Fall of Angels
by
L. E. Modesitt, Jr


Copyright 1996 Cover art by Darrell K. Sweet Maps by Ellisa Mitchell
Edited by David G. Hartwell A Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty
Associates, Inc.  175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010 Tor Books on the
World Wide Web: http://www.tor.com

For David Hartwell Who was willing to look at something different from
the beginning

INITIAL CHARACTERS

Crew of the United Faith Forces' frigate WINTER LANCE

RYBA Captain, also a Sybran nomad

NYLAN Chief Engineer, half Sybran

SARYN Second Pilot, half Sybran

AYRLYN Communications Officer, non-Sybran

GERLICH Weapons Officer, Sybran, non nomad

MER TING Logistics Officer, Sybran, non nomad

Marines attached to the WINTER LANCE

FIERRAL Commanding Officer

BER LIS

CESS YA

DENALLE

DESINADA

ELLYSIA

FRELITA

HULDRAN

ISTRIL

JASEEN Also a combat med tech

KADRAN

KY SEEN

LLYSELLE

MRAN

RIENADRE

SELITRA

SHERIZ

SIR ET

STENT ANA

WEBLYA

WEINDRE

Part I THE FALL

"THERE WERE ANGELS in Heaven in those days, and there were demons, and
the demons were the creators and the creation of chaos... "In that
distant battle between the fires of the demons and the ice lances of
the angels, the very skies twisted in upon themselves, and the angels,
who came from cold Heaven, were cast down and strewn across the
stars.

"Those angels, the first and last from far Heaven, when they found the
world, knew not where they were, nor could they see even the stars from
whence they had come.  And they descended unto the Roof of the World.

"There they built the Citadel of the Winds, the tower called Black,
with those chained lightnings yet they had retained, carving unto
themselves a high refuge and a reminder of their past.

"So as they had come, so earlier had come those from the lands and
heritage of the demons, and those were men who believed not that women
should wear blades nor speak their minds and thoughts.

"In the time of that first summer came arms men inspired by the demons,
and there were battles across the Roof of the World, and blood ...
"Thus continued the conflict between order and chaos, between those who
would force order and those who would not, and between those who
followed the blade and those who followed the spirit.

"Of the great ones were the angel Ryba, Nylan of the forge of order and
the fires of Heaven, Saryn of the dark blades of death, and Ayrlyn of
the songs."

Book of Ayrlyn

Section I [Restricted Text]

II

"WHAT ARE YOU going to do when you get back to Heaven?  Visit your
family?"  asked Saryn in a low voice, barely audible above the hiss of
the ventilators.  As second pilot, she had control of the Winterlance
while the captain dozed in the command couch.  Saryn's eyes were
glazed, her mind half on the neuro net

"I'll probably think about that when the time comes.  Might be a long
time," pointed out Nylan.  "Headquarters has extended all flight
officers' tours another two years."  The engineer's thoughts flicked
across the power net, only a section of the full neuro net as he
answered.

"Why don't they just say that we're stuck until we drive the demons
out?"

"Top angels-excuse me, Cherubim and Seraphim- express their commands
more temperately."  Nylan cleared his throat.  "Where are we headed?"

Saryn expressed a mental shrug through the net.  "I've got the
coordinates, but the captain didn't say why.  We're positioning for an
under space jump, and awaiting further orders."

ALL NET CALL!  ALL NET CALL!

As the neuro net alert jabbed through his thoughts, Nylan stiffened and
glanced around the bridge of the United Faith Forces' frigate
Winterlance.

Ryba-the captain-hit the net so quickly, her thoughts cold and clear
across the neuro net that Nylan wondered if she had ever been asleep.

At times like these, the engineer wondered if he ever really had known
the captain.  He knew that she drove herself, that she spent hours in
high-gee exercise, that she knew and practiced not only unarmed martial
combat, but even the antique twin sword exercises of Heaven's Sybran
horse nomads-and that the blades on her stateroom wall were razor sharp
and had sharpened points as well.  Then, she had been raised in the
nomad heritage where women fought and commanded-and she did command.

Nylan stifled a yawn and eased fully into the net, catching the last of
the on-line feed.  "... line two to be led and coordinated by UFFS
Winterlance ... line three to be led by UFFS Stormsweep.  Action will
commence at 1343 standard ..."

"Shit..  "The contemptuous word that floated unattached through the net
came from Saryn, who had just released the conn to Ryba, although Saryn
had stayed linked to catch the incoming message.

"Right enough," affirmed the captain, her tone not quite sardonic.
"Twelve towers, and only fifty of us, and half are destroyers with
barely adequate D-draws."

Saryn stood, wiggling her fingers.  Then she tried to massage her neck
with her left hand before settling back into her couch and trying to
rest while Ryba reoriented the Winterlance prior to setup for the under
space jump prior to the attack.

With a deep breath, Nylan stretched.  The engineer could check the
files for the whole message, but the captain had it, and he knew
enough-more than enough.  The demons had a picket line of towers across
the transit corridor, with webs into the under space that would
effectively cut the United Faith Alliance in two.

The damned towers that drew power from who knew where and how were
almost invulnerable-almost.  Except when enough de-energization was
concentrated on the nexus points in their energy links, and then the
entire line went up into pure energy.  Most of the time, though, it was
the angel ships that went up in energy.

The towers had to be hard to build, because there were only about fifty
known to exist.  That still meant enough to quarter the UFA and to
disrupt trade and communications totally.

"Engines ... interrogative fusactor status."  The captain's inquiry
burned into Nylan's thoughts.

The engineer suppressed his annoyance.  Ryba could have dropped into
the power subnet easily enough; it wasn't as though the Winterlance
were anywhere close to jump or combat yet.  He slipped deeper into the
system and ran through the checks, then pulsed the summary to her.

"Thank you, engines.  Power net looks good."

Nylan straightened in the couch and watched as the captain studied the
displays-the ones spread across the front of the cockpit, and those in
her mind.  Her thoughts flicked through the Winterlance's neuro net
making course adjustments, tweaking the power flow from the twin
fusactors, and studying, again and again, the icy images of the demon
ships of the Rationalists.

"Lots of power there, Ryba," observed the wiry white-blond engineer
from his third seat.  His un vocalized words flowed through the neuro
net to her.

"I wish you two would speak aloud.  All those empathetic overtones mess
up the net."  Ayrlyn, the comm officer, took a deep breath, although
her words were also unspoken, flowing through the net with ice-burning
over edges

Empathetic overtones?  Just because they occasionally slept together?
Nylan glanced sideways to the fourth seat where the brunette sat, her
thoughts restricted to the comm net as she monitored everything from
standing wave to demon frequencies.

"Net's faster."  Ryba's no-nonsense words snapped across the net with
their own burning edges.

Nylan winced and decided to check the power subnet again.

"Ten till jump.  Time adjustment will be negative five for sync."

The engineer moistened his lips.  Backtime twists out of jumps seemed
to give the angel ships an advantage, but the power requirements on the
fusactors meant they had to be rebuilt almost every third sortie, and
eight units was the max back time possible for an angel cruiser.  The
destroyers could go ten, but their under space mass drag was less.  So
were their shields.

A negative five meant the force would contain at least one heavy
cruiser, with three to five de-energizer draws.  That also meant
trouble.

"Trouble ..."  As if to confirm Nylan's concerns, Ayrlyn added the
single word verbally.

"Weapons ... interrogative D-status."

"De-energizers are ready, Captain."  Both Gerlich's voice and "net
voice" came across as a smooth deep baritone, smooth as the man
himself, unusually so for a full Sybran.  Of the ship's officers, half
were full-blood Sybran-Ryba, Gerlich, and Mertin-big, broad-shouldered,
and, despite their size, most at home in the chill of the high
latitudes of cold Sybra.  Ayrlyn was mostly Svennish, and Saryn and
Nylan were about half and half.

"Interrogative mass distribution."

"Within parameters, Captain."  Mertin squeaked, despite his size, both
in person and on the net, perhaps because he was barely out of the
Institute.

The time clicked by silently as the Winterlance hurled toward her under
space jump point, as the dozens of other angel ships converged on that
same jump point.

"Stand by for jump."

"Engines, standing by."

"Comm, standing by ..."

The acknowledgments flicked across the net, sequentially yet
instantaneously.

"Jump ... NOW!"

The Winterlance dropped under space with a rush of golden glory, as
though on spread wings, that instant of pain ecstasy enduring forever,
yet gone before it had begun ... then real space slammed tight around
the cruiser.

The rep screen flared bright with the images of nearly fifty angel
ships, arrow-wedged toward the glittering line of light held together
by the mirror tower ships of the demons.

Nylan could sense the dark image of a trapped angel transport, an
insect struggling futilely in the web of energy, struggling with full
drives, with shields, yet unraveling into dust and energy in the
instants after the angel force dropped toward the demon mirror
line-that impossible energy web that stretched across seemingly empty
space to snare any angel ship within light-years, in real or in under
space

"Full shields.  Everything you can get me, Nylan."

"Yes, scr."  - "Begin overlap ... now!"

"Full shields in place, Captain."  Nylan dropped himself down through
the net practically to the individual flux level, to smooth the energy
flows, and to develop maximum power for both screens and propulsion
fields.

At the same time, he had to fight the feedback created by the
overlapped shields of the cruisers flanking the Winter-lance.  On the
right was the Polarflow, on the left the Deepchill.

The Polar/low's engineer was either rough or new, or both, and the
power fluctuations from the ship created unnecessary energy eddies
across the entire shared shield, eddies that fed back into the
Winterlance's power net

"Smooth your fields, three!"  snapped Ryba over the command net.  Three
was the Polarflow, and Nylan nodded.

The worst of the energy fluctuations smoothed, but Nylan shook his
head.  The other engineer just didn't have the touch, and nothing
except experience would give it to him or her.  The problem was that
the demons wouldn't give that much time, either, before the mirror
towers lashed the fluctuations into energy storms whose feedback would
rip the Polarflow apart.

The representational screen showed the first line of angel ships, the
destroyers, sweeping "down" toward the picket line of light.

"One, close up."

Ryba's commands seemed distant as Nylan, his senses deep in the power
subnet, merged the fusactor flows into an eddy-free flow.

"Line two... begin D-sweep at my mark.  Five, four, three, two ...

MARK!"

The darkness of the ordered shields of the second line deepened as the
cruisers accelerated toward the tower ship pickets, a darkness all the
more profound for its depth, a depth that radiated the smoothed harmony
of merged energies.

A blinding line of light flared through the screens, through Nylan's
mind, shivering him to the tips of the nerves in fingertips and toes,
and leaving his eyes watering.

When his mind cleared, long before his eyes, he could sense through the
net that that blinding line of light from the tower ships had shattered
the first line of attacking angel forces, nearly a dozen fast
destroyers.

Still, without so much as a flicker in the overlapping screens, the
Winterlance, and the second line, dropped its darkness toward the
mirror-lights of the demons, and Ryba squared the ship on its
tower-shattering course.  "De-energizers."

"Charging," came Gerlich's affirmation across the net.  The screens of
the Rationalists' tower ships flared and merged, creating a shimmering
wall that seemed to reflect all electronic signals and visual images
back through the Winterlance's neuro net

Ryba winced as the signals knifed through her skull; Nylan dropped off
the top level of the net.  So did Ayrlyn.  "Activate D-one."  The
captain's thoughts were cold, even though Nylan knew she trembled in
the command couch, even as the combined signals of the angels' fleets
and the demons' towers flared back through her mind and her body.

"D-one is activated."

"Activate D-two."

"D-two is activated."

Nylan moistened his dry lips, finally opening his eyes, then easing
back onto the neuro net top level, where his senses slipped across the
screens and inputs that the captain juggled as line two began the sweep
through the probing disruption lines cast by the demons.

With twelve towers and only fifty angel ships, he didn't expect too
much from the de-energizer beams of line two, except that the demons'
towers would have to draw on their own power, rather than use laser or
solar energy to hold the reflective focusing against the angels' fleet.
It often took four lines to even get the reflective shields of the
demons to dim.

Nylan watched the representational screen-no visual scans would show
the intertwinings of energies and positions that marked the angel-demon
conflicts.  The energy draw beams converged on the selected nexus
point, the two from the Winterlance, two from the Deepchill, and one,
of course, from the struggling Polar/low.

"Three!  Get that D-beam in position."

There was no response from the Polar/low, but somehow the demons'
towers shifted in space, and the D-beams flared into nothingness.

The captain flattened the propulsion fields and slewed the ship
sideways at a right angle to the course line, then even before the
frigate was reoriented, pulsed the de-energizers twice more on the
nexus linch point between the shields of two towers.

Another pale amber de-energizer beam struck the same linch point, then
another, and then a fourth.

"Power, Nylan.  Power!"

The engineer dropped into the neuro net and a hundred flashes of energy
ripped at him, enough that his whole body burned, as he boosted the
fusactors to nearby twenty percent over rated maximum and channeled
everything but the power to the ship's screens into the
de-energizers.

Two disrupter fields bracketed the Winterlance, and Nylan dropped his
senses into the lowest power sublevels, smoothing fields and trying to
anticipate the feedback effects.

Somewhere, on the neuro net levels above him, he could sense the
implosion as the Polarflow was sucked into over-space chaos.

Ryba dropped the frigate's ambient gravity to near-null while lifting
the Winterlance almost on her tail.  The demon disrupter brackets
faded.  Sweat poured from Nylan's forehead and down across his closed
eyes as he eased the flux lines into smooth lines of power from each
fusactor and merged them.  He let the right fusactor rise to one
hundred ten percent rated output and the left to one hundred nine
percent until just before the hint of electronic chaos began to appear.
Then he dropped both to just shy of max.

Even so, the system telltales began to flash amber, like pinpoints of
pain through Nylan's body, and he took the ventilation system off-line
to compensate, knowing the two dozen marines would start cursing even
as the cold air stopped flowing from the ventilator jets.

The flight crew members were used to the loss of ventilators in combat,
and were usually too preoccupied to worry, but the backup combat troops
weren't.  They hated serving as backups, but ever since the Icewind had
captured a demon tower, the angel high command had insisted on two
squads of marines on each cruiser.  Of course, reflected Nylan, no
other cruiser had even come close to a tower ship, and the angel
scientists had yet to figure out how the damned tower worked, except
that it somehow both created chaos perturbations and used them to
distort real space

Two sets of disrupter beams probed around the Winterlance.

Ryba dropped the external energy levels to nil, then pulsed screens.

Nylan scrambled through the mid-level power net cooling feedback, and
unsnarling the energy loop from the second fusactor, always more
sensitive to field effects.

A third beam switched to the Winterlance as the Deepchill went to
chaos.

The captain dropped the nose and most of the screens, jamming all the
power flows into acceleration, and demanded, "Power!"

Nylan rammed the fusactors into emergency overload, nearly one hundred
twenty percent of rating on each, letting his nerves burn as he damped
the swirls.

The third line of angels began to attack the towers, but the disrupter
beams all seemed to remain searching for the Winterlance, bracketing
the cruiser on all sides.

Nylan swallowed.  With no gravity in the Winterlance, the ship warming
rapidly, the ventilation off, and the captain playing spaceobatics to
avoid the Rats' focused ion disassociators, his guts were twisted into
knots, his eyes pools of pain, and all he had to operate with were the
net and his senses.

"Shields!"  Ryba dropped the acceleration to nil.

The fourth line of angel ships, including the heavy cruisers, swept in
from below, and dozens of de-energizers licked at the towers, but the
disrupters still slashed at the Winterlance.

Nylan re shifted the power flows into over shields calculated, and
recalculated.  The Winterlance's screens were strong enough for perhaps
two simultaneous demon beams-once, twice at the outside.

One disrupter slid across the screens, and Nylan moaned as the power
burned into his brain, even as he shifted the screen focus to blunt the
dull, aching, and chaotic combined power drain and overload.

A sound like splintering glass, shattering static, and pure chaos
screeched through the comm bands as the mirror ships' nexus point
collapsed and fundamental chaos back-surged from the disintegrating Rat
picket line.

Angel ships scattered, some under jumping blind, others swallowed by
the chaos vortex unleashed by the nexus point's collapse.

Ryba dropped the shields and pulled full acceleration.

The fundamental chaos-a white vortex swirling in no directions and all
directions-glittering with the focused and reflected energies of the
Rationalists' tower ships-slammed through the Winterlance, twisting and
tumbling the frigate through a dark funnel-into a red-tinged whiteness
framed with black order.

The same blackness flooded over the overloaded engineer.

III

NYLAN SHOOK.  HIS head.  He hadn't expected that he'd be able to shake
his head-or that he'd even be alive.  Then he tried to access the neuro
net but nothing happened.  He concentrated on the power system, and got
the mental image of the board.  The mental readouts matched the visual
console before him, but he had no feeling of being on the net, just the
mental picture.

Both status images revealed that the fusactors were dead-almost as if
they did not exist.

He frowned.

"Darkness!  Look at you ..."  murmured Ayrlyn.

"What?"  asked Nylan.

"Your hair is silver-not old silver, just silver."

"Enough on hair color!  Where are we?"  Gerlich's words growled from
the speaker.

"We're trying to find out!"  snapped Ryba.  "It takes longer
manually."

Nylan stared at the captain-whose dark brown hair had clearly turned
black-a dark jet-black.  Jump transits didn't change hair color-that he
knew.  He turned toward Ayrlyn, whose brown hair had become a fiery
red, not orange-red or mahogany-red, but like living flame.

Were they all dead?  Was this some form of afterlife?

"So... where are we?"  asked Saryn, her hair still brown, perhaps
slightly darker, a shade more ... alive.

As he waited for the captain to answer, Nylan glanced at the board
before him, where half the displays were either dead or showing
meaningless parameters, and then back at the captain.  Finally, he
shrugged and waited.

"Nowhere I've ever seen," Ryba finally answered.  "The nav systems
don't match anything, but we're practically on top of a planet, and
I'll have the orbit stabilized in a bit."

The engineer frowned.  The odds on under jumping especially blind and
unintentionally, and ending up near a planet, any kind of planet, were
infinitesimal.

"Nylan, is there any way to get more power?"

"The fusactors are dead, Captain.  I'll try again."  Nylan concentrated
on the fusactors, ignoring the dead net, trying to call up and
replicate the feeling of smooth power flows.

For a moment, perhaps several units, some form of power flowed, but
Nylan felt as if it were flowing from him, not the fusactors, and the
blackness began to rise around him.

He let go of the image.  "That's it, Captain."  He didn't know why, but
he couldn't do more.

"Might have been enough."  Ryba's words were grunted.

The engineer returned to study the readouts before him, regretting the
slowness of the manual inputs.  Since the captain said nothing, Nylan
began to use the long-range sensors to gather data on the planet,
cataloguing each piece of data as it hit the system.  A warm water
planet with no electronic emissions; clear day-night rotational
pattern; no moons of any size; no light concentrations on the dark
side; roughly Heaven-Sybra-standard gravity, assuming that the mass
balance was somewhere near norm.

He trained one sensor on the sun and swallowed.

"Stable orbit... I think," announced Ryba, wiping her forehead with the
back of her black ship suit sleeve.  She turned in the couch and
frowned.  "You were right, Ayrlyn.  About the hair color."

Nylan nodded to himself.  Was the spectrum, the visible spectrum,
different?  How could it be?  The ship's lights were still the same. 
Or were they all different?

"Where are we?"  asked Saryn.  "Does anyone know?"

"A demon-fired long way from anywhere-that's certain."  Ryba wiped her
forehead again, looked back at the screens once more, and then at
Nylan.  "You were doing something with the sensors, Nylan.  What do
they show?"

"I'd have to say that we're not in our universe."

"Not in our universe?  How could we not be in our universe?"

"Would you prefer dead?  The afterlife of the demons?  Those are your
choices.  Personally, Captain, I prefer the alternative universe."

"And what might lead you to this conclusion, Scr Nylan?"  Ryba's voice
was chill, the polite voice of disagreement that Nylan hated.

"A number of little things, beginning with the odds of blind under
jumping and emerging near a planet.  In our universe, that kind of jump
would have turned us into dust and energy.  The fusactors are both
dead, and they shouldn't be.  The indicators show that the firm cells
are discharging at half their normal rate, despite twice the emergency
load."

"At least there's a planet down there."

"That's another problem.  It's a water planet, and it's in what would
be a habitable zone-assuming that such a thing existed with a
yellow-white star this hot.  But it's on the fringe for most of us."

"You're half-Svennish, aren't you?"  snapped Gerlich over the speaker.
"Trust a Svenn to pick a hot planet."

"He didn't pick it," pointed out Ryba.  "How hot is it?"

"If the sensors are accurate... the sea-level surface is like Jobi, but
warmer.  Too hot to be comfortable for us, but fine for demons.  There
are a couple of high-altitude plateaus that would be perfect-especially
in the smaller continent, but setting a lander down there would be
murder."

"Trying to live in a place hotter than Jobi would kill most of
us-except you and Ayrlyn," responded Gerlich's voice.

Saryn swallowed in the background, but Nylan said nothing.

"It wouldn't be a revel for us."  Ayrlyn's brown eyes seemed to flash
blue.

Ryba nodded curtly, but not quite so coldly.  "Anything else?"

"I think there's some form of life down there, and there shouldn't be,
not without some form of moon, or unless we're looking at a plano
formed world.  But there aren't any electronic emissions."

"Maybe it's a lapsed colony world."

"Could be.  Whose?  How long has it been isolated?"

"Stop it, please .. ."  said Ayrlyn.  "If the fusactors are down, can
we fix them?  If not, what do we do?"

"We die or colonize."  Ryba looked coldly back to Nylan.
"Atmosphere?"

"Rough analysis indicates low CO, oxygen about twenty-two percent,
mostly nitrogen.  There's nothing obviously wrong, but I can't rule out
toxic or chronic trace elements in the soil or atmosphere."

"Inhabited?"

"The traces I've picked up say so."  The engineer shrugged again.
"Could be anything, but it's carbon-based, and, if I had to guess,
probably some form of humanoid.  There are some regular patches that
could be fields and some lines that could be roads ..."

"Better than savages, but not much."

"You could be jumping to conclusions," pointed out Ayrlyn.

"I have to go with the odds."  The captain glanced back at the
readouts.  "And we're continuing to lose power."

"This whole world is against the odds."

Ryba turned and called up the visual display of the smaller continent
on her console.  "Nylan, Saryn, Ayrlyn .. . come here."

"Captain?  Gerlich here.  What's the drill?  The marine force leader
wants to know.  So does Merlin."

"We're in stable orbit, but we'll have to abandon the ship.  We're
surveying landing sites.  You can commence figuring loads for the
landers.  Something along the line of configuration C."

"Self-sustaining?"  came the weapons officer's voice.

"That's affirmative.  Local culture looks primitive, but organized.
Roads and fields, and that probably means things like blades, archers,
and cavalry or the local equivalent if they have horses or what passes
for them.  Mass density is standard, and that means metal-working."

"Understood.  All four landers appear operational..."

"Fusactors aren't going to work here, Gerlich," added Nylan.  "You'll
have to modify the configuration for that."

"Fusactors work everywhere."

"Not here, wherever here is."

The captain looked at Nylan.  "You sound absolutely certain."

"You can have Gerlich test the survival fusactor, but it won't work."

"Weapons .. . the engineer is probably right, but test the fusactor and
let me know."

"Will do, Captain.  How much time do we have?"

"Take enough time to do it right, Gerlich.  We're operating on stored
power.  We can't take the tier two firm cells, but try to make room for
the fully charged cells left in tier three."

"What tools?"

"All the hand tools, and"-Ryba looked at Nylan-"two sets of laser
cutters."

Nylan nodded.

"No energy weapons?"  asked Gerlich.

"The heavy-weapons head for one laser.  Hand weapons might be useful
for a time, but we probably won't have any way to recharge them.  All
the slug-throwers the marines have.  And take all your
clothing-especially sweaters or warm things-even if you have to wear it
or stuff it into cracks in the landers.  And blankets.  I can guarantee
we won't be coming back for anything."

"We'll get working on it, Captain."

Ryba turned to the bridge crew and gestured to the screen.  "Where do
we go down?  Here's the planet."

The four clustered around the single wide screen.

"Four major continents.  The one that looks like a fish- roughly-has an
island off it."  Ryba glanced at Nylan.  "Would we be better off on the
island?"

The engineer shook his head.  "It's hot; it's so dry that the sensors
don't show any moisture, and there are no signs of habitation.  It's
also pretty rocky."

"What about the big southern continent?"

"Isn't it hot?"  asked Saryn.  "It's not that far south of the
equator."

"Very hot," admitted Nylan.

"You don't seem very positive, Scr Nylan," commented Ryba.  "Each unit
we sit and talk costs us power, and all you do is say no."

Nylan shrugged.  "I'd vote for the second-largest continent.  It's got
some high mountain plateaus in that western range.  It's spring or
early summer now, and we can land.  There's greenery there, but no
signs of habitation-probably too cold for the locals, and it might be
helpful not to tramp on anyone's boots."

"It's hundreds and hundreds of kays from any access to oceans or major
rivers," pointed out Ayrlyn.

"We're not exactly into seafaring," Nylan said dryly.

"Fine," said the captain.  "We land on this mountain plateau.  We get a
defensible position-maybe.  We get snow and ice over our head in the
winter, a short growing season, and probably not much access to
building materials."

"We also have more time to establish ourselves before the local
authorities, or what passes for such, show up," answered Nylan.

"It's insane to try and put a lander into a mountain pasture.  It could
be just a high-altitude swamp," protested Saryn.

"The odds are against that, and there are two areas where we could
land.  Each is twice as long as a lander's set-down distance."

"Twice as long in the middle of mountains that could rip a lander into
little shreds."

Nylan shrugged.  "How long will anyone last if we set down on those hot
and flat plains?"

"We don't even know if they have local authorities, or if the locals
are intelligent, or if they even look remotely like us," protested
Saryn.  "This is insane."

"I think you just validated the engineer's suggestion," said Ryba.
"There's too much we don't know, and we don't have the energy to
shuttle things off the ship.  Besides .. ."  She left the sentence
unfinished, but Nylan knew the unspoken words.  Except for removable
power supplies, weapons, and tools, the Winterlance would shortly be
unusable in any case.

"Trying to hit mountain landing areas?  That's crazy."

"You're right," Nylan agreed.  "Except that trying to land anywhere
else would be even riskier.  The landing is high risk, but it makes
survival lower risk.  Take your choice."

"We're opting for long-term survival," announced the captain.  "I'm not
interested in merely prolonging existence enough to die of heat
exhaustion on a nice flat plain where landing is easy.  I'll begin
computing the entry paths," the captain announced.  "Nylan, would you
do a survey of your equipment to see if there's anything else that
could be useful planet side

The engineer nodded as the captain assigned the responsibilities for
cannibalizing the Winterlance.

IV

"HAVE YOU DETERMINED the cause of the great perturbation between order
and chaos-the one that shook the world last evening?"  asks the
white-haired man dressed in the more traditional flowing white robes.

The younger, but balding, man straightens and looks up from the
circular glass in the middle of the white oak table.  "Scr?"

"I asked, Hissl, about the great perturbation.  Jissek still lies in a
stupor, and my glass shows that waves flooded the Great North Bay."

"Waves always flood the Great North Bay, honored Terek."  Hissl
inclines his head to the older magician, and the summer light that
reflects off the roof of the keep of Lornth and through the window
glistens on his bald pate.  "I do believe that order fought chaos in
the skies, and that times will be changing."

"A safe prediction," snorts Terek.  "The times always change.  Tell me
something useful."

The man in the white tunic and trousers stands and bows to the older
white-clad man.  "There are strangers approaching from the skies."

"There are always strangers approaching.  How do you know they are from
the skies?"

"The glass shows a man and a woman.  The man has hair colored silver
like the stars, and the woman has flaming red hair, like a fire.  They
are seated in a tent of iron."

"An old man and a redheaded weakling?"

"The man is young, and the woman is a warrior, and they bring other
women warriors."

"How many?"  Terek walks to the unglazed window of the lower magicians'
tower, where the shutters tremble against the leather thongs that hold
them open.  His eyes look out upon the barely green hilly fields above
the river.

"A score."

"I should tremble at a score of women warriors?  This is the message of
such a great disturbance?"

Hissl bows again.  "You have asked what I have seen, and you mock what
I tell you."

"Bah!  I will wait until Jissek wakes."

"As you wish.  I have warned you of the danger."

Terek shakes his head and turns toward the plank door that squeaks on
its rough hinges with each gust of the spring wind.  He does not shut
it as he leaves.

Hissl waits until he can no longer hear the sound of boots on the tower
stairs.  Then he smiles, recalling the lances of winter that the
strangers bear, and the breadth of the women's shoulders.

NYLAN WENT THROUGH the manual controls a third time, as well as through
the checklist once more.  Then he studied the rough maps and the
readouts again.  He had one of the two landing beacons, and his was the
one that the other three landers would hone in on-assuming he managed
to set down where he planned, assuming that he could find the correct
high plateau in the middle of the right high mountain range without
getting spitted on the surrounding needle-knife peaks.  The second
beacon would go down with Ryba-in case he ran into trouble.

"Black two, this is black one.  Comm check."  Nylan watched his breath
steam as he waited for a reply.

"One, this is two.  Clear and solid."

"Good.  You're cleared to break orbit."

The engineer took a deep breath.  "I'm not quite through the checks.
About four units, I'd guess."

"Let us know."

"Will do."

In the couches behind him were the eight marines assigned to his
lander.  The craft wasn't really a lander, but a space cargo personnel
shuttle that could be and had been hastily modified into a lifting body
with stub wings for a single atmospheric entry in emergency situations.
Only one of the four landers carried by the Winterlance was actually
designed for normal atmospheric transits, and it had far less capacity.
That was the one Ryba was bringing down with the high-priority cargo
items.

Although Nylan had more experience in atmospheric flight than Saryn or
even Ryba, he wasn't keen about being the lead pilot through an
atmosphere he'd never seen, belonging to a planet he suspected
shouldn't exist.  Because he was even less keen about dying of
starvation or lack of oxygen in orbit, he continued with the checklist.
Still, the business of trying to hit mountain plateaus bothered him,
even if it were the only hope for most of the crew.  "Harnesses
strapped and tight?"

"We're tight, scr," responded Fierral from the couch beside him, the
blue-eyed squad leader, who once had been a brunette, but who now had
become a fiery redhead as a result of the Winterlance's strange under
jump  "It wouldn't be a good idea to be floating around here anyway,
would it now?"

"No," admitted the engineer.  He took another deep breath before
flicking through the remainder of the checklist.

He scanned the screens, then thumbed the comm stud.  "Black one, this
is two.  Breaking orbit this time."

"We'll be tracking you."

"Thanks."  Nylan pulsed the jets, amused as always that it took energy
to leave orbit, then watched the three limited screens as the lander
slowly rose, then dropped, although neither sensation was more than a
hint with the gentle movements.  He knew those movements would be far
less gentle at the end of the flight.

The first brush with the solidity of the upper atmosphere was a
dragging skid, and enough of a warming in the lander that Nylan's
breath no longer steamed.

The second brush was longer, harder, like a bareback ride across a
fall-frozen stub bled field just before the snows of a Sybran winter
began.  And the lander warmed more.

Nylan studied the screens, not liking either the temperature readouts
or the closures.

"Make sure those harnesses are tight!  This is going to be rough."

"Yes, scr."

With the third and last atmospheric contact, the lander bucked,
stiffly, and then again, even more roughly, as the thin whisper of the
upper atmosphere slowly built into a screaming shriek.

Whhheeeeeee .. .

The lander was coming in fast... too fast.

Nylan flared the nose, bleeding off speed, but increasing the heat
buildup.  Then he dropped it fractionally.

Whheeeeeeeee .. .

The lander bounced, as though it had skidded on something solid in the
upper atmosphere, then dropped as if through a vacuum.  Nylan's guts
pushed up through his throat, and he could taste bile and smell his own
sweated out fear.

"Friggin' pilot... not made of dur all steel..."

"Does ... best he can ... wants ... to live, too ..."

"Don't apologize for an engineer, Desinada ..."

Nylan tried to match geographic landmarks with the screens, but the
lander vibrated too much for him to really see.

The sweat beaded up on his forehead, the result of nonexistent
ventilation, nerves, and the heat bleeding through the barely adequate
ablative heat shields, and burned into the corners of his eyes, as his
hands and mind worked to keep the lander level.

The buffeting began to subside, enough that he could see ocean far
below and what looked like the tail of the fish continent ahead.

He checked the distance readouts and the altitude.  He'd lost too much
height.  After studying the fuel reserves, little enough, he thumbed on
the jets and flattened his descent angle.

At the lower speed, though, the effect of the high winds became more
pronounced, and the edges of the stub wings began to flex, almost to
chatter.  With little enough power, the engineer could do nothing
except hold the lander level, and wish ... He tried to imagine
smoothing the airflow around the lifting body, easing the turbulence,
soothing the laminar flow, and it almost seemed as though he were
outside the ship, in a neuro net a different neuro net almost like
smoothing the Winterlance's fusactor power flows.

The chattering diminished, and Nylan slowly exhaled.

Another hundred kays passed underneath, and he thumbed off the jets,
hoping to be able to save some of the meager fuel for landing
adjustments.

Far beneath him, the screens showed what seemed to be a rocky desert, a
boulder-strewn expanse baked in the sun.  Ahead rose the ice-knife
peaks that circled the high plateau that was his planned destination.

He thumbed the jets once more, again imagining smoothing the airflow
around the lander.  Surprisingly, the lander climbed slightly, and
Nylan permitted himself a slight grin.

The DRI pointed to the right, and the engineer eased the, lander
rightward, wincing as the lifting body lost altitude in the maneuver.

All too soon, the high alpine meadows appeared in the screens as green
dots-small green dots, but the southernmost one grew rapidly into a
long dash of green set amid gray rock.

The lander arrived above the target meadow, except the meadow showed
gray lumps along the edges, and a sheer drop-off at the east end that
plunged more than a kay down to an evergreen forest.

From what Nylan could tell, the wind was coming out of the east, and he
dropped the lander into a circling descent that would bring the lifting
body onto a final approach into the wind.  He hoped the approach
wouldn't be too final, but the drop-off allowed the possibility of
remaining airborne for a bit if the long grassy strip were totally
unusable.

As he eased around the descending circular approach, the lander began
to buffet.  Nylan kept easing the nose up, trying to kill the lifting
body's airspeed to just above stalling before he hit the edge of the
tilted high meadow that seemed so awfully short as he brought the
lander over the ground that seemed to have more rocks than grass or
bushes.

He eased the nose up more, letting the trailing edge of the belly
scrape the ground, fighting the craft's tendency to fishtail, almost
willing the lifting body to remain stable.

The lander shivered and shuddered, and a grinding scream ripped through
Nylan's ears as he eased the craft full onto its belly.  The impact of
full ground contact threw Nylan against the harness straps, and the
straps dug deeply into flesh and muscle.  The engineer kept
compensating as the lander skidded toward the drop-off, slowing,
slowing, but still shuddering eastward, and tossing Nylan from side to
side in his harness.

With a final shudder, the lander's nose dug into something, and the
craft rocked to a halt.

For a long moment, the engineer just sat in the couch.  "We're down."
Nylan slowly unfastened the safety harness, trying to ignore the spots
of tenderness across his body that would probably remind him for days
about the roughness of his landing.

"Did you have to be so rough?"  asked Fierral.  "Any emergency landing
that you can walk away from is a good one.  We're walking away from
this one."

"You may be walking, scr, but the rest of us may have to crawl."  The
squad leader shook her head, and the short flame-red hair glinted.

"Are you sure he's done?"  asked another marine.  "We're done."  Nylan
touched the stud that cracked the hatch.  There wasn't any point in
waiting.  Either the ship's spectrographic analyzers had been right or
they hadn't, and there was no way to get back to orbit, and not enough
supplies in the ship to do more than starve to death-especially since
no one knew where they were and since there were no signs of technology
advanced enough to effect a rescue.

The air was chill, almost cold, colder even than northern Sybra in
summer, but still refreshing.  A scent of evergreen accompanied the
chill.

With a deep breath, Nylan stepped to the hatch on the right side of the
lander and used the crank to open it the rest of the way, "It smells
all right."

"I can't believe you just opened it.  Just like that," said Fierral.

"We didn't have any choice.  We're not going anywhere.  We can breath
it, or we can't."  Because the lander had come to rest with the right
side higher than the left, Nylan had to lower himself to the ground.
"..  . can't believe him .. . kill us all or not..."  "... least he
doesn't dither around .. ."

"Neither does the captain .. . probably why they get along ..."

Leaving the voices behind, the engineer slowly surveyed what was going
to be their new home, like it or not.

The landing area was a long strip of alpine meadow, perhaps five kays
long and a little more than two wide, bordered on three sides by rocky
slopes that quickly rose into the knife-edged peaks that had shown so
clearly on the screens.  To the north was a ridge, lower than the
surrounding rocky areas, almost a pass, through which he had brought
the lander.  The entire meadow area sloped slightly downhill from the
northwest to the southeast, one of the reasons the landing had seemed
to take longer than necessary, Nylan suspected.  To the southwest,
beyond the rocky slopes, rose a needle peak, impossibly tall, yet
seemingly sheathed in ice.

"Freyja ... blade of the gods," he said quietly.

"It is, isn't it?"  said Fierral from behind his shoulder.  "How did
you get us down?"

"It wasn't too bad."

Fierral glanced back to the west, along the trail gouged out by the
lander.  "That's not exactly a prepared runway."

"No."  Nylan laughed.  "Would you give me a hand?  We need to set up
the beacon for the others."

"They can land here?"  "The beacon makes it a lot easier.  You can lock
in a direction and rate of descent."

"I would get the hard landing."

"We're here."

"Wherever that is."  Fierral wiped her sweating forehead and glanced
around the high plateau.  "At least it's not too hot."

Behind them, the other marines dropped from the lander.

Nylan looked at the track he had made.  From what he could tell, most
of the rocks were small, nothing that would create too many problems.
Rising from the grass between the rocks were small purple flowers,
shaped like stars, that rose on thin, almost invisible, stems.

Nylan forced his thoughts from the fragile flowers and turned toward
the lander itself.  From what he could see, the ablative coating on the
belly had been largely removed by the shrubbery and rocks.

"We've got some work to do-quickly.  We need to set up the beacon and
see if we can move the lander a bit."  He headed toward the lander and
the emergency beacon it contained.  Fierral followed.

One of the marines walked the several hundred steps eastward from the
lander, pausing just short of the sheer dropoff.  "... frigging long
way down ..."

Nylan nodded.  They had come a long ways down.  He just hoped that they
didn't have to fall any farther.

VI

HISSL STUDIES THE images in the glass.  Four rounded metal tents squat
amid the late spring grasses that carpet the Roof of the World.  On the
high ground in the northwest corner of the grassy area, the
silver-haired man hammers stakes in place in a pattern which Hissl
cannot determine through the mists of the glass.

Thrap!  At the sound, Hissl squints and the image in the screeing glass
fades into swirling white mists that in turn vanish, leaving what
appears as a circular flat mirror in the center of the small white oak
table.  He turns.  "Yes?"

"Hissl, Jissek has recovered, and we are here."

"Do come in."  The man in white erases the frown and stands, waiting,
as the two other men in white step into the room.

Terek closes the door and smiles.

Hissl returns the smile and bows.  "I am honored."

"What do you make of the people of the iron tents?"  asks the rotund
Jissek.  "From where did they come, do you think?"

"From beyond the skies-that is certain."

"Why do you say that?"  asks Terek.

Both Jissek and Hissl look at the older wizard.  Terek looks at Hissl
as if waiting for an answer.

Hissl takes a deep breath before he speaks, ignoring the frown his sigh
evokes from Terek.  "There are many signs.  It would appear that the
tents flew down to the Roof of the World-"

"Flew?  Iron cannot fly."

"They flew," confirmed Jissek.

"The people who were in the tents look mostly like us, but they are
not.  I have never seen silver hair on young people or hair that is red
like a fire.  And they sweat, as if the Roof of the World is warm, as
though it might be hot like in the Stone Hills or the high plains of
Analeria in midsummer."

"That seems little enough.  What else?"

"They are mostly women.  Out of a score, only three are men.  Their
leader is a woman.  At least, she is shaped like a woman.  And all the
women bear what look like weapons, though I cannot be sure."

"The angels, you think?"  asks Jissek.

Hissl shrugs.

"Angels?  Bah .. tales to frighten children with.  That's all."

"Every wizard who can scree will see these women, and such tales will
get passed, especially to those few who follow the black."

Terek pulls at his smooth chin.  "Such tales ... that would not be
good.  Perhaps someone should travel west."

Hissl and Jissek exchange glances.  Finally, Hissl, the youngest
wizard, the only balding one, clears his throat.  "Would it be...
proper for us to undertake such a mission- given the concerns raised by
Lord Nessil of Lornth?"

"That might work to our advantage," points out Terek.  "Lord Nessil
would not wish the example of armed women to be made known, especially
to the Jerans.  Their women ride with the men, and he has had some
trouble ..."

The other two wizards nod.

"He would appreciate our concern, and he would be most intrigued with
women of silver or fiery red hair."

"These ... angels... might not take to being taken," says Hissl.

"Have they shown weapons?  Thunderbolts, or fire bolts such as we can
bring?"

"No," admits the balding wizard.  "Not that we have seen used."

"Then fourscore arms men should be more than enough."

"As you wish."  Hissl inclines his head.

"I will recommend, of course, that you accompany His Lordship."  Terek
smiles.  "Since you have discovered the strangers, you should share in
the rewards.  And one wizard should be more than enough.  We would not
wish to imply a lack of confidence in the abilities of His Lordship."

"No... no, indeed," murmurs Jissek, wiping his forehead.

"You are most kind, High Wizard."  Hissl offers a head bow.  "Most
kind."

VII

THE LANDER SHELLS formed a square on the rocky upper slope of the
alpine area, adjacent to one of the two small streams that wound
through the grass and shrubs, and below the staked-out pattern that
Nylan had made.  One of the shells contained several body-sized dents,
and plastic foam filled a long gouge on the left side.  On the uphill
side of the shells were several plastic-covered stacks-the disassembled
sections of the landers' exterior removable parts.

The wind whispered in from the north, barely above freezing.

Nylan and Ryba lay together in the forward part of lander one, sharing
the command couch, under the light thermal blanket that was more than
warm enough for them.

Only the faintest light crept in through the short corridor from the
hatch, but Nylan had no difficulty seeing.  With the silver hair had
apparently come some form of enhanced night vision that took in the
objects around him in the dimmest of light.  He looked at Ryba, short
hair tousled, face calm in sleep-not quite relaxed, but he had never
seen her completely relaxed.

Beyond the couch were their clothes .. . and the twin blades Ryba had
brought down from the Winterlance and begun to wear.  Nylan did not
shake his head.  She was doubtless correct in assuming that the blades
would have to serve as a defense before long and in accustoming herself
to their use.  What weapon could he use?  A blade probably, since Ryba
could teach him, although the idea of an edged weapon bothered him. But
where would they get blades?

Though he knew the basics of metallurgy, he'd never tried anything so
primitive as smithing, and he had no idea if there were any metallic
deposits nearby.  Charcoal he could make, if he ever had the time, and
he could devise some sort of bellows, but they would be useless without
iron or copper.  The landers held enough steel alloys, but a primitive
smithy would be hard-pressed to reach temperatures high enough to melt
or cast them.

He took a long, slow breath.

Ryba's eyes flickered, and then, as always, she was awake.  "What are
you thinking about?"

"Weapons, smithing, how to use the materials in the landers..."  He
shrugged, suddenly conscious of her nakedness next to him.

"That's not all you're thinking about," whispered Ryba.

Nylan could feel himself blushing.

"And after last night?  Shame on you."

Nylan nibbled on her neck.

"Not now ... I can hear someone in the back."

"It's different in the morning.  Besides, we've got a lot to do.  The
growing season is so short.  We'll have to get those grow-paks figured
out and started.  They're really designed as deep-space hydroponic
units, but there are instructions for conversion, and there's one
planet or soil-based unit."  The captain swung her feet onto the chill
composite flooring of what had been the cockpit area.

Nylan swung his feet to the other side, aware of the warmth of her back
against his and of the faint scent of evergreens and the whispering of
the wind outside.

Ryba pulled on her ship suit as did Nylan.  He followed her into the
dawn, and toward the stream to wash up.  Neither spoke.

As the day lightened, long before the sun had edged above the
tree-fringed eastern horizon that lay beyond the drop-off, Nylan had
whittled a small limb into shavings, then used one of the matches to
light the cook fire.  He looked down at the match, then shook his head.
"Strikers, maybe."

"Strikers?"  Ayrlyn broke off a handful of dried end branches from the
dead tree limb that several marines had dragged nearly a kay the day
before.

"Steel and flint... maybe I could cut some pieces from the lander and
bend them into an arc, attach the stone.  Haven't seen any flint,
though."

"You are planning for the long haul, aren't you?"  Ayrlyn fed more of
the under into the small flickering flames, flames duller than her
flaming hair.

"Not so long.  Three boxes of matches might last a local year if we
used only one a day.  We don't exactly have a chemical-processing
industry here."  Nylan picked up a plastic bucket, checking the scrapes
on the gray material, then began to walk toward the stream.

"Does he sleep?"  Saryn limped toward the fire that Ayrlyn fed, leaning
heavily on the rough staff that allowed her to avoid putting too much
weight on the hardened foam cast around her broken right leg.

"Neither he nor the captain seem to need much."  Ayrlyn yawned.

"Where's the captain?"

"In number two with Merrin, sorting through the grow-paks," answered
the engineer, returning with a full bucket of water.  "She wants to get
started on laying out fields and planting."

"We've been down less than an eight-day, and she wants us to be field
hands?"  asked Saryn.

"What about Gerlich?  Where's he gone?"  inquired Ayrlyn.

"He's got the one bow and the arrows-out hunting.  He claims there's
something like a wild boar out there."  Nylan gave a short laugh.

Saryn shook her head.

The captain and the junior officer emerged from the shell of lander two
and walked toward the fire.  Mertin ducked to avoid the line of smoke
that seemed almost to seek his face.

From lander four emerged Fierral.  The red-haired marine commander and
the two ships' officers converged on the fire, stopping well back.

"Why the fire?"  asked Fierral.  "We've still got firm cells."

"Cooking.  We're saving the cells for things we can't duplicate
locally," answered Ryba.

"Such as?"

Two more marines eased up toward the fire.

"Powering the combat laser, if we need to."  Ryba adjusted the
makeshift hair band to keep the short and thick black hair totally away
from her face.

Nylan emptied half the water into the kettle and swung it out over the
fire on the makeshift crane.  He frowned as he set aside the bucket.

"You don't approve, Scr Engineer?"

"I hope we can avoid that.  The combat laser gobbles power.  The more
power we can use for constructive purposes the better."

"I take it you have some ideas?"

Nylan stood.  "I've been studying the geology.  There's something that
looks like black marble, except it's not.  It's tougher, but it's not
as hard as granite, and I hope it cuts more easily-with a laser."

"Houses?"  asked Saryn.

The silver-haired man shook his head.  "A tower, something like that.
It makes more sense.  That's what I staked out-good solid footings
there."

"How long 'fore we start building something, scr?"  asked one of the
younger marines standing behind Ayrlyn.

"That's not the first priority," snapped Ryba.  "The lander shells are
fine for now.  What we need to get in the ground is food.  We also need
to survey the forest and the meadow here to see what's likely to be
edible, while we still have the analyzer and some power."

Nylan nodded.

"And... we'll still need timber of some sort to roof, floor, and brace
the engineer's tower."

"We might not need planks except for flooring and bracing," Nylan
volunteered.  "There's a dark gray slate that splits into sheets pretty
easily."

"Good ... I think."

"What's in the emergency grow-paks?"  Saryn leaned back on the flat
stone, stretching out the leg with the cast.

"Maize, although I don't know about whether the stream will supply
enough water ... potatoes that ought to do well in a cold climate, some
high-protein beans."

"Get the potatoes in first," suggested Nylan.

"Potatoes?"  asked Mertin, stepping up beside Ryba.

"They grow just about anywhere, and we could exist on them with only a
few supplements.  The ground seems all right."  The engineer poured the
rest of the water from the bucket into the pot.  "They keep better than
some of the other plants, although you could dry and grind the maize
into a flour, I think."

"Seems?"  asked Saryn.

Nylan shrugged.  "It might take generations to determine if all the
trace elements are there, but I'd bet they are."

Ryba looked at him.

"If it's not perfectly plano formed it's a natural duplicate of a hot
humanoid world.  It feels right."

"Are we going to rely on feel?"

"We'd better figure out something to rely on besides high technology
that won't be around much longer."

"Feel..."  Ryba frowned.  "Let's finish eating and get to work on those
fields.  The growing season can't be very long here.  Once we get
everything we can planted, then we'll worry about game and timber and
longer-range priorities."

Fierral nodded, stiffly, like the marine force leader she remained.

Saryn straightened on the rock where she sat and winced.

Nylan glanced uphill across the starflower-strewn grass and bushes-and
rocks-to the staked outline of the foundations of what he hoped would
be a tower... if they could get to it.  If the locals didn't show up in
force first... If... He clamped his lips together, ignoring the
sidelong look from Ryba.

VIII

THE EARLY-MORNING sun glared out of the blue-green sky and bathed the
sloping meadow, and the figures who toiled there, glinting off the few
exposed metal sections of the lander shells and off the small spring
that fed the stream.

Ryba stood above it all, on the top of the rocky ledges above the
dampness of the meadows in the wind that blew steadily from the
northwest.  With her stood Fierral and two marines.  All four looked to
the northeast, down the rocky ridge line.

"There ... you can see them, at the base of the ridge there.  It's
almost as good as a road."  Fierral pointed.  "They're pretty clearly
headed here.  And there are a lot of them."

"I'd expected a little more time before anyone found us.  I wonder how
they knew."  Ryba frowned, then shrugged.  "I suppose that's not the
issue now,"

"What do you want us to do?"  asked the blue-eyed force leader.

"Act innocent.  Keep the sentries in place and use the mirrors to
signal me when they get close.  Position the rifles there in the rocks
where you can sweep them if you have to.  Try not to use them until you
really have to.  I'd rather save the ammunition.  Make sure the rest of
the marines have their sidearms with them.  We only have the pair of
rifles?"

"Just the two," Fierral affirmed.

"Give one to each of your best snipers-besides you- and put one where
you are and the other on the far end of that downhill clump of
rocks."

"Not a bad cross fire."  The force leader nodded.

"Then set up the rest of the marines where they can take cover quickly
if they have to.  They might have archers or something."

"I didn't see anything like that through the glasses," Fierral said
slowly.  "You don't think they're peaceful?"

"With more than fifty horses in a primitive culture?  That's the
equivalent of a half-dozen mirror towers."  Ryba snorted.  "No ...
they're not peaceful, but we'll pretend they are, and I'm betting
they'll be trying for the same impression, too."

Fierral raised her eyebrows, just as flaming red as her hair, but said
nothing and waited for Ryba to explain.

"It's simple.  The way the approach runs here, you have to come up the
ridge, and that's exposed.  Nylan was right.  It's a good spot for a
tower-or a castle.  The rocks behind there are too sharp to bring
horses through, and too steep.  So"-Ryba shrugged again-"without modern
weapons, it would be hard to take.  But first we have to survive to
build it.  Anyway, they'll pretend to come in peace, unless we attack
first, just to get close, and they think we'll be drawn in."

"Men," laughed Fierral.

"They may be transparent, squad leader, but they're still dangerous."
Ryba turned.  "The engineer will be doing the prep work for his tower,
and I'll keep a handful busy with the ditching.  We might as well do
something while we're waiting.  It will be a while.  They'll walk the
horses up here so that they're fresh for the battle they're pretending
they don't want.  Try not to kill the horses.  We'll need them."

"Besides you, who can ride?"  asked Fierral.

"You'll all have to learn, sooner or later.  This way, we won't have to
buy mounts."

The other two marines looked from the hard face of their squad leader
to the harder face of the captain.

IX

"LORD NESS IL THE ang-the strangers are just over the rise, not more
than twenty rods beyond the tips of the gray rocks."  The arms man in
brown leathers keeps his voice low and looks up to the hatchet-faced
man in the heavy purple cloak.  Blotches of moisture have soaked
through the arms man leather trousers, and green smears attest to his
crawling through underbrush and grass.

Lord Nessil brushes back a long lock of silver and black hair, then
smiles.  "Are they as attractive as the screeing glass shows?"

"Pardoning Your Grace, but I wasn't looking at them that way."  The
arms man eyes flicker to his right as another trooper leads his horse
back to him.  "They don't seem bothered by the chill.  They wear light
garments, like they were in Lydiar in midsummer, but I wasn't looking
beyond the clothes, more for blades, and only the black-haired wench
bears one.  A pair she has."

"A pair of what?"  asks Nessil.

Lettar looks down at the grass.

"For that, Lettar, you shall have one to enjoy."  Nessil laughs softly.
"Women warriors, and only one has a blade.  I shall enjoy this."  He
turns toward the wizard in white.  "What do your arts show, Wizard?"

"There are less than a score that I can scree there, eighteen in all,
and but three men.  They bear some strange devices that radiate some
small measure of order, and others that bear some measure of chaos.
They have set up a spindly windmill that will be ripped apart in the
first good wind."  Hissl inclines his head.

"What would you have us do, Wizard?"

"I would like your men to preserve their devices.  We might learn
something from them.  I cannot advise Your Grace on tactics, My Lord.
You are the warrior.  I can but say that they are likely to be more
formidable than they appear.  I cannot tell you why."

Nessil laughs again, still softly, but more harshly.  "You caution me
that they could be formidable, but not why.  Thus, if I succeed in
capturing them all, I will be pleased."  His face darkens.  "If I fail,
you may claim you warned me.  Wizard's double words!  Ride beside me,
Scr Wizard."

"Pardoning Your Grace, but what shall we do?  Ride down on them?"  asks
Lettar.

"No.  We will be civilized.  We will ride up and demand their surrender
for trespass.  That way, we might get them all.  We do outnumber them
more than three to one."  Nessil looks at Hissl.  "And we get the
wizard close enough to use his fire bolts if need be."

"What about the men?"

"If they resist, kill them.  If not, we can always use them somewhere.
Try to save as many of the women as you can.  I've never had a
silver-haired wench-or one with fire-red hair."  Nessil offers a boyish
grin and looks along the line of threescore mounted troopers.  "Shall
we make our appearance?  Bring out the banners.  After all, we do come
in peace, one way or another."

Hissl's eyes glaze slightly, as if he is no longer quite within his
body.

Then the horsemen ride toward the low rise, over which looms the
ice-needle peak that dominates the Roof of the World.  The banners flap
in the brisk wind that blows out of the north and spins the windmill
beyond the crest of the hill.

The star flowers left in the meadow on the far side of the ridge-those
that have not been destroyed by the cultivation or wilted as their
season has passed-bend in the wind.

ABOVE THE PLOT where Gerlich and several marines half toiled at
ditch-digging, partly sheltered by a line of boulders, Nylan studied
the laser, and the array of firm cells in the portable rack.  He
mumbled and made another adjustment to the power head on the laser.

"Why don't you just try it, scr?"  asked the stocky blond marine behind
him.

"Because, Huldran, we can only replace a fraction of the power."

"What about the emergency generator?"  Huldran nodded her head toward
the man-sized but flimsy-looking windmill set near the crest of the
hill.  Beneath it was a small array of solar cells.  Both the cells and
the generator fed through a converter into a single firm cell.

Nylan laughed.  "The laser uses more energy in a few units than the
generator supplies in a day."  After another readjustment to the power
head he straightened and wiped his sweating forehead.  "It gets hot
here in the day."

"Yes, scr."  Huldran wiped away the sweat from her fair-skinned
forehead.

"I heard that, Scr Engineer," said Gerlich from the plot.  "It's
frigging hot here.  It would have been hard to try to live any lower.
I'll bet those lowlands are like the demons' hell."  The shirt sleeved
Gerlich blotted his brow and handed the makeshift spade to one of the
marines.  "Your turn."

"Yes, scr."  The dark-haired marine took the shovel and continued
digging the ditch that would divert stream water through the plot.  Her
eyes continued to scan the rise to the north as she slowly dug.

Three other marines grubbed at the ground with makeshift implements
resembling hoes to clear away the mixture of what appeared to be grass
and a high-altitude clover bearing occasional reddish blooms.  Their
eyes occasionally darted toward the top of the ridge or toward one of
the rock formations.  The shortest marine wiped her forehead, her hand
unconsciously touching the slug-thrower at her belt.

"How long do we have to play at being innocent would-be peasants,
anyway?"  asked Gerlich.

"Until our visitors arrive," responded Ryba from the end of the small
plot.  "In any case, you've proved you can toil with the best,
Gerlich." She motioned to the former weapons officer.  "You can even
bring in game with a bow-even dangerous game."  Her eyes flicked to the
rack where another marine had stretched out the hide of what appeared
to be a cougar and studied a small manual.  "No one knows what to do
with the hide.  What do you know about making bows and arrows?"

"Not much.  I use them.  Others make them."

"We're all going to have to do some making here."

Gerlich smiled lazily and shrugged.

Ryba's hand flicked, and, as if by magic, the tip of one of the steel
blades appeared at the brown-haired man's throat.  Her eyes met his, as
they stood there, the captain almost equal in height to the husky
weapons officer, and in breadth of shoulders.

Gerlich swallowed.

"In case you've forgotten, I'm not only captain, but I'm tougher than
you are-and so are most of the marines, in case you get any ideas."
Ryba's blade vanished back into the scabbard.  "Now ... do you want to
try to figure out how to make something useful?"

"You've made it clear I have little choice."

"None of us do, not if we're going to survive.  I intend to make sure
that we all do."

A light flashed across Ryba's face, and she squinted, then turned
toward the sentry up in the rocks.  After a moment, she called, "Ready!
Stand by for visitors."

"Ready, Captain," responded Fierral, squaring her broad shoulders.

To the north of the plot, but to the right of the rockier ground where
Nylan's crude stakes marked the tower that might never be built, Saryn
sat in the shade of a boulder and used one of the three survival knives
to pare down a fir limb into the shaft of what would be another shovel.
At Ryba's command, she eased her own slug-thrower out of the holster
and onto the flat rock.  She stopped peeling and carving, but still
held the knife loosely.

Beyond her, still partly sheltered by a line of boulders, Nylan made
yet another adjustment to the power head on the laser.  He
straightened, then frowned as he both heard Ryba's command, and somehow
felt the presence of horsemen beyond the ridge.

Was it just his imagination?

Ryba walked uphill toward the rocks until she was less than a dozen
paces from where Saryn and Nylan worked.  "Company's about to
arrive."

"Wonderful..."  mumbled Nylan.  "We're barely planet-side an eight-day,
and someone has decided to start a fight.  Humans are such peaceful
creatures."

"We're angels," hissed the dark-haired Saryn.

"Same same," muttered the engineer back.

"High Command would have your head for that," pointed out the second
pilot.

"We'll never see High Command again."

Saryn shivered.

"Keep your slug-throwers ready," added Ryba.  "Aim for the body."

The ground vibrated slightly as the horsemen crossed the top of the
ridge.  In the van were two young men bearing purple banners, followed
by a man in a purple cloak thrown back to reveal an iron breastplate
and a large hand and a half sword worn in a shoulder harness.

Ryba reached for the slug-thrower at her hip.

"That won't do much," observed Nylan.  "They'll just think it's magic
of some sort.  I suspect that they only recognize blades and arrows as
weapons."

"I don't care what they call it.  We have to stop them."

"Will it hurt to talk?"  Nylan asked.  "They look too like us not to be
human."

"I suppose not, but if they're really human, they're here to fight."
Ryba's eyes flicked toward the ridge where the head marine stood.  The
snipers remained hidden.  "Fierral has her troops ready to gun down the
whole mass of them if I give the order."

"All of them?"

"If necessary."  Ryba's face was hard.  "People don't like facing the
unknown.  If they're hostile, I'd rather have them all disappear.  We
could plead ignorance in the future.  It's hard to plead ignorance when
there are witnesses."

The three studied the riders as the horsemen rode down toward the angel
encampment.  Beside the purple-clad leader rode a man cloaked totally
in white, and Nylan could even feel a sense of whiteness, tinged with
red, emanating from the man, who was the only one not carrying visible
weapons.  That lack of weapons bothered the engineer.

"Watch out for the one in white," he said quietly as his hand drifted
to the standard-issue sidearm that he had never used against the demons
of light or their mirror towers.

"I'll keep that in mind."  Ryba kept her broad shoulders square as she
stepped forward and somewhat away from the rocks.

The horsemen drew up in a rough line, a sort of half-circle centered on
the small plot being ditched.  The marines in the plot had lowered
their hoes, and their hands rested by the butts of their sidearms.

The man in the purple cloak reined up well short of Ryba, inclined his
head, and declaimed something.

"Not good," whispered Nylan.  "They know she's in charge."

Ryba inclined her head slightly, then, without turning her head, asked,
"What did he say?"

"The general idea is that we don't belong here."

"I could tell that myself," snapped Ryba, her eyes still fixed on the
man in purple.

The leader of the locals added a few more words, the last ending in
what seemed a partial snarl.

Ryba looked back at him, then responded in an even tone.  "I suggest
you do the same to yourself."

Purple cloak drew the big hand and a half sword, holding it at the
ready.

"Now what do you suggest?"  asked Ryba.

"Put one of those Sybran blades through him and run like hell from the
guy in white," suggested Nylan.

"I'm afraid we can't recognize your authority."  Ryba's voice was
almost musical.

Another sentence followed from the local's leader, and he gestured
toward the heavens overhead.

Nylan pursed his lips.  Did the locals know they had come from space?

"Returning to where we came from is clearly impossible," Ryba
responded.

The sword jabbed skyward again.

"No."

The purple-cloaked man barked a command.  The sword swept toward Ryba
as he spurred his horse forward, as did the other horsemen.

"Fire at will!"  yelled Ryba.

Even before the local's heavy blade was within a body length of Ryba,
the purple-clad rider was sagging from the big horse, a length of
Sybran steel protruding from his chest.

The other horsemen continued to charge whoever happened to be close,
blades out and looking for targets, maintaining a rough double-line
formation.  Only the man in white held back, his eyes scanning the
meadow area.

Crack, crack, crack, crack... Even the first staccato impacts of the
marine slug-throwers that echoed across the high meadow hurled nearly a
dozen arms men from their mounts.  One of the purple banners fluttered
to the ground.

The others ignored the sounds and rode toward the handful of marines in
the open.

Crack!  Crack!  Crack!  More slug-throwers discharged, and more
horsemen tumbled, their frozen faces wearing expressions of
disbelief.

Nylan aimed at the man in white.  Crack!

Nothing happened, but the engineer had the feeling that somehow the
ceramic composite shell had fragmented before it reached the target.

Crack!

With a long and dramatic-sounding set of phrases, the man in the white
tunic and trousers raised his right hand and gestured.

Ryba dove behind the nearest boulder, and Nylan ducked.  The two of
them jammed together.

Whhssttt!  The fire bolt seemed to bounce off the rock, flared over the
half-hoed field, and smashed across the side of the nearest lander.
White ashes cascaded onto the meadow.  Where the fire bolt had struck
was a gouge in the dark tiles that showed metal beneath.

"Frig ..."  muttered Ryba.  "Personal laser!  Can't believe it."

Whhhsssttt!

Another fire bolt flared above them, gouging a line of fire through the
meadow clover.

Whhhssstt!

Crack!  Ryba's shot also failed to reach the man in white.

"That's no laser."  Nylan peered over the edge of the boulder, then
frowned.  The man in white was gone, although Nylan thought he could
feel someone riding up the hill.  More feelings that seemed to be
correct, and that bothered the engineer.

"Where did he go?"  snapped Ryba.

"Forget him!"

Crack!  Crack!  Crack!

Nylan lifted the slug-thrower as two horsemen, low in the saddle, swept
around the end of the rocks and headed toward them.

Both the captain and the engineer fired again.

Crack!  Crack!  Crack!  When the hammer came down on the empty chamber,
Nylan scrambled to the other side of the rock, emerging a moment later.
His mouth dropped open as he saw Ryba on one of the horses, chasing
down, and slicing open one of the hapless arms men and then another.

"Get the damned horses!"  yelled Ryba before she rode uphill after a
fleeing mount.

Nylan looked at the nearby horse, then flung himself behind the boulder
as another horseman galloped toward him.

Crack!  Crack!  Crack!

The slugs whistled over Nylan's head, and one of Saryn's shots dropped
the horseman.

"You'd better reload!"  suggested Saryn.

"Thanks!"  Nylan, crouching behind the boulder, fumbled the second and
last clip into the slug-thrower.  He hoped the marines had more
firepower.  He also hoped they were better shots than he'd proved to
be.

When he scrambled up, there were no horsemen nearby, just the mount of
the man Saryn had dropped.  Nylan, ignoring his apprehensions about
grabbing onto anything ten times his size, grasped the reins of the
nearby mount, which promptly reared.  "Now ... now ..."  He tried to be
reassuring, but the horse reared again, nearly dragging him off his
feet before it settled down.

Whhheeeee .. . eeeee .. . eeee .. .

"I don't like it any better than you do, fellow, lady, whatever you
are."  Horses?  What was he doing hanging on to horses on an impossible
planet?  He tried not to shiver and concentrated on calming the
horse.

Slowly, somehow, he managed, even as he looked across the meadow.  He
swallowed.  From what he could see, there were large numbers of bodies
strewn almost at random.  Three of them, beyond the plot, wore ship
suits

Absently, Nylan patted the neck of the horse.

Wheee .. . eeee .. .

He glared at the beast that towered over him, and, surprisingly, the
animal seemed to whimper.  Patting the animal's neck, he added, "Just
take it easy."

His eyes flicked across the meadow, then toward the top of the hill
where Ryba had reined up.

"They're gone, frig it!"

Nylan led the horse toward the lander shells and the half-grubbed and
ditched plot, not quite sure what to do with the animal.  At the least,
he needed to find someplace to tether it.  Several marines were working
over two angel bodies as he led the horse toward the nearest lander,
where, absently, he tied the reins around an internal door loop.  No
one was going to be closing the door anytime soon.

Then he hurried through the fallen horsemen.  One moaned as Nylan
passed.  He looked down at the hole in the man's abdomen, and his guts
twisted at the blood.  The man moaned again.  Nylan knelt.  There
wasn't much he could do.

The soldier muttered something, blood oozing from the corner of his
mouth.  Had he fractured ribs in his fall from the horse?  The man's
hand clutched Nylan's, and he muttered, "Nerysa .. . Nerysa .. ."

His hand loosened, as did his jaw.

Nylan closed the dead man's eyes and slowly stood.  Then he walked
toward the group between the end lander and the plot where three
gathered around a prone figure in a ship-suit.

"It's no use."  One of the marines sat back and wiped her forehead.

The unmoving figure was that of the junior officer- Mertin.  Above
sightless eyes and streams of dried and drying blood, his forehead
looked slightly lopsided.

The marine stood.  "Those blades are more like iron crowbars.  Not much
edge.  Damned sword caved in his temple.  He just stood there and shot,
never ducked He got about four of them."

Nylan looked toward the other grouping.  "Who's that?"

"Kyseen, I think.  Mangled leg.  Three of them hit her at once.  She
got two.  The third got her with his horse.  She still got him."

Nylan shook his head.  The entire fight still seemed both horribly real
and terribly unreal.

From what he could tell, several other marines were also down.

From the hillside above, Ryba rode downhill, leading three more
riderless mounts.  More to the west, another marine and Gerlich were on
horseback, trying to corner several more of the riderless horses. Nylan
counted nearly a score of mounts being held, tethered, or chased.

Nylan glanced back toward Kyseen.

"Dumb bastard!"

Since she sounded as though she had a chance for recovery, and since he
was certainly no med tech he walked back toward the uphill side of the
lander shells where Ryba was directing the construction of something
where the horses could be tethered.

"Nylan!"  ordered Ryba.  "Get a couple of marines and check the bodies.
Those that aren't too badly wounded we'll try to save for information.
Gather all the weapons, anything valuable, and have your detail bury
the rest deep enough that scavengers, or whatever they have here, won't
get them.  Keep any cloaks or jackets or armor or boots-if they're in
good condition."

Nylan nodded.  While he didn't like the idea, he understood the need.

"Don't bury any of the dead horses yet."  Ryba made a sour face. "Maybe
we can butcher some and stretch out the concentrates."

Nylan frowned.  Horse meat?  Maybe it would be better than
concentrates, but he had his doubts.  To stop thinking about that, he
asked, "Who got away besides the fellow in white?"

"Maybe a half dozen.  One or two were wounded, I think."  Ryba turned
her mount toward the end of the meadow where Gerlich lurched in the
saddle as his mount nearly carried him into an overhanging pine branch.
"Use your legs, Gerlich, and your head!"

Nylan pointed to the three nearest marines.  "You, you, and you-we're
the scavenger and burial detail."  He saw Huldran.  "You too, Huldran.
We'll start up by the rocks and sweep down.  Carry the bodies to the
lower end of the meadow, near the drop-off."  He gestured.

"That's a long ways," pointed out a tall woman, who, like him, had come
out of the mysterious under jump with silver hair.

Nylan tried to remember her name.  Was it Llysette?

"Llysette, it's downhill-"

"It's Llyselle, scr."

"Sorry.  In any case, Llyselle, it is downhill and away from the water,
and it's going to be hard to bury them deep enough to get rid of the
smell.  There are rocks there, for a cairn, if necessary."

"Yes, scr."  The four gave him resigned looks.

"Why don't we just drop them over the cliff?"  asked Huldran.

"That would probably just cause more trouble with the locals, and we
don't need that."

"How would they know?"

Nylan shrugged.  "I don't know, but they've got something-call it
technology, call it magic.  They knew Ryba was our leader, and they
knew we came from space or the local equivalent."

"Great..."  mumbled one of the other marines.

"Stow it, Berlig," said Huldran tiredly.  "The engineer's usually been
right, and these days that counts for a lot.  Let's get on with it."
"Take any weapons, knives, any gadgets or coins.  Jewelry, too," added
Nylan.  "The more we find, the more we might be able to figure out
about these people."

The sun had dropped behind the mountain peaks by the time Ryba,
Gerlich, and their work crew had completed a makeshift corral for the
captured mounts and by the time a large cairn and five individual
graves had been completed and filled in the southwestern corner of the
open area, just beyond the end of the meadow and less than two dozen
steps from the beginning of the drop-off.

Saryn was by the cook-fire area, making an attempt to butcher a dead
horse.  Nylan shook his head, but kept walking toward the stream.  He
needed to get the blood and grime off himself, if he could.

Not much more than an eight-day and already five were dead-Mertin and
four marines.  Then, again, reflected the engineer, without the
combat-trained marines and Ryba, things would have been worse, much
worse.

Nylan bent down and washed the rock dust and dirt from his hands in the
narrow stream.  Then he walked back toward the lander where they had
stockpiled the plunder, such as it was, from the corpses.  They had
gathered nearly three dozen of the heavy iron blades that scarcely
seemed sharp enough to hack wood.  After thinking about Ryba's Sybran
blade and how she had sheared right through the local plate and chain
mail, Nylan shook his head.

He neared the lander, and Ayrlyn, who stood by the single remaining
local.  The man half sat, half lay almost against the side of the end
lander on a thin tarp.  The pale green eyes surveyed Nylan, and the man
spoke.

Nylan almost caught the words.

"He's asking if you're the only true man here," said Ayrlyn from his
elbow.  "He wants to give you his sword.  Or he would if he still had
it."

"Honor concept, I suppose."

"Only men have honor here?  Are we in trouble!"  snorted the former
comm officer.  Her brown eyes flashed that impossible shade of blue.

"If I take his sword, I'm responsible for him, I suppose."

"Something like that, I'd guess."

"Does that mean he gives his word not to escape, or is it meaningless
nonsense?"  Nylan's voice was hoarse, tired.

"Who would know?"

Nylan stared at the local.  "I'll take his moral sword, or whatever.
Tell him that if he breaks his word, he'll wish no one in his family
had ever been born."  Nylan was tired.  Tired and angry, and he just
wished that things hadn't degenerated into slaughter so quickly.

Even before the flame-haired comm officer started to speak, the man
paled, and words tumbled from his lips.

Ayrlyn looked sideways at the engineer.  "For a moment, I thought you
almost glowed."  She shook her head, and fires seemed to shimmer in her
hair.  "Whatever you did, he claims you're his liege.  His name is
Narliat."  She lowered her voice.  "You did something that scared the
living darkness out of him.  He called you master or mage, something
like that."

Nylan rubbed his forehead.  "This place makes me feel strange.  It's
almost like being on the net, except it's not."  He almost could
understand the man's words, and the language was somehow familiar, but
not quite.  He kept rubbing his forehead.

Ayrlyn looked at him.  "It is strange.  I've had a couple of flashes
like that, except it's more as though I could feel the trees or the
grass."  She glanced around nervously.  "I'm not crazy.  I'm not."

"We're probably just tired."  Nylan looked at the prisoner.  "Now
what?"

"Tell him to stay here, and he will."

Nylan did, and Ayrlyn repeated the words.  Narliat bowed his head.

The two angels walked toward the cook fire where Ryba waited.  Nylan
glanced to the rocky outcropping where a pair of sentries were outlined
against the twilit sky.

The captain turned her head.  "How many in the cairn?"

"Forty-three."

"Forty-three?  That many?"  burst out Kyseen from the litter by the
fire.

"That few," said Ryba.  "There were almost sixty, I think.  Probably
another three or four were wounded.  They'll probably die, if the
locals' medical care matches their weapons.  That means almost a dozen
escaped."

"Killing two thirds of an attacking force sounds pretty good," pointed
out Saryn.

"I'm more worried about the one in white," mused Nylan.  "It wasn't a
laser, but he had a lot of power."

"It doesn't make sense.  Whatever weapon he used burned right through
the lander's ablative tiles like they weren't there-until it got to the
thin steel under shell  That's not a laser.  The ablative tiles would
have stopped even a small weapons laser."  Saryn winced as she shifted
her position on the stone.

"Call it magic," suggested Nylan.

"Magic?"  Ryba's eyebrows lifted.

"There's something here like a neuro net-"

"You think this is all imagination?  That we're really trapped in the
Winterlance's net?"

"Oh, frig ..."  muttered Gerlich.

"No.  There are too many independent variables for a net to handle,
especially the interactions and apparent actions between individual
personalities.  Also, there's a feel about the net," explained Nylan.
"It's not here."

"Thus speaks the engineer."  Gerlich's tone was openly sarcastic.

Nylan ignored it.

"What do you think of the local swords?"  Nylan asked Ryba.  "You're
the only one with any experience, I think."

"Not quite," said Gerlich.  "I did club fencing for a while."

"So did I," added another voice.  "Sers ..."

Nylan looked at the wiry silver-haired marine.

"I'm Istril," the marine explained apologetically.

"That's a help," said Ryba slowly.  "You're all going to have to use
blades, I think, before the year is out, anyway.  Maybe sooner.  Unless
we can manufacture bows and learn archery."

"Why ..."  started a voice farther back in the twilight.  "Oh ...
sorry."

"Exactly.  Fierral took inventory.  That little firefight cost us
nearly three hundred rounds.  That's actually pretty good.  One in nine
shells counted.  Except we only have about six hundred rounds left.
That's maybe two battles like we just went through."  Ryba bowed to the
marine force leader.  "Without the marines, we'd all be dead or
slaves."

Ryba turned to Nylan.  "I fear you were correct, Scr Engineer, about
the need for a defensive emplacement, a tower."

Nylan nodded.  "You never answered the question about blades."

"Most of their blades are hatchet-edged crowbars.  That hand and a half
blade the leader carried is a fair piece of work, and so was one other
thing like a sabre.  Why did you ask?"  Ryba smiled tightly.  "You
don't ask questions, scr, unless you know the answer."

"I saw what your blade did to the local leader," Nylan replied
honestly.  "I just wondered what the comparisons were."

"If we could find blades like mine, it would give us an advantage-not
so much as slug-throwers-but I don't see those for a long, long time to
come."

Neither did Nylan.

"But," continued the captain, "I don't know how we could find or forge
blades like mine."

Nylan frowned, then pursed his lips.  Was there any way?  He shook his
head.

"What about the language?"  Ryba turned to Ayrlyn.

"That doesn't make sense, either.  It sounded like an offshoot of
Anglorat," said the comm officer.

Nylan nodded, mostly to himself.  He should have recognized it, but he
hadn't expected the demon tongue to show up here.  "What was that idiot
saying?  Where were you, anyway?"  asked Ryba.  "Where you put me ...
on the other side."  Ayrlyn gave a slight shiver.  "I didn't get it
all, and some of the words didn't make any sense, but the general idea
was that we had to surrender because we were trespassing on his
lands-"

"His lands?"

"His lands."

"Darkness help us," said Ryba.  "We would knock off the local ruler.
That can't be good."

"It might be very good," mused Nylan.  "Anyone else might decide to
wait a while before taking us on."

"Either that, or they'll all be up here on some sort of holy war
against their version of the demons.  That's what we probably look like
to them."

Nylan laughed.

"What's so funny?"

"We got here because we were fighting the demons, and as soon as we
land, we're fighting more demons."

"You think this place was a Rationalist colony?"  Ryba's eyebrows knit
together.

"How could it be?  It's not even in our universe," snapped Gerlich.

"Maybe they got here like we did," suggested Saryn.

"We don't even know how we got here, not for sure," pointed out Nylan.
"Or where here even is."

"You obviously have some ideas, O Bright One," snapped Gerlich.  "So
how do you think we got here?"

"We were at the focus of a lot of energy, more than enough to blow the
boards and the Winterlance right out of existence.  We're still around,
even if it's someplace strange-"

"Are you sure we're just not dead, or imagining things?"  asked
Ayrlyn.

"The physical sensations seem rather intense for being merely spiritual
and mental..  . and I explained the limitations of a net..."

"So you did."

Nylan turned to look fully at the taller man.  "So .. . listen.  I'll
listen to your knowledge.  If we don't listen and save every bit of
knowledge we have to share, we'll be dead-or our descendants will
suffer more than they have to:-or both."

"That assumes we'll live that long," snapped Gerlich.

Ryba's blade flickered again, and the cold steel touched Gerlich's
neck.  "I'm getting very tired of having to use force to keep you in
line, but it seems like that's all you respect."

"Without that blade ..."

Ryba handed the blade to Istril, the small marine.  "Hold this."

Gerlich looked puzzled.

"Some people never learn."  Ryba's foot lashed out across the bigger
man's thigh.

"Missed, bitch."  Gerlich charged.

Ryba danced aside, and her hands blurred.  Gerlich slammed face first
into dirt and clover, then scrambled up and took a position, feet wide,
hands in guard position.

Ryba feinted with her shoulder, once, twice.

Gerlich did not move.

The captain seemed to duck, then with a sweep kick knocked Gerlich off
his feet, although the brown-haired man scrambled and slashed at her
arm.  Ryba took the arm, and Gerlich went flying into the meadow.

He rose slowly, holding his arm.

"It's only dislocated," snapped Ryba.  "I could have broken your
worthless neck.  So could most of the marines."

"Why didn't you?"

"Because you have some stud value.  But I could break both your arms
and keep that."

Nylan shivered at the chill in Ryba's voice.  He looked up at the
unfamiliar stars.  They looked very cold, and very distant.

Gerlich slumped and slowly walked forward toward the fire.

"Jaseen, can you snap that back in place?"  asked Ryba.

"Yes, scr."

"Do it."

Gerlich sat down on a boulder, while Ryba reclaimed her blade and
sheathed it.  Nylan glanced across the faces of the twenty-two
women-all but the two standing in the rocks as sentries-and then at
Gerlich.  Things were going to be different..  . very different.  He
repressed a shudder.

XI

NYLAN LAY ON his side of the couch in the darkness listening to Ryba's
soft and even breathing.  A faint cold breeze wafted forward from the
open lander door, bringing with it the scent of fire smoke and
evergreens.

The engineer closed his eyes, then opened them.  Less than six hundred
rounds of ammunition-that was what stood between them and being
captured or killed by the locals.  The battle laser might be good for
another skirmish, but it wouldn't be much good once the fighting
reached the hand-to-hand stage, and that meant a cold decision to wipe
out the locals before they even charged the angels.

And after that?  The locals wouldn't go away.  It might be a few
seasons or years before they attacked again, but given human nature,
they would.  Then what would the angels have left for defense?  Ryba
had agreed to build a tower, and that meant he had to design one that
was simple and relatively quick to construct, big enough for growth,
and proof against a cold, cold winter that probably lasted more than
half the local year.  Ensuring that the tower could hold off any
lengthy attack also meant figuring out a water supply that couldn't be
blocked .. .

He sighed.

"You're still awake?"  asked Ryba.

"I thought you were asleep," said Nylan.

"No.  I was thinking."

"So was I. What were you thinking about?"

"You name it, and I was thinking about it," she answered slowly.
"Weapons, the locals, weather, crops, housing, your tower, the next
generation, how to feed horses through the winter, how to get to the
winter ..."

Nylan nodded, then added, as he realized that, while he could see her,
she didn't seem to have the same night vision he did, "I was thinking
about the tower."

"I told you that you could use the lasers to cut stone to build the
tower.  Just make it big enough for three times the numbers we have."

"Four," suggested the engineer.

"If you can do it.  There's not that much power in the firm cells."
Ryba reached out and squeezed his hand.  "It isn't going to be easy."

"No.  And the building season won't be much longer than the growing
season.  Some of the evergreens look solid enough, and straight enough
to provide the timbering we need.  But we'll have to cut green timber,
and that's going to be hard with one axe and one portable grip saw."

"You just can't stack stones on top of each other, though, can you?"

"Not unless we want to use huge blocks, and we don't have enough people
to move things.  We'll need mortar of some sort, but there has to be
clay somewhere around here, and, unless I'm mistaken, there are old
lava flows across the way."

"What does lava have to do with mortar?"

"I haven't found any limestone nearby.  So I'm hoping that I can either
pulverize some of the lava or that there's some compressed ash that I
can use with the clay.  It's going to take a little experimenting."

"What about glass?"

"Shutters, probably, for the first winter, except for what I can make
out of the arma glass screens, but they're small.  There's one small
handsaw besides the grip saw.  If the emergency generator holds up for
a while ... if I can figure out how to make mortar ... if..."  Nylan
took a deep breath.  "Too many ifs..."

"Yes."  She squeezed his hand again, and he squeezed back.

They lay silently for a time longer.

"Those swords we got from the locals aren't much better than iron
crowbars," Ryba finally said into the darkness.

"That bothers you, doesn't it?"

"You can't forge replacement shells for the slug-throwers, can you?  Or
make powder?"

"I could make black powder, if I could find the ingredients, but it
would destroy the guns within a season, I think.  There's too much
residue.  That's even if I could cast shells out of the copper I don't
know even exists."

"Better blades ought to be possible .. ."  mused the captain.  "Somehow
.. ."

The silence dropped over the couch again, then lengthened into sleep as
the scent of the fire was replaced with the colder late-night air, the
stronger smell of the evergreens, and the hint of the oncoming rain.

XII

AFTER WIPING HIS forehead, Nylan handed the crude shovel to Huldran.
"Keep clearing this rock off, all the way downhill to the stakes there.
Make sure the dirt goes way outside the stakes, or you'll have to move
it again."

"Yes, scr," answered the stocky blond.

Nylan took his makeshift twine and weight level and measured the slope
of the clear rock shelf.  The rock ledge uncovered by the digging
sloped enough that the tower foundations would have to be stepped and
leveled.  With the brush of pine branches, he gently swept the dust and
dirt off the rock around one crack that extended the length of the
cleared area, bending down and using his hand to gauge the width.

On a flat expanse of rock to the west of the tower foundation area, two
marines took turns using crude stone sledges on the chunks of reddish
rocks.  Beside them Saryn took a small hammer and pulverized the small
pieces into dust, and then swept them into one of the few plastic
buckets.

Kkhhcheww!!!  Chhhew!!!

"Frigging dust!"  snapped the former second pilot, shifting her weight
and the cast on her injured leg.

Kkkchew!!!

Despite the sneezing, Saryn kept pulverizing the reddish rocks.

Over the hammering came another set of vibrations.  The engineer raised
his eyes to see Ryba riding up, her eyes surveying the area.

"Are you still digging holes?"

Nylan glanced at the captain sharply, then exhaled as he caught the
glint in her eye.  "Yes.  We're still digging holes."  He gestured,
then swallowed, and continued the explanation he felt stupid making.
"If I get the foundation and the lower level right, the rest will be
easy.  If not..."

"I'm glad you take it seriously."  She wiped her forehead.  "We're
going to need it, and a stable or barn as well."

"I don't know how long the laser will last..  ."

"It lasts as long as it lasts.  Then we try something else."  Ryba's
voice was matter-of-fact.

"Any signs of the locals?"

"Isrril thought she saw someone in purple on the far ridge, but whoever
it was didn't stay around.  There's a road down along the bottom of the
ridge, more like a trail.  I'd say it's one of the high passes across
the mountains, probably more direct, but colder."  Ryba turned in the
saddle, studying the fields and the surrounding slopes, then looked
back at Nylan.  "Gerlich says there aren't any signs of local hunters
in the higher woods.  Not much in the way of larger game, either.  That
cat seems to be the top of the predatory chain.  There are some goats,
probably escaped domesticated animals or their offshoot, some horned
sheep, and a lot of smaller animals, all off the mammal evolutionary
tree.  The goats and horned sheep run at the first sign of anyone
nearing.  There are traces of what might be deer, but no one's seen
any."

"Goat and mutton are the animal-protein sources, then?"

"And the deer.  Horse meat, possibly, and there have to be cattle,
somewhere."

"Why?"

"Where did the leather come from for those saddles and reins?  Or those
vests?"

Nylan felt stupid.  "Of course."

Ryba glanced toward the marines pounding rocks, and toward Saryn, who
wore a floppy hat she had scrounged from the plundered goods.  Ryba
blotted her forehead, then steadied the horse, which sidled away from
Huldran.  "Sandstone?  Why are they crushing that?"

"Volcanic ash.  It's almost too hard, but if we crush it and mix it
with some other stuff, and some of the clay at the base of the ridge,
it sets pretty well, maybe too well, sort of like a stone epoxy.  We
won't be able to mix much at once, and that's going to be a problem."

"It hardens too quickly?"

Nylan nodded.  "All or nothing.  It either sets quickly, or it's
slop."

"When will you start actually building?"

"Not until I get the footings set.  Another couple of days probably.
The first line of stones-that will really be like a sill-has to be
perfect.  We'll do a double wall up to the third-floor level, fill it
with stone chips and clay for insulation-"

"Whatever you think."  Ryba nodded and turned the horse down toward the
section of the meadow that resembled a field of sorts.

As she left, Nylan pondered.  Did he really need to cut all the stones?
How big, or small, should they be?  What pattern would optimize the
energy usage and prolong the laser's useful life?

He took a deep breath, then laughed.  He was taking too many deep
breaths.

"No!  I'm no friggin' field hand!  You take your turn in the fields,
too!  Your ship's scrap, and you're no better than the rest of us
now."

Nylan looked downhill and to the eastern part of the field from where
the voice carried up across the meadow.

One of the stocky marines, one of the few not only bigger but broader
in the shoulders than Ryba-Nylan thought her name was Mran, but he'd
never been good with names and hadn't been concentrating that much-held
the crude hoe like a staff, daring the captain to force her to return
to work.

Nylan missed Ryba's response, but she vaulted out of the saddle and
handed the reins to Siret, one of the three marines with silver hair
like Nylan, and one of the more quiet marines, though Nylan thought the
deep green eyes saw more than most realized.

"Big trouble, scr," observed Huldran.  "Mran's tough, and she's a
hothead."

The four other marines in the field drew back, slightly, but watched as
Ryba carefully slipped off the crossbelts that held her blades and the
belt and holstered slug-thrower, then laid them across the roan's
saddle.

Mran smirked-Nylan could sense the expression as he and Huldran hurried
downhill toward the field.

Then Ryba said something.

"You and who the frig else?"  demanded Mran.

"Just me."

Except for his and Huldran's steps, and the faint rustling of the wind
through the evergreens beyond the meadow, a hush held the meadow.  Even
the few remaining star flowers seemed held in stasis.  Nylan wanted to
shake his head, knowing what would happen.  Mran didn't understand what
Ryba really was.

"You afraid or something, Captain?  "

"No ... I'm giving you one last chance to get back to work.  If you
don't, some part of your body won't ever work right again."  The words
were like ice.  "I didn't think even you were stupid enough to take on
someone raised as a nomad and wired as a ship's captain."

"You don't scare me, Captain."

"That's your problem, Mran, not mine.  Get back to work."

"Make me."

"All right.  You were warned."  With the last word, Ryba blurred, as
her hardwired reflexes kicked in.

Mran tried to slash with the hoe, but dropped it as Ryba's foot snapped
her wrist.  The marine used her good hand and reached for the pistol,
but the captain followed through with stiffened hands and an elbow.  A
second crack followed the first, and Mran looked stupidly at the second
damaged wrist-but only for a moment before she crumpled into a heap.

Ryba slowed to norm speed and smiled.  "Anyone else think I shouldn't
be in charge of things?"

"Noser came the ragged chorus.

Her face hardened.  "Surviving in this place isn't going to be easy,
and I don't want to have to keep doing this sort of thing."  She
glanced toward Nylan.  "I might add that the engineer, the second, and
the comm officer could have done the same thing, except that they don't
have the advanced martial arts training, and they would have had to
kill Mran.  Disabling is harder."  She smiled again and looked down at
Mran.

The marine's eyes unglazed, and hatred blazed from them.

"Next time, I'll break your neck first.  The only reason you're alive
is the same reason Gerlich is alive.  There are too few of us for
genetic purposes, but you cause one single bit of trouble, and I'll
drop you over that cliff without another thought.  Do you
understand?"

"Frig you!"

Ryba took a deep breath.  Then her foot lashed out.  Crack!

Mran's head snapped back, and the lifeless body slumped onto the
field.

Ryba looked at the marines.  "I never want to do this again-ever.  But
I will if I have to.  We won't survive if everyone thinks she can
second-guess me.  I'll listen to ideas, and I have, and I've taken
them.  But there's no room for this sort of thing."

As Ryba belted on the crossbelts, Huldran turned to Nylan.  "Hard
woman."

He nodded.  "I'm afraid she's right.  According to our local source,
old Narliat, we're regarded as the evil-doers from the skies, and force
of arms and surviving up here in the cold are all that are likely to
save us.  More democratic systems don't work well with large egos, and
marines and ship's officers all have large egos."  Nylan snorted.

"Frigging lousy situation."  Huldran's green eyes glared momentarily.

"Let's try to make it better."  Nylan shrugged, and turned to walk back
toward the incomplete tower.  He didn't know what else Ryba could have
done, not without creating even more problems in the days ahead, but he
didn't want to talk to her at the moment.  Even if some people, like
Gerlich and Mran, or Lord Nessil, the dead local leader, seemed to
respect only force, Nylan might have to accept it, but he didn't have
to like it.

He looked back to where Ryba mounted.  He suspected Ryba was shaking,
inside-high speed took a lot out of a body-but the captain seemed as
solid as the stone Nylan labored over as she turned the roan toward the
next field.

XIII

"WHAT WILL YOU do with the cowardly wizard, dear?"  asks the heavyset
and gray-haired woman who sits on the padded bench in the alcove.

The black-bearded young man pulls down his purple vest and walks toward
the empty carved chair with the purple cushion, then turns back to face
her.  "Much as I distrust Hissl, Mother dear, I wouldn't call him
cowardly.  According to the handful of troopers who returned, he was
attacked, and he used his fire bolts After Father and nearly two score
troopers were killed, he retreated.  If he hadn't brought them back, we
still wouldn't know what happened for sure.  Then I would have had to
rely on Terek's screeing, and I don't like that, either.  He's even
more devious than Hissl."

"All wizards are devious.  That was what your father said, Sillek," the
lady Ellindyja responds.

"He was right, but they have their uses."

"What will you do with Hissl?"

"Nothing."

"Nothing?  After he led your father to his death?  Nothing?"
Ellindyja's voice rises slightly, its edge even more pronounced.

"What good will killing him do?  We've just lost three squads of
troopers, and it looks like we now have an enemy behind us, right on
top of the Roof of the World, possibly able to close off the trade road
to Gallos.  Lord Ildyrom and his bitch consort are building a border
fort less than a half day's march from Clynya, and the Suthyan traders
are talking about imposing more trade duties.  Sooner or later, we'll
have to fight to take Rulyarth from them or always be at their mercy."
Sillek pauses.  "With all that, you want me to kill a wizard and get
their white guild upset at me?  Create another enemy when we already
have too many?"

"You are the Lord holder of Lornth now, Sillek.  You must do what you
think best... just as your father did."

"What good would executing Hissl accomplish?"

His mother shrugs her too expansive shoulders.  "The way you explain
it, none.  I only know that difficulties always occur when white
wizards are involved."

"I will keep that in mind."  Sillek turns and walks to the iron-banded
oak door, which he opens.  "Take the wizards and the others to the
small hall."

"Yes, scr."

Sillek holds the door to his mother's chamber and waits as she rises.
They walk down the narrow hall to the small receiving chamber where he
steps up and stands before the carved chair that rests on a block of
solid stone roughly two spans thick.  The lady Ellindyja seats herself
on a padded stool behind his chair and to Sillek's right.

Seven men file into the room.  The five troopers glance nervously from
one to the other and then toward the two wizards in white.  None look
at Lord Sillek, nor at his mother, the lady Ellindyja.  Hissl's eyes
meet Sillek's, while Terek bows slightly to the lady before turning his
eyes to Sillek.

"Who has been in the forces of Lornth the longest?"  Sillek's eyes
traverse the troopers.

"Guessin' I have, scr.  I'm Jegel."  Jegel has salt and pepper hair and
a short scraggly beard of similar colors.  His scabbard is empty, as
are the scabbards of all five troopers.  The left sleeve of his shirt
has been cut away and his upper arm is bound in clean rags.

"Of the three score who rode out with Lord Nessil, you are all who
survived?"

"Beggin' your pardon, scr, but we aren't.  Maybe a dozen rode down the
trade road to Gallos.  Welbet led 'em.  He said that you'd never let
anyone live who came back with your father left dead."

