His gloved fingers brushed the black staff
in the lance holder, feeling the warmth of order even through the
leather and even as his head throbbed at the evasion he had voiced.
Somehow, the evasions and the little deceptions bothered him more than
they used to.  Was it because of the closeness of the Whites?

"You get accustomed to it."

The carts behind Justen creaked.  He turned in the saddle, swaying
somewhat, to make sure that the rockets and the launching frame
remained securely lashed in place.

Yonada followed his look, licked her lips.  "I can't believe you can
ride so close to all that powder,"

"You are."  Justen grinned.

"Only because you are.  Engineer.  How can you be sure that some White
Wizard won't touch it off?"

"I can't.  But not one of them has been able to touch powder held in
black iron since Dorrin came up with the idea centuries ago."  Justen
looked forward to the beginning of the column, where Gunnar rode beside
Dyessa, the angular force leader, who reminded Justen of a handful of
iron rods not quite fully welded together.

Just before the two disappeared around the switchback, Dyessa smiled at
Gunnar in response to whatever he had said.

Justen shook his head.

"That wizard, he must be something."  Yonada flicked the reins gently.
"Dyessa almost never smiles."

"Oh, he is."

"You know him?"  The black-haired Sarronnese officer laughed.  "I
suppose that's a stupid question.  You're both from Recluce."

"Recluce isn't that small.  It takes a solid six days to ride from one
end of the island to the other.  That's almost as far as from Rulyarth
to the Tyrant's palace in Sarron.  There are lots of people I don't
know.  But the wizard's my brother, Gunnar."

"Younger?"

"Older," corrected Justen with a wry smile.  "Air Wizards always tend
to look younger.  Why, I don't know."

Yonada's horse edged closer to his, and Justen studied the road as they
neared the switchback around which the others had disappeared.  To the
right of the road, the stream had cut a channel only a handful of
cubits wide.  Just beyond the switchback, the water dropped into a
narrow gorge of dark, reddish rock almost thirty cubits deep.  The
canyon narrowed until the road was barely wide enough for but a single
cart hemmed in on the left by a sheer ledge that rose nearly a hundred
cubits and by the gorge on the right.  Beyond the gorge and the rushing
water was another sheer wall rising to a greenish-blue sky, partly
obscured by hazy white clouds.

Even at midday, the road was shadowed and cool, although Justen
occasionally felt a gust of warmer and moister summer air probing the
depths of the canyon from somewhere.

"We're almost there," the Sarronnese offered.

"Where?"

"Middlevale."  Yonada took a deep breath.  "This could be-" She broke
off in mid-sentence.

Justen caught a hint of raw fear behind the words.  What was it about
the Whites that so bothered the Sarronnese?  The fact that the
Sarronnese viewed the invasion as a White crusade against the Legend?

Beyond the switchback turn, the road narrowed even more, then opened
onto a small valley with steep walls of reddish rock.  Middlevale was
hilly, perhaps two kays long, filled with rocky, shrub-covered hillocks
and scrub oak.  A small inn, with but two chimneys and a single story,
hunkered just off the dusty road between two larger hillocks not more
than half a kay from Justen.  From a stripped sapling between the hut
that served as a stable and the inn itself flew the blue ensign of
Sarronnyn.

Justen pursed his lips and turned to Yonada.  "I don't understand why
you didn't defend the eastern gap there."  He pointed to the far end of
the valley and to the narrow defile from which the White forces would
presumably emerge.

"We tried that idea when we were forced out of Westwind.  But the Chaos
Wizard just loosened the rocks in the narrow canyons-and Derla's whole
force was smashed.  The Whites can't do that on open ground."

"If they drop rocks, doesn't that block the way for them later?"

"They just blow up the rocks.  It takes a while and slows them down,
but they can do it.  We can't."

Justen nodded.  He hadn't fully considered all the things that a Chaos
Wizard could do in mountain warfare.

Two riders galloped across the valley, raising thick dust that hung
behind them like a red fog.  Justen squinted to make out what was
happening as the scouts reined in near the middle of the Sarronnese
forces, two parallel lines of foot levies in roughly parallel lines
perpendicular to the road, reinforced in the center by the horse
troopers.  On each flank were additional cavalry, carefully positioned
behind copses of scraggly trees.

"Over there!"  Firbek stretched in his stirrups and pointed toward a
taller hillock in the midst of the Sarronnese forces.  "We need to set
up there.  Get that cart moving!"

The marine ranker on the cart snapped the traces, and the cart groaned
past the inn and toward the hillock pointed out by Firbek.

A thin, bearded man-broom in hand-and a gray-haired woman watched
silently from the doorway of the inn.

"Why don't they leave?  There's going to be a fight here."  Justen
looked back toward the center of the Sarronnese troops, where Gunnar,
Dyessa, and the bulk of the reinforcements had joined up.

"I don't know.  Everyone was told to leave.  Where there's a battle,
the Whites burn everything to ashes."

The battle ensign dipped twice, and three short blasts from a trumpet
followed.

"Strike two!  Strike two!"  Yonada stood in the stirrups and gestured.
"Form up."  She lowered her voice and turned to Justen, pointing to the
hillock where Firbek stood amid the brush and red rocks.  "I'll see you
there later."

Justen watched as Yonada's squads peeled away.  He rode alone toward
the marines, feeling almost useless .. . and somehow vaguely regretful
that the friendly Yonada was gone.  And he wondered why he was riding
into a battle for no really good reason-just to observe?  His fingers
brushed the black staff, and he smiled faintly at the warmth of the
order residing there.

What was he supposed to discover?  A new weapon, as if he were some
second Dorrin?  And who knew whether any of the stories about the great
Dorrin were really true?  Justen hardly felt comparable to the
venerated ancient smith.  At least Gunnar could ride the breezes and
tell the Sarronnese leaders where the enemy forces were.

Justen tried to send his perceptions out beyond the valley, but he
could sense nothing past a few hundred cubits.  He nudged the gray, who
did not move until he knocked his booted heels into her flanks.  Then
she ambled toward the hillock where Firbek wrestled the rocket
launching rack off the cart.  Justen dug his heels into her flanks
again, and she lurched into a trot, forcing him to grab the edge of the
saddle and hope his staff didn't bounce out of the lance holder.

Great engineers didn't have to hold onto saddles, did they?  Justen
hung on until the gray slowed down to a walk at the beginning of the
hill's upslope.  He reined in near the top and looked eastward.

What seemed like a stream of white-coated figures issued from the
defile at the far end of Middlevale and poured into the flat plain.

The Sarronnese trumpet sounded again, and the foot soldiers dropped to
a kneeling position behind hastily heaped piles of earth and sand,
holding long pikes ready to lift.

The blue cavalry dropped blindfolds over their mounts' eyes.

The White forces marched forward several hundred kays, then halted-out
of bow range.

Hssttt!

A fire bolt flared from amid the white banners waving behind a cluster
of head-high, pink-gray boulders to the right of the east entrance to
Middlevale.

The gray under Justen whimpered and sidestepped, and the engineer urged
her partly back down the hillock, where he dismounted and tied her to
the same scrub oak as Firbek's mount.  Then he scrambled back up the
rocket emplacement.

Another fire bolt flashed from the area of the white banners, dropping
just short of the front line of the Sarronnese.  Even before it had
hissed into a blackened spot on the sandy earth, another fireball arced
into the Sarronnese lines.

A scream echoed across Middlevale.

A heavy roll of drums thundered from the east end of the valley, and
the White foot and lancers began to move forward as another fireball
smashed into the left side of the thin Sarronnese line.

"Rockets ready!"  snapped Firbek.  Justen frowned.  The Whites were
well beyond the normal range of the ship-to-ship rockets.  He edged up
to Firbek.  "The rockets aren't accurate at that distance."

"Strike the first!"  ordered Firbek, not even looking at Justen.

Whhstt!  After heading straight from the small launcher, the rocket
neared the White lines, then curved to the right, past the soldier in
gray, and exploded in a gout of flame against a boulder.

"Another one!"  snapped Firbek.

The two marines lifted another rocket into the black iron tube.

"It's too far," Justen said.  "We can't get any closer."  Firbek turned
toward the woman marine with the striker.  "Strike it."  Whhssttt!

The second rocket flared straight toward the Iron Guard, then twisted
upward, exploding in a shower of iron fragments and flame.

The White lancers rode forward at an even pace, carrying white-bronze
lances with tips that glistened with fire.  Justen scanned the lines,
noting that the Whites outnumbered the Sarronnese almost two to one.

Another roll of drums, and the White lancers charged.  A staccato
trumpet command warbled from the Sarronnese side, and the pikes came
up, except at the far left flank.  The lancers peeled away from the
pikes, all but those directly in front of the marine position, where
nearly a full squad angled through and began cutting the pike-holders
down from behind.  The left flank began to crumple.

"There.  Lower the launcher!"  Firbek jabbed toward the White
lancers,

Hhhsttt!  The fire bolt exploded in front of the launcher, and one of
the marines flared into a charred pillar, toppling forward on the crest
of the hill.

Ignoring the sickly odor of burnt meat, Justen grabbed the left-hand
wheel on the launcher and began to crank while the woman marine slipped
another rocket into place.  "Strike it!"

Justen released his hold on the wheel and concentrated, trying to sense
the air around the rocket, but the missile curved into the stony ground
and cartwheeled into a fir, turning the tree into an instant torch.

Hhhssttt!  A fire bolt flared from the higher stretch of road on the
far side of the valley and washed across the leading row of the
Sarronnese to the left of the gap in the line so quickly that none of
the four even screamed as they turned into dark ash.

"Do something, Engineer!"  bellowed Firbek.  "Cover!"  ordered
Dyessa.

The Sarronnese scattered for boulders, for low, rocky rises in the
uneven valley floor, even for the few tree trunks.  The Iron Guard
horse formed up into strike squads at the far end of the canyon.

Justen glanced around, searching for Gunnar, but his brother was
nowhere to be seen.

"Another rocket!"  demanded Firbek.  Justen and the remaining marine
adjusted the launching frame, then dropped behind it as a fire bolt
washed harmlessly over the black iron.

As soon as the flame subsided, Justen lowered the launcher until it was
pointing directly at the nearest lancers, then forced himself into a
semblance of detached calmness.  This time, he concentrated on the
rocket itself, trying to add a touch more order to the casing, a sense
of smoothness, a sense of direction.  He continued to pour order into
the metal even as the marine touched off the fuse.

Crrrummpp!  The fourth rocket exploded where it had been aimed-right in
the midst of the lead squad of the White lancers-casting black iron
shards into dozens of bodies.  The White lancers, even those barely
touched by the shrapnel, flared into points of flame.

A wave of whiteness flowed back from the destruction and swept around
Justen.  He staggered and put a hand out to the launcher frame to
steady himself.

"You all right?"  the marine asked.  Justen forced a nod against the
internal chaos and straightened up.

Of the entire White lancer squad, only a single figure remained, and it
wheeled its mount and galloped back toward the swelling lines of
soldiers in dark gray: the Iron Guard, waiting like a storm on the
horizon of the Eastern Ocean.  Even on the left flank, the White
lancers had peeled away, although Justen had not seen why.

For a long moment, the battlefield seemed frozen, motionless.

Then another set of drum-rolls rumbled from the east, and the
white-clad foot began to march forward, away from the Iron Guard,
almost like breakers preceding a wave,

"Another rocket!"  ordered Firbek.

Justen again smoothed the flows and forces around the rocket and then
watched as a whole section of White forces flashed into flame with the
missile's explosion.  But the white-clad wave continued onward, rolling
toward them even as Justen struggled to remain upright against the
white backlash.

"Strike!"

Whhhssttt... "..  . strike .. ."

Whhssttt... "Strike .. . strike ..."

How long the marine lit off rockets and Justen smoothed their path to
destruction and chaos, the engineer was unsure, only that the pattern
ended.

"Scr!  We have only a handful of rockets left."

Justen studied the valley, noting the greasy black splotches across the
entire eastern end and the seemingly endless lines of white and gray
troops marshaled below the red rocks.

The sun hung barely above the western lip of the canyon valley.  Had
that much time passed?

A double drum-roll rumbled into the late afternoon, and now the
gray-clad Iron Guard foot marched forward toward the concentrated knot
of Sarronnese foot, backed with the remaining archers and perhaps two
squads of cavalry.

The Sarronnese held only the two central hillocks and the ground
between.

"Why don't they go around?"  Justen asked no one in particular.  "We
couldn't stop them now."

"Once they start to fight, Engineer, they leave no survivors."

Justen's stomach tightened.  All he was supposed to have done was to
watch and learn.  Instead, he had been killing, and he was just about
to be killed.

"Might as well try the rest of the rockets."  Firbek's voice was
hoarse.

Justen helped depress the launcher once more and waited for the woman
to squeeze the striker.  And Justen again smoothed the flows and forces
around the rocket.  The black iron missile flared into the advancing
Iron Guards.  A handful fell like leaden dummies or disjointed
marionettes, but there were no flares and explosions-not as with the
White lancers.

And still more troops seemed to pour from the defile in the eastern end
of Middlevale.

Justen glanced to his left and right.  More than half of the Sarronnese
forces seemed to be down, burned to ashes, or missing.

"Strike another one!"  Firbek demanded.

Justen concentrated once more on supplying order to the rocket.  And
once more another set of Iron Guards toppled as they strode toward the
scattered Sarronnese forces.  But the Iron Guards advanced as slowly
and steadily as the tide.

Three more fire bolts flared from the line of boulders just beyond the
eastern entrance to Middlevale.  Two dashed themselves against stony
hillocks.  Screams followed the third, which had struck two mounted
troopers on the edge of the command post where Dyessa and Gunnar
remained, still mounted.  A scraggly fir began to burn.

"Get that light-fired rocket in the launcher!"  Firbek glanced toward
the white banners at the end of the valley.  "Aim it toward those white
banners."

The woman marine slipped the rocket into place and looked up, striker
in hand.  "You like to help us, Scr?"

Firbek scowled, but he walked over to the remaining case of rockets.

The marine ranker squeezed the striker.

Justen belatedly focused his attention on the rocket, enough so that it
wobbled only slightly before plowing through a line of foot soldiers
under a crimson-fringed gray banner.  Another wave of whiteness flowing
back from the destruction swept around Justen, and he put out a hand to
the launcher frame to steady himself.

"You all right, Engineer?"  The woman marine looked at him.

"Sort of."

Firbek levered out another rocket.

"Shouldn't we save a few?"  asked Justen.

"For what?  Wait, and they'll all be at our necks.  Will be anyway
before long, unless the wizard pulls out a miracle."  Firbek slid the
rocket into the tube.

A heavy drum-roll sounded, and a wave of dark-gray mounted troops swept
forward, riding through the foot in dark gray to take the charge.

A woman in Sarronnese blue scrambled up the hill toward them,

"The commander wants another barrage on the Iron Guards."  The
messenger conveyed the order to Firbek calmly.

"We're almost out of rockets.  We'll fire until we're done."

"I will so inform her."  The messenger hurried back downhill, ducking
calmly as another fire bolt flared past her.

"Strike!"

Whssttt... "Strike .. ."

"Whsstt..."

"That's it, Scr.  That was the last rocket."

Justen slumped against the hot metal of the launcher frame, not sure
which was worst-the dizziness, the nausea, or the splitting headache.
He straightened and staggered back down toward the gray, where he
grasped for his black staff.

"We needed more rockets, Engineer.  I asked for more."

Justen touched the black staff before speaking.  "We made what we
could, Firbek.  They're darkness-hard to forge."

"Hard to forge?  Is it easier to die?"  After glancing toward the Iron
Guards headed uphill, Firbek unsheathed his sword.

Justen gripped his staff.

A rumble of thunder-thunder, not drums-echoed across Middlevale, and a
chill sense of blackness followed.  Justen scrambled back toward the
launcher and stared.

Like a black tower, Gunnar stood on a low hillock to the right of the
one where Firbek, Justen, and the marines had labored with the
rockets.

A second dull rumble filled the sky, and the thin clouds overhead
seemed to thicken even as Justen watched.  A third, longer, rumble
echoed through the skies, and darkness fell like an early twilight as
cold gusts of wind whipped across the burned battle plain.

Even the Iron Guard slowed, and the white banners at the east end of
Middlevale seemed to droop, despite the wind.

Rain began to fall, first with scattered droplets, then more heavily,
like a flight of cold arrows, and finally, as the afternoon skipped
abruptly to late twilight, in sheets that flayed like whips.

Justen clutched his staff and staggered toward the gray, untying his
own reins and Firbek's.  He thrust the marine officer's reins at him,
then mounted the gray and spurred her toward the other hillock, where
Gunnar still stood like a short, dark tower.

Unable to see more than a few cubits beyond the gray's mane, Justen
used his order-senses to guide him toward Gunnar's profligate
squandering of order, lowering his head against the rush of wind and
water.

Were the Whites having as much trouble as he was?  Did it matter?  He
spurred the gray across the space between the hills and up the slope.

"Get back!"  ordered Gunnar, his voice cutting through the tumult like
lightning.  "Get everyone out of here!"  He struggled into the saddle
of the bay.

"But they'll drown in the gorge if you've called rain!"  yelled Dyessa
over the whistling of the wind.

Justen eased the gray closer to where Gunnar wobbled in his saddle.

"They won't.  But they'll die here for certain."  Gunnar steadied
himself, grasping the edge of the saddle.

Dyessa gestured to the woman with the trumpet.  Three short double
blasts sounded against the storm.  The ensign swirled and dipped three
times.

"Again!  Keep it up!"  Dyessa spurred her mount toward the bottom of
the hill.

Justen forced a sense of order into the black staff, then extended it
to Gunnar, who shook his head.

"Touch it!"

Gunnar shook his head again.

"Damn it!  Don't be so frigging proud!  You need it, and we need you to
get out of here!  Touch it!"

Gunnar reached toward the staff, and Justen thrust it against his
brother's palm.  The Air Wizard straightened even as Justen could sense
his thoughts departing.  Justen eased the gray next to the bay and
began guiding his brother's mount toward the inn, toward the west end
of the narrow valley, vaguely aware that the single remaining marine
rode the rocket cart not more than a score of cubits ahead and that
Firbek held the harness of the cart horse.  He tried to ignore the
shaking in his knees, not certain whether it was exhaustion or fear, or
some of each.

The thunder rolled like massive drums beating through his skull, and
the rain raised welts across his unprotected face, but Justen kept both
horses moving, ignoring Dyessa as she chivied her troops in their
retreat.

The wind whistled, the thunder drummed, and Justen rode slowly past the
bare roof beams of the inn, its thatch torn loose by the force of the
storm.

Behind him, the trumpet wavered.

The rain pounded through his black jacket as if he were bare-backed,
and with each step, the gray slowed as red mud began to form.

Before him, the sheer red rocks loomed like a wall.  He edged the
horses to his left and through the narrow gap-Once inside the canyon,
the force of the wind and rain dropped, although the volume of the
deluge did not abate.

Perhaps a dozen Sarronnese foot straggled down and around the
switchback, just behind Firbek and the empty rocket cart.

The dull rumbling of the thunder echoed over Middlevale and down into
the canyon.  To Justen's left, the narrow cascade had become a rushing
torrent, rising to within a handful of cubits below the road.  How long
would it continue to rise?

"That should do it for the storm," Gunnar straightened in the saddle,
looking over his shoulder.

Justen followed his brother's eyes, catching sight of the Sarronnese
commander as she guided her chestnut around and through the retreating
forces until she caught up with Gunnar and Justen.

"Now what?  The storm won't hold them long."  Dyessa shouted to make
herself heard above the wind and rain.

"Is everyone out of the valley?"

"Those that are alive."

Gunnar lifted his shoulders and let them drop, then closed his eyes.

Justen reached over to keep his brother from falling.

A ripping, rushing, and drumming sound rose over the rain, and the sky
grew darker.  Even from the depths of the canyon, Justen could see the
whirling black tower that swept upward.

"Light!"

Even Dyessa's face paled as she gazed back.

The roaring increased, as if the stone walls were being beaten like
drums.

Thuunnk .. . unnkk .. . uinnkk .. .

A series of impacts rocked the roadbed itself, but the roaring dropped
to a whisper, and the sky began to lighten.  The rain kept falling,
subsiding to a normal heavy downpour.

Gunnar slumped across the neck of his mount.

"You!"  snapped Dyessa.  "The Recluce marine!"

Both Firbek and the woman marine turned.

"Hold there."  The Sarronnese commander jabbed toward the unconscious
Storm Wizard.  "Get him on the cart: He can't ride."

Dyessa watched as Justen and Firbek carried Gunnar onto the cart.

As he covered Gunnar with the Air Wizard's own waterproof and stepped
back to remount the gray, Justen glanced to the gorge, where the water
level had suddenly dropped back toward its earlier level.

"What happened?"  Dyessa asked.

"I need to ride back a little.  I think Gunnar dammed the valley."

"Good.  The damned Whites can't handle water."

"What if the dam gives before we get out?"

Dyessa glanced back up the canyon, toward the unseen wall of stone and
rubble behind her.  "It had better not."

Justen had already turned.  He let the gray pick her way through the
last of the Sarronnese stragglers trudging downhill through the mud and
rain.  By the time he reached the straight section of the canyon below
the switchback, he could sense the mass of stone and brush that
Gunnar's whirlwind had thrown into the stream and gorge.  Still, he
rode almost to the switchback.

Dark water oozed through the gaps in the stones and cascaded from
dozens of points into the gorge, half-filling it in its rush toward the
distant River Sarron.

Justen forced his abused order-senses to enfold the storm-built barrier
Gunnar had created.  After studying the barrier for a time, he shook
his head.  His brother wasn't a bad engineer for a Storm Wizard.  He
wiped yet more water out of his face and turned the gray back down the
canyon.  Cold rivulets ran down inside his blacks, chilling him through
and through.  Even the inside of his boots felt soaked.

Dyessa was still waiting, but Firbek and the rocket cart- and
Gunnar-were out of sight farther down the canyon, the creaking of the
cart masked by the dull swishing of the continuing rain.

The Sarronnese leader looked at Justen.  "Will whatever he did hold?"

Justen wiped more rain from his face, a useless task, and shook himself
"Forever ... or until there's a drought and several Chaos Wizards."
Seeing the doubtful look on Dyessa's face, he added, "There's a lake
building up in Middlevale, or what was Middlevale.  That much water
carries a lot of order.  A good Chaos Wizard or two could blast away
the stones there, except for the order of the water.  The lake has to
be drained or dried up before wizards can do much.  And they won't be
doing anything until this rain ends, and I think that's not going to be
for a long time days anyway-and then if any of them survived, which I
doubt many did."

"Good.  We can reinforce Zerlana somewhere."  Dyessa touched the reins
and raised her voice.  "Let's get moving."

Before she could start, Justen lifted his hand.  "Wait.  Have you seen
Yonada?"

"She fell in the first attack, Engineer.  She bought you wizards the
time to save the rest of us."

Justen swallowed.  Yonada gone?  Just like that?

"I don't think I'll ever understand you wizards."  Dyessa shook her
head.  "You devise black weapons that destroy whole squads and call
storms that turn valleys into lakes and drown entire armies, and then
you're surprised that someone dies."

Justen dumbly flicked the reins.  He needed to find Gunnar ... at
least.

Dyessa picked her away ahead, encouraging, organizing, as the remnants
of two forces shambled back toward Sarron.  Clutching the black staff,
Justen rode slowly to catch up with his brother, hoping he could do
something, but scarcely knowing what.

XXVIII

A jolt rocked the cart as it rumbled off the even pavement of the pink
stone bridge and onto the packed clay ruts of the road.  Gunnar moaned,
but did not open his eyes.  From his saddle on the still-placid gray,
Justen lifted his left hand, reaching out instinctively, but the cart
settled back into its faintly swaying roll and Gunnar lapsed back into
a deeper sleep.

Even from where he rode beside the cart, Justen could sense the
depletion of the order-forces within his brother.  He glanced up at the
marine in black riding near the front of the column beside Dyessa.
Firbek rode with his knees, both hands gesturing.  From the movements,
Justen suspected he was explaining once again the limited range and
shortcomings of the ships rockets.

Justen snorted.  Part of the problem was Firbek's lack of guts.  When a
weapon's accuracy was limited by range, you either moved up to get in
range or you let the enemy get close enough to use it.  Firbek had done
neither.  He'd just fired rockets almost for the sake of firing them,
and had forced Justen to squander his limited abilities on getting a
handful to go somewhere close to where they had been aimed.  And that
had meant Gunnar had damned near killed himself calling a huge storm.

So ... now .. . while Firbek was explaining away his shortcomings,
Justen was worrying about his brother, laying the black staff next to
him when he could, and hoping the proximity of that order would help
Gunnar.

Ahead, the clay road leading from what had been Middlevale merged with
the main road to Sarron.  Soon they would be traveling the last section
of the road that had brought Justen from Rulyarth to Sarron, since
Middlevale was north and east of Sarron.

Dyessa rode past, headed toward the rear of the column, her eyes
ignoring the marine driving the cart and the unconscious man under the
worn, blue wool blanket.  Justen's eyes followed her as she circled the
short column and headed back to its head.

As Dyessa completed the circuit, the column turned onto the main road.
Justen looked to the northwest, back along the route toward Lornth, but
the river town was lost beyond the rolling hills.

Gunnar moaned again, and Justen tried to reach out, not only
physically, but with his order-senses... only to find the same gentle
barrier that had blocked him ever since the fight.  How could one call
the mess at Middlevale a battle?

After wiping his forehead, Justen shifted his weight in the saddle
again and tried to ignore Firbek's continuing conversation with the
Sarronnese commander.  The rocket cart creaked, Gunnar occasionally
moaned, and the gray carried Justen toward Sarron.

Well before the column trudged up the final section of the road, a
single figure in green galloped downhill on a bay mare, pausing but
momentarily beside Firbek and Dyessa.  Krytella reined up next to the
cart, dismounted, and without speaking, handed the bay's reins to
Justen.

Only after she had spent some time with Gunnar, infusing enough order
into the restless Air Wizard that her face had paled even under the
afternoon clouds, did she slip off the still-moving cart, reclaim the
reins, and remount.  Her voice was cold.  "You let him do this .. . why
did you let him?  He's your brother."

"I did what I could.  I did give him some order before he called the
storm, but once he collapsed, I really couldn't reach him."  Justen
wiped his forehead again.  Since summer had come to Sarronnyn, it
seemed like all he did was sweat.  "I tried."

Krytella frowned.  "You transferred a little order.  How, I don't
know."  Her eyes flicked back to the unconscious figure.

"I tried using the staff."  Justen cleared his throat, wondering if the
clouds rolling in from the east were the result of Gunnar's storms and
if they would bring more rain.  "He'll be all right, won't he?"

"He'll live.  Whether he'll see or think is another question."

"Like Creslin?"

"I don't know.  I just don't know."

Dyessa eased her mount up beside Krytella's bay.  "Greetings,
Healer."

Justen glanced past her to see that Firbek had remained near the head
of the column.

"Greetings."

The Sarronnese commander gestured vaguely toward (he rocket cart.  "I
hope he will recover."

"So do I."  Krytella paused, then the words burst out as if she could
no longer hold them.  "What good were all Gunnar's efforts?  They
clearly weren't enough to win the battle, were they?"  Krytella's eyes
flashed across the bedraggled column, perhaps a third of its original
strength.

"No, Healer.  It was just the only time we happened to have stopped the
White devils in more man a season."  Dyessa looked down from her mount.
"Victories against the Whites are not exactly cheap.  I thought that
you of Recluce understood that.  This one only cost me two-thirds of my
forces-and to stop just a small body of the White devils."

Krytella's eyes turned to the still figure on the rocket cart.  "Do you
really care?"

"Healer, I am glad that your Air Wizard will survive.  He and the
engineer saved us.  They more than deserve .. . our gratitude."  Dyessa
took a deep breath.  "Whether that gratitude will mean much in the
seasons ahead, I question, given our inability to hold the White devils
back."

"I... was too hasty ..."

"No."  The dark-haired commander smiled sadly.  "You are probably
correct.  But we all do what we must."

Krytella and Justen watched as Dyessa guided her mount back toward the
front of the riders.  The column turned eastward onto the last uphill
stretch toward Sarron.

The clouds thickened, and low rumbles of thunder punctuated the growing
gloom.

"He really did it..."  murmured the healer.

As the raindrops began to fall, Justen eased the gray closer to the bay
on which Krytella rode, her eyes focused somewhere beyond the road.

"Krytella... you have to show me something."

"What?"

"How to transfer order-force from me to someone ..."

"That's a healer's-"

"I tried, and I couldn't do it.  And Gunnar almost died."

Krytella looked steadily at Justen.  "As much as you're jealous of
Gunnar, you love him, don't you?"  Justen looked at the ground.  "He
needed help, and I couldn't give it."

"Oh, Justen ..."  The healer's hand brushed Justen's for a moment, so
gently that he could not be sure that it had happened, but a warmth
flowed from her to him.  "That's how it feels."

Justen tried to ignore her closeness and to concentrate on the
order-patterns.  Pushing aside her warmth and sweet scent, he focused
his thoughts.  Ignoring the might-have-be ens he let his senses grasp
the flow of order.  He owed Gunnar that, if not much more.

XXIX

The thunder outside the smithy was deep enough to be heard over the
clanging of metal and the slow pounding of the hammer mill, tended
carefully by Quentel, whose left arm was bound in a splint of wood and
canvas.

Justen lifted the hammer, touching the iron arrowhead on the forge.  He
frowned.  Too bad the engineers couldn't cast black iron, or that the
Sarronnese smiths couldn't forge black iron, either.  Like everything,
black iron had its limits.  Since it couldn't be cast, that meant, at
least so far, that the Blacks hadn't been able to make more than a
handful of black iron guns-just those on the Mighty Ten-and since the
Whites could touch off cammabark or powder held in regular iron, albeit
with difficulty, anyone who wasn't a White or on a Black ship risked
having cannon blow up on them.

Probably the Iron Guard could use long guns or cannon, even if the
regular White troops and wizards couldn't.  But that limitation
wouldn't help the Sarronnese much.  The engineers had made a few
muskets for hunting, but they weren't feasible for war.  Making a
musket by hand out of black iron took too much time and effort.
Arrowheads were another story.

Justen took a deep breath, reflecting that the idea for arrowheads had
been his, and pulled the next sheet of iron from the forge.  Four quick
taps with the hot set and the first rough shape was ready.  Then he
scarfed the base and reheated the iron to welding temperature before
tapping the holed rod stock to the base.  He followed with another tap
to the hot set and a reforming on the special mandrel that sat in the
hardie hole.

"You'd think you'd been doing that all your life," observed Nicos,
stopping for a moment on his way back from outside.  The older engineer
wiped sweat from his face.  "This place is hotter than Recluce was even
before Creslin fixed it.  I can sure see why he never wanted to come
here."

Justen nodded, recalling his trip to the Silver Shield in Sarron.  "I
can think of several reasons."

"Do you think the arrowheads will work?"

"They'll work.  I just hope the Sarronnese understand how well."

"They're in trouble.  You'd think they'd use whatever works."

"Maybe ..."  Justen cleared his throat, trying to swallow the taste of
charcoal and metal.  He reached for the pitcher and took a swallow of
the lukewarm water.

"With the true Leg end-holders, you never know."  Nicos flashed a smile
and turned toward the hammer mill.

Justen resumed forging.  After he had a dozen of the rough-out
arrowheads, he nodded to Clerve, who began the tedious job of filing
and grinding them before Justen used the last touch of heat and order
to turn them into black iron.  Then the striker would use the smooth
wheel on the grindstone for a final polish.

While Clerve filed and rough-ground, Justen finished another dozen
forms, then began the careful ordering of those completed by Clerve.

By midday, each man was soaked from the heat of the forge and the hot,
damp air that seemed to well out of the ground.  But Justen had more
than three dozen of the special arrowheads ready.

"That's enough for now."  He wiped his forehead and placed the hammer
on his bench.

At the rear and newest forge, Altara set aside her tongs and walked
over to where Justen banked the edge of his coals.

"How are you doing?"

Justen nodded toward the last half-dozen gleaming black shapes on the
hearth.  "Around two score this morning.  That's not enough for even a
few moments of battle."

"Dyessa wants to try them first, and Firbek thinks you ought to go with
the next detachment,"

"I'm no marine."  Justen squinted at the salty sweat that had run into
his left eye.  He blotted it away and then walked out under the side
eave of the smithy, scarcely cooler than the forge area, so still was
the midsummer air.

The chief engineer followed.  "I'd like your opinion on whether we
should make more arrowheads.  Firbek wants more rockets."

With a snort, Justen scooped a handful of water out of the bucket set
on the small table and splashed it across his face.  Altara waited.

"We'd get better results with the arrowheads," he said at last.

"I won't get that answer from Firbek, especially if you don't go with
Dyessa."

"So ... I have to go because Firbek loves the rockets?"  The young
engineer sank onto the rough bench, letting his eyes rest on the road,
where two heavy-laden wagons rumbled downhill, headed eastward from
Sarron.  Farther downhill, another wagon also lumbered eastward. Justen
shook his head.

"I could ask Clerve to go.  And Krytella has suggested that the
Sarronnese could use a healer," Altara told him.

"No.  I'll go.  Clerve would just get himself killed.  I can at least
duck."

"You don't think I should let the healer go?"

"No.  The way the Whites fight, there aren't many wounded."

"I got that impression."  Altara caught Justen's eyes.  "Thank you."

"When does Dyessa leave?"

"Sometime within the eight-day, probably before the end days."  Altara
paused, "Why do you look so glum?  You seem to forget that you were
successful in stopping the White thrust through the northern pass."

"I suppose."  Justen snorted softly.  "We were successful-if that's
what you call losing three-quarters of the Sarronnese forces, half of
our black iron equipment, and almost killing the one real wizard we
have."

"Justen, you're too hard on yourself."

Justen stood.  "I'm going for some cold water and to check on Gunnar,
The healers are getting some supplies from the river wharf."

"You'll keep working on the arrowheads?"

Justen smiled and shrugged.  "I still think they'll be more useful than
Firbek's rockets."

As Altara watched, Justen stepped off the worn planks of the side porch
and onto the red clay that separated the smithy from the old house.
First he made his way to the pump behind the dwelling, where he rinsed
one of the buckets thoroughly, even adding a touch of order to it to
ensure that the water would remain pure, before half-filling it.  Then
he carried the bucket back to the front porch.  When he stepped up to
the door of the old house and looked back toward the smithy, Altara was
no longer on the side porch, but had apparently returned to work.

He climbed the stairs almost on tiptoe, setting each foot down as
quietly as possible.  When one stair creaked, he froze for an instant,
then continued.  He slipped into the small garret room where Gunnar
dozed.  Pausing briefly, he studied his brother's open, unguarded
face.

As quietly as he could, Justen used the small bucket to fill the
pitcher on the stand beside the sleeping man and then slipped onto the
stool beside the bed.  Even as he watched his brother, the openness
vanished and Gunnar's jaw tightened.  A half-mumble escaped the nearly
closed mouth.  Gunnar's body shuddered and half-turned on the pallet.

Justen felt a sense of whiteness, of chaos held at bay.  He remained
sitting, wishing for the black staff, but forcing himself to remain
calm.  Then he recalled what old Dembek had taught him-about the depth
and the order of the Eastern Ocean, about the solid grain of the
iron-and slowly let the order settle around him.  Reaching out gently,
as Krytella had demonstrated, his fingers brushed his brother's
forehead.  Then, even more slowly, he let that concentrated order seep
from his fingertips.  "... mmphh ..."  The tension oozed from Gunnar's
face, and his breathing deepened slightly.  The flickering of his
eyelids slowed, but did not stop.

Justen waited for a time, leaving his perceptions extended, seeking a
return of that fragment of chaos, but the unseen dark calm of order
remained.

In time, the engineer retreated down the narrow stairs as quietly as he
had come, blotting the dampness from his eyes and face, trying not to
swing the bucket into the walls, and keeping his booted feet to the
outside edge of the risers to reduce the creaking of the ancient
steps.

XXX

Although Justen could sense the storms building to the west of Sarron,
the air in the smithy remained hot, damp, and still, and the hammer
mill's monotonous and continuous beat had given him another headache.

He coughed, set down the hammer for a moment, and watched as Clerve
used the grindstone to polish and smooth the finished black iron
arrowheads.  After a deep breath, he eased the iron stock into the
forge and waited for the metal to heat.  Then he reclaimed his hammer
and started in again on the next set of the deadly arrowheads.
Arrowheads and more arrowheads-he was even dreaming about the damned
things.

"I think you have enough arrowheads to prove how good they are,"
suggested Altara.

"I'm not so much interested in proof as in protection."

"After the last battle, I can understand that."

"I thought you might.  Gunnar really did most of it, and he's in no
shape to go anywhere."  Justen let go of the hammer and wiggled his
fingers.  After a while, even forging out the roughed-out arrowheads
cramped his hands.  "Some of them escaped.  Firbek wasn't exactly
pleased."  His nose itched from the soot and dust in the air, but he
managed to stifle a sneeze.

"I know."  Dark circles framed the chief engineer's gray eyes.  "He
keeps complaining about the rockets.  He also said that he lost two
mules and a launcher because of the flash flood.  He seems to have
forgotten how that flood saved his life."  She paused for a moment as
the hammering from the other anvils seemed to crest.

"Nothing's right for Firbek.  Gunnar stopped the Whites almost by
himself, and paid for it.  Firbek's already forgotten that we had to
bring Gunnar back on the rocket cart.  I suppose Firbek bitched about
that, too, A misuse of good ordnance equipment ..."  Justen wiped his
forehead and glanced at the adjoining forge, where Berol and Jirrl
worked on the rocket heads.

"He's a little more understanding than that."  Altara cracked a faint
smile.

"Not much.  Gunnar was blind for the first day or so.  He's still
dizzy."

"Krytella says his sight is fine now."

"Next time it will be worse.  At least that's usually the way it goes."
Justen sighed.  "I'm beginning to understand why Dorrin invented
order-forging."

"Firbek's convinced that the rockets are the only thing that will stop
the Whites' Iron Guard."

"Rockets are fine against ships at close range, but they're not all
that good against troops," observed Justen.

"You apparently managed."  Altara's eyes narrowed.  "Firbek said that
you did something.  He's kept insisting that you go on the next
campaign."

"I'm so popular.  You want me to go.  Firbek wants me to go.  But he
didn't ask me."

"He won't.  He doesn't want a favor.  He believes in orders.  It was
enough for him to ask if there were any way to make the rockets more
accurate."

Justen snorted.  "We can't make the casings that accurate, and the ones
with fins aren't much better."  He cleared his throat.  "Cannon are
much more accurate.  Why can't we make a cannon, put it on a big wagon
rather than on a ship?  I know we can't cast the cannon out of black
iron, but we could make the shells like rockets with the powder
inside."

"In the first place, it's called a carriage, not a wagon, and it takes
a lot of work to build gun carriages right.  But we could do that,"
admitted Altara.  "That's not the problem.  Where do you put the powder
so that their wizards can't touch it off?  Rockets have all their
powder inside black iron."

"Put the powder in black iron magazines in cloth bags or something
until the moment you put it in the gun.  The White Wizards couldn't
find it and touch it off that quickly."

"And how do you transport the magazines, especially in the rains?  How
many would it take for even a single cannon?  Besides, you need to work
on the arrowheads.  You just can't do everything at once."

"I know.  I'll have another three score done before I finish
tonight."

"You expect the marines or the Sarronnese to have them attached and fl
etched overnight?  You are leaving in the morning, you know."

"Fine."  Justen sighed, "They'll work whenever they're fl etched  He
pulled the iron from the forge and picked up his hammer.

Altara stepped back, a sad smile on her face.

Justen set the cherry-red iron on the anvil and lifted his hammer.

Clerve continued to file the burrs off the roughed-out forms.  Around
them, the chorus of metal on metal continued.

After he had finished another half-score rough forms, Jus-ten paused as
a black-clad figure walked through the front entrance.  Still holding
the iron in the forge, he looked over as Firbek approached. "Greetings,
Oh hallowed and heroic marine leader."

Firbek offered a bright smile.  "Greetings, exalted toiler in metal and
fire.  We look forward to seeing you early tomorrow."

"And I, you."  Justen forced a smile.

The marine offered a smile equally forced before he turned and walked
past the second forge to the corner where another shaft had been added
to the main mill shaft  There Altara and Nicos were wrestling with the
small lathe, which had seized up.

Justen took a deep breath, trying to calm down.  He didn't want to hit
the arrowhead too hard.  Why did Firbek set him off?  Why had Firbek
always set him off?  The engineer took another deep breath, then
gestured to Clerve.  "I'll be back in a moment."  He walked quickly out
of the smithy to the side porch.

The water bucket was empty.  With a harsh laugh he picked it up and
walked through the sultry air toward the pump.  After getting the water
running with the hand pump, he splashed his grimy face until it felt
clean and momentarily cooler.  Then he filled the bucket and headed
back to the smithy, past the garden, where the beans were already
knee-high and blooming.

Justen glanced back to see a taller blond figure walking slowly from
the house.  Gunnar gestured toward the bench, and Justen nodded,
setting the nearly full bucket on the rough stand, and waited for his
brother.

"How are you?  Sit down, for darkness' sake," he greeted Gunnar.

"I think that answers your question."  The corners of Gunnar's mouth
turned up momentarily.  "At least I can see, and I can walk a dozen
cubits without feeling like I'm going to fall over."  He settled slowly
onto one end of the bench.

Justen took the other end.

"How are you doing?"  asked Gunnar.

"All right-except that I have to go on that expedition against the
Whites."

"That's tomorrow, isn't it?"

"Of course."  Justen shook his head.  "I've been thinking, Gunnar."

"Dangerous occupation for an engineer."

Justen ignored the comment.  "You know that order-forces can't use
gunpowder, not without the danger of some White Wizard setting it off.
Why can't we return the favor?"

"You want to handle chaos?"

"That's not what I meant.  If you create a storm-like Creslin did-it
results in destruction.  Isn't there some other way to create the same
effect?"

"You'd better stick to engineering, Justen."  Gunnar shook his head,
then winced.  "Darkness .. . can't even shake my head without getting
frigging dizzy."

"If you and Creslin can create destruction through the use of order-"

"Darkness!"  Gunnar winced again.  "I don't know.  Maybe there is some
way.  Go ahead and figure it out, but you could end up like me ... or
like Creslin.  It's demon-damned scary to wake up blind, and so dizzy
you can't even move."

Justen wiped out a cup and half-filled it, then extended the cup to his
brother.  "Here."

"Thanks."  Gunnar sipped the water slowly.  "We've got a big problem
here."

"I think I'm beginning to realize that."

"I've watched the Whites' Iron Guard.  What if they do the same thing
with ships?"

Justen wrinkled his forehead, then nodded.  "You mean that we wouldn't
be the only ones relying on the basic order of the ocean.  How would
that change anything?"

Gunnar set the cup on the bench between them.  "There's no reason the
Iron Guard couldn't develop their own Blacks."

"But wouldn't that just repeat what happened in the time of Creslin?"

"Maybe.  How many Creslins are there?  Would you want to bet Recluce's
future on it?"

Justen grinned wryly.  "I wouldn't.  But why the great conversion?  You
didn't seem to think the Whites were such a big threat."

"I suppose that's because I understand what I did."  Gunnar looked at
the planks between his boots.  Justen waited.

"I called up one of the biggest storms since Creslin.  And what
happened?  Maybe .. . just maybe ... I destroyed a thousand troops, and
it didn't even really slow down the Whites, or not much.  Without you,
I probably would have died-"

"That's not-"

"It is, younger brother, and we both know it."  Gunnar paused.  "I was
stupid, and I could do it better now.  And I could probably focus a
storm on a really big army, or on a fleet.  But there's no one else who
can or would try, and I clearly can't do that sort of thing very
often."  He shrugged.

"So you're saying that .  - .  eventually .. . Recluce will lose?"

"It wouldn't ever come to that, but it wouldn't matter, would it, once
Fairhaven took over Hamor, and Nordla, and Austra?  Not that any of
that will happen in our lifetime."

"So what are we supposed to do?"

Gunnar looked straight at Justen, suppressing another wince.  "Whatever
happens on this expedition tomorrow, get your ass back here.  You're
worth more alive than if you throw yourself away on a battle that won't
mean much over the long run."

"It might not be that simple."

"It never is."  Gunnar sighed.  "It never is."

XXXI

"Come on, old lady."  Justen patted the gray's neck, letting a trickle
of order flow from his fingertips.  So far, the canyon remained
comfortably cool, but it was far short of even midmorning.

Wheeee .. . ah .. .

"I know.  I know.  You don't like this fighting business either."  The
engineer studied the canyon.  Like most of the canyons that contained
roads through the Westhorns, it had been sculpted by running water, or
the running water had found it the easiest path toward the Northern
Ocean.

"You really don't have to talk to your horse, Engineer," observed
Firbek, turning back in his saddle.  The marine rode beside the cart
horse.

A woman marine named Deryn flicked the reins to encourage her mount to
keep up with Firbek as the column wound uphill toward yet another vale
in the Westhorns, where Dyessa hoped to be able to reinforce Commander
Zerlana before the White forces arrived.

"The horse doesn't talk back," Justen said with a laugh.

"You haven't said enough for her to answer," cracked Firbek.

"Well put," Justen conceded, patting the gray again.

The road turned sharply where the stream had struck a wall of solid
granite.  Justen noted the narrow gap and the relatively less steep and
boulder-studded slope.  The water flowed over a wide granite shelf in a
mere half-cubit depth-and the streambed itself was less than two cubits
below the roadbed.  The engineer smiled.  Maybe it wouldn't take magic
to build a lake.  Then he frowned.  Why was he thinking about how to
stop the Whites if the Sarronnese had to retreat?

Because he was worried.  Dyessa was grim, not even talking to Firbek.
The Sarronnese troops acted as though they were being sent to a
slaughterhouse, and not even Gunnar had been able to give a real
victory to Dyessa at Middlevale.  Darkness, his brother still had
trouble standing up for long periods.

Justen shifted his weight in the saddle, still uncomfortably hard, but
said nothing as he followed the column up the road by the stream,
occasionally glimpsing above the canyon walls the ice-covered spires of
the Westhorns.

Yee-ah ... A black vulcrow flapped from a dead fir limb and laboriously
climbed out of the canyon, heading eastward.

Was that a normal vulcrow, or one of those possessed by a White Wizard?
Justen touched the black staff.

Innumerable turns later, the column marched into a circular valley, one
with gentle slopes but with the same rocky hillocks that had
characterized Middlevale.  This time, the Sarronnese were dug in less
than a half kay from the western entrance.  Berms of earth and rock
protected cavalry mounts, while the Sarronnese foot had erected what
looked like a stone wall in the form of a semicircle.

White banners-along with green, gold, and crimson-waved at the far end
of the valley.

A rider in blue leathers trotted up to Firbek.  "The commander suggests
that the hill to the left, there, offers the best command of the
approach to our lines.  Follow me, if you would."

Justen grinned.  The messenger clearly conveyed Zerlana's suggestion as
an order.

"Thank you."  Firbek's voice was cool and polite.  He turned to Deryn,
then to Fesek, the other marine who rode beside him.  "Follow the
messenger."  He looked at Justen.  "Are you coming, Engineer?"

"How could I not?"

"Indeed.  How could you not?"

Justen tapped his heels into the gray's flanks.  The horse whinnied and
fell in behind the cart.  The engineer dismounted halfway up the
hillock and tied the mount to a scrub oak before climbing up to the
hilltop, where the marines were setting up the rocket launcher.  He
left the black staff in the lance holder beside the saddle.

"Let's get those rockets ready."  Firbek remained mounted while Deryn
and Fesek adjusted the launcher.  Then Fesek stacked the rockets next
to the launcher while Deryn tightened the brackets.

Justen shrugged, then began to lug boulders so as to form a low wall.
After positioning nearly a dozen of the huge stones, he looked up.
Firbek had dismounted and tied his horse downhill next to Justen's
gray, where both mounts attempted to browse on the scattered clumps of
grass that sprouted from the rocky soil.

A light breeze blew out of the east, carrying fine dust and the faint
odor of horses ... and perhaps, thought Justen, fear.

"Ready?"  asked Firbek.

"Yes, Scr."

"How about you, Engineer?"

"As ready as I suppose I'll ever be."

A heavy drum-roll rumbled like thunder across the valley, and a wave of
White lancers, hundreds of mounted soldiers, charged toward the
Sarronnese lines.  Behind them, methodically marched the foot levies
under the green-and-gold banners.

Hssttt..  . The first fire bolt slammed into the hillside on which flew
the blue banner of Sarronnyn, turning several scrub oaks into
charcoal.

Hssttt .. . Another fire bolt hit higher on the hill, but merely
scoured lichen off the stones from behind which Zerlana and her small
staff watched the battlefield.

Hssttt..  . The next fire bolt arced down behind the stones, but the
absence of screams reassured Justen .. . somewhat.

The gray banners of the Iron Guard remained well to the rear as the
White lancers galloped across the valley.  Not until the lancers were
less than two hundred cubits from the stone wall was there any sound
from the Sarronnese.  A trumpet, clear and crisp, sounded two sharp
notes, then repeated them.

The first flight of arrows arced out from behind the heaped
stone-and-earth walls sheltering the front lines of the Sarronnese.

Justen held his breath as the black iron-tipped arrows sleeted downward
onto the White lancers charging across the valley floor.

Crump .. . crump .. .

Openmouthed, the engineer watched as each of the White lancers struck
by a black iron-tipped arrow exploded in flame.

A faint and ragged cheer rose from the Sarronnese lines even as another
flight of the iron-tipped arrows arced into the already hazy morning
sky.  The arrows fell like fireballs among the lancers.  Riderless
horses, some of them burning, screamed.  The light wind carried the
acrid odor of burning hair and charred flesh to Justen.  He shook off a
sudden dizziness and waited.

Hssttt.,. hssttt... hssttt... Three quick fire bolts burned across the
valley and splashed against the earthworks.  One too-curious soldier
screamed as she flared into an instant torch.

Justen swallowed hard.

"Let's get those rockets ready."  Firbek glared at Deryn and Fesek.
"We'll hold until the Iron Guard marches, unless the regulars get too
close."

A handful of the White lancers straggled back toward the east end of
the valley, followed by empty-saddled mounts.

For a time, an uneasy quiet, broken only by the whisper of the wind and
the faint muttering of the Sarronnese troops, held the west end of the
valley.

Then, from the eastern side, the drum-rolls rumbled forth, and another
set of lancers charged toward the Sarronnese, passing through die foot
soldiers.  Once the second wave of lancers passed, the foot moved
forward, using brush and hills for cover, steadily moving toward the
Sarronnese.

Hssttt.  -.

Hssttt... The fire bolts dropped onto the earthworks with little
effect, except for creating a briefly burning bush.

In response, another flight of arrows dropped into the lancers, with
yet more explosions and burning bodies.  Justen swallowed, both at the
destruction wrought by the black iron and the realization that few of
the special arrows remained.  Another wave of dizziness struck him, and
he shook his head again.

This time, the remaining lancers circled back, regrouped, and joined by
a third group of fresh cavalry, charged the Sarronnese once more.

Although the arrows still fell among the lancers, some of those hit
continued to ride forward.  Others fell, but they fell like ordinary
men, and the weight of the charge, the sheer numbers of more than five
hundred remaining lancers, pushed at the thin line of blue-coated
Sarronnese.

The bodies of white-clad men and their horses piled into a line less
than a hundred cubits from the shallow Sarronnese earthworks.

The heavy drum rolled, and the lancers peeled away to reveal the
Fairhaven foot, carrying light, white shields, almost upon the
Sarronnese lines and marching forward.  Behind them, White archers
appeared, and a flight of white shafts arced toward the Sarronnese.

"Now!"  snapped Firbek.

Click..  .

Justen flattened himself just before the rocket passed through where he
had been standing.  He shivered on the ground, not really understanding
why he'd had enough sense to drop out of the way, or had he been
dodging from the arrows?

"I told you to be careful!"  Firbek's massive hand slammed into Deryn,
throwing her to the ground, where she lay cradling her arm.

The big marine turned the launcher and nodded at Fesek, who clicked the
striker to light off the first rocket.

Justen climbed to his feet, trying to brush away the dirt and a glob of
manure that had stuck to his tunic.  Sweat oozed from his forehead as
he thought about how close to him the rocket had come.  He turned
toward the Fairhaven forces.

The black iron missile plowed into the ground to the left of the center
of the green-bannered forces.  A low, growling sound accompanied the
White advance, part murmurs, part yells, part the sound of booted feet
on hard ground as the foot-sloggers stormed.  over the bodies and
charged toward the thin blue line behind the low stones.

Another wave of white arrows flew, and Justen dropped behind his stone
wall.  Deryn scrabbled awkwardly behind the cart.

Standing behind the black iron frame, Firbek racheted up the launcher
and nodded.  Fesek struck the fuse, and this time, Justen tried to
order the initial airflow.  The combined effort succeeded, and the
rocket slammed through the center of the White foot, creating a
fireball and strewing charred bodies for a dozen cubits.

Another ragged cheer rose from the Sarronnese even as the wave of
destruction rocked Justen.  He steadied himself on the topmost rock of
the wall he had built, fighting the nausea and dizziness created by the
havoc.  He glanced over at Deryn, who was trying to fasten some sort of
makeshift splint on her forearm; he sensed not anger, but sadness in
her.

Arrows fell on both sides, slashing into white-clad and blue-clad forms
alike.  Justen dropped onto his knees; so he could see the field
without presenting a target for some archer.

"Another."  Firbek lifted the rocket into the launcher.

The second rocket widened the hole in the White center.  Justen leaned
against the stones and groaned.

Hhsstt..  . The answering fire bolt fell short, almost charring some of
the White foot.

"Another.  The White Wizard's getting tired."

"Again ..."

Somehow, the engineer infused some order into each launch, trying to
stay out of view of the White archers, fighting the recoil of chaos and
dizziness.

"Hold."

The remaining handful of the Fairhaven assault forces, those under the
green banner of Certis, crept back behind makeshift barricades of
bodies and brush and stones.  For a time, a low sighing swept the
valley, composed of the wind and the moans and cries of the wounded and
dying.

Then a heavy drum-roll thundered from the west, and a wave of troops
under the crimson banner started forward.

Once more the White archers lifted their bows, as did the Sarronnese,
and the late morning sky was filled with death.

Hhstt..  . hssttt..  .

"We need to stop them!  Strike it!"  Right after the rocket left,
Firbek was lifting another into place in the launcher,

After a deep breath, Justen added a touch of order, enough so that the
rocket hit just left of the center of the new assault.

Hsssttt .. . This time, the wizard's fire bolt splashed in front of the
launcher.

Firbek cranked up the launcher.  "There.  He's on that low hill.
Strike!"

The second rocket splashed flame before the White Wizard, who dropped
from sight.  Firbek readjusted the launcher.  "Strike!"

The next rocket widened the hole in the Whites' center.

Hhssttt..  . The answering fire bolt again fell short.

"Another.  Keep them coming.  They're getting tired."  Firbek changed
the launcher angle, and the rocket seared the hilltop where the wizard
had stood.

"Again."

"Strike again .. ."

The engineer kept infusing order into each launch.

Despite the rockets, the White foot reached the Sarronnese line, and
the clash of metal joined the smell of charred bodies, the odor of
burning rocket powder, and the screams and moans of soldiers and
horses.  Sarronnese archers loosed shafts at ranges so close that at
times, one shaft transfixed two Fairhaven troops..... hssttt..  .
hsstt... The fire bolts alternated between the Sarronnese and the
Recluce positions, but Firbek and Justen now concentrated on the White
foot troops.

"Strike!"

Then the three men in black stood in a lull as the shattered White foot
fell back even as another set of heavy drum-rolls started and the gray
banners were lifted and dipped.

Three short double blasts sounded over the isolated shouts, the
screams, and the hissing of the occasional fire bolt  The ensign
swirled and dipped three times.

"That's the fall-back order!"  yelled Fesek.

"We've still got rockets!"  Firbek protested.

Justen pointed to the comparative handful of blue-clad Sarronnese.
"Zerlana doesn't have much in the way of troops left.  And they're
calling in the Iron Guard."

Firbek stared for a moment, then dropped his hands.

Justen yanked the marine's arm and pulled him to the ground.

"Dumb bastard-"

Hhhssttt..  . hsstt.  Nearly a score of arrows followed the fire bolt
above Justen's head.

"We're the target!"

"Let's get moving!"  Justen crouched behind the launcher, pulling the
brace pins while Fesek and Justen carted the dozen and a half remaining
rockets, wrapped in a canvas, to the mule.  Then they placed the
launcher on the cart.  Deryn pulled the fuses one-handedly and put them
in a leather bag strapped next to the canvas on the mule.

Justen nodded at the safety precaution, then mounted the gray.

A fire bolt flared around the mule, which tottered forward three steps
before collapsing.

Arrows arched over the hilltop.

"Keep moving!"  ordered Firbek.

"You move!"  Justen flung himself off the gray and tried to remove the
canvas from the dead mule.  As if he were moving through deep snow, he
untied the rockets, one by one, until he could lift the canvas off and
then get it over the gray's back.

Hssttt... He re-tied one rocket, then another ... hsssttt..  . . and
another ... White arrows flew by his shoulder.  . and another .. .
hssttt... With a sigh more like a sob, the engineer grabbed the gray's
reins and began to run, using the hillock as shelter from the direct
attack of the White Wizard.

Behind him, the drum-rolls mounted.  Beside him trotted three blue-clad
soldiers.  Ahead, he could barely make out the cart and the two marines
riding into the canyon between two lines of archers and troops waiting
to cover the retreat, if necessary.

Another wave of arrows dropped around them.  One slammed into the woman
beside Justen, pinning her arm to the dirt.  Justen reached down and
absently snapped the arrow, then lifted her onto the gray, right on top
of the rockets, even as he pulled out the shaft and handed her a scrap
of canvas.

"Bind it with this."

The soldier looked at him blankly.

"Wrap it if you want to live!"  he ordered, flicking the reins to keep
the gray moving.

"Tough little bastard ..."  muttered the soldier to his left.

Tough?  Justen hadn't even lifted a blade or his staff, and he felt
like chopped meat.  The ground seemed to sway underfoot, and his head
ached as if it had been beaten with a truncheon.  He coughed and kept
walking until he, the gray, and the wounded soldier were in the
canyon.

There, since the bedraggled column was still moving, he kept walking,
leading the gray.

"Engineer!"

Justen looked up at the sound of the voice.  A Sarronnese officer whom
he did not know was leading a riderless horse, a dapple.

"Mount up!"

Mechanically, he climbed into the empty saddle, still holding the
gray's reins.

"Thanks .. . fellow.  But I'll walk with mine."  The wounded soldier
slipped off the gray, shivering as her fingers touched the black iron.
She trudged slowly downhill.

Justen eased the dapple around them, still leading the gray.  Making
his way down the canyon, his head cleared slightly and after a time, he
looked back at the winding column.

What could he do to stop the Whites?  It would not be that long before
they wiped out the wounded, took their arms and supplies, and looted
the dead.

What Gunnar could do with wizardry, perhaps he could accomplish with
order-mastery and the powder in the rockets, since his senses indicated
that the Whites were not immediately upon the heels of the remaining
Sarronnese.

On the way in, he had studied at least a handful of places in the
narrow canyon where a rough dam might be erected, especially the place
where the stream had turned abruptly at the granite face-if he recalled
the spot correctly.

Less than half a kay into the canyon, Justen paused at a narrowing in
the walls and studied the first outcropping.  A frown followed as he
noted the depth of the pooled water below.  While the deep water stored
order, it was also likely to swallow the amount of rock that might be
forced loose.

As he rode, he discovered that either he had caught up with the marines
or they had slowed to wait for him.  They rode on silently.

Once Justen reached the narrow granite wall that he recalled, he guided
the dapple and the gray off the road and onto the narrow stream bank
where he studied the canyon walls again.  What he had in mind still
seemed possible.

"Why are you stopping, Engineer?"  Firbek circled back.

"I'm going to build a dam."

"With what?  Magic?"

"Hardly.  The rockets, for one thing."

"I need those rockets."  Firbek put his hand on his blade.  Farther
downhill, Deryn had reined up the cart.  Beside her, Fesek sat on his
mount.  Both looked impassively over the intermittent flow of soldiers,
most of them wounded, at Jus-ten and Firbek.

"So do I."  Justen smiled, and his fingers closed around the black
staff.  "And I saved them.  I also helped forge them."

Firbek glanced from Deryn, still cradling her shattered left arm, to
the gray and the canvas holding the rockets.  Then he laughed.  "Fine!
Do what you will."  He looked at Deryn.  "It's his decision."

Justen watched for a moment as the three turned their mounts and the
cart back onto the dusty mountain road to follow the Justen forces back
down to the foothills and the river.  Then he tied the horses to a
scrubby root protruding from the loose rock.  If he used the tree ..
.

"Engineer... what are you doing?"  Zerlana, surrounded by a half-squad
of heavily armed cavalry, reined up beside him.  "We'll need those
rockets on the plains."

"Begging your pardon, Commander.  They will do more good here."

"Would you explain?"

Justen shrugged, then pointed to the boulder-strewn slope to the right
of the road.  "Most of those stones are fairly loose."

"We all know that.  Every spring we have to clear the road.  But the
White Wizards will just blast apart those few boulders you can bring
down here."

"Not if I can get enough of them in the streambed."

The commander studied the road.  "You can't raise the stream more than
three cubits, I'd guess.  How would that help?"

"Would you want to bring your forces through three cubits of icy
water?"

"Can you do this?"

"I don't know."  Justen shrugged.  "It's worth a try.  If it works,
they'll have to use the road that leads from their highway, and that
goes to Cerlyn, which puts the Whites a lot farther from Sarron."

"And if it doesn't?"

"You lose some rockets and one engineer-at most."

"How much help could you use?"

"Three people.  Any more would just get in the way."

Zerlana rode downhill toward a group of light horse that had reined up
just at the turn when she had stopped next to Justen.

The engineer stood by the dapple, absently stroking the gelding's neck,
while his perceptions ranged across the sides of the canyon, seeking
out weaknesses in the rock and the thin soil cover.

Before he had finished sensing the rock and soil faults, three mounted
soldiers rode up, two in blue leathers, one in gray.

"The commander said you needed help."  The hard-faced blonde with a
razor-thin, blood-edged cut along the right side of her jaw reined her
chestnut in, almost on top of Jus-ten.  "What are you doing?"

"Blowing up the hillside to make a dam once our people get
downstream."

"Our people?"  asked the brunette.  The woman in gray said nothing.

"Anyone I fight for is my people."  Justen held in a sigh.

"How long will this take?"  asked the hard-faced blonde.

"Most of the afternoon."

"That's too long.  The Whites will be here before you're done."

Justen shook his head.  "Hardly.  They haven't left the battlefield.
They've got some cleaning up to do."

The brunette snorted.  "Didn't like those black arrows, they didn't.
Wish we'd had more."

"When the commander reports to the chief engineer, there will be more
forged."

"Not enough."

"That's what we're here for.  This buys more time to forge weapons and
gather troops," Justen reminded the three.  "What I need from you are
boulders from up there that look and feel not too steady, like they
might move with a huge push.  We need some way to mark them ..."

"Here's some white cloth.  It'll last for a while, anyhow."  The
blonde's laugh was nearly a cackle.

Justen nodded.  "While you're doing that, I'll be moving the rockets
into place."

He thrust a small iron pry-bar, taken from the canvas that held the
rockets, into his belt, then unloaded four rockets from the gray. Using
the tree root, he levered himself onto the lower ledge, from where he
scrambled onto the sparsely grassy rocky incline.  Cubit by cubit, he
struggled up as far as he could go.

"This one looks like it might move, scr," offered the brunette.

Justen put a hand on the boulder, a time-smoothed monolith that
protruded from the hillside, letting his senses surround the granite.
He shook his head.  "This is still attached to the ridge below.  Let's
try that one over there."

"It's not as big."

"They have to be able to move."

After three tries, Justen found two boulders that seemed to fit his
needs.  After using the pry-bar to gouge out a long hole on the upslope
side of the larger boulder, he placed two rockets inside and gently
tamped in the sandy soil as well as he could, leaving only the twisted
fuses exposed.

"Get up behind that rock!  All of you!"

He used the striker, then scrambled for cover, slipping and scraping
the side of his face as he clawed his way behind the ridge rock that
the brunette had thought would move.

Crummppp..  . uumpp... Sand exploded from the boulder, and the stone
rocked, then settled.

"Darkness Jus ten eased over to the boulder, ignoring the blood on his
cheek, and touched the granite, then shoved.  The blonde's shoulder
joined his, and the boulder groaned forward .. . and began bouncing
downhill, carrying several smaller rocks and some sand with it.

The next boulder also took two rockets, but it fell onto the road
itself, although one of the smaller rocks tumbled into the stream.

By the time he had returned for more rockets and carted them up the
steep slope, falling only twice and scraping his face once again,
Justen's blacks were soaked from his waist up.  A quick look at the sky
confirmed that the hazy clouds remained in place.

More rocks, more holes, and more rockets resulted in a growing pile of
stone in the narrow gap where the canyon turned.

After splashing their faces clean, the four sat by the stream to rest.
Shortly, Justen stood.

"Let's get the horses around the bend.  Then we'll muscle these rocks
into some sense of order."

"This is worse than fighting.  You can only die there.  Here, you get
tortured."  The blonde shook her head.

Justen shrugged.  "It hurts me, too."

The replacement mount-more heavily muscled than the gray-a pulley, the
three soldiers, and Justen managed to wrestle the larger boulders into
a line across the narrow point in the canyon before the sharp bend.
With the stones in its bed, the stream had risen enough that it lapped
at the edge of the road.

"Now we'll drop some more stones.  Smaller ones."

The three exchanged looks.  The blonde shrugged.  So did the woman in
gray.

After a moment, the brunette grinned.  "All right, Engineer.  We'll
help you drop more stones."

When there were only four rockets left and the sun had dropped well
below the canyon rim, Justen straightened up.  "Let's go down and
finish."

The four waded through calf-deep water before they could climb over the
makeshift berm, or dam.  The three climbed onto perches above the road,
since water was flowing across the roadbed.

"Shit.  No wonder no one ever took Recluce .. . takes too much friggin'
work."

"Better than listening to Dyessa or Zerlana bitch about..."

"Dyessa .. . miss her.  Good sort for a field leader."

Justen looked toward the three, but they said nothing.

"Miss her?  What happened?"

"Demon-damned wizard got her, I think, there at the last charge."

The engineer pursed his lips, then swallowed to moisten his dry throat.
Dyessa herself had been right.  Why was he so surprised that
individuals died?

Finally, he stood and walked back to the low berm, where he stopped and
studied the bank above the stream.  Then he unstrapped the launcher and
carried it to a flat spot, settling it carefully in the heel-deep
water.  He adjusted it, aiming it right above the stream.

"Why are you doing this now?  Why didn't you start with this?"  The
blonde in the blood-smeared and tattered blue leathers coughed after
she spoke.

"You need the bigger rocks to hold the smaller fragments and dirt."
Justen touched the striker, extending his perceptions to smooth the
flow of air across the rocket.

Whssttt... crummpp .. .

With the second rocket, a solid wall of rocks, sand, soil, even roots,
fell into the stream, turning the clear water reddish-brown.  Almost
instantly, the water began to seep onto the road.

Justen carted the launcher down below the dam and aimed the next rocket
toward the bulge overhanging the road.  Although a considerable mass
fell with that rocket, he used the last one to bring down more
material.

Then he strapped the launcher onto the dapple and stood panting, his
blacks soaked with water and sweat, his face scraped and bloody.  He
grinned.

"You look like crap, Engineer.  Why are you smiling?"  Even as she
questioned, the trooper in gray grinned.  Then she mounted.

Justen struggled into the saddle, patting the gray on the neck. "That's
a girl.  Just get old Daddy Justen back to Sarron."  "... tough little
bastard ..."  "..  . sort of like him ..."

Justen looked back at the low dam, sending his senses into the rocks
and earth and the few limbs.  It wasn't as massive or as solid as
Gunnar's work, but it would hold, at least for a year or two, and that
would be enough time to force the White armies onto the southernmost
route, the one through Cerlyn.

XXXII

The two White Wizards walked up the hill.  The boot heel of the shorter
touched a dark object in the dust.  He jumped slightly at the hissing
sound.

"Another one of those black iron arrows?"  asked the larger and
stockier man.

"The darkness-damned things are everywhere."

"Tell me about it.  You don't have to send a dispatch to Histen asking
for another two thousand lancers."

"They didn't... not that many, did they?"

"Jehan, I'd guess they had about score forty of those black arrowheads.
Do you want to guess how many they'll have forged by the time we get to
Sarronnyn by the southern route?"  Zerchas took a deep breath as he
reached the hilltop, where he turned west and studied the low water
blocking the western exit from the valley.

"The Iron Guard could take this road."

Zerchas looked mildly at Jehan, who in turn looked at the cart tracks
in the ground.

"Can you tap the chaos springs?"

"Me?"  Zerchas snorted.  "Maybe the late, great Jeslek could have, but
that Black engineer's dam is founded in cold running water laid over
solid granite.  Send Histen another message and get one of those
hotheads, like Beltar, out here.  Let him deal with the order recoil.
I'd rather not, thank you."

"You think there could be that much of a problem?"

"Do you want to try it, O great Jehan?"

"Ah ... I think not."

"Then don't ask me to."  Zerchas's eyes went vacant for a time.

Jehan glanced downhill at the coach and the detachment of White lancers
that surrounded it, then toward the slowly spreading lake, and finally
back toward the eastern end of the valley, where the gray banners were
being furled and the tents struck.  He moistened his lips.

Zerchas cleared his throat.  "That dam's not all that well built.  Once
we get into Sarronnyn, a small team could drain it easily from the
other side.  If the water had settled some, and if we had the
materials, we could send a boat down there now."

"We don't-"

"I know.  We'll just have to take the longer route.  The road's better
anyway."

"Everything's taking longer.  The way things are going, we'll be at
winter's doorstep before we even reach Sarron."  Jehan spat downhill,
his spittle hissing as it struck a fragment of black iron.

"I doubt that.  The Sarronnese have lost nearly half of their army
already."

"They'll draw more levies."

"Sarronnyn has never been that well equipped for war.  The whole idea
of the Legend is against war."

"What about Westwind, or Southwind?"

"One's long dead, and the other's dying."  After taking a last look at
the shallow water, Zerchas turned and began to walk downhill.  "Let's
go.  You need to get that message off to Histen, Ask for Beltar by
name."

"As you wish."

XXXIII

Four figures rode up the incline from the river road to Sarron,
slightly behind the main mounted body of the returning Sarronnese
force, but well ahead of the foot soldiers.  Unlike most travelers in
recent days, they came from the south.  As on most summer days in
Sarronnyn, high hazy clouds covered the sky, barely decreasing the
burning of the white yellow sun, but giving a more greenish cast to the
sky.

Justen wanted to wipe the sweat off his face as he reined up outside
the Recluce enclave and tugged on the reins of the dapple to bring the
horse to a halt beside his gray.  The scratches and bruises had left
his forehead tender.  With the back of his forearm, he gently, very
gently, blotted the dampness away, ignoring the itching of the scrape
across his right temple.

He turned in the saddle to face the Sarronnese troopers.  "Thank
you."

"None of the soft masculine stuff.  Engineer.  Wish there were more
like you around."  The blond inclined her head.  "We'll see you
again."

"I trust that it is not too soon."  Justen offered a wry smile.

"We'd hope the same in some ways, no offense to you.  Engineer.  Not
that we would mind seeing you."  The soldier in gray glanced back
toward the southeast.  "We won't be fortunate in that way.  I'd like a
couple of quivers of those black arrowheads before we see those White
devils again."

The Sarronnese troopers nodded one after the other.

"We'll do what we can."  Justen watched for a moment as the three
turned their horses back to rejoin the remnants of the Sarronnese
cavalry.

Then he rode toward the end of the barracks that held the stable,
leading the dapple and giving a half nod at the sound of metal on metal
and the dull thuds of the hammer mill.  The smell of oil and quench
water tickled his nose.  Two of Castin's chickens scuttled from the
door to the stable as he reined up and dismounted.

After unloading and stabling the dapple, he led the gray into the last
empty stall.  Then he walked across to the pump, where he got a bucket
of water to wash off the worst of the grime.  The second bucket was for
the horses, and he lugged it back across the sun-baked clay.  He poured
half into one stable bucket and half into the other, providing a bucket
for each horse.

After letting the mounts drink, he curried the dapple quickly and had
begun to unsaddle the gray when he heard steps.  Altara stood outside
the stall.

"I just got back."  He unbuckled the girth.

"I saw.  Firbek said you were using good rockets for what he called
light-fired foolishness."

Justen pulled the girth clear of the buckle and straightened up.  "I
used them to build a dam with.  So I guess that was foolishness."

"What did Zerlana say?"

"I don't know.  I never talked to her afterward.  She was too busy."

"Justen, sometimes .. . sometimes you're as bad as your brother.  You
two .. you just do something important and never tell anyone."  Altara
shook her head.  "It's a good thing no one's worried about trade routes
right now."

"I suppose so.  That really hadn't crossed my mind."

"How soon can you get back to work on the arrowheads?  Zerlana sent a
messenger-she said the black iron arrowheads turned all the White
lancers they struck into fireballs.  She wants as many as we can
deliver."

"I told you they'd work."  Justen stepped out of the stall and into the
light.

"Darkness .. . what happened to you?"  Altara glanced toward the
dwelling across the dusty yard.  "You need a healer, at least to check
out all those scrapes.  How did you manage to get all cut up like
that?"

"I was wrestling with a mountain.  That's what happened when I used the
rest of the rockets-they were ones I'd saved, by the way-to build the
demon-damned lake.  This one's not as deep as the one Gunnar built, but
it should make the middle pass road almost impassible for the Whites."
Jus-ten racked the blanket and the saddle, and picked up the curry
brush.

"Firbek said you'd never do it."

"He's welcome to go swim in it."  The young engineer stepped back into
the stall and began to curry the gray, who whickered and sidestepped.

"Easy, lady."  He stroked her, and she settled down.

Altara squinted and peered over the stall at the horse.  "Is that the
same gray?"

"Same one."  Justen forced himself to keep brushing.  Darkness knew,
the poor beast deserved it.

"It doesn't look the same.  She looks less swaybacked .. . younger
somehow."

"Probably just decent treatment and enough food."  Jus-ten set down the
brush.

"I don't know.  I wonder if you couldn't have been a healer.  Krytella
says you actually helped heal Gunnar."

"He's my brother."

"I'm going to get Ninca to look at your face."  Altara shook her head
as she left the stable area.

Justen kept brushing; the gray whickered once more.

"I know.  I know.  Summer's not even close to being over, and it's
going to get hotter."  Even before he finished speaking, the gray
slurped water across his boots.  "Thank you, too."

The gray whickered again, and Justen studied the animal.  Was it
possible that he had infused enough order, inadvertently that the horse
was healthier?  He shrugged.  It was certainly possible, but a little
order was small enough repayment for the gray's having lugged him all
over Sarronnyn.

He set aside the brush and rummaged through the nearly empty barrel of
oat cakes before coming up with some morsels for both horses.  The gray
whickered and nuzzled his arm; the dapple merely ate.

Justen closed the stalls, shouldered his pack, and trudged through the
afternoon heat and the dust raised by his boots toward his room in the
barracks.  He realized that he needed to get something to eat.  Had
anyone left anything from the noon meal?

"Justen!  Ninca needs to look at that face of yours."  Altara waved
from the side porch of the smithy.

The young engineer turned toward the two women.  Altara stood aside as
Justen climbed the steps to the porch.

Even before he slumped onto the bench, the older healer was peering at
his face.  He could sense the light tendrils of order touching his
scrapes and scabs.

"You kept it fairly clean.  That I can see.  There's no chaos anywhere,
almost as though I'd done it myself.  Just keep the dirt out of the
scrapes.  You won't look very pretty for a while, young engineer, but
I've seen worse.  After you wash at night, and make sure you do, put a
little of this ointment on the cuts and scrapes."

"Thank you."  Justen took the ointment in the small box.  He also
intended to keep up with his own order-ministering.

Ninca gave him a wry grin before she turned to Altara.  "Might as well
take another look at that big engineer's arm, since I'm here."  She
frowned.  "Seems like the Sarronnese never heard of real healing.
Someone in the Tyrant's court always is wanting healing.  And
Krytella's always getting badgered by some woman or another in the
streets."

"Not enough food."  Altara's voice was matter-of-fact as she looked
straight at Justen.  "We do need more arrowheads ..."

"I know.  I need to put this away and get something to eat."  He
pointed to the battered leather pack.

"Castin might have put something by," Ninca observed.

"I'll see you later," Altara told him.

Justen watched the two women enter the smithy, then stood and lifted
his pack.

"Wait a moment," said Gunnar.  Justen's brother stood in the smithy
doorway through which Altara and Ninca had just passed.  "You might as
well sit back down."  Gunnar gestured to the other end of the bench
with his left hand.  In his right hand was a covered basket.  "Altara
isn't going to force you to pick up your hammer or whatever at this
very moment."

Justen's eyes flicked toward the smithy, then to his pack.  "Actually,
I was going to put this in my room and try to find something to eat."

"I thought you might be hungry when I saw you coming."  Gunnar set the
basket on the bench.  "There's some sliced chicken, brown bread,
cheese, and a pear apple there.  I didn't bring anything to drink, but
here's a cup, and the water in the pitcher's cold."  The Storm Wizard
seated himself crosswise on the bench, one leg on either side.

"The water's never cold," protested Justen.  But he set the pack
down.

"It is now."

Justen sat and poured some water into the cup Gunnar had produced.  He
sipped.  "You're right.  How did you do it?  Some sort of storm
wizardry?"

Gunnar nodded, a faint smile on his face, a smile that faded as Justen
watched.  He wrinkled his brow.

"Using order still hurts, doesn't it?"  Justen asked, stuffing a chunk
of chicken in his mouth and beginning to chew.  "It depends.  I can use
the winds to scout with, and that doesn't hurt.  Trying to move ... to
arrange things, even the air, still can be a bit..  . difficult."

"Doesn't quite .. . hurt like .. . the demons of light," mumbled the
younger brother through his mouthful of chicken and the chunk of
still-warm brown bread he had added to the somewhat dry fowl.

"More like a cut across the skull, or a headache.  But it's getting
better."  Gunnar paused and watched Justen wolf down several more
mouthfuls before he spoke again.  "You're not quite as white as one of
the healers' bandages."

"Was hungry.  Not that much food left... on ... the way back."  Justen
looked at the remainder of the loaf.  "Castin is baking small loaves
these days.  And the taste is bitter."

"He says we don't notice the difference, whether they're big or small.
We eat everything anyway."  Gunnar sobered.  "There's not much food
left anywhere.  The grain is from the bottom of the granaries.  It gets
a touch of mold-the good kind that helps fight chaos-but it does taste
bitter."

"It's not winter.  Why are the granaries so low?"  Gunnar looked at
Justen.  "That's just it.  Sarronnyn gets its fruit from the upland
groves, and they bloom late.  The grains haven't headed yet."

"So ... in mid to late summer is when the food stocks are lowest.  From
the long look on your face, I'd assume that Fairhaven has tried to cut
off trade with Sarronnyn."

"That's really not the problem.  It's the people.  Sarronnyn produces
plenty.  It always has.  But if you were a farmer out there-" Gunnar
gestured to the west "-would you want to sell much if you worried about
the winter and whether the Whites would fire your fields the way they
did in the south Kyphros or Spidlar?"

"Everyone's hoarding."  Justen swallowed and reached for the water.

"Right.  And that means something else."

Justen gulped half a cup of cold water and used his belt knife to slice
off a chunk of the hard, yellow brick cheese.  He waited for Gunnar to
continue.

"It means that the Sarronnese have already lost hope."

Justen nodded, chewing the tangy cheese that seemed to coat his teeth.
He took another sip of the cool water.  Even with Gunnar's wizardry,
the water didn't stay cold in the heat of summer.

"You're worried," Justen finally said.

"Yes, younger brother.  I'm worried.  Even with your engineering of the
dam, it won't be more than another three to four eight-days before the
Whites are almost to Sarron."

"That's time to make a lot of black arrowheads."

"They don't work any better than regular arrows on the Iron Guard, and
the Whites are moving all their Iron Guard forces onto their wizards'
road."

Justen pursed his lips.  "Maybe Firbek was right.  Maybe we need more
rockets."

"Maybe."

The two brothers sat silent on the bench, looking to the south, looking
through the heat waves that rose from the river road.

XXXIV

"Come in."

The broad-shouldered White Wizard stepped into the tower room.

The thinner man in white studied a glass upon a seemingly antique
white-oak table for a time before turning.

"You requested my presence?"  Beltar bowed deeply to the High Wizard.

"I did."  Histen gestured to the glass, and a group of buildings
appeared in the midst of the swirling white mists.

"A small detachment of engineers from Recluce has arrived in
Sarronnyn."  Histen gestured again, and the image in the glass
vanished. "Already, they have been rather effective in slowing down the
advance of both the White Company and the Iron Guard."

Beltar waited.

"They also brought a descendant... of Creslin."

The younger wizard raised his eyebrows.

"He turned Middlevale into a rather deep lake.  Unfortunately, a
detachment of the Iron Guard happened to be there at the time."

"No other forces?"

"The others are more .. . shall we say .. . replaceable.  Perhaps two
score returned, and we anticipate that for some time, the northern
route will be blocked."

"It does sound like quite a deep lake indeed."  Beltar pursed his lips.
"What else?"

"Is that not enough?"

Beltar smiled politely.  "A single lake would not be that great an
impediment to the redoubtable Zerchas."

"Actually, there were two lakes.  The second was created just on the
middle road.  It is shallower."

"But enough to keep the White forces off the road, no doubt."

"A minor impediment, I am sure."

"Certainly," agreed Beltar with yet another smile.  He waited.

"Ah... you see," temporized Histen.  "The other thing is that the
engineers are providing weapons."

"Like their rockets?"

Histen frowned.  "They have begun, just begun, to forge black iron
arrowheads."

Beltar nodded slowly.  "I presume the casualties among the White
lancers were rather heavy."

"We lost nearly four hundred before they ran out of arrows."

"And you don't want the situation to get out of hand?"

"Ah .. . yes.  The Iron Guards are being sent their cannon."

"So the rumor is true .. . that cannon were cast by the Lydians."
Beltar bowed.  "Clearly, you have thought matters out in great detail,
High Wizard.  How may one such as I be of service?"

The High Wizard fingered the gold amulet that hung around his neck.
"You have suggested that... the more effective aspects of the renowned
Jeslek's approach .  might be suitable."  The High Wizard paused.

Beltar continued to wait.

"Have you not?"

"I believe I have made some comments to the effect that much of import
that Jeslek accomplished has been perhaps overlooked."

"You at least have less arrogance than your idol.  We believe that
someone of your abilities would be useful in countering this Storm
Wizard, and perhaps also in offsetting those arrowheads and black iron
rockets their engineers have forged for the Sarronnese."

"In short, you want me, and the newly developed cannons, to destroy the
engineers and the Storm Wizard before the world realizes the
vulnerabilities of our forces?"

"Let us say that an expeditious victory in Sarronnyn would be to
everyone's advantage."

"I appreciate your faith, and I am at your disposal."  Beltar bowed.

XXXV

After securing the black staff in the lance holder, Justen swung into
the gray's saddle and rode across the dry clay and scattered clumps of
grass in the yard until he reached the half-dozen marines.  One of the
chickens clucked from a perch on the lower railing of the rickety fence
around the healers' garden.  Absently, Justen wondered why, wherever
healers went, they had gardens, or nurtured the gardens of others.

Firbek's eyes flicked over the cart and its marine driver, then settled
on Justen.  "Ready, Engineer?"

"Whenever you are."Justen nodded and lifted the reins.  The gray
sidestepped, then carried him up beside the marine officer.

"Where is this spring, or whatever it is?"

"According to the directions from Merwha-"

"Merwha?"  Firbek interrupted.

"She's the Sarronnese officer assigned to help with our supplies.
According to her, we take the back road, the one that skirts the east
side of the city, until it forks, and then we take the right fork for
about five kays, maybe six.  About halfway up that road, we'll run into
the yellow branch- that's what they call it.  Smells like brimstone.
The brimstone comes from the springs ..."

"I have the idea."  Firbek turned his head toward the marines.  "Head
out.  Uphill to the second fork."

Justen let the gray keep pace with the bigger man as Firbek led the
group onto the main road heading toward Sarron itself.

A blue-painted coach, leather bags strapped to the roof, rolled past
Justen on its way downhill to the river road.  The coachman held the
well-oiled reins of the two matched bays.  Beside him sat a guard
dressed in blue and cream livery, holding a cocked crossbow.

"A copper .. . just a copper, noble Sers."  A boy in a ragged loincloth
held out his hand to Firbek.  One leg, bent and twisted, dragged in the
dust as he limped downhill, away from the city.  "Just a copper ... a
poor copper."

Firbek ignored the beggar, edging his horse into the center of the
highway.  Justen slipped a copper from his purse and flipped it to the
boy.

They had ridden less than fifty rods uphill before they had to edge to
the side of the road again, this time because an empty farm wagon was
drawing past a small cart piled high with household goods, and drawn by
a small donkey.  A white-haired woman and a white-bearded man walked
beside the donkey.  Neither looked up at the mounted soldiers from
Recluce, or even at the farm wagon as it rattled by.

Justen brushed his fingers across the black wood of the staff, then
swallowed.

"Make way .. . make way!"  shouted the tall woman riding at the head of
nearly a dozen mounted guards.  Behind the guards, rolling downhill
from Sarron, rumbled two wagons, each covered with canvas bound over
loads that reached a good four cubits above the heads of the teamsters.
Six horses strained to pull each wagon, and the heavy wheels powdered
the dirt scattered across the stone slabs of the roadway leading into
Sarron.

Creaakkk... Justen followed Firbek and the rest of the squad off of the
granite paving and onto the shoulder, eyeing the curve in the heavy
timbers of the wagon bed.

"Damn!"  muttered the redheaded marine driving the cart as it rattled
and bounced through deep ruts on the shoulder.

Because he wondered exactly what lay under the canvas, Justen reached
out with his order-senses to touch the passing wagons.  Fabric-heavy,
woven fabric, bound in rolls- rested under the canvas.  Fabric?  Rugs?
The Sarronnese were known for their rugs, and rugs were certainly
heavy.  But the wagons bore enough rugs to fill a small warehouse.

Justen frowned.

"What are they carrying.  Engineer?"  asked the woman marine behind
Justen.

"Rugs."  His voice was distant as he pondered the significance of the
wagon-loads of rugs, and of the second dozen guards who followed the
wagons.

"The weaseling merchants are abandoning Sarron," snapped Firbek.  "They
beg for our help, but they won't even stay in their own city."

"We haven't exactly been all that successful in stopping them."
Justen's voice was dry.

"Turn at the fork!"  Firbek pointed to the side road on the right,
which branched off to the southeast just before the main road widened
into the causeway that entered Sarron.

The narrow, packed-clay road followed the pink granite outer walls of
the city, roughly a kay from the outermost stones.

"No moat," offered Firbek after they had covered another kay.

"Not that much water here, I suspect."  Justen frowned as he looked up
and recognized the stone arches of the main aqueduct.  "No .. . that's
not it.  Probably the heat."

"What's the heat got to do with it?"

"You put water in a moat someplace that's this hot and it gets all
stagnant, scummy, green.  You get lots of mosquitoes, flies, bugs. Lots
of diseases."

"Hmm .. ."  Firbek pursed his lips.  "Walls aren't high enough.  No
more than fifteen or twenty cubits.  I don't think the gates would hold
off a ram for long, either."

"Probably not," Justen returned.  "It's been more than a thousand
years, maybe longer, since anyone threatened Sarron."  He brushed away
a fly once, then again, before concentrating and setting a gentle ward
against the insects, thankful that he'd at least picked up that art
from Krytella.

"Can't forget that the Whites think a long ways ahead.  Not these
Sarronnese.  Ha!  Rug merchants, all of them."

Justen rode on without responding, occasionally looking back at the
city walls as they receded, occasionally wincing as the cart wheels
squeaked.  The right-hand fork in the road appeared not more than two
kays beyond the east side of the walls.

In time, still before midday, the faint odor of brimstone began to
drift from the water beside the road, a stream beside which grew no
large trees, for all of the age of the stone fences.

"Smells like rotten eggs."  The marine driving the cart screwed up her
nose.

"Eggs smell better," answered a rider behind Justen.  The comments
seemed to loosen tongues that had been silent.  "..  . what's this
stuff for .. ."  "... the engineers use it... rockets ..."  "... smells
so bad. Sure it's not chaos-touched?"

They rode another kay and more before they reached the stone walls of
the healers' enclave.  The red-oak gates had been swung open and
chained in place.

Inside the walls there was an open, paved courtyard, almost free of the
smell of brimstone.  To the right was a stonewalled but thatched
building that appeared to be a stable, while a garden with sculpted
trees stretched from the courtyard to a long, low building with a
red-tiled roof.

Justen dismounted and tied his gray to the hitching rail that doubled
as a fence between the stone-paved courtyard and the garden.  A light
breeze carried a slight hint of brimstone across the grass and ruffled
the long-stemmed blue flowers that bordered the courtyard's paving
stones.

A figure in a green tunic and trousers walked from the tile-roofed
building and down the stone walk that split the garden.  Justen looked
up to Firbek.  ,

"We'll be happy to wait here," the marine said.

Justen walked toward the green-clad woman.  At an angle to his right,
between the stable and the main building, he could see the drying pans
filled with the orange-yellow of brimstone.  He halted several paces
from the gray-haired healer.

"You must be the engineer from Recluce.  I am Manila, healer leader of
Gyphros."  She bowed to him.

Justen returned the bow, noting the deep, dark circles around the
woman's eyes.  "As the Tyrant may have informed you, we have come for
some brimstone."

"We wish it were otherwise."

"So do I," confessed Justen.

"It is already bagged, Scr."  The woman pointed down the path to
Justen's right.  "The bags are stacked just beyond the far corner of
the stable, this side of the drying pans.  I regret that there is no
cart path, but each of the bags holds only about a half-stone of
brimstone.  We also bagged what little nit re we had.  There are five
bags of that."

"How many bags of brimstone?"

"Four score."  An apologetic look crossed the healer's face.  "We did
keep what we thought absolutely necessary for healing, just a stone or
so."

"That's more than we could have asked."  Justen bowed again.  "And
bagged, no less."

"We had an outpost at Middlevale, Engineer.  The Whites killed all
score and five, even though they offered no resistance.  We all have
sewed for the past eight-day."  The healer's face hardened.  "Though
you do not follow the Legend in the way we do, you have come when few
have.  Direct your weapons well toward the legions of accursed
light."

"We will do what we can."  Justen looked toward the pile of what he had
thought stones, then back toward the cart.  "May I have the marines
load the brimstone?"

"Of course.  Afterward, we will have laid out bread and meat and cheese
on the table under the tree there."  Again, the healer looked
apologetic.  "We have only red berry and water."

Justen smiled.  "That will be more than adequate.  And I thank you."

"No thanks are necessary."  The healer turned.

Justen walked back to the marines.

"What was all that about?"  Firbek, still mounted, glared down at
Justen.  ' The brimstone is all bagged, about four score half-stone
bags.  There are five bags of nit re as well."  Justen coughed, then
continued.  "After your troops load the cart, the healers will be
laying out a full meal on the outdoor table next to where the brimstone
bags are stacked."

"Four score?"  asked Firbek, a frown crossing his face.

"Four score," repeated Justen.  He repressed a smile as he watched the
words about the food pass among the mounted marines.

"AH right.  Follow the engineer!  And no slacking if you want to enjoy
that meal!"

Justen patted the gray on the shoulder and glanced toward the healer,
who watched from the corner of the garden as the marines carried the
bagged brimstone from the enclave and as three other healers, two men
and a woman, carried out large platters that they set on the table,
followed by pitchers and crockery mugs.

After watching the last bag of brimstone as it was loaded and tied in
place, Justen gave the gray a pat and started toward the table.  He was
as hungry as the marines.

"Scr?"  The older healer nodded toward the gray.

"Yes?"

"Is that staff yours?"

"Ah .. . well, yes.  It was a gift, but it is mine."

"You are far more than an engineer, young man.  But do not place too
much trust in the staff."

Justen flushed.

The healer smiled.  "I know your book says that-"

"My book?"

"The one by your patron-The Basis of Order.  Our bodies may live in the
hills, but that does not mean our minds do."  The older woman gestured
toward the table, where the marines had begun to eat.  "You need to eat
also.  But remember that a staff is to be used, not leaned upon."

Justen tried not to shake his head.  First, Firbek and his displeasure
at the amount of brimstone, and now this?  He'd have to talk to Gunnar.
He definitely would.

XXXVI

Justen leaned back and let the cool evening breeze-coming out of the
east and off the Westhorns-blow over him.  On the other end of the
porch, Clerve struggled with a battered guitar and an old song.  down
by the seashore, where the waters foam white,

Hang your head over; hear the wind's flight.

The east wind loves sunshine,

And the west wind loves night.

The north blows alone, dear.

And I fear the light.

You've taken my heart, dear.

Beyond the winds' night.

The fires you have kindled

Last longer than light.  . last longer than light, dear, when the
waters foam white;

Hang your head over; hear the wind's flight.

The fires you have kindled

Will last out my night... Justen listened to the words that dated back
to the founding of Recluce.  He did not look toward the steps where
Gunnar and Krytella sat and talked in low voices.  Although they were
close enough that he could have called the words on the breeze with his
senses, he did not.  The cool breeze ruffled his hair, hair that had
gotten too long.

"How about something a little more cheerful?"

The whispered request carried even against the rustling of the breeze,
and Clerve resettled himself on the stool brought outside for the
night.  . sing a song of gold coins,

A pack filled up with songbirds,

A minstrel lusting after love,

And yelling out some loving words ... "That's better.  Got anything
about the White devils?  Or these fancy Legend holders?"

Justen grinned at Quentel's flat tones.

"You know, if it weren't for the Legend .. ."  began Berol.

"I know," rumbled Quentel.  "I wouldn't be here hammering out rockets
for the Tyrant."

"It would be better if we had more of them."  Firbek's cool tones rode
over Clerve's strumming.

Justen turned to see Firbek.  Somehow, the big marine had slipped onto
the corner of the porch almost silently.  The young engineer frowned,
unseen in the darkness, at the sense of wrongness in Firbek's words.

"We're forging too late into the night already.  We don't need any more
accidents."  Altara's voice was as cold as Firbek's.

"Can't we just enjoy the music?"  asked Castin.  "Let this poor old
cook who's been cooped up in a kitchen hotter than your forges just
enjoy the young fellow's playing."

"By all means.  By all means."  Firbek sauntered down the steps and
across the darkened yard, barely missing the garden fence as he headed
back toward the marine barracks.  "... always spoiling things."

"Sing another one, boy!"  commanded Castin.

Clerve's fingers crossed the strings, and his clear voice brought the
others into silence.

I watched my love sail out to sea,

His hand was deft; he waved to me.

But then the waters foamed white and free

Just as my love turned false to me.

Oh, love is wild, and love is bold.

The fairest flower when e'er it is new,

But love grows old, and waxes cold

And fades away like morning dew .. .

"Just like the young, always moaning about how sad love is."  Castin
slipped an arm around Ninca's waist.  The head healer pretended to
ignore his gesture, but Justen caught the sense of her smile, even in
the darkness.

"One more, and then .. ."

"And then what?"

"Nevermind..."

Even as Clerve touched the strings again, Quentel slipped into the
darkness, followed shortly by Altara.

If I'd held scores of flowers, or laid within my lady's bowers .. .

If I'd held reigning powers, or struck down the sunset's towers .. .

As the last silvered notes died away, Castin and Ninca rose, then Berol
and Jirrl.

Krytella stretched and stood.  "Clerve sings well.  I enjoyed
listening.  But I'm tired, and tomorrow I have to go check on the
Sub-Tyrant's daughters.  Again," the healer added with a mock groan.

"Tribulations of being a good healer."  Gunnar chuckled, his right hand
on the railing of the porch steps.

"It was a nice night."  Justen stretched and -stepped toward
Krytella.

"Good night, Gunnar .. . Justen."  The healer stepped around Justen,
who watched as she slipped inside.  He swallowed, wishing the words had
really been for him.  He turned as Clerve approached.  "Thank you.  You
sing well."

"Thank you, Master Justen."  Clerve nodded as he eased down the steps
and headed toward the end of the barracks, where the engineers had
their rooms.  Gunnar and Justen stood alone on the steps.

"There won't be that many more good nights."  Gunnar glanced toward the
south.  "The Whites have fought clear of the Westhorns and have reached
the upper river road."

"The Tyrant hasn't said anything."  Justen coughed.

"Have you seen all the levies marching in?  Or all the people
fleeing?"

"You make it sound like the Tyrant is staking everything on Sarron.
It's still a seven-day ride, for darkness' sake, to Rulyarth."

"Their belief in the Legend isn't so strong as it once was."  Gunnar
shrugged.  "And everyone fears the terrors of the Whites.  If Sarron
falls, so will Sarronnyn."

Justen shivered at the cold certainty in his brother's voice.

If Sarron falls, so will Sarronnyn.  He heard the words again and
again, long after he had climbed onto his pallet, until, sometime in
the early hours, he drifted into a troubled sleep.