"That's the way it should be ..."

Sillek ignores the whispered comment from his mother, but the troopers
shift their weight.

"Why did you come back?"  he finally asks.

"My consort just had our son, and I was hopin'..."  Jegel shrugs.

"Did you ride away from my father in battle?"

"Noser  Jegel's brown eyes meet those of Sillek.  "I charged with him."
His eyes drop to his injured arm.  "Got burned with one of those
thunder-throwers, but I followed him until there weren't no one to
follow.  Then I turned Dusty back."

"Dusty?"

"My mount.  I ran into the wizard at the bottom of the big ridge-him
and most of the rest.  Most went with Welbet.  The rest of us came back
with the wizard."

"What did you think of the strangers?"

Jegel shivers.  "Didn't like their thunder-throwers.  One woman-she was
the one with the blades-she threw a blade, and it went right through
Lord Nessil's armor, like a hot knife through soft cheese.  Then she
took his horse, and slaughtered three, four of the troopers with both
the blade and the thunder-thrower, almost as quick as she looked at
'em."

"Were they all women?"

"Mostly, scr.  Except the one I got.  He had a thunder-thrower, but it
did him no good against my blade."

Sillek's eyes turn to the second trooper.

"I be Kurpat, Lord Sillek.  I couldn't be adding much."

"Did you leave my father?"

"Noser

Sillek continues the questioning without finding out much more until he
comes to Hissl.

"And, Scr Wizard, what can you add?"

"About the fighting, Lord Sillek, I can add little, except the
thunder-throwers throw tiny fire bolts much like a wizard's fire, but
not so powerful."

"If they were not so powerful, why are so many troopers dead?"

Hissl bows his head.  "Because all of the strangers had the
thunder-throwers, and because the thunder-throwers are faster than a
wizard.  If your father had two score wizards as powerful as Master
Wizard Terek, there would be no strangers."

"Pray tell me where I would find two score wizards like that?"

"You would not, scr, not in all Candar."

"Then stop making such statements," snaps Sillek.  "Don't tell me that
two score wizards will stop the strangers when no one could muster so
many wizards.  Besides, you'd all be as like to fight among each other
as fight the strangers."

"Pray answer a widow's question, Scr Hissl," requests Ellindyja from
the stool on the dais.  "How was it that you counseled my consort to
attack the strangers?"

Hissl bows deeply.  "I am not a warrior, Lady.  So I could not counsel
the lord Nessil in such fashion.  I did counsel him that the strangers
might be more formidable than they appeared."

"But you did not urge him to desist?"

Hissl bows again.  "I am neither the chief mage of Lornth"-his head
inclines toward Terek-"nor the commander of his troops.  I have
expressed concerns from the beginning, but the chief wizard advised me
that, since I could not prove that the strangers presented a danger, we
should defer to the wishes of Lord Nessil, as do all good liege men

"You, Chief Wizard," Ellindyja continues, "did you counsel Lord Nessil
to attack the strangers?"

"No, my lady.  I did inform him of their presence, and I told him that
they were appeared likely to stay."

"And that some were exotic women, I am sure."

Hissl's lips twitch.

Sweat beads on Terek's forehead before he answers.  "I did inform him
that several, men and women, had strange silver or red hair.  I also
told him that they had arrived from the heavens in iron tents and that
he should proceed with care."

"You, Scr Hissl, did you bid him proceed with caution?"

"Yes."

"Then why did he attack them?"

"My lady," responds the balding wizard, "we rode up in peace, but the
leader of the strangers refused to acknowledge Lord Nessil, even when
he drew his mighty blade."

"I see.  I thank you, Scr Wizard."  Ellindyja's voice is chill.

Hissl offers a head bow to her.

"Go... all of you."  Sillek's face remains blank as the five troopers
and the wizards walk quietly toward the door.

XIV

NYLAN ADJUSTED THE single pair of battered goggles and then lifted the
power head of the laser in his gauntleted hands.  The wind blew through
his hair, and the puffy clouds scudded quickly across the sky, casting
quick-moving shadows across the narrow canyon where the engineer stood.
The chilly summer wind carried not only the scent of evergreens, but of
flowers, although Nylan could not identify the fragrance.  The star
flowers had all wilted or dried up, but lower yellow sun flowerlike
blooms appeared in places, and long stalks that bore single blood-red
blooms jutted from crevices in the rocks at the western edge of the
meadow-and from between the rocks in the cairns.

Fifty steps down the dry gorge stood a horse harnessed to a makeshift
sledge.  Two marines-Berlis and Weindre- waited by the horse for the
cut stones that Nylan hoped he could deliver.  He also hoped the laser
lasted long enough for him to cut a lot of stones.

He touched the power stud, and the laser flared.  Nylan could almost
feel the power, like a red-tinged white cloud, that swirled from the
firm cells into the laser.  He released the stud.

"What's the matter, scr?"  asked Huldran.

"Nothing major," he lied, thinking that it was certainly major when the
ship's engineer imagined he could see actual energy patterns.  His head
throbbed slightly with his words, and he massaged his temples.  The
effect was almost like coming out of reflex step-up.

The wind whistled through the branches of the stunted pines farther
back and higher in the narrow gorge.  He moistened his lips.

"Are you all right, scr?"  The stocky blond Huldran bent forward.

"I will be."  / will be if I can get my thoughts together, he added to
himself.  As he looked around the gorge, he wondered whether, if he cut
the stones correctly, he could also hollow out spaces so that the area
in front of his quarrying could eventually be walled up or bricked up
for stables or storage or quarters.

Then he shook his head.  He was getting too far ahead of himself.  The
power swirl-why was it familiar?

"Something .. . but nothing bothers him .. . got nerves like ice ..."

He tried to push away the whispers from Weindre and concentrate on the
power flow.  Flow-that was it!  It was like a neuro net flow.  He
touched the stud again, briefly, and concentrated, ignoring the sweaty
feeling of his hands and fingers within the gauntlets.

The laser flared just for a micro instant but that was enough.

Nylan squared his shoulders and studied the rock, then aimed the head
along the chalked line.  The white-red line of invisible fire touched
the line.  Nothing happened, except that the rock felt warmer, hotter,
redder.

"Frig," Nylan muttered under his breath, as he cut off the power again.
He'd been certain that the laser would cut through the rock.  Lasers
cut everything, from cloth to metal.  Why wouldn't they cut rock?

Because, his engineering training pointed out, they burned through
other substances, and the rock could absorb more heat than cloth or
sheet metal, and it didn't accept the heat evenly, either.

"Problems, scr?"  Huldran blotted the sweat oozing across her
forehead.

"Some basic engineering I need to work out."

He needed to work out more than basic engineering.

After taking another deep breath, he triggered the laser once more and
reached out with his thoughts, as though he were still on the neuro net
ignoring the impossibility of the setting, and smoothed the power flow.
This time, the rock began to smoke along the focal line of the laser,
and a slight line slowly etched itself along the chalk stripe.

Nylan de powered the laser, and checked the power meter-half a percent
gone for nothing, nothing but a scratch on black rock.

"Scr?"  Huldran stepped forward to look at the black stone.

"We're getting there," he lied, pushing the goggles back and wiping his
damp forehead.  "It's slow.  Everything's slow."

"If you say so, scr."

Could he narrow the focus, somehow use the netlike effect to redirect
the heat into a narrower line?  If he couldn't, the laser wasn't going
to be much good for stone-cutting.

Replacing the goggles, he checked to see that the head was set in the
narrowest focus, then triggered the power.  As the fields built, he
juggled the smoothing of the power flow and his efforts to channel
power into the thinnest line of energy possible.  For an instant, all
he got was more stone-etching, then, abruptly, the light knife sliced
through the black rock.

Nylan's eyes flicked to the power meter-the flow was half what it
should be.  He stopped his-were they imaginary?-efforts to smooth the
flow and felt the red-white swirl and watched the meter needle rise and
the slicing stop.  Hurriedly, he went back to his not-so-imaginary
efforts to reduce the laser power flow fluxes, letting himself drop
into the strange pseudo net feeling that eased the energy flows to the
laser and reinforced the energy concentrations.  Even though he had no
scientific explanation for the phenomenon, his efforts reduced the
energy draw of the cutter by nearly fifty percent, while cutting stone
in a way he wasn't certain was possible, and he wasn't about to turn
his back on anything that effective, whether he could explain it or
not.

As the tip of the laser reached the end of the chalked line, Nylan
eased it back along the second line, then along the third, before
releasing the stud.  He wiped his forehead with the back of his
forearm, then knelt, adjusted the power head and positioned the laser
for the undercut.

Still concentrating, he powered the laser, smoothed the flow, and drew
it along the line.  Then he released the stud, and, using the gauntlets
he had pressed into service to protect his hands from rock droplets, he
tried to wiggle the stone.  The whole line wobbled.

He nodded and began the cross-cuts.

When he finished those, the line of clouds had passed, and the sun was
again beating down on him.  The first individual building stone came
away from the black rock easily, and Nylan smiled and lifted the
goggles.

"Take 'em away, Huldran."  The stocky blond marine motioned to Berlis
and Weindre.  "You two-come and help."

Nylan plopped down on a low stone and wiped his forehead, feeling even
more drained than when he had ridden the Winterlance's net, more
drained than from overuse of reflex boost.  His eyes flicked downhill.
Through the narrow opening in the gorge he could see most of the field
to the east of the tower site.  Thin sprigs of green sprouted from the
hand-furrowed rows.  To the north, where he could not see, there were
longer green leaves from the field where the potatoes and other root
crops had been planted in hillocks.

"These are heavy," grunted Weindre, staggering down to the sledge with
a single block.

"That's the idea," said Huldran.  "We can't waste power on small
blocks.  Besides, bigger blocks are harder to smash with primitive
technology.  So stop complaining and get on with carrying."

When the three had cleared out the half-dozen blocks, Nylan stood and
chalked more lines, longer ones, and went back to work.

By the time he had finished the next line, his knees were wobbling.  He
sank onto the stone after he de powered the laser and pushed the
goggles onto his forehead.

"Darkness-the engineer's white like a demon tower."  Huldran looked at
Nylan.  "Don't move."  She turned to Berlis and Weindre.  "You can
still load those blocks on the sledge.  Berlis, you can lead the horse
down the gorge and out to the tower site."

The stocky blond marine looked at Nylan.  "I'll be right back.  Just
sit there."

Nylan couldn't have taken a step if he'd wanted to, not without falling
on his face, not the way the gorge threatened to turn upside down
around him.

He sat blankly until Huldran returned and thrust a cup in front of his
face.  He drank, and the swirling within his head slowly subsided
enough for him to take a small mouthful of the concentrate-fortified
sawdust called energy bread.  He chewed slowly.

Ayrlyn walked up the gorge carrying a med kit stepping around Berlis
and the slowly descending horse and sledge.

"What happened to you?  You look like you stayed on boost too long."

Nylan finished the mouthful of bread.  "I think I overdid it."

"What do you mean?"

"A variation on the law of conservation of energy and matter, or
something like that."  Nylan wiped his forehead with the back of his
forearm.

Ayrlyn looked at Huldran, who looked at Weindre.  Weindre shrugged.

"This place allows me to operate on something like the neuro net and I
can smooth the power flows to the laser and focus the laser into a
tighter beam.  That lets me cut with about half the power.  It's not
free, though."

The flame-haired former comm officer nodded.  "Heavy labor?  Like
boost?"

Nylan nodded.

Huldran's blond eyebrows knitted in puzzlement.

"On the ship's net," Nylan tried to explain, "the fusactors supply the
power to sustain the net.  It's a small draw compared to the total
power expended by the system, but it's real.  This .. . place ... is
different.  I can replicate the effect of the net-but I have to supply
some form of power, energy- and it's just like working."

"That local in white ... ?"  began Ayrlyn, her eyes widening.

"Probably something like that, but I don't know."  Nylan finished off
the chunk of energy bread, and took another gulp of the nutrient
replacement.  "It's frustrating.  I find a way to save power, and it's
limited by my strength."

"It's a lot faster than using a sledge and chisel to quarry the rock,"
pointed out Ayrlyn.

"It's slow."

"Can anyone else do it?"

"I don't know."  Nylan shrugged.  "I'd guess it's like being an
engineer or a pilot or a comm officer.  If you have some basic talents,
you can learn it, but..."

"Can you use the laser again, and let me try to watch or follow?"
Ayrlyn looked around.  "You two try also."

Nylan stood and stretched.  "I'll cut a few."  He.  used the chalk and
roughed out the lines he needed, then picked up the power head
"Ready?"

"Go ahead."

He dropped the goggles in place, touched the stud, and began to smooth
the fluxes, trying to be as gentle as possible, and realizing that the
gentle efforts were nearly as effective and not quite so draining.
After the first cut, he stopped.  "Well?"

"I couldn't see or feel anything said Weindre.  "No," added Huldran.

"There's a sort of darkness around you," said Ayrlyn, "and that
darkness seems to focus the whiteness-it has a hint of an ugly red-of
the laser."

Nylan nodded.  "That feels right.  Do you want to try it?"

"No!"  Ayrlyn's mouth dropped open after her involuntary denial.  "I
... I don't quite know why I said that."

"Something in you feels rather strongly.  Do you have any idea why?"

"The white of the laser.  It feels wrong .. . really wrong ...
disordered ... ugly."  Ayrlyn shuddered.

"I couldn't see anything like that," said Huldran, "but I watched the
power meter, and you're using a little less than half what's normal,
except for the first few instances.  It seems to be cutting better than
I ever saw."

"What is this place, anyway?"  asked Weindre.  "Who knows?  A different
universe, maybe, where the laws of nature, physics, are different.  Not
a lot different, or we wouldn't be surviving, but different."  Nylan
picked up the laser again.  "And if we don't get enough stone for the
tower, we won't be surviving."  He disliked his own tone, perhaps
because it reminded him of Ryba's attitude.  What was happening to him?
He was seeing patterns and neuro nets that couldn't be and getting ever
more critical of Ryba.  And yet he worried about sounding like her.
"You'll have to take it slowly," insisted Ayrlyn.

"Unless you can find someone else who can do it," pointed out
Huldran.

"Why don't I see if I can rotate some of the marines up here, just to
see if anyone can do it-or even sense what you're doing?"  asked
Ayrlyn.

"Fine.  But there's only so much power here."

"I'll send them," said Ayrlyn firmly.  "Take your time."

"Yes, mother fowl."

"Cluck, cluck ..."

Nylan grinned and readjusted the goggles.  "Ready?"

"Yes, scr."

He lifted the power head again.

XV

"HOW DID PEOPLE come here?"  asked Ayrlyn, moving back from the heat of
the cook fire.

"The old ones?"  Narliat edged toward the heat and half turned to face
the redhead.  "The old ones came a long time ago."

In the growing late twilight of early summer, Nylan sat behind the two,
concentrating on Narliat's speech and trying to catch the meanings of
the slurred and modified Rationalist words.  "... like you strangers,
they came from the skies ... not in tents of iron, but upon the backs
of iron birds ..."  Narliat gestured with the healing hand, and the
missing thumb and forefinger did not seem to hamper him as much as the
still-splinted broken leg.

"Were there people already here?"  asked the comm officer.

"There were the druids, the people of the Great Forest, and many others
... especially those in other lands beyond Candar-"

"Candar?"  asked Nylan.

"Ah, the wizard, he does speak."  Narliat turned to the engineer.
"Candar-that is all the lands that are surrounded by the oceans here,
the lands of Gallos and Lornth, and Jerans, and Naclos, and Lydiar in
the east."

"Candar is the name of the continent," said Ayrlyn.

"It is Candar, not continent," explained Narliat.  "Candar is where the
old ones landed ... the old tales claim that the mighty iron birds took
all of the plains of Analeria to land.  That is how big they were, and
their wings shadowed whole towns .. ."

"Analeria is the high plains region east of these mountains," added
Ayrlyn, brushing flame hair from her eyes, still acting as a comm
officer.  "..  . and the old ones were glad, for they had fled from the
awesome ice lances of the angels of Heaven.  The wizards, the white
ones, they say that you are fallen from the angels of Heaven.  Is that
true?"

"We've certainly fallen," quipped Nylan, slowly, in what he recalled
from his service indoctrination in Rationalist dialect, "but-"

"So they were right!"  Narliat's eyes widened.  "You are angels.  Do
you freeze everyone to death who opposes you?  Are you going to freeze
me?"

"No," said Ayrlyn and Nylan, nearly simultaneously.

"What does our friend have to say?"  Ryba, both blades on her hips,
looked down at the three.

"He was telling us about the old legends.  Sit down.  If you can follow
tangled Old Rat, you might find it interesting," suggested Ayrlyn.

Ryba eased herself onto a cut-off tree-trunk section that served as a
seat.  The remainder of the tree had been laboriously cut into a
handful of planks with the single collapsible grip saw.

"She is the cherubim-or a seraphim.  Truly, she was terrible,"
stammered the local arms man

"Terrible?"  murmured Ryba.  "How delightful."

Nylan frowned, but only cleared his throat.

"You were telling us about the old ones," prompted Ayrlyn, "how they
came to the high plains of Analeria on the backs of the great birds ..
."

"Those birds, they had feathers whiter than snow, and the tips of those
feathers were like mirrors, and they even turned back the sun .. . and
the old ones brought with them the knowledge of metals, and of the cold
iron that turns back the fires of chaos..."  Narliat paused and looked
up at Ryba.

Nylan followed the local's glance, trying to picture the captain as
Narliat saw her-an angular face, with a regular but sharp nose and high
cheekbones, pale clear skin that tanned only slightly, dominating and
penetrating green eyes, broad-shouldered and muscular without being
overly stocky, and short hair that had become so dark that it seemed to
swallow light.  In fact, she looked like an avenging angel.  "The fires
of chaos?"  asked Ayrlyn.  "What can you tell us about the fires of
chaos?"

"No wizard am I," declared Narliat, and his eyes went to Nylan, then
back to Ayrlyn.  "Those who are wizards control the fires of chaos."

"Like the man in white?"  suggested Nylan.

"Hissl?  Yes, he is ... he was one of Lord Nessil's three wizards."

"He still is," added Nylan.  "He escaped.  Hissl did, I mean.  What
about this Nessil?"

"Lord Nessil-your seraphim killed him with the iron lightning she flung
through him."  Narliat coughed.  "He was the lord of Lornth, and Lornth
claims the Roof of the World."

"Not anymore," said Ryba.

Nylan's eyes looked down toward the cook fire where various small
rodents had been spitted and were being turned.  The horse meat from
the animals killed in the attack had been tastier than the rodents, but
not much.  A lot of the meat had been wasted, because they'd had no way
to preserve it.  Ryba hadn't been pleased with that, Nylan reflected,
not at all.  Then, some days, she didn't seem pleased about much.  That
hadn't changed much, though, not from when she'd had a sound ship under
her.

On the far side of the fire, Gerlich leaned close to a lithe
marine-Selitra.  The former weapons officer, who had taken to wearing
Lord Nessil's hand and a half blade, said something, and they both
laughed, but Selitra glanced sideways at Ryba, who remained
concentrating on Narliat.

Charred and fire-roasted rodents, mixed with the vanishing ship
concentrates, were scarcely Nylan's idea of a good meal.  Ayrlyn had
found some roots that resembled-or were-wild onions, but without cook
pots, their culinary value was minimal.  "... the lords of Lornth came
out of the Westhorns here, many, many years ago, almost as long ago as
when the old ones came in from the skies on their mighty birds with
feathers like mirrors .. ."

"Are there any traders that cross these mountains?"  interrupted
Nylan.

"Traders?"  asked Fierral from behind Nylan.

"We've got some local coin now, and some jewelry, and a bunch of
blades.  We could buy a few things-like sledges or wedges, cook pots.
Most traders don't care about politics."  Nylan cleared his throat.
"Maybe other things."

"But... to trade with the angels .. . who would dare?"  declaimed
Narliat.

Nylan suspected that, had it not been for the stories, there might
already have been traders, or some travelers, on the high road that
crossed the mountains and ran below the ridge that led up to the high
meadow.

"Anyone who wants coins," suggested Ryba.

Narliat looked blank, and Ayrlyn translated.

The arms man grinned.  "Skiodra."

"Is he a trader?"

"That is what he calls himself, but he is a thief, and his guards carry
blades that are often in need of sharpening."

"Sharpening?"  Fierral's red hair glinted as she shook her head.

"They get nicked when they fight," said Ryba dryly.  "How do we find
this Skiodra?"

"He will find you if you fly the trade banner."

"We don't have a pole or a trade banner," pointed out Ayrlyn.

"Poles we can make," said Nylan, turning toward Narliat.  "What does a
trade banner look like?"

"A trade banner."  The arms man shrugged.  "It is a white banner with a
dark square in the middle."

"We can put something like that together,"

"With what?"  asked Ayrlyn.  "I didn't notice such things as needles or
thread in the survival paks."

"There are some needles in the medical kits-for sutures," said Ryba.

Nylan frowned, wondering why Ryba was so familiar with the medical
kits.  That hadn't been her training at all.  Then again, as captain,
she'd looked at everything.  He'd been mostly involved in solving the
shelter problem.

"We'll also have to make a show offeree when this Skiodra shows up."

Ayrlyn translated for Narliat.

"Skiodra is very polite if you are strong."  The arms man shrugged. 
"If not, you become slaves, and he sells you to the traders from Hamor.
That happened to a cousin of Memsenn's.  She lived on a farm outside of
Dellash.  One day Skiodra passed by, and when her consort came home,
she was gone.  He chased Skiodra's men, and they killed him."

"Not a pleasant fellow."  Fierral's fingers went to her sidearm.

"I don't think any of Candar is what we'd term peaceful," said Ryba.
"The only way to ensure peace is through strength."

"That was what Lord Nessil said.  But..  . now that he is dead, it may
be that the Jeranyi will march, or the Suthyans."  Narliat edged closer
to the fire, then looked at the angels around him.  "Truly, you are
people of the winter.  Is Heaven cold?"

"Colder than Candar, even than here," replied Ayrlyn, "except maybe in
winter."

Across the fire, Gerlich and Selitra stood and eased away into the
shadows, hand in hand.

Ryba and Nylan exchanged looks.

Ayrlyn snorted.  "Poor woman.  Thinks she's special."

"I've warned them," added Fierral, "but it does get lonely."

"I would make you less lonely ..."  volunteered Narliat.

Fierral shot a look at Narliat, who immediately glanced at the darkness
beyond the fire.

"He's learning Temple fast," laughed Ayrlyn.  "Even if it's not that
different from Anglorat."

"Too fast," said Fierral.

"Supper's ready," called Saryn.  "Such as it is."

At the call of supper, even Gerlich and Selitra reappeared, no longer
quite hand in hand.

Nylan followed the others, getting his helping of mush and chunk of
blackened rodent, as well as a few berries and a chunk of wild onion.
The roughly circular wooden platter was the result of a collaboration
between some of the marines and Narliat.

He sat farther from the fire, on a boulder overlooking the landers,
using his fingers and a crudely carved spoon he had made.  The slightly
charred rodent was tastier than the mush, but he ate both, and washed
them down with water from the plastic cup he had claimed and kept.

Beside him, Ryba ate, equally silent.

After he finished, Nylan stood.  "I'm going to rinse this off, and rack
it, and wash up.  Then I'm going to collapse."

"Wait for me."  Ryba finished her last mouthful of mush.  "I won't be
too long.  I have to check with Fierral to make sure the sentries are
set."

"All right."  Nylan walked over to the side branch of the stream,
diverted for the purpose of washing, and rinsed off the wooden platter,
then used the scattering of fine sand to wash his hands.  After that he
rinsed them and splashed off his face.

"Next," said a voice.

He looked up to see Ayrlyn standing there.  "Sorry."  He stood and
moved away from the stream.

She smiled.  "You don't have to be."

"You're doing well with Narliat."

"He figures he'd better do well.  He doesn't have anywhere else to go.
Besides, he likes the ratio of men to women."

"Has anyone ... ?"

"Right now, Ryba would have their heads, but that won't last.  She
probably knows that, too.  She thinks of everything."  Ayrlyn paused.
"Just be careful, Nylan.  She uses everyone."

He nodded, hoping the darkness would cover his lack of enthusiasm.

Ayrlyn bent to rinse her platter, and Nylan walked to the lander,
passing a pair of marines on the way.  One was Huldran, the stocky
blond who helped with stone-cutting; the other a solid brunette whose
name he had not learned.

"Evening, scr."

"Good evening, Huldran.  Are you on sentry duty?"

"Not tonight.  Not tonight."

Once in the forward area of the lander, Nylan pulled off his boots.
Then he sat in the darkness for a time barefooted, before he pulled off
the ship suit that, despite careful washing, was getting both frayed
and stained.

When Ryba still did not appear, he finally stretched out, folding the
cover back to just above his waist.  His shoulders and his forearms
ached, and his feet hurt.  He also worried about Ryba-their
relationship.  A lot of the time she was distant, commanding, just like
he imagined an antique nomad-liege of Sybra.  Of course, that was her
heritage, and Candar seemed to reinforce those traits.

In the distance, he could hear laughter, but could not recognize the
voices.

As his eyes began to close, he heard footsteps on the hard floor of the
lander, and he propped himself up on his elbow.  "I told you I wouldn't
be long."  Slowly, Ryba slipped out of her boots, and then out of the
ship suit and eased under the thin cover.  Her lips were cool, but
found his, and her skin was like satin against him.

Later-much, much later-they eased apart, although Ryba's hand held his
for a moment.

"Don't go away."  Ryba rolled away from Nylan.  "I'll be back in a
moment."

"Where would I go?"

She ruffled his hair slightly and pulled on her ship suit over her
naked body, thrusting her bare feet into her ship boots- boots that
were beginning to wear, as were everyone's.

Nylan wondered absently if traders had boots, or if footwear would
become yet another problem.  He leaned back on the couch, letting the
cool air from the door waft over him.  Sometimes ... on the one hand,
Ryba was a good leader, captain, whatever, and she was receptive,
sometimes aggressive in sex ... and yet... he sometimes felt more like
an object than a person.

His eyes closed.  It had been a long day, as were they all, and he. 
was barely aware when Ryba returned, slipping off her suit and lying
beside him under the thin blanket that was almost too hot.

XVI

THE SUN HAD barely cleared the trees on the eastern side of the sheer
drop-off at the base of the meadow when Nylan laid the endurasteel
brace and the crowbar like local blade beside one of Ryba's Sybran
blades.  Beneath the blades was a crude quench trough, half-filled with
water and the hydraulic oil for which there was really no other use-not
for centuries, probably.

Then the engineer walked around the working space outside the base of
the unfinished tower construction.  Should he consider a dry moat as
well?  He shook his head.  Half the year or more a moat would be a
bug-filled mess, and the other half the high snows would render it
useless.

"Stop spacing out.  Get on with it," he muttered, turning to the firm
cells.  The power bank was down to twenty percent, and the system
wouldn't work at levels below twelve.  His eyes went to the windmill,
which turned in the lighter morning breeze.  The cell being charged was
over eighty percent.  Another day might find it at ninety percent if
the wind picked up, if... Nylan laughed ruefully.  Far less than a day
of continuous heavy laser usage would discharge one bank of cells, and
it would take nearly half a local season to recharge the individual
cells in just one of the four banks they had brought down from the
Winterlance.  The more he tightened the beam and the shorter the energy
pulse, though, the less the effective power drain, and that meant some
things were less power-intensive.  Darkness knew he'd better find less
power-intensive ways to use the laser.

With a little more than half the stone for the tower cut, he'd
exhausted two banks and most of the third.  The emergency charger had
recharged three cells, but each bank held ten.  Still ... he had gotten
more proficient with managing the laser's power flows, and each row of
stones took a shade less power.  Also, the cut edges and leftover
chunks could be used, perhaps for the less exposed inside walls.

Terwhit... terwhit.  The call of one of the birds-a green and brown
scavenger-drifted across the high meadow from beyond the field, along
with the smoke from the small cook fire.

The engineer studied the curves of the Sybran blade again, with his
eyes, senses, and fingers, frowning as his senses touched a slight
imperfection in the hilt.  Then he grinned.  Who was he deceiving?  He
was no blade smith just a dumb engineer trying to figure out how to
counterfeit a workable sword while no one was around to second-guess
him if his idea didn't work-using questionable techniques in an even
more questionable environment.

Terwhit.  With a rustle of feathers, the small greenish-brown bird
flitted from a twisted pine in the higher rocks behind the partly built
tower toward the firs in the lower southwest corner of the high
meadow.

Nylan ran his fingers over the Sybran blade again, then picked up the
endurasteel brace he had unbolted from one of the landers.  Again, he
forced himself to feel the metal.  It also had several imperfections
hidden from sight-Heaven-based quality control or not.

Finally, he powered up the firm cell bank, pulled on the goggles and
the gauntlets, and picked up the heavy brace.  After readjusting the
laser, he pulsed the beam, slowly cutting along what felt like the
grain of the metal.  He pursed his lips, considering the apparent
idiocy of what he did- guiding a laser with a sense of feel he could
not even define to create an antique blade out of a brace from a
high-tech spaceship lander.

The heavy tinted goggles protected his eyes, although he realized that
he wasn't using his vision, but that sense of feel, a sense that
somehow seemed to break everything into degrees of something.  What
that something was and how he would categorize it were more questions
he couldn't answer.

He didn't try, instead releasing the power stud and letting his senses
check the cut and the metal-which felt rough, almost disordered.

With another deep breath, he flicked on the laser and spread the beam
for a wider heat flow, using his senses and the power from the laser to
shape and order the edge of the blade, trying to replicate something
like the feel of the Sybran blade.

After the second pass, he unpowered the laser and pushed back the
goggles, wiping his forehead.  Then he bent and picked up the plastic
cup, swallowed the last of the water in it, and set the empty cup back
on the ground beside the cell bank where the power cable wouldn't hit
it.

One of the marines-Istril-sat atop one of the rocky ledges and watched
as he readjusted the goggles and studied the model blade again.

Once more, he picked up the metal that had been a brace and triggered
the laser, shifting his grip, and trying to ensure that his gauntlets
were well away from the ordered line of powered chaos emanating from
the power head

After his first rough effort at shaping the blade, he turned to the
curved hand guards and tang.  As he shaped the metal, he tried to
smooth it, just as he once had smoothed power fluxes through the
Winterlance's neuro net  When the rough shape was completed, he
unpowered the laser and checked the cells-a drop of less than one
percent so far.  Not too bad for a first try.

He pushed back the goggles and blotted the area around his eyes, then
studied the blank blade.  Even with one rough cut, the shape looked
better than the local metal crowbars.

He could feel Istril's eyes on him, but he did not look toward the
rocks.  The smoke from the cook fire was more pronounced, as was the
hum of people talking.  He did not look toward the landers, either.
Instead, he inhaled, then exhaled deeply and replaced the goggles and
lifted the laser.

Trying not to feel like an idiot, he triggered the laser and continued
to use his mental netlike sense and the power of the laser to work the
metal, almost to smooth the grains into an ordered pattern while trying
to create the equivalent of a razor edge on both sides of the blade.

By the time he finished with the laser, not that long it seemed, sweat
poured down his forehead, out and around the goggles, and his knees
trembled.  Done with the laser, he set the power head down and waited
as the metal cooled toward the color of straw.

The oil and water mixture in the crude trough felt right, but whether
it was ... time would tell.  Using the modified space gauntlets, he
swirled the mixture in the trough and eased the blade into it, letting
his new sense guide the tempering-or re tempering  Then he laid the
blade on the sheltered sunny side of the black boulder where it would
complete cooling more slowly.

He set aside the goggles and checked the power meters- a drop of one
percent, maybe a little more.  He nodded.  He could make something that
looked like a blade, but was it any good?

As he saw Ryba's broad-shouldered figure striding grimly toward him, he
offered himself a smile.  He'd get one opinion all right-and soon.

"Why did you take my blade?  It had to be you.  No one else would-"

Nylan held up a hand to stop her.  "I'm guilty.  I didn't hurt it.  I
needed a model, and I didn't want to feel like a fool."

"Model for what?"

His eyes turned toward the flat rock where his effort rested.

"Darkness!  How did you do that?"

"Art, laser, dumb luck-all of the above.  Don't touch it; it's still
hot enough to burn your skin, and I don't know if it will work.  It
looks right; it feels right, but I'm no swordsman.  It could shatter
the minute it's used.  I don't think so, but it could."

Ryba stepped up to the blade and looked down at the slight curves of
the deep black metal.  "It's beautiful."

"Technology helps," Nylan admitted.  "But I don't know if it will even
work.  It could break apart at the first blow."

"I don't think it will."  Ryba looked at him.  "It looks like it will
last forever."

"It doesn't matter what it looks like.  It's how it feels and lasts."

She studied the blade again.  "I need to teach you more about using
blades.  It would be a shame for someone who can create this not to be
able to use it well."

"You don't even know if it's right."

Ryba's dark green eyes met his.  "About some things, I can tell."

Nylan shrugged.

"How many of these can you make?"

"Over time, enough for everyone, and probably a few more.  I'd guess a
little less than a two-percent charge on the bank for each.  But I
don't want to do that many until we've got enough stone for the
tower."

"We need both."

"It will take more than half a season with the portable generator to
fully charge a whole bank of cells.  We've gone through nearly three
banks, and that only leaves one that's completely full.  We'll probably
have the first recharged before we finish the tower.  I haven't done
the math, but I could probably forge ten blades on a depleted bank if I
recharged two cells.  But I need a base load of twenty percent for
stone-cutting."

"You've got piles of cut stone here," pointed out Ryba.

"It's not enough."  He shrugged.  "Right now, the mortar's the problem,
but I think I've got that set."

"That's a terrible pun."

"Didn't mean it that way."

The former captain looked at the smooth and sheer black stone wall that
rose nearly twice her height, then at the square door frame whose base
stood nearly her height above the visible base of the tower.  "You're
building a demon-damned monument."

"Why are you letting me?  Could it be that I'm right?"

Ryba laughed.  "The others look at this, and they all see that it can
be done, and that we're here to stay.  Nothing I say is as effective as
your killing yourself.  They all see how you drive yourself.  But is
everything that you've planned really necessary?"

Nylan pointed to Freyja-the ice-needle peak that towered above the
unfinished tower, above the other mountains.  "You can tell from the
ice on those peaks that the winter is as cold, if not colder, than
northern Sybra.  Also, a tower isn't enough.  We need stables, and next
year, we'll need more storehouses, and workrooms for all the crafts
we'll need to develop, and we'll have to defend them all.  I'll end up
cannibalizing the landers for metal and everything else, because that's
easier than trying to develop iron-working from scratch or than trading
for it.  Once we run through the plunder, what can we use to buy goods?
Or food?  I certainly haven't seen traders galloping to find us.  Also,
there's going to be a gap between when we lose all high technology and
when we can master lower technology."

Ryba looked at the blade.  "What gap?"

"It would take me days to forge a blade like that with coal or charcoal
and hammers.  Maybe longer, and that's if I knew what to do.  That's if
I had an anvil, if I could find iron ore, if..  ."  He snorted.  "How
long will the emergency generator and the charging system last?  Maybe
a local year... and it might quit in the next eight-day."

"Then you'd better do at least a few blades, and others, as you can fit
them in.  We're going to need them.  I hope not soon, but we will."

Nylan wiped his forehead.  "I'll try to balance things.  Has anyone
heard anything about this so-called bandit trader?  Can't we get
something from him?  Big cook pots, even cutlery?"

"I'm working on a list.  What do you think we really need?"

"Some heavy cloth, wool maybe, and something like scissors, to cut it,
thread and needles.  We're not equipped for winter.  There
were-what?-two cold-weather suits in the paks?  Any dried or stored
food we can buy.  What about something like chickens ... for eggs?  The
concentrates might last until mid-winter.  Salt.  Some of that stuff
Gerlich kills could be dried and salted.  Oh ... I need to figure out
how ... never mind ..."

"What?"

"I'll use the laser to glaze it.  That will make cleaning it easy."

"What?"  repeated Ryba.

"The water reservoir, cistern, whatever you want to call it.  I'd like
it to be on the second level in the center, but I don't know if I can
work that.  I still haven't quite figured out piping or a reservoir
near the head of the spring.  We'll run hidden piping, like a siphon,
so we can have some continuous water flow in winter or if we get
besieged ..."

"You are a pessimist."

"A realist."

"Probably," she admitted.  "What if the laser goes?"

"There are two spare power heads and a spare cable.  I can use the
weapons head, if I have to, but the power loss is enormous, and that
might not work at all.  If it goes now, we do it the hard way, and not
nearly so well, and people die.  If it lasts into winter, then I should
have the basics done"

"Dreamer."

Nylan grinned ruefully.

"Go get something to eat."  Ryba motioned to Istril, who had edged down
the rocks, and who hurried up in response to Ryba's preemptory gesture.
"Istril .. would you watch this equipment while the engineer eats?
Don't touch it, and don't let anyone else, either."  Ryba pointed to
the blade that Nylan had used as a guide.  "Use that if you have to."

"Yes, scr."  Istril's eyes flickered to the.  black blade on the stone.
"You made ... that... scr?"

"I tried," conceded Nylan.

"It's beautiful... sometime ... could you forge me one?"

"Istril should get one of the first ones."

Nylan sighed and nodded at the slight silver-haired marine.  "It's cool
now.  Pick it up and see if it's half as good as it looks."

"You mean it?"

Ryba and Nylan nodded.

Istril touched the hilt-designed to be wrapped in leather-and slowly
lifted the blade.  She stepped back and lowered it, then smiled.

"Is it tough enough?"  Nylan asked.  "Bend it or something."

Ryba lifted her blade.  "Just blade to blade."

Nylan watched as they fenced, the silvery metal of the Sybran blade
glittering against the black of his.

After a time, they both lowered their weapons, and Ryba wiped her
forehead.  A moment later, so did Istril.

"I think it might be better than mine," said Ryba, "at least in blade
work.  It might not be balanced right for throwing."

"It's beautiful," said Istril.

Ryba looked at Nylan.

He nodded at Istril.  "It's not perfect, but you may have it.  The hilt
needs to be wrapped."

"It's too good for me."

"Then you'll have to get better for it," said Ryba.  "In return for the
blade, you'll have to teach the engineer how to use one."

"Can I start now?"

"After I eat, and only for a little," said Nylan.  "We've still got a
tower to build."

XVII

"I WAS NOT exactly amused by your reference to the chief wizard the
other day before Lord Sillek," begins Terek.

"You are the chief wizard," points out Hissl calmly, "and I only spoke
the truth.  To have done otherwise .. ."  He shrugs.

"There is truth, and there is truth," says Terek slowly, shifting his
bulk as he ambles toward the table with the screeing glass upon it.

Hissl remains silent.

"Let us see if you can find anything which may impinge upon these .. .
fallen angels.  For if something does not, sooner or later we will be
called to help avenge Lord Nessil's death."

"The longer before we ride to the Roof of the World, the better."

"I would prefer never to ride there," replies Terek.

Hissl concentrates.  The white mists part, and a half-built tower
appears, a tower whose walls seem as smooth as glass and as dark as
winter water unruffled by wind.  A silver-haired man struggles to
position a long slab of stone to form the top step in a wide stone
staircase.

"Great wizardry .. ."  mumbles Hissl, the sweat beading on his forehead
from the effort to maintain the image.

"It would take a score of scores to take that tower even now with the
weapons they have."  Terek paces away from the table.  "Those stones
seem steeped in order."

"Could you not fire it?"  Hissl relaxes, and the image fades.

"Now-but what if they roof it with split slate?  It would be two or
three eight-days before Lord Sillek could assemble a force and ride
there.  Can you see Lord Sillek building siege engines upon the Roof of
the World?"

"He could," suggests Hissl.  "Anything is possible for a great lord."

"You are so dense.  What would Lord Ildyrom be doing once he discovered
Lord Sillek and his engineers and most of his arms men were upon the
Roof of the World?"

"So Lord Sillek leaves them alone?  Is that so bad?  It's only good for
summer pasture anyway, if.  that.  What does he lose?"

"Honor ... face.  We told Lord Nessil about the strangers.  If his son
and heir cannot defeat them, what do you think he will do to us?  And
it will be us, not just me, Hissl."  Hissl pulls at his chin.  "It
could be a cold winter."

"In irons below the castle, your hands and arms would be burned
apart-if you lasted that long."  Terek glances at the glass.  "See if
you can find anything else."

"What?"

"Anything."

Hissl concentrates once more, and a band of riders now appear in the
screeing glass, with one of the lead riders bearing a white banner with
a dark square in its center.

"Traders ..."  mused Terek.  "Almost armed like bandits."

"Skiodra, probably .. ."  muttered Hissl, the sweat beading more
heavily on his forehead with the effort of holding the second image.

"Can you open it a little more?"

Hissl concentrates, and more sweat pours off his forehead, even as the
mists widen to reveal dark pines and rocks, and a needle peak in the
background.

"It looks like the Westhorns, along the high road toward the Roof of
the World."  Terek smiles.  "Skiodra is just the type to steal what he
can and destroy the rest.  He only trades when he has to The chief
wizard rubs his hands together.

"What if he trades them weapons?"  Hissl releases the image and blots
his forehead.

Terek frowns and stops rubbing his hands.  "That's not the problem.
They have weapons.  They have more weapons than they have soldiers, if
that's what those women in dark gray are.  What if they trade weapons
for goods?  Even a poor sword is worth half a gold."

"You said Skiodra is not much better than a bandit:"

"Let us hope he is an effective bandit-a very effective bandit."

Hissl nods, but his eyes drop to the glass.

XVIII

NYLAN STUDIED THE staircase again, considering the wisdom of such a
massive central pedestal.  He'd had five purposes in mind-to provide a
central support for the square tower, to make flooring each level easy,
to provide an interior storage space, to allow for firm stone steps, to
provide for chimneys, and to provide an interior air tunnel for
ventilation.  All that was well and good, but its construction had
slowed that of the tower wall, still only slightly above the second
level.

He put his foot on the nearest brace, wiggled it gently.  Because Nylan
had no really accurate way of calculating loads, he was estimating and
feeling the bracing, setting the stripped logs that formed the bracing
for the floors only about three hand spans apart.

"Cessya, this isn't solid on the outside."

"Weblya is bringing up some wedges now.  Then we'll mortar it in
place."  Using the crude tripod crane, Cessya and another marine eased
another timber toward the stone-lined slots.

"Frig!  It's still too big.  Needs more trimming."

As the big roan bearing Ryba neared the tower, Nylan stepped away from
the long flat section of stone that would anchor the next section of
the staircase and started down the stone stairs.

Ryba had tied the roan's reins around one of the larger building stones
when Nylan met her.  She now carried one of the Sybran blades and the
second blade Nylan had forged in the other Sybran scabbard-as well as
the bolstered slug-thrower.

Nothing like a walking armory, he reflected.  "Where have you been?"

"I've been checking out the approaches from the west.  We're better
protected than I thought.  You can't get here except by coming up the
ridge.  I stopped to see how you were coming before I go check out the
road.  There still haven't been any signs of travelers-just scouts from
Lornth."

"How do you know?"

"They wear purple.  Subtleness isn't exactly ingrained in the local
culture."  Ryba started up the steps.  "Let's see how things are
going."

"Not bad, actually."

When they reached the spot where Nylan had been working, he glanced
down toward the fields and the meadows that surrounded them, now dotted
with the small sunflowers.  A silver-haired marine weeding in the field
suddenly dropped her hoe and dashed across the ditch, where she
vomited.

"Ryba?  Did you see that?"

"What?"

"Look down there.  She looks sick."  The engineer pointed.

"That's Siret.  She's sick, but it's not an illness.  I suspect her
contraceptives have worn off-if she's been taking them at all."

"I haven't seen Gerlich with her."  Nylan didn't think the thoughtful
silver-haired marine was the type to go for Gerlich.

"Who's been looking?"  Ryba shrugged.

"You did make a point about stud value with him."

"That's true."  Ryba half laughed.  "You'd think you were building this
tower to stand forever."

"I figure that it will be a generation before anyone can expand on what
we build.  If they're prosperous, fine.  If not, this buys them
time."

"Assuming we can finish it."

"We could roof what we have now and get better shelter than the
landers."

"You're talking four levels?"

"Six.  We've almost cut enough stone for five on the outside walls, and
I could do the inside walls with mortar and uncut stones if
necessary."

"What about heat?"

"I'm thinking about a crude furnace.  But that's the reason for a tower
with an underground foundation, except we'll cover part of the lower
level with stone and soil on the outside.  Heat rises, and that's going
to be important in the kind of winter we have here."

Ryba shook her head.  "You'd better hope the laser holds out.  Or that
you learn to forge with local materials."  She paused.  "Is there any
way you could shape those local blades into something better?  That
wouldn't take as much power as cutting and forming them from the lander
braces, would it?"

"I don't know.  Do you want me to try?"

"Let me think about it.  How many of those killer blades have you
done?"

"Three so far."

Ryba glanced toward the ridges where Nylan had quarried the black
stone.  "We're going to need more.  Demon-damn, we'll need more of
everything."

"I know."

"What about the stable?"

"We can't do everything.  I've been cutting the stone so the space
could be used for storage, or for stables.  The overhead would be
low."

"Outside of spacecraft, Nylan, they're called ceilings."  Ryba
laughed.

"I might get used to it someday."  He cleared his throat, then shrugged
his shoulders, trying to loosen them.  "Back to work."

The sound of hooves echoed from the west, and Ryba glanced toward the
top of the ridge and the approaching rider.  "Kadran's in a hurry.
We've got close to enough mounts, but not nearly enough people who know
how to ride."

"Most of us were raised to ride ships, not horses."

"Look where it got you."

Nylan grinned ruefully.  Sometimes, he really wondered about Ryba.  She
was planning to build a culture, a kingdom, as a matter of fact,
without even a look back.  She'd killed one marine and threatened to
cripple Gerlich.  At the same time, Nylan didn't see that much of an
alternative, not when everyone seemed to respond only to force.

He moistened his lips.  For all Ryba's apparent indifference to the
past, the engineer still couldn't help wondering about his family, his
sister Karista, and his mother.  They'd all be told he was dead, and he
wished they knew he was alive.  He shrugged to himself.  Assuming they
were in another universe, was it better for them to think of him as
dead?  No, but there wasn't a thing he could do about it.

Ryba had already left the tower to wait for Kadran.  Like all the
marines, Kadran was full Sybran-big and tough.

Nylan looked up the uncompleted staircase, then turned and followed
Ryba.  He'd like to know what was happening, and Huldran would ask.

"There's a bunch with a trading flag riding up toward our banner,"
announced Kadran as she rode up.  "They've got a lot of weapons
showing."

"That's probably wise in this culture," said the captain.  "We'd better
respond in kind."

"Scr?"  asked Kadran.

"You find Fierral, and have her get all of you ready for another
attack.  It shouldn't come to that, but our local friend says some of
these traders will take everything you have if you're not tough.

"Tell Istril to come with me, and get Gerlich and have him wear that
big crowbar he's so fond of.  And have Ayrlyn and Narliat come."  Ryba
turned to Nylan.  "You, too.  That will make three and three."

"I wouldn't know how to swing one of those things.  I've had maybe
three lessons, and Istril died laughing the first time," protested
Nylan.

"Strap on a pistol and the blade.  The locals don't see the
slug-throwers as weapons.  We need to get moving.  Meet me over by
those rocks as quickly as you can.  I need to gather up the coin and
jewelry we've got, and some of those crowbars that pass for blades."
Ryba untied the reins and vaulted into the saddle of the roan.

As Ryba and Kadran rode off, Nylan shouted up into the unfinished
structure.  "Huldran!  Cessya!  Weblya!  We've got company.  Drop what
you're doing, and form up with Fierral."

"Where, scr?"

"Up by those rocks, I think.  On the double!"

Huldran laughed.  "That's Svennish.  "Double-quick' is marine."

"Double-quick, then."

Nylan began to half walk, half run toward the lander that held his
sidearm and the blade he had formed and did not still know how to
use.

By the time he had reclaimed his gear and splashed water on his face
and hands to get rid of the worst of the dirt and grime, and hurried up
to the meeting point, Fierral and two others watched from the top of
the western ledge, the weapons laser ready.

Nylan hoped they didn't have to use it.  He fingered the pocket torch
he had gotten from the lander, wondering if such a simple item would be
useful, but he wanted something that would suggest power that didn't
involve hurting or killing anyone else.

The remaining sixteen marines-all wearing sidearms- were deployed in
two groups, each group with a clear field of fire.  Kyseen, her face
white, and her leg still in a heavy splint, sat on a boulder at one end
of the rocks with the eastern most group.

The traders, dressed in half-open quilted jackets and cloaks, had
halted downhill from the trading banner.

Ryba glanced around the group, all in thin uniforms or ship suits some
still sweating from their haste.  "Before we start... the one thing we
don't trade is any of our weapons- or the new blades Nylan has
forged."

"Those blades ... they are worth golds ... many golds," suggested
Narliat.

"They'll cost us far more than that if the locals get their hands on
them.  We can trade any of the captured blades, but that's it."

"How much are those arms men blades worth?"  Nylan asked Narliat.

"Whatever Skiodra will pay."  Nylan gave the smaller man a sharp look.
Narliat stepped back a pace, then stammered.  "That is true, but the
worst of them would have cost Lord Nessil nearly a gold."

"Good.  That should help."

"Let's go.  We'll leave our pile of trading goods here."  Ryba fingered
the leather pouch at her waist that contained almost all their local
coins.

The six walked slowly down to the banner.  "Where do we stop?"  Ayrlyn
hissed to Narliat.  Her eyes flashed blue.

"A dozen paces this side."

As the six angels stopped, eight of the traders stepped forward,
leaving perhaps a dozen men with the horses and the four carts.

The traders stopped on the far side of the banner.  For a moment, the
only sound was that of the wind, and the faintest dink of harness
chains from the traders' cart horses below.  After another moment, the
biggest trader, wearing a huge blade like the one Gerlich bore, and a
breastplate, stepped forward another two paces.  "I am Skiodra," he
declaimed in Old Anglorat with an unknown accent so thick that Nylan
could barely follow the simple declaration.  "You wish to trade?"
Skiodra inclined his head to Gerlich, the biggest man in the angel
group.

Before Gerlich could speak, Nylan stepped forward and smiled politely
at the bandit-trader.  "Yes."  Then he gestured to Ryba.  "This is Ryba
.. ."  He groped for the Old Anglo-rat word, and added, "Our marshal...
leader."

Skiodra squinted slightly.  One of the traders behind Skiodra, with a
bushy blond beard, grinned broadly.

"And you do not let anyone else do the speaking, O Mage?"

Mage?  Nylan certainly hadn't thought of himself as a mage, especially
with a blade in an ill-fitting scabbard strapped around his waist.

"Pardon ..."  Narliat cleared his throat and looked at Ayrlyn and then
Nylan.

Nylan nodded.

Skiodra's eyes flicked to the splint on Narliat's leg and to the ruined
hand.  The blond man behind him continued to grin.

"Honored Skiodra," began the arms man from Lornth, "best you and your
men tread lightly with your laughter.  Lord Nessil did not, and he lies
under a pile of rocks above the cliff.  Even his wizard could not save
him.  The ... marshal"-he struggled with the unfamiliar word-"hurled
one of those angel blades through his breastplate.  Never in my years
as an arms man never have I seen anything more terrible."

"You may not have seen much," suggested Skiodra, before looking past
Narliat to Nylan and then Gerlich.  "Can she not speak for herself?"

"I... speak..."  answered Ryba in Anglorat, "but not your words
well."

"How do we know you speak the truth?"  asked Skiodra.  "This .. .
minion .. . speaks well, but fine words are not truth.  Nor do they buy
goods."

"Does that matter?"  asked Nylan.  "You are traders.  We would trade.
If you insist..."  He shrugged and turned to Gerlich.  "Take out that
crowbar, slowly, and show it to him ..."

A thin trader with a scar on his face and a mail vest showing through a
tattered tunic scowled at the word "crowbar."

As Gerlich extended the hand and a half blade, Skiodra's eyes
widened.

"That... it is a great blade," he admitted.

"Put it away," commanded Ryba.  "Just be ready."  Without letting her
eyes leave Skiodra, she said in an even voice to Nylan, "Tell him that
he's dead meat if he tries anything funny, but that we can probably
make him some credits or whatever they call it."

"You understand that, Narliat?"  asked Nylan.

"Yes, scr."  Narliat cleared his throat.  "Most skillful trader .. .
you have seen Lord Nessil's great blade.  Lord Nessil came here with
threescore arms men  A dozen or less escaped with their lives ..."

"Why do you speak for them?"

Narliat looked down at the splint and raised his ruined hand.  "What
else would you have me do?  They are angels, and who with wits would
cross them?"

"I see no angels."

Ryba stepped back and raised her hand.

Hhsssttt!

A single flare of light flashed, and the top of the pole and the
trading banner that had flown from it vanished.  A few ash fragments
drifted down around the Candarian traders.

Nylan tried not to wince at the power used in that quick burst.

Narliat gulped, but cleared his throat.  "I did say they were
angels."

Skiodra managed to keep his face calm.  "Why would angels trade?"

"We could not bring everything we need with us," answered Nylan
haltingly.  "Do you not buy food when you travel?"

"You only want food?"

"Or something that provides food, like chickens."

"The great Skiodra does not deal in chickens, like some common .. .
peasant."

"Let him offer what he has," suggested Ayrlyn.  "Don't ask for
anything."

Narliat glanced at Ryba, then Nylan.  They nodded at Narliat.

"Noble Skiodra ... since my masters know not what you might have to
offer, it might be best for you to show what you have."

"You might best do the same."

Narliat looked to Nylan, who nodded again.

"We will bring some goods," answered Narliat.

Skiodra lifted his hand, and the four carts began to wind their way up
from the road at the bottom of the ridge.

Ryba turned and gestured.  Four armed marines moved toward the piles of
supplies near the top of the ridge.

Nylan looked westward to the darkening clouds that promised the first
real rain since they had landed.

The first cart held barrels.

"That-the orange one," explained Narliat, "that is dried fruit from
Kyphros.  The white ones are flour.  The seal means it was milled in
Certis .. ."

"How much do they generally run?"  asked Ayrlyn.

Narliat glanced nervously from the redheaded comm officer to Skiodra,
who cleared his throat.

Ryba put her hand on the hilt of the blade Nylan had laser-forged.

"Uh ... I couldn't be saying, scr, not exactly, since it'd depend on
when Skiodra bought them and where."

"Three silvers for the flour and a five for the fruit," said Skiodra.

Narliat's eyes widened.

Nylan snorted.  "That's about triple what the trader paid for them."

"You wish to travel to Kyphros to get them for yourself?"  asked
Skiodra.

"Excuse me," said Nylan.  "Four times what he paid.  Maybe five."

The slightest nod from Narliat confirmed his revised guess.

"So, the noble trader paid-what?-half a silver for each barrel of
flour, and he wants three.  Six times ... that's nice if you can get
it."  Nylan laughed.

"Ah ... my friend ... how would you pay for the feed for all those
horses and men?  It is not cheap to travel the Westhorns-and the flour,
it came from Certis, and those fields are on the other side of the
Easthorns .. ."

The engineer repressed a sigh.  A long afternoon lay ahead, and the air
was getting moister with the coming of the storm.  "A half silver a
barrel for your expenses, for each two barrels, I could see," he added.
"That would be more"-he groped for the word-"fair."

"Fair?  That would be ruin," declared Skiodra.  "You mages, you think
that because you can create something for nothing that every person
can.  Bah!  Even two silvers a barrel would destroy me."

Narliat's eyes flicked back to Nylan.

"Such destroying ... that would buy you fine furs.  Even a handful
of..."  He looked at Narliat.

"Coppers?"

"Coppers.  Even two coppers in gain a barrel would make you the richest
trader."

"I said you were a mage.  That may be, but your father had to be a
usurer.  You would have my men eat hay, and my horses weeds.  Even to
open trading, as a gesture of good faith, at a silver and a half a
barrel, I would have to sell the cloak off my back."

In the end, they agreed on nine coppers a barrel for the ten barrels of
flour.

"What do you have to offer?"  asked Skiodra, as a boy, acting as a
clerk, chalked the number on a long slate and showed it to Nylan.  It
looked like a nine, but Nylan still glanced toward Ayrlyn and Narliat,
who nodded.

"Try the small sword," suggested the arms man

Nylan presented it.

"A nice toy for a youth, but scarcely worth much," snorted Skiodra.

"Lord Nessil paid a gold for it," asserted Nylan.

"A gold, and he was a rich lord who was cheated, or sleeping with the
smith's daughter .. ."

It was going to be a longer afternoon than he had thought.  Nylan
refrained from taking a deep breath.  "Lords don't have to bargain,
noble Skiodra.  If they think they are being cheated, they kill the
cheater.  The blade is probably worth two golds, but a gold is what he
paid, and it's scarcely touched."

"Your father and your grandfather both were usurers, Mage.  How your
poor mother survived... I might consider, out of sentiment, and because
of your audacity, five coppers for that excuse of a weapon ..."

The sun, had it been visible through the heavy clouds, would have been
nearly touching the western peaks before Skiodra packed what remained
back into his carts and departed-not quite smiling, but not frowning,
and promising to be back before harvest.

"So what do we have?"  Fierral's eyes went from the carts of Skiodra to
the supplies, but the redheaded marine officer's hand stayed on her
sidearm.

The piles, bales, and barrels represented a strange assortment of
goods.  Besides nearly thirty barrels of flour, corn meal, and dried
fruit, and a waxed wheel of yellow cheese, there were bolts of woolen
cloth, a pair of kitchen cleavers, two large kettles and three assorted
caldrons, two crude shovels, an adz, two sets of iron hinges big enough
for a barn door, but no screws or spikes.

Nylan looked away from the assorted goods and held out his hand,
feeling the tiny droplets of rain.  As he listened to the rumble of
distant thunder, he frowned, feeling that the clouds almost held
something like the Winterlance's neuro net

Ayrlyn looked from the clouds to Nylan.  "I know."

Ryba frowned, then asked Narliat, "You think they'll be back?"

Narliat shrugged.  "Maybe yes, maybe no.  It matters not."

"It doesn't matter?"  asked Ayrlyn, brown eyes questioning.

"Others will come, now."

Nylan hoped so.  They needed more supplies, a lot more, if the winter
were anything like he thought it was going to be.  And they needed
something like chickens.  He thought chickens could last the winter if
they were in a place above freezing out of the wind.  Then he took a
deep breath, realizing that was just a hope.  What did he really know
about anything like that?

"I hope so," said Ryba, echoing his thoughts.  A low rumbling of
thunder punctuated her words.  "We need to get this stuff into the
landers or under cover."  Ryba turned.  "Fierral?  Have your people get
this stored.  The cloth needs some dry places-maybe lander three.
Nylan, how much covered space is there in your tower?"

"Not a lot yet," the engineer admitted.  "Only the bottom level of the
center is covered yet, and that's where the lasers and firm cells
go."

"Then it will all have to go in the landers for now.  That will make
things tight."

"I'll see about getting the next level floored and roofed," said Nylan.
As he hurried back to ensure that the lasers were stored against the
oncoming rain, he wondered if he would ever get caught up to the needs
they faced.

He fingered the torch in his pocket, and gave a half-laugh.  He'd never
even thought about using the beam.  That was the way so many things
worked-when it came time to use them, he forgot or did something
else.

Overhead, the thunder rolled, and the fine rain droplets began to get
heavier, and the sky darker.

XIX

THE RAIN STILL fell the next morning, but the droplets were fine and
sharp, carried by the winter like wind out of the ice-covered heights
to the west.  Low clouds obscured Freyja and all the mountains, except
for the ridges closest to the landers.  Even the partly built tower
seemed to touch the misty gray underside of the clouds.

Nylan paused in the door of the lander, looking down at the gooey mess
below.  After a moment, he stepped into the mist-filled air, and his
boots squushed in the mud.  Some of the clumps of grass-even the yellow
flowers-bore a snowy slush, and he looked back at Ryba.  "This is one
of the better reasons to get the tower finished.  We're not going to
have dry and sunny weather all the time."

His eyes dropped to the mud underfoot, and he frowned.  "We need
clay."

"Clay?  What does that have to do with rain and weather?"  Ryba stepped
into the gusting rain.

"I should have thought of it sooner.  We'll need bricks, and maybe I
can make some clay pipes for water and the furnace.  The right kind,
and I can make a big stove so people won't have to keep cooking over
fires."

"You're still hung up on that furnace, aren't you?"

"The main hall will have a big hearth and fireplace in case it doesn't
work."  He shrugged.  "We also need to get water from the springs to
the tower, and that means pipes."

Ryba laughed.  "You'd think you'd been born doing this sort of
thing."

"Hardly.  I hope I don't make too many mistakes.  I'm overlooking a lot
of things, except"-he snorted-"I don't know what they are because I've
overlooked them."

They stopped before reaching the cook fires, and Ryba studied the
fields, wiping the water from the ongoing drizzle from her face.  A
long, boot-deep trench crossed one corner of the potato field, and one
hill had been undercut by the running water.  Two marines were
reclaiming it, while a third was digging a diversion trench across the
uphill side of the field.

"Denalle, would you finish that demon-damned diversion so we're not
fighting water and the frigging mud?"  demanded one of the two trying
to keep the potato hill from collapsing into the narrow stream of cold
water.

"Stow it, Rienadre.  You want to fight through these plants, you do it.
They got roots tougher than synthcord.  I'll be happy to change places
with you."

"Shiiittt..  ."

The two marines in the field stood up as the gooey mass of soil
collapsed into the still-widening trench.

"We're going to help you, Denalle, before we lose more."  Rienadre and
the other marine trudged toward the edge of the field.

"This really isn't that good a locale for crops," Nylan said.

"I know, but until we can develop more trade and maybe find some animal
that does well up here ..."

"Sheep or winter deer or something.  Even chickens or some sort of
domesticated fowl."

"None of which we've seen," Ryba answered curtly.  "Not chickens, and
the goats scatter into the rocks if they so much as hear a hoof
click."

They walked through the drizzle to the cook-fire area, where Nylan got
a slab of bread that Kyseen had tried to bake in a makeshift oven and
some purple food concentrate.  He looked at the off-white center and
nearly black crust of the bread, so flat that it looked more like a
pancake.  He supposed that was because Kyseen had no yeast or whatever
made bread rise.  After another look at the black-edged mass, he broke
off a section and chewed.  The bread was only half-cooked and soggy in
the middle, but-if he avoided the carbonized outside-it tasted better
than the purple concentrate.

Nylan frowned.  Some of the partitions in the landers were thin metal.
Perhaps he could unbolt them, and without too much power usage, turn
them into baking sheets for the oven he hadn't built.  After a laugh,
he took another mouthful of the soggy bread.  He was thinking about
making items to fit in things he wasn't sure he could build, and that
assumed that he found something like clay, that he could turn it into
brick, and that the laser held out-just to begin with.

He finished the last bit of the heavy slab of bread and the slice of
the pungent yellow cheese, rinsed his wooden plate, and set it back
with the others, and went to find Ryba.

He found her talking with Fierral at the far side of the cook fires.

"Rain or no rain, we need some sentries.  The locals are tough, and I
don't want someone lofting arrows into us.  Or whatever."  No bowman
was going to risk ruining good strings in the rain, Nylan felt, but he
said nothing.

"Yes, scr," Fierral answered, then looked toward Nylan, her red hair
plastered against her skull by the dampness.

"I wanted to talk to Istril about where I might find some clay."  Nylan
brushed the water off his forehead to keep it from running into his
eyes.

"You're not going to work on the tower?"  asked Ryba.

"I'm not about to take out the lasers in this weather.  The timbers
will have to dry anyway before they're mortared and wedged in place."

"What about the clay you're using in the mortar?"

"That's not quite the same.  Without the ash .. ."  Nylan shook his
head.  "Besides, I'm hoping to find something that's easier to use and
fire.  Istril said that she'd seen some spots that might be clay,
somewhere down below."

"Wouldn't the locals already be using it?"

"Large deposits, yes.  I just want enough for bricks to build some
inside walls, maybe a stove, and some water pipes."  Ryba shrugged and
turned to Fierral.  "Can you spare Istril?"

"That won't be a problem, Captain.  Or should we start calling you
marshal?"

Ryba grinned.  "Whatever works."

Istril was still sleeping in the third lander, and, while Nylan washed
up and went to find out something about the horse situation, she ate.

When Istril arrived, the slim marine vaulted into her saddle.  Nylan
climbed into his, banging himself with the blade he had forged and
still barely knew how to swing without hitting himself.

Thankfully, Istril let her horse walk uphill toward the tip of the
ridge that seemed almost into the mist that hung below the clouds.
Nylan let his beast follow.

"I don't know as what I saw, scr, is what you want, and it's down a
little ways.  It wasn't like dirt, and it was almost slimy."

"All we can do is look.  That sounds promising.  Even if it is clay, it
will take some experimenting to see if we can fire it."

"Fire it?"

"Turn it into things-pipes for water, bricks, maybe things like plates
or pots.  That means building a kiln or an oven of sorts."  He grabbed
the horse's mane as the beast lurched downhill.

They rode in silence until they reached the exposed section of the
ridge, little more than a narrow way bordered on each side by rocks
that dropped sharply away.  Most of the rocks on the north side were
still covered with ice left from the winter that held some of the
night's snow above it.

Nylan looked down toward the forests that began well below the bottom
of the ridge.  They would have to circle back along the bottom of the
ridge on the north.  "In the distance, kays below, he could see and
sense a narrow stream emerging from the rock pile.  He massaged his
back.  "How long will this take?  Isn't there a shorter way?"

Istril led the way down the ridge line, keeping her mount close to the
windswept hard rock near the center.  "Be a while, scr, but you don't
want to take the short way down there."

"What short way?"  Nylan's words came out as he bounced in the
unfamiliar saddle, reflecting that any saddle would have been
unfamiliar.

The silver-haired marine laughed.  "Over the cliff.  Where we're headed
is really just below the landers.  A long way straight down."

"Oh."  Nylan readjusted his weight in the saddle.

By the time they reached the bottom of the ridge and crossed the cold
narrow stream, Nylan felt the tightness in his legs.  The rain had
dropped off more to a soft mist, and the clouds above appeared a
lighter featureless gray.

"Sometimes we see those scouts in purple, but lately they've pulled
back.  Don't see any travelers, but Narliat says that we won't until it
gets warmer, toward midsummer.  People don't cross the Westhorns that
much."

"That's what they call these mountains?"  asked Nylan.  "The Easthorns
are the other big range, then."

"Guess so."  Istril drew her blade and ran through a set of what looked
like blade exercises as the horses paralleled the small stream.  When
she finished, she wiped the blade on a scrap of something tucked in her
belt and sheathed it.  "Good blade, scr."

"Thank you.  I wish I could use one the way you and Ryba do."

"Practice.  Never thought I'd have a real use for it."  She laughed
softly and leaned forward in the saddle.  "There!  Look up on the
hill."

Nylan looked.  A tawny catlike creature vanished behind a bushy pine.

"Those are the big cats.  They don't like us much.  I think there are
something like bears, too, but I've only seen tracks."  "Nylan glanced
up at the nearly sheer rock wall that began on the far side of the
stream.  "Hard to believe we're up there."  He looked back toward the
thick trunks of the evergreens where the big cat had vanished.  Would
it have been better to bring everything down the ridge?

"It's less than a kay ahead, in and out, just above where the other
little stream joins," explained Istril.

The two streams joined below a reddish-brown mound that held some
bushes Nylan didn't recognize, and only clumps of grass.  Just above
where the two streams joined, a narrow log, a fallen fir limb, lay half
in and half out of the water.  A brownish green frog smaller than
Nylan's fist squatted on the water-peeled limb, then plopped into the
stream and vanished.

After dismounting and tying the horse to an evergreen branch, he jumped
across the stream, nearly plunging back into it when his worn ship
boots skidded on the slippery ground.  He grabbed a bush and steadied
himself, then bent down and scooped up some of the clay, almost as
plastic as dough.  The consistency seemed right, but how could he tell?
"Can we start a small fire here?"

"I can probably find some sticks."  Istril brushed a lock of silver
hair back over her ear and dismounted.

While the marine gathered brush and some small branches, Nylan
experimented with the proto clay  It looked right, felt right, but
would it fire right?  He rolled out several small balls with his hands,
then some flat sections, and one small crude pot like shape, then
another.

His striker, when he had finally used Istril's knife to scrape
some-thin dry shavings, worked in getting the fire started.  They added
drier branches and waited until there was a small bed of coals, on
which Nylan, after wetting his hands in the chill water, placed his
test items.

Then he washed the reddish clay off his hands in the water that chilled
all the way up his arms.  While the clay balls and flat sections baked
on the coals, coals that occasionally hissed in the few drops of water
falling from the gray sky or nearby trees, Nylan slowly trudged up the
narrow gorge, looking up to his right as he went.  Up there, somewhere,
was the plateau where the landers rested.

Istril trudged beside him, looking more to the sides as she did.
"Doesn't look like many people have been here."

"Probably not.  You saw how cold those traders looked- and we were
sweating."  Nylan stopped and looked up the cliff.  If they had rope
... perhaps they could get some rope the next time-if there were a next
time ... if the traders had rope.  He studied the cliff.  The vertical
was still more than four hundred cubits, and probably treacherous at
the top.  Plus ... the fired clay wouldn't be that strong and that
meant any sustained banging against the rocks would probably crack it
unless it were heavily padded-and that meant even more rope and
equipment.

If he built the firing hearth up the branch of the creek, which would
be dry most of the time- He pulled at his chin.  Either the clay went
up on horses, or the finished bricks and pipe did.

There was enough wood nearby.  He hoped the two-person saw they had
bought from Skiodra would help in cutting wood for the firing.  Or
would it be needed for planks and timbers?  Could they use one of the
smaller saws on the deadwood to get firewood?  Why did he think things
would be simple?

Finally, he turned and started back down to the coals.

"Be a long trip to bring things up," observed Istril.

"Very long.  But there's a lot of wood here, and not nearly so much up
there."

"That makes sense, scr."

Nylan hoped so.

He used a stick to ease one of the balls out of the coals.  While the
ball had cracked in two, the half coated with ash seemed hard enough.
The other side was still damp in parts.

While he could feel that the clay was right, he decided to wait a while
longer for the other pieces.  He had the feeling that, so far as the
clay and brick works were concerned, he-or someone-was going to be
doing a lot of experimenting, and a lot of waiting.

XX

"I SEE YOU still intend to let those women flaunt their defiance at you
from the Roof of the World."  The lady Ellindyja holds the needlework
loosely.

"When did you take up needlework?"  asks Sillek.

"When I found myself no longer useful to the Lord of Lornth, I took up
the diversions of my youth."  Ellindyja eases the outer wooden hoop
off, readjusts the cloth over the inner hoop, and replaces the outer
hoop.  Then she picks up the needle.

"We haven't replaced the arms men we lost."

"Nor your father's ring.  Nor his honor."  Ellindyja's voice is
acid-edged.

"The present Lord of Lornth would appreciate any suggestions you might
have, my dear mother, which do not either bankrupt me or leave our
lands open to Lord Ildyrom."

"I have been thinking, Sillek-about heritages and honor."

Lord Sillek purses his lips, then asks, "What of something besides an
attack we cannot afford."

"Well ... if one must resort to more indirect and more merchant like
means, Sillek, my son, surely there must be some ... adventurers... out
there who might want a reward of sorts, perhaps some small parcel of
almost worthless land, and a title... even a pardon... if necessary."
Ellindyja smiles brightly.

"Hmmmm .. ."  Sillek paces to the tower window and back.  His fingers
touch his trimmed beard.  "Not nearly so expensive as troops.  It might
even reduce the banditry-one way or another."

"I am more than happy to be of service, Sillek-as I was for your
father.  He was a most honorable man."

"I don't think we'll make the offer through a broadsheet, though."

"No .. . that would be too overtly merchantly.  Tell your wizards and
your senior arms men and make sure that the traders' guild knows.  That
is the way the better merchants operate."

"I do so appreciate your advice."  Sillek paces back to the window,
glancing out into the slashing rain that has poured off the Westhorns.
"Your advice is always welcome."  He only emphasizes the word "advice"
ever so slightly.

"I am so glad you do."

Sillek does not turn from the window, not until he forces a smile back
upon his lips.

XXI

NYLAN SPLASHED HIS face again, trying to wash away the stone dust, then
took a long swallow of the cold stream water.  The water carried away
some of the acridness and dustiness that seeped endlessly into his
nostrils and dried his throat.  After another swallow, he walked back
toward the tower.  In the foot-packed clay area beyond the rough
stacked stones and the space where Cessya and Huldran alternated
splitting the slates for roofing tiles, Istril and Ryba were working at
blade practice, using the wooden wands that were far safer for
beginners.

Nylan shivered.  His turn would be coming up.  He set down his cup on
the nearest pile of black stone and watched as Saryn and Ryba began to
spar.  Despite the partial splint that remained on Saryn's leg, their
wands flickered, faster, and then even faster, until Nylan's own heart
and lungs seemed to be racing.  Even Istril and Siret had stopped, both
silver-haired marines following the action.  As Saryn limped backward
and lowered her wand, the engineer finally caught his breath.

"Ah, yes," came a voice from the sunny side of a pile of cut stones
meant for the sixth level of the tower.

Nylan leaned over to see Narliat drinking in the reflected heat from
the stone.  "Yes?"

"The she-angels, those two, and I see why Lord Nessil is dead."

"You liked Lord Nessil?"  Nylan tried to keep his voice neutral.

"He was more honest than most, but he was terrible when he was angered,
and he was angered a lot.  That is not what I meant, Mage.  I am a man,
too, and I was an arms man  Narliat shrugged.  "I would not lift a
sword against your she-angels.  They would kill me in three strokes,
even the one who is crippled, and I have killed a few men.  They were
poor farmers, but they were strong, and I did not want to die." Narliat
looked back to the practice space where Ryba had followed Saryn's lead
and set aside her weapon.  "I see the she-angels, and I see the whole
world change."

Nylan could feel the sweat oozing from his forehead as he stood in the
sun.  He looked down at the local, wearing a jacket and huddled against
the black stone, almost for warmth.  "You're cold?"

"Not if I stay here."  Narliat smiled.  "You will make your tower warm,
will you not?"

Nylan looked toward the stones, looking more like dark gray in the
sunlight than the black they had seemed when Nylan had cut them from
the mountain.  "Not that warm-"

"A tower-on the Roof of the World.  Only the angels would dare-"

"Nylan!  Since you're not cutting or setting stone, let's get your
practice done now."  Ryba motioned.

Narliat grinned as the engineer trudged toward the practice area.

"Here you go."  Ryba handed Nylan one of the hand-carved wands.  "It's
not balanced the way I'd like-"

"I know.  We've been through this before."  Nylan lifted the wand.  The
last few times he'd actually managed to keep Ryba from tapping him at
will, but he had no illusions about his ability to hold off a master
swordsman or arms man or whatever they were called.

"Set your feet."

Nylan shuffled into position.

"Not like an old man, Nylan."

Behind them Nylan could see Saryn motioning to one of the marines.

"Pay attention," snapped Ryba.

He took a deep breath and tried to focus on the wand, on Ryba's face,
framed in jet-black hair, and upon her wand.

"That's better.  Ready?"  Her wand thrust toward him, and he parried,
clumsily, barely deflecting it.

"You can do better than that."  This time her wand was quicker, and
Nylan tried to counter, but the edge of the wood thwacked his
shoulder.

"Ooo .. ."  He wanted to rub it, but had to dance aside as another
slash whistled toward him, and another ... and another.

Somehow, he managed to slip, block, deflect, and dance away from most
of the captain's thrusts and slashes.

"All right."  Ryba stepped back.  "That's what you should be facing,
but most of the locals aren't that good.  Most don't use the points of
their blades, but the edges, and that's different."  Nylan shook his
head and blinked, then blotted the sweat from his eyes.

"They use heavier blades and try to beat you to a pulp."  Ryba picked
up the wider wooden weapon, the one with a wooden blade that looked
more like a narrow plank than a practice weapon.  "You need to work on
deflecting a heavier blade.  You can't meet it directly, not without
losing your own blade or risking having it broken."  She took the
bigger wooden slab in "two hands.  "Ready?"

"Yes," said the engineer, even as he thought, No.

The first time his light wand met Ryba's heavy one, the impact shivered
all the way up his arm, and he staggered back, dancing aside to avoid
another counter stroke before the third one slammed into his thigh.

"You'd be crippled for life if that had been a real blade, and if I
hadn't pulled it at the end.  Demon-damn, Nylan, this is serious, and
these things can kill you-and they will."

"Fine for you to say .. ."  he gasped.  "You grew up with them."

"Get your blade up.  Get it up."

He raised his wand, ignoring the pun, and waited, then half ducked,
half slid the heavier wand.

"Better.  Get it back up."  Ryba sent another slash at his open side.

Nylan jumped and slid his wand over hers, then drove the heavier blade
almost into the dirt.

"Good.  Use their momentum against them.  Those crowbars are heavy."

But it didn't seem that heavy for Ryba because she whipped it back up
and around, and Nylan was back pedaling again, and again.

Still, in between all her hits, he did manage to drop the heavy wand
into the dirt once more and actually strike Ryba on the shoulder,
lightly.

Finally, she stepped back, "Not bad.  You've got a feel for it.  Right
now, you could probably hold off the weaker locals.  You just need more
practice."  Ryba smiled.  "I can see that you'll be good-very good-with
the blade."  Her smile vanished, replaced momentarily with a look Nylan
could only term somber.  "It won't be easy."  She looked toward the
tower and shook her head.

Nylan lowered the wand, his entire body dripping sweat.  Practicing
against Ryba was worse than carting heavy stones up the seemingly
endless tower steps, and probably a lot more futile.  He handed the
wand back to her.  "Sometimes," he said, "it feels futile.  I'll never
be as good as you are."

She took the wand from him, lowering her voice.  "You don't have to be.
You're an engineer, and you're going to be a wizard or a mage or
whatever they call them."  Ryba paused.  "Narliat already thinks you
are."  Then she added, "But you still need good basic defense skills,
and that means more practice."

Nylan wiped his forehead with the back of his forearm.  "Mage?"

"It has to do with the way you use the laser.  You ought to be able to
use this local net or whatever it is for more than that."  Ryba offered
a forced smile.  "I know you can."

"Thanks.  You're so encouraging."

"I know what I know."  She shrugged.  "Only sometimes ...
unfortunately."  Then she looked toward the two marines standing back
beyond the stacked slate, and pointed at the silver-haired one.
"Llyselle, we don't have forever."

Nylan trudged back to the stream to wash his face again before he
returned to the business of setting stone in the walls of the tower.
Even the cold water didn't cool him much.  The yellow sunflowers had
begun to wilt, and were being replaced by small white flowers that
hugged the ground between clumps of grass.  Nylan felt like one of the
wilted yellow flowers.

As he passed the practice area, he glanced at Narliat, sitting in the
sun and fingering the splint on his leg.  Nylan laughed to himself as
he realized that the arms man was in no hurry to remove the splint, no
hurry at all.

"She's tough," observed Huldran as Nylan lifted another stone and began
to lug it up the stairs.

"Very," grunted the engineer.

"So are you."

"Not like she is."

"You're just as tough, serin a different way.  She couldn't build the
tower, and we'll need it, and you aren't a fighter.  You're a
defender."

"Suppose so .. ."  Nylan continued up toward the top of the fifth level
where he set the stone on the rough planking.  Then he turned and
headed back for another stone.  Above him Cessya and Weblya wrestled
another of the big timbers into the stone slots.

He was carrying up the fifth stone, and almost wishing he were back
practicing when Huldran asked, "Are you about ready for more mortar?"

"Start mixing it.  One more stone, and we'll be ready."

"You've almost got the north side filled in between the supports."

"With luck, we'll get the west done, too."  He continued up the stone
stairs, almost tripping on the top step.  By the time he returned with
the next stone, Huldran was stirring the mortar components together.

"This tower will last forever," she said.  "Maybe."

"The captain says it will, longer than any of our descendants will live
here, and that's a long time."

"She said that?"

"Yes, scr."

Nylan paused before lifting the stone into place, then said, "Can you
bring that tub up when you're done?"

"Not a problem."

After reaching the fifth level and setting down the oblong stone, Nylan
took a deep breath, then measured the six heavy stones, and rearranged
them in the order he wanted.  What had Ryba meant by saying that the
tower would last forever?

While he waited for Huldran, he glanced out toward the southwest,
taking in the ice-needle of Freyja, the peak that glittered in the
midday light like a de-energizer beam sensed through the Winterlance's
net.  He swallowed.  That was past, and no reminiscing would bring back
that time or universe.

This was indeed a different place, not that different on the surface,
but more different than most of the angels realized.

Still... Ryba's comments-both the ones he had heard and those reported
by Huldran-bothered him.  Was she getting delusions of grandeur, of
some sort of omnipotence?  How could she say she knew what was going to
happen?  Was she getting delusions because she had trouble accepting
that she could no longer wield the Winterlance like a mighty blade to
smite the demons?

"Here's the mortar, scr."  Huldran eased the trough onto the planks.

With the trowel-another laser-cut adaptation-he began to smooth the
next line of the reddish-gray mortar across the top of the stones
already set.

Clang!  Clang!  The off-key sounds from the crude triangle gong
resounded across the Roof of the World.

"Bandits!"

Nylan eased the fifth heavy stone into place on the mortar, trying to
ignore the whinnying of horses and the shouted commands.

"Istril!  Take the lower trail!  Try to cut them off.  Use the
rifle."

"Fierral!  Run the second group .. . with Gerlich ..."

"Form up!  Form up ..."

By the time Nylan finally could let go of the stone and hasten up the
steps to look over the top edges of the outer wall, he only saw the
dust of departing marines, riding off behind Ryba and the redheaded
force leader-and a dozen marines remaining with blades and sidearms
stationed in the rocks on each side of the top of the rise.

From the far side of the rise was what was becoming a packed road down
the ridge, Nylan could hear hooves.  In time, he reflected, they should
consider putting in marker cairns or something for winter travel.  Or,
considering the mud, a real paved road.

A horse-carrying double-trotted back over the rise and downhill.  Blood
streamed down the face of the marine riding in front.

"Medic!  Medic!"  shouted the other rider.

"That's Denalle!"  said Weblya, balancing on the last of the big beams
she and Cessya were setting in the slots, the beams that would form the
floor for the sixth level of the tower and the roof of the fifth.

"She's bleeding and got an arrow through her arm," added Cessya.

Nylan watched for a moment before going back to the stones.  The mortar
would set before he got the last stone in place if he didn't hurry, and
there wasn't anything he could do that Ayrlyn or one of the combat
medics couldn't do better.

He laid out another line of mortar, then lifted another stone into
place, trying to ignore the conversation between the two marines above.
"... think he feels he can't waste an instant..."

"You look at that ice up there.  You want to be in one of those
thin-shelled landers when the snows are up over our heads?"

"But... Denalle's hurt..."

"What can the engineer do that the medics can't?"

"Glad I'm not an officer ... or the captain."

"No ... I wouldn't want to be in her boots.  Or the engineer's."

A whispered remark came next, followed in turn by a laugh.

"You'd better not.  You'd really be in trouble."

Nylan blushed, but laid another line of mortar.  After he set the sixth
stone, he carried the nearly empty tub of mortar down to the yard space
where Huldran was using the sledge and a wedge Nylan had made to split
slate.

Clunk!

"Damned stone .. . doesn't always split right," grunted the stocky
marine.

"I know.  Nothing works quite the way we want."

"You didn't use all of it?"  asked Huldran.

"No ... can you powder it or something?"

"Do that all the time.  Just spread it out on the clean section of
stone there-the one with the dents in it.  When it dries, we turn it
into powder and add it back in."

A cooler breeze whipped across the meadow and the tower work area,
along with the shadow from a puffy and fast-moving cloud.

"Wind feels good," commented Huldran.

"It'll make it easier to finish the sides before the day's over."

"You think you can?"  asked the stocky blond.

"There's enough stone cut, and I'm trying to let the generator recharge
some more firm cells before I have to cut more.  The captain wants me
to forge more blades, and ..."  Nylan shrugged.

"You're trying to have enough power to finish the tower and do that?"

The engineer nodded before returning to carting stone.  He had almost
finished getting what he would need before several horses appeared at
the top of the rise and headed down toward the landers.  Over one horse
was another body, one clad in olive-black.

Nylan shook his head.  Did every bandit attack mean another death?

He watched as the mounted marines rode straight for the smoldering fire
where Kyseen, hampered in combat by her broken leg, struggled with
cooking.

Nylan still hadn't done much on that front, besides designing the
kitchen layout and the stoves for the tower.  He hoped that the bandits
who had attacked Denalle and the others hadn't done too much damage to
the brick-making operation, but he wasn't about to say that out loud.

The engineer recognized the slim, silver-haired figure of Istril, and
he waved.  "Istril!"

The marine turned her mount toward the tower, after saying something to
the two others and letting them continue toward the landers.

Nylan and Huldran waited, then the engineer gestured.  "Who?"

"Desinada."  Istril reined up.

Nylan vaguely remembered the woman; she'd been among the group that
he'd brought down on his lander.  "Sorry."

"That sort of thing happens here.  A lot, it seems."

"Anything good?"  asked Huldran.

"One of them had a purse."  As she turned the horse toward the landers,
Istril lifted the leather pouch and shook it, letting Nylan and the
three marines hear the clank and jingle of mixed coins.  "Not that I
wouldn't have Desinada back for a dozen of these and then some."

"Was anyone else hurt?"  Nylan asked.

"No.  Rienadre ducked behind your brick oven and winged one of the
bastards.  I got the other one.  We think one got away, maybe more, but
Berlis ran down the winged one.  He gave her some lip, and she ran him
through.  She gets mean sometimes."

"Yeah .. ."  muttered Weblya.  "Like always."

"Thank you."  Nylan inclined his head to Istril.

"No problem, scr."  Istril turned her mount back toward the landers.

More hoofbeats announced the return of Ryba and the rest of the
marines, along with two more mounts, each with a bandit's body slung
across the saddle.

Nylan nodded and bent to lift another stone.  "Back to work."

"Don't you stop for anything, scr?"  asked Cessya.

"Winter won't."  Nylan started up the stairs.

"One more timber," announced Cessya.  "Just one more."

"Then we got to saw planks," pointed out Weblya.

"Oh, yeah ... it's my turn on top.  You get to be in the pit."

"Thanks."

The sun had dropped behind the western peaks before Nylan mortared in
the last stone on the fifth level of the eastern wall.  Despite his
best resolves, he still had the gaps in the southern wall left to do.
Another day before Cessya and Weblya could wedge and mortar the big
timbers into place and start on placing the planks.  He trudged down,
carrying the empty mortar trough.

"We'll take that, scr," said Weblya.

"You're going to finish it even before it starts to chill, aren't you?"
asked Cessya.

"The walls and roof.  We might even be able to use some of the arma
glass for windows in a few places, if the laser holds out."  Nylan
coughed, trying to clear the stone and mortar dust from his throat.  "I
wanted to get the stoves and furnace in, too."

"A furnace?"  The two looked at each other.

"Pretty crude.  Wood-fired, and wide heat ducts.  A big air return down
the stair pedestal-that's already in place."

"You think big, don't you?"

"I suppose so, but you need space when there's snow outside over your
head."  Nylan smiled wryly.  "The snow nomads didn't do all that winter
hunting just for food.  If they'd all stayed around the fires, they'd
have killed each other."  He frowned.  "We probably need some timbers
inside so that people can work on skis after it gets cold."

The two marines shook their heads as the engineer checked the laser,
still stored in the space under the lower stairs, and then walked up
the hill toward the portable generator with a single firm cell.

He checked the readout on the cell being recharged-over eighty-three
percent-and disconnected it, replacing it with the discharged cell.
Then he walked back down to the tower where the three marines had
cleaned the trough and racked their tools.

"I'm going to wash up before dinner," he said.

"What is dinner?"  asked Huldran.

"Gerlich brought in two wild goats, or sheep or something.  So we're
going to have a goat stew.  Meat's too tough for anything else,"
answered Weblya.

Goat stew, reflected Nylan, probably meant goat meat, wild onions, and
a few other unmentionable or unidentifiable plant-root supplements, all
thickened with some of the corn flour.  "Wonderful."

He plodded toward the streamlet that seemed to narrow each day.  They
hadn't really had much rain in almost two eight-days.  That could mean
problems for their attempt at crops.

After washing, he walked through the twilight toward the landers and
the cook fires, his face cool from the water and the wind off the ice
of the higher peaks.

The smell of smoke and bread and wild onions told him that, again, he
was among the last to eat.

"Here, scr."  Kyseen handed him one of the rough wooden platters heaped
with dark stew, a slab of the flat, fried bread on the side.  The edges
were only dark, dark brown this time, not black.

"Thank you."  Nylan took it and looked around for one of the sawed-off
logs that served as crude stools.

"You can sit here, scr."  Selitra slipped off a log seat.  "I'm
finished."

Nylan offered a grateful smile to the lithe marine and sat.  "Thank
you."  His legs ached; his shoulders ached; his hands were cracked and
dry.  And he still hadn't finished the fifth level of the tower.

He tried the bread; it wasn't soggy, and it even tasted like bread, but
heavy, very heavy.  He dipped it into the brown mass that was stew and
chewed.  Either he was starving or the food was improving.  Probably
both.

"Do you mind if I join you?"  asked Ryba.  "I ate a little earlier."

Nylan nodded.  "I was trying to finish the outer part of the fifth
level.  We didn't quite make it."  He looked north to the dark shape of
the tower.

Ryba's eyes followed his.  "It's impressive."

Nylan snorted.  "I just want it to be warm and strong."

"Just?  I recall words about furnaces, stoves, and water."

"Those all go with being secure and warm."  He dipped the corner of the
bread into the stew and scooped more into his mouth.

"Those weren't common brigands," Ryba said quietly.  "Their blades and
bows were better than those of some of Lord Nessil's arms men

"Bounty hunters?"  Nylan finally asked.

"I think so.  The local lord has probably offered some sort of reward
to get rid of us.  We'll probably see more bandits or brigands, maybe
even a large force by the end of the summer."

"The engineer shook his head.

"Your tower looks better and better."  Ryba's fingers kneaded the tight
muscles in his shoulders.

Nylan swallowed.  "I'm not sure I like being right in quite that
way."

"It's better than being wrong."

He couldn't argue with that and looked toward the larger fire, where
the marines had gathered around Ayrlyn.

"What about a song?"  asked Llyselle.

"A song?"  questioned the red-haired comm officer, her voice wry.

"About how you angels routed the bandits," suggested Narliat.

"I don't know about routed," muttered Denalle, her eyes dropping to the
dressing on her right arm.  Her left hand strayed toward the second
dressing that covered her forehead, then dropped away.  With a wince,
she closed her eyes for a moment.

"I don't make up songs that quickly," answered Ayrlyn.

"But you are a minstrel, are you not?"  asked Narliat.

"This is a verbal culture," pointed out Saryn.

"Too verbal," growled Gerlich, glaring at Narliat.

Nylan could feel himself tensing at Gerlich's response and forced
himself to let his breath out slowly.

"And it has too many wizards," added the hunter.  "And I don't
understand why the wizards serve the nobles, the lords, whatever they
are.  Those wizards have real powers."

"The wizards, they cannot stand against cold iron," answered Narliat,
"and there are not a great many wizards."

"Still don't see ..."

"Oh, Gerlich .. ."  murmured Ryba, barely loud enough for Nylan to
hear.  "Think, for darkness' sake."

Nylan thought also, about cold iron, wondering why cold iron would
prove a problem for a wizard.  He could handle it, and Narliat said he
was a wizard.

"Cold iron?"  he finally asked.

"Why yes, Mage.  The white ones, they cannot handle cold iron.  It's
said that it burns them terribly."  Narliat shrugged.  "I have not seen
this, but I have never seen a white wizard touch iron.  Even their
daggers are bronze."

Nylan frowned.  Why would that be so?  "Thank you."

"Now that we have that cleared up," Ryba said too brightly, "how about
that song?"

Ayrlyn picked up the small four-stringed lutar she had brought down
from the Winterlance, just as Ryba had brought the Sybran blades.

"How about this one?"  Ayrjyn strummed the strings, adjusted one peg,
then strummed again, and made another adjustment before clearing her
throat.

A captain is a funny thing, a spacer with a net, an angel gambling with
her death, who never lost a bet.

The captain, she took us to those demon-towers, then brought us back
right through Heaven 's showers... Nylan winced, knowing that the
second verse would be bawdy, and the third even bawdier, then glanced
at Ryba, who was grinning.

"I've heard worse versions," she said.  "Much worse."

Raucous laughter began to rise around the fire even before Ayrlyn
finished the last verse.  "... and she served him up well trussed, well
done!"

The laughter died away.

"An old song?  A Sybran song?"  asked Denalle.

"I don't know many," admitted Ayrlyn, "but there is one."  The redhead
readjusted the lutar, then began.

When the snow drops on the stone,

When the wind song's all alone,

When the ice swords form in twain,

Sing of the hearths where we 've lain.

When the green tips break the snow,

When the cold streams start to flow,

When the snow hares turn to black,

Sing out to call our love back.

When the plains grass whispers gold,

When the red blooms flower bold,

When the year's foals gallop long.

Hold to the fall and our song... Nylan glanced around the fires, then
to the unlit and dark tower looming against the white-streaked peaks,
and back to the marines.  More than a handful effaces bore eyes bright
with unshed tears.  Some marines blotted damp cheeks when Ayrlyn
lowered the lutar.

Huldran slowly walked out into the darkness, and Selitra laid her head
on Gerlich's shoulder, sobbing silently at the old Sybran horse nomads'
ballad.

"How about something a bit more cheerful?"  suggested Ryba.

"I'll try."  Ayrlyn readjusted the lutar and began another song.

When I was single, I looked at the skies.  Now I've a consort, I listen
to lies, lies about horses that speak in the darks, lies about cats and
theories of quarks .. .

"Lies about cats and theories of quarks..."  mused Nylan.  "They're all
lies here, I suppose, at least the quarks."

"You don't think quarks are real here?"  asked Ryba.  Her hand rested
lightly on his forearm, warm in the cool of the mountain evening.

"Who knows what's real, or what reality even is?"  he answered.