XXXVII

Justen set aside the finished black iron arrowhead, the last for the
morning.  After Gunnar's report to Altara, the engineers were
alternating between forging rockets and arrowheads, working even later
into the evening as the blue-clad messengers galloped up the river road
with continuing reports of the White advance.

Firbek insisted that only the rockets could hold back the Iron Guard.
Justen pursed his lips.  Was the Iron Guard that formidable?  So far,
all he had seen were the standard White forces.  Was the Iron Guard
being saved for confrontations with order-for an invasion of Recluce,
perhaps?

The engineer took a deep breath.  Speculations and guesses would not
forge anything.  "Get something to drink.  Then we'll go back to the
rockets."  Clerve wiped his forehead again, nodded, and set.  aside the
hammer.

Justen watched the younger man walk toward the side porch, then
followed.  He needed a drink and fresh air as much as the striker did.
He lifted the empty pitcher that sat on his bench.

Nicos shifted the iron in his forge and looked up as Justen passed.
"How are you doing?"

"Another score or so of the arrowheads.  The rockets take me more
time."

"They take everyone more time.  They're a light-Fired pain in the ass."
The wiry engineer glanced past the hammer mill.  "Quentel's none too
happy about handling all that powder, even in black iron boxes in the
root cellar."

"I wouldn't be, either."

"And Firbek."  Nicos snickered.  "He bitched like the demons when
Altara told him that the marines would have to help load the powder in
the rockets."

"Firbek's always bitching, especially behind someone's back.  I don't
like the man all that much, but I couldn't say why."  Justen shrugged
and lifted the pitcher.

"Can't like everyone.  Just so he does his work."  Nicos turned the
iron again.  "This-coming to Sarronnyn- seemed like a good idea at the
time.  Now it's not looking quite so good."

"I know."

Nicos swung the iron onto the anvil, and Justen walked out of the
smithy and onto the covered porch.  In the hot, still air, Clerve sat
crumpled like a damp cloth on the bench, his clothes dark with sweat.
Justen looked down at his own clothes, even damper than the younger
man's.

Finally, in the silence, Justen picked up the bucket and the pitcher
and stepped out into the late summer sun, wondering when, if ever, the
Sarronnese summer would turn into autumn and the seemingly endless heat
would stop.  He trudged across the dust toward the pump.  Three
chickens gazed at him silently from the shade on the north side of the
old house.

"Too hot to cheep.  That's hot."  He filled the bucket and trudged back
to the porch, where he filled a mug for Clerve.

"Thanks, Justen.  I don't see how you do it.  You just keep going."

"Practice."  Justen frowned as belatedly he forced himself to
order-spell the water, both in the bucket and in Clerve's mug.  At
least, after badgering Krytella for almost an eight-day, he had learned
how to.  order-spell against water disease.  Of course it didn't help
if he didn't remember to use what he had learned.  Justen glanced at
Clerve.  He hoped that the one gulp the striker had taken wouldn't hurt
him.

The engineer wiped his forehead on his sleeve before pouring a mug for
himself and forcing himself to sip, rather than gulp, the lukewarm
water.

Finally, he picked up the pitcher and looked at his striker.  "Come on.
We need to get back to work on rocket casings."

Clerve sat up.  "Will the rockets really do any good?  Aren't the
Whites still advancing?"

"I don't know.  But they'll do more good than if we did nothing."

The two walked back into the smithy, where the hammers clanged and the
hammer mill thumped.

Justen set the full pitcher on the bench, then took up the sheet iron.
Clerve worked the bellows while Justen eased the metal into the forge
and watched it slowly change color.

In time, out came the cherry-red iron.

Clerve lifted the hammer ... let it fall, and raised it again ... let
it fall, and raised it again.  Every so often, he paused and wiped his
forehead.

In between the hammer strokes, Justen adjusted the iron on the anvil,
watching the worked metal get thinner and thinner.

When Clerve paused, Justen wiped the sweat off his forehead on his
upper sleeve.  He took the calipers and measured, then nodded at Clerve
and returned the metal to the forge.  After reheating the iron, this
time Justen took the smaller hammer and the flatter.  Following a last
set of taps, he stepped back and let the metal cool, nodding at
Clerve.

The younger man powdered the chalk line, then set the template against
the metal.  A quick set of snaps, and the rocket-casing outline
appeared in white on the parchment-thin metal.

With the heavy bench shears, they slowly cut out the casing.  The
distortion created by cutting the casing did not impair the rocket's
function much, not when compared to such precise forgings as turbine
blades or pump components.  Jus-ten laid the flat iron on the hearth
and took a deep swallow from the pitcher of water.

Would the rockets help?  What about the cannons that Gunnar said were
being moved along the river road?  How could the rockets help against
them?  Wasn't there some way?

With a deep breath, Justen brought one side of the casing into the
forge to heat it before punching the rivet holes and bending the metal
into its final cylindrical shape.  Later, somehow, he needed to think
about the cannon and powder.  Later.  Somehow.

XXXVIII

Justen eased less than a thimbleful of the ground powder onto the
hearth of the forge before stoppering the flask and setting it on the
iron plate on the workbench.  Then he took a pine splinter from the
shavings box and thrust it into the coals, blowing faintly until the
wood flared into flame and he could withdraw the splinter.

At full arm's length, he thrust the flaming tip into the powder,
closing his eyes and concentrating with his senses as the powder
flared.  After opening his eyes, Justen set the glowing splinter on the
hearth, pursing his lips.

Once again he poured a minute amount of the powder onto the hearth and
re stoppered the flask.  Again he closed his eyes and concentrated.
This time, the powder remained powder.

With a sigh, he picked up the pine splinter and thrust it back into the
coals until it again flamed.  Then he carefully touched off the powder,
his eyes closed and senses extended.  The brimstone-infused smoke
residue curled up from the plate.

Kkkchewww .  , .  Justen rubbed his nose, which continued to itch.  He
frowned and set aside the splinter as he reached for the powder flask.
Kkkccheww... After a series of sneezes, he rubbed his nose again, then
poured a fingertip of powder on the iron once more.  He concentrated,
trying to replicate the patterns.  Nothing happened.

With another deep breath, he recovered the splinter and lit it, then
thrust the flame into the tiny pile of powder, trying to hold in his
mind the combinations of joinings that led to the chaos of
destruction.

The order-patterns failed again.  Justen frowned.  The patterns
existed.  He just had to create the proper ones.  What did a fire need?
Something to burn .. and air.  A fully damped fire or stove or hearth
didn't work well.  Was there a link to the air?  Or did he need to
create one?

He reached for the powder once more .. . and concentrated ... and
reached for the powder ... and concentrated.

His eyes burned and his legs ached when... Whhsstt!  The brightness
burned through his closed eyelids, and the smithy seemed to lurch under
him for just an instant.

Dumbly, he looked at the iron.  Not a trace of powder remained.  Nor
was there any smoke.  He poured out another dribble of powder and tried
to replicate the patterns.

Whhssttt... The brightness burned at him, and the smithy lurched around
him, even though his feet remained planted on the ground.

Justen shook his head.  Did he really want to use the patterns?  His
brain seemed to almost whirl inside his skull.  After taking a deep
breath, he brushed off the iron and turned toward the door.

The stars shone coldly as Justen stepped into the early autumn evening.
The acrid smoke, not of powder but of a distant fire, burned in his
nostrils, carried northward along the river, foreshadowing the White
advance.  His tunic ruffled in the cool breeze, and he turned to the
door, which he slid closed as gently as he could.  Despite his efforts,
the squeaking was loud enough to silence the night insects for a
moment.

"Justen?  What in the demon's hell were you doing?"  Gunnar stood in
the darkness not ten steps away.

"The impossible."

Gunnar sniffed and looked toward the empty powder flask in Justen's
hand.  "I should have guessed.  Do you know what that felt like?"

"Felt like?"  Justen took another deep breath.

"That's what woke me.  It felt like you'd twisted order into chaos."

"Not exactly.  You build two small order-patterns, and when you link
them .. well, they create their own chaos."

"Order creating chaos?  That's impossible!"

"It doesn't work quite that way."  Justen tried to explain.  "It's more
like there's too much order for the structure, and because it can't be
held together, the expansion creates chaos-sort of like when you heat
water to steam."

Gunnar nodded in the darkness, a gesture that would have been invisible
to anyone but a wizard-or an engineer.  "Trust an engineer..."

"You don't sound pleased."

"I'm not sure that I am.  I think there's far more to what you've done
than you realize."  The older brother brushed his hair off his forehead
and stood silent in the darkness.

Justen waited.

"You've linked building and destroying, order and chaos."  Gunnar
laughed nervously.  "There have never been any Gray Wizards because no
one has figured out how to bridge order and chaos.  You have managed to
turn order into chaos.  But Gray magic has to work both ways.  Can you
turn chaos into order?"

"I don't think I'd even want to try-not even to preserve the Legend."

They both looked to the east, uphill at the dark walls.  Only a
scattering of torches or candles wavering through windows lit the
city.

"Good.  It might not be enough, even so," said Gunnar wryly.  "Now can
you let me get some sleep, without any more twisting order out of its
fabric?"

"It wasn't like that."

"It felt like that."

"All right."  Justen sighed.  "I'll see you in the morning."

"No, you won't.  I'm riding south to see if I can spy out the scope of
the White advance.  The Tyrant wants more details on those cannons, or
long guns.  I should be back by evening."

"Well, as you said earlier, make sure you get your ass back in one
piece."

"Right."  Gunnar laughed, men clasped Justen briefly.  "Good night,
except that it's more like good morning."

For a moment, Justen watched his brother walk toward the old dwelling.
Then he turned back to the barracks and his small room.

XXXIX

Justen paused outside the smithy door, looking up at the gray clouds,
feeling the faint breeze at his back, a breeze that actually promised
to cool the smithy.  Perhaps fall would arrive after all.

He turned back to look at the road.  For the past few days, the
rumbling of wagon wheels and the clopping of hooves had filled every
lull in the noisier work of the smithy.  The traffic on the main road
remained almost continuous.  Carts and coaches rolled north to
Rulyarth; troops and supplies straggled into Sarron before being
dispatched to the fortified earthworks southeast of the city.  Less
fortunate souls limped down the road, northward toward the ocean.

Justen shook his head and entered the smithy.  As he did, he felt as
though someone were looking over his shoulder and into the shop.  He
looked back, but no one was there.

"Well, make yourself useful."  Standing at the second forge with Nicos,
Altara set down her hammer and punch.  "These all need to be
riveted."

Justen studied the square, black iron frames, his eyes going from the
completed frames on the racks to the dark sections of wood.  Then he
walked over to the benches and picked up a piece of wood, then another,
examining the three stacks, each of a different shape.

Beyond the wood stood the kegs of nails and spikes.

The young engineer looked back over his shoulder again.  Still, no one
had come through the front door of the smithy.  "Have you seen Gunnar?"
he asked.

"He's on the hills west of Klynstatt, using the winds to spy out where
the damned wizards are putting their troops, especially the Iron
Guards."  Altara cleared her throat.  "We need to get these done.  We
have to get them in place before the Whites get too close."

Justen nodded.  "I'm surprised that Firbek isn't complaining that we
still don't have enough rockets."  He glanced through the open doorway
and into the yard, where the marines were working with the new
adjustable launcher.  "Has Firbek said anything about..."  He let the
words trail away.

"About your order-smoothing the rockets when they're launched?"  Altara
snorted.  "He's decided he likes me better than you, and you know how
much he likes me.  He asked if I'd help with the rockets if the Whites
reach the marsh defenses."

"If?  More like when."

"I share your optimism."  The chief engineer shrugged.  "I said I
would.  Nicos will handle the mines.  You can back up whoever needs
it-or follow whatever mischief you have in mind for the Whites."

Justen looked sharply at the older engineer.

"Gunnar said you ought to be free.  He didn't say why.  I don't argue
with Weather Wizards.  And no one is about to question either your
courage or your enterprise."  Altara cleared her throat and looked at
him.  "But you still need to help rivet those casings now."

Justen hung up his tunic and walked to the forge.  He looked at the
mine casings again.  In the press of survival, was serving order much
different from serving chaos?  Both seemed bent on inventing better
means of destruction.

After repacking the charcoal and pumping the great bellows until the
fire glowed nearly white-hot, he picked up the tongs and swung the
first section of casing into the forge, letting it heat until it
reached cherry red and he could punch out the rivet holes.

On the road outside, the wagons rumbled and the blue-clad troops
marched.  And women and men and their children walked northward.

Justen swung the iron from the forge and set it on the anvil.  Then he
lifted his hammer and punch.

XL

The Sarronnese forces and their earthworks formed an arc just below the
top of the hillside.  To the right were the Klynstatt Marshes, and
beyond them ran the River Sarron.  To the left, the northeast, were the
ironwood forests, where the darkness under the gnarled branches was
filled with heavy, twisted roots and dank potholes.  The odor of
stagnant water and the thin, warbling cry of the needle lizards
occasionally drifted southward.

Threads of black smoke rose in the southeast, marking the passage of
the White horde that had drawn itself up at the far end of the
Klynstatt valley.  Between the White forces and the Sarronnese, the
trade road ran like a brown cable tying two weights together.

Behind Justen, the old stone watchtower on the hilltop flew the blue
ensign with the eagle: the battle flag of Sarronnyn.  Justen stood on
the right-side edge of the earthworks and studied the road, not only
with his eyes, but with his senses.

Perhaps two kays away, partly shielded by a low rise not even steep
enough to be called a hill, the White forces had formed up under their
assorted banners: the crimson of Hydlen, the purple of Gallos, the
green of Certis, the gold of Kyphros, and, of course, the crimson-edged
white of Fairhaven and the crimson-trimmed gray of the Iron Guard.

Justen glanced back toward the stone watchtower that Zerlana had taken
for her command station.  Krytella and the healers waited behind a low
earth berm to the left of the tower.  Farther to the northwest, perhaps
four kays across the plateau, lay Sarron itself, with only browning
fields separating the city from the oncoming battle and its outcome.

A steady wind from the east, chill from the ever-present ice of the
Westhorns, flapped the few blue banners of the Sarronnese and the
green-and-black flag of the single detachment from Southwind,
hard-faced women all, from the youngest trooper to the grizzled
commandant.

Heavy gray clouds imparted a sense of impending doom.  Despite the cool
breeze, Justen wiped his forehead.  Was that sense of doom made even
stronger by the odor of burned fields and houses?  Or did it reflect
merely his own inexperience?  His fingers gripped the wood of the black
staff, suddenly slippery in his hands.

A low, thudding drum-roll issued from the chaos forces and echoed down
the valley toward the defenders.

Thurumm... thurumm... In a staccato rhythm, the hoofbeats of the White
lancers' mounts rumbled down from their emplacement on the far side of
the valley.  Behind the lancers waited the troops of Gallos and Certis,
as well as those of the Iron Guard.  Over a berm on the opposing
hillside flew a single white banner.  The chill from that small berm
drew Jus-ten's attention even as he dropped behind the earthworks.

The White lancers neared the foot of the hill held by the Sarronnese
and drew up on the higher ground above the marsh to Justen's right-just
out of easy bow range and just short of the buried mines under both the
transplanted hillside grass and the road.

A single fire bolt flashed from the area of the white banner and flared
toward the Sarronnese hillside, spreading until it impacted.  Several
thin lines of greasy black smoke spiraled skyward, but no screams
followed the flame.

The ground shook.  In a line behind the watchtower, the blue-clad
riders stood by their blindfolded mounts and waited.

Justen nodded.  So far, Zerlana had anticipated the wizards' tactics.

A semi-hush fell across the hillside; Justen waited.

Thwuppp!  A circular section of hillside between two trenches
erupted.

"Long guns!"  "They've got cannons!"  Clerve glanced at Justen.

"Gunnar thought they did."  Justen rubbed his forehead.  "That makes
sense.  We've got rockets," He studied the area.

"But they can't forge black iron," protested the apprentice.

"So .. . the Iron Guard can use plain iron or bronze, and we still
can't use chaos to fire their powder," snapped Jus-ten.

Thwuppp."  Screams followed the second shell.

Thwuppp!

Justen located the emplacement; three guns behind a low hill to the
left of the main body of the White forces.

Thwuppf

"Try the rockets!"  Firbek bellowed, his voice harsh.

Justen sensed rather than heard the flint and steel of a striker and
the whoosh of a naval rocket.  He also could feel Altara's order-touch
on the missile.  The smoking exhaust and the patch of fire on the front
of the hill shielding the guns confirmed the rocket's target.

A second rocket followed the first, with as little success.

Thwupp!  Another section of trenching exploded and strewed timber,
earth, and bodies across the hillside.

Justen extended his senses toward the guns until his head ached, but he
could not reach them.

Thwupp!  More churned earth and bodies appeared on the hillside.

"Keep down!"  Justen scrambled away from Clerve and along the trenching
to his left, holding the black staff in his left hand as he scrambled
around kneeling archers.

"Watch it!  Oh ... sorry, Scr."

But Justen was past the archers' squad leader, and the other archers
moved out of his way.  By the time he reached the end of the trench, he
was already breathing heavily.

Nearly half a kay of open hillside grasses, no more than knee-high,
separated the trenches from the scrub oak and thorn berries on the edge
of the ironwood forests.  "Do you want to do this?"

No one answered him.  He took several deep breaths, grasped the staff
more tightly.

Thwupp!

Even before the vibration from the impact of the incoming shell had
stopped, Justen levered himself out of the trench and ran for the
forest, hoping he was out of bow range, hoping the Whites would think a
cannon shot wasted on a single man.

"Who's that?"  a voice bellowed from behind the dust raised by the
Whites' shelling.

Justen ignored the voice and kept running, thinking as he did that he
was forgetting something important.

Thwuppp!

His breath ragged, Justen finally skidded behind a scrub oak, his feet
nearly sliding out from under him on the rough ground.  So far, the
Whites seemed content to wait out the Sarronnese forces.

Another set of rockets splattered against the front of the hill
protecting the White cannon.

Justen shook his head, wondering why Firbek didn't try to loft the
rockets over the hill.  But how could one gauge the trajectory?  Still,
it wouldn't do much good to fire directly at the hill protecting the
Whites' cannons.

Justen took another breath and headed downhill, his perceptions
extended.  He hoped there weren't too many White scouts or archers
out.

Less than three hundred kays downhill, the engineer paused as he sensed
the White archer just inside the deeper forest.  Flattening himself
under another scrub oak, he caught his breath.  He still couldn't feel
the cannons; he could only hear the continuing shelling and the
intermittent screams.

The Sarronnese were in trouble.  If they charged, the White Wizards
would fry them with fire bolts  And if they stayed in the trenches,
eventually the shells would destroy them.  If they retreated, all too
many would be cut down by the greater numbers of mounted White lancers
or the Iron Guard.

And Justen was trying to sneak past an archer, feeling helpless the
whole time, just to get close enough to the cannons to see if he could
duplicate his trick with the powder.

He began to crawl through the grass, trying to ignore the jabbing of
the rocks and the difficulty of carrying his staff.  After less than
thirty cubits, he paused under another scrub oak.

Thwupp!  Upslope, the shells continued to fall.

Think, he told himself.  What about a shield like the ones used on the
Black ships?  Could I hold it together without failing on my face while
walking half-blind through the brush and rough terrain?

He took another breath.

Whssst!  An arrow flew overhead.

Justen ducked, still trying to concentrate on weaving the light-shield
around himself.

Thwupp!  Yet another shell struck the hillside behind him.

Slowly, he wove the shield until his eyes saw nothing but blackness.
His mental senses provided only a rough image of the ground and the low
trees around him.

"Damned Black Wizard!  He's gone."

"Shoot anyway."

"Where?"

Justen edged downhill gingerly until his perceptions lost the first
archers-and picked up a second pair.  He took a deep breath and
continued on toward the gun emplacement.  Behind him, the shells
fell.

A faint rustling, the sound of boots, seemed to come from the ironwood
forest, but his senses seemed confused far beyond the point where the
heavy trees began.

He kept moving downhill.

Thwupp!

"There's a Black scout on the flank somewhere!  Aim for those bushes!
There!"

Justen flattened himself as arrows flew in his general direction, then
scrambled up and hurried more quickly downhill.  Even the grass seemed
to grab at his boots.

"He's closer.  Try there!"

Justen scrambled into a depression that might have been a dry streambed
and struggled downhill.

"Lost him ... for light's sake."  The voice from the forest was more
distant, and Justen hoped he stayed clear of the White Wizard who
seemed to be tracking him.

The gun emplacement was still hundreds of cubits away when he found he
could actually sense it, but his vision was so scattered that he pushed
onward in his darkness, finally halting short of the hill shielding the
cannons, as much afraid of Firbek's useless rockets as of the arrows
and cannons of the Whites.

Justen's legs shook as he settled into the grass and began to
concentrate on the powder in the White's plain iron shells.  Would his
effort work?  It had to.

He rubbed his forehead and took a deep breath, concentrating on
creating the special order of powder and air... Crummpp .. . crummppp
.. . crummppp.  The waves of successive explosions and fire welled over
the hilltop, burning away the grasses even on the top of the side
nearest Justen.  That twisting, wrenching, yet somehow unseen,
collision of order and chaos screamed like a runaway steam boiler
through his skull, and he crashed face-forward on the grasses and
dirt.

XLI

The ground rumbled, and a huge gout of flame exploded into the sky.

One of the three White Wizards standing behind the makeshift berm that
commanded the Fairhaven forces staggered, then crumpled into a heap.
The other two exchanged glances.

"Darkness-damned Blacks!"  Zerchas peered toward the roiling flames
where the cannon of the Iron Guard had stood moments before.  "How ...
what... Did you feel that twisting?"

Beltar wiped his forehead.  "I... never felt anything like that.  It
was like a flash of order turned into chaos."

"Every White in Candar felt it," snapped Zerchas.  "You're the
high-powered Chaos Master.  What was it?"

"I don't know."

The stockier wizard scuffed a white-leather boot in the dirt.  "I think
you'd better find out."

Beltar glanced across the valley, watching puffs of flame as an
occasional black iron arrowhead found a White lancer.  "It can't happen
again right now."

"Are you sure about that?"

"Yes.  Besides, whatever that Black did required powder, and there
isn't any more."

"There certainly isn't.  There aren't any more cannon, either."

"Ummm ..."  Eldiren struggled into a sitting position.

"Well?"  Zerchas looked at the slight wizard on the ground.  "Do you
know what happened?"

"Ummm ..."  Eldiren moistened his lips.  "Any water?"

Beltar extended his water bottle, and Eldiren swallowed.

"Never mind.  We've gotten half their forces already."  Zerchas turned
to the messenger in white.  "Tell Jekla to have the Fifth and Third
begin their assault.  The Fifth and Third.  Do you have that?"

"Yes, Scr.  Marshal Jekla is to have the Fifth and Third begin their
assault."

Beltar glanced at Zerchas.  "You still want me to hold back?"

"What point is there in your throwing fire against earthworks?"

"I could topple the city."

"Fine .. . but that would just make the Sarronnese more desperate and
cost us more troops.  Magic doesn't win battles," Zerchas snorted.
"Troops do."

"How about Jehan?  He's using magic to help the Iron Guard turn the
flank."

"The Guard will win the battle, not the magic."  Zerchas turned and
walked toward the hill crest where the marshals awaited him.

Eldiren looked at Beltar.  Beltar shrugged.  They both watched as the
purple banners sallied toward the earthworks of the Sarronnese.

XLII

The smell of smoke and brimstone, and burning grasses, and charred
bodies, seared Justen's nostrils and throat.  Still lying on the grass,
he coughed, holding back a retching sensation.

Crump ... A last, smaller, explosion rumbled behind the hill.

Slowly, the engineer rolled into a sitting position.  He rubbed his
throbbing forehead.  Now all he had to do was to get back to his own
side of the field.  He reknit his light-shield and began the walk
northward.

Past the confusion and screams from the White side, he made it halfway
up the long slope holding the Sarronnese forces, using the shallow but
dry streambed for cover from wizardly scans.  Then he had to stop.  His
unseeing eyes burned, and the pulsing within his head threatened to
split his skull.

The same rustling and muffled thudding he had heard on the way down
still appeared to be coming from the ironwood forest.  He frowned.
Could the Whites be sending troops through the ironwoods?  How?  The
thorn-trunked trees shredded leather like flower petals, and in places
there was hardly room for a single man, let alone for any real number
of troops, to squeeze through the briars and the thorns.

As he listened, the sound seemed to fade.  He shook his head and
continued uphill, not releasing his shields until he was well inside
the trenches.

"Scr..  . Where'd you come from?"

"The cannons," Justen answered without thinking, still rubbing his
forehead.

"You did that?"  The archers' squad leader jabbed a thumb toward the
blackened hillside where the cannons had been.  Only smoke twisted up
from behind the hill.

Justen shrugged and edged back to where Clerve waited.

"Where did you go?"  the apprentice asked.

"I tried a trick with the cannons."  Justen sat down on the damp clay
of the trench's floor.

"That was you?"  Clerve looked to the engineer.  "The whole
order-fabric shivered, like a sour copper note.

"Thanks.  That's all I need to hear."

A drum-roll rumbled across the valley.

"Justen!  The Whites are charging.  Right toward us!"

"They won't get here, not yet."  Still, Justen levered himself to his
knees and peered over the heavy timber brace at the slope below.

A line of purple-clad levies surged uphill toward the lower front line
of the trenches where the Sarronnese pikes and halberds waited.

Cruump!  The lower hillside and road erupted.  Even the timbered clay
wall before Justen and Clerve buckled, and the concussion threw them
against the rear wall.

Justen staggerd up and peered through seared eyes downhill.  The
sundered earth had flowed uphill and buried the first line of defenders
within their earthworks.  Another wave of whiteness from the
devastation struck him, and he slumped to the bottom of the trench
under his own darkness, darkness propelled with a white agony that
slammed at his skull.

How long it was before he climbed out of the white agony, Justen did
not know, only that his fingers were clutched around a heavy timber.

"Mother of light!"  screamed a soldier from the revetment below, a
trench above the one that had become a tomb.

Justen squinted his eyes against the pain of the wounded soldiers.
Their agony pounded against his senses.  His upper arm throbbed.  A
wooden splinter had ripped through his jacket and tunic.  He looked at
it dumbly as behind his timbered wall, he struggled against the pain
searing through his skull.  How had Dorrin stood it?

He swallowed and touched the wooden fragment in his arm gingerly,
swallowing with relief at the knowledge that the wound was superficial.
Despite the burning in his eyes and the hammering in his skull, he
worked out the wood, then glanced at the other side of the trench,
where Clerve lay sprawled facedown in the clay.  The white hammers beat
through his skull so heavily that he could barely concentrate or see
beyond a few feet.

In the lull that followed the destruction, Justen bent down and touched
Clerve, sensing the ragged breathing, and offered a small touch of
order to the striker.  The younger man's breathing steadied, and
strangely, the throbbing in Justen's skull subsided to a duller ache,
so regular that it took him a moment to realize that another drum-roll
had begun.

He peered downhill to see a wave of troops, both crimson and purple,
marching forward.

A flight of black-tipped arrows cascaded into the ranks of the White
forces, and puffs of flame flared intermittently.  Justen nodded to
himself.  Not all the White forces were chaos-tinged, probably not even
the majority save for the White lancers, who drew directly on chaos,

A low moan caught his attention, and he knelt beside Clerve.

"Ohhh..."

Justen offered Clerve a sip of water as the apprentice pulled himself
into a sitting position.

"Hurts .. ."  mumbled Clerve as he swallowed.

Justen touched the heavy red wetness soaking the side and back of the
other's sleeve.  How had he missed the bleeding?  The engineer looked
around the debris of the half-collapsed trench, but could find nothing
to bind the wound with.  He glanced past the timbers.

A wave of yelling and the intermittent sounds of steel on steel echoed
uphill as the Fairhaven troops crashed over the first line and poured
into the trench works splitting to follow the trenches to the higher
emplacements.

The banners continued to push uphill, reaching halfway to the higher
defenses.  Arrows-not many, but enough-flew from the trenches beneath
the watchtower toward the first ranks, trying to slow the advance.

Justen gnawed on his lower lip as he edged toward Clerve.  "... got to
move."

The apprentice squinted, his eyes rolling, before he toppled backwards.
The blood kept welling from his arm and shoulder.  Justen lifted the
youth in his arms and staggered upright.  He glanced back.  The banners
following the troops neared the trenches despite the handfuls of arrows
that rained down upon the Whites' uphill charge.

Justen ignored the words of the soldiers he passed as he struggled
through the trench that angled uphill, all the time half-wondering how
he could have overlooked Clerve's wound.

Bent under the youth's weight, he trudged through the damp, clinging
clay in the trench bottom, determined to reach the healers.  How long
it took, he did not know, only that his head pounded again by the time
he laid Clerve on an empty pallet.

"Ugghhh ..."  A trooper on an adjoining pallet retched.

"This one looks like a pincushion."  A cool voice drifted in from out
of his sight.

"There's Justen!  That's Clerve."

At the sound of Krytella's voice, Justen tried to turn his head, but
the effort was so great that blackness clouded his vision.  He steadied
himself.

"Can you-"

But the healer had already begun to strip away ruined fabric.  Justen
slowly walked back toward the crest of the hill.  His feet carried Him
without thought.

To the left of the watchtower stood Altara, beside the left rocket
launcher.  The blankness in her eyes showed that her senses were
elsewhere, upon the rockets, upon the struggling forces halfway up the
hill.

Two trumpet blasts blurted from the watchtower, followed by two more.

Whhhsttt!

"Tower.  Crank it down a notch," ordered Firbek.

One of the marines loaded a rocket, while a second adjusted the
launching frame.  At the left launcher, another set of marines
replicated the actions.

"Strike!"

Whhsttt!  Whssstt!

Justen's eyes followed the smoke of the black projectiles, watching as
two fiery impacts scattered Certan and Gallosian levies across the
hillside.

"Load and strike!"  Whhhsttt!  Whhssstt!

Another impact, and another recoil of whiteness and death drove Justen
back a step, almost into the unmoving Altara.  He looked down to see
that the chief engineer had locked one hand around an earthwork brace
so firmly that both hand and arm had bleached into an unhealthy
whiteness.

He winced at the pain that spilled from her and stepped back another
pace.

"Darkness..."

His eyes turned to the long slope below, then toward the right-hand
slope, between the marsh and the edge of the earthworks, where the
Sarronnese cavalry charged into the flank of the White forces, driving
them down and back.

Three quick trumpet blasts followed, and the blue horse wheeled and
retreated, but not before a pair of fire bolts turned half a dozen
riders and their mounts into charred heaps.

Then the arrows flew-regular arrows, Justen noted absently-and even
more of the Gallosians fell.

Justen retreated another few paces and leaned against the cool stones
of the tower.

A young man darted up to him and handed him a chunk of cheese.  "The
lady healer said for you to eat this."  He was gone before Justen could
open his mouth.

Whhhssttt!

Another rocket roared down the hillside, followed by another.

The engineer sat on the damp clay and took a bite of the cheese,
glancing toward the marines and the launchers.

"Hold it!"  Altara broke from her concentration.

"Why?"  asked Firbek.

"We're hitting more of our troops than theirs.  Besides, they're
pulling back.  Wait... for either the Iron Guard or the White
lancers."

"Stand down."  Firbek's voice was dull.

Justen mechanically ate the cheese, then sipped lukewarm water from the
bottle he had forgotten was on his hip.  The worst of the pounding in
his head lifted.  Almost a hush had fallen across the heat of midday.

Altara came over and sat down beside him.  "Might as well rest while we
can.  They'll be back.  Outside of the rockets, we don't have much
left."

Justen offered her the water bottle.

The chief engineer took a swallow and handed it back.  "Thanks.  What
did you do to the cannon-or do I really want to know?  It felt like you
were playing with chaos, but you sure don't show any signs of it."

"I figured out how to combine order and powder to make chaos."  Justen
took a deep breath.  "Is it always this way?"

"What way?  You've been in more of this than I have."  Altara gave a
wry smile.

"So ... disorganized.  I don't mean the fighting ... but things happen,
and I can't seem to put the pieces together.  Clerve was wounded, and I
just gave him water and looked at him for a while.  Somehow, at first I
didn't even see he was hurt.  How does anyone keep track of what's
happening?"

"Most people don't, I'd bet."  Altara glanced across at the marines,
all but Firbek sitting behind the low timbers that braced the back of
the hill crest berm.  "Firbek just kept firing those rockets."

A deep drum-roll echoed.

"Shit.  That sounds like the White lancers."  Altara struggled to her
feet.

The drum-rolls continued, answered in turn by four short blasts from
the Sarronnese signal trumpets.

As in the previous battles, the White lancers rode forward at an even
pace.  The tips of their white-bronze lances glittered with cold fire.
Forming out of bow range, they were almost five deep.

"Ready!"  ordered Firbek.

"Hold it," snapped Altara.  "Wait until they're closer.  Aim for the
flat just where the slope begins.  They'll have to slow there, and
they'll probably bunch up."

Another roll of drums, and the White lancers charged.

"Ready!"

A staccato trumpet command warbled from the Sarronnese watchtower, and
the remaining pikes lifted on the left side of the third line of
trenches.  The lower trenches were vacant, nearly leveled by the
fighting, the fire bolts the cannon impact, and the earlier mines.

Whhsstt!  The first rocket arced over the lancers and flared on the
hillside behind the White cavalry.

"There ... on the flat.  Lower the launcher!"  Firbek jabbed toward the
White lancers.

Whhssttt .. . whhsttt!  Two more rockets flared off the hill crest  One
exploded harmlessly in midair, far short of the lancers.  The second
gouted flame across the right end of the charge, and dirty white ashes
drifted out among the cattails and swamp grass of the marsh.

Another trumpet blast, and black-tipped arrows began to strike the
White lancers as well.

"Strike!"

Whhsttt!  Whsstt!

"Strike!"

Whhhsttt!

The screams of men and horses echoed from the Fairhaven side of the
field for the first time in the day.  Yet the lancers pounded onward,
past the flat and to the edge of the Sarronnese trenches-and around
them, using the thin wedge of ground between the end of the earthworks
and the slope to the marsh as a turning point before riding down the
pike-holders from behind.

"Aim at the trench edge!  There!"  snapped Justen, knowing that Altara
was caught with her senses order-smoothing the rockets.

"Strike!"  Firbek ignored the engineer.

Justen tapped the marine on the shoulder.  "Aim at the trench edge!
There!"

Firbek glared but shouted to the marines, "Uphill!  A touch to the
right.  At the end of the trenches."

Whhhsttt..  . whsssttt... The first rocket charred a patch of cattails
in the marsh.  The second rocket, aimed with a touch of order supplied
by Justen, exploded on point: amid a clump of White lancers turning the
flank of the Sarronnese forces.

Hssttt!  A lone fireball arced over the earthworks and flared across
the right launcher.

"Eeee ..."  The marine aiming the launcher fell forward, burning.

Justen swallowed hard, trying not to retch at the odor of charred
meat.

While he fought to control his churning stomach, another marine took
the left-hand wheel on the launcher and readjusted the crank.  The
woman marine slipped another rocket into place.

"Strike it!"

Whhsttt."  The rocket exploded in midair.

Whhsttt!

So did the next rocket.  Justen frowned.  Had the Whites discovered a
way to explode powder in black iron?

The heavy roll of drums increased, and the levies' from Hydlen and
Lydiar began to march forward, following the path of the White
lancers.

"Strike!"

Altara continued to concentrate on the rockets.

Whhhsttt!

Despite the huge gaps in the ranks of the lancers-fully two-thirds of
them had been killed, fired, or downed-the remainder hacked their way
uphill, seemingly ignorant of the damage created by black iron
arrowheads and rockets.  Behind them, stolidly marched the White
levies, their small shields held high against the iron arrows.

The Fairhaven strategy was working, Justen realized.  In trying to hold
off the lancers, the Sarronnese had failed to target the levies, and
now those levies were more than halfway up the hill.

Yet... still the crimson-and-gray banners had not moved.

Why has the Iron Guard not been pressed into the fight?  And why are
there so few fire bolts from the White Wizards?  Justen glanced from
one end of the field to the other.

Whhhsttt!

Another drum-roll echoed across the valley.  Now the gold-and-green
banners began to move forward.  How many troops do the damned Whites
have ?

"Strike!"

Whhsttt!

Still ... the rockets went off, although now half of them were
exploding in midair rather than where they were aimed.

Justen's head ached, and he did not understand how Altara remained
standing.

Hsssttt!

Justen ducked as another wizardly fire bolt arced past, splattering on
the antique stones of the watchtower.  His eyes drifted back to the
lower right-hand side of the field, where the Whites surged upward.
Below them, it appeared as though the marsh had solidified.  Realizing
that the dark masses were bodies, Justen forced himself to swallow the
bile in his throat.  Everywhere he looked there were bodies: burned
bodies, ashes, bodies with arrows through them, bodies coated in dull
red.

Another drum-roll rumbled across the hill crest  Justen shivered, then
turned.  The sound had come from the northeast, from the direction of
the iron wood forests.

Not five hundred cubits to the north, formed up at the edge of the iron
woods, were hundreds of dark-clad troops.

"Darkness!"  Justen swore.  The banners on the field below had been
decoys.  He should have trusted his feelings!

Another drum-roll and the Iron Guard began to march forward.  Arrows
arced from behind them toward the Sarronnese.  Justen dropped in back
of a timber brace, now wondering what he could do.

Suddenly, a familiar figure appeared beside the watch-tower.  Justen
shivered as he felt the webs of order building around Gunnar.  He could
sense his brother's call to the great winds and the storms from the
Roof of the World.

A cold, whining, whistling wind whipped out of the southeast and across
the hillside.  The Sarronnese battle ensign flapped wildly.

Behind Justen, Firbek continued to direct the rockets against the
remnants of the White lancers, apparently oblivious to the threat from
the ironwood forest.

"Strike!"

Whhhsttt!

Justen glanced back toward Gunnar and the oncoming Iron Guard, and he
shivered as the wind continued to rise and the sky darkened.

Gunnar stood apart from the tower, like an ancient tree rooted in
time.

Scattered ice pellets began to rattle against the stones of the tower.
Dark clouds roiled into the once-clear sky, and a rumble of heavy
thunder rolled across the valley as the storm swept down upon the White
forces.

The drum-rolls faltered for an instant.

Hhhssttt!  Another fire bolt flared-this time from behind the Iron
Guard-and splat ted against the watchtower.  Justen, fighting his
headache and feeling of despair, struggled to throw an order-shield
around Gunnar.

Hhhsstt!  The next fire bolt angled wide of the Storm Wizard.

Justen kept concentrating, clinging to the heavy timber for support as
he poured his strength into creating the barrier that would protect
Gunnar while his brother called the storms.

"Form up down there!"

Justen frowned at the words as another figure-massively built and in
blacks-turned from the rocket emplacements and walked swiftly past
Justen and across the ridge through the wind toward the Black Weather
Wizard.

Justen frowned.  Then he stood.  "Gunnar!"

Locked into the winds, Gunnar remained rooted.  Justen began to run
toward his brother, wishing for his staff, but it was buried in the
hillside collapse.  He pulled out his belt knife, realizing that he
would not reach Gunnar before Firbek did.

"Firbek!"

The big marine lifted his blade.

The winds whistled, and the ice fell, pounding, slowing the advance of
the Iron Guard to less than a crawl.

Justen twisted the shield between the marine and Gunnar.  Firbek
paused, and Justen lunged forward, plunging the knife into Firbek's
right shoulder.  The marine dropped his own blade, but his left hand
slammed Justen to the ground, causing Justen to release his knife as
well as his order-shield.  Then Justen grabbed the blade that Firbek
had dropped.

Firbek's open palm slammed across Gunnar's unprotected face just as
Justen swung the blade up.  Firbek jumped back, but Gunnar staggered,
then toppled onto the trampled brown grass.

Justen walked toward the marine.  Firbek backed away, circling around
toward the vacant rocket emplacements.  Jus-ten advanced, wondering if
Firbek had dismissed the marines or if they had fled when they had seen
the Iron Guard.  Then he saw the black-clad figures, now bearing
blades, circled around the Sarronnese force leader.

The winds subsided, and the ice pellets became less frequent.

"Choose, Engineer!  Me ... or your brother."  He pointed toward the
oncoming Iron Guard.

Justen could sense both of the oncoming White forces.  Blue-clad
figures began to scurry over the top of the hill, hastening back toward
a Sarron that seemed impossibly distant.

Justen angled toward the nearest rocket launcher, Firbek's blade still
in his hand, nearly tripping on the still form of Altara.  His eyes on
Firbek, Justen bent down.  The chief engineer was unconscious but
breathing, and he offered her the slightest touch of order before
straightening.

"So ... what are you going to do, Firbek?"  Justen tried to turn the
wheeled frame of the rocket launcher toward the advancing gray-clad
forms.  "Join the Iron Guard?"

The big marine used both arms to turn the second launcher toward
Justen.  "it's not a bad idea.  At least Fairhaven isn't filled with
hypocrites."

"You really believe that?"

"Look at the Mighty Ten!  They could destroy anything on the ocean, and
the Council just builds each ship bigger than the last but insists that
we can't help anyone.  We've got shitty rockets when we need shells."

"This isn't the time for philosophy.  Why don't you turn that downhill
before the lancers get here?"

"For what?"  The striker in Firbek's hand flicked.

Justen, ignoring his searing headache, threw a light-shield around
himself and stepped aside.

Whhhsttt!

Justen jerked sideways, then turned toward Firbek again.

Firbek touched the striker to the second rocket and yanked the launcher
around, toward the engineer he could not see.

Whhsstt!  The rocket flared past Justen, who was now running.

Justen swung the sword, at the last moment turning it so that the flat
of the blade slammed against Firbek's head.

The marine dropped.

"Aaaeee .. ."

A searing whiteness blinded Justen for a long moment.  He shook his
head to clear it.  His mouth dropped open as he looked to the left of
the watchtower and saw Sarronnese troops dashing past the burning
command tent, now no more than drifting ashes.

After barely glancing at the unconscious marine, Justen sprinted toward
the blazing tent beneath the stone watch-tower.  Stopped by the
heat-hotter, seemingly, than a forge-he glanced around.  Gunnar
tottered up beside him.

"Do something!"  Justen yelled.  "Call a storm .. . anything !"  The
ends of his hair crinkled as he moved toward the flames.

"Don't you feel it?"  Gunnar shook his head sadly.

Justen opened his mouth, then shut it.  The tent contained only bodies.
"That bastard ..."

"Who?"  Gunnar squinted.

Hhhsstt!  A fire bolt splashed across the ancient stones of the tower.
Justen staggered, then turned back toward the rocket launchers.  He had
taken only three steps before the first crimson banner-and more than
two-score lancers- surged over the hilltop.  He looked over toward the
ironwood forests, only to see the Iron Guard less than two hundred
cubits from the tower, marching in tight array.

He glanced back toward the spot where the remaining marines had
gathered and saw Altara's tall figure, blade in hand.  The black-clad
marines and the remaining Sarronnese guards were marching swiftly back
toward Sarron, their shields held high against arrows.

"Shield yourself!"  shouted Gunnar.  "They're all around us.  Get back
to Sarron!"

As Justen watched, his brother disappeared from sight, although Justen
could sense the bending of the light.

Hhhsttt!  Another fire bolt flared past, so close that could feel the
heat.

Justen gripped the blade he had taken from Firbek more tightly,
whirling toward the squad of Sarronnese beneath the watchtower. Circled
around the tall, blond woman, the Sarronnese backed away from the White
forces, almost running toward the road to escape the pincer-like
movement of the lancers and the Iron Guard.

Hhhsstt!  Hhssttt!  Two fire bolts flared past Justen.

"Aeeeiii .. ."  One Sarronnese trooper choked out a scream before
falling in a charred heap.  Four others just fell silently.

Feeling as though he walked through heavy, sticky mud, Justen turned
toward Sarron and tried to knit the light back around himself.  Even
the darkness wavered.

Trapped!  If he didn't shield himself, the archers or the Guard would
get him.  If he did, he wouldn't have enough strength left to escape
the White forces.

He ground his teeth against the throbbing in his head, the watery
feeling in his legs, and took a step, then another.  Downhill... toward
the marsh.  Toward water, the one thing that the damned White Wizards
couldn't incinerate or twist.  Toward water, far closer than the
all-too-distant walls of Sarron.

He took another step ... and held the light-shield .. . and another ...
and held the light-shield .. .

His head pounded.  When the pounding occasionally stopped, fire seared
across his skull.  But he struggled on downhill, knowing he dared not
fall.  The White Wizards seared their battlefields clean of all bodies,
dead or not.

Another step, and another .. . until the steepness of the slope leveled
into a softer footing.  Softer between the bodies, at least.

At the edge of the marsh, he stopped, surrounded by death.  Out in the
deeper water, in the late afternoon, a single frog croaked, and Justen
could occasionally hear the buzz of flies and the drone of mosquitoes
over the sound of marching feet and the hissing of fire bolts

The way north was too steep.  In his darkness, he edged southward,
slowly, the mud sucking at his boots.  He stepped around and over the
bodies that seemed endless.

At some point, he released the light-shield, too tired to hold it, and
looked back.  He swallowed, realizing that he had traveled less than
two kays and that the systematic looting and weapons recovery of the
Whites continued.  No one looked his way, or perhaps no one cared.  He
staggered southwest, away from the battle, away from the Whites, and
away from Sarron.

At last there were no more bodies-only marsh and mud and mosquitoes and
flies and dampness and stenches he could not identify.

After the real darkness of twilight fell, he climbed onto higher
ground, eventually falling asleep behind a stone wall, not far from a
road whose destination he did not know.

XLIII

"Justen!  Where's Justen?"  The voice rasped from Gunnar's raw
throat.

"We don't know."  Altara glanced again to the south, but the columns of
smoke were too far away to be seen.

"Damn!  Can't even move my head."  Gunnar's voice died away, and his
eyes closed slowly as though he were fighting sleep itself.  Lying on
the marines' rocket cart, now empty of weapons, he looked more dead
than alive.  The bloody marine lying next to him moaned as the cart
lurched around the corner and down toward the compound where those of
Recluce had prepared to defend Sarron.

Still walking quickly to keep up with the cart, the chief engineer
placed a cold cloth on the magician's forehead, then pulled herself
onto her mount.

"No healers?"  asked Deryn, her arm still encased in leather braces.

"No; They're .. . dead."

"Damn Whites.  Why'd they fire on the healers?"

Altara shrugged.  "Why does chaos do anything?"

"I can't believe it about Firbek."

"He likes fighting," added a third voice.  "I expect he'll do rather
well in the Iron Guard."

"We're leaving," announced Altara.  "As soon as we can."

"Leaving?"

"Leaving.  We've got a Storm Wizard who damn-near died.  Almost half of
our engineers and all of our healers are dead or missing.  And Sarron
will fall in days, if not sooner."  She glanced back over her shoulder
at the pink granite walls.  "So much for the Legend."

The ground trembled underfoot.

XLIV

In the gray before dawn, Justen sat on the edge of the stone wall,
slowly chewing the handful of overripe red berries he had picked from a
late-bearing bush and listening to the twitter of insects and the
whisper of the breeze from the north.  With the wind came the faint
odor of ashes.

The trees were turning, not golden or red, but a muddy brown.  Was that
because the trees of Sarronnyn were different, or because of the influx
of chaos?

The engineer shook his head wryly.  The Whites had done nothing to the
trees.  How easy it was to think of everything in personal terms.  The
trees and the stones would endure whether order or chaos triumphed in
Sarronnyn.

He swallowed the last of the berries.  After having slept poorly and
breakfasted on a few handfuls of berries, he was still tired and
hungry.  He had no pack, no staff, no knife, a blade without a
scabbard, the clothes on his back, perhaps three golds and a few
silvers, and a handful of copper pennies.  He also had no mount, and
most of the White forces stood between him and Sarron.

At least, after the red berries he could stand up without feeling like
he would fall over.  One tiling was clear enough.  He was not about to
get anywhere, especially around the Whites and back to Sarron-or to
Rulyarth-on foot.  With a deep breath, he looked around.  To the
southeast, not much more than a kay away, stood a small cot with two
outbuildings.  The lack of smoke from the chimney and the overall
stillness indicated that the holding was probably deserted.

Justen turned to the southwest, but the Klynstatt Marsh continued to
straddle the River Sarron for another two to three kays.  The swamp was
the main reason why most boat travel stopped just above Sarron itself.
While it was highly unlikely that anyone would follow him through the
marsh, he was doubtful that they would have to, since the large water
lizards were not known for their finicky appetites.

He climbed up onto the stones, carefully balancing himself by holding
on to a scrub oak that grew beside the half-tumbled wall, and looked
back to the north.  A low pall of smoke, or fog, hung over the northern
end of the marsh.  Even as far away as he was, he could sense the White
forces to the east of the river and the marsh, presumably preparing for
the assault on Sarron itself.

He jumped down from the wall and crossed the twenty cubits of browning
grass that separated him from the deserted road.  When he reached the
strip of clay, he studied the ground for tracks, but there were only a
handful, all headed to the south, away from the battlefield.

There would be no mounts to the south, just refugees.  Justen turned
north, prepared to cast a light-shield around himself at any moment,
his ears and senses alert for White outriders or travelers.

Only the sound of the insects, the occasional terwhit of an unseen
bird, and the rustling of the marsh grass beyond the road and across
the wall to his left broke the quiet of the early morning.

Justen had covered nearly two kays when the winding road seemed to sway
underfoot and he stumbled.  After recovering his balance, he stopped,
putting his hand to his forehead.  Was he weaker than he thought?  He
lifted his hand, looked at it, and concentrated.  The road swayed under
him again.  He glanced northward and caught sight of an oak, the higher
branches wavering as if blown by the wind.  But the air remained quiet,
almost heavy in its stillness.

The ground continued to tremble as Justen hurried to the next hill
crest where he could gain a better view of the approaches to Sarron.

As he paused on the crest, he pursed his lips-so visible was the focus
of chaos emanating from the old watchtower that had been Zerlana's
command post.  Even though he could not see Sarron, he had no doubt
about what was happening there.

Should he continue?  He smiled wryly.  The more chaos, the more chance
he had of finding a stray mount unattended-or at least of being
undetected.  Besides, he had no desire to cross most of Candar on foot,
not if he could find a way around the Whites and rejoin whatever
remained of the engineers.

Justen quickened his steps slightly, heading northward.

XLV

In the early light, Beltar glanced at the two blue-clad bodies outside
the watchtower.  The dark-haired serjeant's eyes were open, sightless.
The other corpse lay facedown.  Neither captive had revealed much about
the Recluce engineers.  Beltar raised a hand, and a hint of flame
flickered around the bodies.  Only white powder remained, drifting away
on the wind.

"Much neater that way," he muttered.

The shortest wizard frowned, scuffing a white-leather boot across the
fire-hardened clay.  "Don't waste your strength."

The third wizard rubbed his chin, eyes flicking from Eldiren to Beltar
and back again.

"I'm not exactly a weakling, Eldiren."  Beltar looked to the other
wizard.  "What do you think, Jehan?"

"I doubt few have your powers, Beltar."  Jehan's tone was dry.  "Except
perhaps Zerchas, and he always points out that wizardry has its
limits."

Beltar snorted and stepped through the open archway.  He climbed the
two-score steps of the watchtower.  From the open battlements, the
entire city of Sarron was visible to the northwest, its pink towers
glowing in the early morning light.  The watchtower from where the
three wizards surveyed Sarron cast a long shadow like an arrow toward
the city.  A faint cloud of brown smoke rose above the city, and early
as it was, a line of figures stretched from the gate downhill toward
the River Sarron.

"What do you plan?"  asked Jehan.

"To bring Sarron down, of course."  Beltar's mouth smiled, but his eyes
did not reflect the smile.

Beltar turned and, eyes closed, stood motionless on the stones.  A
faint white haze shimmered around him.

Jehan swallowed, looked at Eldiren.  Eldiren shrugged and looked toward
the northwest and the city.

The ground shivered, once, twice.  A faint wave rolled through it,
lifting the beaten grass and the ripped clay of the battlefield in a
swell, then the fields beyond, before momentarily disappearing from
sight on the downhill slope that dropped away from the old tower.

The tower itself rocked with the beginning of another swell, and Jehan
put out a hand to the battlement to steady himself.  Eldiren glanced
from Jehan to Beltar to the fields in the low valley that separated the
tower from Sarron.  The first series of swells crossed the green
expanse.

Another set of shudders rolled from the tower, the swells seemingly
growing in height as their distance from the White Wizards increased.
The handful of horses held by the lancers below whinnied.  Several
skittered, as though they wanted to escape their holders.

"Hold, damn you ,.."  "..  . blindfold them .. ."

"Should have thought of that earlier ..."

With yet another shudder, the land heaved again.  One stone dropped
from the tower to the ground, and a horse reared, its whinny almost a
scream.  A dull rumbling echoed from the ground beneath.  To the
northwest, the towers of Sarronnyn swayed, Faint cracks echoed back
toward the wizards, barely audible above the scuffling of the horses,
the whinnies, and the low curses of the lancers just beyond the
tower.

With an even louder crack, sharp as a whip, a corner split from one of
the distant towers.  The section hung motionless for an instant before
swaying out slowly and dropping down beyond Sarron's city walls.  A
gout of dust marked the impact.

Beltar shifted his weight silently, and another set of tremblors raced
through the ground toward Sarron.

The city walls wavered, rocking slowly back and forth, until more
white-pink stones began to tumble.

Jehan swallowed again.  Eldiren wore a grim smile.  Bel-tar's face was
expressionless, but sweat collected on his forehead above his
still-closed eyes.

With each successive tremblor, more stones toppled from the towers and
walls, some of them crashing downhill toward the River Sarron, but most
into the city.  Thin plumes of smoke began to rise from behind the
now-jagged walls.  Soon the plumes were thicker, darker, and joined by
columns of white smoke, until a heavy pall spilled over walls and
city.

Another loose stone dropped from the watchtower, and Jehan glanced from
the gap in the crenelation to Sarron itself even as an entire section
of the city wall collasped like a waterfall of stone and a huge gout of
dust billowed skyward.

The smoke over Sarron grew even heavier, blurring the lines of the
battered walls, and the figures on the main road scurried like ants
from a disrupted hill toward the river.  The sound of distant shrieks,
screams, and wails blended into a low, moaning buzz.

The sun had climbed well clear of the horizon before Beltar reopened
his eyes and looked out upon the distant smoldering pile of
rubble-rubble that still shivered with aftershocks, rubble that was
crowned too often with tongues of flame.  Greasy black smoke mingled
with white smoke to pour into the sky, and flames licked at the
horizon.

"Did you leave anyone?"  whispered Eldiren.

Beltar turned.  "Perhaps.  Those away from the buildings and walls."

"Why didn't you do that in the battle?"  asked Jehan.

Beltar turned and made a sweeping gesture over the ash-covered and
churned earth of the hillside to the south of the tower.  "It's almost
impossible to destroy a braced earthwork."

"But you could have sneaked around through the forest and destroyed the
city.  Their army would have surrendered," pointed out Eldiren.

"Then we would have had thousands of angry armed men and women who had
absolutely nothing to lose.  Because they rejected our terms, we could
destroy the city.  That's accepted by people.  Destroying cities
without fighting battles isn't... at least not until you've fought more
than a few."

"But that's crazy."  Eldiren shook his head.

"No.  That's war."  Beltar started down the stairs as hazy clouds began
to gather around the smoking ruins of Sarron.

A faint smile crossing his lips, Jehan nodded before following the
other two down the narrow steps of the watch-tower.

XLVI

Just around the bend in the road, past a copse of scrubby willows,
stood something alive.  Justen extended his senses, smiling as he
caught the feeling of a horse.  He frowned, trying to discern whether a
rider also rested nearby, but he could sense nothing.

Carefully, he drew his cloak of light around himself and eased as
silently as he could along the road .... stopping, listening, and
easing forward .. . stopping, listening, and easing forward .. . until
he passed the willows.

When he was convinced that only the horse waited, he dropped the shield
and looked.  A chestnut gelding stood beside the road, grazing the
short grass that grew on the side away from the marsh.  Justen grinned,
thinking about his already-sore feet, and eased toward the horse.  He
paused as he saw the dark stains across the saddle, on the blanket and
the chestnut's mane.

The gelding whinnied.  Justen took another step and stopped.  The
chestnut whuffed and sidestepped away from the road and into the stub
bled grain field backing away from the hedgerow that seemed to start
with the scrubby willows.

"Easy, fellow.  Easy .. . now."  The engineer stepped forward.

For a moment, the gelding just watched.  Then he lifted his head and
sidestepped again.

"Easy .. ."  Justen took a small step.  So did the gelding.  Justen
tried again, but the wary chestnut continued to back away.

Finally, Justen readied out with a sense of order to reassure the
skittish horse.

Wheee .. . eeee!  Almost as if Justen had burned him, the big gelding
wheeled and galloped away across the stubble, puffs of dust rising as
his hooves struck the ground.

Idiot!  Of course you scared him.  He's a White mount.  The engineer
frowned.  Will I have that trouble with any mount?  He shook his head.
Not all the Whites had been equally chaos-tinged, and with the numbers
who had been killed and wounded, there had to be some available mounts
somewhere ... didn't there?

Two twisting turns in the road later, he encountered another mount, but
the sense of Whiteness was so strong that the engineer just sighed and
trudged onward, wondering if the Whites would have totally leveled
Sarron before he could even get five kays down the road.

Justen paused and looked to the marsh and back to the road.  The trail
that skirted the marsh-the one he had taken the evening before-could
not have been more than three kays long, yet the road twisted and
turned so much like a lizard that its length was closer to twice the
length of the trail.  He took another deep breath as he sensed another
horse.

A small bay mare grazed near the road, on the marsh side.  Justen
frowned as he saw the blood-streaked saddle.  Pausing behind a scrub
oak, he listened, but save for the distant vibrations of wagons and
troops, he could hear nothing.  Then he stepped forward.

The saddle pad was gray.  Justen extended his senses, but there was no
sign of chaos beyond a faint lingering hint of Whiteness, as if someone
tinged with disorder had paused and departed.  Nor could he sense
anyone else near the horse.

L Slowly, the engineer inched forward.  The mare looked up for a
moment.  Justen paused.  The mare whickered but did not move.  She
continued to regard Justen.

In the grass, between the road and the wall, lay a dark-gray bundle.

Justen frowned, then eased over to the wall, where he sat down for a
moment.

"You all alone, now, lady?"  he asked conversationally, looking toward
the gray bundle that could only have been the mare's rider.  He touched
the figure with his order-senses, but the trooper was dead .. . and had
been dead for a time, possibly since the battle of the day before.

Unlike the other horse, the mare did not skitter at the pulse of order,
although Justen had not directed it at her.  Still, her steadiness was
a good sign.  He continued to sit on the wall.

"You're the faithful kind, not like those others.  You're waiting for
your rider to get up.  But I don't think it's going to happen."

The mare whickered again.

Justen slid to the adjoining stone, nearer to the mare and her dead
rider.

"I wish you'd think about letting me get closer."  He eased across two
more stones, so close now that his mud-smeared boots almost touched the
outstretched hand of the dead Iron Guard.

Slowly, Justen leaned forward and half turned over the body.  Despite
the short black hair and the dullness of the dead face, the woman had
been attractive .. . and young.  Somehow, the broad, muscular shoulders
and dark hair reminded him of Altara.  The dead Iron Guard could have
been the chief engineer's sister.  A black-tipped arrow was still
clutched in her left hand, and her right shoulder and chest were caked
with blood.

Justen forced his hands to be steady as he laid her on her back.  He
closed his eyes for a moment, thinking about black iron arrowheads-and
of how proud he had been of their effectiveness and his
craftsmanship.

Whuuuff..  . The mare nudged his shoulder.

"All right, I'll do what I can.  But I'm going to tie you up so you
don't run away."  He tied the mare to a sapling that grew at an angle
from the wall, then searched the pack and saddlebags, but found nothing
there that resembled a shovel.

You 're a damned fool.  He straightened the woman's body and dragged it
into a depression on the other side of the wall.  He took from the
trooper only her purse, containing five golds and a silver, her belt
knife, which he placed in his own sheath, and her empty scabbard.
Firbek's blade stuck out of the Iron Guard's smaller scabbard, but a
too-small scabbard was better than none.  Then he wrapped the dead Iron
Guard in the ground tarp that had been rolled behind her saddle.  He
rerolled the blanket and replaced it behind the saddle.

You're still a sentimental fool.  He began to pile stones over her
covered form, looking up the road every time he set a stone in place.
By the time the cairn was completed, he was drenched and shaking.

Then he looked helplessly at the water bottle stowed behind the saddle
and laughed.  The ration bag was empty except for a small, dried chunk
of cheese and three battered biscuits.  He attempted not to gulp them
all down at once, but to chew them slowly between sips of the water.

"Best meal in days," he told the mare as he untied her and eased into
the saddle.

After turning the bay north, toward the smoking heap that had been
Sarron, he glanced back, but his eyes blurred as the image of a younger
Altara clutching a black-tipped arrow came to mind,

"Let's go, lady."

The mare sidestepped, then continued northward at an easy walk.

At the next stream, Justen stopped and let the mare drink.  He refilled
the water bottle at the same time and peeled a few last red berries
from a small bush beside the stream.  He was still hungry and shaky.

After remounting, he glanced toward the northeast.  The smoke billowing
into the sky was thick and gray.

Less than a kay beyond the stream, the road curved downhill and then up
and to the right.  Justen reined up, then looked at the patches of
ashes on the backside of the hill and at the lumps of metal.  He had
almost reached the battlefield without realizing it.  On the far side
of the depression lay the churned earth of the Sarronnese defenses, now
blanketed in heavy gray ash.

Just beyond the curve in the road that led to the flat between the two
hills, he could sense a wave of Whiteness, almost as though a barrier
stretched across the road, a barrier that extended from the ironwood
forests far to his right and almost to the marsh.

Scores of mounted troops held the road ahead-clearly a rear guard for
the massive White forces that marched toward Sarron itself.  Justen
frowned.

What chance did he have, even if he could maintain a shield for the
next five to ten kays, of passing through the Whites' surveillance
undetected?  He sat on the mare, stroking her neck, considering his
options.

Realistically, he'd have the demons' of light own time trying to get
through the next few kays, with at least one Chaos Wizard scanning the
narrow space between the marsh and the forests, and probably part of
the forests as well.  Even if he did get through, then what?  Sarron
was a pile of smoking rubble, and the engineers and Gunnar were either
dead or on their way to Rulyarth.  But he would have known, somehow, if
Gunnar were dead.

But if he didn't try, he'd have to circle so far south and west that he
might never catch up with the fleeing Sarronnese- or with the remaining
engineers and Recluce marines.

Pushing that thought from his mind, he eased the light-shield around
himself and the mare and stroked the mount on the neck even more
reassuringly.  "Now ... it'll be dark, but Papa Justen wants to go
home."

Whheee... He stroked her neck, projecting what reassurance he could as
the mare stepped delicately forward.

The ugliness of the White troops mounted as he urged the mare around
the curve in the road, guiding her onto the shoulder, where he hoped
the puffs of dust from her hooves would not be quite so obvious.

Straining, Justen could hear a few of the troopers' muttered words. 
".. . waiting here .. ."  ".... no damned loot... no women .. ."  ".. 
. Girta got all the luck."  "..  . call being around Zerchas luck
..."

The area on the marsh side of the road, less than ten cubits wide
before it sloped steeply downhill, was empty of mounted troops.

Justen tried to breathe easily, quietly.

"Order!  Archers!"

With the snapped command, the White lancers fell silent.  Justen tried
to pull up the mare.

Wheee..  .

"There!  See the puffs of dust.  There's a Black spy!"

Through the unseen reddish-white fire, Justen could sense the presence
of a White Wizard-not a terribly strong one, but the man didn't need
strength with as many troops as he had.  The engineer wheeled the horse
away and nudged her down the road, flattening himself against her
back.

"Archers!  Release in volley.  Volley one!"

Thunngg .. . unngg .. . unnggg .. .

"Where, damn it?"

"What-"

"Horse high!  Horse high!"  snapped the wizard.

The engineer edged the horse as far to the edge of the drop-off as he
dared, urging her back, away from the soldiers.

Thunngg..  . unnggg .. . unnnggg .. .

He could sense the arrows flying overhead, and more toward the center
of the road, as he rode sightlessly around the curve and out of the
line of fire.

"Hold!  We don't know what tricks he's up to!  Remember those traps in
Spidlar!  Hold .. ."

Justen took a deep breath when he finally let the horse drop into a
fast walk and lowered the light-shield.  He'd just been lucky that the
Whites were afraid of an ambush.

After checking the empty road behind him, he turned in the saddle and
looked downhill toward the River Sarron.  Beyond the marsh to the
south, there might be a bridge or a place to ford.  While his knowledge
of Sarronnyn's geography was sketchy, he did know that the town of
Clynya offered a crossing.  He shook his head.  Clynya was more than
three days' ride.

He studied the wave of unseen whiteness behind him once more, hoping
that none of the rear guard were about to ride after him.  He studied
the winding road ahead, a way that would take well past mid-morning to
even get past the marsh and to the point where the road ran along the
river again.

The mare whickered, and he patted her neck.  "Easy .. . easy.  We've
got a long way to go."  He just hoped it wasn't too long.

He swallowed as he realized that they would be riding past the cairn of
the dead Iron Guard again.  He took a deep breath as the image of a
laughing, dark-haired woman settled in his mind for a moment.

Order-tipped arrows?  Wonderful craftsmanship?

He patted the mare and kept riding.

XLVII

Justen wiped his forehead on his sleeve, then gave the mare another
pat.  To his right, the river twisted and turned through the
bottomland, while thickets rose out of the adjacent backwaters.  On the
western side of the River Sarron were stub-bled fields interspersed
with rock-walled meadows turning brown, where even some few scattered
flocks of sheep still browsed, as if their shepherds knew that the cold
running water protected them.

Should he try to find a ford?  Justen looked down to the river, which
spanned nearly a hundred cubits.  Despite die lack of rain, the center
of the muddy flow still churned ominously.  The light breeze carried a
half-leafy, half-musty, smell of autumn up from the river.

The engineer glanced toward the west, where the sun hung midway between
the zenith and the smoke-smudged horizon.  Then he sighed and took a
swallow from the water bottle.

The rocky slopes above the road held several small meadows and stone
trellises bearing vines.  The grapes had been stripped, and the few
houses he had seen were shuttered tightly.  He'd found a few berries,
and even a pear apple tree with enough fruit not only to eat, but to
store in the otherwise empty saddlebags.  Though he was not ravenous,
some solid bread and hard cheese would have been welcome.

"Let's go, lady."  He patted the mare again and lurched slightly in the
saddle as she started uphill.

How long they had ridden before he saw the thinnest of smoke plumes
from the holding chimney, he did not know, only that the sun hung lower
in the afternoon sky.

"Should we try to buy something?"  he asked the mare.  Receiving no
answer, he turned her off the road and up the cart path toward the low,
stone and thatched-roof dwelling.  Even as he watched, the thin line of
smoke seemed to get thinner, but he could still smell the faintest hint
of burning wood.

A stone wall, broken by a single open gate, surrounded both the house
and what appeared to be a thatched barn.  From somewhere behind the
wall, Justen could hear the sound of a saw.

"Father!"  called a sharp and high voice.

"Hullo, the house," Justen called as cheerfully as he could, reining up
perhaps twenty cubits short of the gate.

"Just stay right where you are, fellow!"  A thin-faced man appeared
behind the wall, standing on something that raised him so that his
chest and the longbow he held were clearly visible.

"I was hoping to buy a few provisions."

"Got nothing for sale."  The man kept the bow centered on Justen's
chest.

"I can pay.  I'll even leave the coin in plain sight."

"Don't want none of your coin."

"I'm not a White- I'm an engineer from Recluce-"

"Don't tell me.  You're riding a horse with a gray saddle cloth.  Means
as you're either a White scout or a deserter, or worse.  If I could be
certain you're a no-good, you'd be dead now.  Sides..  . even if you be
from the devil isle, what's the difference?  Fighting over our corpses,
that's all."  He raised the bow fractionally.

Justen frowned, then drew the cloak of light around himself and the
mare, nudging her sideways quickly and flattening himself against her
neck.

Thunnn .. .

The arrow passed over his head, close enough that he could feel the
wind of its passage.

"You bastard wizard!  You get close, and I'll still get you!"  The man
had nocked another arrow.  "I can see your tracks in the dust.  You
can't hide everything with your tricks.  Now get out of here!  I got
plenty of arrows, and I might miss-but I might not."

Shaking his head behind the light-shield, Justen used his perceptions
to help him turn the mare.

"Just keep going!  We don't need your kind here.  You come back, and
I'll chase you to the Stone Hills."

Justen kept himself as low in the saddle as possible as he guided the
mare down the drive and back onto the road.  Once beyond the bow's
range, he released die shield and found himself shaking.

"They're not exactly too friendly.  Chase us all the way to the Stone
Hills?  It's hot, and it doesn't sound like a friendly place."

The mare whickered, once, softly.

"You don't want another rider spitted with an arrow."  Before all the
words were out of his mouth, the image of the dead, dark-haired Guard
appeared in his mind.  Had she even seen the archer who killed her?
Maybe it hadn't been one of his arrows.  He shook his head.  It had
been his idea, and that meant all the arrows were his.

The mare's former rider hadn't been touched with chaos, but in the end,
that hadn't mattered.  She had died, and so had thousands of
Sarronnese.  So had Clerve and Krytella.  Jus-ten's eyes blurred, as
did the visions of the redhead and the dark-haired Guard.

He rode, not really seeing, for a time.

While there were other holdings, those few he could finally see from
the road were silent, closed, and seemed almost hostile.  So after
climbing and descending three more hills, he spotted a pear apple not
too far from the road with a few fruits left.  He picked them, and some
late berries growing by a narrow stream.  He ate one pear apple and the
berries, washed them down with stream water-order-spelled for
safety-and hoped his system would not rebel against all the fruit.  As
he ate, he brushed aside a whining mosquito and some flies.  The mare
grazed quietly.

Finally, he stood and shook himself.

"Time to get moving .. . again."

The mare slowly raised her head, brown-tipped grass disappearing into
her mouth.

They continued southward on the road, the only road, which followed the
river until they reached a slightly higher hill.  At the hill crest
Justen paused as he studied the river valley below and the small town
on the west bank.  He had reached the point where the river forked into
its upstream branches.  Rather than attempt a massive span across the
Sarron below the junction, the Sarronnese had built two bridges, one
across each fork.  From what Justen could see, the western river fork
was nearly twice the size of the fork before him.  The town, whose name
Justen could not recall, lay on the western side of the western
branch.

Again, the houses and barns scattered across the hillsides through
which he rode remained shuttered tight or empty, or both, while he
could see smoke and movement on the far side of the River Sarron.

After studying the scene below for a time, he urged the mare forward
and down toward the bridges.  Perhaps he could finally get across the
river and turn back toward Sarron and Rulyarth.

As the road flattened, he passed a series of buildings that appeared to
be an inn, but the sign had been removed from the posts by the road,
and even the stable door had been boarded shut.  Recent and
heavy-rutted tracks led from the closed inn toward the bridge ahead.

After glancing back at the inn, Justen continued toward the bridge on
the raised roadway that overlooked lower, swampy ground.

Yee-ahhhh ... A vulcrow cawed from a bare-limbed tree, then flapped
back in the direction of Sarron.

Justen reined up at the edge of the stone bridge.  The center section
of the span, which had obviously been of timber, had been removed,
leaving a gap of roughly ten cubits.  The locals had clearly not spent
much effort on blocking the eastern bridge, but he suspected that the
western bridge would be different.

The water beneath the bridge seemed almost shallow enough to ford.
Justen nodded and looked back at the gap between the sections of stone
pavement.  The opening was almost narrow enough for him to clear it
himself.  Did he really want to try jumping the horse?  Could he manage
to hang on?  Or would it be better to try the river?

"You up to a short jump, lady?"  He patted the mare, but she did not
answer.  He sighed and guided her back to the clay approach to the
bridge.  Then he studied at the span.  The gap looked wider than
before.

"Darkness screw it!"  he snapped.  "Let's go!"  He nudged the bay into
a canter, then a gallop.  Her hooves clattered on the stone, and she
jumped-even before Justen had urged her-and landed cleanly on the other
side.

Justen bounced in the saddle, grabbing her mane with one hand and the
saddle with the other, leaning over so far that his head almost scraped
one of the bridge abutments.  His stomach churned, and he was breathing
hard by the time the mount slowed to a walk and he managed to get
himself straightened in the saddle.  His ribs hurt where he had
apparently bounced into the hilt of Firbek's too-big sword.

The clay of the road was lined with deep wagon ruts, probably those of
the wagons carrying the bridge timbers.  The ruts ran past the narrower
road that headed southeast into the dry and rolling hills.

Justen rode up to the larger bridge and noted the kay stone Rohrn.  As
he suspected, all three center sections, except for the stone piers,
had been timbered, and had been removed.  Did the people of Rohrn
really think the lack of a bridge would stop the Whites?

He grinned.  Given the depth of the river, it would certainly slow them
down.  Then he shook his head as he turned the mare back.  How was he
ever going to get across?  On the side where he rode, there wasn't even
a trail paralleling the western branch of the river.  Probably the
smaller road he had just passed would turn or join another trail that
would wind back to the river.  Probably... . but trying to get out of
Sarronnyn was proving harder than he had thought.  But then, everything
was proving harder than he had thought.

He turned the mare back toward the last crossroads, glancing to the
west, where the sun had half-dropped behind the horizon.  To the right
of the road was a narrow, recently plowed field that paralleled the
river and stretched several hundred cubits westward to the top of a low
rise.  A split-rail fence separated the field from the road, and
another marked the far end of the field.  Because of the gentle rise,
Justen could not see the ground beyond the farther fence, only a
regular line of trees.

He still needed to find a place to camp-and to find something more to
eat, and some grazing for the mare.  To stay too close.  to Rohrn, with
its dismantled bridge, probably wasn't very wise.

Justen flicked the reins and looked toward the crossroads.

Then he paused and turned in the saddle.  There ought to be another
road somewhere, but he hadn't seen it, not unless he'd overlooked
something.  But after two different sets of archers having fired at
him, and without a decent meal, he wasn't thinking all that clearly.

Finally, he urged the mare onto the road heading yet farther from Rohm,
from Sarron, and from Rulyarth.  He took a deep breath and patted the
mare again.

This time, she whuffed back at him.

XLVIII

The more slender of the two figures in white winced as he studied the
mists swirling through the flat glass on the table.  The candle
illuminating the glass flickered as he leaned forward and attempted to
make out the dim figures within the mist.

"Darkness," muttered Beltar.  "What's that?"

"A woman and a tree.  A sending of some sort, except that it's
order-based, and yet it's not.  It feels like it's from the
southwest."

"From Naclos?  The druids?  I don't like that."

"Like what?"  interrupted a rougher voice.  Zerchas stepped into the
tent.  "I felt someone playing with a screeing glass."

Behind him followed Jehan, his face carefully blank.  ' "There's some
sort of order-projection coming out of Naclos," Eldiren observed
mildly.

"Out of Naclos?  We've never been able to see into Naclos."  Zerchas
turned his head and spat out into the darkness, then gestured.  A white
flame flared where his spit had landed.

"That's rather .. . excessively cautious."  Beltar's voice was cool,
polite.

"Superstitious, you mean?  Some superstitions have reasons behind them,
young Beltar."  Zerchas laughed harshly.  "Now what's this nonsense
about the druids?"  He peered toward the glass and the dark tree.

Jehan's eyes followed those of Zerchas.

Abruptly, the image vanished.

Eldiren swayed on his stool, putting a hand to his brow.  His face
appeared pale in the flickering light.

Beltar and Zerchas exchanged glances, although behind them, unnoticed,
Jehan staggered for a moment and straightened, recomposing himself.

"The druids?  That much order?"  blurted the burly White Wizard, "But
why?"

"It has to be connected with that engineer-the one who did the black
arrowheads and made that second dam."  Eldiren mumbled the words.

"Didn't he leave with the others?"

"He's not on the river road to Rulyarth.  There were only five
engineers in that group."  Beltar put a hand on Eldiren's shoulder.
"Let go of the glass," he added in a lower tone.

"He could have been dressed as a marine.  He's the one that the Recluce
marine-Firbek's his name, I think-says is good with weapons," suggested
Jehan.

"Firbek looked at them all in the glass."  Eldiren nodded at the glass,
now only a mirror resting upon a table.

"Then find him and be done with it, if he's so important."  Zerchas's
lips turned into a sneer.  "Surely your powers are up to handling a
mere engineer!  Either capture him or kill him.  Then you won't have to
worry about the Naclans."

Beltar seated himself before the blank glass, frowning momentarily as
the white mists appeared again.  Slowly, an image formed, that of a man
sitting by a stone wall.

Then the mists swirled over the image, and the glass blanked.

"What-"

"He threw up a barrier.  I don't think he's just an engineer."  Beltar
closed his eyes and massaged them gently.

Eldiren's eyes met with Jehan's, and Jehan gave the minutest of head
shakes

"Where is he?"  asked Zerchas.

"He's not that far away," answered Beltar.  "Somewhere on the road
toward Clynya."

"Oh .. . leave him alone.  What can one engineer do?"  asked Zerchas,
again spitting through the flap of the tent and incinerating the
residue even before it could strike the ground.  "Even if he were a
second-rate Black, he couldn't do much."

"Show-off..."  mumbled Eldiren.

Jehan winced.

"On second thought," Zerchas added, "perhaps this engineer could be a
threat.  Eldiren, you can take the Second and Third lancers and find
him."

"Ah ... we haven't really sent any forces as far as Clynya."  Beltar
stood up from the stool.

"We have now.  Eldiren, you can take the Fifth, what's left of them, as
well.  There aren't any holdings toward Clynya anyway-only orchards and
sheep.  Just head up the River Sarron past Rohrn to Clynya.  You
probably can't cross until you reach Clynya in any case.  That way, you
can ensure everything is secure there while Beltar and I begin the
march toward Rulyarth."  Zerchas smiled.  "Jehan will take your place
here with Beltar."

"The Black could always hide in the Stone Hills," suggested Eldiren.

"Even an engineer from Recluce couldn't be that naive."  Zerchas
snorted.  "Once you've taken this renegade engineer, you can march down
the south branch of the Jeryna River.  Take your time.  We'll meet you
in Jerans .. . when we can."

"That's asking a lot."  Eldiren swallowed.

"I'm sure you'll manage.  But I wouldn't take any powder."  Zerchas
bowed, and added before turning and departing, "Good evening."

Jehan looked at Eldiren and shrugged behind Zerchas's back.

"Come on, Jehan.  You're not staying here .. . yet."

Jehan turned and followed the older wizard.

For a moment, the two remaining White Wizards stood silently.  Only a
few voices penetrated the tent from the camp beyond, those and the
faint chirping of insects and the intermittent croaking of a frog.

"Beltar .. ."  Eldiren rubbed his forehead.  "Those are all units that
are short because of that engineer.  I doubt if there are five score
left, And the hill Sarronnese don't exactly like outsiders."

"I know."

"Can't you do something?"

The broad-shouldered White Wizard shrugged.  "What?  Zerchas still
commands.  That's why he's dumping Jehan on me-to make sure I'm a good
boy."

Eldiren pursed his lips and looked at Beltar.  Beltar met his glance.
After a moment, Eldiren's shoulders slumped and he walked into the
darkness.

Left alone in the tent, Beltar took another deep breath.

XLIX

Justen put his arm out to the tree, encircled by a carpet of short
green grass.  The bark of the lorken was deep-ridged and nearly as
black as the wood he would find beneath.  Yet he had seen no lorken so
massive this far in his ride from Sarron, not that he had been allowed
much time to ponder trees.

"You have had little enough time to find this tree."  The slender young
woman with the silver hair, still dressed in brown, appeared beside the
dark and massive trunk.  ' "Is this another dream?"  he asked.

"No.  Not if you consider dreams as the fragments of sleeping thoughts
poorly perceived, and even more poorly recalled."  Her voice rang a sad
silver.

"But who are you?"  Justen tried to step forward and found he could
not.

"You will find my name in Naclos.  That is where you must go, if you
would find yourself."  Her face was somber.  "You have not, you know.
Unless you find yourself, you are fated to .. ."  She paused.  "But
that I cannot say.  Only that you will never rest.  For you have
created chaos from order, and that will twist your very being unless
you come to the Balance."

Justen pondered for a moment.

The rustling of steps, the crackling of a branch, and the low whisper
of the wind woke the engineer.  He quietly eased into a sitting
position next to the stone wall, his senses and his eyes searching the
darkness around him.

He squinted as a light that was not a light began to glow in the air
less than three cubits away.  As he watched, the face of a dark-haired
man peered at him from the glowing white mists.

Recalling, all too belatedly, his screen training, Justen forced
himself to concentrate and to weave the starlight around him, hoping to
hide himself from both physical and magical searchers.

For a time, for what seemed a long time, he sat in his dark cocoon
until he was certain that the White Wizard had lost his vision.  By
then, whoever or whatever had prowled the road had also vanished.  When
he released the shield, only to the darkness of night, he began to
shiver.  The shivers continued despite the warm fall air, even when he
wrapped his cloak around himself to add to the warmth of the blanket.

The blanket failed to add much warmth, and he shivered through the
night, so tired that he shivered through the dawn and did not stagger
up until the sun had not only cleared the horizon, but the tops of the
scrubby trees on the eastern hills.

Standing in the morning light mat gave little warmth, he was so chill
that he half-expected his breath to steam.  He stretched gingerly,
letting his senses and eyes search the area, but he could sense only a
handful of birds, some assorted small rodents, and the mare.

He washed in the stream that was little more than a trickle, but the
best water he had been able to find, and drank, wincing at the metallic
taste.  His incipient beard itched, and he wished he had a razor, but
that luxury had been lost along the way as well.

After fishing a battered pear apple from the saddlebags, he slowly ate,
hoping that the fruit would not be too acid on his empty stomach.  As
he finished the pear apple and washed his hands clean of the sticky
juice, heavy wings beat through the morning.

Ye-ahhhh.  At the sound of the vulcrow, he turned toward the half-dead
willow, a good fifty cubits up the streamlet, where the bird had
alighted.  Something about the vulcrow's arrival bothered him, and he
extended his senses, but only until they touched that vague whiteness
that confirmed his fears.  The distant White Wizard was linked in some
way to the bird.

Ye-ahhh.  The vulcrow flapped into the sky toward the south.

"Almost as if he were looking for us," mumbled Justen.  And why had the
bird headed south?

He groomed the mare quickly with the curry brush he had found in the
left saddlebag and dropped the saddle blanket into place, wishing that
it were not dark gray on both sides and that the red stripe did not
show through.  Then he hefted the saddle onto the mare.  With only a
single whicker, she let him.

After rolling the blanket and slipping it into place behind the saddle,
he mounted, looking around for the vulcrow, but the black bird was
nowhere in sight..  . yet.

He let the mare take an easy pace as he continued to study the road for
signs of a turnoff for Clynya, or for a way to turn west and get back
to the river.  He wished that he had followed the river, but he'd been
reluctant to ride across others' fields, harvested and plowed under or
not, and his earlier encounter with the holder and his bow had
disabused him of any notion of impartiality on the part of the locals.
His black garments seemed as unpopular as those of the Whites or the
Iron Guard.

Turning in the saddle, Justen looked to the west, but he could not even
make out the line of trees that marked the western fork of the river.
Back to the east, he could see-barely-a few trees that might be
following the smaller tributary to the Sarron.

Why wasn't there a road closer to Clynya?  What had he overlooked?

Yee-ah ... yee-ah .. , From a pile of stone that marked a field corner
another hundred kays ahead, the dark vulcrow called.

Justen moistened his lips.  Only another few kays and he would turn
west, road or no road.

"How can we catch him, Scr Wizard?"  The force leader of the White
lancers nodded politely at Eldiren.

"It shouldn't be that hard.  He's not awake yet, and may not be for a
while."  The White Wizard glanced to the still-graying eastern horizon.
"He doesn't seem to have much food, and he's not yet aware that we're
following him.  He's also not taking the quickest route.  He missed the
first turn to Clynya-"

"How could he do that?  He's a wizard, too."

Eldiren laughed.

The officer stepped away from the mare.

"He didn't expect trickery from the locals.  They plowed over the road,
built a fence, and even planted some bushes."

"But how-"

"When you can use the vulcrows and see things from the air, it's
obvious that when a road starts in the middle of a hillside,
something's been done."  Eldiren handed the officer a sheet of
parchment.  "Take your fastest half-squad and lead them along the route
marked.  You have to get to the crossroads, marked with the red cross
there, before he does."  Unlike Zerchas and Beltar, Eldiren climbed
into the saddle of a white mare, not into a coach, before continuing.
"All you have to do is take the shorter road, the one he didn't take,
and hurry.  Just wait at the crossroads until we join you or until you
gel a message.  If the engineer comes, capture him, of course.  That's
all you have to do."

"All?  Capture an engineer wizard with a half-squad?  We still have to
make up a day's travel."

"No.  If you get there first, he'll turn away.  He won't come to
you."

"But two day's travel in one?"

"Less than that, really.  I'm sure you'll manage."  Eldiren waited for
the officer to mount, looking pointedly at the other's horse.  "I doubt
that anyone is going to stop us, at least not until we reach Clynya and
try to cross the river there, and that will be a while, perhaps longer,
and the political situation may have changed."

"Begging your pardon, Scr Wizard, but you sound as though you'd rather
chase this engineer, even to the Stone Hills, than go to Clynya."

"Our task, according to the great Wizard Zerchas, is to track down this
engineer, if possible."  Eldiren grinned briefly.  "Now get your squad
and get moving."

"Yes, Scr."

"Unless you'd rather go with Zerchas ..."

"We'll be moving right out, Scr."  The officer swung quickly into his
saddle.

LIJusten pulled up at what looked to be a footpath-or less.  He still
had not seen a road back to the river, or toward Clynya, and he had
traveled another three kays, more than he had promised himself.  But
the road he was traveling, from what he could tell, had curved until it
now ran almost due south, separating ever more widely from the river
with each step the bay mare took.

"Shall we take it?"

Since the mare waited for his decision, he turned her onto the path
that began between two fields.  The dusty path ran alongside a stone
wall that traversed a gentle slope for several hundred cubits.  Every
fifty cubits or so, Justen had to guide the mare to the left or duck or
push the yellow scrub-oak leaves and branches out of his face.

"More like a dog's way," he muttered as a branch rebounded and scraped
the side of his face.

The wall turned back toward Rohrn just over the top of the hill, and so
did the path.  Justen reined up.  From what he could see, the path ran
parallel to the road for several hundred cubits, then angled again
toward the river, but not in nearly so direct a line as the section he
had just covered.  He shrugged.  Somehow .  somehow, he had this
feeling that no matter which way he went, getting to Clynya wasn't
going to be easy.

Yee-ahhh.  The same white-tinged vulcrow sat on a bare limb of a dead
pear apple not more than two dozen cubits away, almost at eye level
with Justen.

The engineer took a deep breath, looked away from the dark bird and
studied the path.  The dusty track looked like it turned back toward
where he thought the river ran.

Yee-ahhh!

"All right.  Any way is better than sitting here."  He paused.  What
about the White Wizard?  And what about the dream?  Why was the wizard
sending his familiar after Jus-ten?  Should he think about Naclos?
Naclos was somewhere to the south, either over the spur of the
Westhorns or across the Stone Hills-and the Stone Hills were just about
the driest and hottest spot in Candar.  Had the dream been merely a
dream?

He flicked the reins.  "Let's find the river and try to get across."

Yee-ahh.  The vulcrow flapped into the midday sky, a black blot against
the high gray clouds that promised neither rain nor sun.

The mare carried him downhill and eventually to a branch in the path,
where again he reined up.  The right-hand branch seemed to head back
toward Rohrn.  Where the left went, who knew, except that it seemed to
flank the side of the stub-bled grain fields that had appeared behind
the sheep meadows and to run toward a jumble of small buildings perhaps
a half-kay ahead.

With an exasperated sigh, Justen guided the mare onto the left-hand
path.

His stomach growled.  Too bad there had not been more food in the
saddlebags.  Why not?  Had the Iron Guard gone into the battle hungry?
Or had she been so new to fighting that she had not learned the need to
carry her own supplies?  Was she any different than poor Clerve, who
hadn't wanted to fight at all?  Justen shook his head, and his eyes
burned again.

"Got to keep moving .. ."  he mumbled to the mare, trying to make out
the buildings on the low hummock ahead, and finally wiping his eyes and
swallowing.  His stomach growled again, and the mare whickered
plaintively.

"All right."  Justen laughed at the incongruity of it all- his stomach
growling and the mare whickering as on a path that might not go
anywhere, he tried to reach an unseen river while being watched by an
unseen White Wizard and an unseen dream druid.  "All right.  Let's see
if we can get some food."

As he neared the hovel-not even a house-he let his senses drift out in
front of him.  A single person hid behind the rough stone walls of the
well between the hovel and the ramshackle structure that probably
served as a barn.  Even from more than a hundred cubits away, Justen
could sense the pain and the fear.

With a deep breath, he slowly rode forward into the yard, studying the
dusty tracks indicating that animals had been gathered and herded away
at least several days earlier.

What looked like a heap of rags beside the well moved.

"Are you all right?"  asked Justen.

"Fine.  Priest ye be ... asking a question ... be that stupid ..."

Justen strained to catch the sharply spoken words, the first he had
heard in the old and lower-Temple tongue.  After dismounting, he looked
for a place to tether the mate.

"Rahmra... too worried... about his old bones to come.  Sent a young
fellow instead."  The heap of rags revealed itself to be a
gray-thatched woman who looked sightlessly at Justen.

Justen frowned and wondered how to answer the woman.  What was she
doing by the well, and what he should do?

"You ... be of the Temple?"

"Yes, but from a farther domain, lady," he finally answered.  His
senses had confirmed that the woman had broken her leg.  "How did you
hurt the leg?"  he asked.

"Be the first sensible words you said.  And maybe a healer?  To help
old Lurles."

Justen tied the mare to the post on the far side of the well and looked
over the stones.  A frayed rope end moved in the slight fall breeze. "I
know a little.  You slipped when the rope broke?"

"Slipped.  That idiot Birsen undermined the step, forgetting his wife's
mother... forgetting, I say, sure and he didn't forget.  Hoped the
Whites or his trickery would get me.  You aren't one of them, be
you?"

Justen chuckled.  "No.  There's a White Wizard who's been following me,
but he must be a good way behind."  / hope, he added mentally.  "Let's
see what we can do for you, first."

Lurles tried to straighten herself on the tilted stone that had once
been a step, but the wave of pain that swept from her almost forced
Justen to stop.  "Oh .  ummm ..."

"Easy .. ."  His fingers brushed across the rags-almost clean, he was
surprised to find-and across the leathery, sun-darkened legs.  "It's
broken."

"Course it's broken.  No other way I'd be left here.  But I can't walk
with the flocks, and Firla has to carry Hyra."

"AH right..  Let me carry you to your .. pallet."

"I got abed.  Maybe not fancy, but it's a bed, and it's mine own."

Justen grinned.  He liked the old woman.  Then the grin faded.  As old
as she looked, he doubted she was as old as his own mother, and Cirlin
certainly didn't look old and withered.  Light as she was, Justen had
no difficulty in lifting her and carrying her back to the hovel.

"Long time since I got swept away by a young, strong fellow.  Almost
worth it."  Her harsh laugh betrayed the pain.  "Mine's the one with
the headboard, in the corner."

The hovel contained one long room, with a cooking hearth at one end and
two beds-one in each of the corners at the end opposite the hearth-two
tables, four stools, and three rough wooden chests along the back wall.
On the smaller table were still stacked buckets, several pitchers, and
various cooking implements.

Justen laid the woman on the bed, then studied the leg, both with his
senses and his eyes.  Should he try?  How could he not?  "I think I can
set it."

"Set what?"

"Put the bones so that they will heal right."

"Then stop jawing about it and do it.  Just like you Temple types .. .
and you men.  Talk and talk."

"It will hurt."

"Can't hurt worse 'n having Firla did.  Almost died then."

Justen took a deep breath.  What else could he do?  If he didn't set
and try to splint the leg, she'd probably die, or never walk straight
again.

It took him three tries and three waves of white-hot agony before he
managed to get the bone ends back together.  The last try dropped the
woman into unconsciousness, and Justen almost crashed into the floor
himself.

When he could stand, he looked about for something he could use to bind
the leg in position.  With a last check around the hovel, he
half-walked, half-staggered, out to the old barn, where he tried to
avoid the worst of the manure and ignore the stench.  A single hen,
apparently overlooked by the holders, clucked at him from a back
rafter.

He found no rope, but took three stakes and an old hide that seemed
sound enough to be cut into thongs.

Lurles was still quiet when he returned.  One of the stakes was too
long.  He managed to break it and whittle the end smooth.  He cut a
series of thongs and started to arrange the stakes around her leg, then
frowned.  He couldn't splint the leg, not without lifting it.  And he
needed more support around the break.  Again he searched through the
hovel, until he found what looked to be an old cutting board.  After
cutting half the hide into an oblong, he put the hide on the board and
eased both under the leg beneath the break.  Then he wrapped the hide
around the leg, placed the stakes, and began to bind the stakes as
tightly as his senses indicated was safe.  When he was finished, he let
a little order trickle from him into her leg, focusing on the ends of
the bone.

"Ooo .. ."

"Just be quiet.  The worst is over."

"Didn't hurt as bad as Firla."

"I'm glad."  Justen shook his head.  If the pain she'd suffered from
his inept bone-setting was less than that of child-bearing, he didn't
want to be around any birthings anytime soon.  "I need to find
something you can use to get around with-in a while.  You shouldn't
move that leg right away."

"Lying here, I'll starve."

"Not immediately."

"Birsen got a second staff.  It's under their bed."

Justen retrieved the heavy staff and set it beside her bed.  "It's on
the floor."

Her hand groped from the low bed until her fingers identified the wood.
Then: "Thirsty,"

"I'll see what I can do about retrieving the bucket and rope."

"Spare rope's in the third chest."

Justen opened the chest and found a short coil of hemp rope, two wooden
mallets, and a saw blade wrapped in oiled rags.  After taking the rope
and closing the chest, he turned.  "I'll be back in a while.  I need to
fix the bucket and water my horse."

"Not going anyplace."

"Please don't."

Outside, a faint drizzle had begun to fall.  He looked to the north at
the thickening clouds.  Only early afternoon, and he had rain to
contend with.  He didn't even have an oilcloth or a tarp.  He swallowed
as he recalled burying the trooper in the ground tarp.  No ... she
deserved that little.  He shook his head and peered over into the
well.

Whheee .. . eeeee .. .

"I know, lady.  You're thirsty and hungry," Justen told the mare.

The well was shallow, not more than eight cubits deep, and the frayed
rope had caught on something almost within reach.

By holding on to the one sound well post, Justen managed to stretch
himself far enough inside the stones to grab the rope.  He frowned as
he studied the end of the rope.  It had not frayed, but had been cut
almost all the way through.  To keep the Whites from getting water-or
to try to harm the old woman?

Justen decided he didn't like Birsen.  After cutting another four
cubits of rope, he tied it to the existing well rope.  He untied the
short upper piece and thrust it into his belt before lowering the
bucket, lifting it, and setting the water on the stone well wall.  He
let his senses drift across the water, order-spelling the slightly
murky liquid.  He could feel the dizziness with the order-spell, and he
realized how hungry he was getting.

Still... the first bucket went into the small trough, and he untied the
mare and retied her where she could drink.  The second bucket he left
on the stones, realizing that he had not brought anything out with
which to carry water back inside.

"Forgot a water bucket," he explained, stopping to replace the rope he
had not used.  He also pulled out the loose rope and set it on the
corner of the big table.

"Not real practical, you Temple fellows."

"No."  Justen laughed, took both pitchers off the smaller table, and
went back to the well.  He returned shortly with two full pitchers of
pure and cold water.

First, he helped ease the older woman into a sitting position, propped
up against the old headboard.  Then he went back to the serving table
and poured some of the water into a battered crockery mug that he
carried to Lurles.

"Here."

She groped until she had the mug, then drank greedily.

Justen pulled up a stool and sat down to rest his unsteady legs before
pouring a drink for himself.  The water helped enough that his
immediate dizziness receded.

"We need to get you something to eat."

"And ye, too, I suppose, young fellow?"

"If we're being honest, lady-me, too.  I'm no angel, able to live on
tall peaks without sustenance."

"Bah .. . load of manure.  Not the Legend bit about men, but about
women being so pure.  People who have blades use them.  Could be man or
woman.  Makes no difference.  Except men are nastier."

"Food," suggested Justen.

A silence stretched out between them.

"You be no Temple priest, be you?"

"No.  I'm not.  And I'm not a healer, either.  I know something about
it, and if you can stay off that leg ... much .. . for a while, it
should heal straight."

"Must be a Black devil..  . stead of a White one."

"Yes, if you want to put it that way," Justen admitted.  "I am from
Recluce."

"Why ye bother with old Lurles?"

"I needed food, and you needed help."  Justen silently damned himself
for being honest with the old blind woman, but somehow it was important
to him, if to no one else, not to deceive her.

"You could have left me."

"Not after I knew you were hurt."

"Why do you need food?"

"I was separated from my brother in the fighting, and I was trying to
get to the river where I could cross, but the bridges were gone at
Rohm.  I was hoping I could get across near here, but I missed the
river road somehow."

"Wizardry, most likely.  There be a three-way fork at Rohrn-the two
bridges and the road 'long the river.  But -there be no fords till the
bridge at Clynya.  It's a deep gorge most places there.  You take the
by path from here, and it climbs and climbs, not that it be so
noticeable ... only when you be tired."

Justen mechanically refilled her mug and offered it back to her.

"There's bread and cheese in the hole by the serving table."

"Are you sure?"

"You smell like an honest fellow.  You talk like an honest fellow, and
you act like one.  I be wrong before, and be wrong again.  That be
life."  She laughed, and despite the blackened and missing teeth,
Justen could see that once she must have been a pretty girl.  He
swallowed, set the pitcher down, and walked to the serving table.

Several old loaves of bread remained in the hole, as well as two large
blocks of hard yellow cheese, each wrapped in wax.  One had been opened
and roughly resealed.  He took that lump and one loaf, replacing the
stone before straightening.

"How many slices of cheese and bread would you like?"

"My, and being served cheese in my own bed by a young fellow yet..."
Another laugh followed.  "One thick one."

Justen sliced three slices of each-all of them thick-and set them on a
wooden platter that he carried back to the corner.  After easing one
slab of cheese onto a thick slice of bread, he took the mug from Lurles
and placed the bread and cheese in her fingers.  He eased back onto the
stool.

"Strong fingers-like a smith's.  You be a smith?"

"Yes.  I work with the forge."

"Good.  Never be knowing a bad smith."  Lurles's words came between
mouthfuls.

The bread and cheese tasted far better than any meal Jus-ten could
remember-at least any recent one.

"You fixed the well rope so I can get water?"

"You shouldn't .. ."  he mumbled through another mouthful of bread and
cheese.

"Bother.  You be a Black smith, and you can't be staying here.  Not if
you want to live.  This stuff ye put on my leg- how long do I keep it
there?"

"I'd guess four to five eight-days.  But it will be a season before
it's really healed."

"Bother that."

"Stay off it as much as you can or it will break again."  Justen
swallowed the last of the second slab of bread and cheese, amazed that
he had eaten it all so quickly.

"You men .. ."  Lurles reached outward, and Justen refilled the mug and
handed it to her.  She drained the mug and bent down to set it on the
floor.

"You sound as though you believe in the Legend."

"Bother the Legend.  Look at Birsen."

Justen cleared his throat.  Finally, he added, "The rope at the well
didn't break..."

"The bucket dropped into the water.  I heard that."

"The rope was cut almost all the way through.  I brought back the top
piece."  He walked over to the table and reclaimed the rope, bringing
it to the older woman and placing it in her hands.  He watched as her
deft fingers explored the hemp.

"Have to do something about that boy."

"Boy?"

"Birsen.  Just a big, selfish boy."  Lurles levered herself around
slightly in the bed, wincing at the movement.  Told Firla he was too
good-looking.  So was Tomaz.  Be ye good-looking, young fellow?"

"Ah ... I never thought about it.  My brother was the good-looking
one."

"Men .. . sure and you thought it.  You be plenty fair, an' my word on
it."  Lurles grinned.  "Now... I be fine, and best ye be going afore
those White devils catch up to ye."

"How ... but what about you?"

"You be not able to take me, be ye?  If you fill the water buckets, I
be able to rest here."  She laughed.  "No White devils trouble
themselves with folk this poor."

"I'll take care of the water."

"And take the other block of cheese and a loaf."

"You need it."

"And you be not in need?  Healing my leg and tending me, worthless as I
be, be worth something, my fine young Black fellow."

Justen shrugged and grinned as he picked up the two small water
pitchers and headed out through the rain.  The mare whinnied as he
hauled up the well bucket.

"I know.  You're probably hungry, too."  Back inside, he wiped the rain
off his face and hair, then set the pitchers down.  "The water's on the
table.  Do you need anything else?"

"Nay."  She paused.  "There be a smidge on of grain in a small cask
behind the post in the near corner of the barn.  For your horse."

"If it wouldn't be too much a loss, a little would help."

"Young fellow ... I can't recall ye to Firla knowing not your name."

"Justen.  It's Justen."  ' "Then be off with ye.  You spent enough time
with a old woman."

Justen touched her forehead lightly, offering a small flow of order,
hoping it would help.

"You sure no Temple priest ye be?"

"No Temple priest.  Just a lost smith of sorts."

"Get the bread and cheese, and the grain, and be off with ye now."

Justen took the remainder of the cheese that he had already cut-about
half the size of the block that remained- and one loaf, leaving two. He
swallowed as he took a last look at Lurles from the door.

"I be fine.  Off with ye!"

He closed the door quietly and firmly and went to look for the grain
for the mare.  The rain had dropped off to a fine, drizzling mist.

LII

The path, as Lurles had predicted, turned and twisted on a gentle
slope, so gentle that Justen was surprised when he looked back over his
shoulder that he could see the eastern fork of the River Sarron winding
southeast, away from Rohm.  The slight curve of the hill blocked his
view of Rohrn and the junction of the rivers.

Justen searched for the hovel, but could see only a thatched roof.  He
hoped that Lurles would be all right.  He took a deep breath and
turned, just in time to duck under an overhanging branch as the path
wound back toward the south.

Had this been a mistake?  Probably, but as far as he had gone, wouldn't
it be even worse to try to retrace his steps?

Still, the ride was somehow oppressive.

The few hovels and the one larger holding he had passed were shuttered
and still, although he had the feeling that the larger holding had not
been abandoned, but fortified, and he had ridden around it.

The dreams bothered him, especially the second one with the same woman,
and the same clarity, and the same message- of sorts.  The first one
had been about the trees, the second about Naclos.  Who knew much about
Naclos, except that it was the home of the druids, who supposedly had
something to do with trees?  Sometimes wonderful cargoes of wood came
from Diehl, the one port in Naclos, and sometimes people talked about
the druids.  But no one knew very much about them yet he was having
dreams about a beautiful druid.

Yee-ahh.  A vulcrow called from a pile of weed-tangled stones heaped in
a corner of a meadow that had once, perhaps, been tilled.

Justen frowned.  Was it the same bird?  He let his perceptions drift
toward the dark feathers, then stopped.  Either the White Wizard had
more than one familiar, or it was the same vulcrow.

His stomach tightened.  Were the Whites after him specifically?  Why?
Had they discovered he was the one who had touched off the cannons and
built the black iron arrows?  If not, why were they following him?  Or
could it be due to his ill-advised attempt to sneak past them?

He twisted in the saddle, but could see no travelers on that small
section of the road he had left in the morning.  Although the clouds
blocked the sun, he could sense that it was well past mid-afternoon,
and he was still wandering through the gentle hills trying to find the
road to Clynya.

Would he ever get there?

The path forked again, and he turned the mare westward, in the
direction he thought might lead to the river.  He glanced back over his
shoulder, shivering at the quiet, and at the chill damp of the fall
air.

LIII

"He stopped for a while outside of Rohrn.  I lost him in the rain, but
he's still not that close to the Clynya road."  Eldiren gave the reins
a little flick to encourage his mount to continue at a fast walk.

"Do you think that Yurka will catch him?"  The sub-officer's voice was
low, deferential.  ' "The way things are going, Yurka will probably
reach the crossroads before he does.  The path the engineer's taking is
actually longer and slower than either main road."  Eldiren laughed.
"That's why Fairhaven builds roads.  That's why the Blacks' own great
Creslin insisted on highways on Recluce .. . and this poor engineer
hasn't learned the lesson yet."

"What are you going to do with him?"

"Yurka?  Nothing.  He won't catch the engineer."

"He won't?  I mean the engineer, Scr."  ' "The engineer will sense
Yurka and his troops and head back along the crossroad he got too
impatient to wait for and should have taken."  The White Wizard shook
his head. "We may even have to slow down."

Eldiren ignored the puzzled expression on the other's face and
continued.  "You know, if we catch this engineer, we'll have to mount
an assault on Clynya, I am quite certain that the bridge there will be
highly fortified.  They might even destroy it."

The sub-officer swallowed.

"Of course, if this chase to catch the engineer takes too much time and
is hard on the mounts, we'll probably have to retrace our steps, say,
to Rohm, or perhaps back down the Sarronnese road."

"But the Wizard Zerchas will..  That's true.  The Wizard Zerchas would
.. ."  Eldiren pursed his lips and smiled gently.

LIV

Justen squinted in the twilight, trying to make his way through both
mist and dim light to find, if possible, the elusive road to Clynya.

The mare whuffled, as if to tell him she was tired of paths and narrow
lanes winding nowhere.

Justen took a deep breath, wishing he could send his senses on the wind
the way Gunnar did.  Unfortunately, his talents did not lie in that
direction, and the farthest he could sense things without using his
eyes was several hundred cubits in any direction.

A faint metallic sound echoed through the dampness.  Jus-ten tightened
the reins and brought the mare to a stop under an oak that had barely
half its foliage.  As he strained to sense the source of the sound, a
yellow leaf fluttered down and landed on the back of his wrist.  He
shook it off.

Ahead was a stone wall nearly eight cubits high that stretched at least
two hundred cubits across the hilltop.  In the watchtower on the corner
were two men, one armed with a crossbow.  Justen continued to listen,
trying to pick up the murmurs.  "..  . some deserters from the Tyrant's
force seen around Rohrn ... trying to get across the river."  "... wish
'em luck!"  "... thinks the Whites will be coming this way .. .
lancers, maybe."

Just his luck!  Justen had stumbled onto an estate, or the fortress
retreat of a local official who maintained his own forces.  He pursed
his lips, listening for a time longer.  Another yellow leaf fluttered
down, past the mare's right eye.  She flicked her ears and shook her
head.  Justen patted her neck and whispered, "Easy ... easy there,
lady."  "... think they'll attack ..."

"Sometime.  Not now.  Only five ... six score .. . not enough to take
us ..."  "... about a wizard ..."  "... walls .. . back to Jera ...
right on the rock below."

"Hope so ..."

"Wish Bildar .. . get here .. ."

Justen patted the mare's neck again and eased her around and back down
the path toward the last fork.  While he was positive that the river
road did not lie far beyond the holding, he did not intend to try to
sneak past any holding that could stand off six-score White lancers,
especially since the mist could lift at any time and it wasn't even
dark yet.

He did not breathe easily until they had retreated almost half a kay,
back to the last fork in the trail.  As he sat in the saddle, he
yawned.  Why was he so tired?

Grinning momentarily, he shook his head.  Besides a lack of food, a
lack of good sleep, constant worry, the effort to heal an old woman-not
to mention the physical beating taken in the battle for Sarron-he had
no real reason to be tired.

Shrugging, he urged the mare down the left-hand trail.  It was more
like a path and seemed to parallel the unseen road rather than join it.
As he rode through the growing darkness, he watched the grounds to his
right, with their neat and squared stone walls, well-kept rail fences,
far better tended than most of the lands he had passed.  Most probably
they belonged to whoever held the walled keep he was avoiding.

Not until the meandering path had carried him and the mare back into
the ragged and rocky sheep meadows and sagging walls and fences did
Justen even consider stopping, despite his near-constant yawns and sore
muscles, A few bites of the cheese and a chunk from the stale bread
while he rode had helped relieve his headache and the worst of the
soreness, but not the yawns.

Finally, the path turned slightly toward the west-at least Justen felt
that it was turning toward the west-and resumed a gentle climb over
several hills.  Justen had lost exact count, trying as he was to remain
awake and being only half-alert, when the path dipped and then turned
to run almost due south, alongside a depression between the hills.

A hint of order, of unseen order, tugged at Justen, and he reined up,
shaking his head.  He looked downhill, but his eyes had trouble
focusing, although from the dimness below, he could hear a gurgling
stream, apparently beneath a small grove of pine trees.  He squinted
and tried to use his senses.  So far as he could feel, there was a
cleared area under the trees, and neither animals nor people around.
The cleared part of the almost tiny valley sandwiched between the two
hills seemed to carry a sense of calm.

Justen studied the hillside.  One part of the slope downward was almost
clear of bushes and trees, but his eyes seemed to skitter away from the
trees.  Using mainly his senses, the engineer guided the mare through
the gaps and under the tall trees.  After he dismounted, his knees
almost buckled when his feet touched the pine-carpeted ground.

"Ooooo .. ."

Whuuff..  .

"Thank you also, lady."

The mare tugged at the reins, pulling Justen toward the stream, which
ran over large pebbles and between boulders and larger rocks.

"Not that way, idiot.  You'll get your hooves stuck there.  Here."

While the mare drank, Justen studied the setting.  No more than a
half-dozen tall pines formed almost a circle, covering the center area
with spreading branches.  The brook appeared from behind a tangle of
thorn bushes and red berries ran through the clearing, and vanished
downstream into an equally rambling mass of vegetation.

Justen pursed his lips and called on his senses again, studying the
area, finally shaking his head.  Beyond a vague sense of some
underlying order, almost permeating the rocks and the pines, he could
find nothing.  Clearly, years in the past, the miniature valley had
been created for some orderly purpose, but of that purpose, nothing
remained.  At least nothing that he could sense.

After he watered the mare, he continued to walk around the cleared
space, but he could find no sign that anyone had stopped or camped
there recently.  Finally, he unsaddled the mare and tethered her to a
pine branch, with enough leeway that she could browse on the thick
grass beyond the trees and in the narrow space before the tangled
vegetation sprouted.

After that, using his senses, since it had grown almost pitch dark, he
fumbled out his rations and began to eat, propped up against the trunk
of a pine, listening to the gentle gurgle of the stream and the
whispering of the pine limbs in the evening breeze.

Dinner, although it was supper in Sarronnyn, he recalled, was one of
the pear apples some cheese, and a chunk of bread, accompanied with
liberal amounts of cool water from the stream.  While the water had
seemed clean enough, he had still taken the precaution of
order-spelling it.  Who knew what sheep fields it had seen?

The heavy needles and the blanket provided the softest bed he had felt
in days, or had it been seasons?  Although the grove appeared and felt
safe, he set a simple ward-the only kind he knew-to wake him if
anything large ventured nearby.  Then he pulled the blanket around
himself and collapsed.

Waking up was difficult, and his feet felt sluggish.  Somehow, he was
no longer in the grove, and he had been running after the mare, who
kept dancing away from him, just out of reach.  On the far hilltop,
Gunnar marched northward, ignoring him even as he shouted his brother's
name.

Yee-ah .. . !  The black vulcrow swooped from out of the sky, and
Justen threw up an arm to ward off the bird.

Hhsstt!  Hssstt!  Two fire bolts seared past him, one so close that his
hair singed.

He looked over his shoulder.  A squad of white-clad riders pounded
across the side of the hill.  He began to sprint toward the mare.

Just as his fingers closed around the reins, he stumbled ... and looked
down at a body in dark clothes.

"Krytella!"  He reached down.  The red hair turned darker and shorter,
and his fingers clutched at rotting cloth as with a shudder, he dropped
the dead Iron Guard, whose liquid flesh flowed into the ground.

He woke with a jolt, wiping the sweat from his forehead.  Had it been
just a dream?  For a moment, it had seemed so real.  Or was the White
Wizard after him again?

Shivering in the chill, damp air, he let his senses touch the calm
around him, reaching out to make sure that nothing lurked in the
darkness beyond the grove, but all he could sense was the faint,
underlying sense of order.  He sensed neither chaos nor dread.

He fumbled for the water bottle he had set beside the tree trunk and
swallowed several small mouthfuls of the cool liquid.  What had the
dream meant, if anything?  He certainly knew that both Krytella and the
Guard were dead.  Was his mind trying to tell him that he couldn't
catch Gunnar?  Or that, for all the calm around him, the White Wizard
and his familiar still stalked him?  He closed the water bottle and set
it back against the bark of the trunk.  Then he pulled the blanket
around his shoulders again and leaned back.

In time, his heart stopped pounding and his eyes closed.

Above him, the pine branches swished in the wind.

LV

With the gray of dawn, Justen was up-first, currying the mare as she
cropped the thick grass beyond the fir-needle carpet where Justen had
slept, then watering her, and finally, washing himself in the stream.
Those duties completed, he breakfasted on the next-to-last pear apple
two handfuls of almost-dry berries that he was able to retrieve from
the thickets without getting scratched into shreds, and bread and
cheese.  He refilled the water bottle and stretched.

Whheee ... eeee.

"You're even ready to go?"  He lifted the gray saddle blanket into
place, then the saddle.  The mare stood patiently as he fumbled with
the girth and cinch.  After checking the saddle, he rolled up the
blanket and tied it behind the saddle.  He stretched again and looked
into the bright blue-green sky.

On the slope beyond the stream, a raft of yellow leaves swirled off a
squat oak in the gusting wind that seemed to mix warm and cold air as
it ruffled Justen's dark hair.  He used his fingers to brush the leaves
off his forehead.  "Getting too long."  He touched the itchy stubble on
his chin and shook his head.

Whheee... eeee ... "We're going."  Justen checked his limited gear and
climbed into the saddle.  The mare sidestepped twice before settling
down.

"Feeling frisky, lady?"  He patted her neck.

The warmth of the sun was more than welcome when he rode out of the
trees and back up to the narrow path.

Justen glanced back at the grove and blinked once.  Despite the order
embodied by the small area, his eyes wanted to skip over the space,
particularly the pines, just as they had the night before.

"Definitely strange," he muttered.  What was there about the trees?  Or
was he still so tired that he was imagining things?  Except that
despite the unsettling dream, he did not feel tired, certainly not
nearly so tired as the day before.

The path continued almost due south, over at least a handful of rolling
hills, before angling back to the west.  The brown-grassed meadows were
longer, as if not so heavily grazed, and fewer cultivated fields graced
either hills or valleys.  Since leaving the grove where he had slept,
Justen had seen no trees except for a few scrub like bushes, and but a
single hovel, with only a rickety barn.  That hovel, like all those
save Lurles's, had been shuttered tight and abandoned.

In the still, morning air, the twittering of insects seemed subdued,
and only a few birds flew, landing to scrabble in the stub bled grain
fields

After bearing west once more and crossing two more low hills, the path
widened into a trail, or narrow road.  Justen reined up just below the
second hill crest when he saw the small orchard below and to the left
of the road.  Half a kay away on the almost-flat ground stood less than
a score of nearly bare-limbed trees, surrounded by a low, tumbled stone
wall.  Two sod-walled buildings, as dilapidated as the wall, sagged
toward each other to the west of the orchard Between the buildings was
a heap of stone that looked to be a rock-walled well.

Glancing down at the road, Justen thought he saw a mass of hoofprints
beneath a thin coating of dust.  He nodded.  Of course.  All the sheep
or goats, or whatever, had been herded westward, perhaps over the
bridge at Clynya.  Was that bridge still standing, or had the
Sarronnese destroyed it, too?  Was he ever going to get back to
Rulyarth-or to Recluce?

The sun and the still air had warmed the high plains as though it were
a summer day, and he wiped his forehead.  Then he took a deep breath
and studied the road again, but he could see no recent tracks, although
he was well aware that he was no tracker.  Slowly, he followed the road
toward the apparently abandoned orchard.

Once he reached the wall, he stopped, studying the trees, thinking they
might be olive trees.  As he followed the road closer to the buildings,
he sent his perceptions ahead, nodding in relief as he discovered the
structures were empty.

He looked at the almost-empty saddlebags, then at the buildings.
Finally, with a look the dusty road to ensure that no one was coming,
he turned off and rode along the short lane to the two soddies.

"Hullo!"

Only silence greeted his hail, not that he had expected a response.

Dismounting by the well, he was pleased to find a battered bucket and a
rope.  In a few moments, he had lifted a bucketful of water,
order-spelled it, and refilled his water bottle, drinking a mouthful
and splashing the road dust off his face.  Then, since there was no
trough, he refilled the bucket and set it out for the mare.  She
slurped noisily.

Justen studied the buildings.  The one to the right of the well looked
like it had been a dwelling and not repaired in years.  The door on the
windowless second building was newer, and fastened with an iron latch.
A set of recent wagon ruts ran from beside the second sod building back
toward the lane and presumably out to the road.

Again, Justen looked to the road before walking over to lift the latch
and open the door.  A trace of brine drifted to him as he peered inside
at the empty timber racks.  Not quite empty, he realized.  Beneath one
rack stood the recently shattered remnants of a large barrel.

With another look around, Justen slipped into the building and walked
over to the barrel.  The top had been removed, and small, round objects
littered the floor; olives.  He peered into the bottom of the barrel to
discover several handfuls or more of the fruit.  After reaching down
and pulling out a damp olive, he nibbled at it.  Beneath the saltiness
of the brine that had been used to cure it, the olive was certainly
edible, if still somewhat bland.

The olive growers had been in a hurry to pack up their wares, since
they had taken what they could easily retrieve and left the rest.

Since there was nothing in which to store the remaining olives, Justen
walked back to the mare and unstrapped one of the saddlebags, the empty
one, and carried it back into the warehouse, where, leaning headfirst
into the barrel and avoiding the sharp points of the two broken staves,
he began retrieving the still-damp fruit, eating some of the olives in
the process and trying not to break his teeth on the pits.

He finally straightened and saw that the bag was more than half full.
He started to leave the storeroom, then shook his head.  Even though
the olives, had he left them there, would have spoiled, he couldn't
just take them.  Finally, he laid two coppers on the rack.

When he stepped back into the yard, the mare whickered, then moved
toward a clump of grass and began to graze.  Jus-ten set the saddlebag
on the well coping and lowered the bucket again, this time to wash his
hands of the salty residue.  After rinsing them, he dried them on his
trousers,

He looked at the saddlebag.  He had not been able to use all of the
abandoned olives, since some had begun to spoil already.  Finally, he
shrugged and began to concentrate, hoping he could add enough order to
the fruit to at least retard spoilage.

A hint of dizziness passed over him, and he sat down on the stones next
to the bag to rest.

"For a mere engineer, you're not doing that badly."

Yee-ahhh.

Justen straightened with a jump.

The vulcrow perched on a dead olive branch, its head cocked to the
side, almost as if studying the engineer.

Whheeee .. . eeee.

"I know.  We're in trouble, lady."  He looked toward the road, but saw
no one.  Then he stood, lifted the saddlebag, and walked over to the
mare to refasten the leather bag in place.  He took a few more olives
and popped one in his mouth before remounting.

Yee-ahhh .. . yee-ah.  The vulcrow was still calling from the olive
tree.

Justen flicked the reins, and the mare carried him out to the road. The
air remained hot and still.

In less than two kays, the road turned south again.  Justen had opened
his tunic as much as possible.  Sweat oozed from his entire body, and
the sun had not even reached its zenith in the blue-green sky.

The grass stretching out from the road was shorter, browner, and
sparser now, with patches of sand and rock between clumps.  The rock
walls had vanished after he left the olive orchard behind, and no
streams graced the flat plateau he rode across.  Only the heavy wagon
tracks over sheep prints indicated use of the road.

After unstoppering the water bottle, he took a deep swallow.

Another kay ahead, he could see a few low bushes in a line almost
perpendicular to the road he traveled, and above them, the air seemed
to waver, like the mirage of a lake.  Jus-ten looked over to the west,
but the plain seemed unchanging as he rode toward the illusion, which
receded, and the bushes, which did not.

The bushes marked the junction with another road, wider, and marked
intermittently with stones.  The new road also had animal and wagon
tracks, all of them headed toward Clynya, Justen hoped.

"Maybe this time, we'll actually get there."

Justen drank more of the water, then touched the mare's neck, trying to
sense how she was doing in the heat.  So far, she seemed strong.

Although the sun continued to shine through a cloudless sky, a faint
breath of air puffed out of the west as Justen rode toward the river
road.  The few scattered hovels were, like the others he had seen,
abandoned.

Justen frowned.  Were all the Sarronnese petrified of the Whites?  Why?
Despite their dislike of the Legend-holders, the Whites generally fired
or destroyed only the cities of those who refused them.  Then Justen
grinned wryly.  By their belief in the Legend, most Sarronnese probably
had to refuse the Whites.

Still .. . wasn't there any way to stop the Whites?  He shook his head,
absently patted the mare, and continued to ride.

Toward midday, he began to look for another hovel, without people and
with a well, as much for the mare as for himself.

Unbidden, the image of the dead Iron Guard appeared in his thoughts
again, clutching the damned black iron arrowhead.  He pursed his lips
and squinted in the bright light, trying to determine whether the lump
on the plain ahead meant available water.

The lump turned out to be another sod-walled hovel.  Although it had a
well, the water in it was almost brackish, and Justen was so dizzy
after order-spelling the salt from two buckets that he sat on the sandy
hot ground eating warm olives and sipping from his refilled water
bottle while the mare drank.

Before he left the hovel and the well, even though he felt full, he
drank more water and topped off his bottle.

Toward mid-afternoon, the grass began to thicken once more, and the
suggestion of rolling hills began to appear, along with a few trees,
and stone pillars to mark the corners of grazing lands.  He passed
three houses that stood almost in a group; while shuttered, they were
substantial and seemed well tended.  He took advantage of their vacant
status to water the mare and refill his bottle, since in the flatness
of the land, he had found no streams.

Then he began to see more grain fields with still more dwellings, again
shuttered, although he had the feeling that some of them were
occupied.

Even later, the ground began to slope downward.  He passed another side
road, the first one in a while that was more than a path; it was almost
as wide as the road he traveled, but it headed due south, not exactly
what he had in mind.  It also bore wagon tracks.  Justen nodded and
urged the mare toward the river.  A slight breeze blew out of the west,
bearing a hint of dampness and the odor of something like hay.

As he crossed the crest of another hill, Justen peered toward a hazy
line of trees pasted on the horizon.  Undoubtedly, they marked the
river.  He glanced toward a bare-limbed tree beside the road and
swallowed as he saw the vulcrow again, staring .. . waiting.

Yee-ahh ... yee-ah.  The bird flapped away over a field as the mare
carried Justen steadily westward.  He wiped his forehead again.  While
he could feel a faint breeze, the late afternoon sun still beat down on
the road-and on him.

By the time Justen reached the top of the next hill, he could make out
puffs of dust ahead, if slightly to his right, between the infrequently
spaced trees that apparently followed the river.  His stomach
tightened.  A horse train that long meant troopers, perhaps a score of
them, and any troopers in this part of Sarronnyn could only be White
lancers or Iron Guards.  That they were already almost in front of him
meant that they would reach the crossroads before he did.

While he could not see the White Wizard's vulcrow, he had no doubt that
the bird lurked somewhere nearby.

He reined up.  What would they do once they reached the crossroads?
Would they head on toward Clynya or turn toward him?  Were they really
after him?

He pursed his lips, thinking, absently stroking the mare's neck.  He
was too tired and not strong enough to hold a light-shield for long,
yet it was almost another two kays to the crossroads.  Finally, he
pulled the mare over next to a scrub oak and dismounted.  If the troops
headed his way, he could just wait, use the light-shield, and let them
pass.  If they continued on to Clynya, he could follow at a discrete
distance.

He smiled and un stoppered his water bottle.  Then he retrieved some
olives, which he ate with a chunk of the bread and a slice of the
cheese, saving some for the next day, although of the bread, there was
little more than the end crust left.

His smile faded as the sun touched the horizon and the White troops
began to camp at the crossroads.

Yee-ah .. . yee-ahh.  This time, the vulcrow circled overhead.

Justen swallowed.  If he had any doubts .. .

He studied the flat road he had covered.  Where could he go now?  Could
he wait?  If he retraced his path, he was bound to fun into the White
Wizard's forces.  Yet he was no match for a score of White lancers, and
the gentle slope to the crossroads was so open that he couldn't cross
the fields without being seen, and his senses were not sharp enough to
trust on fields he had never seen.  One hole, and the mare would break
a leg.  And the Whites were already warned to fire above any dust
puffs. He swallowed, wondering if he could just wait until full
night.

Yee-ahhhh... He turned again to look back along the road he had
taken.

Beyond the second hill, he could see more dust.

"Darkness!"

Yee-ahhhh .. . yee-ahh.

Justen tiredly remounted the mare and turned away from the crossroads.
There had been a side road two hills back.  Because the Whites might
get there first, assuming that the second dust cloud represented more
Whites-and from its size, a larger group-he would have to chance the
open fields.

Restraining his impulse to have the mare trot or canter, he rode back
down the gentle slope they had just climbed, his eyes studying the
terrain to his right, to the south, trying to memorize it.

Then, at the bottom of the hill, he drew the light-shield around
himself and the mare and turned south across the open grasslands,
hoping his memory would not play him false.

LVI

Eldiren frowned.

"What happened, Scr Wizard?"

"He disappeared.  One of those cowardly Black tricks.  But it won't
help him now.  We've got position on him."

"I beg your pardon, Scr?"

Eldiren shook his head.

The officer just shrugged apologetically, apprehensively.

Eldiren sighed.  "It's simple.  He knows that the others hold the
crossroads, and he's an engineer, not a mage.  So he will either try to
circle around them and get on the river road on the other side of our
forces, or he will try to get to that side road up ahead."

"But... from what you said, he's more than a kay from it.  We're just a
few hundred cubits."

"He'll cut across the fields, but he's going to have to do that
half-blind, and that will slow him down.  Take another score-say the
Fourth.  Ride past the crossroads and just keep going until you get to
the fork in the road on this side of the river.  You'll know it.  After
the roads join, it's only a couple hundred cubits to the big drawbridge
that crosses the Sarron into Clynya.  The bridge will be up, of course.
Just hold the fork as close to the bridge as is safe and wait for us.
Forage as necessary."

"What about the engineer?"

"If you hold the fork, he can't cross the river.  He'll have to travel
into the wilds for another day, maybe longer... but once you go past
him and get on the river road, he won't head that way.  And we'll be
right behind him.  If you see dust puffs, you know what to do with the
arrows."  Eldiren smiled.

The officer shivered.

LVII

Justen blotted the sweat from his face wondering how he and the mare
had kept going.  He was tired, and so was she.  Every time he tried to
get to the river, it seemed as though more White troops had arrived. He
had no energy left with which to shield himself from the damned
vulcrow, and the sun never stopped beating all day long.  His exposed
skin was bright red, and his face burned night and day.  His own salty
sweat was like acid on his cheeks, and even his skin under the short
beard itched and burned.  Again, he wished for a razor.  Some men used
knives to shave, but he wasn't up to that, especially without some form
of soap or oil.  He rubbed his aching forehead again, trying to forget
the pain in his legs.

So why did he keep going?

The dust that he knew was rising from the road behind him partly
answered that question.  A score or more of White Lancers and a White
Wizard chasing him were certainly good reasons to keep riding.

Overhead, the vulcrow circled, keeping his location pointed out to the
White Wizard.  Yet it was almost a game, a deadly one, as if the White
Wizard were holding back.  By sleeping less and riding longer for the
past two days, Justen had managed to keep ahead of the Whites.  But
each day, he awoke from a troubled sleep with less energy left, and no
quick or easy way to replenish his supply of now-exhausted bread and
cheese.  The few shuttered homesteads and hovels in the parched
southern grasslands were not abandoned, but filled with armed and
fearful souls.

He was almost out of olives, and only brackish water that he had
order-spelled had kept them going.  At least there was still
grass-browned but chewable-for the mare.

At the top of another of the dry and endless hills, Justen turned,
taking a deep breath.  The Whites were closing in again, and it was but
a bit past midday.

He turned again, noting the fork in the road ahead.  The left-hand fork
was narrower and headed straight for the dull, gray hills.  He could
see one stone wall off the left road; The main road swung westward and
looked flat and empty.

Justen took the left fork.  In the hills, there might at least be
somewhere to hide.

Less than half a kay southward into the hills, on the slope above the
road, stood a long stone building, roofed in weathered clay tiles.
Justen turned the mare up the lane.

Whheeee ... eeee.

"I know.  It's steeper, but we need the water."

As he rode into the yard, a figure dashed for the door of the dwelling.
The door clunked shut with a thud, and a bar dropped into place.  By
the well lay a bucket filled with water.  Justen grinned.  He rode the
mare to the door of the dwelling.

"If I could trouble you," he said loudly, "I'd appreciate taking some
of that water, and if you had any traveling provisions to spare, I'd
leave some coin for you."

No one answered.

"All right.  I'll just be taking the water, and I'll leave some coppers
by the well."

Justen leaned forward in the saddle, taking his weight off his sore
thighs and cramping muscles, before half-climbing, half-falling, out of
the saddle.  He steadied himself by grasping the edge of the saddle.

Finally, he dipped a finger in the water and tasted it- slightly
brackish, but not enough as to require the order-spelling that he
wasn't even sure he could carry off in his present condition.

There was a circular trough by the well, and he poured some of the
water into it for the mare, who immediately began to drink.

"Easy .. . easy, lady."

Then he drank some of the remainder and splashed the rest across his
face and neck, both to cool himself and to remove me dust and grit.
Remembering his promise, he took two coppers from his purse and set
them on the coping.  Then he lowered the bucket into the shallow well
and brought it up.  After retrieving his water bottle, he began to fill
it.

"Get out of here!  Go on!"  Justen looked up to the doorway of the
dwelling, where a woman had an antique crossbow trained on him.  Her
dark hair, shot with gray, flared away from her narrow face as she
concentrated on her aim.

"I'm leaving," Justen protested.  "The coppers are right there."

"That's the only reason you're not dead."

Justen capped the water bottle and replaced it in the saddle holder,.
Then he forced himself to take another deep swallow of water from the
bucket.  "You might be careful.  There are a couple score Whites on the
road behind me."

"I'll be careful enough.  But bother your Whites .. . you brought them,
you deserter.  Let them chase you into the Stone Hills, for all the
good it will do you."

"I'm not a deserter.  I'm a Black engineer."

"You're all one and the same.  Now get on that poor horse and get out
of here."

"The Stone Hills?"  asked Justen, pouring some of the water in the
bucket into the now-empty trough.  He could tell that the mare needed
more, and the water was warm enough that she wasn't cramping.

"Maybe you're not quite so bad ... it doesn't matter.  Just like the
Roof of the World is the coldest spot in Candar, the Stone Hills are
the driest.  And that's the only place this road leads to ... except
for the old copper mines, but they're long worked out."  Her face
hardened.  "Soon as your horse finishes that, you be gone."  ' "Could I
buy a loaf of bread or something?"

"Your coin's not worth it."  She raised the crossbow.

"Thank you."  Justen half-climbed, half-dragged, himself onto the mare,
half-fearing a bolt in the back.  But the bolt did not come as he rode
back downhill and turned toward the Stone Hills.  Perhaps the Whites
would not follow past the copper mines.

With a glance over his shoulder at the dust cloud that was less than
two kays behind, he laughed harshly.

LVIII

"Sending Beltar to Sarronnyn was a masterstroke, Histen."

"No, sending gold to Recluce was better.  Without that marine turning
on the Storm Wizard, we could have lost another army."  Histen stepped
away from the screening glass upon the white-oak table.

"What happens when the Storm Wizard recovers?"  Renwek absently
adjusted his red-leather belt.

"Nothing.  He's on the way back to Recluce, it appears, with the
remaining engineers.  Except for the one that Beltar claims is
wandering loose in Sarronnyn."

"That doesn't sound good."

"Actually, it is rather good, because Zerchas and Beltar are arguing
about what to do.  And young Derba, who's more of a hothead than
Beltar, doesn't want to cause trouble until he knows who will win."

"What about Jehan?"

"I worry about poor Jehan.  He thinks too much.  So does Eldiren.  Of
course, you do, too, Renwek."  The High Wizard cracked a smile as he
walked to the window.  After glancing at the cold autumn rain and
rubbing his forehead, he eased the window closed.  "There are times I
wish we had a Weather Wizard."

Renwek coughed nervously.  "Won't that Weather Wizard reveal your .. .
influence?"

"My bribery, you mean?  What is there to reveal?  The only person the
wizard could know about has joined the Iron Guard."  Histen poured two
glasses of the red wine.  "It is going rather well."

"Not that well.  We have lost a small army and almost half of
another."

"We have Sarron, and we'll have all of Sarronnyn before long-those
parts that Beltar doesn't reduce to rubble.  Besides, losses like that
will keep Zerchas humble."

"Zerchas is rather cunning."  Renwek pursed his lips.  "But then .. .
Beltar is stronger than Zerchas.  If he takes on Zerchas, he might-"

"He might replace Zerchas?  Of course he will.  Not all of Zerchas's
scheming will work.  Jehan's too smart to do Zerchas's treachery, and
Zerchas knows it.  More important, Jehan will somehow avoid crossing
Beltar."

"You think you know them all, don't you?"

"That's the real part of being High Wizard.  Any young fool with power
can incinerate his rivals."

"And what will you do when Beltar climbs the Tower like Jeslek did?"

"If he does get that far ... hmmm."  Histen paused.  "Like Sterol, I
would offer him the amulet.  Unlike Sterol, I would not scheme, but
offer my full support before leaving for Lydiar , .  just about as fast
as I could manage."

"That is not exactly the height of honor."

"There is a great difference between breaking one's word-which I have
not done-and waiting around to be incinerated by someone who doesn't
understand the difference.  Beltar won't chase after me.  Derba would,
the arrogant idiot."  Histen drained the glass.  "In the meantime, send
another shipment to Recluce."

"But why?  You don't need-"

"Renwek .. . always pay your traitors well, even after their treachery.
If no one finds out, they'll be grateful, and you might need them
again.  If someone does find out, it draws attention to the gold and
not to the giver."  The High Wizard laughed.  "In this case, the gold
probably wasn't necessary.  I'm sure he was only following his own
inclinations.  But guaranteeing his inclinations was cheap."

Renwek nodded, but pursed his lips.

LIX

Justen slowed the mare to a halt, trying to sense what was bothering
him.  Overhead, the sun still blazed with the heat of summer, hotter
with each step the mare carried him into the Stone Hills.  Was he even
in the Stone Hills?

He glanced up the road, still wide enough for heavy wagons, if
crumbling at the edges.  Where were the copper mines-abandoned or
otherwise?

Yee-ahhh .. . yee-ahhh.

The vulcrow landed on the limb of a weathered gray cactus overlooking
the road, stared at him for a moment, then flapped back into the
cloudless sky.

A dull pounding, almost like the roll of drums, startled Justen, and he
looked over his shoulder.  A line of White lancers, less than a kay
away, had spurred their horses into a canter toward him.  Even as he
looked, they seemed to close the gap to several hundred cubits.

Justen turned and glanced around.  The road ran above the dry
watercourse between two low hills.  A few clumps of brown grass,
scattered cacti, sand, and rock covered the hillside.  The hot wind
threw grit at his blistered and raw face.

To the right, about two hundred cubits ahead, was a road cut into the
hillside, and after the cut, what had been the main road narrowed to
little more than a trail.

The mines?  Justen nudged the mare with his boots.  Tired as she was,
she began to trot.  The engineer glanced back again.  The hard-riding
lancers were close enough that several had lifted their blades.

Justen turned his attention to the road.  Should he take the narrow
trail or the mine road?

He decided on the mine road and urged the mare toward the road cut.
"Come on, lady.  "The effort was probably useless, but with a White
Wizard so close and looking for him, and with no vegetation or cover,
even light-shielding wouldn't be enough.

Yee-ahhh .. . yeahhhh.  The vulcrow swooped in front of Justen, one
wing almost grazing his face.

Wheeee ... ccc.  The mare skittered and nearly fell.  Justen grabbed
her mane to stay in the saddle as she stopped just below the road
cut.

Yee-ahhh.

Justen flicked the reins.  "Please .. . lady."

Thunnggg ... hissttt.  The arrow flew past his ear.

"Shit..."  he muttered, realizing that it had come from in front of
him.  He flattened himself against the mare, simultaneously trying to
cast a light-shield around them both.

Thunnnkk..  .

Whheeeee .. . The mare screamed, and Justen winced at the pain that her
cry carried.

"Got the first horse, leastwise.  That fellow won't make it far without
a mount."

"Get the damned bird!"

Thunnkkk!

As the mare slumped to the ground, Justen felt his way clear, grabbing
the half-full water bottle and the blanket from their holders and
trying to sense his way off the road.

The lancers charged toward the fallen mare, who must have reappeared
from nowhere, thought Justen, as he struggled away from the mine-road
cut.

Thunggg ... thungg ... "Ambush!"  "..  ware the arrows!  Watch out!"

"Call the wizard!"

As the lancers regrouped, Justen slowly limped toward the narrow trail
that he could feel rather than see.  The vulcrow flapped in the road,
an arrow through one wing, and a single lancer lay in the dust.  Justen
did not look back as he struggled uphill.

He doubted that the few Sarronnese hill folk, tough as they might be,
would stop the lancers for long.

Hhssttt!  A fire bolt splashed on the uphill side of the road behind
Justen.

He continued to walk blindly and steadily away from Sarronnyn away from
any water he knew about, and away from the White Wizard, his feet upon
a quickly narrowing trail.  The trail did not so much halt as merge
with the now-dry watercourse that climbed gently between the two
browning hills.

Justen reached the top and stepped behind the husk of a dried cactus
before releasing the light-shield.

Below, the lancers had dropped back beyond bow range, and waited.

One of the Sarronnese archers, almost indistinguishable from the brown
and muted red of the land, nocked another arrow and let it fly.

Hhhsttt!  The fire bolt tracked back the arrow's path.

"Aeeeiii .  , ."  The screaming archer flamed for a moment, then
toppled into a charred heap.

Another archer lofted an arrow toward the lancers, this time without
leaving the rocky cover.

Hssst!  The fire bolt flared harmlessly against red sandstone.

Justen nodded and slipped downhill and out of sight.  Since he had seen
only one vulcrow, it might be a while before the White Wizard could
bring another one after him.  He hoped so.

Farther downhill, he stopped and took a deep swallow from the water
bottle, then threaded the loops through his belt.  After loosening the
strap on the blanket roll, he slung it over his shoulder and let the
blanket swing under his arm.

He looked at the gray hills ahead.  He hoped there were a lot of cacti,
because he was headed for Naclos, like it or not.  He had no illusions.
Most likely, he'd die on the way.  But Naclos offered a chance, and he
had no doubt that surviving in the hill country of Sarronnyn for any
length of time was impossible for him.  Perhaps he could struggle
through the Stone Hills to the green lands of Naclos.  Perhaps there
was something to the dream, the vision of the silver-haired druid.
Perhaps.

He snorted and kept walking, his eyes peeled for any vegetation that
might harbor either water or nourishment.

LX

The two silver-haired women-the age of the older distinguishable from
that of the younger only by the darkness behind her pupils and the
barely visible fine lines radiating from the corners of those too-wise
eyes-stood on opposite sides of the sand table.  Neither spoke.

The older woman concentrated, and a replica of the Stone Hills appeared
in miniature in the sand.

The younger woman, her hair falling but to her shoulders, concentrated
in turn.  Sweat beaded on her forehead.  Her lips tightened, and her
eyes closed, but her hands remained by her side, seemingly relaxed.

A faint smile creased the lips of the older woman as she watched the
other's efforts.

In time, a small portion of the has-relief map churned momentarily, and
a small spike of sand appeared on the northern edge.  The woman with
the shorter hair smiled broadly for a moment.  "He's there."

The other nodded, sadly, and raised her eyebrows.  "He is strong, but
is he strong enough?"

"I think so," answered the younger, "but we never know.  Not
until..."

"Yes .  , .  only a handful ever endure the Stone Hills for more than a
few days.  Are you sure you want to go?"

"Yes," answered the younger.  "My sending, my duty."

The older woman released a deep breath, and the sharpness of the relief
map subsided into vague and rounded contours.  "Your duty ... it may be
long."

"You regretted yours?  I have always enjoyed his songs."

The older woman's faint smile faded.  "He has lost much.  So do we all.
And the times apart are hard, especially if you must share him."

"That will not be so."

"As the Angels will."  The younger woman nodded, and her fingers
brushed the other's before she turned to begin gathering what she
needed for the trip ahead.  She had little time to waste, not if he
were already in the heat of the Stone Hills.

LXI

Eldiren glanced across the half-dozen charred heaps that had once been
living beings.  "Those five were Sarronnese hill-fighters."  He pointed
to the figure stretched closest to the mine road.  "That was the Black
engineer."

"Weren't we supposed to capture him?"  ventured the lancer
sub-officer.

"I doubt that Beltar and Zerchas will be that unhappy to learn that he
is dead," said Eldiren dryly.  "Not after he dragged us almost into the
Stone Hills.  He nearly made it- we couldn't have followed far into the
hills."  The White Wizard laughed.  "Though I doubt he would have
lasted long out there, either.  Still .. . would you want him around to
make more of those cursed arrowheads?"

Three of the closest lancers shook their heads vigorously.

"Was he the one who touched off the cannons?"  asked the sub-officer,
nervously glancing at the ramshackle and weathered timbers of the mine
buildings on the flat behind the White Wizard.

"Most probably," admitted Eldiren, raising his hands.

Hhhssttt!  The white fire played over the four bodies closest to the
mine structures until they were white ash.

The White Wizard turned toward the mine buildings, and fire splashed
across the structures.  For a moment, the wizard watched.  "That should
get rid of this pest hole

Then he turned to the remaining body and nodded.  "He led us quite a
chase.  May their good ones all die so young."  His hands lifted again,
and the white fire incinerated the corpse.  Only a few white ashes and
a dark splotch on the sandy ground remained.

"Let's go."

"Yes, Scr."  The sub-officer turned to the half-score of lancers.
"Mount up and head back.  We'll water at that stead again."

The White Wizard turned his mount back toward the hills and saluted.
Then he wheeled the white horse after the lancers.

LXII

Justen missed the mare, and not just because his feet were sore.  She
had given him her best, and had probably done the same for the dead
Iron Guard.  And what had been her reward?  Death, by an arrow meant
for him.

He trudged along in the thin shadow of the gully, trying to keep
heading south while staying out of the direct sun.

Looking back, he could see dark smoke circling into the sky, a sign
that the Whites had fired the old mine buildings.  That would give him
more time.  He shook his head.  More time for what?

The Whites wouldn't chase him any farther.  Not without a road, or any
possible water for a score of lancers and their mounts.  And especially
because they probably doubted that he could survive the Stone Hills.

Justen's eyes flicked from stone to stone along the dry depression.
Everything looked shriveled, even the cacti, and the only sounds were
those of his raspy breathing and his feet crunching on the hard and
sandy soil.

The first hill was gentle enough, but the sunlight on the far side
struck him like a fire bolt  He squinted out at the dryness and the
gray stone before him.  Somewhere to the south lay Naclos, somewhere
beyond the hills-as if he could ever get there with only a half-full
water bottle and no real skills for enduring in a stone desert.

One thing was clear, very clear.  He couldn't travel during the heat of
the day.  He needed a cool spot where he could rest.  His eyes darted
down the hillside, looking for something sheltered, and hopefully
uninhabited by anything that would regard him as dinner.

From what little he knew, none of the bigger mountain cats lived in the
hotter regions, and the killer lizards needed more water than the Stone
Hills provided.  But snakes and spike rats could be dangerous enough.

He took the slope one easy step at a time, squinting against the light,
until he reached another low point between what seemed endless hills.
Instead of climbing yet another rise, he followed the depression to the
east, toward the westernmost spur of the Westhorns-well beyond his
vision.  But the Stone Hills widened the farther south they flowed.

He trudged for nearly a kay until he found a large, boulder with two
grayish lumps tucked under the eastern side.  Each wrinkled lump was
the size of a small bucket and bore hard brown spines.  Justen nodded
and looked at the overhang provided by the boulder.  Then he took out
the blade he had lugged across Sarronnyn and poked around, trying to
scrape away the loose sand and to see what else might be in the cool
shade.  A reddish insect scuttled out, and Justen stamped on it and
scuffed it away into the full sunlight.  He scraped some more, down to
a mixture of hard red clay and sandstone.  Nothing else appeared.  He
unrolled the blanket and used some rocks to hold one edge of it in
place on the rim of the boulder, forming a rough awning.

After that, he studied one of the gray cacti.  Finally, he used the
long blade to cut a slice from one side.  A sticky substance clung to
the blade.

Sitting down under the boulder and behind his blanket awning, he took a
deep breath and studied the slice of cactus, first with his eyes and
then with his order-senses.

The sticky, sap like substance held water, and his senses indicated
that he could probably lick or eat the gooey stuff.  He touched his
tongue to the grey pulp.

"Oooo ..."  The pulp was more tart than an unripe pear apple and more
bitter than fresh-harvested brown seaweed.  Justen took a tiny nibble
and sat down to wait and see how his empty stomach reacted.

If he were to get across the Stone Hills, he was going to need more
water and more food, and there was no one out here to bring it to
him.

He half-dozed, half-dreamed, until he could feel the air begin to turn
cooler.  Then he slipped out from his awning, to realize that the sun
had almost set, with an orange glow coming from the west.  The air was
still warmer than in Nylan in mid-summer, if far cooler than it had
been at midday.

He looked at the cactus, then sliced off a larger chunk this time,
forcing himself to take a mouthful.  It tasted like sawdust mixed with
rotten seaweed, but he gagged perhaps half of the bite down.  He
decided not to eat more for the moment and began to roll up the
blanket.

A faint chittering began to echo along the depression, indicating that
at least some insects existed.  With a small swallow from the almost
depleted water bottle, Justen began to walk southward again, trying to
avoid climbing when possible, and looking for anything that might
resemble food or water.

He saw several of the gray cacti, but decided against trying any more
until his stomach decided whether they were as edible as his senses
insisted they were.

A brown-gray rodent skittered from a crevice in a rock, then dropped
back out of sight as Justen's boots crunched in the sand.  The
slightest hint of air brushed across his still sun-blistered face, and
he took a deeper breath.

Maybe...

LXIII

. and maybe not.

Justen tried to move, knowing that the heat of yet another day had
nearly passed, but his eyes would not open.  His fingers explored the
puffiness, and he gently worked the gunk away.  Three days of eating
various types of cactus hadn't killed him, but his face was bloated,
and he felt dizzy most of the time.

He'd hoped to follow the dry streambed until he could sense water under
the sand, but the water was either not there or too deep to sense.  As
one eye and then the other opened under swollen eyelids in the light of
late afternoon, he tried to moisten his lips, but both tongue and lips
were.  dry.  There just wasn't enough water, and he'd had to tighten
his belt so much that his trousers would have flapped loosely around
his waist and legs had there been any real wind.

His back was sore, and he didn't want to think about the blisters on
his feet, or on his face.  Instead, he rolled forward onto his knees
and managed to rise.  He rattled the water bottle-still empty-then
replaced the blade and scabbard on his belt.  The blade was useful for
cutting the cactus sections to begin with because with it, he could
avoid the long thorns, but both his knife and blade had acquired sticky
edges that no amount of wiping seemed able to remove.

He rolled the blanket as tightly as he could and strapped it into
place, then started downstream, or at least downhill.  The curves in
the sand indicated that at one time there had been water in the dry
streambed.  Besides, downstream was roughly southward, roughly toward
Naclos, although Justen could see no end to the stony slopes and
valleys.

His eyes opened more as he walked, and he watched for the type of
cactus that was greener rather than gray, the one that had more water
and was, of course, rarer.  But neither green cactus nor obvious stream
or pothole appeared in the ever-dimming nightfall.

He kept trudging, trying every so often to find some sense of water,
some hint that the Stone Hills were not so dry as he had heard they
were.  By now, he could identify the rustle of the spike rats, and the
hiss-click of the red insects with the nasty-looking tails.  Even a
spike rat would be tasty, but the rodents never got close enough for
either his blade or a stone.

The dry sand was everywhere-in his boots, in his festering blisters, in
his ears-and where it didn't itch, it burned.  He stopped to slice a
corner off of a gray cactus, the only one he could find, with barely
any moisture in the pulp.  He chewed as he walked on under the stars.

He finally slumped against a boulder in the middle of the river that
probably hadn't held water since before the founding of Recluce and let
his feet rest, looking over at a dark patch on a slab of rock beside
the dry wash.  He let his senses drift to the rock, then straightened
and lurched over to the rock, feeling the dark moss.  Moss?  He pulled
the knife from the sheath, then stopped, letting his senses, shaky as
they were, probe the softness beneath the darkness that would have been
green in the light.

He uncapped the water bottle and put the top in his purse.  Then,
carefully, his fingers trembling, he began to cut away the top layer of
moss, clearing it from the edges of the narrow fissure.  He began to
dig inside, and dampness touched his fingers.  He bent over and licked
the stone, oblivious to the muddy and mossy taste.  Then he edged the
knife in deeper, and a thin stream of water began to trickle out.  He
bent down and began to lap it up, certain that it would be gone in
instants.  He kept lapping, until the fullness of his stomach told him
that he could hold no more.

Then he put the bottle against the stone, but the flow oozed past the
top.  He twisted the knife blade deeper, and the scraping echoed across
the sandy stream bottom.  But a thin line of water spurted ever so
slightly away from the stone, enough that he could press the water
container against the edge of the stone and listen to the water trickle
inside.

His fingers were shaking when the bottle was full and capped, and he
filled his mouth again, and again.  Not wanting the water to escape, he
pushed some of the moss back into the fissure, reducing the thin stream
back to an oozing flow.

Then he searched for a place to rest, to let the water help his body
renew itself.

Three times during the night, he drank as much as he could hold.

In the dull gray before dawn, he sat up, his blanket drawn around him.
How long should he stay by the dribbling water?  How long would it
last?

He walked back to the rock for another drink, unplugging the moss, but
only a slightly increased oozing greeted his efforts, and his senses
could not penetrate the rock far enough to see if more water lay deeper
and beyond the reach of die knife.

"Have to find more ... somewhere ..."  he mumbled to a spike rat, which
vanished behind a hump of sand.

After rolling the blanket and shaking the sand from his boots, he
lapped at the thin, oozing line of moisture from the rock, trying to
get the last driblets.  Then he loosened his belt a trace and started
back down the streambed, roughly southward, to see how far he could get
before the sun turned the sand and rock back into an oven.

The little water cache in the rock had bought him some time, and his
step was firmer, his head clearer, although his guts felt heavy.  He
walked on the exposed rock floor of the wash where possible, since the
soft sand dragged at his boots.

As the sun climbed, turning from orange to white in the ever-clear,
blue-green sky, even the faint rustle of scattered insects vanished and
the heat and stillness grew.

LXIV

The dark-haired engineer paced along the heavy-timbered wharf, glancing
back at the puffs of white smoke floating into the sky from the stacks
of the Pride of Brista.  Her eyes flicked down the pier toward the
warehouses, past the two Hamorian traders and the sleek lines of the
powered schooner that had no nameplate and bore black rigging and
canvas-a smuggler if any vessel deserved the name.

Wagons continued to roll up to all four ships, disgorging goods. 
""Ware the wagon!  "Ware the wagon!"

Altara moved back out of the path of the carter, then stepped farther
aside as two women, dressed in dark-blue leathers and carrying blades,
escorted their consorts and three children along the rough timbers.
Behind the family came three handcarts, heaped cubits high with bales
and bags.  And behind the carts followed three hard-faced guards, each
woman bearing double blades and a pack.

One of the guards nodded to Altara, and the engineer returned the nod,
her eyes flicking back toward the head of the pier.

Puffs of smoke rose from the tall stacks of the
two-hundred-fifty-cubit-long Hamorian steamer: Empress Dafrille. Altara
frowned at the order-tensions radiating from the boilers, then sighed
as she saw Gunnar's blond and gangling figure striding down the pier. 
She stepped aside for another wagon, this one laden with rolls of
Sarronnese carpets destined for one of the Hamorian ships.  "... loose
the sling!"  "... bound for Atla in Hamor..."

Altara peered over the bustle of people and cargo toward Gunnar and
waved.

The weather mage waved in return and kept walking, disappearing for a
moment behind another wagon, this one filled with wooden crates.

Gunnar shook his head as he approached.

"Not any trace of him?"  asked Altara.

"No.  He's alive.  I think I'd know if he weren't.  But wherever he is,
it's a long way from here."  Gunnar hopped on a bollard to avoid a
careening hand truck loaded with three crates, then dropped back to the
pier beside Altara.

"You took long enough."  She glanced toward the Pride of Brista, where
two sailors on the pier were beginning to help single up the lines. "We
need to hurry."

"I climbed the bluff over there.  I thought the height might help.
Besides, we're not leaving until later."  Gunnar dodged as a heavyset
woman rolled an empty handcart back toward the head of the pier.

"The port-master is clearing the piers so two more steamers can berth.
Everyone's being pressed to load more quickly."  Altara threaded her
way along the edge of the pier, not looking back to see if Gunnar
followed.

"Everyone's given up."

"Wouldn't you?  The Tyrant's dead; the heir's a sickly
fifteen-year-old, and there's no real army left.  Sarron's a pile of
rubble, and the Whites are three days from Rulyarth."  Altara snorted.
"You'll notice we're not staying, either."

"Some help we were."  Gunnar stopped short of the gangway of The Pride
of Brista as a hefty stevedore rolled an empty hand truck down.

"We couldn't do it alone.  You and Justen wiped out about an entire
army between you.  What else did you expect to do?"

Gunnar shrugged helplessly,

"You two Blacks, get on board.  We're lifting the gangway," called the
second from the deck.

Altara and Gunnar exchanged glances.  Altara nodded at Gunnar, and the
sandy-haired man stepped onto the plank.  The engineer followed.

LXV

With a last deep breath, Justen halted at the top of the stony rise. He
chewed slowly on the chunk of green cactus, gently brushed aside a
flake of dried skin from his blistered face, and eased himself onto a
lighter-colored stone that seemed flat.  The too-big blade in the
two-small scabbard banged against rock and his bruised leg.

"Ooooo ..."  Even now, in the early morning, the stone had picked up
enough sunlight to be uncomfortable.  He turned his head and looked
back to the north.  Heat wavered off the gray stones that covered the
rows and rows of hills, each hill like the one behind it.  Then he
studied the hills before him.  Was the faint line on the horizon the
high forest of Naclos ... or another mirage?

He blinked, wiping his forehead.  The ground seemed to shiver, and he
sat on the hot stone and took the water bottle from his belt,
swallowing about half of the remainder and studying the bottle before
replacing it in his belt.  How much longer could he could keep finding
water?

Some of the dizziness abated.  In time, he stood and eased downhill,
placing each booted foot carefully on the loose rock, looking for an
overhang or a shady spot before the full heat of midday, or, equally
important, for one of the small, green tub cacti and the moisture it
would contain, or for another pocket of rock water, or a small
sinkhole.

According to his all-too-rough calculations and his own sense of
direction, the high forests of Naclos were still days away.  All that
lay behind him or ahead of him was stone, the endless gray stone of the
Stone Hills, a dry ocean of rock.

"Ocean of rock, ocean of stone .. . can't drink either one."  He
laughed hoarsely, then continued to slog along the partly shaded dry
washes mat headed roughly southward, his eyes and senses alert for
water or for the few edible cactus fruits.

One foot..  . and then the other..  . one foot..  . and then the other
.. . while overhead, the white-orange sun blazed through the clear
blue-green sky.  One foot... and then the other...

LXVI

"The Whites have taken both Rulyarth and the harbor.  Suthya is
surrounded on all sides."  Claris rubbed her forehead for an instant,
then sipped from the black glass goblet on the Council table.

The roar of surf from the beach below the Black Holding provided a
background for the cold drizzle that fell beyond the closed windows.
Only two of the oil lamps in the wall sconces were lit.

"You can see why I felt that any significant commitment of resources to
the Tyrant was premature at best."  Ryltar brushed back a wispy lock of
brown hair.

"Ryltar ..."  The third counselor coughed, then moistened her thin
lips.  "Our handful of volunteers cost the Whites dearly.  Perhaps more
would have saved the Sarronnese."

"Jenna, dear, have we learned nothing in the centuries since the
Founders?  The great Creslin himself could save only those who were
willing to save themselves, and that was with all his power.  The
Sarronnese were not willing to fight, not the way Southwind would, or
even Suthya."  Ryltar lifted his goblet, then set it down without
drinking.

"And now Suthya and Southwind stand alone, each separated by a
Sarronnyn held by the White devils.  Not exactly promising, you must
admit."  The black-haired and broad-shouldered older woman shook her
head, then took another sip from the goblet.

"Let's be honest, ladies.  Where would we have gotten enough troops to
have made a difference in Sarronnyn?  Without leaving Recluce itself
defenseless?  All told, we have .. . what?  Score forty marines?
Another score twenty students with some skill at arms?  We have not
exactly pursued the art of land warfare."  Ryltar smiled.

"Why it is that your reasoning always leaves me queasy, Ryltar?"  Jenna
glanced outside as a flash of lightning overpowered the glow of the oil
lamps.  "Perhaps it's because you have been the one who has continually
opposed increasing the number of marines.  Or increasing the iron-ore
shipments from Hamor."

Ryltar shrugged.  "I don't deny it.  One must pay for such expansions,
and I have always opposed increasing tax levies."

"Let's not get into that this evening," suggested Claris.  "The point
is that Fairhaven has taken another step in its master plan for
conquering Candar.  The question is what we intend to do about it?"

"Ah, yes.  The great master plan."  Ryltar smirked.

"Ryltar..."  Jenna sighed.

"We still have to face the facts.  First, our ships will stop Fairhaven
from ever being a threat to us, even if all of Candar falls.  Second,
as we just discussed, we scarcely have the trained troops to make much
of an impression.  And where would we send them?  To Suthya, already
surrounded?  To Southwind-which Fairhaven may wait years to attack, if
it ever does?"  Ryltar turned in the dark wooden armchair and stared at
the oil lamp beside the painting of the silver-haired man that hung on
the inside wall overlooking the table.  "What can Fairhaven really do
to us?"

"Destroy our basis of order-"

"Jenna," interjected Claris, "we've discussed this time after time, and
you won't change Ryltar's mind tonight or any other night.  Do you have
any specific ideas?"

"Fine.  Just- Oh, never mind."  Jenna paused.  "At least the engineers
could forge a huge supply of those black iron arrowheads and we could
send those to the Suthyans."

"How would we pay for them, and for the iron?"  countered Ryltar.

"I suspect, given their effectiveness, the Suthyans would willingly pay
for such weapons," added Claris dryly.  "That's a good idea."

"I don't like it.  We're not supposed to become arms merchants to the
world."

"We're not.  And, as you like to point out in regard to armies, we
couldn't ever build that kind of force ... but we could send a few
thousand arrows."  Jenna smiled sweetly.

"I don't like it, but..."  Ryltar smiled grimly "... it's far better
than sending our people to die.  We did lose more than half of those
'volunteers," you know."

"I know.  Including your nephew, if you consider what he did a loss."

"Jenna..."

"I beg your pardon, Ryltar."

"I accept your apology, fellow Counselor."

Another flash of lightning from the storm on the Eastern Ocean flared
through the Council Room, and the windows rattled with the thunder that
followed.

"I think that's enough for tonight," suggested Claris.  I'll talk to
Altara and Nirrod later in the eight-day about the arrows."

Ryltar stood, nodded, and departed silently.

Jenna gathered several documents and slipped them into a leather
folder.

"You were hard on Ryltar."  Claris glanced from the windows to the
younger woman.

"He's hard to take.  Doesn't he understand?"  Jenna shook her head.
"Sometimes I think we never should have stopped the practice of exile.
The whole idea of the trial posed by danger geld makes sense.  Some
people just can't understand what we have and stand for without seeing
the alternatives.

"It would take a danger greater than any we have faced to get people to
agree to that."

"That's why there's a Council," snapped Jenna.  '-To make the unpopular
decisions that have to be made."

"Jenna..."

But the youngest counselor had already taken her folder and stalked
out.

LXVII

When he finished anchoring the blanket in place, Justen eased into the
shade and scraped away the hotter sand until he reached the cooler rock
and clay.  After checking for insects and spike rats, he unfastened his
belt and laid the blade aside, then pulled off his boots, ignoring the
blisters on his feet.  Keeping chaos from the open sores was not a
problem, but he had no real strength with which to heal them.

Finally, he turned and leaned his back against the stone before opening
the quarter-full water bottle.  He drank half, saving the rest for when
he started out again at twilight, and carefully recapped the bottle.

His eyes had scarcely closed when he saw the tree again.

Once more, Justen put his arm out to the lorken, except that now the
black-barked trunk was surrounded not by a carpet of short green grass,
but by sand that burned with the heat of the sun.  He tried to step
forward, but the sand burned through the soles of his boots.

"Keep trying to find this tree, and it will find you."  The slender
young woman with the silver hair, still dressed in brown, and still
barefoot, appeared in the heat beside the dark and massive trunk that
radiated coolness and order.

He tried to speak, but his tongue was so dry that he could not.

"The path to finding the tree, and to finding yourself, will be yet
more difficult."  Her voice chimed with the sad and muted silver he
recalled from the last dream.

"More difficult..."  Justen mumbled through thick lips.  "More
difficult?"

"The order that is truth is colder than the Roof of the World in
winter, drier than the Stone Hills, and farther than Naclos for a White
mage."

The tree and the woman faded, but the hot sun flared, and Justen woke
with a start to find that something had shaken a corner of his blanket
awning loose and that the heat of the sun fell on his uncovered forearm
with the force of red-hot iron.

He eased to his feet and crawled outside his makeshift awning to reset
the rock that had held one corner of the blanket in place.  His bare
feet burned before he managed to get back behind his shelter.

Even when he finally drifted off into another period of uneasy dozing,
his feet still felt hot and his eyes gritty, but no more images of
trees or of the silver-haired woman came to him.

As the slightly cooler air of twilight fluttered the blanket that
served as his awning and sunshade in the afternoon, Jus-ten leaned
forward, trying to moisten his lips with a too-dry tongue.  Once more,
with his inability to find enough water, his eyes felt gritty and
swollen, and they burned as he forced them open.

He rumbled for the water bottle, then concentrated to steady his hands
as he drank the last from it.

After shaking the sand from his boots, he eased them on and stood up,
glancing to the west.  From the orange glare, he could tell that the
sun was close to setting.

Next, he shook the blanket clear of the boulder.  His hands trembled
again when he rolled it up.  The first time he tried to slip it into
the leather loops and strap, he fumbled, and it unrolled onto the
sand.

"Darkness ..."  He coughed and tried to swallow, but his throat was so
swollen that he would have choked had there been any moisture in his
mouth to swallow.

Finally, he had the blanket rolled up, and he began plodding southward
again, along another dry gully.

Even before the orange of sunset had faded, he stumbled and fell on his
knees.  A sharp-edged stone cut through his trousers and bruised and
gashed his right knee, which began to throb dully.

Slowly, he picked himself up, looking for a cactus or some sign of
water.  Seeing neither, he kept walking.

Scritttch... At the sound of the spike rat, his eyes slowly focused on
the low boulder where the rodent had been, but his feet continued to
move.  Then the toe of his left boot caught, and he felt himself
falling forward.

For a long time he lay on the hard, rocky ground.

Scrittchh..  . scrittch ... Something tugged at his trousers.  Finally,
he rolled on his side in time to see the spike rat skitter out of sight
behind a rounded stone.

A little later, as twilight faded into darkness, he gathered enough
strength to sit up, and finally to stand.

"Got... find .. . water."

He stood in the midst of water, cool water flowing through the Stone
Hills, yet he could not open his mouth and drink.  All he could do was
to put one foot in front of the other.

Then he could no longer do even that, and he slumped beside a rock.
"... how it ends?"  Had he spoken the words, or thought them?  Did it
matter?

Still, the wondrous water flowed through the hills, the water he could
not touch or drink, though he watched it and sat amidst its swirls and
dancing spray.

"Gunnar... Krytella ..."

The dead Iron Guard rode the bay mare through the shallows toward him,
but the torrent carried rider and horse away.  A black lorken began to
grow from the middle of the streambed, and its blackness oozed over
him.

LXVIII

The tall man tossed one stone, then another, out across the sand and
into the waters of the Gulf of Candar.  He picked up a small, flat
stone, dropped it, and walked down to the water's edge, where in a thin
line of white, the Gulf nibbled at the white sands of Recluce.

His eyes took in the heavy gray clouds, foretelling winter, that
churned across the offshore waters toward him.  Then he shook his head
and began to walk southward, back toward Nylan.  His booted feet kicked
sand as heavy steps carried him down the narrow beach under the cliffs
and toward the wider expanse of sand that in turn led to the breakwater
of the harbor.

As he neared the breakwater, a figure in black joined him.

"Are you all right?"  asked Altara.

"I'm fine."

"That's why you're prowling the beaches all the time?  That's why you
were talking to Turmin about whether Blacks could scry?"

"I'm fine."

"You're worried.  He's your brother, wherever he is out there."  The
chief engineer nodded toward the waters of the Gulf of Candar.

"At least you say 'is."  "

"I think you'd know."

"He's in trouble, Altara, and I don't even know where he is.  I should
have stayed with him."

"You didn't know."

"He saved me from Firbek.  If he hadn't-"

"He'll be all right.  He is a survivor, Gunnar."  Altara laid a hand on
the wizard's forearm for a moment.

"Not many survive what he's undergoing, I think."

"It's that bad?"

"Worse, probably."  Gunnar looked out toward the storms, the twilight,
and thought of the long winter ahead.  "Worse."

Part II ORDER-MENDING

LXIX

Justen woke shivering in the dark.  How could he shiver in the heat of
the Stone Hills?  Had he just imagined the water?  What had happened to
all the water?  And to the Iron Guard?  As he turned his head, a line
of fire burned from his eyes to his neck, and he shuddered.

"Do not move yet," a husky and musical voice told him.  "You are still
very ill."  The words were like high Temple, but somehow different-more
lilting, more like a song.

"Where ..."  Justen's voice was so dry that the single croaked word was
all he could manage.

"Hush.  Please drink this."

Liquid dribbled onto his lips, and he licked it away, then took several
small sips of the bitter-tasting drink.  After a moment, his unseen
rescuer placed the bottle against his lips.  He drank some more.

The heat of the air that flowed across his face told him that he was
still somewhere warm, if not hot, but he could not see.  Had he gone
blind?  Or was he in the demons' hell for his misuse of order?

He tried to reach his face, his eyes, but his arms would not move.

"Your eyes will heal.  They are only swollen."  Again, the musical
voice.

As if the struggle had exhausted him, he sank back, and the blackness
welled over him again, just like the shade of the lorken he had never
seen, save in dreams.

When he woke once more, it was cooler, darker even through his swollen
eyelids.  His body still felt like every cubit had been beaten and then
left in the sun to rot.

Wordlessly, the bitter liquid was offered, and wordlessly, he drank.

The third time he woke, he could swallow more easily, but his eyes
still felt puffy, and he did not try to open them, although his hand
crept across his cheek to a filmy substance that covered his eyes and
most of his nose.

An involuntary shudder sent another wave of white fire from his eyes to
his neck.

"Please do not try to move quite yet."

"My eyes..."  Justen rasped.

"They will heal, but you must rest.  Please drink some more."

Justen slowly drank the proffered bitter liquid, feeling stronger as it
seemed to flow through his body.  Or was someone infusing order into
his limbs?

Again, he slept.

When he woke, the air was hot with the heat of midday, and his eyes
remained locked in blackness.  Had he but dreamed of drinking and of
the musical voice?  Was he still lying against the rock in the middle
of the Stone Hills?

He licked his lips; the swelling seemed almost gone, and when he
swallowed, his throat did not bind with dryness.  Remembering the pain
when he had tried to move his head earlier, he let his fingers touch
his face lightly, brushing what felt like scabs across his cheek and a
bandage across his eyes.

"You feel better."  The musical words were not a question.

"Yes."  Justen swallowed.

"Can you hold this and drink?"  Justen took the water bottle, which
felt like his own, and managed to drink from it with only a bit of the
liquid drooling out the side of his mouth.

"Drink as much as you can.  It helps the healing."

When his stomach protested and even before he could speak, cool fingers
lifted the bottle from his hands.

"Who are you?"  he asked.  "Where are we?"

"You may call me Dayala.  We are in the Stone Hills."

Justen frowned at the lilt to her voice, the tone that seemed somehow
familiar, yet totally unknown.  He moved his head ever so slightly,
realizing that it was on a pillow and that he lay on some sort of
mat.

"How ... where did you find water?"

"I brought some, but you would have been able to find it in time.  Do
you wish to sit up?"

"Yes."

The faint breeze ruffled his air, and the sound of gently flapping
fabric passed him, confirming his suspicions that he lay within some
sort of tent.  The arms that helped him, though smooth, were as firm
and strong as any engineer's or smith's.  As he leaned back against
whatever supported the pillow, he asked, "You are a woman?"

"You scarcely needed to ask that."

"I can't see."

"Do you need to?"

Justen flushed, then reached out with his perceptions.  Woman ... yes,
but a deep blackness surrounded her, like a well of order.  He
shivered.  Never had he felt anyone with that much order or certainty.
And yet, that order seemed to hold within it... something.  Chaos?  He
shivered again.

"You ... must be from Naclos."

A faint sense of laughter swept over him.

"It may seem funny to you ..."  Then Justen had to grin, even though
the gesture hurt the corners of his mouth.  He had been rescued, and he
was irritated because she was amused?

"Would you like some travel bread?"

The sudden moisture in his mouth answered before he did.  "Yes,
please."

"I can see that you are recovering your manners, although you have not
troubled yourself to let me know who you are."

Justen felt himself flushing.  "I am sorry.  I'm Justen, and I'm an
engineer, a very junior one, from Recluce."

"Thank you, You need to eat."  Dayala placed a chunk of bread in his
hands, her smooth fingers barely touching his skin.

Justen chewed a small corner off the chunk of bread, which had a moist,
thick texture tinged with the taste of nuts.  Even chewing was an
effort, but slowly he finished the bread and found the water bottle in
his hands.  He drank.

"Tomorrow ... if you improve ... we will continue our travel."

"Where are we going?"  Justen forced the question out before yawning.

"To Rybatta."

"Rybatta?"  He yawned again.

"That is ... my home.  You will be welcome there."

Lying against the pillow, Justen half-shrugged, cutting the gesture
short as his shoulders protested.  His eyes closed.

LXX

Justen woke to the sound of the tent flapping overhead in a soft
breeze, discovering that Dayala-or someone-had covered him with a soft
blanket.  For the first time, he realized that all of his clothes,
except for his drawers, had been removed.  He stretched gingerly,
relieved that nothing cracked or sent sharp spines of pain through his
body.  Then he cautiously inched into a sitting position, his back
against the pillow.

From the flapping of the tent, and the cooler air that flowed across
his face, and from the grayness that seeped through the bandage across
his eyes, he sensed that it was sometime around dawn.  He kept the
blanket, softer than any he had ever felt, around him, wondering where
his clothes were, or if they had been ruined beyond repair by his trek
through the sand and the Stone Hills.

He let his perceptions flow around him and discovered the water bottle.
He reached out, fumbled a bit in uncapping it but eased it to his mouth
and took a deep swallow of the liquid: water, mixed with something
bitter.  As he recapped the bottle, he heard steps.

"You are awake.  I was getting your garments.  Repairing them was,
shall we say, a challenge."  Dayala set a pile of clothing by his hand.
"You should be able to travel some today."

"I'll have trouble without being able to see."

"After you get dressed, we'll take off the bandage."  She turned, and
her steps receded.

Justen shrugged.  He ought to be able to dress without seeing.

After reaching for his shirt, he discovered he had the tunic.  Then he
had the shirt halfway on before realizing it was inside out.
Eventually, he managed to get himself together and to struggle into his
boots.

Breathing heavily, he lurched out from the tent, almost knocking over a
side pole.

"It might be wise to take the binding off your eyes now.  You ought to
sit down."  Dayala guided him to a boulder, warm even in the early
light, where he sat as she loosened the knot that held the strips in
place around his head and across his eyes.

Justen's still-swollen fingers fumbled with the cloth, and he squinted
under the bandage at the distant light of the Stone Hills.  Even before
he had eased the last strip off his face, his eyes watered and he
closed them, not daring to open them.

But finally, when his eyes had adjusted to the worst of the glare, he
blinked once, then twice, and peeped at the sand at his feet.  His
boots looked almost new, as did his trousers.

Dayala stood by his elbow, but he did not look in her direction for a
time; he was still squinting.  Finally, he turned his head toward
her.

The woman's face appeared hal oed in light, and she wore what seemed to
be a light-brown shirt and trousers, with a dark, woven belt.

Justen blinked, squinting again.  "Can't really see you..."  He looked
more closely at her shimmering, shoulder-length silver hair.  He
blinked and swallowed again.  Then he closed his eyes for a moment,
rubbing his fingers together, letting his perceptions inch toward
her.

He shook his head.  She seemed to consist of a pillar of absolute
blackness-yet there was something else, almost like chained chaos,
beneath that darkness, strong and absolute as it seemed to be.  His
perception of her chilled him so much that he shivered.  Finally, he
opened his eyes to a slit and glanced toward her, taking a long, deep
breath.

"It wasn't a dream, was it?"

Dayala shook her head slowly.  "Why do you find it so hard to believe
that I am real?"

"I'm not used to dreams coming to life."

She grinned and shook her head, as if what he had said were childishly
amusing.  Justen tightened his lips.  His stomach growled.

"You need to eat."  The engineer grinned helplessly, betrayed by his
body.  "What about you?"

"I ate already."  She bustled through a pack until she brought out a
block of cheese and a half-loaf of bread and handed him both.  After
struggling with the cheese, he reached to his belt but discovered he
had no knife.  With a greater effort, he finally broke off a chunk of
the cheese.  While he bad struggled with the cheese, Dayala had
retrieved the water bottle, and she set it down wordlessly, still
capped, by his feet.  He alternated the cheese and bread, but his
stomach filled after only a few mouthfuls.

"You have not eaten much in a long time."

Justen looked down at the long, loose end of his belt.  "A longtime."

"I will pack up now.  We should begin to travel while it is still
cool."

Justen's eyes glanced at Dayala's bare feet.  "Boots?"

"Oh, no.  They would separate me too much."

She walked over to the tent, leaving Justen to sip from the water
bottle, and slipped the cords that held the side poles.  With quick,
deft movements, she had the tent on the ground before he had finished
and recapped the bottle.

"Wait a moment," he said.

Dayala paused, looking up at him from a kneeling position.

"You rescued me.  You sent those dreams to me.  You knew exactly where
I was.  Not that I didn't need rescuing, and not..."  he swallowed "...
that you're not lovely, but I'd really like to know ..."  He
shrugged.

Dayala turned and sat cross legged on the folded tent.  "The Ancient
One found you in the dreams of the Angels.  This does not happen often,
and a sending must be matched to ... a suitable person.  So the Ancient
One summoned those who might be ... suited."  The druid moistened her
lips. "She helped me with the sendings.  We did not know if you would
come to Naclos."

"What if I had not?"

Dayala looked down at the ground.  "In some seasons' time, I would have
had to come for you."

Justen pondered.  Finally, he asked, "Did you make me come to the Stone
Hills?"

"No!  We do not compel... not ever."

"But how did you find me?"

"One of the An-ancients helped me."

"But why?"

"The Balance has a use for you.  I do not know what it is, only that
you .. . are special."

"So are sacrifices, I understand."

She blanched as if he had struck her.

"I'm sorry."  He felt as though he had been the one struck.  He shook
his head.  "I'm sorry.  It just seems that everyone but me knows what's
going on and everyone is pushing me all over the world."

A shadow dimmed the intense green eyes.  "I know that you are of great
import, of more import than I will ever be.  That is hard-"

"Me?  A junior engineer?"  Justen laughed.

"The power is not in the name, but in the actions, and in the ability
to act.  Have your actions not already changed the world?"

The image of the dead Iron Guard, still clutching the black-tipped
arrow, came to mind, and he shivered.  "I hadn't thought of it that
way."

"The ancients do."

Justen shook his head.  Was this real, or was he still dreaming, and
dying?

As he sat there, Dayala slipped from her sitting position.

"I can help you roll up your tent," Justen pointed out, deciding that
since he felt alive, he might as well act that way.

"I am used to doing it alone."  Dayala smiled.  "If you would hold this
while I slip the cords around it?"

Justen kept the tent fabric, somehow pleated to stay in its shape,
compressed until Dayala had tied the cords.  Then he rose.  "Where does
it go?"

"You're still weaker than you think."

"Fine.  We can carry it together."  He picked up one end of the tent,
now tied into a bundle less than four cubits long but almost a cubit
and a half thick.

Dayala picked up the other end easily.

As they walked past the boulders to the still-shaded gully where the
horses waited, Justen's fingers rubbed at the fabric.  For the size of
the tent, the bundle was light.  "What is the tent made from?"

"A kind of... silk."  Dayala laughed as she spoke.  "This goes on the
brown stallion at the end."

Justen swallowed as he looked at three horses.  None wore bridles, or
even hackamores, and none bore a saddle.  Instead, they wore soft,
woven harnesses.  The two mares were already loaded with thin packs.
One carried several jugs.  He stepped up beside the stallion, who
turned his head to watch as Justen eased the tent over the harness.  He
found the cords and began to fasten one side.

"Not too tight.  Just enough that it won't shift."

"Ah ... how are we traveling?"  Justen asked.

"The same as they are.  The same way you got here.  On our feet."  She
began to dig in one of the packs, finally lifting out an object that
she unfolded and handed to Justen.  "Here.  This should help you with
the sun."

Justen took the soft hat, apparently woven from some sort of grass, and
eased it onto his still-sore head.  Light as the hat was, his scalp did
not protest, and his eyes stopped watering quite so much.

"Thank you.  This helps."  Justen adjusted the hat.  "But I don't
understand.  You have horses.  And you're barefoot.  How can you walk
through .. . this?"  Was he still dreaming?

"The horses have agreed to help me."  Dayala's voice was
matter-of-fact, as though she stated an obvious truth.  "And I hope you
will be all right in your boots.  They seem so confining."  The woman
shivered.

"I hope Rybatta isn't too far."  Am I saying this, Justen asked
himself, while just assuming that I can walk to some town I've never
heard of with a woman I only met in my dreams?  He shook his head, but
the dryness of the Stone Hills and the dull soreness of his feet added
to the sense of reality.

"An eight-day or so, I would say, although we will move faster as you
get stronger."

Justen didn't know whether he hoped his healing were fast or slow as
Dayala marched out over the hot sand and rocky ground as if her bare
feet were shod in the best of leather boots.

They had wound around two wide curves between hills and Justen's steps
were slowing when Dayala paused.  Her eyes narrowed, even more than
required by the endless sun.  Justen stopped, as did the horses.

Finally, Dayala pulled a small shovel from the roan's load and walked
toward the shaded side of the hill, stopping near a dry and sandy
patch.  She lifted the shovel and forced it into the sand, almost as if
it were an effort.

Justen walked over.  "Would it be easier if I did the digging?"

"Yes.  You and the horses will need water, but ... even here..."

Justen ignored the unfinished sentence and began to dig.  After four
shovelfuls, he was sweating.  Four more, and he paused to catch his
breath.  He looked at the sand in the bottom of the hole, suddenly
damp.  He resumed digging.  After perhaps another five or six
shovelfuls, he stopped.

The bottom of the hole had begun to fill with relatively clear water,
and Dayala slipped a shallow pan with a tapered end into the hole.

Justen watched as she used the pan to fill the two large jugs carried
by the mare, and then filled both their water bottles.  Something-like
a pulse of order-tinged green- passed between her and the horses.  Then
she stood aside and let the horses drink, and the depression kept
refilling.

"Now we will not have to stop until later."

Justen cautiously sipped the water, but it tasted only faintly sandy,
and his order-senses told him that it carried nothing chaotic.  He took
another swallow before capping the bottle and replacing it in his belt
holder.

The stallion neighed, and the horses moved away from the water.  Even
as Justen watched, the last of the liquid sank back into the sand.  He
swallowed, squinted, and turned to follow Dayala as she marched
southward.

LXXI

"You requested my presence?"  Beltar bowed at the entrance to the room
that had been the port governor's office.

Zerchas continued to study the lower part of Rulyarth below the bluff,
the part that contained the now empty harbor.

"I did.  We've rested enough.  Go meet your friend, what's-his-name, in
Clynya, or however close he got while chasing that Black engineer."
Zerchas drank the red wine straight from the bottle.  "Go the inland
route.  I want you to take Berlitos, and we'll both-"

"That seems a bit roundabout," offered Beltar.  "Just let Eldiren deal
with Clynya.  If I take Bornt and follow the river to Berlitos, that
will leave Clynya and Rohrn cut off.  I can swing up to Clynya if
Eldiren has problems.  Neither Clynya nor Rohrn's that big.  Or do you
plan to take Bornt?"

"I like your idea better."  Zerchas grinned.  "After all, if they don't
submit, why .. . you can treat them as you did Sarron.  I'd rather
leave Jera intact; it's a pretty town, and the port's not bad.  Later
on, you and your friend can clean up the little places.  You have a
certain style.  The locals already are calling you "The White
Butcher."" Zerchas laughed.  "By comparison, I seem almost friendly."

Beltar remained silent.

"You know, young Beltar," offered Zerchas, "the problem with using
force is that everyone expects it from you, and when you don't use it,
they think you've lost either your powers or your will.  You can't
make-and keep-the amulet on power alone."  Zerchas shook his head. "You
don't understand.  You won't until it's too late.  Go on, destroy
whatever you want to, but leave Jera alone."

"I assure you that I will destroy only as much as is necessary, and no
more."  Beltar bowed deeply.  "I assume that the remainder of the
lancers and the Certan and Gallosian levies are for this campaign,"

"You're very perceptive, young Beltar."

"And Jehan?  Will he be accompanying me?"

"I think not.  I have a few other .. . tasks for Jehan.  He doesn't
need more corruption."

"I see," Beltar bowed again before leaving.

Zerchas thought about the younger wizard for a long time, his forehead
knotted.  "They never understand," he murmured.  Then he took another
deep swallow of the red wine.  "Bah.  Turning already ..."

LXXII

Scrrittch... scrittchhh..  .

Justen's eyes opened at the sound of the spike rat.  For a moment, he
stared into the darkness before his eyes completely adjusted.  At least
his night vision had returned.

By the time he could see clearly, both the sound and the spike rat had
disappeared, but he did not feel immediately sleepy, perhaps because
his feet still ached.

The only nearby sounds were the faint swish of a night breeze across
the sands of the Stone Hills, still warm even in the quiet toward dawn,
and the even fainter whisper of Dayala's breathing.

His eyes turned toward the woman, who lay uncovered on a woven mat,
barefooted and bare-headed, wearing the same trousers and shirt, which
never seemed to get dirty.  Her lips were parted slightly, and the
silver hair swirled around her broad shoulders.

Was she beautiful?  Not exactly, at least not in the sense that
Krytella had been, for Dayala's face was too open, almost blank-looking
in sleep, especially with much of the life supplied by her intense
green eyes, now locked behind her eyelids.  Her chin was almost elfin,
but without the high cheekbones that Justen felt should have gone with
such a chin.  Yet, there was .. . something .. . about her.

He shook his head.  Maybe it was just kindness he was responding to.

She twitched slightly and mumbled, a frown crossing her forehead.  "...
my sending ..."

Justen waited, but she lapsed into a deeper sleep.  Before long, he did
also.

Dayala woke before he did.  That was obvious from the water, travel
bread, and cheese waiting for him.  "You need to eat first."

"Not quite."  He smiled crookedly and padded out of the tent, watching
where he put his bare feet and wincing with almost every step until he
stepped behind a low boulder.  His chin itched with the scraggly beard
he was growing, and he missed the razor as much as he did the knife.

When he returned, Dayala was eating a chunk of the bread.  He sat down
and brushed the sand from the bottom of his feet and picked a small
pebble out from under the crook of his big toe.  It had felt much
larger.  Then he looked at his left wrist, at a thin scab less than a
span long, somehow more than a scratch, yet straight and clean.  He
shook his head.  How had he done that?  He frowned, shrugged, then
sipped from the water bottle before breaking off a hunk of cheese.
"Wish I had my knife ..."

Dayala looked at the ground, a faint flush rising into her face.

"What did you-" Justen began.

"It's in the pack on the brown mare.  I brought it.  I'm sorry about
the sword, but I just..  . just couldn't."

Justen stopped, still holding the cheese in his hand.  "Couldn't
what?"

"You see .. ."  The Naclan looked down again.  "The knife is a tool,
and we even have some knives.  I did use yours, as I had to.  But the
sword isn't.  I mean that's not what it's designed for, and I couldn't.
When you took the shovel, I thought you understood."

Justen looked at the cheese and then at the silver-haired woman.  Those
impossibly deep green eyes met his.  For a moment, neither spoke.  Then
his stomach growled, and Dayala smiled.  He shrugged.  "First things
first."

After the cheese, he chewed a piece of the travel bread, still nutty
and moist.  When he had sipped some of the water, he caught her eyes
with his.  "About the swords and knives?"

"We don't fight, not that way.  Swords sever things from their roots.
Shovels do sometimes-only it's not as bad here."

"How do you fight?"

"You will have to see.  It's more a matter of... restraint and
Balance."

Justen chewed and swallowed another mouthful of cheese and bread,
wondering as he did so if anything in Naclos were straightforward.
Instead of talking, he just ate, somewhat more than the day before.

"The Balance is important to us, perhaps more so than to .. . others,"
Dayala said, then sipped from her own water bottle.  "Balance cannot be
forced, not over time."

"Why did you call me?  That's what it was, wasn't it?  You wanted me to
come to Naclos.  Did you have anything to do with that White Wizard
chasing me?"

"No."  Dayala shivered.  "You are ... unbalanced, but they are ..." She
shivered again.

"Evil?"  Justen pursued.

"That is your word, and it has some ... accuracy."

"What would be more accurate?"

"Unable to be Balanced..."  Dayala left the words hanging, as if she
were unsatisfied but lacked any way to explain.

Justen sighed, then looked toward his boots.  "If men were made to walk
this far, why didn't the Angels give us hooves?"  He rubbed the arch
and then the ball of his left foot.  "Feels good .. ."  He repeated the
process with his right foot before shaking his boots to remove any sand
or insects that might have gathered.

"Would you really want hooves?"  Dayala's eyebrows arched.  "The Demons
of Light had hooves, they say."  She paused before adding, "You do
sleep without those boots.  That's a good sign."

"Why?"

"Any good Naclan needs to be in touch with the land."

"But I'm not a Naclan."

"You will be before you leave."  She grinned, but the expression faded
into a sad smile.

Justen tried not to shake his head.  No matter what questions he asked,
every answer created even more questions, and he was still tired, too
tired to try to straighten them all out.  He pulled on his second boot,
stood, then bent to recover the thick, woven sleep mat, which he shook
out, rolled, and tied with the braided cords.

LXXIII

Justen put one booted foot in front of the other.  His feet felt like
wrought-iron lumps, or cast lead, and it was only a bit before midday.
His eyes ran over the hillside, catching a few patches of brown grass,
and he frowned.  Were the hills not as steep?  Could they actually be
getting out of the damned Stone Hills?

They walked around another curve in the endless valleys between hills,
the dull clumping of the horses' unshod feet the loudest sound in the
heat of the day.  The hill before Jus-ten looked just like all the
others, maybe steeper, and heat waves shimmered off the dull brown
rocks.

"We must climb.  The valley goes too far north from here."

Justen could not quite hold the groan.

"Do you need to stop?"

"Not yet."

Although they had stopped and set up the tent for the midday period
every day for the last three days, that was because of his weaknesses,
not Dayala's.  Barefooted or not, she could walk longer and faster than
he could, perhaps than he ever would.

"Are you sure?"

"I'm sure."

Dayala's long legs stretched as she angled up the hill.  Jus-ten grimly
dug his boots into the sandy soil.

Whheeee .. . eeee.  The stallion trotted past Justen as if to chide him
for being so slow.  "..  . only got two legs, thank you .. ."  he
mumbled.

The stallion's head turned for a moment before the horse continued
after Dayala.  The bay mare also trotted past Jus-ten's slow steps.

He looked back at the roan, but the trailing mare's steps were almost
delicate, and she continued to follow him.

"At least not all the horses are out to prove a point..."

He continued to slog up the hill.

Dayala and the two horses waited at the top.  She stretched a hand
toward the south, where, beyond a mere dozen lines of undulating gray
stone rises, a faint line of darkness appeared.  "We don't have far to
go before we reach the grasslands.  Tonight or tomorrow."

Justen looked at the hills and then at Dayala.  "Late tomorrow."

"Perhaps.  You are still not feeling well?"

"I'm .. . fine," Justen snapped between gasps.  He uncapped the water
bottle and took a deep swallow.  The water helped.  Then he took the
light hat off and fanned his face.

As he cooled off and caught his breath, Dayala poured water from one of
the jugs into the flat pan and held it for the stallion to drink.  She
did the same for the mares, then repacked the pan.

"We'll follow that one, more to the west, to begin with.  There's a
spring just before the grasslands."  Justen picked up one leaden foot
and then another, half-walking, half-sliding down the slope toward the
distant line of green.

Dayala walked beside him, breathing easily.

LXXIV

Up close, the grasslands were not so verdant as they had appeared from
the hillside, existing more as discrete clumps of wiry grass only a few
spans high.

Justen kicked at one of the clumps, then stopped and turned to Dayala.
"That bothers you, doesn't it?"

She nodded.

"Because it serves no purpose?"

She did not answer, but he knew that was the reason.  What he didn't
know was how he had known that his action bothered her.  He hadn't even
been looking at her.

The rolling hills were easier walking, or his legs were getting
stronger, or both.  By midday of the first morning on the grasslands,
the Stone Hills had vanished behind the northern horizon, even when
Justen stopped and looked back from the top of each rolling hill.
Dayala had not looked back, but forward.

At the top of another low rise, he paused and took a drink from the
water bottle and munched on the travel bread, which seemed endless.
"How much of this did you bring?"

"Three-score loaves.  We could live on it alone, but the cheese adds
variety."  The Naclan brushed the fine silver hair off her forehead.
"Most men like variety."  Her tone was matter-of-fact.

Justen nodded, then capped the water bottle.

"Does anyone live here?"

"A few people like the grasslands.  They have wagons and follow the
grass.  I did not see any of them on my way to find you."

Justen pursed his lips.  "You haven't explained how you found me, and
why.  You know, you haven't really explained anything much .. . just
that the ancients helped you."

"You helped also."  She smiled.  "You have a strong .. . presence, even
when weakened."

"You druids must be rather sensitive."

"Not compared to the ancients.",

"Ancients .. . you keep talking about the ancients.  Who are they?  Are
they druids?"

"Druids?  You talk about druids, and I have said little, assuming it
was another word for those of Naclos.  But .. ."  She shrugged
questioningly, even as she continued her steady pace up the gentle
slope.

Absently, Justen noted that the grass clumps now grew closer together,
almost touching.  "Druids are people who love the trees.  Supposedly,
all druids are attractive women, and each has a ... ah ... special
tree."

"Why is that tree special?"

"If it dies ..."  Justen was reluctant to finish the sentence.  "..  .
the druid dies."  Dayala stopped and glanced back in the general
direction of the Stone Hills, looking for the stallion and the mares.
The horses no longer traveled close to them.  "You will find ancients
and others in Naclos, and we all find the trees to be of value,
especially as part of the great forest.  There are even small parts of
the great forest left in Sarronnyn, though few recognize them.  And
there are many males you would call druids."  She grinned.  "In time,
some will think you are a druid."  The grin faded.  "And some of us are
tied, the ancients most of all, but not to trees."

"The ancients?  You still haven't explained-"

"You will have to meet them.  They are part of your Legend, but which
part, you must decide.  But we will do no deciding if we do not keep
walking."  As the three horses left off their distant grazing and
galloped toward her, Dayala turned and walked along the low
ridgeline.

Justen took a deep breath, somehow feeling hurt, or that she had been
hurt, but not knowing why.  He hurried after her, almost running.  "I'm
sorry.  I didn't mean ... but you know everything, and I don't know
anything .. . except that a lovely woman rescued me and wants me to
walk across all of Candar."

"Not all of Candar, not even all of Naclos.  Just to Rybatta."  She
tossed her head, and the cascade of silver rang like bells in his head.
What was happening?  Had she cast some sort of spell?

A smile, almost shy, crossed her face.  "We don't do magic here.  It is
far too dangerous, especially near the great forest."

The horses swept uphill, running free, and Justen watched, just
watched, marveling at their grace.

"You are a druid at heart, Justen... and I am glad of that.  You feel
what I feel when I watch the horses."

"We haven't seen any other horses."

"No.  Most of them live in the Empty Lands.  The grasses are lusher
there, and deeper."

"How deep?"

She bent and drew an imaginary line at knee height.  "Of course, they
must worry about the steppe cats, and sometimes grass snakes."

"The Empty Lands?"  Justen replaced the water bottle.

"They are like the High Steppes of Jerans, but no one lives there save
the horse people and the wanderers.  There is little open water and few
streams."

The dark-haired mail took a deep breath.  "How can there be lush grass
and no open water?"

"The grass has deep roots, and the rains are plentiful, but the soil is
sandy in most places.  Once it was a forest, before the coming of
the... old ones, who cut the trees and made it a desert.  The ancients
turned it back into grassland, and each year, the trees move farther
west, and ..."  she shrugged as she walked "... someday the forests
will return."

Justen matched steps with her for a time, an easier task on the
downhill because his legs were a shade longer than hers, before
continuing.  "What about the grass snakes?"

"They eat the rodents, mostly, but some can kill a foal or a child."

His eyes traversed the ankle-high grass in the gentle valley below.
"How big do they get?"

"As big as they can, of course.  The wanderers claim the king of snakes
is twenty cubits long and nearly a cubit in girth."