"Where we are is real."

And that was a definition as good as any, Nylan thought, his eyes
taking in the almost luminous ice of Freyja, the needle peak that would
dwarf even the most massive tower he would ever be able to raise.

XXII

"LORD SIL LEK LET it be known that he would not be displeased at
whoever reduced the squatters' holding on the Roof of the World to
rubble and returned the seal ring of his father."  Terek pulls at his
chin as he walks to the tower window.

"He's not taking another army up there," answers Hissl, leaning back
from the glass upon the small table.

"We discussed that earlier.  In his position, would you?  This approach
will encourage every cutthroat in Lornth to attack those women."

"What good will that do?"  Hissl stands and walks toward the second
open window to let the breeze cool him.  "Lord Nessil had score three
arms men  Not even Skiodra has that, and you saw how he backed down
when he came face-to-face with those devil women.  What could a handful
of brigands do?"

"Lord Sillek has to do something.  The .. . expedition to the Roof of
the World was rather .. . embarrassing for Lord Nessil..."  Terek turns
back toward Hissl.

"For his family, you mean?"  asks Hissl.  "A corpse is beyond
embarrassment."

"Young Lord Sillek wishes to avenge his father."

"And to solidify his position?"

"He's willing to grant lands and some minor title to whoever succeeds.
Something like Lord of the Ironwoods, no doubt."  Terek laughs.  "There
are bound to be some who feel that no women can be that dangerous." The
chief wizard shrugs.  "Besides, there are not that many of them, and
for every one that is killed-that will make things easier for Lord
Sillek."

"Let us see," muses Hissl ironically.  "Lord Nessil lost forty-three
arms men and those angels lost three.  Say there are two dozen left up
on the Roof of the World ... why, that means Lord Sillek, or someone,
only needs to sacrifice around four hundred arms men  Hissl's voice is
soft and smooth.  "And that would be in a battle on an open field.  It
might take ten times that once their tower is completed.  Do you
suppose we could persuade Lord Ildyrom, Lord Ekleth of Spidlaria,
and-"

"Enough of your foolishness," snaps Terek.  "The lord's stratagem
against those angels cannot hurt him."

"Do you believe they are really angels?"  asks Hissl.

"It might be in our interests to claim that they are-or at least that
they are fallen angels."

"Some of them died.  Angels don't die," points out Hissl.

"I believe that was one of the men."

"There were four graves for their own, and there are still two men
walking around.  That means three of the women died."

"You are rather tedious, Hissl," says Terek.

"I am attempting to be accurate."

"Then let us call them fallen angels.  That makes them seem more
vulnerable."  Terek pauses, then adds, "And what other... accuracies...
might you add?  Helpful accuracies?"

"Those thunder-throwers ... I do not think that they will be able to
use them for too much longer."

"Would you stake your life on that?"

"Not at the moment.  In a year..  . yes."

Terek waits.  "Go on.  Explain.  Don't make me drag everything out of
you."

"Only a handful of them are experienced with blades- the leader, one of
the men, and one of the smaller women.  But they are teaching the
others.  The thunder-throwers are more effective than blades.  So ..."
Hissl shrugs.  "Why are they spending time learning a less effective
weapon?  Also, they have begun to build a tower."

"On the Roof of the World?  One winter and they'll be dead or ready to
leave."

"I don't know about that."  Hissl touches his left cheek with his
forefinger, and he frowns.  "We were wearing jackets and cloaks.  The
wind was cold.  It was still just beyond spring up there.  They were in
thin clothes, and they were sweating-all of them."

"We will see."  Terek pulls at his chin again.  "We will see."

"Yes.  That is true."  Hissl frowns ever so slightly, then smiles.

XXIII

THE GREEN THAT had sprouted from the hand-furrowed rows of two of the
fields rose knee-high in places, waist-high in others, depending on the
plants.  The potatoes had been planted in evenly spaced hillocks, but
the green-leaved plants nearly covered all the open ground of the third
field, except along the diagonal line where the water from the storm
eight-days earlier had created a trench, since filled in.  Behind the
fields, the landers squatted, droplets of dew beading and then
streaking the metal.  Well beyond them were the large cairn and the
seven others, including the latest one for Desinada.  Already, dark
blue flowers grew from between the cairn stones to mix with the red
blood-flowers that were fading as the summer passed.

Nylan turned to the west, where, in the dawn, the fog seemed to rise
off the squared structure of black stone that dominated the area above
the field.  The final upper sill of the wall stones stood more than ten
times the height of a woman.  Rising out of the middle of the tower was
a square construction of mortared stones, and at the central point
about half the rafters for the roof were connected.  The remaining
rafters were lined up in the stone working yard below the tower.

Nylan stood in the dawn and studied the south-facing opening that would
be the doorway.  While the heavy pins had been set in the stone
lintels, the door had yet to be built, as did the causeway to it.

His eyes flicked from the tower base up the black stones.  No great
work of art, but it would be big enough and strong enough to do what
would be necessary, unless the locals decided to drag siege engines
through the mountains, or spent seasons building them and supporting
the builders with an army.  Neither seemed likely.  Then, he reflected,
nothing about the planet was terribly likely.

At the sense, rather than the sound, of someone approaching, he turned
toward the landers.

"You don't sleep much, do you?"  Ryba stopped several paces short of
him.

"Neither do you, apparently."

"Burdens of leadership, curse of foresight .. ."  Ryba cleared her
throat, then turned toward the tower.

His eyes followed hers.  "Still a lot to do.  Sometimes, more than
sometimes, I wonder what else I've forgotten."

Her hand touched his shoulder.  "It's beautiful ... the tower, and I
can see, you know, that it will last for generations.  Maybe longer."

"You can see that?"

Ryba shrugged, almost sadly.  "Some things I can see.  Like the women
who will climb the rocks searching for Westwind, for hope, for a
different life.  Like the men who will chase them, not
understanding."

"Westwind?"

"I thought it was a good name.  And that's what it will be called." Her
laugh was almost harsh.  "So we might as well start now."

Nylan turned to her.  "You're seeing all this?"

"Nylan ... you can bend metal and power, and Ayrlyn can touch souls
with her songs, and her touch heals small injuries-and Saryn-she
glitters when her hands touch the waters or a blade.  Why shouldn't I,
who rode the greatest neuro nets of all, why shouldn't I have a power
beyond the blades?"

"Foresight?"  he whispered.

"At times ... yes ... It's only occasional... now ... but I wonder..."
She shook her head.  "You think it's easy to kill one of your own, to
be as hard as the stones in your tower?  To see what might be, if only
you're strong enough .. ?  To know that everyone will die if you're
not..."

His hands touched hers, and found that her hands and fingers were cold,
trembling, for all that he had to raise his eyes to meet hers.

XXIV

"THUS CONTINUED THE conflict between order and chaos, between those who
would force order and those who would not, and between those who
followed the blade and those who followed the spirit.

"On the Roof of the World, those first angels raised crops amid the
eternal ice, and builded walls, and made bricks, and all manner of
devisings of the most miraculous, from the black blades that never
dulled to the water that flowed amidst the ice of winter and the tower
that remained yet warm from a single fire.

"Of the great ones in those times were, first, Ryba of the twin blades,
Nylan of the forge of order, Gerlich the hunter, Saryn the mighty, and
Ayrlyn of the songs that forged the guards of Westwind ... "For as the
skilled and terrible smith Nylan forged the terrible black blades of
Westwind, and wrenched the very stones from the mountains for the tower
called Black, so did Ryba guide the guards of Westwind, letting no man
triumph upon the Roof of the World.

"For as each lord of the demons said, "I will not suffer those angel
women to survive," and as each angel fell, Ryba created yet another
from those who fled the demons, until there were none that could stand
against Tower Black.

"..  . and so it came to pass that Ryba was the last of the angels to
rule the heavens and the angel who set forth the Legend for all to heed
.. ."

Book of Ayrlyn

Section I [Restricted Text]

XXV

SIL LEK LOOKS DOWN the lines of horse, then back toward the west branch
of the river, and the ford.  Behind him, the fourscore arms men shift
in their saddles.

On the next rolling hill is another force of cavalry, under the white
banner bearing a single fir tree-the banner of Jerans.  Sillek studies
the Jeranyi force, noting the.  varying sizes of the troopers opposing
his.  Men and women both bear arms, their mounts standing, waiting, in
the knee-high grass.

"Barbaric," he mutters.

"The women?"  asks Koric.  The mustached and slightly stoop-shouldered
captain spits out onto the grass.  "Sometimes they're nastier than the
men.  Rather fight the Suthyans any day."

"Do you see Ildyrom over there?"

"He's the one in the green jacket.  Verintkya's the big blond bitch
next to him.  She uses a mace sometimes, they say.  Split your head
with a smile, she would."

Sillek turns in the saddle.  "Master Terek."

"Yes, Your Grace?"  The chief wizard eases his mount closer to the Lord
of Lornth.

"Will your fire bolts reach the Jeranyi?"

"From here, scr?  It's a long pull..."  Terek's ungloved hand brushes
his white hair.  Behind him Hissl and Jissek watch Sillek intently.

"Yes or no?"

"Yes, scr."  Terek holds up a hand.  "But we can't send so many.  It
takes more energy to send bolts that far."

"Can you tell if Ildyrom has any archers there?"

Terek gestures to Hissl.

"There are a couple of troopers with the short curved bows, but no
longbows, scr."

"So they can't quite reach us with arrows .. ."  Sillek pauses, then
turns to Terek.  "Go ahead, Chief Wizard.  Fry as many as you can."

Beside Sillek, Koric clears his throat.  "Scr .. . begging your
pardon."

Terek waits, as do Hissl and Jissek.

"Yes, Captain?"  Sillek's voice is smooth-and cold.

"Using fire bolts ... I mean .. . what if they've got wizards?"

"Is that your real concern, Captain, or are you clinging to my father's
outdated sense of nobility?"

"Scr ..."  Koric drew himself up in the saddle.

"Koric ... I'm not interested in battlefield tales or boasts.  I've got
a bunch of bitch-women at my back with thunder-throwers.  I've got
Ildyrom and Verintkya trying to take over the good grasslands between
the South Branch and the West Fork, and the Suthyans are raising the
port tariffs in Rulyarth.  Now, if I can get rid of Ildyrom without
losing anyone ... so much the better."

"Next time, they'll bring wizards," said Koric.

"There aren't many, if any, as good as ours."  Sillek turns to Terek.
"Is that not correct, Master Wizard Terek?"

"I believe so, scr."

"Good.  Prove it."

Koric frowns as Terek concentrates, then points.

Whhhhssttt!  With a whistling, screaming hiss, a fire bolt arcs from
Terek's fingers out over the valley between the two hills and falls
across two Jeranyi troopers.

The twin screams shriek across the gently waving grasslands, and greasy
smoke billows from the other hillside.  A riderless horse rears into
the midday sky, then lets forth a screaming whinny before bolting down
the hillside in the general direction of Berlitos, the forest city of
Jerans that lies more than four days of hard riding to the west.

The remaining Jeranyi horse hold, though the troopers on them seem to
shift in their saddles before several arrows fly eastward.  The shafts
drop harmlessly in the tall grass well below the hilltop where the
forces of Lornth wait.

"Another!"  commands Sillek.

Terek frowns, but concentrates.  A second fire bolt arcs over the
valley and toward Ildyrom.

The bolt splashes across the chest of a roan who rears, screaming, so
suddenly that the rider is flung backward and falls into a crumpled
heap.  More greasy smoke rises as the fatally wounded horse falls and
rolls, then quivers, in the damp grasses.  A trooper dismounts, checks
the still figure in the grass.  Shortly, two Jeranyi troopers quickly
put the body on a packhorse.

Then the fir-tree banner jerks, and then the Jeranyi turn and ride
westward, disappearing behind the hilltop, leaving three piles of
smoldering ash.

As Sillek watches, Terek takes a deep breath, and Hissl, observing the
pallor on Terek's face, nods to himself.

"Now what, scr?"  asks Koric.

"We follow them, discreetly."

"We could ride 'em down, maybe get rid of them."

Sillek holds in a deep breath, purses his lips, then finally responds.
"How many arms men did we lose?"

"Why, none, scr."

"How many did they lose?"

"Three."

Sillek nods.  "And what happens if we do this every time they stop,
until we chase them back to their earthen fort?"

"It won't get rid of their fort."

"No ... but if we can kill five or ten troopers every time we meet and
not lose anyone-how long before Lord Ildyrom is going to think about
abandoning that fort?  We can do the same to supply forces, you
know?"

"He'll think of something, scr."

"He probably will, and we'll have to think of something better." Sillek
motions, and the purple banners flutter in the light wind as the
Lornian forces follow those of Jerans.  "Preferably before he does."

XXVI

THE WHITE-YELLOW sun beat down across the Roof of the World, and Nylan
wiped his forehead, glancing across the fields.  The melting ice from
the mountains to the south provided some water, but the two small
streams that wound out of the rocks and meandered across the meadow
area before they joined seemed to shrink daily.  The meadow area around
the fields now bore no flowers, only grass and low bushes, except for
the stony patches where nothing grew.

Nylan's eyes followed the general path of the stream to the cut on the
north end of the eastern plateau where the stream plunged over the
edge, dropping in a thin line of silver to the creek bed on which, far
below, lay the gorge that contained Nylan's fledgling brick-making
operation.  He hadn't tried the clay piping yet.  The bricks were
proving difficult enough.  He took a deep breath.  With the laser, he
could work what seemed miracles, so long as the firm cells lasted, and
yet trying to get the consistency and texture of a demon-damned
low-tech brick ... With a shake of his head, Nylan turned, and as he
walked back from the space in the rocks, feeling relieved, his eyes
flicked over the tower.  The outer walls were complete, and so were
most of the inner walls.  Cessya, Huldran, and Weblya had the roofing
timbers in place, and the three of them were working on the
cross-stringers, while he got the tiles ready.

At the southern base of the tower were the stacks of slate tiles that
had slowly been split by Huldran, Cessya, and Weblya with the sledge
from Skiodra and the wedges he had made with the laser-just waiting to
be drilled so that the tower could be roofed.

He swallowed.

He'd never made provisions for waste disposal in the tower.

"Shit .. ."  he mumbled.  How could he have overlooked that?  It didn't
seem all that bad now, in the warmth of summer, but with ice and snow
deeper than a man or woman, or deeper than that, some provisions
definitely needed to be thought out-and he hadn't.

He walked toward the work yard and studied the tower again.

He could convert one of the fourth-level casements into a small
facility, with an exterior drop shaft into a cistern-type enclosure
with a drain for liquids.  Maybe he could add another on the fifth
level.  But some sort of bathhouse or the like would have to be
separate, and for safety's sake, have a separate water line-plus a
covered and walled passage that could be blocked off in cases of
attack, if necessary.  Some part of the bathhouse probably ought to
have laundry tubs, as well.

How ... how could he have overlooked those needs, and what else had he
overlooked?  Then again, the difficulty of covering the piping and the
heights had forced him to put the tower's cistern on the lower level.

Back in the yard, he rechecked the power levels on the block of firm
cells-down to thirty percent-mentally calculating and deciding he
might, might, make it through the day before replacing the block.  He'd
also planned to use the laser to craft another blade or two-Ryba was
insisting that he needed to provide more weapons before the laser gave
out.  In between times, he'd already managed to forge nearly a dozen of
the black blades that all the marines clamored for.  After scratching
the flaking and itching sunburned skin on his forearm, he inspected the
laser's power head with both eyes and his senses, still trying every
trick he could think of to eke out the best use of the stored power
that he was running through faster than the emergency generator would
ever be able to recharge-assuming the laser even outlasted .  the
generator.

Nylan finally eased the laser on and focused the beam, as much now with
his mind as with the manual controls, to drill the necessary holes in
the slate roofing tiles that Stentana would stack as he finished
each.

The barrel of heavy spike nails that Ayrlyn had charmed out of a
traveling trader two days toward the plains of Gallos was definitely
going to be a help.  Making nails was not something he even wanted to
try with a laser, assuming he could even figure out how.  The
transaction, according to Narliat, had taken not only Ayrlyn's charm,
but more than a gold in coin-and a gold was worth plenty in this
culture- something like a season's work for a laborer-the looming
presence of armed marines, and Narliat's guile.  She'd also come up
with another pair of heavy hammers and a huge chisel, plus, of course,
some food.  Nylan had appreciated it all, especially the cask of dried
fruit from someplace called Kyphros.

He was drilling three holes in each slate, after having tested the idea
by spiking several to sections of stringers that had proved flawed.

Once he got back into the rhythm of the work, Nylan moved through the
big slates quickly, and that was a relief, because he felt everything
he could do to stretch more life from the laser would make everyone's
life easier.

In time, his arms began to ache, as they always did after using the
laser, and his vision began to blur.

Clang!  Clang!  Clang!  Someone banged the alarm triangle.

"Bandits!"  yelled another voice, and before Nylan could finish the
hole he was drilling and cut the.  power flow and look away from the
laser, Ryba and a handful of marines were galloping across the meadow
and up the ridge.

"I thought we got the bandits earlier," said Cessya, wrestling a
rough-cut stringer toward the makeshift earthen ramp that led to the
tower door.

"This is probably another group," pointed out Nylan, his eyes on the
additional marines taking up positions on the rocky heights that
controlled the approach to the tower and the meadow and fields.  He
took a deep swallow from the cup and munched some of the stale flat
bread, feeling guilty as he did, but knowing that he couldn't do what
he did without the additional nourishment.

"Take a break, Stentana," he suggested.  "It'll be a little bit before
I can fire it up again."

"Power, scr?"

"Sort of."  He smiled wryly, not wanting to explain that he was the
underpowered part of the equipment.  He walked up the ramp and into the
shade of the second level of the tower, where he sat on the
next-to-the-bottom step.

The triangle sounded again, and Nylan heaved himself up off the step
and back out into the sunlight.

Three riders guided their mounts down toward the landers, following the
trail past the tower yard.  On the fourth mount, riderless, a body was
slung across the saddle, a body in the black olive drab of a marine.

"Who?"  asked Huldran as Istril led the horse past the tower yard.

Nylan looked at the laser and then toward Istril and the dead marine,
but the body was facedown.

"Frelita."

Nylan didn't know the marine by name, since he hadn't learned them all,
but he'd probably recognize her face-or recognize when she wasn't there
at dinner.  For a time, the tower crew watched the horses and their
riders.

"We can't help them by looking," Nylan finally said.

"I'll be glad when the tower's finished," added Huldran.

Weblya laughed once.  "Then we'll have to build a real ramp, and some
stables.  There's a lot to do."

"How about a bathhouse with showers?"  suggested Nylan.  "And a place
to do laundry?"

"Showers with ice-cold water?  No, thank you," answered Stentana.

"He's working on a furnace," said Huldran.  "Maybe he can give us a
hot-water heater."

Nylan groaned.

Huldran grinned.  "I can ask, scr."

"Let's worry about getting a solid roof on the tower first."

"Yes, scr."  The blond squared her shoulders.

Nylan finished the last of the roof slates before the sun even touched
the western peaks, with enough time-and power left-for him to shape two
more of the black blades, although they couldn't be used, not easily,
until some of the hides of the big cats killed by Gerlich were
tanned-or until they got some kind of leather to wrap the hilts.

After that, Nylan stowed the laser cells back in the space under the
tower stairs.  Then he trudged to the upper stream and washed up as
well as he could before making his way toward the cook fires.

Three repeated rings on the triangle called all but the sentries around
the fires.

Ryba stood on one of the lengths of logs, and studied the group,
waiting for silence.  Her face was grim.  "Frelita's dead.  It didn't
have to happen, but she really wasn't paying attention."  "... poor
woman .. ."  "... should have watched closer ..."

"You idiots!"  snapped Ryba, her voice cold as a winter gale, cutting
off the low murmurs.  "Did you think that after one round of bandits,
they'd all go away?  We can't afford to lose one of you every time some
idiot brigand shows up.  Do you want to be the next one skewered by one
of those arrows?  There's no such thing as one band of brigands in a
place like this.  You kill one bunch, and more show up.  And life is so
frigging hard here that they don't care much if they die, so long as
they have some fun along the way.  Fun is food, wine, beer, and
women-and they don't care how they get their women."

Saryn fingered the sharp edge of her blade, one of the better ones
Nylan had done, and one of the matching pair that the former second
pilot wore.  "... I do"

Her words were as clear as if she had been standing beside Nylan, and
he frowned.  How had he heard Saryn so clearly?

Ayrlyn, halfway between Nylan and Saryn, shook her head, then glanced
at the engineer, raising her eyebrows.  He shrugged back, trying not to
cough as the smoke from the cook fire twisted toward him.

Perhaps it wouldn't be too long before Rienadre and Denalle had fired
enough bricks to start building the big stove and the furnace in the
lower level of the tower.  Maybe completing the tower would help with
some of the security.  He pursed his lips.  Who was he kidding?  Crops
had to be tended.  Someone had to hunt.  Others had to keep watch.  The
tower would be great against the winter, and at night-but not that much
help in the warm days, except as a higher vantage point.

"Women are slaves here-outside of Westwind.  And don't you forget it.
There are few men off the Roof of the World who wouldn't want to kill
you, humble you, rape you-or all three.  We're the evil angels to a lot
of these people.  Now we can change that, and we're going to-but we
can't do it if you get yourselves killed."  A cast of sadness crossed
the captain's face.  "I'm sorry about Frelita.  I wish it hadn't
happened.  And I'm still sorry about Desinada.  But let's not let it
happen again."  She stepped down and walked through the marines toward
Nylan.

He touched her forearm, and she looked at him, then nodded toward the
tower.  So they walked back up the gentle slope until the black stones
loomed over them.

"It always takes death or force to get people's attention.  And one
death sometimes doesn't even do it," Ryba began.  "I've got to act like
some ancient dictator just to get people to follow common sense."

"Not all of us," suggested Nylan.

"Thank the darkness."  Ryba sighed.  "But they complain about sawing
planks, cleaning saw blades, or making bricks.  Don't they?"

"Sometimes."

"And what do you tell them?"

"I ask them if they want to spend the winter with a thin layer of metal
between them and snow twice their height, eating frozen food and
breaking their teeth-if they've got the strength to eat."  Nylan
paused.  "Selling the tower's easy.  They can see it.  It's hard to
sell alertness, or general preparedness, or anything people can't
touch."

Ryba nodded.  "Sometimes ... sometimes, I get so tired."

Nylan put his arms around her.

She stiffened for a moment, then relaxed.  "Have to remember to take
comfort when I can."

"That's all we can do."

After a time, they separated and walked slowly back toward the cook
fires and a late supper.  Overhead, the cold stars blinked out and
shone down on the Roof of the World, each as cold as the ice that
coated Freyja, as cold as the latest cairn in the southwestern corner
of the Roof of the World, where there were getting to be too many
cairns, too quickly.

XXVII

THE LOW GRAY clouds that had brought the long-overdue afternoon rain
scud eastward and toward the mighty Westhorns as Sillek peers on his
knees through both the twilight and the chest-high, damp grasses.  Less
than a thousand cubits away, across a slight depression, lie the
earthen ramparts that sit on the last raised ground controlling the
approach to the ford-and the road to Clynya.  Behind the ramparts are
several tents, and more than a handful of long rough-planked buildings
with sodded roofs.  The air smells of damp grass, soil, and
woodsmoke.

"Can you set those buildings on fire, Master Mage?"  he asks Terek.

"This grass is damp, scr."

"The buildings?"  hisses Sillek.

"Yes, scr, but I'd have to get closer, much closer.  They've cut away
all the grass-"

"Burned it, I think," corrects Sillek.  "You can see in the dark, can't
you?  Mages are supposed to be able to do that."

"In the dark?  You want us to do this in the dark?"

"As I told Koric, I'm not a slave to an outmoded code of honor, Master
Chief Wizard.  That bastard Ildyrom disregarded honor and traditional
boundaries when he seized the grasslands west of Clynya and built this
fort to hold them.  Honor says I should send my arms men against a
bunch of mongrel scum to have them killed?  Frig honor.  I intend to
get the grasslands back without killing my men."

Terek shifts his weight from one knee to the other in the high damp
grass, all too aware he does not wear the hip-length boots that Sillek
does.

"When it gets dark, Koric and a handful of the best will escort you and
the two other wizards down as far as you need to go.  I want everything
in that fort to burn-everything."

"But they'll flee."

"Of course."  Sillek smiles.  "I've thought of that, too.  Now, let's
get back and get ready."  He glances to the darkening western horizon,
then back to the thin lines of smoke coming up from the wooden huts
behind the earthen walls.

Terek shivers, but follows the lord as the two creep back through the
grasses, hoping that the sentries in the fort can see nothing but grass
waving in the evening breeze.  "..  . all this sneaking ..."  Terek
mumbles to himself.  "Do you want to ride up front in a charge to take
that fort, Master Wizard?"  asks Sillek, still easing through the damp
grasses in a crouch, grasses that bend and then spray Terek with the
rain that has coated them.  Terek wipes his forehead.  "Noser

"Then stop complaining.  I'm a lot more interested in winning than in
being a dead hero, and, from what I've seen, so are you,"

When they reach the low hill that shelters the Lornian forces, Sillek
straightens and massages his back.

Koric waits and listens as Lord Sillek explains.  "... won't be too
much longer before it's dark enough for you to start, Koric."

"Yes, scr."

Sillek touches his arm and lowers his voice.  "Who else can I trust to
ensure these ... wizards ... do as they're supposed to?  I can't spare
a score of horse or the archers."

"I understand, scr.  I'll do my duty."

Both Sillek and Koric understand the words that Koric does not speak.
But I don't have to like it.

"I know," Sillek says.  "Just remember.  It's the results that count."
He studies the almost-dark sky and the stars that have appeared. "You'd
better get started."

Koric nods.

Sillek wipes what moisture he can from his leathers, and boots, before
mounting and beginning his instructions to the horse troopers.

As the skies continue to clear, and the white fire points of the stars
blink across the grasslands, Koric leads the three wizards through the
grass.  Watch fires glimmer at the four corners of the fort, spilling
light into the darkness.

Another group from Lornth circles behind the wizards, heading for the
ford in the West Fork.  The dozen men bear longbows and filled
quivers.

Farther from the Jeranyi redoubt, sheltered by the slope of the land
and the, chest-high grass, Lord Sillek and his horse wait, then he
nods, and, almost silently, the troopers begin their roundabout ride to
the south side of the road that leads from the ford to the fort.

The grass bends and whispers, showering Hissl with droplets.  He wipes
his face and follows, at a crouch, Koric and the chief wizard.

"Keep down," hisses Koric.  "You mages get us discovered, and you'll
spend the next season in cold iron, if the Jeranyi don't catch us, and
do it first."

Hissl takes a deep breath and wipes more water out of his eyes.  Jissek
just puffs along after Terek.  Behind them follow a half squad of armed
troopers, also creeping through the damp grass and darkness.

"Is this close enough?"  asks Koric as he pauses and glances toward the
watch fires that are little more than a hundred cubits away, their
flames flickering in the light but steady wind out of the west that
brings with it the smell of wood fires, probably from wood ferried
downstream from the headwaters of the West Fork.  Mixed with the wood
smoke is the odor of cooking grease.

Hissl licks his lips, trying to ignore the growling in his guts.

"Close enough," admits Terek, "even for Jissek."

"You start when you're ready," orders Koric.  "The others will watch
for the fires."

"The center building is mostly wood," offers Hissl in a low voice.

"Thank you, Master Hissl," responds Terek.

"Stop it, you two," mumbles Jissek.  "Let's get on with it."

"You also, Master Jissek," hisses Terek.  "I'll do the first, then
Hissl, and then you, Jissek.  Take your time, and hit something."

Whhsttt!

The first fire bolt arcs out of the grass and drops into the fort-
slamming into the side of a building where flames lick at the
rough-dressed log wall.

Clang!  Clang!

The Jeranyi warning bell echoes through the fort.

More fireballs arc out of the darkness and fall across the buildings
within the earthen walls.

The bell clamors more, then falls silent as the sound of voices and
muffled orders fill the once-still evening.  "... mount up and fall
in!"

"Archers!  ... Where are the frigging archers?"

"Fire!  Water for the cook hall!  Fire!"

Three additional fireballs, the first the largest, drop in succession
into the fort.

"Aeeeeiiii!"  A scream tells that at least one has struck more than
wood.

The crackling of flames joins the chorus of orders and the whuffing and
whinnying of hastily saddled mounts.  The night air lightens with the
growing flames from the buildings in the fort, with burning canvas, and
the smell of smoke thickens as it drifts toward the wizards.

Another round of fireballs flares eastward.  After his fourth fire bolt
Jissek drops to his knees and holds his head.  Terek snorts and flings
another ball of fire toward the fort, and so does Hissl, who ignores
the sweat beading on his forehead despite the cool night wind.

The flames continue to build, and the cool wind becomes warm, then hot,
and the Jeranyi redoubt blazes with the light of a second sun.

Terek grunts as he lets go a last fire bolt  "Can't do much more
here."

"All right.  Let's move back.  Keep low until we're out of the
light."

As all three wizards stumble after the surefooted Koric, the fort's
gates open, and the Jeranyi horse ride quickly down the road toward the
ford, in rough ranks, blades glittering in the light of dozens of
fires.

The whirring of arrows, like soft-winged birds, is lost in the clatter
and thump of hooves, in the low-voiced orders, and the crackling of the
fire.  The bodies slumping in saddles are not.

"Charge the river!"  orders a strong tenor voice.

"The river!"  adds a second, deeper voice.

The column straightens, and the Jeranyi forces gallop downhill, hooves
thudding on the damp-packed clay of the road, before splashing through
the water and heading into the darkness that leads to Jerans.

More soft-winged arrows fly out of the darkness into the backlighted
horse troopers, and more bodies fall from saddles.  Some few wounded
riders are fortunate enough and strong enough to hang on and keep
riding into the safety of the western darkness.

Shortly, the road is empty, except for more than two dozen bodies and
two riderless horses.

Behind the empty road, the pillar of fire that had been a Jeranyi
outpost slowly subsides, consuming as it does all that can burn, and
filling Clynya, kays downwind, and the barracks there, with the odor of
smoke and burned meat.

Later, much later, in the small upper room of the barracks, Sillek
smiles.  "That should give Ildyrom something to think about."

Koric nods slowly.  "This time.  What if he rebuilds?"

"This time, the wizards will watch.  One of them will stay here with a
detachment."

The three wizards exchange glances.

Koric nods slowly.  "Might I?"

"If that would please you, Captain."  Sillek turns to Terek.  "I would
appreciate it if Master Hissl might serve my captain Koric here."

"I am most certain that Master Hissl would be pleased," answers
Terek.

"Indeed, I would be pleased, Your Grace," responds Hissl.  His voice is
low, only a shade more animated than if it were absolutely flat.

In the corner, Jissek wipes his forehead.

XXVIII

HIGH HAZY CLOUDS hovered above Freyja, moving slowly eastward, and
behind them, to the west, lurked a hint of darkness.

Nylan cleared his throat and checked over his equipment, from the worn
gauntlets and the scratched goggles never designed for such intensive
use down to the crude trough of water and hydraulic fluid.

He ran his fingers over the blade he was using as a model once more
before picking up another of the endurasteel braces from the landers.
His senses, now more practiced, studied the metal, checking the
imperfections hidden within.

With a deep breath, he pulled on the goggles and the gauntlets and
touched the power-up studs on the firm cell bank.  After picking up the
heavy brace, he readjusted and pulsed the laser, slowly cutting along
the grain of the metal.  He'd finally gotten used to guiding a laser by
feel, and he even didn't try to analyze what he was doing too deeply.

When he had completed the rough cut, he released the power stud and
checked the cut and the metal-still rough, still partly disordered.
Next came spreading the beam for a wider heat flow and to get the heat
and power to guide the semifinished shape of the blade.

After his round of shaping, he concentrated on the hand guards and
tang.  As he cut and melted the metal, he eased the metal into shape
and order, trying not to remember how he once had smoothed power fluxes
through the Winter-lance 's neuro net

Almost as an afterthought, he tried to bind that... darkness ... that
accompanied the local net into the metal.  He'd gotten better.  Not
only did the blade glow with a lambent darkness, but it felt more right
for him.  He'd keep this blade and pass the one he had been using
along.

By the time he'd completed and tempered the blade, the power loss was
only about a half percent from the cells- but he was exhausted as he
slumped onto one of the extra wall stones and gulped down the water
from the battered and scratched gray plastic cup.  Perhaps the extra
energy required by the darkness he had put in the metal?

He licked his dry lips and looked across the tower yard.  Beyond the
extra wall stones were the thicker slate chunks that would be used for
flooring-at least in the lowest tower level and in the great hall.

The wind had picked up, its cooling welcome as it ruffled his unevenly
cut short hair.  Jaseen had tried, but the aesthetic effect left
something to be desired.  Not that he cared that much-or did he?

To avoid that speculation, Nylan glanced up beyond Freyja, noting that
the sky was darkening, becoming almost black upon the mountains that
formed the horizon.

"Frig .. . he's here early .. . and another miracle blade," mumbled
Weindre to Huldran as the two entered the area outside the tower that
was coming to be known as the yard.  "Don't complain.  Your life just
might rest on those blades.  How many rounds are left in your little
slug-thrower?"  Huldran grinned at Nylan.

The engineer offered a quick smile in return, then glanced at the roof,
where three sides were complete, with the black-gray slate tiles spiked
in place.  Only the east side remained unfinished, with three lines of
tile in place along the bottom stringers.

They'd used mortar to seal the ridges, although Nylan knew something
more plastic, like tar or pitch, would have been far better-but where
could they find that?

"I know.  I know," answered Weindre as she stopped in the yard.  "But I
feel so awkward with a piece of sharp metal in my hands."

"Better learn to get comfortable with it," suggested the stocky blond
marine.  "Otherwise you'll end up like Desinada or Frelita."

"You want us like the captain or the second, or Istril?  They're
scary."  Weindre paused.  "Even the engineer-pardon, scr-he's pretty
good, and he doesn't practice that much,"

A dull rumbling echoed off the western peaks, followed by another round
of thunder.  Three quarters of the sky was black, but the sun still
shone in the east.

He forced himself up.  "I'll need some help getting all this into the
space in the center of the tower."

"Scr?"  Another roll of thunder pounded out of the mountains.

"This is going to be a demon-damned storm.  Let's go!  Now!"

"Yes, scr."  Huldran grabbed Weindre by the arm, and the two marines
unfolded the carry-arms for the firm cell racks.

Nylan began gathering tools and loose objects as the wind began to tear
around him.

Overhead, the clouds gathered into a dark mass almost as black as deep
space.  The wind had risen to a whistling shriek by the time the three
had stowed all the equipment, as well as the just-finished black blade,
back in the tower, and Nylan had secured the heavy door.

"Now what?"  shouted Huldran above the wind.

The lightning cracked across the sky, the white-yellow bolt reflecting
off the ice of Freyja, the rumbling echoing back and forth between the
high peaks after each bolt.

"Just stay here in the lower level of the tower," suggested Nylan.
"We'll see how well we built."

Weindre looked at the two.

"I'd rather be here than in one of those flimsy landers," snapped
Huldran.  Nylan sat on one of the steps, his eyes resting on the low
lines of brick that represented the base of the stove.  The furnace was
waiting on the results of his efforts in firing clay piping.

Weindre glanced up the stairs, then followed Huldran over to a side
wall.  Unlike Nylan, neither sat-they just stood listening to the
storm.

His eyes closed as he leaned back against the stones, Nylan let his
senses follow the patterns of the storm.  Even without straining, he
could feel the interplay of chaos and order, like the power flows that
occurred when the angels' de-energizers fought with the mirror towers
of the demons.  He doubted he'd sense that type of battle again, not
with technology, anyway.

Like ice knives, the rain slashed down, heavy droplets dashing against
the stone walls of the tower, then running in rivulets downward.

Clack!  Clack!

Fist-sized hailstones banged off the stones of the tower walls.

A small trickle of water, blown through the unfinished main doorway,
began to drop from one side of the stairwell above, down onto the
packed clay of the tower's lowest level.  Before long, the drops became
a stream.

The wind continued to howl, and Nylan wished that he'd insisted that
the big front door be finished and hung.  He still hadn't done much
more on the waste-disposal problem than rework the two casements.

The water had formed a large puddle, almost a small pond in the lowest
part of the tower basement, that grew as Nylan watched.

Almost as suddenly as the storm had begun, the clacking of the
hailstones died away, and the wind's whistling dropped off.

Nylan stood and eased his way up the steps and onto the water-soaked
timbers and stone subflooring of the tower's entry level.  From the
doorless front portal, he looked out across the Roof of the World.  The
lower corners of the larger field were little more than knee-deep
gullies, leading into a man-deep canyon that ran right off the edge of
the plateau.  Even in the middle of the northernmost fields, some of
the small potato nodules were half-exposed, hanging out over ditches.
Only the stone cairns-one large and eight smaller ones-looked
untouched.  That figured.

Nylan shrugged and walked out into the drizzle, then looked back at the
tower.  The walls seemed solid, and the foundations untouched, although
the open casements on the upper levels were dark with moisture.  His
eyes went higher.  From what he could tell, only the lower line of
slate tiles on the east side had been damaged, and about half, a good
twenty, were either askew or missing.

Nylan hoped the laser lasted longer, because trying to hand bore or
punch those slates would create a lot of broken tiles-and more than a
little wasted effort for Weblya, Huldran, and Cessya.

"Shit!"  Huldran's voice was bitter.

"That's only a handful of roof tiles," Nylan pointed out, turning back
toward the landers and trying to ignore a sense of loss as he plodded
through ankle-deep water and mud.  He didn't know what he should-or
could-do, but he needed to find out the rest of the damage.

"Yes, scr, but we didn't need any of this."  Huldran walked at his
elbow..

"Probably not.  We should have expected it, though.  I imagine fall,
winter, and spring are all this violent, if not worse."

"Hate this place."

"You'd rather be down on the plains, melting into a pile of goo?"

"The whole friggin' planet, scr."

"None of us planned this.  We do what we can."  And hope that it's
enough and that we didn't do anything too stupid, he added to himself.
"We'll need to run wider diversion ditches around the field to stop
this sort of thing."

Heaps of hail lay strewn everywhere across the meadow, and the drizzle
that kept falling was tinged with ice flakes.  Ryba looked up from a
prone figure where she and Jaseen, the combat med tech struggled.  "We
need dressings, Nylan.  Gerlich's out hunting, and he knew the storage
plan by heart.  Try lander three.  Huldran, can you take charge of the
diversion in the fields so that we don't lose any more crops?"

"Yes, scr."  The blond marine was moving as she spoke.  "Will do."  As
Nylan turned to go for the med supplies he asked, "What happened?"

"One of those skinny little trees with the gray leaves- the storm
ripped off a top branch.  Kadran didn't even see it coming in the wind
and rain.  Went through her shoulder like a set of barbed arrows."

Nylan winced, but stepped up his pace.  He was halfway through the
second bin in lander three when Ayrlyn joined him and started at the
other end of the bins.

Nylan ran through an emergency medical kit.  "There are a couple of
modules missing here."

"Don't bother with that, Nylan."  Ayrlyn frowned.  "Great help here.
This one says it's the emergency surgery section, and here's the
section for emergency childbirth.  Someone's been into it, but it's
been resealed."

"Be a while before we need that."  Nylan glanced through the lander
door, but did not see the all-too-visibly-pregnant Ellysia.  "How
Gerlich .. ."  He turned back and discarded the single remaining
bone-splint kit.

"There are some stupid ones left.  Every generation there always are.
Not many, but she'd never considered birth control.  Now, what about
this-standard first aid-"

"That's it.  We need to run that over to Jaseen."

"I'll do that.  See if you can find any more.  We might need them.  Who
knows what happened to those who were caught out in the open?"  Ayrlyn
grasped the sealed package and left while Nylan carefully worked
through the dwindling medical supplies, before finding another sealed
package of surgical dressings.  He decided against taking them, but set
the package in the now-empty first bin before leaving the lander.

In the short time he'd been in the lander, Ryba had managed to start
the process of restoring order.  Kyseen was rebuilding the cook fire,
and straightening up that area, while Huldran had managed to divert the
main flow of water from the bean field and had a crew working on the
potatoes.

Ryba was checking over the mounts, and Istril headed off with two
others to see about rounding up two mounts that had left the makeshift
corral.

Everything, except the tower, it seemed, was makeshift, and he still
didn't have the demon-damned thing finished- or even the plans worked
out for the bathhouse and laundry addition and the jakes in the
tower.

Slowly he walked back to the tower, where the lower level lay filled
with puddles, one of them almost a half cubit deep.  Drains.  He had
forgotten drains-another mistake to be rectified.

When he reached the tower yard, and the slowly vanishing puddles, he
turned and looked up, studying the rain, now only falling steadily in a
form somewhere between a fine mist and a heavy drizzle.  The piles of
white hailstones, like bleached bones, stood out on the green of the
meadow.

Then he walked up into the tower and started up the stairs to check on
the damage to the east roof.

As he climbed, he wondered about his brick-making and the crude oven,
then shook his head.  That had been low tech, and if the rains had
carried it away, he would find a way to rebuild it.

XXIX

HISSL STARES INTO the glass, looking at the waving stalks of grass, and
at the burned fort, with the few wisps of smoke still threading into
the sky.  Concentrating again, he waits for the image to re-form, and
it does, showing an empty road that would lead to Berlitos, should he
desire the glass to follow the track.

There are no signs of the Jeranyi.  Hissl tugs at his chin.  Ildyrom
must have pulled back a long ways, perhaps as far as Berlitos.

The wizard frowns, and the white mists fill the glass, eventually
showing a line of horse troopers trudging down a forest road behind the
fir-tree banner.  Since there are no forests near Clynya, that means
Ildyrom has in fact stopped pressing his claim on the grasslands-for
now.

The white wizard shakes his head.  "You'll be stuck here for
seasons-seasons, angel-damn!"  His words are low, but they hiss with
frustration.

He looks around the small room, then out the narrow window into the
blue of the morning and over the low thatched roofs of Clynya toward
the West Fork he cannot see from the second story of the barracks.  As
he does, the image fades from the glass.

"Terek .. . with you scheming in Lornth, how will I ever get out of
here?  If I'm successful, Ildyrom won't get the grasslands back, and
I'll be stuck here.  If I'm not..  ."  He shakes his head and looks
down at the blank glass.

In time, he studies the mirror once more, and the mists swirl, and in
the midst of the swirling white appears the Roof of the World, and the
black tower that stands, despite the storm, and the silver-haired
figure in olive-black who trudges up the stone steps.  The glass also
shows the aura of darkness that surrounds the man in the glass.

"A mage, and he knows it not."  After a time, Hissl gestures, and the
image vanishes, leaving only a blank and flat mirror on the small
table.

Finally, he smiles, tightly, thinking about bandits and the Roof of the
World.

XXX

STANDING OUTSIDE THE lander, with the light wind that promised fall
ruffling his hair, Nylan slowly finished the gruel that passed as
morning porridge, along with cold bread, his thoughts on the tower once
more.

Huldran and the others had been less than pleased when Nylan had
insisted on putting a drain in the bottom of the tower, nor had Ryba
been happy when he had used the laser to drill through some of the
rock.

"A waste of power ..."

Nylan disagreed-the lowest level of the tower needed to be dry.
Dampness destroyed too many things.  He swallowed the last bite of the
lumpy gruel with a shudder and glanced toward the tower.  At least the
roof and doors were in place, and he could concentrate on making the
place livable.  Outside the front door, Cessya and Weblya had already
begun to haul stones in to fill the space between the walls of the
causeway.

The engineer walked over to the wash kettle and rinsed the wooden
platter before racking it.  He hoped that they could finish the tower
kitchen before long-but he needed to work out the problems with making
the water pipes.  If the climate were warmer he could have just built a
covered aqueduct, but that would freeze solid for half the year.

He walked back toward Ryba, his eyes rising back toward the dark stones
of the tower that was somehow tall, squat, and massive all at the same
time.

"What are you thinking?"  asked Ryba.  "You're not really even here."

"About water pipes, kitchens, laundry."  He paused.  "About building a
bathhouse or whatever."

"I suppose you want to start a soap factory, too."

"Someone else can worry about that.  I'm an engineer, not a chemist."

"Good."  She laughed harshly.  "The bandits are whittling away at our
ammunition.  We need more blades.  Can you coax out another two
dozen?"

"Another two dozen?  Don't most of the marines have one?"

"They'll need two."

Nylan pursed his lips.  "I can do some.  I don't know how many.  I
thought the cells would be the problem, but there's a raggedness in the
power heads

"And you had to drill a drain?"

"Yes .. . if you didn't want all the supplies to mold and mildew."

She shook her head.  "You're stubborn."

"Not so stubborn as you are."  Nylan wondered how long before everyone
would think he was obsessed with building, if they didn't already.  Why
didn't they see that they had one chance-just one?

A single clang on the triangle echoed through the morning.  Ryba and
Nylan looked up to see Llyselle ride across the meadow.  Llyselle
bounced slightly in the saddle, but Nylan knew that he bounced even
more when he rode.  He didn't have Sybran nomad blood-or training.  The
tall, silver-haired marine reined up outside the cooking area, but
before she could dismount, Ryba stood there, Nylan not far behind
her.

"There's a herder down there, waving a white flag," Llyselle announced.
"He's got some sheep or goats, and something in cages."

"Let's hope he wants to sell something."  Ryba pointed at the nearest
marine-Siret.  "Go find Narliat, and Ayrlyn, and ask them to join
us."

"Yes, scr."  Siret glanced at Nylan with a strange look in her deep
green eyes, then turned away, but Nylan could tell she was definitely
thicker in the midsection, unlike Selitra.  Yet Selitra had been
sleeping with Gerlich, and she didn't seem pregnant.  But Siret, the
silent silver-haired guard?

Before long, Narliat limped up, using a cane, but without the makeshift
leg cast he had worn for so long.

Ryba repeated Llyselle's explanation.

"Most herders would not come this high with you angels here.  Once this
was good summer pasture, but now The former arms man shrugged. "Times
have been hard, and your coins are good.  He would not have to drive
animals all the way to Lornth or to Gallos.  The cages-they might be
chick-ins."

"What does the white banner mean?"  asked Ryba.

"Scr Marshal, it means he wants to get your attention.  Beyond that?  I
do not know."

"Hmmmm ... we need all the supplies we can buy or grow, and they
probably won't be enough."  Ryba glanced up at the tower and then back
to Ayrlyn and Narliat.  "How do we approach this herder?"

"You walk down with a handful of people, I suppose," began Ayrlyn.

"Just one or two-not the marshal or the mage," added Narliat. "Powerful
angels should not start negotiations with herders."

"We did with Skiodra," pointed out Ryba.

"That, it was different, because it was under a trade flag and Skiodra
was himself there, and he is a powerful trader."

"If you say so."  Ryba glanced around.  "All right.  Everyone!  Get
your weapons.  Let's hope we won't need them.  Meet by the triangle at
the watch station on the right... by the road to the tower."  She
turned to Fierral.  "Where's Gerlich?"

"Where he is every morning.  Out hunting."  The head marine's voice
bore overtones of disgust.

"If he shows up ... tell him, too."

Nylan hurried to the lander where he reclaimed his sidearm and the
blade he had forged, which was too small for the overlarge scabbard. He
tried not to fall over the damned thing every time he wore it.  Ryba
might never be without her weapons, but he couldn't work with a pistol
at his side and a blade banging his leg.

Ryba had the big roan saddled when he reached the watch station.

The herder waited below at the foot of the ridge.  Occasionally, the
man looked up the slope, then back at the milling sheep, or shifted his
weight as he leaned against the side of the cart.

Finally, after talking to Fierral and Istril, Ryba nodded.

Carrying the small circular shields they had reclaimed from the last
brigands, with Narliat between them, Berlis and Rienadre walked down
the ridge toward the herder, who had a white banner leaned against his
cart.  Beyond the herder were perhaps five ewes with their lambs.

Nylan and Ryba watched from the rocks at the top of the ridge as the
three neared the herder.  The herder and the three talked, with Narliat
doing most of the speaking.  Finally, Berlis turned uphill and
gestured.

Neither Nylan nor Ryba could make out the words.

"Do you think it's all right?"  asked the captain.

"I don't know, but nothing's going to happen if someone doesn't head
down there.  From what Berlis is trying to tell us, the trader won't
trade unless a more important person appears."

"I don't like this," muttered Ryba.

"All right, ride down.  That gives you more mobility-and have Istril
and some of the others ready to charge like those old Sybran
cavalry."

"Very funny."

"We need the sheep, and maybe those chickens, and you know it.  So does
the herder.  He's gambling that you just won't steal them.  You're
gambling that it's not some kind of setup."

"Wish I could see ... everything ..."

Below them, Berlis gestured again.

"You can't?"

"It comes and goes, and some of it... makes no sense.  Some is too
clear."  Ryba vaulted into the saddle.  "Fierral!  Istril!  Stand by.
Llyselle, you ride with me-on the right."

Nylan noted that the trees at the base of the ridge were on the right,
but before he could speak the two started down the ridge, riding
slowly.  He kept watching, but nothing changed.  The herder watched as
the two riders neared, and so did Berlis and Rienadre.

Abruptly, Llyselle's horse reared, sending the silver-haired marine
flying.  Ryba bent low in the saddle, turned her roan toward the trees,
and charged.

"Let's go!"  Fierral and the others galloped down the ridge.

Feeling as if he were making a big mistake, Nylan followed on foot.  He
was halfway down the ridge, his worn boots skidding on the rocky ground
before he realized he was alone.

Ahead, the mounted marines charged into the trees.  Nylan heard the
reports of the sidearms and saw the sun flash off Ryba's blade.  He
kept moving, but, by the time he neared the herder's cart, the action
was over.

Llyselle was limping toward the cart, looking uphill past Nylan, and
the engineer turned and saw Ayrlyn riding down, carrying two large
plastic sacks with green crosses on them-medical supplies or dressings.
Nylan wished he'd been smart enough to think of a horse or medical
supplies, or something.  Instead, he'd just run into the middle of what
could have been trouble, too late to help and without any support.

He pursed his lips as Ayrlyn rode past.  There was still trouble.
Llyselle was holding her right arm, cradling it, as though it were
broken or injured, and Narliat and the herder were still under the
cart.  Fierral and Istril had charged off downhill through the trees.

Nylan kept walking, his eyes checking on all sides.  As he neared the
cart and the beginning of the forest on his right, he saw several
bodies near the trees, and one on the open ridge ground, with two
marines beside her.

The downed marine was Stentana-an arrow through her eye.  An arrow, for
darkness' sake.

Nylan counted eight brigand bodies and, his eyes elsewhere, almost
tripped over his scabbard.  He caught himself and turned at the sound
of hooves, reaching for the blade, but the riders were Istril and
Fierral, and they led two more horses, each with a body slung across
it.

Nylan turned toward the cart.  There Ayrlyn was treating a wound caused
where an arrow seemed to have ripped into Berlis's thigh.  Llyselle
stood beside Berlis, waiting.

"Strip the bodies and make a cairn down there, over by the rocks,"
commanded Ryba.  "No sense in dragging them up the mountainside.  Take
all their clothes.  We need rags as well as anything-but the clothes
all need washing, and then some."

Since he didn't seem to have been much use, Nylan plodded toward the
woods, and grabbed one of the bodies by the boots and dragged the
corpse toward the rocks where Ryba had pointed, but toward an area
where small boulders seemed more plentiful.  Damned if he were going to
make burial hard on himself, not for men killed as a result of their
own failed ambush.

Nylan forced himself to strip the bandit, barely more than a youth
despite the straggly beard and the.  scar across one cheek.  The
bandit's purse held only two silvers and a worn copper, but both
silvers were shiny.  The man wore a quiver, but had dropped his bow
somewhere.  He had no blade, just a knife that was badly nicked.  As
for clothing, he had worn a tattered and faded half cloak that had once
been green of some shade, a ragged shirt, once brown, trousers, also
once brown, but of a differing shade, and two mismatched boots, both
with holes in the soles.  No undergarments, and no jewelry.

After looking at the threadbare garments and cloak, Nylan agreed with
Ryba's assessment of their use as rags.  He also wondered how many
vermin the clothes harbored.  At the same time, in a way, he felt sorry
for the dead man.  Life couldn't have been that easy for him.

"Another attack?"  Gerlich had ridden in from the trail to the west,
the one that looped north from the ridge before descending and turning
west, unlike the other two-one of which descended around the lower east
side of the ridge and eventually led to Nylan's brickworks.  Across his
saddle lay three large and brown-furred rodent like creatures, already
gutted.

"This one was a little different," Nylan explained as Siret dragged
another body across the ground and let it fall next to the one Nylan
had stripped.  "They used that herder there as bait."

"Dump the clothes there in that pile," ordered Fierral, still mounted,
and pointed to the stack Nylan had made.

"What about the coins and other stuff?"  asked Siret.

"You can keep a knife-if you don't have a belt knife," answered Ryba.
"If you do, pass it to someone who doesn't.  You can keep the local
coppers, too.  Share them if you think you can.  Give any silvers or
golds to the comm officerAyrlyn.  We'll need those to buy food and
supplies-from the next honest trader."

"They seem to have things well in hand," observed Gerlich.

The herder and Narliat had crawled out from beneath the cart.  Berlis
and Rienadre stalked toward them.  So did Huldran and another seven
marines.  The herder looked up at the circle of marines.  Then he
slumped into a heap.

"He's just fainted," said Ayrlyn softly.

"Never saw angry women with blades," snorted Ryba.  "What about the
others?"

"I did nothing," pleaded Narliat.  "Nothing, I swear it."

"Just stuff it," growled Berlis as Ayrlyn sprayed a disinfectant into
the guard's wound.  "Don't tell me how you didn't see it coming."

Llyselle leaned against the side of the cart, her face paler than her
silver hair.

Brawwwwkkk .. . awwwkkkk .. . From the handful of cages behind the
injured marine came the sound of chickens.

"Are there any other bandits around?"  Ryba asked Fierral.

"Istril and I chased down the two who ran.  Istril was complaining that
she had to shoot them.  She didn't want to waste the ammunition."

"We need to think about bows," snapped Gerlich as he eased his horse
next to Ryba's.  "We need some sort of long-range weapon."

"There are four or five here.  Two got broken," announced Siret.

"We'd better start learning to use them," suggested Gerlich.

Nylan frowned.  Gerlich was right.  But could he build a better bow?
One with a longer range?  Out of some of the composites in the
lander?

"Look out," whispered Istril..  "The engineer's got that look again."

"What about these damned sheep?"  asked Gerlich, gesturing around at
the near dozen ewes and lambs.

"They're all ours," snapped Ryba.  "We'll let the herder go."

"Don't forget the chickens," Nylan said.  "Good source of protein."

"Pay him one copper.  I only suggest," Narliat added hastily as Berlis
glared at him while Ayrlyn continued wrapping a tape dressing around
the wounded marine's thigh.

"Local custom?"  asked Nylan.

"It is traditional for treachery.  He cannot claim he was not paid."

"Fine.  Nylan-you and Ayrlyn take care of it," said Ryba.  "Just make
sure he understands."

"He already understands," said Ayrlyn.  "That's why he passed out."

Ryba pointed toward Denalle and Rienadre.  "You two, and anyone else
you can round up, figure out how to get these animals up over the ridge
and into the grass on the west end.  We can use the manure to fertilize
the crops-or maybe compost it some way for next year.  I'm no herder,
but they'll provide meat at the least and maybe wool, if we can figure
out what to do with it."  She gestured up the ridge.

"Yes, scr."  The two nodded and looked at the sheep, then slowly
circled downhill of the milling animals.

The herder moaned, and Berlis levered her blade out, wincing, but the
point was firm as it rested against the herder's neck.  The man's eyes
bulged.

"Go ahead.  Explain it to him, Narliat," Ayrlyn suggested.  She
rummaged through the prepackaged medical gear.

"I have no copper."

Nylan fished out the purse he had taken from the dead bandit, extracted
the single copper, and handed the worn coin to Narliat.  "There."

Narliat looked at Nylan, turned to the herder, then to Berlis.  Berlis
retracted the sword.  The herder swallowed, but did not move.

"Sit up," Nylan commanded in his poor Anglorat-good enough because the
herder sat up slowly.  "Go ahead," the engineer told Narliat.

"This is your payment.  It is full payment for your treachery.  There
is no other payment, save death, should you reject this coin."

The herdsman gulped, looking toward Ryba.  "Kind lady .. . they made
me.  They would have killed me.  My ewes, they are half my flock ... my
children will suffer ... Take the fowl... take them as my gift, but...
the flock .. . ?"

Ryba's eyes were as hard as emerald.  "Your treachery has killed a
dozen men, not that they were worth much, and one of my marines, who
was worth much.  Another has lost the use of her arm, and a third took
an arrow in the thigh.  Don't talk of suffering."

Narliat looked at Nylan, and the engineer realized that the herder had
not understood a word.  "Our people have suffered from your treachery,"
Nylan explained in Old Anglorat.  "You helped make that treachery.  The
marshal has been generous.  Will you take payment or death?"

Narliat's slight nod confirmed that Nylan's words met the formula.

"And," Nylan added, though he could not have said why, "do not think to
take the coin and reject the offer.  Do not take the coin and curse us.
For then you will live all your days as though you had died, and you
will be tortured endlessly."  He could feel something flash before-or
from-his eyes.

The herder fell forward in another dead faint.

"Friggin' torps," said Berlis.  "Man has no guts.  Faints twice, and
nothing touched him."

"The .. . mage .. . did," stuttered Narliat.  "He-the herder-will never
think a dangerous thought again."

"Impressive," said Ayrlyn.

The herder groaned and slowly picked himself up.  "The coin ... the
copper .  please ... please ..."

Narliat handed him the copper.

"Please .. . can I take my cart?  Please let me depart."

"Go on," said Ryba.

The herder looked at Nylan.

"Go.  Never forget."  - "No, great one.  No.  No."  The herder shivered
as he slowly unstacked the four crates, each with a pair of chickens
with reddish-brown feathers.  Then he took the pony's reins and untied
them from the stake in the ground.  Leaving the white banner on the
ground, he led the cart away, looking back over his shoulder every few
paces.

"We need a cart," Nylan said, looking at the departing herder.

"A cart?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"For firewood, bricks, you name it..  ."

"Fine," laughed Ayrlyn.  "Saryn and I will work on it."

"You?"

"Why not?  If you can build towers and forge swords, surely two of us
can find a way to build a simple cart."

"Now that you've disposed of those logistics, how did you manage that
last bit of terror, Nylan?"  asked Ryba.

Ayrlyn frowned, but stepped back from the marshal as Ryba edged the
roan closer to the engineer.

"What?"

"Terrifying that poor sot."

"He's not a sot, scr," said Berlis.  "He's a worthless hunk of meat."
Then she paused.  "I have to admit that the engineer scared me for an
instant, and I didn't even know what he was saying."

"I'm waiting, Nylan," said Ryba lightly.

The engineer finally shrugged.  "A little applied psychology and a
menacing tone in a foreign accent."  His head throbbed slightly as he
said the words, and he frowned.

"Psychology, my left toe," muttered Ayrlyn under her breath. "Wizardry,
plain and simple."

Nylan flushed, but Ryba had eased her mount back slightly and missed
the byplay.  The engineer said more loudly, to catch Ryba's ear, "I
still need to go down and check the brickworks.  There's nothing I can
do here right now, and I want to get the tower ready to live in."

Ryba opened her mouth, closed it, then said, "All right.  I trust
you'll use your senses to scout the way."

The slight emphasis on "senses" was not lost on the engineer, and he
nodded.  "I will, Marshal."

"Thank you, Honored Mage."  She flushed at the title.  "And Istril and
Siret can ride with you."  She laughed.  "The silver angels."

Nylan frowned before he realized that the three of them all had the
bright silver hair created by the under jump that had brought them to
the Roof of the World.

"Siret can take Llyselle's mount," continued Ryba.  "You can try one of
the captured ones.  They look spiritless enough even for you."

Nylan nodded.  "That's fine."  "... what was all that about?"

Nylan caught the question Siret whispered to Ayrlyn as he climbed into
the saddle of the old bay.

"A little formality, that's all," Ayrlyn answered Siret in a dry
tone.

After settling himself into the saddle, Nylan gingerly flicked the
reins of the bay and followed Berlis and Istril toward the descending
ridge road.  As he bounced along, he wondered why he'd insisted on
going to the brickworks.  Was he worried that the brigands had found it
and damaged it?  Or because he had to do something after looking so
stupid?

Belatedly recalling Ryba's admonition, he tried to sense beyond the
trail that was still not a road, for all the travel between the clay
works and the tower.  Slowly, he caught up with the marines.

"I'll go first," suggested Istril, "then the engineer."

Nylan started to object, then shut his mouth.  If anything went wrong,
with only three of them, it didn't really matter where he rode.
Besides, given all the dead brigands, why would any who had survived
stick around?

"Hate this frigging place," said Siret, now riding behind Nylan.
"Everyone out to kill us, just because we're women."

"They seem to want to kill me and Gerlich as well," Nylan answered.
"And Merlin might have had something to say about it.  They don't seem
to like any strangers."

"You're different, scr."  Siret's voice held less anger.  "The men here
... they're not human."

"Even Narliat?"

"He's the same as the rest.  He's just scared stiff of us, especially
the captain, the second, and you, scr.  Especially you, scr."

Why him?  Ryba was far deadlier than Nylan.  Why, Nylan couldn't hit
someone with a slug-thrower at nearly point-blank range.

The three rode down from the next rise in the rising and falling trail,
and when Nylan glanced back, he saw only the sky, the plateau rocks,
and the trees.  Istril had opened more distance between them, and her
head swung from side to side, her head cocked almost as though she were
trying to listen for trouble or even sniff it out.

Nylan tried to follow her example, looking, sensing ... They continued
down the winding trail, nearly silently, when a vague sense of unease
drifted, as if on the wind, toward Nylan.  He squinted, and looked
toward the tall evergreens to the left, but the silence was absolute.
That bothered him.  All he could smell was the scent of pine, of fir.

But there was something ... somewhere ... "Scr!"  cried Siret.

Even before her words, Nylan had seen the flicker of motion to the left
of the trail.  As he yelled "Istril!"  he turned in the saddle and drew
and threw his blade toward the man who had stepped clear of the thick
underbrush and leveled the bow at the slender marine who led the three
angels.

In a fashion similar to working the ship's power net and the laser,
Nylan smoothed the air flow around the spinning blade, extending its
range, and somehow ensuring that the point struck first.

"Uhhh!"  The brigand crumpled.

Nylan rode toward the forest, sending his senses into the trees, but
felt no others nearby.  Siret had ridden up beside him, her
slug-thrower out in one hand.  Istril had wheeled her horse, ducking
low against her mount's back as she rode up.

Before the engineer and Siret reached the bandit, the figure convulsed,
and a wave of whiteness flared across Nylan.  He shivered and barely
hung on to the saddle as the power of the death he had created washed
over him.

"Scr?  Are you all right?"  Istril reined her mount up beside Nylan.

"He's fine," affirmed Siret.

"Fine .. . now," said Nylan after drawing a deep breath, trying not to
shake as he forced himself out of the reflex step-up that he hadn't
even realized that he had triggered.  He took another deep breath and
glanced down at the dead brigand's young face-another man barely out of
youth, looking for all the world almost like the one he had stripped
farther up the mountain.  Brothers?  Or did a lot of dead bearded young
men just look alike?  He took another slow deep breath, wishing he had
something to eat or drink.

Why all the bandits?  Surely, the word was out that it was dangerous to
take on the angels up in the mountains?

"You stopped him.  He was going to shoot me, wasn't he?"  asked
Istril.

"Yes."

"Frigging right," added Siret, the deep green eyes cold.

"How did you know he was here?"  asked Istril, adding belatedly,
"Scr?"

"I just sort of felt that someone was here."  Nylan dismounted and
eased his blade from the bandit's chest, then wiped it clean before
replacing it in the scabbard that the blade did not really fit.  "And I
couldn't reach him.  Gerlich was right.  We need longer-range
weapons."

Istril studied him and pointed.  "You have your sidearm."

Nylan swallowed.  "I guess I really didn't think.  So I threw the
blade.  I hoped it would distract him, anyway."

His head throbbed with the lie.  He'd hoped to kill the bandit, plain
and simple, and instinctively he'd known that he couldn't have with the
slug-thrower.  He'd always been a lousy shot.  So he added, "I hoped it
would kill him, but I wasn't sure I could do it.  Not with a pistol."
With his uttering of the truth, the sharp throbbing in his skull faded
into a dull ache.  The engineer rubbed his forehead.  What was
happening to him?  Throwing blades on a low-tech planet, getting
headaches from lies, forging blades with magic-or the equivalent,
knowing that he could kill with a blade and not a sidearm.  Was he
dreaming?  Was he dead?

He shook his head.  The pain, the aches, the constant tension-they all
seemed too real for death or dreams.

"Are you certain you're all right?"  Istril's eyes continued to survey
the forest to their left, then the cliffs to the right.

"Yes.  Mostly."  Nylan bent and went through the brigand's purse.  A
few coppers, and three shiny silvers.  A thin gold ring.  A beat-up
knife.  He checked the clothing and boots.  "Boots worn through and
stuffed with some old leather."  He stood and sniffed.  "He had to have
a mount somewhere."

The engineer cast out his senses again, searching not for more
brigands, but the horse.  "I'm not sure, but I think his mount is
tethered back there."

"What about more bandits?"  asked Istril.

"We thought we had them all," said Siret, "and this one popped up."

The engineer shook his head.  "There aren't any.  Not alive."

"Narliat says you're a wizard, too-a black one.  Do you know what that
means?"  Istril glanced back toward the trail and then focused on
Nylan.

"No."  Nylan took the reins and began to lead his mount through the
trees toward the horse tethered behind a massive pine just past a large
boulder sunk in pine needles.  "A black wizard?  I've got enough
trouble just being an engineer."

Istril ducked and rode after him.  After a moment, so did Siret.

XXXI

"NOW THAT YOU have reclaimed the grasslands, when will you reclaim the
Roof of the World?  And your father's honor?"  The gray-haired Lady
Ellindyja shifts her not-inconsiderable bulk on the upholstered bench
in the alcove.  Her fingers dart across the embroidery hoop, the needle
shining like a miniature blade that she deftly wields.  Sillek stands
behind the carved chair with the purple cushion, resting his arms on
the back.  "The grasslands are reclaimed only so long as Koric and
Hissl remain in Clynya.  The moment they leave, Ildyrom's forces will
return, in even greater numbers, no doubt.  I send arms men into the
Westhorns, and I won't only lose the grasslands, but half the land
between Clynya and Rohrn."

"If you cannot reclaim that honor, you must do something to solidify
your position.  You need an heir, Sillek."  His mother's voice is flat.
"You know you do."

"I also need score five more arms men control of Rulyarth, and Ildyrom
in his grave."

"Not to mention regaining control of the Roof of the World."  The
needle continues to dart through the white fabric, trailing crimson-red
thread.

"As I have told you, most honored mother, that might be a very bad
idea, right now."  Sillek straightens and purses his lips.  "A very bad
idea."

"A bad idea?  To reclaim your patrimony?  Given all that your father
has done for you, Sillek, how could you possibly even think that, let
alone say it so soon after his last sacrifice for you?"  The glittering
needle darts through the fabric like a cavalry blade chasing a fleeing
footman.

Sillek waits until the pace of the needle slows.  "I took your advice,
dear Mother, and we are already reaping its benefit, and it has cost us
little."

"Costs?  You talk so much of costs."  The needle shimmers, then plunges
into the fabric.  "Costs are for merchants, or for scoundrel
traders."

"I am not being clear, I fear."

"Clear?  I fear you are all too clear.  You will give up your patrimony
because your enemies are too much for you."

"I do not intend to forfeit my patrimony, Mother dear, and your
assumption that I would do so speaks poorly for me, and not well for
you.  I would certainly never wish to relinquish that which my honored
sire had gathered for my benefit or the benefit of our people."  Sillek
walks toward the alcove.

"Could you explain your logic to your poor benighted mother, Sillek,
Lord of the Realm?  How can you retain your patrimony when you refuse
to reclaim it?  Are you a magician now?"  The needle stitches another
crimson loop in a droplet of blood that falls from a gray sword.

Sillek smiles.  "From what Terek has told me, and from my other
sources, so far the angels on the Roof of the World have destroyed at
least three bands of brigands trying to claim my reward-that reward you
suggested so wisely.  And two of the lesser angels have been killed,
and four or five wounded, while close to a score of brigands have been
destroyed."  His smile turns into a laugh.  "I couldn't do nearly so
well, and I certainly am in no position to lose another score three of
trained arms men

Sillek glances out the window and toward the river.  "Next spring .. .
after winter up there-then we'll see."

"I do hope so, Sillek, dear.  I do hope so."  The sharp needle stitches
in another loop of blood.

Sillek's lips tighten, but he does not speak.

XXXII

NYLAN OPENED HIS eyes slowly in the gray light that came through the
open tower window.  Although fall had scarcely arrived, the nights had
begun to chill, enough so that the single blanket seemed thin, indeed.
Blankets were not used in large numbers on spacecraft, and the few that
had been brought down felt less than adequate for the winter ahead.
That meant another set of items to be bought from the
all-too-infrequent traders.  Nylan blinked as he wondered how they
could pay for all that they still needed.

Although the landers had been stripped of what would make the tower
more habitable, that had provided little enough.  The marines occupied
the third level of the tower.  Gerlich, Saryn, Ayrlyn, and Narliat
occupied part of the fourth level.  The fifth was used for
miscellaneous storage, and Ryba and Nylan rattled around in a sixth
level that had little in it except for the two lander couches lashed
together and a few weapons and personal effects.

Only the shutters on the second and third levels were finished, the
results of Saryn's and Ayrlyn's handicrafts, and there were no internal
doors.  Rags had been pieced together to curtain off the two jakes and
provide some privacy.  Nylan hoped that they could finish the bathhouse
and additional jakes facilities before too long-not to mention the
shutters.

As he moved slightly, Ryba's eyelids fluttered, and she moaned.  He
waited, but she did not open her eyes.  So Nylan slowly shifted his
weight more in order to look out through the casement.  A trace of
white rime frosted the outer edge of the window ledge, but the
whiteness seemed to vanish as the first direct rays from the sun
touched the dark stone.  The hint of wood smoke drifted in the window,
blown down from the chimney momentarily.

Over the crude rack in the corner hung their clothes, including the
ship jackets that probably would not be heavy enough for the winter
ahead.

Nylan's eyes shifted back to Ryba's face, to the curly jet-black hair
cut so short and the pale clear skin, to the thin lips and the high
cheekbones.  Her eyelids fluttered again, and she groaned.

"Not yet... not yet," she murmured.

Nylan waited, almost holding his breath.

"No..."

He reached out and touched the cool bare shoulder.  "It's all right.
It's all right."

Ryba shook her head and moistened her lips, but her eyes did not open
for a moment.  Then she shit ted her weight on the lander couch and
looked directly at the engineer.  "No it's not.  I was dying, and I
won't finish everything that needs to be done for Westwind, or for
Dylless."

"It was just a dream ..."  Nylan paused.  "It was a dream, wasn't
it?"

Ryba shook her head again, and squinted as she sat up.  Then she swung
her feet off the couch, letting the blanket fall away from her naked
figure, until it covered only her waist and upper thighs.  Her back to
Nylan, she faced the open window, looking out toward the northern peaks
that showed a light dusting of snow from the night before.  The
faintest touch of yellow and brown tinged the bushes and meadow
grasses.

"It wasn't a dream.  It was real.  My hair was gray, and I was lying
here, except I was in a big wooden bed, and there was glass in the
windows, and people in gray leathers were standing around me."  Ryba
shivered and then stood, padding to the clothes rack, where she pulled
on her undergarments and then the brown leather trousers and an old
shirt-both plunder.

"If your hair had become gray, that had to be a long time from now." He
stood and stretched.

"Nylan ... I wasn't finished, and it hurt that I didn't finish."

"Ryba," Nylan offered gently, "no one who really cares about anything
is ever finished with life.  And you care a lot."  He forced a smile,
then began to dress himself.

Ryba finished with the bone buttons of the trousers and then buttoned
the shirt.  "You're probably right, but it was real ... too real."

"Another one of your senses of what will happen?"

She nodded.  "They come at odd times, but some have already
happened."

"Oh?"  He hadn't heard that part.

"Little things, or not so little.  I saw your tower almost from the
beginning-and I know what the bathhouse will look like."  She sat back
on the joined lander couches that served as their bed and pulled on her
boots.

"Who is Dylless?"

"Our daughter.  I'm pregnant, and she'll be born in the spring, just
before the passes melt."

Nylan's mouth dropped open.  "You ... never ..."

"She'll be a good daughter, and don't you forget that, Engineer."  Ryba
smiled.  "I wanted the timing right.  You can't do that much in the
winter here, and next summer ... we'll have a lot of problems when
people realize we're here to stay.  They think the winter will finish
us, but it won't."

"Promise?"  he asked.

"I can promise that, at least so long as you keep building."  She stood
in the open doorway at the top of the steps.  "I want things to be
right for Dylless, and they will be."

"A daughter ... you're sure?"

"You wanted a son?"

"I never thought-one way or another."  He shook his head, still at a
loss, still amazed.

"You'll have a son.  I'll promise that, too."  Her voice turned soft,
almost sad.

"You don't..  ."

"I know what to promise, Nylan.  I do."  Her eyes met his, and they
were deep and chill, filled with pain.  "There's no time to be
melancholy, Engineer."

The forced cheer in her voice contradicted her calm and pale face.  As
they looked at each other, Nylan could hear the hum of voices from
below, and the smell of something cooking, although he wasn't sure he
was in any hurry to find out what Kyseen had improvised for
breakfast.

"We do our best, Nylan, in spite of what may be."

"May be or will be?  Can these visions of yours be changed?"  Nylan sat
down on the couch-bed and reached for his ship boots his eyes still on
her.

Ryba shrugged.  "Maybe I only see what can't be changed.  Maybe it can
be.  I don't know, because this is something new."

"All of this is something new."  Nylan pulled on his ship-boots,
getting so worn that he could feel stones through them.

"You need new boots.  You ought to check the spares.  We've only got
about twenty pair left over."

"I suppose you're right."  Nylan stood.  "I have to be.  I'm the
marshal.  You have to, also.  You're the mage.  Now that we've settled
that, let's see if breakfast is remotely palatable."  She started down
the steps, the hard heels of her boots echoing off the harder stone,
and Nylan followed, trying not to shake his head.  A daughter, for
darkness' sake, and Ryba had named her, and seen her in a vision of her
own death.  At that, he did shake his head.  The Roof of the World was
strange, and getting stranger even as he learned more.

They walked toward the pair of tables stretched out from the hearth. In
a room that could have handled a dozen or more tables that size with
space to spare, the two almost looked lost.  The benches had finally
been finished, and for the moment everyone could sit at the same
time.

Ryba marched toward the head of the table, but Nylan lagged, still
looking around the great room, amazed that they had completed so much
in barely a half year.  Of course, the tower was really not much more
than a shell, but still... He smiled for a moment.

Breakfast in the great hall had gotten regularized-a warm drink,
usually a bitter grass and root tea; cold fried bread; some small
slices of cheese; any meat left over from supper-if there had been meat
served-and something hot, although it could be as odd as batter-dipped
and fried greens or kisbah, a wild root that Narliat had insisted was
edible.  Edible kisbah might be, reflected Nylan, but something that
tasted like onions dipped in hydraulic oil had little more to recommend
it than basic nutrients.  It made the heavy fried bread seem like the
best of pastries by comparison.  So far the few eggs dropped by the
scrawny chickens had gone into the bread or something else fixed by
Kyseen.

"Good morning, Nylan," said Ayrlyn.

"How did you sleep last night?"  the engineer asked the redhead, who
huddled inside a sweater and a thermal jacket and sat on the sunny
south casement ledge that overlooked the meadow and fields.

"Not well.  It's getting cold.  When will the furnace be finished?"

"Not until after the shutters," he answered.

"The shutters won't help that much."

"Unless we cut a lot more wood and finish the shutters, the furnace
won't be much use," Nylan pointed out.

"Don't we have any arma glass at all?"  Ayrlyn shivered inside the
jacket.

"There's enough for six windows."  He put his lips together and
thought.  "Maybe eight.  Most of them ought to go in here.  These are
south windows."

"That's why I'm sitting here trying to warm up.  I'm not a Sybran
nomad," Ayrlyn pointed out, turning slightly on the stone so that the
sun hit her back full on.  "Saryn and I could make simple frames that
would go on pivots if you could mortar the pivot bolts or whatever in
place.  Can you cut the arma glass

"If the laser lasts."  Nylan laughed, then frowned as his stomach
growled.

"You need to eat."

"I can hardly wait."  The engineer glanced toward the table where Ryba
was serving herself.

"It's not bad this morning-some fried meat that has some taste, but not
too much, if you know what I mean, and there's a decent hot brew.
Narliat showed Selitra a bush that actually makes something close to
tea.  Bitter, but it does wake you up."

"All right.  Bring me a window design, and we'll see what we can do."
He started toward the table.

"We need salt, demon-damn!"  Gerlich's voice rose from the end of the
table nearest the completed but empty hearth.  "Without salt, drying
meat's a tricky thing, and I don't want to smoke everything."

"I'll have Ayrlyn put it high on the trading list."  Ryba's voice,
quieter than Gerlich's, still carried the length of the room.

Gerlich strode by, wearing worn and tattered brown leathers rudely
altered to fit his large frame and carrying a bow and quiver.  "Good
day, Nylan."

"Good day.  How's the bow going?"

Gerlich stopped and shrugged.  "It doesn't shoot far enough, or with
enough power, but it's good for some of the smaller animals-the furry
rodents."  He grinned.  "I'm tanning those pelts-Narliat told me some
of the roots and an acorn they use-and by winter I might have enough
for a warm coat."  The grin faded.  "There's not much meat on the
fattest ones, and I don't know how good the hunting will be when the
snow gets deep."

"I don't, either."  Nylan paused.  "Let me think about it."

"Do that, Engineer."  Gerlich raised the bow, almost in a mocking
salute, and began to walk toward the main door.  "I'm going to try my
luck at fashioning a larger bow."

"Good luck, Great Hunter."  Nylan made his way to the table and sat
down across from Ryba.

"It's not bad," she said.  "The meat, I mean."

"What is it?"

"I didn't ask."

"One of those rodents, baked and then fried," said Kyseen, replacing
the battered wooden platter with another; half-filled with strips of
fried meat.  "The stove makes all the difference, and the bread even
tastes like bread now.  The eggs help, but those chickens don't lay
them fast, and I'm letting 'em hatch a few, 'cause we'll need another
cock, a rooster"-the cook flushed-"before long."

"If we had windows and that furnace," suggested Siret, with a shiver,
"that would help, too."

Nylan glanced at her, and she looked away.

"You'll warm up a lot before long," added Berlis.

The silver-haired Siret flushed.

Nylan felt sorry for the pregnant marine and added, "I'm working on the
furnace... as soon as we have more bricks."  Gingerly, he used his
fingers to take several strips of the fried rodent, and two slices of
bread.  There was no cheese, but there was a grass basket filled with
green berries.  He tried one, and his mouth puckered.

"Those green berries are real tart, scr," said Berlis, glancing at
Siret.

Siret flushed, but said quietly, "It might have been better if that
arrow had been centered between both thighs.  It would have fit right
there."

"Enough," said Ryba, but Siret was already walking past the end of the
table with no intention of returning.  The marshal turned her eyes to
Berlis.  "Comments like that could get you killed."

"Yes, scr."  Berlis's voice was dull, resigned.

Nylan ate more of the green berries and the fried rodent strips without
comment.  The bread was good, and he finished both slices down to the
crumbs.

"What are you planning today?"  Ryba asked.

"I'll try to squeeze in two more blades before I go back to the
bathhouse.  What about you?"

"Trying to put up a more permanent fence for the sheep.  They got into
the beans last night."

"I'd rather have mutton anyway," came a low voice from down the
table.

"I would, too," admitted Ryba, "but we need both."

Those left at the table laughed, and Ryba took some more rodent strips.
So did Nylan.  Before he had finished eating, Ryba stood and touched
his arm.  "I'll see you later."

His mouth full, Nylan nodded.

After he gulped down the rest of his breakfast, he walked out the
causeway and down to the "washing area" of the stream.  In the shade of
the low scrub by the water were a few small ice fragments, which
reminded the engineer that the bathhouse would soon become a necessity,
not a luxury.  He took a deep breath, and then an even deeper one when
he splashed the icy water across his face.  The sand helped get the
grease off his hands, but he wished they had soap, real soap.

"Along with everything else."  Nylan snorted and mumbled to himself. He
tried to ignore the basic question that the soap raised.  How could he
or Ryba turn Westwind into an economically functioning community?

Because the south yard had become the meeting place, training yard, and
thoroughfare, Nylan carted the laser equipment out to the cleared space
beside the bathhouse structure on the north side of the tower.

After he checked the power levels and connected the cables, Nylan
looked from the laser power head to the endurasteel braces, then at the
half-finished north wall of the bathhouse.  Huldran was mixing mortar,
while Cessya and Weblya were carrying building stones.

He lowered the goggles, pulled on the gauntlets, and flicked the power
switches.  Huldran had finished mixing the mortar and had begun to set
the higher stones in the north wall by the time Nylan had finished the
rough shaping of the blade.

He cut off the power, pushed back the goggles, and sat down on the low
sills of the unfinished east wall of the bathhouse.  Working with the
laser was as exhausting as lugging stones.  While his mind understood
that, it still felt strange.  Then again, the whole planet was
strange.

After he felt less drained, he stood and walked around the bathhouse
and uphill to the spring where he filled the plastic cup that would
probably wear out even before he did.  He sipped the water, too cold to
drink in large swallows, until he had emptied the cup.  Then he
refilled it and walked back down and checked the firm cells.

"How many more blades will you doser  asked Huldran.

"I don't know.  There are enough braces for another dozen, but whether
the laser will last that long is another question."

"Do we have enough stone?"

"Probably not.  This afternoon, I'll cut some more.  We may have to
finish this with bricks.  I asked Rienadre to create some molds for
bigger ones, closer to the size of the stones."

"That's good, but I'd rather have stone."

"So would I, but we're lucky we've gotten this far."

"I'd not call it luck, scr."  Huldran flashed a brief smile.

"Perhaps not," said Nylan, thinking of the nine individual cairns
overlooking the cliff.  He lowered the goggles and triggered the power,
beginning the final shaping of the blade.

When he looked up after slipping the blade into the quench trough,
Huldran had finished the north wall and was beginning on the east wall.
He removed the blade and set it on the wall to finish cooling.

Clang!  Clang!

"Bandits!"

A half-dozen horses clattered over the ridge and down toward the tower.
The riders had their blades out as they headed for the tower.  Behind
them, Nylan could see two marines following on foot.

Crack!  Crack!  The two shots from one of the rifles-presumably from
the lookout at the tower's northern window on the upper level-resulted
in one horseman dropping a blade and clutching his arm.  He swung his
mount around and back uphill, but the others galloped toward the tower,
directly at Nylan.

The engineer groped for the blade that wasn't at his side.  Then, with
a deep breath, he flicked the power switches on the firm cells back on,
and dropped the goggles over his eyes.

"It ought to work ..."  he muttered.  As the power came up, he forced
himself to concentrate, trying to extend the beam focal point through
what he thought of as the local net, creating a needle-edged light
knife

"Get the mage!  There!"

The remaining five riders turned toward Nylan.  The ground vibrated
underfoot as they pounded downhill.

A field of reddish-white surrounded the focal tip of the weapon as
Nylan, more with his senses than his hands, slewed the light blade
across the neck of the leading rider, then the second.

Nylan staggered, as his eyes blurred, with the white backlash of death,
and his head throbbed.  He just stood, stock-still, trying to gather
himself together, to see somehow, through the knives of pain that were
his eyes.

Another set of hooves clattered across the hard ground, these coming
from the south side of the tower.  As the second rider finally went
down, Istril and Ryba rode past the tower, their blades out.

Ryba's throwing blade flew, and the third rider-his mouth open in
surprise-collapsed across his mount's neck.  The horse reared, throwing
the body half-clear, and dragging the rider by the one foot that jammed
in the left stirrup all the way to the edge of the upper field before
the horse finally stopped.

Crack!  Crack!

The fourth horse staggered and fell, but the rider vaulted free and ran
toward Nylan, his blade raised, and his free hand reaching for the
shorter knife at his belt.

The engineer swung the laser toward the attacker, readjusting the focal
length with his senses, fighting against his own headache and the
knives in his eyes.  The white-red fire blazed, and the flame bored
through the man.  The corpse pitched forward, and the blade clattered
on the stones less than a body length from Nylan's feet.  Nylan went
down to his knees, and stayed there, flicking off the energy flow to
the power head as he swayed under the impact of another death, yet
worrying that he had not cut the power earlier.  They had so little
left and so much to do.

The single remaining raider ducked under Istril's slash, started to
counter, and looked at the stump of his forearm as Ryba's second blade
flashed downward.

"Yield!"  demanded the marshal, her eyes cold as the ice on Freyja.

The redheaded man, his hair a mahogany, rather than the fire-red of
Ayrlyn or Fierral, clutched at his stump without speaking.

"Yield or die!"  yelled Nylan in Old Anglorat, forcing himself to his
feet, still clutching the wand that held the laser's power head

"I... Relyn of Gethen Groves of Lornth ... I yield."  The young fellow
was already turning white.

"Nylan, can you handle this?  There's still a bunch below the ridge."
Ryba had pulled her blade from her other victim, not leaving the
saddle, then turned the roan toward the ridge, Istril beside her.

Relyn swallowed as he heard her voice and watched the two gallop
uphill, joined by four others.

"You'd better get down."  Nylan glanced around.  Both Huldran and
Cessya had left, either to find mounts or follow on foot with their
weapons.  "If you don't want to bleed to death."

As he struggled out of the saddle, Relyn looked closely at Nylan,
seeing for the first time Nylan's goggles and gauntlets.  Then he
pitched forward.

Nylan set aside the power head and walked toward the mount and its
downed rider, noting the well-worked leather and the tailored linens of
the rider.  The black mare skittered aside, but only slightly as Nylan
dragged the young man toward the laser.

"Hate to do this ..."  he said.

A brief burst of power at the lowest level and widest spread cauterized
the stump.

Nylan kept looking toward the ridge, but no one appeared.  With his
senses he could tell that Relyn was still alive and would probably live
since the blackened stump wasn't bleeding anymore.  The engineer wished
he could have done something else, but what?  He laughed harshly.  Here
he was, worrying about whether he could have done a better job saving a
man who had been out to remove his head.

He left the laser de powered and walked to the wall where he picked up
the blade he had just forged.  Wearing the gauntlets, he could use
it-if the need arose.

Should he chase after the others-or wait?  He decided to wait, hoping
he wouldn't have to use the laser again.  He wasn't sure he could take
any more killing.  Since Relyn was still unconscious, he walked toward
the black mare, starting with her to round up the three horses that had
remained in the area, tying their reins to various stones on the solid
part of the north wall of the bathhouse.  Then he forced himself to
check through what remained of the three bodies that he had blasted in
one way or another with the laser.

Ignoring the smell of charred flesh, he methodically raided purses,
removed jewelry, and stacked weapons on the partly built east wall.
Then he went to work removing those garments that might still be
usable.  All three mounts had heavy blankets rolled behind the
saddles.

"Oooohhh ..."  Relyn moaned, but did not move.

Nylan looked toward the ridge.  Finally, he looped some cord around the
unconscious man's arms and feet, and then climbed onto the mare, who
backed around several times before finally carrying Nylan and his
recently forged blade toward the ridge.

The wave of death that reached him as he crested the ridge almost
knocked him from the saddle.  All he could do was hang on for a moment
before starting downhill toward the figures on horseback and the
riderless mounts.

As he descended, he began to discern individual figures, and almost all
those he saw were in olive-black.

A black-haired figure turned the big roan toward him.  "Nylan!  Are
there any more by the tower?"

"Just the one I tied up.  The others are dead.  What happened here?"

"There must have been nearly thirty of them .. ."  Ryba smiled a grim
smile.  "A handful got away.  The others, except one or two, are
dead."

"What about us?"

Ryba shook her head.  "For this sort of thing-it's not too bad.  We
lost two, I think, and Weindre took one of those blades in her left
shoulder.  We're claiming the spoils of war right now."

"Did you notice that these weren't bandits?"  he asked.

"What do you mean?"

"Good mounts, good saddles, good clothes, good weapons, and jewelry and
a lot of coins," Nylan explained.

"We'll talk about it later.  We need to gather up everything."  Ryba
rode back downhill.

Since she seemed to have everything under control, Nylan turned the
black around and headed back up the ridge to the tower.

By the time he had reached the uncompleted bathhouse and tied up the
black, Relyn's eyes were open.

"I gave my word, Mage," he snapped.

"I wasn't sure, and you weren't awake enough for me to ask you,"
returned Nylan in Old Anglorat as he unfastened the cords.  He extended
his senses to Relyn's stump.  "That probably hurts, but you'll live."

"Better I didn't."

"I doubt that."  Nylan massaged his forehead, trying to relieve the
pain in his eyes and the throbbing in his skull.

"Have you never been exiled, unable to return?  That is what will
happen when my sire discovers I was bested by women, and fewer of them
than my own solid arms men

"All of us are exiles, young fellow.  As for the women, you might note
that they're not exactly the kind of women you have here."  Nylan felt
very safe with that assertion.

"You don't jest," returned the man dourly.  "They had small
thunder-throwers-and their blades ... had we blades such as those,
things would have been different.  Did those blades come from the
heavens, also?"

Nylan looked down at the stony ground.

"You look confounded, Mage."

"My name is Nylan."  The engineer didn't wish to answer, but even the
thought of not answering was increasing his headache.

"Scr Nylan, surely you know where came such blades."

The engineer took a deep breath.  "I... made them."

"Here?  On the Roof of the World?"

Nylan nodded.

"Light!  I must be cozened into attacking angels each worth twice any
arms man and supported by a mage the like of which our poor world has
never seen."  Relyn struggled into a sitting position on the wall. "You
killed three of my men, did you not?"

"Yes."

"Might I look at that blade?"

Nylan looked down at the blade he had thrust through the tool belt.
"This?  It's not finished.  The hilt needs to be wrapped."  He eased
the blade out, half surprised that he had not cut himself with it,
though it was shorter than the crowbars carried by the locals.  He
showed it to Relyn, who brushed the metal with the fingers of his left
hand.

"Would that I had a blade like that," said the younger man.

"They are for... the guards ... of Westwind."

"Westwind?"

Nylan gestured to the tower.  "That's what we have named it."

"Westwind."  Relyn shivered: "Westwind.  A cold wind."

"Very cold," Nylan agreed, thinking about Ryba's coolness after the
battle.  What was he supposed to have done?  Sprung into the saddle and
chased after them?  He laughed, thinking of himself bouncing along on
the black.

"You laugh?  You laugh?"

"Not at you, Relyn.  At me.  I was thinking about how awkward it is for
me to ride a horse."

"I do not understand.  Do not all men ride?  All mages?"

"Yes, but we don't always ride horses into battle."  Nylan turned at
the sound of hooves, watching as Huldran and Cessya rode up.

"You're already organized, scr, aren't you?"  asked Huldran.

"Pretty much," Nylan admitted.

"Who's the pretty boy?"  asked Cessya.

"I think he's the guilty one.  He thinks his father will disown him for
being defeated by a bunch of women."

"He's not bad-looking."

"They think you're not bad-looking, Relyn," Nylan said.  "Even if you
are the one who plotted this.  Might I ask why?"

Relyn shrugged.  "I am the younger son, and when I heard that Lord
Sillek had offered lands and a title to whoever reclaimed the Roof of
the World ... I spent what I had.  Now ... I am ruined."

"If you had succeeded, we'd have been ruined," pointed out Nylan as he
turned to Huldran.  "Who did we lose?"

"Weblya and Sheriz.  Weindre got slashed up, but Jaseen says she'll
pull through.  A bunch of bruises and cuts for everyone else, except
the marshal."  Huldran sighed.  "It's going to get tougher.  We're just
about out of rounds.  Best to use what we've got left for the
rifles."

"I wouldn't know," Nylan said, "but that would be my suggestion."

"That's what the marshal told us."  Huldran turned in the saddle.
"We've got to make another big cairn.  Siret's bringing down the cart
for the bodies.  Since you're all right, scr..."

"Go on."  Nylan waved the two off.  "Do what you have to."

"A curious tongue you speak, Mage.  Some words I understand.  You are
not, properly speaking, an arms man are you?"

"No.  I'm an engineer ... like a smith.  I build things, like the
tower, or this."

"Yet you slew three men, and you forge blades that..  ."  Relyn groped
in the air with his left hand.  "And the women, they are mightier
warriors than you?"

"For the most part, yes."

"Demons of light save us, save us all, for they will change the world
and all that is in it."

Of that, Nylan had no doubts.  And, from what he'd seen, it would
probably be a better world-but would it be one that had a place for
him?  From Ryba's actions and gestures, daughter or no daughter, he
wondered.

XXXIII

THE GRAY CLOUDS churn out of the north, and a cold rain falls across
Lornth, heavier showers splattering in waves across the red tile roofs
of the town.  From behind the leaded-glass window, Sillek's eyes look
south toward the river, though he sees neither roofs nor river.

"Sillek, did you hear me?"

He turns toward the alcove where his mother the lady Ellindyja adjusts
the white fabric over one wooden hoop, then slips the second hoop in
place to hold the linen taut.  Golden thread trails from the needle she
holds in her right hand.

"My dear mother, I fear I was distracted."

"Distracted?  The Lord of Lornth cannot afford distractions, mental or
otherwise, and certainly not distractions of the nature of the ... lady
... Kirandya."  Ellindyja knots the end of the thread with motions that
seem too precise for the white and pudgy fingers.

"I suppose not."  Sillek's words are harsh as he sits on the
straight-backed wooden chair opposite the alcove bench.  "You were
saying?"

"Scr Gethen-you might recall him, Sillek.  He has more than score ten
in arms men and all the lands between the rivers north of Carpa, even a
hillside vineyard.  I think he has several daughters near your age as
well, and the middle one is said to be quite a beauty."