Justen shuddered at the thought of a snake that large, then glanced
sideways.

"Since I have never seen the king of snakes, I could not say." Dayala's
face remained open as she-continued.  "I have seen a large snakeskin,
very large ..."  She waited.

"How large?"  Justen finally asked.

"Oh, about two cubits long."

Justen began to laugh.  When he didn't laugh, he shook his head.  And
he had thought she had no sense of humor.  Finally, he gasped. "Someday
... someday,."

"I am sure of that."  She grinned.

His feet were lighter as they crossed more hills, and as the sun, no
longer the blazing ball it had been over the Stone Hills but still
warm, shone through the near-cloudless sky.

The horses sometimes galloped off, circling, prancing, but always
returning.  At times, Dayala and Justen stopped, rested on a rise, and
ate or drank.

As the sun neared the southwest horizon, Dayala pointed to the valley
below, where a clear pool of greenish water lay between two smaller
hills.  "I had hoped we could reach this.  I would like to bathe, to
splash in the water."

"You bathe, swim, a lot in Rybatta?"

"We all like the trees and the water."  She looked to the east, toward
the grazing horses, and the bay mare lifted her head and trotted toward
them.

Justen could feel the brief pulse of order and wondered if he could
duplicate it.

The horses whuffed to a halt on the grassy slope overlooking the pond,
and Dayala began to unload the stallion.  Justen began with the roan.

"Easy, lady .. ."

The roan whuffled.

"She says she is a mare, not a lady."

"What do I call her?"

"Threealla is as close as you could say it," Dayala said cheerfully,
trilling the name.

"All right, Threealla.  How was I to know?  I'll get this off in a
moment.  Then you can drink or roll in the grass-"

Whheee .. . eeee ... Justen shrugged.  Why was he talking to a mare?

He shrugged again.  Why not?  He'd always talked to horses, except that
this one understood ... or Dayala could understand the mare.  He
unstrapped the last of the bags and set them on the grass.  In the time
it had taken him to unload the roan, Dayala had unloaded both the
stallion and the bay mare.

He watched as the horses trotted to the far end of the pond, near the
rushes that marked a small, marshy area.

"Our clothes need washing, and so do we.  We come first."  Dayala
slipped off the shirt even as Justen watched.  She wore nothing
underneath.

He swallowed.

"Did you not want to bathe?"  She glanced at him quizzically.

"Ah ... yes ..."  He looked down and pulled off his tunic, then
balanced on one leg to pull off one boot.  He repeated the process with
the other foot.

Dayala giggled.

Justen refused to look up.  He yanked off his shirt, trousers, and
drawers, folded them roughly and dropped them on the grass.

"You looked just like a grouchy old crane perched on one leg."

Justen looked up at Dayala and swallowed, feeling almost unable to
breathe as his eyes fell across her: the bronzed skin, small breasts,
silver hair, and the deep-green eyes that sparkled with a light of
their own.  Helplessly, he looked down, seeing his own paler skin and a
body that seemed covered with too much dark hair, a body too angular,
too thin, for all the breadth in his shoulders.  His eyes finally
returned to Dayala, focusing on the sole blemish he could see, a faint
white line across the inside of her left wrist.  He still was breathing
too quickly.

She smiled.  "I see I please you."

Justen gulped.  "Yes..."

"You also please me, and that is good, but you need to go in the
water."

Justen did not need to look down to know that.  He flushed, then
realized that Dayala had also blushed.

Whheee .. . eeee.  From the end of the pond, the stallion pawed the
grass momentarily.

Justen grinned and dashed into the water.  Dayala followed, almost
drawing abreast of him as his feet, then his legs, slowed in the
resistance of the water.  Then he plunged forward, surfacing in the
waist-deep pool.

"Oooo ... it's cold!"

"You complain too much."  Dayala leaned back, letting her hair float on
the surface, her shoulders just barely underwater.

Justen looked away, toward the horses grazing on the grass above the
pool; then he paddled toward the small marsh at the far end, where
reeds grew.  He looked down as he paddled, but only greenish sand
floored the pond, and a lone fish, smaller than his foot, flicked away
through the clear water.

"The marsh is the heart of the pond."  Dayala had slid through the
water like an otter, and eased along beside him.  "If you try, you can
feel it."

Unsure about trying his perceptions of order and chaos while awkwardly
paddling along, Justen nodded and followed her suggestion, ignoring the
warm Blackness she represented beside him and concentrating on the
marsh.

The reeds were thin, narrow spears of Blackness, and patches of White
chaos nestled in the mud around them.  Tiny black specks flitted
through the water between the reeds.  Some shelled creature tugged at
chaos-a lump of something else dead-yet all the pieces seemed woven
together, and the Black and the White seemed bound in a green web.

Justen stopped paddling, started to sink and swallowed a mouthful of
water as his toes touched the sand below.  He pushed himself into the
air and blew out the water.

Dayala, too, almost swallowed a mouthful of water as she laughed.  "You
looked so funny .. . can't stop paddling ... stay afloat...".

Justen spit out more of the clean-tasting water, remembering to paddle.
"I'm not much in the water."

"You do well."  Her smile was warm.  Then she dived and flashed
underwater.

Justen paddled slowly back to where he could stand, letting the water
seep into him, enjoying the coolness as if trying to make up for all
the days of heat.

After a time, he reclaimed his clothes, leaving his belt and purse with
his boots.  As he picked up the garments, Dayala, still dripping,
handed him a piece of something green.

"Soap root."

After washing their clothes, they pitched the tent and hung their
clothes over cords strung from the tent posts.  Justen tried not to
look in Dayala's direction, though he could feel her eyes upon him
occasionally.

The horses stayed near the pond but close to the marshy end, where
their snickers, whuffles, and neighs echoed off the water.  As darkness
fell, softer sounds rose from the marsh, punctuated by an intermittent
croak.

In the cool night air, Justen and Dayala sat on the grass, wrapped in
the silky blankets, munching on travel bread and sipping clear pond
water.

"You are beautiful..  ."  His voice was low.

"No," she responded with an amused tone, "you find my body
beautiful."

He blushed, glad that the sudden color was not visible in the
starlight.

"And I find your body beautiful.  That is hopeful."

He tried not to picture her diving, sporting in the water, sleek and
graceful like some water animal.  Finally, he took a long sip of water
and leaned his head back, looking into the deep purple and the points
of light overhead.  "I wonder where Heaven is ..."

"They say we cannot see Heaven from here, that it was lost forever."

"Someday maybe we could find it."  ' "They say that the Demons of Light
destroyed it."

"We'll have to build a new one, then."

"Are all engineers builders?"

"Mostly.  I'm not that good an engineer..."  he broke off, then
finished "... except in destruction."  His words caught in his throat.
"I didn't realize how much that bothered me."

Her hand touched his briefly, fleetingly, and the warmth crept up his
arm.  So he just sat and watched the dark silver of the pond and
listened to the night.  With the faint buzzing from the marsh, Justen
frowned as he realized that there were no mosquitoes.

"That is because they sense you could ward them off."

"Huh?"

"The mosquitoes .. . they sense your power."

"Must be different mosquitoes.  Or Naclos is different, very
different."

"Naclos is different."

With that, Justen could agree.

They sat quietly for a time.  Justen fell silent and his eyelids grew
heavy.  Finally, he stood and eased his way into the tent, and after
wrapping himself in the quilt, he slept.

Dayala slept an arm's length away, yet somehow he could sense her
presence as if she were next to him, and once his hand reached out in
sleep to touch her... and touched nothing.

LXXV

Above Justen, the hills seemed to curve away, as though he stood at the
edge of an invisible circle.

They walked up the hillside until they came to a path in the grass,
marked only by a slight depression that wound up and around the
hillside from the right.

"That's the way we'll take to Rybatta tomorrow."  Dayala nodded toward
the path.

Justen glanced back toward the west, where the sun almost touched the
rolling grassy hills, but he said nothing.  It had to be near
mid-winter by now, yet the trees were green.  Was the great forest this
far south?

"It will be slower for the first day, until we can leave the tent and
the jugs at Merthe."

"The horses?"

"Oh, no.  It wouldn't be fair to them, not in the great forest.  We're
nearly at the edge of the great forest.  Can't you feel it?"  Dragging
him by the hand, Dayala almost skipped up the last few cubits to the
top of the hill, dodging around a few saplings and scrub bushes that
Justen did not recognize.

They halted by two long, flat boulders-worn smooth by generations of
observers, perhaps?

Justen noted a depression in the grass, almost a path, heading at an
angle down toward the great forest.  "Wouldn't it be easier to take
that path?"

"That path is for later.  Right now, it will take you nowhere."

"It looks like it heads toward Merthe."

Dayala shrugged.  "If you wish, tomorrow we can follow it, but it ends
not far into the forest.  With each generation, it goes farther."

"Oh."  Justen looked at the almost-path, then shook his head.

Dayala sat down and studied the great forest, green with a golden tinge
cast by the setting sun.  Justen surveyed the solid roof of greenery
that stretched out below the hill and was almost on a level plane for
as far as he could see.

"Sometimes I come here and just watch the great forest for days."

Justen opened his mouth, then shut it.  Days?  Yet Dayala didn't seem
the type to exaggerate.

"Not days, perhaps not even a day."  Dayala laughed.  "But the forest
makes you lose track of time.  That's one of the trials, but it's
perfectly safe to look at."

Trials?  For a moment, Justen stood at the edge of an unseen chasm.  He
shook his head again.

"We can rest here for a moment.  Later, we'll set up the tent in the
meadow back there.  It's below the crest on the grassland side.  The
horses won't be here for a while."  Dayala shifted her weight on the
rock with a smile.  "It's good to get back.  The Stone Hills are fun,
and it's always good to walk the grasslands.  The Balance there is so
simple."

Every time he felt that he was about to understand Dayala, she referred
to something else that hinted at more he did not know.

Why was the Balance simpler in the grasslands than in the great forest?
Justen let his senses pass over the subtle mix- hire of green that
began a hundred cubits below the boulder where he sat in the sunset.
His feet still ached at the end of the day.  From the corner of his eye
he saw Dayala's bare feet dangling over the rock next to his booted
ones.  He shook his head.

What he didn't know ... So simple?  He frowned, letting his perceptions
fall toward the golden green of the great forest.

Mixtures of order and chaos, their patterns intertwining, caught his
attention, and he dropped into them.  There-an upwelling of pure black,
somehow brilliant green simultaneously, twisted around a fountain of
white tinged with green ... and .. . there ... a gentle pulsing of two
smaller order-beats against a flatter, rounder kind of chaos, except
... how could chaos have any order or form?

Had there ever been such a mixture and intertwining of order and chaos?
Justen let himself drift along the lines of power toward a small
fountain of blackness that somehow seemed to geyser deep into the rocks
below Naclos, almost like a fast-growing tree penetrating all else
beneath the forest.

Underneath, a torrent of white boiled around the base of the black
fountain.

A cool thread of green beckoned to him, but he felt as though he almost
understood the patterns being woven ... A line of white lashed from
nowhere, and needles like knives burned through him.  Another, thicker
band of white began to twine around him, even as the thinner white line
slashed at him again.  A band of black ripped at him, and he tried to
wrench free, but another line of white, tinged with red, slashed, and
his soul and his face burned.

The cool thread of green tugged, beckoned ... "Dayala?"

"Justen..."

His thoughts merged with that green, but the lashes continued, black,
white, black and white, fading slowly as he and Dayala dragged their
perceptions from the great forest.

"Paradise has its thorns," he gasped.  He released his grip on Dayala's
hands, his eyes widening as he saw the burns, the ripped sleeves and
trousers, and the blisters crossing Dayala's face in a zigzag pattern.
His eyes flashed toward the forest, but the green canopy was silent.
"What..  . happened to you?"

"Hush ..."  She extended the water bottle.

His head ached as if it had been caught in a smith's iron vise.  But
his tears were for the blisters and burns on her body.  He struggled up
and put his hands on her shoulders, where neither shirt nor body
suffered.  "You .. . have some first."

She drank, then said after handing him the bottle, "You're too strong,
too much of a temptation for the forest."

As he drank, he saw, for the first time, that his sleeves were in
tatters and that red burns and weals crisscrossed the flesh beneath.
His face and forehead burned, much as they had in the Stone Hills.

"We need to go down."

He followed her to the hill crest and down to the clearing where the
three horses waited.  The stallion pawed the ground.  The bay nibbled
on a low, green plant, not much higher than the half-cubit-high grass
around it.

"I know, Threealla.  You had to wait for us slow humans."  Justen
walked up to the roan.

Whheeee... ccc.  The roan tossed her head,

Justen shook his in response, stopping short as darts of fire shot down
his neck and arms.  Dayala turned away and leaned against the
stallion's flank for a moment.

He took a deep breath, and silently they unloaded the horses.

"This will help."  Dayala extracted a small, oiled package from one of
the bags and stepped up to Justen, a cream on her fingertips.

He stood still as she brushed the cream across the blisters on his
face.  Almost immediately, the worst of the stinging began to abate
into a duller pain.

When she had finished, he took the package and brushed the cream, as
gently as he could, across her face.

"Thank you," she said.

He swallowed.  How could she thank him when his carelessness, his
failure to understand her warning, had harmed her?

"I did not explain well."

Justen shook his head.  "I did not listen well."  His stomach
growled.

A quick smile crossed her face.  "I hear your stomach.  We should
eat."

"I'll get some water.  The stream below?"  he asked.

"That is safe ... even for you."  The faint smile remained for a moment
longer.

When Justen returned with one of the large jugs filled with clear and
cool water, the horses stood watching as Dayala finished anchoring the
tent in place.

He looked at the horses.  "They're waiting."

"Of course."

Justen understood, but how did one thank a horse?  Finally, he bent his
head and concentrated on expressing his appreciation through his
perceptions, through a somehow warm pulse of order.

Wheeee... The roan tossed her head, then lowered it and turned,
followed by the bay.  The stallion pawed the grassy ground once ... and
was gone.

"That was gentle.  You will make a good druid."  Dayala sat cross
legged on one of the sleeping mats set in front of the tent and
motioned for Justen to sit on the other.  Two clear cups sat empty
between them.

As he sat down, she offered him a half-loaf of the travel bread.  He
poured water into the cups, noting that the blisters on her face had
begun to lose their angry red color.  His stomach growled again.

Dayala smiled.  "Best you eat.  Undergoing a trial makes you hungry."

"Do all druids have to face that?  Will the whole trip through the
great forest be like that?"

"Oh, no."  Dayala mumbled the words through a mouthful of crumbs.  "If
you do not seek order or chaos, nothing will happen.  It is the seeking
that offers the invitation.  If you remain within yourself..."

Justen nodded.  Clearly, using order-or chaos-as an aide to perceiving
or traveling would be fraught with great danger.  He frowned.  "But
what if a jungle cat-"

"If it attacks you, then it is a form of chaos, and you may respond
accordingly.  If you attack it, the forest perceives you as chaos."

"Not much hunting, huh?"

"No."

Justen ate several more mouthfuls before speaking.  "But cats have to
eat?  What can they attack?"

"Anything that is smaller or cannot escape.  The whistling pigs, or the
hares, sometimes a fawn."

"That seems disorderly.  Strength seems to rule, not order."

Dayala licked her lips and drank from the clear cup.

"I'm still confused," Justen told her, "What you seem to be saying is
that any first action, by order or by chaos, meets a reaction, but that
those who are strong enough can get away with it."

Dayala nodded.

"Why wouldn't the forest strike back at the cat?"

"It does not use pure order or pure chaos."

"Oh.  But if I respond to a physical attack, you're saying that my
response transforms the purely physical into a question of order and
chaos?"

"No.  You .. . any druid transforms the physical into a question of
order-chaos Balance."

Justen swallowed.

"That is why the great forest struck at you.  Nature resists any
attempt to separate its , .. Balance .. . into two levels of being.
What you see and feel, and what you feel beyond that..  ."

Pondering, Justen munched through two more bites of the nutty and
filling travel bread.

"So... separating order from the world that creates it is a form of
violence?"

Dayala nodded.  "Separating chaos, while easier, is also violent... and
evil."

"Wait a moment.  You're saying that separating either order or chaos
from the everyday .. . world is evil."

The druid paused to finish another sip of water.  "It is hard to
explain.  If you strengthen order in a tree, that is not evil, because
a tree grows to strengthen order.  Nor is it evil to allow chaos to
exist, but to create order separate from the tree or to place chaos
where it would not occur ..."

Justen put his hands to his head, but let them fall away as they
brushed his blisters.  "Then ... why the trial?  I mean, if you're not
supposed to-"

"It is not that easy."  Dayala looked toward the faint gray remnants of
twilight to the west.  "We dug in the desert to find water.  That did
violence to the ground, but dying when water was there and when the
digging created only a little chaos would have created more chaos. That
is not quite right .. but.."

Justen took a deep breath.  "So the trial is to-"

"To show that you are strong enough to use order wisely.  If you cannot
resist the forest, then ..."  She shrugged, and Justen received a
feeling of sadness and worry.

After a time of staring into the twilight, he asked, "How does one
resist the forest?  How did you resist it?"

"It was difficult.  I bound chaos in order and walked through the
fountains of each.  Every person has a different way .. . those who
return."  She looked down.  "I am tired, and we must carry much
tomorrow, as far as Merthe."

Later, with the silky quilt drawn up to his chest, Justen lay back on
the sleeping mat, staring at the tent fabric overhead.  "Was that what
you meant when you said that magic was dangerous in the great
forest?"

"All unbalanced use of order or white force is dangerous.  It is much
more dangerous in the great forest."  Dayala shifted her weight, and
Justen could almost feel the pain in her arms.

"I still don't understand why you got burned and cut.  You said it
wasn't dangerous.  Didn't you already pass your trial?"

Dayala was silent, so silent that Justen sat up, wincing at the pain in
his arms as he levered himself about to look at her.

She winced as he did, although she had not moved, and tears streamed
down her face, silver to Justen's night sight, silver in the
darkness.

"Oh, darkness."  His eyes burned, and he looked down at the scar on his
wrist, the scar that matched the one on hers, and both scars seemed to
flame with a matching blackness.  "Darkness .. ."  And ever so gently,
he placed his fingers against hers.

Their tears continued to flow long after Justen laid his mat beside
hers so that their fingers would remain linked, long after the low
sounds of the great forest echoed gently over the hilltop.

LXXVI

Eldiren concentrated on the screeing glass, but despite the sweat on
his forehead, he could not break through the white, swirling mists that
covered the glass.

"One of those places ..."  he muttered as he released his hold.  The
glass shimmered with the blankness of a mirror.  He cleared his
throat.

"It's all those trees," Beltar said, gesturing toward the ancient
forest in the valley below the White camp.  "Isn't that why no one can
ever look into Naclos?"

"That's what they say."  Eldiren patted his still-damp forehead with a
square of folded cloth.  "When are we supposed to link up with
Zerchas?"

"After we take Berlitos."

"How are we going to do that?"  asked Eldiren, "I can't even see most
of their troops because of the order in die trees.  Trying to attack
would cost us whatever troops we have left.  Can't you shake it
down?"

Beltar shook his head.

"The trees?"  Eldiren prompted.

"I don't know, but I can't tap enough of the chaos-flows in the ground.
All I get are little tremors.  There's a lot of old order here."

"Still, you're not doing badly.  We hold Clynya and Bornt-only that
little place, what's-its-name, up on the first branch of the Sarron-"

"Rohrn," supplied Beltar.  "Forget it.  That one will have to wait.  We
need to get through without losing any more troops.  Clynya wasn't
exactly a pushover.  If you hadn't managed to circle back through the
hills and start those fires-"

The herald entered the white-walled tent.

Beltar looked up.  "Yes?"

"The Sarronnese refuse any terms, scr."

"Oh?"

"They were most arrogant, scr."  Sweat streamed down the man's face,
and his blue cap, held at his waist in both hands, was dark with
dampness.  "They .. . they said that Berlitos had never surrendered,
not even to the greatest Tyrant in history, and that they weren't about
to surrender now."

"Idiots!"  snapped Beltar.

The herald waited.

"No, they won't surrender.  Of course they won't.  Honor and all that
crap!"  Beltar paced across the tent, then back.

The herald glanced toward Eldiren.

"So now what?"  Beltar asked.

Eldiren gestured toward the herald.

"Oh."  Beltar nodded.  "You may go."

"Thank you.  Thank you, scr."  The herald fled.

"You seem to have them all terrified, Beltar."

"I wish the order-damned Sarronnese were terrified instead.  But no.
It's like they have to force me to use my powers."

"You just said you couldn't do that here," pointed out Eldiren.

"I said I couldn't shake down the damned city, and they probably know
that."  The White Wizard fingered his chin.  "You were saying
something, or I was.  Fires, that was it.  I wonder what Berlitos is
built of. There's not much stone around here."

"You'd burn it?"

"Why not?  It's better than losing an army.  Jera is the only city I
have to save."  Beltar smiled.  "They can use all these damned trees to
rebuild it... if there are enough of them left.  Besides, the storms
won't hold off that much longer."

"Burn it?"  asked Eldiren again.

"Why not?  I seem to be condemned to use force.  So I might as well.
Right now, Zerchas wants results.  I'll get him his results."  Beltar
walked to the entrance to the tent and looked down at the forest city
of Berlitos.  "I'll get him his order-damned results."

Eldiren looked at the blank glass and then at Beltar's back.  He pursed
his lips, but did not wipe the sudden return of sweat to his
forehead.

LXXVII

The road was wide enough for a single wagon, not that Jus-ten had seen
any wagons since they had entered the great forest not much past dawn.
He had seen handcarts, pulled by men or women, large, smooth-skinned
buffaloes carrying bags or barrels attached to padded harnesses and
following druids who used no apparent direct control, and nearly a
score of people walking from one place to another under the green
arches of the towering, brown-trunked trees.

Beneath the monolithic trees that rose more than a hundred cubits into
the air grew shorter trees and bushes, each almost as if placed, never
touching any other.  Some were squatty, dark-trunked lorken, others
oaks that seemed never destined to reach the heights of those Justen
had known in the highlands beyond Wandernaught as a child, heights he
had thought soaring until seeing the great forest of Naclos.  The
forest canopy turned the road and all beneath it into a green-lighted
temple, almost demanding worship.

Without the sun bearing down on him, Justen had tucked the woven cap
into his belt.  His head felt less sweaty without the cap, but die
covering had clearly helped him across the Stone Hills and the
grasslands.

As they walked deeper into the great forest, Justen found himself
speaking in whispers.  "How much farther to Merthe?"

"A while.  It is not even mid-morning."

He shifted the heavy packs on his shoulder, glad he was neither a pack
animal nor a soldier, not usually, and looked down the road,
momentarily empty except for them.

The dark-splotched form of a forest cat almost as tall as Justen's
waist slipped across the road a hundred cubits ahead of them, vanishing
silently into the undergrowth.  Justen felt for the knife at his belt,
not that a knife would have done much good against such a monster. "Are
you sure we're safe?"

"As long as you don't start order-probing again."

"But what would stop-"

"You are with me."

Justen swallowed, momentarily feeling like a stupid child, wanting to
say childishly, "Yes, Mother."  Instead, he tried to receive some form
of order-impressions-rather than trying to send or investigate.  He had
already learned the dangers there, as the soreness on his face and arms
reminded him.

The road followed, as it gradually descended, a stream that grew slowly
wider and slowly noisier.  On each side grew bushes and occasional
flowers.  He paused to study a purple trumpet bearing a stamen that
seemed to flow like golden notes from the bell of the floral
instrument.  The purple flower had its own space, like every plant, no
matter how narrow, no matter how frail.

As he turned toward Dayala, who had stopped during his examination,
Justen marveled at the unseen gardener who maintained the trees, even
the flowers that peered from scattered beds, and the road-or roads.
"Who takes care of all this?"

"The great forest takes care of itself.  As it should be."

As it should be?  Justen did not voice the question as he strained to
keep up with Dayala.  The road followed the river, and they passed a
few more souls, all adults and all walking with that determined stride
that he had come to associate with Dayala.

"Everyone walks."  He shrugged his shoulders in an attempt to relieve
some of the growing soreness from the heavy pack.

"Except when we take the river.  How else would it be?"  How else could
it be if the Naclans did not use animals for riding or pulling carts?

It was near midday when the road turned and before them, a stone bridge
crossed the stream.  When they stepped onto the span, Justen saw on the
other side of the stream a small dwelling, almost entirely shaded by
trees, and beyond the smooth, dark walls, sunlight fell on the lower
trees and the grass-grass he had not seen since they had entered the
great forest.

In the kay-wide circular space that appeared to be Merthe, there were
none of the monolithic forest giants, but only a scattering of shorter
trees, most set right against the low houses.  More than two-score
dwellings or other low buildings sat on curving, stone-paved lanes.

A silver-haired man carrying a large covered basket nodded at Justen
and Dayala as they took their last steps off the bridge and walked onto
the sun-splashed road leading into the town.

"Pleasant-looking place."

A faint breeze flowed from the great forest into Merthe, ruffling
Justen's hair from behind.  He pushed the locks back off his forehead,
aware that they were all too long, but glad that he no longer had to
wear the woven cap.  "Why should it not be?"

With no answer for that, Justen glanced toward the second dwelling they
passed, where two children played a hopping game.  The older girl
nodded solemnly as they went by, while the younger waved cheerfully.

Behind the house was a garden with neat rows and staked plants that
grew as tall as Justen's shoulders.  The leaves in the garden were
still green.

"Does it never frost here?"

"Seldom."

"So the plants grow year around?"

"Most of them do."

Justen was pondering this as he saw a pair of cows chewing on the lush
grass behind another dwelling, the animals apparently un staked and
unfenced.  He shrugged his shoulders, trying to release the stiffness
and soreness from carrying a pack far heavier than he had lugged
before.

Dayala walked toward a low building, with three oaks square against
each side wall.  "This is where we will leave the traveling
equipment."

An archway, not a door proper, offered entrance to the shop.  As they
stepped inside, Justen glanced at the curtains that had been tied back,
but no door lay behind them.  He tried not to frown, but why was there
no door?  Were there no thieves?  Even though Recluce had few thieves,
if any, the dwellings and shops had doors.

"Dayala!  You found him!  I'm so glad for you."

Justen raised his eyebrows as a squarish young woman bounded out from
behind a small loom on a table in the rear of the building.

"Justen," Dayala gestured toward the woman, "this is Lyntha."

"I am honored."  Justen bowed slightly.

"No.  I am honored.  So few ever make it to Merthe, or to the northern
reaches of the great forest."  Lyntha grinned.

Dayala slipped out of her pack with an ease Justen admired, an example
he followed far less gracefully, if with more relief.

"Here is the tent..  . and it is ordered .. . and the water jugs ..."

The engineer rubbed his shoulders as he watched Dayala unload items
from the two packs.  Some went on the nearly empty flat wooden table,
while others, such as the big water containers, Lyntha carried into a
back room.

"We'll put the other things away.  You were weaving..."

"My sister will be having a son, and she will need a comfort quilt for
him."

"She has waited a long time."

"Not so long as you!"  Lyntha laughed.

Dayala flushed, so briefly that Justen almost missed the flash of
color.  "Some of us are just luckier than others."

Even as Lyntha returned to the loom, Dayala began to place items on the
racks around the room.  Justen fingered the wood on a staff, tightly
grained and smooth lorken, almost glossy to the touch.

"What about the travel bread?"  he wondered aloud,

"That will be used for the cows and chickens."  Dayala carried some of
the sealed waxed containers back into the rear section of the building,
and Justen followed with the remainder.

When the packs were empty and placed on racks, Dayala turned to him.
"It would be fitting if you would consider leaving your water
bottle..."  She inclined her head toward the wooden rack that contained
only the bottle she had placed there and one other.

Justen unfastened the bottle and leather strap holders from his belt.
"What about the water?  There's still some inside."

"Lyntha?"  Dayala gestured.  "Justen forgot to empty this bottle. Could
you take care of it?"

"Just leave it on the end of the rack.  He's not the first, and he
won't be the last.  Why, last eight-day, old Fyhthrem not only left a
pack here full, but she had olffmoss in it.  What a mess that was.  She
apologized and later brought by some dried pear apple flakes in wax for
the travel food.  But it happens.  A little water, that's nothing."

Justen set the bottle and straps on the end of the rack, glancing back
at Dayala.  She nodded and walked toward the table where the stocky,
silver-haired woman was operating a small hand loom.

"We must go."

"You'll be back before long."

"Of course.  At the proper time."

Justen bowed to Lyntha.  The woman flushed briefly but returned the bow
with a nod.  Then he followed Dayala back into the warmth of the sun,
loosening his tunic as they crossed what passed for a central square on
their way toward another low building, also without any signs or
indications of its function.

Inside another doorless room, they stood amid a half-dozen chairs and
tables, all empty, when a silver-haired youth, barely to Justen's
shoulder, stepped into the room.

"Dayala!"  He grinned at the silver-haired woman.  "Mother said you'd-"
He turned and bowed to Justen without finishing the sentence.

Justen returned the bow.

"You're as eager as ever, Yunkin."  Dayala shook her head.

"Someday I'll be just like you."

"I hope not!"  Dayala laughed and looked around the room.

"You should sit at the corner table there.  It's the coolest, and I'll
get you something to drink."

They sat down, with Yunkin hovering at their elbows as they pulled up
their chairs.  "What would you like to drink?"  The silver-haired boy
looked from Justen to Dayala even before he finished the question.  "Is
he the order-mage from beyond the Stone Hills, young ancient?"

"Yes.  This is Justen.  He was born in Recluce."  Dayala flushed.

"Welcome to Merthe, Scr."

"What do you have to drink?"

"Redberry, green berry light ale, and dark beer."

"The dark beer, please."

"And you, lady?"  Yunkin attempted a more formal tone.  "The light
ale."

"Mother ... I mean ... we have .. ."  the boy grinned, then forced
himself back into a more composed demeanor "... cheese and bregan."

"That would be fine," Justen said.  Anything but travel bread.
Anything.

Dayala nodded, and after the boy had scurried through the archway
toward the kitchen, she raised her eyebrows.  "Anything else?"

Justen looked at the smooth, wooden surface of the table, unable to
detect the joins in the wood.  Finally, he asked, "What did he mean
when he called you a young ancient?"

"It is a term of respect.  He was being polite, I... am not close to
being an ancient."

The youth scurried back, the dark brown of the beer and the gold of the
ale clear through the thin crystal of the tall glasses he carried.

Justen waited for Dayala to drink, then took a slow sip of the beer.
Both the tang and the smooth power of the brew made him glad his first
sip had been small.  His body was now unused to any sort of spirits.
"This is good."

"You are one of the few from Recluce who drinks beer, are you not?"

"I suspect I'm the only engineer who does."

"That is good."

"The others don't think so, especially my brother."  Jus-ten swallowed,
wondering how Gunnar was, wondering if the others had reached Recluce
safely.  But they must have made the journey safely.  He would have
fell something surely had Gunnar been injured.  Or would he?

"They look only at the surface of the Balance."  She sipped from her
glass more slowly than Justen.

Before he could respond, Yunkin had arrived with two wide platters, one
of which he slid in front of Dayala and the other before Justen.

Justen took a deep breath, inhaling the fruity-nutty aroma of the
pastry and the tang of the cool cheese.  He had forgotten that cheese
could be anything but warm, somewhat off-tasting, and mushy.

"You look hungry."

"I am hungry."  Before he had realized it, he had finished both the
cheese and the pastry, as well as most of the beer, without saying a
word to Dayala.

The boy appeared with a pitcher, half-filling the crystal goblet before
Justen.  As Yunkin walked back to the kitchen, Justen frowned.

"You seem disturbed," Dayala observed.

"How did he know I only wanted that much?"

"He did not.  He just felt the Balance.  Do you want more?"

"No."  Justen sipped the cool and smooth dark beer.  "No."  But he
still frowned.  Again, he felt as though he had missed something he
should have understood.

He held his empty glass silently until Dayala finished.  She had said
nothing further, and he had not felt like asking any more questions
that would make him feel stupid or childish.

"We should go.  Rybatta is still a distance from here."

Justen frowned, realizing they had not seen Yunkin's mother, and that
something else had seemed odd.  "Don't we owe them something?"

"Of course.  I'll send Duvalla some green berry preserves or some
juice. You're a smith, aren't you?  Yual..  . needs to meet you, and I
know he would let you use his forge.  Not many can handle that, so
anything decorative of iron would be welcome and appreciated."  Dayala
stretched her legs and shifted her weight on the wooden chair.

"But..: how can you make things work like that?"

"Justen, do you remember how the great forest felt?  How can it not
work?"

"I'm a child in some ways, remember?  Please stop being quite so
condescending and cryptic.  Tell me as though I were the stupidest and
slowest child."  That was certainly how he felt.

"It's the Balance.  If you do not repay voluntarily, then others will
respond to that imbalance,"

"You mean ... if I didn't repay them in some way, a neighbor or someone
would remind me?"

"Only if you were a near-child."

"Near-child?"

"One who has not passed his trial."

Justen took a deep breath.  "All right, what is the trial?  Plain and
simple."

Dayala's green eyes fixed on him.  "That is when you become an adult, a
druid.  That is when you walk the great forest with your mind, alone,
without help."

Justen shivered.  "Like I tried to do the other night?"

Dayala nodded.

"And all druids do ..."

"People can leave Naclos, and some do.  Those who stay must pass the
trial."

Justen blotted his suddenly damp forehead.  "So, assuming I passed my
trial and I didn't repay a service, what would happen?"

She shrugged.  "It does not happen often.  Most of us, even forgetful
ones, are reminded."

"But if I didn't..."

"I could not say.  A forest cat, perhaps a white-mouthed snake ... the
great forest has its ways."

Justen shivered as though once again he stood on the edge of an
enormous chasm.  "You don't get much choice."

"Why should we?  Is it orderly that people should be allowed to cheat
others or to eat more than they contribute?"

"But a productive person-"

"No.  The great forest understands, and so do we.  A sick man repays
when he can.  So does a nursing mother."  You know in your heart what
is right, do you not?"

"Not all people do."

"All those who live in Naclos do."

The cool certainty of Dayala's words chilled Justen even more.  He
lifted the beautiful beer glass, studied the curves, and set it down.

A system of unforgiving, absolute justice?  What had he gotten himself
into?

"You are disturbed."  Her fingers reached out and touched his arm.
"That is good, a sign of your good heart.  The forest protects those of
good heart."

"I wouldn't have known."

"I do not doubt you would follow the Balance even so."

Justen was not so certain of that, but he fingered the beer glass
without speaking.

LXXVIII

"This is my dwelling."  Dayala gestured to the wooden cottage in the
clearing ahead.  She shifted the pack on her back, which contained some
bread and cheese from the market in Rybatta, the modesty of which she
had apologized for three times since leaving the center of the town.

In the dimness of the twilight, Justen peered at the low structure,
seemingly set between four massive oaks.  The oaks were lower than the
soaring monoliths that reared into the sky.  Then he swallowed,
realizing that they actually formed the living corner posts of the
cottage.

How many houses had he looked at in Naclos without being consciously
aware that they were part of the trees?  What else had he looked at and
not seen?  He glanced sidelong at the silver-haired druid.

"It's."  orderly."  Behind a narrow lawn to the rear of the house rose
a number of low trees, almost resembling hundreds of bushes, that
extended several hundred cubits back toward the great forest itself.
"What are all the trees?  Or are they bushes?"

"They're what I do."

Justen forced a laugh, pulled at his beard, uncertain as to how to
proceed, before asking, "And what is it that do you, mysterious
druid?"

"I work in wood."

"You're a carpenter?"

Dayala shook her head.  "No ... I work with the Balance.  I could not
handle cutting tools."  Her hand held back one of the entry curtains.

Fingering his beard again and feeling the itchy skin beneath, Justen
wished she did.  Where would he find a razor?

"Yual makes such things.  Perhaps he could help."

After inclining his head in embarrassed acknowledgment, Justen stepped
through the entry and into a large main room.  The walls were of
smooth-paneled wood without visible seams, and the hardwood floor
matched the walls and ceiling.  Two long wooden benches formed a right
angle in the far corner of the room.  One archway showed a kitchen
containing a compact stove of clay and iron.  Justen looked at the
stove, set in an alcove, and nodded, noting that the tree had grown, or
been grown, to leave a space for the stove and the brick chimney behind
it.

A bathing room contained a tiled and freestanding tub, but a built-in
jakes.  Justen glanced at Dayala, then nodded.  Certainly, trees could
use such ... waste products.

He peered into the guest room, containing little more than a stool, a
closed chest, and a wide bed on which lay a pillow and a folded blanket
of the same warm and silky material that had covered him most nights on
the journey to Rybatta-except that the blanket on the bed was black, as
was the pillowcase.  A woven rug, patterned in triangles, covered half
of the smooth wooden floor.  On the wooden chair was laid a set of
brown trousers and a shirt, both looking to be his size.  The garments
made it clear where he was sleeping.

"I thought you might need some clothes."

"Obviously, you were convinced that I would make it across the Stone
Hills."

"Hope can often make it so."

Justen looked down at his ragged shirt, and then at Hers.  "I trust you
left some for you self as well."

"I do not need quite so much in the way of covering, but I am
sufficiently provided."

"You are indeed well provided."  Justen attempted a leer.

Dayala stifled a yawn.  "If you would like to wash up, the well is out
back, and so are the buckets.  I will prepare some food."

"The bread and cheese are fine.  You're tired."

"I am tired."  Dayala smiled.  "And bread and cheese and some fruit are
what we are going to eat."

Justen grinned back and went to carry water.

LXXIX

Justen sat on the gray boulder, letting his bare feet dangle in the
cool water.

Whhnnn... Idly, he brushed away the tiger mosquito, then raised the
faintest of order-shields to guide away the hungry female, and any
other insects that might decide to nibble on him.

"You've gotten much .. . better."  Dayala's hand rested beside his on
the stone.  Her warm fingers glided over his wrist for an instant.

"More delicate, you mean?"  Justen grinned and turned his foot, kicking
a small jet of water at her.

"Delicate?  I think not.  Gentle, perhaps, but it will be years before
your touch is ..."

"Refined?"  Justen stretched.  "Why did the mosquitoes out in the
grasslands not bother me, and why do these still nibble?"

"Because the grasslands are still."

"Oh.  Here there is too much power of too many different kinds?"

"Something like that."

"I'm hungry."  He yawned.

"No .. . you're not.  Listen to your body.  Does it really need food?"
Dayala gave him a broad smile.

Justen felt the blood rising into his face and looked over at the white
edges of the stream, where the fast-flowing water broke around the
rocks.  Then he looked back at Dayala.  Her eyes dropped,

"You're blushing."  He grinned.  "You're .. . blushing."  He twisted
and slid off the rock onto the pine-needle carpet.  He held out a
hand.

Dayala's fingers closed around his as she flipped clear of the stone
and jumped down beside him.

"Not bad for an ancient druid."

"I'm a very young druid.  Very young.  Otherwise .. ."  She disengaged
her hand and smoothed her hair back.

"Otherwise?"

"I would not be here."

Justen frowned, realizing that while her words were true, more than a
little had been left unsaid.  "Only young druids travel after strangers
in the Stone Hills?"

"This is true."

"But..  . why you?  You never have really answered that question."

Dayala looked down at the grassy patch on which she stood.  "Let us
walk back."

Justen followed her through the woods, which seemed nearly park like
When they reached the gently curving road that would lead them into
Rybatta and out again to the cottage that lay on the far side, he
leaned closer to her.  "You were going to tell me ..."  ' "This is a
story that you must tell yourself in time, as you come to truly know
Naclos and those of us who dwell here.  But I will tell you another
story."

Justen frowned, then took a deep breath and listened.

"Once a young girl asked her mother what her life would be like.  Would
she have lovers, or just one special lover?  Or would she serve the
Angels, and listen to the giant trees, and to the voices under the
ground, and to the winds that cross all Candar and whisper their
secrets to those who can hear?  How long would it be before she would
know these things?

"Her mother smiled but said nothing, and the girl asked again.  What
will my life be like?  How will I know?  But her mother said nothing.
And the girl began to cry.  She wept as only a child can weep, with
great sobs.  When she stopped weeping, her mother brought her an unripe
Juraba nut.  The green ones are so hard that they can be opened only
with a sword or a sledge or a great, heavy mill.  And her mother told
her that her life was like the Juraba nut."  Dayala stopped speaking
and nodded to a thin older man who carried a basket of green pear
apples

The man nodded with a slight smile as he passed.

"And?"  asked Justen.

"That is the story."

Justen pursed his lips and thought.  "Your story seems to say that if
you attempt to force an answer before it is ripe, you will destroy it,
just like you would destroy that green nut."

Dayala nodded.

"The question is ... how does a stranger, or a near-child who has never
seen a Juraba nut, know when the nut is ripe?"

"The shell splits, and you can see the inner husk and the nut pod for
yourself."

"Wonderful.  Was that mother your mother?"

"Of course.  That is how I know the story."

"Have you seen the ripe nut?"

"No more than you have, dear man."

Justen shivered at the warmth in the words "dear man" and the admission
they contained.  Ahead lay a narrow footbridge at the juncture of two
paths.  Beyond the bridge, the giant monoliths thinned and the cleared
area that was Rybatta proper began.

"Hello, young angels."  A small, silver-haired girl cradling a basket
filled with waxed packages of cheese and a waxed honeycomb nodded
politely, stepping aside to let them cross the narrow span.

"Harmony be with you, Krysera."  Dayala smiled.

Justen nodded, and Krysera returned the nod solemnly.

After they were out of earshot, Justen asked," So now I'm a young
angel?  Just what does that mean?"

"It's a term of respect.  She isn't quite sure of what to call you.
Because you live here with me and not in the strangers' house, you're
not a stranger.  You radiate order and power.  So you must be a young
angel."  Dayala shrugged as if the conclusion were obvious.

"Strangers' house?"

"If we had a real stranger, he or she would stay with Yual or Hersa.
She is the copper-worker.  Diehl has a large strangers' house, what you
would call an inn.  When we travel, we stay in guest houses."

"So why am I not a stranger?"

Dayala touched his arm, the spot where only a faint scar remained. You
are not a stranger.  Not now... not ever

The force of the words, felt in his mind, staggered him, and he
stumbled.  Dayala's hand steadied him for a moment, but her fingers
almost seared his skin.  He glanced sidelong at her and saw the
dampness on her cheeks, and his eyes burned.

What was happening?  To him?  To her?

They had walked another hundred cubits when Dayala finally spoke again.
"Let us go to the river pier."

"Any reason?"

"I need to speak with .. . Frysa about how many boxes she will need."

They passed the small market stall with the neatly stacked pear apples
the closed barrels of grains.  Down the open but narrow steps in the
cooler cellar were the cheeses and the riper fruits.  Dayala waved to
Serga, the shopkeeper, and the rotund man waved back.

"Boxes?  Your boxes?  What does she need them for?"

"To trade.  We do trade for some things, like copper, and your woolens
from Recluce, although we do not need many warm garments, and mostly
the wool is used for other things."

"So you provide boxes for trade as a way of repaying the great forest
and the others in Naclos?"

"Exactly."  Dayala laughed softly.  "You see!  You do understand."

"Sometimes."

Only a single boat was tied at the stone pier, and it was empty.

Dayala led Justen past the pier and to a small, round building formed
by a single tree-not an oak, but a species with which Justen was
unfamiliar.  Inside, on a stool sat a woman, also silver-haired and
green-eyed, but deeply tanned.  As she rose, she reminded Justen of
Dayala, although he could not say why.

"Justen, this is Frysa."

Justen bowed.  "I am honored."  And he felt that he was, just as he
felt that Dayala had not fully explained who Frysa was.

"You have a handsome soul."

Justen flushed, and he glanced at Dayala.  She also had colored.

"He is modest, and that is to the good, for both of you."

Dayala nodded before speaking.  "I forgot to ask how many boxes you
will need."

"A half-score would be enough for now.  You will have more time .,.
later."

Justen looked out absently at the river, smooth and nearly a hundred
cubits wide between the tree-lined banks, and at the single boat.
Smooth as the water was, paddling upstream would be difficult.

"How do you find Naclos?"  asked Frysa.

"Seemingly peaceful, and very unsettling."

"He's honest, too."

Justen tried not to blush again, and failed.

"Already, except for your hair, you look more like us, inside at least,
than those of Recluce."

Justen shrugged, unsure of how to react.  "I cannot see that deeply
into myself.  So I must accept your observation."

Frysa reached out, and her fingers brushed his bare wrist.  "Remember
to trust yourself."  She looked at Dayala.  "You must be going.  Thank
you.  You have been very fortunate.  Even so, it will be difficult for
both of you."  She turned to Justen.  "She is not so strong as you,
though it seems otherwise now."

Without looking, Justen could feel Dayala blushing.

The two women embraced, and as they parted, Justen bowed again.  "It
was good to meet you, and I wish you well."

"He is also generous."

"Yes."  Generous of soul, and knows not why ...*

Justen swallowed at Dayala's unspoken words, wondering if the stray
thoughts mat passed between them would only grow stronger, wondering
... He shivered.

In silence, they walked back past the single boat.

"How do the boats get upstream?  I don't see how they could paddle all
that distance."

"Sometimes we can get the river people-the otters-to pull them, but
only if the boats carry no people.  The otters will pull light
cargoes."

"So anyone who goes downriver by boat must walk back, or paddle
themselves?"

"Yes.  But it's not that bad if you can sense the currents."

Again, silence dropped between them as they passed the guest house on
the square and the small dry-goods store that held linens and the fine,
spider-silk cloth.

"Frysa's a relative?"  Justen asked.

"Yes."

"Your older sister?"

Dayala shook her head with an amused smile.

Justen shook his.  "Your mother?  Doesn't anyone get old here?"

"Of course.  Just more slowly.  Aging is a form of chaos, and it can be
balanced."

"Your mother, of course.  How stupid of me."  He shook his head.  "Why
didn't you tell me?"

"I wanted her to see you as you are.  You are honest and open."  And
that is rare

Justen's eyes threatened to water at the damning honesty of her
unspoken words.  What was happening to him?

"The great forest insists that you recognize yourself, and that is very
difficult."

"Difficult..."  He laughed harshly.

They had passed the long rows of bean plants at the edge of Rybatta
proper before Justen spoke again.  "How do you make your boxes?  By
growing them on those bushes?  I know.  It's more complicated than
that, but is that the idea?"

Dayala nodded.

"It's work?"  She nodded again.

He shook his head as they walked up the curving path to her house.  "AH
this takes some getting used to."

"I understand."  Dayala stopped in the middle of the main room,
dropping her hands.

For a long time, Justen looked at her, at the silver hair, the green
eyes, and the dark, open orderliness within that screamed out a
terrible honesty.  Then he eased his arms around her, and her arms went
around his waist.  Their lips brushed.  Want you .. . coming to love
you ...* Justen blushed at the boldness of his thoughts.

For a moment, Dayala's lips pressed his, and she squeezed him to her
before easing back and holding him almost at arms' length.  She was
breathing heavily.  "The nut... isn't quite .. . ripe."  Then she
wrenched out of his arms and ran into her room.  So hard .. . unfair.
Angels never said... love you.  Not right yet.  Don't know... how
long

Justen staggered under the emotional barrage of words, as warm as
summer and as pointed as arrows.  He finally sank onto a stool.

As quickly as he learned one thing, he learned more that he didn't
know.

LXXX

The center of Berlitos stood on the top of a low hill that swelled out
of the forest, a forest filled with trees still gray in the winter
cool.  The Temple to the Angels-polished amber wood-rested beside a
three-story structure.  Even in the center of the hilltop city, a few
gray-green trees blurred the outline of the low buildings.

Beltar stood on the hastily erected log platform and cleared his
throat.  A light but steady wind blew from behind him out of the
northeast and toward the city.

Standing at Beltar's shoulder, Eldiren glanced nervously toward the
hill city and back at the relative handful of troops that flanked the
platform, less than score fifteen in all.  And Zerchas wanted them to
take most of western Sarronnyn?

"Ready, Eldiren?"  asked Beltar.

"For what?  You're doing the work."

"You can help," snapped Beltar.

The slight White Wizard shrugged:

Shortly, a fire bolt slashed into a house more than a kay away, and the
thatched roof began to burn.  A second bolt arced into a closer
structure in the valley below the hill, and a third flared farther and
dropped onto the polished wood of the Temple.  White smoke, followed by
a black smudge, rose.

A heavy bell tolled once, then again, and again, the leaden echoes
ringing through the gray morning.

Beltar grinned and wiped his forehead.  "We seem to have gotten them a
little stirred up."

Eldiren frowned and concentrated.  A small, whitish fire bolt spilled
against the bottom of the hillside.  No smoke followed the impact.

A second large blast of flame plowed into the Temple, and another into
the tall structure beside it.  Tongues of flame licked at the wood.

Flames began to spread from the thatched house, now engulfed in flame
at the base of the hill.

"Scr!  There are troops headed this way!"

Beltar looked at Eldiren.  "You take care of them.  You don't have any
range, anyway."  Then he looked at Yurka, now the lancer commander.
"Form up in front of the platform."

"Yes, scr."

Another fire bolt arced across the sky, landing on the right side of
the hill, where more smoke began to twist into the sky.

Eldiren glanced at Yurka.  "Get the archers ready-those we have. Before
long, someone's going to be marching up that road, such as it is."

"Yes, scr."  Yurka eased his mount back toward the north side of the
hill.  "Kulsen!  Get your squads up here."

Eldiren concentrated, and another fireball arced toward the thatched
houses below the center of the city.  Shortly, another roof burst into
flame.  The White Wizard smiled grimly.

Beside him, Beltar lifted an enormous sphere of fire into the sky, then
let it fall like a meteor on the structure beside the Temple, where
flames splashed in all directions.

"See that?"  Beltar grinned.  "So I'm not as great as any Tyrant?  Let
them say that now!"

Another fire bolt followed.

From the narrow road down toward the valley between the Whites and the
outskirts of Berlitos, a thin, wavering trumpet sounded.

A wedge of soldiers in iron-plated leather corselets and wearing blue
sashes marched along the muddy road toward the White forces.  Before
them came a single youth with a faded blue banner.

"Archers!"  called Yurka.

"First rank, release!"  Kulsen's voice was harsh, and a thin rain of
arrows dropped into the Sarronnese soldiers.  A handful staggered and
two fell, but the Sarronnese pressed uphill.

Another flight of shafts dropped into the Sarronnese, followed by two
fireballs in succession.  A blue-sashed soldier flared into a pyre of
flame and greasy black smoke.

"Second rank!"

Another scattering of arrows sleeted to the southwest.

"Lancers!"  snapped Eldiren.  "Third and Fifth!"  He wiped his forehead
with the back of his sleeve.  Another fireball blasted into the
advancing infantry.

The two-score lancers charged the Sarronnese behind a third flight of
arrows and two more fire bolts

Two larger fireballs dropped into the center of Berlitos.  By now,
flames-fanned by the growing wind from the northeast-were everywhere in
the center of the city.

Less than a score of Sarronnese infantry remained-none with halberds or
pikes-as the White lancers swept through the Sarronnese and re-formed
for a return sweep.

"Poor bastards," muttered Yurka.  "Just out here without any idea of
why or how."

"Like us," said Eldiren curtly, almost under his breath.  He winced,
but another fireball flared into the Sarronnese.  Three broke and ran,
only to be cut down immediately by the returning lancers.  Then only
two of the Sarronnese foot troops remained standing.  One lancer
clutched his arm; the others seemed unscathed.

The last two Sarronnese turned and ran.

"Let them go," said Yurka wearily.  "There will be more."  His
mustaches flared in the wind that had become almost a gale.

"I don't think so," said Beltar.  "Look."

Eldiren and Yurka turned to the west, where a wall of flame swept up
the hillside to meet the flames that crowned what had been Berlitos.
Eldiren dropped his arms.

Crack!  Eldiren turned.  A lightning bolt forked out of a dark sky, and
a patter of rain Slapped against the timbers of the platform.

"The rain may save them," offered Kulsen, even as he unstrung his bow
and put the strings into a waxed pouch.  He turned to the score of
archers.  "Save your strings, then reclaim your shafts-those that you
can."

The older archers had already begun to protect their bows.

Eldiren turned back toward the city as the rain began to fall steadily,
watching the flames rise in the wind, seemingly undamped.

"Wouldn't surrender to us?  The next copper-bit town will."  Beltar
looked toward Eldiren.

"I am certain they will, Beltar."  The slight White Wizard slowly sat
down on the edge of the platform, letting his legs dangle in the air,
taking ragged breaths as though he had completed a footrace.

"I'm no mere Tyrant.  They'd better learn that."

Eldiren nodded silently.

The rain continued to fall, and soon a cloud of steam began to rise
from the charred ruins of the city.  Then soot began to fall with the
raindrops.

The White lancers drew cloaks over their armor and rode under the trees
at the edge of the clearing to escape the worst of the slashing rain.

For a time, Eldiren sat on the edge of the platform.  Finally, he
heaved himself erect, climbed down, and walked through the muddy ground
to his horse.  He mounted slowly as the rain began to let up.

Once in the saddle, Eldiren took a crimson cloth and wiped the dampness
off his uncovered head.  The cloth came away gray and sooty.

"Let's go!"  snapped Beltar.  "There's nothing left here- or there
won't be."

"Form up."  Yurka's voice was expressionless as Beltar headed for his
coach.

Eldiren guided his mount up beside the lancer officer.

Yurka looked at the White Wizard for a long moment.  "This isn't
war."

"Yes, it is," answered Eldiren tiredly.  "War is slaughter, and Beltar
is very effective at it,"

"The light save us all."

The two rode silently beside the column that represented the remains of
the Third lancers.  They continued westward, circling the ash heap that
had been a town.

As the column neared a crossroads, a woman stood, her ripped blouse
streaked with ashes.  She began to run, barefooted, lifting a kitchen
knife.  Yurka, drawing his sabre, reined up the chestnut.

"Bastards!  White bastards!"  She lifted the knife even higher and
turned toward the apparently unarmed Eldiren.

The White Wizard urged his mount sideways, but the woman lunged
forward.  Eldiren gasped but managed a short blast of flame at the
woman.

The charred figure shivered, then pitched forward in the mud just short
of Eldiren.  The wizard swayed in the saddle, holding on to his mount's
mane for a time.

"You all right, scr?"  asked Yurka.

"I'm all right."  Eldiren's voice was flat.

"I'm sorry about that madwoman.  I should have stopped her."

Eldiren shook his head.  "I should have avoided her."

"She would have tried to use that knife on someone."

"I suppose I would have, too.  Wouldn't you?"

Yurka nodded.  "That's the way it is."

"Yes.  It is."  Behind them, the coach rolled around the dead woman,
and the archers split their files to avoid the corpse, The rain
continued to fall.

Eldiren did not look back.  He only swayed in the saddle and listened
to the creaking of the coach and the occasional crack of the coachman's
lash.

The low sounds of the lancers' conversations blended with the fading
hiss of steam and with the soft pattering of the scattered rain
showers.

After a while, Eldiren wiped the soot off his brow with his hand and
then wiped his hand on the grimy cloth tied to his saddle, bright
crimson not long before.  No matter how often he wiped his forehead,
his hands came away dirty.  There was soot everywhere, even with the
ruins of Berlitos a dozen kays behind them, and the spring rains seemed
to come down gray as well.

"I am no mere Tyrant," Beltar had proclaimed.  No one would accord him
that title, not now.

Despite the faint sunlight between the clouds, Eldiren shivered. Behind
the thin White Wizard, Beltar's coach creaked as the four-horse team
pulled it along the muddy road leading to Jera.

LXXXI

"Yual needs to meet you.  He is waiting for you.  Besides, I have work
to do, and so do you."  Dayala took Justen by the arm and walked with
him out to the road.  "You remember the directions?"

"Over two bridges and past the splintered oak.  Then take the uphill
lane to the clearing."  Justen grinned.  "Is it safe?  I mean, for a
near-child like me to wander around alone?"

"As long as you don't order-probe all over Naclos.  Besides, not much
happens around Yual."

"I get the feeling that you very much want me to meet him."

"I do."

"Why?"

"Because."  Dayala grinned.  "You need to work with your hands, not
just with your mind.  I see you twitch, and your body needs that
work."

"All right, most excellent druid.  I bow to your knowledge."  His
fingers brushed, hers, and their eyes locked for a moment Impossibly
deep were those green eyes, and for a timeless moment, Justen could
neither move nor speak.

"Justen ..."  need to go

He shook himself like a wet water cat.  "I'm going.  It's off to Yual's
I go."

He could feel Dayala's eyes on his back until he had walked around the
first curve in the road and out of her sight.

Yual's holding sat on a low hill.  Around the hill grew none of the
monoliths.  Gray, thick clouds scudded above the forest, and a heavy
rain pelted onto the hillside and against the two buildings crouched
there.  The house and the smithy were the first structures Justen had
seen within the great forest that were not grown by some tree or
another.

Justen shrugged and walked out from the high canopy into the rain and
up the stone-paved lane toward the smithy.

Like every door in Naclos, the door to the smithy was open, and Justen
stepped inside.  There he waited until the silver-haired man reached a
stopping point and set the rough-forged blade on the forge shelf to
anneal.  Then Justen stepped forward.

"You must be Justen."  The smith's eyes were not green, surprisingly,
but a clear brown that seemed just as piercing as the green eyes of the
other Naclans.  He smiled broadly.  "Dayala said you would be here, and
I was hoping that you would come.  My forge is yours."

"You're too kind."  The younger engineer bowed.

"I am not kind at all.  I am hopeful.  So few in Naclos pursue
smithing, and it has been more than many years since an outside smith
has come this deep into the great forest."

"I bring no tools .. ."

"I have a few extra ones, and you may borrow as necessary to forge what
you need."

Justen glanced around, from the ubiquitous anvil to a second, smaller
anvil, at the great bellows, albeit curved differently, and at the
hammers and tongs, racked neatly in two stands.

From the forge came the gentle heat of charcoal.

"Charcoal?"

"Even in the great forest, trees die."

"Andiron?"

"There is enough in the bogs."  Yual gave a wry smile.  "Those of us in
Naclos use little iron compared to Sarronnyn."

"Or especially to Recluce."

"That is a concern to the Balance."  Yual gestured to the forge.  "If
you do not mind ..."

"Please go ahead."

"You certainly can examine my poor work, and when I finish, we can see
how I might help."  The smith took a small pair of tongs and swung the
blade blank into the forge fire.

Justen picked up a hammer, running his fingers across the smooth grain
and the curves, noting how it was shaped to the smith's hand.  Finally,
he set it down.  "Beautiful tools."

"Ah ... I am a toolmaker.  You are a smith.  The fire ... it beats out
from you like the forge of the gods."  Yual retrieved the red-hot iron
and slipped it onto the anvil, using precise and even strokes with a
mid-weight hammer to draw the blade thinner.

On a table at the back lay some of Yual's finished work.  Justen
studied it: a set of knives, a warren, a stone-cutting hammer and
matching chisels, some large and hooked needles.  There were no tools
for shaping wood, nor for farming.  For gardening, but not for farming.
And no razors.

What should he forge?  Justen frowned.  He owed gifts to many already,
from the gear shop in Merthe to the guest house there, and certainly to
Dayala, and now to the smith, Still, he should be able to forge his own
razor.

He fingered a small section of what looked to be bar stock, except that
it was softer iron, and squarer.  He paused, realizing that Yual must
partly smelt his own iron.  His estimation of the "toolmaker" rose
another notch.

What could he forge for gifts?  Perhaps some decorative items, except
for the gear shop; for that shop he had already decided on a pair of
fire-strikers.  Even druids had lamps- and stoves, if only for things
like breads-and travelers often needed fires.  The flints might be a
problem, but he could ask Yual about that before he started.  If there
were no flints, perhaps he could make a travel lantern.

For Duvalla, he could forge a decorative nutcracker, and for Dayala, he
had an idea ... if he could but execute it.

While Yual worked, Justen found a drawing board and a stick of
charcoal.  He began to sketch, rough-figuring what he had in mind to
make after the razor, and remembering that bog iron was probably
scarce.

"A smith who thinks before he lifts iron."  Yual laughed, standing over
Justen, who had not even noticed the other's approach.

"Oh..."

"I am doubly honored that you share both your thoughts and your
trust."

"I'm the one who is honored."  Justen's words were fact, for he was
neither particularly special nor trusting.

"How can I help you?"  Yual asked.

"If I could borrow some flame from the forge and pay you in some way
for the use of iron and tools... all I have is some poor skill.  I
could use whatever anvil you do not need."

"You see my iron.  What works for you is yours.  I had planned to use
the large anvil for some tools ..."  ' "The small anvil would be
fine."

Yual nodded.

"And should you need it, I can work the bellows on the bigger
pieces."

"That would help," admitted the older man.  "I have an extra leather
apron."

After pulling off the brown shirt that Dayala had provided, Justen tied
the apron in place.

Yual had returned to the forge and the large anvil by the time Justen
had found the small length of iron he needed, the smaller hammers and
punches.

In time, the forge rang with two hammers.

Later, after suggesting that they eat, Yual set bread and a basket of
fruit on the table, then a pitcher.  "This is dark beer, but I have
water."

"The dark beer is fine."  Justen wiped his forehead.  Both his hands
and arms were tired.  It had been too long since he had worked the
iron, and his strokes were neither as sure as he would have liked nor
as clean.  He took a deep breath, then sipped the beer, enjoying the
not-quite-cool liquid and looking down the grassy hill to the point
where the great forest resumed.

"It's pleasant here."

Yual swallowed a mouthful of beer.  "Some find it too ... removed from
the forest."

"Do all Naclans have to be that close to the forest?"

"I don't."  Yual laughed.  "My daughter sometimes travels far from the
forest, but her mother gets unsettled if too long away from the trees.
We're all different, just as all of you are."  The smith snapped an end
off the bread and offered the loaf to Justen.

"Thank you."

"You keep the iron as soft as you can, I saw, until the last steps, and
you always work with the grain.  That's the way I do, but not the way
the Sarronnese forge."

"They can't work order into the metal.  So it doesn't matter, I
suspect, but I don't want it to get brittle.  That's the advantage of
black iron over steel.  There's more flexibility.  That's why our
boilers can take more pressure than those of the Hamorians."  Justen
chewed off a mouthful of bread from the end that he held.

"Delicate work with that double hinge on the nutcracker."

Justen nodded.  "Stronger, though.  The flutes aren't what I wanted,
exactly, but I'm out of practice."  He took another sip of the smooth,
dark beer.  "May I come back?"

"Of course.  So long as you stay in Rybatta, you are welcome."  The
words were warm, but Yual gave the faintest of frowns, as if to ask why
Justen would ask such a strange question.  At least that was the
impression Justen received.

"I owe a lot of people, and perhaps I can show you something.  I'll
try, anyway."

"I am sure you will."  Yual refilled Justen's mug, then pulled a green
apple from the basket and began to eat it.

Justen took a firm pear apple thinking about the work still to do.

The sun had touched the lower trees before Justen had racked, the tools
and swept the smithy.  Then he walked quickly through the twilight,
carrying only the razor, wrapped in a heavy, leaflike husk that Yual
had supplied.

Dayala's house was quiet, dark in the dimness of late twilight, when
Justen stepped inside.

"Dayala?"

As his eyes adjusted to the dimness, he saw a figure slumped on the
short couch in the main room: Dayala.  He stepped forward quietly,
listening to the gentle breathing that was almost, but not quite, the
faintest of snores,

Had she eaten anything?

"Oh ..."  Think too loud

"I'm sorry.  I'm not exactly used to controlling how loudly I think."

The druid slowly sat up.

"Are you all right?"  Justen asked.

"I am tired.  It is hard to work with the small trees, and I did
promise some boxes ..."

"I know."  Justen stepped around her and into the small kitchen.  He
took his belt knife and sliced several slabs of bread from the loaf
that remained and rummaged in the low cupboard for some cheese.  "I
think there's a ripe pear apple on the tree.  I'll be right back."

There were two, and he brought them both in after washing them in a
bucket of water drawn from the well.

Dayala was still rubbing her eyes when he set the platter on the table
and lit the small lamp with his striker.  There was some juice in a
pitcher, and he set the pitcher and two mugs on the table.  Then he
half-filled her mug.

"Thank you."  She yawned again, easing her chair up to the table.

"What did you do today ... exactly?"

"I finished only one box.  It's on the low table there.  It's not very
good.  I tried to rush too much."  She sipped the juice.  "How did you
find Yual?"

"He was very friendly.  I need to go back.  Smithing is slow work,
especially when you're out of practice."

"Going back would be best, I think.  I also have much to do."

Justen looked toward the low table.  "Could I look at the box?"

"If you remember that it is far from my best work."

Justen lifted the oval box of smooth-finished blond wood with a wide
grain.  The top slipped off easily.  There were no signs of joins or
glue, as if the box were a seamless whole.  "This is beautiful."  He
gently replaced it and sat down on the chair across the table from
her.

"Please ... it is not my best."

Justen swallowed.  "Your best must be ..."  He could not finish the
sentence, for he had no appropriate word.

"You are ..."  too kind

"No.  One seldom sees such crafting."

Without speaking more, the druid slowly ate a single slab of bread and
one chunk of cheese.  Then she sipped more juice, and yawned-once,
twice.

Justen tried not to yawn, but his mouth opened almost as wide as
hers.

"We are both tired."  Dayala pushed her mug away.

"It has been a long day," Justen admitted.  Still, he was puzzled,
since Dayala had admitted that she did not handle edged tools.  She was
exhausted, clearly, and her work was beautiful.  But how did she do
it?

They put back the bread and cheese and staggered to their respective
beds.

"Goodnight."

Justen was not certain whether he had spoken or Dayala had, but sleep
crept over him before he could decide.

LXXXII

"You must learn from watching .. . and listening."  Dayala's fingers
tightened around his, then loosened but did not break away.  "He is
almost as ancient as some of the old ones, and his songs teach much."

"Young lovers ... I see you hiding there on the bench."

Justen frowned, for the voice was youthful and strong.  The
silver-haired man with the guitar in his hands, sitting by the small
fountain that sprang from nowhere, looked no older than Justen
himself.

Justen extended the faintest of order-probes toward the man while
looking at Dayala, until he could sense her guarded approval.

"I was young once.  Enjoy it."  The laugh was friendly, warm, and so
was the sense of order that Justen received, but an order that
contained a hint of ... something bound within it.

Dayala touched his arm as the singer's fingers touched the strings.
Sitting on the bench grown from the dark lorken, Justen watched and
listened.  The silver-haired man's fingers glided across the strings,
and the golden notes floated into the twilight, each one soothing even
as it chilled, warning as it cooled.

The druid's hand rested coolly in Justen's, and they listened, and
wept.  down by the seashore, where the waters foam white,

Hang your head over; hear the wind's flight.

The east wind loves sunshine,

And the west wind loves night.

The north blows alone, dear,

And I fear the light.

You've taken my heart, dear,

Beyond the winds' night.

The fires you have kindled

Last longer than light.  last longer than light, dear, when the waters
foam white;

Hang your head over; hear the wind's flight.

The fires you have kindled

Will last out my night.

Soon I will die, dear,

On the mountain's cold height.

The steel wind blows truth, dear,

Beyond my blade's might.  beyond my blade's might, dear, where the
waters foam white;

Hang your head over; hear the wind's flight.

I told you the truth, dear,

Right from the start.

I wanted your love, dear

With all of my heart.

Sometimes you hurt me,

And sometimes we fought,

But now that you've left me,

My life's been for naught.

My life's been for naught, dear, when the waters foam white;

So hang your head over, and hear the wind's flight.

So hang your head over, and hear the wind's flight.

Justen was the one who hung his head, tears still caught in the corners
of his eyes at the terrible longing held in the golden notes.

"Perhaps you recall this one.  I apologize if the accent is not quite
right, but it has been a long time," the singer said.

Dayala cleared her throat softly.

"You do remind me, a bit, of her, young lady.  What is your name?"

"Dayala."

"A lovely name."  The singer turned cold, green eyes upon Justen.
"Remember what you have heard here when you leave Naclos, fellow.
Leaving is hard, but being left is harder.  I know.  I have done
both."

"Who ... are you?  I ought to know, I feel."  Justen shrugged
helplessly.  "I'm always grasping, as though I were on the edge of
things."

"Names do not mean that much, not after all this time.  Once I was
called Werlynn, and once I had children."  The man lifted the guitar.
"It was hard to leave.  Everyone thought I died on the journey.  It was
better that way.  For them, at least."

Dayala nodded.

"Do you recall this song?"  The long fingers caressed the strings.

Ask not the song to be sung,

Or the bell to be rung,

Or if my tale is done.

The answer is all-and none.

The answer is all-and none.

Oh, white was the color of my love,

As bright and white as a dove,

And white was he, as fair as she,

Who sundered my love from me.

Ask not the tale to be done,

The rhyme to be rung,

Or if the sun has sung.

The answer is all-and none.

The answer is all-and none.

Oh, black was the color of my sight,

As dark and black as the night,

And dark was I, as dark as sky,

Whose lightning bared the lie.

Ask not the bell to be rung,

Or the song to be sung,

Or if my tale is done.

The answer is all-and none.

The answer is all-and none.

They sat on the bench for a long time after the silver-haired singer
had gone, holding hands tightly, holding shoulders tightly, holding
souls tightly.

LXXXIII

Justen set the iron blossom on the table, turning it so the light from
the window would strike it until sunset.

Then he laid the other items on the eating table: two nutcrackers, the
strikers, the scrolled trivets, and two travel lanterns that could
carry either the inset lamps or candles.

Even with Yual's help and the softer-wrought bog iron, he had spent, on
and off, most of the spring and early summer creating the pieces-those
and the design for the small water turbine in which Yual had been so
interested.

Justen peered out into the garden, where Dayala still walked among the
low bushes that seemed more like trees.  His hand fingered his
once-again smooth chin, not that Dayala had seemed to note the
difference, but he felt better clean-shaven.  She had offered him a
small vial of some sort of soapy oil that had reduced the number of
cuts he suffered at the hands of his own craftsmanship.

After pacing around the room, reorganizing his efforts once again, he
glanced back at the iron trilia, the thin steel petals bending just so.
But Dayala remained out in the garden, and the sun had begun to drop
below the unseen horizon.

Finally, Justen slipped out through the front archway and quietly
walked into the garden.  He paused by the first tree, looking down at
the fist-sized closed pod that seemed larger than when he had studied
it several days earlier.

Dayala stood well to the back of the garden, her fingers intertwined
with one of the bush-trees, oblivious to Justen as he approached.

Watching with his senses as well as his eyes, Justen swallowed as he
felt the slow transfer of order from the druid to the tree.  Then he
stepped back and eased his way to the front of the garden, shaking his
head.  Why had he not quite seen?  If trees could be made to grow
houses, certainly they could grow boxes, and who knew what else?

Was Naclos always to be this way, where he took what was said in one
fashion while it was meant in another?  Where Dayala thought he
understood, and he thought she understood?

He paced across the short, open space before the house, back and forth,
back and forth, as the twilight dropped across the house and garden.

"Justen .. . you didn't tell me you were home."  Dayala stood by die
oak that formed the corner post of the house.  She held something in
her hand.  "I wanted to show you something."

Although she smiled, Justen could sense her exhaustion.

"You're tired.  You're trying to do too much in the garden."  And this
time, he knew what he meant when he spoke.  Anyone who could walk him
nearly to death across the Stone Hills and yet was too tired to eat
after working the trees was definitely spending too much energy on her
work.

"Please?"  She held up a box.

He stepped forward, and she extended the nearly oblong object.

His fingers closed on it and he shivered, feeling the smoothness, the
order, and the absolute serenity the box embodied.  Then he looked at
the fine grain, at the design of hammer and anvil on the lid.  "It's ..
. beautiful.  "More than beautiful

"I did it for you."

His eyes burned, and he looked down.

"Justen."

His raised his eyes to meet hers.

"You cannot learn everything at once.  And we both need something to
eat, I think."

He nodded and followed her inside, still marveling at the box, at the
finish and the grain and the design.  How had she managed to grow the
hammer and anvil?

"Oh .. ."  he blurted.  "There's something for you on the table."

Dayala was already bending over the iron trilia.  "Justen, it's
gorgeous!  It looks so real."

He shook his head, knowing that his poor work with iron could scarcely
compare to the real artistry that she had shone.

"And these... for Duvalla and the others.  They will be so pleased. But
the flower-"

He watched as tears streamed down her face.

"But .. . it's nothing compared to this."  He held up the box she had
given him.

"No.  My poor box is nothing."  nothing at all

He set the box on the table next to the iron trilia, and then-hands
touched.

"Don't you see?"  she sobbed.  "It is easy to make the trees grow into
patterns.  They want to help.  But cold iron?  It fights all the way,
and to think that you made something so beautiful from metal.  You put
the fire that is within you in that, and it will never die."

"Don't you see .. ."  he answered, his voice breaking "..  . the trilia
is only cold iron, nothing like your art."  ... nothing at all... "But
it is you, you!"  Her fingers tightened around his.

Through blurry eyes, he saw her and understood-finally, he thought-that
the gift was the self and the sacrifice, not the object.  And yet the
object created from soul had beauty-because it was created from the
soul?

For a time, they stood by the table, eyes and hands locked.

Then Dayala laughed softly.  "We still need to eat."

He nodded, and his eyes fell on the box for a moment, while hers turned
to me iron trilia.  He set the box beside the blossom and lifted the
other gifts one by one to the small side table while she brought out
some fruit and a loaf of bread.

LXXXIV

Dayala set the berry bread on the oval breadboard, sliding the loaf
into place with a long wooden paddle.  The table lamp flickered with
the breeze created by her movements.

"I don't know if I can eat any more."  Justen took a deep breath.  "It
smells good."  His hands cupped the mug that remained half-full of dark
beer.

"I learned it from her."  Dayala inclined her head toward Frysa.

"Mothers always get the blame."  Frysa's eyes twinkled for a moment.
"Even when they're praised."

"Unless fathers do," Justen added.  "My father has always been the
cook.  Gunnar took after him in that respect.  I can do a little."

"Gunnar?"  asked Frysa.

"My older brother.  He's an Air Wizard."

"He still seeks you," murmured Dayala.  "That is what one of the
ancients told me."

Justen swallowed.  Gunnar, still searching?

"He knows you are well."

"He's probably worried, though."

"It must be nice to have a brother."

"I have a younger sister, too.  Her name is Elisabet.  She's a Weather
Wizard also, or she will be."

"We have few children here," Frysa answered slowly.  "Not all stay, but
the great forest can support only so many."

Justen nodded.  People would have to exist in the order-chaos Balance
as well.  "Are there too many people in other lands?"

Frysa and Dayala looked at each other, then back at Jus-ten.

Finally, Frysa spoke.  "There is always a Balance.  Here, we know that
Balance, but we would not be so foolish as to declare what mat Balance
might be elsewhere."  Her eyes flicked toward the iron trilia that sat
on the side table.  "I could not come close to such artistry.  Nor
could most Naclans.  So how should we presume?"

Justen sipped just enough beer to wet his throat.  "So you suspect that
there are too many people in at least some places, but you believe it
is up to those who live in such places to reach their own decisions-or
to fight with the Balance on their own?"

"One can scarcely fight the Balance."  Dayala's lips quirked after she
responded.

"I understand.  They must reach their own terms with the Balance, but
if they fail to do so ..."  He shrugged, then pursed his lips.  Is that
why I am here?  To allow an outsider a chance to right the mess beyond
Naclos?"

"You were bound to try, whether we helped or not.  You are a Shaper,"
said Frysa flatly.

"You try to help those who are going to try, and you always have,
haven't you?"

"When we could.  Many have refused our knowledge."

Dayala took a small swallow from her mug and watched the conversation
between her mother and Justen.

Justen took another deep breath.  "We met this singer- Werlynn.  You
helped him?"

"No.  He went out to help you with his songs and his son.  It was very
hard on him, and he still is not ... quite reconciled ..."

"His son?"

"He had a daughter who was killed when quite young, and his son was
blind for most of his life.  They both died young .. . young for
druids, anyway."  Frysa smiled sadly.  "He blames himself."  She pushed
back her chair.  "I must go.  Tomorrow I am going downriver to Diehl,
and I will need to be alert for the river currents."

Justen and Dayala stood as Frysa did and walked with her toward the
front archway, where Dayala drew back the hangings to let her mother
pass into the soft, late-summer night.

A faint chirping and the croak of a frog echoed in the darkness as the
older silver-haired woman, her hair almost glowing in the purple
darkness, slipped away toward the center of Rybatta.

Dayala closed the hangings.

After returning to the table, Justen looked down at the uneaten berry
bread.  "It smells so good, but I just couldn't.  I'll have some in the
morning."

"You understand your body best."

"I suppose."  Justen paused, then swallowed.  "I'm almost afraid to
ask."  He paused again before speaking.  "I've met your mother twice
now, but..."

"My father?"

Justen nodded, his heart dropping.

Instead, Dayala laughed.  "I should have told you.  I'm sorry.  You've
already met him.  But I didn't want..."  She shook her head.  "Some
things are different here."

Justen's thoughts whirled.  What man reminded him of Dayala?  Where?
Then he nodded and asked slowly, "Yual?"

"Of course.  That is why ..."  *I can bear the flame

"But... why don't they live together?"

"Sometimes they do.  But Yual likes the more open spaces, and sometimes
he travels the Empty Lands, or the grasslands.  He went to Sarronnyn
several times before I was born."

"And your mother is more tied to the great forest.  Yual told me that,
except that he didn't say it was your mother- just that it was his
daughter's mother."  Justen shook his head.  "You all think I see more
than I do.  And I still don't have the answers I feel I need."

"I could take you to see Syodra.  She has a talent with the sands, and
that was how I found you."  Dayala squeezed his fingers.  "It would be
easier..."

"Easier?"

"The sands at the edge of the Stone Hills are sometimes clearer, but,"
Dayala shrugged, "they are not always .. . cooperative.  For what you
seek, the forest sands could help."

"Anything would help, I think."  Justen squeezed her fingers, his
breath somehow constricted by her closeness and his desire.  "Is this
nut ripe yet?"

He could feel the sadness in her.

"No ... not yet."

"What does it take to ripen it?"  He tried to keep his tone light,
knowing that he was scarcely deceiving her.

"A trial.  Your trial."

He nodded, not exactly surprised.  How could she dare to love fully
someone who could not stand up to the great forest on his own?

"It's not that.  You have to understand-to feel-before you are
ready."

He understood all too well.  Dayala, like it or not, loved him, and she
did not want to push him before he was ready.  But if he waited, would
he ever be ready?  It was already late summer, almost fall, and the
cold winds would be blowing across the Gulf and chilling Recluce before
long, while the first snows had already begun to fall on the
Westhorns.

"Could we see Syodra soon?"

"Tomorrow."

LXXXV

"Syodra, this is Justen.  Can you help him?"

The older druid had silver hair longer than Dayala's, but the same
green eyes, although her tunic and trousers were of a silvered brown.
She stood beside a raised bed of sand that was enclosed within the
roots of a lorken tree.

"I can show him what the sands say.  He will have to find his own
meanings."  Syodra smiled politely and inclined her head.

"I will leave you two, The sands work better without confusion." Dayala
touched Justen's hand and started down the path.

"What are your questions?  Think deeply about them as you ask."  Syodra
dipped her hands into the colorless sands held by the lorken roots.

"People call me a Shaper.  All I want to do is to stop the spread of
unbalanced chaos that is Fairhaven.  How am I going to do that?"

The sands quivered and colored, and Justen watched as there appeared an
image of darkness spreading across a white tower, blotting it out. Then
the sands churned and the space turned a brilliant white.

"Darkness covering Fairhaven, replaced by light.  What does that
mean?"

Syodra remained silent, and Justen nodded to himself.  "My meanings, I
know."

He wet his lips, then asked,"I'm supposed to be myself in order to
succeed in this trial.  How can I be that?"

The second image was clearer, that of Justen clasping a bloody sword
and a skeleton to himself and bowing his head.

"That seems rather far-fetched, but there must be a truth there ...
somehow," Justen said wearily.  "What would you show me?"

Syodra inclined her head and glanced toward the colored sands, which
boiled on the table, then came to rest with an image of a red-haired
woman dressed in black.  Beside the picture was a flag bearing a
crossed rose and blade.

"Are you saying that you're responsible somehow for Megaera becoming a
founder of Recluce?"

The sands churned again, less violently, and the image of two broken
black bracelets replaced the image of the banner.

Justen shook his head.  "I don't understand that one.  I suppose it
really doesn't matter.  I'll either understand it or..  ."  He
shrugged.  "Why is it that I can't quite grasp things?"

The sands boiled again, and a single pillar of black appeared,
separated by a low wall from a pillar of white.  A chain of green led
from the white pillar to the black, except that the links from each
pillar ended in a sundered link lying on the smooth stones of the
wall.

"Anything else?"  The image of his clasping the bloody sword and the
skeleton echoed in his thoughts, and he shivered.

"No.  You have seen enough."  The silver-haired woman smiled sadly,
then pointed toward the pathway.

Justen inclined his head, bowed slightly, and backed up several steps.
He turned and eased past the huge black oak.  In the root that had been
grown into the shape of a bench, overlooking the natural pond, sat
Dayala.

"Did you find what you wished?"

At the combination of huskiness and music in the druid's voice, Justen
sighed and slowly sank onto the seat beside her.  "Not exactly.  It's
like everything else I find in Naclos.  Everyone is so helpful, but
half the time I don't understand the answers, at least not until
later."

Instead of looking at her, Justen idly reached for a long stem of
grass.  He shivered again at the image of the sword and skeleton.

Dayala's hand touched his.

"Sorry," he apologized.  "I forget."

"If you had real need of it," she began.

"I know.  I'm nervous.  I keep thinking that if I knew more ... but I
never will.  Not that much more.  Can you tell me any more about the
trial?"

Dayala shrugged nervously.  "You know more than most.  You almost went
through the trial the first time you met the great forest.  That makes
it both harder and easier.  You know more, and you have more reason to
fear.  And you should not fear.  You are strong enough, if you trust in
yourself."

"So when do I undertake this trial?"

"Whenever you wish.  We will have to go back to Merthe."

"Can we start tomorrow?"

Dayala nodded.

LXXXVI

Justen sat on the edge of one of the narrow beds, looking across the
darkness to Dayala, who unfolded the thin blanket provided by the guest
house.

Somewhere he could hear Duvalla singing softly, and the warm odor of
fresh-baked bread wafted through the half-open window.  A few voices,
only a few, for even the center of Merthe was far quieter than the edge
of Rybatta, drifted to his ears, but he could not make out the words.

"There have to be some rules for this."  Justen's voice bore an
exasperated tone.  "Otherwise, I could just go up on the overlook and
say "Hullo, great forest' and walk away."

"If the great forest accepted the trial, it would not be that simple.
And if it did not, then it would not be a trial.  But there are rules.
You must enter the great forest on the path that leads downhill from
the black rocks.  You must always stay on that path until you reach the
end, or until you can go no farther, and then you must return by the
path to the road to Merthe."  Dayala took a deep breath, then added, "I
am bidden to tell you one other choice."

"Bidden?"

"You must choose between the safe and the glorious.  Those are the only
choices open to you."

"The safe and the glorious?  What does that mean?"

Dayala looked at the floor.

Finally, Justen spoke again.  "When is the trial over?"

"When you set foot on the road to Merthe."

"Proof of the will and the way, I guess."  Justen nodded, then frowned,
shifting his weight on the narrow sleeping pallet.  "Dayala, you make
it sound so simple, but nothing is that simple."

"Simple does not mean easy.  It is simple to walk across the Stone
Hills to Naclos, but was it easy?"

"Why me?  Why did you risk your life to get me?  Why did you risk it
again when I got tangled in the great forest?"

She looked down and did not speak.

Justen waited, sitting on the pallet, drumming his finger on the wooden
frame.

"Justen, you see and you do not see.  Would I tie my life to yours and
then unnecessarily endanger you?"  do love you

Justen saw tears in her eyes, and he could feel the combined sadness
and frustration they represented.  His own eyes burned.  "But why?  Why
did you tie us together?"  He could barely choke out the words.  "You
didn't have to .. . to, rescue me."

"Because you are a Shaper.  What you .. . learn if you survive the
trial, will let you ... change the world ... and no Shaper, the Angels
decreed .. . can go unfettered."  Her words were more sobs than
coherent phrases by the last syllable.

A cold chill settled over Justen, colder than the winds off the
Northern Ocean.

LXXXVII

Justen walked alone, wearing brown trousers, brown shirt, and his old
black boots.  He and Dayala had walked from Rybatta back through Viela
to Merthe, where she waited.  Now he walked toward the edge of the
great forest, toward the overlook, trying not to think too much of what
awaited him there above the great forest.  Trying not to think of the
druid who had held him like a lover, but who was not a lover, not yet.
Trying not to think too deeply.

And he had once thought of Naclos as almost a park, where trees and
animals and druids lived in peaceful harmony!

He stopped where the path split, one fork heading out into the
grasslands, the other uphill through the low brush to the overlook.
Then he turned and started uphill, wondering how many others had made
the same choice and how many had headed into the grasslands as
wanderers, forever exiled from the land of their birth.

Just before the hill crest in the clearing where they had spent that
night more than who knew how many eight-days before, he took a last
look toward the grasslands-out toward the Stone Hills, where everything
had seemed so simple.  Then he climbed the last few cubits and looked
down on the forest.

There are two ways .. . the safe and the glorious .. . the safe and the
glorious ... the safe and the glorious.

Justen swallowed, then shook his head.  Darkness damned if he would
creep.  Not for the Whites of Fairhaven or for the intertwined order
and chaos of the great forest of Naclos.

The sun touched the western horizon, and Justen took another deep
breath.  He'd taken too many breaths, and not enough thought.

He frowned.  The form of the trial was his, so long as he came to terms
with the forest, so long as he walked the forest in full order and in
body.

But there was no stipulation on how he accomplished that challenge.  He
grinned and pursed his lips, bracing his back against the smooth, dark
stones, dark with order... and with blood.

He shook his head nervously, then looked across the great forest and
into the golden dust of twilight.

He broadcast his challenge to the great forest.  *I am!  Here I am
No... oh, be careful, Justen...*

Even from afar, he could feel the clear, thin thoughts from Dayala, and
he barely had time to push a vague sense of reassurance back toward her
before the first lash of white spiked out of the twilight toward him.

He imagined himself as a stolid black iron anvil, a basic force of
order, and the lash shattered on him, white blobs of chaos burning in
the air around him .  burning, yet not burning.

Before that first lash had shattered against his presence, two other,
thinner, webs-one of white and one of black- circled around him,
spinning tighter as if to crush the basic order within him.  His
breathing became labored, shallow.

Justen let himself become iron, white-hot iron just below the point of
burning, radiating heat..  .

The twin spirals began to radiate heat back at him.  Without moving his
mouth, Justen grinned and let his iron core accept their heat, take it
all, just as heat-greedy iron would always take that heat.  Making that
heat his, he took the first step down the path.  The two pulses
shriveled under his iron will, hard like the hands of the
sometime-smith he was, even before he reached the lower bushes at the
edge of the great forest.  *I am Justen!  I am me

Crack... A heavy branch thundered through the canopy above him,
dropping almost at his feet and blocking the path.

Justen paused, then released the heat he had received from the second
attack.  The bark of the fallen branch smoldered, then flared, and he
burned through the heavy wood as a blade would cut through a stick of
cheese.

He set his left foot inside the forest, and his right.  Sweat poured
from his forehead, and dark shadows rose in the light he cast.

Cracckkk .. .

Justen burned away the second trunk-sized limb before it reached him,
and stepped deeper into the green gloom.

With each cubit, the path grew fainter, harder to discern, as if it
were fading away with each step, but Justen put one foot, and then
another on that disappearing path.

Another burst of power flared in the depths of the forest, and an
enormous forest cat charged toward Justen, who flinched.  The cat's
teeth-each tooth larger than a belt knife-glinted like silver blades,
and the extended claws dripped blood.

Justen concentrated on bending light, on bending force around himself,
and the cat vanished.

A figure in dark gray stepped forward out of the shadows, holding a
short shaft.  Justen slowed, but the soldier with the shadowed face
carried no blade, no shield, only the short length of oak barely a
finger's thickness.

The soulless eyes of the Iron Guard looked through Justen as she
extended the order-tipped arrow.  You are of chaos, as surely as I am..
. for death is chaos, and you have created death, not just by your own
hand, but by the hands of hundreds .. .

He shivered, then looked through the figure with his order-senses, but
only the tiniest pulses of energy appeared behind the image.

Take it..  . it is yours, great Master of Chaos.

Master of Chaos?  Never!  He put up a hand as if to push the arrow
away, knowing that the image had to be some gambit of the great
forest's.

Take it... The Iron Guard hurled the arrow at his outstretched hand,
and fire shot through his left arm as if a knife point had ripped open
his arm from wrist to shoulder.

It is yours, Master of Chaos, returned to you , .,

Justen squinted, trying to see beyond the image, but nothing stood
there, and his eyes watered as he walked past the Iron Guard, his arm
almost leaden with the pain.

A red-haired woman stood beside the path, beckoning, smiling .. .
except that her face was half-charred and the bones of her cheeks and
forehead protruded from split and blackened flesh.  Ashes clothed
her.

Come with me, Justen.  You loved me ... and I suffered this because of
your love .. .

No!  Justen gritted his teeth.  / did not cause that suffering.  Firbek
did!  You never loved me!  You loved Gunnar.

Her arms reached for him, and Justen threw up more shields, but a
finger, impossibly long, reached out and seized his good right arm, and
her nails burned into his forearm like white-hot iron spikes from his
own forge.  His flesh sizzled, and the stench of it filled his
nostrils.

You loved me, and your love has killed me.

Justen trudged forward, his arms hanging limply, into the darker
shadows that lay in his path.

A black-haired woman in blue leathers wheeled her horse, then halted
the beast, steam rising from its nostrils, across the path.  She
pointed the short sword at Justen's breast.

Come .. . great Bearer of Destruction.  Join us.

Behind her, Justen could sense the rising hordes of the dead, could
feel the white-cloaked figures.  He stopped.

Join us ... Blood dripped from one arm, while the other bore four
blackened spots, burned through shirt and skin and flesh, spots aching
with the pain beyond pain.

Join us..  .

He looked dully at the horse soldier.  What was he missing?  His head
throbbed.  He could not lift his arms.

Join us .. . Great Deceiver .. . believer in your creed of order alone
.. order alone ... The sword touched his chest, burning away his shirt.
Smoke rose into his nostrils.

Join us.  You cannot escape.

Cannot escape .. . Cannot escape.  The words rang through his ears and
head cannot escape.

Then Justen laughed and grasped the blade, ignoring the slashes across
his palms.  "No!  You join me.  I accept you!  You are my chaos, my
evil.  You are me!"

A dull watting rose and fell... rose and fell... and Justen released
the shields that had blocked him from the great forest and that had
turned himself against himself.  He lay on the path, and before him
growled the forest cat, not impossibly large but extraordinarily
real-and less than ten cubits away.

Slowly, he staggered up, his slashed palms burning with sandy grit, his
arms barely able to help him rise.  He glanced at his left arm and the
open gash that ran from wrist to elbow, and at the four charred
depressions in his right forearm.  He swallowed.

The cat growled.

"Go home, cat.  I don't want to play anymore."

He squinted.  In the darkness, the path seemed to tilt before his eyes.
He straightened and put one foot in front of the other.

"No light-damned forest is going to-"

The cat growled once more.

His teeth clenched tightly, Justen stared at the cat.

The cat's tail twitched, and one paw lifted.

"I won't... won't, won't!"  Justen howled, and howling, drew together
the patterns he had used but twice before, knowing now that he needed
neither powder nor cannons, but only order and will, order and will ...
order and will!

Whsstttt..  .

The ground trembled, the forest monoliths swayed, and a single line of
light flared from Justen's hand, passing over the giant cat and leaving
no sign of the animal, no burned ashes, no screams.  A pathway burned
straight ahead for as far as Justen could see.

The echo of his order-chaos shift reverberated in his brain as if two
mirrors reflected the sun back and forth down an endless corridor, a
corridor stretching simultaneously deep into the earth and up into the
heavens.  And all along that corridor, the ancient Angels wept, and
Ryba-she of the swift ships of Heaven-held her head, and the Demons of
Light smiled before they drowned in the darkness of brilliant order.

And somewhere, a forest cat slunk off to lick its paws, to sleep away
its terrible nightmare of an ancient Angel.

Justen coughed, then staggered forward, concentrating on one step at a
time.  He took a step and a deep breath, a step and a breath, a step
and a breath .. .

How long it took, he did not know, save that when the grayness of dawn
lightened the forest, he stepped onto the road to Merthe.

Dayala stood there, white-faced, red-eyed, scars on her arms and across
her face, blood oozing from her hands.

"That bad...?"  He took a last step onto the road, and his knees
crumpled.

Her arms were strong and gentle-like a lover's-as she lay down with him
and their tears and blood mingled and fell on the dust.

LXXXVIII

"Zerchas was right, you know."  Beltar sipped a glass of wine and
glanced at the surf beyond the breakwater.  "Jera is too pretty a place
to destroy."

Eldiren silently lifted his goblet in assent.

"We'll probably have to head back to Rulyarth soon, if this mud ever
clears from the roads.  It's hard to believe we've been here all
summer, nearly half a year."

"Sometimes .. . until we lose more troops taking some forsaken
crossroads that decides the war's not over.  You don't see that here in
Jera."

"War is ugly, Eldiren.  Enjoy the benefits while you can.  At least you
don't have to worry about Jehan slinking around and reporting to
Zerchas every time you take a piss."  Beltar took a healthy swallow
from his goblet.

"Jehan's not that bad.  He probably doesn't have much choice."

"With Zerchas, probably not.  But I still have to worry about him. Once
we get on the road, it won't be so bad."  He lifted the goblet again. 
They say the roads will freeze several eight-days before the snows
fall, if they fall at all."

"Snows?  It's barely harvest time."

"The winter comes earlier here.  We'll have to start preparations for
the attack on Suthya ... if we want to begin right after the spring
thaw."

"They won't surrender?"

"Zerchas says not.  The Suthyans want to haggle over everything.  I
think they'll knuckle under once the armies begin to chew up their
countryside."

"Like Sarronnyn?  The Sarronnese still haven't knuckled under.  They
never will.  They hale us."

"Never say never, Eldiren."

Eldiren toyed with the empty wine glass, holding it up and catching the
light of one of the wall lamps in the clear crystal.

"They say you can scree in a good crystal goblet."  Beltar laughed.
"Ever tried it?"

"No, I cannot say that I have."  Eldiren glanced toward the half-empty
bottle of red wine.

"See if you can look into Naclos.  Maybe it would be easier with the
goblet."

"Naclos?"

"Try to find out what happened to that engineer."

"He died."

"Eldiren.  Someone who twists order into chaos isn't going to get fried
by one of your fire bolts  Zerchas may think so ... but we know better.
Don't we?"  Beltar smiled.  "Why don't you try to find him in Naclos?
For me ... rather than for Zerchas."

"Beltar..  ."

"You don't have to explain.  No one wants to commit suicide to make
Zerchas happy.  Light knows, I wouldn't.  But try to scree for that
engineer.  I feel uneasy, like he just might be up to something."

Eldiren set the goblet on the table before him, took a deep breath,
concentrated, and looked at the mists forming in the space between the
thin layers of crystal.  The center of the goblet momentarily reflected
the dark circles beneath his sunken and deep-set eyes.

The serving girl-daughter of the villa's former owner- turned and
looked openmouthed at the twisting pillars of white and black that
writhed in the mists of the goblet.

A soundless shriek split the twilight, and the goblet shattered,
strewing glass fragments over the table.  Eldiren pitched forward onto
the table, and blood oozed across the linen.  The serving girl sank
into a heap in the doorway.

Beltar shook his head groggily before picking a glass splinter out of
his cheek.  "Darkness..."  He lifted Eldiren's face off the table
linen, picked out the glass fragments, and then blotted the cuts with a
cloth soaked in the wine.

After that, the White Wizard struggled to lay the younger man on the
couch against the wall, where Eldiren breathed slowly, as if stunned by
a blow to the head.

Beltar looked at his empty wine glass, then at the still half-full
bottle.  He shook his head and instead, reached for the last chunk of
the now-stale bread left in the basket.

He did not have to wait long before the hooves clattered on the stones
outside.

"Where is that mangy, lying excuse of a wizard?"  Zerchas stepped over
the still-prostrate body lying in the doorway.  His eyes flicked from
the glass and blood on the table to the unconscious man on the couch.

"Dead?  That engineer's so dead that his latest feat has shattered
every screeing glass in Candar.  Engineer?  He's no more an engineer
than .. . Eldiren is a White Wizard."  Zerchas turned toward Eldiren.
"Too bad he's stunned, but it's easier this way.  Lie to me, would
he?"

Beltar stood.  "You didn't give him much choice, Zerchas.  You really
wanted me to protest, didn't you?  So you could have an excuse to be
rid of both of us."

The serving girl shook her head, her eyes widening as she watched the
two wizards.

"Words.  All you do is talk."  Zerchas lifted his hands, and a line of
white stars flashed toward Beltar.

White flame gouted from Beltar, meeting the crackling, sparkling line
of reddish-white stars in front of Zerchas.  White ashes began to drop
from nowhere onto the floor as the white flames pressed the stars
closer and closer to Zerchas.

The walls shivered, and the rest of the goblets shattered.