"I don't believe you were talking about his daughters."

"Ah .. . no."  The golden thread completes the edge of a coronet on the
linen, and the needle pauses.  "Scr Gethen had a son, Relyn or Ronwin
or something.  He heard of your offer of lands and a minor title for
destroying those witches on the heights-"

"Your idea, as I recall," interjects Sillek, "and a good one."

"And the young fellow gathered his funds and some arms men and attacked
the witches.  He had a score and ten men, well armed.  A half dozen
returned."

"I had heard something of his exploit, but only this morning.  Pray,
tell me-how did this news come to you?"

"The youth's mother-Erenthla-she and I were once close, and she sent a
messenger.  That's of no matter now, Sillek.  You certainly should not
expect me to be totally cloistered.  What is of import is that Scr
Gethen is less than pleased.  Erenthla-she is Lady of Gethen Groves-
conveyed that.  Rather clearly."  Ellindyja's needle flickers through
the fabric, creating another lobe to the coronet taking shape on the
linen.  "She hinted at her liege's loss of honor and that it might be
linked to your failure to uphold that noble heritage bequeathed to
you."

"Since you are determined to pin this upon me, why should I be
disturbed?  The young fellow knew the risks.  Any raiding has risks.
And he was a hothead, from what I recall.  The kind that thinks every
fight brings honor."  Sillek stands, then his brows knit.  "He was
killed?"

"Far worse-he was captured.  Being captured by women -even angels-makes
it most humiliating, especially for his sire.  Erenthla was clearly
distraught.  I should not have to point this out to you.  Of course,
Scr Gethen was forced to disown him, but he was Gethen's second son of
two, and second in the succession, and there are only sisters after
him."

"Ah ... the matter becomes clearer.  I should court one of those
sisters in the guise of placating Scr Gethen ...."  Sillek paces back
to the window and stares into the heavy rain.  His lips tighten and his
fingers knot around each other.

"I did not suggest that.  It is not a bad idea, but I was talking of
honor of the honor your failures have cost you, and now, Scr Gethen.
The honor you have steadfastly refused to acknowledge or uphold.  The
honor that you subjugate to concerns more suited to a petty merchant.
My son should not be a merchant, but a lord."

Sillek turns and slowly walks across the floor.  He stops by the chair,
and his eyes flash.  "I am Lord of Lornth, and my father did not die
for honor.  He died looking for exotic women.  Of that, I should not
have to remind you, of all people.  His honor, his duty, lay in
preserving and protecting his people-and there he failed.  He lost more
than two score trained arms men for nothing!  I know what honor is.
Honor is more than a reputation for seeking out danger mindlessly.  It
is more than attacking enemies blindly without regard to costs and
deaths.

"You talk of honor, but the honor that you speak of so carelessly and
endlessly will bring nothing but pain and needless death.  There is no
honor in destroying Lornth through mindless attacks on powerful
enemies.  There is no honor in squandering trained arms men like poor
tavern ale."  His hand jabs toward Ellindyja as she starts to speak.
"No!  I will hear no more protestations about empty honor, and should
you ever throw that word at me again, you will be cloistered-in high
and lonely honor in my tallest tower.  There you can think of honor
until your dying day.  And may it comfort you, because no one else
will.  Do you understand, my dearest mother?"

Ellindyja pales.  Her mouth opens.

Sillek shakes his head grimly.

Finally, she bows her head.  "Yes, my son and liege."

For a time, silence fills the chamber.

"I still value your advice," Sillek says evenly.

Ellindyja does not look up, as the unsteady needle slowly fills in the
second lobe of the coronet she stitches.

"About Scr Gethen's daughter," he suggests.

"Courting Scr Gethen's daughter would not be a bad idea," Ellindyja
says quietly, her eyes still on the embroidery.  "No ruler is so rich
that he cannot afford to look at both a lovely lady and lovely lands,
and this... incident... left Scr Gethen with but one heir."

"Fornal is reputed to be outstanding in Arms."

"He may be," said Ellindyja, "but life is uncertain, as your father
discovered.  Although Scr Gethen is a warrior of caution and
deliberation, I do know that he is less than pleased."

Sillek turns from the window.  "You think I should go to Carpa and
soothe his ruffled wings?"

"It could not harm you, and, since you are so preoccupied about the
possible predations of Lord Ildyrom, rather than ... other
considerations, you would be close enough to return to Clynya, should
that remote need arise."  The pudgy fingers fly momentarily, and the
golden thread continues to fill in the outline of the coronet.

"It is scarcely remote when a neighboring lord builds a fort on your
lands."  Sillek's face is stern, and chill radiates from him.

A jagged line of lightning illuminates the roofs of Lornth, and the
crash of nearby thunder punctuates Sillek's observation.

"That is true.  Perhaps you could make that point with Scr Gethen in
person."  The lady Ellindyja lowers her embroidery.  She does not meet
his eyes.

Sillek lifts his hands, and then lowers them.  "We shall see."

"Sillek dear, I understand your concerns for the greater good of
Lornth.  I only provide those suggestions that I feel might be helpful
for Lornth ... and for preserving your patrimony."

Sillek's lips tighten again.

Ellindyja looks away.  "Scr Gethen is upset, my son and liege.  I
cannot disguise that."

Sillek's eyes fix on her, but she says nothing.

"He is upset."  He takes a deep breath and releases it slowly.  "And it
is true.  You cannot change that.  For your judgment in this matter, I
am grateful, but... I do not appreciate even indirect references to
honor and patrimony.  Those are best reserved for cloistered towers."

"Yes, Sillek.  You have made your point, and you are Lord of Lornth."
Ellindyja bows her head again.

Sillek offers the faintest of head bows before turning back toward the
door as another rain squall pelts across the roofs outside.

After the door closes, Ellindyja smiles sadly, and murmurs, "But you
cannot escape honor."

The embroidery needle flashes, and the third golden lobe of the coronet
forms.

XXXIV

WITH THE SHUTTERS in the great hall closed, the fire in the hearth left
the room-the end closest to the fire-nearly comfortable for Ryba and
the marines in just the light and tattered ship suits they wore for
heavy work.  Although Narliat had kept complaining about the chill,
Nylan had resisted using the new furnace, especially since the grates
for the ducts on each floor were not finished.  Besides, it wasn't that
cold, not yet, and he worried about having enough firewood for the long
winter.

Nylan wore his ship jacket, unfastened and open, as did Ayrlyn and
Saryn.  Relyn and Narliat wore their heavy cloaks wrapped around them,
and sat on the right edge of the raised hearth, their backs to the
heaping coals and the logs of the fire.

Two squat candles-among the few in Westwind and procured by Ayrlyn and
Narliat-flickered on the table.  The candles and the fire managed to
impart a wavering illumination to the great hall, although the corners
were dark, as was the end of the room nearest the stairs.  Nylan could
see clearly without the light.  That was not the case for most of the
others, as they squinted to see when they turned toward the gloomier
sections of the hall.

Ayrlyn had drawn one of the candles close to Relyn's stump, because he
had complained that the arm was chaos-tinged.

"Chaos-tinged?"  asked Saryn.

"Infected," explained the redhead, looking at the arm.

Nylan could feel as Ayrlyn extended her senses to examine the arm, much
in the same way that he had manipulated the fields around the laser.

"The arm's not infected," Ayrlyn said.  "You'll live."

"What sort of life will I live, healer?"  asked Relyn.  "The great
warrior of Gethen Groves defeated by a handful of women, and what kind
of life awaits me?"  He inclined his head to Nylan.  "And by an unknown
mage."  He snorted.  "Who would believe that less than a score of
women, a single armed man, and one mage could kill nearly thirty
well-armed and -trained men?"

Nylan took another look at Relyn's stump.  Crafting something like a
hook or artificial hand might not be that difficult, and it might make
the man more functional and less self-pitying.

Gerlich smiled briefly at the mention of "a single armed man," then
glanced toward Ryba.  His smile vanished.

"Scr, they killed three score of Lord Nessil's men," suggested Narliat,
raising his maimed right hand.  "He even had a wizard with him.  And we
have not seen any of the great Lord Sillek's men, or Lord Sillek
himself, come to follow his sire's example.  Lord Sillek did succeed
his father, did he not?"

"He did, arms man  That was why I was here."

"Would you care to explain?"  asked Nylan, knowing the answer, but
wanting the others, besides Ryba, to hear it from the local noble
himself.

Ryba sat in the single chair at the end of the table-a rude chair,
crude like all the other crafts, but Saryn had insisted that the
marshal should sit at the end, and had made the chair herself.  Ryba
half turned in the chair to hear Relyn's words.

"Lord Sillek offered a reward of the Ironwoods and a title for whoever
cleansed the Roof of the World."

"Cleansed?"  asked Ryba coldly.  "Are we vermin?"

While her accent in Old Anglorat left something to be desired, Relyn
understood and swallowed.  "Your pardon .. . but women like you are not
seen elsewhere in Candar, nor across either the Eastern or the Western
Ocean."

"There are women like us in Candar, and they will find their way to
Westwind," Ryba said.  "In time, all the lands west of the Westhorns
will be ruled by women who follow the Legend-the guards of Westwind...
I've mentioned the name before."

"The Legend?"  asked Relyn.

Nylan glanced at Ayrlyn, who looked down.

"Ayrlyn?  Now would be a good time to introduce your latest song."

"As you wish, Marshal."  Ayrlyn walked to the far end of the hall where
she removed the lutar case from the open shelves under the central
stone stairs.  She left the case and carried the instrument toward the
hearth.

"What is this Legend?"  asked Narliat.

"It is the story of the angels," Ryba said smoothly, "and the "fate of
those who put their trust in the power of men alone."

Nylan winced at the certainty in her voice, the absolute surety of
vision.  Like her vision of a daughter, although that was certainly no
vision.  There were enough signs to Nylan, especially to his senses,
but while he could not tell the sex of the child, Ryba had no doubts.

"All Candar will come to understand the vision and the power of the
Legend," Ryba added.  "Though there will be those who oppose it, even
they will not deny its truth and its power."

Ayrlyn stood before the hearth, lutar in hand, adjusting the tuning
pegs, and striking several strong chords before beginning.

From the skies of long-tost Heaven to the heights of Westwind keep,

We will hold our blades in order, and never let our honor sleep.

From the skies of light-iced towers to the demons 'place on earth,

We will hold fast lightnings 'powers, and never count gold's worth.

As the guards of Westwind keep our souls hold winter s sweep;

We will hold our blades in order, and never let our honor sleep... As
Ayrlyn set down the small lutar, Ryba smiled.  The hall was hushed for
an instant.  Then Cessya began to clap.

"Don't clap.  It's yours, and you need to sing it with her.  Again,
Ayrlyn."

The redheaded healer and singer bowed and strummed the lutar.  Her
silver voice repeated the words.

By the last chorus of "and never let our honor sleep" all the marines
who had become, by virtue of the song and Ryba's pronouncement, the
guards of Westwind Keep had joined in.

Nylan tried not to frown.  Had Ryba used the term "guard" before?  Was
she mixing what she thought she had said, her visions, and what she
wished she had said?

Relyn looked at Narliat, and both men frowned.

"You frown, young Relyn.  Do you doubt our ability at arms?  Or mine?"
asked the marshal.

"Nosher " "Scr' will do, thank you.  The term applies to honored
warriors."  Ryba turned away from the two at the corner of the hearth.
"A good rendition, Ayrlyn.  Very good."

Ayrlyn bowed and walked toward the shadows that shrouded the stairs.

Relyn glanced toward Ryba's pale and impassive face and whispered to
Narliat.  "She is truly more dangerous than Lord Sillek."

Far more dangerous, Nylan felt, for Ryba had a vision, and that vision
just might change the entire planet-or more.  Sillek and the others had
no idea what they faced.

The engineer's sense of reason wanted to deny his feelings.  Logic said
that a mere twenty-plus marines and an engineer could not change
history, but he could feel a cold wind every time he thought of the
words Ayrlyn had composed, as though they echoed down the years
ahead.

XXXV

IN THE NORTH tower yard, Nylan glanced from the arma glass panels up at
the sky, where gray clouds twisted in and out and back upon each other
as they churned their way southward, bringing moisture from the
northern ocean.

Behind him Huldran and Cessya ground more lava stone for the mortar
needed to finish the southern wall of the bath-house and the archway in
its center that would lead to the north tower door.  As the powder rose
into the air, the intermittent cold breeze blew some of the fine dust
toward the engineer.

Kkkchewww!!!  He rubbed his nose and looked at the two marines, working
in their threadbare and tattered uniforms.  Then he checked the
connections on the power cables, and the power levels on the scrambled
bank of firm cells he was using-twenty-four percent.

He lowered the goggles over his eyes.

Baaa .. . aaaa .. . The sound of the sheep drifted around the tower.
Nylan hoped someone knew something about sheep, because he didn't. They
gave wool, but how did one shear it?  Or turn the fleece into thread or
wool or whatever got woven into cloth?  There was something about
stripping the oil from the wool, too.  Saryn or Gerlich probably could
slaughter them and dress them, but how many did they want to kill-if
any?  And when?

What about the chickens?  Kadran had them up in a narrow cut Nylan had
made above the stables-a makeshift chicken coop.  Would it be warm
enough in the winter, or should they be in with the sheep or horses?
Who would know?  He couldn't attempt to resolve every problem, but he
hoped someone else could figure out the sheep and the chickens.

He forced his thoughts back to the job at hand-cutting the arma glass
to fit the window frames that Saryn and Ayrlyn had made.

Nylan studied the chalked lines on the scarred and once-transparent
panels from the landers.  If he cut carefully, and if his measurements
were correct, he might have enough glass for eight windows-four for the
great hall and the rest for the living quarters-one or two on each
floor where people slept.  In the coming winter, the tower would still
be dark-they had no lamps and only the few candles.

His eyes flicked in the general direction of the second large cairn-and
the eleven individual cairns.  How could Ryba promise that Westwind
would change history when two seasons had reduced their numbers by more
than a third?  Children?  But how many?

"Stop it!"  he told himself, lifting the power head

Cessya and Huldran glanced up, and Nylan looked down at the arma glass
forcing himself to take a deep breath and concentrate on the cutting
ahead.

He triggered the energy flow to the power head and began his efforts to
narrow the laser's focus even more.  Unlike his efforts with stone or
metal, the arma glass sliced quickly and easily, and Nylan soon looked
on eight evenly sized pieces, each ready to fit into a frame.

After clicking off the power, he checked the cell-bank energy
level-barely down at all.  His eyes narrowed, and he looked at the arma
glass sections, then pushed back the goggles and walked over to the
frames.  Each frame was complete, except for the top bar, so that the
arma glass could be slipped into the grooves.

Still wearing the gauntlets, Nylan picked up a section and eased it
into the frame.  It stuck halfway down, but with some tugging and
wiggling, he managed to push the glass all the way into the frame.
Saryn and Ayrlyn could assemble and install the rest of the windows.
Another problem resolved.

Then he looked back at the laser.  Because he had used so little
energy, he might even have some power to use for Gerlich's project, not
that Gerlich had asked Nylan directly, beyond complaining about
underpowered bows.

Nylan removed the fraying gauntlets and wiped his forehead with the
back of his forearm.  Cool breezes or not, using the laser left him hot
and sweaty.  After a swallow of water, he looked at the two smaller
braces on the stone, along with the two long rods of composite beside
them, then at the sketch that Saryn had drawn from memory.

Nylan studied the pair of braces once more, then pulled on the
gauntlets and eased the goggles in place.  The lenses were so scratched
that he relied on his senses more than on his sight.  All the equipment
from the Winterlance was falling apart, overstrained and stressed from
usage far heavier than ever planned for by Heaven's shipbuilders and
the angels' suppliers.

Finally, he triggered the power to the laser.  The composite sliced
easily, and he quickly had the rough form he needed.  Then he set that
aside and began shaping the brace toward the ideal shape that Saryn had
suggested.

The first long, slow pass with the laser left him with the metal too
heavily bunched near the grip.  After three passes, with the sweat
streaming down his face and around his goggles, he had the shape he
needed, leaving an open groove down what he thought of as the spine of
the metal.

He cut the power flow and set the laser wand aside gently, removing the
goggles and gauntlets and sitting on a building stone.  There he wiped
and blotted his face.

In the meadow to the east, the grass was browning more each day.  The
leaves of local deciduous trees, even those that seemed like oaks and
had acorns, did not change color much.  Half the leaves seemed to turn
to a light gray and shrivel into almost thin strips clinging to the
branches, while the other half dropped off.  Why?  He didn't know and
might never.

"Scr?"  asked Huldran as she carried a stone past him and toward the
slowly rising southern wall.  "What's that?"

"A bow .. . maybe."

"You'll get it right."

Nylan wasn't sure about that, but he put the goggles back on, and then
pulled his hands into the gauntlets.  After measuring the composite
rod, he triggered the laser, trimmed the rod more, and then started to
mold the metal around the rod.

EEEssssssTTTIThe would-be bow exploded into burning sparkles, and Nylan
threw it into a stone-walled corner.  He backed away quickly and set
down the wand as quickly as he could so that he could beat out the
smoldering fabric on his upper arm.  As he did, he thanked the high
command for insisting on flame-retardant uniforms.

He took off the goggles and studied the ragged and now burned and holed
right sleeve.  A section of his biceps was faintly reddened, but he
could feel just warmth, not the pain of a burn.

With that, he watched as his proto bow collapsed into a puddled mass of
metal and melted composite.  What had happened?  He knew iron-based
alloys could burn, but the laser hadn't been that hot.

He glanced upward.  Overhead, the gray clouds continued to twist back
and forth on each other, but not even a sprinkle had fallen on the Roof
of the World, let alone lightning.  On the other side of the tower, a
procession of marines conveyed the last of everything remotely usable
from the landers into the tower.  Another group was systematically
finishing the stripping of the lander shells and storing what could be
used for future building or raw materials in the first lander, which
had been dragged up next to the bathhouse wall.  The second lander
shell was at the foot of the narrow canyon where Nylan had quarried his
stone, partly filled with cut and dried grasses for winter feed for the
horses.  Drying racks, made of evergreen limbs, ranged across the
spaces below the ridge rocks.

Nylan glanced back at the cooling mess of metal.  Beside him stood
Huldran, just looking.

"Fireworks, yet?"  asked Ryba from behind him.  "How did you two manage
that?"

"I haven't figured that out yet, but I was trying to form metal around
a composite core-"

"The gray stuff-cormclit?"  Nylan nodded.

"It's pretty heat-resistant in a directional way-that's why it's used
as a hull backing," pointed out the marshal.

"Oh, frig .. ."  The engineer shook his head.  Next time, he'd have to
cut the composite so that the heat-reflective side was to the inside of
the groove.  It made a stupid kind of sense, although he couldn't have
given the explanation a good physicist could have.

"I take it you figured it out?"  asked Ryba.  "You have that look that
says you're so stupid not to have realized it from the beginning."  She
paused.  "No one else would ever figure out your mistakes if you
weren't so upset about them."  She laughed briefly.  "What were you
trying this time?"

"Another weapon."

Huldran eased away from the two.  "Need to set these stones, scr,
Marshal, before the mortar locks up."

"Go ahead," said Nylan.

"We'll need every new weapon we can get," Ryba said.

"We're about out of slug-thrower shells?"  asked Nylan.

"Maybe fifty, seventy-five rounds left in personal weapons, about the
same for the two rifles.  That's not enough."  She shrugged.  "What
were you trying to make?"

"One of those endurasteel composite bows."

"We could use some, but where did you get the idea?"

"Gerlich was muttering the other morning about the lack of accuracy and
range with the native bows."

"He always mutters-when he's around."

Thunder rumbled across the skies, echoing back from Freyja, and fat
raindrops began to fall.

"Excuse me.  I need to get the laser under cover."  Nylan began to
disassemble the equipment.  First the power head and cable went back to
the fifth-level storage space-into an area half built into the central
stone pedestal-then the meters, and finally, the firm cells themselves.
Ryba helped him carry the cell assembly.  After that he set the cooled
and melted puddle of metal and composite in a corner of the uncompleted
bathhouse.  He might be able to use the mess in some fashion later ...
and he might not.

Then, through the scattered but big raindrops, he and Ryba walked up to
the emergency generator, spinning in the fall wind.  It too was
failing, bearings squeaking, and power surging, but it still put power
into the firm cell attached to the charger.  Both charger and cell were
protected by a framework of fir limbs covered with alternating layers
of cannibalized lander tiles held in place with heavy stones.

"Still charging."  Nylan carefully replaced the covering.

"You've made the power last longer than anyone thought possible," Ryba
said.

Looking downhill at the tower, Nylan answered, "There's more to do, a
lot more."

"There always will be, but Dylless will appreciate it all.  All of the
guards will."

At the clop of hooves, both turned toward the narrow trail from the
ridge, where Istril rode toward the front gate to the black tower.

"Trouble?"  asked the engineer.

"I don't think so.  She wasn't riding that fast."

They had almost reached the south side of the tower before the triangle
gong rang.  Clang!  Clang!

"Those traders are back, Marshal," called Istril as she rode from the
causeway toward Nylan and Ryba.  "The first ones."

"Skiodra," Nylan recalled.

"He's the one.  He's got nearly a score of men, and eight wagons."

"I told you we needed weapons," said Ryba dryly.

Nylan shrugged.

"Get a dozen marines," ordered Ryba, looking at Istril, "fully armed.
Have the rifles stationed to sweep them if we need it."

"Gerlich is out hunting," pointed out Istril, "with half a squad."

"Get who you can."  Ryba turned to Nylan.  "You, too.  You did so well
last time that you can handle the trading."

Nylan shrugged, then headed to the washing area of the stream.  He
wished the bathhouse were completed.  Then he laughed.  The tower had
gone more quickly than anyone could have anticipated, far more quickly,
and he was still worrying, except it was about showers, and laundry
tubs, and more jakes.

Ryba headed toward the stables.  "I'll have a mount waiting for you."

"Thank you.  I won't be too long."

After a quick wash and shave, with the attendant cuts, a return to the
tower, and a change into his other ship suit he donned the slug-thrower
he hoped he didn't have to use, and the black blade he had infused with
black flux order.  Then he walked down the stone steps, past the aroma
of baking bread, and out the front gate of the tower.

As Ryba had promised, a mount was waiting, its reins held by Istril.

"They just left, scr, at a walk."

"Can we catch them by walking a bit faster?"  asked Nylan.  The not
quite swaybacked gray whickered softly as he mounted.

"I think so."  Istril grinned.

Nylan and the silver-haired marine with the warm smile joined the other
eleven marines and Ryba halfway down the ridge toward the spot where
the traders, dressed in the same quilted jackets and cloaks, waited by
a single cart that flew a trading banner.  Two were on foot before the
cart, the remainder mounted behind the cart.

Skiodra, still the biggest man among the traders and wearing in his
shoulder harness an even bigger broadsword than the long blade Gerlich
usually bore in similar fashion, stepped forward.  "I am Skiodra, and I
have returned."  His Old Anglorat did not seem so thick, but Nylan
wondered if that were merely his growing familiarity with the local
tongue.

"Greetings, trader," answered Ryba, still mounted.  Her eyes did not
leave his, and after a moment, the trader bowed.

"Greetings, Marshal of the angels.  We bring more supplies.  Have you
blades to trade?"

"These are better," said Ryba.  "We will bring them down shortly.  What
do you have to offer?"

"Are we sure they are angels?"  interrupted the bushy-haired and
full-bearded trader behind Skiodra.

Skiodra waited, enough so that Nylan understood the ploy.

"If you wish to join those under that cairn there," suggested the
engineer quietly, pointing to the heaped rocks that covered the slain
bandits, "you may certainly test the strength of your beliefs."  He
dismounted and handed the reins to Istril.  Then he walked forward,
slowly drawing his blade, the one he had kept because it was even
darker than the others and seemed to hold darkness within its smooth
luster, and extended it sideways and slowly.  "You might also wish to
touch this blade if you doubt."  He smiled, knowing that he had bound
some of the strange flux energy within the blade.

The blond reached for the blade, but his fingers never touched the
black metal.  Instead, he stepped back, his face pale.

Nylan extended the side of the blade toward Skiodra.  "Perhaps..."

"No.  My friend spoke too hastily."

As before, the first cart-the one with the banner this time-was filled
with barrels.

"Shall we start with the wheat flour?"  asked Skiodra.  "I have the
finest of flours from the fertile plains of Gallos, even better than
the flour of Certis, and closer and fresher."

"And doubtless unnecessarily costly, for all that trouble, trader."

"It is good flour."

"I am sure it is," agreed Nylan, "but why should we pay for a few days'
freshness when we will be storing it and not using it until seasons
from now?"

"I had forgotten-until now-that, mage or not, you came from a long and
distinguished line of usurers," responded Skiodra.  "As I told you
once, my friend, and I will accord you that courtesy, it is far from
costless to travel the Westhorns.  This is good flour, the best flour,
and that freshness means that you can store it longer, far, far
longer... at a silver and three coppers a barrel, I am offering you
what few could find."

Nylan tried not to sigh.  Was every trading session going to be like
the first?  "And fewer still could afford," he responded as smoothly as
he could.  "Granting you the freshness, still five coppers would more
than recompense your travel."

"Five coppers!  Five?  You would destroy me," declared Skiodra.  "With
your black blades, do you think that you can eat metal in the cold of
winter?  Or your soldiers, will they not grow thin on cold iron?  A
generous man am I, and for a silver and two I will prove that
generosity."

Ryba's eyes appeared to look at neither Skiodra or Nylan, but remained
on the blond trader.

"Such generosity would quickly bring you dinner on plates of gold and
silver.  At six coppers a barrel, you would be feeding your mounts
sweetcakes."  Nylan smiled broadly to signify his amusement.

"Sweetcakes?  More likely maize husks begged from gleaning fields.  A
silver and one... not a copper less!"  Skiodra looked toward the
roiling clouds.  "May the devils from the skies show you my good
faith."

"Your faith, that I believe," answered Nylan.  "It is your price that
not even a spendthrift second son would swallow.  Seven coppers."

"I said you were a mage.  Oh, I said that, and blades like black
lightning you may forge, but your father could not have been a mere
usurer, but an usurer to usurers.  You would have my horses grub
stubble from peasants' fields.  Even to give you a gift to start
trading, at a silver a barrel, I would have to sell not only my
daughter, but my son."

"At eight coppers a barrel, because I would reward your efforts to
climb here, you would still have golden chains for your daughter."

"I could not sell a single barrel at nine coppers," protested
Skiodra.

"How about eleven barrels for a gold?"  Nylan's fingers slipped over
the hilt of his blade as he sensed the growing chaos and tension in the
big guard next to Skiodra and keyed in the reflex boost he had always
worried about using, even on the Winterlance 's neuro net

"Done, even though you will ruin me, Mage."

Ryba looked sideways, and the blade of the blond trader flickered-but
not as fast as Nylan's, which flashed like a stroke of black lightning
through shoulder and armor.

The blond trader's dead eyes were frozen open in surprise, and Ryba's
blade rested against Skiodra's throat, as Nylan removed and cleaned his
own blade, fighting against the throbbing and aching that battered his
skull, both from the chaos of death and the agony of forced reflexes.
Would every death hurt that much?  Or would it get worse?

"This sort of thing isn't good for a trader," Nylan remarked
conversationally.  "People might get the wrong idea.  We might think
that you really wanted to rob us."  He squinted, trying to fight off
the pain.

"I did not know .. ."  Skiodra looked toward the dozen armed men with
bared blades who edged their mounts toward the mounted guards of
Westwind.

"Let us just say that you did not," said Ryba.  "You might tell your
men to sheathe their blades.  Could any of them have stopped the
mage?"

"No."  Skiodra looked toward his men.  "The angels mean well, I think,
and it might be best if you put your blades away."

About half did.

"Who wants a blade right through his chest?"  asked Ryba with a
smile.

A single man charged, and Ryba's left hand flickered.  The dark-bearded
man slumped across the horse's mane with the throwing blade through his
chest, and his mount reared.  The body slid into the dust.

The dozen mounted angels eased forward, each bearing an unsheathed and
dark blade Nylan had forged.

Skiodra looked at the grim faces of the women, and the blades.  The
other five men sheathed their blades slowly, though their hands
remained on their hilts.

"This really isn't very friendly, Skiodra," said Nylan.  "Have you seen
that your men all moved first, and they're all dead?"

Skiodra swallowed, eyes glancing at Ryba's blade, back at his neck.

"Doesn't that tell you something?"  pursued Nylan.  "Now ... do you
want to trade for your goods, or do you want us to slaughter you and
take them?"

"How do I know-"

"Stuff it!"  snapped Ryba.  "We would prefer to trade, and you know it.
You'd prefer to steal, and we know it."

A pasty cast crossed Skiodra's face.

"So we'll trade, and if you try anything nasty, we'll just kill you,"
concluded Ryba.  "I thought you agreed to nine coppers a barrel for the
flour."

"Yes, Marshal of angels."

As Ryba lowered her blade, Skiodra mopped his forehead.

"What else do you have to offer?"

Skiodra forced a grin under his pale and sweating brow.  "I might ask
the same of you, Mage."

"How about two dozen of the finest blades produced west of the
Westhorns, directly, more or less, from a place called Carpa.  Of
course," Nylan said lightly, "I expect that five of them would pay for
everything in your carts with a few golds to spare."

"I slandered your father, Mage.  You had to be whelped from a white
witch and sired by the patron angel of usurers."  Skiodra shrugged.  "I
cannot blame you for trying to get the best price, but your idea of
fairness would have ruined Lestmerk, and he could get blood from stones
and water from the sands of the Stone Hills."

"Now that we have that understood," laughed Nylan, doing his best to
ignore his continuing headache, "what do you offer from the remaining
carts?"

"I will show you, provided you bring down those blades."

"I'd say to bring ten," Nylan suggested to Ryba, "just so that the
honorable Skiodra has a choice.  And some of the breastplates,
maybe."

Skiodra frowned, and Nylan translated roughly.  "I suggested that the
marshal bring a double handful to allow you a choice."

"Mage .. . you alone must be the patron of usurers."

Nylan shrugged.  "Since you are the patron of ambitious traders, I'd
say we could work out a fair trade."

Skiodra laughed, but the sweat beaded on his forehead, and Nylan
wondered why.  Did he seem that formidable?

Cessya turned her mount back up the ridge, presumably to bring down the
cart and some of the blades captured from Relyn's forces.

In the end, Ryba and Nylan looked upon nearly thirty barrels of
flours-maize, wheat, and barley; five bolts of gray woolen cloth; one
bolt of a red and blue plaid; four barrels of dried fruit; two kegs of
a cooking oil from something called oil pods three axes; two saws; and
enough other assorted goods to fill a wagon-plus one of Skiodra's
carts, the oldest and most rickety.  He'd even managed to get a barrel
and a small-keg of feed corn that might help the chickens through the
winter.

The guards remained mounted until the trader's entourage was well along
the road toward Lornth.  Then, as half the women began to load the two
carts, Nylan mounted and eased the gray up beside Ryba.

"This whole business is a little strange," he observed.  "You notice
that Skiodra didn't show up until after you made hash of young Relyn's
forces.  And this Lord Sillek-he's the son of the lord you killed in
the first battle-he's offered land and a title for our destruction,
enough that this young hothead-Relyn, I mean-was willing to take the
chance."

"It's not all that strange," answered Ryba.  "Skiodra wanted to see if
we'd been hurt, and how badly.  If we were weak, then he'd attack.
Since he found us strong, he'll sell the information to someone.  Lord
Sillek, I suppose."

"Something like that," Nylan agreed.  His eyes covered the goods that
had cost eight blades and some breastplates.  "We still have some
coins.  ""The flour and fruit will help, but it's going to be a long
winter," Ryba said quietly, "even if we can get some more from those
traders that Ayrlyn has been working with near ... what is it?  ...
Clarta, Carpa?  The economics are the hard part-in war or peace, I
suppose."  As the last of Skiodra's riders disappeared beyond the
ridge, she turned her mount uphill.

Nylan rode beside her, still bouncing in his saddle, wondering if he
would ever learn to ride as smoothly as the others.  "Do you think we
can make this work economically?  Westwind, I mean?"

"I already have," said Ryba slowly, "thanks to Skiodra and young
Relyn."

"You don't sound happy.  Is that another vision?"

"Not exactly.  But the pieces I've already seen make more sense."  Ryba
shifted her weight in the saddle and turned to face Nylan.  "Look how
many bandits there are.  Trading has to be dangerous.  Westwind will
patrol the roads across this section of the mountains-what are they
called?"

"The Westhorns."

"And we'll charge for it.  I think the sheep will make it."

"But that's trading lives for coin ..."  said Nylan.  "More or less."

"Yes, it is.  So is everything in a primitive culture.  Have you a
better answer?  Can we grow enough up here to support even the few we
have left?  And if we could, could we keep it without fighting?"

"No," admitted Nylan.

"If they want to die by the sword, we'll live by having sharper and
faster blades.  Thanks to you, smith of the angels."  Ryba did not look
at Nylan as she rode past the sentry point where Berlis and Siret, and
their rifles, had surveyed the trading.

Nylan could feel Siret's green eyes on him, and he nodded and smiled to
the pregnant marine briefly.

"Smith of the angels?"

"For better or worse, that's your legacy, Nylan."  Ryba kept riding,
crossing the ridge crest and turning the roan toward the canyon that
served as a corral until the stables could be completed.

"And yours?  Or do I want to know?"

"Ryba, of the swift ships of Heaven.  Ryba, one of the founders of
Westwind and the Legend.  Blessed and cursed throughout the history to
come, I suspect.  Don't ask more, Nylan."

"Why not?"

"Because I won't tell.  Not even you.  Not Dylless, when her time
comes.  It hurts too much."

"You can tell me."

"No.  If I tell, then you-nobody-will act the same, and we might not
survive.  I can't risk that, not with all the prices everyone's already
paid.  And will.  And will keep paying."  She kept riding.

Nylan looked toward the tower, and then at Ryba's dark hair and the
dark hilts of her blades.  Ryba of the swift ships of Heaven.  Ryba,
the founder of the guards of Westwind and the Legend.  He swallowed,
but he urged the gray to keep pace with the roan.

XXXVI

THE STOCKY MAN whose black hair is streaked with gray escorts Lord
Sillek into the room at the north end of the courtyard, carefully
closing the door behind him.

Two heavy wooden doors stand open to the veranda and the shaded
fountain that splashes loudly just beyond them.

Sillek glances around the room, his eyes taking in the inlaid cherry
desk, the two bookcases filled with manuscripts bound in hand-tooled
leather, and the two cushioned captain's chairs that are drawn up
opposite a small table.  The chairs face the fountain, and the north
wind, further cooled by the fountain, blows into the study.

"My sanctuary, if you will," says the gray-haired man.

"Quite well appointed, Scr Gethen," responds Sillek, "and certainly
private enough-although ..."  He gestures toward the open doors and the
fountain.

"It is more discreet than one would suspect."  Gethen laughs.  "It took
some doing before the sculptor understood that I wanted a noisy
fountain."

"Oh .. ."  Sillek smiles, almost embarrassed.

"Please, Lord Sillek, do be seated."  Gethen slips into the chair on
the left with an understated athletic grace.

"Thank you."  Sillek sits almost as gracefully.

"My lady Erenthla has expressed a concern that you might have come to
the Groves as a result of her hasty note to the lady Ellindyja.  She
wrote that missive while she was in some distress."  Gethen clears his
throat.

"I must admit that the receipt of the letter, certainly not its
contents, did remind me that I had been remiss in paying my respects.
My arrival represents a long-overdue visit to someone who has always
been of great support and good advice to the house of Lornth."  Sillek
inclines his head ever so slightly.

Thrap.  The knock is almost unheard over the gentle plashing of the
fountain, but Gethen immediately rises, crosses the handwoven,
patterned carpet, and opens the door.

"Thank you, my dear."  The master of the Groves stands aside as a young
blond woman carries a tray into the study.  On the elaborately carved
tray are two cups, a covered pot with a spout, and a flat dish divided
into two compartments.  The left contains ca rna nuts, the right small
honeyed rolls.

Sillek stands, his eyes going from the confectioneries to the bearer,
whose shoulder-length blond hair is kept off her face with a silver and
black headband.  Her eyes are deep green, her skin the palest of golds,
her nose straight and even, and just strong enough not to balance the
elfin chin and high cheekbones.

"This is my middle daughter, Zeldyan.  Zeldyan, this is Lord Sillek."

Zeldyan sets the tray on the low table, then rises and offers a deep,
kneeling bow to Sillek, a bow that drops the loose neckline of her
low-cut tunic enough to reveal that her body is as well proportioned as
her face.  "Your Grace, I am at your service."  Her voice bears the
hint of husky bells.

"And I, at yours," Sillek responds, as he tries not to swallow too
hard.

"We will see you at supper, Zeldyan."  Gethen smiles indulgently.

She bows to them both, then steps back without turning, easing her way
from the study and closing the door behind her.  Gethen slides the bolt
into place.

"A lovely young woman, and with great bearing and grace," Sillek
observes.  "You must be proud of her."  His fingers touch his beard
briefly.

"My daughters are a great comfort," Gethen answers as he reseats
himself, "a great comfort.  And so is my only son, Fornal.  You will
meet him at supper as well."

"I never heard but good of all your offspring, scr."  Sillek has caught
the slight emphasis on the word "only," but still places his own
marginal accent on the word "all."

"Your courtesy and concern speak well of you, Lord Sillek."  Gethen
leans forward and pours the hot cider into the cups.  "Your father was
not just Lord of Lornth, but a friend and a compatriot."  He turns the
tray and gestures to the cups, letting Sillek choose.

Sillek takes the cup closest to him and lifts it, chest-high, before
answering.  "A compatriot of my sire is certainly someone to heed, and
to pay great respect to."  Then he sips the cider and replaces the cup
on the tray.

Gethen takes his cup.  "The son of a lord and a friend is also a lord
and a friend."  He sips and sets the cup beside Sillek*.

Sillek glances toward the fountain, then back to Gethen.  "You offered
my sire your best judgment."

"And I would offer you the same."

"You have heard of the ... difficulties I have faced recently, between
certain events on the Roof of the World and Lord Ildyrom's ...
adventures near Clynya?"

"I have heard that certain newcomers are said to be evil angels, and
that they have great weapons and a black mage with powers not seen
since the time of the descent of the demons."

"We do not know nearly enough," Sillek admits, "but what I do know is
that these so-called angels killed nearly threescore trained arms men
and lost but three of their number.  They have also destroyed several
bands of brigands who thought them easy prey.  Unfortunately, they have
also caused others pain, others who may have judged-"

"It often is not our judgment that matters, Lord Sillek, but the
perceptions of others," interrupts Gethen.  "When the perception of the
people is that women are weak, those who fall to women are deemed even
weaker and unfit to lead."  The master of the Groves shrugs, sadly.
"And those who lead, especially rulers, must follow those perceptions
unless they wish to fight all those who now support them."

"That is a harsh judgment."

"Harsh, yes, but true, and that is why I, who loved all my children,
have but one son, for I cannot endanger the others by flaunting dearly
held beliefs."  Gethen clears his throat.

Sillek waits without speaking.

"I understand you were successful in reclaiming the grasslands with a
rather minimal loss of trained arms men  Gethen laughs.  "Rather
ingenious, I think."

"I was fortunate," Sillek says, "but it ties up my chief arms man and
one of my strongest wizards in Clynya."

"Hmmmm.  I see your problem.  If you attempt to secure the river, or
Rulyarth or send another expedition to the Roof of the World..."

Sillek nods.

"Perhaps you should take the battle to Ildyrom.  It appears unlikely
that the newcomers on the Roof of the World would move against anyone
in the near future.  Nor will the Suthyan traders."

"I had thought that, Scr Gethen.  Still, Ildyrom can muster twice the
arms men I can.  The other option would be to enlist support for a
campaign to take Rulyarth, enough support to wage such an effort
without removing forces from Clynya."

Gethen purses his lips, then tugs at his chin.  "That might work,
provided those who supported you were convinced that you would continue
to work in their best interests.  With the access to the Northern
Ocean, and the trade revenues, Lornth could support a larger force of
arms men ..."

"I had thought that, scr, but wished to consider your thoughts upon the
matter."

"Hmmm .. . that does bear consideration."  Gethen tugs at his chin
again, then reaches for his cider and sips.  "You would need to make a
solid, a very solid, commitment."

"That is something that I would be willing to doser especially for the
good of Lornth."

"The good of Lornth, ha!  You sound like your father.  Beware, Sillek,
of phrases like that.  When a ruler talks of the good of his land, he
means his own good."

"The two are not opposites, scr."

"True.  And sometimes they are the same.  Tell me, what do you think of
Zeldyan?"

"At first blush, she is attractive and courtly.  I would know her
better."

"Should you wish for the good of Lornth, Sillek, I'd bet you will know
her much better."

"That is quite undoubtedly true."  Sillek forces a smile.  "For you
offer good advice."

"How good it is-you shall see, but I offer you all the experience that
I have, purchased dearly through my mistakes."  The gray-haired man
rises.  "I believe the time for supper nears, and Fornal and Zeldyan
would like to share in your company."

"And I in theirs, and yours, and your lady's."  Sillek stands and
follows Gethen into the twilight of the courtyard.

XXXVII

THE WEST WIND, as usual, was chill, chill enough that most of those
working on the Roof of the World had covered their arms, although only
Narliat, stacking grasses on the drying rack, actually wore a jacket in
the sunny afternoon of early fall.

In the colder shadow of the tower on the north side, as Huldran,
Cessya, and Selitra worked to complete the stonework on the east and
south sides of the bathhouse, Nylan tried to complete the bow he had
failed three times with squinting through the goggles, coaxing power
out of the cells and through the power head  The line of light and
power flared almost green, and Nylan channeled the reduced power around
the curved form he held in the crude tongs, smoothing the metal around
the composite core, trying to shunt the energy evenly around the
composite without burning the iron-based alloy.

With a last limited power bath, Nylan flicked off the laser and slipped
the proto bow into the quench-but only for a moment-before laying it
out on the dented chunk of stone too flawed to use for building.

In the end, the shape differed clearly, if subtly, from the sketch that
Saryn had provided so many days earlier.  Still, a wide smile crossed
his face.  The bow had been harder, much harder, than the blades.

After a drink from the fired-clay mug, he picked up the second crude
bow frame, already roughed out, and began inserting the composite
core.

But just before noon, he had created three bows and dropped the energy
levels to where he needed to replace two of the ten cells before
continuing.

He also needed a rest, and something to eat.

After disassembling the laser and storing the wand and power head the
engineer walked around the tower toward the causeway and the main south
gate to the tower.

The south tower yard, below the causeway, was getting more use, now
that the tower was occupied, and the landers had been moved again and
set up more for storage, either to the west of the tower or at the
mouth of the canyon used for corraling the horses and for stone.  A low
rough-stone wall was rising around the yard, built by the simple
expedient of asking the marines to carry small stones and put them
along the lines Nylan had scratched out.  There were enough stones
around the tower, and the knee-height wall made a clear demarcation
between meadow and the tower yard.

On the uphill side of the yard, near the causeway into the tower,
Ayrlyn and Saryn were working to improve their cart, based on their
ideas and what they had seen in practice in the cart obtained from
Skiodra.  On the downhill side, beside the remaining roof slates and
building stones for the bathhouse, Gerlich and Jaseen sparred with the
heavy wooden blades.

Nylan's eyes moved south where, on the trail-road down from the ridge,
a thin, red-haired figure walked between the two marines, and Fierral
followed.

Since Ryba wasn't around, Nylan waited until the four reached the base
of the causeway.  The marines stopped, and Fierral stepped forward, her
eyes surveying the area before settling on Nylan.

The local, so thin she seemed to be little more than a child, barely
reached Fierral's shoulder, although her tangled hair fell nearly to
the middle of her back.  Her pale blue eyes darted from the marines to
Nylan.  She shrank away and back toward the marines.

"Scr," Fierral began, "this local just showed up and bowed and bowed.
Selitra and Rienadre don't understand the local Anglorat, and I don't
do that much better, but I think she's asking for refuge or something.
Do you know where the marshal is?"

"No one here will harm you," Nylan offered in his slow Anglorat,
looking at the painfully thin figure.

The girl-woman looked down at the packed dirt leading to the causeway,
and eased back until she was pressed against Rienadre's olive-blacks.

"She's clearly not fond of men.  Better get the marshal," Nylan
suggested.  He turned toward the nearest of his tower workers, who had
stopped on the far side of the causeway by the main tower door.
"Cessya?  I think Ryba's checking the space for stables up in the
stone-cutting canyon.  Will you get her?"

"Yes, scr.  Wouldn't mind a break from lugging stone."

"Well... you could bring down a few of the larger fragments ..."

"Scr?"

Nylan grinned.

"Master Engineer... someday .. . someday ..."

"Promises, promises..."

Cessya flushed as she turned.

"You're a dangerous man, Engineer," said Fierral.

"Me?"  Nylan laughed.

When the force leader, or arms master just shook her head, Nylan's eyes
crossed the south tower yard to where Ayrlyn was bent over the axle of
the creaky cart.  Saryn stood on the other side.

"Ayrlyn?"

The redheaded healer lifted her head.  "Yes, Nylan?  What great
engineering expertise can you offer to stop the creakiness of the
wheels?"

"Roller bearings, except I can't make them.  Grease, otherwise,
preferably from Kyseen's leavings or from animal fat."

"Grease?"  Ayrlyn made a face.  "I need engineering, and all you have
to offer is grease?  That was what you said yesterday."

"That's what they used for centuries.  It's smelly and messy, but I
understand it works."  Nylan shrugged and grinned.  "Can you give us a
hand?"

"With what?"

The engineer motioned toward the local girl-woman.  "We have a local
problem.  I need you and Narliat."

"That worthless loafer?"  Ayrlyn took a deep breath, then wiped her
greasy hands on a clump of grass.  "He's pretending to stack grasses to
dry.  It's the easiest job he can find."

"I'll get him," Saryn volunteered.  "You talk to the local kid, Ayrlyn.
I still hate Anglorat."  The former second pilot, limping yet, turned
and headed for the grass-drying racks.

Ayrlyn wiped her hands on the grass again, then crossed the yard, where
she stopped and looked at the small redhead.  After a time, the
girl-woman looked back.

"Who are you?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"Hryessa."  The name was so faint that all of the angels had to strain
to catch it.

"Where are you from?"

"Lornth.  The way was hard."  Nylan nodded at the long scratches, and
the scabs, on the scrawny legs below the gray dress like garment, and
the purple and green bruises on the left side of the face.  A white
line in front of her left ear bore witness to a previous injury.  "Why
did you come?"

"Because .. . because ... I heard that you were angel-women, and that
you had defeated Lord Nessil.  Even the mages of Lord Sillek fear you."
Hryessa pursed her lips as though she feared having said too much.

"Some of that is true," answered Nylan.  "We have defeated Lord Nessil,
and some of the bandits."

The small redhead stiffened and swallowed, but her eyes finally met
Nylan's, although she shivered as she spoke.  "They say that you are a
black mage who devours souls and puts them into the stones of your
tower."

"Oh ... frig The expletive whispered from Rienadre's lips.

"I do not devour souls.  All of us have built the tower," Nylan
explained.

"You are too modest," interjected Narliat.  "The mage made the tower
possible, and he used a knife of fire-"

Hryessa shrank back until her back pressed against Rienadre's legs.

Nylan wanted to smash Narliat for making things harder, but Rienadre
spoke before Nylan had figured out what to say.

"Easy, easy, kid," said the marine.  "The engineer's good people."
Rienadre patted the girl-woman's shoulder, and the small redhead
straightened, more in response to the tone than the words she could not
have understood.

"He is a good mage," explained Ayrlyn in Old Anglorat.  "His works have
saved many, and his tower will protect us all against the winter.  It
is only made of stones and timber and metal-nothing more."

Nylan tried not to wince at being called a mage.  He was an engineer,
and a poor excuse for one in a low-tech culture.  That was all he was.
Except... as he thought that, his head throbbed.  Was he more than an
engineer?

"You wanted to see us?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"I had ... hoped, great lady .."."  Her eyes fell to the clay
underfoot.  "I had hoped to find a place."

"It will be a cold and long winter," Ayrlyn offered.

"I do not care .. . you are women."  Her eyes glistened, but the tears
remained unshed, and Hryessa stiffened, gathering herself together in
pride.

"You do not have to beg, or humble yourself," Nylan said softly.  "The
lady Ayrlyn only wished you to know that winter on the Roof of the
World will not be easy."

"Is he really a man?"  asked Hryessa, directing his words at Ayrlyn.

Nylan tried not to frown.

"Yes," answered Ayrlyn with a smile.  "He is very much a man, but he is
an angel, as are we all."

The sound of hoofbeats interrupted the process, as Ryba guided the big
roan to a halt by the causeway, letting Cessya slide off first, then
dismounted and handed the marine the reins.  The marine led the roan to
the hitching rail.

Ryba walked toward the group, halting beside Nylan and looking at the
small redhead.  "You are Hryessa," she said slowly, "and you have come
for refuge.  You are welcome."  With that, the marshal smiled.  "All
such as you are welcome."

Nylan froze for a moment.  How had Ryba known the woman's name?

Hryessa bent her head, then knelt.  "Thank you, Angel of Heaven."

Ayrlyn's and Nylan's eyes met, and Nylan realized that they shared the
same feeling-one of awe, a sense of experiencing something that
transcended either of them.

After a moment, Ayrlyn spoke.  "These others-they are also angels."

"But she is the angel," said Hryessa in a calm voice.  "I have seen."
She bowed again to Ryba.

Ryba inclined her head to Ayrlyn.  "Would you take care of her?  Get
her washed and clean and clothed?  And you and Fierral need to work on
sleeping arrangements and blade training."

"We'll take care of it."  Ayrlyn nodded.  After a moment, so did
Fierral.

Hryessa frowned, her eyes darting from Ryba to Ayrlyn.

"They're going to make sure you get bathed, clothed, and fed," Nylan
explained in Old Anglorat.  "Then, you will learn our ways, and they
will teach you the way of the blade."

"Teach me a blade, like an arms man

"Better, Hryessa, better," said Fierral in accented Anglo-rat.

Again, Ayrlyn and Nylan exchanged glances, and Nylan felt that they
shared almost a sense of foreboding.

Ryba nodded and turned back toward the long hitching rail on the west
side of the causeway, where her roan was tied.

"Let's go, Hryessa," suggested Ayrlyn, leading the young woman toward
the tower.

Nylan headed for the stream to wash, wishing, again, that he had gotten
around to finishing the bathhouse.

After washing, he turned back toward the tower and walked across the
short causeway and into the great room.  All eight narrow windows to
the great room were open to admit the cool breeze.  In four, the arma
glass windows were pivoted and the shutters folded back.  In the other
four, without the arma glass the shutters were just folded open.

In time, Nylan hoped, they would be able to afford glass for the
remainder of the tower windows, but glass was a lower priority than
food or weapons, especially now that Ryba had declared that the destiny
of the guards of Westwind would be the double blades.

No wonder she had pressed him for the forty blades he had made so
far!

He stepped toward the mostly filled tables.  The grass baskets were
filled with loaves of fresh-baked bread.  Ayrlyn had finally brought
back a yeast starter or whatever it was, and Kyseen had only exploded
dough all over the kitchen a handful of times before learning how to
mix flour, yeast, and water in making loaves suited to the big,
wood-burning ovens that everyone had thought were too big when Nylan
and Huldran had started laying bricks and mortaring in the metal
cooking surfaces and oven grate slots.

Nylan sniffed the air, trying to determine the composition of the steam
rising from the two big pots-one on each table.  Some sort of stew,
with local roots and greens tossed in.

Jaseen turned toward Nylan as he passed the end of the second table,
and he noted the scratches on the med tech forearms.

"What happened?"  he asked.

"Frigging pine trees.  The second and Kyseen discovered the cones have
nuts, and you can roast them or bake them or whatever.  Only problem is
that if you wait for the cones to fall, the nuts are gone.  Selitra and
me, we've been climbing pines.  I slipped, and some of those needles
are like knives."

"I'm sorry."

"So am I. Frigging nuts.  Bet they don't even taste good."  She took a
savage bite from the chunk of bread she held, and Nylan walked toward
the hearth end of the first table.

Ryba, as usual, sat at the head of the table, and Nylan slipped onto
the end of the bench to her left, the space that was always left for
him.

As he sat, he noticed Ayrlyn leading Hryessa toward the second table.
The local woman now wore leather trousers, boots, and a shirt somewhat
large for her thin frame.  Her face had been washed, and her hair had
been cut short, marine-style.

As Hryessa looked down the table, her eyes widened, and she swallowed.
Ayrlyn said something, easing Hryessa onto the bench and breaking off a
large chunk of bread for her.

"There's our first recruit," noted Ryba.

"She's not that big," said Gerlich from the other side of the table.

"Given time, she'll be as good or better than any except Istril or a
few others."  Ryba's words were matter-of-fact.  "We'll see more before
long."

Beside Saryn, Relyn frowned, struggling with a spoon in his left hand.
"You will teach her the blade?"

"Of course.  Why not?"

Relyn opened his mouth, then looked at Nylan.  "Mage?  What do you see
when women have blades?"

"More men and women will get killed-at first."  Nylan stood and spooned
stew onto his trencher.  "After that, most of those who die will be
arrogant men."

"You sound displeased at that," Saryn offered.

"I'm displeased any time force is the only answer, and these days I'm
displeased a lot," said the engineer as he reseated himself, forcing
his tone to be wry.

The silver-haired Siret smiled shyly and passed Nylan a basket of
bread.

"Thank you."  Nylan handed the basket back after breaking off a chunk
of the heavy bread.

"You're welcome, scr."

"Would you pass me some, dear Siret?"  asked Berlis.

"I certainly would, dear Berlis.  About the time you bed a demon-except
you already have.  So enjoy it."  The deep green eyes flashed.

"Talk about bedding ..."

"If you want to bed a blade," suggested Siret, "just say another
word."

"Guards!"  snapped Ryba.

Both women closed their mouths.

"Thank you."  Ryba turned to Nylan.  "You were working on something
different this morning."

"Yes.  I finally got the bow thing worked out, I think."  Nylan turned
to Gerlich.  "You might want to try it later this afternoon."

"Try what?"  Gerlich lifted his eyebrows.

"A metal-composite bow."

"I'll try it, but I finally made one out of a local fir-type tree that
works pretty well."

Nylan took a spoonful of stew.  The meat and sauce tasted more of salt
and some spice than meat, but he was hungry and shoveled in several
mouthfuls, followed with a bite of bread.  The bread was better-tasting
than the stew.

Perhaps because of the outburst between Berlis and Siret, the midday
meal was relatively quiet, although Gerlich had a long and low
conversation with Narliat.

After eating, Nylan went back to the north yard and the next group of
metal-composite bows.

First, he laid out three more strips of composite, and trimmed them,
before rough-shaping the braces into the bow outlines.  After that, he
turned off the power and rested for a moment, letting the chill breeze
off the western heights cool him and dry his sweat-soaked hair.

Behind him, the clink of trowels and mortar and stone continued as the
outside walls of the bathhouse rose.  The walls separating jakes,
showers, and laundry could be installed after the roofing.

His break done, Nylan adjusted the goggles over his eyes once more and
eased power through the laser.  He could sense the raggedness of the
power head and he sweated even more heavily as he strained not only to
meld the metal around the composite core, but to keep the energy flow
from the power head constant.

As he turned the curved shape in the tongs, his breath became more and
more uneven, but he managed to smooth the last curves before shutting
down the power and pushing the goggles back.

The quick quench was followed by his slumping onto a stone to rest.

Four bows.  How many more could he coax from the laser?  Should he stop
and use the life of the power head to do the delicate stonework?  He
took a deep breath.  He still had the other power head

With a quick rest and a mugful of cold water, he went back to work on
the next bow.  The power head wavered more; Nylan strained more; and he
took even more time gasping and recuperating.  Five bows rested on the
stones.

The third bow of the afternoon creased his arms with lines of fire long
before he finished, and left a knifelike pounding inside his skull.  As
he started on the final smoothing and melding, coaxing power out of the
cells and through the power head the line of light and power stuttered
more and more in green bursts.  Sweat poured from his forehead and
around his goggles and even inside them.

His eyes burning, Nylan completed the last smoothing and flicked off
the power to the wand, then set it aside and stepped toward the quench
tub.  He slipped on the clay, but caught himself as he dipped the bow
into the quench for its momentary bath before laying it on the stone.

He sat on the stone for a long time, sipping water, eyes closed.

"Are you all right, scr?"  Cessya finally asked.

"I will be."  / hope, he added mentally, considering I've created six
bows that might not even work, nearly destroyed the laser in the
process, and feel like the local mounts have tromped me into the
stone.

"Are you sure?"

The engineer opened his eyes and nodded.

"What are these?"  asked Cessya.

"A new kind of bow-if they work."

"Do you need some help?"

"Well .. . if you could take the firm bank back to storage," Nylan
admitted.

"Selitra!  Give me a hand here.  We need to store the energy cells,"
called Cessya.

Nylan slowly disassembled the power cables and the wand and power head
while they carried the cells back into the tower.  Then he followed
with the laser components and stored them on the shelves above the
power cells.

When he returned, the three were back at their stonework.  Nylan
extracted the woven bowstring from his pocket and tried to string the
first bow.  It took him three tries, probably because his arms were
still aching.

Then he had to go back into the tower and find some arrows.  Instead,
he found Gerlich off the main hall.

"Are you ready to test the bow?"  asked the engineer.  "We'll need
arrows and a target."

"Sure.  Why not?  I've got an area where I've been practicing at the
south end of the meadow, near those scattered firs.  We'll see what
your toy will do, compared to the wooden one I worked out."  Gerlich
grinned, but the grin made Nylan uneasy.

The two walked back to the north tower yard, Gerlich with his own bow
and quiver.  The western wind felt good as it ruffled through Nylan's
hair, and the engineer realized he was still hot.  He handed the
composite bow to Gerlich.

"Hmmm ... a little heavy, and probably too short."

Nylan looked at the curves.  "Too short?"

"Well, Relyn says that a proper bow should be chin high, about three
and a half cubits local."

Nylan shrugged.  His bows were not quite chest high, but, easier, he
suspected, to carry on horseback.

"Let's see about the draw."  Gerlich took the bow and mock-nocked an
arrow.  "Stiffer than it looks, but probably not strong enough for the
average arms man He grinned again.  "Then, there's accuracy.  Let's go
and see."

Nylan followed the long-legged former weapons officer across the meadow
to the half-dozen scattered firs.  Circular targets on ropes dangled
from the limbs.

"Those just twist and flap unless you hit them square and hard," said
Gerlich.  "Good training."

The engineer watched as Gerlich took a long arrow from the quiver,
nocked it, and released the shaft.

The shaft clunked against one of the targets, spinning it, but the
shaft did not hold and angled to the ground.  Gerlich released two more
shafts.  The same thing happened twice more.

He handed the bow back to Nylan.  "What you've got is accurate; it's
easy to carry; and it's probably all right for hunting.  I'd like
something with more power, and I think most of the locals would also.
It's good, but not in the class of your blades."

Gerlich lifted and strung the big bow, then sent a shaft whistling
toward the target.  Thunk!  The target swung in the light breeze, but
the shaft held in place.  "See the difference?"

Nylan nodded politely.  One difference he had noted was that Gerlich
had not drawn the composite bow to its full capability.

"I'll stick to my own bow and my toothpick, if you don't mind.  Smaller
weapons are fine for marines."  Gerlich paused.  "Is that all,
Engineer?"

"That's all."

"I need to see about some game to fill the pots."  Gerlich walked
toward the trees, reclaiming the arrows and checking them, and
resetting the targets.  Then he raised an arm and walked briskly toward
the canyon corral.

Nylan followed more slowly, wondering about both the bow and Gerlich.
Why had Gerlich not drawn the bow fully?  Was he worried that the metal
might splinter?  Nylan would never have given him a bow that he thought
would fail.

"Is that your new bow?"  Istril rode up to Nylan as he neared the
causeway.  "Could I try it?"

Nylan shrugged and handed it to her.  "Gerlich wasn't impressed.  He
said it wasn't strong enough."

Istril laughed.  "Brute strength isn't everything."  She tried the
draw.  "It seems as heavy as his."  She looked at Nylan.  "We've got a
target range up near the corral canyon.  Do you want to see how it
works?"

Nylan glanced to the west, where the sun hung just above the peaks.  He
wasn't going to get much more done before supper anyway.  "All
right."

"Climb up behind me," invited the marine.  "Benja can carry double for
a short ways, and it's faster."

"You're sure?"

"I'm sure."

Nylan clambered up awkwardly behind the slim marine.

"You're going to have to put an arm around me, scr, or you'll get
bounced off after four steps."

Nylan flushed, but complied, and Istril flicked the reins.  Nylan still
bounced, but Istril seemed welded to her saddle, able even to open and
close the crude gate without dismounting.  When they reached the corral
area, Nylan slid down gratefully into the shadows.  "Thank you.  I
think I do better in the saddle than behind it."

"Most people doser  Istril slid down and unsaddled Benja.  "You won't
mind if I rub her down?"

"Of course not."  As she worked on her mount, Nylan walked up the
canyon to where he had cut the stone.  The brickwork for the stables
was almost finished, and rough fir timbers were stacked beside the
walls.  He ducked through what would be the door and studied the
interior.

The rafters wouldn't be that far above his head, but the horses would
have shelter at least.  He walked outside.  Braaawwwk..  . awwwkkkk ..
. awwkk.  From the smaller and more crudely bricked space where Nylan
had tried to quarry more stones, before finding the rock fractured,
came the sound-and the definite odor-of chickens.

Nylan turned and headed downhill.  Istril had just patted Benja on the
flank, and the mare whuffed, then walked to the water trough.

"The targets are up there, on that side."  Istril strode briskly
uphill, and Nylan followed, marveling that the slender guard had so
much energy so late in the day.  She paused.  "There they are."

Three man-shaped figures-sculpted from what seemed to be twisted fir
limbs-stood before a backdrop of gray that flowed from the canyon
wall.

"The gray stuff behind them is sand and dirt.  No sense in blunting
arrowheads."  Istril nocked a shaft with a fluid motion and released
it.

Whunk!  The shaft vibrated in the target, right where an arms man heart
would have been.  "Nice!"  she exclaimed.  "Gerlich said it wasn't
strong enough."

"Friggin' idiot.  Beggin' your pardon, scr, but he is."  Istril nocked
and released a second shaft, which appeared beside the first.  "Sweet
weapon, scr, and there's plenty of pull here.

I'll show you.  Might cost me a shaft, but we might as well find
out."

The marine walked toward the target on the far right.  When she reached
it, she bent down and pulled a battered breastplate from behind the
target, fastening it in place.  Then she walked back to Nylan.

"We'll see how it does against the local armor."

"Can you spare a shaft?"

"I'd rather lose a shaft than my neck."  Istril laughed, a warm sound.
"It's better to find out now instead of in a fight."  She set her feet,
nocked a third shaft, and let it fly.

A dull clunk followed the impact, but the shaft slammed through the
metal and held.  At the sound, Benja barely looked up from where she
chewed off a few clumps of mostly brown grass.

"I don't know what the big idiot's talking about."  Istril shook her
head.  "This is smaller than his monster.  It's easier to carry.  It
aims better, and it goes through armor.  What else do you need?"

"The reputation for carrying the biggest bow and blade?"  suggested
Nylan.

Istril laughed again.  Then her face cleared.  "This is a killer
weapon, scr.  Any of the marines-I guess we're guards, now-any of us
would carry this over anything else I've seen or used.  Do you have any
more?"

"Five others, but I don't have strings for them."

"Five?  That's a good start."

"I don't know how long the laser will last," Nylan explained, "and I
didn't want to make any more unless they were good."

"Good?  With this and your blades, the locals won't stand a chance."

"Please don't humor me, Istril," Nylan asked.

"I'm not humoring you, scr.  I wouldn't do that.  We're talking our
necks and lives."

"I didn't mean-"

"I know."  Istril extended the bow.

"You can keep it.  I wouldn't have the faintest idea of how to use
it."

The faint sound of the triangle gong announced the evening meal.

"Thank you, scr.  We'd better be headed down."

They walked in silence down to the tower, ducking through the fence
poles and following the path to the causeway.

"Bread smells good," said Istril as Nylan swung open the heavy front
door to the tower.

"Kyseen does that well."

"I think Kadran's been helping since her shoulder was torn up."

"That might explain it."  Nylan gave a half laugh.

Istril set the bow by the stairs, and they walked to the tables.

"Testing the engineer's bow?"  asked Gerlich politely.

Ryba's eyes flicked to Nylan.  "You forged a bow?"

"Finally," the engineer admitted.  "It's been difficult."

"I hope you didn't spend too much power on it," Gerlich added from his
seat in the middle of the first table.  Selitra sat beside him.

"You have to spend power to create anything," pointed out Nylan.  "We
need good longer-range weapons."

"Your blades are more effective," countered Gerlich.

"I don't think so," said Istril firmly.  "I tested the bow, and it's
perfect for a mounted guard."

"For a guard, perhaps, but I can put more power into the great bow,"
answered Gerlich.

"I'm sure you can," responded Istril politely.  "But the engineer's bow
works much better for a mounted guard, and I'm more than glad to use
it.  So will the others, I'm sure, since it's much easier to carry on
horseback, and far more accurate than that monster you carry."

"It doesn't have the pull."  Gerlich's voice carried an edge.

Ryba's eyes flicked between the silver-haired guard and the dark-haired
man.

"It has enough power to go through a breastplate at combat range and
that should be enough for anyone," snapped Istril.

"I thought we were talking true long-range weapons ..."

"Enough," said Ryba quietly.  "The engineer's weapons will be sung of
long after we are all gone from Westwind.  So will your great bow,
Gerlich.  There's room for both in history.  It's been a long day, and
we don't need an argument at dinner.  In fact, we don't need arguments
at all.  We need to work together to get through the coming winter."

Nylan slipped into his seat quietly, glancing at the scattering of
ashes in the cold hearth.  "No fire?"

"It's not that cold yet, and it takes work to saw and split logs, even
the dry deadwood," said Ayrlyn from across the table.  Beside her, on
the side closest to Ryba, sat Hryessa.  Relyn sat on the other side.

"You're wearing a jacket."

"I'm not a Sybran," conceded the redheaded healer.  "You're half
Sybran, at least."

Nylan grinned and shook his head.  "The wrong half, probably."

Dinner consisted of long strips of meat, clearly beaten into
tenderness, and spiced with the hot dried peppers that Kyseen had found
somewhere, then covered with an even hotter red-brown sauce.  With it
were lumpy noodles, some almost as thick as small dumplings, and some
form of sliced root.

Nylan forced himself to take several circular root slices, but he
ladled the sauce over everything except the bread.  The bread seemed to
get better.

The only beverage was water.  They had a choice of bitter tea in the
morning and water at night.  The engineer wondered how long it would be
before they might have something else.

Hryessa looked blankly at the barely smoothed wood of the tabletop
while conversation continued.  As Nylan started to eat, the local woman
helped herself to another hefty portion of meat and dumpling noodles.
She ate slowly, as though she were full, but could not believe that she
would eat the next day.

Nylan refrained from shaking his head and took a second bite.  By the
time he had swallowed the mouthful of meat and dumplings, the sweat had
beaded up on his forehead.

He drained his mug and refilled it, then blotted his forehead.

"The bread works better than the water," said Ryba dryly.

Across the end of the table, Ayrlyn nodded.

He took a mouthful and chewed.  They were right.  The burning faded,
and he took another mouthful.  After more bread and some water, he
asked, "Is this the latest way for Kyseen to stop complaints about the
food?  How can you complain if it's too hot to taste?"

"I think it's good," offered Gerlich.

"He never had any taste to begin with," suggested Ayrlyn in a
whisper.

"He still doesn't," muttered Nylan, adding more loudly, "You always
liked things hot and direct."

A wave of laughter rolled down the table.  Hryessa ignored the humor;
Relyn frowned slightly, still struggling to eat with his left hand; and
Nylan reminded himself that he had wanted to craft something for
Relyn's stump.

"Better than cold and indirect," countered Gerlich.

Only a few chuckles greeted his remark, then small talk resumed around
the two tables, especially at the end away from the hearth where
Huldran and Cessya sat.

Nylan overheard a few of the phrases.  "..  . bathing when there's ice
on the walls ..."  "... better than stinking .. ."  "..  . cares?  No
one but the engineer, and you know how dangerous that'd be"

Nylan glanced toward the corner of the first table where Narliat sat
beside Denalle, who was attempting to practice her Anglorat on the arms
man  Narliat's face was bland, although Nylan sensed the man was
fighting boredom.

Nylan concentrated on finishing his meal, although he required two more
large chunks of bread to get him through the last of the spiced meat.

"No sweets?"  asked Istril, her voice rising above the murmurs around
the tables.

"What kind of sweets?"  replied Gerlich.

"Not your kind, Weapons.  You're as direct as that crowbar you carry.
That's hard on a woman."  Istril stood and walked toward the steps to
reclaim the composite bow.

Relyn, sitting beside Ayrlyn, watched the slender marine.  He pursed
his lips, opened his mouth, then closed it.  "How .. . ?  No man would
accept that in Lornth."

"This isn't Lornth, Relyn," said Ayrlyn.  "This is Westwind, and the
women make the rules.  Gerlich crossed the marshal once; she took him
apart.  She used her bare hands and feet to kill a marine who crossed
her."

The young noble glanced at Nylan.  "What about you, Mage?"

"Gerlich is better at the martial valors than I am, I suspect."

"You're better with a blade," said Ryba, "for all of his words about
his great sword."

Gerlich's eyes hardened, but he turned and smiled to Selitra, then rose
and bowed to Ryba.  "It has been a long day, Ryba, and we will be
hunting early tomorrow."

Ryba returned the gesture with one even more curt.  "May you sleep
well."

Gerlich smiled, and Nylan tried not to frown.  He liked the man less
and less as the seasons passed.

"You are a strange one, Mage," said Relyn slowly.  "You are better with
a blade than most, yet you dislike using it.  You can wield the fire of
order, and yet you defer to others."

"Too much killing leaves me unable to function very well."

"But you are good at it."

"Unfortunately," Nylan said.  "Unfortunately."

Later, in the darkness, Nylan and Ryba walked up from the great hall,
slowly, the four sets of steps that led to their space on the sixth
level.

"Some nights, I get so tired," said Nylan.  "It's easier to chop wood
and do heavy labor than to use the laser these days.  It's beginning to
fail."

"Can you do any more of the bows?"

"I did six.  I might be able to do some more, but I haven't cut all the
stone troughs for the bathhouse and showers.  I did get the heater
sections done."

"A heater?"  asked Ryba.

"It's not really a water heater, but I figured that I could put a
storage tank with one side on the back of the chimney for the heating
stove, because not many people will bathe in ice water in a room
without heat.  It probably won't get the water really hot, but it might
make it bearable, and the back stone wall is strong enough to hold a
small tank."

"You're amazing."

He shrugged in the gloom of the third-level landing, almost
embarrassed.  "I just try to make things work."

"You won't always be able to, Nylan."

"Probably not, but I have to try."

"I know."  She reached out and squeezed his hand, briefly, then started
up the steps again.

When they reached the top level, Nylan paused.  Framed in the
right-hand window, the unglazed one, was Freyja, the ice-needle peak
faintly luminescent under the clear stars and the black-purple sky.
Nylan studied the ice, marveling at the knife-sharpness of the
mountain.

Ryba kicked off her boots and eased out of the ship suit  Nylan turned
and swallowed.  Lately, Ryba had been distant, oh so distant.  He just
looked.

"You don't just have to look," she said in a low voice.  "Today is all
that is certain."

He took a step forward, and so did Ryba, and her fingers were deft on
the closures of his tattered ship suit

"You need leathers," she whispered before her lips touched his.
"Leathers fit for the greatest engineer."

"I'm not-"

"Hush ... we need what is certain."

Nylan agreed with that as his arms went around her satin-skinned form,
still slender, with only the slightest rounding in her waist, the
slightest hint of greater fullness in her breasts.

Later, much later, as they lay on the joined couches that they still
shared, Nylan held her hand and looked at Freyja, wondering if the peak
had a fiery center like Ryba.

"I'll be back," Ryba whispered as she sat up and pulled her ship suit
over her naked form.  She padded down the stairs barefoot, after
picking up an object Nylan could not make out, night vision or not,
from beneath the couch.

As the cold breeze sifted through the open windows- both the single
window with the arma glass and the one with shutters alone were
open-the engineer pulled the thin blanket up to his chest, and waited
... and waited.

His eyes had closed when he heard bare feet, and he turned and asked
sleepily, "What took so long?"

"I ran into Istril, and she wanted something," Ryba said.  "I'm never
off-duty anymore, it seems.  I was able to help her, but it took a bit
longer than I'd thought.  She thinks a lot of you."

"She's a good person," Nylan said, stifling a yawn and reaching out to
touch Ryba's silken skin, skin so smooth that no one would have
believed that it belonged to an avenging angel, to the angel.

"Yes.  All of the marines are good.  That's one reason why I do what I
do."  Ryba let Nylan move to her, but the engineer felt the reserve
there, the holding back that seemed so often present, even at the most
intimate times.

And he held back a sigh, only agreeing with her words.  "They all are
good, and I do the best I can."

"I know."  Those two words were softer, much softer, and sadder.  "I
know."  But she said nothing more as they lay there in the cool night
that foreshadowed a far, far colder winter-as they lay there and Ryba
shuddered once, twice, and was silent.

Hryessa's words ran through Nylan's mind, again and again.  "But she is
the angel."

Darkness, what had they begun?  Where would it end?

XXXVIII

SIL LEK  GESTURES TO the chair closest to the broadleaf fern that
screens the pair of wooden armchairs from the remainder of the
courtyard and from Zeldyan's family and retainers.

"You are most kind, Lord Sillek," murmurs Zeldyan as she sits, leaning
forward, the husky bell-like tones of her voice just loud enough to be
heard over the splashing of the fountain.

"No," says Sillek.  "I am not kind.  I am fortunate.  You are
intelligent and beautiful, and ..."  He shrugs, not wishing to voice
what he thinks.  Despite the apparently secluded setting of the chairs
and low table between them, he understands that all he says could be
returned to Gethen.

"Your words are kind."

"I try to make my actions kind," he answers as he seats himself and
turns in the chair to face her directly.

"Necessity does not always permit kindness."  The blond looks at Sillek
directly for the first time.  "Necessity may be kind to you."

"You speak honestly, lady, as though I were a duty.  There is someone
else who has courted you?"

Zeldyan laughs.  "Many have paid court, but none, I think, to me.
Rather they have courted my father through me."

"I would like to say that I am sorry."

"You are more honest than most, and more comely."  Her hand touches the
silver and black hair band briefly, and a sad smile plays across her
lips.  "Have you not courted others?"

"I am afraid you have the advantage on me, lady, for I have neither
courted, nor been courted-until now."

"Why might that be?"  She leans forward ever so slightly.

"Because"-he shrugs-"I did not wish to be forced into a union of
necessity."  He laughs once, not trying to hide the slightly bitter
undertone.

"You are too honest to be a lord, scr.  For that, I fear you will pay
dearly."  Zeldyan's tone is sprightly.

"Perhaps you could help me."

"To be dishonest?"  She raises her eyebrows.

"Only if dishonesty is to learn to love honestly."

"You drive a hard bargain, Scr Sillek."  Her eyes drop toward the
polished brown stone tiles of the courtyard.

Sillek reaches out and takes her right hand in his left.  "Hard it may
be, Zeldyan, but honest, and I hope you will understand that is what I
would give you."  Another short and bitter laugh follows, then several
moments of silence.  "I would not deceive you with flowery words,
though you are beautiful and know that you are.  But comeliness and
beauty vanish quickly enough in our hard world, especially when courted
for the wrong reasons."

"You are far too honest, Sillek.  Far too honest.  Honesty is dangerous
to a ruler."

"It is, but to be less than honest is often more dangerous."  Sillek
frowns, then pauses.  "Is it so evil to try to be honest with the lady
I wish to join?"

"You might ask her if that is her wish."

The Lord of Lornth takes a deep breath.  "I did not ask, not because I
do not care, but because I had thought it was not your wish.  I have
appeared in your life from nowhere, and there must be many who have
known and loved both your visage and your soul."  He laughs softly.  "I
had not meant to be poetic, here, but my tongue betrayed me."

Zeldyan's eyes moisten for an instant, but only for an instant, before
she turns her head toward the broadleaf fern.

Sillek waits, the lack of words punctuated by the splashing of the
fountain.  His eyes flick toward the end of the courtyard where he
knows Gethen and Fornal make small talk about crops and hunting while
they wait, and where, in another room, the lady Erenthla also waits.

When Zeldyan faces Sillek again, her face is calm.  "What would say
your lady mother?"

"Nothing."  Sillek wets his lips.  "Her thoughts are yet another thing.
A fine match, she would think.  She would say to me that the Lord of
Gethen Groves has lands, and his support will strengthen Lornth and
your patrimony, Sillek."

"You court strangely, My Lord."

"So I do.  Say also that I court honestly."  He offers her a head bow.
"Would you be my consort, lady?"

"Yes.  And I will say more, Lord.  Your honesty is welcome.  May it
always be so."  Zeldyan bows her head in return, then smiles
ironically.  "Would you wish my company when you deliver my consent to
my father?"

Sillek stands.  "I would not press, but I had thought we both might
speak with your father, and then with your mother."

"She would like that."

Sillek extends his hand, and Zeldyan takes it, though she scarcely
needs it to aid her from the chair.  Their hands remain together as
they walk past the fountain and back toward the far end of the
courtyard.

XXXIX

NYLAN USED THE tongs to swing the rough bow frame into the focal point
of the laser, struggling to keep the power flows smooth and still shape
the metal around the composite core.

On the stones he used for cooling after the quench lay a circular
cuplike device with a blunt-very blunt-hook and two bows-most of a
morning's work.  He hoped the metal cup and hook would serve as an
adequate artificial hand for Relyn; he was tired of the veiled
references to one-armed men.

His eyes went back to the two bows.  All told, the engineer had made
twelve over the eight-day before, each a struggle sandwiched between
limited stone-cutting and building the heating stove for the bathhouse,
and welding the two laundry tubs.  Ellysia, relegated to laundry as a
collateral duty because her obvious and early pregnancy had limited her
riding, had immediately commandeered both.  According to what Nylan had
overheard, though, she refused to launder anything of Gerlich's.

Nylan permitted himself a smile at that, before he forced his
concentration back to controlling the laser, and smoothing the metal
around the cormclit composite core of what would be another bow.

As the tip of greenish light flowed toward the end of the bow, the
energy flows from the power head fluctuated more and more wildly, and
Nylan staggered where he stood, trying to hold the last focal point.

Pphssttt!  Even before the faint sizzling faded into silence, Nylan
could tell from the collapse of the flux fields around the laser focal
points that the power head had failed.  The engineer slumped.  The
other cutting power head was in little better shape.  The weapons head,
although scarcely used, would squander power, depleting the cells in a
fraction of a morning-without accomplishing much, except destroying
whatever it was focused on.

The last power head might last long enough to finish another handful of
the composite bows.

He frowned.  First, he needed to cut the shower knife plates.  Then, if
the second power head lasted that long, he could go back to the bows.
At least, the black tower was finished.  That is, the basics were-roof,
floors, the hearth, chimneys, the stove and the furnace itself, and the
water system from the tower wall to the lower-level cistern.

Everyone had needed something.  Ryba had wanted weapons; everyone had
needed shelter; the horses had needed stables; the tower had needed
some windows ... the list had seemed endless.

He disconnected the power head from the wand, glancing toward the
uncompleted bathhouse behind him.  Huldran, Cessya, and the others were
raising the roof timbers on the stables.

The single clang of the triangle announced the noon meal, and Nylan
took the artificial hand and the broken power-head.  He dropped off the
power head in the tower, then found Relyn by the causeway.  The
mahogany-haired man sat on the stones watching Fierral and Jaseen spar,
his eyes narrow.

"Greetings, Mage."

"Greetings.  I brought you something."  Nylan extended the device.

"What..  . might that be?"

"What I promised the other evening when I measured your arm."  The
engineer extended the artificial hand and mounting cup, measured to fit
over the healing stump.

"It might be better than nothing, scr."  Relyn took it in his good left
hand.

Nylan felt himself growing angry, and the darkness rising within him,
but he bit back the personal anger and chose his words carefully before
he spoke.  "It is no evil to lose, either a battle or a hand, to
someone who is better.  It is a great evil to refuse to struggle
against your losses.  I offer you a tool to help in that struggle.  Are
you too proud to use that tool?  Does an arms man refuse a blade when
his is broken?"

Rather than say more, Nylan turned and left.  He was one of the first
at table for the midday meal, rather than the last, but he refused even
to look in Relyn's direction.

After he ate, Nylan excused himself and trudged back to the north side
of the tower, where he set up the laser with the remaining power head

On the other side of the tower, in the fields, the field crew-Selitra,
Siret, Ellysia, and Berlis, who still complained about her thigh
wound-were gathering the beans, and digging up some of the bluish
high-altitude potatoes.  The potatoes that didn't seem ready could
wait, but with the threat of light frosts growing heavier, the last of
the aboveground produce had to come in.

Between the carcasses dragged in by Gerlich and salted or dried, and
the wild roots, and crops, and the barrels of assorted flours gotten in
trading, Westwind might get through the winter-on tight rations.  The
food concentrates were almost gone, far faster than Ryba or Nylan had
anticipated.

Clang!  Clang!  The triangle sounded twice.

Nylan looked up from reconnecting the second power-head as Istril led
four other riders uphill toward the ridge.  Another set of would-be
crop raiders, no doubt.  There wasn't the swirl of the white chaos-feel
on the local net that happened when large numbers of arms men showed
up. Why his senses worked that way, he didn't know, only that they
did.

Since they didn't seem to need him, he turned his attention back to the
work at hand.  With the goggles in place, he studied the sheets of
metal taken from lander three and the lines chalked on them.

Finally, he triggered the laser and began to cut the knife plates,
quickly and without much smoothing.  All eight went quickly, and he
took a deep breath when the long-handled plates were completed.  The
rest of the "valves" could be worked out with local materials, if
necessary.

He moved the leftover metal and laid out the three rough bow forms and
the three composite cores he had already cut.

Maybe... maybe... the laser would last through all three.

At the sound of hooves, Nylan looked up.  Istril led a mount, over
which was a body.  So did two of the marines who followed.  Seven
mounts, and three bows in all, and no obvious casualties for the
marines.  Nylan took a deep breath, then noticed that Istril had turned
toward him.

She reined up well short of the laser.

Nylan checked the power and pushed back the goggles.  "No
casualties?"

"No."  She smiled broadly.  "The bows work well.  Very well."  Then the
smile became a grin.  "Gerlich doesn't know what the frig he's talking
about.  He couldn't have sent an arrow as far as your bows, even with
that monster of his.  It's technique."

Nylan nodded.  "With most things, it's technique."

"The bows may save a lot more lives than the blades, scr.  Ours,
anyway, and that's what we're worried about."  She paused, then flicked
the reins.  "We need to take care of these."

Nylan offered her a vague salute, watched as she turned her mount, then
lowered the goggles.

The energy flows tumbled through the power head like green rapids, and
Nylan felt he was using all his energy just to smooth them, and it took
even more to begin to shape the rough metal bow frame around the
composite.

Once more, his face was a river of sweat as he struggled with the laser
and the shaping.  And once more, he was drained, arms lined with
internal fire and legs shaking, by the time he finished the bow and
quenched it.

The power head was failing, yet, after what Istril had told him, the
bows might be the most important thing he could make before the laser
system collapsed.  So he rested on the cracked stone he used as a seat,
trying to catch his breath and regain his strength before beginning the
next bow.

"So ... the mage is working hard."  Relyn ambled into the north tower
yard.  He carried Nylan's creation in his left hand.

"The mage always works hard."  Nylan wiped his damp forehead.

"You sweat like a pig.  Yet I see no weapons, no hammers, no hot
coals."

"This is harder than that."

"What?  You work the fires of the angels' hell?"

Nylan stood and walked toward the firm cell bank and the laser wand.
"Watch.  Then you can decide."

Relyn's lips tightened, but he said nothing as Nylan lowered the
goggles.  The engineer inserted the composite strip in the groove of
the bow frame, then picked up both with the tongs and the laser wand
with his right hand.

Again, the greenish light flickered, and Nylan wrestled with the
fluctuating power levels as he molded metal around composite.  Sweat
streamed into and around his goggles.  His arms and eyes burned, and
his legs felt rubbery even before he quenched the bow and set it
aside.

He pushed back the goggles and blotted his face dry, but his eyes still
burned from strain and the salt of his sweat.  His tattered uniform was
soaked.  For a few moments, he just sat there, doubting whether the
power head would last through another bow.

"Worse than the fires of the angels' hell," Relyn finally offered.

The words startled Nylan since, with all the concentration required, he
had forgotten that the young noble had been watching.

"It's hard, but I wouldn't know about the angels' hell.  I've only seen
the white mirror towers of the demons."

"You look like men and women, but you are not."  Relyn shook his head.
"You bend the order force around chaos and form metal like a smith, and
the fire you use is hotter than a smith's.  Yet all the other angels
say none but you can wield that green flame."

"I won't be able to do that much longer.  The flame maker is failing,"
Nylan conceded.

"That is why you work so hard?"

The engineer nodded.

Finally, Relyn bowed his head.  "I have not been gracious, or noble.
This ... it is a work of art, and you were generous to create it for
me, especially when you have so little of the flame left.  And you put
some of your soul in it.  That I can see.  I will use it, as I can, but
I would not wear it after my last words when we ate-or yours."

Nylan understood that the statement was as close to an apology as he
was ever likely to get, and that the words had cost the younger man a
great deal.

"It is yours to use."  Nylan paused.  "I only ask that you use it for
good, not evil."

Relyn lifted his eyes.  "You.have not..."

"No.  I would not compel," Nylan said, mentally adding, Even if I knew
how, which I don't.  "The choice is yours.  I don't believe in forcing
choices.  People resent that, and their resentment colors their actions
and their decisions."

Relyn studied the smooth metal.  "Now ... I must think."

"About what?"

The younger man gave Nylan a crooked smile.  "About what I have seen
and what I must do."

"I wouldn't stay here," Nylan said bluntly.

"But you do."

"That's true, but I'm an angel.  You aren't."  As he spoke, Nylan found
himself thinking that he was only half angel, assuming pure Sybran
equated to pure angel.

"Even angels have choices, Mage."  Relyn lifted his remaining hand,
then turned and walked uphill toward the ridge.

"What was that about?"  Nylan asked himself, walking back to the bucket
by the wall.  He drank and splashed his face before returning to the
last bow.

He shouldn't have worried about the last bow.  The entire power head
fused solid when he triggered the power.  He looked at the day's
work-five bows.  Seventeen bows in all.  Not enough, but better than
none.

He began disassembling the laser, and he had returned all the
components, useless or not, to the tower, all except the bank of firm
cells and the five bows, when Ryba rode down from the ridge and reined
up.

"Both the cutting heads for the laser are shot," Nylan explained.
"They're totally fused."

"What were you doing?"

"It doesn't matter.  The total cumulative flow was the issue.  The
heads are only made to last so long.  I got five more bows done."

"That's almost enough.  Can you modify the weapons head?"  asked Ryba,
almost idly, leaning forward on the roan, her fingers touching the
staff of the composite bow Nylan had given her-one of his better
efforts.

"Not really.  It's designed for maximum power disbursement in minimum
time-that's a weapon configuration."  The engineer unfolded the
carrying handle on the right side of the firm cell frame.

"What about your .. . abilities?"

"I can channel the flows, shape them, but I can't hold back that kind
of power flow.  With the industrial heads, they're designed to be
choked down, except it's not choked.  They draw power at any level ..
."  Nylan shrugged.  Explaining how things felt with a new ability he
couldn't adequately describe even to himself was difficult.  He
unfolded the other carrying handle.

"How much power do we have left?"

"Fifty percent on one bank of cells.  The emergency generator might
last long enough to get that bank to full power.  Then again, it could
quit any time.  The bearings are nearly shot."

"That could power the weapons laser, couldn't it?"  Ryba smiled again,
almost cruelly.

"For a while.  The cells might hold for a year."

Ryba straightened in the saddle.  "You've done well, Nylan.  The great
smith and engineer.  You built a tower, a bathhouse, stables, figured
out how to heat them-and still left the weapons laser.  I'll see you at
dinner."

As she rode off, with the way she spoke, he almost wished he hadn't
accomplished so much.

XL

"SER GET HEN OF the Groves!"  announces the young arms man in training,
"accompanied by Lady Erenthla, and Zeldyan, of the Groves of Gethen."

The single horn plays a flourish, and Sillek, concealing a wince
because the horn player is off-key, hopes that Gethen is not terribly
musical.

Through the opening doors of the great hall step the three, walking up
the green carpet toward the dais where Sillek and his mother stand. The
lady Ellindyja remains slightly back and to his right, but close enough
that Sillek can read her face.

In the hall are nearly threescore landowners and others of prominence
in Lornth, there to witness the formal betrothal.

Zeldyan, eyes downcast, walks behind her father and side by side with
her mother.

"She'll do for a consort," opines the lady Ellindyja.  "Good lands,
good blood, good manners, and good looks.  And Scr Gethen will back you
on the campaign to take Rulyarth?"

"That was a deciding factor in announcing the betrothal," Sillek lies.
"But I would have no more speech on that.  The fewer who know, the
better."

"I will keep silent, but I rather doubt that her father's support was
the deciding point," suggests Lady Ellindyja.  "She took your fancy,
and you'll tell me that her father will support you to soothe me."

"I felt him out before I ever saw Zeldyan."

"If he knew you cared, he would have driven a harder bargain."

"He only has one son," Sillek says quietly, his lips barely moving and
his face impassive as Gethen and Zeldyan approach.

The lady Ellindyja shrugs.  "All ventures are a gamble.  Had young
Relyn taken back the Roof of the World, Scr Gethen would have doubled
his lands and influence.  Now he must support you more.  Sometimes luck
is as important as skill."

"Your advice was the deciding factor, Mother dear," whispers Sillek
just before he steps down off the dais platform to greet Gethen.

Gethen inclines his head.

Sillek offers a half bow.  "Welcome to Lornth, Scr Gethen."  He turns
to Erenthla.  "And to you, lady."  His last bow, and his deepest, goes
to Gethen's daughter.  "And to you, Zeldyan.  I am honored."

Although Zeldyan's face displays a polite smile, a tinge of a flush
colors her cheeks as she curtseys in response.

"Not so honored as we are," responds Gethen formally, and loudly enough
so that those even in the back of the hall can hear.

"You do offer me honor in entrusting your daughter into our family and
care, and I assure you that she will in turn be honored and cherished,"
responds Sillek, turning his eyes from the father to the daughter.

Both Gethen and Ellindyja frown momentarily at the words "and
cherished," while the white-haired Erenthla smiles briefly.

Zeldyan momentarily raises her eyes to Sillek, and they sparkle, before
she drops them so quickly that not even Ellindyja sees.

"As a pledge of my trust," Sillek continues, "I offer you the seal ring
of a counselor of Lornth."

A dark-haired youth, an arms man to be, steps forward with a small
green pillow on which rests the golden ring.

"It is a token of my faith."  Sillek's eyes are clear and direct as he
faces Gethen, so direct that the older man pauses momentarily.

"You do me, and my daughter, great honor, Lord Sillek."

"Only your due, scr.  And hers."

This time, at the untraditional reference to Zeldyan, Gethen does not
frown, although the lady Ellindyja swallows.

A second young arms man approaches, with another pillow on which are
two matching silver rings, each with a square emerald set in the center
of a miniature seal of Lornth.

Sillek takes the smaller ring.  "With this ring, I ask for your hand,
lady, and with it, I pledge both my hand and my honor."

She extends her left hand, and Sillek slides the ring in place, adding
quietly, "And my devotion."

Then it is Zeldyan's turn, and her voice is cool and firm, without
bells, without brassiness, without softness.  She lifts the larger
ring, and Sillek extends his hand.  "With this ring, I give you my
hand, and accept your hand and your honor."  As she slips the ring in
place, her fingers tighten around his hand briefly, and she adds, "And
give you the respect you deserve."

Gethen's eyes widen but fractionally, and then they cross with the lady
Ellindyja's.

I Sillek's and Zeldyan's hands remain locked for several instants,
before Sillek finally says, loudly enough for all in the hall to hear,
"Two hands promised in honor."

"Two hands promised in honor!"  the onlookers chorus.

Sillek steps onto the dais and draws Zeldyan up beside him.  After a
moment, he gestures, and Gethen and Erenthla join them.  All smile
except the lady Ellindyja.

XLI

THE DULL RUMBLE of thunder echoed across the Roof of the World, and a
line of rain slashed at Tower Black.  Water dribbled through the closed
shutters of the great room, but not through the arma glass windows. 
The coals left from the morning fire imparted a residual warmth .. .
and some smokiness, because Nylan had added the hearth after the walls
had been started.

Nylan sipped the cup of leaf tea slowly, lingering past breakfast. With
his head still aching two days after the laser had failed, he wondered
if the bows had killed the power-heads earlier than necessary. He
massaged his neck again and looked around the empty room.  The guards
had left the table and were working, either in the lower level of the
tower, or in the stables, out of the cold rain that had fallen for two
days straight.

The inside tower drains were working, at least, and water seemed to be
filling the outfall, from what he could see out the front door.  Nylan
smiled, but the smile faded as he thought of the uncompleted bathhouse
and unfinished outside conduits to the cistern.  He should check those
drains before long.

He wished he'd been able to roof and finish the bathhouse before the
rain.  The heating stove in the bathhouse was only half-built.  With
the laser gone, he'd have to mortar the plates for the water heater in
place, but he couldn't do any more brick and stonework until the rain
stopped, and the clouds outside were so dark they were almost black.

Nylan took another sip of the hot tea that tasted almost undrinkable,
but seemed to help relax rigid muscles and relieve the worst of the
headache, and massaged the back of his neck with his left hand once
again.

The main tower door opened and then closed.  A single figure stomped
wet boots, then headed toward the tables.

"You look like manure."  Ayrlyn slid onto the bench across the table
from the engineer.  Her short red hair was wet and plastered to her
skull, and rivulets of water ran down her cheeks.

"Manure feels better.  You look wet."

"The joys of trying to locate logs and timber before the weather turns
really nasty.  We need more deadwood for the furnace and kitchen stove.
It cuts easier."  Ayrlyn wiped the water off her face, but another
rivulet coursed down her left cheek right afterward.  "There's a lot of
internal work this place needs.  That means green wood, and it's a mess
to cut."

Nylan's eyes rose to the blank stone walls, the unfinished shelves, and
the lack of interior walls.  "You could say that."

Ayrlyn studied Nylan.  "You look like a worn-out engineer."

"You look like a soaked and worn-out artisan and singer."  Nylan
paused.  "I never did tell you how effective that Westwind guard song
was."

"It's a terrible song," protested Ayrlyn.

"That's why it's effective.  Every anthem ever written is terrible,
either melodically or because it's lyrically tear-jerking."

"You've made a study?"

"No .. . but the Sybran anthem .. . you know, 'the winters of time...
the banners of ice..."  Or how about the Svennish hymn to the mother?
Or "The Swift Ships of Heaven'?  Have you really listened to the
words?"

"Enough."  Ayrlyn laughed.  "Enough."

"All right... but what about the Akalyrr "Song to the Father'?"

"Enough!  I said enough."

Nylan sipped his tea, trying not to grimace.

"That good?"

"It helps.  That's all I can say about it."  He set the mug down again.
"Have you learned anything new from our friend Relyn?"

Ayrlyn glanced toward the end of the great room.  "He's learning how to
use that hand, but he still feels crippled- and angry.  He's confused,
too, because he owes allegiance to this Lord Sillek, yet he feels he
was tricked.  He also doesn't think much of Narliat... or of Gerlich,
for that matter."

"He has good taste," Nylan said.  "Has he told you anything new that we
didn't know about this planet?"

"It's hard to say."  Ayrlyn frowned.  "He pretty much agrees with
Narliat's story about the landing of the demons, and so does Hryessa.
She's taken to Saryn, by the way.  She sees Ryba as a goddess, and she
can't relate to a goddess.  Saryn's merely a mighty warrior.  Hryessa
also tells the demon story a little differently-the demons are the
patrons of men and of the wizards, and white is the color of
destruction here."

"Why wouldn't it be?"  asked Nylan.  "The demons of light are white."

"In a lot of cultures, especially low-tech ones, white means purity. It
was in ancient Svenn, and in Etalyarr.  Here, darkness is pure, and
there's not much emphasis on cleanliness.  All wizards are men,
obviously."

"Wonderful."  Nylan glanced toward the door and the stairs, but the
great room remained empty save for them.

"Black wizards are rare.  That's why Hryessa will look at you."

"Because I'm rare?"

"Because they all think you're a black wizard."  Ayrlyn smiled.

"How would they know?  I don't even know why what I do works."

"For Relyn, Hryessa, and Narliat, it's simple.  White wizards throw
fire bolts without using tools or weapons.  White wizards destroy
people and things.  Black wizards build things, like towers, tools, and
weapons.  Or heal.  You build.  So you're a black wizard."  Ayrlyn
shrugged.  "You also have silver hair, and none of the white wizards
do.  They aren't sure about black wizards, since there aren't many."

"If I have to be one or the other, I guess it's better to be black."
Nylan took another sip of the tea, trying not to make a face, then set
the earthenware mug-a recent addition from Rienadre and the brick
kiln-down and massaged his neck.  "Your healing makes you a black
wizard, too."

"I don't know that I'm any wizard ..."

"You're a healer."

"A minor black wizard, then.  Very minor."

Ayrlyn offered a quick smile, then continued.  "Relyn seems to think
that this Lord Sillek has his hands full.  His western neighbor, a
charming fellow named Ildyrom, has been trying to take over some
grasslands.  Young Sillek also is being choked by his northern
neighbor.  Relyn doesn't understand the government there, but it sounds
like a form of council run by big traders.  They hold the river near
the Northern Ocean and all the ports."

"So he's got trouble on all sides?"

"According to Relyn.  Narliat says it's not that bad, and all Hryessa
knows is that food has gotten scarcer.  Oh, Relyn also says that no one
likes fighting the westerners-Jeranyi, I think they're called-because
the women fight alongside the men."

"Rather chauvinistic culture."

"I'd say that's the rule, mostly.  It's a warm planet."

"What does warmth have to do with male chauvinism?"

"It doesn't necessarily, except that women handle extreme cold better
than men.  Look at Heaven, where women have more than half the
government.  Some anthropologists theorize that cold tolerance is the
whole basis of the Sybran culture."  Ayrlyn spread her hands.

"Do these Jeranyi come from a cold culture?  I didn't recall any
mountains there."

"No.  Maybe there's some other reason."

"Anything else?"

"He's given me a lot about local customs, trade, that sort of thing,
but it's background.  Helpful, but background.  The other thing is that
this Lord Sillek doesn't have an heir, or any surviving siblings.  That
bothered Relyn."

"Probably civil war if Sillek dies," mused Nylan.  "Two out of three
says this Sillek's definitely got his hands full."  He looked down at
the rapidly cooling tea and wondered if he could force himself to drink
any more.

"That's my reading, but we're only going on what we've seen, and that
isn't much, plus the in-depth reports of three locals, and the offhand
remarks of traders."  Ayrlyn blotted a thin line of water from her neck
below her right ear.  "Rain looks like it's never going to stop."

"It's probably snowing on the mountaintops."  Nylan looked toward the
windows, then swung his feet over the bench.  "Time to check the
drains."

"Drains?"

"The little details, like keeping the tower from being washed away. The
things that get forgotten in the sagas of heroes and heroic deeds."

"Still bitter about that?"

"A little."  He snorted.  "But it's time to go get wet."

"I'm going to dry off some before I go back out there."

"I haven't been out, and I should have been."  The engineer stood and
carried the mug down to the north door of the tower, where he washed it
in the one bucket, rinsed it in the other, and racked it in the
peeled-limb framework leaned against the stone wall.  The second slot
in the upper left was his.

Then he closed his jacket and eased open the north door, which not only
squeaked, but scraped against the floor stones.  A blast of rain slewed
across him, but he hurried out and closed the door behind him.

The water resistance of his ship jacket wouldn't last long, but he
wanted to check the drains in the uncompleted bathhouse.  The last
thing he wanted was the rain undercutting the walls or their
foundation.

A roll of thunder followed another line of what seemed solid water that
hit Nylan just as he ducked through the half-covered archway and into
the unroofed bathhouse.

"Oh .. . frig!"

The water was already ankle-deep.  Nylan plodded forward toward the
first drain where he could sense some drainage.  He pushed back his
sleeves and thrust his hands into the water, ignoring the chill,
feeling around, and finally finding a chunk of brick.  He pulled that
out of the mud, only to have something sharp scrape the back of his
left hand.  He heaved the fragment over the wall and bent down again,
fishing through the muddy water and coming up with a long shard of
slate.  He threw that outside the walls and looked at his hand.

The rain washed away the blood from the thin cut as fast as it welled
out, but the cut was only skin-deep.  The water started to swirl down
the drain, then stopped.  The engineer sighed and went fishing again,
this time coming up with a round stone just the right size to plug the
drain.

He watched the water swirl and start to drain, and again stop.

After repeating the process nearly a dozen times, the drain seemed to
be flowing freely, and he slogged through the instep-deep water to the
other end of the bathhouse and the second drain-also plugged.

After four tries, he got the second drain running freely, but the first
drain had become plugged again-with several more stone fragments.

All in all, Nylan slogged back and forth between the two drains nearly
half a dozen times before the area inside the walls was drained,
although several depressions remained as ankle-deep puddles.

Then he circled the tower, checking the rock-lined drainage way on the
lower east side of the tower.  While the drainage way was a narrow
rushing stream that seemed to divert the deluge from the tower
foundations, beyond the stones the water had already dug a trench
knee-deep through the lowest point of the makeshift road to the
ridge.

Nylan shook his head.  They would need a stone culvert, or something,
to keep the road from being washed out with every heavy rainstorm.  He
took a deep breath and headed back to the north door of the tower, his
ship boots squishing with every step.

Water-resistant or not, Nylan's jacket was soaked, as was everything
else.  But the drains were working, and the water from all around the
tower was flowing freely into the outfall he had designed.  Beyond the
outfall... He just winced.

His head ached again; his neck and shoulder muscles were tight, and his
eyes burned, and he trudged back to the north side of the tower.  He
turned the heavy lever, and the latch plate lifted.  A strong push and
the door swung open, barely wide enough for him to squeeze through
sideways, before it stuck.

Nylan edged inside and checked the door.  The hinge pins were solid,
and the strap plates hadn't moved.  He bent down, then nodded.  With
the moisture, the wood had swelled, and perhaps the latch end had
drooped some with the extra weight and usage.  Whatever the exact
reason, the end of the door was wedged on the stone.

He grunted, and half lifted, half shoved the door back closed.

After closing the door, he took off his jacket and wrung it dry,
letting the water spill on the stones by the door.  Then he stripped
off his boots and the ship suit and repeated the process with the ship
suit ignoring the fact that he was standing near-nude by the door. He
turned his boots upside down and poured out the remaining water.

As he set them down, the north door eased open, then stuck once more.

Siret squeezed inside, barely able to maneuver her thickening
midsection through the narrow opening.  Her deep green eyes fixed on
him.  "Scr?"

"Trying to wring out the worst of the water," he explained.

Siret said nothing, her eyes still on him as he re donned the ship suit
and he could feel himself blushing.  Once he had the damp suit back on,
he shoved the door shut, barefoot, his feet sliding on the cold damp
stones.

"I'm sorry, scr," Siret finally said.  "I should have helped, but I ...
I just... I don't know what happened."  Her eyes did not meet
Nylan's.

"That's all right."  He slowly pulled on the damp boots.  "Thank you."
Siret turned and headed toward the great room on the other side of the
central stairs.

Nylan followed.  Even before he was two steps into the great room, he
felt the heat, from the hearth, more welcome than the odor of fresh
bread coming from the grass baskets.  He spread his damp jacket on the
shelves beneath the stairs, then walked toward the warmth, glad that
his seat was close to the hearth.

The two tables were nearly filled with damp marines.  Narliat's dry
leathers stood out, as did Kadran's and Kyseen's.  The dryness of the
cooks' clothing, Nylan could understand, but Narliat sat beside
Gerlich, who looked like a drowned rodent, with his damp chestnut beard
and longer hair plastered against the back of his neck.  Relyn, across
the table, was soaked as well, but he offered a smile.

Nylan returned Relyn's smile and nodded when he passed Gerlich, and
then eased into the seat at the end of the bench closest to the
hearth.

Saryn sat on the end of the table with her back to the windows, across
from Nylan.  Between her and Ayrlyn sat Hryessa in dampened leathers.
Relyn sat to Ayrlyn's left.

"The fire feels good," Nylan observed.

"Since everyone's soaked, it seemed like a good idea."  Ryba smiled
faintly.  "Our resident healer and communicator pointed that out."

"The damp is worse for health than snow would be.  So I suggested the
fire," Ayrlyn said.

Nylan turned on the bench so that the heat from the hearth would warm
his back.  While the ship suits were thin, the synthetics did dry
quickly.

The big pot in the center of the table held a soupy stew, to be poured
over the bread.  Saryn passed him a basket of bread, and he broke off a
chunk, then stood and ladled stew over it.

"How did you get soaked?"  Ryba asked.

"Cleaning out the drains in the bathhouse so that the foundations
wouldn't get washed away.  I also checked the other drains and the out
falls

"It's snowing on the higher peaks," said Ayrlyn.  "I wouldn't be
surprised if we got snow here within an eight-day or two."

"I hope it holds off.  We've still got a bunch to do to get the
bathhouse finished."

"Will it take that long?"  asked Ryba.

"Long enough," said Nylan, pouring the hot root and bark tea into his
mug where, when the hot liquid hit the clay, the mug cracked in two, as
if a magical knife had cloven it, and the tea poured across the
table.

"Friggin'..  . !"  Nylan nearly knocked over the bench as he lurched
sideways to avoid the boiling liquid that had started to drip off the
table onto his legs.  As he stood beside Ryba's chair, he looked around
for something to wipe away the tea.

"Scr!"  Kyseen stood and tossed a bunched rag toward Nylan, which
opened and dropped onto Hryessa's bread and stew.

Hryessa's mouth opened.

"These things happen," said Ayrlyn calmly, as she reclaimed the rag and
spread it on the tea puddle.

Hryessa looked at her stew and bread, then at Ayrlyn.

Saryn grinned, shaking her head.  "It doesn't look like it's been your
morning, Engineer."

Nylan reached forward and gathered the tea- and stew-soaked rag,
carefully wringing the liquid into the inside corner of the hearth
where the heat would evaporate it.  Then he mopped up more of the tea
and repeated the process.

In time he sat back down, glad at least that the split mug hadn't
poured bark tea over his bread and stew.

"Here's another mug, scr."  Rienadre set one in front of him and
retreated.  "Some of them don't fire right.  I'm sorry."

"Would you pour the tea?"  Nylan asked.  "I haven't had much luck."
Rienadre took the kettle and poured.  The mug held.

"Thank you."  Nylan took a small sip, marveling that the tea wasn't
bad.  That alone told him how bedraggled he felt.  He took a mouthful
of bread and stew, then another, trying to ignore the bitterness of the
tubers and onions.  From the corner of his eye as he set down his mug,
Nylan could see Gerlich bending toward Narliat.

"Finishing the bathhouse with hand tools is going to take time-and
dryer weather," the engineer added.

"Cannot a mage do anything?"  asked Narliat.  "You have builded a tower
that reaches to the skies, and you cannot make a few channels in
stone?"

Put that way... Nylan frowned.  "Perhaps I can, after all."  The real
question was the timing of Narliat's question.  Was Gerlich thinking up
the nasty questions for the arms man or was Narliat that disruptive on
his own?

"You are a great mage, and great mages do great things," Narliat
added.

Nylan wanted to strangle him for the setup.  Instead, he turned to the
arms man  "I have never claimed to be a great mage.  But I have done my
best to accomplish what needed to be done, and I will continue to do
so."  His eyes locked on Narliat until the other looked away.

Then he took another chunk of bread and ate more of the stew, trying to
ignore the gamy taste Kyseen had not been able to mask with salt and
strong onions.

XLII

AS HE WAITED for Ryba, Nylan stood in the darkness at the unshuttered,
unglazed window and looked at Freyja, the knife edges of the
needle-peak softened but slightly by the starlight and by the snow.

His stomach growled, reminding him that the spiced bear stew-that was
what Kyseen had called it-had not fully agreed with his system.  Would
it be that way all winter, although he could scarcely call it winter,
since only a few dustings of snow had fallen around the tower?  Not all
of the scrub bushes and deciduous trees had shed their gray leaves,
although it was clear most kept about half, shriveled against the
winter.

Meals were enough, so far, to keep body together, but not much more,
and it wasn't that cold yet.

Nylan leaned forward and looked to the north side of the tower and the
half-roofed bathhouse.  Almost instinctively, he curled his hands, and
his fingertips rested on the callused spots at the base of his fingers.
He had far too much to finish, far too much, and, as time passed, fewer
and fewer cared, except for the few like Ryba, Ayrlyn, and Huldran, and
the guards with children.

He turned toward the stairs as he heard Ryba's steps-heavier
now-approaching.

"Dylless hasn't been kind to my bladder," said the marshal.

"I'm sorry about the tower design," apologized Nylan.  "I just wasn't
thinking about waste disposal."

In a rough-sewn nightshirt of grayish beaten linen, Ryba sat down
heavily on her side of the twin couches.  "Narliat and Relyn think this
tower is luxury, the sort of place for lords and dukes or whatever.
Neither wants to leave.  They'll have to, by spring at the latest."

"If they have to leave, why are you letting them stay?"

"I don't want the locals to find out much about us until we've got
things in better order.  So far, the only people who have left have
been those who have fled our weapons, mostly in terror, and traders who
have never seen things closely.  I'd like to keep it that way for a
while longer.  And we can learn a few things more from Narliat and
Relyn."  Ryba shrugged.  "Relyn might end up fathering a child or two,
and he seems bright enough."

The engineer pulled at his chin, "You're pregnant, and so are Siret and
Ellysia.  Isn't that a lot for the numbers we've got?"

"Three or four out of sixteen-not counting Hryessa- that's only about a
third, and most will be able to fight by late spring.  Most children
will be born in winter or early spring in Westwind, anyway."

The calm certainty in Ryba's voice chilled Nylan more than the wind at
his back, but he asked, "Four?"

"I think Istril is, also," said Ryba.

"Istril?  She doesn't strike me as the type to play around."

"I could be wrong," Ryba said.  "I'm not always certain about these
things, but she will be sooner or later."

"But who?"

"I can't pry-or see-into everything, Nylan.  Right now, I'm just
fortunate enough to be gifted, or cursed, with glimpses of what might
be.  That's bad enough.  More than enough."

"I'm sorry."

"Do you know what it's like to see pieces of the future?  Not to know,
for certain, if they're what will be or what might be?  Or whether
you'll bring them into being by reacting against them?"

Nylan cleared his throat.  "I said I was sorry.  I hadn't thought about
things quite that way."

Ryba looked at the stones of the wall beside Nylan.  "You deal with
stone and brick and metal-the certain things.  I'm wrestling with what
will sustain life here for generations to come.  What do I do about men
who are killers?  Or those who will leave?  Or may leave?"

"I don't like the implication that I'll leave."  Nylan sat down beside
the dark-haired woman and touched her shoulder.  "I don't have any pat
answers.  I do what I can, everything that I can think Of, as well as I
can."

"I know, Nylan.  You work like two people.  You've done things I don't
think are possible, and Westwind wouldn't be without you.  But a place
isn't a community without traditions, values, that sort of thing,
holding it together.  That's why we need your tower, Ayrlyn's songs-"

"And your ability to teach and create military strength?"

Ryba nodded.  "It's going to be tough."

"It's already hard."

"It's going to get harder," she predicted, looking out at the cold
shape of Freyja.  "A lot harder."

In the end, they lay skin to skin, and, after a time, Ryba was
passionate, demanding, and warm.  Predictably, before they had even
relaxed, she had to get up.

"You just went," he protested sleepily.

"There are some things, especially now, where I don't control the
timing."  She pulled her gown down and padded down the stone steps.

Fighting exhaustion and sleep, Nylan tried to analyze the subtle
wrongness behind her words .. . but nothing made sense.

Before either solutions or sleep reached him, Ryba padded back up the
steps and slipped into the couch.  Her cool hand stroked his forehead
for a moment.  "You're a good man, Nylan.  No matter what happens,
remember that."  She squeezed his shoulder.

He squeezed her hand in return and murmured, "Know you try your best,
for everyone."

She shuddered, and let him hold her, but she would not turn to him as
she sobbed silently.

XLIII

IN THE NORTH yard outside the bathhouse, Nylan picked up the hammer and
chisel.  Behind him, on the roof, Denalle and Huldran spiked roof tiles
onto the cross-stringers mortised into the main timbers to provide a
flat surface.

Overhead, the clouds were white and puffy, like summer clouds, but the
chill in the late autumn wind belied that.  To the west, the clouds
seemed evenly spaced, and Nylan hoped that they would stay that way.
His eyes dropped to the pair on the roof-Cessya had ridden off with
Ayrlyn.  "..  . damned gourds, whatever they were, never ripened ...
bitter in the stew, worse than that rancid bear meat..  ."

"Just keep complaining, Denalle, and I'll spike your hand right under
the next tile," snapped Huldran.

"Potatoes are good ... hope they last..."

"More spikes, Denalle."

Nylan let his eyes drop from the unfinished roof to the dark stone
before him that would be a water-conduit section.

"And you cannot make a few channels in stone?"  Narliat had asked, at
Gerlich's prompting.  And Ryba had just left Nylan hanging.

His choices were simple.  Abandon the idea of showers.  Finish the
trough pipes in wood, which would need continuous maintenance, or try
low-tech stone-cutting methods.  In a low-tech culture, cleanliness was
important for health and survival, and if he didn't make it easy or
halfway convenient, cleanliness would go the way of the Winterlance.
Besides, abandoning anything would cause problems with Gerlich.  He was
coming to like the big man less and less.  Was that because he was
coming to trust his feelings more?  And Ryba-how much was she deceiving
him, just to ensure that Westwind would survive?

He moistened his lips.  In some ways, it didn't matter.  He was stuck
finishing the bathhouse the hard way.  He took a deep breath and
studied the chunk of dark stone, letting his senses drop into the heavy
mass, following the lines of stress and fault.  If he nudged that
line... and boosted that... then, just maybe, the stone would break ...
He brought the hammer down on the chisel.  Clung!  The impact shivered
up his left arm.  There was a technique to chiseling stone, and he had
no idea of what it was.  He raised the hammer again.

Clung!  A flake of stone the size of his thumb flew from the chisel,
but the reverberation still numbed his arm.  A dozen strokes later, he
had learned a better angle and not to grip the chisel so tightly.  He
also had only chipped out a narrow groove in the stone.

The clouds had almost disappeared, leaving the sky a bright green-blue,
but the wind seemed stronger, and colder.

Even before he heard the hooves, Nylan could sense the approaching
horses, knowing that they were marines-and Ayrlyn.  There was no sense
of the white disorderliness that seemed to accompany the arrival of
locals.

The five horses, and the cart acquired from Skiodra and since rebuilt,
headed over the ridge and down the track to the tower.  The clay
remained damp enough from the previous rain that there was no dust.
Riding pillion behind Istril was a woman in tattered leathers, with
long brown hair.  Another refugee?  wondered the engineer.  And Istril?
She wasn't riding any differently.  Was that another of Ryba's
foresights?  Something that might be?

Nylan shrugged, wondering how many more women would arrive at Tower
Black before the winter closed in.  Given the attrition the angels had
suffered, more bodies would be helpful-if there were enough food.  They
had the sheep and the chickens, but how would they feed livestock
through the winter?  Didn't that mean more grain?  Or grass or hay?  Or
something?

As the horses passed and he saw that Ayrlyn was safe, he picked up the
hammer once more, ignoring the numbness in his fingers from the wind
and the impact of iron upon steel.

By the time the triangle by the main south entrance to the tower
clanged for the midday meal, Nylan had completed rough channels in two
stones, each the length of his forearm.  His fingers were cramping, and
his arms were scratched from the rock fragments that had split and
ricocheted.  No wonder not much got built quickly-or with any
complexity-in a low-tech, culture.

Nylan set aside the hammer and chisel and stood stretching as Denalle
and Huldran climbed off the roof.  The eastern side was more than half
finished.  "Looks good," he offered.  "Except we have to mortar it or
it'll be dripping melted snow inside all winter," pointed out
Huldran.

"Doing the roof's friggin' hard on the knees," added Denalle.

"You want to wash clothes in the snow?"  asked the older guard.

"The way things are going," said Denalle, looking down at her
threadbare and tattered working ship suit "we won't have anything to
wash."

"The healer just brought in a cart of some kind of cloth, and more
barrels of flour, it looked like.  You'll be spending part of the
winter sewing up your kit for next year."  Huldran smiled at Nylan.

"I didn't sign up for sewing."

"Neither did the rest of us.  Do you want to fight with your bare
breasts hanging out?"  asked Huldran.

Denalle glared at the ground.

"Let's go eat," suggested the engineer.

As Nylan neared the lower table, Relyn, sitting beside Jaseen, raised
his right arm, and the artificial hand, and nodded.  The engineer
smiled back.

"You made that, scr?"  asked Huldran.  "Why?"

"So he wouldn't have any excuses to mope around," Nylan said dryly.
"You'll note that I made it blunt.  Very blunt."

Huldran laughed.

The newcomer was seated between Saryn and Ayrlyn, near the head of the
table on the window side.  For some reason Narliat was on Ayrlyn's
right, with Gerlich on the other side of the former arms man  Nylan
surveyed the two tables and found that Hryessa was seated near the foot
of the second table, beside Istril and across from Relyn and Jaseen.
Istril looked down at her trencher, and her lips curled.  Had Ryba been
right?  Was she pregnant?  The engineer glanced toward the hearth and
kept walking until he reached the end of the table.

"How is it going?"  Ryba asked as Nylan waited for Huldran and then
slipped into his end seat beside the marine.

"Huldran and the others are doing well on the roof.  Maybe two days
before it's tight."

"Could be three," Huldran said, "if we run into trouble."

"And you?"  Ryba asked Nylan.

"I'm getting the hang of the stone-cutting, but it's slow."

"The weather will hold for at least several days," Ayrlyn said.

"Good."  Nylan poured some of the hot bark-and-root tea and waited. The
mug did not crack.  He picked it up and took a sip, waiting for Huldran
to help herself to the bread in the grass basket.  "Another refugee?" 
The engineer turned to Ayrlyn as he took a chunk of bread and handed
the basket to Ryba.

"Thank you," said the marshal.

"This is Murkassa," said Ayrlyn in Old Anglorat.  "She's from Gnotos.
That's a little town in Gallos, just east of the Westhorns."

The round-faced girl, and she seemed more a girl than a woman, nodded,
her long hair so thin that it fell in a cloud over her shoulders.

"This is Nylan.  He is an engineer and a mage," Ayrlyn explained, still
in Anglorat.

Murkassa's brow furrowed at the word "engineer."  She turned to Ayrlyn.
"What kind of mage?"

"Black, I'm told," Nylan answered before Narliat could open his mouth
and create trouble.  "I make things."

Narliat had his mouth open, but Ayrlyn's elbow caught the former arms
man in the gut, and he closed it.

"Nylan is-" Gerlich started to speak, then stopped as he realized
Murkassa did not understand him.

"How was your luck with the traders, Ayrlyn?"  asked Ryba.

"They had some of what we needed, but it cost me three blades and a
gold."  She glanced at Nylan.  "I'm not quite as good as the
engineer."

"Any spikes?"  Nylan asked, knowing that Huldran wanted to know.

"A small keg-those were half a gold, and they wouldn't budge on that,
but you and Huldran put them high on the list."

"We can't finish the bathhouse roof without them," said the marine.
"Not without taking all winter."

"What else?"

"Heavy wool cloth.  Rough as a new recruit.  Some tanned hides for
winter gloves, another eight barrels of flour and two of dried fruit. A
bag of salt for drying whatever we slaughter or bring in from hunting. 
Another big kettle for Kyseen.  A half-dozen needles-another half gold,
but how can anyone sew without needles?-and a roll or spool of heavy
thread that's almost twine.  And a bunch of little things, some spices,
and a big bag of onions and two sacks of potatoes, and a barrel of
dried corn for the livestock."  The redhead shrugged.  "That doesn't
leave too much in the Westwind treasury.  They said they'd be back in
an eight-day, if it doesn't snow."

"After that, we'll probably be on our own, I guess," said Ryba.  "The
snow line is creeping down the peaks around us."  She turned to
Murkassa and switched to Anglorat.  "How ... did you ... come to
Westwind?"

"I was sold to be the consort of Jilkar.  He is a hauler in Gnotos, and
a strong man.  He beat his first consort to death because she angered
him.  She gave him only daughters, and then she ran away with a trooper
from Fenard.  Jilkar found them and let the man go."  Murkassa
shrugged.  "He would have beaten me.  He beats everyone.  I heard of
the tower of women, and I ran.  If I did not find you, I would die in
the Westhorns.  But I did find you."  A fleeting smile crossed her
face.

"You are welcome to stay as long as you wish."

"Can I stay forever?"

"If you follow our way," Ryba answered.  "No one said anything to
Jilkar?"  Ayrlyn's tone suggested she knew the answer.

"No.  He is the hauler.  He takes the wool to Fenard.  He is stronger
than any two men, and he has a house on the hill with guards."

As the others drew out the sordid social structure of Gnotos, all too
familiar a pattern, from what Nylan could tell, he sipped the tea and
ate.

After the midday meal, Nylan returned to the north tower yard, and the
cold wind out of the northwest.  Huldran, Cessya, and Denalle worked on
the roof, with Cessya lugging up the stones, Denalle placing them, and
Huldran spiking them in place.

Nylan studied the stone that he was supposed to turn into a conduit.
There had to be a faster way to cut the stone, didn't there?  For a
long time, he let his senses range over the oblong of black rock before
him.  He'd already discovered that he felt uneasy, so much that his
head ached and his stomach twisted, if he even came close to mimicking
the white lines of fire that the local mages effected.

After concentrating on the stone for a time, he finally placed the
chisel and lifted the hammer.  The reverberations seemed to be less
when he didn't worry so much about precise chisel placement, but the
order of the stone.

His progress was better with the new technique, not anything to boast
about compared to the laser, but by the time the triangle clanged
again, he had five more lengths of conduit bottom.

After he stacked the conduit in the corner of the bathhouse, on the
eastern side under the completed roof, he flexed his sore and
increasingly callused fingers-only small blisters.

"You really got that in place," he told Huldran, looking up at the
expanse of completed roof tiling.

"Thank darkness that the healer came up with another keg of spikes."
The marine reached out and knocked on the side of the crude ladder-pole
she had just climbed down.  "I never thought so, but you might get your
bathhouse and laundry, scr."

"I thought you wanted the showers," Nylan joked.

"Choosing between stinking and bathing in ice water isn't a choice I'd
want to make."  Huldran lowered the ladder-pole, and she and Denalle
laid it down under the completed roof, then gathered the spikes they
had dropped.

Every single spike was valuable, Nylan realized, especially in a
low-tech culture where each had to be fashioned by hand.  He walked
around the tower to the stream, hoping it wouldn't be too long before
he could use the bathhouse.  After washing his hands and face, he
walked back around the tower and, as he neared the almost-completed
archway from the bathhouse to the tower, he whistled a few notes.  What
were the words?  "... an engineer's work is never done, / not even
after the long day's run ."

He smiled to himself as he opened the door, which no longer scraped the
stones-although it had taken Saryn and Selitra most of a morning to
plane and carve it back into shape.

"You seem cheerful, Engineer," said Gerlich.  Narliat just bowed.

"The stone-shaping's coming better, and Huldran's got the roof in
place."

"Good."  Gerlich offered a quick smile, and he and Narliat turned,
leaving Nylan as he closed the north door.

The engineer wondered why neither had looked pleased.  Did they want to
stink or bathe in freezing water?  Or was it because each of Nylan's
accomplishments boosted Ryba's authority and the satisfaction of the
guards with her rule?  And it was rule, Nylan knew full well, and there
wasn't that much doubt in Nylan's mind that Gerlich would rather be the
one doing the ruling-or that having Gerlich in charge would be a
disaster.  Ryba did what had to be done, but Nylan knew it wasn't
always easy for her.  Gerlich would end up like every other male tyrant
on the planet.

He pulled at his chin, wondering why so many men had to dominate.  Then
maybe women would be just the same, given the chance.  With a shrug, he
walked toward the hearth of the great room and the aroma of fresh-baked
bread and cooked onions.

XLXIV

HISSL PACES ACROSS the small room, then peers out the window toward the
river and the stub bled fields that lie beyond.  Although the sun
glints off the puddles in the fields, the sky is turning the bluer
green-blue that presages winter.  The wizard looks away from the
distant points of glare and paces back toward the table.

"Nothing!  We sit here and wait.  And Terek meets with Lord Sillek
while I rot here."

He paces back across the small room, passing the table and the screeing
glass again, then back to the window.  The distant puddles still throw
glare at him.

Finally, he seats himself at the table that holds the flat mirrorlike
glass.  He concentrates.  The white mists swirl.  He concentrates until
the sweat beads on his forehead, although the room is pleasantly cool,
filled with the scents from the bakery up the street, and the hum of
conversations.

At last, the image appears-that of a black tower, with a second, and
lower, building rising beside it, already roofed with the same black
slate tiles that cover the taller tower.  A short, stone-walled
causeway leads to the tower and to a heavy door banded together with
strips of metal-not iron, but some metal Hissl does not recognize,
though it feels like iron through the glass.

Farther uphill, the angels, some in black and others in leathers, are
digging a long ditch in a line that leads toward the tower.  On the
uphill portion of the ditch, the black mage and an angel are placing
lengths of stone in the trench.  There is a trough filled with what
might be mortar beside the stones.

Hissl squints and tries to focus the image, but the best he can do is
catch a glimpse of a section of rock that appears to have a deep trench
gouged in it.  He slumps back into the chair.

"Black angels and a black mage."  He shivers for a moment.  No lord he
knows could have built a tower like that, and not in a mere two
seasons.  Yet the black mage who lives with the angels has done so, and
the mage has done other things, as well, things that Hissl does not
understand.

"Still, they have not felt the winter, and the number of cairns grows.
By spring .. ."  He raises his eyebrows and smiles.

In the spring and early summer, Ildyrom and his people will be busy
planting.  Hissl nods to himself.

XLV

A LOW FIRE burned in the bathhouse stove, but the building- still open
inside except for the three jakes stalls at the north end-remained
chill.

Nylan washed and shaved his several days' worth of beard in one of the
laundry tubs.  He looked wistfully to his right, at the unfinished
showers, and at the piles of slate stone and powdered mortar heaped in
the middle of the room.  While there was water to the ceramic nozzles,
he and Huldran still had to finish the stone floors, or all they would
have would be frozen clay.  He took a deep breath and splashed away
skin, whiskers, and blood.

After washing, he rinsed his waste water down the floor drain, with a
breath of relief as the water gurgled out of sight.  He hoped the
combination of deeply buried drain lines and the outfall covering-and
oversizing-would be enough to get them through the winter.

Wearing just a tattered pair of trousers-spoils, again- he walked the
length of the bathhouse, along the already packed clay of the east
side, and through the archway into the tower and up the stairs, all
four flights to the top level.

Ryba had already dressed, and was pulling on her boots as Nylan
stripped off the leather trousers and donned his working ship suit  She
stood and straightened the blanket as he struggled into the leather
boots.

"It looks like a storm is coming in hard," she said.  "Can you finish
the bathhouse?"

"The inside will take a day or two more.  We've got the jakes and the
laundry area finished."  Nylan walked over to the sole arma glass
window and looked up at the dark clouds boiling out of the northwest,
cloaking Freyja in blackness, with snow thickening and dropping to
shroud the lower parts of the western peaks and the heights behind the
tower.

A thin layer of ice covered the window ledge outside the casement, and
the engineer watched as one flake, then another, dropped onto the ice,
melding with it and turning transparent, the black-gray stone showing
through.

The flakes thickened, and even the lower sections of Freyja disappeared
in the snow that seemed so white near the tower and so dark in the
distance.  The ground remained brown, with a few white patches.

Nylan closed the arma glass window, and the shutters.  When he looked
down, he realized that he had stood before the open window long enough
for a small pile of flakes to accumulate, but as he watched, the
whiteness faded into a damp splotch on the roughly smoothed plank
floor.

"Why did you close the shutters?"  asked Ryba, fully dressed in her
ship suit and even wearing a black ship jacket.  "It looks like
midnight in here that way.  I can't see in pitch-blackness, the way you
can."

"We're going down to the main level, and no one's going to be here." He
walked around the couches toward where the marshal of Westwind stood.

"That makes sense, but it still bothers me when it's so dark."

"It's going to be a long and dark winter."

"You are so cheerful this morning."

"I try," he answered.

They walked down the long stone steps, the sounds of their boots
echoing away from the stairwell and into the open levels they passed.
Several marines were still dressing on the third level, but none looked
toward Nylan and Ryba.

The tables were largely full, and even Murkassa sat at the end, on
Istril's right, while Hryessa sat on the slim trooper's left.  Istril
looked at the bread on her trencher, but had not lifted it.

Did she look pale?  Nylan smiled, getting a quick and faint smile in
return as he followed Ryba toward the head of the table and the
hearth.

After he slid onto the bench, Nylan poured the bark-and-root tea into
the dark brown mug.  The tea's taste was still bitter, but warming.  He
reached for the dark bread.

"A storm like this won't last," predicted Relyn, sitting at the last
seat on the window side of the first table.  "The snowflakes are too
large."

"The snow will bring a long rest," pronounced Narliat.  His cloak was
wrapped tightly around him, and he glanced toward the cold hearth.

"I'm glad for the rest," announced Huldran.

"You don't get one.  Not yet," said Nylan.  "We've still got the shower
floors and partitions to install."

"Cessya can help."

Cessya looked at Huldran, her eyes dark.

"It's easier than clearing and packing snow," intervened Nylan.

"What are you talking about?"  asked Gerlich.

"We still have to keep the area around the doors, the out falls and the
trails to the stables and down to the forest open."  Nylan pulled at
his chin, then looked toward Ayrlyn, then Ryba.  Both nodded.

"We'll need to have ways the horses can travel.  They'll need some
exercise," pointed out Ayrlyn.  "We'll need them to bring up more
wood."  She cleared her throat "Hryessa, Siret, and Murkassa need to
gather more cones."

"Cones?"  asked Nylan.

"They have seeds, and they'll help feed the chickens," Ayrlyn said.

"Your chickens, they will taste like the pine trees."

"I'd rather have live pine-tasting chickens than dead tasty ones
halfway through the winter.  We don't have near enough food for the
livestock, and that will help," answered Ayrlyn.  "If the traders come
back, they're supposed to have some more dried corn.  If they come back
..."

"We can't have people sitting around all winter," added Saryn.  "They'd
be at each others' throats."

"They can't sit around anyway," said Ryba.  "We'll need some additional
food, something from hunting, and probably more firewood."

"A lot more firewood," predicted Nylan.  "We probably ought to require
dragging as much up here as we burn."

"How?"

"If we keep doing it, we should be able to keep a path clear to the
forest at the base of the ridge.  Ayrlyn-you said we could drag trunks
with the horses, and cut them outside the causeway."

"The guards can only stay out so long, and we don't have enough
cold-weather clothing for everyone," pointed out Saryn.

"We have wool and thread and needles," said Ayrlyn.

Nylan cleared his throat.  "We could dry some of the wood near the
furnace, and we need a lot of furnishings-tables, even dressers."

"We don't have that many nails," said Ryba.

"They used to put things together with pegs.  We can do that," Ayrlyn
pointed out.  "It takes more time, but we're going to have a lot of
time."

"You can make glue," added Relyn.  "The crafters dry and grind hooves,
I think, and some parts of the hides and boil them."

"Arms practice.  For everyone.  I don't want a tower full of crafters
come spring," added Ryba.  "They'll have to be better than any of the
locals when the battles resume."

"I think archery is out," said Nylan.

"Because of the weather?  No.  There will be enough clear days .. ."

"The clear days are cold enough to a freeze a man's lungs," said
Relyn.

"Woolen scarves would help," Ayrlyn said, "but you'd have to hold down
heavy exertion and mouth breathing."

"We'll take it as it comes."  Ryba broke off a chunk of bread. "There's
a lot we can do to get ready for next spring and summer."

"How are we going to get around in this stuff?"  asked Huldran, with a
gesture toward the window.  "We don't have skis or sleds or sled
dogs."

"Slowly," says Hryessa.  "In the lower Westhorns, the snow gets deeper
than a horse's head."

"Snowshoes," Ryba said, "and old-fashioned wooden skis with leather
thongs, just like Gerlich and Saryn have been making."

Nylan frowned.  Would he have to learn to ski?  He didn't look forward
to that at all, not at all.

"Have you ever skied?"  Ayrlyn asked him.

"No.  I never saw the joy of slogging through powdered ice for fun."

"I can learn it, and I'm not even Sybran," insisted Ayrlyn.  "I'm
mostly Svennish.  You're at least half Sybran, aren't you?"

"About half and half.  It gets complicated.  But my grandfather Weryl
was a Svenn.  He came to Heaven as a boy.  Does that make me more
Sybran than if he'd come as an adult?"  Nylan laughed.  "He didn't ski,
either."

"Was he a blond, too, scr?"  asked Istril.  "Like you used to be?"

"I think so.  He died when I was little."

"Just because he didn't ski doesn't mean you can't," pointed out
Ayrlyn.

"Especially since you'll have to if you want to go anywhere in the
wintertime," added Ryba.

"You make it sound so attractive.  I'll have to."  Nylan frowned.
"Either freeze or be stranded in the tower."

"It's not that bad," said Saryn.

As Nylan thought about a response, he saw Istril hurry from the table,
toward the north door, and disappear.  Her bread was untouched.

"You'll like it," added Ryba.

Ayrlyn gave a quick grin.

Nylan took a sip of tea, warm tea, and wondered just how badly he would
freeze learning to get around on wooden slats.

XLVI

IN HER GREEN tunic and trousers, her hair bound back in a green and
black enameled hair band Zeldyan steps into the tower room.  After
closing the door, she bows deeply to the lady Ellindyja.  "Honor and
greetings to you, lady."

"You are now the Lady of Lornth, and I am honored," answers Ellindyja.
She does not rise from the cushioned bench in the alcove, but lowers
the embroidery hoop to her lap.  "Your grace in coming to visit so soon
shows great respect for your lord, and I am pleased to see that."

"I respect Sillek, more than most would ever know.  You are my
consort's mother, and, out of my deep respect for him, always to be
honored and respected," says Zeldyan, inclining her head to Ellindyja
again.

"I am so pleased to be included in your respects, dear, especially
since your mother has always been one of my dearest friends." Ellindyja
knots the yellow-green thread with deft motions, and takes up the
needle.

"She would count you among her dearest and most trusted friends,"
answers Zeldyan, stepping toward the alcove where Sillek's mother
begins an embroidered leaf on the white linen.  "And a wise woman."

"Wise?  I would think not," says Ellindyja as the needle completes
another loop of green comprising the leaf.  "For my son has less of his
heritage than his father."

"I am confident that situation will change, my lady, and that the
greatness of Lornth will increase."

"With enemies on three sides, Lady Zeldyan?"

"While I would certainly defer to those who understand arms and other
weapons far better than I do, I have great faith in my lord Sillek."
Zeldyan pauses.  "And great faith that you will offer counsel to
him."

"I have always attempted to be of service to the Lords of Lornth, to
his father, and to Sillek."  Ellindyja completes the small leaf, knots
the thread, and rethreads the needle with crimson.

The faint whine of the late fall wind rattles the closed tower window,
but neither woman looks to it.

"And you have," responds Zeldyan.  "You surely have."

"Thank you, my dear."  Ellindyja knots the crimson thread and makes the
first stitch in the small segment of the linen that will be a drop of
blood.  "I understand that your father has remained here in Lornth for
a time."

"He plans to leave for Carpa tomorrow, now that he has seen me safely
joined to Sillek."

"And your mother?"

"She will arrive to see you presently.  I prevailed upon her to allow
me a few moments with you to convey my respects."

"You know, my dear, Sillek may have been even wiser than I had thought.
Together we might be of great assistance to him."  The crimson stitches
bring the hint of arterial blood to the linen.

"My lord Sillek respects you greatly, Lady Ellindyja, and I would
prefer not to intrude upon that bond or that trust.  I would be most
happy for any and all advice that you might have."

"As I said, Lady Zeldyan, Sillek chose wisely."  Ellindyja's voice is
dry, but she holds the needle still for a moment.  "I would trust that
you might pay some heed to the possibility of ensuring the succession
of Lornth."

Zeldyan bows slightly.  "I would like nothing better, my lady."

A muffled th rap sounds on the door.

"That would be your mother, I presume?"

"Yes, my lady."

"If you would be so kind as to bid her enter?"  Ellindyja's needle
flashes again as Zeldyan steps toward the door.

"But, of course.  She has looked forward to seeing you for some
seasons."  Zeldyan smiles and opens the door.

"Cakes and sweets should be arriving shortly," announces Ellindyja,
"for the three of us.  I had hoped we might converse."  She stands and
sets aside the embroidery hoop.  "Erenthla!"

The heavier white-haired woman bends forward and brushes Zeldyan's
cheek with her lips before stepping fully into the room and responding.
"Ellindyja, I am so pleased to see you."

Zeldyan closes the door and, with a faint smile, stands, waiting. 
Part

II THE WINTER

XLVII

As HE WALKED back from the bathhouse, and the jakes he was getting
gladder and gladder about having completed, Nylan pulled down the ship
jacket that had a tendency to ride up over the lined leather trousers.
The lining consisted of the synthetic material left from his tattered
work ship suit inexpertly stitched in place.  The combination was
warmer than the ship suit and certainly less drafty.

In the archway between the bathhouse and the tower, just before the
closed north door, ice was already forming on the walls, from the
collected and frozen condensation of the breath of those who passed
through, and from the moisture coming from the completed showers.

"Too far from the furnace or the water-heating stove."  The engineer
opened the north door and then closed it behind him, his fingers
tingling from the chill metal latch-not quite cold enough to freeze
skin to it.

He could sense the residual warmth from the furnace ducts as he walked
into the great room, although he could tell from the lack of air motion
that no logs had been added to the firebox recently.

He stopped at the staircase when he saw Ayrlyn bent over her lutar. For
a time, he listened to the soft words which she half-sang,
half-hummed.

On the Roof of the World, all covered with white,

I took up my blade there, and I brought back the night.

With a blade in each hand, there, and the stars at my boots,

With the Legend in song, then, I set down my roots.

The demons have claimed you, forever in light,

But the darkness of order will put them to flight.

Will break them in twain, soon, and return you your pride.

For the Legend is kept by the blade at your side.

The blade at your side, now, must always be bright, and the Legend we
hold to is that of the right.

For never will guards lose the heights of the sky,

And never can Westwind this Legend deny... And never can Westwind this
Legend deny.

The words echoed softly in the great room, and the wind that hurled the
snow against the shutters and windows supplied a backdrop of off-rhythm
percussion.

The four arma glass windows in the great hall provided the only
exterior light, and that illumination was diminished by the storm and
the snow that had gathered in the outside window ledges and half
covered each with snow.  Snow sifted through the windows that had but
shutters and built into miniature drifts on the stone ledges, drifts
occasionally swirled by the gusts that forced their way around the
edges of the shutters and sent thin tendrils of freezing air across the
room.

Nylan waited until Ayrlyn stopped and looked up before he spoke.
"That's a haunting melody."

"It should carry the words well enough."  Ayrlyn's voice was cool,
measured.  "That's what she wants."

"Ryba?"  Nylan eased himself onto the bench on the other side of the
table from the redhead.

"Who else wants songs?  Most people work on firewood, food"-she laughed
softly-"or bathhouses and towers.  I still have to do other things.
Skis are what Saryn and I have been doing, but the song comes first,
or, at least, not last."  Ayrlyn paused.  "You haven't made your skis
or even tried skiing.  That's going to make it hard on you.  Even
Siret's been out, and in her condition, balancing isn't easy."

"Do I have to?"

"Of course not.  You can stay inside all winter or walk the two trails
we can keep packed.  Anyway ... I wish I could have spent more time
learning the skiing, but Ryba wanted the songs."

The engineer frowned.  "She's trying to build a culture, in a hurry."

"I don't object to that.  Songs have always been part of any culture,
and we need some sort of verbal reminder..."  Ayrlyn paused.  "I just
don't know that I like what I'm doing.  The words are as much hers as
mine, and ... I just don't know."

"The guards seem to like them."

"Do you?"

The directness of the question stopped Nylan, and he pulled at his
chin, then licked his lips.  Finally, he answered.  "They're too
harsh."  Then he shrugged.  "But people only respond to strength, or
force, whether that force is in song or a blade."

"Whether they're angels or demons."

Nylan nodded.

"So the great marshal will use every tool offeree necessary."

"I don't see that we've had much choice.  Mran, Gerlich, Relyn, bandits
... all of them wanted to force things their way."

"That's a sad comment on so-called intelligent beings."  Ayrlyn glanced
toward the stairwell.  "So... I'll sing this one tonight, after the
evening meal.  It should please the marshal."

"You're angry."

"It doesn't matter, does it?  She's right.  This world needs changing.
Even I see that.  What if I'm just a tool in the process?"

"We're all tools."

"You like that?"  asked the redhead.

"No.  But you have to survive before you can get beyond being a tool. I
just haven't figured out how to get that far."

Ayrlyn shook her head.  "I'll see you later, fellow tool.  Now that
this task is done, it's back to the mundane business of crafting and
carving skis."  Ayrlyn stood.  "You too should join us."

"In what?"

"Making skis and learning to use them."

"Me?  I've never skied."

"If you don't want to be walled behind these stones all winter, you'd
better learn, and you can't learn if you don't have skis."  Ayrlyn
picked up the lutar.  "It might make it less necessary for you to be a
tool."

"That's a great choice.  Be imprisoned for half the year or learn to do
the unnatural in the middle of powdered ice so cold that walking over
it will freeze your breath into ice crystals."

"It's a choice."  Ayrlyn lifted her eyebrows, before heading toward the
stairwell.

It was a choice.  Not the best of choices, but a choice, like all the
other choices that seemed to face Nylan.

As Ayrlyn carried her lutar down the stairs to the lower level, another
set of steps sounded, coming from the bathhouse.  Nylan waited,
watched, until Relyn stepped into the great room.

"I hoped I would find you, mage."

Nylan gestured to the table.  "Sit down."  He sat without waiting for
Relyn to do so.

Relyn eased onto the bench, actually using the blunt, half-hooked end
of the metal hand to balance, although Nylan caught the wince as the
other put too much pressure on the still-tender stump.

"That replacement will take getting used to, I'm afraid," Nylan said.
"And it will probably be cold outside unless you cover it.  The metal
will pick up the chill.  I didn't think about that when I crafted
it."

Relyn waited for a moment, saying nothing.  As the wind rattled the
shutters, and more snow sifted onto the inner casement ledges of the
windows, he finally spoke.  "The hunter ... he says that you are not
really a mage.  Is that true?"  Relyn struggled with the Sybran/Heaven
Temple tongue.

"Gerlich?"  Nylan shrugged.  "That depends on what you mean by a mage.
Can I throw fire bolts the way your wizards can?  No.  Can I tear apart
things?  No.  If that's what you mean by a mage, I'm not, and I never
said I was."

Relyn pursed his lips.  "You made those devil blades that cut through
armor, did you not?"  Half his words were Old Anglorat.  "And you used
the flame of the angels?"

"I did, but that's a form of machine, not magic."

"The singer, she says that you used magery to twist the flame in a way
that no one else could."

"I suppose that's true," Nylan admitted.  "And I can use that ability
to chisel stone a little more easily."

"I saw you carve that hard black stone like it might be wood.  No stone
worker I have seen could do that."

"Does a name matter?"

"Names are important," insisted Relyn.

"Are they?"  asked Nylan.  "Substance lies in what is, not what people
say."

Relyn frowned.  "Words cause people to act.  If someone calls you evil
angels, then that gives others a reason to destroy you."

"That's true," Nylan admitted, "but only when you talk about inspiring
people to act.  Their actions cause destruction, not the words
directly.  All the words in the world will not make me into a white
wizard.  All the words in the world will not bring back your hand."

"I do not know about that..."  Relyn muses.  "Do not the white wizards
whisper incantations to bring about their actions?  Did I not hear you
talk to yourself when you guided the green flames of order?"

"Did you not talk to yourself when you practiced with the blade?"
countered Nylan.  "The actions matter, not the words which surround
them .. . although words can certainly inspire actions."  He cleared
his throat, then paused as a violent gust of wind rattled the windows
and shutters and shivered the great south door on its heavy iron
hinges.  "That's often the problem with rulers.  They move people with
their words, and because they do, they believe that they can use words
to change the physical world.  They can change people's minds and
feelings, but unless those people use shovels and some form of power,
the words will not move the mountains."  As he finished, the engineer
looked down at the table.  "I'm sorry.  I shouldn't talk so much."

"You are a mage, a different mage, but a mage, and how will I learn
about what you do if I do not listen?  I can see your actions"-Relyn
lifted the artificial metal hand-"but not your thoughts."

"I'm not sure that my thoughts are terribly important."  Nylan laughed.
"The marshal's perhaps, but not mine."

"She thinks great and terrible thoughts, I fear."

Nylan thought the same of Ryba's thoughts, but he only answered, "She
does think great thoughts, and she will change this world."

"So will you, Mage."

"Me?  Only so far as ..."  Nylan stopped.  "I do not think so."

Relyn laughed.  "More so than you think."  He stood.  "But I must think
more.  Thinking is harder than the blade."

Nylan frowned.  "There's no reason why you couldn't re-learn the blade
with your other hand.  Saryn could certainly teach you."

Relyn paused.  "A left-handed blade?"

"No worse than a black mage," countered Nylan.

Relyn laughed harshly, then turned.

As the former noble walked toward the stairwell and up the steps, Nylan
glanced back at the now-empty tables and the cold hearth.  After a
moment, he crossed the great room and headed down to the tower's lowest
level.

In the kitchen, the heat radiated from the stove where the long loaves
of bread baked.  Nylan took a deep breath, enjoying the aroma.  Kyseen
and Kadran worked at the blocky worktable, its surface already marked
with the imprints of knives, slicing potatoes into circles and dropping
them into the largest caldron.  Both wore rough shirts with the sleeves
rolled up.  Kyseen set down her knife and, taking a pad made of rags,
opened the stove grate, easing in two chunks of wood, one after the
other.

"We'll need to saw some more small stove wood," Kyseen told Kadran,
checking the coals in the stove, with the door open.

More heat welled out into the lower level, enough that Nylan, even by
the foot of the stairs, could feel himself getting warm and dampness on
his forehead.  He unfastened the light ship jacket.

"It's your turn," Kadran said back to Kyseen.

"All right."

Cloaks wrapped around them, Narliat, Hryessa, and Murkassa stood in the
alcove between the side of the stove and the central stairwell.

"Narliat, and you two-you could do some woodcutting," suggested Nylan.
"It might even warm you up."

"Friggin' right," whispered Kyseen to Kadran, who nodded.

"Kyseen will show you what to do," Nylan suggested, before heading
toward the other side of the lower level and the rudimentary carpentry
which awaited him.  Carpentry?  He really didn't have that much of a
feel for wood, but he had no real tools for working metal.  By the next
winter, he really should think about building another structure, a
small smithy where he could learn, one way or another, more traditional
metalworking.  Even with his ordering ability, he suspected it would be
a long summer and hard work, but there were too many tools and items
that Westwind needed-and too few coins to purchase them.  On the other
hand, with the lander shells, there was metal, even if it did take his
strange ability to work it.

Ayrlyn gave him a crooked smile as he stepped toward the planks.

"Where do I start?"  he asked, repressing a shudder at the thought of
trying to cross deep powdery snow on a pair of carved boards.

XLVIII

WITH A NOD to the guard in the corridor, the Lord of Lornth closes the
tower door and crosses the room to the alcove where the lady Ellindyja
sits.

"Good day, my lady mother."

"Good day, Sillek.  You are kind to continue to visit me."

"Since I have a consort?  You will always remain my mother, and a woman
from whom I have learned much."  As the wind whistles, he turns and
eases back toward the window.  "The wind is stronger than usual, this
time of year."

"It may be a cold winter.  It's not been this cold in several years."
Ellindyja's eyes drop to the embroidery hoop.  "I hope it will not be
too chill for your consort."

"Zeldyan?  Carpa is almost as close to the Westhorns as Lornth, and
farther north.  I'm sure she's used to winter.  Her father did teach
her to hunt and basic blade skills."

"She is rather accomplished."  Ellindyja pauses, but Sillek's eyes
drift back to the window.  She clears her throat.  "Sillek, your
Zeldyan has been such a dear... so solicitous and so faithful in paying
her respects to me."

Sillek turns from the fitful flakes of snow that dance outside the
tower window and crosses the room, dropping into the chair across from
his mother.  "She knows that you are very wise.  She's told me so."

"She loves you, Sillek.  That is very dangerous."  Ellindyja lifts the
embroidery needle like a scepter and points it toward her son.

"Dangerous?"

"She cares so deeply that she may counsel you against what is best for
Lornth out of her fears for you."  Ellindyja deftly secures the end of
the thread, then begins the first stitch of the sword blade that will
be golden.

"I am sure that there are many who will seek to counsel me otherwise,"
Sillek responds.  "It might be refreshing to have someone actually
interested in my health.  Not necessarily good for Lornth, but
refreshing."

"What would be good for Lornth will be good for you, Sillek."

"I would hope so."  The Lord of Lornth stands.  "I would hope so."  His
eyes turn back to the window.  "Perhaps a long, cold winter will rid us
of the evil angels on the Roof of the World."

"Do you believe that?"  The embroidery needle flickers through the
linen, trailing gold.

"Evil isn't usually dislodged by weather.  Still... one can hope, and,
since spring comes late to the heights, that will give us time to
increase our resources before dealing with that problem."

"I am pleased to see you have not put that loss from your mind."

"Neither from my mind, nor from my plans, Mother dear.  But I have no
desire to leave my back unshielded while venturing into the Westhorns."
Sillek studies the dancing flakes beyond the window.  "Yes ... a long,
cold winter might be helpful for many reasons."  He walks toward the
door.

"I am pleased that you are doing well, that you have chosen not to be
cloistered, and that Zeldyan pleases you."  He smiles as he holds the
door ajar.  "And I am also pleased that I took your advice and
journeyed to Carpa."  With a last smile, he half salutes Lady Ellindyja
and closes the door.

The north wind rattles the tower window, and the snowflakes dance.

XLIX

CARRYING THE SKIS and the fir poles with the leather straps at one end
out through the south door to the tower, Nylan followed Ayrlyn and
Saryn up the beaten path toward the stables for several hundred cubits.
Where the ground dropped away from the path on the south side, there
was a ramp packed through the waist-deep snow, rising gently from the
path for perhaps fifty cubits before the ramp merged with the snow.
Beyond that point, the snow, swirled in drifts, generally dropped away
toward the east.

The cairns down in the south corner of the snow-covered meadow were
white hummocks with drifts extending almost to the drop-off that
overlooked the forest far below.  A light wind blew across the
snowfieid, lifting and swirling the top powdered snow under a bright
sun that gave no warmth and a clear green-blue heaven that seemed to
suck the heat out of the engineer, despite the two jackets and heavy
woolen scarf he wore.

Nylan set the skis on the flat part of the packed snow ramp, following
Ayrlyn's example, and looked along the ramp that sloped gently upward
through the walls of snow.  A half-dozen dual ski tracks fanned out
from the end of the ramp onto the snowfield.

"Who's been out already?"  Despite the scarf around his nose and mouth,
Nylan's breath formed white clouds in the air, and he could feel the
ice forming on the wool of the scarf.  As he watched, the ice crystals
that had been Saryn's breath fluttered to the powdery surface of the
packed snow.

"Gerlich, the hunters," answered Saryn, "and Fierral, Ryba, and the
scouts."

If Gerlich could master old-style skis, then Nylan could, he decided,
as he bent down and fastened the leather thongs around his boots, boots
lined with wool scraps and bulging somewhat at the tops.  He had to
take off the outer layer of his gloves because they were really leather
mittens covering woolen gloves, and he couldn't handle the leather
thongs with the fingerless mittens.  Neither mittens nor the gloves
beneath fit terribly well, since he'd done the cutting and stitching
himself.

"Ready?"  asked Saryn.

Nylan straightened and pulled the leather mittens back over his gloves,
then took a pole in each hand.

"If I can do this, you can," said Saryn, slowly gliding up the ramp.

"Let's hope so," Nylan muttered, but he followed her example and, one
pole in each hand, slowly slid the left wooden ski forward.  Each ski
felt like a building timber, but Ayrlyn had insisted that the skis
needed to be wide and long because the snow on the Roof of the World
was light and powdery.

As he tried to slide the right ski after the left one, he could feel
himself lurching forward, and he leaned back to compensate.  Then his
left ski started sliding backward, and he jabbed a pole into the packed
snow of the ramp, wobbling there before catching his balance.

"Start with slow movements," suggested Saryn, "and keep your weight
forward-not too forward-on the skis."

"I've always tried not to be too forward," Nylan retorted, ignoring the
cold air that bit into his nose, throat, and lungs.

"Slow movements, one ski at a time," ordered Ayrlyn.

Nylan inched the left ski forward, then the right, then the left until
he had crept up the ramp to where the packed area ended.  Squinting
against the brightness of the sun, he looked out over the nearly flat
and powdered snow that covered the meadows more than waist-deep.

"Just follow in my tracks," Ayrlyn instructed.

Nylan edged after the redhead, though her hair and most of her face
were well swathed in a gray woolen scarf.

Despite his best efforts, his skis skidded out of the tracks Ayrlyn had
made, then sank to knee depth.  As the snow piled up in front of his
shins, he slowed to a stop.  When he shifted his weight, the skis sank
even farther until the snow reached his knees.

"Making the first trail is the hardest," called Saryn from beside him,
"especially if you're moving slowly.  Speed helps-until you fall, and
then it's a mess."

Looking at the snow that covered his skis completely and most of his
lower legs, Nylan decided it was already a mess.  "Just put one ski in
front of the other.  Make it a sliding sort of walk."

That Nylan could understand, and the process seemed to work, enough so
that he actually had covered several hundred cubits, mostly staying in
the trail Ayrlyn had cut through the snow.

"That's it," the singer called.  "Just keep up that motion."  At that
moment, Nylan reached too far forward with his right pole, lost his
balance, flailed, and went down in a heap, his entire upper body
plunging through the powdery white crystals until a gloved hand slammed
against something hard.

He lay in the snow, his feet pinned together by the skis, breathing
both chill air and snow crystals that had oozed around his scarf.

"Straighten your skis."

"How?"  he mumbled through the snow.  Finally, he levered his upper
body sideways, since his skis would not move, until his legs could
separate slightly.  Then he bent his knees and curled up into a ball as
close to the skis as he could.  That allowed him to rock himself over
into a half-crouching, half-kneeling position.  From there he struggled
upright, his snow-covered face finally emerging into the glare, the
snow almost chest-deep.

His skis felt mired, but he lifted each in turn, letting snow filter
under each, climb-packing his way up until he stood on the skis-merely
knee-deep in the powder that leached the heat out of his legs and
feet.

"See .. . you can get out of it," said Saryn.

"This time," snorted Nylan, trying to brush the snow off himself, snow
that clung to everything but the leather trousers and packed itself
into every bodily crevice.

He started after Ayrlyn even more cautiously than before, then stopped
as he saw a pair of figures sweeping from the ridge line above the
tower.

Istril and Ryba skied slowly downward, a rope tied to a bundle they
towed.  As they neared, each leaving a graceful dual line of ski traces
in the snow, Nylan could see the bundle consisted of a pale-coated
winter deer.

He also marveled at their grace, doubting that he would ever match it.
Part of him never wanted to try as the snow melted in cold rivulets
down his neck, back, and legs.  He forced a wave to the two skiers.

"There's the engineer!"  Istril returned his wave.

As he started to follow Ayrlyn's tracks again, in a turn that would
carry him back toward the packed trail the horses used, Nylan found
himself again wobbling on the skis, conscious that the leather thongs
provided no real support.  He jabbed his poles back down to balance
himself and let himself slide to a halt.

"Watch your balance," said Saryn, nearly beside the engineer, making
her own track, the powdery snow nearly to her knees.

"That's easy to say.  Doing it is a lot harder."

Istril and Ryba had towed the deer carcass to the tower, unfastened
their skis, and lugged their kill and skis inside long before Nylan
struggled the few hundred cubits back to the tower.

"That's enough for today," he declared.  Maybe forever, he thought, as
he gathered skis and poles and trudged back across the causeway.  He
left a trail of snow and water down to the storeroom beside the
furnace, and on the steps on his return trip back up to the great room
for the midday meal.

Nylan slumped onto the bench before the hearth, aware that he was
sitting in damp trousers.  His upper cheeks were nearly flaming red,
and his ears ached as they warmed.  They hadn't been out in the cold
that long-except it appeared that the Roof of the World was even colder
than a Sybran winter-and that was cold, indeed.

Although there was no fire in the hearth, the great room was warm by
comparison to the frozen wasteland outside, and the bark-and-root tea
helped.  He poured a second mugful.

"You drank that quickly," said Ryba.  "You would too, if you'd dived
into a snowbank and gotten stuck there."

"You wouldn't have had that problem," pointed out Ryba, "if you'd
started trying to learn earlier."

Nylan took another sip of the tea.  Ayrlyn had already told him as
much, far earlier, and he supposed he deserved the reminder, but skiing
was a pain, however necessary it might prove.

Ryba raised her eyebrows.

"How were the bows in the cold?"  he asked, hoping to change the
subject.

"The bows are really good in the cold," Istril said from the foot of
the first table.

Nylan nodded.  While he hadn't thought about that, both the composite
and the endurasteel had been designed to handle the chill of space and
the heat of high-temperature reentry, which would make them ideal for
the chill of the winter on the Roof of the World.

"Gerlich's already snapped one of his great wooden bows in the cold,"
Istril added in a lower voice, after looking around and not seeing the
hunter.  "I'll bet the new bows would be really good in cold-weather
warfare."

"Is anyone else crazy enough to be out in this weather?"  asked
Nylan.

"Well .. . they're good for hunting, too.  Even Fierral thinks so, and
she's pretty hard on everything."

"Is there that much out in the woods?"

"More than you'd suspect, from the tracks, and that's good for us.  You
saw the deer.  That's a couple of meals, at least, even for twenty of
us.  There's also a snow cat, almost all white, with big spread paws
and claws.  I don't know how good the meat is, but I'd bet the fur is
warm."

Nylan nodded.  After his brief excursion, a warm coat sounded better
than wool or a ship jacket, a lot better.

NYLAN FASTENED THE ship jacket and pulled on the crudely lined boots
that he wore everywhere, even inside the tower.  His fingers crossed
his stubbly chin, but the chill was so great, even with the heat from
the bathhouse stove, that he had not shaved, but only washed his face
and hands, before hurrying back up to the tower's top level to dress
for the cold day ahead.

The heat from the furnace removed the biting chill of the wind that
howled outside the tower's walls, but Nylan's breath turned into a
frosty cloud when he stepped away from the heated center of the tower
and up to the sole top-level arma glass window to check the sealing. 
He half rubbed, half scraped away the frost to look outside, but cold
air rolled off the glass, and frost re-formed almost as fast as he
removed it.  Through the little area he could keep clear, he could only
see white-white and more white.

For more than two days, the white barrage had continued, and Nylan
wasn't certain how much of the snow was new and how much just snow
picked up by the roaring wind and flung-and re flung-against the
walls.

Most of the exterior tower walls had a spotty coating of ice on the
inside stone, except in the kitchen and the furnace room.  Kyseen and
Kadran had plenty of guards-especially the newer ones-ready to saw and
split wood in return for a place around the stove.  The number of
people willing to work on partitions and stools, or other wooden
necessities, in the workroom off the furnace had never been higher.
Could it be the warmth?  Nylan grinned at the thought, even as he
readied himself to head down to join them.

Ryba was below somewhere; she hadn't said where she was going, but,
with the storm still going, she was somewhere in the tower.

A figure huddled by the furnace duct on the fifth level.  Nylan paused
on the steps.  "Relyn?"

"Scr?"  The red-haired man stood with his cloak wrapped around him.  "A
man can never get warm here.  It's too cold to do anything except be
miserable, and just warm enough so that you never quite freeze."  He
jerked his head toward the single shuttered window.  "I can't even
leave.  Twenty steps in that, and they'd find me frozen in a block of
ice come spring."

Nylan sat on a step, and Relyn sat on the other edge.

"Why are you up here?"  asked the engineer.

"It's the only place where I can be alone.  Sometimes .. ."  Relyn
shook his head.

"I'm surprised that you haven't gotten close to one of the guards."

"It is ... hard ... to think about, as you put it, getting close to
someone who could kill you with one blow."

"Why?"  asked Nylan.  "Anyone you sleep with anywhere could kill
you."

"You always bring up disturbing points, Mage.  At home, when I had a
home, should anyone have killed me, they would have been tortured and
then killed."

"If anyone killed you here, she'd be punished.  What's the
difference?"

"It is different," pointed out Relyn.

"I suppose so.  Here you have to trust someone else, under a ... ruler
.. . you don't know.  I think that means you've never really trusted
anyone."  Nylan stood up.

"Mage ... were you in Carpa, I would challenge you."

"For what?  Is the truth so terrible?  Most people with power always
say they trust people, and what they mean is that they only trust them
so long as they control them.  True trust occurs only when you have no
control."

"I'd rather have control."

"We all would .. . but even that's an illusion a lot of the time."
Nylan recalled Ryba's struggle with her visions.  "Even for rulers.  If
a ruler taxes his people too heavily, some will revolt, and he must
kill them."

"As he should," declared Relyn.

"But dead men pay no taxes, and now the ruler must tax the others more
heavily to pay the soldiers because there are fewer men to tax.  And he
will need more soldiers because people will be even more unhappy.  More
soldiers require even more taxes, and that makes people even less
happy.  Do you see where that leads?"

"But..  ."  Relyn looked up at Nylan.

"Control is not what it seems, young Relyn.  If you kill a man, you
make an enemy out of his family.  How many enemies can a ruler afford?
Do you see the marshal eating better food than her guards?"

"No."

"Does she wear jewels or great trappings of wealth?"

"No."

"Will her guards follow her anywhere?"

"I think they would."

Nylan smiled.  "Think it over."  He walked down the steps, wondering
why he had bothered.  What he had said would certainly have upset
anyone in Relyn's position, and the young noble was probably very
upset.  But what good had it done?  His head throbbed slightly.  Why?
Because what he'd said wasn't quite true?  Ryba did have one thing the
others didn't-power.  It might be power out of necessity, but it was
power.  Nylan shook his head.  He couldn't even present provoking
thoughts that might be misleading without getting a headache, or so it
seemed.

Nylan rubbed his forehead as he walked down the steps past the great
room, empty.  except for Ayrlyn, gently strumming the lutar-probably
refining or working on another song.  He paused for a moment, watching
the redhead struggle with a chord or a phrase, but she did not look his
way.

He turned toward the south door, where chill winds seeped through the
cracks, and a fine layer of snow covered the stones behind the door,
shifting with each gust that buffeted the tower.

Nylan resumed his descent, thinking about the cradle he was crafting.
But Dylless would need somewhere to sleep, and a cradle made sense.

FROM THE INNER corner of the room wells the warmth of a well-banked
fire, though Terek still wears a heavy white woolen vest over his
robes.  The white wizard's face is red with strain, but Sillek ignores
the wizard's effort and studies the image in the glass on the table.

In the center of the swirling white mists is a dark tower, rising out
of the snows.  A beaten path runs uphill from the tower toward a canyon
in the base of the higher western slopes.  Thin spirals of smoke rise
from the twin chimneys in the pyramidal roof of the black tower.

A pair of figures in black coats walk briskly uphill, their breath
leaving a thick trail of white.  The snow on each side of the path
rises above the heads of either.

The flat of the snow before the tower is crossed with sets of flat
tracks, ski tracks that spread in all directions, with some circling
back to the short causeway before the tower.  A second packed-snow
trail leads to the ridge separating the tower from the forest below,
and a pair of horses drag a tree trunk up the ridge.  Beside them walks
a figure bearing a pack.

"It looks normal," observed Sillek.

"Have you seen enough, scr?"  asks Terek.

"I think so."

The wizard relaxes, and the mists collapse, leaving a blank glass.
"It's too normal, scr.  That snow is over their heads, and there must
be three cubits more packed underfoot.  The air is so cold that their
very breath falls like snow itself, and they walk to check their
mounts-those are stables up in that canyon.  Could your arms men do
that?"

"Not for long."  Sillek turns to the wizard.  "What is your meaning,
Scr Wizard?"

"They are evil angels, scr.  They must be destroyed, or they will
destroy us.  No one else could walk the Roof of the World without
freezing into ice."

Sillek nods without agreeing.  "Thank you, Scr Wizard.  If you discover
anything new, please let me know."

"Will you destroy them, scr?"

"Scr Terek, as you pointed out, we can do nothing until the snows melt,
and it becomes warm enough for normal men on the Roof of the World."

"Yes, Lord Sillek."

"Then we will see what we can do."  Sillek nods once more as he leaves
the warm quarters of the wizard.  His face is impassive as he walks the
long corridor and climbs another flight of stairs.

The guard opens the door to his quarters, and he closes it, stepping
quietly past the sitting room to the bedchamber where Zeldyan sits in a
chair, knitting a small blanket.

She smiles and stands, setting aside her work.  "You look glum,
Sillek."

The Lord of Lornth hugs his consort, feeling the beginning of a gentle
rounding of her figure against him.  "How are you doing?"

"Fine.  I can feel him kick."  Zeldyan smiles as they separate.

"How can you?  You're not that far along."

"I can.  It's gentle, but he does kick."

"You always call the child 'him."  "

"That's because he is, and we'll call him-"

"Hush.  That's bad luck, to name a child before he's born."

"As you say."  Zeldyan grins.  "Why were you so displeased?"

"I had asked Terek to scree the Roof of the World.  My mother has again
pressed the issue.  Now Terek is pressing me to attack the Roof of the
World.  No one else but evil angels could survive that cold."  Sillek
shrugs.  "No one else built a huge stone tower with hearths up there,
either, but he says that those women must be destroyed, that they're
too evil to live."

"Are they?"

"What do you think?"  he counters, glancing back toward the closed
doors.

"They're probably no more evil than anyone else.  They come from
somewhere else, and they have nowhere else to go."  Zeldyan smiles
momentarily before continuing.  "Like those who have nowhere else to
go, they will fight to the last to keep what they have.  That will make
them very dangerous."

"It already has," he points out, looking toward the window and across
the light blanket of snow that has already begun to melt, even though
the clouds' have blocked the winter sun.

"You have already committed to undertake the expedition to Rulyarth."
Zeldyan points out.  "Though we must say nothing publicly."

"And so I will.  If I am successful, though, the wizards, the
believers, and everyone else will be pushing me ..."

"And your mother," Zeldyan adds gently.

"I know."  He sighs.  "Rulers are always ruled by everyone else's
expectations."

Zeldyan steps close to him and takes his face in her gentle hands.
"Even I have expectations, love."  Her lips brush his.

"Yours I can handle," he whispers and returns the kiss.

LII

DESPITE THE HEAVY woolen blanket that covered the thin thermal blanket
and the crude but heavy woolen nightshirt he wore, Nylan was cold.  A
thin layer of crystals from his own breath scattered off the blanket as
he sat up.  The room was dark, with only the hint of gray seeping
through the thoroughly frosted single arma glass window, although Nylan
knew, alerted by the sounds drifting up the steps from the great room,
that it was late enough.  Another storm had descended upon the Roof of
the World, with yet more snow.

As if to punctuate his conclusion, the wind provided a low howl, and
the window casements rattled.  A few fine flakes sifted around the
iced-over shutters as Nylan sat on the edge of the couch and stared at
the peg holding clothes he knew would feel like ice against his skin.

"Don't take the covers," said Ryba.  "It is cold up here."

"Another furnace day.  ""It been a furnace day every day for the last
eight-day, and we're running through wood all too fast.  Fierral's
coughing out her lungs because she spent too much time in the cold.
Istril's not that much better, and I worry because she's pregnant."

"Ayrlyn helped them both."

"There's a limit to what she can do, though."

"Just like there are limits on the way you seem to be able to see
pieces of the future," Nylan pointed out.

Ryba sat up on the couch and swirled the covers around her.  "I hate
feeling this awkward."

"You don't look awkward," Nylan pointed out as he struggled into his
clothes.  He'd wash later.  That bothered him, too, that even for him
cleanliness was falling behind the need to keep warm.

"Dylless is already affecting my balance.  My bladder already went."
The marshal of Westwind slipped to her feet.  "I hate wearing this
thing like a tent.  At least I can still get into my leathers. 
Darkness knows how long that will last."

"I'm headed down," Nylan said.  "It might do your image good to arrive
before me."

"Thank you, gracious Marshal."

"Oh, Nylan ... it's just that you're always too busy to be punctual. Go
get your tea."  Ryba pulled off the woolen gown.  Her midsection was
only slightly rounded, and the engineer wanted to shake his head.  Ryba
would feel huge while she was slimmer than most women who weren't even
carrying a child.

Nylan pulled on his boots and went.  He had not even set foot on the
stones of the main level when Kyseen greeted him.

"Scr, the cistern's not filling.  It's half-full."

"It'll wait."  Nylan walked to the table, looming out of the gloom like
a rock out of the fog of a harbor.

"Amazing," whispered Gerlich, just loud enough for most to hear.  "The
engineer arrived before the marshal."

"Amazing?  I suppose so."  Nylan wished he could think quickly enough
for a clever comment.

"What magic will you create, Mage, to return the waters to the tower?"
asked Narliat.

"It's not magic, Narliat.  It's a stone conduit that's probably frozen
solid because I didn't get it buried far enough below the frost line."
Nylan snapped off a piece of bread and dipped it in a brown sauce that
was left over from dinner the night before.  "I haven't lived here
before, and I had to guess.  No one around here could even build a
tower."

"But you are a mage."

"You said that.  I didn't."  Nylan took a bite.  Both bread and sauce
were cool.  Even the tea was lukewarm.

Across the table from Nylan, Ayrlyn offered a faint smile of
condolence, but said nothing as she sipped her own tea.

The insides of the shuttered windows were masses of ice, created from
drifted snow and the condensation from the guards' breath.  The four
true windows were so heavily frosted that they were solid white.  With
a shiver, Nylan took a second sip of the warm tea that didn't help all
that much, then another mouthful of bread and sauce, followed by the
last dried apple slices in the wooden bowl.  The single fat candle on
the table shed as much greasy smoke as light.

"I'll be getting a few more apples for the marshal, scr," said Kyseen,
"and you can have a few, too."

"Thank you," said the engineer, although he wondered why he should be
thanking her because the early birds had eaten everything.

The fruit had not made its way up to the table by the time Ryba sat
down heavily in the chair with her back to the cold hearth.

"You seem tired, Marshal," offered Gerlich.

Narliat smiled.  From the middle of the second table, both Hryessa and
Murkassa looked at Ryba and then at Gerlich.  Ayrlyn frowned.

"I am tired," Ryba admitted.  "I'm especially tired of your superficial
cheerfulness, and I'm almost tempted to send you out hunting at this
very moment.  So don't push it."

Nylan held in a grin.

"I beg your pardon," Gerlich responded.

"No, you don't.  You just say you do," said Ryba politely.  "Snakes
have more integrity than you do, Gerlich.  So do the demons."

Beside Istril, at the far end of the second table, Relyn paled.

"You could even say, behind my back, that I'm in a bitchy mood.  That's
a mildly polite way of putting it."  Ryba smiled.  "So the next time
you attempt to patronize me, you might have to eat steel or ice.  You
can take your pick."

Kyseen hovered behind Nylan, holding the small bowl of dried fruit,
waiting until Ryba turned to the cook and nodded.  Kyseen set the bowl
between Ryba and Nylan.

"Thank you, Kyseen," said the marshal.

"Thank you," echoed Nylan.

Nylan glanced at Gerlich and caught the under the breath "Thank you,
thank you-it makes me puke .. ."  With a forced smile, Nylan looked at
the hunter and said, "Why, Gerlich, I thought you had better digestion
than that.  By the way, the reason I'm usually late is that I have
better things to do than to sneak around and complain about how things
are run around here, or make snide remarks under my breath.  Or go out
and hide and sulk in the snow while pretending to hunt."

Narliat turned pale; Gerlich opened his mouth, and then shut it.

"You know, Gerlich," added Ryba.  "You always did underestimate the
engineer.  In the end, it's likely to prove fatal."

"Might I be excused?"  Gerlich asked quietly.

"Of course."  Ryba smiled.

Gerlich stood and bowed, but not too deeply.

"Your timing was excellent, Nylan.  That should stop his plotting for a
time," said Ryba.  "A day or two, perhaps."

"Are you going to kill him?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"No," said Ryba.  "There's been enough death, and that sort of thing
wouldn't play well with the guards.  Not yet."  Her face held a bitter
smile.  Then she took a sip of tea.  "This is almost as bad as liquid
manure.  Almost, but not quite."

Nylan took several of the apple slices, but left most of them for Ryba.
She needed them, and so far, he didn't.  He did refill his mug from the
steaming pot that Kadran set on the table.  The bark-and-root tea
tasted better hot, or perhaps he couldn't taste it so well when it was
hot.

He munched another piece of bread.

Ayrlyn rose and nodded to the marshal, then to Nylan.  "We'll be doing
a lot of woodwork for the next few days, scr, and I need to see to the
space, and the glue."

Ryba nodded, as did Nylan, since he didn't have much choice with a
mouth full of dry bread.

"We have problems with the water, I understand," Ryba said after Ayrlyn
had departed.

"I'd guess the frost line is lower than I'd calculated, but I'll have
to check now that I've eaten and have some strength."

"You made such a to-do about the water..."

"I know.  I know.  It's all my fault."  With a groan, Nylan rose and
headed down to the lower level and the cistern, Kyseen following
closely.

All the guards in the kitchen area watched as he neared the cistern. He
opened the cover and peered inside.  His eyes saw almost nothing, but
his senses could feel that the inlet pipe was mostly filled with ice. 
The water level had dropped to the half-full point, a good two cubits
below the stone inlet conduit.  A few drops glistened on the ice-coated
inlet spout.

Nylan extended his senses, attempting to hold the feeling similar to
the neuro net  So far as his senses could follow the water back up the
conduit, he could sense only ice.  Finally, he stepped away from the
tower's cold south wall, leaving the cover open and turning to Kyseen.
"It's frozen.  Keeping this open might help, but make sure everyone
stays away from it."

"Scr?"  asked Kyseen.

"The air here is warmer.  It might help thaw the ice inside.  The
piping wasn't deep enough.  I'm pretty sure it's frozen outside as
well."

"What do we do?  You can't fix it now, can you?"  Kyseen made a vague
gesture up the steps toward the heavy lower outer door, which continued
to vibrate, despite the southern exposure and the heavy windbreaks
beyond.

Beyond the stone walls, the wind howled.

"We may not be able to fix it until spring, and that's a long time,"
answered Nylan.  "For now, take the extra caldrons and fill them with
snow.  Put them by the furnace.  When they melt, pour the water into
the cistern and start over.  If we can get the water level up, and
warmer, it might help."

"Should we put some on the stove?"

"Not until after meals are cooked, and don't add any wood to the fire.
We really don't have enough wood as it is.  The tower's warm enough
down here to melt the snow."

Up in the room he and Ryba shared-that was another story.  The center
space was warm enough, thanks to the furnace ducts, but only when the
furnace was burning.  The shuttered window had become a mass of
immobile ice.

"What about boiling water?"  asked Kadran.

"That won't do any good until the water level's up near the inlet
spout, and that means melting a lot of water."

"Now what are you going to do?"  demanded Kyseen.

"I still have to check the bathhouse," he answered as he crossed the
kitchen and headed back up the steps to the north door.  "That might
tell me where the freezing's happening."

The north archway was cold, as usual, but the bathhouse was tolerable,
perhaps because Huldran had a fire going in the stove.  Nylan climbed
up the brick steps beside the wall- designed for just such a
purpose-and checked the water warmer-which was three-quarters full.  A
thin stream of water trickled into the warmer's reservoir, but only a
thin stream, even with the knife gate wide open.

"How long have you had the fire going?"  he asked Huldran.

"Not long, scr.  Colder than a winter deer's rump in here earlier."

Nylan sighed.  "Maybe heating the stove will increase the flow more. If
not, we can use the stove to melt snow, and perhaps the heat from that
will also keep some water flowing."  He paused.  "Once the storm lets
up, I'll check the out falls

"Hope the stove helps, scr," offered Huldran.

"So do I."

He shook his head as he passed through the ice-covered cave that the
archway between the tower and bathhouse had become.  Chronologically,
they weren't quite at midwinter, from what he could figure, and
everything was freezing.  Maybe more heat would help .. . and maybe
not.

Another blast of cold air shivered through the archway following a long
low moan from the gale outside, and a short icicle hanging from the
bricks overhead broke loose and shattered across the stone floor,
several pieces skidding against the tower door.

The unheated archway was better than an open space between tower and
bathhouse, but not much, reflected Nylan, as he opened the tower door,
stepped inside, and closed it behind him.  He stopped shivering when he
started down the steps to the almost comfortable lower level of the
tower.

On the side of the lower level away from the kitchen- opposite the
furnace-Ayrlyn directed a half-dozen marines in their efforts to turn
rough wooden slabs and planks into furnishings for the tower-wall
partitions, stools, an occasional chair, and several cradles.

Nylan stepped toward the group.

"How is the water going, scr?"  asked Siret.

"There's enough in the bathhouse for some washing, a few quick showers,
and maybe more as the stove warms things up," Nylan said, inhaling the
aroma of baking bread that never quite seemed to leave the kitchen
area.  Did Kadran and Kyseen do all the baking as much to keep warm as
to feed the marines?

"What about the cistern?"  asked Istril.

"I can't do much about that now.  We'll see if Kadran can get the water
level up.  That might help."  He shrugged.  "If I can't fix the water,
at least I can do something useful."  Nylan picked up the dovetailed
section of the cradle that was beginning to resemble a headboard.
Carving and fitting the pieces was slow, even with the glue Relyn had
developed from ground deer hooves and boiled hide and who knew what
else.

After studying the design he had scratched on the wood, he set the
headboard down and took out his knife, borrowing the common whetstone
to sharpen it.

"Can I follow the same pattern?"  asked Istril, as she stepped up
beside him, no longer nearly so slim in the midsection as she had been
in the summer and early fall.  "For the cradle, not the design."  Then
she covered her mouth and smothered a cough.

"Of course," answered the engineer.  "Is there anything I can explain
... or help with?"

Istril flushed.

So did Nylan, although he didn't know why, and he stammered, "With the
woodworking.  I'm not an expert.  That's Ayrlyn."

"That cradle looks very good, especially for the tools we have,"
commented Ayrlyn.

"I've had a lot of time," said Nylan.  "And probably even more to
come."

"He's safer down here," whispered Berlis.

Both Siret and Istril turned toward the mouthy guard, and Berlis
stammered, "The marshal... she is a little touchy ... right now .. ."

"You'd be touchy, too," said Saryn, looking up from where she smoothed
a curved back piece for what looked to be a chair.  "She has to think
of everything and put up with idiots like the great hunter."  Saryn
glanced toward the corner where Ellysia quietly worked over another
plain cradle.  "I'm sorry, Ellysia.  I didn't-"

"No offense taken, scr.  He's a lying cur.  I just hope he's got good
genes."  Ellysia showed broad, even teeth, then looked down over her
swollen midsection at the sideboards she" was painstakingly rounding.

Nylan studied the design again, the sole tree twisting out of the rocky
hillside, then let his senses take in the wood before he lifted the
knife.  "... everything he does is beautiful..."

The engineer tried not to flush.

"Not quite everything," quipped Ayrlyn quietly.  "You haven't seen him
ski, obviously."

Nylan grinned in spite of himself, thinking about the considerable
additional practice he would clearly need in that area.  Then he slowly
drew the knife over the line that represented the right side of the
rocky slope, deepening the groove gently .. . gently.

LIII

AS HE WATCHED Saryn shift her weight on the ungainly skis, Nylan wanted
to shake his head, but he had little enough time for that.  Just
following the former pilot's tracks was proving hard enough even after
his determined efforts over the past eight-days.  To navigate and shoot
a bow on skis remained an effort, but he wasn't plunging headfirst into
the snow or leaning backward until his skis slid out from under him and
left his shoulders and rump buried in the white powder.

With a passing cloud, a shadow fell across the trail, and Nylan's eyes
squinted to adjust to the change in the midday light, but the relative
relief of the cloud passed, and the glare returned.

The snow around and across the Roof of the World was more than seven
cubits deep, and twice that in drifts.  That was deep enough that Nylan
could fall into one of those pits and never make his way out, not
without turning into a knot and cutting the thongs.  There was no way
to untie them hanging upside down in a mass of powdered ice or the
equivalent.  His fingers twitched around his poles as he thought about
the knife at his waist.

He blinked as a clot of snow thrown up from Saryn's skis and carried by
a gust of wind splattered above his left eye.

Saryn held up a hand, and Nylan coasted to a stop right behind her,
proud that he neither hit her nor fell into the deep snow beside the
semi trail that the guards had created through the lower forest.

As he caught his breath on the level stretch before a steep descent
through the trees, trying not to breathe too deeply, Nylan put off
thinking about the climb back up the ridge that would follow the
trip.

"I think there are some deer, and maybe a snow leopard, downhill and to
the right.  The wind's coming uphill here, and I might be able to get
close enough," whispered Saryn.

"If I'm not stamping along?"

She nodded.

"Go on.  We're always on the verge of running out of meat."

"Can you just wait here?"  asked Saryn, her voice still low.  "With
your bow ready?"

"I'll wait with a bow handy.  How much good it will do I'm not sure."
Nylan tried to keep his own voice down.

As the wind whispered through the evergreens, clumps of snow splattered
around them, leaving pockmarks scattered on the once-smooth white
surface, depressions that the wind seemed to begin to fill immediately
with feathery white powder that scudded along the snow.

The engineer glanced back uphill.  Already, sections of the packed
trail they had followed had begun to disappear beneath the drifting
snow.  Another shadow darkened the Roof of the World, and he looked up
at the white cloud that scudded across the sun.

"You'll do fine.  Just don't let our supper get away."  Saryn raised
her left hand and then slipped down the steeper section of the partly
packed snow trail ahead.  In moments, she was out of sight in the
trees, gone as silently as if she had never been there.

Nylan shrugged and unlimbered the composite bow, wishing that he had
practiced more with the weapon.  The shadow of the cloud passed, and
for a long time, nothing moved in the expanse of white beneath the
overhanging firs, nothing except snow scudded between trunks by the
light wind that rose and fell, rose and fell.

A gray-winged form plunged from nowhere into a swirl of powdered snow,
and a quick geyser of white erupted, then died away as the gray-hawk
flapped away, a small white-coated rodent in its claws.

As the hawk vanished, Nylan inched forward on the skis, mainly to shift
his weight and keep his hips and knees from cramping in the cold.  He
looked back in the general direction of the tower, but could see
nothing but snow, tree trunks, and the white-covered green of the fir
branches.

A rhythmic swishing, almost a series of whispering thuds, rose, just
barely, over the hissing of the wind.

Nylan squinted, looking downhill, when the snow cat bounded across the
hillside toward the trail where he stood, moving so quickly that what
had seemed a small figure swelled into a vision of knife claws and
glinting teeth even as Nylan released his first arrow and reached for
the second, triggering reflex step-up.  The second arrow flew as the
leopard reached the snow beside the flat section at the crest of the
trail.

Both Nylan and the snow cat seemed to be moving in slow motion, but the
engineer forced his body to respond.  The third arrow left the
bowstring as the cat stretched toward Nylan.

Bow still in hand, he managed to dive into the snow at the side of the
trail as the snow cat lunged at him.  A line of fire slashed down his
shoulder as he half twisted away from the mass of fur and claws.  His
skis linked together, and he toppled like a tree blasted by a
microburst into the deep snow, a heavy weight on his back.

That weight did not move, and, in time, Nylan levered it away from him
and, through a combination of rolling, twisting, and gasping, finally
struggled into the light.

His knees ached.  One leg burned, and the other threatened to cramp.
Half sitting, half lying in the snow, he managed to reach one of the
poles he had abandoned to use the bow, and with it, to retrieve the bow
itself.  He laid it on the edge of the harder snowpack of the trail.
Then he looked at his boots and the mass of snow and ice around the
thongs.

With a groan and more rolling he finally managed to totter erect.

The claws had sliced through the heavy leather shoulder of the hunting
jacket he had borrowed from Ayrlyn, but blunted the impact enough that
the wound was little more than a thin line skin-deep.

He looked at the snow-covered leopard, then downhill, but the forest
was silent.  After prodding the cat with one of his poles, he took a
deep breath, regretting it instantly as the chill bit into his lungs,
and then edged his skis toward the dead leopard.

Nylan knelt and removed the first arrow shaft, wiping it clean on the
snow, then replacing it in the quiver.  Then he searched for the
second.

The sun was well past midday when Saryn trudged uphill, pulling the
carcass of a winter deer behind her.  By then, Nylan had dragged the
snow leopard out onto the trail and worked out the three arrows.

"I'm sorry, Nylan, but... we do need the meat, and it took me
longer-What happened to you?"  Saryn stopped and stared at the
bedraggled engineer, her eyes going from his shoulder to the body of
the snow leopard.

"It decided I'd make a good dinner.  I tried not to oblige."

"You were lucky."

Nylan nodded.  His jaw still chattered, and his knees were wobbly,
especially as he looked at the stretched out length of the cat.

"But they're all your shafts.  So you get the fur.  We all share the
meat.  That's a dubious benefit."  Saryn laughed, and Nylan joined
her.

Snow-cat meat was tough, gamy, and no pleasure for teeth or tongue,
even in a well-cooked stew.

Nylan adjusted the bow in its cover and checked the quiver.

"What will you do with the fur?"  Saryn asked.  "That's yours, you
know."

"Mine?"

"Meat you can split, but not the hide.  We all agreed that the choice
is up to the one who brings the animal down, especially if you get
wounded."

Nylan's eyes flicked to the slash in his jacket.  "It's only a cut."

Saryn laughed.  "Your skis didn't move much."  Her eyes looked to the
depression beside the trail.

"That would have been futile," Nylan admitted.

"So you stood there and fired three arrows at a charging leopard?"

"It does sound stupid, when you put it that way."

"Necessary," Saryn said.  "What would have happened if you'd tried to
ski away?"

"I'd be under ten cubits of snow or a midday meal for the leopard."

"So the pelt is yours.  You earned it."

"I suppose it will make a good coverlet for Dylless.  It's light and
warmer than anything else."

"Dylless?  Ryba's ... ?"

Nylan nodded.  "Mine, too."

"That's a beautiful cradle you're making."

"Thank you.  It's almost done, and that's hard to believe."  Nylan took
a deep breath.  "Don't we have to drag this beast somewhere?"

"You get to drag it home.  I've got the deer," Saryn said.  "I even
have some rope."

"You are so obliging."

"Think nothing of it."

How Nylan got the cat carcass back to the tower he didn't know, only
that his legs ached even more, his shoulder burned, as did his eyes,
despite the eye black under and around them-which he'd have to wash off
sooner or later.  He felt light-headed.

He had taken off his skis and leaned against the causeway wall and
watched as Kadran and Saryn set up the tripod and skinned and gutted
the deer and then the leopard.  With the pelt off, the cat's carcass
was thin, and Nylan felt almost sorry for the dead animal, even though
it had certainly tried to kill him.  "Thin," he murmured.  "So
fearsome, and so thin."