The serving girl's mouth opened to scream, but her cry was soundless as
she pressed her body against the wall.

For a moment, the white flame curled away from Zerchas, and the white
star-points arrowed toward Beltar, but again, they shriveled into ashes
as a wall of flame filled the doorway.  Then only two piles of ashes
remained in the doorway.  One had been a White Wizard, the other a
girl.

Beltar grinned widely, before his legs buckled under him.

LXXXIX

The tall blond man stood on the black cliffs overlooking the Gulf of
Candar, just inside the black walls that marched across the grass to
mark the separation between Nylan and the rest of Candar.

He stood as he had often stood over the course of the past year, eyes
closed, senses spread to the wind, searching.  The knee-high tips of
the browning grass brushed against his black trousers.  He stood in the
darkness of mid-evening, responding to a sense of .. . ?  What he had
felt he did not know, only that he had sensed something and that he
needed to respond.

From the west, the steel torrents of the high winds that scoured the
Roof of the World rushed across southern Candar and dipped low across
the waters between the island continent and the White-dominated bulk of
Candar.

A thin shaft of twisted black and white seemed to lance into the
heavens, and a roll of unseen thunder buffeted his skull.

The scream of agony-twisted black and white-staggered Gunnar, and
unprepared for the violence of the sensation, he stumbled, tripping
over a small boulder.  His arms waved in an attempt to catch his
balance, but his leg scraped the boulder and he plunged forward.

Slowly, he picked himself up, wiping away the blood from the cut on his
forehead and wincing at the stinging in his leg.  He could feel the
bruise forming on his calf.  But he smiled.  "Justen ..."

Justen was alive, of that he was certain.  That scream had been of
agony and triumph.  Justen was alive.  But where?  That was another
question.

He limped along the path beside the dark stone wall.  Perhaps Turmin
had felt the twisting and turning of order and chaos and would know
from whence it had come.  Perhaps not.  But Justen was alive.

XC

Justen watched as Dayala walked back from her trees toward the front of
the house.  He smiled.  Lovely druid

She lifted her head and returned the smile.  Handsome druid

"I am a druid?"

"Anyone who undergoes your kind of trial is a druid."  Her eyes
flickered to the white lines on her forearms.  A gust of wind ruffled
her hair, and she shivered, not entirely from the chill.

"Sorry," he murmured, leaning forward and brushing her cheek with his
lips.  "I never meant..."

"I know.  And the great forest helps one heal."

"No.  You helped us heal."

She shook her head.  "I knew how, but you had the strength for us
both."

Justen shrugged.  "Then show me."  He grinned.

Dayala touched his hands.  "You should know, but I will show you what
you already know."

"I'm waiting."  He grinned again.

"Look at yourself," instructed Dayala.

Justen looked down, seeing brown cloth and the soft brown boots that
were not leather.

"With your mind, your senses."  Dayala laughed softly.

Justen followed her instructions, somehow scanning his own body, seeing
the linkages between muscle and bone, the tiniest bits of white-flecked
chaos within himself, as within all living things, and the flow of
order holding chaos at bay for now .. . until he was old and gray.

"See how you are.  Now, watch this."

Her senses enfolded his left arm, and he watched as the tiny flecks of
chaos somehow twisted.  They remained, but instead of being
free-flowing, they were locked into order.

"You try on your other arm.  You do not destroy chaos, but lock it into
order so that it cannot escape."

Justen struggled to replicate what Dayala had shown him.

For all the ease with which she had locked the chaos behind order, he
failed.

He tried again, scanning his body, seeing the small changes in the
cascading order that flowed from point to point, from fingernails to
fingers to arms.  He shook his head.

She watched as he tried again .. . and again.  The fourth time, he
managed the twist, but not the lock.  He looked at the patterns on his
left arm, and tried once more.

By the time he matched her efforts, he was soaked with sweat.  "...
think you're in better shape than I am."

She raised her eyebrows.  "You haven't finished."  Then she grinned.

Justen swallowed and tried extending the effect across the rest of his
body.  The sun had set by the time he finished.

"It is harder to do on yourself, but that is what is important."
Especially for me ... and for you

Justen nodded, understanding why, knowing that druids had only one
consort-ever-for how could one go through the agony of merging souls
more than once?

"Now you can meet the Ancient One, for she will not meet with anyone
who has not faced the great forest and become a true druid."

Justen studied himself again.  On the outside, he looked no
different... did he?

"People may say you look younger.  Then again, they may not.  You are
younger than most who find the way from outside."

Justen's thoughts were still on the ancient.  "Who is this Ancient
One?"

"The one who can help you understand what you must do."

Justen could not help but sense the sadness behind her words, and he
turned and held her in the twilight, not wanting to question, only
wanting to grasp the moment as her lips fell upon his.

XCI

Dayala pointed.  "There is the grove."

"Why now?"  Just as we have truly found each other

"When the Ancient One knows, she knows.  And because it is already
late."

Justen glanced toward the sky, unseen above the high forest canopy,
reflecting that it was not even mid-morning.  Late for Candar; late for
you; late for me.  Gunnar always claimed that I was always late.  The
sometime-engineer, sometime-druid, took a deep breath and squeezed
Dayala's hand before letting go.

"I will be waiting," she told him.

Although he had sensed that she would be waiting, her words were
welcome reassurance, and he smiled.

In the middle of the grove, a single black lorken grew, twisted with
age, yet no higher than Justen, and a silver-haired woman, garbed in
pure silver, stood beside the tree.

At first glance, she looked scarcely older than Dayala, but Jus ten
could sense the age behind the smooth skin, and he understood that
youthfulness was a product of the lesson he had just learned from
Dayala.

He inclined his head.  "I am here, Ancient One."

"You have questions, young druid."

"I would ask how the great evil done by the Masters of Chaos may be
righted."

"Why do you say that the actions of the Masters of Chaos are evil?
Chaos is chaos, and order is order.  Can you ask chaos to be order, and
order to be chaos?"  The woman's words were calm, measured, as if she
stated the most obvious of facts.

"But .. ."  protested Justen "..  . is there no meaning to order?  Is
there no purpose to life?  Why do so many struggle to put order in
their lives?  Even under your Legend, the ancient Angels fled
Heaven."

"Your questions ask for the meaning of life, as if the ancient Angels
had written the answers in stone as a riddle for those who came after
to find and unravel.  Neither the world nor the Angels have a purpose.
The world exists.  It needs no meaning.  Men and women need
purposes."

"But what about order and chaos?  They exist," said Jus-ten.

"Indeed they exist, as does the world.  But thinking beings are the
ones who ascribe values to order and chaos.  Why does a person do
anything?"

"Because he, or she, wants to."  Justen frowned.  "Or has to."

"And if that person refuses?"

"Someone could use force."

"Can that person move the muscles of his or her body?"

"You're saying that every person chooses to act.  That's cruel.  What
if children, or a family, will starve or be tortured?"

"That is still a choice."

"Are there are no higher values?  Is there is no difference between a
person who serves good and one who serves evil?  Or between a person
who is coerced into unwise acts and one who does them willingly?"

"Of course there is a difference.  But not to the world- only to
thinking beings."

Justen paused.  "Then if the world does not care, why should not a
person do whatever is pleasing?  For what purpose should anyone try to
do good deeds?  The world does not care."

"Either selfishness or selflessness will destroy a person.  If a soul
is too selfish, thinking only of personal ends and desires, and should
she live long enough, none will support her and many will try to tear
her down.  To survive, one must become so strong and so heartless that
neither love nor affection could or would desire to reach such a
person.  And in the end, such a being is no longer a person, but a
soulless machine like the engines on your black ships.

"A person who is too selfless is blown hither and yon in the gusts of
others' needs, for there are always more needs than even the most
charitable of humans can address.  Should a person be strong enough to
address the most worthy and pressing of needs, then she will either
bleed to death from the demands upon her or lose all warmth in a
mechanical quest to fulfill the world's needs.  Then she becomes so
selfless that she, too, is no more than a selfish soul in the quest of
selflessness.

"Thus, a person who would live a meaningful life must always struggle
between selfishness and selflessness, always questioning.  When she
gives up the struggle, she allows others to determine the meaning of
her life.  She may not even be aware that she has relinquished the
struggle, for those others may indeed represent a belief in something
she finds better and higher, and she will follow their simple rules
with great relief.  They may be the rules of the Angels, the Demons of"
Light, the Black Brotherhood, or the White Council.  Yet we have
observed that most humans who give up that struggle question why life
has no meaning, especially when troubles befall them."  The thin lips
turned slightly at the corners.

"You're not terribly cheerful.  Your philosophy doesn't offer a great
deal of comfort."

"You did not ask for comfort.  You asked for wisdom.  Wisdom is seldom
comforting, because much of what humans find comforting is nothing more
than illusion."

For a time, Justen looked past the ancient but unlined face.  Finally,
he swallowed.  "Is it good for the Chaos Masters to control all
Candar?"

"You are placing values on such actions.  When you ask such a question,
you have already decided that for the Chaos Masters to absolutely
control Candar is bad.  But do you ask whether it is good for the Order
Masters to control absolutely Recluce and the oceans around Recluce?"

"Then are you saying that such control is an illusion?  When I have
seen cities fall and soldiers die?"

The woman shook her head.  "The illusion is that control by either is
good.  Under the Balance, total domination by order or by chaos can
only lead to death of one kind or death of another."

"You mean that we should allow chaos into our lives?"

"That, too, is an illusion.  Chaos exists in all lives.  So does
order."  Justen sighed.  "What are you telling me?  That what I seek is
an illusion?  That it is meaningless to seek order?"

"I said no such thing, young druid."

"I'm not a druid."

"You are a druid.  Whether you accept that remains to be seen."  She
smiled.  "You wish to halt what you see as evil in the spread of chaos
from Fairhaven.  So do we.  Such a great deed is not possible unless
the Balance is considered.  Have you asked what makes such chaos
possible?"

"Often."  Justen shrugged.

"And?"

Justen shrugged again.

"Can chaos be created?"  asked the ancient Angel.

"I don't think so."

"You are correct.  In some places, order must spring from chaos.  Here,
chaos must spring from order."

"So what must be done to reduce the power of chaos?"

"That is up to you.  You know how, but you must find the will and the
way."  The ancient Angel smiled.  "That began with the trial."

"How?"

"You could have left Naclos as a child, remembering nothing, or you can
leave as a adult, remembering all, and possessing the knowledge and
commitment to do what must be done."

"Why couldn't I have just left?"

"You are still barely beyond being a child.  You have difficulty
accepting faith ... so I will use the tool necessary for children.  Try
to leave.  Go!  Walk away from me."

Justen started to turn, but his legs would not move.  Concentrating his
will within himself, he lifted one leg ... but he could not turn and
set it down heavily.

His eyes saw the darkness, and the chaos, within the ancient orbs of
the Angel, but even as the realization of that antique madness clawed
at his thoughts, he stood rooted, unmoving.

"That is why you will leave as a knowing adult.  That is why you faced
the trial of the forest... and risked losing all memories of Naclos.
And Dayala risked losing her life for you.  You might remember that as
well."

The pressure around him relaxed, and Justen held back a shudder.

"You know what must be done."

Justen nodded slowly.

"Dayala will help you prepare.  There is no other way."

Justen looked into the power of the Angel's eyes and saw again the deep
wells, one of white, one of black, each tinged with green.  The depth
of that power made Gunnar's control of the storms look like a child's
game, his own recent understandings like a fumbler's beginnings at
Capture.

"Do you understand?"

"Not everything, but enough, I hope."

"So do we."

"Why me?"

"We cannot save you, nor can one people save another.  Salvation must
always come from the soul and the self; it can never be forced ... as
you will discover.

"You must find the way and the will, and your journey began with the
trial.  That was only the first.  There will be more and greater ones,
in Recluce and beyond.  Tomorrow, or the next day, you and Dayala will
begin the trip to Diehl.  That is the next step on your journey.
Remember, too, that there are always two ways-the safe and the
glorious, and for the glorious, there is a far higher price."

Justen glanced away from the deep eyes, suddenly unable to focus on the
brilliance of that combination of order and chaos.  He studied the dark
tree by her shoulder, and when his eyes refocused, she was gone.

He walked slowly from the grove, his feet heavy, feeling that somehow
they were already on the road to Diehl.

XCII

The boat glided downstream with only occasional guidance from Dayala.
Justen sat on the midships seat, watching the light play over her face
as she kept the craft in the center of the unseen currents.

"Did the ancient tell you why we had to come to Diehl?"  .  "How else
will you return to Recluce?"

"I don't want to leave you."

"We have talked of this before.  You cannot leave Recluce, if that is
what you truly choose, without first returning.  If you choose to
return, I will be here.  I will always be here for you."  Always

Justen swallowed at the poignancy of the shared thought and reached out
to grasp her free hand, the one not on the mounted oar that served as
sweep and tiller.

In silence they passed a grassy stretch on the west bank, where a
single house, grown by two oaks, sat in a small clearing.

A girl on her knees in a garden patch waved, and Justen waved back.

"How much farther to Diehl?"

"At least another half-day."

He squeezed Dayala's fingers again.

As the boat left the clearing and the house behind, Justen let his
senses drift beneath the surface of the water, catching the flashes of
light that were the fish, or a bottom-feeding turtle, and, nearer to
the bush-cloaked banks, an occasional otter.

"It's a lot more pleasant than walking."

"Even boating has its drawbacks."  Dayala eased the craft toward the
eastern bank to center it back in the main current.

"Walking through the Stone Hills doesn't?"

A hard pulse of reddish white glimmered deep beneath the dark surface
off to the right of the boat.

"Oh .. ."  murmured Dayala.

"Oh?"  Justen sat up straighter.

The water exploded into a white froth, and the boat rocked as a pair of
jaws as long as Justen himself ripped into the air, followed by a
massive gray-green body covered with mossy scales.  When the huge water
lizard dropped back into the water, the second wave nearly capsized the
boat, soaking both Justen and Dayala even as they had to brace
themselves to keep from being thrown into the water.

Justen grabbed for the sword he had long since left in the Stone Hills,
then snatched the spare oar, knowing it would not do much good against
the jaws he had seen.

Two eyes as big as water bottles fixed on the boat and its occupants,
and an aura of chaos and hatred oozed over the river like a clammy
rain.  The water lizard, easily twice the length of the boat, churned
toward them.

Remembering his ordeal at the edge of the great forest, Justen reached
again for order and will, bending them toward the giant reptile.

Whhsssttttt..  .

A line of white light flared from the lizard toward him.  The water
roiled, the boat pitched, and Justen raised his hand, a hand that
seemed to move impossibly slowly, to send a single line of darkness
back along the white line until it passed through the giant lizard.

But the white light swept over Justen, and his head seemed to split
into fragments even as the echo of his order-chaos shift reverberated
in his brain and as the two mirrors within him reflected the sun back
and forth down an endless corridor, a corridor stretching
simultaneously deep into the earth and up into the heavens.

Then the darkness struck him into the bottom of the violently rocking
boat.

The sun was low when Justen felt a soft hand on his aching forehead and
cool air across his burning cheeks.

"Oh..."

The boat rocked gently and he shivered, feeling chilled by the breeze
that swept across his damp shirt.  He opened his eyes and coughed.  The
deep gouges on the planks confirmed that the river lizard had not been
imaginary.  He shuddered again, wondering if he would ever be able to
accept the strangeness of Naclos, where everything seemed so peaceful
on the surface-just like the river itself.

His head turned, searching for Dayala, feeling that she were somehow
absent, not there to his mind.

"I'm here.  Someone has to guide the boat, at least some of the
time."

Justen tried to lever himself up, but his legs refused to move.  "My
legs .."  He looked at them, unable to see any wounds.  He called on
his order-senses, using the pattern that Dayala had taught him, but he
could sense nothing, as if he were suddenly order-blind.  "I can't see.
I mean ..."

"It's all right.  It's just a mind bruise, and it will pass."

"Mind bruise?"

"That's how the water lizards stun their prey.  You have to maintain a
barrier, a shield."

"For how long?  Days?  Seasons?"  Justen shivered again, not just from
the cold, although the late afternoon sun should have warmed him.  His
head still ached.

Dayala had slipped behind him and wrapped herself around him, her
warmth lifting the chill.  "Just for a while.  It never lasts more than
a day.  You might have a headache for longer."

He blinked, then rubbed his eyes, gratefully accepting her warmth.
"Every time I think I've learned something about this place, I run into
another nasty surprise."

"You do have a habit of attracting them.  I haven't seen a water lizard
that big in a long time."

"Why me?"

"Because you are a living fountain of order, and order in that quantity
draws chaos, dear man."  She slipped back to the rear of the boat and
reclaimed the tiller.

"You mean this will happen to me all the time?"  Justen groaned.

"No.  It won't even happen after a while in Naclos."

"Oh?  Pardon me if I sound skeptical.  What happened to our giant
friend?"

"The lizard?  The turtles and the carp are having a feast."

"Thank you."

"I didn't do anything.  I'm not sure I could have.  You stunned it, and
it drowned."

Justen took a deep breath.  His legs were beginning to tingle. Probably
a good sign, he supposed.

Dayala eased the tiller, and the boat lurched.  "We don't mind the ones
that get as big as cats ... but that one was older than Diehl, I
think."  She shivered.

So did Justen, recalling the chaos light emanating from the lizard, a
force stronger than that of any mere wizard.  And he had thought that
Naclos was so peaceful.

"Your dangers are more obvious."

Justen rubbed his forehead, then realized that Dayala was repeating his
gesture.  "Oh ... my headache or yours?"

"Some of each, I think.  You'll know in a while."  Justen took another
deep breath and looked at the dark water.

"We won't make Diehl tonight," Dayala said.

"Somehow, I figured that out."

Dayala laughed, and Justen reached out for her free hand.

XCIII

Dayala guided the boat around the last turn in the river and toward the
the single long pier in the harbor.  Except for an un crewed fishing
boat, the pier was empty, though it was long enough for at least two
oceangoing ships.

Standing in the prow, Justen held the line in one hand, waiting until
Dayala's deft motion with the sweep propelled the flat-bottomed boat
close enough to the pier for him to scramble up.  The pier smelled of
seaweed and barnacles and long use.

After he had climbed up the slimy wooden ladder and tied the boat at
the shoreward end of the pier, Justen reached down and took the packs
Dayala handed him.  Then he extended his hand for her.  When she came
onto the pier, his lips brushed her cheek.  As he straightened, his
hand rubbed his forehead.

"Your head still aches?"

"It comes, and it goes," Justen admitted.  "Less now."

Her eyes focused on him for a moment.

"That feels better.  Thank you."

"I do not like headaches, either."

Justen laughed and swung his pack onto his back.

Behind the long pier, of stone and timber, was the port-master's
single-story office, of smoothed and polished wood, roofed with clay
slates.  A chandlery, identified by a sign bearing crossed candles
circled with rope, stood at the corner of two streets behind the
port-master's office.

A brisk breeze whipped off the bay and across the pier, lifting sand
and grit past the couple's legs as they walked toward the chandlery.

"Where are we going?"

"To Murina's.  Her guest house is on the other side of Diehl, the side
closest to the great forest."

Justen nodded.

Two traders in purple trousers and gold tunics stood under the
overhanging eaves shading the front of the chandlery.  The man had a
grizzled beard, while the woman's hair was shorter than Justen's,
although her face was lined and she bore the white shadows of chaos and
age within her.

"Another damned-handsome druid," muttered the woman.  "Never saw such
standoffish men.  Shame."

"The women are beautiful creatures, too," added the bearded trader.
"But you can keep them both.  I'd rather not be turned into a tree,
thank you."  He laughed.

So outsiders saw them both as a druids?  Did he really look that way,
or was it his brown clothing?

They walked past a tavern, proclaimed by a sign bearing a silver bowl
and an unfamiliar cooking odor that filled Jus-ten's nostrils.  Heavy,
almost rancid.  Yet the smell was familiar.  He frowned.  Grilled lamb?
But he had never thought of lamb as a heavy odor.

He pursed his lips, recalling that he had eaten no meat since he had
come to Naclos.  Nuts, cheeses, even eggs of various sorts, but not
meat.

At the next corner, Dayala took a right-forking road that seem to angle
away from the harbor.  Justen followed, still drawing in the feel of
the town, trying to explain to himself why it felt different from
Rybatta and Merthe, or from any of the others in Naclos.

He glanced at a row of brick shops-the middle one shuttered against the
strong afternoon sunlight-and then at the houses beyond the shops; they
were more like those of Kyphros; heavy-walled and blank-faced,
presumably arranged around a central garden courtyard.

Diehl seemed orderly enough, and there was no sign of chaos whatsoever
in the area.  So what bothered him about the place?  He rubbed his chin
and looked sideways at Dayala.  Did she feel the same way?

"Yes.  You should know that."

He should?  Then he nodded, grinned, and shook his head.  Part of the
uneasiness he felt was not his at all, but hers, and he was still
having trouble getting used to their overlapping feelings.

Shallow-that was the word that described Diehl.  Shallow.  The
orderliness of the town-compared to the Balance between order and chaos
that existed in the great forest- seemed without any real foundation.
Would Recluce seem that way, too?  He pulled at his chin, then
readjusted his pack.  Much of the weight in the pack consisted of small
items such as the box Dayala had made for him, destined for Recluce,
and included a smaller box that Dayala had insisted he take for Gunnar
as well as several others to give as he saw fit.  Certainly, one would
be for Altara.

Unlike Rybatta, Diehl was compact, with the houses almost crowded
together-until they suddenly reached the edge of the town.

Justen looked back.  They had scarcely come a full kay, yet not two
hundred cubits ahead, the first line of the giant trees began.

Nestled almost beneath those trees stood Murina's guesthouse, at the
edge of the great forest that began just to the northeast of Diehl
proper.  The guest-house, as all proper guest-houses, suspected Justen,
was grown from the oaks that formed each wall.

He had not realized that he was holding his breath until he released
it.  Then he laughed, sensing that part of his relief was Dayala's as
well.

They almost skipped up the stone-flagged path to the front archway,
where Dayala jingled the bells that hung on a woven strap,
"Coming..."

Murina, like virtually all druids, had silver hair, but like Yual, her
eyes were brown rather than green.  Unlike Dayala, she was tiny, coming
barely to Justen's shoulder.  "Dayala ... it has been a time."

"It has.  This is Justen."  Justen bowed.  "I am pleased."

Murina laughed.  "Not so pleased as I am to see you.  I like Dayala,
and it is clear that you are special to her."

Justen flushed, surprised at the directness, then flushed again as he
felt Dayala's reaction.

"May you always feel so."  The guest-house keeper laughed softly once
more.  "Please come in.  Shersha will show you to your room while I
finish my baking, if you do not mind.  Then perhaps you will join me
for some juice on the terrace."

Dayala and Justen nodded.

A tiny and solemn-faced girl stood in the hallway inside, beyond the
archway.

"Shersha, you remember Dayala?  This is Justen."  Murina gestured
toward him, and Shersha inclined her head.  "They will have the big
room above the terrace, the one with the window on the garden."

"That's the best," Shersha affirmed.  Then she turned and led them
around a corner, up a wide staircase with low steps and to a hallway
with another archway.

"I hope you will like it."  The girl's voice was shy,

Justen stepped through the hangings in the archway.  Although modest,
the room had a window overlooking the rear garden.  There was but one
bed, double-sized.  He looked at the bed and then at Dayala.  He could
feel her blush even before he saw the color rise to her cheeks.  "We
like it," Jus-ten choked, trying not to laugh.

"Thank you, Shersha.  Tell Murina that it is perfect."

"We are glad that you are pleased."  Shersha inclined her head and
turned to go.

"It is perfect," Justen echoed.  "I hope we will be able to stay for a
while."

"Mother would be pleased."

From the archway, they watched the clear-eyed girl skip down the
hallway.  Justen lowered the hangings and slipped his arms around
Dayala.

Her lips found his, and they moved toward the wide bed.

XCIV

Late afternoon had come before Justen and Dayala rose and washed and
dressed and descended to the terrace, where Shersha escorted them to a
table with four chairs, then returned with three large brown mugs.

Murina pulled a chair up to the table and looked at Justen.  "Much has
been said about you.  I can see why."  She grinned.

Justen blushed.

"You're modest.  I understand why Dayala likes you, and that is
good."

Justen felt once again that as much had not been said as said, but he
answered politely, "I still feel somewhat like a child here.  But
compared to all of you, I am.  So I suppose that's to be expected."

"Not exactly a child, is he?"  Murina raised her eyebrows and glanced
at Dayala.

"No.  He knows more than he thinks he does ... and more than either I
or the ancients expected."  Her hand crept under the table and squeezed
Justen's.

"And less, I suspect," Justen added wryly, his eyes following the
flight of a brilliant green bird, with a black head and a yellow beak,
that swooped past the corner of the terrace and lit on the edge of the
kitchen roof below.

"I see my friend has arrived."

"He comes often?"  asked Justen.

"Every day before twilight.  He sings a song or two and waits for a
reward."

"And you reward him?"

"Shersha usually does.  I think he really sings for her, but I like his
songs."

The green bird cocked his head, then dipped it twice, as if bowing to
the audience, and began to sing-a short series of notes somewhere
between silvered bells and the golden-strung notes of the singer called
Werlynn.  Justen listened and felt almost disappointed when the two
short songs were done.

Shersha appeared on the terrace and tossed some berries toward the
songbird, who caught one on the wing and then returned within moments
to scoop the others off the terrace stones.

"Can you tell us what has happened in Sarronnyn?"  asked Justen.

"The traders say that the Whites of Fairhaven hold all of Sarronnyn and
that come spring, they will attack Suthya."

"That would leave just Southwind and Naclos."

"They will never come here."

Justen nodded.  "What about Southwind?"

"Southwind could fall.  We could do nothing outside of the great
forest."

"That's something I still don't quite understand."

"Most peoples have rejected the Legend and the truth behind it." Murina
shrugged.  "Do we have armies?  How could we help?"

"Yet no one here fears Fairhaven."

"What is there to fear?  Their wizards are so unbalanced that any
attempt to use chaos in the great forest would destroy them."  The
guest-house holder smiled at Justen.  "The same would be true of your
Order Wizards."

"I found that out."

Shersha carried out a long loaf flanked with a line of cut cheese and
several pear apples  She set the platter in the middle of the table.

Justen raised his eyebrows at the evidence of the knife,

"Some of us can use knives," said Murina with a smile.

"Just those of you with brown eyes?"

"It helps, but Trughal is a green-eyed smith."

Dayala shook her head with a half-smile, then reached for a slice of
cheese.

"Sit down, child."  Murina gestured to Shersha, who promptly perched on
the fourth chair and reached for a pear apple

After finishing the piece of cheese and breaking off a corner of the
loaf, Dayala turned to Justen.  "Tomorrow you should talk to the
traders, and I will talk to Diera.  She is the .. . port-master."

"Diera knows everything," volunteered Shersha.

"Not quite everything," corrected Murina with a smile.

Justen took a large chunk of the warm bread.  "I suppose I should try
to find out what else is happening in the world.  Not that I expect
things to have changed very much."

"They never do," said Murina.  "But enjoy the bread.  Warm bread is
better than cold gossip."

Dayala nodded, and Justen took another mouthful of the warm and crusty
bread.

XCV

"There's no point in attacking this late in the year."  Beltar glanced
out the window of the coach.  "Let some time pass, and let the Suthyans
feel some pressure.  Anyway, before we deal with Suthya, we need to
convince the Sarronnese that we're not White devils."

Eldiren shifted his weight on the padded cushion and rubbed his
forehead, massaging the thin white scar above his right eyebrow.  "The
Sarronnese will be as bad as the Spidlarians.  Worse, much worse."

"Anyone can be convinced ... somehow."

"Like you convinced Zerchas, perhaps," responded Eldiren dryly.

"Well, yes.  If all else fails."

"Aeee ..."  A dull thump followed the cry, and the coach slowed.

Beltar yanked open the door in time to see a mounted figure spurring
his horse up the long, sloping hillside.  The coach driver's body
slumped limply against the roof of the coach, an arrow through his
chest.  The guard beside the driver struggled with the reins.

Two squads of White lancers raced up the hill in pursuit of the
attacker, but the attacker seemed to be widening the gap.

As the guard wrestled the coach to a halt, Eldiren looked at Beltar. "I
think we have a great deal of convincing yet to do."

"Bah!  They'll learn."

Eldiren's eyes followed the White lancers, who had continued to fall
behind the single rider.  "When we can't even catch one man?"

"You should talk."  Beltar lifted his arms.  A huge fireball arced from
the White Wizard across the hillside, landing on the fleeing rider.
Fire splayed in all directions, and smaller fireballs bounced downhill.
One struck the leading lancer.  A quick scream, and two pyres of greasy
smoke dotted the hillside, each one consisting of both horse and
rider.

Beltar grinned.

"Was that really necessary?"  asked Eldiren.

"I couldn't let him get away with it."

Eldiren looked back toward the charred lancer and mount, and at the
greasy smoke swirling into the gray sky.  "I'm sure our lancers
understand that you couldn't let him get away with it."

"Stop carping.  You couldn't have done anything."

"You are so right, Beltar.  Unlike some, I do know my limitations."

The stocky White Wizard glanced away from Eldiren and at the guard.
"Get him down, and let the healer look at him."

"He's dead, scr."

"Then get another driver.  We still have to get to Rulyarth."

"Yes, scr."

Eldiren refrained from the smallest of head shakes

XCVI

"Justen, tomorrow a Bristan trader will dock here at Diehl.  The ship
will take you home to Recluce."

"Recluce isn't home.  Not now."

Her smile was sad.  "You cannot say that until you return there.  And
if you do not, it will always be home.  Home must be relinquished at
the hearth, not at the ends of the earth."

She lifted a leather bag and set it on the bed.  "These are for you."

"What does the bag have to do with the trader?  Or my leaving?"

Dayala eased the stones onto the coverlet.

"Why, Dayala?  These are worth a fortune... anywhere."

"The ancient said that you would need them on your quest."

"Is that just another way to bribe me to leave?"

"That is unfair, Justen.  She has no need to bribe."

"To make me feel better?"

"I do not think she Values you that cheaply."

"Then why?"

"Because you are powerful, more powerful than you know.  You will twist
anything to do what you think is correct.  These will help make that
twisting easier on everyone else."

Justen's face took on a puzzled expression.

"I still do not understand all that you do," Dayala went on, "but you
make things from the parts of the earth, from the metals and other
substances.  If you must build everything yourself, you will twist more
than if you can buy parts or metal."

Justen paced around the table, trying to grasp the meaning behind
Dayala's words.  "If I make things myself, it creates more .. .
disorder... more chaos?"

"Of course."  Dayala smiled as if what she said were so obvious as not
even to be a question.

He shook his head.

"Justen, think of it this way.  If you buy your iron from Yual, he has
already made it in the most orderly manner.  While you have greater
skill with the forge, you do not have his skill in extracting the iron,
and you will disrupt the earth and the forest more in making your iron
..."

"I understand."  Justen smiled wearily.  "But the ancient gives me too
much credit."

"Not enough, I think.  And there is another reason, a selfish one."
Dayala slipped the stones back into the bag.

"Oh?"

"Having such resources may keep you from being too delayed in what you
must do."

"You want me to come back?"  He shook his head, feeling the pain she
felt.  "Sorry , .. stupid question.  But why can't you come with me?"

Her lips tightened.

"I don't want to leave," he protested.

"You cannot stay.  Not now."

"Will I ever be allowed to stay?  I'm not a druid.  Isn't this just a
kind way of forcing me to leave?"

"Kind?"  her voice broke.

Justen watched as the tears flowed, as her entire fabric of order
shivered somehow, not losing itself, but..  . suffering.  Then his arms
were around her.

"How can she do this?"  Justen's eyes burned.  "She's no Ryba ... no
Angel.  There isn't a drop of warmth or kindness"

"Order is not kind, nor is the Balance .. . and you are a druid."

He swallowed, recalling the ancient Angel's words: "You did not ask for
comfort.  You asked for wisdom."  Yes, he had asked for wisdom.  He had
asked what had to be done to reknit the world into one fabric.  He had
not asked to be separated from the one being .. .

"We have the hope of a long life, Justen.  But would you be happy
living it if all Candar were under the White Wizards and all the oceans
under the hand of the Black Mages?"

"No."

Dayala smiled sadly, then spoke into his silence.  "Tomorrow you will
just walk down to the dock.  Diera will tell the captain it is our wish
that you be transported to Recluce.  The Bristans stop at Nylan on most
of their trips, anyway."  Dayala looked toward the harbor, avoiding
Justen's eyes.  "We also have a cargo of lorken, which will be worth
far more to them in their trade at Recluce."

Justen nodded.  From what he had heard, most woodworkers outside of
Recluce preferred not to use lorken, despite its strength, its deep,
black color, and its tight grain.

"We have tonight."  He took her hand.

"We have tonight."  Her fingers grasped his hungrily.

XCVII

The black trousers and shirt felt strange to him as he walked hand in
hand with Dayala down to the stone pier in the harbor.

"You have the stones?"

Justen nodded.

"Try to save some of them for as long as you can.  I cannot tell you
why, but my feelings say that you will need them."  Dayala squeezed his
hand.

"I trust your feelings."

"Then trust them enough to know that you will return."

He squeezed her hand back, and they walked to the end of the pier,
where the sole ship was moored.  Justen could sense that the engine was
cold, but the crew moved across the scrubbed decks with a sense of
purpose.

The Bristan ensign-the sun above an ice floe-flew at the jack staff and
emblazoned on the upper part of the ship's stem in gilt letters was the
name Nyessa.  The railings were recently varnished, and the brass work
glittered.

They stopped opposite the plank to the ship, and Justen gave Dayala a
last embrace, a last kiss, a long sharing of salty lips and tears.
Their fingers lingered for an instant after the kiss, until Justen
finally stepped away 'and shifted the pack on his back.  Then he walked
up the gangway.

"You the honored passenger?"  asked the squat man in the green
jacket.

"Justen."  The druid-engineer inclined his head.  "I understand that
the port-master arranged my passage."

"Bikelat, second mate," replied the officer.  "Oh, she arranged it all
right.  Captain Gaffni'd take you to Hamor for the cargo she
transferred."  The officer glanced from Justen to Dayala, who remained
on the pier, and back to Justen.  "Don't know what you did, and don't
know as I'd want to."  He paused.  "Need to stand back, scr.  We were
just waiting for you."

As Justen stepped aside and then moved along the rail, from where he
looked down at Dayala, the officer called, "Forward sheet up!  Let's
go!"

Two hefty sailors, a man and a woman, cranked up the gangplank while
canvas billowed out overhead.

"Lines away!"

Justen locked eyes with Dayala, and for a moment, they seemed
together.

"Wouldn't be leaving a lady like that, fellow."  The second shook his
head as he came up beside Justen.

"Not exactly my choice, either."  Justen's throat was thick as he
watched the green water widen between them.  Good-bye ... love

Her fingers touched her lips.  *I am ... with you always

"You're one of them, aren't you?  You're talking to her ..."  The
second stepped back.

Justen forced a rueful smile.  "I was born and raised on Recluce,
trained as an engineer."

"Darkness save .. . someone," muttered the officer.  "Glad they like
the captain."

Justen frowned as the man walked away toward the poop deck, where the
captain supervised the piloting out of the bay.  Then he watched the
pier until Dayala was less than a spot on a finger of stone.

Not until after the Nyessa cleared the twin hills and the channel
between did smoke begin to stream from the funnels.  Shortly
thereafter, the heavy engines began to turn the paddles and the Bristan
trader chugged northeast across an almost glassy sea.

Justen climbed to the poop and stood by the fantail, still glancing
back, still sensing the twined strand of ... something .. . that led
back to Naclos.  Was this what made him a druid-that he loved and was
bound to one?  Or was it something deeper?  Or was he a druid at all?

Finally, he turned to study the sea ahead, its swells beginning to grow
choppy as a breeze freshened out of the southwest.

XCVIII

Justen kept one hand on the poop railing as the Nyessa plowed into a
wave that buried the bowsprit.  Green water gushed down the deck, and
spray flared close to where Jus-ten stood.  In the early morning light,
despite the noise of the wave, the ship seemed quieter.

Of course, Justen nodded to himself.  The paddles were silent, and the
steam engine was cold.  While the wind held, the captain didn't need to
burn the coal.

"Always get a good wind coming out of Diehl," observed the second,
pausing beside Justen for a moment, his long blond hair slicked back by
wind and spray.  "Most times, anyway."  He glanced at the blacks Justen
wore.  "Don't see how... you a druid and one of those mage types.
Didn't know anyone could be both."

"I'm not sure you can.  I started out as an engineer .. . smith type.
Somehow I ended up in Naclos to avoid the Whites in Sarronnyn."

"Talk about going from the flame to the forge," The second whistled.
"Bet Wesser would like to get you looking at his engines!  You know
engines?"

Justen nodded.  "Most types."  How long had it been since he had dealt
with steam and turbines and screws and shafts and condensers?  Though
more than a year, he still thought of himself as an engineer.  But was
he?  Could someone who had sensed the great forest and who remained
tied to a druid-perhaps was a druid-be an engineer?

As he thought of Dayala, her warmth, her quiet depth, a wave of sadness
poured across him.  He pursed his lips.  He suffered two exiles of
sorts: one from Recluce, one from Naclos.  Yet he was scarcely cheered
to return to Nylan, except to see Gunnar, Elisabet, and his family.
What could he tell Altara, or the Council?  That their pursuit of order
was almost as wrong to the ancients as Fairhaven's pursuit of chaos?

Who would believe him?  Yet how could he lie?

His stomach growled.

The edge of another wave spilled across the forecastle, and below on
the damp deck, two sailors re-coiled lines, ignoring the thin sheet of
water, while another surefootedly clambered up the mainmast.  Across
the poop deck, another sailor, a heavy-shouldered woman, took a hammer
to a metal pin on a winch crank.

Justen's stomach growled again.  He straightened and headed for the
crew's mess, located under the bridge, where it took up a space not
much bigger than two of the cabins like the one Justen shared with the
third mate.  Two short tables were bolted to the floor, as were the
backless benches.  The grooves in the table held racks containing deep
baskets.

Breakfast was dried fruit-pear apples and peaches-biscuits, and tea
that slopped from a metal pitcher with each lurch of the Nyessa. 
Justen sat in one corner, where he could wedge himself between the
bench and the bulkhead.

Two sailors sat at the other table, and the third mate lurched into the
mess and sat across from Justen.  "Rough weather seems to suit you, Scr
Justen."

"It's not too bad, not so long as I'm careful how I walk."  Justen
shrugged and poured tea into one of the battered gray mugs.  After
trying to crunch a biscuits and feeling the hard wedge slice at his
gums, he dunked the biscuit in his tea mug.

"See that you found the only way to eat cook's biscuits.  Bloodied my
gums on them more than once," observed the third officer cheerfully.

The two sailors eased quietly out of the mess, but the woman nodded
behind the third's back and shook her head sadly.

"Wonderful day.  Clear, breezy.  Makes a man glad to be upon the
sea."

Justen nodded and reached for a pear apple  It tasted smoky and salty,
but he ate it anyway, reflecting that it was far tastier than gray
cactus.

"Captain's got us running right before the wind.  Master of using the
wind, the old man is."  The words spewed out with fragments of
biscuit.

Justen smiled faintly and took another sip of tea.

Part III THE ORDER-CHAOS WAR

XCIX

The sandy-haired wizard dashed through the doors of the engineering
hall, looking from right to left and back until he spied the tall,
dark-haired engineer.  "Altara!  He's safe.  He's on his way into
port."

The chief engineer set down the calipers, "You can finish that, Nurta."
She walked around the tool forge and toward Gunnar.  "How soon?"

"I think it's the ship off the channel.  I think."

"I'll meet you there."  Altara nodded at Gunnar.  "Goon.  He is your
brother."

Gunnar dashed back through the hall and out into the bright summer sun,
settling into a quick walk down the hillside as he judged that the
Bristan ship-the ice-floe ensign made that clear-had not yet passed the
outer breakwater.

There was something odd about Justen, that he could tell even from a
distance-some sort of fine order-thread that seemed to stretch back
toward Candar.  He grinned.  But then, there had always been something
odd about Justen.

Gunnar walked more quickly, knowing that he would be on the pier before
the ship arrived.

Justen squinted into the sun, watching the pier.  The Nyessa's paddles
backstroked and slowed the trader to less than a crawl as it
side-walked up to the vacant space between two heavy bollards.  Docked
closer inshore on the pier was a two-masted, black-hulled schooner with
a single side-wheel and a thin runnel.  A light wind out of the west
added to the fall's mid-morning chill.

After glancing at the pack by his legs to ensure it was still there,
Justen studied the pier, where a half-score dockworkers were engaged in
unloading the schooner, and where a handful of men and women stood
clearly waiting for the Nyessa.

A tall, sandy-haired man and a dark-haired woman- each in blacks-stood
apart from the waiting docking crew.

Justen waved, and they waved back, although he wondered how Gunnar had
known his brother had returned.

The first officer stopped beside Justen.  "Scr, your share of the cargo
will be deposited with the port-master's bank under your name."  She
unfolded the parchment sheet.  "Is this correct?"

Justen scanned the document, trying not to swallow at the unexpected
share accorded him: half of the lorken's estimated value.  It would run
to nearly a hundred golds.  Finally, he nodded, "When will the funds be
available?"

"Well, scr.  This is really an estimate, based on previous cargoes, but
the debts have to be settled before we out-port again."

"I see."

"The druids are very precise, scr.  No one who cheats them ever gets
another cargo."  The first laughed softly.  "Herko found that out the
hard way.  We'd rather not.  So if you have any questions, please .. .
please talk to me or the captain."

"I'd like a copy of the final invoice left with the account, if you
don't mind."

"Noser  We would provide it anyway.  That way, there's no confusion.
Now, if you would excuse me ..."

"Oh, yes.  Go right ahead."  Justen watched as the lines went to the
pier workers, and the crew began to winch the Nyessa into place.
Finally, he slipped his pack onto his back and edged over to where two
husky crew members were lowering the gangplank.

Altara and Gunnar were waiting as he stepped off onto the stones still
damp from the rain of the night before.  Gunnar wrapped his arms around
him, and Justen hung on to his brother for a moment.  Then they
separated.

"How did you find this ship?"  demanded Altara.  "What have you been
doing?"

"Where have you been?  How did you get here?  I was worried when we got
separated in Sarron."  Gunnar's questions spun at Justen more quickly
than a whirling turbine blade.

Justen held up his hand, half-laughing, even as his eyes watered at the
concern and love radiating from his brother.  Was this something else
he hadn't seen before?  "Stop," he choked out.  "I can't answer
everything at once."

"Why not?"  Altara grinned as she spoke.  Around them, dockworkers and
sailors doubled up the lines to the Nyessa, and several horse-drawn
wagons creaked down the pier past the schooner and toward the Bristan
trader.

"I'm hungry," Justen confessed.  "Houlart's is open early, isn't it?"

"Still thinking about food?"

"Anything's better than cactus."

"Houlart's is open," Altara responded, "but whether anything that's
available this early is more edible than cactus is another question."

Justen readjusted his pack, and the three walked along the pier toward
Nylan.

"How long did the crossing take?"  asked Gunnar.  "Five days.  But the
captain used sail as much as he could."

"Five days?  Where did you come from?  You didn't come from Armat or
Southwind then?"

"No.  From Diehl."

"Naclos?  You must have crossed all of Candar, "or did you ship around
Southwind?"  Gunnar dodged around a porter trundling a handcart.

"I've seen a great deal of Naclos, especially the Stone Hills and the
northern grasslands."

"Elisabet has been worried, you know."

"I really .. ."  Justen sighed.  "I should have sent a message, but ...
so much happened, and I didn't know how to.  No," he corrected himself,
finding that he did not want to misrepresent the situation.  "Naclos
was so strange that sometimes it seemed unreal, and I just didn't think
about what else was happening or who might be worried.  I knew I had to
come back, but in a way, I really found it hard."  He shook his head.

Neither Gunnar nor Altara spoke as they turned off the pier and went
down the road past the port-master's and toward the shops behind the
harbor front.  A shadow passed across the three, cast by a small and
fast-moving cloud.

Justen tried not to frown as the same feelings that he had first felt
in Diehl-except stronger now-swept over him.  All the buildings, solid
black stone, somehow seemed lopsided, as if they were tilting toward
him and about to fall.  He blinked several times, trying to rein in his
sense of order-chaos imbalance.

"Are you glad to be back?"  Altara asked.

"I don't know.  It's good to see you both-really good.  And I want to
go to Wandernaught and see everyone."

Altara and Gunnar looked at each other, but again did not speak.

"There's a lot to do," Justen continued after a moment.  "It seems like
... I don't know."

"What have you been doing?"

"Surviving.  A lot of things."  Justen pointed to the sign of the black
waterspout that marked Houlart's.  "I don't want to start until I can
tell you the whole story at once ... not in pieces."

The public room was empty, not surprisingly for midmorning in Nylan. As
he walked past the first tables, Justen glanced at the Capture board
lying, on the empty corner table, wondering if he would play Gunnar any
differently now.  He set his pack between his chair and the wall, and
as he dropped into the wooden armchair, he half-shrugged, realizing
that he had no real desire to play Capture.

Altara waved to the serving woman in the corner, a small woman in a
blue cap who scurried over to the three.

"There's still sausage and eggs and fried white seaweed," began the
woman.

"Do you have any bread, heavy conserves, and beer?"  asked Justen. "And
some white cheese?"

"He hasn't changed much," whispered Altara to Gunnar.

"Might as we could manage that, scr.  And you?"  asked the server,
turning to Altara.

"Just green berry

"I'll have some of that bread, and green berry Gunnar said.

The serving woman nodded and turned, and Justen moved his chair
slightly, looking down at his pack.

"The ship?"  asked Altara.

"Why not let him begin at the beginning?"

Justen watched as the serving woman brought his mug of beer and set it
on the dark wood table with a thump.

"Be a moment for the bread, scr, and the green berries

Justen took a small sip of the dark beer.  It tasted more bitter than
he remembered, but then he took a healthy swallow.  "All right .. ." He
held up a hand before the questions began again.  "I'll tell you the
main points.  First; I was so tired by the end of the battle in Sarron
that I couldn't hold the shields long, and I was on the wrong side of
the hill, with all those wizards between us.  Before I figured out what
had happened, I couldn't get back.  So I thought I'd go upriver, try to
find a horse and cross the Sarron and double back..."

Between sips, Justen detailed his travels in Sarronnyn, outlining the
problems with the White Wizard who had kept chasing him and telling how
he never could get to a ford on the river.  Then he began on the
dreams.

The serving woman set two mugs of green berry on the table and left as
quickly as she had come.

"You had these dreams before you left Recluce?"  asked Gunnar.

"One.  But I thought it was just a normal dream.  Then, when I ended up
trying to cross the Stone Hills ..."

The bread, the white cheese, and the cherry conserve arrived.  Justen
began to eat, interspersing words with food.

"But you said the Sarronnese hill raiders killed your horse."

"I crossed the Stone Hills on foot.  For the first part, I was alone. I
had trouble finding water, and when I tried the gray cactus, it made me
sick.  The green ones weren't too bad.  But I just couldn't find enough
water.  It was a good thing Dayala found me."

"Dayala?"

"She's a druid .. ."

"From the look on his face, Gunnar, she must be something."

"How did she find you?  She just went into the Stone Hills and found
you?  Why?"  Gunnar pursued.

Justen finished a mouthful of bread and cheese, silently reflecting
that the cheese seemed heavy, and thicker than he recalled.  "She was
the one who sent the dreams, and she used the sands to find me.  It
took a while for me to heal.  I wasn't in very good shape, and of
course we had to walk back to Rybatta, which is where she lives.  The
druids don't ride animals, but the animals will carry loads for them-
usually."  Justen described the slow trip back, but omitted his initial
encounter with the great forest.  When he reached the point where he
was describing Dayala's work, he lugged his pack onto his lap.

"You two don't believe half of what I'm saying.  Poor Justen's lost it
all.  He's out of his mind.  Here."  He handed the first box to Gunnar
and the smaller, dark-grained one to Altara.

Gunnar swallowed, and Justen could sense his brother's awe and
order-probing of the box.

Altara just looked .. . and looked .. . before speaking.  "There aren't
any joints."

"No.  She grows them."  Justen grinned.  "After all, she is a druid."
Then his face grew somber.  "It's not as simple as that.  It really
takes work.  She was more tired after a day of working the trees than I
was after a day of smithing."

"I thought the druids didn't work metal."

"So did I, but her father is a smith.  Uses bog iron, but he lives a
bit away from the others.  Only a few of the druids are comfortable
with things like blades and knives."

"What-"

"Hold it," Justen interposed.  "I've talked and talked.  Now, it's your
turn."

"But you didn't finish-"

"I'll finish later.  What happened after the battle in Sarron?  I felt
the White Wizard shake down the city, but after that, I was too much on
the run."

"The Sarronnese, except for the people in Berlitos, pretty much just
gave up after the Tyrant died."  Altara paused to lake a swallow of
green berry  "We managed to get back to Rulyarth.  That was a mess.
People were bribing .. . killing .. . anything to get out of Sarronnyn.
A bunch went into Suthya, but no one thinks the Suthyans can hold out
for long.  We got passage back on The Pride of Brista-deck passage, and
it rained the whole way.  Two of the marines died from wounds and
chill.  That's what happens without healers."

"What happened to Firbek?"

"Last time I saw him, he was turning over our launchers to the Iron
Guard.  According to the Sarronnese troopers who escaped and came here
last spring, he led a detachment in the sack of Rulyarth."  Altara's
voice was cold.  "Gunnar was surprised.  He thought you'd killed
him."

Justen shook his head.  "I stabbed him, but he slugged Gunnar and got
away.  Then all the lancers charged over the hill, and he turned the
rockets ... on the healers."

Altara exchanged glances with Gunnar.  "Gunnar thought the White Wizard
did that."  "No.  It was Firbek.  It was partly my fault.  He was
trying to get me, but the rockets went past me and into the healers'
area."  Justen looked at the table.  "Clerve, Krytella-none of them
knew what happened.  I'd still kill that bastard if I got half a
chance."  He waved to the serving woman.  "Another round of drinks." He
looked at Gunnar.  "Can you pay for this?  I'll be able to repay you in
a day or two."

"Don't worry about it."  Gunnar touched his shoulder.  "I'm just glad
you're back."

"After you got home ..."  prompted Justen.

"The Council talked to us, one by one."  Gunnar pushed the empty mugs
to the center of the table as the serving woman deposited three more
and collected the empties.  "Turmin asked me a lot about how chaos felt
up close."

"And everyone pretends that nothing happened."  Altara snorted. "Except
that Ryltar pushed through an increase in the tax levy on local
merchants to beef up the marines in case they're needed on the merchant
fleet."

"Why not tariffs?"  asked Justen.

"Because higher tariffs cut trade," snapped Altara.  "Taxes here come
out of our pockets.  Where else can we go for food or goods?  Oh, and
traders were exempted, of course."

Justen sipped the second beer.  Somehow, taxes seemed as unreal in
Recluce as Dayala's box-making had at first seemed in Naclos.  "It
sounds like nothing's changed since before we left for Sarronnyn,
except that next spring, the same thing will happen in Suthya."

"No, it won't, because the Council won't even send volunteers next
time.  They'll just wring their hands," Altara said.

"Is that so bad?"  asked Gunnar.  "We weren't exactly all that
effective."

"No.  You and Justen only cost them two armies and delayed them almost
a year.  But everyone's convinced that we can do nothing."  Altara
looked at the mug.  "I'm almost ready to start drinking beer- or
brandy."

Justen shivered, thinking about Krytella, Clerve, and the dead Iron
Guard.  "There's too much order and too much chaos..."  he mumbled.

"Too much order and too much chaos?"  asked Gunnar.

Justen shrugged.  "Something one of the older druids said.  I'm still
thinking about it."  A twinge and a flash of light flared in his skull.
"I'm thinking a lot about it."

Altara and Gunnar exchanged glances again.

"You never did say how you got from Rybatta to Diehl and home, or why
it took so long," prompted Gunnar.

"I took a boat downriver, but a lot happened before I did ..."  Justen
began to describe Rybatta and the cooperative aspects of Naclos.

Altara let out her breath slowly as he began to speak, and Gunnar
leaned back slightly in his chair.

Again, he tried to avoid discussing the coercive nature of the great
forest, his trial, and his lies to Dayala.  He also did not mention his
feelings of order imbalance.

In some ways, it was going to be lonely in Recluce, Justen thought,
lonely indeed.

CI

Justen opened the door.  Nothing had changed.

The oil lamp still stood on the corner of the desk; there was not even
a speck of dust on the bronze or the glass of the mantle.  Only the
narrow bed was different, with the coverlet and sheet neatly folded at
the foot rather than in place on the pallet itself.

After closing the door and setting his pack on the bed, Jus-ten walked
to the window and eased open the inside shutters and then the window,
so that the fall breeze whispered into the still air of the past.

He opened the pack and took out the remaining half-dozen boxes, each
wrapped in the soft, husk like leaves that protected them, and set each
box, still-wrapped, on the side of the desk.  His fingers tingled as
they brushed the smooth grain of the last box where the leaf had not
quite covered the wood; the grain spoke of silver-hair, long fingers,
and green eyes.

For a time, Justen stood over the desk, eyes closed.  Then he took a
deep breath and turned to his personal toiletries: the razor he had
forged at Yual's, some soap from Rybatta, a soft cloth for his face, a
small, bronze-framed mirror.

He shook out the brown trousers and tunic, softer cloth than the blacks
he wore again, and hung them on the pegs in the wardrobe.  The pack
went into the bottom of the wardrobe, leaving space for boots, assuming
that he got another pair of black ones.

After closing the doors of the tall cabinet, he went to the small
bookcase and lifted the Capture board and the box containing the black
and white tokens.  Then he set the board down and studied the box, all
too aware of the joints in the wood, all too aware that even the finest
craftsmanship seemed somehow like violence, as though the woods had
been forced together.  He set the box down and shook his head.  If
Naclos had seemed so unreal, why was he seeing everything differently
here?

His eyes turned to the stones of the outer wall, but they seemed set in
order.  Was it that the wood had been shaped with edges?  Was he
getting to be like Dayala, unhappy with edged tools?  Or was he merely
more perceptive now?

With a last look around the room, he turned and opened the door to
begin the short walk to the engineering hall and the work that,
presumably, awaited him.

The slight depression in the center of the stone steps leading down to
the main floor and the street again reminded him of the generations of
young engineers who had lived in these quarters, and he could almost
sense the men and women of the past looking over his shoulder, their
order-stern countenances fixed in time.

Shaking his head, he stepped into the cool, bright afternoon and turned
downhill.

An empty horse-drawn wagon clattered past on the street.  Justen
frowned at the sight of the driver seated on the wagon rather than
walking beside the horse.  He blinked and took a deep breath.

Halfway down the hill, he paused opposite the classroom building that
had always seemed to form a part of the hillside, but now it seemed to
stand out rather than blend.  A handful of students had gathered around
a stone bench by the statue of Dorrin, chattering like rare birds.  For
several moments, he stood and watched before turning and continuing
down to the engineering hall.

He paused at the bottom step, looking up at the shadowed porch and
sensing the ordered masses of metal within the walls, more solid and
hulking than he had ever recognized.  With another deep breath, he took
the low steps and entered the hall, stopping just before the workroom
floor.

A young woman whom he did not know worked the forge and occupied the
space he had once called his own, and her strokes on the anvil were
clean and sure-as were all the strokes of all the engineers.

The dull grinding of the gear-cutters echoed in his ears as he
watched.

"Justen?  What are you doing here?"  The dark-haired chief engineer
walked toward him.

He shrugged.  "I am an engineer, I guess."

"We've gotten along without you for a time, Justen."  Altara laughed."
And from what Gunnar says, at least your sister would like to see you.
So, I expect, will the Council, once they find out you've returned."

He had wanted to see his family.  So what was he doing in the
engineering hall?  Justen's eyes darted from one mass of heavy iron to
another, from anvil to iron casing to fine drawn turbine blade.

"If they want to see you, I'll ride up to Wandernaught and fetch you.
If not, you can come back here in a few days.  And don't worry.  You'll
get paid, such as it is."

Justen smiled guiltily with the realization that he was far wealthier
than he had ever expected to be.  The smile faded as he recalled the
reason for that wealth.

"You'll have to bring a mount, or I'll take the post coach," he
added.

"I'm sure that the Brotherhood or the Council could spring for a mount
if they need to see you.  Now ... go on and tell your family that
you're safe and in one piece."

"Thank you."  Justen slowly turned.  Why was he so slow?  Of course his
parents and Elisabet wanted to see him, and he wanted to see them.  So
why hadn't it really crossed his mind?  Why had he just followed his
old habit patterns?  He slowly walked down the steps to the street, his
fingers idly stroking his chin.

CII

"Well .. . we're almost there."  Severa tightened the reins slightly,
and the post wagon slowed as it neared the post house.  The Broken
Wheel, the two-story stone-and-timber inn, looked almost the same as
the last time Justen had been home, except that the cracked wagon
spokes on the sign were now a darker brown.  A man not much older than
Jus-ten, paint pot in hand, waved at Severa.  She waved back.

"Who's that?"  asked Justen, grabbing the edge of the seat as Severa
levered the wagon brake and the wagon lurched to a halt.

"Rildr.  He's old Hernon's nephew.  They're slowly fixing the old place
up.  It wasn't terribly run down, but you either fix inns up or they
fall apart."

"I think that's pretty much true of everything."  Justen handed her the
two coppers, slipped off the leather seat and reached into the wagon
bed for his pack.  He looked up at the high, thin clouds that cooled
the afternoon without providing rain.

Severa put the coins in her purse, then lifted one of the leather post
bags out and onto the stone walk beside the post house just as the
young postal worker came scurrying out.  "I'm sorry, Severa.  I didn't
hear you."

"If I woke the demons.  Lorn, you still wouldn't hear me."  Severa
grinned at the young man, who looked sheepishly at the paving stones
underfoot.

Justen shouldered his pack and lifted his hand to Severa.  "Thank
you."

"I enjoyed the company, Justen.  Give my best to your mother."

"I will."  Justen turned and began to walk westward along the main
street, past the coppersmith's, and then past Basta's Dry and Leather
Goods.

Another wagon stood outside Seldit's, where the cooper and the driver
were lifting a large barrel up alongside three others in the wagon
bed.

"Good afternoon, Seldit," Justen said pleasantly as he passed.

"Justen!  We ... no one .. . when did you get back?"

"Yesterday .. . that's when I got to Nylan."  Justen stopped.

"Your dad will be glad to see you."  The heavy-armed cooper coughed.
"Your mom and sister, too."

"I'll be glad to see them."  Justen grinned.  "Don't let me keep you.
I'll be around for a few days, I think."

"Just goes to show .. ."  Seldit shook his head and glanced at the
driver.  "Engineers and wizards .. . never tell..."

"That's right."  Justen forced another grin.  "You never can.  Just
like bad coppers, we keep coming back."

"Off with you.  You're still a young scamp .. . sort of."  Justen waved
and turned.  Seldit, at least, was the same, even if Wandernaught felt
somehow shallower, just as Diehl, and even Nylan, had-although Nylan
was the most solid of the three.  Yet, it was the most imbalanced,
nearly drowning in a surfeit of order.

After he passed the house where Shrezsan had once lived, he came to a
smaller structure, one that seemed so new that it was almost not there,
where a blond young woman and a child were working in a small garden
plot.  So, Justen reflected with a smile, Shrezsan and Yousal had moved
next to her parents' house, to be close enough to carry on the family
wool-and-linen business.  Neither Shrezsan nor the child looked up as
he strode past and toward the hills that held the cherry and pear apple
groves.

Once beyond the first set of groves, its trees certainly as solid as
any in Naclos, Justen began to look westward for a sight of the house.
When he passed the last cherry grove, the familiar black-stone and
slate-tiled house he neared looked no different.  It, like Nylan, felt
more solid.  Was that because of those who lived there?  Or because it
had stood for longer than many?  Justen could see his father's wiry
figure on a ladder at the far end of the grove, picking apples.
Elisabet's slender figure stood at the base of the ladder, handing up a
basket.

She turned toward Justen and dropped the basket, breaking into a
pell-mell dash toward her brother.  "Justen!  Jus-ten!  Father!  He's
back!  He's back!"

The violence of Elisabet's hug almost knocked Justen into the low stone
wall by the roadside.

"I knew!  I knew you were coming!"  She buried her face in his
shoulder.

Absently, Justen realized that she was nearly as tall as he was, that
she was no longer a gawky girl, but a young woman.  He hugged her. "I'm
glad I came."

Horas had followed his daughter more deliberately, and he stood at the
edge of the road, waiting.  Justen disentangled himself from his
sister's hold and gave his father a hug.

"You've changed," were Horas's first words.  "A lot."

"Yes.  It's been along year."

"He's still Justen," said Elisabet.

"You might say that he's more Justen than ever."  Horas's words were
tinged with warmth and irony.

"Where's Mother?"

"She's at Nerla's, helping her lay out her own smithy.  She said she'd
be back by mid-afternoon.  She wasn't-she said-going to do all the hard
work for a former apprentice."

The three laughed at Horas's mimicry of Cirlin.

"Of course, now she'll have to find another apprentice, unless .. ."
Horas looked speculatively at Justen.

"Who knows?"  Justen shrugged.

"I think the apples can wait a bit.  Let's go have some: thing to
drink.  There's even some ale left, and-"

"There's a dark cake, with real molasses!"  exclaimed Elisabet.

"Will Gunnar be coming?"  asked Horas.

"I think so, but not for a day or two.  He had to finish something with
Turmin, and he said that you ought to have me to yourselves for a bit.
I think he was afraid I'd gotten better at Capture."  Justen offered a
quick smile.

"Have you?"  asked his sister.

"No.  I haven't played since I left Sarron, and that was a year ago.
Anyway, I don't think I'm any better."

Horas turned, and his two children followed him up the stone walk
toward the covered porch.  He waited by the door to the house as
Elisabet and Justen stepped onto the porch.  "Redberry and ale,
right?"

"Right."

"Right."  Inside, Elisabet plopped on the stool by Justen's knee and
looked at her brother.  "What happened?"

Justen laughed.  "Wait until Father comes back.  I'm sure he'll want to
hear as well, and I don't want to tell the same story twice."

"Then you'll want to wait until Mother comes, and I'll have to help
with dinner, and then I'll never get to hear it all."

"You'll get to hear it all."  Justen ruffled her short-cut sandy hair.
"You cut your hair."

"Long hair gets in the way, and besides, I don't want to be just a
brood mare, and that's what all the girls with long hair are."

"Strong words, young woman."  Horas extended the taller mug to
Justen.

"True words!"  Elisabet lifted one ok the two shorter mugs from the
battered wooden tray.  "Lydya is already saying how many children
she'll have!"

Justen and his father exchanged quick smiles.

"And don't smile like that.  I know what I want."

"That I believe."  Justen took a slow sip of the ale, holding it in his
mouth for a moment.  He was glad to find that his father's brew was as
smooth as any in Naclos, and he let the ale trickle down his dry
throat.

"Well, I think your mother is at the turn," said Horas.  "So we'll wait
to hear your story until she gets here."

"I told you so."  Elisabet looked at Justen,

"In the meanwhile, we can tell you what has happened here."

"Not much," suggested Elisabet.

"I've added some seedlings to both groves, and I suppose you saw
Shrezsan's and Yousal's house."

Justen nodded.

"They're redoing The Broken Wheel, and Niteral has taken over old
Kaylert's spread.  He says that it's just to get it ready for
Huntal-that's the boy who went to Temple school with Gunnar.  He and
Mara have two girls, and they didn't like the fishing life of her
family.  So they moved back to the guest house at Niteral's, but it's
really too small-"

"Fishing ... ugh," interposed Elisabet.

"Some people have to fish."

"Orchards are better."

"Not if you don't have an Order Wizard in the family or if you don't
like bugs," observed Horas.

Elisabet stood and dashed off the porch and down the walk to greet
Cirlin.  "Justen's home!  He's back!"

Horas and Justen looked at each other.

"Still half girl," Justen said.

"Not for long, I think."

Justen stood and gave his mother a bear hug as she stepped onto the
covered porch.

"What a welcome surprise!  But then, Gunnar was always convinced that
you'd be back."

"He knew more than I did."

Horas disappeared into the house for a moment, reappearing with another
ale about the time that Justen and his mother disengaged themselves and
Cirlin sat down in the narrow rocking chair in the corner.

"All right.  I want to hear everything," announced Elisabet.  "I've
waited and waited."

"I think Justen's hungry.  Perhaps we should wait until after
dinner..."  Justen caught the twinkle in Horas's eyes.

"Father!  You .. . you're just teasing."  Cirlin shook her head.
"Sometimes you're too eager, daughter."

"Maybe so, but Justen promised I could hear it all."  Justen patted her
on the shoulder.  "You'll hear everything that everyone else hears." He
took a deep swallow of the welcome ale before beginning.  "I'm sure
Gunnar's told you all about what happened in Sarron until the final
battle.  I'll start there .. ."

The sun was touching the tops of the low hills behind the apple and
pear apple groves when Justen finished his abbreviated tale of his
travels across Candar.  "... and when the ship pulled up at the pier in
Nylan, there were Gunnar and Altara, waiting for me."  Belatedly, he
remembered and reached for his pack, digging out the three of Dayala's
boxes he had set aside for them.  He handed the first to Elisabet.
"Dayala sent these."  Then he handed one to Horas and one to Cirlin.

"This is beautiful!  It's mine?  Really mine?"

Justen nodded.  "It's yours, Elisabet."

Horas studied the woven grains in the box he held, then set the box
gently on the table beside him.  Cirlin set hers beside Horas's box.

"She is quite accomplished, isn't she?"

"Yes."

"And she rescued you from the Stone Hills, and made sure you got home
safely?  We owe her a great deal, don't we?"  Horas's voice was low.

Justen swallowed.  "Not so much as you think.  We are all caught in the
designs of the Angels."

"You love her, don't you?"

"Yes."

"But she's a druid!"  protested Elisabet.

So am I, thought Justen, but he did not speak the words immediately.

"She's a druid, and you're from Recluce!"  Elisabet looked from Justen
to her parents.  "You're not a druid.  You can't leave us,"

"I am a druid.  Now."

Horas nodded, as did Cirlin.

"You aren't staying, are you?"  asked Horas.

"Of course he is.  He just got here," insisted Elisabet.  "He'll change
his mind.  He has to."

"I'll be here for at least a few days.  Altara says that the .  Council
may want to see me."

"I'm sure that they will."  Cirlin took a long pull from the tall mug.
"That time comes for all of us, though.  Are you going back to
Naclos?"

"I don't understand."  Elisabet looked from one parent to the other.
"He was almost killed in Candar, and you both seem to think that he's
going straight back."

"Not straight, I think.  Is it just the druid?"  asked Horas.

"She can't have bewitched Justen.  Tell me she hasn't, Justen."

"No.  I'll have to go to Fairhaven."

Elisabet's eyes grew wider.  "None of this makes any sense.  Can you
all explain what you are talking about?"

"Look at me, Elisabet.  Look at me with your order-senses."

For a moment, Elisabet stared at her brother, then looked away.  She
shivered and stared down at the floor.

"Now, lass, tell me what you saw," requested Horas.

"He ... his order .. . there's no chaos that's not tied up.  Gunnar,
even, has flecks of... loose chaosJusten doesn't."

Elisabet stumbled through the words and finally looked up.  "It's
something .. ."  She swallowed without finishing the sentence.  "You
meant it.  The druids did something.  Why?"

"Yes, I meant it.  But they didn't do anything.  It's something I had
to do.  And it's about .  , .  everything."  Justen knew how
pretentious the words sounded, but that didn't make them any less true.
He hurried on.  "I'm not going there for a while.  I have a lot to do
here."

"Good!"  exclaimed Elisabet.

"I can't say I'm displeased either," added.Cirlin.

"Since we've disposed of that, how about some dinner?"  asked Horas.

The growling in Justen's stomach provided his answer, and he grinned.

"Justen!"  cried Elisabet in mock outrage.

He shrugged and then grinned as his father turned toward the kitchen.
But his eyes burned, and he looked out at the all-too-familiar and
all-too-strange apple trees that were lined up in the growing gloom of
twilight.

CIII

"I'm sorry I had to cut short your time with your family.  The Council
was very insistent-"

"Altara .. ."  Justen cut off the chief engineer's apology, at least
the fifth he had heard on the three-day ride from Wandernaught.  "You
didn't cut it short, and we'll stop there on the way back.  So don't
worry."

"But I do.  They haven't seen you in more than a year,"

Justen took a deep breath, thinking about what lay ahead after his
meeting the Council.  Going back to Candar wasn't going to be easy, but
he did not see much choice, not when so much of the vaunted order of
Recluce seemed so shallow so one-sided.

"You haven't told me everything."

"No."

"What happened to the carefree Justen, the one who called weapons
obsolete?"

"I still don't carry them, you'll notice."  He tried to ease a light
note into his voice.

"Then was a game.  Now you mean it."  Altara pointed to the black
structures on the bluff ahead to the right.  "There's the Black
Holding."

The five black buildings seemed rooted into the heavy rock that
underlay most of Recluce, and yet, to Justen, they seemed somehow
unbalanced, straight as they stood, as if they were about to tip
sideways.  He squinted and shook his head, but the feeling did not pass
as they rode closer.  He almost felt as though the ancient order
embodied in the stones were about to fall on him.

He took a deep breath as he reined up outside the small and ancient
stable.  As he dismounted, he patted the horse on the neck, and the
stallion whinnied gently.

"You've come a long way from that young engineer who could barely sit
on a gray nag."  Altara laughed as she slipped off her bay gelding and
handed the reins to the young man in black who had stood waiting as
they rode up.

Justen handed his reins to a young woman, and the stallion whickered
and sidestepped.  Justen looked at the horse, sending the faintest
pulse of order toward the high-spirited animal, and added, "Take it
easy, fellow."

The stallion whinnied and steadied.  The young aide's eyes widened and
she moved back, even though Justen gave her a reassuring smile.  He
stepped across a shallow puddle held in the worn hollows of the ancient
stones.  The rain had not fallen as far south as Alberth, where they
had stayed the night before.

"Which way?"  Justen inclined his head toward the walkway to the
right.

"This way."  Altara motioned to the left way, which circled the stable
and took them on the south side of the holding, next to a raised
terrace.  The path ran between an ancient oak tree and the terrace.
Before them, the Eastern Ocean glimmered silver in the morning light of
summer.

"Do you think the Council is really interested in where I've been?"
Justen took the steps up onto the terrace and crossed to the closed,
dark-pine door.

"Of course not.  You're the only engineer or mage to have been beyond
the port of Diehl in probably five generations.  You're one of the few
people known to have survived the Stone Hills, and you're the one whose
design of ordered black arrowheads cost the Whites nearly an entire
army.  Why would they be interested in poor little Justen?"  Altara
grinned.

"I thought I'd ask."

"If you have to play dumb, don't play it quite that dumb."

Justen returned her grin and rapped on the door, which opened even as
he lowered his hand.  A woman in marine blacks and wearing the double
short swords of ancient and fallen Westwind waited.

"Justen, from the engineers.  I'm here to .  , ."  He looked at
Altara.

"We're responding to Counselor Jenna's request.  I'm Chief Engineer
Altara."

"Welcome to the Black Holding."  The marine smiled politely.  "Do come
in."  She stepped back and gestured toward a room beyond the small
foyer.  "If you would like to sit down, I believe that the counselors
will be ready for you shortly."

The foyer walls were plain, just as Justen had remembered them from the
one time his tutor had shown him the holding years earlier.  Clearly,
the Founders had not been interested in decoration, and their
successors had left the holding as plain, as drab, as it was
originally.

The waiting room held nearly a dozen black-oak chairs and a low table,
but all the chairs were empty.  Altara took one by the window, where
she could see a corner of the Eastern Ocean.

Justen walked to the single bookcase, containing a score or more of
volumes.  His eyes ranged over the untitled black covers.

"Are you going to sit down?"

"We've been riding for five whole days.  I'm not much better as a
horseman than I was a year ago."

"It's been more than a year, and you're a lot better."

"Not much, but you're right.  It seems a lot longer."

"You're a lot older."

"Crossing the Stone Hills does that."  Justen laughed.  "I could use a
dark ale now."

"You still drink that stuff?"

"Why not?  It tastes good."

"But you're more ordered now.  You remind me more of your brother, or
of Turmin."

"I like beer.  "Clearing her throat softly, the marine stood by the
door to the Council Chamber.  "Engineers, the Counselors will see you
now."

Justen followed Altara into the dark-paneled room, his eyes flicking to
the portraits that flanked the windows- Megaera and Creslin, the
Founders-and back to the three figures who stood behind the Council
table.

In the center was an older, dark-haired woman, flanked on the right by
a man with brown wispy hair, and on the left by a redheaded woman who
seemed close to Altara's age.

The older woman nodded.  "I'm Claris.  I appreciate your coming.
Engineers.  This is Ryltar .. . and Jenna."

The redhead acknowledged her name with a slight inclination of her
head.  Ryltar nodded abruptly.

"Please sit down."

Justen took the right-hand chair, a comfortable but worn black-oak
wooden armchair across from the redhead.  Altara sat across from
Claris.  ""The chief engineer has told us of how you got to Sarron and
of what happened there-the outcome of the battle- but we don't know
what happened to you after the battle."

"Where should I start?  After Firbek tried to turn the rockets on
us?"

"We're familiar with that," Ryltar said sharply.  "Why didn't you fall
back with the others?  How did you get separated?"

"The Whites came up the hill so quickly, and I didn't have a mount.  I
also didn't have much strength left at that point.  So I pulled a
light-shield around myself..."

Ryltar nodded for him to continue, and Justen detailed the way he had
tried to get back across the River Sarron and how each attempt had
pushed him farther into Sarronnyn, until he was south of Clynya.

"Why did you try to cross the Stone Hills?"  asked Claris, the older
counselor.

"I didn't have much choice," Justen began wryly.  "There were
several-score lancers and at least one White Wizard chasing me, and I
couldn't seem to avoid the damned vulcrow ..."  He went on to describe
how at every attempt to reach the bridge at Clynya he was almost herded
southward and eastward to avoid capture.  "... and in the end, there
didn't seem to be much of a choice."

"Were the druids .. . helpful?  I mean, how did they receive you?"
asked the younger red-haired counselor.

Justen frowned.  "It's hard to explain.  They rescued me from the Stone
Hills.  I didn't make it quite all the way across-"

"Just how far did you make it, young man?"  interrupted the
wispy-haired counselor.

"By the end, I wasn't in much shape to measure, serIf my memory is
correct, I lasted somewhere between ten and twelve days before I
fell."

"And you had no special help?"

"It sounds stupid, I know.  I walked into the Stone Hills with a
blanket, the clothes on my back, and a water bottle.  At the time, it
seemed a great deal more reasonable than it does now.  I suppose being
chased by a White Wizard can do that to your reason."  Justen smiled
briefly, noting the cool look from the older counselor toward Ryltar.

"You lasted twelve days on one bottle of water, and you're not even a
mage?"

"Ryltar-"

"Jenna, I'm just trying to see if our engineer is what he says he
is."

"No," Justen said.  "One kind of cactus-the green one-has water in the
pulp.  So do the gray ones, but they made me sick sometimes.  Twice I
found little pockets of water in the rocks.  I do have some
order-sense.  I couldn't be an engineer if I didn't."

"So you lasted for twelve days on what water you found?"

"It might have been ten ... could have been fourteen.  I wasn't
thinking very clearly by then."

"And what happened?"

"I fell and couldn't get up."  Justen shrugged.

Beside him, Altara grinned at his flat statement.

"And?"  pushed Ryltar.

"When I woke up, someone had found me and was trying to get me to
drink.  It was one of the Naclans."

"One of the druids?"

Justen nodded.

"So-just like that-they rescued you, fed you, and carried you back to
Diehl and then sent you home to Recluce, healthy and healed?"  Ryltar
snorted.

Justen took a deep breath, paused, and instead of responding, extended
his order-senses to touch Ryltar.  A slight frown creased his forehead;
it was not exactly chaos, he sensed, but..  . something.  A disorder
that verged on "You seem somewhat displeased, Justen," said Claris.

"No ..."  Justen tried to gather himself.

"Could you explain what happened in Naclos?"  asked Jenna gently.

"Well, we walked back.  They don't ride horses there.  The horses will
carry packs for them, but the druids say they have a bargain with
them."

"You walked to Diehl?"  Ryltar's voice rose again.  "Across half of
Candar .. after barely surviving the Stone Hills?"

"Ryltar..."  "... asking us to swallow a lot..."

"You might be able to swallow if you talked less and listened more,"
snapped Jenna.

"Jenna," temporized Claris.

Justen took another deep breath.  "First, I didn't go anywhere for days
after they found me.  Then we walked only a handful of kays a day.  We
walked to a place called Rybatta.  It's on the river, and later we took
a boat downriver to Diehl.  It did take me a while to recover."  "..  .
should hope so."

"What can you tell us about the Naclans?"

"They believe in a version of the Legend, I'd say, although they never
quite explained it.  They live in harmony with all living things ...
don't take life, even of plants, without reason .. . appear to be
long-lived ..."

Throughout the explanation, the skepticism on Ryltar's face became more
pronounced.

Finally, Claris held up a hand.  "You seem rather dissatisfied,
Ryltar."

"I am.  How can we believe any of this?"

"I don't sense any chaos.  Do you?"

"How could we tell?  We need an expert."  Ryltar snorted again.

"Is that why you have Turmin waiting?"  asked Jenna.

Ryltar flushed.

"Justen, with all that is happening, and with what happened to his
nephew, you can understand Counselor Ryltar's concerns that somehow you
are now tied up, perhaps unwittingly, with Fairhaven?"  Claris's voice
was gentle.

"I understand the counselor's concerns."  Justen grinned.  "I take it
you want the honored Turmin to check out my degree of... orderliness? I
don't have any problem with that."  Turmin might, reflected Justen,
with a turn to his lips.

"You seem amused."  Ryltar had gestured to the marine by the door.

"I am.  I think that Turmin will find me very .. . orderly.  The druids
wouldn't have allowed me anywhere near Diehl if I hadn't been."
Ryltar's lip curled as Turmin entered the chamber.  Justen stood,
nodding to the black mage, as did the others.  "Would you?"  Claris
nodded at Ryltar.  "Justen, here, has apparently spent almost two
seasons in Naclos, and has recently returned.  I appear to be the only
one concerned that he may not be what he seems."

"That is perfectly understandable with your ... responsibilities."
Turmin nodded to the counselor.

A faint flush colored Ryltar's neck, and Justen suppressed a grin.
Turmin wasn't anyone's tool.

The mage turned to Justen.  "Do you mind, scr?"  Justen caught the
frown that crossed both Claris and Ryltar's face even before he
answered.  "Noser"

Turmin smiled as he extended his order-perceptions, and Justen could
sense something-but it was far fainter than the black mist that had
surrounded Dayala, and especially the ancient Angel.

The mage frowned briefly, then nodded.  After a few moments, he turned
to the three counselors behind the table.  "Begging your pardon,
counselors, but this young fellow shows more basic order than anyone on
Recluce.  Even being around him would make your average White
squirm."

"Could this be a trick of some sort?"  pursued Ryltar.  "Counselor,
again begging your pardon, but you're far closer to the Whites than he
is.  I don't know of any way to counterfeit order.  Do you?"

"Thank you, Turmin," Claris proffered.  "We appreciate your help."

"Any time, counselors."  Turmin nodded curtly, bowed to Justen
slightly, and with his back to the three counselors, winked.

Jenna covered her mouth, and the faint smile.  "We have a few more
questions," added Claris as the door shut behind Turmin.  "Do you think
that the Naclans will fight the Whites?"

Justen took another deep breath.  The morning was going to be long. "So
far as I know, they have not fought in any recent time, but I would
question whether Fairhaven would wish to invade Naclos.  The forests
are almost impassible, except for hidden trails.  The Stone Hills could
not be crossed by an army, and the country produces little that the
Whites could use."

"How do they intend to escape the effect of chaos?"  Justen took a sip
of water before considering his answer.  How indeed?  "They believe
that the forces of the Balance will eventually right the situation ..."
Helped by one engineer named Justen, I suspect.

The questions continued, and so did his answers, all of them truthful,
all of them as complete as he knew how to make them, and all of them
misleading to a Council that could not understand that too much order
represented as much of a threat as did too much chaos.

CIV

After shifting his weight in the saddle, Justen wiped his forehead,
although the summer heat was far less oppressive than that of the Stone
Hills in the late fall.  Absently, he wondered how anything survived
there in the summer.  With the thought of the Stone Hills, an image of
Dayala's face floated into his mind.  Should he write?  How would he
get a letter delivered?  And what could he say in words?  Oh ...
Dayala. Miss you

A faint shadow crossed the road as a puffy white cloud briefly covered
the sun.

Had he sensed some warmth in return, or was he merely feeling what he
hoped to feel?  Justen's stomach growled, and the stallion's hooves
clicked on the stones of the High Road, that memorial to the great
Creslin.  "Do you think that tavern's open yet?"

Altara had remained silent since they left the stable at the Black
Holding.  Now she cleared her throat before speaking and glanced out
toward the sheep meadows to the west of the road; each meadow was lush
with the hardy grass that grew only in Recluce, each separated from the
next by the low, dark stone walls.  "The tavern-I suppose so."  A farm
wagon rolled toward them, filled with neatly stacked baskets of
potatoes headed for the harbor at Land's End.  "Good day, Magister,
Magistra."  The woman in the driver's seat nodded as she spoke.  "Good
day."

"Good day."

When the wagon was well past, Altara looked at Justen for a time, her
green eyes focused intently, before speaking.  "You've changed.  Not in
any way that's obvious."

"I suspect that being chased across half of Sarronnyn by a White Wizard
and nearly dying in the Stone Hills might have had some effect."

"It's rather more than that, young Justen, except that you're not
nearly so young anymore."  Altara looked southward along the
stone-paved High Road before continuing.  "You certainly had Counselor
Ryltar upset."

"There's something about him ..."  Justen's hand idly stroked the
stallion's neck.

"You're surely not intimating that one of our great and mighty
counselors might be less than perfectly orderly?"

"Turmin did."  Justen laughed.  "But I wonder how you'd ever prove
anything like that.  Or if it's even the case,"

"You look too deeply, Justen.  What about simple corruption?  Someone
from Ryltar's family has been on the Council for the last two
generations."

"I can't believe someone could buy a Council seat without people
finding out."

"Of course not.  But if the great trading family of Nylan supports and
contributes to the funding of the Council..."

"Oh .. ."  Justen nodded.  Still, Ryltar didn't feel right. Corruption?
 Who would pay Ryltar for what?  And why?

"What will the Council do about Suthya?"  Justen patted the stallion on
the neck again.

"Not a thing.  Berlitos is nothing but cinders, and after the fall of
Sarron and the firing of Berlitos, the Council doesn't seem willing to
act.  Besides, the Whites haven't made a move."

"So the Council will do nothing?  I wonder if someone has paid Ryltar
to stop any action."

"Justen ... that's a serious charge."

"I'm not charging, just wondering.  Besides, how would you find out?
Profits on trading shipments are hard to track."

"Whatever .. ."  Altara shook her head.  "I don't think you'd have to
pay Ryltar.  He's never wanted involvement with Candar."

"Idiots ..."  muttered Justen.

"I agree.  But why do you think so?"

"The Whites will consolidate their hold on Sarronnyn and send out their
secret wizards and undermine the people's faith in order, and Suthya
will fall just as Sarronnyn did."

"You want to go back to Candar to stop them?"

Justen smiled faintly, but did not answer.

"Darkness.  You're really thinking about it, aren't you?"

"Do you think the tavern's open?"  Justen gestured toward the hamlet
they approached.

"If your stomach can stand it, the public house in Extina is better,
and it's not quite midday, anyway."  Altara forced a chuckle.  "And the
dark ale is supposed to be among the best."

"I could use a mug of good dark ale."  He patted the stallion's neck
once more, hoping the ale would not be too bitter with the aftertaste
he had never noticed until he had tasted the ale of Naclos.  "I
definitely could."

CV

"Good night, son."  Horas waved vaguely as he headed down the hall to
bed.

Justen closed the door and glanced at the lamp in the wall sconce.  Did
he need it, really?  He walked over and gently blew it out to save oil.
Then he pulled off his boots and piled up the pillows against the wall
before he settled onto the bed.

Justen put his arms behind his head and stretched his feet out on the
bed he had slept in for so many years before he had gone to Nylan to
become an engineer.  Now what was he?  Part engineer, part druid, part
healer, part who knew what?

As he heard the wind gust through the yellowing leaves of the trees
outside, he frowned, recalling Gunnar's long-ago words: You have
managed to turn order into chaos.  But gray magic has to work both
ways.  Can you turn chaos into order?

Was working with chaos totally wrong-if the goal was order?  He
shivered.  How many people had destroyed themselves in that way?  But
what if he held the chaos within blocks of order-just as the healing
that Dayala had taught him held chaos twisted and locked in order
inside his body?  False lead?  Magistra Gerra had once mentioned that
false lead linked order and chaos, but that false lead was dangerous.
Even the yellow-powdered deposits that contained it were hard to find,
and harder to break down into the metal itself.  Thrap..  .

He smiled, sensing Elisabet on the other side of the door.  "Come on
in, Elisabet."

"It's dark."

"You don't need a light.  No wizard does.  Just look."

"Oh, Justen.  You spoil everything."

"Just because I know you can see without much light?"

"Justen ..."

"Does Mother know you're up?"

"She won't mind.  Neither would Father."  Elisabet plopped onto the
corner of the bed, and Justen moved his feet aside.  "Tell me about
Dayala.  What's she like?"

"Why do you want to know?"  Justen grinned in the darkness.

"Justen, you're in love with this druid, and I'm not supposed to be
curious?  Does she have a tree, like in the old tales?"

"Hardly.  Most of the druids live in the great forest of Naclos and
don't like to leave it, but not all of them are like that.  Dayala's
father is a smith who traveled to Sarronnyn several times in years
past.  And their houses are really made out of trees.  She works with
smaller trees to make the boxes."

"You told me that already.  What does she look like?"

"Well, she's almost as tall as I am, and she has silver hair and green
eyes.  And a very dry sense of humor that's hard to describe.  At
first, it was a little hard to understand her, because the Naclans
speak the original Temple tongue-"

"Does she look like that picture of Llyse that's in the old armory?"

"Hmmm."  Justen tried to remember the picture that Elisabet mentioned,
the one that showed the great Creslin's sister in battle gear.  "Her
hair isn't as curly as Llyse's, and her shoulders are broader, I think.
Oh, and she doesn't wear boots or shoes.  That's so she can keep in
touch with everything around her."

"Does she wear clothes?"

"Elisabet."  Justen mock-chided his sister.

"She must have something that attracts you."

"She wears clothes-trousers and a shirt, usually.  A silvery brown
color."

"Is she a good lover?"

Justen tried not to choke.

"Well, is she?"

"Elisabet, I think that's between Dayala and me."

"She's a good lover.  How smart is she?"

"A lot smarter than I am about some things."

"Oh, dear."  Elisabet drew her knees up to her chin.  Finally, she
asked, "How long are you going to stay?"

"A few more days, maybe less.  At some point, I should be going back to
Nylan."

"I meant, when are you going back to Candar?"

Justen shrugged.  "I don't know.  It won't be soon.  There's too much
to do.  I don't even really know how I'm going to do what needs to be
done."

"Good.  I hope it takes a long time.  Why doesn't Dayala come here?"

"We talked about that.  Until I finish my ... task, I won't be going
back there, either."

"Justen, you don't sound very happy about this task."

"I'm not.  It has to be done, but I'm not happy about it."

"Why do you have to do it?"

"Have you noticed anyone else besides Altara, Gunnar, or me very
concerned about what Fairhaven is doing?  Concerned enough to do
anything except to ignore the Whites?"

"Father says that everyone thinks Recluce will be safe even if they
take over all of Candar."

"For a while, probably."

"Then why-"

"I made order-tipped arrows, Elisabet.  They killed a lot of innocent
people.  Sometimes I still have nightmares about them.  That's the
problem with evil.  Chaos isn't necessarily evil, but the Whites are
evil because they want to impose their ways on others through force.
But the only way to fight evil is with force, and that makes the ones
who fight it almost as bad as the evil ones.  I don't want the whole
world becoming evil-those who are evil and those who must become evil
to stop them."

Elisabet remained silent.

"If you let evil grow, then it takes more force to stop it, and that
means even greater evil in the world.  That's what's wrong with the
Council's view."

Elisabet crept up the bed and put her arms around Justen.  "You're very
brave."

"No, I can't say that.  I'm angry.  I'm angry, and I hate the Angels
and the Whites for putting me in this position.  If I don't do
something, I'm a coward, and if I do, I become like the Whites, doing
evil in the name of some ideal."

His sister hugged him again.

Finally, he shrugged.  "I suppose that's life."

"You're different.  You're more serious,"

Justen forced a short laugh.  "That's life, too."

CVI

Justen sat on the chair backwards, his loosely crossed arms resting on
the curved back as he faced Gunnar.  "What are you doing right now?"

"Listening to you."  Gunnar leaned back on the narrow bed, his head
resting against the paneled wall of the Brotherhood's quarters for
senior wizards.  The outer walls of Jus-ten's room were only of dressed
stone.

Justen sighed.  "I mean, for Turmin, for the Brotherhood."

"Mostly scouting the high winds, trying to follow what's happening in
Suthya.  Also, following the wind patterns for the fleet, letting the
ships know what to expect, where there are likely to be storms.  The
usual."

"There's something wrong with that Counselor-Ryltar, I mean.  It's not
chaos, but he just doesn't feel right."  Justen pulled at his chin.  "I
wish I knew what he's been up to.  Could you find out?"

"You want me to spy on a Counselor?"

"It was just a thought."  Justen shrugged.  "It's probably too
tedious."

"You know, I always used to fall for that."  Gunnar sat up.  "You'd
tell me I couldn't do something, and I'd have to prove I could."

Justen grinned.

"All right.  I'll spend a little time at it.  Just a little, though."

"That's all I could ask."  Justen sipped from the glass of now-warm
dark beer.

"I still can't believe you can drink that stuff and be as orderly as
Turmin says you are."  Gunnar frowned.

"The druids have a saying about deeper order."

"Right.  What about this lady ... this Dayala?  You always avoid
talking about her."

"You're right.  I do."  Justen took a last sip from the mug and set it
aside.  "She's hard to describe."

"Well... what does she do, beside sitting around being a druid?"

"She makes things out of wood.  She grows them, like that box I gave
you."

"Grows them?  That's a little much, even for a druid."

"I thought so, too, but... it's really hard to explain unless you've
been there.  On the surface, everything seems so orderly, and it is.
But they make each druid balance order and chaos on a deeper level."

"Make?"

"They have a trial.  You either undertake the trial and survive, or you
leave."

"You ... did their trial?"

Justen nodded, then added, "I almost didn't make it.  Sarronnyn was
like a child's game in some ways.  Not that you couldn't die in either
place."

Gunnar looked at Justen for a long time, and Justen could feel the
order-probing.  Finally, Gunnar shook his head.  "This Dayala ... was
she the reason?  Why you did the trial, I mean?"

"Partly.  But I still felt I had to.  I can't tell you exactly why,
except that I felt something was wrong in Recluce.  Maybe that was
because of Firbek."

"There can be bad apples in the best orchard."

"But they shouldn't be put where they can spoil an entire barrel,
should they?"  Justen shifted his weight on the hard wood of the chair
seat,

"What are you getting at, dear brother?"

"Why was Firbek the one leading the marines?  I don't believe in
coincidences, as a rule."

"You think .. ."  Gunnar paused before continuing.  "Is that why you
want to know about Ryltar?  Because he's Firbek's cousin?"

"Call it curiosity."

"Curiosity, my foot."

"Even the White Wizards don't do things without reason."

"What are you saying?"  Gunnar scratched the back of his neck.

"Why are there so few White Wizards in Fairhaven?  In a way, why has
Fairhaven been even more successful since Cerryl the Great dispersed
the great White Wizards to the capitals and the troop stations around
Candar?"

"It might be because of the Iron Guard as well."

"I'm sure that's part of it, but the concentration of chaos is as
dangerous to them as it seems to us, perhaps more so."

"What are you getting at?"  asked Gunnar.  "You dance all over the
place.  This all started when I asked you about Dayala.  Or maybe when
... I don't know.  You bring up so many things that I lose track."
Gunnar sighed.  "Oh, well, what do you mean about concentrating
chaos?"

"I'm going to force them to concentrate all their chaos in one spot,
and make sure that they do."

"Just how will do you that?  Send them a message begging them to do
what you say they haven't done in centuries?"

Justen grinned as he stood up.  "You know, that might actually work."

Gunnar rose from the narrow bed.  "You leaving?"

"I've got to work in the hall in the morning."

"You never did tell me about your druid."

"You're right.  I didn't."  Justen grinned and headed for the door,
opening it and turning back to face Gunnar.  The older brother sighed.
"Next time?"  Justen lifted his shoulders in an exaggerated shrug and
grinned again.

CVII

After wiping the sweat off his forehead, Justen walked out through the
engineering hall and onto the side porch.  A brisk, cold breeze blew
out of the west, and his breath steamed in the late afternoon.  The
cold air helped him regain his Balance.  Sometimes now, he almost felt
suffocated in the hall in the presence of so much ordered metal, yet
paradoxically, he was even better than before at ordering iron.

He took a deep breath, and he cooled quickly in the cold air, but he
stood in the weak light and looked toward the sun, hanging low over the
Gulf of Candar.

Dayala .. . are you looking into the twilight, or brooding over your
boxes and trees ?  How long will it be ?

He caught a hint of warmth ... of something.  But was it merely his own
longing, his own desires reflected within himself?

After taking another deep breath and a swallow from the water pitcher,
he returned to the hall, not to his forge but to the raised platform at
the rear, where Altara sat at a drawing board.

He waited until she finally looked up from the schematics.  "Yes,
Justen?"

"I need to work late.  Do you mind?"

Altara raised her eyebrows.  "You're ahead of schedule.  You must have
learned something in Naclos.  Your work is better than when you left. I
was thinking of letting you take over more of Fitzl's work.  He's
considering moving to the wagon works in Alberth."

"I need to work on some things."

"Such as?"

"A model for a land engine."

"Turmin said it couldn't be done.  Too much chaos without the
stabilizing order of the ocean."

"I have an idea."

Altara mock-winced.  "The most deadly words for an engineer.  "I have
an idea."  So did Dorrin, and look at what a mess that caused."

"I'm no Dorrin.  I certainly couldn't figure out something like The
Basis of Order.  What harm would making a model do?"

"If I recall," began the chief engineer with a grin, "he started with a
model, too."

Justen spread his hands.

"I might, just might, consider it," she relented.

"Oh?"

"If you would consider occasionally sparring with those of us less
fortunate in our martial talents."

"That's blackmail."

"It certainly is."

"All right.  I stand blackmailed."

"We'll see you after work tomorrow.  Tonight," concluded Altara with a
broad smile, "you can start on your model.  After, of course, you
finish what you were working on for the recovery pumps."

"Of course, honored Chief Engineer."

"Will changing the impellers solve the problem?"

"I'll have to see.  I have a new design that might work."

Altara nodded, and Justen knew that the conversation was at an end.  He
nodded in return and walked back to his forge, looking automatically
for Clerve.  His chest tightened.

Clerve-and for the year or so you worked for me, I never knew until the
end that you could sing, or told you how much / appreciated it when I
heard your songs.  Was life always like that?  Never saying what should
be said until it was too late?

Justen pulled at his chin with his left hand and looked toward the
forge.  The problem with the recovery pumps for the new Hyel was simple
enough.  The rates of condensation and collection weren't uniform, and
the impellers tended to break when they switched from air or froth to
more solid condensate.

Probably the best way to straighten things out would be to overhaul the
condensation system, but the problem had been given to him as a pump
problem.  He sighed and looked at the rough templates for the new
impeller blades.

A varying-speed pump would be another answer, but that made the system
much more complex, which certainly wasn't a good idea, not with too
much of it already running at the order-chaos limits.

He frowned, his thoughts drifting toward the land engine, and whether a
full water jacket around the condenser would even out the pump's
flow.

Finally, he shook his head and stepped toward the forge.  One step at a
time, and the current step was to rough-forge the redesign impeller
blades to see how well they worked.  Then he'd have to grind and polish
them before annealing and ordering them and locking them into the black
iron ring that was the heart of the pump.

He slid the iron into the forge, glancing around the busy hall,
listening to the cacophony of hammers, grinders, mills, and cutters
that overrode the lower hum of voices.

CVIII

Justen wiped the dust off the battered staff-still in his cubby from
well over a year before, when he had left Recluce for the oh so heroic
expedition to help Sarronnyn.  He snorted as he hung up the leather
apron.

"I can't believe it.  You're actually going to spar with us-with the
obsolete weapons."  Warm had deepened his voice almost into the bass
range as he picked up a new, black iron-bound staff.

"I actually am."  Justen looked embarrassed.  "I'm sorry about your
staff.  I really am.  But it got buried when the Whites' cannons
targeted us, and I know you liked it.  I wanted to bring it back."

"Don't worry about it."  The balding older engineer touched Justen's
shoulder.  "I know you would have if you could.  Did it help?"