"It's a hard life, even for the animals who live here," answered
Saryn.

A taller figure skied to a halt beyond the causeway, then bent and
unlaced the thongs of his skis.  Gerlich looked at Saryn and Kadran.
"So you finally got something besides a deer.  A real snow leopard.
Congratulations, Saryn."

Saryn smiled politely, pulling her scarf away from her mouth.  "Thank
you, but it isn't mine.  I got the deer.  Nylan put three arrows
through the cat.  All of them in the chest, not much more than a span
apart."

"In the chest?"

Saryn rotated the carcass on the fir-limb tripod and pointed.  "Here,
here, and here."

Gerlich inclined his head to Nylan.  "My congratulations to you, then,
Engineer.  Your bows must carry farther in the winter."

"I wish I'd been able to use them at that range," Nylan offered,
pointing to the slash in the jacket.  "Then this wouldn't have
happened.  He got a little closer than I would have ideally preferred.
It's hard to fire arrows with claws in your face."

After a moment, Gerlich answered, "I can see that."  With a look back
at Nylan, he crossed the causeway and entered the tower.

"Scr," said Saryn, "we really don't need you.  You might think about
cleaning and dressing that slash.  Relyn and I- we'll start tanning the
pelt... don't you worry."

Nylan heaved himself erect and picked up the skis and poles.  "Thank
you.  You're probably right."

After carting the skis down to the lower level and racking them and the
poles, he started back up toward the fifth level, where the medical
supplies were kept.  He stopped at the main level and staggered into
the great room, where he slumped at the empty table, too tired to climb
the steps.

While he really needed to wash out the cut on his shoulder, that meant
climbing four more flights of steps, and digging out the antiseptic,
what little there was left, and then going to the bathhouse.  He took a
deep breath.

The main door opened, and Kadran struggled inside with a deer haunch,
followed by Kyseen.  Neither looked toward the dimness of the great
room.  "... should have heard the engineer... 'got a little closer than
I would have ideally preferred."  I thought I'd die.  Gerlich was going
to shit building stones"

"Engineer's a tough little bastard."  "... quiet, a lot of the time...
have to be tough to deal with the marshal... leopard's probably easy by
comparison ..."

Ryba, tougher than a snow leopard?  Nylan chuckled to himself.  No
question about that, but he'd prefer to fight neither.

As the two cooks vanished, he stood and walked toward the steps, and
the antiseptic, the cleaning he wasn't looking forward to, and soreness
in muscles he'd forgotten he had- and the headache, the headache that
seemed not quite constant.

LIV

OUTSIDE THE FROSTED window, the day is dull gray.  Even the snow on the
fields in the distance is gray.  That on the roads below Hissl's room
has been tramped into a frozen mixture of brown and gray.

The warmth from the small brazier in the corner is more than welcome.
Hissl shifts his weight on the stool to warm his right side, without
taking his eyes from the glass on the table.

Centered in the swirling white mists are the images of the black mage
and the woman warrior.  Each drags a carcass, but the mage drags that
of a snow cat up the slope toward the line of smoke that rises from the
tower chimneys.

Two other figures, also on the long wide skis, sweep down the slope
toward the pair.

The mage appears awkward on the skis, but he is the one who drags the
snow cat.  Their breath puffs through the scarves that cover their
faces, then falls in the bright light in powdery crystals toward the
snow through which they climb.

Hissl's eyes focus on the bows both carry, then narrow.  He smiles. "No
thunder-throwers now."

Neither of the two skiers who stop on the white expanse above the
toiling pair wear thunder-throwers, either, and Hissl's tight smile
broadens.  He tries not to think about a mage who will stand fast
before a snow leopard, and his eyes flick to the window.

The grasslands beyond Clynya are still covered with white, but the days
are again lengthening, and even on the Roof of the World the snows will
vanish in time.

LV

CARRYING A CLEAN outfit, Nylan padded down the stairs in his boots and
old trousers, trying to ignore the chill that seeped around him.  He
slowed as he neared the fourth level.

Gerlich unloaded his gear, racking the quiver in the shelf space that
was his, and hung the long bow beside it, his fingers running over the
wood, almost lovingly.  Then he removed the shoulder harness and the
great blade.

The big man slid the blade from the scabbard, studied it, and took a
small flagon from the bag that hung from one of the pegs.  After
extracting a pair of rags from the leather bag, he used one rag first
to dry the blade and afterward the scabbard, before draping the damp
rag over a shoulder-high peg on the long board fastened to the wall.
Then he un stoppered the flagon and poured a small amount of oil onto
the other rag before closing the flagon.  Gently, the hunter oiled the
blade from hilt to tip.

As he watched the hunter, Nylan puzzled over several items.  Although
Gerlich brought back no game, he had brought back fewer arrows, and
shafts and arrowheads were not easy to come by.  Had Gerlich lost the
shafts?

Nylan smiled.  Perhaps the great hunter was not so great after all.  He
shook his head as he studied Gerlich.  Why did the hunter carry the
huge blade on a hunting trip?  Any sort of sword was difficult to use
on skis.  In fact, anything was hard to use trying to balance on wooden
slats spanning deep powder snow.

Based on his encounter with the leopard, Nylan could certainly testify
to that.  He lifted his right shoulder, felt the soreness.  Despite the
antiseptic, one section of the slash had become inflamed, enough so
that Ayrlyn had been forced to use her healing talents-a way of forcing
out the disorder of infection.

After having watched her do it, Nylan had practiced on the shoulder
wound himself, keeping it chaos-free.  That talent might come in useful
at some point, especially when the few remnants of the medical supplies
were exhausted.  The talent didn't seem to speed healing much, but it
stopped infection and would reduce scarring, Nylan suspected.

"Any luck?"  Nylan asked from the steps.

Boredom replaced surprise on Gerlich's face.  "Not this time.  We've
killed most of the dumb animals, and I've got to travel farther every
time."

"Sorry to hear that."  Nylan nodded and continued down the steps.

There were people near the hearth in the great room, but the engineer
continued onward toward the north door.  He shivered as he hurried
through the ice-lined archway and into the bathhouse.  The stove was
yet warm, and some water lay on the stone tiles of the first shower
stall, but no one remained in the building.  Huldran probably had used
the shower-or Ryba-or both.

Nylan stripped off the boots and trousers and checked the knife valve.
Then he stood under the frigid water only long enough to get thoroughly
wet, before lathering himself with the liquid concoction that Ayrlyn
had claimed was the local equivalent of soap.

The amber liquid looked like oil laced with sand and flower petals.
That was also what it smelled like-rancid flower petals.  It felt like
liquid sandpaper as Nylan stood, damp and freezing, on the cold stones
of a shower stall without a door, trying to scrub grease off his hands,
frozen and thawed sweat out of his stiff hair, and grime off most of
his body.

He had to wet his body twice more just to get lathered half properly,
and then it took three short rinses-just because he couldn't stand
under the cold water that long.  Cold?  The water had been warmed some
by the bathhouse stove's water warmer.

The only excuse for a towel was a napless synthetic oblong that might
have qualified as a hand towel on Heaven except for the fact that it
was designed to shed water-not absorb it.  So Nylan had to use it more
to wipe the water off his body, letting a combination of evaporation
and what felt like sublimation do the rest.

While he looked and smelled more human at the end of the process, the
bluish tinge to his skin spoiled the feeling.  The goose bumps and
shivers remained long after he donned the relatively clean clothes that
had taken two days to dry after he had washed them.  Finally, his feet
were dry enough for him to pull on the wool-lined boots.

The bathhouse remained empty, except for him.

When he had stopped shivering violently, he marched resolutely toward
the brick archway that had become a solid arc of ice.  The ends of his
damp hair still froze before he got into the tower and closed the north
door behind him.  After carting his old trousers up to the top level,
he returned to the great hall, and the coals in the hearth.

In the dimness, Relyn sat on one side, Murkassa on the other, each
one's back to the coals.  Neither looked at the other.  Both
shivered.

"A cheerful group," Nylan observed.

"Feeding fowls-that is all I can do that is useful," snapped Relyn,
raising his artificial hand.  "Or sheep.  It is so cold that I can
barely hold the bag."  His eyes turned on Nylan.  "Your hair is wet."

"I couldn't stand being dirty and unshaven any longer.  I took a
shower."

"You have ice in your veins."  Relyn shuddered.  "You are more terrible
than the women.  They are merely angels, trying to live as people."

"That's nonsense," Nylan retorted.  "I'm trying just as hard."  He
stepped toward the residual warmth of the hearth.

"They did not think of the tower and build it.  They did not find the
water that flows when all is frozen.  They did not forge the blades of
black lightning.  They did not build the small bows that send arrows
through plate mail."  Relyn stood, but his eyes were on the stones of
the floor.  "They only fought and grew crops and hunted.  You forged
Westwind, and all that it will be.  I have finally seen the truth.  You
are the first true black mage."

Nylan snorted.  "Me?  I'm the man who can barely cross the snows on
skis.  The one who couldn't get a thunder-thrower to kill anyone ..
."

Relyn laughed .. . gently.  "The thunder-throwers do not belong in
Candar.  Nor did the magical tools you first used.  Yet all the weapons
you created and all the buildings you built will remain.  Everything
you forged belongs here on the Roof of the World, and everything will
last for generations.  If you died today, what you have wrought would
remain."

"That was the general idea.  You seem to be the first one to fully
understand that."  Nylan paused, and in the silence could hear the
sounds of voices and tools and cooking coming up from the lowest level
of the tower.  "What's so strange about it?  I helped to build a tower,
but there are towers all over Candar.  I forged some blades, but arms
men all over Candar carry blades.  I created bows, but archers have
existed for years."

Relyn just shook his head.

"Murkassa?"  Nylan turned to the thin and round-faced girl.

"Yes, Scr Mage."  Murkassa pursed her lips and waited.

"Tell the honorable Relyn that he's full of sheep manure."

"Noser  You are the black one, and the marshal is the Angel, and you
have brought the Legend to the world."  She looked sideways at Relyn.
"The men of these lands, mayhap of all lands, are like Jilkar.  They
respect only the strong.  You have made these women strong-"

"They were already strong."  Nylan laughed bitterly.

"Then you have kept them strong, and they will force the men of Candar
to respect them-and to respect all women."

"That is why Sillek will come to attack Westwind," said Relyn.  "After
him may come Lord Karthanos of Gallos."

"Is that why Lornth dislikes Jerans?"  asked Nylan.  "Strong women?"

Relyn nodded.

With the low moaning of the wind, the engineer turned toward the
windows.  "Some mage I am.  I can't even keep this place warm
enough."

"It is warm enough for the angels to grow and prosper.  It is warm
enough that all Candar will tremble at the name of Westwind.  I should
think that would be warm enough."  Relyn's tone is ironic.

"You give me far too much praise, Relyn."

"Noser .. . you do not choose to see that you have changed the world. 
You have changed me, and you will change others, and in time few indeed
will understand the world before the Legend."

"You are different," Murkassa added.  "You see women as strong, and as
you see them, so are they."

"Women are strong.  Stronger than men in many ways," Nylan said.

"As you say, Mage."

Nylan shook his head.  Why did they take his words as a statement of
faith, as if what he said became true?  Outside, the howling of the
storm rose, and Nylan wondered, absently, how the sheep, chickens, and
horses were faring.  The enemy was the winter, not the preconceptions
of men in Candar.

Both Relyn and Murkassa exchanged amused smiles, as if Nylan could not
see the obvious.  Maybe he couldn't.

"I'm going down to work."

"Yes, Mage."

They smiled again.

Change the world?  Nylan tried not to frown as he left the slowly
chilling great room to descend to the woodworking area and his efforts
with the cradle and the rocking chair he was beginning.  Changing the
world by building a tower with rudimentary water and sanitation?  By
using a dying laser to forge a handful of blades and a few composite
bows?  By nearly getting killed by a snow cat or always falling into
snow over his head?

He snorted again.  He had a cradle to finish-and a rocking chair-and he
couldn't afford to be distracted by delusions of grandeur.

LVI

"..  . DON'T UNDERSTAND WHY Lord Sillek is receiving this trader with
such honor"

As she catches the murmur from halfway down the long table on the low
dais, Zeldyan smiles and, under the table, squeezes Sillek's hand.

He turns and smiles at his consort.

"The honorable Lygon of Bleyans!"  announces the young arms man in
training at the doorway to the dining hall, his voice on the edge of
cracking.

Retaining the smile on his face, Sillek stands to greet Lygon.  Zeldyan
rises almost simultaneously.  At the end of the table to Sillek's
right, the lady Ellindyja smooths her face into a mold of polite
interest.  At the end to the left, Scr Gethen cultivates a look of
indifference.

Lygon, a round-faced man wearing a maroon velvet tunic and a silver
chain, marches up between the two rows of tables in the dining hall as
the murmurs die away and the leading tradespeople and landowners of
Lornth watch.

A quick trumpet fanfare sounds as Lygon steps onto the dais.

Sillek gestures to the empty seat to his right.  "Welcome, Lygon.
Welcome to Lornth, and to our hospitality."  He steps back.  "This is
Zeldyan, my lady and consort.  Zeldyan, this is Lygon, the most
honorable trader of Suthya."

"Whenever you rulers call me honorable, Sillek, I want to reach for my
purse."  Lygon overtops Sillek by half a head, but bows low, first to
the Lord of Lornth, and then to Zeldyan.  "It is a pleasure to meet
you, lady, and to know that Lord Sillek has you to enchant him and
grace his towers."

"It is my pleasure to meet you, scr," Zeldyan responds, smiling
brightly.  "And I will do my best to offer such grace, especially since
you do us such honor."  Behind her, Gethen nods minutely.  "We don't
want your purse, Lygon, just your presence."  Sillek laughs easily and
stands until the trader sits.  Around the hall, the murmurs rise again.
Lygon stares frankly at Zeldyan for a moment before his eyes return to
Sillek.  "Your consort, she is a true beauty."  His eyes go back to
Zeldyan.  "And you are, my lady.  Few indeed have your grace and
beauty."

"I do my poor best for my lord," Zeldyan answers, "for he is dear to
me."

Lygon nods, neither agreeing nor disagreeing as Sillek himself pours
the red wine from the pitcher between them into two goblets almost
equidistant from each man.  The trader takes the goblet fractionally
closer to Sillek.

Sillek lifts the one remaining, raises it, and says, "To your continued
health and to good trading."

"To health and good trading," affirms Lygon.  Those at the head table
drink with Sillek and Lygon, though Zeldyan's lips barely pass the
wine.

Lygon sets his goblet before him and studies the great hall below the
dais.  "Quite a gathering."

"Only the due of a first trader of Suthya."  Sillek takes another sip
from his goblet.  "Even my consort's father made a special trip from
Carpa to honor you."

"First trader, twentieth trader-what difference does it make?"  Lygon
shakes his head.  "We're all traders, and we try to be fair to all."

Lygon's voice carries, but his eyes are on Sillek, and he does not see
how Scr Gethen's lips tighten at his words.

"Fairness-that's important to Lornth.  It always will be," answers
Sillek.

"I had hoped that Lornth would continue the warm relationship enjoyed
in the past with the traders of Suthya, and I am pleased to see such
hospitality again offered."  Lygon downs the remaining wine in his
goblet with a single swallow, then slices the pear apple on his plate
into slivers and pops a pear apple section and a chunk of Rohrn cheese
into his mouth.  "Always have good cheeses here."

"I am glad you find them so, and trust you will always do so."  Sillek
takes a swallow of his wine, a swallow far smaller than it appears.

"The wine's better than what your sire served.  Where'd you find it?"

Sillek inclines his head toward Zeldyan.  "The uplands of Zeldyan's
father's lands produce a good grape, and better wine."

"Ha!  Consorted well, for beauty and good wine.  You demon, you." Lygon
laughs.

Sillek smiles, as does Zeldyan, but, at their respective ends of the
table, neither Gethen's nor Ellindyja's face mirrors such apparent
pleasure.

"Heard some rumors-you know how things go-some rumors that a bunch of
crazy women took over a mountaintop on your eastern marches."  Lygon
swallows and chews more of the pear apples and cheese.  "Some even
say," adds the trader through a full mouth, "they're evil angels."

"That has been said," acknowledges Sillek, "and, if they survive the
winter, I may well be occupied.  Then again," he laughs wryly, "I may
be occupied with the Jeranyi.  I'm certain you've also heard that
rumor.  Well... it's true.  I've got my chief arms man in Clynya.  He's
not exactly pleased."

"It has also been said that you handed Ildyrom a stinging defeat."
Lygon chews through the rest of the pear apple slices, barely avoiding
spitting fragments across the linens.

At her end of the table, Lady Ellindyja contains a wince.

"The problem with such victories," Sillek responds, "is that they
require maintenance.  And supplies," he adds, looking at the trader.

"No business tonight, Lord Sillek," protests Lygon.  "It's a cold
winter out there, and tonight's the time for warmth and good food."

"I stand corrected."  Sillek raises his hands, half in laughter, half
in mock defeat.

Zeldyan smiles.  So does her father.

LVII

A LOW FIRE, for once, burned in the hearth of the great room.

Ryba sat in the chair at the end of the table, with Saryn on her right
and Nylan on the left.  Ayrlyn sat beside Saryn, while Fierral sat next
to Nylan with Kyseen beside her.  Relyn was seated beside Ayrlyn.
Gathered around the foot of the first table on the side below Saryn
were Gerlich, Narliat, and Selitra.  On the side below Nylan were
Huldran, Istril, Murkassa, and Hryessa.

"I'd guess you'd call this a status or planning meeting."  Ryba's
breath created a flicker in the candle at her end of the table.  "I
wanted to hear from each of you about how your efforts are going, and
any suggestions you might have."  The marshal looked at Gerlich.
"Hunting?"

"It's getting harder," Gerlich said.  "The deer we do get are thinner.
We haven't seen a snow leopard since the engineer killed his.  The big
cats have gone to lower grounds-or hibernated.  The same for the
bears."

"The old ones say the leopards talk to each other," added Murkassa.

Her breath nearly guttered out the other candle, and Huldran reached
out and moved it more toward the center of the table.

"What about smaller animals?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"It takes a lot of effort to catch them, and what good is a hare when
we have to forage for more than a score of people?"  Gerlich shrugged,
looking toward Kyseen.

"You get me three hares, and I can make a meal," affirmed the cook.

"How are your supplies coming?"

"Not as well as I'd like," admitted Kyseen.  "We've been grinding and
powdering some of those roots into the flour, and that stretches it.
Some of the guards say it's bitter.  What can I do?  The potatoes are
good, but we'll finish those off in another eight-day, maybe two, if we
only have them every third day."

"The potatoes are all that stick," said Huldran.  "There's not enough
meat, and the loaves are getting smaller."

The low moan of the wind outside the great room punctuated her words,
and, for a moment, no one spoke.

"Birds?"  asked the marshal.

"We've got owls and gray-hawks up here.  That's all we've seen,
anyway," answered Gerlich.  "Neither has much meat, and they're so
quick I don't see how you could shoot them."

Ryba nodded and turned to Saryn.  "What about the livestock?"

"There isn't enough grass and hay for the horses and the sheep," Saryn
said.  "We've cut back on the corn for the chickens, and they've cut
back on laying.  There's not enough grain for the rest of the winter
for them, either."

"The chickens, they lay little in the winter," said Hryessa.  "I would
start killing the older ones and let the young ones live for the year
ahead."

"Can you work that out?"  asked Ryba.

Saryn glanced at Hryessa, then at Ryba, and nodded.  "That still
doesn't solve the fodder problem."

"The lander we used for storage is more than a third full," said
Selitra.

"I helped fill that full, I did," interjected Narliat.

"We're only about halfway through the winter," pointed out Saryn.
"There's no forage out there, and there won't be even after the snow
melts."

"There are the fir branches .. ."  suggested Murkassa.  "Goats
sometimes eat them."

"It doesn't do the goats much good," pointed out Relyn,.  "and sheep
can't eat as many things as goats."

"We're getting short of food," Ryba pointed out, "and we don't have
enough food for both sheep and mounts."  Her eyes narrowed.  "We can
get more sheep, one way or another, if we have to.  Without mounts
we're dead."

"We need twenty mounts," said Fierral.  "And they can't be skin and
bones."

The marshal turned back to Saryn.  "Figure out a slaughter schedule for
the sheep-and horses, if need be-that will leave us with twenty mounts,
if you can, by the time there's something for the sheep and horses to
forage on.  It would be good to have some sheep left, but .. . we'll
need the mounts more to get through the summer."

"That's going to take a day or so."

"A day or so won't make any difference.  Also, work it out with Kyseen.
That's so she can plan the food schedule to keep everyone as healthy as
she.  can, given this mess."

Saryn nodded.

"What about timber?  Firewood?"  asked Ryba.

"We're almost out of the green timber for making things," said Saryn
flatly.  "We've got skis for everyone, and you've seen the chairs and
room panels-and the cradles.  That's about all we can do this winter.
We're running through the stove wood and firewood.  We can't even drag
enough wood up from the forest to replace what we're burning.  If we
drag up more than we are now, the horses will need to eat more, and
some will get lung burn."

"Should we turn the furniture into heat?"  asked Gerlich idly.

"No," answered Ayrlyn.  "That wouldn't add two days' heat, and it would
be a waste of all that effort.  Besides, the impact on people's morale
..."

"Just asking."

"Try thinking," muttered Huldran under her breath.

Nylan barely kept from nodding at that.

"Anything else?"  The marshal looked around the table.

Gerlich nudged the woman beside him.

"The roof in the showers leaks," ventured Selitra.

"We can't do much about that until spring," Nylan admitted.

"Sometimes the water freezes on the stones.  That's dangerous," said
the lithe guard.

"Getting up on that roof now would be more dangerous," pointed out
Nylan.  "And it's too cold for the mortar to set.  We don't have
roofing tar ... maybe by summer."

"I hope no one falls."

"Is there anything else we can do something about?"  asked Ryba.  "If
not, that's all.  Saryn .. . you stay.  I'd like your estimates on what
livestock should be slaughtered and how that might stretch out the feed
and fodder."

As Nylan stood by the window while Saryn provided rough fodder
estimates to Ryba, he listened to Hryessa and Murkassa, talking in low
voices by the shelves under the stone staircase.  "... a third of a
place filled with hay and grass, and they would start slaughtering
now?"

"Would you wait until there was no food, and then kill them all, or
have them starve?"  asked Murkassa.  "These women, they are smart, and
the Angel thinks ahead, far ahead."

Perhaps too far, thought Nylan, turning back to the pair at the table.
He hadn't liked Gerlich's using Selitra to bring up problems with the
bathhouse, either.  The engineer forced himself to take several deep
slow breaths, then turned his thoughts back to the table, though he
remained beside the frosted and snow-covered window.

"I'd say a sheep now, and another one in an eight-day ... two chickens
... lay in three days ... that leaves eight hens and four half-grown
chicks."

"Mounts?"  asked Ryba.

"There's one nag, gelded, barely gets around."

"See if Kyseen can make something there.  Start with the nag, not the
sheep.  A sheep can give wool and food.  A male that can't work and
can't stand stud-that's useless."

Nylan half wondered if someday he'd be just like the poor nag.  He
pursed his lips and waited until Saryn strode out.  Then he stepped up
as Ryba rose from the chair.  "In short," he said, "things are bad and
getting worse, and it's going to be a long time before the snow
melts."

"That's not a problem," said the marshal.  "It's going to warm up
within probably three eight-days.  But it's likely to be almost eight
eight-days before there's any spring growth, even in the woods, that
the animals can forage through, or before Ayrlyn can get out and trade
for food."

"Eight eight-days?  That's going to be hard.  Really hard."

"Harder than that.  Much harder."  Ryba walked toward the steps down to
the kitchen area.

LVIII

THE TALL MAN smooths his velvet tunic before stepping into the tower
room.

"You do honor to receive me, Lady Ellindyja," offers the tall trader.

Lady Ellindyja steps back from the door and offers a slight head bow.
"I do so appreciate your kindness in coming to see one whose time is
past."  She slips toward her padded bench, leaving Lygon to follow.

As she turns and sits, she picks up the embroidery hoop, and smiles as
she finds the needle with the bright red thread.

"Ah ... my lady, you did-"

"Lygon, you are a trader, and you have dealt fairly with Lornth for
nearly a score of years."

"That is true."  Lygon runs his hand through the thinning brown hair
before settling into the chair opposite Ellindyja.  "I would like to
believe I have always been fair.  Firm, but fair."  He laughs.  "Firm
they sometimes take for being harsh, but without a profit, there's no
trading."

"Just as for lords, without honor, there is no ruling?"  asks
Ellindyja, her needle still poised above the white fabric of the
hoop.

Lygon shifts his weight on the chair.  "I would say that both lords and
traders need honor."

"What weight does honor add to a trader's purse?"  asks Ellindyja, her
tone almost idle.

"People must believe you will deliver what you promised, that your
goods are what you state they are."

"Do you tell people what to buy?"

Lygon frowns before he answers.  "Hardly.  You cannot sell what people
do not want."

"I fear that is true in ruling, too," offers Ellindyja, her eyes
dropping to her embroidery as the needle completes a stitch.  "The
lords of a land have expectations.  Surely, you are familiar with
this?"

"I am a trader, lady, not a lord."  Lygon shifts his weight.

"I know, and you would like to continue trading in Lornth, would you
not?"  Ellindyja smiles.

"Lady .. ."  Lygon begins to stand.

"Please be seated, trader Lygon.  I am not threatening, for I certainly
have no power to threaten.  I am not plotting or scheming, for I have
my son's best interests at heart.  But, as any mother does, I have
concerns, and my concerns deal with honor."  With another bright smile,
Ellindyja fixes her eyes on Lygon.  "You are an honorable man, and you
understand both trade and honor, and I hope to enlist your assistance
in allaying my concerns."  She raises the hand with the needle slightly
to halt his protestation.  "What I seek from you will neither cost you
coin nor ill will.  I seek your words of wisdom with my son, at such
time as may be appropriate.  That is all."

"I am no sage, no magician."  Lygon rubs his forehead.

"I have little use for either," answers Ellindyja dryly.  "As you
remarked at the dinner the other night, my son faces a difficult
situation.  Lord Ildyrom has created some difficulties to the south,
while the demon women have seized part of his patrimony in the
Westhorns.  These women are said to be alluring, not just to men, but
to mal contented women here in Lornth."  She pauses.  "And all across
the western lands, even in Suthya.  Would you want women leaving Suthya
to create a land ruled by women?  How would you trade with them?  Would
they not favor traders from, say, Spidlar?"

"I could not say.  I have not heard of such."  Lygon licks his thick
lips.

"Let us trust that such does not come to pass, then."  The needle
flickers through the white fabric.  "Yet how can Lord Sillek my son
support such a cause merely because it would benefit the traders of
Suthya?"

Lygon's brows furrow.  "If you would go on ..."

"It is simple, honored trader.  My son is concerned that the honor of
merely regaining his patrimony is not enough to justify the deaths and
the coins spent.  His lords are concerned that their daughters and the
daughters on their holdings do not find the wild women alluring, but
they cannot speak this because they would be seen as weak or unable to
control their own women."

Lygon shakes his head.  "What has this to do with trading?"

Ellindyja's lips tighten ever so slightly before she speaks.  "We have
few weapon smiths and armies require supplies.  If the honor of
upholding your-and our-way of life is not sufficient for you to speak
to my son about the need to uphold his honor, and that of his lords,
then perhaps the supplies needed in such an effort will offer some
inducement.  Except you need not speak of supplies to Lord Sillek. That
would be too direct, even for him."

"My lady .. . you amaze me.  Lord Sillek is fortunate to have a mother
such as you."

"I seek only his best interests, trader.  Happily, they coincide with
yours."

"Indeed."  Lygon's eyes wander toward the door.

Lady Ellindyja rises.  "You must have matters to attend to more
pressing than listening to an old lady.  Still, if you could see it in
your heart to offer your observations about honor and about how you see
that lords would not admit their concerns publicly ... why, I would be
most grateful."

Lygon stands and bows.  "I could scarcely do less for a mother so
devoted to her son."

"I am deeply devoted to his best interests," Ellindyja reiterates as
she escorts the tall trader to the door.

The tower door opens, and Lygon steps into the hallway and strides
toward the steps to the lower level, his face impassive, his eyes not
catching the blond woman who is descending from the open upper
parapets.

As she follows the trader down the steps, Zeldyan's eyes flick to the
door to Lady Ellindyja's room, and her mouth tightens.

LIX

IN THE CORNER of the woodworking area of the tower, Nylan slowly traced
the circular cuts he needed to make in the scrap of poorly tanned
leather.  That way, he got longer thongs and could use the leftover
scraps.  Even so, his makeshift net was turning into a patchwork of
cord, leather thongs, and synthcord.

He glanced at the pieces of the unfinished cradle, then at the
rocking-chair sections.  Both needed more smoothing and crafting before
he glued and joined them, but his hands cramped after much time with
the smoothing blade-and Siret and Ellysia had a more urgent need to
finish their cradles.

From the other side of the tower came the smell of meat horse meat,
cooking slowly in the big oven.  There was also the smell of bread,
with the hint of bitterness that Huldran and others had noted.

Nylan found himself licking his lips-over horse meat?

It had been a long winter.  For a few days, they'd eat well.  And then
they wouldn't, not for another eight-day or so.  He tried not to dwell
on the fate of the poor swaybacked and tired gelding and instead looked
at the fragile-appearing net.

"How do you catch the snow hares?"  Nylan had asked Murkassa.

"Weaving I know, and cows, and sheep, but not hunting.  Men hunt, Scr
Mage."  The round-faced girl had shrugged, as if Nylan should have
known such.  Then she had added, "It is too cold to hunt here, except
for you angels, and I must stay behind the walls."

Hryessa had been more helpful.  "My uncle, he once showed me his snares
and his nets ..."

After listening to descriptions of snares and setting them, Nylan had
decided nets were more practical in the deep snow of the Roof of the
World.

Then, he hadn't considered the sheer tediousness of making the damned
net.  With a slow deep breath, he started cutting, trying to keep his
hands steady, knowing that, as in everything, he really couldn't afford
to make any mistakes, to waste any of the leather.

He rubbed his nose, trying to hold back a sneeze.  With the dust left
over from building and the sawdust from woodworking and the soot from
the furnace, he wondered why they weren't all sneezing.

Kkhhhchew!  Kkkchew!  The engineer rubbed his sore nose again.

"It's hard to keep from sneezing," said Siret from where she smoothed
the sideboards of her cradle.  "I hate it when I sneeze, especially
now."

Behind and around Nylan, guards worked on their own projects.  Ayrlyn
was attempting a crude lutar, using fiber-cabling from one of the
landers as strings.  Surprisingly, Hryessa also worked on a lutar.

As he knelt on the slate floor, Nylan caught a glimpse of boots
nearing.

"It's getting presentable in size," said Ryba.

Nylan stood.  "The net?  Yes.  Whether it will work is another
question, but I thought I'd try for another niche in the ecological
framework."

The marshal laughed.  "When you talk about hunting, you sometimes still
sound like an engineer."

"I probably always will."

"What else are you working on?"  Her eyes went to the wood behind
Nylan.

He gestured, glad that the cradle's headboard was turned so the carving
was to the wall.  While he couldn't conceal the cradle itself, he
wanted some aspect of it to be a surprise.

"The cradle for Dylless.  A chair."  He laughed.  "Once the cradle's
done, I'll have to start on a bed.  Children grow so fast.  But that
will have to wait a bit, until the snows melt, and until we're in
better shape."

"At times, I feel like life here is always a struggle between waiting
and acting, and that I'll choose the wrong thing to wait on because we
don't have enough of anything."  Ryba forced a laugh.  "I suppose
that's just life anywhere."

"What are you doing?"  he asked.

"Checking on what everyone else is doing.  Then I'll start pulling out
guards for blade practice."

"You're still doing that on the fifth level?  It's dark up there."

"It works fine.  They really have to concentrate.  Besides, using a
blade has to be as much or more by feel as by sight."  Ryba cleared her
throat.  "Nylan ... you need practice with a blade.  A lot more
practice."

"Another vision?"  he answered glumly.

"Another vision."  There was nothing light in her voice.

"All right.  After I get a little more done on the net."

"I'll be a while.  I need to talk to Kyseen."  Ryba's eyes passed over
the back side of the cradle's headboard without pausing as she turned
and crossed the space toward the kitchen.

Nylan's ears followed her progress.  "... not a warm bone in her body
..."  "... like the queen of the world ..."  "..  . even cold with the
engineer .. . show him some warmth ..."  "... she's not kept in a
corner, caged up, like me," added Murkassa.  "She can walk the
snows."

Istril, almost like a guardian, touched the Gallosian woman's arm.  "It
is getting warmer.  It won't be that long."  "... too long, already.
The stones of the walls will fall in upon me..."

All the guards were getting worn and frazzled.  Nylan hoped that Istril
were right, that it wouldn't be that long, but he wasn't counting on
it.  That was why he worked on the net.  "... never loses sight of the
weapons, does the marshal?"  asked Siret, not looking up from her
continued smoothing of the sideboards of the cradle she knelt beside.

"No, and she's right, even if I dread getting bruised and banged up."

"You do better than most, scr."

"You're kind, Siret, but she makes me feel like an awkward child, even
when she's carrying extra weight and is off balance."

"What about me, scr?"  asked the visibly pregnant guard.

"You're still sparring?"

"She says that the men around here could give a damn if I'm with child.
Or have a babe in arms."

"She's probably right about that, too," Nylan answered slowly.

"Sad, isn't it?"

They both took deep breaths, almost simultaneously.  Then Siret
grinned, and Nylan found himself doing the same.

LX

SIL LEK WALKS INTO the armory, followed by Terek.  The Lord of Lornth
spots the assistant chief arms man sharpening a blade with a whetstone.
"Rimmur?"

The thin man looks up from the stool, then stands quickly.  "Yes,
scr?"

Behind Sillek, Terek closes the door.

"How can I help you, scr?"

"Since Koric remains to hold Clynya, I need you to make sure that our
arms men are ready to travel as soon as the roads firm.  I don't mean
an eight-day later.  I mean the day I lift my blade.  Do you
understand?"

"Yes, scr.  Where do we make ready to go?"

"I'm not telling you.  Nor will I until we start to march."  Sillek's
smile is grim.

"Scr .. . that'll make it hard .. ."  Rimmur's words die under Sillek's
glare.  "I mean ... the men ..."

"Let me explain it," answers Sillek.  "I have Ildyrom and the Jeranyi
to the west, and these evil angels to the east.  If I announce I'm
going after the angels, Ildyrom will be in and through Clynya within
days after the snows melt, or the rains -stop, and the roads firm.  If
I go after Ildyrom, the traders will raise their prices and lower what
they pay, and the angels will be free to take over more of the
Westhorns, including the trade routes and the lower pastures.  If I do
nothing, everyone will think they can make trouble."

"Yes, scr," answered Rimmur.  "Which are you going to do?"

Sillek slaps his forehead theatrically and glares at the assistant arms
man "If I tell you and the arms men of Lornth that I'm going after
Ildyrom, then everyone will tell everyone else, and in three days all
of Candar will know, and the traders and the angels will make trouble.
If I say I'm going after the angels, then Ildyrom and his war-women
will make trouble.  So I can't say.  You just have to get them ready.
I'll announce where later."

"Yes, scr.  They won't like it, scr."

"Rimmur ... do they want to know and be dead, or not know and be
alive?"

"Scr?"

"If no one knows where we're going, whether it's after Ildyrom or the
black angels, then our enemies can't plan.  If they can't plan, then
fewer of our men get killed.  So just get them ready.  Tell them what I
told you."

"Yes, scr."  Rimmur stands and waits.

As Terek and Sillek head up the narrow steps to the upper levels of the
tower, the white wizard clears his throat, finally saying, "You never
did indicate ... scr ..."

"That's right, Terek.  I did not.  I do not know what sort of screeing
or magic the angels have.  So my decision remains unspoken until we
leave.  That way, Ildyrom and the angels have to guess not only which
one I intend to attack, but also when."

"As Rimmur said, scr, that makes preparation uncertain."

"Terek .. . before this is all over, we'll end up fighting them both.
So prepare for both eventualities."  Sillek steps out onto the upper
landing and turns.  "Your preparations won't be wasted."

"Yes, scr."  Terek inclines his head.

"Good."  Sillek turns and walks down the corridor to the quarters where
Zeldyan waits.

LXI

THE NIGHT WIND whistled outside the tower windows, rattling the
shutters on the partitioned off side so much that small fragments of
ice broke off and dropped to the floor inside the sixth level.  From
the third level below came the faint crying of an infant, Dephnay, but
the crying died away, replaced by the faintest of nursing sounds, and
gentle words.

On the slightly warmer side of the top level of the tower, protected by
the thin door, the recently completed partitions and hangings, Ryba and
Nylan lay in the darkness.

Nylan's legs ached from the skiing, the endless attempts to find and
track the smaller rodents he knew were in the forests.  His arms and
shoulders ached from the drubbings he had taken in his last
blade-sparring sessions with Saryn and Ryba in the half darkness of the
fifth level of the tower.  His lungs were heavy from the cold.  His
guts grumbled from the continual alternation of too much meat and too
few carbohydrates with the periods of too little food at all.  His
upper cheeks burned from near-continual frostbite, and his fingers
ached from holding a smoothing blade or a knife too long.

For all his exhaustion, he could not sleep, and his eyes fixed on the
patchwork hangings that moved, ever so slightly, to the convection
currents between the cold stone walls and the residual warmth of the
chimney masonry that ran up the center of the tower.

Ryba lay on her back, nearly motionless, eyes closed, the woolen
blanket concealing her swelling abdomen.

In the darkness through which he could see, Nylan studied her profile,
chiseled against the darkness like that of a silver coin against black
velvet, a profile almost of the Sybran girl-next-door, lacking the
regalness that appeared whenever she was awake.

What had made her able to struggle against such odds, going from a
steppe nomad child to being one of UFA's top combat commanders and to
founding a nation or tradition that seemed almost fated to endure?

Would it endure?  How long?

He stifled a sigh.  Did it matter?  Ryba was going to do what Ryba was
going to do, or what her visions told her to do, and for the moment he
had no real choices.  Nor did any of them, he supposed, not if they
wanted to survive.  He tried to close his eyes, but they hurt more
closed than open, with a gritty burning.

The shutter on the far side of the tower rattled again as the wind
forced its way against the tower, and more icicles broke off and
shattered across the plank floor.  Even the arma glass window creaked
and flexed against the storm, although Ayrlyn insisted that, while the
storms would be more violent in the eight-days ahead, they represented
the warming that was already under way.

Nylan hadn't seen any real warming outside, and the snow was still
getting deeper, and the game scarcer, and the livestock thinner, and
tempers more frayed.

He tried to close his eyes again, and this time, this time they stayed
closed.

LXII

NYLAN LAY IN his snow-covered burrow, the long thong attached to the
weighted net suspended over the concealed rabbit run.

Catching even rodents was a pain.  First he'd had to put out the nets
almost an eight-day before so that the damned frost rabbits would get
used to the scent-or that the cold and wind would carry it away.  But
even when they triggered the net, somehow they never had stayed caught
long enough for Nylan to get there.

So he'd been reduced to tending his net traps in person.

It had taken him all morning to get the one dead hare strapped to his
pack, and it was well past mid-afternoon.  Now, lying covered in the
snow, watching the second rabbit run he had discovered, Nylan could
sense the snow hare just below the entrance to the burrow.  It had
poked its head out several times, but not far enough or long enough for
Nylan to drop the net.

So the engineer shivered and waited... and shivered and waited.

The sun had almost touched the western peaks before the hare finally
hopped clear of the burrow.

Nylan jerked the thong and the weighted net fell.

The rabbit twisted, but the crude net held, and in the end, Nylan
carried a small heap of thin flesh and matted fur up through the snow.
Now he had two thin, dead snow hares- that was all.

He was cold, his trousers half-soaked.  The sun was setting, and he had
a climb just to get out of the forest, even before the ridge up to
Westwind.

All that effort, for two small hares.  In the future, could they breed
them?  Except that meant more forage and grain stored, and there was a
limit to what they could buy or grow.

He waded through the snow that was chest-deep downwind to where his
skis were.  Once he went into a pothole, with the snow sifting around
his neck and face.  He slowly dug himself out.

His fingers fumbled as he strapped his boots to the skis in the growing
purple deeps of twilight.  Then he pushed one heavy ski after the other
along the slope.  When he reached the packed trail the horses used to
drag the trees up the ridge, he unfastened the thongs and carried poles
and skis up the ridge.  By the time he reached the causeway, all the
stars were out, and the night air cut at his lungs.

From the darkness outside the tower, he stumbled inside into the gloom
of the front entry area inside the south door, carrying skis, poles,
and hares.

The warmth of the great room welled out and surrounded him, and the
twin candles on the tables seemed like beacons.

Ayrlyn reached him first as he leaned against the steps.  "Ryba was
worried.  It gets cold out there when the sun goes down."

"I know.  It took a little longer than I thought."  He looked toward
the guards at the table, his eyes focusing on the cook near the end of
the second table.  "Kyseen.  My humble offerings."  Nylan raised the
pair of dead hares.

The dark-haired cook slipped from the table and hurried across the cold
slate floor.  "All offerings are welcome these days, scr."

Kadran followed her.  "If you can bring in a couple more, we can tan
the pelts and stitch them together as a coverlet for Ellysia's
Dephnay," added the second cook.  "This tower's not so warm as it could
be for a child ... begging your pardon, scr, knowing you did the best
you could, but it's not."

"By next winter, it will be warmer."  Nylan hoped they would be around
for next winter.

"You go eat, scr," insisted Kyseen.  "I'll dress these quick so they
don't spoil, and I'll be back up in an instant."

"Have you eaten?"  he asked.  "I wouldn't want to spoil your meal..."

"I've eaten, and you haven't."  Kyseen took the two hares and started
down the steps.

Nylan left the skis and poles by the stairs.  He'd put them away after
he ate.

"Two rabbits?  That's all?"  asked Gerlich as Nylan walked slowly
toward his place at the table.

"I'm still learning."  As Nylan sat, heavily, ignoring the cold and
dampness in his trousers, he asked, "By the way, when did you last
bring in any game?"

Gerlich flushed.  "I brought in a winter deer, not a rabbit."

"That was more than two eight-days ago," Ayrlyn said as she reseated
herself across from the engineer.

"So?"  retorted Gerlich.  "Everything's scarce these days, and we've
probably already killed the stupid ones."

"We can't live on stupid game," pointed out the singer.

"The hares are another meal."  Ryba's voice cut through the argument.
"And each meal helps."  She smiled for a moment at Nylan, though there
was sadness in the expression as well as pleasure and relief.

"It's always cold and dark!  Always!"

Nylan turned his head at the loud words from the lower table, where
Istril had laid her hand on Murkassa's shoulder.

"The days are getting longer now," pointed out the silver-haired guard.
"Before long, it will be getting warmer as well."

"It's still too cold and dark."  Murkassa's words seemed lower, though
Istril patted her shoulder again.  "Even the wall stones are cold and
dark."

Turning back to the trencher before him, Nylan took a slow swallow of
the warm tea, not even minding the bitterness.  He reached for the
chunk of bread left for him.

A portion of a mutton stew or soup also remained, only half-warm, but
Nylan began to eat, hardly conscious of the coolness of the meat and
gravy, or the lumpiness that marked the last of the blue potatoes ...
or of the continuing conversation between Istril and Murkassa.

LXIII

"I CAN'T!  I can't!"

From the corner of the furnace and woodworking room where he smoothed
the sideboards of the cradle, Nylan looked toward the stone steps.

"NO!  I won't.  I can't."

Beside him, Siret dropped the polishing cloth, then awkwardly bent
over, trying to reach the scrap of fabric.  Nylan retrieved it and
handed the cloth back to her.  "Here."

"Thank you, scr.  I feel like I can't do much of anything easily-"

"No!  It's too white!  It's ... AEEEiiiii..."

Across the room, Ayrlyn set down the lutar bridge she had been working
on, nodded to Hryessa, and hurried up the stairs.  After a momentary
hesitation, Nylan lurched to his feet and followed Ayrlyn, not knowing
quite why he did, but feeling that he should.

By the south door to the tower, Jaseen and Istril held a struggling
brown-haired figure-Murkassa-dressed in a heavy jacket.

"Too white!  It's too white!"  Murkassa's flailing arm caught Istril
across the cheek, but the silver-haired guard pinned the arm to her
anyway, ignoring the red blotch that would be a bruise.

Ayrlyn stepped up to Murkassa, whose body was stiff, and whose screams
had become incoherent, and touched her forehead.  Murkassa jerked away,
but Ayrlyn followed the movements, again touching her forehead.

After a moment, the dark-haired woman slumped, and the two holding her
lowered her to the floor.

"Whew!"  muttered Jaseen.

Istril put a hand to her cheek.

Ayrlyn bent down and stroked the woman's forehead.  "You'll be all
right..  ."

Nylan swallowed.  Had he felt that unreasoning fear and rage?  He
studied the figure on the stones.  Murkassa's face, though relaxing
under the healer's touch, remained drawn.  Or was it just thin?

Nylan thought for a moment.  Wasn't everyone's face thinner?  His
trousers were looser.

"Hut fever," Ayrlyn said wryly, straightening up.

"Hut fever?"  asked Istril.

"She's not built for the cold-not enough body fat when she came here,"
explained Ayrlyn.  "We really don't have warm enough garments-or
sufficient food for a good cold-weather diet.  She can't stand the
cold.  She's afraid of it-with reason-but she can't stand being kept
confined."  Ayrlyn shrugged.  "The conflict just got to her."

"What do we do?"  asked the med tech  "There's nothing in the kits,
little enough left anyway, and we're saving that for childbirths."

"She'll be all right."  Ayrlyn sighed, then sank onto the stairs.

Nylan could feel her exhaustion, almost the way he had felt when he had
worked hard manipulating the fields for the laser-or the power net on
the Winterlance.  The Winterlance seemed a lifetime ago, and, in a way,
it was.

"Just take her up to her bunk.  She'll be all right when she wakes."
Ayrlyn's voice was low and hoarse.

"You sure?"  asked Jaseen.

The singer and healer nodded.

Jaseen turned and called to Weindre, who stood gaping by the stairs
from the lower level.  "Give me a hand."

"Istril's there."

"Get your rump over here.  Last thing we need is Istril lugging weights
upstairs.  Then we'll have someone else needing medical care we haven't
got the supplies for."

As Weindre neared, Istril said quietly, "I'm sorry."

"You've got nothing to be sorry for," said Jaseen.  "Someday it'll be
her turn, and she'll need help."

As the two guards carried Murkassa up to the next level, followed by
Istril, Nylan said to Ayrlyn, "Stay here.  I'll be right back."

He hurried down to the kitchen and cornered Kadran.  "I need some
bread, something for the healer."

"Healer?"

"Ayrlyn used that healing touch on Murkassa-she went crazy, Murkassa, I
mean-and Ayrlyn looks like she's been run over by a couple of
horses."

Kadran frowned.  "Just a little.  You never lie anyway, scr, but some,
they'd tell me anything to get more to eat, and we got to keep it
fair."

"I know.  I appreciate it."

"Here you go, scr."  Kadran cut a thin slice from the end of a loaf
cooling on the table.  "Just try not to talk about it, or everyone will
have a tale of some sort."

Nylan nodded wryly.  "I'd gathered as much.  Thank you."

Nylan carried the thin slice of the bitter and dark bread up the
stairs, where he handed it to Ayrlyn.

The healer took it without speaking and began to eat, slowly.  More
slowly, the color returned to her face.  "How did you know?"  she asked
after she licked the few crumbs from around her lips.

"I could .. . sense it.  You sort of manipulated the whiteness away
from her, but that takes energy."

For a moment, neither spoke as Jaseen and Weindre trudged back down the
steps.  Nylan moved to let them pass.

"We got her in her bunk.  Istril's staying with her," Jaseen
announced.

"Thank you, Jaseen, Weindre," said Ayrlyn.

"No problem.  Want you around to do that healing if I need it."  Jaseen
offered a smile and a half salute.  "We're going down where it's warm."
After the guards had disappeared into the lower level, Nylan sank back
onto the stone step.

"Thank you," Ayrlyn said.

"You're welcome."  He added, "I saw Murkassa after you put her to
sleep, and I was thinking how thin she was."  He shifted his weight on
the stone.

"Everyone's thin.  Haven't you noticed that?"  Ayrlyn glanced down at
the entry space by the closed south door, then back at Nylan.  "The
fact that Istril, Siret, Ryba, and Ellysia are pregnant takes our minds
away from it-that and the bulky clothes.  We're not on what seems to be
a starvation diet, but you need three to four times the food intake if
you're active in cold weather, and we have to be active-for a number of
reasons-like getting enough wood to keep from freezing.  So we really
don't have enough food."

"Is it ever going to get warmer?"

"It already is.  The ice is thinner on the windows, and before long
they'll stay clear all the time."  Ayrlyn paused.  "I worry about the
food, though.  Darkness knows what it will be like by early summer."

Nylan nodded.  They needed more hares, more game .. . more everything.
He knew what he was doing from now on.

"You can't do it all, Nylan," Ayrlyn said softly."

"You can't solve every problem."

"But I have to do what I can."  His eyes met hers.  "How could I live
with myself if I didn't?"

After a moment, she looked down at the stones.  Then she raised her
brown eyes to his.  "I appreciate that, but it will always bring you
sadness, because people take advantage of it, just like they only
respond to force."  Her fingers touched his hand for an instant, and he
could feel the warmth that was more than physical-and the sweet
sadness-before she dropped them.

He nodded.  "I know.  So do you."

Their eyes met for a moment before he looked away.  Why was she the
only one who really understood?  Or was she?

After another long moment, he asked, "Do you need anything else?"

"No," Ayrlyn answered with a faint and enigmatic smile.  "The bread was
fine.  I don't need anything else to eat."

Nylan nodded again, and helped Ayrlyn to her feet.  "I have to get back
to woodworking."

"I know."

Again, he could feel her eyes on his back as he went down the stone
steps to the lower level.

LXIV

ZELDYAN RESETTLES HERSELF in the large padded chair beside the bed,
wearing a green silk sheen dressing gown that, while it sets off her
golden hair, barely covers her midsection.  "He's active," she says,
looking down and smiling.  "I wish he weren't quite so ... strong."

"You always say 'he."  " Sillek stands up from the chair that matches
the one where Zeldyan sits.

"You always question that.  The child is a boy.  Even if he were a
girl, would it matter?  We're young."

"It matters not to me."  Sillek steps up beside her chair, bends, and
kisses her cheek.

"But it matters to all the holders, and to your enemies."  A touch of
bitterness creeps into Zeldyan's voice.  She shifts her weight in the
chair.  "I can't ever get comfortable these days."

"A lord is always captive to his people's perceptions."  Sillek glances
toward the window, beyond which he can glimpse the distant fields, half
white, half brown.

"You mean the perceptions of the holders and those with wealth?"
Zeldyan again shifts her weight in the chair and glances toward the
corner that holds the chamber pot.

"I cannot support a large standing army.  So I must have the support of
the large holders.  They want the succession of Lornth to be
ensured."

"If either a son or a daughter could hold Lornth, there would be more
stability."

"Not as they see it."  Sillek reaches down and squeezes Zeldyan's
shoulder.  "Only men can be holders."

"Or warriors.  Or lords."  Zeldyan glances up.  "Even your mother feels
that way, and she understands more than most men.  Yet she pushes and
pushes for you to attack those women on the Roof of the World.  Even
enlisting foreign traders."

"Lygon ... he can't do that much, and we can make that work to our
advantage."

"For now," she agrees.  "But how can you put off all these questions of
honor that your mother raises or the idea that you are weak if you do
not attack the Roof of the World?"  Her lips tighten, and she forces
them to relax.

"I can put that off for a time," he muses.  "But not forever."

"I know.  If you fail to strengthen Lornth"-she looks to the closed
door-"Ildyrom will likely succeed in taking it.  If you are successful,
then all the holders will demand you reclaim the Roof of the World."

Sillek nods slowly.

"What real good is that land?  Only angels or demons could live there.
Was it worth your father's death?  If a few damned women want to live
there .. ."  Zeldyan shakes her head.

"Some women have already deserted their households.  One was caught;
the others were not."

"Oh ... so the idea of a refuge where women are not beaten, where they
can bear arms-that frightens the strong men of Lornth?"  Zeldyan shifts
her weight in the chair again.  "I'm sorry, Sillek.  It's not you.
You've been fair and open.  And, in his own way, so is my sire."

"I'm still Lord of Lornth, and the men have the power, and they look to
me to put things right-as they see it."

"As they see it... what they see will be the death of us all."

"I am trying to work around that."

"I know.  I know."

"I'll be back."  Sillek bends and kisses her cheek again.  "At
midday?"

"At midday."  Her eyes drift toward the chamber pot.

LXV

"IT HURTS ... NO one said it would hurt like this .. . damn you, Ryba!
Damn you!"

Siret's words, muffled by the steps and the ceiling and floor
separating the great room from the marine quarters above, were still
clear.

Nylan looked at Ryba.

"Childbirth hurts," the marshal said, "as I'm going to find out
firsthand before too long."  She winced slightly as Siret yelled
again.

The space across from Nylan was vacant.  Both Ayrlyn and Jaseen were up
with Siret.  At the base of the table, Gerlich glanced quizzically at
Nylan, then whispered something to Narliat.  The former arms man raised
his eyebrows and looked at Nylan.

Nylan could almost sense the pain rolling down from the upper level.
Finally, he stood.  "Maybe I can help Ayrlyn."

"You're not a healer or a med tech pointed out Ryba.

"No ... but healing takes a sort of... field strength .. . and I can
help there.  Besides," he pointed out, tossing the words back over his
shoulder, "I'm not good at standing around and doing nothing."

The silence behind him lasted but a moment, and the buzzing of
conversations rose, louder than before, even before he started up the
stairs.

Siret's face was red as Nylan approached the couch in the dimness of
the candlelit third level.  Ayrlyn was pale, and Jaseen glanced at the
engineer as if to ask what he was doing there.

"Good," murmured Ayrlyn.

Without asking, Nylan touched the back of Ayrlyn's neck, trying to
extend that sense of ordered power.  Through Ayrlyn he could sense the
wrongness.

"Need to move her," he said quietly, "the child."

"How?"  murmured Ayrlyn.

Nylan didn't know.  He knew only that it felt wrong.  He let go of
Ayrlyn and touched Siret's left arm.

For the first time, she saw him.  "You came.  You came."

"Hush," he said, embarrassed.  "We'll see what we can do."

Jaseen frowned and mouthed behind Ayrlyn's back, "The baby's stuck."

Nylan nodded, but his perceptions reached out again, almost, it seemed,
independently, trying to catalogue the problems, from the cord that was
around the child's neck to the tightness of the birth canal to ...
First... as though he were guiding a laser, he strengthened the flow of
blood, oxygen, life force-in the confusion of mixing systems, he did
what felt right, hoping that his feelings were correct, since he was no
doctor, only an engineer.  But there were no doctors.

"She's breathing easier .. ."  murmured Jaseen.

Ayrlyn nodded.  "... hurts, hurts so much," whimpered Siret.

Nylan's legs were shaking, and he went down on his knees beside the
former lander couch, his fingers brushing the silver-haired guard's
forehead, then her abdomen as he tried to loosen what needed to be
loosened, ever so gently, half wondering if he were dreaming or dead,
as the room took on an aJmost surreal air, as he kept shifting the
strange black-tinged forces in a pattern he did not quite understand,
but could only feel.

Beside him, he could feel another black-tinged presence, sometimes
helping, sometimes leading.

"There!"  exclaimed Ayrlyn.  "There!  Push again!"

"I'm pushing," groaned Siret.

Nylan closed his eyes for a moment, trying to get the room to stop
swirling around him.

"You have to push again," announced Jaseen.  "You've still got the
afterbirth."

"Hurts .. ."  Siret's voice was low, but stronger.

"You can do it."

"Good."

After a time, the engineer stood and looked at Ayrlyn.  "You did it."

"No, you did it.  I didn't have the nerve to try until you started."

"We did it, then."

They looked at Siret, and at the girl she held to her breast, the
infant with the silver fuzz on her scalp that would be silver hair like
her mother's.

Siret smiled, finally, wanly, and then said, "Thank you.  I could feel
you changing things ... somehow.  She wouldn't have lived, would
she?"

"No," said Jaseen.  "But she's a strong little girl.  So don't you
worry.  Now, we've got to get you two cleaned up, and I can do that.
Those two"-and she jerked her head toward Nylan and Ayrlyn-"they spent
every bit of that magic they had on you.  You're a lucky woman."

Siret's green eyes closed for a moment, then opened.  "I'm so tired."

Nylan extended his perceptions, afraid she might be hemorrhaging or
something worse, but, beyond the damages his mind and senses insisted
were normal-he could only find exhaustion.

He shook his head.

"Anything wrong?"  asked Jaseen.

"No.  Except that everyone insists this is normal."

Ayrlyn and Jaseen laughed.

"I need some tea," Nylan said, "and I can't do anything more here."  He
felt guilty as he stepped away, but Siret and her baby daughter seemed
all right.  He tried to ignore the blood that seemed to be everywhere
as Jaseen started with the antiseptic.

Slowly, he made his way down the stairs, but a faint smile came to his
face as he realized that, strange as it had been, everything had turned
out the way it should.  He crossed the great room, half aware that the
tables were mostly empty and that Ryba had left.

"You look like a proud father," said Gerlich cheerfully.

Narliat smiled nervously.

"You know, Gerlich," Nylan said coldly.  "The woman was in pain.  For
the record, not that it should matter, I never slept with her.  And you
should know that.  So shut up before I stuff you into a piece of
stone."  He turned and sat down at the end of the table.

Gerlich sat silently, as if stunned, but Nylan didn't care.  He was
tired of Gerlich's games and insinuations.

Ryba had already left, but Kyseen or Kadran, or someone, had left the
bread and some tea.  The tea was lukewarm, but tasted good.  Nylan ate
the bread slowly, sipping the tea.

After a time, Ayrlyn sat down across from him.  "Thank you.  We might
have lost them both."

"You were doing fine.  I just made it easier."  He cupped his hands
around the mug, glancing at the window behind her, aware that the snow
had melted and/or sublimated off the arma glass

"Siret was glad you were there."

"I'm just an engineer, stumbling along and doing what I can."  He
refilled his mug, then hers.  "I make a lot of mistakes."

Her hand touched his wrist, just for a moment, and he felt a sense of
warmth.  "You're a good man, Nylan.  It's ..."  She broke off the
words, and repeated, "You're a good man.  Don't forget it."

Nylan looked toward the window, hoping spring was coming, and dreading
it at the same time.  He took another sip of tea, vaguely aware that
Ayrlyn had slipped away, as his thoughts skittered across Siret and a
silver-haired child, across a tower without enough food, across
Gerlich's uncharacteristic silence, across Ayrlyn's warmth.

He sipped more tea, tea that had become cold without his noticing it.

LXVI

AS HE HEADED back up to the tower's top level, Nylan paused on the
steps, looking into the tower's third level with eyes and senses.
There, in the darkness, a silver-haired guard held a silver-haired
infant daughter to her breast and gently rocked back and forth on the
rocking chair that all the guards, and even Nylan, had helped to
make.

"Hush, little Kyalynn, hush little angel..."  Siret's voice was low,
but sweet, and apparently disturbed none of the guards sleeping on the
couches in the alcoves spaced along the tower walls and separated by
the dividers many had not only crafted, but personally decorated and
carved.

Some remained awake.

Nylan could see where one of the other silver-haired marines-Istril-now
heavy in her midsection-stared through the darkness in his direction.

Did she have the night vision?  Had it been conferred by that under
jump on all who had gotten the silver hair?  How many of the former
marines had strange talents, like his or Ryba's, talents they had never
mentioned?

That Nylan did not know, for he had never mentioned that ability,
though Ryba had guessed-or learned through her strange fragmentary
visions.  His eyes slipped back to Siret, his ears picking up the
gentle words.

"Hush, little angel and don't you sigh / Mother's going to stay here by
and by ..."

Nylan swallowed.  He'd always heard the lullaby with "father" in the
words, but he had the feeling that fathers weren't playing that big a
part in Ryba's concept of what Westwind should be.

How long he listened he wasn't certain, only that little Kyalynn was
asleep, as was Dephnay, and so were their mothers.  His feet were cold
by the time he slipped into the joined couches up on the sixth level.

"Where were you?"  whispered Ryba.

"I went down to the jakes."

"That long?"

"I ... went ... to the bathhouse ... it's more .. . private."  He felt
embarrassed, but the heavy mutton of the night before clearly hadn't
agreed with his system.  "The mutton .. ."

"I see ... I think."

"Then I stopped to listen to Siret singing to her daughter for a
moment.  You don't - I didn't really think of her as a mother.  You see
them with those blades, so effective, so .. ."  Nylan paused, searching
for the words.

"So good at killing?"

"No.  I don't know.  It just touched me, that's all.  I don't even know
why.  It's not as though I really even know her.  I just helped a
little."

A shudder passed through Ryba.

"Are you cold?"  He reached out to hold her, but found her shoulders,
her body warm, despite the chill in the tower.  The rounding that was
Dylless made it difficult for him to comfort her, or to stop her silent
shaking.

In the end she turned away, without speaking.  Even later, after they
had fallen asleep, his arm upon her shoulder, Ryba had said nothing,
though her silent shakes had they been silent sobs?  had subsided.

LXVII

SUNLIGHT POURED THROUGH the narrow open window of the tower.  So did a
flow of cold air, ruffling the hangings and rattling the thin door that
closed off the marshal's quarters.

"We're doing all right with the food," Ryba said.  "The snow's
beginning to melt off the rocks, and it won't be all that long before
we can send out Ayrlyn to trade for some things."

"It is warming up," admitted Nylan.  "I hope we can count on it
continuing."  He peered out the narrow opening, squinting against the
bright light, and studying the blanket of white-and the few dark rocks
on the heights to the west of the tower.

"A storm or two won't make that much difference," pointed out the
marshal of Westwind.  "We've still got more than anyone expected."

"You managed it very well," Nylan agreed, looking out the open
window-the fresh air, cold as it was, was welcome.  "Very
realistically."  " "Realistic," that's a good term."  Ryba shifted her
bulk on the lander couch.  "Most people aren't realistic.  Especially
men."

Rather than debate that, Nylan asked, "What do you mean by
'realistic'?"

Ryba gestured toward the window.  "The locals can't really live up
here.  It's hard enough for us.  Realistically, they should just leave
us alone.  Over time, we'll be able to make the roads free of bandits,
facilitate trade, and stabilize things.  Not to mention providing an
outlet for abused women, some of them, anyway, which will make men-some
of them- less abusive.  If they attack us, a lot of people get killed,
more of them than of us."  She sighed.  "That's a realistic, or
rational, assessment.  But what will happen is different.  The local
powers-all men-will decide that a bunch of women represent a threat to
their way of life, which isn't that great a life anyway, except for a
handful of the well-off, and they'll force attacks on us.  If they win,
they wouldn't have any more than if they hadn't attacked, not really,
and when they lose, and they will, they're going to lose a whole lot
more over time."

"How would women handle it?"  Nylan asked almost idly.  "Do you want me
to close the window?  It's getting colder in here."

"You probably should.  A lot of the cold air drops onto the lower
floors, even with the door closed."  Ryba shifted her weight again.
"They say you can never get comfortable in the last part of pregnancy.
I believe it.  Now .. . how would women handle it?  I can't speak for
all women, but the smart ones would ask what the cost of an action
would be and what they'd get.  Why fight if you don't have to?"

"Maybe the smart men do, too, but they don't have any choice,"
suggested Nylan, stepping over to the window and closing it.

"That could be," admitted Ryba.  "But you're conceding that the smart
men are surrounded by other men with power and no brains."

Nylan shrugged.

"Too many men want to dominate other people, no matter what the cost.
Women, I think, look at the cost."

"Women also manipulate more, I suspect," Nylan answered.  "Men-most of
them-aren't so good with subtleties.  So they dislike the manipulative
side of women."

"When it suits them.  Manipulation isn't all bad.  If you can get
something done quietly and without violence, why not?"

"Because men have this thing about being deceived and being out of
control."  Nylan laughed wryly.  "They can go out of control when they
find out they've been tricked or manipulated," .

"Let me get this straight.  Men fight and have wars because they can't
manipulate, and then they fight and have wars whenever they feel they
are manipulated?"

Nylan frowned.  "I don't like the way you put that."

"If you have a better way of putting it, go ahead.  Personally, I
believe women, given the chance, can do a better job, and, here, I'm
going to make sure they get a better chance."  Ryba eased herself onto
the floor.  "I'll be glad when I can get back to serious arms practice.
For now, it's just exercise."

"I doubt it's ever just exercise," quipped Nylan, following her down to
the dimness of the next level and the practice area.

He paused on the steps, noting that among those already practicing with
Saryn and a heavy-bellied Istril were Relyn and Fierral.  The
one-handed man gripped the fir wand in his left hand with enough
confidence that Nylan could see he had been practicing for some time.

Ryba picked up a wand.  "Istril?  Shall we?"

Istril bowed.

Nylan took a deep breath and headed down to the woodworking area and
the unfinished cradle.  What Ryba had said about men seemed true
enough, but that apparent truth bothered him.  It bothered him a lot.
Were most men really that irrational?  Or that blind?

LXVIII

HALFWAY UP TO the top of the ridge, Nylan looked back, adjusting his
snow goggles.  Gerlich and Narliat remained out on the sunlit flats,
Gerlich shouting instructions as Narliat struggled with a shorter pair
of skis.  The shorter skis would probably work, Nylan reflected, now
that the midday warmth had partly melted the snow and left it heavier
and crustier.  As he continued up the ridge, leaving Gerlich and his
hapless pupil on the flats before the tower, Nylan wondered why Gerlich
had suddenly taken an interest in instructing Narliat on skis.

Was he becoming a counterfeit Ryba, trusting no men?  He didn't
distrust Relyn, although he didn't understand the man.  Relyn seemed
different, as though he had changed and were not sure of himself.
Gerlich, on the other hand, seemed ever more foreign, contemptuous,
stopping just short of provoking Ryba.

As Nylan reached the top of the ridge, he looked back.  Narliat was
skiing slowly, following a track already set in the snow, and Gerlich
continued to encourage the local.

Nylan used the thongs to fasten his boots in place, then skied down the
ridge in the gentle sweeping turns he had never thought he could do. He
still lurched and flailed, but did not fall.

He stopped at the bottom of the ridge, searching the trees, then
finally pushed his skis west, toward the narrower strip of forest,
following his senses.  Were the gray leaves on the handful of deciduous
trees beginning to un shrivel They'd have to sooner or later, but Nylan
hoped it would be sooner.

As he entered the trees, now bare of snow, the engineer swept the scarf
away from his mouth.  The wool was too warm, and he couldn't breathe as
he slid the heavy skis through the space between the trunks, his
perceptions out in front of him, trying to sense any possible game.

He saw older hare tracks, expanded by the faint heat of the midday sun,
tree-rat tracks, but nothing larger or newer.

Moving slowly, he paused frequently, letting his senses search for
signs of life he could not see.  His fingers strayed to the bow at his
back.

Something stirred-slightly-beneath a snow-covered hump, but Nylan shook
his head.  That something was a bear not likely to emerge for a time,
and there was no way the engineer was going to try to dig out something
far more than twice his size.

He slowed as his eyes caught the tracks in the snow- something like
deer tracks, but larger.  He turned his skis slightly downhill to
follow the tracks, his senses ranging ahead.

From his perceptions the animal seemed to be a large deer-or an elk.
Nylan had never paid much attention to those sorts of distinctions, but
it definitely offered the promise of a lot of meat.

The big deer had migrated up from the lower elevations, or, thought
Nylan, fled local hunters seeking game as the snow in the lower hills
melted.

Nylan must have skied nearly another kay before he saw the animal,
standing in a slight opening under a large fir.  The engineer stopped
in the cover of a pine.  If he moved farther toward the deer, the
animal would see him, yet he was still more than fifty cubits away.

Nylan remained in the shadows of the pine, as silent as he could be,
downwind of the deer, finally deciding he was as close as he dared.
Slowly, quietly, he withdrew an arrow from the quiver, nocked it, and
released it.  The next shaft was quicker, as was the third.

The buck snorted, and then ran.  Nylan slogged after him, not pressing,
but moving steadily.  If he had missed, he'd never catch up.  If he'd
wounded the beast, then he ought to be able to wear it down-if it
didn't wear him down first.

Within a few cubits of where the buck had stood were scattered
bloodstains.  He also found a shaft, wedged in a pine trunk-probably
the third shaft.  After recovering that- carefully-he replaced it in
the quiver and put one ski in front of the other, trudging through the
ever-heavier snow along a trail of scattered blood droppings.

Sweat began to ooze from his forehead, and he loosened his jacket and
untied the scarf and put it inside the jacket.  He didn't want to stop
to get into the pack.

A welcome shadow fell across the forest as a single, white puffy cloud
covered the sun.

Nylan's legs began to ache, and the buck turned uphill at a slant.
Nylan's legs ached more.  He glanced ahead, and did not see the hump in
the snow-a covered root or low branch.

His left ski caught, and he twisted forward.  A line of pain scored his
leg, and he grunted, trying not to yell.  For a moment he lay there,
letting his perceptions check the leg.  The bones seemed sound, but
another wave of pain shot down the leg as he rolled into a ball to get
up.

Slowly, he stood, casting his senses ahead.

The buck was not that far away, perhaps two hundred cubits, just out of
sight, and Nylan slowly slid the left ski forward, then the right.

When he reached the next low crest in the hill, he could see the big
deer, almost flailing his way through the snow.

Nylan pushed on, trying to ignore the pain in his leg.

With the sound of the skis on the crusting snow, the deer lunged
forward, then sagged into a heap.

Nylan finally stood over the buck, but the animal was not dead.  Blood
ran from the side of its mouth, and one of the shafts through the
shoulder had been snapped off.  More blood welled out around the other
shaft, the one through the chest.  The deer tried to lift his head;
then the neck dropped, but he still panted, and the blood still oozed
out around the shaft in his chest.

Nylan looked at the deer.  Now what?  He didn't have anything for a
humane quick kill.  Finally, he fumbled out the belt knife.

Even using his perceptions, trying to make the kill quick, it took him
three tries to cut what he thought was the carotid artery.  Three
tries, and blood all over his trousers, the snow, and his gloves.  Even
so, the deer took forever to die, or so it seemed to Nylan, as he stood
there in the midday glare and the red-stained snow.  The sense of the
animal's pain was great enough that, had he eaten recently, he wouldn't
have been able to keep that food in his guts.  Even though they needed
the meat, his eyes burned.

Nylan worked out the one good arrow shaft, cleaned it on the snow, and
put it in his quiver.  Then he dug out the rope and the sheet of heavy
plastic.  Awkward as it was working on skis, he left them on, afraid
that he'd never get them back on if he took them off.

The poor damned deer was heavy, and the plastic sheeting was smaller
than the carcass, which had a tendency to skid sideways as Nylan pulled
it.  The snow had gotten even damper under the bright sun, and most of
the way back was uphill.  Nylan's left leg stabbed with each movement
of the skis.

The rope cut into his shoulders, despite the heavy jacket, and sweat
ran into his eyes.  It felt like he had to stop and rest every hundred
cubits, sometimes more often.

Mid-afternoon came, and went, before he cleared the forest and reached
the bottom of the ridge.  There, Nylan dragged everything onto the
packed snow surface of the trail, took off his skis, and tied them to
the sheeting.

With another series of slow efforts, he started uphill.

Halfway up, two figures skied down and joined him.

"Scr?"

Nylan looked up blankly, then shook his head as he recognized Cessya
and Huldran.

"Frigging big animal, scr," observed Huldran with a grin.

"Heavy animal."  Nylan nodded tiredly.  "I could use some help."  That
was an understatement.

"We can manage that."  Huldran studied the red deer.  "Lot of meat
here."

"I hope so.  I hope so."

As the two marines unfastened their skis, Nylan just sat in the snow
beside the trail.

"You all right, scr?"

"I'm a lot better since you arrived."  Nylan staggered up as they
started to pull his kill uphill once more.  The muscles in his left leg
still knotted with every step, but the pain was less without the strain
of pulling the makeshift sled and deer.

Saryn was waiting, tripod ready, by the time the three reached the
causeway.

Nylan set his skis against the tower wall and sat on the causeway wall,
too tired to move for a time.  The sun had just dropped behind the
western peaks, and a chill freeze rose.

"Scr," ventured Huldran, "would you mind if I took your skis and poles
down?"

"I definitely wouldn't mind.  I'd appreciate that very much."

"Don't stay out too long, scr," added Cessya, picking up his poles.

"I won't."  The coldness of the wind felt good against Nylan's face,
and he just sat there, staring into space.

Saryn looked up from the deer carcass, then at Nylan.  "Good animal,
but you sure made a mess."

"I'm a poor killer and a worse butcher," Nylan said, his voice rasping.
"I wasn't planning on getting anything this big.  I hope I didn't spoil
anything by taking so long."

"It's cold enough that it isn't a problem."  Saryn grinned.  "Gerlich
came back earlier.  He said there wasn't anything within kays."

"There isn't.  I went down that section you call the forest wedge."

"And you carted this back that far?  That's a long climb."

"Huldran and Cessya helped me back up the ridge."

Kyseen hurried out the tower door, looked at the deer, then at Nylan.

"Mother of darkness!  What am I going to do with that?"

"Cook it," snapped Saryn.  "The engineer didn't cart it back to
waste."

"Tonight... the meal's done."

"I'm sure you can find something to do with this tomorrow, Kyseen,"
Nylan said.  "And they'll eat anything you cook."

"They're already complaining about the chicken soup, and it's not even
on the tables.  Why didn't I wait for the big deer the engineer
brought-that's what Cessya asked."

"Tell her it's worth waiting until tomorrow."  Nylan grinned, and slid
off the wall, trying not to wince as his leg hit the stones of the
causeway.  "You mind if I leave you, Saryn?"

"No.  You did the hard work.  This is simple drudgery."  Saryn's
skinning knife flashed again.

Nylan limped into the tower, and looked down at his damp and bloody
clothes.  Should he go straight to the laundry, or up to find
something, like his sole remaining ship suit that was dry?

"You look even worse than manure."  Ayrlyn walked toward him from the
stairs leading up from the lower level.  "You're limping.  Is any of
that blood yours?"

"I fell chasing the deer.  I don't think any of it's mine."

"Let me see."  Her fingers lifted the trouser bottoms and touched his
upper calves.  "It feels like you ripped the muscles.  You shouldn't be
skiing or hunting for a while."

Nylan could feel a faint touch of warmth radiating from her fingers,
and a lessening of the cramping.  The pain subsided, slightly, from an
acute stabbing into a duller, but heavy aching.

Ayrlyn straightened.  "I hope it was a big deer."

"It's a huge deer," interjected Huldran as she passed, adding, "I'll
get the stove in the bathhouse warmed up.  You look like you need it,
and there's a little wood we can spare."

"I'm all right," Nylan protested, feeling as though he were being
humored.

"Enjoy it," Ayrlyn laughed.  "People are glad to see another solid
meal.  And you do look like you need some cleaning up.  I'm going to
help Saryn.  From what everyone's said, she needs it, or she'll be out
there all night."

Nylan flushed.  "It's not that big."

The healer grinned before she turned.

Nylan looked at the stairs up to the top level.  The bathhouse wouldn't
have warmed that much yet.  He suppressed a groan before he started up
the stone steps.

LXIX

IN THE WARM lower level of the tower, Nylan worked only in a light
tattered shirt and trousers, occasionally even wiping sweat from his
forehead, as he smoothed and evened the cradle's sideboards.  At times,
he had to stop and massage, gently, the aching left calf that still had
a tendency to cramp if he stood on it too long without moving.

A few cubits away, Istril used a single smoothing blade to plane the
sideboards of the cradle that could, except for the carvings and
designs, have been a mate to the cradle before Nylan.

The engineer glanced at Istril's headboard-which bore a crossed hammer
and blade surrounded by a wreath of pine boughs.  He nodded at the
detail of the pine branches.

"You like it, scr?"  She leaned back against the cool wall stones and
wiped her forehead.

"You did a much better job on the carving.  than I did," he admitted.
"The pine wreath is good."

"Thank you.  I worked hard on it."  She grinned, although the grin was
wiped away as she stopped and massaged her abdomen.  "They say the last
part is the hardest."

"Of woodworking?"

"Of bearing a child.  I suppose that goes for anything."

Nylan nodded, lowering himself onto his knees to take the weight off
his leg, but the stone was hard, and he'd have to switch position
before long.

"Jaseen said you and the healer saved Siret and Kyalynn."

"We did what we could.  It happened to be enough."

"If... I need you ... would you?"

Nylan nodded.  "If you need us, we'll be there."

"Thank you."

He paused.  "Istril, could you feel what we did?"

The silver-haired marine blushed slightly.  "A little, scr."

"Good.  You might try to explore that talent.  It could come in
useful."

Istril paled.  "Ah ... excuse me, scr."  She turned.

"Are you all right?"

"I'm fine.  Fine as I can be with someone punching my bladder."  The
formerly slim guard half walked, half waddled up the tower stairs, even
though, except for the distended abdomen, she carried no extra
weight.

Nylan couldn't imagine carrying and bearing a child.  Having to
experience the pain and discomfort secondhand was bad enough.  Maybe
Ryba was right.  Maybe things would be better if women ran them.  Then,
again, maybe they'd just get used to abusing power, too.  The soreness
in his knees from kneeling on the hard rock got to him, and the
engineer switched to a sitting position beside the cradle.

He picked up the fine-grained file and studied it, glancing at the
assembled cradle in front of him.  After looking at the wood, he set
the file aside and picked his knife back up.

With long strokes that were as gentle as he could make them, he worked
on rounding the left sideboard just a touch more, trying to make the
sides match as closely as he could.  The relief around the rocky
hillside on the headboard needed to be deeper, too, although he
sometimes felt as though attempts at art were almost a waste in a
community struggling to survive.

He looked up at the sound of boots.

Relyn stood there, studying the cradle.  After a moment, the red-haired
man asked, "Were you ever a crafter, Scr Mage?"

"No, I can't say that I was."  Nylan blotted his forehead with the back
of his hand, then shifted his weight on the hard stone floor.

"Then the forces of order have gifted you."  Relyn squatted next to the
cradle, his fingers not quite touching the carving of the single tree
rising out of the rocky hillside.

"It's not as good as Istril's," Nylan said, nodding toward the
momentarily abandoned work.

"She is also one of the gifted silver-heads."  Relyn eased into a
sitting position with his back against the wall.

"Are there many in Lornth with silver hair?"

"None, except the very old, and their hair is a white silver, not the
silvered silver of the angels."  Relyn tapped the blunt hook that had
replaced his right hand against the cut stone of the wall in a series
of nervous movements, almost a replacement gesture for tapping fingers
or snapping them.

"You look upset," the engineer observed, lowering his voice, although
only Rienadre and Denalle remained on the woodworking side of the lower
level, and they were laboring together on a chair of some sort across
the room, in the area closest to the kitchen space.

Relyn glanced at the other two guards.  "It grows warmer.  What am I to
do?  I am not welcome in Lornth.  I would have to fight to prove I was
no coward."

"I saw you practicing the other day.  The blade looks comfortable in
your hand."

"I hope to learn enough to defend myself with the bad hand."

Nylan frowned.  "Maybe .. . maybe, we could figure out a clamp or
something so that you could fix a knife to the hook.  Don't some fight
with a blade and a knife?"

"That... I have not heard of."

"It's been done," Nylan affirmed.

"Since you say it, Mage, that must be so."

"Wouldn't that help?  Enemies wouldn't think you were defenseless on
your right."

"Again, you prove you are dangerous."  Relyn frowned.  "Could you make
such a device?"

"I'll see what I can do.  Let me see your knife, though."

Relyn eased the knife out and passed it hilt-first to the engineer.

Nylan looked at it for a time before speaking.  "I think I can, maybe
bend some rod locks so they'll hold the hilt."  He handed back the
knife.  "I take it you'd rather not stay in Westwind."

"I am no mage.  Nor am I a mighty and powerful warrior like the hunter.
Nor did I handle a blade, even with two hands, as well as the best of
these guards.  Even those bearing a child work and improve their
skills-and with those devil blades you forged?"  Relyn shook his head.
"Also, I do not trust the marshal.  She smiles, but she smiled when she
took off my hand."

"Why are you telling me?"

"I must talk to someone, and I distrust you the least, because you
would build rather than destroy."

"Thanks," answered Nylan dryly.  "I suppose I deserve that."

Relyn shrugged apologetically.

"Do you think the marshal will have you killed in your sleep or
something?"  Nylan asked, wishing he had not even as he spoke.

"It is possible.  It is possible that lightning might strike me as
well.  I do not fear either .. . now."

"Ah ... but you think your welcome might wear thin?"

"There is not that much food, is there?"

"I did bring in that deer, and that means more game might be moving
higher into the mountains."

"That will be true for a time, but only for a time."

"Where could you go?"

"South, north, east-anywhere but west."  Relyn grinned briefly.  "I do
not have to decide that until the snows melt, perhaps later."  He
paused.  "If I should need to depart sooner?"

"I'll let you know if I know" Nylan laughed softly.  "Sometimes, I'm
among the last to discover things."

"It is often that way when one deals with women."

"Even in Lornth?"

"Even in Lornth, even as a holder's son," Relyn affirmed, as he stood,
using the hook to catch the edge of a stone wall block and to help
balance him.  "Thank you, Scr Mage."  He offered Nylan a head bow
before turning andxheading for the steps.

Nylan looked down at the cradle.  A daughter coming?  That was hard to
believe as well.

LXX

NYLAN TOOK ONE end of the saw and looked across the half-cubit-thick
fir trunk to Huldran.  "Ready?"  Another trunk lay beside the path,
ready for their efforts when they finished cutting and splitting the
first.

"Ready as you are, scr."  The broad-shouldered marine grinned.

"I hope," Nylan grunted as he pulled the blade handle toward him,
"you're a lot more ready than that."

"Do we really need this wood now?"  asked Huldran.

"We could get more storms.  Even if we don't, do you think it will go
to waste?  After this winter?  Besides, we can't plant now.  We're just
about out of wood planking for new fixtures, and there's only so much
equipment for people to hunt.  Also, we'll need wood for the kitchen
stove and," Nylan laughed, "to defrost the bathhouse."

"You used it more than I did," pointed out Huldran.

"We probably used it more than about half the guards did together."

"If we get more guards, they'll have to use it.  You know what standing
next to Denalle is like?"

"Do I want to find out?"

Huldran shook her head over the motion of the saw.

"I was afraid you'd say that."

As they sawed, Gerlich opened the tower door, and he and Narliat walked
out across the causeway and leaned their skis against the low wall near
the end of the causeway.  Gerlich carried his great bow, the second
one, since the first had broken, and both bore packs.

"Off hunting?"  asked Nylan, without stopping his efforts with the
saw.

"We'll see what we can find," Gerlich answered.  "Now that it's warmer,
and Narliat's learned to ski better, he can help me pack back whatever
we get."  The hunter grinned.  "There might even be another one of
those big red deer."  The grin faded.  "Sometimes, Engineer, sometimes
..."

"I'm just an engineer," Nylan admitted.

"He is also a mage," added Narliat.

"I know that," said Gerlich.  "He's the one who doesn't."  The tall man
hoisted his skis.  "We need to be off."

The two carried their skis up the trail toward the top of the ridge.

"That's a case of white demon leading the white demon," puffed out
Huldran.

"He brings back food."

"Sometimes .. . and he's not shy about letting the whole tower know."

When Nylan and Huldran finished the first cut, a piece of trunk a
little over a cubit in length lay on the stones of the causeway.

"Do we split or keep sawing?"  asked Huldran.

"Saw another," suggested Nylan.

"This is a lot of sawing for a trunk that's not all that thick."

"It's as thick as a single horse can drag.  Anything bigger, we'd have
to saw where it was felled, and I don't want to struggle with a saw in
chest-deep snow."  Nylan paused, and Huldran staggered.

"Tell me when you're going to stop," she said.

"Sorry."  Nylan tried to catch his breath, grateful that the air was no
longer cold enough to bite into his lungs.

"Ready?"  asked Huldran after several moments.  "Let's forget about
splitting until we get this thing cut."

They resumed sawing, even as Fierral marched out with nearly a squad of
guards.  All of them went up to the stable, and brought back three
mounts, on which were strapped the other crosscut saw, and two of the
four axes.

"More wood?"  asked Nylan, pausing with the saw, then adding, too late,
to Huldran, "I'm stopping."

Huldran stumbled back several steps, and barely kept from toppling into
the deeper snow only by grabbing onto Rienadre.

"I'm sorry, Huldran."

"Scr .. . please?"

Fierral shook her head.  "There's not much else we can do right now. So
we'll cut and trim as much as we can.  We'll leave the smaller limbs in
cut lengths for later in the year when we can bring them back with the
cart, and we'll drag back the trunks.  Saryn thinks we should set aside
more and more to start seasoning so that we'll have a supply for making
planks."

"She's probably right."

After Fierral and the squad trudged up the trail to the ridge, both
Nylan and Huldran took a break, for some water and other necessities,
before they resumed.  As they sawed, Ayrlyn and Saryn came and trudged
up to the stables to feed livestock, along with Istril, who was worried
about the mounts.

When the three returned, Nylan and Huldran had only finished five more
sections.

"You two are slow," jibed Saryn.

Nylan took his hands off the saw-and Huldran staggered again, almost
toppling into the snow-and gestured.  "You want to take this end?"

"Ah ... no, thank you, Nylan.  I'm working on finishing those dividers
for the fourth level."

"I thought we were out of wood for that sort of thing," said Huldran,
leaning on the now-immobile saw.

"They were rough-cut eight-days ago.  The finish work is what takes the
time," answered Saryn.

"What about you, Ayrlyn?"  asked Nylan.  "Room dividers?"

"Healing.  I'm worried about this rash little Dephnay's got.  It keeps
coming back.  And Ellysia's having trouble nursing, and there aren't
any milk substitutes here."

"We need a few goats or cows, you think?"  asked the engineer.

"We need everything."  Ayrlyn shook her head as she left with the
others.

"Scr, if you stop to talk to everyone, this trunk's still going to be
here by the time we plant crops."  Huldran cleared her throat.  "And I
did ask if you'd let me know when you stop sawing.  Twice."

"Sorry."  Nylan looked down at the slush underfoot and used his boot to
sweep it away from where he stood.  "All right?"

Before the next interruption, they managed almost a dozen more cuts,
leaving them with most of the first trunk cut into lengths to be split.
Despite the gloves, Nylan could feel blisters forming on his hands, and
the soreness growing in his arms and shoulders.

They were halfway through yet another cut, one that would leave only a
few more cuts to finish the second trunk, when the horses reappeared on
the ridge, dragging more fir trunks-two each-down the not-quite-slushy
packed snow of the trail toward the tower.

Fierral and her squad were laughing by the time they reached the
causeway and stacked the six trunks up.

"You two are so slow."

"Do you want to do this?"  asked Huldran, without slowing her sawing.

With grins, Denalle and Rienadre shook their heads.

"We'll just bring in the trunks, thank you," added Fierral.  "Has
Kadran rung the triangle yet?"

"No."  But as Nylan spoke, Kadran came out and rang the triangle for
the midday meal.

"Good timing," added Selitra.

Huldran let go of the saw, and Nylan stumbled forward and rammed the
saw handle into his gut, so hard that he exhaled with a grunt.

"So sorry, scr."  She grinned.

"All right," Nylan mumbled.  "Next time I'll remember."

"What was all that about?"  asked Kadran.

"Nothing," answered Nylan.  "What are you serving?"

"Venison, your leftover venison, spiced with pine tips, a few not quite
moldy potatoes, and a handful of softened pine nuts.  The bread is more
bitter than ever, but the healer says it's edible."

"It's better than starving."

"Not much," commented Berlis, as she followed Denalle and Rienadre into
the tower.

Fierral, Selitra, and Weindre did not go inside, but led the horses
back up to the stables.

"More wood will help," said the cook.  "When will you have some
split?"

"Mid-afternoon," Nylan guessed.

"I'll send Hryessa and Murkassa out for it.  They can take that kind of
cold."  Kadran paused.  "It's not really that cold anymore, but they
think it is.  Flatlanders!"  She snorted.

"You can tell she's from the Purgatory Mountains," said Huldran as
Kadran left.  "Let's finish the last cut before we eat.  Fierral and
the others will take that long to get the horses settled anyway.  Then
we can try splitting what we've sawed when we get back."

Nylan took up his end of the saw once more.

After the midday meal, Nylan picked up one of the axes and looked at
the sections of trunk.  "I don't know."

He lifted the axe and brought it down.  The axe head buried itself in
the wood, which creaked, but did not split.  He lifted the axe, and the
wood came with it.  So he brought wood and axe down on the frozen
ground together.  It took him two more attempts before the circular
chunk of wood split into two unequal sections.

"I think sawing is easier."  Nylan panted as he half leaned on the axe
handle.

"Let me try."

"Be my guest."  Nylan handed the axe to Huldran.

Her first attempt also stuck in the larger log section, but the second
effort split that section in two.  "Only took me two."  The blond guard
smiled at Nylan.  "Splitting's easier."

"You were working on a smaller section.  Try one of the big ones."

Huldran shrugged and lifted the axe again.  It took her two attempts to
split the log chunk.  "It's tough.  Maybe we don't have the
technique."

"Green wood is harder, I think."

They alternated efforts, slowly improving, until they had reduced the
sawed sections into chunks of stove and furnace wood.  The guards who
passed the wood-splitting avoided commenting after a quick look at
Nylan's face.

About mid-afternoon, as promised by Kadran, Hryessa and Murkassa peered
out from the tower door, some time after Nylan and Huldran had returned
to sawing another green fir trunk.

"We've got plenty there for you," said the engineer.

Hryessa stepped out quickly, then stopped by the pile of split wood,
looking at the open jackets and the two sweating figures.  Her breath
formed a faint white cloud as she spoke.  "It's still cold here.  It is
not as bad as before, but..."  She shrugged.  "Yet you are hot."

"It's so cold up here that you'd think the low landers would leave us
alone, wouldn't you?"  asked Huldran, not stopping her sawing.

Nylan just kept moving his end of the saw.

Murkassa, stooping to fill her arms with split wood, shook her head
sadly.  "They are men."

"It is sad, in a way," added Hryessa, as she struggled back into the
tower, leaving Huldran and Nylan to their sawing.

"I'm not sure it's sad being a man," Nylan puffed as he kept the blade
moving.

"It is if you're as hidebound as the locals are."

"The women have it much worse."

"For now," pointed out Huldran.

"Point taken," Nylan said.  "Let's take a break."  As he slowed the
saw, he glanced to the west where the sun hung just above the
Westhorns.

The tower door opened, and Murkassa and Hryessa trooped out again, this
time accompanied by Jaseen and Kadran.

"They said you had a lot of wood here," explained Jaseen, glancing over
the pile.  "You two make a good team."

"True," said Huldran.  "I don't like taking breaks, and he won't quit
until the job's done."

"I need something to drink," Nylan told Huldran.  She nodded, and he
walked into the tower and then out through the north door and through
the archway, where most of the ice had slowly melted, leaving the split
stone floor perpetually damp.  He made his way to the laundry area
where both tubs, full of clothes and chill water, stood with no one
nearby.  Nylan held out a hand toward the stove.  It was warm.

He shrugged.  With little soap, soaking helped.  He wondered if some of
the recently cut and split wood had found its way into the bathhouse
warming stove.  Why not, now?

The water was beginning to flow more regularly, and Nylan drank from
the laundry tap, trying not to spill too much on the floor, then used
the jakes.  As he walked back, he passed Siret, carrying Kyalynn, as he
started through the north tower door.

"You have the laundry detail?"  he asked.

"Yes, scr.  It's better that way now that I'm so far along.  I still do
my blade practice and exercises, though."

Nylan shook his head.  "Don't worry about it.  Letting the water warm
to room temperature probably helps get things cleaner, too."

"I hadn't planned it that way ..."

"Don't tell anyone."  With a grin, Nylan held the door, then closed it
after them.

"You took long enough," said Huldran.

"Some things take a little time."  He took up his end of the saw,
looking at the third or so of the trunk that remained to be cut.

Before they finished cutting two more lengths, the kitchen crew had
carted off all the split wood, and Nylan had asked Jaseen to carry one
armful out to the bathhouse stove.

"You might get cleaner clothes that way ... also warmer wash water," he
told the med tech  Except she's more like a healer now.  No med techs
on the Roof of the World, he thought.

"Sounds like a good idea."  Jaseen winked at him.

Nylan ignored the wink, wondering why she had offered the gesture, and
kept sawing.  After they finished sawing their fifth trunk, with the
sun starting to drop behind the western peaks, they began splitting.

Whheeeee .. . eeeee .. .

At the sound of horses, Nylan glanced uphill.  Fierral led the three
horses over the ridge, each dragging two mid-sized trunks.

Huldran and Nylan looked at each other, then at the three trunks piled
by the trail road.

"We're never going to gel caught up."

"Just think of it this way.  We're working on next winter.  So we can
burn wood all winter long and be warm," said Nylan.  "And have warm
showers and water that's only cold, not liquid ice."

"It does sound better when you put it that way."  Huldran picked up the
axe again and split a half-trunk section into quarters, then the larger
quarter in half, before handing the axe back to Nylan.

"You're going to be stiff, Engineer," laughed Fierral as the logging
crew stacked six more long trunks beside the trail path.

"Since you're done for the day," grunted Nylan, splitting another
section, "let Huldran have the other axe so we can finish this.  Then,
your people can take down the split wood when they go in."

Fierral unstrapped the axe, and Huldran took it.

Denalle, winding up one of the hauling ropes, groaned.

"You want to do what the engineer's doing?"  asked Fierral.

"Been doing it all day ..."  mumbled Rienadre.

"You got breaks.  There were six of us."  Fierral raised her voice.
"Denalle, Rienadre, and Berlis-you don't have to climb to the stable,
but you get to cart in wood.  Selitra, Weindre, and I will stable and
rub down the horses."

Several groans echoed around the causeway.

"You want to be warm-you cart wood."

Fierral, Selitra, and Weindre started up the shadowed snow trail to the
stables with the horses.  The other three guards carried sets of skis
into the tower, then straggled back across the causeway to stack wood
in their arms.

Huldran held her axe for a moment and looked at Nylan.  They both
grinned.  Then, Nylan set down his axe and massaged his right shoulder
with his gloved left hand.

"I'm already sore, and there's two days' work stacked behind us."

"We want to be warm next winter.  Someone told me that," returned the
stocky blond guard.

Nylan looked at the four cut, but unsplit, trunk sections.  "There
aren't too many left here."

"Here comes Gerlich," said Huldran, "but I don't see Narliat."

"Maybe he's following the great hunter."

"Maybe .. . except he always likes to get to the food first."  Huldran
brought the axe down again.

Nylan followed her example, and by the time Gerlich dragged his bundle
up to the causeway, they were cleaning the axes.  Rienadre was stacking
another armful of wood, but the other guards had not returned for their
third load.

"Where's Narliat?"  asked Huldran.

"Gone," answered Gerlich.  "I was trying to pack this boar-thing up the
slope, and when I stopped, he was gone."  The hunter gestured to the
dead boar.  "This is heavy.  Maybe not quite as heavy as a red deer,
but there's a lot of meat there."

Again, Nylan could sense the wrongness about Gerlich's words, and he
instinctively looked for Ayrlyn, but the healer was nowhere around, not
that she had any reason to be out in the twilight and cold.

"It does look like a lot," Nylan temporized.

"Sneaky little bastard, anyway," said Rienadre as she staggered away
under a load of wood.

"He was born here, not on Heaven," said Gerlich, setting his skis
against the wall by the door.  "I'm going to get Saryn, to see if she
can help me butcher this."

As he went inside, Kadran came out to ring the triangle.  She looked
toward the carcass.  "The hunter's back.  What's that?"

"Gerlich brought back a boar," answered Huldran.  "Of course, he lost
Narliat along the way."

"Why does this happen to us?"  asked the cook.  "We've got a thin soup
and barely enough bread, and he brings in a juicy boar, and everyone's
going to complain and ask why we've got soup."  She rang the
triangle.

"We're coming!"  called Fierral.

Saryn and Ayrlyn followed Gerlich across the causeway, Saryn bearing
the tripod and the hooks.  Gerlich hoisted the carcass into place after
Saryn set the tripod into the packed snow of the trail beyond the end
of the causeway stones.

"We'll gut this and rough-cut it now," said Saryn, "and stack the
sections in the archway by the north door.  That's plenty cold.  Then
Kyseen and Kadran can figure out what to cook and when later tonight or
in the morning."

"Fine," said Gerlich.  "Fine."

"Another good meal," offered Weindre as she, Selitra, and Fierral
passed the tripod.

"Not tonight," said Ayrlyn.  "Tomorrow."

Selitra nodded to Gerlich, but the hunter did not return the gesture.

"Let's take some wood."  Fierral looked at the remaining split
sections.

"Trust Denalle to leave some," muttered Weindre, bending to scoop
lengths into her arms.

"There's not that much left," said Fierral.

"I'll take a load, too," said Nylan.  "That should do it."

"I'll rack the axes," offered Huldran.

"Thanks."  Nylan followed the guards down to the lower level and into
the far kitchen corner, and the makeshift wood bins there.

"See!"  snapped Kyseen, stirring a kettle.  "Even the engineer carts
wood."

Nylan nodded after dumping his armload and trudged to the bathhouse to
wash up.  The wash tubs were empty, and tilted to dry.  He supposed the
clothes were hanging on lines around the tower, on one side of the
fifth level, usually.

Fierral stood in one shower stall, using the tap to rinse her face and
hands.  In another was Selitra, stripped to the waist.  Nylan passed
and quickly looked away.

He used the tap valve in the laundry area to wash his hands and face,
blotting the chill water from his face with his hands, and shaking the
water off his hands in turn.

"Still better than trying to find the stream."  Fierral laughed as she
joined him in walking back to the great room.

"That's true.  I hope we can get enough wood to keep the place warmer
next winter."

"That would be nice."

Nylan slipped into his spot on the bench before Ryba or Gerlich had
arrived.  For a moment, he just sat, his head in his hands, realizing
just how tired he was, and how sore he was going to be-and there were
days more of wood sawing and splitting to come!  Maybe it would improve
his muscular condition, but would he survive it?

Ayrlyn sat down across from him.  Neither spoke for a time, until Nylan
finally lifted his head.

"Hard day?"  Ayrlyn asked.

"Yes.  I wasn't built to be a lumberjack."

"Thin soup, again," said Ayrlyn.  "They won't like it."

Kadran's and Ayrlyn's prediction seemed fulfilled.  As the seats
filled, Nylan listened.  "..  . thin soup, and there's a big pig
carcass in the back archway..."  "... always hold out a good meal for
tomorrow when we get crap today ..."

"Why do the hunters always bring the good stuff in late?"

Holding Dephnay in a half pack, Ellysia sat at the second table, beside
Siret and Kyalynn.  Siret cradled Kyalynn in her arms.  Dephnay kept
squirming until Ellysia put the child up to her shoulder and patted her
back.

Istril sat down heavily across from Siret and beside Hryessa, and then
Ryba walked past the two mothers and eased herself into her chair.  "I
see Gerlich isn't here."

"Not yet."

"He's washing," added Ayrlyn.

Ryba waited until Gerlich sat down.  "I understand that Narliat left,"
she said evenly.

Gerlich turned to face the marshal.  "I was pulling the carcass up the
hill.  When I looked back he was gone."

"Just like that?"

"That boar was heavy, and I didn't have enough rope for both of us."

"Did Narliat say anything before he left?"  Ryba nodded to Ayrlyn.

"No.  He talked about how he'd never be an arms man again, but he's
said that a number of times."  Gerlich took a short swallow of tea from
his mug.

Again, Nylan could sense the whiteness, the partial wrongness
surrounding the hunter's answers.

Kyseen set one of the heavy caldrons on the table, then used the ladle
to fill Ryba's bowl trencher  Kadran followed with the baskets of
bread.

"Did he say anything else?"  Ryba asked.

"Nothing special."

"Where do you think he went?"

"I don't know.  He was headed west, I think, but he could have doubled
back or turned north or south."

"He won't go south, not far," said Ayrlyn.  "Straight south is just
more mountains.  Southwest leads to the local equivalent of the hottest
demons' hell.  It's a place called the Grass Hills, except there's not
much grass, they say."

"West or north, then," observed Ryba with a nod.  "And that means the
locals will know more about us.  Well... they would sooner or later."
She paused, then added, "I'm glad you were able to bring back that
boar."

"My pleasure, Ryba.  My pleasure."

Nylan and Ayrlyn exchanged glances, and Ryba shook her head.

Gerlich frowned.

"We'll have solid meals tomorrow," Ryba added.  "Might I have some
bread?"

Nylan passed her the basket.  The soup was more tasty than many
previous efforts, and hot, for which he was grateful.  The bread was
bitter, but the bitterness didn't bother him.  His shoulders were tight
and ached, and while the tea helped, it didn't help enough.

Later, after a meal of small talk and speculation about how soon the
snow would really melt, Nylan dragged himself up to the top level,
following Ryba.

He sat on the end of the couch.  "Gerlich isn't telling everything."

"He's lying," Ryba said tiredly, shifting her weight on the couch.  "I
didn't need you and Ayrlyn to tell me that.  He's lied from the
beginning."

"Are you going to let him keep doing this?  You killed Mran."

"Gerlich hasn't openly defied me, or you, or anyone.  We know he's
lying, but knowing and proving it aren't the same thing."  Ryba eased
her legs into another position.  "I hate this.  Now my legs get swollen
all the time.  I'm already regarded as a tyrant by some, and I can't
throw him out or kill him until he gives some obvious reason.  He
won't, though, because he can't stand the hot weather below, and that
makes it even worse.  He wants to be marshal, and he's plotting to
replace me."

"How?  No one likes him, except maybe Selitra."

"Who said anything about liking him?  He's using Narliat, I'm sure,
although I can't see it clearly, to try to find some local backing."

"Local backing?"

Ryba laughed harshly.  "Gerlich is a man.  He can make the argument
that the locals can't take Westwind, but they can ensure that one of
their kind-a good old boy-runs it.  He'll try to join the local gentry,
or whatever passes for it and, if we're not careful, he could."

"What about your ... visions?"

"They show Westwind surviving.  But it could survive under Gerlich's
descendants as well."  Ryba took a deep breath and shifted position
again.  "I hate this."

Nylan frowned.  Like Gerlich, Ryba wasn't telling the whole story. Then
again, were any of them telling the whole story?  He licked his lips.

"We need some rest."  Ryba leaned over and blew out the small candle,
then stripped off her leathers and eased into her tentlike nightgown.

Nylan undressed in the dark.

LXXI

NYLAN SET THE cradle-pale wood glistening in the indirect light that
filtered through the single arma glass window of the tower's top
level-where Ryba would see it.

Then he drew into the dimness behind the stones of the chimney and
central pedestal and waited, sensing her climbing the steps.  In time,
the sound of her steps, slower slightly with each passing day and heavy
with the weight of the child she carried, announced her arrival.

Nylan watched as she bent down, as her fingers touched the wood,
stroked the curved edges of the side panels, as her eyes focused on the
single tree rising out of the rocky landscape in the center of the
headboard.

"Do you like it?"  He stepped out from the corner.  While the cradle
was no surprise to her, he had tried to keep the details from her as he
had finished the carving and smoothing-all the laborious finish work.

Ryba straightened, her face solemn.  "Yes.  I like it.  So will she,
when she is older, and so will her children."

"Another vision?"  he asked, trying to keep his voice light.

"You make everything well, Nylan, from towers to cradles."  Ryba sank
onto the end of the bed.

"I didn't do so well with the bathhouse."

"Even that will be fine.  We just didn't have enough wood this winter
to keep it as warm as we needed."

"The water lines needed to be covered more deeply."  His eyes went to
the cradle again.

So did Ryba's.  "It is beautiful.  What do you want me to say?"

"I don't know."  Nylan didn't know, only that, again, something was
missing.  "I don't know."

Part III THE SPRING OF WEST WIND

LXXII

IN THE COLD starlight, the short man struggles through the knee-deep
snow, snow that is heavy and damp, that clings to everything but his
leathers.  The snow glistens with a whiteness that provides enough
light for him to continue.  His boots crunch through the icy crust
covering the road that will not be used by others for at least another
handful of eight-days.

The soft sound of wings mixes with the light breeze that sifts through
the limbs of the pines and firs, and a dark shadow crosses the sky,
then dives into a distant clearing.

The traveler shivers, but his feet keep moving, mechanically, as if he
is afraid to stop.

Occasionally, he glances back over his shoulder, as though he flees
from someone, but his tracks remain the only ones on the slow-melting
snow.  On his back he carries a pack, nearly empty.

As he lifts one foot and then the other, his mittened fingers touch the
outline of the cylindrical object in the pouch that swings around his
neck under jacket, tunic, and shirt.  He tries not to shiver as he
thinks of the object, instead continuing to concentrate on reaching the
warmer lands beyond the Westhorns, the lower lands where the heights do
not freeze a man into solid ice.

He puts one foot in front of the other.

LXXIII

NYLAN GLANCED FROM the bed to the half-open tower window.  Outside, the
sun shone across the snow fields and rivulets formed pathways on the
snow, draining off the grainy white surface and into the now-slushy
roads and pathways.  In a few scattered places, the brown of earth, the
dark gray of rock, or the bleached tan of dead grass peered through the
disappearing snow cover.  Despite the carpet of fir branches, much of
the road from the tower up to the stables was more quagmire than
path.

The east side of the tower was half ringed with meltwater that froze at
night and cleared by day, so much that from the eastern approach to the
causeway, the tower resembled the moated castle that Nylan had rejected
building.

His eyes flicked from the window back to Ryba, whose own eyes were
glazed with concentration and the effort of measured breathing.  On the
other side of the lander couch stood Ayrlyn, her fingers resting
lightly on Ryba's enlarged abdomen.  Beside her was Jaseen.

"I'm hot," panted the marshal.

The joined couches had been moved toward the window because the ice and
snow melting off the slate stone roof had revealed more than a few
leaks that dripped down into the top level of the tower.

Nylan used the clean but tattered cloth to blot the dampness off Ryba's
face, then put his hand on her forehead.

"That feels good."

"Good," affirmed Nylan.

"Just a gentle push ... gentle .. ."

"Hurts ... tight..."  the marshal responded.  "Dylless?"

"She's doing fine, Ryba," said Ayrlyn.

"I'm ... not..."  Ryba shivered.  "Cold now."

After he drew the blankets around her shoulders, Nylan blotted Ryba's
damp forehead again.  "Easy," he said.  "You're doing fine, too."

"Easy ... for you ... to say."

"I know."  Nylan kept his tone light, although, with his perceptions,
he could sense that Ryba's labor was going well, if any labor, and the
effort and pain involved, could be said to be going well.

"Push ... a little harder."

"Am pushing ..."

"Stop..."  "..  . tell me to push, then not push .. . make up your
mind..."

Nylan held back an inadvertent grin at Ryba's asperity.

"We're trying to do this with as little stress on you and Dylless as
possible."  "... little stress?"

Jaseen nodded, but said nothing.

Nylan patted away the sweat on Ryba's forehead, then squeezed her arm
gently.

"Push!"  demanded Ayrlyn.

The marshal pushed, turning red.

"You have to breathe, too," reminded Ayrlyn after the push.

"Hot..."  gasped Ryba.

Nylan eased the blankets away from her shoulders.

"All right... get ready .. ," said Ayrlyn.

Through it all, Nylan stood by, occasionally touching Ryba, infusing a
sense of order, though that order was not essential.  In the end, a
small head crowned, and Jaseen eased the small bloody figure into the
light, and onto the Roof of the World.

"In a bit, you'll need to push again," said Ayrlyn.

"I... know ... let me see her," panted Ryba.

When the cord was tied and cut, Ayrlyn eased the small figure onto
Ryba's chest.  Dylless seemed to look around, then turned toward her
mother's breast, her mouth opening and fastening in place.

"You little piglet," murmured Ryba.

"Like her mother," affirmed Nylan.  "She's concentrating on what's
important."

His senses extended over his daughter, taking in the hair that would be
silver and the narrower face that was also from his Svennish heritage.
In some ways, almost, she felt like Kyalynn, Siret's silver-haired
daughter.

Nylan swallowed, then looked away toward the window, back out to the
spring, and the melting snow, back out to the few green shoots that
hurried through the patches of white.

Not now, he thought, not now, and he forced a smile, which turned into
a real one as he watched Dylless, even though his chest was tight, and
a sense of chaos swirled through his thoughts.

"They're both fine," Ayrlyn affirmed.

Jaseen nodded.

Ryba's eyes closed, a half-smile on her face.

LXXIV

"DON'T WE KNOW where we're heading?  Or when?"  Hissl walks to the
barracks door.  By looking out and down the street, he can see the haze
of light green-the grasslands that stretch all the way from Clynya to
the South Branch of the River Jeryna.

Koric shrugs.  "Lord Sillek is not telling anyone.  We know we will be
moving against either Lord Ildyrom or against those angels on the Roof
of the World.  One way or the other ... we have to be ready."

"He hasn't said?"  asks the white wizard.

"No.  Rimmur said he almost took off his head for asking."  Koric
laughs.  "I can't say as I blame Lord Sillek.  If people knew where or
when, they'd be ready, and our arms men would be killed.  As it is,
everyone's waiting for him to make a mistake, any mistake.  Everyone
talks.  You know how hard it is to keep things quiet.  Ildyrom probably
has spies in every tavern in Clynya, and a few other places as well, if
you know as to what I mean."

"Yes, I know."  Hissl smiles faintly.

"You seen any sign of the Jeranyi, yet, in your glass?"  Koric asks.

"Not anywhere close to the grasslands, but the grass is short, and the
way's still muddy."

"Could they come up the river?  Don't you wizards have trouble with
running water?"  Koric fingers the hilt of the big blade on the bench
before him.  ' "I can see what's on the water, not what's in it or
under it.  But they wouldn't swim all the way upstream from Berlitos." 
Hissl forces a chuckle.

"No, Wizard, I guess they wouldn't.  But you be looking for them.  I
wouldn't want any surprises.  Neither would Lord Sillek."

"I'll be looking," Hissl replies.  "I'll certainly be looking"

LXXV

FROM THE CAUSEWAY, Ayrlyn and Nylan looked at the fields and the
stretches of mud that had been crude roads the previous fall and
snow-covered trails through the winter.  The fields and meadows were
white and brown, still primarily white, although long green shoots
poked through the white in places.

"Snow lilies."  Ayrlyn pointed to a green stem rising from the snow.

"Some things will grow in the strangest conditions," mused Nylan. "They
grow through the snow, and we can't even walk up the hill without
sinking knee-deep in mud.  We're not moving much anywhere for a
while."

"The stables are even more of a mess because all that packed snow
turned into ice and then melted all at once.  Fierral's in a terrible
mood.  Then, I'm surprised she's not that way more often."

"Why?"  asked the engineer.

"How would you like to be the chief arms master under Ryba?  Fierral
knows that nothing she does will ever match Ryba.  That means she'll
always be the chief flunky."

"Hadn't thought about that, but it makes sense."

"Of course it does."  Ayrlyn snorted.

"We won't be seeing any bandits or invaders for a while, I'd bet."

"No traders, either," pointed out Ayrlyn.

"You could ride out, and it would be dry when you returned."

"If it didn't rain, but I couldn't bring much back without the cart,
and how would I get it out of here?"

"Hadn't thought about mud."  Nylan turned his eyes downhill and to the
east.  Below the lower out falls the cold rushing water, both from the
runoff diverted from around the bathhouse and tower and from the
drainage system, had cut an even deeper gouge through the low point of
the muddy swathe that had been a road, a depression that was fast
becoming a small gorge.

"I knew I should have built a culvert there," muttered Nylan.

"Exactly when did you have time?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"The road to the ridge needs to be paved."  Nylan ignored her question,
since the only free time he'd had, had been after the snow had fallen.
"It's almost impossible to leave the tower anyway."  He glanced toward
the fir trunks stacked beyond the causeway, noting that the trunks on
the bottom of the pile were more than half sunk into the mud.  "I
suppose we can cut and split the rest of that wood."

"You always have to have something to do, don't you?"

"There's always more to do than time to do it," he pointed out.

She nodded slowly.  "Do you think that when you die someone will build
a huge stone memorial that says, 'he accomplished the impossible'?  Or
'he did more than any three other people'?"

"No one will build me any memorials, Ryba's prophecies
notwithstanding."  Nylan paused, and then his voice turned sardonic.
"Don't you know that's why I built the tower?  It's the only memorial
I'll ever have, and I'm the only one who knows it-except you."

"You're impossible, Engineer."  Ayrlyn turned to him, and her eyes were
dark behind the brown.  "She sees the future, but you take the weight
of that future."

"I suppose so."  Nylan shrugged.  "But who else will?  The guards, even
Ryba, laugh at my building, my obsession- I'm sure that's what it's
called.  The predictably obsessed engineer."  His words turned bitter.
"If this were a novel or a tri deo thriller, the editors would cut out
all the parts about building.  That's boring.  You know, heroes are
supposed to slay the enemy, but no one has to worry about shelter or
heat or coins or stables or whether the roads need to be paved or
whether you need bridges or culverts to keep them from being
impassible.  Bathhouses are supposed to build themselves, didn't you
know?  Ryba orders sanitation, and it just happens.  No matter that the
snow is deep enough to sink a horse without a sign.  No matter that
most guards would rather stink than use cold water.  No matter that
poor sanitation kills more people in low-tech cultures than battles.
But building is boring.  So is making better weapons, I suppose.  Using
them is respected and glorious and fires the imagination.  Frig ...
every mythological smith has been the butt of jokes, and I'm beginning
to understand why."

"You're angry, aren't you?"

"Me?  The calm, contained engineer?  Angry?"  Nylan swallowed.  "Never
mind.  I didn't mean to upset you."

"You didn't upset me, Nylan.  And I do understand.  Do you think that
going out trading is any different?  We need all these goods to
survive, but trading isn't glamorous like winning battles.  Do you know
what it's like to have every man stare at your hair and run his eyes
over you as if you wore nothing?  To know you can't lift a blade
because women are less than commodities, and almost anything goes?  And
if you do use your blade, you won't be able to trade for what you
need?"  Her voice softened and took on an ironic tone.  "Besides, no
one wants to trade with someone who kills some idiot and then has to
empty her guts on her own boots."  The redhead laughed.  "They don't do
tri deo dramas about people who trade for flour and chickens,
either."

"No.  They focus on the great heroes," Nylan said.  "Like Ryba."

"Part of that's not easy, either," Ayrlyn pointed out.  "She does see
things, you know."

"I know."

"It must be terrible."

"I suppose so."  Nylan didn't want to say more, feeling as though he'd
poured out more than he'd ever intended, and Ayrlyn wasn't even the one
with whom he slept.

"I mean it.  If she has a vision, or whatever it is, can she trust it?
Does she dare to oppose it?  What should she do to make it occur, if
it's an outcome she wants?  What are the options and trade-offs?"

"You still talk like a comm officer, sometimes."

"I probably always will."  A brief laugh followed.  "Don't you see,
though?  What she has is a terrible curse.  It's much easier to be a
healer, or a black mage.  We do the best we can, and, if we make
mistakes, we aren't faced with the idea that we knew in advance and
still failed."

"She doesn't see everything."

"That's worse.  How can she tell what might be a wish, or what leads to
what she sees?"  Ayrlyn shivered.

Nylan moistened his lips, and his eyes flicked toward the top of the
tower.  The wind rose, and a fluffy white cloud covered the sun, and
Nylan shivered also, but not because of the darkness or the chill that
swept across Tower Black and the causeway where they stood.

LXXVI

"YOUR SON, LORD Sillek."  The midwife turns to Sillek, her face blank
with the concealed expression of one who felt Sillek had no rights to
be in the room.

Sillek glances from the small figure in the midwife's arms to Zeldyan's
washed-out and sweat-plastered face, then back to the child and the
fuzz upon his scalp that already bears a blond tinge.  He smiles
broadly at both his son and his consort.

"Have you a name?"  asks the midwife.

Sillek ignores the question and bends over the wide bed.  His lips
brush Zeldyan's cheek.  "I love you."  His fingers squeeze hers for a
moment.  "Thank you.  He's healthy and wonderful.  You are, too."

"May I?"  asks the Lady of Lornth, her arms reaching for the infant as
Sillek steps back.

"You?"  asks the midwife.

"He's my son."

Sillek's eyes fasten on the midwife until she lowers the boy into
Zeldyan's arms.

Zeldyan eases the seeking mouth into place and smiles faintly.  "His
name is Nesslek, after his father and grandsire."

"Nesslek ..."  muses Sillek.  "You had that thought out all along,
didn't you?"

"Of course."  Zeldyan's quick grin fades.  "I still feel like a herd of
something ran over me."

"Would you like a wet nurse now?"  asks the midwife.  "Lady
Ellindyja..."

"No.  Thank you.  Not now."  Zeldyan's arms tighten ever so slightly
around her son.

Sillek watches both, a smile on his lips and in his eyes.

LXXVII

TWO HUNDRED CUBITS uphill from Tower Black, still well below the rocks
that rose into the sides of the stable canyon, Nylan looked at his
forge site.  Four corners marked with rocks, that was all, not that
there was much he could do until the planting was complete-food was the
first priority.

With a forge, he might be able to make a simple plow, if he could bend
metal around a wooden frame.  He certainly wouldn't have the heat to
forge metal lander alloys-soften them, perhaps, and even that would be
hard.  He'd also need charcoal, lots of it, and that meant work down in
the forest, after it dried out more.

He turned toward the greenery below, the sprigs of grass sprouting even
in the field area, and the sprays of thin white lacy flowers that
seemed to have sprung up everywhere.

Despite the chill that had him in his worn ship jacket, the engineer
took a deep breath of the clean air, glad to be out of the tower.  Then
he started up to the stables.  His first job was to fix the road, and
he needed the crude cart to lug down rocks, piles of rocks.  As he
passed the lander, now used for fodder storage, he could hear Ayrlyn
and the guards as the healer organized the planting detail.

"Those are potatoes?  Where did you get these?"  demanded Denalle.

"We grew them.  The ones we saved are known as seed potatoes," said
Ayrlyn, almost tiredly.  "The number of potatoes we saved for seed
wouldn't have fed anyone for more than an eight-day-and then what would
we have to plant for the next year?"

"We're hungry now."

"Shut up, Denalle," added Rienadre.  "Someone's got to think ahead. You
think there's a food market over the next hill?  Or a seed store?"

"Stuff it!  I'm tired of your superiority.  I'm tired of you, and I'm
tired of this whole planet.  I just want out.  Out!  Do you hear me?"

"I think the whole Roof of the World hears you," added Nylan before the
healer could speak.  "The marshal will let you leave anytime.  The only
question is whether you want to be beaten, raped, killed, or just be a
paid slut once you reach a town."  He shrugged.  "Who knows?  You might
find some peasant nice enough to feed you, shelter you, and give you a
dozen kids."

Denalle glared at the engineer.  Nylan met her eyes evenly.

Then she looked down.  "I hate this place."

"I don't think any of us would have chosen it," Nylan said quietly. "We
just have to make the best of it.  You have any ideas to make it
better, let someone know.  We are listening."  He started toward the
cart, then stopped and asked Ayrlyn, "You don't mind if I use the cart
around here?  I'm going to cart stones."

"Stones?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"I'm going to build a stone culvert and crude bridge where the out
falls cut through the road.  Unless I fix that, it will just get worse.
Then, as I can, I'll be using stones to pave the road from the causeway
to the bridge, and then up the ridge.  Someday, we won't have to worry
about the mud, then."

"I thought you were going to work on a forge."

"I'll probably do both.  I can't use the forge until I make charcoal.
I'd need help with the logs, and that'll have to wait until after
planting."

"That's a lot of stones," said Ayrlyn.  "You can have the cart.  It's
not as though we couldn't come and get it almost immediately."

Nylan grinned and walked toward the stables.

"Use the gray," Ayrlyn called.  "She's used to the cart."

By the time the engineer had the gray harnessed and the cart ready, the
planting detail had left.

He had tucked his blade and scabbard in the narrow space beside the
seat, so he could get it quickly-Ryba had insisted he have it near-and
flicked the worn leather leads.  "Come on, old lady."

His eyes went to the blade.  With the practice that Ryba had also
insisted upon, he was improving, but he still wasn't comfortable with
the blade, even as he found that he could now usually keep from getting
spitted-or the equivalent with the wooden practice blades-and could
actually strike most of the other guards at will, except for Ryba and
Saryn.  He could also run through the exercises with his own
blades-finally-without danger of taking off an ear or other limbs.

He flicked the leads once more, and the gray tossed her head vigorously
but followed him through the mud toward the outcroppings farther up the
gorge from the stable.

Rough stones there were, more than enough, and Nylan slowly filled the
cart until it seemed to sag over the wheels.  By then his back felt as
if it were sagging as well.

"Hard labor-they never told me about this in engineer's school," he
mumbled to the gray.

The mare didn't answer, but chewed the few green shoots she could reach
from where Nylan had tethered her.  She kept chewing as he untethered
her and slowly led her and the creaking wagon down past the stables,
past the smithy site, past the tower and causeway to the gaping hole in
the muddy patch that passed for a road.

Then he began to unload the stones, one after the other, stacking each
where he thought it would be closest to where it would be needed. After
the wagon was empty, he flicked the reins, half dragging the mare from
cropping the white flowers and the tender leaves beneath, and headed
back uphill.

"Nice day, scr," called Hryessa from the causeway, where she had taken
off her boots and was knocking the mud from them against the stones of
the causeway wall.

Behind her, in the low-walled practice area, Llyselle and Siret sparred
with wands, their mounts standing by, since Ryba had decreed that at
least two outriders were to be ready at all times.

"It is, at last."  He waved to Hryessa and kept leading the mare
uphill.

For the second load, Nylan concentrated on finding larger chunks of
stone, the kind he could use.  to frame a large culvert.  Two long
green trunks might help.  Ideally, stone alone would last, but he
couldn't always afford to do the ideal.

After he finished loading the cart, he stretched and tried to massage
his back.  The planting detail was still struggling with mud and seeds
when he returned to the road and began stacking the stones from his
second load.

He glanced to the tower as the triangle sounded once.  Almost before
its echoes died away, Siret and Llyselle galloped up the hill.  The
guards in the planting group laid aside shovels, hoes, and warrens, and
reclaimed bows and blades.

Nylan continued to unload stones until he heard hoofbeats on the trail
down from the ridge.  Then he dropped the last stone and strapped his
scabbard in place.  Only the two Westwind mounts returned, but Llyselle
and Siret each carried another rider.

As the two slowed and picked their way around the gap in the road, and
the gray and the cart, Nylan studied the newcomers-both women, one
brown-haired, one black.  Then he walked toward the causeway.

The silver-haired guards set the two women on the stones at the end of
the causeway.  Both staggered as their feet hit the hard rock.

Nylan arrived after the armed and curious guards of the planting
detail.

The black-haired woman, thin-faced, glanced at Nylan, then at Siret,
then at Llyselle, and back at Nylan.

The engineer glanced around.  Ryba was still in the tower.  Saryn was
out Hunting, although Nylan suspected she was as much keeping an eye on
Gerlich as hunting.  Ayrlyn had been supervising the crop planting and
stood at the back of the now-armed planting group.

"I think they're asking for shelter, scr," said Llyselle, "but I still
have problems with the local tongue."

"I don't trust the dark one," added Siret.

Nylan turned his perceptions on the black-haired woman, wincing as he
did.  An aura of white chaos, laced with red, surrounded her.

"See what I mean, scr?"

Nylan grinned at Siret.  "Your night vision is a Jot better than it
used to be, isn't it?"

She looked down.

"Don't worry."  He glanced at Llyselle.  "Yours is too, isn't it?"

Llyselle looked bewildered.  "I thought most everyone's was.  So I
didn't say anything.  Besides, I hate night duty."

Ayrlyn made her way around the half-dozen guards who had been planting
and stepped up beside Nylan.  He realized that, in their muddy and
tattered work garb, none of them looked terribly prepossessing.

Ryba stepped out of the tower doorway, dressed in clean leathers, both
blades at her waist.  Just inside the door, Nylan could make out
Ellysia, Dylless in one arm, Dephnay in the other.  The marshal
surveyed the group, her eyes halting on the two women.

Both would-be refugees prostrated themselves.  "Refuge, Angel of
Darkness."

"You can get up," she said wryly in Old Anglorat.  "I'm the marshal of
Westwind, not an angel of darkness."  She turned to Nylan and asked,
"Have you talked with them?"

"No.  The brunette seems all right.  The black-haired one is trouble,
filled with chaos."

"Chaos?"

"The white stuff that means no good.  It's like an aura."  Nylan
glanced around.  "She's like a white wizard."

Ryba winced, then turned to Ayrlyn.  "You're the healer.  What do you
think?"

"I'd go with the engineer's assessment."

Ryba looked at the black-haired woman.  "You still carry the evils of
men, and of chaos.  We will not harm you.  We will not receive you.  We
will give you food and let you make your own way."  The black-haired
woman swayed, and put a hand out to hold the causeway wall.

"She's acting," snapped Ayrlyn.

"Faker," added Siret in a low voice.

Nylan nodded in agreement.

"You're sure?"  Ryba asked Ayrlyn.

"Yes."

"You are bid to leave," ordered Ryba.  "Now.  Walk up to the-"

The dark-haired woman turned.  Something glinted in her hand, and she
jumped toward the healer.

Siret's blade flashed down, almost in reflex, cutting across the
dark-haired woman's shoulder and into her chest.  Blood splashed,
striking the stones of the causeway almost as fast as the corpse from
which it came.

Nylan staggered at the wave of whiteness coming from the death.  His
skull felt as if it might split for an instant, before the sensation
subsided to a dull aching.

Ayrlyn eased back and quietly retched into the depression behind the
causeway.

The brown-haired woman flattened herself on the stones.  "Spare me!"

Denalle stepped forward and kicked back me dead woman's hand.  Under it
was a dagger with a jagged blade.

"Nice," said Ryba dryly.  "What about the other?"  Her eyes went to the
groveling brunette.

"No chaos.  We can't tell intent," Nylan said, his eyes darting toward
Ayrlyn, who had finally straightened up.  Their eyes crossed, sharing
the knowledge and the chaotic feeling of death.

"Ayrlyn?  Would you and one of the guards-and the mage"-her eyes
focused on Nylan-"talk with the other one?  If she seems all right,
have Hryessa and Istril get her set up.  If not, feed her, and send her
on her way with some food, not a lot."

Nylan glanced at the marshal, as if to ask if she had any visions.

"Not this time.  They're not always reliable."

Although Rienadre looked puzzled at the exchange, she said nothing.
Ayrlyn nodded almost imperceptibly.

"We've all got work to do.  Let's get on with it."  Ryba turned and
went back into the tower.

"You may rise, woman," Nylan said in Old Anglorat.

The brunette looked up, her eyes going to Siret, who remained mounted,
cleaning the black blade on a scrap of cloth, then to the closed tower
door.

Ayrlyn glanced at Denalle.  "Would you and Rienadre bury ... don't make
a big deal of it, out by the bandits, deep enough ..."

"We'll take care of it, healer," answered Rienadre.

Denalle glanced at Nylan and nodded.

"The rest of you can get back to planting.  I'll be there before too
long," said Ayrlyn.  "Siret and Llyselle, and the mage, are enough
guard for one woman."

Denalle slipped the jagged blade into her belt before she and Rienadre
lugged off the body.

The brunette had gathered herself into a sitting position on the stones
as the majority of the guards left.  The entire left side of her face
was yellow and green from a recent series of bruises.

"Who are you?"  began Ayrlyn.

"Blynnal... I'm from Rohrn ... I... we heard ... there was a place..."
Tears began to stream down her cheeks.  "But ... women ... don't..  .
kill..."

"Why not?"  asked Ayrlyn.  "Men do.  Women have strong arms, too."

"But..."

"Child ..."  said Ayrlyn softly.  "If we are attacked, we defend
ourselves.  Is that wrong?"

"Jrenya, she was strong.  She said no man would ever force her, and you
killed her."

"Why did you and Jrenya come here?"  asked Nylan.

Blynnal's eyes dropped to the stones, to the patch of blood that marked
where Jrenya had fallen.

Ayrlyn and Nylan waited.  So did Siret and Llyselle.  Llyselle's mount
whuffed, and the guard patted its neck.

"Dyemeni, he was my consort, he beat me after Kyel died ... he kept
beating me .. ."  More tears rolled down Blynnal's face.  "Jrenya said
it was wrong.  She said we needed to do something.  When ... the snows
melted ... Dyemeni, he took out his big leather belt... he did ...
things ..."

"What about Jrenya?"  asked Nylan, ignoring the faint glare from
Ayrlyn.  "Why did she come with you?"

"She ... she said, Nortya was mean ..."

"Did Nortya beat her?"  asked Nylan.  "Did Jrenya have bruises like
yours?"

"No ... but... he was mean."

"How was he mean?"  pressed Nylan.  "Did you see him hurt her?"

"No ... but she hated him ... she said ... her father made her join him
... because he was the factor's only son."

"So ... you left Rohrn because your consort beat you?"

Blynnal nodded.

"Did Jrenya kill Dyemeni?"  asked Nylan.

Ayrlyn's eyes widened, as did Siret's.

Blynnal looked down at the stones.

"Did she?"

"I ... don't know .. . She stabbed him, and we ran.  We meant to leave
anyway, but he came home early, and he saw the packs, and he hit me. He
didn't see her."

"What about her consort?"

Again the brunette looked down at the stones.

"She killed him, too, I suppose?"

The faintest of nods answered Nylan.

He looked at Ayrlyn.  "I don't know.  She's weak-probably because
everyone beat her up.  She doesn't seem evil or chaotic ... but two
murders?"

"The dead one did both," pointed out Siret.

"I... was glad..."  admitted Blynnal.  "Dyemeni... hurt me ... so much
.. ."

"Honesty helps," Nylan offered.

The brunette sat on the dust and mud of the causeway stones in her
tattered trousers and tunic.

Ayrlyn glanced from the green and purple side of Blynnal's face to the
two mounted guards.  "What do you two think?  She'll be sharing your
quarters."

"Her problem seems to be men, and we sure don't have too many around
here, especially since the weasel left," said Llyselle.

"The weasel?"  Nylan said inadvertently.

"Narliat."

Ayrlyn looked at Siret.

"I'd say to give her a chance.  First mistake, and she's gone."

The healer looked to Nylan.

"That's my reaction ... but I'm a man."

As the conversation proceeded, Blynnal had turned from one face to the
next, eyes puzzled, almost like a trapped hare.

"I think we agree," said Ayrlyn, "and none of us are exactly happy
about it."  She turned to Blynnal and switched to Old Anglorat.  "We
are not happy with how you came..."

Tears oozed from the local woman's eyes.  "... but... you will have a
chance to prove yourself."

Blynnal threw her arms around Ayrlyn's legs.  "Thank you, great lady.
Thank you!  I will be good.  I will cook.  I will scrub, but do not
send me away."

"You may cook or scrub-we all do.  Even the mage digs and lifts rocks.
But once you prove yourself, we will also teach you the blade."

Blynnal's eyes widened.  "I had not thought..  ."

"You will learn when to use it-and when not to.  Both are important."
Ayrlyn glanced at Nylan.  "I just hope ..."

"So do I."

"She'll be all right," said Siret softly.  "She's just a scared little
rabbit who got with the wrong people.  That other one, though ..."

"Very bad person."  Llyselle shook her head.  "Very bad."

"Anything else?"  asked the healer, looking toward the tower.

"Before you go ... I had a question," said Nylan.  "Could I get two
green trunks, around a half cubit thick, for the bridge?"

Ayrlyn looked over his shoulder at the stones stacked around the gorge
through the road.  "I'll talk to you about that after I get Blynnal
organized with Istril.  But I think we can manage that-if it doesn't
rain."  She gave Nylan a brief smile and touched Blynnal on the
shoulder.  "You need to wash, and to have your hair cut and to get
clean garments..."

As Ayrlyn and her charge left, Llyselle looked to the sky.  "It won't
rain.  I can tell."

Nylan wondered what else the silver-haired guard could tell.  He looked
back at the cart and the stones.  Then he took a deep breath and
started back toward the unbuilt bridge, trying to ignore the thoughts
of the unbuilt smithy.

LXXVIII

TH RAP

Hissl glances up from the table to the half-open door to the outside
landing, half-open to allow in the spring breeze.

"Yes?"

"I seek the great wizard Hissl," comes the voice from beyond the
door.

Hissl rises and picks up the white bronze dagger from the table as he
steps toward the door.  "And why might you seek him?"

The door swings open, but the hooded figure standing there does not
enter the room.

"I'm not exactly interested in cutthroats sneaking around with their
faces hidden."  Hissl's tone is faintly ironic.

"I am not a cutthroat, and I offer you the key to your wishes, honored
Wizard," begins the hooded figure.

"My wishes?  How would you presume to know my wishes?"  asks Hissl.

"An unnamed brethren of yours presumes, not I."  The hooded figure
extends an object..  . very slowly.

Hissl reaches, then draws back his hand.  "Iron!  That is no token of
friendship!"  His fingers tighten around the dagger.

"Look again, I was told to tell you."

Hissl's eyes narrow, but he studies the object on the other's palm.
"Chaos, bound in iron, and yet, the chaos binds the iron.  How can that
be?"

The hooded man steps forward and sets the object on the white oak
table.  "I will leave that for you, and for you to consider."  He turns
and walks down the narrow steps from the upper room.

Behind him, Hissl studies the iron and the chaos which surrounds it.
"But how?  How?"

He finally glances out into the afternoon, but the hooded figure has
vanished into the streets of Clynya, and the spring wind bears no hint
of the stranger or his origin.

LXXIX

THIS TIME, AT the low cries, and the sense of pain, Nylan had not
waited, but followed Ayrlyn up to the third level, and to Istril.

"It'll be all right," insisted the silver-haired guard.  "It will be. I
know."  Her breathing increased, and lines of pain creased her face.
"But I feel better with both of you here."

"You know a lot," said Ayrlyn.  "More than I do."

"What about me?"  said Jaseen.

"You ... too ..."  puffed Istril.

"Don't push yet," cautioned the healer.  "You're not ready."

"Feels that way .. ."  grunted the silver-haired guard.  "Want to push
... whole body says I should."

"Don't... not yet..  . pant... puff, but don't push."

Nylan stood beside the bed that had been a lander couch, waiting,
hoping he would not be needed, feeling, again, almost like an intruder,
for all that he had promised Istril that he and Ayrlyn would be
there.

In the end, besides providing order support, and a touch of healing, he
was not needed, and Istril cuddled her son in her arms, and dampness
streaked her cheeks.

"What are you going to call him?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"Weryl."

Nylan paused.  "Weryl?  That was my grandfather's name, too."

"I know.  I liked the name."  Istril's hand stroked the boy's cheek.
"So small."  Her eyes closed momentarily.  "Tired ... worse than riding
all day ... hurts a lot more, too."

"You'll heal fine," Ayrlyn assured her.

"Just let me finish getting you cleaned up," muttered Jaseen, adding to
Ayrlyn, "That's about the last of that antiseptic."

"We're going to have to develop some local substitutes- something."

Nylan stepped back away from the couch, then stopped and looked at the
boy, another child with the silver fuzz on his scalp, foreshadowing
silver hair like his mother's.  Istril's eyes closed again, and her
breathing smoothed, but she opened them and looked at Nylan.

"Glad ... you keep promises ..."

Although he felt awkward, Nylan stepped forward and touched her wrist.
"You just rest and take care of your son."

"He ... I will," answered Istril, seemingly fighting both pain and
exhaustion.

"Just rest," added Ayrlyn.

Nylan took a last look at the two and then walked to the steps and down
toward the now-empty great room.  Ayrlyn followed.

The engineer looked at the empty tables, then walked to the one window
that was open.  He stood there, in the cool wind that carried the smell
of turned earth, spring flowers, and damp pine needles into the
tower.

"Sometimes..."  For a time, he did not finish the sentence.

"Sometimes, I feel like there's so much I should see, like the
children."

"Both Istril and Siret had silver-headed children," said Ayrlyn.
"That's more than a little strange, since Gerlich is dark-haired."

"Does Relyn have anyone in his family with silver hair?"  asked
Nylan.

"I don't know, but I got the impression that no one has seen anyone
with silver hair like the four of you anywhere on this planet."

"Maybe it's dominant?"  Nylan shook his head.

"That's asking a lot," said Ayrlyn.  "Our hair colors get changed from
this switch from universe to universe.  That I can buy, in a weird sort
of way.  But changing a recessive into a dominant gene?  I don't know
about that."  She pauses.  "Are you sure you don't know more about
this?"

"I've only slept with one person."

"You're telling the truth, and that bothers me.  Because..."

"I know," Nylan sighed.  "Kyalynn, Dylless, and Weryl all feel the
same, with our senses ... don't they?"

Ayrlyn nodded.

"I need to talk to Ryba."

"I'll be here," Ayrlyn said.  "Remember that.  I'll be here."

Nylan looked at the redhead, but she just repeated her words.  "I'll be
here, if you need to talk."

"Thank you."  He took a deep breath and headed for the steps.

Ryba was easing Dylless into the cradle.  So Nylan waited for a time
until his daughter half snorted and slipped into sleep to the gentle
rocking of the cradle.  Already, she seemed larger.

"How is Istril?"  asked Ryba, her tone that of professional concern,
even before Nylan could speak.

"She's fine.  So's her son."  Nylan watched Ryba.

A faint shadow crossed the marshal's face.  "She had a son?"

"She named him Weryl."

"How touching."

Nylan swallowed.  "Dylless isn't the only one, is she?  How did you do
it?"

"How does it feel?  i promised you a son.  I didn't realize it would be
this soon."

"I don't like it-but how did you manage it?  You're the only one ... I
mean, I'm not like Gerlich, bedding every willing marine."

Ryba turned toward the window, walking past the cradle, where Dylless
gave a little snort.  Ryba paused and smiled briefly at the infant
before speaking.  "You don't have to bed anyone but me.  We do have
some remnants of medical technology.  And I know how to use the local
net, or whatever you want to call it, also, at least enough to ensure
that our child would be a daughter."  Ryba looked back at the
silver-haired girl in the cradle.  "I thought that Istril's child would
be a girl."

Nylan decided against mentioning Istril's slow-emerging abilities.  He
walked to the other tower window, and looked out past the folded-back
shutters.  "Why?"

"Isn't it obvious?"  Ryba brushed the short dark hair out of her face.
"We're stuck here.  We need to prepare for the next generation.
Interbreeding with the locals runs risks we don't even know about. With
Merlin's death, you and Gerlich are the only ones with verifiably
compatible genes.  You're hung up on being with one person .. . which
is ... reassuring ... for me, but not terribly effective.  This way we
can assure staggered pregnancies.  Besides, we don't have many men.
Look what happened to Mertin.  At least now we've saved your genes."

"And so many girls?"

"I'm not about to let male brute force undo what we've built.  There
will be a few more sons, though."

"Stud value," said Nylan bitterly.

"Eventually, we'll have to bring in locals, but not until we've widened
the gene pool enough, and until the girls are socialized the right
way."

"The feminine Utopia."

"You've seen this planet.  Boys are more fragile than girls; so more
boys are born in times of stress.  Put those together, and natural
selection would have all our daughters barefoot and pregnant in fifteen
years.  Twenty at the outside.  No, thank you."

Nylan could see dark gray clouds massing on the northern horizon, just
above the western peaks.  "You could have told me, rather than let me
guess."

"I couldn't risk it."  Ryba looked down at the floor, then to the
cradle.  "It's not you.  You're basically a gentle man ... but... I
know what works, and there's too much at stake.  Do I tell you, when I
know that I'll have a bright and talented daughter if I don't?  Or
that... I don't dare tell you that, either."  She shook her head
helplessly.  "I know just enough."

"You're a captive of your visions.  Life isn't just following what you
know will work.  Can't you dare to make it better?"

"I have," answered Ryba bleakly.  "That's why three guards are dead.  I
saw myself being more brutal than in dealing with Mran, and I wouldn't
do it.  I wasn't quite that bad after Frelita died, but I should have
been, because more guards died being careless, because people only
respect force.  You don't think I've tried?  Or that it doesn't bother
me?"

"It doesn't bother you enough."

"It bothers me a lot!  I suggest, and, unless I've got a hand on a
blade and madness in my eyes, half of them won't listen.  You think I
enjoy that?"

"But you do it..."

"You don't see how much it upsets me, and you never will, and that's
just another reason why I don't ever want many men around.  And you're
one of the best.  Most of them are like Gerlich or that weasel
Narliat."

Nylan shook his head.  "I'm not them."

"No, you're not.  What would you have me do?  Don't give me
generalities, either.  What action do you want?"

"Don't turn me into a stud through artificial insemination."

"Fine.  Will you promise me to bed three more guards- of my choice-late
this summer?"

"I'm not like Gerlich."

"No.  But we need children if Westwind is to survive.  And if Westwind
doesn't survive, most women on this planet won't have a life worth
living."

"You need a purpose, don't you?"  asked Nylan.  "You have to have
something that makes it all worthwhile."

"It took you this long to figure that out?"  Ryba gave a harsh bark,
not quite a laugh, and Dylless murmured and turned on the coarse sheet.
The marshal bent down and rocked the cradle.  "I'm not satisfied with
mere survival, and you aren't either, Nylan.  You just won't admit it.
You'll nearly kill yourself to build a tower that will last for
centuries, but you won't admit it.  You'll risk ridicule for being
obsessed with building, but you won't admit you need a larger purpose,
too."  The marshal paused, then added, "You still didn't answer my
question.  You asked me to do something, and I said I would-if you'd
give me an alternative."

"I don't know."  Nylan looked down at Dylless.

"I always thought men liked the idea of harems."  Ryba shrugged.  "Or
we can keep on the way we are.  It's a little messy, but..."

"I'm not Gerlich, and I need to think about it."  With a last look at
Dylless, Nylan turned and walked down the steps- out through the big
south door and out into the shadows that were falling from the cold
north across the Roof of the World.  His feet carried him to the smithy
site, and the rocks and the mortar.  At least what he built was solid.
At least he could see what happened with mortar and stone and timber.

He needed to talk with Ayrlyn.  He needed that, but not yet.  Not
yet.

LXXX

"THAT'S IT."  NYLAN tapped the last wedge into place, ensuring that the
fourth fir trunk would remain in place over the stone culvert.  Ryba
had declared that food and planting came first.  So he'd done the
bridge and culvert backward, putting the heavy rock riprap in place on
both uphill and downhill sides of the culvert first, doing everything
he could do alone until Saryn and the others could fell and bring him
the trunks he needed.

"Last year, this was just bushes and grass," said Huldran, setting down
a heavy stone just beyond the footings that held the bridge timbers.
She looked down at the stone-lined channel.  "Do you think we need this
big a bridge?"

"I hope it's big enough," the engineer answered.  He gestured toward
the tower and the bathhouse behind it.  "We're changing the land, and
the guard will keep expanding- according to the marshal.  The more hard
roads and buildings, the more runoff.  This is to keep it channeled
from the fields."

"What if there's no rain?"  grunted Cessya, mixing water into the dry
ingredients of the mortar.

"That's next year's project," laughed Nylan, slightly nervously.  "See
that swale down there?  If we dam it at the north end, then we can put
a spillway, a little one, in the middle, and run a ditch from the south
end down to the fields."

"The Rats'd have your head, Engineer, for all this land-changing,"
Huldran commented.

"They'd do the same if they were trying to survive here."

"They like hotter places."

"They can have 'em," snapped Cessya.  "Mortar's ready."

The three lugged the battered and leaking mortar tub up to the flat
spot beyond the end of the timbers.  Huldran and Nylan began to fill
the spaces between the heavy rocks, the wedges, and the timbers.

Once the mortar dried and held the trunks, then Nylan could complete
the bridge's roadbed, not so wide as he would have liked, but wide
enough for a good-sized wagon and a wall on each side.

As he paused before taking another trowel of mortar, he took in the
short stretch of paving stones that extended from the west end of the
unfinished structure toward the causeway before the tower.  Westwind
was looking more and more permanent.

Nylan eased the mortar into place, while Huldran took the cart back up
beyond the tower and to the base of the rocky hills to bring back more
stones for both the bridge roadbed and for fill.

In the low-walled flat beyond the causeway, blade practice had begun
again.  Ryba had handed the carry-pack with Dylless in it to Selitra.
Facing her was Blynnal, and the local woman cowered once she held the
wooden wand.

Saryn stood beside Blynnal, correcting her.

Behind Saryn, Hryessa and Murkassa practiced, already, from what Nylan
could tell, making good progress toward achieving Ryba's standards for
all the guards, whether originally angel marines or local refugees.

The engineer pursed his lips as he bent for more mortar.  Results-Ryba
got them.  He just wasn't fond of the tactics.

"Working hard again, I see."

Nylan glanced up to see Ayrlyn standing there.  "What else do obsessed
engineers do?"

"I'm leaving tomorrow morning ..."  The redhead let her words trail
off.

"All right."  This time, Nylan understood.  "Can I finish up this batch
of mortar?"

She nodded.

The engineer turned to Cessya.  "I'll finish here.  Would you go find
Huldran and tell her just to unload the stones and then take the cart
back.  I need to talk to Ayrlyn about what we need from her next
trading trip."

"Yes, scr."  Cessya grinned.  "Walking's easier than moving stones."

"We'll make up for it after the noon meal," Nylan promised, returning
her grin, then looking back down at the stone in front of him.

"I'm still looking for an anvil?"  Ayrlyn asked as Cessya started
uphill, toward the tower and the rock-strewn canyon beyond the stable
canyon.

"We need spikes, and nails, almost any kind of hardware.  A set of
hammers, I'd guess, big ones for the forge."  Nylan troweled the mortar
smooth in the joints between two stones.  "And some circular saw blades
for the sawmill."

"We don't have one," the redhead pointed out with a smile.  "We don't
have a forge, either."

"We'll have both, before the end of the year."  The smith extended the
trowel for more mortar.

"Nylan ... why do you drive yourself so hard?"

"Because .. . what else can I do?  Ryba wants to change this world to
one where women rule, and she'll leave the ground soaked with blood,
including mine, if I try to stop her.  Besides, she's right about the
way women are treated, and you can't change that without even greater
force."  He paused and wiped his forehead with the back of his
forearm.

"Building things won't change that," Ayrlyn reflected.  "You're just
allowing her to do more."

"What am I supposed to do?  I've got three children, and I only knew
about one of them until they were born.  Am I just going to condemn
them to a short and nasty life?  If they have strong walls and warmth
and clean water, that leaves them less at the mercy of this friggin'
world.  I don't like it, but Ryba's the only ship in port."

"What do you want?"

The smith finished the joint, and extended the trowel to the battered
tub for more mortar.  "I don't know.  I know what I don't want.  I
don't want killing after killing.  I don't want to be cold and dirty
and hungry.  I don't want that for Dylless or Weryl or Kyalynn."  He
shrugged, then applied the trowel again.

"You want to be appreciated, but you don't want to force people to
appreciate you.  You want to be loved, but not used."

"You might say that," he admitted.  "But that's true of most people.
Don't you feel that way?"

"Yes"-Ayrlyn smiled warmly-"but I thought we were talking about you.
You feel responsible for all your children, and yet you feel used.  And
you won't say anything about it.  You don't like to talk about your
feelings, not directly, and you try to avoid it.  Was it that way
growing up?"

"My mother always said there was no use in complaining.  No one cared,
and we might as well save our breath.  So Karista and I didn't.  The
older I got, the truer it seemed."  He set down the trowel as he
finished the last of the mixed mortar.  "What about you?"

"There you go again.  Two sentences about you, and switch the subject
to me."  Ayrlyn laughed.  "My father was the warm one, and he joked a
lot.  He was quiet about it, but he also made it known, like your
mother, that outside the family, no matter what people said, most
didn't care."

"It sounds like he cared."

"Your mother didn't?  I'm sure she did."

"Oh, she did," Nylan admitted, "but she felt it should be obvious, and
why belabor the obvious?  Actions speak louder than words-that was her
maxim."

"So you keep trying to make your actions do the speaking?"  The redhead
shook her head.  "Most people don't read actions very well.  They need
words as well, lots of them, preferably words that say how wonderful
they are."

"You're more cynical than I am."

"You're not cynical at all, Nylan."  Ayrlyn reached down and touched
his arm gently, her fingers warm and cool at the same time.  "You're a
caring man who's never allowed himself to express what he feels.  You
feel guilty and self-indulgent when you even think about what you feel.
So you keep doing things and hope people understand."

"Probably."  Ayrlyn snorted and squeezed his arm.

"What about you?  After last fall, aren't there going to be arms men
out there looking for a trader with flame-red hair?"

"It's getting cut shorter, and I'll be wearing a hat.  If they notice,
well, it takes time to send messages in this culture, and we'll try to
stay ahead of Lord Sillek's authorities."

"I'm not sure I like that."

"What else can I do?  We need the goods, and now is better than
later."

The engineer nodded reluctantly, then stood as the bell rang for the
midday meal.

"Time to eat?  You headed my way?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"Is there any other way?"  Nylan swallowed.  "Don't answer that."

"I won't, but I'll remember that you asked it."  She smiled gently, and
Nylan smiled back.

LXXXI

ZELDYAN SITS, PROPPED on the edge of the bed, Nesslek at her breast,
wearing a green silk sheen dressing gown that sets off her golden
hair.

"He's mostly good," she says, looking down and smiling.

"Except when he cries in the middle of the night."  Sillek rubs his
eyes and yawns, then walks to the window of the room.  The fields
beyond Lornth, those he can see, have turned green, the light green of
crops recently sprouted, with a hint of brown underlying the green.
"Some night- just a night-couldn't he stay with a nurse?"

"When he's older, but he's not even a season yet," points out Zeldyan.
"Would you want to trust the heir of Lornth out of our sight so young?"
She offers an open smile.

"I may not survive another season."  Sillek laughs.  "Undertaking this
campaign may get me more sleep than staying in my own bed."

"I'm glad it's only sleep you're wishing."  He turns from the window
and steps to the bed, bending and brushing her cheek with his lips.
"It's not all I'm wishing, but I want you well."

Zeldyan flushes, ever so slightly.  Then she frowns.  "I still worry
about your being so far from Lornth."

"Whatever I do, it will be far from Lornth.  I have two enemies trying
to bleed us dry, and another one that my own holders won't let me
forget.  Or my mother."

"Has she done anything beyond talking to Lygon?"  asks Zeldyan.

Sillek frowns faintly, then turns to the window.  "I'm sorry.  I didn't
mean ."

"That's all right."  Sillek strokes his black beard without turning.
"Lord Megarth approached me.  So did Lord Fysor.  They were old friends
of my sire."  He shrugs and turns, his eyes bleak.  "What can I do?"

"I'm sorry," Zeldyan repeats.  "So am I."

"It all seems so stupid."  Zeldyan lifts her free left hand to stop his
objection.  "I know.  I know.  You've explained, and so has your
mother, and so did my father when he disowned Relyn, but it's still
stupid."

"Has anyone heard from Relyn?"

"No.  Father thinks the angel women have kept him captive.  Have your
wizards seen him?"

"No.  That doesn't mean much, though.  They can't scree inside that
black stone tower, and during the winter how could anyone tell one
person from another in those heavy coats and scarves?"  Sillek sits in
the chair beside the bed and yawns.  His hand strokes her cheek for a
moment.

Nesslek gurgles, makes a soft sneezing sound, and returns to nursing.

"You just get to eat and sleep and be close to your mother," says
Sillek to his son.  "And keep me awake."  He stands.

Zeldyan reaches out and touches his hand.  He wraps his fingers around
hers for a moment, and then their fingers part.

LXXXII

RIENADRE GESTURED TOWARD the brick forms stacked in rows on the crude
trestles.  "It'll be another few days before these are ready."

"We do what we can."  Nylan needed more of the bricks so that he could
finish the smithy and the forge.

"That we do."  Rienadre picked up the axe.

Nylan flicked the leads, and the gray mare whuffled.  The cart creaked
as it rocked forward under the load of building bricks.  A heavy gust
of wind whipped through Nylan's hair, then dropped away.  Overhead,
high cumulus clouds dotted the sky, some showing dark centers, for all
that it was only slightly before midday.  The gray whuffled again, and
the cart creaked, and Nylan walked beside, along the rutted trail that
was not quite a road.

Whuff..  .

"I know.  It's no fun carting bricks uphill.  Well... it's no fun
walking alongside you, either."

The cart-the one Saryn and Ayrlyn had built, not the one that they'd
obtained from Skiodra and repaired-creaked again.  The other was with
Ayrlyn, and Nylan wondered if she would be able to obtain saw blades on
her trading run.  Then he, in his copious spare time and with his great
ignorance of low technology, would attempt to build a sawmill.

He snorted.  The healer had perhaps four golds, and several blades.
What were they going to do to get through the early summer?  He
swallowed, thinking about her flame-red hair and the anger Westwind was
generating.

A flash of yellow-banded black wings crossed the trail, and the yellow
and black bird alighted on the end of a dead pine branch and cocked its
head in an almost inquiring attitude at Nylan.

"Hello there," said the would-be smith.

Twirrrppp .. . twirrrppp .. .

The cart creakked once more, and the bird responded to that as well.

"I think you like noise."

At that comment, the wings spread, and the bird departed.

Ahead, Nylan heard voices, and saws, and the regular thump-chop of an
axe.  Fierral and the timber crew were at it, and before long, he'd
have to come down and turn the piles of limbs, the crooked ones, the
stumps, and the other sections unsuited to timber, into charcoal.  The
idea was simple enough, a controlled burn under low-oxygen conditions. 
That meant burying most of the wood, probably in a long pile and
lighting one end.  How many times would he have to try it before he got
it right?

He flicked the reins again.

Before long, the cart crossed another low rise in the trail.  To the
right, downhill, was a clearing filled with stumps.  At the east end
was a pile of limbs, odd pieces of trees, flanked by a tall brush pile.
Along the trail like road were two low piles, one of squarish timbers
and one of planks.

From a pole fastened between two smaller pines and fashioned from a
roughly smoothed and stripped fir limb hung four gutted hares.

Nylan's eyebrows rose, and he slowed to examine the game.

"Hryessa," explained Fierral, walking up.  "She made some snares.  Can
you take those up to Blynnal and Kadran?"

"Where's Kyseen?"

"Working with us.  There was a general consensus that she's better with
a blade and an axe or saw than in the kitchen, and I really doubt that
Blynnal will ever be much with a blade.  Hryessa and Murkassa-they'll
be good, but not poor Blynnal.  On the other hand-"

Both turned at the sound of hoofs.

"Weapons!  Blades and bows!"  Fierral's blue eyes turned cold, cold as
the ice on Freyja.

A black-haired woman clung to what seemed to be the plow-harness or
horse collar of a big brown beast that lumbered down the slope toward
the guards.  Before her on the horse was a small, dark-haired child.
With each step, they bounced, and Nylan winced.

Hryessa arrived almost instantly, and Berlis wasn't that far behind.
Weindre stood by one end of the pole with the hares on it, her bow in
hand.

The woman pulled at the leads, and the plow horse slowed.

Fierral glanced uphill, then stepped forward and caught the leads up
short, just beyond the harness.  Foam streaked the gelding's muzzle.

The dark-haired woman straightened on the horse's back, holding her
head higher, her arm around the girl who sat before her.  Their brown
tunics had recently been cleaned, but both riders were mottled with
dust, and muddy patches appeared on the mother's cheeks.

"Are you ... the... mountain women?"  asked the woman in a hoarse
voice.

"We live here," answered Fierral in accented Old Anglo-rat.

"I would like to claim refuge.  For my daughter and me."

Fierral looked at Nylan.  "What can you tell?"

Nylan took a breath and tried to let his feelings, through what he
still conceived of as the local magic net, sense the woman.  After a
moment, he turned to Fierral.  "None of that white stuff, that chaos
that's almost like evil.  She's tired, almost ready to collapse,
probably ridden that beast a long way.  All that doesn't mean she's
good, though.  The child's hungry," he added as an afterthought.

"It's a start," pointed out Fierral, who looked back at the exhausted
riders.  "We will not send you away, but the marshal must-"

"Decide," finished Nylan.

"Please ... help.  Surba ... he follows, and Pretar is with him."  With
a convulsive gesture, the woman half climbed, half fell, off the horse.
Her bare feet hit the ground hard, and she turned and lifted her
daughter down.

Nylan shuddered.  His feet would have hurt from hitting the rocky
ground that hard, but the woman seemed unfazed by that.  Instead she
looked back uphill.  The child looked boldly at Nylan, and he smiled
back.  She remained solemnly wide-eyed, her head reaching not quite to
his chest.

"Hryessa-take your mount and get the marshal-and some reinforcements.
Let the marshal decide, but tell her we have a refugee and a couple of
incoming troublemakers."

"Incoming?"  asked the locally raised guard as she mounted.

"Bad men who are on their way here," Fierral rephrased.  Berlis offered
a brief grin at the rewording.  Hryessa urged her mount uphill.

"Who might you be?"  Nylan asked.  "Nistayna.  I rode all the way from
Linspros."  Her eyes darted back uphill, her hands remaining on the
girl's shoulders.

"Stand by for company!"  ordered Fierral.  "Berlis-you get over there
on the other side where you've got a clear shot."  The guard eased her
way across the trail.  "And Linspros is where?"  asked Nylan.  Her eyes
widened.  "Is it true that you fell from the skies?"

"Yes, in a way," answered Nylan tiredly.  "Now ... where is Linspros?"
He added to Fierral, "I'd like to know where else we're going to be
making enemies."

The chief guard, or arms master or arms mistress-she had to be
something like that in this culture now, Nylan reflected-responded with
a grim smile, then motioned to Weindre.  "They need something to
drink."

"Linspros .. ."  Nistayna mumbled.  Nylan walked to the nearest stump,
leading the cart horse, and tied the leads to a protruding root.  Then
he turned and extended a hand to the apparently tottering woman.
Nistayna shied away, her arms shielding the girl.  "Fine."  He motioned
to Weindre, who approached with a plastic water bottle, one of the few
remaining.  "You get them to sit down before they both fall over."

Fierral tied the plow horse to another tree, and glanced back uphill.
Hryessa was already nearly to the top of the ridge and almost out of
sight.

After the black-haired local slumped onto the stump, she took the
bottle and offered it to the girl.  After the child drank, and after
the mother took several swallows of water, Nylan tried again.  "We are
strangers.  Where is Linspros?  Is it near Gnotos?"

"Oh, no.  Linspros is between Analeria and Gallos in the great west
valley."

"It's east of the mountains.  How long did it take you to find us?"

"Days .. . many days, and yesterday ... I saw Surba.  I was on the
heights, but he has Pretar.  He is a hunter and a tracker.  They will
be here soon.  We could not ride as fast as they can."  Again, she
looked to the east.

"This refugee bit always disrupts work," said Fierral dryly.

"We've gotten a good cook, a good rabbit hunter, and some blades."

"We'll need a lot more, the way things are going."

"Why did you leave Linspros?"  asked Nylan.

"Surba .. . only a woman would know.  Only a mother."  Her eyes fell.

"Sexual abuse?"  Nylan asked the redheaded head of the guards.

"Probably, but who knows?  Any kind of abuse seems to be fair on this
friggin' planet.  Maybe the girl."

Nylan bridled inside, but only said, "That's not representative.  We
only see the ones who are abused.  The happy ones, or those from places
where the women have some power, won't be the ones seeking out the
angels."

Fierral opened her mouth, then paused.  "You could be right."

"Maybe what this shows is that the society doesn't offer a place for
those that don't fit in, but it doesn't mean every woman is degraded or
oppressed."

"No," said Fierral.  "Just those who want to be treated equally."

"Maybe," said Nylan.  "Maybe not.  Do we know enough?"

They looked back at Nistayna.  She, in turn, kept her eyes on the
ground, but clutched the plastic water bottle, then offered it to her
daughter again.  The child drank, but kept her eyes on Nylan.

For a time, they all waited.  How long, Nylan wasn't certain.  Then he
frowned.  Did he hear hooves?  Ryba?

"Ready!"  snapped Fierral.

Across the trail road, Berlis checked her bow.

Weindre checked her bow and held an arrow, almost ready to nock it.

Behind Fierral, Llyselle appeared, also carrying her composite bow,
flanked by Kyseen, the former cook, who grinned shyly at Nylan.

Ryba rode down the trail, and the guards lowered their bows.

"Don't relax too much," said the marshal as she and Hryessa rode up
together.  "Your incomings are headed this way."

"Will they go up to the tower?"  asked Nylan.  "They might, but they
won't get far.  Everyone else, except Ellysia and Blynnal, is waiting
on the top of the ridge.  And Gerlich, of course-he's out hunting."

Ryba surveyed the area.  "If we have to go to weapons, use the bows
first.  I don't want any of us hurt if we can avoid it."  Then she
eased the big roan up next to the stump where the dark-haired Nistayna
now stood.  "You are the Angel?"

"I'm Ryba, the marshal of Westwind."  Nistayna bowed her head.  "Please
... save us ... take us in.  Do not make me return.  If you must, I
will leave, but please take Niera.  She must not..  ."

Nylan's lips tightened.  He didn't like Surba, and the man hadn't even
appeared.  Ryba glanced to Nylan.  "No chaos.  Seems honest."

"So long as you live by our rules, you may stay."  Ryba paused, and
then added, "Westwind is not always an easy place, and we already have
powerful enemies-" She broke off at the sound of hooves.

Two riders eased their way down the slope.  On the lead horse, a black
stallion, rode a burly man dressed in a green shirt and tunic and brown
leather trousers.  Behind him rode a thin-faced blond man with a large
bow across his back.

The thin man started to reach for the bow.

"I would not touch that bow, not if you wish to live," said Ryba, her
voice carrying across the suddenly silent trail and woods.

The burly man reined in the black stallion, a trace of foam at the edge
of his mouth, and skittering at his rider's rough handling.

"Nistayna's my woman, and no mountain women are going to take her away.
You keep her, and I'll have every man in Linspros here to tear down
your fancy tower.  Yes, we've heard about your tower, and no tower's
going to stop us."

"That would mean a lot of graves," pointed out Ryba.

Nistayna shivered, but stood straight.

"I want my woman back.  Now."

"You don't own her."  Without taking her eyes off Surba, Ryba asked,
"Do you wish to return with him?"

"No.  I would die first."  The words were soft, but firm.  "We both
would."

Ryba's lips curled.  "They do not like you much."

"They are mine, and they will return with me."

"I think not."

Surba looked at the four bows trained on him.  Then he looked at Nylan,
who had drawn his blade, but not lifted it.  His eyes darted to the
blond man, who shook his head.  Finally, he answered Ryba, "There are a
lot more of you than us, but we'll be back, and we'll tear that tower
down stone by stone."

"I see," said Ryba.  "So you and your friend just rode after this
woman, and I'll bet you didn't even bother to tell anyone where you
were going.  You just thought you'd ride her down and beat her and take
her back.  Is that it?"

"Real men don't have to tell anyone where they're going."  He shrugged.
"All of Linspros knows me.  No one walks on Surba."

"I wouldn't think of it," murmured Ryba.  She nodded at Berlis, then
slowly took out her throwing blade.  She rode forward slowly, stopping
a dozen paces away from the stallion.  "Do you know what this is?"

"It's a toy blade."

Ryba smiled, and the blade flashed from her hand.

The burly man slumped over the saddle, tried to straighten up, and
finally did.  "Bitch ... dirty .. . bitch."  The stallion whickered and
skittered sideways.  "... unfair .. ."

Nistayna's hand went to her mouth, then her arms went around her
daughter, and she turned so the child looked to the forest.

"It's so fair to beat someone who can't flee or fight back," murmured
the marshal.  "So honorable ..."

The slender hard-faced man took one look at the dying man, ducked to
one side of his mount, and spurred the beast toward the woods.

"Get him!"  Ryba ordered, urging the roan after Pretar.

Fierral nocked and released an arrow.  So did the other four guards.

The blond man and the horse went down, the horse screaming.

Nylan's legs felt weak, and he forced himself to remain erect, despite
the white flashes of death that washed over him.  He was glad he hadn't
been forced to use his blade, but how often could he avoid it on this
frigging brutal planet?

"Damn!"  muttered Fierral.  "That was a good horse."

Ryba studied the two corpses before riding back to Nistayna.  "One
always pays for freedom."  Her voice was cold.  "I hope you will use
that freedom well."

Nistayna looked from the marshal to Nylan.

"Angels are not sweet, lady," he added.  "They are often just and
terrible, and few indeed are strong enough for justice."  Even as he
spoke, he wondered how just murdering two men had been.

With a sigh, he walked toward Fierral.  "Put the bodies on the cart.
I'll take them up to the tower.  Then, after I unload, I'll send
someone down with the cart for the horse.  Maybe Blynnal can make a few
meals out of it."

Nylan glanced from Fierral to Ryba, still seated on the roan.  Ryba
shifted her weight in the saddle, and he realized that the ride had
been painful for her.

"This was a setup."  She answered his unspoken question.  "Either they
brought her back, and that proved we could be intimidated or taken, or
they came back empty-handed, and set it up for an army.  This way, no
one knows for sure."  She shrugged.  "People don't like to send out
armies or armed forces when they don't know what happened."

She turned the roan back toward the tower.  "Hryessa?"

The young guard drew her mount beside the marshal as the two horses
slowly walked uphill.

"Stupid .. . they were stupid ..."  muttered Berlis.

Nylan looked from Ryba to the two refugees, and then to the bodies on
the cart.  While he understood Ryba's logic, he couldn't say he was
pleased with the speed with which it was made and the dispatch with
which it was executed.  Literally executed, he reflected
sardonically.

He turned toward the gray mare, wondering again.  Ryba anticipated
trouble, and in any "civilized" world, that would be called murder. Yet
.. . was preventing abuse and death through death exactly wrong? He
shook his head.  The problem was that you couldn't always be sure that
a killing before the fact was justified, visions or no visions.

He untied the leather leads to the cart horse and flicked them.  The
wheels creaakked as he resumed the long climb up to the ridge, the
tower, and the smithy site.

LXXXIII

AT THE TH RAP on the door, Hissl turns from the window.  The knocking
continues when he does not move.

"Just a moment."  The wizard composes himself and steps forward, his
fingers on the hilt of the white-bronze dagger at his belt.

A hooded figure stands at the outside door to Hissl's room and bows.
"Have you thought about the keys to your wishes?"

"The keys to my wishes?  How would you presume?"

"You are tired of being thought of as the second wizard, as a tool to
be used and left aside.  You would like position and power in your own
right."  The hooded figure remains on the landing.

"Stay there."  Hissl takes two steps back, still watching his visitor,
then circles behind the table with the glass.  He looks from the hooded
figure to the glass, then concentrates.

Slowly, a shape appears in the swirling mists, the figure of an arms
man in brown leathers with a purple sash across the thin breastplate.
Behind the figure is a black stone tower.

Hissl does not wipe his sweating brow as he releases his hold upon the
glass.

"You are an arms man but you come from the black tower of the devil
angels.  I could kill you."  He pauses.  "I should kill you."

The arms man takes one step into the room and stops.  He extends his
right hand, missing the index finger and thumb, but does not throw back
the hood, for all that his features had just appeared in the screeing
glass.  "The angels took those from me.  I cannot return to Lornth or
my family.  I offer you the chance for power and position."

"How can you offer me power and position?  You have nothing."  Hissl
laughs.  "And you have returned to the lands of Lornth, if not Lornth
itself."

"My ... patron would like to see Westwind fall."

"Westwind?"

"That is what the evil angels call their tower and the lands they stole
from the Lord of Lornth."

"If your patron is so powerful, why does he not take this .. . Westwind
himself?"

The arms man shrugs.  "Lord Nessil could not, not with threescore arms
men  You and the great hunter could, knowing what he knows and what you
know, and what I know."

"And what is that?"

"He will have to tell you that."

"I am supposed to take that on faith?  Ha!"  Hissl laughs again.

"Here is another token."  Slowly, the arms man extends an object,
bending forward and setting it on the table beside the glass.

Hissl looks at the thunder-thrower, smaller than he had realized.  "Why
would I need that?"

"So you will not take the hunter on faith."

Hissl licks his lips as he regards the metal object that radiates both
chaos and order.  Finally, he says, "What does the hunter want?"

"To meet with you.  To plan the conquest of Westwind."

"Ha!  Young Relyn of Gethen had nearly two score arms men and he
failed. So did Lord Nessil.  You, your hunter, and I are supposed to
succeed when they did not?"

"I was bid to tell you that more than a third of the angels who faced
Lord Nessil are dead.  Four are with child or have a babe, and only one
thunder-thrower still works.  Many of the angels are unhappy with the
highest angel, and the black mage has lost much of his magic."

Hissl shrugs.  "If your... patron is so eager to see me ... why, have
him come to Clynya."

The hooded figure nods.  "He said you would bid me so.  Before long, he
will come."

"I would like to see him."  Hissl forces a smile.  "That I would."

LXXXIV

"I'LL TAKE HER."  In the darkness, Nylan slipped out of his side of the
bed, his former lander couch, and picked up Dylless.  "She can't be
hungry.  You just fed the little pig."

He checked her makeshift diaper-too much remained makeshift within
Tower Black-but she was dry.  Nylan eased into the rocking chair.  "Now
... now... little one..."

Despite his gentle singing, Dylless's moans changed into a full-fledged
crying.

Ryba sat up.  "I'm tired, but not enough to sleep through that."

The engineer kept rocking, kept singing.  Ryba flopped back on one side
and rubbed her forehead.  Outside the tower, the night wind whispered,
its gentle hissing lost behind the cries and songs in the tower.

Dylless continued to cry for a time.  Then her cries dropped off to
moans, and the moans to sniffles.  Finally, she gave a last snuffle.
Nylan continued to rock, and the wind whispered through the cracks in
the shutters.

"I can't sleep, now," said Ryba, just above a whisper.  "And I have a
headache."

Nylan refrained from saying that he had several, and instead patted
Dylless on the back and stood, walking back and forth between the
partly open arma glass window and the cradle.  Finally sensing she was
asleep, he eased Dylless into the cradle, then immediately knelt and
patted her back with one hand while rocking the cradle with the
other.

Dylless took three noisy breaths and settled back to sleep, but Nylan
eased off the rocking slowly.  After a time, he stopped and returned to
his side of the bed, where he sat on the edge, eyes closed, and rubbed
his temples with the fingers of his right hand.

"We haven't talked about children," Ryba said quietly into the
darkness.

"What about them?"

"You never answered my question.  You're being difficult."

"Probably."

"Do you want everything we represent lost?"

Nylan took a deep breath.  "I don't know.  It seems as though, so long
as I build towers, and bridges, and bathhouses, and smithies,
everything is fine, but when I say... oh... never mind... I can't
explain how I feel."

"You haven't tried," said Ryba in a reasonable tone.

"You have everything figured out.  If we don't kill these two men,
dozens will arrive, and we'll have to kill them, too, or be killed.  If
we don't use the two men as studs, we might have our gene pool
contaminated too soon ..."

"Aren't you being harsh?"

"You've said or done all those."  Nylan's shoulders slumped in the
darkness, and his eyes dropped to the cradle.  Would Dylless be as
coldly reasonable as her mother?

"We landed with twenty-seven women.  No sooner had we landed than a
local lord showed up wanting to turn us all into serfs or concubines,
or worse, and probably to slaughter all three of you men.  Since then,
we have made not one aggressive gesture toward the locals.  We have not
raided; we have not stolen.  All we have done is build a place to live
where they can't and try to survive.  The locals are still trying to
kill us or cheat us ... or both.  The local women, some of them at
least, are risking death to find refuge here.  Maybe all this local
male behavior is mere lousy socialization.  Maybe it's not.  Do you
want me to gamble after everything that's happened?  Do you really want
Gerlich's genes to dominate Westwind?"

Nylan rubbed his temples again.  Finally, he said, "The killing hurts.
Even when I don't do it, it hurts."

"You think I like it?"

"I know you don't," Nylan said.  "I'm telling you something different.
It's part of this net, or whatever it is, but when someone's killed, a
wave of whiteness, like mental acid or something, washes through me."

"Ayrlyn told me the same thing happens to her."  Ryba paused.  "You
both have that ability to help healing.  They're probably tied
together."

"I wouldn't be surprised."

"We still haven't dealt with the children problem.  Do you want me to
risk-"

Nylan raised a hand to wave off the question, but realized that Ryba
couldn't see the gesture.  "You've been right about most things, but...
and this sounds like a woman ... I still feel violated."

"I've noticed that.  You stay on your side of the couches.  Are you ...
do you need time?"

Nylan took a slow deep breath, wondering if time would ever heal
anything.  "I don't know that time would heal things."  He paused.  "Do
you want me to move my stuff elsewhere?"

"No."  Ryba's voice was cool.

"What do you want?"

"I want you to think about things.  We can move the couches apart, if
that will help."

Nylan puzzled at Ryba's tone, wondering about the wrongness again.
"More visions?"

"You could say that."

Nylan could sense the sadness and reserve in the tired voice, and the
anger.  "I'm sorry."

"So am I, but being sorry doesn't solve things."

He eased his body next to hers, putting his arms around her
shoulders.

She pushed him away.  "I don't need your comfort."

"Ryba .. ."  He put his arms back around her.  Who else could hold her,
and who else besides Ryba was strong enough to bring them through?  His
eyes burned, even as his own anger seethed, but he whispered, "Even
marshals need to be held."

"I don't need you ... I don't need anyone."

In the end, he looked into the darkness, while Ryba, the marshal, the
farsighted, sobbed silently, again, with her face away from him.

Dylless slept, and the wind hissed through the window.

LXXXV

THE WATCH TRIANGLE rang once, well before mid-morning, and Nylan
ignored the summons to the tower, continuing to lay brick, although he
hoped that it signaled Ayrlyn's return, and that she'd been able to
find saw blades.

The back wall was complete, and the side walls were thigh-high.  Where
the front wall would be, the space for the double doors was framed in
brick-but only knee-high- and he needed to leave spaces for two
windows.

By the time he finished using the last of the mortar, Ayrlyn and the
cart were headed down from the ridge.  Nylan squinted.  There were two
people on the cart seat, and two in the cart, and five on horseback.  A
stranger accompanied the four guards who had gone with the healer on
her trading run.

The engineer wiped his forehead with the back of his hand, then looked
down at the empty mortar tub.  Beside it were the baskets of crushed
lava, clay, and what passed for lime.  He set the trowel down and
started downhill.

Four strange women stood by the causeway with the healer, three
shifting their weight nervously from one foot to the other, while the
shorter dark-haired woman on one end gentled her mount.

Ayrlyn was supervising the unloading.  "The barrels of flour and meal
go down to the big shelves in the corner off the kitchen."

With that, Weindre carted off a large barrel.

"The saw blade is for Nylan, but put it up on the fifth level.  We
haven't built a sawmill yet."

Murkassa laughed at the comment as Ayrlyn handed the blade to Berlis.

"He says he will-then he will."  Ayrlyn turned.  "Speak of the
demon."

"I see you got the saw blade."

"Just one, and it was nearly a gold itself, and I had to promise that
it was going up on the Westhorns.  That was an easy promise."

"I see you brought some recruits.  We picked up one-with a daughter."

"Word is getting around."  Ayrlyn gestured toward the tower.  "Selitra
went to find Ryba."

"I suppose you took them all."  Gerlich stepped up beside Ayrlyn.

"Hardly.  I must have been approached by a dozen women.  I settled on
these four."

"Only four.  Imagine that."

"Don't push it, Gerlich," Nylan said quietly.  "I haven't seen too much
game lately, and you don't offer much besides that."

"Game is scarce."  Gerlich eased away to the other side of the cart,
frankly appraising the three women.  Relyn stood beside Cessya, an
ironic smile on his face, his semi hook resting on his belt.

Nylan still had to make and deliver the clamp for the one-armed
man-another area where he'd fallen short, but he didn't have the smithy
working.

With the sound of hoofs on the short stretch of pavement heading up
toward the stables, the engineer turned.  Ryba sat easily on the roan,
though Nylan knew riding was slightly painful, but not so painful as
their uneasy peace, a peace held together by separated couches,
necessity .. . and Dylless.

All four women turned to Ryba as well, the tallest shivering enough
that her discomfiture was obvious to all the guards gathered round.

Ryba reined up, but did not dismount.  "So you wish to join the guard
of Westwind?"

"If it pleases you, Angel," answered the dark-haired woman, the
shortest of the group.

"That's Ydrall," whispered Ayrlyn.  "She even had her family's
permission, and brought a few things we could use-needles, a few
silvers .. . and some dried fruit from their trees-pear apples they're
called.  She rides well and can use a blade."

"I'm no angel.  I'm the marshal of Westwind.  If you choose to remain
here, you will have to fight for it.  It appears half the men in Candar
would wish to beat you down and to tear down our tower stone by stone.
Are you willing to fight them, even if they are cousins?"  Ryba's voice
was hard.  "If one is your sister's consort?"  Ryba straightened in the
saddle.  "If you are that determined, you may share what we have, and
we will teach you the way of the blade and bow."

The four nodded, and several quietly said, "Yes."

Ryba's eyes turned to Gerlich for a moment, then passed to Fierral.
"Will you make the arrangements, guard leader?"

"Yes, Marshal."  Fierral turned to the four.  "Bring your gear, your
things, with me, and we'll find you space on the third level .. ."

As Ryba turned her mount back up toward the stables, and as the four
left following Fierral, Nylan remarked, "Too many more, and we'll have
to start making bunks and mattresses or pallets."

"We'd better start now," answered the healer.  "I've avoided any large
towns, places where there would be arms men but everywhere I've been,
there are women ready to leave.  There aren't too many in any one
place, but..  ."

"I'm glad you avoided the arms men  It has to be getting more
dangerous."  Nylan added quickly, "What do we make mattresses from?"

"I tried not to be too obvious .. . and thank you for saying that you
care."  Ayrlyn smiled as Nylan swallowed, then said, "Grasses might do
for mattress filling, if they're dried well and thoroughly debugged,
but we don't have that much cloth to cover them, or sew them."

"I wouldn't sew them all the way," suggested Nylan.  "Leave an end open
so it could be folded shut.  That way-"

"That makes sense.  We could tuck dried flowers in there.  They might
help."  Ayrlyn glanced at Cessya.  "We need to finish unloading the
cart."

Nylan shifted his weight from one sore foot to the other.  "I've got
more brickwork to do, and I need to raid a lander lock.  Maybe I'll do
that first."

"A lander lock?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"Something I promised for Relyn."

"That's something I like about you, Nylan, another thing," Ayrlyn said
before turning to Cessya.  "You keep your promises."

A small face peered out the window from the great room, and Nylan waved
to Niera.  Was she helping with the infants?  Or just keeping their
mothers company or running errands?

Niera gave the smallest of waves, then ducked back from the window.
Nylan crossed the causeway and headed inside.

After reclaiming a tool kit from the fifth level of the tower, Nylan
trudged uphill to the lander used for grass storage.  "I promised him
eight-days ago, longer."  He shook his head.

The lander door was ajar, as always, since the lock mechanism had been
disconnected and the lock plates removed, and most of the guards didn't
bother using the sliding bolt that had replaced the automated system.

After removing three access plates, and sneezing intermittently the
whole time from the hay and grass dust that rose every time he moved
his boots, he found something that might work-more like an inside
lock-plate shim with large screw holes at each end.  If he could bend a
control arm.  That meant removing another access plate and
disconnecting the other end of the rod.

Nylan was sweating, his tattered work shirt soaked through, by the time
he had all the miscellaneous parts he needed-or thought he needed.  But
he smiled as he carried them, and the tools, back to the smithy where
Cessya greeted him.

"Now that we stowed the trading goods, the healer said I'm supposed to
make myself useful, scr," she announced, "and I've got no interest in
pulling weeds or sawing timbers.  What, do you need?"

"More mortar."  Nylan grinned.  "Are you sure you want to make yourself
useful here?"

"Grinding that lava rock for mortar is better than grubbing through the
mud or having that fir sap fall all over you.  The rock dust washes
off.  Besides, what you do lasts, and I can say that I helped do it."

"Well ... I appreciate that honesty.  We'll all learn, you and Huldran
and I, how to build and operate a smithy."

"Sounds good.  I'll be back in a bit.  I need to get those mallets and
a bucket of water."  Cessya inclined her head and was gone.

Nylan set the tools and parts in the corner.  Because he needed some of
the cruder and heavier tools in the lower level of the tower, he'd
start work on Relyn's knife-holder-grip after the midday meal, hoping
he wouldn't need to actually forge it, but just bend metal.

He looked around the unfinished smithy.  With Cessya's help, it might
not be that long before they had the building and the forge done.  The
charcoal was another story, and trying to forge metal was going to be a
disaster.

"A smith, yet?  Probably not..."  He shook his head, then began to
carry in bricks.

LXXXVI

NYLAN STUDIED THE completed rear wall of the would-be smithy, and took
a deep breath.  He was getting tired of the building that seemed
endless.  His eyes flicked to the high puffy clouds.  Would it never
end?

His mother had been right, though.  No one else cared about his
troubles, except Ayrlyn.  He smiled, tentatively, then blanked his face
at the sound of boots on the road.

"How soon will you have this forge operating?"  asked Fierral as she
stepped within the uncompleted walls.

Nylan glanced around the area, trying to estimate.  "A while," he
finally said.  "Only have half the walls done.  The forge itself..  ."
He shook his head.

The guard leader frowned.

"Why?"

"We don't have that long.  We're reaching the limits of the blades you
forged.  We've never had enough of those bows.  And we're getting more
and more women showing up.  They don't have the training the best
locals do.  Most of us don't, but we're getting there."  Fierral ran
her hand through her short-cropped fire-red hair.  "What gives us a
chance is your weapons."

"But you need more?"  asked the engineer.

"We need more of everything.  Arrowheads first.  Frigging Gerlich-he
took off hunting this morning with a good fifty shafts.  Showed how few
we have left."

Nylan pursed his lips.  Gerlich, again.  Now what was the man up to?

"Scr .. ."  Fierral asked quietly.  "Do you really need a smithy built
like the tower?  We just can't wait for that.  The locals won't."

Nylan looked around again.  "I can put together a forge of some sort in
the next few days-I have to have that-and develop a bellows of some
sort.  And you'll have to help me make charcoal.  You can't smith
without coal or charcoal."

"Whatever it takes, scr."  Fierral's eyes drifted to the practice yard
below the front of the tower.  "I'm just a guard leader.  I'll never be
that much more, not like you or the marshal.  But the guards, all of
the women, they need the weapons."

Nylan understood that the words were as close to a plea as Fierral
would ever offer; that, like him, she kept the doubts and fears and
concerns held tightly.

"I'll get working on it," he promised.

"Thank you."

Nylan did not sigh until she was halfway back to the practice yard.

LXXXVII

THE SCOUTS RIDE vanguard nearly a kay before the column that follows,
riders under the purpled banners of Lornth and trailed by a far longer
column of foot soldiers, levies leavened with professionals from Carpa,
Lornth itself, and even from Spidlar and far Lydiar.

As it takes the road skirting the rapids, the army approaches the ford
that prefaces the split in the trading road.  Less than a kay below the
rapids lies the junction of the greater and lesser rivers.  Another kay
below that is the ford, and beyond that the river flows smooth and deep
on its northward course to Rulyarth.  On the east side of the ford, the
road splits, the left-hand highway following the river, the right
slowly rising into the hills until it reaches the west branch of the
River Arma where it follows Arma all the way to the city of Armat,
capital of Suthya.

By straining, Sillek can see the edge of the fields in the flat below
and to the northwest of the hills through which the road passes and the
river rapids pass.  Those fields are a lighter green than those in
Lornth, and half the ground shows brown where the crops have not spread
so early in the year.

With the wind out of the east, occasional drops of moisture fly from
the rapids to the road, and more than once Sillek looks to the clear
sky in surprise, before turning his head toward the dull roaring of the
river.

On Sillek's right rides Scr Gethen.  Behind them, flanked on each side
by hard-faced arms men ride Terek and Jissek.

"Fornal was reluctant to remain at the Groves," says Gethen.

"Someone we can trust has to," answered Sillek easily.

"Don't speak of trust loudly, Lord Sillek.  Soldiers might presume that
such planning implies an expectation of failure."  Gethen laughs. "Call
that the insight of an old man."

"You're scarcely old, with those few gray hairs," points out the
younger man, looking to the low hill beyond, the last hill before the
ford.  His face tightens as one of the scouts in the van pauses his
mount at the hill crest, then turns and gallops back toward the main
force.

"I'd say that means a Suthyan force holds the ford," Gethen says.

"Probably."

They continue to ride toward the messenger.

"Suthyans, Lord Sillek," announces the rider in the purple tunic.

"How many?"

"Not more than score twenty, I'd say.  Two- to threescore mounted, and
none are archers."

Sillek nods.  "Stay back on the hill.  Don't let them see you.  We'll
be there presently."

"Yes, scr."  The messenger heads back toward the five other scouts.

"What do you plan, Lord?"  asks Gethen.

"To destroy them," answers Sillek.

"You have more than enough forces to make them retreat."  Gethen turns
in the saddle to survey the more than two thousand troops following.

"If I let them escape, then I'll have to fight them later."

"They are outnumbered, and will fight desperately, and that will cost
you disproportionately," advises Gethen.

"In a head-to-head battle, yes."

The older man waits.  "I await your orders, Lord."

"With the option to disengage if I plan something too stupid, Scr
Gethen?"  asks Sillek with a smile.

"You are both your father's and your mother's son, I think."

They proceed to the grassy back side of the hill overlooking the
ford-and the Suthyans-where Sillek gathers in the chief arms men and
the two wizards.

"Hold the body of the troops just below the hill crest on this side,"
Sillek orders the chief arms men  "Keep them still.  About half the
mounted troopers will come with me.  We'll hold the hill crest in full
view of the Suthyans."

Gethen frowns, but says nothing.

Sillek turns to Terek and continues with his instructions.  "You and
Jissek will be with us, and when I give the order, you're to start
casting those fire bolts into their ranks.  We'll start downhill,
slowly, but stay short of really effective bow range.  They don't have
any Bleyani bowmen, thank the light."

Sillek pauses and scans the faces, then bites back the words he might
have said, instead adding, "We'll be showing less force than they have,
and by coming downhill, we're also showing that I'm young and
inexperienced.  The fire bolts will get them angry, because that's not
fighting fair, and they'll come charging after us-"

"If they don't?"  asks Gethen.

Sillek shrugs.  "Then we stop a third of the way down the hill and let
Terek and Jissek fry as many of them as we can.  I'm not in this for
honor.  The idea is to take the river and Rulyarth as effectively as
possible.  If you would, Scr Gethen, I'd like you to arrange the forces
here so as to trap the Suthyans once they cross the hill crest.  Could
we set the pikes so their horse couldn't stop in time?"

Gethen purses his lips.  Then his lips twist.  "You have a nasty turn
of thought, Lord Sillek.  Nasty ... but it should work."

The chief arms men nod in agreement.

Sillek looks to the arms men  "Don't let anyone charge down that hill.
If anyone tries it, I'll have Terek turn him into charred bacon.  Let
them all know that, if you have to."

The grizzle-bearded arms man on the right coughs and spits from his
saddle and onto the damp grass.  "Isn't that being a mite hard, scr?
Especially when it's an easy fight, us havin' so many more than
them?"

"No.  We'll need every man we have alive and well when we reach
Rulyarth.  I'm not interested in glory hounds.  You can tell them that,
too.  I want to win with the fewest lives lost."

The slightest nod from the oldest arms man greets his statement.

Shortly, Sillek leads more than two score mounted troops over the hill
crest and slowly downhill under a pair of purpled banners.  To the
right of the hill is the river, and from farther east comes the muted
rumbling of rapids above the point where the two rivers meet.