Justen nodded, thinking not of the battles, or of the order embodied in
the staff, but of the concern with which it had been given.  "Yes.
Sometimes ... a lot."

"That's good.  Maybe this afternoon you'll be so out of shape that you
won't have a chance."  Warm tapped his staff on the stone tile floor.
"Come on."

"I'm coming, and I probably won't have.  I haven't picked up a staff
since I lost yours on the battlefield."

Justen followed the older engineer out to the near-empty highway across
from the ancient armory.

Warm glanced up the long slope, but the highway was clear in the fall
twilight.  The close-fitted stone blocks remained solidly in place
after centuries of use.  "Altara's probably over there practicing
already."

Justen shook his head.  Why had Altara insisted on his resuming his old
habits of sparring?  Trying to see if action would return him to a
shadow of his former devil-may-care attitude?  Did she think that
repeated words and actions could re-create the past?  He twirled the
staff, then dropped it against the stone and caught it on the rebound.
But he had to jump to catch it, and he almost dropped it.  "You're out
of practice."

"So it seems."

Warm paused before the half-open main doors of the armory, looking back
to see if anyone had followed them, then marched into the black stone
building that showed no apparent age, for all of the centuries that had
passed since the original engineers had built it.

Justen eased out onto the open expanse of the practice floor.  He
placed his old staff against the wall and began to stretch, feeling
tightness and the continuing awareness of the imbalance between order
and chaos, an awareness that was becoming easier to handle, although it
had not faded.  He continued to stretch, glad that his muscles were not
nearly as tight as he had feared.  How much had Dayala's reordering of
his body changed him?  He swung his arms to loosen the tightness in his
shoulders.

"You don't look that out of shape."  Warin eyed Justen.

"Appearances can be deceiving."

In the far corner, several other engineers, with Altara at their
center, were also exercising.  In the near corner was less than a squad
of marines.

"Where are the rest of the marines?"

"Some of them moved to the new armory.  Don't know why, but it happened
after Gerol took over.  I suppose they didn't want to associate with
mere engineers," panted Warin from a knee squat.  "Those are Martan's
squad, He's Hyntal's young cousin."

"Hyntal-the captain of the Llyse?"

"Do you know any other Hyntals?"

"Hyntal the cooper; Hyntal the silversmith in Alberth."

"Don't be so patronizing, Justen.  We all know you can do the
impossible and know the unknowable.  Just give us credit for doing what
we do and know."

"I'm sorry."  Justen looked at Warin.  "I really didn't mean to sound
that way."

"It still bothers people, you know," added a new voice.  "You about
ready to show us how out of trim you are?"  Altara swung a long staff
as she crossed the floor.

"As ready as I'll ever be, I suppose."  Justen wiped his hands on his
exercise trousers and picked up his staff.  Then he squared his feet
and lifted his old and battered staff, more than a cubit shorter than
the black length held by Altara.

"You still using that little thing?"  Altara brought the black staff
whistling around.

Justen slid her staff off his and countered.

Altara stepped back, feet balanced, and brought her staff back in a
half-parry.  Justen eased forward, ducking the longer staff.  The
blocks, counters, thrusts, blocks, and parries alternated.

"You haven't..  . slowed .. . down."

"Don't... know .. . why," Justen puffed, barely managing to slip
Altara's thrust and avoid a thwack to his ribs.  "That would .. . have
.. . hurt."

Altara eased back and took several deep breaths.

Justen took a deep breath himself before repositioning his feet and
waiting for the next attack.  Idly, he tried to touch the flow of order
and chaos, both within himself and around him.

Altara started forward, and Justen let his body react to the
order-balance and watched as his staff flickered and twisted.

"Darkness.  What was that?"  Altara looked at her staff, which lay on
the exercise floor.

"Are you all right?"  Justen asked.

"Fine.  Didn't even touch my hands."  Altara picked up her staff and
looked at Justen.  "Again?"

Justen reached for the sense of order once more, but he had to dance
aside twice, awkwardly, before finally slipping into the patterns
required.  Within instants of his feeling the under rhythm of
order-chaos, Altara's staff was flipped from her hands and crashed into
the near wall.

"Some defense."  The chief engineer shook her head.  "Your attacks
aren't as sharp ."..  but I don't think anyone could touch you now."

"I don't know.  You almost got me twice."

"You seemed to be struggling, like you were trying to find something,
but when you found it, I couldn't get close."

"Guess it was something I picked up in Naclos."  Justen shrugged.

Altara looked intently at him.  "I don't think you just picked it up
somehow."

"Maybe not."  Justen managed a half-smile.

"I think I'll try Warin for a round, if you don't mind."  She inclined
her head to the balding engineer.

"My pleasure, Chief Engineer," said Warin.  "But be kind.  I'm not his
mightiness, Justen.  And he said that he was out of practice."

"Then let us hope he never gets into practice."  Altara bowed and
waited for Warin.

Justen watched, wondering, as their staffs interlinked and whirled.
Even more now than before, the staff and weapon play seemed like a
game.  A game where one could get hurt, but a game.  He pursed his
lips, then took a deep breath.

"How did you do that?"

Justen turned to face the marine who stood beside him.  "Do what?
Sorry, I don't think we've met.  I'm Justen."

"I know.  Everyone, I think, knows who you are, if not by sight, at
least by reputation."  The black-haired and square-faced marine
grinned.  "I'm Martan.  I was watching your work with the staff.  It
has to be technique.  You're not in specially good condition, and
Altara is, and you made her almost look silly."

Justen looked at the packed clay underfoot.

"I was curious, that's all," added the marine.

"I don't know .. . exactly.  It's a combination of my old training and
of order-sensing, of matching actions to the flow of order and
chaos."

"Chaos?"

Justen gave an embarrassed shrug.  "Whether or not anyone wants to
admit it, there's chaos everywhere.  Even our bodies have some chaos
inside.  So there are always flows."

"Hmmm.  I don't know how practical that is for someone who's not a
mage."  Martan grinned again.

Justen looked sheepish.  "Probably not very, except that there's not
much difference between really good training and what I did."

"Do you ever think you'll go back and fight the Whites?"

Justen pursed his lips, not wanting to lie or to admit what he had in
mind.

"If you need some marines, scr, let me know."  Martan laughed.  "But I
can keep a secret... except from Hyntal.  He can find out anything." He
looked toward Warin and Altara, who had stepped away from each other
for a break.  "It was good to meet you."  He inclined his head and
trotted back toward his squad.

Justen frowned for a moment.  Was it that obvious that he was thinking
about returning to Candar?

CIX

"You know, Jenna.  I've done a little checking on that young
engineer."

"I'm sure you have, Ryltar.  Darkness forbid that anyone be termed more
orderly than you."

"Jenna, I believe you are being somewhat unduly hard on a fellow
counselor," interposed Claris.  "What did you find out, Ryltar?"

"He brought back a cargo of lorken from Diehl on that Bristan ship.
Half of the sale price went to him.  There was no credit to be paid
back."

"You're the trader, Ryltar.  Please explain the subtleties to us."
Jenna brushed a strand of red hair off her forehead.

"This young engineer is lost in Candar.  He supposedly travels the
Stone Hills on foot, walks through Naclos untouched, and loses
everything but the clothes on his back- even his horse and his blade.
Yet he arrives in Nylan with some well-made clothes and half-owner of
an unmortgaged and valuable cargo that nets him more than a hundred
golds."  Ryltar spread his hands.  "Does not this seem rather odd, to
say the least?"

"You can't be accusing him of chaos-corruption, I hope," said the
oldest counselor, "unless you're willing to accuse Turmin of lying, or
of incompetence."

Ryltar shook his head.  "I have another question.  What scheming are
the Naclans doing?  Is this a plot to get us to protect them after
Suthya falls?"

"Oh, you admit that Suthya will fall?"

"Why not?  The Whites will attack either before the snows or first
thing in the spring after the thaw.  It's clear that we cannot stop
them, and Southwind cannot spare the resources now."

"So, you feel that the druids have somehow influenced this young
engineer?"

"Do you have a better explanation?"

"No, But that does not mean there isn't one."

"I intend to keep watching our young friend."

"By all means, Ryltar.  By all means."

CX

Justen picked up the miniature gear train, then looked at the pieces of
the model lying on the workbench.  He set the gear train down.

He just couldn't make all the components, not without taking years; in
that, the druids and Dayala had been right.  And he supposed he could
have others make the wheels, perhaps even the chassis he needed.  But
why did he need the land engine?  Because, like Dorrin, he wanted to
prove it could be achieved?  That was a lousy reason in these days.

Besides, that didn't feel right.  It had more to do with bringing a lot
of order to Fairhaven.  But even an ordered land engine wouldn't be
enough, would it?

Oh, Dayala ... I've gotten myself into a mess.  What a mess.

There was no answer, not that he expected one.  But at times, he
thought he could feel a distant glimmer of warmth.

So what else did he need besides the land engine?

He shook his head.  Engineering on the basis of intuition was
light-fired hell.  Anyway, after he finished the model of the power
train, he needed to break down the design to see what he absolutely had
to build, what he could do by modifying salvage, and what he could
buy.

With a deep breath, he looked at the forge and eased a slip of iron
into the coals.

A tall figure slipped inside the hall and walked toward the single
forge in use.

"Justen?"

Justen looked up.  "Oh, Gunnar.  How did you know I was here?"

"Where else would you be?  You're not in your room, and you're not in
Wandernaught.  Your druid is an ocean away, and you're obsessed with
something.  This was a good bet."  The Air Wizard glanced at the model.
"This your land engine?"

"That's it.  Such as it is."

"You don't sound terribly happy about it.  Was Turmin right?"

Justen frowned momentarily.  "In a way, but it doesn't matter."  He
used the tool tongs to ease the slip of iron from the forge and set it
on the bricks.

Gunnar pulled up a stained and battered stool and sat down.  "Why
not?"

"Well, I don't think I could build a land engine that would run by
itself the way one of the Mighty Ten does, but that wasn't what I had
in mind anyway.  I just wanted one to run from somewhere in eastern
Candar to Fairhaven-as sort of a threat to persuade the White Wizards
to get together."

"If you can do it, what's the problem?"

"How would that induce the Whites to congregate?"

"If you managed to get through all the forces they'd send to stop you
.. . you'll have to arm it, you know?"

"I hadn't thought about that, but you're right.  That will mean it has
to be bigger and heavier."

"With more order, I'd guess, just to hold it together," added Gunnar.

"Naturally."  Justen pulled at his chin.

"Couldn't you make something that just concentrated or radiated order?
Black iron does that in a way, but you have to be close to feel it.
What about whatever it was you did with the powder?  Couldn't you do
something like that?"

"I couldn't keep exploding powder the whole way to Fairhaven."

"I'm sure you'll figure something out."

"Since you're here .. ."  Justen pursed his lips.  "Have you found out
anything about the good Counselor Ryltar?"

"Well .. ."

"I'd appreciate it if you would.  I'm getting word that he's expressed
more than a passing interest in me."

"All right.  I still don't know what you want."

"You'll know when you see it.  I trust your judgment, brother dear."

"I appreciate your trust ... I think."  Gunnar lifted his shoulders. "I
really came by for another reason.  I wondered if you wanted to go home
at the end of the next eight-day."

Justen frowned momentarily, then smiled.  "Why not?  Sure."

"Good thought, Brother.  You can't brood too much."  Gunnar stood.
"Talk to you later."

Justen slipped the iron back into the forge.  He still had to work out
the power-train design.

CXI

The wispy-haired trader walked up the gangway and onto the dark-hulled
schooner berthed at the end of the pier.  "Hullooo ..."

A light breeze from nowhere wafted around him as a figure, barely
revealed in the lamps hung by the head of the gangway, stepped forward.
The two lamps flickered, even though the flames were shielded by the
smoked-glass mantles.

"Master Ryltar.  We'd expected ye earlier."

"I was delayed.  You'd indicated some particular .. . gems."

"Fire-eyes.  From Hamor."

"Not exactly through the emperor's trading house, I gather."

The two men walked forward on the deck, and the tight breeze shifted
past them in the cool fall air.

"Chill night.  Even a little wind makes it colder," offered the
smuggler.  "Just a score.  Half seconds, half firsts."

"I'd have to see them."

"There's a glim here."  The smuggler's striker scratched, and he
adjusted the wick of the small lantern on the hatch cover.  Then he
removed a cloth-covered case from his shirt and set it beside the
lantern, easing back the cover.

"Fair quality, if they hold up in daylight," Ryltar observed.

"Better than fair."

"A trace."

"More than a trace."

"I'll grant a shade better than fair."  Ryltar paused, then added,
"Fifty golds for the lot."

"Ha.  No backwoods lout.  You'll not see these again for less than a
hundred."

"Seventy's the best I can do.  It will take years to sell these without
destroying the market."

"Eighty, then."

"Seventy-five, if they look as good in the morning light."

"We sail by mid-morning."

"I'll be back with the coin before then."

The case disappeared, and the lantern flickered.  The two men walked
silently back midships to the gangway.

"Good night, Master Ryltar."

"Goodnight."

Behind the corner of the harbormaster's building, Gunnar wiped his
steaming forehead, glad for the cool air.  That Ryltar was involved
with Hamorian smugglers wasn't exactly wonderful news ... but he
doubted that simple smuggling was all that Justen had in mind.  And if
Ryltar routinely dealt with smugglers, might he deal as well with
others even less ... orderly?

The weather mage wiped his forehead again, then turned and walked
slowly up the hill toward his room.

CXII

With short, heavy tongs, Justen eased the old and cracked pump shaft
into the de-ordering forge at the rear of the engineering hall.  This
was an older forge, tucked behind the rolling mill and the gear
cutters, both unused for the time.  He looked toward the front, but he
could see only a corner of the hall past the unused mill.  In the
limited space within view, he could see Quentel and Berol worked on the
lathe.

Justen used the foot treadle to pump more air through the bellows and
into the forge.  He hated de-ordering black iron, because it was a
single-handed job, and because it meant heating the iron to the
white-hot burning point, which was even hotter than necessary for
welding.  When iron got that hot, even black iron, anything could go
wrong.  Yet the Brotherhood couldn't afford to tie up too much order in
scrap metal, nor to waste the iron.

Justen frowned.  Why couldn't he adapt the ordering process that Dayala
had shown him and turn it into a de-ordering process?  Since the black
iron was artificially ordered, and the idea wasn't to create chaos,
something like that ought to work.

He took a deep breath and concentrated on the iron, trying to nudge the
order bonds back out of place.  The iron in the de-ordering forge
continued to heat, but nothing happened to the long and cracked pump
shaft as the one end started to turn cherry red.

Justen tried again, and felt a dull clunk in his mind.  A cracking
sound followed the mental clunk, and Justen blinked.  His tongs held
only about a third of the former pump shaft.  Two other pieces of dull
iron lay on the bed of cold gray ashes that had been a forge fire.  All
three pieces of de-ordered iron were cold-that he could tell.

He shook his head, letting his order senses scan the iron and the
forge.  The fragments were no longer black iron, and the forge fire was
stone cold, as if it had burned out days earlier.

Justen eased the iron left in the tongs onto the fire brick shelf, set
the tongs aside, and placed his hand near the iron rod that had been
part of a pump shaft.  No heat.  Were his thoughts and senses deceiving
him?  He looked around and finally peeled a sliver of wood from the
bench, then set the tip of the sliver against the iron.  Nothing.  He
repeated the process with the forge fire ashes, and with the other
fragments.  All were cold.

He pulled at his chin.  What had happened?

"Now what have you done?"  Altara stood at his -shoulder.  "This forge
was raging hot when I passed here a bit ago."

"I don't know exactly.  I was just trying to de-order the black iron
without using so much heat."

"Well..."  Altara surveyed the forge, looking at the cold ashes.  Then
she stepped forward and passed her hand through what should have been a
wall of heat.  "You managed the de-ordering far quicker than I've ever
seen it done, but how did you manage to chill an entire forge in
moments?"

"It was an idea, but it didn't quite work out the way I thought it
would."  Justen pursed his lips.

"Why do I suspect this sort of thing with you?"  Altara gave a gentle
half-laugh.  "Even when you come up with the most deadly weapons, like
those order-tipped arrows, something else, like those White cannons,
shows up to counter them."

"It's the Balance, I think,"

"Dorrin talked about it, but I don't know that everyone took him that
seriously."

"They should have," Justen blurted.

"Why do I think you know more than you're saying?"

The junior engineer looked at the forge again, his forehead knitting,
before returning his eyes to Altara.

"I've been thinking about our sparring match die other day."

"Yes?"  Justen said warily, his eyes flicking back to the cold ashes of
the forge.

"So has someone else."

"Warm?"

"Hardly," laughed the dark-haired woman.  "Warin knows you couldn't do
anything evil.  Unfortunately, doing good can often be more disruptive
than doing evil.  Look at our great predecessor, Dorrin.  Anyway, it
appears that one of the engineers mentioned your skill to someone, and
that someone mentioned it to another someone, and, lo and behold, one
Yersol, junior factor in the noted establishment of Ryltar and Weldon
and cousin of old Weldon himself, stopped me the other day to inquire
about the 'change' in your sparring.  Then Hyntal asked me the same
thing.  Apparently, his cousin Martan had watched also, except young
Martan wants to go on your next 'adventure," and Hyntal wanted to put
in a good word for the young fellow.  Adventures?  You're barely back,
and the word is out that you're going on adventures?"

"I doubt that Martan told anyone but Hyntal."  Justen shook his head as
he considered the other aspects.  "Ryltar put Yersol up to it."

"Of course.  You are well on the way to proving that you are totally
and utterly order-mad-whatever that meaningless term means.  I really
think that you need some time off to rest from your ordeal."

"Time off?  Are you telling me I'm crazy?"  Justen tried to keep his
voice level as he studied the older engineer.

"No.  You're probably saner than any of us.  But cold sanity isn't
recommended in the land of the mad."  Altara's face was somber.  "You
could do almost anything on your mother's forge that you could do here,
couldn't you?"

"Not some of the delicate work, and there's no way I could do gears."

"I'm sure that there must be some old gears that the Brotherhood has no
use for, or some scrap you could pick up for a few silvers."

Justen nodded, finally understanding.  "I suppose so ... and the rest
would do me good.  Ryltar also wouldn't have to cast aspersions on all
the engineers, would he?"

Altara nodded.

"You're worried?  Really worried?"

"Wouldn't you be?  He's one of three Counselors, and mostly the Council
does what he wants, at least so far as the engineers and Candar go.
He's already suggested that you're a druid spy."

"So ... if you've been told, and do nothing ...?"

"Exactly."

"Darkness," muttered Justen.  "Can't you do something?"

"Do you have any idea?  We're not the White Wizards of Candar.  Or even
if we did have that kind of power, how would one assassinate a
counselor without the tracks being traced right back to those with the
most reason?"

"So I'm on my own?"

"Justen .. . you've been on your own since before we went to Sarronnyn.
The rest of us just didn't know it."

The junior engineer took a deep breath.

"I also think you'll have more time and freedom to do what you need to
do.  The word is out that you have enough coins so that you don't need
much.  But the Brotherhood will pay half your stipend because you are
on a rest cure.  Ryltar will appreciate that touch, and it's the best I
can do.  Except I know we have a great deal of 'scrap'-a great deal,
and some of it just can't be easily de-ordered."  Altara smiled
broadly.

Justen looked at the cold ashes of the forge.  "I don't think there's
an easy way to de-order anything."

The chief engineer shrugged.  "If there is, let us know.  We'll be
pleased to lend you a wagon to carry some of that scrap to Wandernaught
for your experiments.  After all, if we could find a cheaper way .. .
Ryltar would have to be pleased."

"Yes, he would."  Justen tried not to sigh.  Despite Altara's offers of
under-the-table help, he had the feeling that what had seemed merely
difficult in Naclos was getting closer to being almost impossible.

"I'll make sure the word gets to the Council about your rest cure."

"Thanks."

CXIII

Justen looked around the room before opening the wardrobe and pulling
out his pack and setting it on the end of the bed, right above the
single wooden crate that would hold his personal items.

After opening his pack, he put the pair of new boots in first.  He
really hadn't had a chance to break them in, and his old spare boots
had long since been lost in Sarronnyn.  Then he folded the brown shirt
and the trousers he had not worn since returning to Nylan and slipped
them inside.

Thrap!

"Come on in, Gunnar."

"I just heard.  I came as soon as I could," gasped Gunnar.  His
forehead was damp with sweat.

"It's not that bad-not that you had to run all the way."  Justen forced
a laugh.

"You're being forced out of the Brotherhood!  That's not bad?"

"It's not the Brotherhood.  I'm taking a rest cure.  I would have had
to leave sooner or later."  Justen picked up the razor he had forged in
Naclos and wrapped it in an old work shirt before sliding it into the
side of his pack.  "This way, I get a little more time.  Sit down."  He
gestured toward die chair.  "There's even some red berry in the
pitcher."

"But why?  And why now?"

"Counselor Ryltar is trying to use me either to discredit Altara and
the Brotherhood or to get them to discredit themselves by standing
behind me."  Justen folded the last pair of under drawers and stuffed
them into the top of his pack.  "Is this the order-madness idea?"

"That's what Altara led me to believe.  She's worried about Ryltar. Did
you find out anything?"

"You were right, Justen.  He's not chaos-corrupted-not yet.  But he is
corrupt.  He's taking smuggled gems from Hamor, and probably
counterfeiting the seal of the Imperial inspectors."

"You saw this?"

"Last night on the Versalla.  She left port a bit ago.  Ryltar offered
some eighty golds for what looked to be a lot more in
gems-fire-eyes."

"That doesn't surprise me.  What does surprise me is that the Council
puts up with it."  Justen leaned over and picked up the Capture board,
setting it on the bed beside the filled pack.  "Don't want to put that
on the bottom .. ."  he muttered as he opened the small drawer in the
desk, almost dropping it as the long-ago violence with which it had
been formed burned his fingers.  He grasped the wood more firmly for an
instant and lifted out the leather case that contained his drafting
kit.

"Coin," offered Gunnar.  "What sustains the Council, and the
Brotherhood, are the trade levies and contributions of the traders.
Some of the traders, like Ryltar's family, make significant
contributions to the Council coffers.  Those contributions keep the
levies lower, and in turn, that keeps the smaller merchants happy with
the Council."

"I see.  So that's why Ryltar's on the Council, and why the Council is
reluctant to cross him?"  Justen picked up the box Dayala had given
him, felt the warm tingling in his fingers, and momentarily looked out
into the chill gray beyond the window.

"It's never that simple."

"Probably not."  Justen reordered his pack, looking for something soft
in which to wrap the box, though it was probably tougher than it
looked-like Dayala herself.

"What are you going to do?"

"Go quietly order-mad at home.  Altara says that no one will be very
interested ... not in the beginning anyway."

"Buying time.  For what?"  Gunnar looked directly at Jus-ten.  "There's
a lot you still haven't explained.  Just what were you doing that
caused Altara, out of the blue, to give you a rest cure?  And what do
you intend to do in Wander-naught?  I can't believe mat you'll be
content to just take up smithing with Mother or cultivating apple
orchards with Father."

"I think some original smithing will do me good."

Gunnar theatrically put both hands on his forehead, then thrust his
arms toward the plastered ceiling and rolled his eyes.  "Oh, darkness
save us.  Is it thy will that the Temple of Order endure such profanity
in the name of sanctity, or is it such sanctity in the name of
profanity, or-"

"Enough!"  Justen shook his head, trying not to laugh.

The Air Wizard bounded onto the chair and thrust his right arm toward
the window.  "Light!  Let there be light!  From disordered light, let
there come ordered darkness that will shine into the souls of women
and-the Angels of- what is it?-ah, yes, the Angels of Naclos
forbid-even into the dark and dreary souls of benighted men ..."

Justen shook with silent laughter at Gunnar's antics.  "... but let us
also not forget the beneficent Council of Recluce.  Include them, too,
in the warm and ordered darkness, lest they see the world as it is and
not as they wish it to be, unless, of course, there is a profit in
seeing true.  For which, in that case, let them find the means to
charge those in light for the privilege of seeing what they have
already seen..."

Gunnar dropped off the chair, coughed, and downed the remainder of the
red berry-right from the pitcher.  "I can't do it as well as you used
to ... but it's all horse shit.  The druids want something.  The
ancient Angels want something.  The Whites want something.  The Council
wants something.  And every last one of them thinks they have a lantern
that shines truth only for them.  And, yes, none of them want to listen
to the lowly engineer, Justen, who just might have discovered
something." Gunnar coughed again.  "Of course, the even lowlier and
more insignificant wizard, Gunnar, has yet to discover what that
something the less-insignificant Justen has discovered, even though he
uses his poor talents to skulk around ships and spy on esteemed members
of the Council.  Even though the insignificant Gunnar has yet to
receive the confidence of the showered-with-order-and-mystic-knowledge
Justen ..."

"All right..."  Justen sighed.  "Sit down."

"I hear and obey, most insignificant engineer, recalling that I am even
less significant than thee."  Gunnar dropped into the chair.

"You want a straight and honest answer.  Fine.  Any more order, such as
represented by adding bigger and more highly ordered warships to the
Mighty Ten, can be balanced only by greater chaos.  Any more order,
such as represented by the development of an ordered Iron Guard, can
result only in greater chaos.  More order on our earth, despite all the
theories of all the mages, means more chaos, and more chaos means
greater and greater power to Fairhaven.  The greater Recluce's success,
the greater Fairhaven's, and the greater the misery in Candar."
Justen's eyes were like black ice as he fixed them on Gunnar.

"Shit.  I had a feeling .. ."  Gunnar shook his head.  "I did have to
ask, didn't I?  And you intend to do something about it, I presume?"

Justen nodded, "Except that de-ordering something leaves a bigger mess
than not having ordered it in the first place.  That's why Altara got
upset.  I de-ordered some black iron without heating it first.  It
de-ordered and sucked all the heat out of the entire forge."

"So you're going to turn all of Recluce into cold ashes or ice to save
Candar?"  Gunnar licked his lips.

"Hardly.  I'm not that altruistic.  I'm working on something to take to
Fairhaven-a land engine."

"And you expect them to let you do this?"

"No.  I'll have to deceive people here on Recluce and use force to get
to Fairhaven once I land in Candar."

"My brother, the lying, altruistic crusader who finally tells the
truth, if not the details."  Gunnar grinned.  "This makes more sense.
Count me in."

This time, Justen shook his head.  "What?"

"Count me in."  Gunnar's face hardened.  "I wasn't exactly indifferent
to Krytella, you know.  Or maybe you didn't.  And I'd known Ninca and
Castin for a long time.  And you, you love this druid, darkness knows
why, but it shows, and you won't even think about returning to her, not
until you do what you've set out to do."

Justen swallowed, then reached forward, bent down, and hugged Gunnar.
After a moment, he straightened.  "Want to help take a load of scrap to
Wandernaught?"

"Sure.  I'll take a good scrap anytime."

"Even if you can't lift an edged weapon?"

Gunnar grinned, and Justen grinned back.

CXIV

Cirlin stepped out from the smithy while Justen and Gunnar were still
easing the blocks under the wagon wheels.  The mist that was not quite
a drizzle flowed around both men and off the oiled canvas that covered
the wagon bed.

"Justen, what on earth have you got there?"  asked Cirlin.

"Iron ... old parts, gear assemblies, engineering stuff."  Justen
straightened and wiped the dampness off his forehead, a dampness mostly
from sweat.  "We'll need to unload this somewhere, maybe in the
shed."

"You'll need to unload the shed before you do.  Your father has it
filled with more lengths and sizes of wood than three generations would
need."

"Well, we could use the wood to build another shed ..."

"With no two pieces the same size?  Leastwise, you'd be giving him a
reason to think about what to do with the wood."

"What about the horses?"  asked Gunnar.

"Where's Elisabet?"  asked Justen nearly simultaneously.

"There's room for both in the end stall," answered the smith.  "Your
sister is at Magistra Mien's for her lessons.  You two do what you have
to here, and I'll finish Hruson's harness.  Then we'll have hot cider
or ale or whatever."

"We'll unload later, after we talk to Father about where to put it
all."

"Fine."  Cirlin turned back toward the smithy.  "Let me finish, and you
can tell me the rest then."

Justen and Gunnar began loosening the harnesses, each working on one
horse.  After stabling the team, they walked through the increasingly
heavy and cold rain toward the house.

"Justen .. . this is cold, and it feels like it could turn to snow."

"You don't know?"

"It's right on the edge, and I haven't paid much attention.  With all
your talk about creating chaos every time we put more order into the
world, I'm not exactly encouraged to influence the weather."

"A little bit won't matter.  I know... it's hypocritical, but I'm
already into deception.  So what's a little hypocrisy?"

"You're also into sarcasm and bitterness, neither of which is
particularly good."

"You're right on that.  We also don't have anyplace to put all this
iron."  Justen gestured at the wagon as they passed it and turned onto
the path to the house.

"Fine."  Gunnar's face went blank, and he stood in the cold rain, the
droplets no longer going around him but falling upon him for a moment,
until Justen guided him away, waiting for Gunnar's senses to return.

After some time, Gunnar staggered and took a deep breath.  "It'll still
snow at Land's End, but from mid-Recluce south, it will be rain."

"Thank you."

Horas had four mugs of hot cider and a platter of shortbread squares on
the dining-area table by the time they had taken off their waterproofs
and damp boots.

"Your mother should be in shortly."

"Good," mumbled Justen, sipping the hot liquid.

Gunnar eased into a chair, then reached for his mug as Justen set down
his mug and seated himself.

"I take it that Gunnar was 'adjusting' the weather?"

"Moving the snow a little north.  Not much, only a little," admitted
the Weather Wizard.

"That's just to give us some time.  We need somewhere to put my
supplies," added Justen.

"Must be a lot of iron in that wagon," observed Horas, lifting his mug
and letting the steam curl around his face.  "It should fit in the
shed, I'd think.  Need to be doing something with that wood, anyway.
Your mother's been saying I've collected it for too long."

"I might need some of it," Justen said.  "Wood's lighter than iron, and
stronger, stone for stone."

"You're welcome to it."

The outside door closed, and Cirlin stepped into the kitchen.  "I
thought it was going to snow, but it's raining.  That your doing,
Gunnar?"

"Yes."

"Well, I can't say as I'm ready for snow, as long as the rain doesn't
freeze."  The smith eased into a chair and took the fourth mug.

"It won't.  It would melt before long, anyway.  It's too early in the
winter for freezing."  Gunnar reached for one of the shortbread
squares.

"We didn't expect to see either of you for a time yet."  Horas set his
mug on the table.

Gunnar looked toward Justen.

"I need everyone's help, I think," Justen answered.

"That's a rare admission, Justen."  Cirlin leaned back in the chair.
"What sort of help?"

"I need to build a land engine."

"A land engine?"

"A small ship that travels on wheels.  Just on the roads, though."

The smith pursed her lips.  "That would seem like a large order for a
small smithy, even with an engineer such as you."

"It's not so bad as that.  Altara will let me use some old parts and
some spare plating, and I've figured out how to convert a steam
pump."

"How will you get them here ... and what is the purpose of all this?"

"The first wagonload is what I brought."  Justen shrugged.  "And the
purpose is to build something that will stop the White Wizards."

Horas rubbed his forehead.  "I know you two are talented young men,
even extraordinarily talented, but you're going to try to build
something in our little smithy that will defeat the White Wizards, when
something like eight of you could not do this with the support of the
Tyrant of Sarronnyn?"

"It does sound stupid."  Justen laughed once, almost harshly.  "But I
think I can do it"

"Why here?"

Justen looked at the polished stone tiles of the floor.  "The Council
would oppose it."

"Then they'll come here and stop you."

"Hardly .. . they think I'm mad, that my stay in Naclos has somehow
disordered me.  That's why I'm here.  They're paying me a half-stipend
in order for me to take a rest cure at home."

"Mad?"  Cirlin smiled wryly.  "Exasperating, romantic, imaginative ...
still a bit of a scamp.  But not mad."

"Neither the engineers nor the Council know what to do.  Even Turmin
says there's not a trace of chaos or disorder around me.  In fact, he
says I'm the most ordered man he's ever studied.  They've coined a new
term for it-I'm 'order-mad."  I'm playing on that.  I've started to
work on ideas for a new type of order-machine to bring true order to
Candar, and I really want most of the Council to dismiss what I'm
doing.  I can't lie about it... so the next best thing is for them to
ignore me."

"I suppose I can see that."  Cirlin frowned.  "But won't some people be
suspicious?"

"Probably.  I think Counselor Ryltar already is.  But that's because
he's not quite right... somehow.  Gunnar's looking into him."

"If it's on the winds, Gunnar will find it."

"That's what I thought."

"Justen's right, I think," added Gunnar.  "Ryltar's involved with
smugglers, and a few other things that I haven't traced yet."

"And if he's corrupt?"  asked Horas.  "What does that change?"

Justen frowned.

"If he has been on the Council for these several years, do you not
think that they feel the same things you do?  And since he is still
there ..."  Horas raised his eyebrows.

"They aren't likely to do much even if there is proof of corruption?"
asked Justen.

"I'm just a holder and a tree farmer."  Horas shrugged.  "But since
when have even the Councils of Recluce acted on charges of corruption
when it is not in their interest to do so?  Has not Ryltar advocated
staying out of war in Candar?  Who would call him corrupt for that?"

"I see your point," conceded Justen, "If he's smart enough to be on the
Council, even if Gunnar discovers that he's corrupt, how could we prove
it, and who would listen to a young engineer who's order-mad and his
brother, the Air Wizard?"

"You want me to stop looking?"

"No.  I still need to know the truth."

"I think Justen's right, Gunnar," added Cirlin.  "You have to know what
is true and what is not, even if no one else does."

"Great."  Gunnar looked into his mug,

"How about dinner?"  suggested Horas.  "Elisabet should be home before
much longer."

CXV

So ... you're not going back to Fairhaven for the winter?  You're
actually staying here in Rulyarth.  How incredibly dutiful."  Eldiren
blew on his hands.  "You can freeze, together with Jehan and me."

"Oh, stop it.  You know it's not dutiful in the slightest.  If I'm in
Fairhaven, that gives Histen the chance to accuse me of neglecting my
duties.  Also, like it or not, troop morale is not favorably affected
by commanders who enjoy warm weather and luxury while the fighters
don't." Beltar looked out through the mansion's glazed windows at the
fast-falling thick flakes of snow.

"You're actually trying to become a well-loved commander?"  asked
Eldiren.

At the other side of the table, Jehan's eyes darted from Eldiren to
Beltar.

"What are my options?  Be relieved or be less respected?  No, thank
you.  Besides, unlike previous commanders, I intend to be ready to move
with the thaw.  Perhaps before, and that takes work now."

"A great deal," offered Jehan slowly.  "It might be prudent, though."

"How?"  asked Eldiren.

"We need more supplies, and they need fewer supplies.  We do have some
winter troops."  Beltar nodded to Jehan, as if thanking him.

"You're going to harass them in winter.  That's not exactly
charitable," suggested Eldiren, a touch of irony in his voice.

"I never said I was charitable.  I intend to bring Suthya down quickly
and with as few casualties to us as possible."  Beltar gestured at the
snow outside.  "We'll have the winter troops train the others in
groups-just enough to keep them from fighting and drinking too much,
and I'll let it be known that any section of levies or lancers that has
too many fights will be rotated into extra training."

"What kind of training?"

"Taking Suthyan border towns and farms with stores- that sort of
thing."

Eldiren shivered.  "I suppose we'll accompany these .. .
expeditions?"

"Of course."

"Cheer up, Eldiren," offered Jehan.  "You could have to stay here and
listen to complaining troops, and have to execute this trooper or that
for torturing some local wench."

"Is that still happening?"  snapped Beltar.

"Not since you turned the last lancer into a candle in the square,"
said Jehan.  "But some of them will be back at it once you leave."

"No, they won't.  I'll fry every trooper in any squad that lets it
happen," declared Beltar.

"You can't say that."  Jehan sighed.  "Then the locals will trump up
something, and you'll either have to fry an innocent squad or back down
and look stupid.  Either way, you'll lose."

Beltar looked from one to the other.  "Then what do you suggest?"

"Don't do anything," said Jehan.  "Anything that happens will be hushed
up because they know you'll fry them if you find out.  A local woman or
two will disappear.  That's the best you can hope for."

Beltar took a deep breath.

"Power just doesn't solve every problem," added Eldiren.

"You can make up the training-rotation schedule, Eldiren."  Beltar gave
the thin-faced wizard a crooked smile.

Eldiren shrugged.  As Beltar stood and turned to depart, Jehan shook
his head.

CXVI

Justen studied the plans laid out on the bench, each corner of the
drawings weighted down by stones.  He glanced from the parts spread on
the clean-swept smithy floor to the plans and back again.

"How do you intend to get the power to the wheels?"  Cirlin looked at
the axle parts, then at the model on the crude workbench.

"Warm helped me with that."  Justen riffled through the stack of papers
before he came to the sheet he wanted.  "See this?"

Cirlin looked over her son's shoulder.  "It looks like a box in the
middle of the axle."

"It is, sort of.  That's where the drive shaft, just like the propeller
shaft, joints the axle.  But it lets each wheel be driven at a
different rate when the land engine turns."

The smith glanced toward the iron sections and odd-shaped parts stacked
in the racks that Justen had built in the far corner of the smithy.
"Will all of that go into this machine?"

"Most of the stuff here, The other parts I'm supposed to use for
material or de-order and ship back to Altara."

"How are you going to pay for all of this?"

"You want pay?  That's fair.  How much?"  Justen grinned at his
mother.

"That's not what I meant, and you know it."

"I know.  But I should pay.  If you help me, you can't do other
things."

"You could help me, too, you know.  You're a good smith in your own
right."

"I will.  But I can pay.  The druids gave me a half-interest in a cargo
of lorken and sent me off with some 'trinkets."  That's what they
called them."

"Trinkets?"

"Gems-all kinds.  Dayala said that I'd need them, one way or another.
So far, I haven't had to cash in any."

"Why are the druids so willing to support you?  That seems a little
odd.  Charity from strangers needs looking at."

"It's in their interests.  They think the buildup of order in Recluce
and the buildup of chaos in Fairhaven should be stopped."

"Why not just stop chaos?"

"That was where I started.  But they showed me more about how order and
chaos are related, and I don't think you can stop chaos without
reducing order."

"That's a terrible thought, son."

"I suppose so, but it makes sense."

"Why do you believe them?"

Justen did not answer momentarily as he used calipers to measure the
diameter of one of the possible axle shafts.  "The Whites' Iron Guard.
Why else would a bunch of White Wizards build up order within their own
domains unless it benefited them?"

"That doesn't mean-"

"I know.  The Iron Guard can stand up to things that the White lancers
can't.  Why, I can't tell you.  On the surface, it's probably not
logical, but it feels right."

Cirlin laughed.  "I'll accept that sooner than logic, Jus-ten."

Justen set the calipers on the bench.  "This one is flawed on the
inside.  I'll need to check some others in the shed."

"Don't track in loo much mud."

Justen shook his head and smiled as he started through the cold, light
rain once again-rain that promised to become snow by night.

CXVII

The burly sailor in the officer's jacket walked up the stone-paved
wharf of Nylan through light flakes of snow that would not stick to the
stones or slate roofs.  A brush of wind tossed a few flakes into his
face, and he wiped away the dampness with a gray rag that might once
have been white.  At the end of the wharf, he turned to the right,
toward the trading houses set on the lower part of the hillside.

The block-lettered sign above the doorway of the third building
proclaimed "Ryltar and Weldon."  Beneath the name in smaller letters,
in both Temple and Hamorian, were the words, "Factors for the Eastern
Ocean."

He moved under the overhang and opened the door, stepping inside and
closing it behind him.

"Might I help you?"  A young clerk dressed in brown stood up.

"Captain Pesseiti for Master Ryltar."

"A moment, scr."

Pesseiti shifted his weight from one foot to the other.  His eyes
traveled from the plain table where the clerk had been sitting through
the half-open doorway and into the corner office, then back to the
bookcase, filled with what appeared to be ledgers.

"Please go in, scr."

The ship's master nodded and walked past the clerk into the office.

Ryltar stood to greet him.  "What can I do for you, Captain?"

"The Tylera is berthed at the end of the big pier."  Pesseiti extended
a rolled parchment toward the factor.  "I've got the transport for the
Ruziosis's woolens-the black and the tan."

Ryltar unrolled the parchment and read through the neatly lettered
contract.  His fingers brushed over the seal at the end.  "Seems in
line.  How do you intend to pay?"

The Tylera's captain extended a flat but thick envelope.

"Looks like a warrant on the Imperial Treasury of Hamor."

"Aye, and it is.  How else.  would old Kylen do it?"

"How indeed," murmured Ryltar as he slipped the folded document from
the envelope and scanned it.  "This time, he even remembered to include
the conversion fee."

"Your woolens are the best."

"At least among the best."

"How soon can we ship?"

"The woolens are baled, but they'll need to be properly packed.
Mid-afternoon for the first load.  Day's end for the rest."

"Could be better, but could be a lot worse."  Pesseiti nodded, then
reached toward his belt.  He laid a heavy leather bag on the table.
"This is the bonus payment for the last consignment.  "

Ryltar's eyebrows lifted as a draft ruffled the papers on his desk.
"Oh... ?"

"For those special cargoes out of Sarronnyn ... if you know what I
mean.  The customer was extraordinarily pleased."  Pesseiti
straightened and tipped his cap.  "Best I be going, Master Ryltar.
We'll be ready to load by mid-afternoon, rain or no rain."

"We'll have the woolens there, under oilcloth if necessary."

"Good."  Pesseiti nodded and left.

Ryltar picked up the bag slowly, hefting it gingerly and shaking his
head.  He wiped his forehead damp, despite the faint breeze and the
coolness of the room.

In the tavern two doors down, Gunnar wiped his own sweating forehead.
Gold .  , .  and Ryltar was surprised.  But not too surprised.  He
swallowed the last of the red berry in his mug and left four coppers on
the table before slipping out into the snow showers.

CXVIII

Creaakkk .. . The sound of a heavy wagon echoed into the shed where
Justen sorted old iron and black iron parts, looking for a yet smaller
gear set.  He straightened, wondering if the wagon were that of
Cirlin's iron wright or of someone else's, and eased the shed door
open, almost welcoming the cold air on his face.  The black-bodied
wagon, pulled by two large chestnuts, had entered the yard by the time
Justen stepped out into the cold.  On one wagon side-panel was the
symbol of the black hammer outlined in white.  Justen looked again at
the black-bodied wagon and the two figures on the front seat.

"Altara!  Warin!"

The balding smith flashed Justen a grin before dropping from the wagon
seat.  "Get out here, you lazy engineer, and help us unload.  It's your
stuff, after all."

By the time Justen had crossed the short space between the yard and the
shed, Altara had climbed down from the wagon and Warin was already
unfastening the tailgate.

"I didn't expect you," Justen admitted.  "Why did you come?"  Then he
grinned.  "But I do have some de-ordered iron you can take back."

"That would help."  Altara set the wagon brake.

Warin tied the horses to the stone post.

"You know, Justen, I still don't know why I'm doing this.  We're
running behind on the Hyel as it is, and here I am almost smuggling you
parts and equipment."  Altara brushed a short lock of hair off her
forehead.

"Because," suggested the younger engineer, "you know that something has
to be done about Fairhaven, and this is one way of easing your
conscience.  Especially since the Council continues to do nothing."

"You should have been a wizard, not an engineer."

"He is both, I think."  Warin grinned at Altara.  "At least after his
adventures in Naclos-whatever they were.  You notice that somehow we
never quite get all the answers when we ask him about Naclos and the
druids, except that there's clearly a very special druid mixed up in
all this."

"Ah, yes, the one called Dayala."

Justen felt himself flushing.  "I'd better help unload this.  I really
do appreciate it."

"See!  There he goes again."  Warin grinned.

"Well .. . you don't exactly talk much about Estil," countered Justen
as he struggled to hoist a box containing a matched gear set.

"I think he's in love, really in love."  Warin grunted as he followed
Justen toward the smithy with a second box.  His breath was a cloud in
the cold winter air.

"You think?"  Altar eased a section of thin plate onto a dolly she had
unloaded and wheeled it slowly along the path after the others.

"Either that or he's spoiling for a fight."  Warin paused.  "Justen, I
almost forgot.  I ran into Martan the other night, and he asked me to
tell you that he was ready any time you are.  He's even dumber than I
am, to want to spar with you."

Justen frowned momentarily.  Martan wasn't reminding Justen about
sparring.  Then he asked, "Can you stay for dinner?"

"For your father's cooking?  That might be one reason we came."

Cirlin joined the unloading brigade, and the four carried in the
supplies Altara had brought, including gear sets, shaft blanks, and a
small condenser.  Justen noticed several more sheets of thin plate yet
to be taken to the shed.

"Why the plate?"

"With your skills, you could turn it into black iron armor, but
anything that travels roads has to be light."  Altara grunted as she
eased the plate onto the dolly.  The dolly's wheels sank slightly into
the hard-frozen ground.

"You should be designing this machine."

"I just might look at your designs.  You're the demon's best on
application, Justen, but design ... I don't know."

"I like you, too."

"Estil still thinks you're imagining that druid, Justen," Warin
interjected.  "She says no one real could turn your head that much."

"Tell her," grunted Justen as he helped Altara ease the plate against
the heavy beams on the side wall of the smithy, "that she could have if
you hadn't tied her up first."

"Lusting after another's man's woman .. . why, Justen, I do believe you
actually show a human side."

Cirlin laughed.  So did Altara and, finally, Warin.

"I presume," added Horas's voice from the smithy door as the laughter
died, "that we will be having company for dinner."

"We certainly will, and for the evening as well," added Cirlin.

"We wouldn't-"

"Where would you stay?  At the Broken Wheel, where you'd freeze?
Nonsense!"  snapped Horas.

Altara and Warin exchanged glances.

"We're not that hard to persuade," said the chief engineer.

"Besides," added Warin, "I might be able to find out more about this
mysterious druid."

"Good luck," said Cirlin.  "I'm his mother, and beside the fact that
she's wonderful, beautiful, green-eyed, silver-haired, and saved him
from many fates worse than death, I know almost nothing.  Oh, and yes,
she somehow coaxes trees into producing beautiful boxes and other
wooden items."  The smith looked at Altara, who returned the smile.

"It's going to be an interesting evening," ventured Jus-ten.

"Stop jabbering," suggested Altara, "and we'll get this junk in sooner.
Also, Where's this supposed de-ordered iron?  You did mention it, you
know."

"In that bin in the corner.  There."  Justen pointed.

Warin walked over and looked down.  "Darkness ... he really did it,
Altara.  Those are turbine rings, but they're only soft iron now."

Altara followed Warm's eyes, and her fingers caressed the iron.  "You
could make a business out of this."

Justen shrugged.  "Call it return for value .. . in a way."

"It would take three eight-days to undo that with a forge, and I'll bet
it didn't take you that long."

"No."  Justen did not volunteer that the bin contained only an
afternoon's worth of effort or that the shed had turned into an ice
house, with heavy sheets of ice across everything.

"Good.  Then I can report honestly that we're saving time and labor by
sending you junk.  Now let's get this stuff out to the wagon."

Even before they had Finished stacking the incoming parts and scrap and
reloading the wagon, Elisabet was waving from the kitchen door.

"We still need to stable the horses."

"Altara, go talk to Elisabet.  We'll do the horses."

The chief engineer shrugged and walked through the late afternoon light
toward the house while Justen and Warin unharnessed the two draft
horses and led them into the stable.

"The brushes are on the shelf there."

"Altara said you never learned to ride, really, until you went to
Sarronnyn.  So how did that happen, since you grew up with horses and a
stable?-" Warin wiped horse hair off his face with his free hand as he
finished one of the chestnuts.

"We had horse teams, not riding horses.  I could care for a horse.  I
just couldn't ride well.  Are you about done?"

"More than done.  It's cold here."

"It's not that bad."

"I grew up in Nylan.  It's lower and warmer than in mid-Recluce." Warin
watched as Justen poured several scoops of grain into the manger.

"You took long enough," said Elisabet when the two engineers walked
into the kitchen and took the two last places at the big table.

"Hot cider, ale, or red berry  asked Horas.

"Hot cider."

"Ale."

"Ale?"  Warin shivered.

"How he can be so ordered and drink ale and dark beer?"  asked
Altara.

"It's just superficial order."  Justen laughed.

"How can order be superficial?"

"Don't get him started," warned Cirlin.

"What about the druid, then?"  asked Warin.

"Dayala?"  Elisabet smiled broadly.  "She's a druid who doesn't have a
tree-not one that, she lives in anyway, except that her house is sort
of grown out of trees, and she always goes barefoot, even in the
desert, but she wears clothes."

"Is that all?"  asked Warin plaintively.  "A real druid who doesn't
live in a tree?  Why does she go barefoot?"

"She is a druid," answered Justen dryly.  "And she did manage to
outwalk me and my boots across the Stone Hills and the grasslands.  I
never did manage walking barefoot through the great forest or the
grasslands, let alone the Stone Hills."

"Do they use iron?"  asked Altara.

"Of course," answered Justen.  "Some of them do have problems with
edged things like blades, and even with knives.  But some of us do,
too.  I understand that Dorrin couldn't deal with blades."

"I want to hear about the silver-haired druids," protested Warin,
grinning sideways at Elisabet.

"Well..  ."  began Justen's sister.

"Elisabet..  ."

"You're no fun, Justen.  You tell them, or I will."

"I know I'm no fun.  Wait a moment."  Justen took a sip of the dark
ale.

"Here's some fresh-baked bread and cheese!"  announced Horas, setting a
long platter on the table.  "Ought to hold you until dinner's ready."

"Don't get this in the engineering hall, do you?"  asked Warin, looking
at Altara.

"Don't get that at home, do you?"  countered the chief engineer.

"No, but he gets a few other things..."  suggested Justen.

"You should talk, from what I've heard about your druid.  And from that
cow-eyed look you get when you think about her and you think no one's
looking."

Altara coughed, trying not to choke on her hot cider, shaking her head
at the same time.

"What can I say?"  Justen laughed.  "What can I say?"

"Probably nothing," suggested Cirlin.  "Try the bread before it gets
cold.  And try not to look too cow-eyed."

"What's cow-eyed?"  asked Elisabet.

Altara choked again, then managed to swallow her cider.

CXIX

"I'm still concerned about that engineer-the order-mad one."  Ryltar
leaned forward across the black-oak table.

"Order-mad?  That's an odd choice of words."  Claris coughed, then
sipped from her mug before setting it back on the ceramic coaster
bearing a replica of the seal of Recluce.  "What do you mean?"

"Yes, Ryltar, please enlighten us."  Jenna's fingers cupped her mug
lightly, almost as if caressing the smooth black finish.

"Well .. . Turmin said that this engineer, this Justen, is clearly the
most highly ordered man he has observed.  Perhaps too highly ordered. I
understand that he is convinced that he must build some sort of land
engine that travels the roads the way our ships travel the seas."

"That might seem impractical, but scarcely mad."  Claris pursed her
lips before continuing.  "Everyone thought Dorrin was mad, but we'd
scarcely be here if he hadn't built the Black Hammer."

"You don't think that running chaos along our roads, particularly the
High Road, is not mad?"

"He isn't doing that, is he?"

"He will be."

"Ryltar ... don't you notice a little inconsistency in your arguments?"
Jenna's mild tones barely rose above the rain that pelted against the
windows.  "You tell us not to worry about Fairhaven, because they're
not yet invading someplace, but we're supposed to worry about an
excessively ordered engineer who has done far less than Fairhaven has.
I'm frankly a great deal more concerned about the increased levies that
were marched across the Westhorns and into Sarronnyn before the snows.
Now it seems that each eight-day we receive reports of yet another town
or hamlet falling to the Whites-and this has been during the winter.
The ice has cut off Suthya from sea trade, and the Whites surround the
Suthyans.  By the spring thaw, only Armat, Devalonia, and a few coastal
towns will remain in Suthyan hands."  Jenna looked at her short and
square-cut fingernails, then laid her hands on the table.

"Most of Suthya's people are on the coast, and most of their troops are
safe," pointed out Ryltar in a reasonable tone.

"That's true enough, Ryltar," countered Jenna, "except that this winter
campaign means that the Suthyans will have no territory left to shield
them from immediate attack after the thaw, and not enough time to bring
in supplies or mercenaries, or anything much by sea."

"The wizards are fighting among themselves."  Ryltar smiled
crookedly.

"One power-hungry wizard destroyed another, and the stronger one has
shown himself far more able and dangerous.  Suthya will fall even
before summer."

"I still must ask the same question, dear colleagues.  What on earth
can we possibly do about it?"  Ryltar steepled his fingers and waited
for a response.  "What, honestly, can we do?  We cannot even get ships
to Suthya at the moment."

Jenna and Claris exchanged glances.

CXX

The cold and late winter rain, interspersed with occasional fat flakes
of snow, plastered Justen's hair against his skull.  He hefted the rock
hammer and tapped around the stone, looking for traces of the heavy
yellowish powder that when order-sorted, became grayish false lead.
Order-sorting the heavy stuff was harder work than forging black iron.
Wizards who handled too much of it for too long, Justen knew, died, but
he felt that his control of the order-chaos balance within his own body
would help protect him.

Even the powder emitted unseen flashes of chaos, like white embers, and
the small traces of false lead seemed like black isles holding chaos;
it was almost a miniature replica of the way the great forest of Naclos
had felt.  Somehow, finding the yellowed, powdery stuff was easier in
the rain, even rain mixed with snow, perhaps because the falling water
blanked out the more distant chaotic impulses.

Justen lifted the hammer again, wishing he were back in Naclos with
Dayala, water lizards, forest cats, Stone Hills, and all.  What was she
doing?  Immersing herself in her work, visiting her parents and
friends, worrying about him?  He shook his head.  Dayala couldn't
afford to pine away after him, and the sooner he got on with his work,
the sooner he could sort out the mess and head back to Naclos.  But
what would he do there?  Be a smith?

He shrugged.  There were worse things, far worse things.

He shivered as cold water seeped down his neck.  At that moment, he
even would have settled for being back in his mother's smithy in
Wandernaught.  He lifted the hammer again, moving across the rocky
pile.

After a time, he sat down on a stone to rest his legs after the hard
work he had done.  As he sat there on the north side of the small slag
pile, he gently rubbed a bruise on his calf, trying to send an extra
touch of order into the injury, and absently wondered what he was doing
foraging around the iron mines of Recluce when his land steamer still
needed so much more work.

"Simple .. ."  he mumbled as he stood and followed his senses through
the small piles of rocky wastes that had yet to be broken and turned
back into hillsides and forests.  "Trying to trigger an order-chaos
collapse, that's all."

He picked up the hammer and tapped it against another stone, then slid
the flap of the oiled-leather gathering bag underneath the stone.

CXXI

After lighting both lamps, Justen eased the powder into the forge and
began to pump the great bellows, his senses attuned to the granules
that would become false lead.  As the heat built up in the powder that
he hoped to turn into metal, he could more easily sense the chaos
locked in order within the tiny specks.

Thrap..  . th rap Justen looked toward the door, but kept pumping.

Thrap... th rap .. , th rap

The engineer eased the powder out of the flame and turned toward the
smithy door.

A dark and squarish figure in black waited.

"Master Turmin .. . please come in."

The mage stepped inside the smithy.  "I hope that I'm not too late."

"Too late?"

"How much false lead have you made?"

Justen swallowed.  "How did you know?  I haven't told anyone."

"We mages have our ways."  A crooked smile crossed the older man's
face.  "Not magic.  I heard that you were frequenting the slag piles by
the old iron mines.  When a wizard does that..."  He shrugged.

"I'm not a wizard like you and Gunnar."

"No .. . you're potentially far greater, and consequently far more
dangerous."  Turmin cocked his head, his eyes straying toward the
forge.  "Heating and order-sorting the powder, I presume?"

"I thought it would work."

"Oh, it will work, all right.  And about a season after you've finished
with the third or fourth batch, you'll probably die of the wasting
sickness.  In your case, you're more ordered.  You might even make six
or seven batches."

Justen swallowed hard.

"Can we get something to drink?  I rode straight from Alberth."

The younger man nodded.  "Let me bank the forge.  Will leaving the
powder here hurt anyone?"

"Probably not, if you get rid of it tomorrow.  If it's been heated only
slightly, you can scatter it into the ocean."

Justen banked his mother's forge, but left the powder on the brick
shelf to cool.  Then he blew out the lamps.

Turmin followed him back to the empty kitchen.

Justen extended an arm to one of the wooden chairs, then asked, "Beer
or green berry

"Greenberry.  I'm not so ordered as you.  Besides, I meant it when I
said I was thirsty."

Justen frowned.  "What about your mount?  I forgot-"

"Your sister was kind enough to water Vaegera.  I told her I was
meeting you on wizardly matters.  She also insisted on feeding the
mount."

"Elisabet..."  Justen shook his head and walked from the kitchen and
into the dim adjoining parlor, where a sandy-haired girl leaned
forward, cupping her ear to listen.

Elisabet stood up as he entered.  "All right," she said.  "You caught
me.  Will you tell me about it later?"

Justen grinned and nodded.  "What I can."

"Promise?"

"Promise."

By the time Justen returned to the kitchen and retrieved the pitchers
from the cooler, his sister had disappeared.  He walked back to the
table, juggling two mugs and two pitchers.

After setting down the beer, he filled a mug with green berry and
extended it to the older mage.

"Thank you."  Turmin swallowed the entire drink in two gulps.

Justen smiled and refilled the mug, then poured a half mug of the dark
beer for himself.  He sat on a stool across from Turmin and waited for
the other to speak.

"Justen, I can only talk from the books, the ones locked away in the
Temple, because there's no one alive today who can do what Dorrin and
Creslin did and wrote about.  You know, in their later years, each
compiled some remarkable insights.  Dorrin's work created The Basis of
Order, you know?"

"So I've been told."

"Well .. . once Gunnar told me about your explosive powder trick, I
knew it wouldn't be long before you were up to something.  I just
didn't know what.  And I'm certainly in no position to judge your
motives, but I would rather have you know the dangers beforehand. False
lead has been around for at least two hundred years, perhaps longer,
Dorrin mentions it.  When you put enough of it together, you get
enormous heat, almost raw chaos; yet, in small doses, it's as ordered
as any metal, although it doesn't ever appear in nature in its pure
form."  Turmin took another sip from the mug, and Justen waited.

"The problem is that it also sends out little bursts of chaos-"

"The white flashes?"

"You can see them?"

Justen nodded.

"That's something.  Anyway, we don't know why exactly, but if you put a
bird, for example, especially a delicate cage bird, near false lead,
after a while it wastes away.  So have the few wizards who worked with
it for any length of time."

Justen waited.  The mage was silent.  In the darkness beyond the single
lamp on the porch, a lone frog croaked from the small pond downhill
from the smithy.

"And?"  Justen finally asked.

"That's it.  I'll answer any questions you have."

"Why did you tell me all this?"

"I'm fond of Gunnar, and I think you have a lot to offer."

Justen pondered the wording.  "That doesn't sound like you're overly
fond of me."

"Whatever you're going to do, it's likely to be terrible.  I'm not
exceedingly fond of the doers of terrible deeds."

"Then why didn't you just let me kill myself with the false lead?"

"Probably Gunnar would have died, too."

"What else?"

"Did you meet an Angel?"

Justen shook his head at the unexpected question, then sipped from the
mug before answering.  "She was called an Angel, but I'm not sure she
was.  She was a druid, and very old."

"Just as you will be one day, if you survive this madness."  Turmin
eased out of his wooden armchair and refilled his mug before settling
back.

"You're not exactly answering directly," Justen observed tartly.

"I suppose not.  It's hard to be direct when you deal with great
power."

"Great power?"

"You have exceedingly great powers, young Justen.  I may be old, but I
would like to remain hale and healthy for what years remain to me."

Justen sighed.

"What did you intend to do with the false lead?"

"I thought I had a way to combine it with order so as to destroy
chaos."

"With greater chaos, of course?"  Turmin's tone was dry.

"Probably."

"Would that have done anyone any good?"

"Maybe not.  But something has to be done about Fairhaven."  .

"Ah, yes ... the White brethren."

"We've ignored them, and they've perverted order to serve chaos, and
they will take over all of Candar."

"All of Candar?"

"All right..  . not Naclos."  Justen sighed.

So did Turmin.

"I have a suggestion, young Justen.  If you intend to use order to
destroy chaos .. . use order, not chaos bound in order.  It's a great
deal safer for all of us, including you."

"How?"

"How indeed?  Have you seen light through an angled piece of
crystal?"

"You get a rainbow."

"That's a form of order, is it not?"

Justen looked down at the nearly empty mug.  "I suppose so."

"You've seen the lens experiment, haven't you?"

"The one where one of the magisters lights a fire with a glass? Yes."

"Doesn't that show that light has power?"

"I think you're reaching, scr."

Turmin laughed softly.  "I probably am, Justen.  I probably am.  Still
... I know, and now you know, that trying to use false lead will
probably kill you before you can do what you feel you need to do."

"Nothing's ever simple, is it?"

"No."  The older mage stood.  "I have a long ride ahead of me."

"You could stay here.  You're more than welcome."

"Your courtesy is appreciated, but I have obligations in the
morning."

"You'll be riding most of the night..."

"Sometimes that comes with the responsibilities of being a mage,
Justen.  Your turn will come, if it hasn't already."  Turmin reached
down, lifted the mug, and drained the last of the green berry

"At least let me pack a few things for you to eat."

"That would be welcome, I confess."

Later, Justen listened as the mare trotted away into the night, the
sound of her hooves echoing over the whisper of the breeze.  He turned
back to the forge.  Tomorrow he would have to scatter the powder into
the Eastern Ocean.  The sea would spread it far enough.

And then he would have to look at crystals-crystals and light.

CXXII

"What are you doing?"  Eldiren glanced from Beltar to Jehan.

They faced the walls of Armat, across the low valley split by the River
Arma as it flowed in a curve from below the hill where the White forces
massed, across the plain, and down through the upriver gates.  The
gates were actually more like towers, with spiked chains that spanned
the river.

With decent siege engines or more cannon, neither the towers nor the
city walls would have been a problem.  But the damned Black engineer's
destruction almost two years earlier of a decade's worth of cannon work
had yet to be more than partially replaced, especially since smiths
favorable to the White viewpoint who could also work iron were not
exactly plentiful.

"Doing me Suthyans a favor."  Beltar smiled crookedly.  "I'm going to
clean up their dirty river.  And their dirty harbor."

Eldiren scratched his head.

Jehan looked speculatively at Beltar.  "Something to do with the river,
and the chaos springs?"

Beltar grinned.  Eldiren frowned.

"What are those down there?"  Beltar pointed to the four buildings on
the hillside below, and to the road that linked them to the main
highway to Armat.

"The inn and the hot springs," answered Eldiren.  "But you made
everyone leave."

"Exactly."  Beltar grinned.

Eldiren's mouth opened.  "You wouldn't-"

"Try me.  It's a lot cheaper than losing soldiers."

The thin White Wizard glanced to the River Arma again.

"It will take some effort, but I can get the river to boil, maybe even
for an eight-day."  Beltar shrugged.  "If dial doesn't work-"

"You really don't like using troops, do you?"

"But I do.  They had plenty to do on the march from Rulyarth."

"Only skirmishes."

"So?  If the enemy won't fight more than skirmishes, is that my fault?
We have conducted a military campaign, and they have retreated.  My
troops don't want to die trying to storm stone walls.  Do you,
Eldiren?"

Eldiren shook his head.

"How about you, Jehan?"

"Of course not.  Neither do most of the troops, the lancers
especially."

Beltar closed his eyes and began to concentrate.

Shortly, the ground rumbled and brimstone fumes seeped from the
buildings below.  Troops began to wet scarves against the smell.  In
time, yellow waters boiled out of the springs and poured across the
less than hundred cubits into the River Arma.

Fog, then steam, rose from the river by the time Beltar slumped against
the portable table.  "... take a while ..."  he gasped.

Across the river, a handful of peasants poured from huts and began to
walk uphill, away from the steam.  Some tried to drive sheep, oxen, and
other livestock.

"They won't forget," murmured Jehan.

"I hope not," snapped Beltar.

The ground rumbled again as a gout of yellow steam and water erupted
from the springs and geysered toward the river.

Eldiren wiped his forehead, wrinkling his nose against the stench.  He
coughed, half-gagging.  "Are we ... supposed to survive this?"

Jehan turned his horse back uphill, and Eldiren followed.

So did Beltar, with a grim smile.  "Who says power doesn't work?"

"It works," answered Jehan absently.  "But what happens when it
doesn't?  Every time you succeed, you make it less likely that you will
survive failure."

"No White Wizard survives failure anyway," countered Beltar.

Eldiren let his mount trail the other two, his eyes on the steaming
water flowing downstream toward Armat, his nose and guts trying to
ignore the stench of boiled refuse.

CXXIII

"How did he take it?"  asked Gunnar.

"He got rid of the powder, and that's mostly what counts."  Turmin
looked out from the terrace to the flat silver of the Eastern Ocean,
"False lead is nasty stuff.  Nasty, nasty, nasty stuff."  He
shivered.

"But how did you persuade him?  Justen doesn't let go of things
easily."  The younger wizard shook his shoulders, as if to loosen
them.

"I told him to fight chaos with total order, not chaos bound in order.
And I pointed out that crystals can order light."

"Light as a weapon against chaos?  Ordered light?  I mean, it ought to
work, I suppose.  That was Dorrin's theory ... but no one has ever made
it work."

"I didn't tell him that."

"That wasn't exactly fair," protested Gunnar.

"What he was planning would have been a lot worse."

"Maybe ... but what if he does make it work?"

"No one has in two hundred years."

"No one was Justen."

"It will still be better than false-lead explosives."

"I hope so.  I do hope so."

"So do we all."

CXXIV

Justen glanced at the cloudless sky of late spring, then carried the
odd-shaped frame from the shed out to the stone walk that led from the
front porch to the road.

After setting the frame in place on the stone slab in the walk and the
square of plain iron beneath it, he tilted the lens in the frame until
the light fell in a point on the square of iron.  The concentrated
sunlight was easily absorbed by the iron, just as magic or chaos would
have been.

He waited for some time, but the iron changed not at all.  Finally, he
edged a splinter of wood into the light.  Shortly, it began to char,
then flared into a brief flame.  During the process, Justen
concentrated not on the wood, but on the flow of light, sensing the
strands as they passed through the lens.

Could he weave more light into the lens?  Not like a shield, where the
light was woven away from the object, but in a way that the light would
be knit together?  He frowned and reached out with his senses to touch
that light, as strong as iron and as delicate as spider silk, to weave
it into a tighter pattern that flowed through the lens.

As the sweat beaded on his forehead, he could sense the heat on the
iron and see the faint, reddish glow.

He tried to widen the web his mind wove, and shadows fell around him as
though a cloud had grown to cover the sky.

A single point of light flared on the iron, and a few sparks showered
off the plate fragment.

"Justen!"  Elisabet shouted.

He shook his head.  The shadows vanished, and he stood again in full
sunlight, sweat dripping from his entire body.  He looked toward the
porch, from where Elisabet looked back at him.

She walked down the steps and along the graveled path until she reached
him.  "I'm sorry.  I spoiled it, didn't I?"

Reaching out, he squeezed her shoulder.  "I can do it again.  It works.
I know that now."

"It felt weird, Justen."  Elisabet shivered.  "Then I looked at you,
and you were standing in the shadows but there weren't any clouds.  And
then the metal caught fire.  It was on fire, wasn't it?"

"Something like that."

At the sound of another set of steps, Justen glanced over Elisabet's
shoulder toward the smithy.  Cirlin, her leather apron still in place,
walked briskly along the path toward them.  Justen waited.

"Trying to forge without coal or charcoal?"

"Not exactly.  I was just trying something out."

"I'm no wizard, son, but whatever you did-" she shook her head "-it
felt like you'd shaken the ground or something."

Justen looked down at the lens in its frame, then at the fingertip hole
in the iron plate.

Cirlin followed his eyes.  "Neat, like a punch.  But you didn't do it
that way, did you?"

"No.  I tried something with sunlight.  It worked fairly well.  At
least I think it did.  The iron was actually burning."

"You burned iron with the sun?"

"I'll have to do more than that if I want this to work."

"Land engines and iron-burning lenses-darkness knows if I want to see
what else you'll come up with."

Justen almost missed the glint in her eyes, then chuckled.

Cirlin shook her head ruefully before she headed back to the smithy.

CXXV

The tall, redheaded wizard climbed the stairs, a loosely rolled scroll
in his hands, a tight smile fixed on his lips.

"Derba, what do you have there?"  The slightly stooped figure of Renwek
stepped forward on the landing outside the High Wizard's chamber.

"A scroll for the High Wizard."  Derba bowed.  "From Wizard Commander
Beltar.  That's how he is styling himself."

"Wizard Commander now," mused Renwek.  "Even Zerchas was not quite that
presumptuous."  Derba waited.

"Might I see that?"

"But of course.  You are the advisor to the High Wizard."  The younger
White Wizard offered a too-deep bow as he offeree!  the scroll.

Renwek unrolled the parchment and began to read.  Then he closed it.
"Perhaps you should come with me."

"I would not presume-"

"You already have, since it is clear that you read it first."  Renwek
turned and rapped on the door.

"Yes?"

"I have a scroll from Wizard Commander Beltar."

"Wizard Commander Beltar?"  There was a pause.  "Come on in, Renwek."

"Derba is with me, scr."

"Well, bring him in."

The two stepped into the tower room.

"Beltar is on his way back, with a few picked squads of the Iron Guard
and the White lancers."  Renwek bowed to the High Wizard.

"I had no doubt that he would be, not after he persuaded the Suthyan
Traders' Council to submit."  Histen snorted softly, his breath
steaming in the chill of the spring morning that poured through the
open window.

"Persuade is not exactly the word I would have employed, scr," Renwek
offered.

"Bah!  He did not shake Armat to the ground, did he, the way he leveled
Sarron.  Nor did he burn it as he did Berlitos.  What happened to our
friend the firebrand?"

"I'm afraid he has begun to learn something about politics and
statecraft, scr.  He did boil the river and the harbor and a few
hundred souls before suggesting to the traders that he could boil them
as well."  Renwek handed the rolled parchment to Histen.  "He took the
liberty of sending copies of this to a few people."

Derba kept a polite smile on his face.  "What does it say?"  Histen
demanded.  "Nothing."  A faint frown crossed Derba's forehead, and
Histen looked at the younger wizard.  "Perhaps you could tell us what
it says, Derba,"

"Uh ... I would not presume .. ."

"What does it really say?  If you've taken the liberty of reading it,
and you have or Renwek wouldn't have brought you in, you ought to
decide what it means."  Histen's words were soft.

"Go ahead," suggested Renwek.

"Well, scr... there are many fine words, but not much in the way of
meaning.  I would guess that mere might be a veiled suggestion that
when the time comes, he will be more than happy to lift the heavy yoke
of duty from your aching shoulders."  Derba smiled nervously.

"Just as you had hoped to do, young fellow?"  asked Histen.  "And don't
tell me you wouldn't presume.  Never mind.  Don't answer that.  You'll
either lie or make a fool of yourself."  Histen turned to Renwek. "What
do you think?"

"Derba has the idea very clearly.  Beltar only wishes to serve the
Council and to ensure your long and healthy life."  Renwek smiled
blandly.

"Ah ... only to preserve me from the heavy yoke of duty that weighs me
down so grievously.  Perhaps it is time to retire to Lydiar for my
well-deserved rest."  Histen snorted again, softly.

"Scr?"  asked Derba involuntarily.

"Lydiar is long settled, unlikely to face revolts and the need for
heavily armed troops, and close enough to return to Fairhaven within a
handful of days.  Besides, Flyrd would be more than happy to return to
Fairhaven and take your quarters, Renwek."

"My quarters?"

"You really don't think you want to serve Beltar, do you?"

"Ah ... no.  I should think not."

"Then perhaps we should make ready."

"As you wish, scr."

Derba glanced from one older wizard to the other.

Histen smiled at the younger wizard.  "You, Derba, should make ready to
help Beltar when the time comes to lift the heavy yoke from his
shoulders.  After all, is not such altruism and service the highest
ideal to which all young wizards aspire?"  His laugh rang off-key.

CXXVI

Squinting against the unseasonably hot spring sun and sweating from the
heat, although a hot spring midday in Nylan was nowhere near as hot as
the winter middays in the Stone Hills, Justen stepped up around the
corner and under the covered porch.

He paused before the small sign proclaiming "Hoslid- Trader." According
to Gunnar, Hoslid was as honest as any, or as dishonest, and owed less
than most to Ryltar.  Justen wanted to avoid Ryltar's firm and Ryltar's
scrutiny.  So, with a cough, he cleared his throat and walked into the
building behind the main traders' square.

The whole idea of building a balloon was ridiculous, but how else could
he get the lens high enough that he could gather enough sunlight and
focus it where he needed?  There weren't any real peaks near Fairhaven.
And what fabric was strong enough and light enough?

Justen paused inside the door, letting his eyes adjust to the
comparative gloom and the squat figure in brown who lumbered toward
him.

"I am Hoslid.  How may I help you?"

"I'd like to obtain a thousand squares of Naclan silk blanket cloth."

"You want what?"  Hoslid asked.

"I want a thousand square cubits of thin silk blanket fabric from
Naclos."

"What's that?  Never heard of it."  The trader scowled.

Justen frowned, glad he had brought the small cloth Dayala had slipped
into his box, but reluctant to part with it.  Finally, he took out the
piece.  "This."  Hoslid fingered it and nodded.  "The silk sheen  It
comes from Naclos."

"That's what I said."

"It is very costly."

"How costly?"

"It is a copper a square cubit.  And I would need a deposit.  Ten
golds."

"No more than five golds, and that would be for two thousand
squares."

"Seven for two thousand."

"Six and five."

"Done."

"And a receipt."

"But of course."  Hoslid offered a broad grin.

"When can you deliver it?"

"Five or six eight days."

"That's good."  Justen lifted his purse and waited.

Hoslid turned and lumbered toward the empty table in the corner. Justen
followed and watched as the trader inked out a contract.  Then he read
it and changed Hoslid's written deposit of seven golds back to six and
a half golds, getting Hoslid to initial the changes before Justen
counted out the coins.

"You bargain hard," the trader said.

"Not hard, just fair."

"You don't bargain fair, and we don't trade."  Hoslid grinned again.

Justen smiled and looked at the trader, then gathered his own order
about him, projecting even greater solidity than he felt.

Hoslid stepped back.  "You're a wizard?  You didn't say."

Justen smiled.  "Does it matter?  You got your deposit, and you know
you can't cheat me."

"I would not think of it."  A faint sheen of perspiration coated the
trader's forehead.

"Good."  Justen smiled broadly as he rolled up the contract.

CXXVII

"Histen!  Where in darkness are you?"  Beltar pushed back the white-oak
door and marched into the topmost quarters in the White tower, the
rooms reserved since before the time of Cerryl the Great for the High
Wizard.

The stocky White Wizard studied the room.  A wide bed stood in the
alcove to his left.  A white blanket and a set of sheets were neatly
folded on the mattress next to a white embroidered coverlet, also
folded with the seal of the High Wizard showing.

The screening table contained a blank glass, and the desk next to the
empty bookcases contained only a piece of parchment, weighted down by a
set of golden links attached to an ancient amulet.

"He's gone."  Beltar turned to Eldiren, who stood in the doorway, Jehan
behind him.

"Histen?  I am not surprised."  Jehan's voice was calm.

Beltar walked to the desk, lifted the amulet and set it aside, his
fingers caressing the links for a moment before he picked up the
parchment and began to read aloud.  "... in the interests of my health,
I am hereby relinquishing the amulet of the High Wizard to my
successor, Beltar, subject of course to the vote of the White Council.
I will be attempting to regain a portion of my former vigor by
undertaking less-taxing duties in Lydiar, as wizard to the duke ..."

He set the parchment back on the desk.

"He felt that a peaceful transfer of power was for the best.  That's
clear," observed Eldiren with a faint smile.

"Either that, or he feels that such a transfer will be only temporary,"
suggested Beltar.

"Did you notice the way Derba watched as you came in?"  asked Jehan.

"I can't say that I did.  I was looking for Histen.  What about it?"

"Derba's almost as powerful as you are," pointed out Eldiren.

"Does it matter?"

Eldiren and Jehan exchanged glances.  Beltar glanced around the tower
rooms, vacant now except for the basic furnishings, before answering
his own question.  "That might be why Histen left.  He just might be
waiting to let us destroy each other.  Histen's shrewder than I am, and
he has a lot more experience."

"At times, Beltar, experience defers to raw power," added Jehan.

"Perhaps, but that means I always have to maintain that power, as you
keep pointing out."

"Very true."  Jehan's voice was even, almost disinterested.

"And very difficult," said Eldiren.

"You two are such comfort."  Beltar shook his head and looked at the
amulet again before turning back toward the stairs.  "We'll need to
convene the Council."

"Of course."

CXXVIII

Justen rolled the uncompleted land engine out of the smithy, the iron
bars and oak-framed sides barely clearing the wide door, although the
door was fully open.  At first glance in the early summer sun, the land
engine's framework looked like a haphazard assembly of iron rods, oak
struts, and bars, all set amid four iron-tired wheels.  The circular,
heavy lifting rings in front of the driver and behind the space where
the third seat would be rose above the rest of the frame-but not above
the squat boiler and funnel that dominated the rear of the machine.

"Ugghhh ..."  Justen strained to push the engine the last few cubits
out of the smithy as the front wheels rolled up the slightest of
inclines.  Despite his grunting, the wheels turned easily enough.
Justen's lips twisted at the thought, considering that he had used
marine shaft bearings designed for far greater weight and stress.  The
drive systems were over engineered and that meant he was going to have
to really work on keeping the armor lightweight.

"Good work on the wheels."  Cirlin stood watching from behind Justen,
and even Horas had turned from the garden to look, "They don't bind at
all, and the axles are solid-no bowing, even with all that weight."

"It's ugly-looking," ventured Elisabet.

"It's not done yet."  Justen slipped a chunk of wood behind one wheel,
then straightened.  He walked to the other rear wheel and eased a
second block in place before heading to the well with a bucket.

Elisabet shook garden dirt from her hands and crossed the yard to the
engine.  She walked around the framework, her fingers occasionally
brushing a rod or a strut.  "It feels solid.  It just doesn't look
solid."

Justen returned with the first bucket of water, which he slowly poured
into the machine's reservoir.  Then he walked back to the pump.  With a
last look at the land engine, Cirlin slipped back into the smithy.

Across the yard, Horas returned his attention to a row of beans.

"That's going to take a lot of water."  Elisabet peered at the
reservoir and then at the bucket Justen carried.

"Not that much," answered Justen, filling the second bucket.  "It's a
ship system, and most of the water is recovered.  It would have been
lighter without the condenser, and I had to keep the pressures higher
.. . well, a lot higher, because I can't use a seawater cooling
system."

He carried the second bucket back to the engine and poured it into the
reservoir.  Then he pointed.  "There are spaces for the air to come in,
and when the engine's moving, the air goes past all those tubes.  That
helps to cool the condensate.  "

"That's why you want Gunnar to help, isn't it?"  asked Elisabet.

"Huh?"

"I'm not stupid, Justen.  I'm your sister, remember?  This engine can't
go that fast.  If you want this cooling to work, you need a lot of air,
and Gunnar's an Air Wizard.  I could even do that.  Can I come?"

"No."

"I didn't think so.  It's going to be dangerous, isn't it?"  Elisabet
continued to study the spaces around the condenser-radiator.  "I'll bet
this gets really hot."

"It does.  Not too hot, I hope."  Justen clamped the reservoir cap shut
and walked around the smithy to the coal bin, returning with a full
scuttle.  After several trips into the shed and the smithy for
shavings, he touched the striker to the small pile in the firebox,
waited for the flame, and began to feed in coal.

Horas gestured to his daughter, and Elisabet finally drifted back to
the garden and her weeding, while Justen built up the fire and used
both the few gauges and his own senses to measure the system's
performance.

Wheeee..  .

For a time, he let the steam moan through the open safety valve in
order to check the piping at lower pressures.  Then he closed the valve
and shoveled more coal into the firebox, letting the pressure build. He
checked the clutch system again to make sure that the drive shaft to
the wheel was disengaged.  He didn't need the land engine rolling off
on its own.

While the steam pressure built, he continued to examine the steam lines
and the heat distribution, wondering how he would be able to armor the
land engine without cooking its operators.

But first he needed to make sure that the systems worked, before he
worried about armor and weapons, both of which he was certain would be
necessary.  Then he had to decide whether the systems needed to be
reworked, and if so, how much, With a sigh, he pulled the blocks from
one wheel, then from the other.

"He's going to see if it runs!"  squealed Elisabet.

Justen looked toward his sister, who covered her mouth and looked to
their father.

"It is a momentous time," she said in a low and serious voice.

Horas covered his mouth, but his eyes twinkled.

Justen slipped into the single seat that was in place, then engaged the
clutch.

Clunnnkk!

The engineer winced at the stress on the reduction gears.  He'd have to
do something about that initial engagement, or ensure that he could
feed steam to the turbine at lower rates, or he wouldn't have any gears
left before long.  Still, the land engine crept across the yard toward
the lane.

Justen turned the steering tiller, and the land engine eased to the
left, into the center of the narrow lane leading past the garden and
the house and down to the main road.

Sssssss .. .

A fine jet of steam sprayed from a joint between the steam-return line
and the condenser-radiator assembly.  Jus-ten shifted his concentration
for a moment, but the leak did not appear to be growing.  While his
attention was on the leak, the engine had veered toward the house, and
he corrected with the tiller, overdoing the change in direction so much
that the engine lurched as the heavy wheel caught in softer soil on the
edge of the lane.

Justen held his breath momentarily, but the front wheel found firmer
ground and the engine straightened.  Another problem: soft ground.

Should he consider widening the wheels?  How much weight would that
add?  Could he avoid that?

The engine almost veered off the other side of the lane before Justen
eased the tiller back in order to keep the machine on the packed
surface of the lane.

Justen took a deep breath, realizing that he had better concentrate on
directing the machine and worry about the engineering changes later.

At the end of the lane, he named the engine onto the road and then
throttled back so that it was barely moving while he turned it around
to head back up the gentle slope of the lane to the smithy.  His
forehead was pouring sweat despite the summer breeze that blew past
him.

Creaakkk... Wincing at the stress on the iron-shod wheel, he eased the
tiller, gauging whether the wheels would stay on the road.  The left
front tire gouged a track in the softer shoulder of the road, and the
land engine lurched again but stayed upright.

Ssssssssss .. .

The joint leak was louder, and a second leak was bathing Justen in warm
mist as he tried to line up the land engine on the lane to avoid
running over the garden or hitting the house or getting mired in soft
ground.

The soft ground bothered him because the armor would make the whole
thing that much heavier.  As it was, he wasn't even carrying the weight
of a full load of coal or water.

The land engine lurched toward the garden, and Justen corrected, trying
to keep his mind on steering and not on engineering, even while the
hissing leaks and various creaks and stresses reminded him of too many
engineering problems.

And he was going to travel hundreds of kays in it... when he couldn't
even get the thing down the lane and back?  He sighed, then eased the
tiller back again to avoid the softer ground.

By the time he had disengaged the clutch, eased in the converted wagon
brake, bled off the steam, and blocked the wheels, his clothes were as
soaked as though he'd stood in a summer rainstorm-dripping both from
his own sweat and the leaking steam and water lines.

He looked at the water-coated framework and shook his head.

"It works.  It really works!"  Elisabet hugged him, then let go.
"You're soaked!  Ugghhh."

"Very impressive, son."  Horas looked at the land engine.  "But one of
a kind, I think," added Cirlin from the smithy door.

"I'm not sure where to start in reworking it."  Justen slowly paced
around the machine, seeing the other problems he hadn't had time to
notice when he was driving: the leak in the waterline joint from the
reservoir to the boiler, the need to reposition the steam-return line
... He shook his head again.  Why did he even need a clutch?  Why not
just change the design so the throttle controlled the steam flow
directly to the turbine?

"Looks to me like most of your problems are the kind that can be
fixed," added Cirlin.  "Doesn't the design work?"

Justen half-smiled.  He'd been so absorbed in the little glitches, he'd
forgotten that the land engine in fact worked.

"Yes ... it actually does."

"Has anyone else built one?"  pursued Cirlin.

"Not that I know of."

"I think you'd know."

"It works, Justen," affirmed Elisabet.  Then she looked at his damp
shirt and trousers.  "But you sure did get wet."

Cirlin smiled.  "We can-fix the little things.  Remember ... it
works."

Justen nodded, but his eyes flicked over the mass of iron and ordered
oak and pine, thinking about all the improvements he should have
considered earlier.  His gaze halted on the area behind the boiler, and
he realized that somehow he would have to add more space for coal.

"He's not here," said Elisabet.  "He's already thinking about how to
fix everything."

"He wouldn't be Justen if he weren't," Cirlin responded.

"He still ought to change into some dry clothes," added Horas.

"I imagine he will..  . when he thinks about it."

Justen reached out with his senses toward the condenser-radiator
joint.

"That may be some time ..."

There was so much to do, Justen reflected, and he really hadn't even
gotten very far with the lenses, either.

CXXIX

At the sound of the horse entering the yard, Justen set down the model
of the balloon and peered through the door, wondering if Ryltar had
already sent someone after him.  He took a deep breath as he watched
Altara swing out of the saddle and tie the bay to the stone hitching
post by the stable.  He walked out through the light rain. "Greetings!"
Altara brushed her short hair back and shook the water off her hand. 
"I can see you've been busy.  Got anywhere dry?  I'm on the way back
from the Black Holding ... again."

"Let me just check something."  Justen walked back to the shed and
motioned for Altara to enter.  "What are you doing here?"

"Seeing what you're doing."  Altara glanced into the workroom that had
been a storage shed.  "Also, telling you that you had better do it
fairly soon.  The so-honorable Counselor Ryltar has begun to tell
people that you are mad and that you should be confined.  I had to
elaborate on your rest cure.  And I did point out that the iron de
ordering you had done, order-mad or not, had saved us nearly a dozen
golds since spring.  Jenna and Claris were impressed, but Ryltar just
frowned and said that it showed how dangerous you are."  The chief
engineer laughed, off-key.  "Of course, I don't see how they could hold
you unless they shackled you in cold iron.  But that isn't the
point."

"No.  It wouldn't be.  I'd have to leave Recluce, which is what he
wants."  Not that I don't want to anyway-just not until I'm ready. "Has
Gunnar told you what he found out about Ryltar?"

"You look like the demons' hell.  Worse than when you were working
night and day in Sarronnyn, and at least as driven."  Altara shook her
head.  "And, no, Gunnar hasn't said anything about Ryltar."  She
glanced toward the models on the bench.  "What are those?"

"Balloons.  You put hot air in them and they rise.  At least they would
if I could get the bags light enough."

"Why can't you?  But what good are they?  You couldn't steer one
anyway, not like a ship."

"Maybe I could put an engine in it with an air screw like a ship's
screw ... but that would be a long time away.  I can't even get these
to rise more than a few cubits."  Altara waited.

"It's the fabric.  Linen's too ... It leaks too much unless I coat it
with wax, and it's too heavy then.  Paper's too weak."  Justen looked
at the models on the bench.  "I'm trying to get some silk sheen from
Naclos, but it hasn't arrived, and it.  may not."  Altara frowned.  "I
think it has.  It must have.  That was one of the things Jenna
mentioned-that you had received a huge shipment of fancy cloth, and
Ryltar said that showed how crazy you are.  He wanted to know where you
got the funds, because the cloth arrived with an invoice declaring it
was prepaid."

"Great.  How do I get it without proving that I've gone crazy?  And why
didn't Hoslid let me know?"

"I think Ryltar prevailed upon him.  His Marshalle- Hoslid's-was lost
in the Western Ocean with a full cargo, and he borrowed heavily from
Ryltar."

Justen wiped his forehead.  "I just love getting such wonderful news. I
still don't know how I can get the cloth if Hoslid thinks he'll be
upsetting the Council by releasing it.  Do I go in there and demand
it?"

"You could.  He'd have to give it to you."

"And that would give Ryltar more fuel for his rumormongering, you
think?"

"Probably."

"You know what he's been up to?"

"I haven't the faintest idea."  Altara grinned wryly.  "But if you want
to tell me, it can't be good."

"We can't prove it, not with hard evidence, but he's gotten golds from
Candar-a lot-for past services, and he's accepting smuggled gems from
Hamor."

"Fairhaven, you think?  How could he?"

"He's never felt right to me."  Justen laughed bitterly.  "Honest
corruption isn't quite chaotic.  It feels different, and ... without
exile any more .. ."

"You really think he would have been exiled under the old system?"

"Probably not.  Coins find a way around any system.  Let's get you
something to eat and drink.  Can you stay tonight?"  Justen set the
models in their brackets and opened the door, looking at the
increasingly heavy rain.

"I don't think I'd better.  I can make Fallroth tonight, and that would
get me back to Nylan by mid-morning."

The two engineers hurried across the yard, dodging around the growing
puddles and up onto the covered porch, where they scraped their boots
and wiped them clean.

"You had an idea about my silk sheen cloth?"  Justen asked.

"Give me your authorization and I'll claim that we're testing the cloth
for sails for the merchant fleet.  Say that you ordered it because you
could get it cheaper."

"Ryltar will know that's not true."

"So?  He won't be able to claim it publicly.  Besides, Hoslid couldn't
refuse the Brotherhood, and Ryltar's at the Black Holding right now.
That means four days before he finds out, and maybe another four before
he could send any instructions."

Justen nodded.  "Let's see what we've got here for you to eat."

CXXX

"Can I come?  You put the second seat in."  Elisabet stood beside
Justen as he removed one of the wheel blocks from the land engine.

High, thin clouds kept the midsummer day from being too oppressively
hot, but Justen felt sweaty all over as he slowly walked around the
craft, letting his senses roam over the piping, assemblies, and drive
shafts.

The land engine still looked like a mass of struts and bars assembled
around a small firebox, a boiler, and a steam engine, but many of the
armor plates that would eventually cover the framework had been
forged-some of them almost to parchment thinness.  Justen did not
intend to put any plating in place until the steam and drive systems
worked perfectly, since repairs would require removal of the plating.

"No."

"Why not?"

"I'm still not sure that things will work right, and I don't want to
have to worry about you."

"Justen, if nothing bad happened before, how could it happen now?"

"This time, we-"

"We?  You mean I can come?"

"No.  I meant that... oh, you know what I meant.  You're just trying to
take advantage of me when I'm thinking about other things."

"It's the only time I can take advantage of you.  Besides, Mother said
you did a good job."

"A good job isn't a safe job."  Justen reflected on his order-tipped
arrows-definilely good engineering, but not safe for anyone involved.
The same had been true of his efforts with cannon powder.  He shook his
head, wondering how he always seemed to get involved with destruction.
Was it proof of what the ancient had said about too much order being no
different from too much chaos?

He took a deep breath and opened the firebox to ease in another
shovelful of coal.  Above him, the steam valve began to whistle
faintly, purging excess air from the system.

"Justen..."

"No.  Once I know it's safe, then you can come."

"Promise?"

"Promise.  Now go back over by the house or into the smithy."

"All right."  Elisabet walked across the yard and up the steps to the
covered porch, brushing away a fly as she walked.

Whhheeee .. . Justen closed the steam-relief valve and walked around to
the driver's seat, where he checked the tiller again to ensure that it
moved freely and that the front wheels moved with it.  Then he eased
the throttle open, slowly, testing to see how the simplified direct
steam feed worked.

The land engine rumbled forward slowly, the wider wheels offering more
stability than those of the first trial an eight-day earlier.

Elisabet watched from the porch as Justen drove past, concentrating on
keeping the land engine in the center of the lane.

At the end of the lane, he turned the tiller, steering the craft onto
the road and away from Wandemaught itself.  He studied the road ahead,
but saw no horses or carts, not that he would expect any at midday.

Then he eased open the throttle and watched as the turbine began to
whine and the wheels began to turn more quickly.  The craft moved from
the speed of a walk to a slow run to the quick trot of a horse.

Justen scanned the engine and the steam and water lines; everything
remained tight.  The road ahead was still clear and flat.  He edged the
throttle up farther, and the seat began to bounce him with each rough
spot in the road.

After throttling back, he looked for a wide place in the road where he
could turn.  After turning, he opened the throttle again, slowing only
when he neared the house.

He crept the land engine up the lane and into the yard, where he began
to shut down the steam system.

"You were going so fast!"  Elisabet stood less than a cubit from the
machine as Justen climbed out and twisted open the steam-spill valve.

"I think it could go faster if I could put some springs under the
driver's seat.  It's hard to control it when you're being bounced
around."

"Faster?  You'd have to gallop to go faster."

"That's the idea."

"It is?"

"You don't want horses .. ."  Justen broke off.  "Never mind."  He
studied the return lines and then let his senses drift across the
drive-shaft connections; they were hotter than he would have liked. Did
he need more grease on them?

"How did it go this time?"  Cirlin inspected the land engine from the
other side.

"The steam system was perfect.  I'm still worried about the power
train.  It heats up too quickly, even with all the black iron."  Justen
pulled at his chin, then wiped his forehead with his forearm.

"Mother!  He was traveling almost as fast as a cantering horse."

Cirlin raised her eyebrows.  "Oh?"

Elisabet nodded.

"Then, dear, I think we should keep that to ourselves.  And please
don't tell Silinna.  I know what good friends you and she are, but-"

"Oh, she wouldn't tell."

"Who told about the time you fell in the applesauce?  When you didn't
want Lyndner to know?"

"Mother!"

"Applesauce?"  asked Justen innocently.  "Lyndner?  Is that Shrezsan's
little brother?"

"He's not exactly little any longer," commented Cirlin dryly.  "But I
don't think we should be gossiping to all Recluce about your land
engine."

"Probably not.  I still haven't worked out the other half of what I
need."

"What is that?"  asked Elisabet brightly.  "Is it the stuff with the
balloons and the lenses?"

"That really shouldn't go outside the family, either, dear."

"Oh, that I already knew.  I wouldn't have thought about telling
Silinna that.  It's real wizardry, and you don't tell about that."

Cirlin and Justen exchanged glances.  Cirlin's lips quirked, and Justen
shook his head.

"You're laughing at me-both of you!"

"No ..."  choked Justen.  "Just at the way you said that.  I'm very
glad you understand about wizardry.  But the land engine's wizardry,
too."

"If you say so."  Elisabet's eyes were very round and purposefully
innocent.

"Try that look on Lyndner," suggested Justen.

"Justen!  You're spoiling it."

"Isn't that what big brothers are for?"

CXXXI

"Isn't it about time for you to turn in?"  asked Gunnar, leaning back
in the kitchen chair.

"I don't want to go to.  bed," insisted Elisabet.  Her lower lip
trembled.  "I'm not some ... some child."

Horas adjusted the lamp, bringing a brighter glow to the kitchen table.
"Unlike some of you, I have trouble seeing in the dark."  He turned to
Elisabet.  "I understand, Elisabet, but it is later than usual, and you
are still a growing young girl."

"I am a young woman, and I shouldn't have to be packed off to bed like
a little girl."

Gunnar's eyes closed.  Justen frowned, but said nothing.

"It is late, dear," added Cirlin.

"I'm not tired , .."  insisted Elisabet, trying to stifle a yawn.  "...
really .  not..."

Justen forced his expression into one of concern and stood.  "You're
sleepy.  I can tell that.  I'll walk down the hall with you."  He
offered his arm to his sister.

"All right.  I don't know why I'm so... sleepy..."  Elisabet trudged
beside her brother.

Once they were around the corner and almost to her room, Justen lifted
the healing sleep-daze that Gunnar had dropped on Elisabet.

"That... Oh ..."  hissed Elisabet, struggling against Jus-ten's grip on
her arm.

Justen put his finger to her mouth.  "I know you're tired," he said
loudly.  Then he added quietly, "If you want to listen on the breeze,
fine.  Just keep it to yourself, and talk to me before you talk to
anyone else.  Especially to Silinna or Lyndner."

"But, Justen ... All right..."

Justen put his hand over her mouth.

"You'll feel better in the morning," he added loudly, removing his
hand.

Elisabet winked and lay down on her bed, offering a loud and
counterfeit yawn, her eyes bright in the darkness.  She blew Justen a
kiss.

Justen walked quietly back to the kitchen, ignoring Gunnar's frown.
"She'll stay in bed.  But I really don't like that, Gunnar.  It's a
form of force,"

"She would have argued all night."

Justen shrugged.  "We did."

"All right."

"What did you want to talk about?"  asked Cirlin.  "That you didn't
want her to hear?"  Gunnar took a sip of red berry and cleared his
throat.  "Ryltar already wants to send the marines after Justen,
according to Altara.  Jenna-she's the youngest Counselor- is holding
him off, but he's working on old Claris.  How soon before you can get
your stuff together?"  Gunnar turned to his brother.

"I need more time.  I still haven't got that fabric from Naclos. Altara
thought she could break it loose from Hoslid without letting Ryltar
know, but I'll need time to get it stitched together.  The land
engine's ready except for the plating, and I've got a little oil stove
that I can use for the balloon.  And the lenses ... grinding the
fire-eyes takes a while.  It's slow."  Justen shrugged.  "They should
work, but I really don't know if they will.  It's all theory."

"You've proved rather adept at converting theory to practice."  Cirlin
laughed softly.

"What else?"  asked Gunnar.

"I need you, and we need a good marine to handle weapons.  I think I
know who, but you should talk to him."  Justen stood and walked to the
cooler, extracting the pitcher of ale.  He filled his mug.

"Who's that?  And why me?"

"Marian.  He's the one whose squad still uses the old armory."  Justen
took a sip from the almost overflowing mug before continuing.  "Because
you work in Nylan with Turmin a lot.  If I go to Nylan, Ryltar will
have three people following me."  The engineer slipped back into his
chair and set the mug on the table in front of him.  He reached toward
one of the two remaining slices of berry bread, then thought better of
it and put his arms on the table.

"Why would you trust Martan?"

"He's already asked to go, and he feels ordered and sound, and he's
Hyntal's cousin.  And we need a ship."

"You're crazy!  You think Hyntal would act as a transport for your
crazy adventure?"

"Why not?"  Justen smiled and sipped from the mug.  "If he's going to
patrol the Gulf, why couldn't he drop us off?"

"The Council wouldn't let him," Gunnar pointed out.

"That assumes they would know.  Why would they have to know?"  asked
Justen.

The other three looked at him.

"Look," he explained.  "The Llyse comes into port and picks up some odd
equipment from the engineers and steams off.  That happens sometimes
anyway.  Who would think about telling the Council?"

Cirlin shook her head.  "What about later?"

"If we don't spell it out, Hyntal can honestly claim that he thought we
were representing the Brotherhood."

"That's not exactly honest."

"No, it's not.  But I haven't figured out any truthful way to lie.  So
I'd rather not make any statements one way or the other.  Just tell
Hyntal we have some equipment that needs to be transported to
Candar-some special equipment designed by one of the more inventive
engineers.  That much is true."

"Sometimes the most obvious is the best."  Horas grinned.

Justen looked at Gunnar.  "You need to find out when Martan's squad is
scheduled for duty on the Llyse.  He'll know.  Any time more than four
eight-days from now ought to work ... I hope."  He swallowed the rest
of the ale in a single gulp.

"What about us?  How can we help?"  asked Cirlin.

"I'll need at least a hundred stone of coal, in small chunks, and a lot
of preserved supplies.  Then I'll need two copper poles, each about
three cubits long.  That's in case the fire-eyes don't work."

Gunnar swallowed.  "That's dangerous, Justen."

"Let's hope the fire-eyes work, then," the younger brother answered
with a brief smile.  "And I'll need to forge probably a gross of the
order-tipped arrows."  A sharp jolt passed through his skull at the
thought of the arrows, and he wondered if he could ever think of them
without pain.

CXXXII

"There's a wagon, like the engineers' wagon, and it's coming into the
yard," announced Elisabet, sticking her head into the shed where Justen
mumbled over the grindstone, trying to adjust the bracket and clamp he
had designed to hold the gem in place.

"A wagon?"  He did not look up.

"It has four wheels, and it's pulled by two horses, and a man sits on
it and drives it," offered Elisabet.

"Elisabet..."  Justen set the clamp aside.  He took a long look at his
sister.  "Are you sure it's not Lyndner, come to carry you off?"

"Justen!  That's not funny."

Justen sighed and hurried after Elisabet, catching her in the yard.
"I'm sorry.  But you were teasing me."

"It's not the same.  I don't tease you about Dayala ... at least not
anymore."  Elisabet sniffed.

"I won't tease you about Lyndner.  Fair?"

"Fair."

Creaakkk... They both turned to watch the wagon.  Warm gave a brief
wave from the driver's seat, then concentrated on slowing and guiding
the team up next to the stable.

Even after a few moments in the direct sun, Justen had begun to
perspire, and he wiped his brow forehead on his sleeve.  Then he walked
over and slipped blocks under the right front wheel after Warin set the
brake.

"I didn't expect you."

"Altara sent me off with your cloth."  Warin pointed to three large
bales in the wagon bed.  l "She said for me to bring back some more
de-ordered iron, if you have any more."  The balding engineer turned to
Elisabet.  "Hello there."  He grinned.  "If it weren't for Estil, I
just might consider moving right up here to Wandernaught."

Elisabet blushed.

"Careful there, Warin, or I'll tell Estil."  Justen paused.  "There's a
good load of iron in the bin.  That's the least I can do for you .. .
provided you keep admiring Elisabet from a safe distance."

"Justen ..."  Elisabet was almost bright red.

"I think it's time to unload the wagon," Justen said in a
matter-of-fact tone.  "Elisabet?  Can you take care of the horses while
Warm and I move the silk sheen to the shed and load the iron?"

"I can certainly handle the horses."  Elisabet tossed her head, and her
blond hair fluffed in the light breeze,

Warin glanced at Justen and mouthed, "She'll be a real handful."

"She already is, if you haven't noticed," Justen whispered back as he
lowered the tailgate and reached for the wide, woven straps on the bale
of cloth.  He frowned, realizing that he had no thread or cording.  He
was always forgetting something, but perhaps he could get some from
Basta in Wandernaught.

The two engineers hauled the first bale into the shed.  "What are you
doing with all this cloth?"  asked Warin as they returned to the
wagon.

"Experimenting.  Remember Lystrl's experiments with the hot-air
balloons?"

"He could never get one to go higher than twenty or thirty cubits into
the air."

"I'm trying to figure out how to do better than that."  Jus-ten reached
for the straps on the second bale.

"For darkness' sake, why?"  Warin grabbed the other set of straps.

"To destroy Fairhaven."

Warin stumbled, and the bale almost wrenched out of Jus-ten's hands
before the older engineer caught his balance.

"You're serious."

"Me?  Order-mad Justen?  Of course not."

"You really are serious."

They set the second bale beside the first.

Warin looked at Justen.  "I don't know which is worse- that you're
seriously proposing this, or that I believe you might actually pull it
off."

"I'm not even sure about that myself," laughed Justen.  "I just know
that I have to try."

"You've definitely got Ryltar worried, Altara says."  Warin turned to
head back to the wagon.

"I think anything that's different upsets Counselor Ryltar."  Justen
followed Warin out of the shed.

"I've got the first one stabled," called Elisabet as she led the second
horse toward the stable.

"Good."

"Then I'll brush them both down.  They're good horses."

"Definitely a handful," said Warin in a low voice.

"More than Estil?"

Warin smiled.  "Let's say that I'd be a lot safer with Estil, no matter
what Altara thinks."

"My little sister Elisabet?  Dangerous?"

"No more so than her brothers."  Warin smiled faintly.  "All of you
scare me a little."

Justen frowned as he took hold of the last bale.  "I don't see why."

"That's part of it.  I like you, and I trust you, Justen, but you still
scare me.  You'll go off and change the world and then wonder why
everyone's so upset.  Altara told me about your black arrows and your
matter-of-fact destruction of all the White cannon.  And about how you
walked the Stone Hills somehow."  Warin tugged on the bale, levering it
toward the tailgate.  "And your brother turns a valley into a lake with
wizardry, and you do him one better with engineering and rockets."
Warin took a deep breath.  "Let's get this in."

They carried the last bale into the shed.

"The thing is," Warin added, "just like Dorrin, you're going to be a
great person.  But a lot of people die around great people, and as much
as I like you, I really don't want to get too close."

"I'm sorry."

"That's not what I meant."  Warin waved off the words.  "I admire you,
but I wouldn't go to Candar with you for all the iron in Recluce and
all the gems in Hamor."

"Stay for dinner?"  asked Justen with a grin.

"Of course.  I'll even stay for breakfast.  Things are safe enough with
your father around, and he's a good cook.  Now, let's get Altara's
de-ordered iron into the wagon."

CXXXIII

Carefully, Justen picked up the small silk sheen balloon from the
center of the workbench.  The balloon skin of the second model measured
nearly three cubits from top to bottom, but folded and deflated, Justen
could lift it effortlessly.  He glanced toward the carefully cut
sections of silk sheen lying in the flat rack he had built.  Even with
Elisabet's and Horas's help, the cutting and stitching and sealing were
going slowly.

At the least, the models had proved that the idea worked-assuming that
he could keep the basket and equipment light enough.

After setting the model carefully on the end of the bench, he centered
the lens frame and remeasured with his calipers.  The frame held the
smaller of the two cut and polished fire-eyes and the lens that would
focus the sun's light onto the polished and re-ordered gem.  For his
first experiment with the polished fire-eye, the beam from the gem
would strike only a square of heavy iron less than two cubits below the
gem.

Both the crystal lens and the gem were set in sliding and adjustable
brackets, whose position would depend on where Justen wanted his
"organized chaos" to strike.  He suspected that the brackets would have
to be much farther apart when he actually used the balloon.

When he had finished measuring and locking the brackets in place, he
lifted the square of heavy iron and carried it out into the yard,
placing it on a square stone paving slab, a corner of it missing, that
he had begged from the quarry.

Finally, after a quick glance to ensure that the cloudless summer sky
had remained so, he brought out the frame and set it on the paving
slab, too.  Then he carefully centered the frame above the heavy square
of one-span-thick iron plate, a chunk weighing more than a stone.

Elisabet, Cirlin, and Horas stood on the porch.  Horas shifted his
weight from one foot to the other, while Elisabet, looking more like
the young woman she was becoming than the gawky girl she had been,
gazed calmly toward Justen.  The calm, feminine look vanished as Justen
caught her eyes, to be replaced with a girlish grin.

Justen grinned back.

Cirlin's face was sober, as if she did not totally approve of Justen's
experiments.  That was not exactly surprising, Jus-ten reflected. Since
his return, he had indicated love for a druid, built two devices
unsanctioned by the Council, and was planning worse.

Much worse, assuming that the experiment turned out the way he thought
it would.  Darkness knew what Gunnar would think.  His brother had
indicated that he might show up... but with Gunnar, that could mean
anything.

Justen turned the frame slightly, calculating the sun's position, and
fiddled with the lens bracket.  A point of light struck the fire-eye,
and an even finer beam touched the iron.

Justen stepped back almost a dozen paces and concentrated, closing his
eyes and weaving a little light into the lens, smoothing the flow onto
and into the gem.  The now-familiar shadow gathered around him and fell
across the house.

Sssssssss... The line of light from the gem became a line of fire that
fell on the plate.  Sparks fountained into the sky.  Immediately,
Justen relaxed his grasp on the light, and the shadows disappeared.

He took a deep breath and stood up.

"Is that all?"  murmured Elisabet.

"For a moment."  Justen walked forward to inspect the plate In the
brief time he had concentrated the light, his light-sword had stabbed
halfway through the heavy iron.  The engineer frowned.  Impressive as
the beam from the gem had been in some ways, explosive powder was more
effective He walked back almost to the porch.  "Don't look at the lens,
please.  It could hurt your eyes."

"But we want to see," protested his sister.

"Elisabet."  The name came from three voices almost simultaneously.

"All right," conceded Elisabet.  "All right.  I don't see why you're
all so worried, but... all right."  With a flick of short blond hair,
she turned to view the oak beside the road.

Justen wet his lips and took another deep breath before closing his
eyes, stretching to gather a wider sweep of light, weaving, focusing,
and sensing the growing flow of order like a river from the heavens,
even as a darker force seemed to gather, welling from Sssttt..  .
cruummppttt!

Justen felt himself being thrown against the stones of the porch
foundation, the wind whipping past him with the force of a
waterspout.

Thuddd... He struggled to raise his arm, but the blackness smashed his
thoughts from him.  "... ugghhn ..."

Someone groaned, then groaned again, Justen realized he was the one
groaning, and he forced his mouth closed.  *... Justen ... dearest

Rain fell across his face, cold, dripping.  He opened his eyes, but
only bright sparks fluttered in front of his vision.  Justen .. .
dearest.  Think.  Balance.  Balance the forces

Listening somehow to the faint thoughts of Dayala, he sought both the
chaos and the order within himself, accepting both of them, and the
bright flashes faded.  He squinted.

Heavy clouds dropped rain and hail across the blackened space that had
been grass.

Slowly, he levered himself upright.

"Demons ..."  Then he lurched toward the porch steps.  "Elisabet!
Elisabet!"

His sister lay in a heap, crumpled against the furniture that had been
swept onto the far side of the porch by the force of the power he had
unleashed, Blood oozed down her face from a gash hidden by her hair.
But his trembling fingers and senses revealed that despite cuts and
bruises, she seemed unhurt and the pulse of order beat strongly in her
veins.

On his knees, Justen scrambled toward the other slack forms.  Horas
seemed more stunned than physically injured.  Justen turned toward his
mother, sensing the pain and damage, and offered what order he could
spare to Cirlin, whose breathing was labored and shallow.

The porch and the gray clouds beyond seemed to tilt.  Jus-ten tried to
take a deep breath, but a line of pain shot up his side, and his chest
seemed to contract.  This time, he could not fight off the blackness
that swallowed him.

CXXXIV

Beltar swept into the lower room of the White tower, even before the
clunk of the door against the chaos-whitened stone had finished echoing
down the corridor.  "Eldiren!  Eldiren!"

Eldiren looked up from the basin where he had dipped a corner of a
towel to dampen it.  He blotted the blood off one cheek with the
dampened corner.  "Yes, mightiest of High Wizards?"

"Eldiren ... do you want to go the way of Zerchas?"

"You'd only waste your power."  The slight White Wizard continued to
blot away the blood.  He laughed once.  "This business of exploding
screeing glasses is getting to be a bother."  He straightened and
looked at the High Wizard.  "No.  I don't know exactly what happened,
but it had the feeling of combined order and chaos."

"That's what I thought.  It came from Recluce."  Eldiren inclined his
head slightly and pressed the towel to the thin slash on his cheek.
"You know more than I, then."

"I'd like you to try to find out what caused this .. . this
abomination.  It feels too much like that engineer you .. . 'killed."
"

"That killing may haunt me for some time, I fear."  Beltar frowned.
"You still don't admit it, do you?"

"Admit what?"

"For having so little power, Eldiren, you're almost insufferable."

"With so little power, mightiest of High Wizards, could I afford to be
less?"  Eldiren finally lifted the damp towel from his cheek.  "It
would be nice to have a real healer around at times."

"You .. ."  Beltar finally closed his mouth.  He walked over to the
table on which broken glass lay in the rough semblance of a circle,
then turned back to Eldiren.  "Use a goblet, or whatever, but find out
what caused this .. , mess."

"Of course.  Your desire is always my command."  Eldiren bowed.

CXXXV

Gunnar and the healer, Gyris, looked down at Justen, stretched out on
his bed.  The lamp in the wall sconce flickered in the breeze blowing
through the half-open window, but the early evening wind was light and
too infrequent to cool the heat that had returned after the chill of
the hail and the thunderstorm.

"Well..."  grumbled Justen, too sore to wipe the dampness from his
forehead.

"You have two cracked ribs, more bruises than you'll ever count, and
you're probably lucky to be alive."  Gyris frowned.  "From the marks on
your back, it looks like you were thrown against the wall.  What
happened?"

Justen started to shrug, but the twinges from his ribs stopped the
gesture short.  "I don't know exactly.  I was testing some lenses, and
somehow that generated an explosion, or a storm, or something, I
remember being thrown against the wall .. . and then crawling up the
steps to find Elisabet and the others."

"Very strange."  The dark-haired healer pursed her lips.  "I may talk
to Turmin about this."

"He was the one who suggested the work with lenses," Justen offered.
"He said it was theoretical, but this isn't exactly a theoretical
soreness."  He offered a faint smile.

"Once you get over the soreness, you can move around.  But don't lift
anything heavy, and stay away from smithing and hammering until the
ribs knit.  I suspect that you have more than enough order-sense to
know when your ribs are healed."

"Thank you," said Justen.

"Thank you," echoed Gunnar with a nod to the healer.

"I won't say it was a pleasure, Gunnar, but it was interesting to deal
with"

"Order-madness?"  suggested Justen politely.

Gyris raised an eyebrow.  "You said that, not me.  It has been
interesting.  But I prefer to avoid the interesting when possible." She
half-turned to Gunnar.  "Everyone else should be fine.  Your mother has
a badly bruised rib that almost feels like it was broken and healed." 
Her eyes dropped back to Justen.

Justen smiled faintly.  "Don't look at me."

"From what I've heard, I wouldn't put anything past you, Justen."  She
picked up her pack and added, "Try not to get into any more trouble."

Gunnar took her arm for a moment, as if to lead her out.

"You, either, Gunnar."

"Me?"

"The two of you."  Gyris frowned, then shook her head as she shouldered
her pack and allowed Gunnar to escort her from the room.

Justen took a gentle, slow breath and waited for Gunnar to come back.

After Gunnar had seen Gyris to her mount and returned, he looked down
at Justen.  "What in the demons' minds were you doing?"

"Working with order."

"Darkness save us if you started to work with chaos!"  Gunnar sighed.
"Exactly why are you doing this?  And who will be the next innocent
victims of your experiments?"

"No one."  Justen cleared his throat, gingerly and softly.  I'm done
with the experiments, at least with the dangerous ones.  Now all I have
to do is finish putting the balloon together and complete plating the
land engine, I can probably start that in a few days."

"With cracked ribs?"

"They'll heal fast,"

"You did heal Mother, didn't you?  That's why you're in such bad
shape."

"What else was I supposed to do?"

Gunnar looked at the lamp and then gazed out the window into the
growing darkness.

"Ryltar will be moving to have you confined-as soon as he finds out
about this.  You've just proved, you idiot, that you are not only
order-mad, but dangerous to everyone around you!"

Justen stopped another shrug before he could complete it.  "Order-mad
because I'm trying to figure out how to stop a threat that no one sees
besides me?"

"We've lasted a long time with Fairhaven.  Recluce won't blow away any
time soon, unless you're the one who blows it away."  Gunnar frowned.
"Just what was this 'experiment' anyway?"

"I was trying to order light and make it stronger."

"You certainly made it stronger.  But I don't understand the hail or
the storm that appeared so quickly."

"When the light gets ordered like that and creates heat ... well, it
doesn't really create heat.  Remember the forge?"

"Oh, shit.  So you made the air overhead really cold.  That chilled out
the water into hail and we got a thunderstorm.  Now you're going to use
your damned engineering to muck up the weather, too?"  Gunnar slammed
his hand into the wall.

"Not here.  Not anymore."  Justen tried not to yawn, but the stifled
yawn hurt all the same.  Tap ... "Is Justen going to be all right?"
Elisabet peered into the room.

"He'll be fine," snorted Gunnar.  "The rest of us may not survive his
engineering, but he'll be just fine."

Elisabet stepped just inside the doorway.  "What he did was really
neat, Gunnar.  You could see-I didn't look, Jus-ten, I meant I saw with
my senses-the rays of order coming from the fire-eye and hitting that
iron plate, and it was like a huge storm building.  I ducked and
dragged Dad down, but Mom wasn't quick enough.  She's lucky she wasn't
hurt worse."

"She was," said Gunnar sourly.  "Justen healed her.  That's why he's a
mess."

"So everyone's all right except Justen, and he will be.  Why are you so
upset?"  Elisabet's fine eyebrows drew together for a moment.

"Because..."

"Is it because Justen's getting to be a good all-around wizard like
you?"

"Elisabet, that's not fair to Gunnar."

"All right."  She turned to face Gunnar.  "I'm not grown up yet, and no
one really listens to me.  But I think Justen's right.  People here on
Recluce just can't keep saying that what the Whites do doesn't matter
because they can't hurt us.  What happens when they get powerful enough
so they can?  Then how many people will be killed?  Or won't it matter,
because everyone who's alive now figures he'll be dead then?"

"It's not something that will happen soon," Gunnar pointed out.

"Oh, you don't think Creslin should have changed the weather and made a
refuge for order, then, because the Whites had killed only a few
people?"  Elisabet stared at Gunnar.

Justen grinned as he lay there.

"You've been listening to Justen again."

"What if I have?  If you won't go to Candar with him, I will.  I can do
everything he needs.  Then you can sit at home and claim that whatever
happens wasn't your fault.  I hate you!"  Elisabet glared at Gunnar.

"But..  ."  Gunnar protested.

"Justen had to go to Candar before you'd think about it-"

"I never said I wasn't going with him.  I did say that he was going to
kill everyone around him if he weren't more careful."  The door opened
and shut with a dull thud.  The three looked at their father.

"This has got to stop."  Horas delivered each word with the force of an
ax.  "You three are arguing as if nothing happened today.  Like
schoolchildren.  As if upsetting all of nature and blotting out the sun
is just some .. . magisters learning tool.  Justen almost killed all of
us, and then himself."

Gunnar looked at his brother.  Justen tried to repress a grin, a grin
he didn't quite understand.

"What are you grinning at?  This isn't a game, son.  You think I don't
know, but you almost killed your mother, and then healed her before you
thought she knew.  That was dangerous, and it was dishonest.  You have
the right to risk your own life.  You don't have the right to risk
hers."

"It seems that everyone has figured that out," admitted Justen wryly.
He tried to shift his weight, but his ribs twinged again.

"What happens when you kill someone outright?"

Justen took a deep breath.  "Just before you came in, Gunnar was
telling me that I was going to kill everyone around me if I weren't
more careful."

"He's right.  Just when are you going to stop this foolishness?"

"I'm done with the experiments.  I was telling Gunnar and Elisabet
that."

"Now you're going to kill people for real?"  Horas asked, exasperation
in his voice.

"Stop sounding like Lydya in the old chronicles," snapped Justen.
"Everyone says that life will be fine if I just forget this foolish
obsession of mine.  "Go on, Justen.  Don't worry about anything.
Recluce will be fine.  Don't worry if the Whites conquer all of Candar.
Don't worry if all trade with Recluce gets cut off.  Everything will be
fine."" Justen glared from his prone position.  "Well, it won't be
fine.  I'm sorry this happened.  It won't happen again, because as soon
as I can, I'm leaving."

Horas's shoulders slumped.  "You can't keep doing this, Justen,"

The door opened again, and Cirlin stood there.  "It is rather difficult
to get any rest with the four of you arguing about whether Candar and
the world should be saved and if Gunnar or Elisabet should help Justen
save it, and whether Justen meant to hurt us."  She turned to Horas. "I
know Jus-ten didn't mean what happened."

"Good intentions don't bring back dead people," Horas said, an edge to
his voice.  "Justen will go off and save the world, but I'd like him to
leave our corner halfway intact."

"That's the problem, and that's why Justen's right and you're wrong,
Father," Elisabet said.

Gunnar took a deep breath.  Justen tried to hold back the insane
grinning feeling he felt.

Elisabet turned to her mother, then to her father.  "I will go!  And
you can't stop me!  You don't understand how important it is.  You
don't!"

"Elisabet .. ."  Gunnar's voice was low.  "Justen and I and Martan will
go, and as soon as we can."

"You two ..."  sighed Horas.  "More death and destruction?"

"You act as if I have a choice," said Justen slowly.  "I don't."

"You have to blow up your family?"  snapped Horas.

"No.  I have to right the Balance .. . except that the ancients didn't
exactly hand me a map."

"You are going to save the world?  And face who knows how many White
Wizards, when you couldn't handle even a few in Sarronnyn?"

"I know more now."  Justen forced a smile.  "I think you saw that."

"You'll destroy us all."

"I don't have a choice."  Justen kept his voice even.

"But-"

"Horas," said Cirlin evenly, "if Justen doesn't have a choice, he
doesn't have a choice.  And if that's the way he feels, then we need to
help him get to Candar as quickly as possible.  Before we start a civil
war here on Recluce."

"That's ridiculous," said Horas.

"Oh?"  asked Cirlin.  "And what are we doing right now?"  Her eyes
swept the group.

A short silence filled the room.

"I think I can persuade Heldra and her daughter to help with the
stitching on Justen's balloon," added Cirlin.

Horas shifted his weight from one bare foot to the other.

"Father... I didn't mean it," Elisabet pleaded.  "But Jus-ten's right.
I know he's right."

"We'll see, daughter."  Horas looked at Justen.  "Heldra, unlike the
rest of us, is not likely to stitch your fancy silk sheen on faith."

"I've still got some golds to pay them with."

"That would definitely help."  Cirlin's eyes traversed the four.  "Now
that we've settled that, can we get some sleep?  Or some quiet?"

"Oh, Mother .. ."  But Elisabet hugged Cirlin, very gently.  Then she
stepped toward her father.  "I'm sorry, Father."

"It's all right."  Horas took a deep breath.  "Mostly."

"I'm sorry, Father," Justen added.  "I wasn't careful enough."

Elisabet slipped her arms around Horas.

Gunnar gave a faint smile past her to Justen, and Justen nodded.

Cirlin shook her head.  "Such an amiable and agreeable group.  So
willing and eager to see each other's views."

Horas coughed.  "Speaking of views .. . Since everyone's still up, and
since no one is about to listen to my views-"

"Oh, Father," said Elisabet, exasperation edging her tone.

"I'm going to put out cider and a perfectly good peach pie.  Shouldn't
go to waste, I say," said Horas.  His tone turned wry.  "After all,
Justen might turn his lenses or something on it."

"If you've got some ale," said Justen, easing himself into a sitting
position and ignoring the twinges in his ribs, "I'll take you up on the
pie."

Gunnar gave a faint, exasperated headshake.

"I'd like that, too."  Elisabet led the way to the kitchen.

Horas stood aside, then gave Justen a long look and a sad headshake.

Justen swallowed, but struggled to his feet.

CXXXVI

"I think the Council should consider an order for confinement of this
.. . what's his name?"  Ryltar glanced toward Claris.

"You can stop the act, Ryltar," suggested Jenna, her eyes not meeting
his, but drifting toward the light-splashed terrace beyond the Council
Room.  "You know very well the engineer's name."

"What is his name?"  asked Claris, her voice deliberately sweet.

"Justen.  You two make me sick with all your games, as if you'd never
heard about..."

"Heard about what, Ryltar?  That this Justen made money with some sharp
trading?  Or that he's apparently been a success as a trader while
remaining highly ordered?  Or is there something else we should know?
Has he decided to compete with you on the Hamor routes?"  Jenna turned
her head and favored the wispy-haired counselor with a smile.

"The marines say that he's strangely accomplished with weapons," added
Ryltar.

"I believe your... cousin ... noted that, even before this Justen went
to Sarronnyn.  Is there something else?"  asked Claris.

"What does it take?  The man's order-mad.  I'm not talking about exile
or execution.  I just want him confined so that he doesn't hurt himself
or anyone else."

"I believe he is resting with his family in Wandernaught.  His brother
is a Weather Wizard who is directly under Turmin's supervision.  This
rest is a confinement of sorts, since he has been effectively removed
from the engineering hall."

"I would like to request that he be physically confined and thoroughly
examined, not only by Turmin, but by several other mages in the
Brotherhood."

"Perhaps we should take that up at our next meeting," suggested Jenna.
"It might help if you had some better reasons, also, Ryltar."

"The next meeting is more than two eight-days from now."

"As you have pointed out often, Ryltar," added Claris, "we do not have
to act precipitously when we are not even sure something is yet a
problem."

"Fine.  Next meeting."  Ryltar stood and lifted the thin leather case
and walked out stiffly.  The heavy door closed behind him with a
thud.

"He's angry.  I don't believe I've ever seen him that angry," observed
Claris.

"He's not telling us something, and I don't know why.  It's almost as
if he's afraid of this Justen."  Jenna brushed a strand of hair off her
forehead and back over her ear.  "And he never answered my question
about the Hamor trade.  None of it makes sense."

"If Ryltar's afraid, it might be well for us to fear it also, Jenna."
Claris stood and glanced toward the closed door.  "Ryltar is so
cautious that he never wants to act.  Now he does.  What does that tell
us?"  She nodded politely.  "Good day."

Jenna suppressed a frown as she stood also and answered.  "Good day."

CXXXVII

"Damned strange basket, if you ask me," confessed Seldit, glancing at
the oblong, waist-high woven basket standing in the middle of the
cooper's workroom.

"Exactly what I need."  Justen smiled briefly, running his fingers
across the triple-woven top ridge.  "You did this well."

"Don't get much call for baskets this big, young fellow."

"That's probably true.  I owe you three for this?"

"We'd agreed on three ..."

Justen caught the suggestion in the cooper's voice.  "But it took more
time and effort than you thought it would?"

"Not a lot, but... Mallin had to help me some nights to get it ready."
The engineer lifted his purse, opened it and set four golds on the
bench.  "Here's four."

"That's generous, scr."

"Not at all.  You had it ready when I needed it, and that's important.
I've got the wagon outside."

"You'll take it now?"

Justen caught the undercurrent of-was it fear?-in the cooper's voice
and answered as heartily as he could.  "Best strike while the iron's
hot.  Old smith saying, you know."  He replaced his purse and lifted
the basket, light enough for him to heft alone, a good sign.  "If you
would open the door?"

"Certainly."  Master Justen."

Justen carried the wicker basket through the open double doors and out
into the street, where he eased it into the wagon bed, then lifted and
latched the tailgate shut.

"Excellent work, Seldit!"  the engineer exclaimed, loudly enough that
Basta, standing in the doorway of his leather-and-dry-goods shop,
turned to look toward the rotund cooper, whose shoulders slumped under
the weight of the unasked praise.  "First rate!"  Justen added, trying
to conceal a malicious grin as he untied the horses and climbed onto
the wagon.  While his ribs seemed healed, he did not want to attempt a
vault.  "Thank you," answered Seldit weakly.  "We try to please,
scr."

Justen released the wagon brake and flicked the reins.  The horses
carried the near-empty wagon out of Wandernaught with easy steps.
Thinking again about Seldit's reactions, the engineer frowned.

Shrezsan was working in the garden, her toddler nearby, and she waved
briefly.

Justen returned the wave, still thinking about Seldit, and Ryltar.  How
much longer before Ryltar would push the Council into acting?  He
coughed to clear his throat, relieved that the cough didn't create even
the slightest twinge in his ribs.

But why was Ryltar so concerned?  The counselor didn't seem to be the
type who really cared much about order, or even about tradition.  The
fact that he was involved with smugglers showed that his concern was
with coin, not with higher considerations.  Justen continued to mull
the question as the team carried him back to the house.

He pulled on the reins slightly to slow the horses before they turned
onto the lane and plodded up to the stable.

Elisabet waved from the orchard, then came running.  Gunnar was waiting
by the stable and slipped the wagon blocks in place as Justen set the
brake and climbed down.

"Does anyone need the wagon?"  asked Justen.

"Not that I know of."

"No," added Elisabet.  "Even the early apples aren't ready to go
anywhere yet."

"Then I'll put it away after I get this inside."  Justen lifted the
basket over the tailgate.  "The balloon and the lens framework are
finished.  All I need to do is attach the brackets to this basket.
After that, let's load the land engine and leave tonight."

"I'd thought- Why?"  asked Gunnar.

"Tonight?  So soon?"  asked Elisabet.

"Because someone is watching and thinks it will be later.  Seldit
really didn't want me to take the basket yet.  He was obviously uneasy
about it, even after I gave him an extra gold."

"Free with your corn, aren't you?"

"I thought it was well invested to get the basket and get out."  _,

"Your coal bins aren't full.  Dad and I can fill them while you and
Mother do the brackets."  Gunnar paused.  "Is it a good idea to travel
the High Road at night?"

"It might be better.  I don't know how horses would take to the land
engine."

"There is that."

"I can pack up some food to go with all the dried provisions stored in
the chest," added Horas, who had just walked past the stable from the
eastern grove.

"We might have to wait a few days in Nylan for the Llyse," added
Gunnar.

"That's still better than being here.  I could put the land engine in
the engineering hall, I think, for the engineers to 'study."  "

Gunnar nodded.  "You're worried.  A lot."

"I think Ryltar's up to something, maybe a lot of somethings.  And I
don't understand why."

"That might be," said Horas, "but you need to be thinking about loading
and preparing to depart, if that's what you've got in mind."

"Trust Father to be the practical one," laughed Gunnar.  "Where do we
start?"

"With the balloon.  It goes in the inside compartments.  I've packed
some spare fabric, but I really don't want it ripped.  The frame for
the lenses is already broken down and inside the padded crate on the
floor of the shed ..."  Justen began to detail what went where in the
limited cargo space of the land engine.

"I never realized that you could be so well-organized," Gunnar told his
brother.

"I've thought about it for a while, and-"

"Tell me what I can bring out," interrupted Elisabet.

"You can bring out all the supplies.  Father knows where they are." The
engineer looked at the nearly cloudless late-afternoon sky.  "I need to
get the land engine out.  I don't think we'll need the canvases,
though."

"Canvases?"  asked Cirlin as she walked down from the smithy.

"Those canvas covers you had Heldra make.  They're to keep the rain or
too much sun off us, but I don't think we'll need them on the way to
Nylan."

"No.  There won't be any rain," added Elisabet as she set off for the
kitchen, scurrying after Horas.

Justen, Gunnar, and Cirlin wheeled the land engine out of the stable
and into the yard.

"Take more than three people to move this once it's loaded."  Gunnar
leaned against the side armor of the craft and wiped his forehead.

"Not on the road, but on soft ground."  Justen set the brake.

Elisabet returned from the kitchen with several waxed packages.  "Where
do I put these?"

"Set them here."  Justen pointed to the seat beside the driver.  "I'll
load them once they're all here.  I know in which order they go inside
the locker."  Gunnar raised his eyebrows.

"I measured.  What good's an engineer's training if he doesn't use
it?"

"I think I'll get the balloon," Gunnar answered.

"I'll help," added Cirlin.

"Father wants to know if he can start dinner."  Elisabet.  looked at
Justen.

"Yes.  That would be just right."

"Optimist," muttered Gunnar.

Despite Gunnar's pessimism, the loading was complete just before Horas
called out, "Dinner."

"I'll be right there.  I'm going to get the firebox ready to light."
Justen whittled some shavings from a branch he had taken from the
woodpile.  Although he had some shavings in a box in the coal bin, they
were to be saved for possible emergencies.

After setting the shavings and some chips and twigs in the firebox, he
walked to the outside pump where he washed the coal dust and grime off
his hands and face, then shook the water off his hands.

The others were at the table when he entered.

"Spiced lamb!"  announced Elisabet.  "And berry bread, and pie."

"That's for later, young woman," said Horas.

"Pass the lamb, please," asked Gunnar.

Justen extended the bread to his mother, and then to Elisabet, who
promptly slathered her slab with cherry conserve.  Justen set a slice
on the edge of his plate and waited for the lamb, still wondering about
Seldit and Ryltar.

"This is good," said Gunnar.  "We're going to miss this kind of
cooking."

Justen took a bite of the bread.

"Why do you have to leave now?  Why so soon?"  asked Elisabet.

"Counselor Ryltar wants to lock me up because I'm order-mad," mumbled
Justen through a mouthful of hot bread.

"Finish eating before you talk," suggested Horas.

"You don't know that for sure," protested Gunnar.

"Sure enough."  Justen held up a hand and swallowed.  "I still don't
understand why.  All Ryltar seems interested in is trade and money."

"If he's a trader," suggested Horas.  "He wants to keep taxes low,
because the levies fall on traders and businesses.  If what you do
starts a war between Fairhaven and Recluce, his taxes will go up and
his profits will fall."

"He wants to confine me because I might do something that leads to
war?"  Justen took a sip of ale from his mug and spooned more lamb onto
his plate, reflecting that he wouldn't get cooking as good as his
father's for a long time, if ever.  He swallowed.

"Maybe he likes things the way they are," suggested Cirlin.  Traders
don't like change."

Justen frowned.  "He does handle smuggling."  He ate some of the lamb,
enjoying the meat and mixed spices.

"It's not illegal here, just in places like Hamor and Candar," added
Gunnar.

"Maybe he doesn't want Justen to succeed," suggested Elisabet.

"He doesn't even know what I'm doing."  He can't, since I myself am
still not exactly sure of what's going to happen.

"Elisabet may be right," said Gunnar.  "Let's say that you do
something, anything, to unbalance things in Candar, anything that
reduces the power of the Whites.  The Whites control their trade
absolutely, and they tax it heavily.  They have to.  That's how they
support all those armies and levies."

"So?"

"The Whites have always tried to reduce free trading.  What advantage
does Ryltar have over the other traders?  He deals with smugglers. Now,
smugglers can exist only if they provide things people can't get, or if
they charge less for their services.  If they don't pay the Whites'
taxes."

Horas nodded.  "So more White control means more coins in Ryltar's
purse?"

"Is that enough to want to lock Justen up?"

"I don't know."  Justen shrugged.  "There has to be something else, but
what it is ..."

"Could anyone be that greedy?"  mused Horas.

"I don't think you can underestimate greed," answered Cirlin.

"I still think I could go."  Elisabet looked at Justen.

"Only when you're as good as Gunnar with the storms, or as good an
engineer as Justen, dear," responded Cirlin.

"That's not fair."

The other four laughed gently.

"All right.  Fair doesn't count, but I don't have to like it."

Justen reached over and patted Elisabet's shoulder.  "Someday ...
someday ... you too can go off into the world and do utterly idiotic
deeds that could kill you."  "... and fall in love with strange people
in strange places that your family has never seen," added Horas, a
twinkle in his eye.  "... and build wondrous devices that throw your
family through stone walls," added Cirlin dryly.  "Promise?"  asked
Elisabet.  The older four laughed again, with less restraint.  By the
time dinner was over, the sun had dropped behind the hills.

Justen and Gunnar carried their packs out to the land engine.  There
Justen checked the coal bins again, easing another shovelful of coal
into them.  Then he opened the firebox and used the striker to light
the shavings and wood, adding a few chunks of coal to begin building up
the fire.  Once the edges of the coal had caught, he closed the door
and left the scuttle by the firebox.  He didn't want to use the coal
from the bins until the land engine was actually on the road.

"Let's put the packs here."  He reached out and set his by the third
seat, and reached back to get Gunnar's.

Then he used the small bellows to force the fire into a hotter flame,
waiting to add more coal.

Sssssss... Justen reached above the back of the third seat, trying not
to snag his sleeve on the wicker balloon basket, containing assorted
supplies, in order to close the steam valve.  The balloon fabric was
folded and stored in one of the storage spaces under the black iron
armor.  Then he eased forward and climbed out of the land engine to
stand beside the driver's seat with Gunnar.

In the early twilight, Cirlin, Horas, and Elisabet stood a pace or so
back from the land engine.

"I still wish you'd let me go," said Elisabet.  "One ride wasn't really
enough."

"Watching that one was bad enough," mumbled Horas.

Elisabet turned toward her father.  "I wasn't in an any danger.  Justen
wouldn't even go fast."

"Praise the darkness he didn't."

Justen hugged Elisabet, then Cirlin and Horas.  Gunnar did the same,
beginning with Horas.

"We'd better get moving," suggested Gunnar as he stepped back from
hugging his sister.

"Be careful with that..  . thing," warned Horas, .  "It's no different
from a Brotherhood ship, dear," noted Cirlin.  ' "Ships are dangerous,
too."

Justen grinned as he caught the teasing tone in his father's voice.
"We'll be careful.  As careful as we can be."

"That's probably not careful enough."

In the quiet, punctuated only by the gentle hiss of steam, Gunnar
climbed into the seat beside the driver's seat, and Justen slipped into
the driver's seal, wiggling the tiller.  The third seat, raised and to
the rear, was vacant.

Justen eased the throttle to begin the steam flow to the turbine.

Creakkkkk .. . The land engine rolled down the lane and toward the
road.  Behind them, Cirlin, Horas, and Elizabet waved.  The brothers
waved back through the twilight.

Neither Gunnar nor Justen spoke until they were on the road to
Wandernaught.

"You know ... some of the people are going to think that we're some
sort of monster when we puff through town."  Gunnar pursed his lips.

Without taking his eyes from the road, Justen increased the steam flow
to the pistons driving the shaft.  "They might, but not many people
will be out, and we don't sound very different from a heavy wagon.  The
engine's not really noisy."

"I don't know.  This is bigger than most wagons."

"Not if you consider that we don't have any horses up front.  But we'll
have to see."

They rolled past Shrezsan's and Yousal's house, and Shrezsan's parents
house, and into Wandernaught.  The main street was clear of horses and
wagons.  Upstairs lamps were lit in the quarters above the cooper's and
above Basta's, and two lanterns flared outside The Broken Wheel.  Three
men stood under the lanterns, two of them gesturing toward the larger
figure, who lifted a truncheon.  "... off with ye!  Not another
word!"

"Our coin's good as any!"

"Light's piss!  What the frig is that?"  The middle figure turned and
dashed toward the alley, away from the inn and the passing land
engine.

The other two watched openmouthed as the machine rolled up the street
and past the inn.  "It's something ..."

"I know it's something!  Looks like a wizard's nightmare."

"Yousal said that wizard .. . Justen .. ."  The voices faded from
Justen's hearing, straining as he was, as the land engine passed the
post house.  He turned the tiller, and the craft headed toward the High
Road.

"You only scared the shit out of one in three," said Gunnar, "and they
know it's you.  How long before Ryltar finds out?"

"A day after we get to Nylan.  Maybe two.  We'll get there maybe two
days ahead of the post,"

"How?"  asked Gunnar warily.

"We're going straight through.  Where could we stop?"

"You can't steer this thing that long."

"I don't intend to."  Justen laughed.  "You're going to learn how."

"Me?"  gulped the Weather Wizard.

"You," affirmed Justen.

CXXXVIII

Beltar took a deep swallow from the goblet and immediately refilled it.
"Here in the tower, you have to drink it quickly, before it sours,"

"The result of centuries of chaos, no doubt," murmured Eldiren.

"No doubt."  The High Wizard set his goblet on the table and fingered
the links from which the gold amulet hung across his white tunic.  "No
doubt."  He picked up the goblet and took another deep swallow.

"Being High Wizard isn't as much fun as conquering places, is it?"

"No fun at all."  The High Wizard carefully set his goblet on the table
again and glanced toward the half-open tower window.  He wiped his
forehead, for the stillness of the hangings revealed the lack of breeze
on the hot, early fall day.  "Everyone hates you, and each one tiptoes
around.  No one says anything but "Yes, High Wizard.  Yes, High
Wizard."  "

"Yes, High Wizard."

"Eldiren!  Just because I'm half-potted, it doesn't mean I can't
think."

"What would you have me say?"

"You could tell me what you found out about that wizard."

"Which..  wizard?"

"The one who exploded the screeing glasses.  Twice .. . wasn't it?"

Eldiren's fingers brushed over the thin scar on his cheek.  "Ah ...
yes.  That wizard."

"You know full well it was that wizard."  Beltar reached for the wine
bottle again.

"I don't know.  He's hard to even find.  The glass isn't clear, and it
seems like there's a mix of order and chaos around him, but it's all
ordered, except how can chaos be ordered?"

"Oh, frig you."  Beltar took another deep swallow from the goblet
before refilling it and setting down the empty bottle with exaggerated
care.  "You mean that we've got... a real, honest-to-darkness ... Gray
Wizard, the kind everyone says there can't be?"

Eldiren fingered his goblet, whose contents he had not touched.  "I
couldn't say for sure, I think so."

"Frig!  I got "Yes, High Wizard' this and "Yes, High Wizard' that, and
now I've got to worry about a demon-damned Gray Wizard who goes around
exploding screeing glasses so no one can even find him?"

Eldiren stared at the table.

Beltar downed the remnants in his goblet and set the glass aside.
"You're not drinking.  Let me have yours.  You look at it too long and
it'll turn sour.  Like everything else round here."

CXXXIX

Clever.  Very clever," Altara ran her fingertips across the
parchment-thin black iron armor, backed with span-thickness black oak.
"But then, you've always been clever with applications, Justen.  How,
might I ask, did you get through the gate in this contraption?"

"He told the guards that he was delivering it to you," said Gunnar,
"and that you'd be angry if it didn't get there.  When that didn't
quite convince them, he pointed out that either the device was good, in
which case, they couldn't stop him, or that it wasn't, in which case,
the engineering hall was the best place for it.  Then he told them that
he was the order-mad engineer.  Quite a performance."

"I can bet," Altara glanced from Gunnar to Justen.

"It really wasn't," Justen protested.  "Besides, not very much of the
land engine is original.  I told them that, too- that it was just like
a small ship.  Most of the parts and assemblies are what we use on the
ships, or small adaptations."

"I recall that there was nothing terribly original about your black
order-tipped arrows, either," noted the chief engineer dryly, "I'd be
terrified to think what you might do if you really got original.
Something like this is bad enough."

Justen decided not to mention the balloon or the beam of ordered-light
created from the polished and ordered fire-eyes.

Gunnar glanced at the hard-packed clay beside the rear loading door
leading into the engineering hall.  - "So, what am I supposed to do
with this .. . device?"  Altara offered a wry smile.

"I thought that you and the others might wish to examine it for a day
or so before-" Justen broke off.

"Yes.  Spare me the details, Justen."  Altara glanced toward the early
morning sun, just above the Eastern Ocean.  "Do I understand that you
want to hide this original needle in the haystack in the engineering
hall for a day or so?  Is that what you're really asking?"

"Yes, honored and knowledge-seeking Chief Engineer."

"And in that way, you will doubtless ensure that every engineer alive
knows what you have done and how to replicate it.  So either your
design will endure forever or the Council will decide to banish us
all?"

"I think it highly unlikely that the Council will banish you all," said
Gunnar.

"Maybe not.  Then again, it may not be that improbable.  The honorable
Counselor Ryltar has inquired about your health only a half-score times
over the past several eight-days.  He seems to want to ensure that your
rest cure is ... thorough."

"I don't see it," said Justen through a yawn.

"Who knows?"  Altara looked at Justen.  "You look tired.  How much
sleep have you had?"

"Not much lately."

"And what are you really up to?  As if I didn't know."

"You want me to tell you?"  Justen forced a laugh.  "We're just trying
to subvert the entire Brotherhood by showing how easy it is to build a
land engine."  He tried not to wince at the stab of pain through his
skull at this small lie.

Altara shook her head.  "You really can't keep this here long."

"I know.  But it is an engineering device.  Two nights?"

"We'll see."  The chief engineer looked toward Gunnar.  "Can you keep
him out of trouble?  And get him some sleep?"

Gunnar shrugged.

"Are you going to sleep in Gunnar's room?"  asked Altara, turning back
to face Justen.

"Not at night.  I have some provisions so that I can sleep in the land
engine, or next to it."  Justen looked at the rear wheel.

"I'm not sure which is worse, admitting you to the Brotherhood quarters
or to the engineering hall."  Altara laughed nervously.

"I'll stay away from the hall during the day," offered Jus-ten.

"Well, let's get this land wagon, land engine-whatever you call
it-inside, before too many people see it."

Justen released the brake and used the last of the steam to start the
land engine rolling.

"Over there," suggested Altara.  "We won't be using the big mill for a
couple of eight-days."

"Do you want me to explain it-the land engine-to anyone before we go
get something to eat?"  asked Justen.  "I'm sure you'll find a way
before you leave-"

"Justen!"  Warin walked past Altara and hugged the younger engineer. He
paused.  "You shouldn't be back.  You still look tired."

"Maybe I shouldn't.  Here's our project," Justen grinned at Altara.  "A
land engine.  See ... we took the small boiler.

Behind them, Altara glanced at Gunnar.  Both shook their head.

After Warin left, Gunnar grabbed Justen by the arm.  "I'm starving, and
if you don't get out of here, Altara will throw both you and the land
engine out."

They slipped out the back door and down the alley toward the harbor.

"Why did you say you wanted to sleep in the hall with the land engine?
That isn't going to be comfortable."  Gunnar looked at the shops
ahead.

"I probably won't sleep."  Justen yawned.  "After we get something to
eat at Houlart's, I'm going to sleep on the floor of your room."  He
glanced toward the morning sun.  "Tonight and for the next few nights,
I'm going to try to stay awake .  ,. or merely doze with some wards."

"I doubt that wards will work well around so much iron.  Maybe Martan
could spare someone to help."  Gunnar yawned, too.  "Houlart's is
around the next corner."

"Good."  In turn, Justen yawned again.

Only two tables in the public room were occupied, and the brothers took
a corner table, one from where Justen could study the entire room.  As
he sat down, he glanced at the doorway by the kitchen, where Houlart
was speaking to a young woman.  He strained to catch the words, but
could catch only a few fragments.  "... Yersol..  . street opposite ...
engineer's back .. ."

He frowned.  Where had he heard the name Yersol?  Did it matter?  It
had something to do with Ryltar.  He leaned toward Gunnar and
whispered, "You were right."

"Huh?"  Gunnar jerked fully alert.

"Never mind.  I'll tell you later."

"What'll it be, gents?"  asked Houlart, standing by the table.

"Food, good hot food," mumbled Gunnar.

Houlart smiled the professional smile of all innkeepers.

CXL

"Who's in port?"

"The Yalmish, and our Viella, and Slyak's bunch-I don't recall what the
current name of his rig is."  Yersol set the mug of warm ale on the
worktable between them.

"We need a little fire work.  The Yalmish and Slyak's group ought to be
enough."

"Here?  That's crazy."

"We need to get rid of that thing in the engineers' hall.  Besides, if
the hall goes, the engineers won't get in the way for a while.  I don't
trust that Altara.  She and Jenna are too close."  Ryltar shifted his
weight on the cushion of the wooden armchair.  His fingers toyed with
die base of the black crystal goblet, still half full of ale.

"Why are you so worried about this engineer?"

"Don't you see?  He almost won in Sarronnyn, and he's managed to get
the demon-damned druids behind him.  Now he's got this land engine that
travels on roads like a steam ship does on water.  But according to the
engineers I know, it takes an engineer to run it."  "The ones you pay
to tell you what's going on?"  Yersol took a last swallow of the ale,
grimacing at the warm taste.  "No other trader could use it, and
engineers don't trade,"

"This one does.  He's got a deal going with the Naclans.  Or the
Naclans are using him.  First it was lorken, and then that cloth that
no one had except the Tyrant of Sarronnyn.  Now he's got something that
will cross Candar faster than the fastest ships."

"He does?"

"Seldit watched him leave Wandernaught.  He arrived here less than a
full day later.  The machine is up there in the engineering hall.
Before long, they'll all be able to build one like it, and where does
that leave us?"

"I told you, engineers don't trade, Ryltar."

"You still don't see.  What happens if he goes back to Candar?"
Ryltar's fingers tightened on the base of the goblet.

"You're rid of him."  Yersol half-filled his mug.  Ryltar gave the
younger trader a look of disgust.  "Would you think for once?  Just
once?"

"So I'm stupid.  Would you explain what the problem is?"

Ryltar glared at Yersol before his expression softened.  "All right.
Where do we make the most profit?"

"On the east-to-west Hamor trips."

"Why?"

"You know-" Yersol paused, then continued.  "Because Hamor's bigger
than Candar, and it's a long trip by land.  Our ships are a lot faster
than theirs, and we don't pay all their duties."

"Do they have good roads?"

"Sure.  But they're a bitch on wagons and pack animals."

"And aren't there Order Wizards in Hamor?"

"Not many, but some."

"If this engineer could run al and engine, could they?"

"Oh.  Shit."

"Now do you see?  This damned land engine gets out, and we lose-"

"I'm slow, but I do gel it."  Yersol frowned.  "But he wouldn't even
think about this.  You know that.  Why would anyone think about taking
a land engine to Hamor?"

"Look, Yersol.  One thing I do know is that nothing in this world stays
a secret, and the emperor of Hamor would do just about anything to stop
us."

"Yeah.  I'll talk to Slyak.  Have him talk to the Yalmish.  It's going
to cost probably double or triple."

"It's worth it."

"What if it doesn't work?"

"Even if it fails, the attempt will get Claris upset enough to get this
Justen put away for a long time-for a permanent rest cure.  She's
almost there now."

"I hope so."

"It will work."  Ryltar nodded.  "It will."

CXLI

"Fire!"

At Gunnar's yell, Justen bolted upright out of his blankets and yanked
on his boots even as he was trying to clear his head.  Two nights of
less-than-restful sleep, even with the naps he took in Gunnar's room,
had left him sluggish.

A ruddy glow came from the front of the hall, accompanied by a faint
crackling as flames seemed to race toward the back.

Justen glanced around.  Martan and his two marines were dressed.  "Open
the door," yelled Justen.  "That one!"  He pointed to the rear loading
door, then threw his pack and blankets into the backseat of the land
engine, even as he disengaged the brake and clutch and began to push,
trying to rock the heavy machine forward.

Gunnar followed Justen's example, throwing his gear in the second seat
and trying to push the engine toward the door that Martan and one of
the marines had slid open.

Flames also licked up a rear corner of the building, and a dark-clad
figure dashed away from the loading door.

"Someone ... set ... the fire ..."  grunted Gunnar, his shoulder almost
touching Justen's.  "Threw oil ... struck it..."

"Bastards," grunted the marine pushing on the other wheel.

Martan joined them, and the land engine began to roll.  Justen put one
hand on the tiller to keep it lined up and headed toward the door.

Behind them, sounds of crackling and waves of heat rose.  Flames also
began to spread on the downhill side of the hall.

"Ugghhh..."  The sides of the craft's armor scraped on a massive boiler
section just inside the door, but Justen turned the tiller and the five
pushed the land engine out through the rear loading door.

Nearly a dozen dark-clad figures stood a good thirty cubits beyond the
door.  Most of them bore staffs or weapons.  One carried a torch.

"There's the demons' machine!"

"Destroy it!"

"No White evil in Nylan ..."

Justen scrambled into the driver's seat and pulled on the brake lever
to stop the land engine, then scrambled to the rear seat and the space
beyond to open the firebox.  He shoved some shavings and chips into
place and lifted the striker.

"Get the demons!"

As the dark figures moved toward the land engine, Justen edged several
small chunks of coal next to the wood and shavings and closed the
firebox door, opening the draft vents.

Gunnar stood rooted just outside the hall, eyes closed.  The winds
began to whine, to whistle, and the stars began to blink out as sudden
clouds thickened.

"Send them back where they belong ..."

From the road before the hall came the sound of more figures running.

"Get the steam pumps .. . cool it..."  "..  . take too long .. ."

"Weather Wizard ... maybe rain."

"Turmin ... find him ..."

The dark-clad group moved toward the land engine; less than twenty
cubits separated them.  Justen could sense the fear within the group, a
fear that had slowed its advance, and he bent down and fanned the fire
in the firebox, trying to build up steam pressure.

The crackling of timbers beginning to burn rose.  So did the sound of
the wind, and cold droplets began to pelt down.

A flash of lighting illuminated the back of the engineering hall and
revealed the three marines .. . and Gunnar, who stood apparently
oblivious to the commotion, trying to direct the storm onto the fire.
As the rain increased in intensity, the intermittent hissing of steam
began to replace the crackling of the flames.

"There, by the door!"

"Stop him.  He's a weather mage!"  screamed a short man in the front of
the dark-clad group.  The man beside him lifted a bow, the short type
used generally by traders.

In the shadows behind the land engine, Martan raised his bow and nocked
an arrow, then released it.  The opposing bowman collapsed, a dark
shaft driven through his chest.

Martan nocked another arrow.

"Marines!"

Gunnar shook his head, saw the dark-clad group, and concentrated again.
Justen shoveled more coal into the firebox.

Cracckkk!

A thin, jagged lightning bolt smashed into the stone before the
attackers, and a wave of hail rattled behind the flare of light. Justen
blinked and shook his head, trying to clear his vision.

"Get the frig ... out of here ..."  "... not paid to ... fight magic ..
."

"Run!"

The attackers scattered, leaving one body on the hail-strewn and wet
stones.

Martan lowered his bow and glanced at Justen.  "Some trader wants you
dead and your machine destroyed."

Justen nodded, then saw Gunnar begin to totter.  He vaulted out of the
driver's seat and half-skidded, half-ran, toward his brother even as
Gunnar stumbled into a sitting position.

Three engineers wheeled a hand pump to the rear corner of the building,
and a thin stream of water played against the flames on the wood-framed
windows.

The rain continued and the hissing subsided as the rain, and the
finally operating steam pumps, poured water on the engineering hall.

Justen lugged the semiconscious Gunnar to the land engine and set him
in the seat next to the driver's place.

Martan and the other two marines continued to survey the area around
the back of the engineering hall.  Finally, Martan asked, "Justen, do
you know who's after you?"

"Ryltar, I think.  But there's no way to prove it."  Martan spat away
from the land engine.  "Scum.  Everyone on the docks whispers about it.
No one wants to say anything.  Bet those were sailors hired from his
ships for some extra coins-or else they were some smuggler's bravos."
Gunnar groaned and held his head.  "Everything's fine," Justen
reassured him.  "Fine?  Head hurts ... fire in the hall... arrows ...
and it's fine?"

Justen and Martan laughed.

"Fine?  Some sense of humor you have.  Ohhh ..."  Gunnar rubbed his
forehead again.

As the rain continued to fall, Justen put up rain canvases over the
seats, and the three marines climbed into the third seat.  Justen
stoked up the firebox and checked the steam pressure.

"The Llyse should be in this morning.  Anyone up for a ride down to the
pier?"

"Uh..."

"I won't make you ride," Martan grinned at the other two marines, "but
it's probably safer than walking, or worrying about who's out there."

"Yeah .. ."  mumbled one marine.

"We can't get shot with an arrow, either," added the other, a
fresh-faced young woman.

"Ready?"  asked Justen, his hand on the throttle.

The three marines looked at each other.

Justen released the brake and eased the throttle forward, and with an
initial creak, the land engine headed out of the alley.

A look back as he turned onto the main road reassured Justen that the
rain and the pumps had saved most of the building.  Still, more than a
score of engineers scurried around the steaming facade of the hall even
as the rain continued to fall on the blackened roof timbers.

"Good thing most of the building's stone," said Martan, following
Justen's quick glance.

"They weren't after the building," said Gunnar, still massaging his
forehead.

"What were they after, then?"

"I could guess, but I really don't know."  Justen shook his head.  Why
was Ryltar after him?  Was it just a question of coins?

A tall figure on the uphill side of the hall stood and watched.  Justen
waved to Altara before turning the tiller to guide the land engine down
toward the harbor.

The machine puffed up onto the stones of the harbor causeway as a faint
gray seeped out of the Eastern Ocean.

The command "Cast off!"  rang from the end ship on the short pier.

"Didn't want to stay around, I see," said Martan as he watched two
crewmen loosen and release lines from the bollards.  Then the crewmen
scrambled onto the black-hulled schooner, whose colors and lack of flag
almost certainly announced her as a smuggler.

Justen turned the land engine onto the main pier.

"That's, one of the ships Ryltar was dealing with," said Gunnar.

"He knows every smuggler east of Hamor," laughed the woman marine.

"Lurena?"  Martan glanced down the pier.

"Yes, scr?"

"Get the squad down here by full dawn and bring Jislik's kit and
mine."

"Yes, scr."

Justen brought the land engine to a stop to let Lurena out, then eased
the engine out to the spot on the pier where the Llyse was supposed to
dock.

"How are you going to get this on board?"  asked Martan.

"Very carefully."  Justen laughed.  "With a heavy crane attached to the
lifting posts."  He pointed to the circular heavy rings in front of the
driver's seat and behind the third seat.  "All the Mighty Ten have
short cranes, and the land engine isn't as heavy as it looks."

"Hyntal will love it."  Martan grinned.

"Why?"  asked Gunnar.

"He hates the Whites, and anything that would upset them..."

"I hope so," murmured Justen.

Gunnar raised his eyebrows, but said nothing.  Martan leaned back in
the third seat.

Even before dawn, the remaining ten marines had marched out to the end
of the pier.

"Let's go, Jislik."  Martan smiled at Justen.  "This will be fun."

"Fun?"  muttered Gunnar from the seat beside Justen.

"Marines have a strange sense of humor."

"That's why they're marines."

"Form up!"  snapped Martan as he stood on the pier before the land
engine."  "This is a special engine that's going on the Llyse.  Last
night some smugglers tried to fire the engineering hall to destroy it.
Your job is to make sure that DO one-except members of the Council, if
they should appear-gets close to this part of the pier until this
engine is loaded on the Llyse.  Is that clear?"

"What about the dockers, scr?"

"Let them do their work, but keep them clear of this engine."

"Yes, scr!"  Justen leaned back in the driver's seat and let his eyes
close.

"Justen?"

The engineer straightened with a jolt.  "Hah?  What?  Is the Llyse
here?"

"No, but young Yersol is, and he doesn't look too happy.  And I think
Altara is walking up the pier."  Gunnar peered around.  "And Martan has
that smile that says he's just waiting to turn his attack cats on
Yersol."

Justen yawned and struggled to clear his mind.  He managed to brush his
hair back and smooth his clothes, but his unshaven chin itched and his
eyes felt like they contained half the sand of the western beaches.  He
climbed down and stood beside the land engine and waited for Yersol to
speak.  Altara had stopped a good twenty cubits behind the trader.

"I don't believe that this ... device .. . should be leaving Recluce
without the approval of the Council," stated the young trader.

"Oh?  Are you a member of the Council?"  asked Justen.

"I am certain that Counselor Ryltar will be here shortly to ...
reinforce that concern,"

"I'm sure he will be," Justen admitted.  "I'm sure he will be.  But
there are a few problems with your statement."  He smiled faintly and
waited, trying to keep his expression calm even while his heart had a
disturbing tendency to pound.  What have I started?  And why is
everyone so upset over something as simple as the land engine?

"I fail to see any problems," announced Yersol.

"First, you are not a member of the Council.  Second, Counselor Ryltar
is only one of three, and he is not the senior member,"

Yersol swallowed.

Justen glanced out past the breakwater.  Was there a puff of smoke
heralding the Llyse?  He hoped so, and hoped that they could get the
engine on board.  Still .  would Hyntal agree, and how long would the
Llyse have to stay in port?

"We'll see, Justen.  We'll see.  You won't pull this off."  Yersol
turned and marched back down the pier.

"He'll be back with Ryltar before long," Gunnar prophesied.

"Not for a while.  If Ryltar were around, he'd have already been
here."

Justen walked toward Altara, conscious that his legs felt like lead
weights.

"Do you think you can get away with this, especially without getting
Hyntal and Martan in trouble?"  asked the chief engineer, her voice
low.

"I don't know.  But it has to be done."

"Has to?  Are you deciding the fate of the world, Justen?"  Altara's
eyes blazed.

Justen returned Altara's intent expression.  Then he smiled faintly.
"Me?  A junior and very order-mad engineer?  How could I possibly do
anything that would change the world?"

"You?  You've made a frigging good start.  The Brotherhood is about
ready to close the gates and wall Nylan off from the rest of Recluce
for the first time in three centuries.  The only question is whether
they turn the cannon and rockets of the Mighty Ten on all the smugglers
first."  Altara lowered her voice.  "The only thing that hasn't come
out is Ryltar's name, maybe because Yersol-" her hand gestured toward
the end of the pier after the departing trader "-started talking really
quickly about the problems of smugglers and Ryltar's efforts to keep
them in line-and offering to pay for all the damage to the engineering
hall."

"None of that changes anything," Justen responded quietly.

"And what about this?  And what are you going to do with the Llyse?  I
can't believe you're just going to dump this in the Gulf or the Eastern
Ocean."

"Why not?"

"Justen."

"I'm going to do what has to be done."  Justen's gray eyes-abruptly as
black and as deep as the great forest- turned full on Altara.

The chief engineer stepped back involuntarily.  "You are dangerous.
Ryltar was right about that."

"All change is dangerous," Justen affirmed.

Wheeee... The steam whistle on the Llyse announced the ship's entrance
into the channel and called for dockers.

"Just about everyone around Dorrin died or suffered, Jus-ten.  Remember
that.  And Creslin was blind for most of his life.  Are you up to that
kind of sacrifice?"

"We'll have to see, won't we?"  Justen swallowed.  Can I ... ask...
this ...?*

The thin but clear response seemed to follow: Can you not, dearest

He shook his head.  Am I imagining the answer?  Or am I answering
myself?

"You're either great or truly order-mad, and I can't say which," Altara
offered a grim smile.  "Maybe it makes no difference.  Do you mind if I
stay?"

The marines drew up closer to the land engine as two dockers slowly
walked from the port-master's office toward the end of the pier.

"No.  I respect you, Altara, but I have to do what I feel must be
done."

"That is an interesting choice of words-'must be done."  "

"Sometimes there aren't any really good choices."  Justen watched as
the Llyse eased up to the pier.

The dockers avoided the land engine, and Justen could sense the
interest in it by the way the crew of the Llyse tended to pause and
glance toward it, or to stop opposite the craft for a moment.

As the gangway dropped, Martan stepped up to Justen.  "It might be
better if I talked to Hyntal first, scr."

"You know him better than I do, Martan.  Do what yon can."

"Thank you, scr."

Martan bounded up the gangway and seemed to fly up the ladder to the
bridge, where he touched the square-faced and tanned captain on the
shoulder.  He pointed toward Justen and gestured toward the land
engine.

"Whatever he's saying," observed Gunnar, "he's certainly
enthusiastic."

The interchange lasted longer than the time it took the crew and
dockers to finish securing the Llyse, but Martan nodded toward the
young engineer and the Llyse's captain plodded down the gangway toward
Justen, his face like stone.  Justen squared his shoulders.

"All right, young Justen," began Hyntal.  "Marian's told me you're
trying to pull some stunt and that I'm supposed to agree with it."

"That's right."  Justen turned to the captain.  "I built this land
engine, and I need to get it to Candar, preferably somewhere in Lydiar
or Hydlen, near a great road.  I intend to drive it to Fairhaven and
challenge the White Wizards."

"I thought it might be something that daft."  Hyntal pulled at his
chin, his hand almost covering his mouth.  "My crew's due land
leave."

Justen tried to avoid taking a deep breath.

"I see as how that causes you some concern.  What am I supposed to
do?"

"You have to do what you believe is right, scr," answered Justen
slowly.  "Just as I have to."

"So .. ."  mused the captain.  "You're a-worried about time, aren't
ye?"  He frowned and looked at Justen.  l "Has the Council forbidden
this?"

"Noser  Not-"

"They haven't forbidden it, you're sure?"  asked Hyntal with a slight
smile.

"Noser"

Hyntal gestured toward the land engine and Altara.  "Why is the chief
engineer here?"

"She's worried.  Someone tried to burn down the engineering hall last
night in an attempt to destroy the land engine."

"They did?"  Hyntal walked across the stones toward Altara.  "Chief
Engineer?"

"Yes, Captain."

"It be true that someone tried to fire the engineering hall last
night?"

"They did more than try.  There is a great deal of damage."

"Just to destroy this young fellow's device?"

"It would seem so."  Altara's voice was level.

"Has the Council made any statements on this device?"

"We are not aware of any."

Hyntal nodded, then turned toward the Llyse.  "Belden!  Run out the
heavy crane.  Get the colliers moving, and lay on the produce.  We're
pulling out at noon.  Double leave on the return."

"Aye, Captain."

"If you will excuse me, Captain," began Altara, winking at Justen
before Hyntal turned back toward her, "I need to return to convey the
concerns of the Brotherhood to the Council, and to ask for immediate
investigation of the fire.  That may take some time.  I leave Justen
and his engine in your hands."

"He'll be safe on board the Llyse.  Aye, he will."  Hyntal nodded to
the chief engineer, then turned to Justen.  "Get that toy ready for
loading, young fellow.  About time someone did something to those White
devils.  About time ..."

Gunnar raised his eyebrows behind the captain's back.  Justen shrugged
at his brother.  While he did not understand fully Hyntal's willingness
to help him, especially given the trouble it would surely cause, he was
not about to raise greater obstacles to his plan-even if the failure to
be totally honest with Hyntal was giving him a splitting headache.

"Let's get all the loose gear out of the seats-" began Justen.

From behind him, Marian's voice called, "Get your kits stowed as soon
as Devor's squad is clear.  Derra and Tynda-take the gangway."

Justen trudged up the gangway with his pack and Gunnar's.  Behind him,
Gunnar carried a crate of loose spares that Justen had found no place
to store.

By the time Justen had returned and readied the land engine for
lifting, with the coal-bin covers in place, the crane was swinging out
over the pier.

"How heavy is that thing?"  asked the muscled officer running the
crane.

"Right now, say a shade more than two hundred stone."

"Wait a moment.  I'll need to gear down and use the heavy links."

The crane returned, more slowly, bearing huge iron links.

Would two of the big clamps fit within each lifting ring, wondered
Justen as the operator lowered the harness that spread the links across
a square iron frame.

Although the clamps made a snug fit, Justen and a crewman managed to
bolt them in place.

"What is this thing?"  asked the woman as she gave a last twist to the
clamp nut.

"A steam land engine."

"Wish I could see it in use."

"If everything goes right, you will," promised Justen, stepping away
and holding his breath as the crane began to rise and the lifting rings
took the entire weight of the machine.

When the iron-tired wheels touched the deck, Justen let out a sigh of
relief.  The crane operator grinned.  "Not as bad as a gun barrel.
Better balance.  Builder also made those lift rings big enough, and
that helps."

Justen smiled.  At least he'd done something right recently.  Then he
looked at the ropes and chains and the deck rings and sighed, realizing
that there was still more to be done.

After chaining the land engine securely to the deck, Justen and Gunnar
followed one of the crew to the rear of the Llyse, where there was a
small compartment with two short bunks and barely enough space to turn
around in.

"Guest quarters," announced the woman with a smile.

Gunnar cocked his head.  Justen threw his pack on the lower bunk.

"I wanted that one," said Gunnar.

"Fine," Justen picked up his pack and lifted it onto the top one.

"The canvas should be ready for you now," announced the woman.

"Canvas?"  asked Justen.

"You don't want saltwater running all over your engine, do you?"

"No," admitted Justen.  He turned and followed her back to the deck,
where three heavy, oil-canvas tarps lay beside the land engine.

After they finished with the tarps, and after the last of the coal and
the last large basket of produce was being hoisted on board, a
wispy-haired man marched down the pier toward the Llyse.  Yersol
followed behind Ryltar.

"Shit..."  muttered Justen.  He had just lashed the waterproofed
canvases in place over the land engine, effectively disguising it from
pier-side identification.  "Here comes Ryltar."  He yawned.

"Young fellow," suggested Hyntal from behind the young engineer, "best
you go below.  The less Ryltar sees, the less trouble he can make."

Justen glanced at Gunnar, then eased behind the land engine and toward
the ladder to the engine room.  He stopped where he could watch without
being seen.

"Best you come with me, Air Wizard," ordered Hyntal.

Gunnar followed the captain across the deck and down the gangway to the
pier.

"Counselor Ryltar," said Hyntal, greeting the wispy-haired man at the
end of the gangway.  "What brings you here?"

Ryltar glanced from Hyntal to Yersol and back, then at the squad of
marines lined up along the railing of the Llyse.  He cleared his
throat.  "Ah ... there seems to have been a fire at the engineering
hall last night."

"So I heard."  Hyntal nodded.

"Reports are that the engineers had built some ... device.  Some claim
that this device embodies chaos magic."

"We're safe from that here."  Hyntal gestured to the black iron-plate
of the Llyse.  "White magic wouldn't last an instant on my ship. 
Noser

Ryltar took another deep breath.

"It also seems that a young engineer-one Justen by name-may have been
involved.  The Council is concerned that he should not leave Recluce,"
added Yersol smoothly.

Hyntal scratched his head.  "I have not seen any announcements from the
Council, but seeing as the punishment for bringing chaos to us is
banishment-" the captain grinned cheerfully "-should I see the young
wretch, and should the Council let me know what to do officially, I'd
be more than happy to put him ashore in terrible, chaotic Candar."

"Ah ..."  Ryltar blotted his face with a large white handkerchief "...
I think the Council would be displeased if such an 'informal' exile
occurred."

"I believe the Council has repudiated exile, has it not?"  asked Gunnar
politely.

"Where is your brother, Mage?"  snapped Yersol.

"I could not say precisely."  Gunnar shrugged.  "But I would be most
interested in knowing what your position is with the Council, Yersol.
Do you speak for it?"

Yersol flushed.

"I must apologize for my cousin's enthusiasm, Captain," offered Ryltar,
ignoring Gunnar, "but it is a matter of importance that we find this
device and the engineer Justen."

"I don't believe I've seen anything from the Council on this,
Counselor."  Hyntal looked blandly at Ryltar.  "If I do, of course I
certainly will do everything within my poor powers."

"Hyntal... I'll have your ship and you."

"Counselor ... I have always been most obedient to the will of the
Council."  Hyntal inclined his head.  "And I will obey any orders
issued by the full Council."

Ryltar looked from Hyntal to Gunnar and to the Llyse, where the short
crane was being dismantled and stowed and where faint smoke puffed from
the funnel.  "Hyntal, I will have you and your ship, by darkness."

The counselor turned and marched back down the pier.

"The madder he gets, the better I like it."  The captain scratched his
head as he watched Ryltar almost run down the pier toward Nylan.
"Still, best we get underway before he beats Claris into signing
something."

"We're really going, scr?"  asked the heavily muscled Belden.

"Yes."  Hyntal nodded.  "I don't know what these young fellows are
doing, and I don't know why.  But anything that that stink-cat Ryltar
is so worried about can't be all that bad."  He grinned.  "Besides, the
last time that young scamp Justen went off to Candar, he and this fuzzy
Air Wizard brother of his did more damage to the Whites than anyone
else had done in a couple hundred years.  None of my family's done much
since my great-great-grandsire, and there's a chance to change that."
He gestured to the inshore bollard.  "Single up!"

Justen grinned briefly in his hiding place on the ladder leading to the
engine room.  Perhaps it was just as well that Hyntal had never
forgotten his great-great-grandsire.

CXLII

"What have you found?"  asked Beltar.

"You've been drinking too much wine," answered Eldiren.

"I'll thank you not to comment on my personal habits."

"Of course, mightiest of mighty High Wizards."  Eldiren looked out from
the top of the White tower to the south, toward the low hills that
sheltered the great highway.

"Why I don't dispose of you ..."

"Because you know you can, and because you need my honesty.  No one
else will dare to cross you.  So you can't trust their judgment."

Beltar coughed and cleared his throat.  "Someday .. ."

"But not now."

"So exactly what did you discover, O Honest One?"

"The Gray Wizard is on one of their mighty black warships crossing the
gulf.  He has something on it that seems filled with order."

"Where are they going?"

"Right now, I don't know exactly, but they'll probably land somewhere
in eastern Candar-Renklaar, Lydiar, Perdya, maybe Tyrhavven.  And I
think the Gray Wizard just might be headed here."

"Here?  Fairhaven?"

"I'm only guessing, but if you wait until I know, or you know, it will
be too late.  One of the really ordered black buildings in Nylan was
partly burned, and that ship carries a lot more order than it should."
Eldiren's eyes dropped to the old center of Fairhaven less than a kay
away.

"Why does that mean he's coming here?"  growled Bel-tar.

"I don't know, but this is the one who spent all that time in Naclos.
This is the one who blew all the screeing glasses.  He's on a Recluce
warship with something that feels like an order weapon.  Isn't he the
one who built all those demon-damned black iron arrows?  He's not
exactly our friend, and he's not running from us.  So where else would
he go?"  Eldiren turned from the vista to face the High Wizard.

"You're the diviner.  You tell me.  Don't ask me questions," snapped
Beltar.

"Fine.  He's coming here, and he has some plan to attack Fairhaven.
What are you going to do?"

"I told you not to ask me questions.  Besides, what could one ship do
even if by a miracle he transported the whole ship to Fairhaven?"

"I don't think you'd want that.  I suggest you convene the Council."

"Couldn't I just ignore these Blacks ... or Grays ... or whatever they
are?  At least until I know what's going to happen."

"You've got one problem with that, Beltar.  By the time you know what
is going to happen, it will be too late to call the Council."  Eldiren
waited.

"Are you sure?"

"Nothing is ever certain."

"Thank you."  Beltar sneered.

"My pleasure."

"Then perhaps we had better call in some of the powerful, even Histen,
but not all of them."

"If you call for the Council, who will you leave out?"

Beltar shrugged.  "Fine.  Call them all.  But bring in the closest Iron
Guards-and that fellow from Recluce.  Maybe he knows some way to stop
them."

"As you wish.  But do you want them in the city?"

"I'm not that dense.  How about..  . oh, find some place, like the old
southern barracks.  You know what's necessary."

Eldiren nodded.

"And you'd better be right, Eldiren, or I'll make you Derba's
assistant.  He'd fry you before breakfast."

"Even you aren't that obtuse."

"Try me."  Beltar turned away.

Eldiren took a long, slow breath.

CXLIII

"Before we call in Magister Turmin," said Jenna, "I would like to know
why we are having this meeting.  We were not scheduled to meet for more
than another eight-day.  And why was I required to ride almost two days
to come to Nylan?"  She glanced around the dimly lit room in the
Brotherhood building.

"Based on what Ryltar has discovered, I fear we may be facing a great
crisis," Claris asserted.

"A crisis?  From one engineer?"  Jenna snorted.

"The engineering hall was torched.  Thankfully, the damage was
restricted."

"Oh.  This engineer torched his own guild's hall?"

"No.  But someone was so worried about this device he has built that
they tried to destroy it," answered Claris.

"What is this device?"  Jenna frowned.

"We know that it travels the roads under its own power."  Ryltar's face
darkened.  "We also know that this Justen somehow enchanted Hyntal to
take him and the device to some destination in Candar.  We were hoping
that Magister Turmin could tell us more."

"You mean that Captain Hyntal refused to believe that you represented
the full Council?  I'm so, so sorry for you, Ryltar."

"I think that once this crisis is resolved," Ryltar added, "we should
also investigate the engineers."

"They're thinking about investigating the Council," responded Jenna.

"That can come later," temporized Claris.  "Magister Turmin is
waiting."

"Fine.  Call him in.  Let's get this over with."  Jenna settled herself
behind the round table.

Claris motioned to the black-clad marine by the door.

Turmin walked slowly into the room.

"Please be seated, Magister Turmin."

"Thank you."  Turmin sat down and waited.

"Can you tell us why Justen and Gunnar boarded the Llyse and where they
might be bound?"

"I was not aware until yesterday that something like that had
occurred."

"How did you find out?"

"Gunnar was supposed to meet me yesterday, but he did not appear.  So I
asked Chief Engineer -Altara if she knew where he might be.  She told
me she had seen him board the Llyse before it left."

"Magister Turmin, can you tell us where the Llyse is?"  pursued
Claris.

"I would presume that it is somewhere in the Gulf of Candar or on the
Eastern Ocean.  I'm not a part of the marines or the Brotherhood."
Turmin smiled faintly.

"We understand that the Llyse ported at Nylan briefly three days ago
and that some sort of wagon built by Justen was hoisted on board.  Do
you have any thoughts about what that might be?"  asked Claris.

Beside her, Ryltar masked a scowl.

Turmin frowned, finally asking, "Do you have any idea-"

"We thought you might know," Claris said firmly.  "At least since both
Gunnar and Justen went aboard with whatever it was.  And a marine by
the name of Martan went with them."

"I do not know exactly what Justen built, but earlier Gunnar had said
that Justen was working on some sort of land wagon that used steam to
propel it."

"Is that possible?  I thought steam engines required the order of
water, like the ocean or very large lakes," commented Jenna.

"For anyone but Justen, it would be impossible," conceded Turmin.  "He
could hold something like that together."

Jenna and Claris exchanged glances before the older counselor spoke.
"What else is on the Llyse?"

"I don't know."

"What else might be on the Llyse ?"  inquired Jenna.

Turmin took a deep breath.  "I don't know, but I suspect Justen has a
device that he believes will destroy the power of Fairhaven."

"Will it?"

Turmin shrugged.  "I'll hope not."

"You hope it will not destroy the power of Fairhaven?"

"You see, counselors, matters are not simple."  The old mage wiped his
forehead.  "In fact, they are very complicated.  The Balance works.  We
know this.  It means that if Justen's device destroys the power of
Fairhaven, one of two things must happen.  Either all those powers will
find a single chaos focus ..."  Turmin shuddered "... and we all know
what that means."

The two women looked at each other again.  Ryltar scowled.

"Or," continued Turmin, "he means to cancel their powers by
simultaneously reducing both order and chaos.  How he would do that, I
do not know, but I suspect that is his goal."

"But why is that a problem?"

"Because Recluce has built up a vast reservoir of order.  If Justen
drains it, I doubt that any of the Mighty Ten will retain their
engines."

"And you did not think of telling anyone?"

"I still do not see how it can be done."  Turmin shrugged.  "If I
attempted to warn the Council of everything that might be possible or
might happen-"

"That is your duty, is it not?"  asked Ryltar.

"Counselor Ryltar, the world will end.  When or how, I do not know. But
it will end.  Consider yourself informed."  Turmin stood.  "By your
leave, Claris?"

The oldest counselor nodded.  Ryltar flushed.

Jenna pursed her lips.  "We need to get all the Mighty Ten into port...
if we can."

CXLIV

"So the honorable Beltar has requested that all members of the Council
gather in Fairhaven to meet the challenge from Recluce?"  Histen
snorted.

"Surely you are not going to refuse?"  Renwek's hands fluttered.
"Beltar would not be pleased.  He is rather powerful, you know."

The older White Wizard glanced from the antique battlement to the
harbor below.  "Yes, he is rather powerful, and it would not be wise to
refuse.  But I have been ill, and it may take me a bit longer to
prepare, and my travels are most likely to be far slower than
normal."

"You look hale and healthy to me, Histen, better than when you left the
amulet to young Beltar."

"I have been ailing, Renwek, and while I will certainly heed the High
Wizard's call, my progress will doubtless be slow.  If you could see
your way to assisting an ailing old wizard, I would appreciate it.  In
either case, please convey, via the wagon post, that we hear and obey
as quickly as our ancient bones will permit."  Histen looked down on
the town of Lydiar and the harbor, letting the sun warm him.

"Ah, yes.  I do see that you may indeed need assistance," stammered
Renwek.

Histen smiled in the sunlight.

CXLV

Justen studied the river, wondering if Hyntal were not crazier than
either he or Gunnar.  But the old captain had been adamant.  "Lydiar's
got a strong bunch of wizards- watch the Great Bay and everything that
comes in.  No one cares much about the Ohyde River, and Renklaar's a
third-rate port.  I'll bet we could get almost all the way to Hydolar
and dump you on the old lower docks."

"How do you know about the docks?"  Justen had asked.  The old captain
had just grinned.  So had Martan.  Justen wondered what else the
captains of the Mighty Ten had been doing that neither he nor the
Council knew of.

The engineer had done what he could.  The waterproof canvases were off
the land engine.  The coal bins were topped off, and the reservoir was
full.  The firebox was ready to light.  Only the chains were in
place.

Of course, how they would ever leave Candar was another question.  All
Justen had told Gunnar and Martan was that he had enough golds for
either a commercial or a smuggler's passage to return to Recluce.  That
was true enough, and it was also true enough that if his efforts
worked, commercial passage would be on a sailing ship.

"Oh, how well we can learn to deceive with truth ..."  Justen glanced
to the southern bank of the Ohyde River, where a small fishing boat
angled toward the massive warship.  He continued to watch, but the
fishing boat did not change course and finally passed abreast of the
Llyse less than a hundred cubits away.  The fisherman waved, and
Mar-tan waved back from the side of the bridge.

Did the Council know that the Mighty Ten-or at least the Llyse-were
traveling the larger rivers of Candar?  Jus-ten grinned.  After his
experience in Naclos, he was beginning not to be too surprised at the
unexpected.

"Oh, Dayala ..."  he half-murmured, half-thought.  You have ... learned
much.  Be careful

In planning to upset half the known world, I'm supposed to be careful?
Justen's grin faded as he caught the serious expression on his
brother's face.

"The lower piers are around the next bend," Gunnar announced.

"It might be time for shields," suggested Justen.

Pendak wiped the sweat off his forehead.  "There aren't any Whites near
the pier.  If I create shields, any White around will sense it and
Hyntal will have the demon's time navigating."

"You've had more experience at this than we have," Jus-ten conceded.
Pendak, Hyntal, and Martan nodded.

Gunnar paused, his perceptions far to the north, ensuring, Justen
hoped, that no rain would come their way, at least not until the steam
car was on the metaled road to Fairhaven.

"Damned fool idea," grunted Hyntal.

Justen tried not to grin at the glint in the captain's eyes.  Hyntal
liked the idea of bringing the Llyse practically into the capital city
of Hydlen.

"What are you calling that contraption?"  asked Martan, pointing to the
land engine on the deck below.

"Hadn't thought of a name."

"Why not?"

"I've never named anything."

"The 'land engine' sounds like an unnamed ship."

Gunnar's eyes flicked back and forth between the two.

"What would you suggest?"  asked Justen.

"Call it the Black Demon.  Aren't all the other demons White?"

"Black Demon ... I like that."  Gunnar chuckled.

So did Hyntal, who added, "Then I can tell his mightiness, Counselor
Ryltar, that the Black Demon was sent after the White ones."

Justen watched as the Llyse headed toward a brownish point on the
northern side of the river, just before what appeared to be a wide
bend.

"Belden!  Get the crane ready.  Young fellow, you'd better have that
thing ready to roll.  Won't be long now.  Those are the lower piers."

Martan grinned.  "My people are ready."

On the deck before the turret, the two squads of black-suited marines
had formed.

Justen scrambled off the bridge and onto the deck below, where he
touched his striker to the shavings and wood chips.  While the wood and
the first few chunks of coal caught, he began to loosen all the ties
but two.

Martan began to stack the bundles of black iron arrows and the three
cases of rockets on the small pallet next to the land engine.

"You don't have to go, Martan."

"Wouldn't miss it for anything."

"I would," admitted Justen.

Martan looked at Justen slowly.  "You're not only brave, but crazy. I'm
just crazy.  Like all marines."  He returned to stacking the bundled
arrows before straightening up and calling, "Raid drill! Stations!"

The marines formed two rows on the shoreward side of the Llyse, the
first row standing ready with bows.  Behind them to the rear of the
ship, two sets of iron shutters dropped open, revealing the rockets.

"Steerage way!"  came the call from the bridge.

After that, Gunnar joined Justen beside the land engine, and the creak
of the crane and the rattle of chains drowned out the captain's
commands.

Justen watched as nearly a score of fishermen and others bolted from
the pier that the Llyse approached.  At least two of the fleeing
figures wore the red-slashed uniforms of Hydlen guards.  With that
thought, Justen slipped back to the firebox and added more coal.  They
would need to have the land engine-the Black Demon-ready to roll when
it touched the pier.

"What if he tilts it too much?"  asked Gunnar.

"If he does, he'll break it and we won't be going anywhere."  Justen
stepped forward as Belden lowered the harness.

He steadied himself as the Llyse lurched slightly.

Creeeakk .. . The heavy wooden pier squeaked as it resisted the weight
of the warship.

Justen slipped the first clamp in place, then the second.  Martan
steered the third to him, but it took both of them to force the fourth
in place.  While they worked on attaching the harness, two marines had
helped Gunnar release the deck chains.

Belden motioned Justen off the land engine, but the engineer shook his
head.  Belden shrugged, and Justen hung on as the crane lifted the
Demon and him clear of the ship and swung both of them onto the timbers
of the pier.

Justen managed to release the forward clamps before Gunnar had
scrambled down to join him, and the two managed the second set.  Then
Justen checked the brake and the steam lines, and finally, the firebox,
where he pushed the coal back into the center and added another
shovelful.

By the time Justen had finished his inspection, Gunnar had stowed the
loose gear.  Then Marian and Gunnar began unloading the small pallet of
arrows and rockets.

Justen loosened the last clamp on the pallet and waved to Belden.  The
officer and crane operator waved back, and the heavy harness lifted.
Justen ran to the edge of the pier.

"Captain!"

"Yes, Scr Wizard?"  called Hyntal.

"Get back to Nylan as fast as you can and shut down .. . until you find
out how we fare."

Hyntal nodded slowly.  "I'll keep it in mind."

"Do it!"  snapped Justen.

Hyntal tensed for a moment, then relaxed fractionally.  He waved
stiffly.

Justen returned the wave and dashed back to the newly named Black
Demon, where Martan had already begun to rack the rockets and arrows in
easy reach.  A froth of water spewed across the edge of the pier as the
Llyse backed around and headed downriver-far faster than she had
cruised upriver.

"He's moving fast," commented Gunnar.

"Justen scared him.  Scared me," grunted Martan.

"He's scared me since about the time he was born," said Gunnar.

"I love you, too, Gunnar."  Justen checked the steam pressure, then
looked around.  "Everyone ready?"

"Hold a moment," said Martan.

"There are three guards heading down from the higher road," added
Gunnar.

"Didn't take them long," said Martan.

"You haven't landed before, I imagine," suggested Jus-ten.

"That's true."

The engineer released the brake and opened the throttle, letting the
Demon ease forward across the slippery timbers to the packed clay of
the road.  "Which way?"

"To the right.  That goes to the old road around Hydolar," said
Gunnar.

"What about the guards?"" "There are guards on both ends of this
stretch of road.  Fewer on the right."

"How many?"

"Just the three."

Justen eased back the throttle when they reached the narrow spot in the
road as it turned left and back up the hill to the old road.  In the
middle of the road stood the three guards as the Demon chugged up
toward them.  On the right side of the road was a deep ditch, on the
left a decrepit stone wall.

"Devils!"

"Blacks..."

One guard, a thin man with a bushy mustache, hacked at the car, and his
saber bounced from his hand.  The second and heavier man jumped aside
and watched without moving farther.  The woman whipped an arrow from
her quiver, but Martan was faster.

Both arrows missed, although Justen thought he felt the Hydlen guard's
pass overhead.  He eased up the pressure as the Demon bounced around a
corner and past a hay wagon.  The horse reared, and Justen glanced back
momentarily to see the wagon flip sideways into the ditch.

"Watch the road!"  Gunnar shoved the tiller, and Justen barely kept the
land engine from landing in the same ditch.

Martan swallowed loudly.  "Shit..."

Justen over corrected again, and the Demon almost piled into the low
stone wall before he got it centered on the road.  Below the wall ran a
narrow creek that seemed almost dry.

"Justen .. . please, please concentrate on the road," begged Gunnar.

Martan wiped his forehead.

The Demon chugged southward for a time as the road wound around the
hills following the nearly dry creek bed.  On the uphill side of the
road were meadows and an occasional flock of sheep, and intermittent
wood lots and scattered hovels.  On the road behind them rose a plume
of dry dust.

"Another cart ahead," warned Gunnar.

"Can you put another shovel of coal in the firebox, Mar-tan?"  asked
Justen.

"Yes, scr.  Just don't hit anything while the door's open."

Justen concentrated on keeping the Demon headed straight and out of the
deeper ruts until he heard the clunk of the firebox door.

"Done, scr."

"Thank you."

Justen tried to steer the Demon as far to the left as he could to get
around the cart and the swaybacked gray that pulled it.  He resolutely
kept his eyes on the road ahead.  "Tell me what that horse did."

"He skittered sideways.  That's all," reported Martan.

In the third seat, behind the brothers, Martan checked the bows and the
rows of iron-tipped shafts.  Behind them were the rockets-the small
ones, and only a score at that-with the two portable launchers, one
mounted on the back of the coal bin, the other on a bracket between
where Justen and Gunnar sat.

"Another shovel of coal?"  asked Justen.

"Coming up."

As the Demon rolled out of a wide curve and a straight stretch of
hard-packed clay appeared ahead, Justen checked the engine once more,
then opened the throttle.  The land engine began to accelerate, the
iron tires digging into the hard clay and the spring seats swaying more
than ever.  "How far before we reach the main road to Fairhaven?"

"Even at the speed you're making, it should be mid-afternoon."  Gunnar
pursed his lips.  After a period where the only sounds were those of
the land engine, the Weather Wizard spoke again.  "Could you explain in
simple terms what you want to get done?  I mean, just what is the point
of all of this?"

"I told you.  To balance order and chaos in Fairhaven."

"How?"  pursued Gunnar.

"I'm trying to force the White Wizards to band together, and then I'll
try to hit them and Fairhaven with pure order."

"That's what the balloon is for?"

Justen slowed the Demon as the road curved to the left and started
downhill past a field of browning grain.  Two men watched the land
engine pass, their mouths full open.

"Surprised them!"  laughed Martan.

"You keep on surprising people and every White Wizard in Candar will be
after you."

"They probably are already."  Justen let his senses run over the land
engine, but so far, the engine continued to run smoothly, and even the
drive shaft was not too hot.

"There are more troops ahead, at least a score of them," warned Gunnar.
"They seem to know that you want to get on the Fairhaven road. They're
waiting at the junction."

"Is there any way around?"

"There's a farm road, but it doesn't go all the way, and it's got deep
ruts."

"Great.  We need to put up the rest of the armor."  After throttling
the Demon down to a stop and locking the brakes, Justen lifted the thin
plate shutters into place, filling the grooves between the roof and the
body of the car.  He left only a space in front of his steering
position, laying that plate sideways.  Then he donned a thin iron cap
with a flared nose guard, as did Martan.

"These slits are small," complained Martan.

"Which ones?"

"You get used to the helmets.  I meant the ones for the arrows.  Too
bad we couldn't have brought more rockets."

"We're probably overloaded as it is."

"It's already getting hot," added Gunnar.

"So .. . bring in a little breeze.  Given the mess we've already made,
a little more weather work won't hurt."

"That's easy for you to say."

Justen began to throttle the Demon back up to speed.  The land engine
came around the last wide curve before the road pointed like an arrow
toward the stone-paved highway north to Fairhaven.  Justen could see
the horse troopers ahead: a mounted squad comprised of two-score troops
and one White Wizard, all under the crimson banner of Hydlen.

Justen throttled back, and his eyes flicked to the coal bin,
calculating how much coal had been used.  Perhaps they should take on
some wood as well.

"Halt," demanded the lead rider.

Justen slowed the steam car but did not stop.  "We are on our way to
Fairhaven.  Are not the roads open to all?"

"Not to those of the Black isle.  Only to those who accept the
beneficence of Fairhaven."

"Stop ..."  whispered Gunnar.

"No.  The car doesn't move well from a complete stop..  We can outrun
them."

"The White Wizard's marshaling chaos!"

Justen sensed the accuracy of Gunnar's words, and he opened the
throttle.  The Black Demon roared forward.

The horsemen charged.

"Idiots!"  snapped Martan.  The marine lifted his bow.

Hsssttt!  Fire washed over and around the oak ribs covered with the
parchment-thin black iron plate.

"Go ahead."

Martan released the first arrow, and one horse plunged into another.

"Damn!  Worse man from a ship's deck."  Still, arrow after arrow poured
from the armored slit before the raised third seat.

Justen centered the rocket launcher on the sense of chaos, tuning his
own senses to the White Wizard, then pulled the striker trigger.

Psssst .. .

"Aeeiii .. ."

"Demons!  Cursed..."

Flames and chaos flared across the rear of the Hydlen troops as Justen
throttled the Demon to a higher speed and the black land engine rumbled
forward and scattered the lancers.

Clunk..  .

Fire flared in front of Justen, and his eyes watered.  The road
blurred.  "Gunnar!"

"What?"

"Steer.  Can't see ..."  Justen gasped, trying to squint to see the
road in the sudden darkness.

"I've got it."

Justen felt his brother's hands on the tiller and released his grip,
trying to ease himself out of the driver's seat.

Even as he moved, he could hear a regular sound; thump ... thump .. .
thump He could feel Gunnar slowing the Demon.

"Don't slow down yet .. ."  he mumbled.  "Get away from them."

"I can't control this thing as well as you can, but we're not stopping,
not until they're out of sight."

"Good."

"One idiot's still following," said Martan.

Justen could sense the arrow being released, and then his fingers
fumbled with die shaft that seemed to be stuck in the thin plate of his
helmet.

"Missed!"

Another arrow followed the first.

"Shit!  Got the horse, not bad, but he's reining up."

The regular thumping continued, accompanied by a squeaking sound.

"What's that?"  asked Gunnar.

"I don't know.  I can't see.  Can't get this demon arrow out, and I
can't get the helmet off."

"Hold still!"  snapped Martan, leaning forward from the third seat.

Justen stopped moving.

"Uhhh ... got it.  Let's see that."

Justen could feel the helmet coming off.

"Your helmet stopped most of it, but you're bleeding like a stuck hog.
Head wounds do that.  There's lots of blood in your eyes."

As he fumbled out a cloth and blotted his face, Justen wanted to rub
his aching forehead.  "Why does a cut hurt so much?"

"It's not just a cut.  Part of it goes almost to the bone.  That archer
put a lot behind that.  It's really more like a crossbow quarrel.  It
bent your helmet.  You're going to have one big bruise."

The thumping continued, and the squeaking increased.

Justen forced himself to concentrate on offering himself a touch of
healing and re-ordering; some of the pain diminished and he began to
see, although the images were somewhat blurred.

"What do you intend to do next time?"  asked Gunnar.  "That was only a
small group."

"Next time, I think we let go with rockets sooner."

"Good idea!"  affirmed Marian.

"Now that you can see, can you tell me what the noise is?"

Justen shrugged gingerly and let his senses slide across the craft. The
engine was sound, as was the drive shaft, but the noise came from the
left front wheel, and the wheel wobbled as it turned.

"I can steer now.  I need you to check to see if any of those troops
are following."  Justen took the tiller.

Gunnar was silent for a time before answering.  "No.  You killed the
White Wizard, and they're just milling around."

"Good.  We need to replace the front wheel."

"Already?"

"It was a freak thing."  Justen sighed.  "I think one of the crossbow
bolts went through the bearing housing."

"Bearing housing?"

"Never mind.  We've got two spare wheels."  Justen throttled down the
Demon.  "We need to unload them and the repair kit first."

While the other two watched, the engineer unlashed the spare wheel,
which Martan carried to the side of the stone-paved road.  Then Justen
turned to the storage lockers.

"How do you plan to replace this?"  asked Gunnar.  "At least a quarter
of the weight rests on that wheel."

Justen rummaged in one of the lockers and pulled out a trapezoidal
wedge and a square block.  "It would be a lot harder if the wheel had
broken.  But it hasn't."

Martan nodded.

"When the wheel is on the flat part here, get me to stop.  I'll set the
brake and we'll block the other wheels."  Justen held up another heavy
block of oak with a half-circle bored on one end.  "Then this goes
under the axle, and we knock the other block out."

"It looks like it will work," admitted Gunnar.

With Martan in front of the Demon and Gunnar beside the block, Justen
edged the craft toward the long wedge.

"Easy ... easy.  It's sliding."

"Sliding?"

"The wheel just pushes it forward instead of riding up on it."

"Shit..."  mumbled Justen.  "It couldn't be that easy, of course.  Let
me back up and get it moving a little faster."

The first time, Justen rolled up one side and down the other.  The
second time, he stopped on top but failed to set the brake quickly
enough.  The third time, the wedge spun because he hit it at an angle.
The fourth time, it worked.

"Now what?"

"This goes under the axle."

"How?"

"Like this."  Justen inserted the half-circle under the axle shaft and
took the heavy hammer, tapping it steadily until the weight of the axle
rested on the block instead of on the trapezoid.  He eased the
trapezoid aside with gentle taps.  Then he used the hammer and the
wrench to loosen the lugs, and at last he slipped the wheel off.

He studied the bearings and nodded.  "See?  Something smashed through
here.  I think that if I had to, I could fix this and make it work for
a while."  He set the old wheel aside and picked up the replacement.
With quick hammer strokes, he nudged it into place, then tightened the
lugs.

"How are you going to get it off that axle block?"  asked Martan.

Ducking under the land engine, Justen began tapping at the block,
emerging with it in his hand shortly.  "It's angled ... here."

As Justen replaced the equipment in the locker and lashed the damaged
wheel in place, Gunnar and Martan looked at each other.

Finally, Gunnar shrugged.  "Altara said he was weak on design."

"That looked like it worked all right."

Justen closed the locker and glanced at Martan.  "Can you add some coal
to the firebox?"

"Yes, scr."

"Do you plan on stopping anywhere?"  asked Gunnar.

"You hungry?  The first package in the hamper there is lunch.  You eat
while I drive and then I'll eat.  Martan can take his time."

"Don't we have to sleep?"

"Yes ... but not until we can find someplace a bit more distant from
people with crossbows and other assorted weapons."  Justen grinned.
"Besides, we've hardly started."  He slipped into the driver's seat,
released the brake and opened the throttle.  "We're off."

Gunnar groaned-loudly.

CXLVI

Beltar struggled with the mirror, trying to get the images to focus.
Even the breeze sweeping in from the tower window failed to remove the
heat from the room.

For an instant, the whitened dust of the metaled road appeared before
the white mist swirled back into place.  The High Wizard frowned and
tried again.

This time the vision held, for a moment, of a black, wagon like object
without horses, trailing smoke, that rolled along the road from Hydolar
toward Fairhaven.  Even through the mirror, Beltar could sense the
amount of order forced into the horseless wagon.  He sighed and
released the image, wiping his forehead.

"You see?"  asked Jehan.  "It's like a miniature warship, and nothing
seems to stop it.  Gorsuch brought two squads against it."

"And?"

"There are three, I think, in it.  They have those fire rockets and
black iron arrows.  Most of the troopers died.  So did Gorsuch."

"Why didn't they just pile stones on the road?"

"Stones are heavy, Beltar, and I doubt they had time.  Besides, do you
want to be the High Wizard who blocked the roads?  Also, they haven't
attacked anybody who hasn't attacked them first."

"They don't look exactly peaceful."

Jehan shrugged and waited.

"So why are they traveling toward Fairhaven?"

"I don't know, but you can tell how much order that machine carries. It
can't bode well for us."

"So let them come.  Let them bring their little land ship."

"What will the world think if three wizards from Recluce take over the
wizards' roads and deposit a huge chunk of order in Fairhaven?  And
what will the Council think?"

"Oh?  Are you claiming that with one action, they nullify all the
effort we've put into trying to isolate Recluce?"

"Some would see it that way."

"Like Derba?"

"He certainly would."

"Wouldn't it be better to ignore them, perhaps even to welcome them?
Follow Cerryl's example ... almost say that it doesn't bother us?"

Jehan coughed.  "For anyone but you-the wizard who has always relied on
his power-"

"AH right, all right.  You've made that point enough.  Let's just send
the entire White lancers against this thing.  Three Blacks couldn't
fight through thousands."

"I doubt they could.  That's certainly true.  Of course, we have only a
few hundred White lancers nearby, and much of the Iron Guard is still
in Suthya."

"And?"  asked Beltar.  "Your tone indicates that I have overlooked
something."

"What happens if the most powerful White Wizard in generations refuses
to deal with a direct assault by a mere three Black Wizards and sends
troops instead of showing up himself?"

"You're telling me that if I don't act like a wizard, the Council will
be ... upset?"

"So might the troops, although I could not say that with absolute
certainty."

"I do thank you."

"It is always my pleasure."

"How soon will those we called arrive?"

"Histen has pleaded ill health, saying that he will make haste but that
his health restricts him, and Renwek is caring for him.  Most of the
others are here, or will be here before that..  . device arrives."

"Histen .. . I'll have to deal with him yet."  Beltar glanced toward
the unopened bottle of wine on the table.

"That is precisely what he fears, I am sure."

"What about Derba?"

"Derba?  He will smile until he can wrench the amulet from you,
preferably taking your neck with it."

"You are so cheerful, Jehan."

"You asked, High Wizard."

"So I did."  Beltar shook his head, and his eyes flicked back to the
bottle of red wine.

CXLVII

The Black Demon had passed three single horsemen, one of them a White
lancer who tried unsuccessfully to chase the land engine; several
wagons, one loaded with cabbage; and a peddler with a mule.

As the late afternoon sun touched the rolling hills to the west of the
old but solid stone road, two wagons and a line of horses stretched
ahead.

"Now what?"  asked Gunnar.

"We steam past," said Justen.  "With the armor in place, of course."

"But the White Wizards ..."

"They already know.  Speed is more important than secrecy."

"How about partial secrecy?"  suggested Gunnar.

"Shields so we're not visible to them?"

"Scare the darkness out of them," laughed Martan.

"Can you do it?"  asked Justen.  "Shields, I mean?"

"I think so.  Can you steer?"

"If I slow down, but I'd have to anyway."  Justen paused.  "What if we
get close, fire a rocket, and then vanish?"

"It plight work, but they might just bunch up," suggested Martan.

"Shields.  No rocket," decided Justen.  He eased back the throttle as
the perceived darkness of the light-shield fell across the Demon.

The land engine crept forward, heavy wheels rumbling faintly on the
stone slabs of the road, the faint hiss of steam sounding almost like a
summer breeze, and the muffled thudding of the engine like a giant
heart.

Clink... clink... "Firdil, do you hear something?  Like a wagon?"  The
horseman's voice seemed to be almost beside Justen, although Justen
could sense that the land engine was still behind the rider.  "...
something .. . hissing like a snake.  It smells hot... like
brimstone."

Clink..  . The horse edged toward the Demon.

Whheee , .. eeeee.  The horse skittered sideways, as if burned by the
contact with the land engine.

"What's with you?"  the rider asked, yanking on the horse's reins.

"Mine's skittish, too," answered the rider still in front of the land
engine as she turned in the saddle.  "Maybe a demon's around.  It's hot
here.  Look-look over at the fields there.  It's hard to see them
clearly."

"Maybe it's because the sun's setting."

"I don't like it."

Wheee... The second horse jumped aside.

"Something big is breathing .. . right there.  Don't you hear the
grinding on the stone?"

"A demon?"  The rider eased his horse off the road.

"What are you two doing?"  yelled a voice from the wagon seat.

"There's a demon here!"

Justen eased up the throttle, and the Demon slid past the riders and
alongside the wagon.

"A what?"

Justen kept his lips clamped, trying not to laugh even while the sweat
rolled down his face.  The last incident had shown that neither he nor
the land engine were invulnerable, and he didn't really want any more
arrows flying his way.

Or swords.  Or whatever.

"Demon!"

"Darkness!  I hear it!"  The teamster flicked the reins.  Clink...
clink.  The two horses began to trot.  Justen pushed the throttle up,
then pulsed the whistle.  Eee .. . eeeee .... The horse on the left
veered toward the unseen land engine, and Justen eased the tiller.  The
left wheel rumbled on the graveled shoulder of the road.  As the
teamster saw the dust, he guided the team away from the "demon," and
Jus-ten steered the land engine back so that all its wheels were on the
road again.

The teamster pulled his wagon to a halt, trying to calm the jittery
horses.  Then the lead wagon pulled over, and Justen and the Demon
slipped by into the twilight.

As the Demon swung around the curve and out of sight of the traders,
Gunnar dropped the shields.  Justen pushed the throttle even higher
before he wiped his sweating forehead.  "Whew ..."  mumbled Martan.
"Scared them."

"Scared me," confessed Justen.  "These roads aren't wide enough."

"No road's wide enough for you" Gunnar commented as the land engine
continued northward and as the darkness grew.

"How can you see?"  asked the marine.

"The road's clear enough."  Justen adjusted the tiller.  "I'm hoping we
run across an empty way station somewhere ahead."

"The last one had all those peddlers.  They swallowed when we went
past."  Martan shook his head.

"The way stations are usually about ten kays apart."  Jus-ten peered
into the darkness.

"How you can see anything ... is that wizards' sight?"

"It runs in our family," answered Gunnar absently.  "There's something
ahead, like a hut, and I think it's empty.  Anyway, I can't sense
anything there.  There's a small stream out of the hills, too."

"How far?"

"About two wide curves."

Justen concentrated on guiding the Demon along the seemingly thin strip
of white stone.

"It's on the right up there."  Gunnar cleared his throat.  "Slow down.
This doesn't feel right."

Hsstttt..  .

A flare of light sprayed off the front armor of the Demon.

"Demons' light!  Frigging wizards!"

Justen blinked, trying keep power to the wheels while dropping speed.

"Where's the frigging bow?"  snapped Martan.

With one hand on the tiller, Justen throttled the Demon down to a crawl
and tried to sense where the White Wizard stood in the darkness.  Then
his right hand left the throttle and groped for the rocket striker.  He
had only the one rocket in the front launcher.  How many wizards were
there?

"Two ..."  whispered Gunnar.  "One's behind the hut."

"Great," mumbled Martan.  "Two Black mages, two White Wizards, and I
can't even see the White bastards."

Justen took a deep breath.  "All right," he whispered to Gunnar. "After
the rocket goes off, you take the tiller and slow this down."

"Me?"

"Just do it," hissed the engineer.  Oh, Dayala .. . hope this works His
fingers flicked the striker.

Whhhsttt... As the rocket flared in the general direction of the wizard
beside the hut, Justen slipped from the driver's seat and into the
darkness, staggering as his feet hit the ground.  He darted from the
black iron of the Demon and toward the wavering white lines of the
wizards' chaos.

Could he replicate the Balance struggles of the great forest?  Did he
have much choice?

He drew on the earth, on the mixture of Black and White within, and
cast both toward the White Wizards, feeding in the hungers that seemed
to come from both.

A huge white mountain cat padded toward Justen, but he let it come,
instead raising a black cat, feeding the black cat to match the white
cat.  The white cat became a fountain of molten rock spilling toward
Justen, and the grass beside the stone pavement began to burn.

Justen called upon the cold within the north and the Roof of the World,
and a fountain of chilled ice and rock appeared beside the lava, which
immediately formed a black crust and began to shrink.

Then he called upon the deep waters, and a fountain of ice-cold water
burst from the earth, cascading over the hut and the two wizards.

Steam fountained where the water struck, and Justen turned the water
into ice, and then back to water.

Oooooo... Like a long whimper, the area around the hut was empty.
Justen sat down suddenly beside the stone serving as a step into the
way station, absently noting the small fire and the two packs that
seemed to shrivel into dust.

Wwhheee .. . eeeee ... "Those are horses," said Martan, standing beside
Justen.

The engineer had not even heard the marine approach.  "They had some
wards I didn't know about.  Kept them hidden."

Martan scuffed the burned grass.  "What I saw was real, wasn't it?"

"Mostly."

"This is serious business."

"Yes," added Gunnar, stepping out of the land engine after setting the
brake.  "Everything Justen does, I think, is serious business."  He
turned to his younger brother.  "What was that?"

"A trick from the great forest.  The only way you can win is to accept
both order and chaos within yourself.  I didn't think any White could
do that."  Justen wiped his still-sweating forehead.

"I don't think most Blacks could do that, either," responded Gunnar. He
glanced around the hut.  "I doubt anyone will bother us now.  I also
think that every White Wizard in Candar probably knows we're here."  He
paused.  "Why couldn't you use that instead of that other .. . infernal
thing?"

"It won't solve the problem."  Justen slowly stood, grasping the timber
framing the way station's doorless opening to help him rise.  "These
two weren't that strong, either."

"Here ..."  Gunnar shoved a wedge of cheese and the end of a loaf of
bread at Justen.

"Thanks."  Justen slowly chewed on first the bread and then the cheese
as Gunnar brought in the pallets and some supplies.

Martan fed more sticks and a small log to the dying fire.

Even before Gunnar had carried in his second load, Justen had struggled
to the hearth by the fire, where he soaked up warmth and tried to keep
his knees from turning to water.

Martan knelt and looked sideways at Justen.  "That wizardry stuff takes
it out of you."

Justen nodded.

Martan rose and left the hut.  When he returned, he offered Justen the
small bucket of clear spring water.

"Thank you."  Justen took a deep swallow.  His legs had stopped
quivering, and he no longer felt as though he would fall over.

"I throttled it down and set the brake.  What else?"  asked Gunnar.

"Open the main release valve by the-"

"Oh ... right."  Gunnar hurried back to the Demon.

Justen rose and followed, more slowly.

In the darkness, Gunnar turned to Justen.  "You didn't have to come."

"The way things are going, we both had better check things."

"Maybe."

Justen threw the thin tarp over the seats.  "This ought to keep
anything from getting damp."

"I don't feel any rain."

"Let's get some food and rest."

The two walked back into the way station and sat down on the stone
floor.  Gunnar spread cheese and bread on a square of cloth and then
added some pear apples

The three ate silently.

"We'll need more coal-or wood-or something," Jus-ten mumbled, his mouth
full of cheese and bread.

"Can we buy it?"  asked Martan.  "You said you had golds."

"How?  Do we steam up to the collier or the blacksmith wearing black
and say, "Oh, I'd like to buy ten stone worth of coal or charcoal'?"

The marine laughed.  "How about stealing it ho nestlike

"Take it and leave coins?"  Justen mused.  That was certainly better
than theft.  "Where's the nearest town?  We can probably make only
another twenty kays before we're running on coal dust.  The Demon burns
coal faster than I figured."

"Well, we're traveling faster than I figured.  When will we reach
Fairhaven?"  Gunnar asked.

"It's at least another half-day's travel, even with the Demon."

Gunnar leaned back on the thin pallet he had unrolled and closed his
eyes.

"Sleeping already?"  asked Martan.

"No.  He's riding the winds, trying to find a town."

"You two .. . sometimes it's fine.  Other times, I wonder what I got
into," admitted Martan.

"So do we."

CXLVIII

"Oh .. ."  Justen awoke with a start as Martan touched his shoulder. He
had slept deeply, perhaps too deeply.  He had not even dreamed of
Dayala, or of the White Wizards.

"If we're to get this coal ..."  said the marine softly.

"Yes."  Justen took a deep breath and stretched, trying to remove the
stiffness from his back.

By the time he had pulled on his boots, splashed his face in the stream
to try to wake up, and rolled up his pallet, Mar-tan had repacked the
land engine, and Justen had to move the pallets to get the buckets.

"I thought we were getting coal."

"We need water, and we might as well refill the reservoir here."

"With those dinky buckets?  It'll take until well after dawn."

"We need the water."  Martan shrugged.

"Now?"  groaned Gunnar.

"Now."

"I'm hungry, "protested the Air Wizard.

"So am I. We can eat while we're traveling toward this place you say
might have coal."  Justen carried the first bucket up from the stream
behind the way station.

Splluuussh..  .

"Crap!"  Gunnar stood ankle-deep in the stream.  "You and your water
before breakfast."

"Fill the bucket and pass it up, or carry it."

The sky was noticeably gray by the time the land engine puffed
northward.

"I told you it would take until dawn."

Justen said nothing as he chewed on the still-moist bread packed by
Horas.

"My boots will be wet all day,"

"Can't you use that wizardry of yours?"  asked Martan.

"It works fine on clothes and me.  If I use it on leather, it ruins it.
The boots would fall apart."  Gunnar bit into a hunk of cheese.

"How far?"  asked Justen.  "... nudder oo ays."

"What?"

"I think he said two kays," interpreted Martan.

After taking another wide curve, even Justen could sense the iron ore
and the wrought iron piled next to the dark, hut-like home that stood
beneath a small hill.

A packed and wide road led left off the main road and to the
ironmongery.  Justen turned the tiller, and the Demon followed the side
road.  To the east, the horizon was turning a paler gray.

"We need to hurry," said Martan.

Awwooo .. . ooo .. . oo..  .

"There's a dog," offered Gunnar.

"I hear," said Justen.  "Can you put it to sleep?"

"Probably.  Wait a moment."

Justen eased back the throttle, and the Demon barely edged forward.

"Dawn's not that far off," hissed Martan.

"He's sleeping now," said Gunnar in a low voice.  "The coal is in a big
pile between that shed and the house."

"I'll drive right up beside it."

All three held their breath as Justen eased the land engine across the
yard and to the coal pile.

"Awful close to the house," whispered Martan.

"Take your bow and watch it, then.  I'm going to put golds by the
door-I'll feel better about paying first-and then Gunnar and I will
load the bins."

"Be a moment 'fore I can get it strung."

Justen set the brake and tried to walk quietly across the yard to the
house.  He eased four golds from his purse onto the flat log set beside
the ironmonger's door.  Then he walked back toward the coal.

"Stop right there, my fine thieves!"  A stocky man stood barefoot on
the stones outside the doorway of the house.  He carried a bow with an
arrow, nocked and pointed at Gunnar.

"Should have put the ironmonger to sleep, too," said Martan.  His bow
was trained on the man.

Justen sighed.  "We're not thieves."

"Likely tale."

"Since this has already turned into a mess, let me explain.  I'm
Justen.  I'm one of those nasty Black engineers from Recluce.  The man
you have your arrow pointed at is my brother Gunnar.  The fellow who
has his bow aimed at you is Martan.  He's a Black marine, and they
don't usually miss."

"I'm Thasgus, and I don't often miss, either."

"If you will look beside the doorstep, or let me go get it, you will
find that there are four golds laid there as advance payment for your
coal.  That's what we want."

"Why are you running around in the dawn, then?"

Justen snorted.  "Since we landed in Hydolar, I've been shot at.  My
land engine has been attacked.  Two White Wizards tried to destroy us
last night.  The last time I was in Candar, I was chased practically
across the continent by a pair of White Wizards."

"Sounds like you're not exactly wanted here.  Why did you bother coming
back?"

"I'm not exactly popular anywhere right now.  That's true.  I came back
because-" Justen shrugged, hoping he did not have to unbalance the
order and chaos around him, although he was willing to do so "-I
thought it might be interesting to meet the High Wizard in
Fairhaven."

"Mind if I have Dessa look by the step?"  asked the stocky
ironmonger.

"Go ahead."

"Dessa!  Look next to the step by the door.  Tell me what's there."

"You want me to look by the doorstep?"

"Yes, woman.  Look by the step.  And don't mind all the wizards in the
yard."

"Wizards in the yard?  My, my ..."  A thin woman peered out the door.
"Well, there's a bone here.  Looks to be chewed by Gutfull.  And a bit
of ribbon ..."

"The other side, please?"  asked Justen.

"Oh .. . here?  There be four coins, Thasgus.  Look to be gold.  Wait a
moment.  My scissors are iron."

Several faint clinks followed.

"They look gold, and they ring gold."

"You lower that bow," offered the ironmonger, "and I'll lower mine.
There's more of you, anyway."

Justen nodded, and Martan lowered his bow slowly.  So did the
ironmonger.

"What kind of coal ye be needing?"  Thasgus set the bow against the
house.  "For four golds, you can have as much of the best as you can
cart in that little wagon."

"Could you throw in a little red berry and a mug of beer?"  pleaded
Justen.

Thasgus frowned.  "Who wants the beer?"

"I do."

The ironmonger laughed.  "A Black Wizard who drinks beer?"  Then his
face clouded.  "Ye be sure you're a wizard?"

Justen drew the light around him, vanishing from the other's sight,
then walked toward Thasgus, appearing less than three paces away.
"Satisfied?"

"Takes all kinds."  The stocky ironmonger shook his head.  "But those
White Wizards will turn you into ashes, from what I hear tell.  You
fellows seem a little... nice... to do such a thing, even If you do
have a funny way of doing business."

"Don't judge the ore by its shine, Thasgus," warned Dessa from the
doorstep.  She carried two pitchers.

"Yes, woman."  Thasgus glanced at Justen.  "You found the coal. Shovels
are in the shed."

"Thank you."

"No thanks.  You're paying for it."

Martan nodded and smiled, but he kept the bow half ready.

CXLIX

"You take those curves too fast," protested Gunnar.  "I can feel the
wheels skidding sideways on the stone,"

"It's safer that way."  Justen laughed.  "It makes it harder for an
archer to hit us."

"What archer even knows we're on the road?"  Gunnar paused.  "You know
something?  We haven't seen anyone on this road today.  No one."

"It's only a bit past dawn."

"Early morning," Martan put in.

"Fine.  We still haven't seen anyone.  I don't like it."

"That's why it's better to move fast.  They've probably warned everyone
off the road.  It will make it easier for us to get to Fairhaven. We're
really not far away."

"You're not going to just drive right into Fairhaven, are you?"

"Of course.  We'll take the main road from the south and head straight
for the great square, or whatever it's called."  Justen straightened
the tiller and glanced to his right, then to his left.  The road
continued to wind between the low bills that presumably guarded the
approach to Fairhaven.

"Justen, can't I get a serious answer?"

"I need a hill."

"A hill?"

"A hill south of Fairhaven.  A tall hill with a clear view of Fairhaven
and the White Tower, and with a road that will take us partway up."

"Just like that?"  asked Gunnar.  "Am I supposed to create one?"

"No.  Look for it."

"While you're throwing me all over the land engine?"

Martan nodded from the third seat, his face slightly pale.

"Do what you can."  As the road straightened, Justen pushed the
throttle forward.  Behind him, Martan groaned almost inaudibly.

For another ten kays, Gunnar withdrew into himself and out of himself,
and Martan hung on to the sides of the third seat.

"Around the next corner, there's a hill.  It looks out on Fairhaven."

Justen slowed the Demon as they rounded the corner and studied the
hill.  "It's too far away."

Gunnar sighed.  "We're getting close to Fairhaven."

"Not as close as I need to be."

"Great.  Let me look again."

A man and a donkey stared at the land engine from a side road.  Justen
waved brightly.  The man's mouth dropped open.

"How about that one?"

"It's really not as high as I'd like."

"What are you looking for?  Maybe we should have brought a White Wizard
like the great Jeslek to create what you need."

"Gunnar, I'm worried, too."

"There's a hill on the next curve.  It's shorter, but it's mostly clear
to Fairhaven, and you might be able to get this contraption to climb it
if you really got moving.  And it's the last real hill before
Fairhaven.  After it, there's one low ridge and then the city starts.
This one is only a sheep meadow.  The one below it has houses."

"All right."

"There's a lane there.  It goes partway up."

Justen eased the throttle farther forward.

Marian's fingers tightened around the iron-plated oak as the land
engine swayed more violently.  Behind them, road dust rose into a high
plume.

More than five hundred cubits short of the hilltop, the wheels dug into
soft ground and spun.

The half-score sheep had half-walked, half-trundled, toward the cottage
downhill from where the land engine was stalled.

Justen sighed and set the brake.  "We'll have to carry the stuff up
there."

"With everyone watching?"

"You want to do it after they send troops?"

Justen climbed out of the Demon and stared at Fairhaven.  For a moment,
the low, glittering white buildings to the north shimmered ... shifted
... and Justen felt as though he were standing on the edge of a deep
abyss and that those buildings tilted into the depths.  He swallowed.
Fairhaven was even more unbalanced than Nylan-but different.

"Are you all right?"  asked Martan.

"I'm fine."  Somehow, the marine's enthusiasm reminded him of Clerve.
He swallowed again.

A man with a staff marched from the cottage uphill toward the Demon and
the three from Recluce.  Justen began to unfasten the wicker balloon
basket.

"What business have you here?"  The shepherd had a short brown beard,
and he waved the staff at them.

Justen stepped forward, staying well beyond the range of the staff.

"I'm Justen, and I'm a Black-really a Gray-Wizard from Recluce.  I'm
setting things up to bring down Fairhaven and the White Wizards.  Feel
free to watch or to depart.  One way or another, this won't last for
more than a day."  He shrugged theatrically, appeared to disappear for
an instant and then reappeared.  He spun a coin toward the shepherd,
who let it fall.  "That's a gold.  Call it rental for your meadow."

The man scooped up the coin without a word and backed down the hill,
glancing from the marine with the bow to the two wizards and back.

Justen smiled, then whistled as he finished unfastening the balloon
basket and began to carry it up to the hilltop.  The notes sounded
leaden, even to himself.

"All of this?"  asked Martan.

"Everything in the lockers that's not food or weapons.  You bring what
weapons you think we need, and Gunnar can bring the food."

"Why are we carrying it all up to the top?"  asked Gunnar.

"Because it's the highest point on the hill," explained Justen between
breaths.  "I'm out of shape."

At the top, he set down the basket and started back downhill.

Gunnar shrugged and followed him.

It was still somewhat short of midday by the time Justen sat in the
middle of a pile of equipment and a smaller pile of coal beside the
small heating stove with the tubing to the balloon.

"Now what?"  asked Gunnar.

Justen continued to fiddle with the single lens as the stove puffed hot
air into the slowly inflating balloon.  "We put a shield-just the hint
of one-around the balloon and then wait until they notice we're
here."

"What if they don't?"  asked Martan.

"Oh, they will."  Justen grinned, glancing at the midmorning sun well
above the browning grass of the eastern hills.  "That's what these are
for."  He nodded toward the curved mirror and the wide crystal lens. "I
intend to send a signal or two."

"I was afraid of that."  Gunnar massaged the back of his neck.  "And
after that?"

"I get the balloon and the lenses ready, and you and Mar-tan build a
rock shelter."

"A shelter?  I came to fight," protested Martan.

"You'll fight, I'm sure," Justen said gently, "but not until after I
take on the White Wizards.  You need to protect Gunnar while he's
ensuring that the skies stay cloudless.  A wizard with his senses in
the skies has no way to protect his body."

"What about you?"

"I'll be up in the balloon basket.  I should be safe from most weapons
there."  Justen shrugged.  "But it can carry only one, anyway."

The small heat stove continued to puff hot air into the silk sheen

CL

The beam of light from the hilltop played across the White tower again.
Beltar squinted.  "That damned engineer is giving me a headache."

"That is clearly his intention."  Despite his calm words, Eldiren
massaged his neck and forehead, his fingers lingering momentarily on
the scar above his eyebrow.

"What's in that light?  Light's supposed to be mostly chaotic."  Beltar
walked toward the window, then turned back, his fingers playing with
the amulet of office.

"It's ordered, somehow.  That's part of the reason it's so bright."
Eldiren moistened his lips.

"I thought you said that the engineer was coming to Fairhaven."  Beltar
paced back toward the window, glancing southward.

"I said I thought he was.  He's close enough, isn't he?  Do you want
that light in the square out there?"  Eldiren gestured toward the east
window and the patch of green visible in the open oblong.

The light played across the tower again, and the screeing glass hummed
faintly.

"Demon light!  He's going to smash more screeing glasses.  Isn't it
time for the Council to convene?"

"You had me tell them mid-morning."

"It is mid-morning."

"Not quite," observed Eldiren.  "Most of them are heading toward the
Council chamber now.  What will you have them do?"

"I think we need to move-behind adequate Iron Guard and lancers, of
course-to the south of the city and bring our combined forces to bear
on this ... engineer."

"Don't you think that is what he wants?"

"I don't really care what he wants.  Just how much longer can we ignore
him?"

"I could ignore him for a long time," said Eldiren.

"I don't have that choice.  I am, if you recall, the High Wizard, and
all the members of the Council are going to have headaches, if they
don't already.  If we don't do something ... today ..."

"They may want you to do it alone," suggested Eldiren.  "As you so
rightly point out, you are the High Wizard."

"Any Black who's strong enough to create that ... is more than a match
for any White."

Eldiren smiled faintly, the smile giving a sardonic cast to his thin
face.

"Stop smirking," Beltar ordered.  "I admit it, and at least I do.  You
still claim you killed him.  Some dead engineer!"

"At the very least, they'll insist you be the focus."

"I know.  I know."  Beltar took a deep breath and looked at the empty
bottle of wine on the side table.  He licked his lips, then stood
abruptly.  "Call Jehan."

"He's downstairs."  Eldiren eased from the straight-backed chair and
walked to the tower door, leaving it ajar.  His boots scuffed on the
tower steps.  "Jehan ."

Beltar walked to the window on the south side of the room, his eyes
taking in the flashes of light and the round object that seemed to
burgeon from the top of the hill from where the light came.  "A sphere
filled with hot air... what does he have in mind?"  He shook his head,
then turned as he heard two sets of boots trudging up the stairs.

The two wizards stepped into the High Wizard's quarters and stood,
waiting.

"Jehan, after we finish here, I want you to find Marshall Kilera and
have him assemble the Iron Guard-every one who's fit-and all the White
lancers.  We'll move out on the Blacks right after the meeting."

"As you wish," Jehan said without inflection.  "Is that what the White
Council will decide?"

"That is what the Council will decide," Beltar affirmed.  "Do they have
much choice?"

"They could decide on another High Wizard," suggested Eldiren.

"Ha!  And they'd slaughter the thinnest pig in the yard, loo.  You
really think that any of them want to go out and face those Blacks?"

"Well... they don't look especially overwhelming.  Outside of that
wagon and a handful of black iron rockets, what do they have?"
Eldiren's voice was light, almost mocking.

"Just the confidence to challenge the mightiest wizards in the world,"
Jehan observed.  "A bag filled with hot air, and more order than any
one of us has ever seen in one place."

"You two!"  snapped Beltar.  "What do you mean?"  He pointed at
Jehan.

"This Black mage keeps doing the impossible.  What is to stop him
again?"

"We are.  The entire White Council."

As Beltar glared at Jehan, Eldiren lifted his eyebrows.

"You two," repeated Beltar.  He cleared his throat.  "Jehan-just go
take my message to Marshall Kilera.  I want him to ready whatever
forces he has to march as close to midday as possible.  Then rejoin us.
We'll be in the Council Room."

Jehan nodded, then turned and hastened out the door and down the
steps.

Fingering the heavy amulet that hung from the chain around his neck,
Beltar inclined his head to Eldiren.  "What choice do I have?"

"Not much.  I think that you're stronger than the Black mage, but he
clearly thinks he can win .. . somehow.  And despite your rumors that
the Black Council was going to imprison him for being order-mad, I
don't think he is.  I think they're scared of him, and that bothers
me."

"It bothers me, too."  Beltar shrugged.  "But what am I supposed to
do?"  He winced as another flash of ordered-light flicked through the
window.

Eldiren shivered.

"Am I supposed to walk up that hillside and say, "Please go away'? Will
that work?"

"No.  And if you did that, Derba would have you in chains for
treachery, or you'd end up blasting half the Council into dust."
Eldiren laughed with a self-mocking note.  "I told you what would
happen if you got the amulet through sheer power."

"You did, but that doesn't help now.  Just what do you suggest?"

"That you can accept?"  Eldiren shrugged.  "Use more power.  Back it
with troops and hope that you don't end up destroying us all.  And
don't turn your back on anyone until it's over."

"You're honest."

"I'm not powerful.  I don't have any choice."

"Shall we go?"  asked Beltar.

"I am at your command, High Wizard."

"So you are."  The High Wizard straightened his tunic, let the amulet
drop to the end of the heavy gold links, and squared his shoulders.  He
walked to the door, and Eldiren followed.  The thud of their boots was
the only sound as they descended the stairs.

"You could give up the office of High Wizard," suggested Eldiren as
they entered the lower hall.  "Or try to talk to the Black."

"Eldiren."  Beltar sighed in exasperation.  "If I gave up the amulet,
I'd eventually get fried, just like Sterol did, because they'll need
someone to blame.  Besides, that presumes that this Black will win, and
that's far from certain.  Last time, he ran from you.  Survival isn't
quite the same as triumphing."

"Sometimes it's the same thing."

"Then throw in your lot with Derba."  Beltar ignored the servant who
scuttled aside.  He continued down the wide hallway to the Council Room
without looking at Eldiren.

"You at least listen to honesty.  He doesn't know what it is," Eldiren
offered.

"Then you're trapped, just like me."

"Worse.  I have to depend on you."

Beltar paused at the door to the chamber.  "Ready?"

"Of course."

A low humming, comprised of multiple conversations, filled the room.
"... why doesn't our great High Wizard just take care of the uppity
Black himself?  Why call the Council?"  "... same Black who destroyed
half the armies in Sarronnyn..."  "... someone strong enough to worry
the White Butcher?  What a pity."  "..  . pity us ... you mean .. ."

Beltar stepped onto the dais, Eldiren at his shoulder, and the murmurs
died away.  He waited for a moment.  "I have called the Council in
order to deal with the insult posed by the Black mage."

"You need the whole Council for that?"  asked a voice from the group in
the middle of the white-hung chamber.

Beltar shrugged.  "I think it's far better to use excessive force than
to have wizards and troops picked off one by one, the way it was in
Sarronnyn.  You might recall that we got nowhere there until we brought
in more than a handful of White Wizards."

Jehan eased in from the side entrance and stopped beside Eldiren.  As
Beltar's eyes rested on him, Jehan nodded.  Beltar smiled.

"You are the greatest wizard ever, Beltar," Derba began.  "That, at
least, is what one has been led to believe."  Derba offered a smile
that was not far from a smirk.  "Yet you're saying that it will take
all of us to deal with three mere Order Wizards from Recluce?"

"You're supposed to be able to move mountains.  Why can't you just lift
the mountains under them?"  Inadvertently, after speaking, a heavyset
wizard massaged his forehead looked away from the High Wizard.

Beltar sighed loudly.  "Just what will happen to all of Fairhaven if I
call on chaos and raise mountains right here?  What do you think,
Flyrd?"  His eyes fixed on the heavy wizard.

"You tell us," suggested Derba.

The stone on which Derba stood vibrated, and the redheaded wizard
lurched in place.

"Very pretty, Beltar."

"I think what Beltar is trying to point out," suggested Eldiren, "is
that it might be rather dangerous.  Raising mountains has a tendency to
destroy the landscape and whatever else is nearby."

"Jeslek did it."  Derba crossed his arms and stared at Eldiren.

A pulse of light flicked through the window on the south side of the
white-walled hall.  Eldiren winced, while Jehan squinted.  Several
other wizards in the chamber shifted their weight.

"And we're still paying for it.  Today there's only high desert and
thin grass on most of the so-called Little East-horns," continued
Eldiren after a momentary pause.  "That scourge was nearly three
centuries ago."

"So .. ."  Derba drew out the word.  "You're saying that if you use
your mighty powers, they may be so mighty and you will have so little
control over them that Fairhaven itself will be destroyed?"

"I did not say that."  Beltar glared at Derba, and lines of flame
appeared around both wizards.  "The Order Wizard has shields.  They
seem strong.  To break those shields will break everything else around
unless we can focus our powers directly on him.  Also, you might
remember that if we create great forces of chaos, we might just create
another order-focus in him.  Does anyone remember what happened the
last time chaos overbalanced order that much?  Does anyone remember why
Cerryl the Great-"

"You're invoking Cerryl?"  asked Derba.  "I find that rather
amusing."

The flash of order-light flicked through the chamber again.

"Most powerful wizards," called a voice from the group on the lower
level, "could we agree on a course of action?  The rest of us are
having some difficulty in dealing with the current disruption."

"Yes, most exalted High Wizard," said Derba.  "Exactly what do you
plan?"  His red hair glinted with what seemed the fire of chaos
itself.

"We have two Iron Guard regiments and their Fifth mounted, plus the
Eighth White lancers.  Add maybe a hundred in detachments-"

"That's a great deal fewer than the two Black mages destroyed in
Sarronnyn, is it not?"  asked the heavyset Flyrd from near the back of
the group.

"At that time, there were exactly two real White Wizards with our
forces, opposed by several thousand Sarronnese, plus a dozen or more
Black engineers and a detachment of Black marines, all supporting these
Black mages.  Here, they have themselves and one marine.  That's
scarcely an overwhelming force, friend Flyrd," suggested Beltar.

Eldiren and Jehan exchanged a brief glance.  Jehan rolled his eyes at
the inconsistencies in Beltar's rebuttal.

"Might that just not signify extreme confidence?  The rumors are that
one of those Blacks is he who shattered every screeing glass in
Candar."  Flyrd crossed his hands across his white robe and waited.

"The rumors also indicate," countered Beltar, "that he had to flee
Recluce and that the Black Council was about to restrain him for being
order-mad."  The High Wizard smiled.  "Any man who sets himself up to
challenge an entire continent is somewhat unbalanced."

"If he's mad, then, why don't you just handle it?"  asked Derba, a
broad smile playing across his face.

Beltar frowned, and white sparks rose around him, forcing Derba's
shields back.

"I withdraw the question, powerful and mighty High Wizard."  Derba
retreated, pursing his lips.

The white sparks dropped away from Derba, and Beltar smiled.  "Since we
are agreed, and since this is best resolved as soon as possible-as
suggested, let us depart."

"Now?"

"What..."

Beltar smiled.  "I have already called up our forces and they are in
readiness before their barracks on the south side of Fairhaven.
Marshall Kilera awaits our arrival and support.  I expect every member
of the Council to be outside the hall and ready to go.  Now."

Derba wiped his damp forehead.  Flyrd glanced nervously from Beltar to
Derba and then to Eldiren before turning toward the rear of the
chamber.

Beltar watched for a moment, then strode out, ignoring the murmurings
that began to rise.  Eldiren and Jehan followed.  "... notice that
Histen just wasn't able to get here."  "..  . Eldiren didn't look too
happy."

"Even Derba backed down..."  "..  . foolishness ..."  "..  . be over in
instants.  Stupid Black ..."

"So stupid.  So stupid that he destroyed half our army in Sarronnyn."
"... a choice?  Who has a choice?"

The wizards began to move toward the waiting mounts and coaches.

CLI

The wind whispered across the browning hillside grasses, and Justen
straightened from shoveling coal into the small stove, leaving the door
ajar for a moment.  He wiped the sweat from his forehead and took a
deep breath, turning to the north.

There, in the center of the plain between the hills, the higher towers
of Fairhaven glistened white, like fangs thrusting from the valley
floor.  The tallest tower-that of the High Wizard himself-pulsed with
the shimmering white that carried the unseen reddish tinge of chaos
beneath it.  Between the orderly rows of buildings and avenues was the
everpresent green of the short trees, the vines, the grass.  White and
green, green and white: Fairhaven, the jewel of Candar.

Justen shook his head.  Did he really believe that he and Gunnar-and
Martan-could take on the massed wizards who had built such a city?  You
can ... and you must

He pursed his lips.  Easy enough for Dayala and the Angels.  They
weren't the ones who were watching a small-sized army slowly march
toward them.  One army, accompanied by dozens of wizards-and good old
Justen was intending to prevail with a bag of silk sheen filled with
hot air, a wicker basket, some rods, two fire-eyes, and the sun?

He laughed softly.  His father had been right.  He'd finally gotten
himself in an impossible situation.  Justen, believe in the Balance ..
. and yourself.  You must Indeed I must *I am with you, beloved ...
always with you

He took a deep breath.

Above Justen, the balloon shivered in the breeze.  On the hillside
below, Gunnar and Martan carried black iron plate from the land engine
toward the crude revetment of stone Justen had insisted they build.  He
could hope that the black iron and stone would protect them.

Clunk .. . The dull sound of metal against rock echoed across the
hillside as the two men set the plate against the stones.

Justen took a deep breath, trying to relax, but the tightness in his
guts persisted, as did the tension in his shoulders.  He took a long
look at Martan, young and proud and strong, and so willing to do great
deeds.  Justen sighed.  Great deeds, indeed.  Feeling more like a
butcher about to be covered with blood, he swallowed and glanced back
toward Fairhaven and the approaching White Wizards.

The line of White forces, while not nearly so impressive as those that
had besieged Sarronnyn, stretched nearly a half-kay along the main road
leading south.  The White lancers leading the forces were no more than
a kay from the point where the hillside road veered off the main road.
Behind them rode the mounted Iron Guard, their crimson-trimmed banners
fluttering in the light wind.  Then came the Iron Guard foot.  Behind
them came the white banners of the wizards, with nearly a dozen of the
White Wizards mounted on white horses, followed by two white-gold
coaches flying gold-trimmed white banners.  Over the oncoming soldiers
and wizards hung a cloud of reddish-white, unseen except by mages, that
promised power, chaos-and disaster to all who opposed the massed will
it represented.

Justen shivered.  Then he nodded and called, "Martan!  I need to get up
there!"  As the marine came trotting, Justen shoveled hot coals into
the heat pan of the balloon.  He checked the lines and disengaged the
fire-cloth piping from the stove to the balloon.  Gunnar walked up
behind Martan.

"They're getting close enough.  I should get the balloon up."  Justen
glanced at the taut silk sheen fabric and at the two lines holding it
down, each line tied to a heavy stake.  "Martan?"

"Yes, scr?"

"Once I get in the basket here, start letting the line go from each
stake.  Hold on to just the one.  The other should unwind by itself.
Then make sure it's tied tight.  After that, get back to your revetment
and protect Gunnar.  Like I told you, a wizard with his mind in the
skies can't protect himself, and I'm counting on you."

"Yes, scr."  Martan nodded solemnly.

Justen frowned for a moment.  "How many rockets are left in the land
engine?"

"Less than a score."

"Use them first, while the Whites are still massed together and making
a good target."

"I'll do my best."

Justen forced himself to meet the young, proud face.  "Thank you."

"Thank you.  I wouldn't have missed this for anything."

"I hope you feel that way when it's all over."  Justen turned to his
brother, giving him a quick hug.  "Keep the skies as clear as you can.
That's all I ask.  All I need.  And stay in that shelter!  We moved
that armor plate for a reason."

Martan and Gunnar exchanged glances before Gunnar's eyes strayed to the
crude rock barrier topped with two sheets of black iron plate from the
land engine.  "I mean it.  You could go blind, or worse."  A long
drum-roll echoed up the hillside from the white-paved road leading
south out of Fairhaven.  A second drum-roll followed.  The
standard-bearers dipped both the white banners and crimson-trimmed gray
ones in response to the drum-rolls.  The air smelled like damp leaves,
though the trees had barely begun to turn Justen climbed into the
wicker basket, careful not to upset the lens assembly or the brackets
to which he would have to attach it once the balloon cleared the ground
with room to spare.  Give me strength.  Oh, Dayala ... be with me *I am
with you... always

The Gray Wizard, for he was a Gray Wizard, he knew, smiled.  This time,
those warm thoughts were not just his imaginings.  "Let the clamps
go."

Martan released one clamp, then the other, straining to keep the line
paying out at an even rate.

As the balloon rose, Justen grasped the sides of the basket, sides
whose lightness, so laudable in his experiments, seemed more and more
like fragility as the balloon rose.  The cottage on the brown-grassed
hillside below turned into a shed and then into a dollhouse-or so it
seemed, even though the balloon was less than two hundred cubits above
the hilltop.

Another roll rumbled from the drums.  Justen lurched sideways slightly
as he shifted his weight and the basket tilted.

"Oooo ..."  A line of fire burned his forehead, and the smell of singed
hair filled his nostrils as he pulled his head away from the small
heating pan that had replaced the stove.

He took a deep breath and forced himself to rebalance order and chaos
in the burned patch of hair, and took another breath in relief as the
pain faded and as the basket steadied.

Slowly, he lowered the bracket assembly over the side of the basket and
clamped it in place, so that the lenses reached out sideways.  The
light from the afternoon sun barely reached the upper lens.

Once more the drums rolled, and the lancers moved up to the stone wall
at the bottom of the hill.  Justen continued to hang over the side of
the balloon basket, which had again begun to sway, trying to adjust the
brackets.  Somehow, the adjustments were harder to make when he was
hanging from the basket than when he was on the ground.  "Come on
..."

The swaying increased as the balloon continued to rise.  Ummmphhh .. .
The balloon gave a jolt as it reached the ends of the tethers, and
Justen grasped the sides of the basket with both hands.  For a moment,
his stomach seemed suspended, but he swallowed hard.  Had Martan felt
that way while traveling on the curves in the road?

Justen smiled a brief, wry grin and bent over again to adjust the lens
assembly.  From the corner of his eye, he could see the White lancers
and the Iron Guard nearing the bottom of the hill.  After doing nothing
for half the day, they had decided to move quickly.  The white banners
and the group of wizards remained in the same position farther back on
the road.  The new High Wizard?

Justen readjusted the brackets, but the light focus was not quite
right, and he backed down the clamp a fraction of a turn.

Hssstttt... A fire bolt flared toward the balloon, but seemed to fade
to the side even before Justen had fully seen it.

Gunnar-it had to be Gunnar, shielding him while he worked.  His eyes
flickered down, but Gunnar was partly concealed by the armor.  Martan
still remained by the tether stakes.

"Martan!"  he yelled.  "Light off those rockets to cover Gunnar."

Hhhssttt.-..

The Weather Wizard deflected another fire bolt

"Crap!"  muttered Justen, still trying to get the lens to focus on the
fire-eye.  He was going to get fried because he couldn't adjust the
settings while hanging upside down, and because the frigging Whites
actually acted quickly, and because he was worried about Gunnar and
Martan, and they wouldn't have a chance if he didn't get his weapon
working, and soon.

Hssstttt..  .

The balloon basket swayed again as Justen's boot slipped, and he had to
grab the basket with both hands to keep from plunging out headfirst.
He'd touched the bracket again and fuzzed the focus.

"Shit..  . shit..  . shit!"

He forced himself to be calm, and slowly he edged the clamp a fraction
of a turn.

Hssttt..  . hssstttt... hhssttt.

The last bolts were close enough for his face to feel as though it had
been singed by a forge fire, close enough that he seemed to smell
brimstone.

From the land engine came the whooshing of the rockets, arrowing
downhill toward the mass of the White lancers.

Crummpt... The first rocket sailed over the White positions and into
the meadow beyond, igniting browning grass into white smoke.

Crumptt... The second plowed through the right flank of the lancers.

Whheeee... eeeee... eeee.

Ignoring the screaming horses, Justen adjusted the clamp another
fraction of a turn.  The light hit the fire-eye at the right angle, and
the fire-eye was pointed, at least generally, toward the White tower. A
blade of light flared out from the assembly, ending in midair.

Even as he realized that the brackets needed finer adjustment, Justen
permitted himself the luxury of a tight smile.

Hssstttt... Crummpttt .. . Another rocket slammed into the stone before
the Iron Guard, spraying flame over a half-dozen foot soldiers.  One
ran forward and vaulted the stone wall and tried to roll the fire out
on the ground.  Instead, the fire grew into a long groove in the high
grass, where a charred figure twitched, its screams dying into moans,
then into silence.

Hhssstttt!  Another fire bolt passed below the balloon.

Crummptt!  Crumpptt!  Two more rockets flew downhill into the massed
White center, leaving a blackened gap.

A quick roll of drums punctuated the air, and half of the White lancers
began to ride uphill.

Three rockets in succession turned the front line of the lancers into a
charred heap.  The remaining riders split around the fallen and
continued toward the land engine.

Two of the next three rockets exploded into the turf before the right
wing of the lancers, raising smoke and dirt and slowing the charge. The
rocket aimed at the left wing brought down the lead horse, but it did
not break the momentum of the charge Gunnar deflected another pair of
fire bolts as Justen fiddled with the brackets.

Cruumptt!  Crumptt!  Crumptt!

"Ohhhh ..."  In spite of himself, Justen glanced below, where Marian
sprinted from the land engine toward the crude revetment, not even
looking back at the tangled, twisted, and burned mass of human and
horse flesh created by the last rockets.

Hhsssttt!

Justen ducked involuntarily, although Gunnar's shields guided the fire
bolt away from the balloon.  He glanced below quickly, where Martan,
despite Justen's orders, still stood in the open, if half-behind the
stone-and-iron-plate revetment.  The marine was lofting black arrows
downhill, where they exploded among the remaining massed White lancers.
As scattered shafts began to fly uphill, the marine released yet
another black shaft before moving behind the barrier where Gunnar sat,
eyes closed, order continuing to build around him.

Justen edged the bracket the slightest bit, and the light-blade flared
into the ground behind the High Wizard's coach.

The response was instantaneous, with fire bolts flying toward the
balloon.

Hsssttt..  . hsssttt..  . hssttt.

The barrage of fire bolts flew by the balloon basket, still protected
by Gunner's shields.  But the air grew warmer, as though the hottest
days of summer were flying toward him.

Justen shook himself.  "Act, damn it!"

He took a deep breath, closed his eyes and concentrated, smoothing the
flow and weaving the light into the collecting lens.  A web of shadow
flickered around the balloon, and Jus-ten could feel Gunnar withdraw
his shields in order for Justen to gather the full power of the
sunlight.

Darkness spread from the balloon, almost as sunlight would have
radiated from a second sun.  It seemed as though night had emerged from
the balloon and fallen across the hillside, then spread northward
toward Fairhaven itself, glittering like a white gem between the
browning green hills.

The dark shadow raced northward, its forward edge a knife-sharp line
between day and night.

Hhssstt..  , The fire bolt seemed to drop away from the balloon even
without Gunnar's shields.

Below, looking like a doll behind his shelter, Martan loosed another
string of arrows.  Each arrow arced downhill, and each seemed to find a
target, each shaft as inexorable as black death.  With every lancer
transfixed by an arrow, there came a faint crump as chaos and order met
and exploded.  The rhythm continued, and Martan's hands and arms
unleashed a steady stream of dark shafts, flying so fast that they
almost streaked like black lightning down upon the White lancers.  The
crump, crump, crump of heads exploding as they struck echoed far into
the growing darkness.  With each explosion came a faint point of light
in the twilight that had fallen around the hill.

Justen concentrated more intently, trying to block Martan from his
thoughts, trying to block out his concerns for Gunnar, trying only to
funnel more light into the lens and direct it to the gem.

Ssssssttt .. .

Like a sword of the ancient Angels, the blade of fire seared the ground
at the foot of the hill, cutting through the brown-green turf, striking
sparks, flinging molten rock like miniature fire bolts as it tore
through the stone wall beside the road.  Small fires and plumes of
smoke rose from scattered points in the field where the flaming rock
droplets had fallen.

Hsssttt!

The sun-blade dimmed as Gunnar's shields deflected the fire bolts then
flared back to brightness and slashed at an angle through a squad of
lancers.  Screams mixed with the hissing that resembled the vent of a
massive steam engine.

Where the light-blade had passed, white ashes swirled and drifted snow
like falling on the clay beside the road, on the glass-hard melted
stone of the road itself, and across the glassy parts of the shoulder
that had once been sand.

Horses reared, those that were left, screaming as they tried to plunge
away from the rain of ash, and from the blackened heaps that had been
men and horses merely brushed by the light blade.  In the dimness, the
white banners fluttered against the growing wind from nowhere, their
muffled crackling adding to the swell of sound.  Hssstttt!

Justen winced as the heat of the fire bolt seemed to blister his
face.

Another roll of drums sounded, and the crimson-trimmed gray banners
headed uphill toward the balloon-and toward Gunnar and Martan.  The
Iron Guard horse trotted forward to lead the next advance, and the foot
began to quickstep.

Marian's arrows shifted to the gray-clad troops, but no longer did the
shafts explode and strew bodies.  The Guards fell, but they fell one at
a time, and there were far fewer shafts than Guards, even as the
marine's arms seemed to blur with their speed.  That blur stopped for a
moment as Martan pulled an arrow from the fleshy part of his shoulder
and then, almost without losing his rhythm, released yet another black
shaft, and another.  But the wave of gray troops surged uphill, ever
nearer to Martan and Gunnar.  Ssssstttttt... With his thoughts, Justen
swung the beam across the line of the White forces, trying to slow the
advance.  The blade played back across the hillside, cutting a
blackened gash across the turf, flinging scattered bits of flaming
debris out and away from the line of sun-fire.

"Aeeeeiiii ..."  Only a few cries rose from the Iron Guard.

Heavier gray smoke curled from the burning grass.  The smell of
scorched turf and the odor of burned flesh-human and animal-permeated
the lower hillside.  But the Iron Guard closed ranks, and the
crimson-trimmed gray banners continued uphill.  Hssstt!

Another fire bolt flashed below the balloon; the wicker of the basket
crackled with the heat, and the balloon bounced.  Justen forced the
sun-blade back toward the Iron Guard, but the line of fire crossed the
road and the White lancers behind the stone wall.  The remnant of the
lancers broke and curled away.  Horses foamed and screamed, some
hurling riders onto the road.

"Form up!  Follow the Guard!"

Another drum-roll sounded, not quite in cadence, and the remnants of
two squads of lancers began to trot up the hillside road, almost as if
following Justen's light-blade.

Higher on the hillside, nearer the land engine and the tethers of the
balloon, at least half of the Iron Guard-half foot, half
horse-continued to march, more slowly but steadily, uphill toward
Marian and Gunnar.

From the White Wizards on the road there swelled a growing pressure:
pure chaos, so deep that it was more red than white.

Hhhsttt!  Hhhssstt!

Hssstttt!  Hsssttt!

From the host of fireballs flaring toward Justen, one slammed past him
and into the balloon.  The basket rocked, and a faint hissing began.
Trying to maintain his concentration, Justen grabbed the basket with
one hand, but the light-sword from the fire-eye slewed away from the
White forces and across a row of houses at the edge of Fairhaven.

One of the houses with a thatched roof exploded into flame, an instant
torch, and smoke poured skyward.  Another structure's tile roof cracked
and splintered, sending hot masonry across down the street like red-hot
arrows.  A tall stone house slumped like a fat wax candle caught in
full summer sun, or a baker's oven, oozing out in all directions, the
molten stone creating a ring of fire that caused nearby trees and
garden plants to erupt in flame.

The sounds of steaming vegetation, screaming people, and panicked
animals melded into a low roar that in turn merged with the hissing of
the light-sword itself.

Hhsssttt!  Hsssttt!

The twin fire bolts fell short, but Justen could sense the growing mass
of chaos building in the White Wizards.

Trying to hold back his horror at the results of the sun-blade, Justen
struggled to get his balance in the rocking balloon basket and to swing
the sun-blade back toward the Iron Guard, which advanced inexorably
toward Gunnar and Mar-tan.

Martan continued to loose arrows, his right sleeve damp with blood, and
Gunnar struggled with the high and mighty winds, trying to keep the sky
clear for Justen.

Ssssstttt... Justen wrenched the sun-blade back below him, playing it
across the advancing ranks of the Iron Guard, trying to ignore the
greasy smoke and the screams.

Still the Guard advanced, now no more than a hundred cubits from where
Martan stood and let fly his arrows.

Justen coughed, and the blade slewed wildly, flashing back toward the
horizon and slagging a corner of the traders' market into molten white
stone.

Again the White Wizards focused their will, and another huge swell of
chaos flared.  Sensing the chaos, Justen slewed the sun-blade across
the fire bolts Hhhsttt!  Crummpptt!

With the impact of chaos and order, the sky seemed to explode.  Black
stars and deep, blinding-white flares intersected, flashing through
each other and dwindling into nothingness as the wind built.  The
balloon bounced so wildly that Justen, even with both hands on the
basket, was thrown against the coal pan and half over the side.  The
smell of singed hair again filled his nostrils.

The light-blade flared northward, and the park in the traders' square
flashed into flame.  Cinders and ashes spewed skyward.  Even while
Justen struggled upright and brought the blade back to bear on the Iron
Guard, the trees in the traders' square burned like bright candles
through the artificial twilight, haze, and ever-thickening smoke.

"That's it," muttered Justen to himself, "Meet chaos with order..."

He spit out blood and forced his thoughts back onto the light-blade,
focusing it on the front ranks of the Iron Guard, playing it back
across infantry and troopers alike, ignoring the white agony that
welled from soldiers whose bodies exploded in steaming fury instants
before they became piles of ash.

More chaos fire flared around the balloon.

Hssssttt!!  Hsssttttt!

The balloon bounced again, but braced, Justen kept swinging the blade
across the Iron Guard, reduced now to less than a score of horsemen
charging toward Martan and Gunnar.

Justen slammed the blade along a line between the two and the Iron
Guard, and still trying to hold on to the Balance between chaos and
order, stretched his light-gathering net to cover the sky as far as he
could reach.  He needed to gather an ever-wider sweep of light.

Below, Marian hacked an Iron Guard off his horse and then mounted it,
swinging a stolen sabre and charging the half-squad of Guards
remaining-as if to push or pull them away from Gunnar and Justen.

More fire bolts flashed past Justen, and the hissing of the balloon
grew louder, a sound that Justen sensed more than felt since his ears
were deafened by the shrieking of the light-blade, the roaring of the
fire bolts and the rushing of the winds that yanked the balloon to the
ends of its tethers.

Below, the sabre flew from Martan's hands as one of the last three Iron
Guards slashed from his blind side.

Almost sobbing as he mentally grabbed at the increased order-energy
from his wider capture net, Justen threw the sun-blade at the three
Iron Guards before Marian.  Still weaving and focusing, Justen directed
the growing flow of order that was like a river from the heavens, even
as a darker force seemed to gather beside it, welling from the earth
beneath.

Ignoring that dark force, Justen flung the wider light-blade back along
the hillside, throwing bodies everywhere, burning through the turf and
melting stone outcrops, trying to keep the Guards, those three
remaining, from Gunnar and Martan, although he could no longer sense
the marine, only Gunnar's will across the skies.

Then a long wave wrenched the earth beneath the valley, rolling from
the hill and to the north.  The undulating motion ran back through the
tethers, rocking the balloon, but that rocking was muted because the
tethers were slackening as the balloon had begun to sink.

To the north, the massive land quake rippled along the highway, lifting
the twenty-stone paving blocks and dropping some of them back into
disjointed positions, others into cracked and shattered fragments.

Houses-those not already fused, charred, or exploded into
fragments-heaved like boats in the surf as the solid ground around them
turned into liquid and shook like jelly.  One swell followed another,
and timbered walls bent, and bent, and snapped apart like twigs.  Stone
and masonry walls shivered, and shivered, and sprayed outward in
cascades of brick and stone.

Waves of white-red destruction, of lost and sundered souls, poured back
toward Justen, and in desperation, he turned the light-knife on that
misty white, slashing through it as if to shield himself, to shield
Gunnar, even to shield distant Dayala.

The grinding sound of stonework collapsing and the distant, almost
hissing, screams of survivors, of innocents dying under flame, stone,
and churned earth, were all but lost behind the searing heat and
boiling edge of the order-chaos blade that Justen turned back down
across the handful of White lancers who had followed the Iron Guard
uphill and had nearly reached a spot almost directly below the
balloon.

Sssssstttt... No screams followed the.  wave of light.  Only a blast of
white pain rocked through Justen with the deaths so close below, and
the slope on the Fairhaven side of the hill glistened like glass.
Lumps-like the remnants of the shepherd's hut-protruded from the
shimmering surface.

Justen, nearly blind with the white agony, tried to rebalance his
forces, to turn them and the order-chaos blade back toward the
remaining White Wizards.

Hhhsssttt... With the continuing barrage of fire bolts most of them
held at bay by Gunnar's efforts in pulsing order-shields and holding
the clouds away, the balloon and basket bounced again.  The hissing
overhead grew louder, and the basket swayed, sinking even closer to the
ground.  Justen squinted, trying to concentrate, trying to remain
ordered and calm even as the order-chaos blade bounced around the
chaos-shield of the High Wizard.

The blade shivered and slashed across the center of Fairhaven, somehow
held together by a web of white.  With the collision of the light-blade
and the white web, stonework melted.  Ancient trees exploded into
flames before falling like charcoaled logs against nibble and melted
stone.  Stone avenues flowed like white-lava rivers.

Even in the balloon the air was hotter than midday in the Stone Hills,
filled with the odor of scorched vegetation, charred flesh, and ash and
cinders and more ash.  Like an oven, the valley baked in the
light-blade-forged twilight, where those few buildings that remained
became ovens that baked their inhabitants.

The only sun in the sky was the light from the order-chaos knife
wielded by Justen, and yet that light gave no cheer, only heat and
agony.

Another pulse of chaos flared into the sky and arced toward Justen-a
massive fire bolt propelled by the will of desperate White Wizards,
held tightly by the High Wizard himself, whose broad shoulders and
sweating face seemed to fill Justen's mind.

Hsssstttt..  .

Again Justen wrestled the order-chaos blade and the energy gathered
from the skies of Candar back toward the High Wizard, focusing it not
only on the shield, but around the shield.  Another land wave shivered
the ground, rocking the balloon through the tethers, and Justen was
forced to grab onto the basket to avoid being pitched out.

The ground around the shielded wizards bubbled as though it boiled, and
steam gouted up in pillars, even through the stones of the
wizard-protected section of the road.

Another fire bolt flared past Justen and into the balloon, burning
through one cable holding the balloon to the basket The balloon slewed
wildly, and Justen tightened his grasp on the basket, trying still to
force the order-chaos blade back upon the White Wizards.

Sssstttt..  .

The trees across the road and behind the wizards flared like black
rockets before collapsing into charcoal, which in turn was covered by
molten rock oozing down from the melted stone of the road.

Hsssttt!

Lashing back against the fire bolts Justen forced the order-chaos blade
toward the White Wizards, where he again played it against the High
Wizard's shield.

"That's ... it.  Keep it centered ..."  he grunted, trying to force
ordered-light squarely against the lines of focused chaos wielded by
the High Wizard.

Sssstttt!  Cruummppttt!

The ground seemed to buckle and explode simultaneously, spewing order
and chaos into the skies and deep into the earth.  Lines of dark fire
and rays of flame heat arced across the glowering sky that abruptly
flared sun-white in brilliance.

On the southwestern side of the White Wizards' shield, the light-blade
gouged a pit so deep that what had been a raised stone road melted into
a glass-lined pit.  Hhhssttt!

Justen mentally walked the order-chaos beam back toward the High
Wizard.  Yet that tight shield held ... and held ... even though it
pulsed against the violence Justen directed against it, each pulse
throwing Justen's light-sword back across the valley.

With each flash across the valley that had held the White City, more
stonework slumped into waxlike heaps until the entire valley seemed to
be in ashes-black, gray, and white-"out of which reared shiny,
once-molten stone, as though the bones of the burned corpses showed
through more clearly with each pass of the "fire-sword of the skies.

Hanging on to the wicker, Justen made a last effort to swing the wildly
spinning order-chaos light-sword back onto the shield of the High
Wizard.  Sssttt... crumppttt..  .

Against the buckling of order and the tide of white, against the unseen
ripping in the fabric of what was, against the white and black knives
that seemed to slash through him, Justen closed his eyes and tried to
picture himself as a lorken of Naclos, rooted in the soil and order
beneath Candar, drawing order from the deep waters, from the iron in
the rocks, and from all the growing plants that had struggled against
the nibbling of chaos.

The wind whipped past Justen with the force of a waterspout.  He felt
himself being thrown against the basket of the balloon, and his fingers
dug deeper into the fragile wicker as the balloon, swinging wildly,
ripped free of one of the tethers.

Almost unaware of his teeth biting through his tongue, Justen curled
the order-blade into a focus, attempting to lock the wizards within
order, putting forth a massive effort to chaos-order Balance the White
Wizards forever.

"Aaeeaeeii ..."

"Ooo ... nooo ..."

Even locked into himself, Justen could sense the twisting and folding
of order and chaos roll across the valley like the heat from that
second sun, dragging the remaining White Wizards-those who had tried to
unleash the full force of chaos against Justen's order-chaos blade-down
inside the shield they had erected, down .. . down into some distant
place where their souls seemed to call as if from a deep well.

Deliberately, as if he and his thoughts were moving through molasses,
Justen twisted the massive forces of order held through the fire-eye,
twisted them like a key in a lock to seal the wizards behind their own
shield ... forever!

Faces flashed before him: swarthy faces, fat faces, and a haunted, thin
face almost like that of an Angel, the eyes filled with suffering.  But
he locked order around that chaos.  Justen, you must .. . must balance
Even Dayala's thoughts were weak, fading away into smoke.

Crackk!  The fire-eye exploded and filled the air with sudden but
momentary silence, and weak sunlight replaced the darkness that had
descended across the valley of Fairhaven.  Clouds of ashes roiled over
the valley, and cinders fell like rain.

A heavy roll of thunder rumbled from the high, dark clouds that began
to cut off the remaining sunlight.

The balloon bounced wildly and swooped lower and lower, back toward the
hill below in a series of pendulum-like swings, jerking to the end of
the remaining tether and back.

Justen glanced toward the approaching ground.  His eyes burned, blood
ran from his mouth, and his arms and legs were bruised, leaden.  What
could he do?  How?  His senses seemed almost paralyzed, and he
struggled to raise his arms, but the impact with the ground and the
blackness that rose from it crashed into his thoughts, scattering
them.

Around him, the land shuddered.  Smoke rose into the sky and fell, and
white knives seemed to slash his flesh from his bones .. . while drums
rolled across the heavens and each drum-roll pulverized his already
smashed bones.

Thrap .. . th rap .. . . th rap ... thrappp .. .

The heavy tapping increased, and cold blows struck Jus-ten across his
face.  Slowly, he tried to swallow, despite his dry mouth and swollen
and bloody tongue.  Finally, he opened his eyes.

He lay against the limp silk sheen fabric of die balloon, and hail
interspersed with fat snowflakes was falling.  Already, the hillside
was blanketed in a thin layer of white.  Day ala

The fragile thread of order remained, but so weakly that Justen could
barely sense it as he struggled into a sitting position.  His left leg
throbbed, and white flashes of pain pulsed through his skull.  His back
and ribs ached each time he took a breath.

As he rolled onto his side to try to stand, his trembling hands slipped
on a pile of hailstones that had collected next to the wreckage of the
balloon.

Half-propping himself on the crushed wicker of the balloon basket,
wicker half-coated with ice, he levered himself upright and began to
struggle along the hillside.  He half-walked, half-dragged, his injured
leg, lacking the order-strength with which to repair the damage.

After less than a dozen steps, Justen stopped, his breath ragged as he
saw the young face on the ground, partly hidden by the snow.  Dark
splotches ran across one cheek, almost touching the sightless eyes.

Martan sprawled beside the heap of charcoal that had been the stolen
mount, his left side blackened, a charred arm flung across his chest,
the rough blackness of his burns merging with the smooth black of his
tunic, the tunic of which he had been so proud.

Justen's eyes watered.  Another loyal person, another death.

Another Yonada, another Dyessa, another Clerve, another Krytella, even
another Iron Guard.  Do the bodies just gather around me?

He took a deep breath and continued dragging himself toward the heap of
darkened rocks that were barely visible under the white coating of snow
and hail, fearful of what he might find, but chaos and order-blind from
the twisting of nature itself, unable to sense whether or not his
brother lived.

Gunnar lay on the side of the hill, half inside, half out, of the
rock-and-armor-plate shelter.  Justen scrambled to the still form, then
took another deep breath as he saw his brother's chest rise and fall,
rise and fall.  For a moment, he paused, his breath still ragged, his
ribs aching with each gasping intake of air.

Dark clouds, darker than any Justen had ever seen, rolled across the
sky.  Even as he watched, lines of lightning forked and smashed into
the churned and melted valley that had been Fairhaven the Mighty.

Despite the thickening snow, Justen could see that the White tower had
melted like a wax candle in the hot sun.  No structure stood in what
had been the White City.  Lines of white radiated from where he stood,
lines where the light-sword had boiled away all vegetation and cleft
the soil down to white rock.

Between those lashes of the second sun lay only ashes, ashes and melted
lumps of stone, some of them white, some of them brown, but most of
them blackened as if mixed with dark ashes before solidifying.

The snowflakes that fell past Justen were gray, and the mixture of
ashes and snow and hail was gray, and his soul was gray.

He looked down at Gunnar, at his brother's chest rising and falling,
rising and falling.  Then he began the arduous trek back to the Demon,
lying just at the edge of the glassy slag that had been a hillside
meadow.  Gunnar and he needed food, and blankets, and rest.

If someone found them, so be it.

Craccckk!

A long, jagged line of white slashed from the dark clouds, branching
and twisting downward into the melted stone and collapsed masonry that
had been the White City.  The blaze of.  the lightning through the snow
reminded Justen of just how unlikely it was that anyone would be
searching for them at any time soon.

He laughed once, harshly.  As if there were anyone who had survived,
save he and Gunnar-and perhaps a dozen White Wizards locked in
order-chaos beneath the abattoir that had been a proud city.

Justen took a step .. . and rested .. . and stepped .. . and rested.
But he kept moving.  Gunnar needed warmth.  He did not look at the
charred heap that had been Martan.  Nor at the charred and molten
destruction that had been the jewel of Candar.

He put one foot forward, then the other.

Gunnar .. . Dayala ... Gunnar ... Dayala ... Justen kept moving .,.
moving ...

CLII

The four druids stood before the ancient, watching the sand shift and
boil, watching as in places the outlines of the coasts changed.

The youngest druid wept silently, wracked with soundless sobs.  In
time, another held her as the sands continued to shift and boil, until
the sand table showed the rebalancing of Candar and Recluce.

"Fairhaven is no more," announced the ancient.  "The second sun of the
Angels has been sheathed."

"But, .. the cost?"  asked Syodra.

"There is always a cost.  None have paid the price in generations, and
a price deferred is always greater.  Most of the towers in eastern
Candar have been toppled.  Rivers have changed their paths.  Half of
the engineers' city has been swept into the Eastern Ocean."

"And the steam-chaos engines no longer work," added Frysa.

"They failed to listen to the songs," added the sole male.  "Or to
their souls."" "It will take much time for the reservoir of order to
rise to its past level-if the Blacks choose to follow that course.  As
they will in time, for little in wisdom passes from one generation to
the next."  The ancient nodded to the others and then toward the
youngest.  "You, and he, have done well,"

"Why .. . ?"  Dayala swallowed.  "He felt .. . feels so much of the
pain."

"That is why you are tied."

"But how can he return here ... after what he has done?"

"Child, he will return to you.  Trust the Balance."

"Trust the Balance?"  Dayala laughed, and the laugh was hard and
brittle.

CLIII

Neither Justen nor Gunnar had spoken more than monosyllables since
pulling themselves from beneath their blankets and brushing away the
damp snow.

Justen drank cold juice and chewed the last fragments of crust between
bites of hard yellow cheese.  His leg remained tender, but the
order-chaos balance he had created with Dayala's help had held, and the
leg had begun to knit.

"What did you do to the last Whites-the ones you didn't burn with that
horrible light-knife?"  Gunnar took the jug from Justen, not meeting
his eyes, and swallowed some of the juice.

"They're .. . trapped in chaos, inside order .. , somewhere under
Fairhaven."  Justen shuddered.  Death .. . had they deserved that?
Perhaps.  But does anyone deserve to be locked in chaos within a block
of order?  He still recalled one face, the one with the slight scar on
the forehead and the look of a suffering angel.  He had no illusions
that all White Wizards were evil or, especially considering himself,
that all Blacks- or Grays-were good.

"They're alive ... still?"

"In a way."

"Could they escape?"

"I don't know.  Not physically."  Justen shuddered again.  "I don't
know.  I don't think so.  They might possess ... an unwary soul."

Gunnar shivered and drew the blanket around himself, seated on still
another blanket insulating him from the patch of browned grass where
they sat amid slagged and frozen stone.  The Weather Wizard fixed his
eyes on a pile of hail yet covered with snow, although the morning sun
had already melted much of the unseasonal covering, leaving the ground
a whitish gray-and-brown blotch work  The weather mage's eyes did not
turn to his younger brother.  "You folded order and chaos together.  No
one's ever done that, not both black and white together but separate.
That was true gray magic."  But he still did not look at Justen.

"That was what I learned in Naclos."  Justen finished the bread he had
been eating.

"I can barely touch the winds."  Gunnar finally turned toward his
brother.  "What exactly did you do?"

"Destroyed about half of the order and chaos in the world, maybe more.
That's why those last explosions were so violent."

"Justen.  You knew that's what would happen, didn't you?"

"Yes."

"And you didn't tell me?  I don't like being deceived, even for the
best of reasons, even by my own brother."  Gunnar swallowed.

"But ..."  Justen stopped as he felt the anger, and the rejection, from
Gunnar.  Hadn't he made it clear?

He looked back across the valley to where the corpse of Fairhaven lay
melted under the partial blanket of snow, melted like a wax model under
a hot sun-melted so quickly.  Under the glasslike melted structures,
under the covering of ash, under the ruins that had disintegrated so
swiftly that pockets of chaos were trapped in heat-ordered rubble, how
many innocents had died?  Had it been fair?  And yet, what else could
have been done?

The people of Fairhaven had accepted the rule of chaos.  Did that make
it right?  Justen shook his head.  Who had been there to protest when
Sarron had been shaken into rubble?  Or Berlitos burned into ashes?  Or
the outskirts of Armat boiled alive?

But his mouth still tasted like ashes.

And how long would it be before the destruction was erased, before the
white scars that slashed through the soil and into the bones of the
earth were covered over?  How long before the screams stopped echoing
from the rocks and the melted buildings?  How long before the trees and
plants grew straight and true?

"Justen?"  asked Gunnar harshly.

"I thought you knew .. ."

"None of us knew, really knew, dear brother."  Gunnar slowly stood. "If
the rest of the world looks anything like this, it will be a long
winter, and then some.  Creslin had nothing on you.  Blood followed
both of you, but at least he used a blade.  Oh, I forgot.  You did,
too.  The most violent blade in history."

"I..."  Justen did not finish the sentence.  What could he really say?
Gunnar was right.

"Not even the demons of light or the Angels could have done better.  I
must give you that, Justen."  Gunnar fumbled with the pack Justen had
brought the night before.  "There are so many lost souls screaming that
I cannot stay here any longer.  Not for one instant."  He slung the
pack on his shoulders.  "If there are any ships left afloat, I'll find
one in Lydiar.  Good-bye, Justen."

Justen struggled to his feet, his left leg stiff and weak, but Gunnar
was already marching downhill, his back straight, his anger visible
with each determined step.

The Gray Wizard took a deep breath, looked across the hillside at the
iron land engine that would never run again in his lifetime, if ever.
He began to gather the extra food, his own pack, and a staff.
Somewhere, he suspected, he could buy or find a horse.

Gunnar would need help, the damned fool.  Not all the White Wizards had
been in Fairhaven, and those left were likely to be more than a little
angry at anyone from Recluce.  He laughed brittlely, despite the
stabbing in his ribs.  A little angry?

Then again, almost anyone from Recluce was likely to be more than a
little upset with one Justen.  And with more than a little reason.  He
licked his dry lips, abruptly remembering a clear song sung on a warm
night in Sarronnyn.  Poor Clerve.  All he'd wanted to do was to watch a
real battle.

And Martan-all he'd wanted was a real battle, and some glory.  Some
glory!

Justen looked up at the place where Martan still lay, half-covered with
snow, and then at the crude shelter Gunnar had used.  At least it would
make a decent cairn.  He could make good cairns-that he could.  And
light-chaos knives, and ordered black iron arrows.

Justen set the pack aside and trudged toward Marian's body.  AH he
could give the young marine now was a decent burial.  That was all. His
eyes burned.

Later... later, he would follow Gunnar.

When he reached the clear young face, the wide, sightless eyes, he bent
down and swung Martan into his arms and trudged toward the cairn-to-be.
To the north, sunlight glinted off the shimmering melted stone and off
the stained, blotchy snow, each as cold as death.

CLIV

As the mountain pony plodded along, followed by the mule with the two
iron-copper bars and the supplies from the land car, Justen continued
to search out Gunnar.  Gunnar, like Jus-ten, had clearly found a mount,
assuming that the signs Justen had been following were Gunnar's and
that Gunnar had indeed been heading for Lydiar.

Burying Martan and gathering his few personal items for his family had
taken a while, not that Justen begrudged that poor repayment.  But
during that time, Gunnar had gained a solid head start.

The Gray Wizard studied the rain-drenched countryside.  Whatever else
he and Gunnar had done, they had definitely called rain.  The hillside
meadows were drenched, and small rivulets poured down across the stone
road.  The catch basins nearly overflowed.

For once, Justen was glad of the solid workmanship of the White
Wizards' stone road.  The dirt roads would be mud after nearly three
days of rain.  Justen snorted.  In his own way, he had also brought
rain, not that Gunnar or any of the Black mages could have approved of
his techniques.

The fast-moving clouds were higher now than they had been in the
morning, and since midday, no rain had fallen.  A break in the clouds
foretold the possibility of sunlight later on.

Justen had just read the kay stone indicating that Hrisbarg, the small
town said to provide the metal for the Iron Guard, was less than a
dozen kays eastward when the air began to tingle.

His eyes followed the feeling to a low hill ahead, almost astride the
road.  A small stone house graced the summit, but the tingling came
from lower on the hillside.  Gunnar, calling storms even with his
diminished powers?  And a sense of chaos?

Justen nudged the chestnut ahead.

When he turned the next wide corner, just past a temporary waterfall
that arched down beside the road, he could see the coach with the four
lancers, and the single horse lying in the road.

Gunnar stood behind a gray boulder, partway up a hillside steep enough
and wet enough to discourage the lancers ... at least for a while.

Hhssttt... A modest fire bolt flared past the Weather Wizard.

Hsssttt..  .

Justen looked ahead.  The White Wizards clearly blocked any passage on
the road to Lydiar, and retreating did not seem attractive at the
moment, not for Gunnar at least.

Hhhssttt... A line of reddened white, blinding and ugly, flowed from
the White Wizard.  Justen slammed an order-shield around himself and
the mule, closing his eyes as the barrage of white fire-rain cascaded
over the shields, and as the damp pine tree behind him flared into
flame and collapsed into dust.  He dismounted awkwardly, his left leg
slowing him, and half-stumbled, half-ran, toward the mule.

Now ... he recalled, the reason for creating the Brotherhood of
Engineers had been the fact that in a world with less order, chaos was
stronger on a one-on-one basis.

"So much power..."  Even as he spoke, Justen fumbled with the long
bundle on the mule, finally unstrapping the poles, hoping that the two
he had would be enough.

Hhhssttt... The dark-haired engineer felt his order-shield shiver under
the assault.  He hoped he was helping Gunnar!

After he lifted the first iron pole with the heavy copper center, and
the second, he began to scramble up the hillside.  He needed to get
uphill and in front of Gunnar-if he could.

Hhhsssttt... The shock of holding off the fire bolt flung him onto the
rocky ground, and he could feel a slash across his cheek even as he
gathered his feet under him and struggled uphill.  "... two of the
Black bastards ..."

An arrow flew past him, then another, as he dodged through the
waist-high brush.

A gust of wind swept across the hillside, and the next arrow went wide,
perhaps because of the sudden wind, or perhaps because he fell forward
when his boot caught on a root.

He stumbled on until he reached a point that was almost above the
coach.  He plunged one of the iron poles into the soft ground and
staggered on.

Hhhssttt .. .

The jolt of once more holding back the fire bolt flung him forward, and
his right hand came away from the sharp rocks bloody.

He managed another dozen steps before he took the second iron pole and
jammed it into the ground, throwing his senses into the iron in the
rocks far below, struggling, panting, trying to open a corridor of
order from the iron below to the two iron poles on the hilltop.

Another fire bolt whistled past him.

He took a deep breath and dropped his shields.  Then he raised his
hands as if to challenge the White Wizards on the road below.  He
waited, ducking as another arrow passed his shoulder.

Hhhhssstttttt!

The sky buckled with the power, and the trees on the distant hills
shook as though a mighty wind had bent them, while the ashes of the
vegetation around Justen swirled across the hillside.

Justen forced himself to leave his feeble shield down, instead
channeling that massive bolt of energy toward the iron and copper
poles, toward the channel that linked the poles to the heavy order of
cold iron deep within the earth.

A cold, black bolt of order, a lightning bolt of nothingness, of
darkness, flashed back from the two iron posts, even from the granite
stones of the house on the hilltop above, and down toward the coach,
guided by the channel Justen had opened.

Without thinking, Justen closed his eyes and covered his face.

Aaaaeeeee... The pain of the mental scream froze Justen in place, but
only for an instant, until the blast hurled him into the ashes-and back
into darkness.

He tried to climb from the darkness, but his fingers and feet seemed
immobile, unable to lift him clear.

"Easy ... easy, you idiot."  Suddenly, Gunnar was beside him.

Water dropped.  on his face-tears.  Gunnar's tears.

"I'm all right," he mumbled, trying to get the taste of ashes from his
mouth as he slowly sat up.  Even the air smelled like damp ashes.  Does
the entire world smell as though it has been burned?

Gunnar held him for a moment.  "Are you sure?  You look like fish
bait."

For a while, Justen leaned against his brother, conscious that the
ground was warm under him, unpleasantly so.  Finally, He sat up and
looked around.  Overhead, the sky was the darkness of a late winter
afternoon, and heavy drops of rain had begun to fall, raising steam
from both the hilltop above-where only two melted granite posts
remained of the house that had stood there-and from the road where the
coach had stopped.  All that remained on the road was a raised lump of
stone and metal resembling an irregular drop of melted wax.

"This place feels like chaos," mumbled Gunnar.  "That's because it is.
There's a lot of order and chaos locked up wrong in the rocks here."
Justen spit out ashes and used his damp sleeve to blot the blood off
the slash in his hand.  "We probably ought to get moving.  It's not
really good to stay here long."

"Is it good for you to stay anywhere long?"  Gunnar forced a laugh as
he helped his younger brother stand up.

They half-stumbled back down the road and around the curve.  The pony
and the mule had retreated but they remained in sight.

Justen sighed, hoping the animals didn't keep walking back to the west.
He wasn't up to chasing them.  For a moment, he looked over his
shoulder, taking in again the melted granite stones, stones that looked
like candles whitened and seared by a glassblower's pipe.  Of the two
iron poles there was no sign at all.  He shivered.  What sort of force
is it that can vaporize iron, even with the lower levels of order and
chaos in the world?  With what sort of power did the Naclans provide
me?

Yet what else could he have done?  The Council had had no intention of
stopping the White Wizards, and neither did the Naclans, except for the
one called Justen.

"We need to get those horses," reminded Gunnar.

"I know."  Justen turned.  "I know.  But one's a pony and one's a
mule."

"I'm glad you followed me."

"So am I."

They trudged toward the animals, and the rain fell, and the steam rose
off the rocks.

CLV

Altara bowed to the Council.

"Might we have your report, Chief Engineer?"

"I have submitted a written report, counselors.  If I might summarize..
."

"Please do."  Claris nodded for the engineer to continue.

"Whatever the nature of the ... disruption in Candar-"

"The destruction of Fairhaven, I believe?"  asked Ryltar.

"I understand that the ... disruption had that effect.  That does not
include the destruction that apparently occurred all over Candar, or
the tidal wave that destroyed nearly a third of old Nylan.  All of
those were, I believe, side effects.  Even the destruction of Fairhaven
was not the primary intent.  Or at least not the major impact."

The three counselors exchanged glances and then looked at Turmin, who
sat at one end of the table.

"Go ahead," ordered Claris.  "What was the primary intent?"

"To reduce the amount of free chaos in the world."

"A laudable goal," suggested Ryltar with only the slightest edge to his
voice, "except that it clearly had the opposite effect.  That doesn't
include the cost to us.  The rather considerable cost, I might
suggest."

"No," corrected Altara.  "The disruption effectively destroyed the
massed power of chaos developed by the Whites, and according to
Magister Turmin-" Altara nodded to the Black mage "-there is no
chaos-focus or concentration remaining."

"You mean that the disruption reduced the power of both order and
chaos?"  asked Jenna.

"Exactly," interposed Turmin.  "Young Justen did what was thought to be
impossible.  He somehow concentrated disordered light into ordered
light and focused it on chaos."

"He did this alone?"

"Yes," said Altara.

"That part he did alone," said Turmin nearly simultaneously.

"Engineer, what does this mean for the Mighty Ten?"

Altara took a deep breath.  "We might be able to disorder what order
remains in the black iron in all the ships.  If Turmin is correct, we
could build three much, much smaller ships-after we rebuild the
engineering hall.  It has suffered a great deal lately."  Altara
glanced at Ryltar.  "Such smaller ships would be almost as fast, but we
could not armor them heavily, and they would have to use a single gun.
They would be effective against most ships on the oceans."

"How?"  protested Ryltar.  "The Hamorians have ships two hundred cubits
or more-"

"Not any longer.  No high-pressure steam boiler will operate without
black iron-not now, and only small ones at that."  Altara lowered her
eyes for a moment.  "Justen has destroyed most of the concentrated
order in the world.  Most black iron is not so strong as when it was
forged.  Even steel cannot contain chaos forces as effectively as
before."

"We could build it back, couldn't we?"  asked Ryltar.  "Our trade ...
our traders ..."

"It took more than three centuries of the efforts of the Black
Brotherhood of Engineers to get from Dorrin's first small ship to the
Mighty Ten."

"There is another question, I submit," suggested Turmin.

The counselors looked to the end of the table.

"Two, really.  First, can Recluce afford to make such an investment
again, now that the world knows that such an investment can be
destroyed?  Second, will anyone want us to do so once it becomes known
that our power was based on actually creating more and more chaos in
Candar?"

Altara nodded slowly.

"I see your point," responded Jenna.  "Could we afford to tax our trade
so heavily when most merchants and shippers will be sorely pressed to
rebuild or reconfigure their ships without more taxes?  That doesn't
include the cost of rebuilding most of Nylan."

Ryltar swallowed.

"Do you have anything else to add, Chief Engineer?"

"We will build one small ship that will work under the current
order-chaos balance.  That is all we can do without additional funds,
and we doubt that more funds will be forthcoming.  Nor do we wish to
exceed the limits suggested by Magister Turmin.  Not when we know the
consequences."  Altara rose and stepped back.  "By your leave?"

"You may go."  Claris nodded brusquely.  "You also, Magister Turmin ...
and the clerks as well."

When the chamber was empty, Claris turned to Ryltar.  "Ryltar?  Weren't
you the one who knew that this ... Justen .. . was order-mad?"  The
wispy-haired counselor frowned, but nodded.

"And yet you said and did nothing?"  added Claris.  "And now he has
apparently decided to stay in Candar, where he cannot be touched?"

"We do not know that.  And I did express some concern, you will
recall," protested Ryltar.

"It does not matter," pointed out Jenna.  "If he is that powerful, how
could we touch him?"

"The way you acted let him destroy our warships and our merchant
fleet," pursued Claris.  "Every ship berthed in Nylan was either swept
away or destroyed-as were those in Lydiar, Renklaar, and who knows how
many other ports."

"I did protest.  And my office and warehouse were totally destroyed."

"Ryltar, most of your wealth is stored in Hamor, and that was where
most of your ships are.  So convenient."  Claris's eyes were hard.

Jenna grinned, an expression less of glee than malice.  "Of all of us,
you had the most knowledge, and yet you kept asking what we could
do."

"You seemed to support him."  Ryltar wiped his forehead.  "You didn't
listen to me."

"Support him?  If you, or anyone, were to review the records, you would
see that both Jenna and I merely stated that we could not act without
knowledge.  You had that knowledge, and you kept it from the Council.
Without the knowledge you had, your protests were meaningless, and you
hid that knowledge so that you alone would profit."

"What are you getting at?"

"Your resignation, for the good of Recluce."

"What?"

"It is likely to come out shortly that you kept this knowledge from the
Council-thereby preventing us from acting in a timely fashion-in hopes
of profiting from the information you alone held," suggested Claris
calmly.  "You certainly would have profited."

"And," added Jenna, "you also ordered your ships out of Nylan but did
not tell Hoslid and the others of your actions.  They lost ships.  You
lost only engines."

Ryltar looked from one woman to the other.  "You're both mad.  You
can't do this."

"Mad?"  Jenna laughed softly.  "No.  And we can do this.  In fact,
unless you leave Recluce quickly, Ryltar, a number of very angry
traders are going to be gathering at your door, and I don't think your
excuses will carry much water."

"Ryltar," added Claris, "being a counselor requires acting for the good
of all Recluce.  All too often, you found reasons why we should not
act.  Those reasons always benefited you.  This time, we will follow
your example and do nothing, except to tell the people what has
happened."

Ryltar wiped his forehead again.

"If you resign now," suggested Jenna brightly, "it might be a day or so
before the official announcement is made.  I suspect that with the
powers of the White Wizards severely reduced, there might even be some
opportunities in places like Sarronnyn and Suthya, where the Whites had
not really consolidated their hold.  You might find them more .;.
congenial."

Ryltar swallowed and looked from one set of bright eyes to the other.
Finally, he swallowed again and reached for the pen before him.

CLVI

Justen waited on the beach nearly a kay south of the main piers of
Lydiar, watching the midday sun-the first in nearly an eight-day-play
on the waters of the Great Bay.

Gunnar walked down from the road.  "The smugglers will take me into
Land's End.  They say that half of the port at Nylan is gone, washed
out by the sea."  He shook his head.  "You don't do things by halves,
Brother."

"Some things can't be done partway."  Justen smiled sadly.

"You still believe that this is all a part of the Legend?  Is the
Legend even true?"

"Oh, the Legend's true enough.  Remember, I did meet an Angel."

"I think you overlooked mentioning that."

"I have overlooked a few things," admitted Justen.  "Still ... in the
purest sense, the Naclans believe that everything is connected to
everything else.  That's why there are almost no edged implements of
any sort in Naclos.  Separation is a denial of reality, and even when
necessary, it occasions pain.  Order in the extreme is sterility and
death, while chaos in the extreme is fire, anarchy, disruption .. . and
death.  In short," Justen said, glancing back at the calm waters of the
bay, "everyone was wrong, including me.  And that's the reason for that
obscure quote from that antique healer-Lydya, I think, was her name.
She told the Marshall of Westwind- she was Creslin's mother, you'll
recall-"

"I recall.  Could you come to the point before my ship sails without
me?"

"It won't.  They need your coins.  You also need to lighten up, Gunnar.
If you don't, I'll come back to Recluce.  I might anyway.  In any case,
I was going to tell you the obscure quote, the one about Dylyss and
Ryessa creating the greatest good and the greatest evil Candar ever
knew.  No one really understood that.  It wasn't the triumph of
Fairhaven and Recluce, but the idea mat order and chaos could be
separated.  It was good because it finally gave a voice to me need for
order, but evil because it separated the two-and the Naclans were
right.  Look at all the pain that separation caused."

"I think you helped there."

Justen's eyes and senses finally found what he was seeking.  He darted
along the sand and reached under a bush.  He picked up the moss-colored
turtle and carried it back to Gunnar.

"Let it go ..."  suggested Gunnar.

"I will-in a moment."  Justen carried the turtle, withdrawn into its
shell, to the rock Gunnar leaned against.

"Watch what I'm doing.  Not with your eyes, but with your senses."

"Is this some trick, younger brother?"

"Of sorts."  Justen forced a wry grin, even though his words were
literally true.  "Just watch."  He cleared his mind of stray thoughts
and began to adjust the flow of order around the small green turtle,
trying to soothe the creature as he did so.  "Easy, little one .. .
easy.  Justen's not going to hurt you."

Gunnar's eyes widened.  "How ..."

"Just feel it..."

Gunnar continued to watch, his eyes wide.

"Do you have the pattern?"

"I think... yes ..."

"Good."  Justen set the turtle on the sand, and after some time, its
head and legs appeared and it scuttled into the bay.

"Wait a moment.  Is that wise?  Didn't you just make that turtle
immortal?"

"Nothing's wise."  Justen laughed.  "Not in the long run, anyway.
Besides, just because its system is ordered without chaos, that doesn't
make it immortal.  A ray or a shark could eat it before lunch.  It's
easier with water creatures like turtles, though."

"Why did you show me that?"

Justen shrugged.  "You could do it to yourself, you know.  Then you'd
never grow old.  You could still get killed, but your body wouldn't
fall apart."

"Where did you learn that?"

Justen's eyes clouded for a moment, recalling the glade, the stream,
Dayala.  He swallowed.  "In Naclos.  From the druids."

Gunnar looked out at the sea.  "It's no trick."

"No .. . it's a curse, and it's my curse on you, older brother, my
curse because I love you."  Justen turned and looked up into Gunnar's
eyes.  "You won't be able to forget the skill, and you won't dare to
let anyone know, or they'll demand you do it to everyone, or they'll
exile you-if you're lucky.  But it's true order.  The true balance of
order and chaos."

Gunnar shivered.  "I could refuse to use it."

Justen laughed.  "Perhaps you will, at least until your bones start to
creak or your teeth start rotting.  Toothaches are very painful."  He
shrugged.  "Then you can reflect on the pain, knowing that you could
cure it."  A dark ale would have helped, but instead, he licked his
lips.  His tongue still felt swollen.

Gunnar swallowed.  "And if I use this .. . skill..  . then in a few
years, I'll have to leave Recluce."

"Not necessarily.  What if you-the great Gunnar- point out that living
an orderly life prolongs life and health, and thus you prolong life for
a few others."  Justen grinned.  "And by the way, dealing with chaos
unravels the effect rather quickly."

"How quickly?"

"Unless you rebuild the order image of your body within a few days,
death is not far away.  Something about the body knowing how old it
really is."

"You clearly have something in mind, dearest younger brother."

"Of course."  Justen smiled faintly.  "This time, I thought it out
beforehand.  We destroyed a good chunk of the massed order and chaos.
One of the problems was that no one understood that excessively massed
order is just as bad as chaos, maybe worse.  You are going to be the
advocate of the Balance, including restoring a lot of the old customs
that worked, like exile, and the use of herbs before applying order,
and the responsibility of crafters for the orderliness of their
apprentices..."

"Why would I do this for you?"  snorted Gunnar.

"You won't.  You'll do it for you.  It's the only way you can stay on
Recluce.  Who knows?  You might even last for a century or two if you
work it right."  ' Then ... no one who exhibits chaos tendencies will
ever stay on Recluce again, no matter who," declared Gunnar.  "That
ought to include you, by rights."

"What about your own child?"  asked Justen, a glint in his eyes.

"I don't have one."

"You will.  What then?  What if he questions?  Or she?  What if he or
she is intrigued with the power of chaos, like Ryltar was?  Will you
send him or her to the chaos-tinged mess mat we've made of Candar?"

"Yes."

"Best you remember that, Brother, in the centuries that come."

"Centuries?"

"Centuries," confirmed Justen.  "I am frozen in order, like it or not,
dear older brother, and you'll be the same, rather than rot from old
age."

"Sometimes, Justen, you're insufferable."  Gunnar fingered his pack.

"No, I'm just Gray.  Very Gray."

"And you'll follow me to look over my shoulder all the time?  No, thank
you."

"I'm staying here."

"To be with your druid lady?"

"That..  . and to just wander around, fiddling enough to keep some sort
of balance between chaos and order."  Justen swallowed.  Day ala will I
always be torn between repairing what I did ... and you

"But ... why?"

"Let's just say that I have to."  Justen grinned.  "Just like you have
to shape up Recluce."

"The druids?"

Justen walked down to where the water of the bay lapped up to the sand,
letting his senses follow a struggling turtle seaward.  "I am one, in a
way."  He turned.  "You need to catch a ship."

"And you?"

"I have a long ride ahead.  But there's time."

The two brothers hugged a last time.  Then one walked northward toward
a black-hulled ship.  The other climbed onto a mountain pony and rode
southwest.

CLVII

The silver-haired and green-eyed druid scooped the soil away and eased
the black acorn into the hole, then replaced the soil.

She stood, smiled, and looked eastward, at the house behind her that
would be grown larger by the time Justen arrived from the east.  She,
and he, would have time.

L. E. Modesitt, Jr."  lives in Cedar City, Utah.

TOR BOOKS BY L. E. MODES ITT JR.

THE SAGA OF REC LUCE

1 The Magic of Recluce 2 The Towers of the Sunset 3 The Magic Engineer
4 The Order War 5 The Death of Chaos 6 Fall of Angels 7 The Chaos
Balance 8 The White Order 9 Colors of Chaos 10 Magi'i of Cyandor 11
Scion of Cyandor

THE SPELL SONG CYCLE

The Soprano Sorceress The Spellsong War Darksong Rising

THE ECOLITAN MATTER

The Ecologic Envoy The Ecolitan Operation The Ecologic Secession The
Ecolitan Enigma

THE FOREVER HERO

Dawn for a Distant Earth The Silent Warrior In Endless Twilight

Of Tangible Ghosts The Ghost of the Revelator

The Timegod Timediver's Dawn

The Hammer of Darkness The Parafaith War Adiamante The Green
Progression (with Bruce Scott Levinson)