A trumpet sounds from the Suthyan forces, and the Suthyan horse,
numbering nearly twice those Sillek leads, form up on the flat before
the long gentle slope that leads up toward the banners of Lornth.

The Suthyans wait as Sillek's troop descends.  In time, Sillek
gestures, and his troopers rein up.

The Suthyans continue to wait.

Sillek shrugs and says, "Make ready, Wizards."

"We are ready, Lord," answers Terek.

"Now!"  orders Sillek.

Terek concentrates, almost wavering in his saddle, but a white-red bolt
of fire arcs downhill and into the mounted Suthyans.

A single horse rears, flame rising from where the rider had been, and
screams as only a horse in pain and agony can.

Jissek follows with a second fire bolt then Terek with a third.

By the time a half-dozen Suthyans have been brought down with wizard
fire, some of the horse troopers trot uphill.  Then, the trumpet
sounds, and all the Suthyans begin the charge toward the apparently
outnumbered Lornians.

"A few more fire bolts orders Sillek, before turning to the arms man
mounted on the horse beside him.  "Let them get within a hundred
cubits."

"That's too close, scr.  They'll chase if they get to two hundred."

"Two hundred, then.  Would you suggest a flat gallop, or a quick
trot?"

The other grins.  "A good commander would order a gallop, get you
clear, then a walk.  A dumb one always orders a quick trot, then a
gallop, and your mount's got nothing left."

Sillek grins back.  "A quick trot to the top of the hill, then."

As they have talked, three more Suthyan troopers have been incinerated,
and the Suthyan mounted are riding quickly toward them.

"Back!"  orders Sillek, after a quick glance at the arms man who nods.
"Quick trot!"

The Suthyans are less than a hundred cubits behind when Sillek's horse
crosses the hill crest and he orders his mounted troop to swing to the
west.

"Get the pikes set!"  snaps Gethen.  "Horse on the flanks!
Archers-stand fast!  Between horse and flank!"

The Suthyan horse is a ragged line by the time the riders surge over
the crest chasing the "fleeing" Lornian forces.

Fully twenty horse and riders are spitted on the waiting pikes.  The
others slow into a milling mass.

"Archers!"  shouts Gethen, and the arrows turn half the remaining
Suthyans into pincushions.

Perhaps a dozen horse troopers swing out to the flanks, only to be
encircled and brought down by Sillek's troopers on the left, and
Gethen's reserves on the right.

"Move up!  Move up!"  snaps Gethen, and the pike men and the foot move
forward.

"Measured pace!  Measured pace!  Archers forward and to the flanks,"
orders Gethen.

Sillek brings the wizards back to the hill crest.  By now the Suthyan
foot are more than halfway up the hill.

"Firebolts!"  he orders.

Jissek strains, and a small ball arches into the left side.  Greasy
smoke rises, along with the shriek of a man who rolls in the damp
grass-in vain as he writhes before subsiding into a blackened lump.

"Terek."

The chief wizard casts another bolt, and two Suthyan troopers turn to
flaming brands.

A trumpet bugles, and the Suthyan forces begin to trot uphill.

"Idiots," mutters Sillek, looking over his shoulder to see that the
pikes are set in the forward position.  Then he signals, and his horse
troopers reform in a double line, waiting.

As the Suthyan forces halt at the hill crest, wavering in sight of the
pikes, Gethen drops his arm, and arrows sheet through the Suthyans.

The line wavers, and then breaks, ignoring the shouted commands from
the Suthyan commanders.

Gethen swings his arm, and the Lornian horse charges.

Less than two score Suthyans scramble into the river, and less than
half those make it across the ford.

On the west side of the river, Sillek reins up and watches.  His eyes
stray, not to the hundreds of Suthyan bodies, nor to the fallen horse,
but to the relative handful of fallen Lornians.  He turns to Gethen.

Gethen cleans his blade and turns to Sillek.  "They'll call you a
butcher, Lord."

"I don't care what they call me, just so long as they respect me."
Sillek takes a deep breath and looks to see that they are beyond easy
earshot of the wizards and the chief arms men who are directing the
looting and burial details.  "Fighting is not glorious, and anyone who
thinks so ..."  He does not finish the thought, but shakes his head.

"Many in your land would dispute that, Lord."

"Even as I save their sons, yet."  Sillek laughs harshly.  "Would you
dispute me, Gethen?"

"No."  Gethen laughs harshly.  "You have learned young what many never
learn.  But do not speak it except to those as gray-haired as I, or
those who have buried sons lost in useless battles, not unless you wish
to kill them."

"I won't."  Sillek tightens his lips.  "Is this useless battle?"

"It is less useless than most, My Lord.  Else I would not be here."

"On to Rulyarth."

"On to Rulyarth," echoes Gethen.

"After our gloriously victorious troops claim their just rewards,"
Sillek adds darkly and under his breath.

LXXXVIII

NYLAN TAPPED THE brick level on the mortar and troweled away the excess
mortar.  That finished the base of the forge.  Sometime, Huldran and
Cessya and the others could set the roof timbers.  He had to finish the
forge and start making more weapons ... for more killing.

"Need more mortar, scr?"  asked Huldran.

"No."  He glanced toward the west, but the sun was just above the
peaks, and they wouldn't have much time before the evening triangle
rang.  He rubbed his shoulders.  After a year, things should be easier,
but it didn't seem that way.  He paused as he saw Ayrlyn hurrying
toward the unfinished smithy.  "I sense trouble."

"We've got more than enough, scr," said Huldran.  "That new one,
Desain, she thinks that showers are unhealthy, and the other one,
Ryllya, she had a fit when the healer cut her hair.  Said her strength
was in her hair.  Things like that remind me how strange this place
is."

"It is strange."  Nylan wondered what was driving Ayrlyn.

"Here comes the healer," announced Huldran.

"Gerlich is gone," Ayrlyn announced even before she stepped inside the
brick-framed doorway of the smithy.  Her face was flushed.

"How do you know?"

"Day before yesterday, he said he'd be gone for two days-that he'd been
having trouble finding game.  He took a mount and the old gray for a
pack animal.  Llyselle found that out when she was cleaning the
stables. She told me, and I told Ryba.  Today, I happened to look at
his space, and both bows were gone.  There were rags folded where his
clothes were. I started checking, and he took all the coins in the
strongbox I had hidden on the fifth level."  Ayrlyn wiped her forehead.
"Ryba has the golds somewhere, but that's a lot of silvers, and a
bunch of coppers. He also made off with a handful of blades-the poor
ones in the back of the chest."

Nylan nodded.  "He's also been sneaking arrows out of the tower."

"You didn't say anything?"

Huldran's eyes widened as they moved from Ayrlyn to Nylan and back
again.

"I didn't know.  All I knew was that every time he went hunting he came
back with a few arrows missing, sometimes more than a few shafts.  Then
the morning he left, Fierral told me he'd taken fifty shafts hunting. I
just thought he was a poor shot, but didn't want to admit it.  Now
..."

"It makes sense," pointed out Ayrlyn.

"Narliat's departure was no accident, either, then," Nylan continued.
"That bastard Gerlich has something arranged."  He turned to Huldran.
"Can you clean up?  The healer and I need to find the marshal."

"Yes, scr."

The engineer and the healer headed toward the tower.

"Where is she?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"Up in the tower, I think.  I carted Dylless around this morning.
Bricklaying is slow with an infant strapped to you, but she liked the
motion, I only had trouble if I stood still."

Nylan and Ayrlyn found the marshal on the fifth level, working with one
of the newcomers.  Saryn sparred with another and Fierral with a third.
At a break in the sparring, Nylan motioned to Ryba.

The marshal stopped.  "With two of you, it must be serious."  Ryba
turned to Saryn.  "Desain needs to stop letting her wrist droop."

"I can manage that."  Saryn laughed.

"And Fierral," added Ryba.  "Nistayna doesn't have any follow-through.
She's afraid she'll hurt someone.  If she doesn't, they'll kill her."

Ryba racked her wand, and the three walked up the stone steps.

On the top level of the tower, Ellysia sat in the rocking chair,
holding Dephnay on her knee with one hand and rocking the cradle
containing Dylless with the other, the cradle that now rested at the
foot of the two separated lander couches.

"Thank you, Ellysia," said Ryba.  "You can go now."  She crossed the
room and opened both windows wide.

Behind her Ellysia shivered as the wind gusted into the room, then
stood and picked up Dephnay.  Dylless started to murmur the moment the
unattended cradle began to slow.

As Ellysia, shivering, her face flushed, started down the steps, Ryba
eased Dylless from the cradle.  "You're about to wake up anyway, little
one."

Ryba sat in the rocking chair and unfastened her shirt.  Dylless began
to nurse, as greedily as always, reflected Nylan.

"What is this problem?"  asked the marshal.

"Gerlich is gone," said Ayrlyn.  "He also took all the silvers from the
lower strongbox."

"I checked the golds this morning.  They're all here," Ryba said
flatly.  "He doesn't have enough coin to do that much."

"He still stole close to four golds in silver and copper," pointed out
Ayrlyn.

"He took everything he could sneak out, including more than fifty
arrows, a packhorse, and some of the more battered blades," Nylan
added.

"Those blades he took are worth close to five golds.  He could buy
close to a score of arms men explained Ayrlyn.  "Hired blades are cheap
here."

"Life is cheap here," said Ryba.  "Look at those cairns."  Her head
inclined toward the open tower window.

"You think he'll do that?"  Nylan's guts already gave him one answer.

"He will, and he will be back, with an army behind him," agreed Ryba
tiredly, shifting Dylless from one breast to the other.

"You see this?"  asked Nylan.

"Not all of it, just a fragment, just enough."

Ayrlyn frowned, but said nothing.

"What Gerlich took won't be enough, and he knows it," Ryba pointed
out.

"Narliat left earlier than Gerlich," said Ayrlyn.

The triangle rang for the evening meal.

"He's acting as Gerlich's advance agent.  Gerlich tries to let someone
else face the dangers first."  Ryba looked down at Dylless.  "Easy
there ... easy ..."  A rueful smile crossed her face.

"Should we beef up the standing guard?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"For how long?  We still need food.  We need to get more things
working, like the smithy, and possibly a few cows or goats.  Not every
guard can nurse, and we won't always have guards with infants at the
same time.  Guards have to work and guard, or Westwind will fall.  I
don't know when Gerlich will try his attack.  The only thing we can do
is make sure that all the guards have their weapons at hand, whatever
they're doing.  Fierral can build a permanent watch post on top of the
ridge, with another warning triangle.  Outside of that..  ."  Ryba
shrugged.

Nylan and Ayrlyn exchanged glances.

"What can we do, besides what we're already doing?"  asked Ryba. "Let's
go eat."  She slipped Dylless from her lap into the carry pack stood,
and headed down the stairs.  "You've eaten, little pig.  It's your
mother's turn."

Ayrlyn glanced at Nylan and shrugged.

He shrugged back.

As they entered the great room, guards were still straggling in.  Nylan
almost stopped short at the third table below the first two.  It only
had one bench, but three of the new guards sat there, flanking Istril
and Weryl.

Nylan paused.  "Hello there, young fellow."

Weryl gurgled.  Nylan patted his shoulder.

Istril smiled.  "He's good."

"I'm sure he is."  Nylan returned the smile, hiding a certain dismay.
How had he ended up with three children born within a season of each
other?  His eyes flicked to Ryba's back, but he kept smiling as he
nodded to the three newcomers before turning.  One was called
Nistayna-that he remembered.

A spicy scent Nylan had not smelled before filled the area, and he
looked toward the big pot that Kadran set in the middle of the table.

"Something new," announced the cook.  "You take one of those flat
biscuit things and pour a ladle of this over the biscuit."

"It better be good," muttered Weindre, loud enough for those at all
three tables to hear.

"It's too good for you," snapped Kadran.

Even the newcomers at the third table smiled briefly.

Ryba slid into her chair, and Nylan and Ayrlyn sat on the benches
across from each other.

When the woven grass basket came to Nylan, he broke off a piece of
bread, sniffed it, and drew in the spicy aroma.  "This even smells
good."

"That's Blynnal's new bread," mumbled Relyn from beside Ayrlyn.  "It's
much better."

"It tastes like real bread," added Huldran.

Nylan took a thick biscuit and then two ladles full of the main course,
a thin stew or thick sauce filled with chunks of meat and assorted
chunks of other things, presumably roots or other vegetable matter, and
poured it over the flat biscuit.

He looked at the brown mass dubiously, then sniffed.  Nothing smelled
burned or rancid.  In fact, the aroma was pleasant, somewhere between
minty and something else.  Finally, he took a mouthful of meat, sauce,
and biscuit.

Ayrlyn and Ryba watched.

"You're braver than I am," murmured the healer.

Nylan nodded, chewed, and swallowed.  "It's good.  I can't tell what's
in it, but it's good."  As he spoke, he could feel his forehead
warming, then his face, and then his mouth and throat.  "Whewww!"  He
reached for his mug and downed the cold water.  It didn't help, but the
bread did.

"Do you still think it's good?"  asked Ryba with a smile, patting
Dylless's back as she squirmed in the chest carry-pack.

Nylan nodded, and took a second mouthful, a much smaller one.

"Another Blynnal special?"  Ayrlyn asked Relyn.

He looked puzzled.

"Did Blynnal cook this?"

"Yes.  She is a good cook.  You are fortunate to have her."  Relyn ate
without water, and without apparent discomfort.

"They clearly like food hotter than we're used to," observed Ryba.

After taking a very small bite of her dinner, Ayrlyn nodded.

Nylan broke off another chunk of bread, but kept eating, ignoring
Ayrlyn's amused smile.

LXXXIX

NYLAN WIPED HIS forehead and looked down at the coals, at his
quick-built forge.  Without a chimney and in a structure without
completed walls, with no doors, open gaps for windows, and no roof,
Nylan was trying to implement a combination of basic metallurgy and
low-level technology, and use his particular abilities with the local
magic field to create a piece of metal shaped and strong enough to
pierce plate armor and to maim or kill those who wore such armor-or do
worse to those who didn't.

He'd already tried to melt the iron, and that hadn't worked.  It took
both charcoal and green wood, and the bellows, and half the time the
iron burned rather than melted.

As he thought of the arrows and blades Fierral had pleaded for, he
sighed twice-once for the thought that damned little was settled in
human affairs without some kind of force and once for his unfulfilled
promise.  He still hadn't finished the clamp device he'd promised
Relyn-another tool of war, except, for the one-handed man, it seemed
more defensive than offensive.

Nylan raised his eyes to Huldran, standing by the bellows.  The bellows
hadn't been that hard, just three pieces of wood joined with leftover
synthetic sheeting and using flap valves and a nozzle.  Creating a tube
under the center of the thrown together brick forge had been tricky,
finally accomplished by having Rienadre fire more than a dozen bricks
with a hole in the center and lining them up and mortaring them in
place.  The air nozzle was a modified lander fuel sieve greatly
modified.

The first charcoal burn hadn't worked.  More than half the wood turned
into ashes.  Another quarter hadn't burned at all.  About a quarter had
been transformed into charcoal.  The second burn had gone better. Maybe
half the wood had become charcoal.  So after more than an eight-day,
Nylan had two heaping piles of charcoal behind the smithy and a
half-dozen disgruntled and sooty guards.  They hadn't cared that he was
sooty.

It was early summer, and the purple star flowers had bloomed and were
fading, and the crops seemed to be taking, at least the potatoes, which
were critical.  One of the remaining ewes had lambed, and three of the
mares had foaled, and yet another woman, older than the others, had
claimed refuge.  Nylan was losing track of all the names of the
newcomers.  Names or not, Fierral slammed them into blade and bow
training, and into logging or field work-except for the timid Blynnal,
who had transformed mealtime from an ordeal into something less
arduous.

Nylan looked down at the open forge.  To save the charcoal, he had
built the fire with wood and let it burn down to coals before easing
the charcoal into place.

Now, he had two hammers, and a makeshift anvil created by
cold-hammering sheet alloy around a stone block wedged between the
sides of a green spruce log buried in the ground.  The anvil, such as
it was, stood waist-high.  Nylan hoped that was correct.  He had one
chisel, and a makeshift pair of tongs.

Huldran still stood by the bellows, waiting.  "Tell me when, scr."

"I wish I really knew," Nylan muttered to himself, as he took the
square of alloy, one of the ones he knew was iron-based and
lower-temperature-rated, in the tongs and thrust it into the coals.
"Now .. . slowly."

The engineer watched until the metal finally turned cherry-red, when he
put it on the anvil and picked up the chisel.  "Hit the chisel," he
told Huldran, and the guard struck the chisel squarely.

Nylan tried not to wince.  "You hold the tongs, and let me have the
hammer."

Huldran took the tongs without comment, and Nylan brought the hammer
down, trying to use his senses to find some grain, some pattern in the
metal.  In a dozen strikes, he finally had a shape that looked remotely
like the war arrow that lay in the unframed and unshuttered front
window.

Nylan reclaimed the tongs, and sent Huldran back to the bellows.

After the next heat, he bent the sides back and forged or welded them
back on each other.  With the third heat, he drew out the edges.  With
the fourth came more ordering through his senses, and finally a
slightly overlarge arrowhead lay on the alloy anvil.

"Going to have to do this quicker or find some other way."

"Could you cast them?"  asked Huldran.

"Right now, I don't see how.  This is as hot as I can get this with
just charcoal, and the metal's nowhere close to melting.  Casting would
be a lot easier, but I can't seem to melt it without burning it."

"What about copper or bronze?"

Nylan shrugged.  "Even if we melted down the copper buried in the
landers, copper arrowheads wouldn't do much good against even iron
plate."

"Oh .. ."

"Exactly."  Nylan lifted the tongs.  "So I'd best get a lot faster."

When Nylan looked up from the sixth arrowhead, he could sense that the
charcoal was almost gone.  Each of the killer arrowheads had been
easier, but each still took time.

Since the wood made a good base and stretched the charcoal, he set down
the hammer.  "We'll build up the fire with those heartwood logs.  Then
we'll take a break while it burns down to coals.  All right?"

"That's fine by me, scr."  Huldran blotted her sweat-dampened forehead.
"Do you think Smithing's always this hard?"

"We're making a lot of mistakes.  I just don't know what they are, but
it's always been hard work."  He walked out through the open space that
was meant for doors to the pile of split and cut logs.  Huldran
followed.

Once the open forge was blazing, and Nylan hoped the heat wouldn't
crack too many bricks, he headed down the road toward the tower.  Under
the clear sky, the sun beat down, so much that he still did not cool
off much once he was away from the forge.

He walked across the short causeway, but stopped short of the door.  He
could sense people in the great room- guards and infants.  Between
meals, the great room had become almost a de facto nursery, which made
a sort of sense to Nylan, because it had the most ventilation and the
best light.

After entering the tower, he slipped along the side away from the great
room and to the bathhouse, where he managed to remove some sweat, soot,
and grime.  Then he squared his shoulders and headed for the great
room.

Siret was the closest to the door, and she had Kyalynn in one arm, and
Dephnay in the other.

Nylan looked down at his silver-haired daughter, her eyes the darker
green of Siret's.  Kyalynn looked back.  He smiled.  She did not,
although her mother did.  Slowly, he extended his index finger, gently
letting it slide into Kyalynn's open palm.  Almost as slowly, her
chubby fingers wrapped around his finger.  He wiggled his finger, and
her hands tightened.  He wiggled again, and Kyalynn gurgled.

"She's strong," he said.

"Yes."  Siret smiled again.

"I'm sorry.  I didn't know," he confessed.

"I know that.  The marshal told me a long time ago.  Do you mind?"

"Mind?"  asked Nylan, wiggling his finger to keep Kyalynn interested.

"That I agreed to have your child?  After the battle with the demons, I
thought... I never would have a child."  The silver-haired guard shook
her head gravely.  "I hadn't thought that would ever upset me, but it
did.  It really did.  Then after the first battle here, I decided
that..."  Siret paused.  "You're not mad at me?"

"I was a little upset-but not at you," he admitted.

"You came when I-when we-needed you."

"I didn't know then, either, but I knew you needed help."

Siret looked down for a moment, then met his eyes.  "I am not yours,
and I will never belong to any man.  But... I'm glad you are Kyalynn's
father."

Nylan finally looked away.  "It's hard for me."

"You are a healer, as well as an engineer.  The other healer .. . you
know that she cries when she thinks no one is listening?"

Ayrlyn, the self-contained and competent healer and trader?  "No.  I
didn't know.  Or ... maybe I didn't want to see it."  He paused.  "And
you, Siret, what about you?  The night vision, the feeling that you can
sense things you cannot see?"

"They help.  This is a strange world, but in many ways better than what
I left."

"I trust you will always find it that way."  Nylan cleared his throat.
"And that you keep working on those new skills."

"I hope that Kyalynn has such skills.  I wouldn't want her to be just a
guard."  Siret's green eyes darted toward the stairs, as if to ask if
Ryba were descending.

Kyalynn yawned.

"Well .. . work on your own skills."  Nylan wiggled his finger out of
the sleepy Kyalynn's hand and stood.

Siret offered a smile and rose.  "I need to put them to sleep while I
can.  Ellysia can watch them while I practice and do a few things for
me."

Istril and Weryl were at the next table, and Nylan crossed the stone
tiles.  Weryl's eyes were already green, and they locked in on Nylan as
the engineer approached his son.

"He knows his father," Istril said quietly.

"I should have realized earlier.  There were clues there, but I just
never thought..."  Nylan shook his head.

"I'm not upset.  It was my choice.  You've saved my life twice, you
know."  Istril gave a wry smile.  "And I don't even know what to call
you.  Part of me thinks of you as an officer and 'scr," and part as
Nylan."

"Whatever you feel comfortable with."  " "Nylan' in private and serin
public."

Nylan smiled.  "All right."

"You know," Istril said quietly, "I'm stuck here.  When I've been
hunting, I've gone down lower, especially last summer.  The air was so
hot and thick that I felt like I couldn't breathe.  Ayrlyn can do it.
She's from Svenn.  I couldn't.  The guards that go with her-they all
lose weight, and it takes them days to feel good after they return.
That's why Ayrlyn takes different ones each time.  You're only half
Sybran.  You could handle the heat and thick air.  So could Weryl. He's
young ... but I couldn't."  She shrugged.  "It's not bad here, though,
and it's getting better.  I'm glad Blynnal came."

Weryl made a stretching motion, as if to reach out to Nylan.  Nylan
took the small hand and let Weryl's fingers curl around his.

"Oooohhh..."

"He likes you."  Istril shifted the boy onto her other knee, closer to
Nylan.

"I'd hope so."

"What are you going to do?"

"Right now, I'm trying to figure out a faster way to forge arrowheads.
We need a lot of them.  If I can solve that problem, I might go to work
on planning and building a sawmill .. ."

In time, Nylan finally stood.

"I understand, Nylan, if you don't want to spend too much time with me.
But keep stopping to see Weryl."  Istril's face was calm, somewhere
between content and resigned.

"I will."  What else can I do?  he thought.  They are my children.  Why
.. . why did you do this to me?  Why did I refuse to see what was
happening?  Because it was easier?  He forced a smile, which softened
as Weryl go oed again.

Either Istril or Siret would have been warmer to him than Ryba, and
Siret really wasn't that interested-or so she said-in any man.  Yet he
never even considered them-because he was still bound in the
officer-marine separation?  And Ayrlyn, crying in the night?

Again, nothing was quite what it seemed on the surface, even with
people.  He supposed people still thought he and Ryba slept together.
That was another problem they hadn't resolved-or he hadn't.
Surprisingly, Ryba hadn't pushed.  What else did she know?

He snorted once, ironically, as he started up the steps to the fifth
level.  Wasn't that always the way it was?  Ryba knowing, and not
saying, and Nylan the great mage, bewildered and struggling.  He
snorted again.

In the dimness of the fifth level, Ellysia was practicing, puffing,
with Saryn, Hryessa, and Ydrall.  Nylan eased around the sparring and
toward the section of storage shelves above the unused weapons laser.
He scooped the parts he had taken from the lander and roughly bent into
shape into a worn leather bag that had been some poor raider's purse.

Then he headed back down to the lower level.  As he passed the third
level, he saw Siret rocking Kyalynn to sleep.  Dephnay, on her knee,
looked wide awake.  Nylan found Relyn in the space off the kitchen,
laboriously smoothing what looked to be a wooden tray.

"That looks good," observed the smith-engineer.

"I said I'd help her.  She's too quiet."  Relyn looked up.  "Blynnal.
She won't ask for anything."

"Some people won't.  She's improved the food a lot."

Relyn grinned.  "Sometimes, I get a little extra."

"I haven't forgotten my promise," Nylan said, taking out the pieces of
metal.  "Like everything around here, it's taking longer.  If you'll
come here, I'd like to measure these.  I'll probably have to
hot-hammer-or whatever they call it these together, but I wanted to
check the fit first."

Relyn extended his hook.

Nylan slipped the pieces in place, then nodded toward the knife.  "I
need to see how tight it should be."

"As tight as you can make it, Mage."

The knife slid into the makeshift clamp easily, too easily.  Nylan
studied the construction, then took his own knife and scratched where
the changes should be.

"We'll try again."

"You do not admit failure, do you?"

Nylan laughed, harshly.  "Life is trial, and error.  Those who succeed
are those who survive their failures and keep trying.  So far, I've
been lucky."

Relyn looked back at the tray.  "It is not luck-that I know.  You
understand how the world works."  He smiled wryly.  "I hope to learn
that, too."

"You probably know more about that than I do," admitted Nylan.

"Never, Mage.  You refuse to accept how much you do know."

"That's all," Nylan said, uneasy with Relyn's words.  "Now, I have to
make it work, and then forge scores and scores of arrowheads."

"You will," promised Relyn.

"I hope so."  Nylan wished he were as sure as the young man from Carpa,
but when he returned to the smithy, he carried the pieces for Relyn's
clamp.

Huldran was waiting, and they loaded more of the charcoal into the
forge.

XC

ZELDYAN EASES HERSELF into the armchair facing the alcove where the
lady Ellindyja embroiders.

"You do me honor, Lady," offers Ellindyja.

"You are the Lady of Lornth," responds Zeldyan easily.

"No longer.  That is your position, now, but you are most kind to
recall my past... honor."  The needle carries crimson thread into the
white fabric.  "How might I be of help?"

"I thought you might like to hear.  There was a dispatch from Lord
Sillek, Lady," answers Zeldyan.

"And you were thoughtful enough to come to tell me, and in your
condition, too.  I appreciate that.  I do."  Ellindyja knots the
crimson strand and threads green through the eye of the needle.

"I am well indeed, only sore, and that is passing.  Nesslek is strong,
and healthy indeed, and for that I am glad."  Zeldyan laughs.  "But I
stray.  Lord Sillek has taken the ford below the great fork and nears
Rulyarth.  According to the dispatch, they have destroyed nearly a
thousand Suthyans, and less than that number stands ready to defend
Rulyarth.  The city was never walled, you know," she adds
conversationally.

"I had heard that somewhere," Ellindyja assents.  "You understand these
things, I can tell.  It must help, being raised in an honorable
warrior's holding."

"I was fortunate," Zeldyan says, shifting her slender figure in the
chair.  "My mother was learned, and taught my father and her children.
My father was skilled in arms and taught her and us both honor and
arms."

"He taught arms to the lady Erenthla?"  Ellindyja raises her
eyebrows.

"But, of course.  He wanted no helpless women in his holding."  Zeldyan
smiles as she rises.  "I must go, but I did want you to know that Lord
Sillek is well."

"I appreciate your thoughtfulness, Lady."

Zeldyan inclines her head.

As the door closes behind her, Ellindyja snaps the green thread, and
knots it in a quick, hard motion.

XCI

THE ALLOY IN the tongs began to change color, getting redder under the
influence of the coals.  Above the open doorway to the unfinished
smithy, a fly droned, circling toward the sweating smith-engineer.

Arrowheads!  Nylan was already sick of dealing with them, despite the
acclaim the product had received from Istril and Fierral.  Roughly two
hundred had been finished.  Nylan smiled.  That meant two hundred that
Fierral and the marines had to smooth and sharpen and fletch-and that
also meant netting birds.  Relyn had proved helpful there, explaining
how to net them and which ones worked better.

With the tongs, Nylan flipped the red-hot metal onto the now-dented
makeshift anvil, then began hot-cutting the shape of the arrowhead with
the chisel and hammer while Huldran took over the tongs.

The hammer rose, and fell, and Nylan moved the chisel.  Sparks of metal
flew with each impact.  One rough shape lay on the anvil, and Nylan
began the cutting on the next.  He concentrated on following the hidden
grain of the metal, letting his senses guide him, even more than his
sight.

That guidance resulted in stronger arrowheads, but each was subtly
different from the next-not enough, Nylan hoped, to affect their
flight.

Through the roof beams, the sun beat into the smithy, and sweat dripped
down Nylan's face.  He brushed back a fly, twice, before it buzzed
across the meadow toward the smelly sheep from whence it had probably
come.  Nylan blinked back sweat.  While he and Huldran forged, around
them Cessya and, surprisingly to Nylan, Nistayna had worked on getting
the roof timbers in place, but the roof had to wait for the completion
of the forge itself.

Each day, after completing forging, Nylan mixed up some mortar and
added to the hood and chimney of the forge.  The door and windows could
wait.

Before the metal cooled enough to need reheating, he had five shapes
cut.  With each day, his strokes, while probably crude compared to the
local smiths, had gotten surer, and the finished product needed less
and less smoothing.

Nylan nodded, and Huldran swung the uncut section of metal back into
the coals.  The smith-engineer brushed the sweat off his forehead with
the back of his forearm, then took the tongs.  "Need more air,
Huldran."

The stocky blonde began to pump the bellows.  While some air wheezed
out through the sides of the bellows, most came up through the air
nozzle, and the coals glowed hotter.

Nylan walked out to the dwindling pile of charcoal-another problem-and
used a shovel to bring in another scoop, which he distributed evenly.
Then he flipped the metal to get a better heat distribution.

He lifted the metal onto the anvil and turned to Huldran.  "You try
one."

Huldran just nodded and slowly picked up the hammer and chisel.

Clung!

Nylan winced as he felt the shiver up the guard's arm.  "Angle the
chisel a shade-to the outside.  It cuts cleaner, and it doesn't hurt as
much."

The second blow did not ring quite so off-key.  Huldran finished two
rough arrow-shaped forms before Nylan lifted the metal back into the
forge.

"Harder than it looks, scr," Huldran admitted as she pumped the
bellows.

"Yes.  You didn't do badly.  My first were pretty crude.  I'll do the
next batch, and then you can do some."

"You're a lot faster, and Fierral needs a lot of arrows."

"I know, but you need some practice, too.  Westwind needs more than one
person who can handle things like this.  Otherwise, an accident-or an
arrow from one of the locals- could wipe out everything I've
learned."

When the metal came out of the forge again, cherry-red, Nylan resumed
cutting.  The two kept working until past mid-morning, when they came
to the end of the sheet of alloy.  All that remained were a few scraps
that Nylan swept into an already battered wooden bucket.

"Someday, I'll work on reforging the scraps into stock.  I think that's
what they call it."  He wiped his forehead.  "We need a break, and I
need to find another panel in one of the landers that won't take
forever to unfasten."

"I'll bank the fire," Huldran volunteered.

"Thanks."  Nylan blotted the sweat out of his eyes again, then began to
walk downhill along the trail he hoped would someday be a real road.

To the south, by the cairns, grazed the handful of sheep.  Desain and
Ryllya were weeding and working the fields, along with Selitra, who was
supervising while weeding and cleaning out the small irrigation
ditches.

A cart, carrying a stack of rough-cut planks for the smithy roof-slate
was out, now that the laser was gone-creaked down from the ridge.
Weindre walked beside the cart horse, one hand briefly touching her
blade.

On the flat exercise area beyond the causeway, two figures sparred.

One was Cessya, the other Relyn.  Relyn was using the knife and clamp
over his hook, but had fashioned a wooden cover for the blade.

Nylan stopped and watched for a time as the wooden wands flashed.

The two paused, and Relyn turned to Nylan.  "It works.  I have much to
learn about using a blade left-handed, but the knife helps."

"He's .. . better .. . than that..  ."  puffed Cessya.  "Glad he wasn't
this good back when he attacked."

"I must be better," Relyn said.  "My left arm is not as strong as my
right."

"Manure," responded Cessya.

Nylan offered a wave that was a half-salute and started across the
causeway.  His arms still ached.  Would he ever get used to the heavy
labor involved with smithing-or everything in a low-tech culture?

He crossed the causeway, but stopped short of the tower door, thinking
about the children and their mothers in the great room.  He didn't want
to face company, not when three of the four children were his, and he'd
be obligated to comment on each, play with each, and possibly even sing
a lullaby to each.  He did most of the time, anyway, since he'd finally
made his uneasy peace with himself, if not with Ryba.  Her
high-handedness still made him seethe, but that wasn't his children's
fault.  Still, he wasn't up to infants this particular morning.

Their mothers don't have any choice.  He pursed his lips, then, after a
moment, headed for the sheltered corner formed between the bathhouse
and tower walls.  He just wanted to be alone.

That wasn't going to be.  As Nylan neared the corner of the tower wall,
he heard the sound of the lutar.  He stopped and listened, recognizing
Ayrlyn's clear voice.

Oh, Nylan was a smith, and a mighty mage was he.

With lightning hammer and an anvil of nigh forged he.

From the Westhorns tall came the blades and bows of the night,

Their lightning edges gave the angels forever the height.

Oh, Nylan was a mage, and a mighty smith was he.

With rock from the heights and a lightning blade built he.

On the Westhorns tall stands a tower of blackest stone,

And it holds back the winter s snows and storms all alone... When the
notes died, Nylan stepped around the corner and looked at Ayrlyn,
sitting on a stone above the ditching.

"That's awful," muttered Nylan.  "Just awful."

"Who was it that told me the songs that people remember and love to
sing are generally awful?"

"Those weren't about me."

"That makes it different?"  asked the healer.

Nylan eased himself onto the ground.  His feet and legs were tired,
too, and it wasn't even midday.

"You're still doing arrowheads?"

He nodded.  "I wish I could get the coals hot enough to melt the metal
and cast them, but when I try that it takes green heartwood, and the
metal burns, and I can't damp it.  With plain charcoal, it's hard
enough just to get the metal hot enough for cutting them.  Some of
those arrowheads are going to rip up the people they hit."

"Isn't that the idea?"

"Unfortunately, but I still have trouble with the idea that people only
respond to force."

"It's especially clear on this planet."

"It's clear everywhere, but in a high-technology setting, it's easier
to ignore.  On the power net you see a de-energizer beam, and a mirror
tower, and, poof, the tower's gone.  You don't see the demons die.  If
someone commits a murder, the government carts them off, and, poof,
they're lase-flashed into dust.  Here it's obvious and slow.  I seem to
feel it more and more."  His eyes turned to Ayrlyn.  "I suspect you do,
too."

"I get so nauseated I can't hold anything down."  Her eyes dropped. "It
seems so ... weak.  I tell myself it must be in my mind, but the
reaction's so immediate, so physical..."

"It's more like a splitting headache for me.  The last few times, it's
been so intense I couldn't see or move for a moment or two."

"Great survival reactions for a violent culture."  Ayrlyn's tone was
dry.

"It's more violent here because Ryba's changing things, and change
usually is violent."

"We're part of that change," Ayrlyn said.  "And there's not much way to
get around that."

After a long silence, Nylan finally asked, "You're really not going to
sing that song, are you?"

"No.  I've got another trading run to make."  Ayrlyn laughed.  "So I
won't be singing it.  Not now.  I'll teach it to Istril.  It's simple
enough, and she's actually getting passable with the simple lutar we
built.  It doesn't have the depth of tone this one does, but it
works."

"Why are you going to teach her that song?"

"Why not?"  answered Ayrlyn.  "As many untrustworthy people have said,
"Trust me."  "

"I guess I have to."  He stood.  "But the song's awful .. . 'a mighty
mage'?  You have to be joking."  He paused, then asked, "Is it safe for
you to keep trading?"

"It's as safe as sitting here waiting to be attacked, if I'm careful.
We avoid the larger towns, and I've got some ideas where this Lord
Sillek has his garrisons."

"I don't know.  I don't like it."  He shook his head.

"I'll be all right."

"Be careful."

"I will."

"And try not to sing that song anywhere."

"As these things go, it's a good song."

"Try not to have it sung for a while."  Not until I'm dead, preferably,
and I hope that s a long while, he added to himself.

"After I teach it to Istril... we'll think about it."

"Please don't."  Nylan frowned.  "I've sat around too long.  After I
get something to drink, I've got to find another lander panel to turn
into low-tech weapons of destruction."

"Good luck."  Ayrlyn rose.  "I'm going back down to the loggers.  It's
amazing how experience changes people's views.  After the cold of the
winter, now all they can think about is making sure there's enough wood
for next winter.  That bothered them more than the short rations."

"Food wasn't that short.  How are we doing now?"

"Those horses have helped a lot, and so have our local recruits.
There's more out there in the forest than we knew."  Ayrlyn shrugged.
"For now, we're all right, but we'll need a lot more coin for
supplies-a lot more."

Nylan started back uphill, conscious that Ayrlyn's eyes stayed on his
back for a long time.

XCII

HISSL GLANCES AT the candle, then at the darkness outside.  A lamp in
the barracks courtyard casts a faint glow across the wooden steps that
lead up to his quarters.

He looks at the beaker of wine on the table, already beginning to turn,
for all that he has had the bottle less than a day, then back out
through the window.  Beyond the courtyard, on the far side, the windows
of Koric's room are dark.

"Out with his woman," snorts Hissl.  "He has his power and his woman,
and Terek rides beside Sillek, and I... I wait for an attack that will
never come, not while I am here.  Not while Ildyrom knows I am here."

He fills the beaker from the bottle and drinks fully half what he has
poured, wincing as he swallows.

A sense of unease fills him, and he looks at the flat glass on the
table.  Leaving the beaker half-full, he walks to the doorway.

A tall figure slips up the stairs, gracefully, yet not furtively,
followed by a second smaller figure.

Hissl touches his dagger, but does not draw it as the others approach.
Instead, he opens the door and waits.

The man who stops in the doorway fills it, and towers over both Hissl
and the sturdy arms man in the cloak behind the stranger.

"I understand you bid me visit you, Wizard?"  asks the visitor in
accented speech.  The tall man wears only a sleeveless tunic in the
cool evening, yet his brow is damp, and his face appears flushed in the
indirect light.

Hissl nods, "I did.  What would a warrior, a true warrior from the Roof
of the World, wish from a poor wizard?"

"To make our fortune.  To keep the world from being changed.  To
provide you with fame and position."  The tall stranger glances toward
the table and the flat glass and the beaker.  "Might we come in?"

"Of course."  Hissl steps back and offers a deep and ironic bow; "My
humble quarters await you."

The tall man takes the high stool and leans forward, waiting until
Hissl seats himself.  The cloaked arms man stands by the door.

"Why have you taken so long?"  Hissl begins.

"I beg your pardon, Scr Wizard, but it has taken somewhat longer to
accomplish the necessary."

"The necessary?"

The stranger smiles coldly.  "To travel here.  To raise coins.  Such
coins, I understand, are necessary.  Gold, after all, is the mother's
milk of ambition, is it not?"

"I had not heard it expressed quite that way," admits Hissl.

"You wish position and power.  I offer that.  With your help, we can
take Westwind-"

"Westwind?"

"The Roof of the World.  Once we take Westwind, the Lord of Lornth, I
understand, will be most suitably grateful."  The tall man wipes his
forehead again.

"That is what has been said," offers Hissl cautiously.

"To take Westwind will require four things: good tactics based on
knowledge, an adequate number of arms men a good leader, and a very
good wizard."  The stranger looks straight at Hissl.  "You are said to
be a very good wizard.  You also must have some coins and contacts
which would supplement our coins in hiring arms men

"Many would claim what you propose is impossible.  Many have already
died."  Hissl's eyes stray to the blank glass on the table and then to
the half beaker of wine.

"Hardly impossible.  Difficult, perhaps, but nothing is impossible."

Hissl raises his eyebrows.

"When we take Westwind, you may have the lands and title that Lord
Sillek offers.  I will take Westwind, and offer immediate and faithful
homage to His Lordship.  I think he will accept it," the stranger
says.

"How can I trust you?"  asks Hissl bluntly.  "You ask me to risk much.
Why would you offer me the leopard's share?"

The stranger spreads his hands, then wipes his forehead.  "Look.  You
wear warm clothes.  Na- The arms man wears a cloak.  I wear as little
as I can, and I am hot.  Given any choice, I would never leave the high
peaks.  I would die during a long hot summer in the lowlands."  The man
shudders.  "I could not take lowlands if they were forced upon me."

"How would I know this?"

The stranger glances at the glass and then at Hissl.  "You know."

"Why do you come to me, and not to Lord Sillek?"

"Because that would place him, and me, in a most difficult position. He
cannot deal directly with a man associated with the angels, but he
could accept the return of his lands, especially if that return is
accomplished with the help of one of his loyal wizards.

"To some degree, I am gambling that he will accept a man who is a
stranger paying homage to him.  But he has said that he will reward the
man who overthrows the evil angels and returns the lands to Lornth.
Because you are a loyal subject and of Lornth, he will certainly reward
you."  The stranger smiles again.

"How, exactly, would you accomplish this?"

"By wizardry, and by unexpected attacks."  The stranger clears his
throat.  "Are you interested?"

After a time, Hissl nods.  "Yes."

XCIII

NYLAN BRUSHED AWAY a persistent fly, the kind that hurt when it bit, as
he had learned the painful way, before pulling the alloy from the
forge.  He blinked as he turned.  Although (he brick forge now almost
reached the roof line, it did not block the direct afternoon sun that
beamed down on his dented, and oft-reflattened and -smoothed makeshift
anvil.

Huldran took the tongs.  Nylan lifted the hammer once more, ready to
hot-cut, wondering if Fierral's endless appetite for arrowheads would
ever be sated.  Then, again, did any military commander ever have
enough ammunition?

He laughed as he finished the blank.

"Scr?"  asked Huldran.

"Military commanders never have enough ammunition."

"If you say so, scr."  Huldran looked puzzled.

Nylan lifted the hammer again, then paused as he glimpsed a motion from
the corner of his eye.  He turned his head.  Ydrall, her dark hair now
cut short, ran up the road.  Nylan lowered the hammer, then raised it
again and kept cutting until the new guard actually entered the
smithy.

"Scr?"  gasped Ydrall.

Nylan set the hammer aside, and brushed back another of the scattered
but persistent flies.  "Yes?"

"Istril and Jaseen, they said you should come," she said in Old
Anglorat.  "Ellysia is sick, very sick, and the other healer, she is
off trading."

"What's that about Ellysia?"  asked Huldran.

"She's sick.  Very sick."  Nylan set down the hammer.  "It's your turn
to do what you can all alone.  I'll send someone up to hold the tongs
for you."

Nylan hurried, not quite running, first to the bathhouse to rid himself
of dirt and grime, and then back into the tower.  Still damp, the
engineer returned to the tower through the connecting south door.

Ryba, carrying Dylless in the chest pack, met him at the foot of the
stairs.  "They called you?  Good.  She's really sick."

"I'll do what I can.  Ayrlyn would be better."  He paused.  "Could you
arrange to send a guard up to help Huldran while I'm gone?  Cessya,
Weindre, someone like that?  She's trying to keep forging
arrowheads."

"I'll take care of it."

"Thank you."  Nylan hurried up the stairs.

Jaseen sat beside the bed.  On her bed, a dozen cubits away, Istril
held Dephnay and rocked the cradle holding Weryl.  Ellysia's face was
blotched and pale, and Nylan could feel the heat welling off her face.
Her entire body was drenched, both in sweat and in an unseen ugly
whiteness.

"What is this?"  muttered Nylan to Jaseen.

"Massive systemic infection, I'd guess.  We don't have any diagnostics,
or those fancy nanotech probes."

"Please ... help me, scr."  Ellysia's voice was less than a whisper.

Nylan took a deep breath, sending his perceptions out, trying to find a
nexus, a center for the infection, but there seemed to be none.  The
ugly whiteness oozed from everywhere within the stricken woman.

He wished he knew more about medicine and bodily systems.  After a
brief respite, he eased his senses out again, this time concentrating
on her circulatory system, trying to strengthen the minuscule order he
found there.

Had a touch of color returned to Ellysia's face?  Was there a trace
less of the whiteness around her?

"Still... so hot... do something just look at me ..."

"He is doing something, Ellysia.  Healers do it with their thoughts,"
insisted Istril from behind Nylan.

Even as he watched, Nylan could sense the faint order he had instilled
crumble.  Again, he forced himself out, to try to strengthen the ailing
woman's internal order, to build dikes against the infection.

His own eyes blurred, and his head ached, and he looked blindly at the
floor, seeing nothing.  His knees started to shake, and he sank down on
the planks beside the lander couch, trying to keep the room from
swimming around him, even as he knew that what he'd done hadn't been
enough.

He reached out, but it was too late.  He slumped into darkness.

Someone was applying a damp cloth to his forehead when he woke.  His
eyes fixed on the silver hair.

"Ellysia?"  he asked.

Istril shook her head.  "She was better, but it didn't last."

Nylan started to shake his head, then stopped.  Even that slight motion
hurt too much.

Istril blotted his forehead again.  "You tried to do too much.  Even I
could feel it."  "..  . wasn't enough ..."

"You need to drink something."  She held a mug.

Nylan struggled up into a half-sitting position.  His head felt like
his own hammers were pounding on it.  The triangle rang for the evening
meal, but he concentrated on sipping the water.  By the time he had
finished the mug, the hammering inside his skull had diminished to a
dull thumping.

"Try this."  Istril handed him a slice of bread.

Nylan could hear the whimpering from the cradle.  "Take care of Weryl.
I'm feeling better."  He paused.  "Dephnay?"

"Siret has her now.  Over there."

As he chewed the thin slice of bread, Nylan's eyes jumped to the next
alcove, where Siret held two infants.

Istril eased Weryl out of the cradle and to her breast.  The whimpering
was replaced with sucking, interspersed with a noise sounding to Nylan
suspiciously like a slurp.

"He likes to eat," said the smith.

"I've started giving him a few mushy things.  The solids seem to help
him sleep a little longer, but he still nurses a lot."  Istril looked
down at her son.  "Little pig."

Some of Nylan's dizziness passed, and he eased himself into a sitting
position.  He noticed that Ellysia's bed was vacant.

"Jaseen moved her.  Said she wanted her in the ground as quick as
possible."

Nylan nodded.

"I don't understand," Istril said.  "No one got sick all winter, and it
was cold, and we didn't really have enough to eat.  Why now?"

"Because it was cold," Nylan tried to explain, as much for himself as
for Istril.  "It was too cold for mosquitoes, flies, and insects that
carry diseases.  We didn't see any traders.  Now, after the winter,
there are a lot more ways to catch things, and Ellysia was just worn
out."

He didn't add that not having two healers around probably hadn't helped
either, but with the raging infection that had surged through Ellysia,
he wondered whether even both he and Ayrlyn would have been able to do
anything.

His head turned toward the dark-haired baby girl Siret held.  "She'll
have to be fed.  I don't suppose she's had much solid food."

"I can nurse Dephnay some," volunteered Istril.

"I can, too," added Siret.

"I suppose I can make it down to eat."  Nylan eased himself erect.

"Are you sure?"  asked Istril.

"I'll manage."  Since Nylan finally could move without his head
spinning, he tottered down the single flight of stairs and into the
great room, followed by Siret and Istril, and the three infants.  "...
silver-haired bunch ..."  "... they look after him."

"Engineer..  . looks like shit..."  "... nearly killed himself... they
said ..."  "..  . more dead than alive .. ."  murmured Selitra.

"I'm not that bad," he rasped back.  "I can still hear whispers."

Selitra blushed.

Nylan continued past the lower tables and slid into his place.  He
immediately broke off a chunk of bread and began to chew.

"You're still pale."  Ryba patted Dylless in the carry pack on her
chest.

Huldran, beside Nylan, nodded.

"Healing's harder than smithing or stone masonry," Nylan grunted after
chewing the first mouthful of bread.

"Ooo .. ."  interjected Dylless.

"I'm glad you agree," said Nylan.  "A daughter's opinion is
important."

"Oooo ..."

Huldran grinned.

Nylan finally took a chunk of the sauce-covered unknown meat.  He
barely had to use his knife.  The brown sauce wasn't the burning dish
that Blynnal called burkha, but a cinnamon mint, hot but not too hot.
It also concealed whatever the meat was, and that, Nylan decided, was
fine with him.  He broke off another chunk of bread and dipped the end
into the sauce, then took a sip of the cool tea like drink that was
also new, and less bitter than the hot bark-and-root tea of winter had
been.

When Nylan stopped and took a last sip of the cool tea, Ryba slipped
Dylless out of the carry pack

"Would you hold her for a bit?"

Nylan extended his arms.

"Oooooo .. ."

"I'm glad you agree, daughter."

Ryba stood, looking imperious.  Nylan cradled Dylless in his right
arm.

"Ellysia died," Ryba began.  "You all know that.  You may be the best
blades on the face of the world, but that doesn't make you immune to
disease.  The engineer built a bathhouse.  I expect you all to use
it-regularly.  Cleanliness is about the only defense against disease we
have left."  The marshal turned to Blynnal and Kadran.  "Everything you
prepare is to be washed, cooked at least to a dull pink if it's meat,
and all the way through if it's one of those wild pigs or a chicken.
The same with eggs."  "..  . tastes ... terrible .. ."  came a
murmur.

"Do you want to have good-tasting food and die?"  snapped Ryba.  "There
was a reason for all those primitive dietary laws we've abandoned. Just
as there's a reason why the engineer nearly killed himself to build
that bathhouse."  Her eyes raked the group, and the silence was
absolute, except for a faint infant whimper from the second table.

Nylan patted Dylless on the back and chewed another chunk of bread as
Ryba took her seat.

XCIV

"IT'S REALLY A pity, you know," Sillek says conversationally, as he
bends forward in the saddle for a moment to stretch.  "The harbor at
Rulyarth is far better than the one at Armat.  But the Suthyans are
blessed with three decent harbors, and so they make the middle one
their main trading point."

"Devalonia is icebound a third of the year," points out Gethen.

"So is Armat.  That's my point.  We could do wonders-"

"Let's not talk about wonders, Lord Sillek, not until we have Rulyarth
and its harbor and can hold it."  Gethen coughs and clears his throat,
glancing up through the mist that is not quite rain toward the clouds
that seemingly shift endlessly and yet do not move at all.  "I hate
this rain."

Sillek nods behind them.  "Not so much as my poor wizards."

A messenger gallops toward them from the vanguard, and the two men
wait.

"Where the road narrows and goes through a gap in the hills ahead,
there is a force drawn up behind a barricade of stone."

Gethen raises his eyebrows.  "Plans for the harbor?"

Sillek shakes his head.  "I defer to the experience of wisdom and
age."

The messenger glances from one lord to the other.

"Have the van halt.  We'll be there presently," orders Sillek.

As the messenger rides north, Gethen asks, "Have you any miraculous
plans?"

"Not yet.  I have an idea."

"I hope it's as effective as the last one."

"So do I."  Sillek gestures toward the chief arms man  "Rimmur!  Have
the force hold here in readiness.  There's a Suthyan force behind those
stones by the hill ahead."

"Yes, scr."

The two lords ride until they reach the van, and the rolling downhill
stretch below the mounted fore guard  There Sillek reins up and studies
the terrain.  So does Gethen.

In time, he motions to Gethen, and the two ride aside from the
others.

"They don't have more than fourscore there-mostly foot levies," points
out Sillek.  "The hill on the north side of the road is rocky, and
they've only a handful of troops there.  If we take the wizards, we
should be able to use their fire bolts and take the crest.  From there,
we can roll down rocks on them-rocks and fire bolts

"What if they reinforce the hilltop?"  asks Gethen.

"The hillside is exposed.  You have our archers fire at them.  We can
get rid of their hill guards before they can send others up the
hillside.  Then it will be too late."  Sillek smiles.

"They'll start sending reinforcements as soon as they see what you're
doing."

"But they won't see that.  You're going to draw up our forces just
about a double bow-shot length from them and go through elaborate
preparations for an attack."

Gethen nods, then asks, "What if they attack?"

"Can you deploy the forces to kill them without losing many?"

"With more than ten times their forces and archers, I can manage that."
Gethen smiles grimly.  "I would still point out that you have a nasty
turn of thought, Lord Sillek."

"That's because I dislike fighting."

"So did I. I still do."

Both men shake their heads before Gethen turns his mount toward the
main body of troops.

XCV

THIN HAZY CLOUDS covered the blue-green sky, not totally blocking the
sky, but reducing the sun's glare and direct heat.  The usual breeze
was absent, and the meadow grasses hung limp and still.  The lack of
wind left the early afternoon almost hotter than if there had been a
breeze and no clouds.

Nylan was crossing the causeway, on the way back to the smithy, when
the outer triangle, located in the small brick tower recently completed
on the top of the ridge, rang three times.  He had scarcely taken two
steps when the triplet clanged again.

Across the fields, guards dropped warrens and hoes and scrambled toward
the tower, fastening blades in place.  As Nylan watched, two duty
guards-Cessya and Nistayna, one of the older new guards-rode up toward
the ridge.  Before he could reach the smithy, Istril had ridden down
past Nylan, leading three saddled mounts, taken immediately by Weindre,
Kyseen, and Kadran, who all rode toward the watch tower.

Istril frowned, but did not ride out with the three, instead spurring
her mount back toward the stables, as Ydrall rode down leading three
more mounts.

Nylan nodded.  Fierral, or someone, had figured out how to get the
kitchen and the field details into the saddle quickly.  They were still
fortunate that the timber detail was involved in expanding the stables,
rather than working down in the woods.

Ydrall's mounts included Ryba's roan, Fierral's mount, and a horse
taken by Berlis.

The engineer had just reached the front of the smithy when Istril rode
back down with another set of three mounts.  Behind her and the
riderless three mounts rode Llyselle, Jaseen, and Murkassa.  Murkassa's
face was pale.

At the tower, three more guards were waiting-Saryn, Selitra, and
Hryessa.

"Move it!"  Saryn's voice carried as she vaulted into the saddle,
leading the six riders up toward the watch tower.

Nylan paused as Istril turned and headed her mount back uphill.  He
waited outside the smithy for the silent silver-haired guard.

She reined up and looked down.  "With Ellysia dead, until the little
ones are old enough to eat solid food, I'm ordered away from battle,
unless attackers reach the tower itself."  Istril glanced toward the
tower.  "Siret has them now."

"You don't have to explain to me, Istril.  You've put your life on the
line plenty."  Nylan gave the silver-haired guard a ragged smile.  "You
don't see me charging out there, either."

"That's different.  If anything happens to you .. ."  She turned her
mount uphill.  "I've got to get more mounts ready."

Nylan watched her for a moment before entering the smithy.  Huldran was
forging arrowheads, letting Desain, one of the newer guards, hold the
tongs.

"Over now.  Easy."

When the triangle rang a third time, Nylan looked at Huldran.  "We'd
better get moving, too."

"The forge?"

"Let it burn."  Nylan turned to Desain.  "Find your blade, and then go
down to the tower.  Listen to Istril or the guards there."

At her puzzled look, Nylan repeated himself in Old Anglorat to her
before turning to Huldran.  "We'll head up to the stables."

They didn't have to go that far.  Istril met them with two more mounts
at the opening to the small canyon where Nylan climbed onto a brown
mare he'd never ridden before.  She seemed responsive enough and not
ready to throw him every which way.

"Take care, scr," Istril said.  "Don't lead the charge."

"I won't."

"That one cares for you, scr," Huldran said quietly.

"I know.  She's good, and she works hard."  He glanced toward the
tower, where Fierral and Ryba, already mounted, waited for them just
beyond the end of the causeway.  "I worry about her."

"You worry about a lot of people."

"One of my undoings," quipped Nylan.

"Come on!"  Ryba waved a blade, and Nylan urged the mare into a trot,
wincing at the jolting, and then feeling guilty as he thought about how
much harder that kind of jolting had to be on Ryba or Istril.

As the four rode two by two across the narrow bridge over the tower
outfall drainage way Ryba said, "The bridge is solid, and the paved
part feels that way, too."

"I wish we had time to pave more."

"Once we get the new ones more settled, maybe we can have a
stone-paving crew.  It's good exercise."

"That's true," agreed Fierral, "but let's worry about what's over the
hill right now.  There's another group of mounted brigands coming up
the ridge.  They're wearing purple, but it's not that light purple of
Lornth.  It's darker."

"Darker purple?  Who could that be?"  asked Nylan.

"Does it matter?"  retorted Ryba.  "How many?"

"A little less than two score

"Any archers or bows?"

"No.  But this group carries round shields that look pretty thick."

"Arrows are faster than shields," Ryba pointed out.

"We don't even have a score of guards up there."

"Use the arrows first," said Ryba.

"I'd planned to."  Fierral glanced at Nylan.  "Now that we have some, I
told Saryn to make them count, but not to worry if a few shafts fall by
the way so long as most of them hit something."

When Nylan looked back toward the tower, he saw one more rider, Ayrlyn,
following, with several large saddlebags.  Medical supplies, such as
they had remaining, he guessed.

More than a dozen guards, all mounted and bearing bows and blades,
forged by Nylan, waited at the ridge top, facing downhill and to the
west.

"They seem to be waiting for us," Saryn announced.  "But they can wait
a long time.  I'd rather hold the heights."

"Idiots," murmured Ryba as she saw the darker purple banners drawn up
on the flat below the ridge.  "They should have just attacked."  Beyond
the banners, almost out of sight, were tethered what appeared to be
packhorses.

"Don't put down male chivalry too much," cautioned Nylan.  "If they
hadn't waited to set up a formal battle, it would have been a mess."

Both Fierral and Ryba looked sideways at the engineer.

"You keep up the direct and brutal business," added Nylan, "and they'll
do the same.  At least, after word gets around, they will."

Huldran nodded minutely, although the gesture was lost on the other two
women.

The ridge top darkened as a larger and more substantial cloud buried in
the high haze drifted across the sun.

"They're out of bow shot."

"We need to make them come to us," Ryba said.

"Do they want to fight at all?"  asked Nylan.

"They won't admit that.  First, they'll make some statement about how
they come in peace to reclaim whatever they think is theirs.  Then will
come threats, and then they'll ride downhill and charge back up."

Nylan said nothing, instead trying to send his perceptions out to see
if the apparent attackers were more deceptive than they appeared.  As
he swayed in the saddle, straining at the limits of his abilities, he
could sense that matters were not quite as they seemed.

"Hold it," he gasped, raising a hand.

"What?"  said Ryba almost impatiently.

"This one's a setup, I think," Nylan explained.  "See the trees to the
right, where they bulge out on the lower side?"

"Someone there?"  asked Fierral.

"Archers, it feels like.  I'll bet their mounts are in with the
packhorses down there.  The woods are too steep there for horses."

"That means ten to fifteen archers."  Ryba nodded.  "So they'll come a
quarter of the way up the hill under a white banner, make an impossible
demand, and as they turn, we'll get sleeted with a cross fire?"

The engineer shrugged.  "I don't know tactics, but I'd guess something
like that."

Ryba studied the ground, then looked downhill and out at the flat where
a rider was lifting up a white banner.  "They don't want to give us
much time, either."

"Can't imagine why ..."  muttered Nylan under his breath, wondering if
the guards' reputation for instant and unforgiving action had already
crossed most of Candar by rumor.

"How far will their arrows go-uphill?"  asked Ryba.

"We could only descend another four hundred cubits or so before we'd be
at the outer range, probably," hazarded Fierral.

"Fine.  We'll go down to the edge of that range and wait."

"And?"  asked Fierral.

"We'll insult their manhood.  That might get them mad enough to charge
after us," said Ryba.

"They can't be that stupid," pointed out Fierral.

"Probably not.  But there's nothing that says we have to fight.  We
ride away.  If they want to fight, they'll either have to bring up
their archers out of the woods-or leave them behind."  The marshal
smiled coldly.

"They won't leave them, not after bringing them all the way up here."

"No, they won't.  But our bows have a longer effective range than
theirs, because they're your specials, and because the height should
give us a little more impact, and they won't expect that power from
mounted archers."  Ryba laughed.  "If they're better, we retreat to the
rocks by the watchtower.  That covers the road, and they'll have
trouble."

"What if they retreat?"  asked Nylan.

"They won't."

As the rider bearing the limp white banner rode uphill, followed by
three riders, Ryba, Fierral, and Berlis rode down the ridge more
slowly, drawing up well short of the midpoint between the two forces.

The leaders of the purple forces stopped exactly where predicted and
waited.

Ryba, Fierral, and Cessya waited.

Nearly half a kay separated the two groups.

Finally, the man bearing the banner-alone-rode up the hill.

Drawing on his senses, Nylan strained to hear, but could only catch the
general sense of the conversation, and the scathing scorn in Ryba's
voice.

The central rider of the attackers' leaders raised a gloved fist.
Ryba's laugh echoed down the hill.  Then the three Westwind riders
turned their backs on the others, and rode back up the hill.

Several arrows arched out of the lower forest, but fell short.  Neither
Ryba nor Fierral even looked back.

After a time, the arms man with the banner rode back down to the three
others.

"They've got a problem."  Ryba's voice contained a hint of laughter as
she reined up before the Westwind guards.  "They were sent to rout us
out.  If they go back, they won't be in good standing.  If they've got
any brains, the last thing they're going to want to do is ride up the
ridge ... but in this kind of culture, if you don't take the fight to
the enemy you're a coward, and that's either a death sentence or an
endless round of duels and hassles."

"Are you sure?"

"What did they say?"  asked Cessya.

"Just about what you'd expect.  They claimed that we had insulted the
sovereignty of Gallos by enticing various inhabitants to join us.  He
couldn't even bring himself to say 'women."  "

"What now?"  asked Fierral.

"We wait."

Finally, a trumpet sounded.

"They'll take the horses up to the archers, and have them ride to about
where we waited for them," said Ryba.  "That would give them enough bow
range to drop arrows on the ridge top here, and that's supposedly
beyond the range of horse-carried bows.  Don't do anything-just
watch-until all the archers are well within range.  Then hit them with
everything we can fire.

"The horse will charge at that point, and we'll start potting horsemen
then.  Some will get through, but try to make it as few as possible."

Nylan looked over at Ayrlyn, who had just reined up beside him, and
they exchanged glances.  The healer nodded sadly.

As Ryba had predicted, several arms men led the dozen mounts to the
once-hidden archers.  The archers mounted and began to ride farther
uphill.  At the same time, the main mounted force began to walk up the
center of the ridge, slowly.

As the archers dismounted, Ryba said quietly, "Fire.  Try to make each
shaft count."

Since he had no bow, Nylan watched.  So did Ayrlyn.

Within moments, half the Gallosian archers were down or wounded.

The horn sounded, and the nearly rwoscore mounted arms men urged their
mounts uphill.

"You three at the end, keep working on the archers.  The rest of you
take the mounted!"  snapped Ryba.

Nylan touched his blade, then drew it, waiting as the Gallosians
rumbled up the gentle, but barren, slope.

Despite the shields, the purple-clad arms men began to fall more than
two hundred cubits from the Westwind forces.

Nylan couldn't see how many made it to the ridge top, because two of
them were headed toward the left end of the Westwind line, where he and
Ayrlyn had reined up.

The engineer swallowed, then urged the mare forward, hoping he could
stay in the saddle, but knowing that he would be dead meat if he sat
rock-still.

The oncoming rider carried a long blade, not so long as the monster
Gerlich used, but long enough that Nylan felt his black blade was less
than a toothpick in comparison.

All the engineer could do was to slide the other's blade past him, then
tighten his knees and try to turn the mare.

His senses, rather than his eyes, warned him of the next Gallosian, and
Nylan just slashed, nearly wildly, but successfully enough, his arm
propelled by something akin to pure terror, to drive the other's blade
down almost into the Gallosian's mount.

Struggling to recover control of both mount and blade, Nylan plunged
after the two as they bore down on Ayrlyn.  She had the first, on her
left, held off, but the second raised his blade on her unprotected
side.

Nylan, with few options, hurled the black blade, again reaching for the
air, the sense of smooth flow.

The Gallosian crumpled across his mount, Nylan's blade through his
body.

Nylan winced, his head splitting as though his blade had cloven his own
skull, and he clutched the mare's mane with his now-free sword hand,
eyes filled with blinding white and unable to see.

He blinked, slowly able to catch glimpses of the ground ahead and the
horse bearing the dead Gallosian.  As the engineer trotted after the
dead Gallosian, and his blade, his vision slowly returned, but his head
continued to feel as though someone had driven an arrow or a blade
through his skull.  Each time he opened his eyes, knives stabbed
through them.  A quick look back reassured him that the guards had
matters in hand, and he could see that Saryn had come to Ayrlyn's aid,
and dispatched the other attacker.

Nylan rode nearly a kay before managing to catch and calm the skittish
horse that still bore the dead man.  By the time he recovered his blade
and rode back, there were no Gallosians left standing.  Two of the
archers had reclaimed mounts and rode furiously down the lower part of
the ridge, followed by a single arms man

Nearly a dozen horses lay across the battle site.

Fierral looked sourly at Nylan as he rode up.  "We'll need more
arrows."  Her eyes took in the dead body.  "Yours?"

The engineer nodded.

"You must be surprising with that blade."

"He threw it through him," Ayrlyn said tiredly, rubbing her forehead,
as she stood by her mount and began to unload medical supplies.

"Through him?"

Fierral rode closer and lifted the corpse half off the saddle, then
levered the inert form out of the saddle.  The corpse hit the ground
with a dull thud.  "You're as bad as the marshal."

Except she doesn't get splitting headaches that almost knock her off
her horse, thought Nylan.

Murkassa rode up, holding her arm, and slowly dismounted.

Ayrlyn looked at the slash on the newer guard's arm.  "It's only a
little more than skin-deep.  Get that grime washed out good, and then
see me or the engineer."  She looked toward Nylan.

He nodded.  "That I can do."

Ryba rode over, shaking her head.

"What?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"I just told her to stay back.  She shouldn't have been in the front
row.  Ryllya, she's dead," added the marshal.  "The newest ones aren't
ready for this."

Ayrlyn walked across the rocky ground to where Hryessa looked down at a
handsome brown-bearded man.  Blood welled out from his left shoulder
and above the breastplate.

"He's dying, and I killed him."

"He would have killed you," Ayrlyn said gently.  "That's what happens
when people fight.  They could have left us alone.  They didn't."

"Lyntar ... said ... beautiful women .. . golds ... there for the
taking .."  The brown-bearded man forced a smile, then tried to hold
back a cough.  His face paled, and the strangled cough brought up only
blood-bright blood."... wrong ... he was ... about the taking ..."  He
looked at Hryessa.  "So slender ... like ... dagger ..."  His lips
moved, but no sound issued forth, and his eyes glazed over.

Beyond the dead Gallosian was another ... of more than a score strewn
across the slope.

"Nistayna!"  ordered Ryba.  "You and Cessya bring back the carts. We've
got a lot of hauling to do."

"I don't understand it," Ayrlyn said.  "They just kept coming.  Half of
them were dead before they even reached us.  It was as though they
couldn't believe they were being killed."

"They couldn't," snapped Fierral.  "In their mind-set, women can't even
try to kill, except maybe to protect their children.  These idiots'd
rather give up their lives than their beliefs."

"That just might change after a few battles," Nylan said heavily from
his saddle.  "You'll be devils, and they'll try to kill you without
mercy."

"There are rumors everywhere," said Ryba, reining the roan up beside
Nylan.  "We're angels; we're devil women.  We're beautiful; we're hags.
The rumors don't matter.  What matters is that we've got to get better.
Every guard has to handle a bow and blade as well as Fierral or Istril.
It would help if they could also throw a blade like you can because
things are just going to get worse."  Ryba surveyed the battlefield,
where women in leathers stripped and stacked bodies and loot, where
other women collected horses.

The creaking from below the ridge indicated that the carts were on the
way to recover the assorted leavings and loot.

"With each success and each new rumor," said Ryba, "we'll get more
women trying to escape, and more arms men and brigands looking for easy
loot because they can't believe we're real.  Then, as Nylan says, one
day, they'll believe it, and someone will head up here with a real
army, and we'd better be ready.  We'll need more arrowheads."

"More arrowheads," groaned Nylan.

"It's better than having to meet them blade to blade, and, speaking of
blades, can you make any more?"

Nylan looked at Ryba.  "We're having enough trouble with arrowheads.  I
made those blades out of structural braces, and I barely could handle
those with a laser.  All that charcoal I've got up wouldn't warm one
lousy brace."

"We need something."

"I'll see about reworking some of the locals' blades-the terrible
ones," said the engineer-smith, "if you don't mind the potential
revenue loss."

"Good."  Ryba paused, then added, "At least all this loot will help us
get supplies for winter."

Nylan and Ayrlyn rubbed their foreheads and exchanged glances.

XCVI

AFTER THE LONG afternoon of cleaning up carnage and wounds, and
building a cairn for Ryllya, the guard he'd never known, and an evening
meal filled with quiet and exhaustion, Nylan sat in the rocking chair,
holding Dylless.  Ryba lay in the darkness, silent on her separate
couch.

For whatever reason, rocking his daughter in the gloom of the tower
helped his throbbing head, more than the darkness or the hot and
welcome meal prepared by Blynnal.  . and who will rock you to sleep?

Your daddy will rock and sing you a song, There s only a cradle and
nothing is wrong.  When the sun has set and the stars are so high, I'll
rock you and hold you 'til morning is nigh .. .

By the time Dylless dropped off and he had slipped into his separate
couch bed, the throbbing inside his skull had subsided to a dull echo
of the former hammering.

After a quick flash of light through the window, the evening breeze
brought the rumble of distant thunder over the western peaks and then
the dampness of air that had held rain.  Perhaps the rain would wash
the sense and stench of killing off the Roof of the World.  Perhaps
sleep would help.

Again, not for the first time, nor for the last, Nylan wondered why so
many people respected only force.  He tried not to sigh.

"The killing is hard on you," Ryba observed.

"You've noticed."  He tried to keep the bitterness from his voice,
knowing he failed.

"You're good for about one killing a battle, aren't you?"  asked Ryba
quietly.  "That makes it hard when people are riding around with
blades."

"Very hard, especially when you're on a horse and can't see."  Nylan
stretched.  His legs and arms were sore, from some combination of
riding and smithing, neither of which he did terribly efficiently, he
feared.

"Why?"

"With every killing, there's a whiteness that fills the field, or the
local net, or whatever you want to call it.  It goes through me like an
invisible but very sharp dagger."

"This place .. ."  said Ryba heavily.  "The more we succeed, the more
everyone wants to destroy us."

"That's true everywhere."  Nylan yawned.  "It's just more obvious
here."

"We're going to get more women, and that means we'll need more
weapons."

"More arrowheads," groaned Nylan, trying to put aside the thought of
more deaths.

"Can't you make any more blades?  We need both.  I'd really like each
guard to have two blades.  That way they could throw one if they had
to.  The more standoff capability we have ..."

Nylan wanted to laugh at the thought of a throwing blade being a
standoff capability.  How far they'd fallen from lasers and
de-energizer beams, although the weapons laser still remained mostly
intact.  "We're having enough trouble with arrowheads."

"We need something."

"I told you.  I'll try to rework some of the captured blades-the
terrible ones," said the engineer-smith, "that's if you don't mind
losing some coins."

"After today, we have enough coins and blades that you can have a few
of them to work with.  I'm sure you can figure out something."

Nylan yawned again, wishing he were that certain.

XCVII

ZELDYAN RISES FROM the scrolls that are stacked on the desk by the
window and turns to greet her visitor.  "Lady Ellindyja, I must
apologize for a certain disarray."  Despite her apology, every blond
hair is in place under the silver hair-band inlaid with malachite, and
her green tunic and trousers are spotless.  " "Disarray' is not a term
I would ever think of applying to you, dear," responds Ellindyja.  "You
are always prepared."

"I thank you for your kindness, and I am most happy to see you.  Is
there anything in particular to which I owe this happy visit?"

"I understand that a force of Gallosians attacked the Roof of the World
an eight-day ago," begins the lady Ellindyja.  "You, of course, as Lady
of Lornth, would know more of this than I. Perhaps you could enlighten
me?"

"I would be more than pleased to share what little knowledge I have,
although you doubtless have many more sources than do I."  Zeldyan
picks up the small bell off the table and rings it.  "Please, do be
seated, and I will have cool, sweetened green juice sent up."  She
gestures to the largest armchair in the sitting room.

"I so appreciate your kindness."  Ellindyja smiles and eases her bulk
into the large chair.  Her eyes cross the room-to the cradle.  "You are
sure that ringing will not wake young Nesslek?"

"If it should wake him, I will hold him."  Zeldyan smiles.  "Children,
I have seen, grow so quickly, and I am not yet tired of enjoying him
while my comfort means much to him."

"They do grow quickly, and you are to be commended for your care and
concern."

A stocky serving maid appears and bows to Zeldyan.  "Yes, my lady?"

"A carafe of the cold fresh green juice, with honey, and some of the
fresh pastries, if you please."

The dark-haired maid nods and slips out through the door.

Zeldyan steps toward the cradle and studies her sleeping son, then
takes the straight-backed chair across the low table from her consort's
mother.  "I received a report from one of the wizards-he sent a report
directly to Lord Sillek as well-that a Gallosian force attempted to
attack the angel outpost on the Roof of the World.  The Gallosians lost
many arms men  The wizard was uncertain if any of the angels were
killed, but some were wounded."

"That must have been Hissl.  He is never certain about anything. Except
his own importance," Ellindyja adds.

"Still .. . wizards, uncertain or not, have a usefulness."

"This ... incursion ... has a disturbing flavor.  I was also under the
impression that a dispatch arrived from Gallos, something about the
inability of Lornth to control the depredations of its inhabitants?"
Ellindyja smiles sweetly.

"Yes," replies Zeldyan.  "As you doubtless know from the dispatch,
though it was addressed to Lord Sillek, Lord Karthanos expressed his
regrets.  He wrote that he felt compelled to take action because the
situation on the Roof of the World had become most distressing to his
holders.  Lord Karthanos expressed the hope that Lord Sillek, once he
returned to Lornth, would redress the situation on the Roof of the
World."

"I had gathered it was something like that."

The door opens, and the serving maid returns with a silver tray, on
which there are a crystal carafe filled with a green liquid, two empty
goblets, and a pale green china plate on which are heaped a number of
miniature pastries.  The maid sets the tray on the table, bows, and
retreats, closing the door behind her.

Zeldyan pours two goblets and waits for Ellindyja to take one.

The older woman also takes a small pastry and eats it delicately.
"These are good.  I recall something of the like from when I visited
your mother-a family recipe, perhaps?"

"I learned a great deal from Mother, for which I am most thankful."
Zeldyan takes a sip of her green juice, holding the goblet and
waiting.

"You can see, I am sure," the lady Ellindyja finally continues, "the
difficulty this situation has raised."

"Yes.  It is rather clear.  The male holders on each side of the
Westhorns are outraged that a group of women has created what appears
to be an independent land.  If Sillek refuses to conquer them, then he
faces dissatisfaction here in Lornth, and possible greater loss of face
and lands if Lord Karthanos takes matters even more into his hands."
Zeldyan sets the goblet down and smiles.  "Of course, Karthanos was
unsuccessful, and that may be why he is requesting, so politely and
indirectly, that Lord Sillek put his lands in order."

Ellindyja sips the green juice, blots her lips with a silk sheen cloth,
and replaces the goblet on the table.  "You are suggesting something,
my dear, but I am afraid that suggestion is not as clear its it might
be."

Zeldyan shrugs.  "Lord Karthanos is known for his cunning.  Perhaps he
has judged that this would-be country of women cannot be taken."

"That would seem unlikely.  A mere handful of women?"

"Unlikely it might be, but were it so, and were my lord to squander his
funds and forces upon the Roof of the World, then what would there be
to keep Karthanos from acknowledging these women and then expanding his
domains into such areas as Middlevale or eastern Cerlyn?"

Lady Ellindyja purses her lips, but for a sole moment.  "You are
dubious about the skills and valor of your lord?"

"I love, honor, and respect my lord, and that love, honor, and respect
demand that I offer him my best judgment.  No one stood against the
eagles of the demons when they landed ages ago in Analeria, and I would
rather my lord be cautious than suffer the fate of Lord Pertelo."

"Such caution would be wise, save that such caution would have all
holders on both sides of the Westhorns clamoring for your lord's early
departure from his stewardship."

"You may well be right, my lady, for most men are ever fools, and those
who are not, such as my lord, are often captives of the multitudes,"
Zeldyan acknowledges.

"Lord Sillek must make his own destiny, and reclaim his patrimony.
Would you have him do otherwise?"  Ellindyja holds the glass, but does
not sip from it.

"My lord must follow his destiny, as you have pointed out so clearly,"
answers Zeldyan.  "Do have another pastry."

"One more," agrees the lady Ellindyja.

"Some more juice?"

"I think not, but you are so kind."

Zeldyan pours herself another half goblet, and her eyes flick, ever so
briefly, to the cradle.

XCVIII

A FAINT LINE of sunlight crossed Nylan's face as he loaded more
charcoal onto the forge coals started from wood.  The basic planks for
the smithy roof were in place, set almost clinker fashion, but in one
or two places, thin beams of sunlight shone through.

There were no shutters, nor doors, nor a real floor.  The only reason
he had a roof was that Ryba and Fierral needed weapons, and that meant
the ability to forge in poor weather.  Would Westwind always rest on
weapons?

The engineer-smith picked up the heavy iron steel blade and extended
his senses, studying the metal, following the grain.  His lips curled
as he felt the weakness that ran up what he would have called the spine
of the blade.  Not only did he not know smithing-he didn't even know
the right terms.

He had no real tools, no real idea of how iron should be forged-just a
basic understanding that a sort of waffled forging and reforging of
steel and iron, combined with a quench that he developed more by feel
than by physics, might improve the local product.

He laughed.  Might improve?  It also might turn a dull and serviceable
crowbar of a weapon into scrap metal.  But the marshal of Westwind
needed better weapons for the new recruits, blades sharper, tougher,
and lighter than the huge metal bars favored by the locals.

There was another difference.  The locals seemed to want to beat each
other to death.  It almost seemed that the equivalent of cavalry sabres
were looked down on, as though it were a badge of honor to carry the
biggest and heaviest weapon possible.  Ryba just wanted to find the
quickest and most efficient way to win.

"Are you ready for this?"  he asked Huldran as he set the blade aside
on the brick forge shelf to the right side of the forge proper.  He
picked up a thin strip of alloy with the tongs, setting it on the
coals.

Huldran pumped the bellows slowly and without comment.  The alloy began
to heat, more slowly than the local blade would.  After a bit, Nylan
eased the blade into the coals, almost next to the alloy, and waited
for it to heat.

Once the crude steel blade had heated, he laid it on his makeshift
forge.  Then he eased the hot alloy strip on top of the cherry-red
blade, and lifted the hammer, his senses extended as he tried to feel
how he would meld the two.

Three blows later, he knew he was in trouble.  The alloy went right
into the local steel like a chisel through wood.

"Frigging alloy," he mumbled under his breath.  "Of course it wouldn't
work the simple way."

"It never does, scr," pointed out Huldran.

"Unfortunately."

It took Nylan longer to separate the barely hammered pieces than it had
to half join them.

"If that doesn't work .. ."  He walked to the unfinished Smithy door.
High cumulus clouds-with dark centers that promised lightning, thunder,
and high winds-filled the sky.  Too bad he couldn't harness lightning
bolts into an electric furnace.  "Right!"  he snorted as he walked back
to the forge.

What if he flattened the alloy into a paper-thin sheet and then
smoothed the local steel over it?  Then if he heated the sheets and
folded them back and flattened them together- always with a layer of
the alloy on the bottom-would that work?

He set aside the mangled blade and used the tongs to put the alloy into
the forge.

"You think you can make this work?"  asked Huldran, pumping the
bellows, sweat running out of her short blond hair.

"For a while.  We're just about out of the thin alloy sheets from
partitions and the like.  I don't have the tools to take apart the
lander hulls.  If I had the tools and talents of a good local smith, I
might be able to, but I don't."

After a time, he eased the alloy from the forge and began to hammer it
into a flatter sheet.  The alloy lost heat quickly, and he had to
reheat it before he was even a third of the way down the narrow
strip.

It took until mid-morning just for Nylan to flatten the alloy and the
blade, and to hammer-fold the two together once.  His arms ached.  His
shoulders were sore; his hands were tired; and he understood why, the
old pictures showed smiths as men with arms like tree trunks.

He eased the once-folded metal onto the side of the forge.

"Now what?"  asked Huldran.

"We take a break.  Then we go back to work."

"You mean this works?"

"Oh, it's working.  It's slow, like everything in a low-tech culture."
Nylan stood and stretched, trying not to wince too much.  "Why do you
think that even a terrible blade is worth almost a gold?"  He took a
deep breath and lifted and lowered his shoulders, trying to loosen
them.  "I read somewhere that a good smith might have to fold and
refold iron and steel together dozens of times to get the right kind of
blade."

"Dozens of times.  It took half the morning for once."

"That's what I meant," pointed out Nylan dryly.  "Lasers and lots of
energy make that sort of thing a lot easier.  Now all we've got is
charcoal and hammers and muscles.  It takes longer."  He walked toward
the tower.  After a moment, Huldran followed.

XCIX

SIL LEK STANDS ON the pier.  Gethen stands several paces inshore of
him. The arms men at the foot of the old pier hold torches, but the
light barely carries to where the Lord of Lornth stands a dozen cubits
out on the rickety structure that sways with the incoming tide.  The
sound of surf rises beyond the bay.  The harbor is empty.  So are the
warehouses that held goods, though a handful still hold grain.

"Only because they couldn't get enough ships in," Sillek says to
himself.

"What did you say?"  asks Gethen.

"Nothing.  Nothing."

"You thought this might happen, didn't you, Sillek?"  Gethen looks down
at the dark water.  "That the traders would pull out without a
fight?"

Below them bobs a waterlogged chunk of wood, and beyond that some
unidentifiable bit of moss-covered and slimy debris.  The cold air
coming off the Northern Ocean smells of salt with a hint of rotten fish
and ocean-damp wood.

"I hoped they would.  Wars cost money, and they've always kept Rulyarth
as a place to bleed, not to fight over.  This was the easy part.  Now
it gets harder."  Sillek looks into the darkness.  "We'll have to bribe
the independent traders, with something, and rebuild at least one of
the piers.  And probably reinstate the barges on the lower section
below the rapids."

"You'll get some cargoes.  My wines alone-"

"Your wines will likely save us, Gethen.  For that I am grateful."

"I've been tired of seeing the Suthyans eat up the profits with their
port charges."  Gethen kicks the rotten wood of the pier, and a chunk
flies out into the dark water of the harbor.

"We'll need some charges, or we won't have a port," cautions Sillek.
"We've got some hungry people here who are going to be very unhappy.
And then there's Ildyrom."

"He hasn't moved on Clynya."

"No, but that ties up more arms men and a wizard.  I really can't
afford another campaign this year.  That's why that business with
Karthanos bothers me.  I could care less about the middle of the
Westhorns.  The land doesn't feed my people, and there aren't any
precious metals there.  But because a bunch of women took it over, it's
going to create a real problem with a lot of the traditional holders." 
Sillek takes another few steps seaward, testing the planks underfoot. 
One creaks and bends under his weight.  He shakes his head.  "When you
solve one problem, you get two more."

"You're right about the Roof of the World."  Gethen laughs.  "That's
why I'm glad you're the lord, and I'm not."

"Well ... if anything happens to me, you'll inherit the mess.  So don't
laugh too hard."

"Me?"  Gethen's amazement is unfeigned.

"Who else?  The holders wouldn't accept my mother as regent, for which
I am grateful, or Zeldyan, for which I am not.  So I've named you as
head of the regency council, with Zeldyan and Fornal as the other two
counselors.  You're respected, and your blood runs in Nesslek. Besides,
you don't want the job-not that I hope you ever get it, you
understand."  Sillek's voice turns dry with his last words.

Both men laugh.

Behind them the torches flicker in the wind, and before them the faint
phosphorescence of the waves outlines the distant breakwaters.

THE STOCKY CLOAKED figure climbs the outside stairs to Hissl's quarters
and waits outside the door, silhouetted against the late twilight
horizon of summer.

Hissl opens the door.

"I have come to see how things are going," says the cloaked arms man

"Matters are not so simple as the great hunter would think," snaps
Hissl, motioning the other into his rooms, but leaving the door ajar.
"If I leave here while Lord Ildyrom remains a threat, no amount of
success on the Roof of the World will leave my head attached to my
body, unless I stay on the Roof of the World."  The wizard glares at
the arms man  "How did you like winter on the Roof of the World?"

"I am not a wizard, scr," answers the arms man

"I am not a devil angel, either, raised in the cold of Heaven and
suckled on teats of ice."

"How soon can you gather what you promised?"

"Lord Sillek is still in Rulyarth, and may well be there until close to
the end of summer"

"The end of summer?"

"The great hunter wishes a reward.  The reward must.  come from Lord
Sillek.  If we offend him .. ."  Hissl shrugs.  "So we must wait, until
I can be relieved, for when he returns, I can certainly request relief
for a time after a year in this hole.  Wizards are not that easy to
come by."

"If your good lord does not wish to relieve you?"

"Then I can leave my position-but I would leave in good enough humor to
claim His Lordship's reward.  Not so if I deserted, especially not when
he is waging war, such as it is, against the Suthyans."  Hissl smiles
sardonically.

"Can you get arms men that late in the year?"

"I have the coin.  With coin, I can obtain two score of arms men maybe
more if the harvest is poor."  Hissl looks toward the window and the
darkening courtyard below.  "Come back when you hear that Lord Sillek
is returning."

"I will be back."  The arms man bows and slips out the door.

Hissl's eyes turn to the blank glass.  He smiles.

CI

As THE SUN neared the western peaks, Nylan eased the blade he had
labored over for more than a day into the quench, watching the color
intently, noting the flickering effect created by the wavelike patterns
of the hard-forged intertwinings of alloy and steel.  When the purplish
shade crossed the edge he eased the weapon out of the liquid and onto
the bricks to cool in the gentle and dying heat from the forge.

The slightly curved blade, similar to but subtly different from the
laser-forged blades, carried order and strength without as much of a
black sheen to the metal.

"Another good one," offered Huldran.

"Tomorrow, you can start one."

"Me?  It won't be near as good as yours."

"Mine weren't as good as mine when I started, either, but I'll be
demon-damned if I'm going to be the only one slaving over weapons.
Let's bank this down.  I've had it."

Huldran nodded.  "Cessya's working on doors and shutters for us,
sometimes."

"Good.  We might get them before the frosts."

"That's a season away, scr."

"I know."  After piling the coals into the corner of the forge, Nylan
took a straw grass broom and began to sweep the now-packed clay floor
clean.  "The paving crew's going to put in a stone floor next
eight-day."

"Do we need it?"

"No more than doors and windows."

The blond guard gave the engineer-smith a crooked smile as she racked
the tongs and the hammers.

A cough caught Nylan, and he looked up.

Relyn stood in the unfinished door.  He pointed to the cooling blade.
"That is better than those you forged with the fires of Heaven."

"I don't know about that," Nylan said slowly, setting down the broom.
"I do know that it's slower-a lot slower."

The one-handed man gave a single headshake.  "With a simple forge, you
create almost a master blade a day.  No smith I know could touch that.
It is as though you could see inside the metal."

"Not that fast."  Nylan frowned.  He did see into the metal with his
senses, but didn't most smiths on this crazy planet?  He looked down at
his hands.  "I need to wash up."

"I'll finish here, scr.  You did the hard work."

"Pumping that bellows is no fun."

"You can do that tomorrow," Huldran suggested as Nylan walked out into
the cooler air outside the smithy.

Relyn followed.

"What have you been doing?"  Nylan turned downhill.

"What a one-handed man can do.  Gather grasses for drying, find leaves
from the teaberry bush for Blynnal, lead cart horses with loads of
paving stones.  I keep busy.  This is not a place where a man should be
lazy."

"You could slip away."

"Where would I go?"  asked Relyn.  "I am nothing in Lornth, and
anywhere he is not known, a one-handed man is first considered a
thief."

"They don't cut off hands for that here?"

"Not everywhere, but it is said they do in Certis and Lydiar.  So .. ."
Relyn shrugged.  "I make myself useful here.  Some of the women, like
poor Blynnal, do talk to me.  None of the angels do, except you, the
healer, and some of the other silver-heads.  You are the true angels,
the ones who can hold the black of order."

"I don't think you have to have silver hair to appreciate order," Nylan
answered, his boots scuffing on the stone of the road.

The paved sections of the road ran from the causeway past the smithy
and up to the mouth of the stable canyon and to the bridge over the
outfall.  Piles of stones lined the upper section of the road leading
to the ridge, indicating where the next paving and road-building would
occur.

A cart full of cut wood creaked toward the castle, the cart horse being
led by Kyseen, who flicked the long leather leads not quite
impatiently.  Already, long piles of cut wood more than guard-high
stretched in three rows along the west side of the road leading to the
causeway, forming another wall between the low crude one that marked
the exercise yard and the road and causeway to the south door of the
tower.

Nylan sniffed the air.  The wind out of the south carried the smell of
damp ground from the irrigated fields, and the fresher smell of cut
grass.  On the air, also, was the sound of wooden wands against each
other on the open expanse of the south exercise yard.

In the late afternoon, Saryn and Ryba, helped by Istril and Kadran,
drilled the newer guards with wands that resembled the blades of
Westwind.

Nylan permitted himself a half-bitter smile.  His legacies would
probably be Tower Black and the shape and killing ability of the guard
blades.  Sooner or later, if not for years, the composite bows would
fail, but his efforts in the smithy proved that, to some degree, he
could replicate blades without the laser.  While the alloys helped, he
suspected that a good local smith could do the same entirely with local
steels.

As he paused to watch the practice, he noted that Ryba alone wore a
slug-thrower, in addition to her twin blades, for the first time in
seasons.

"Nylan!  You can spare a moment to spar with us," called Ryba.

He shrugged and walked forward.

"You know Nistayna.  This is Liethya, and this is Quilyn."  Ryba
surveyed the three.  "Nistayna, you're the farthest along."  Then she
handed Nylan the wand she had used.

"So long as this isn't for blood.  I'm stiff," protested Nylan.

"Wands up," ordered the marshal.

Nylan lifted his wand, trying to get into the spirit of the sparring.

Nistayna seemed almost diffident, and Nylan easily slid around her wand
and tapped a shoulder.

"Nistayna!  You'll get killed that way!"  snapped Ryba.  "Let me have
your wand."

Nylan began to understand what was happening, and he waited as Ryba
squared her shoulders and lifted the wand.

Then he attacked, as well as he could.  Ryba parried, and cut back.
Nylan backpedaled.  The wooden wands hurt, especially with the force
Ryba used.

The engineer-smith tried to gather to himself some of the feeling of
order and pattern he felt within the smithy and with a metal blade,
and, as he did, the wand seemed lighter, and almost wove a moving net
with Ryba's wand.

For a time, neither he nor Ryba seemed able to touch the other.  But
Nylan's legs, rather than his arms, gave out, and he stumbled.  Ryba's
wand cracked his ribs.

"All right," he groaned, with a forced laugh.

Ryba handed the wand to Nistayna, whose eyes were wide.  "That is how
good you must be."

"The mage-he is better than any arms man I have seen."

"He's better than any I've seen," added a male voice from the causeway,
"and I've seen a few."  Relyn gave a crooked grin.  "And she's better
than he is.  Not by much, but enough for it to count in a battle."

Ryba erased a momentarily puzzled look from her face, as she said to
Nylan, "You've gotten better, much better.  You aren't practicing that
much."

"Smithing the hard way is good for arm strength," he said wryly,
handing the wand back to Ryba.  "It's my footwork that suffers."

Liethya and Quilyn still looked from Ryba to Nylan and back again.

"I'm going to wash up before the evening meal."  The smith pushed hair
that needed cutting back off his damp forehead.

"You're quitting before the sun sets and before it's pitch-dark?"  Ryba
asked in mock amazement.

"I got to a stopping place.  I've got another blade finished that needs
to be wrapped and sharpened."

"I'll have Fierral get it in the morning, if that's all right."

"Fine."

"Back to your drills!"  snapped Ryba.  "You'll drill until you can hold
off anyone who's not as good as the mage- or until your arms drop
off."

Nylan could sense the unvoiced groans.  He would have groaned, too.

Siret, Istril, and Niera had the youngsters in one corner of the third
level as Nylan trudged up.  He waved, briefly, and got a smile from
Niera.  Istril had her back to the stairs, nursing Weryl, and Siret was
juggling Kyalynn and Dephnay.

Shortly, Nylan trudged back down toward the bathhouse and a shower,
carrying his cleaner leathers, the ones he wore when he wasn't dealing
with coals, metals, and sweat.

The bathhouse was warm, hot, with a fire in the stove.  While the
showers were empty and the fire burning down, the floor stones in two
of the stalls were still wet.  Nylan stripped and soaked himself.  The
water was not freezing, but not quite lukewarm, either, but he was hot
enough that it didn't matter as he took what passed for soap and
lathered up.  Then he shaved, by feel, no longer needing a mirror.

After he dried off, a process more like wiping the water off his body
and letting the rest evaporate than toweling dry, he eased into the
cleaner shirt and leather trousers and boots.

As he passed through the archway, he nearly ran into Huldran.

"How's the water, scr?"  Huldran was smeared with soot, and her hair
was sweaty and plastered to her skull.

"Someone fired up the stove.  It's not bad."  He looked at the guard.

"I had Denize do it."

"Thank you."

"It was as much for me as you, scr," said Huldran with a grin.

"I still appreciate it.  Enjoy your shower."

Huldran gave a half-nod as she padded barefoot toward the showers.
Nylan opened the north door, noting that the archway didn't seem to
trap moisture in the summer the way it had in the winter.

"Excuse me, scr."  Kadran scurried past him and out the big south door
to ring the triangle for the evening meal.

Almost before the echoes died away, guards appeared from
everywhere-outside following Kadran in, and from the third level,
trooping down to the main floor of the tower.

Nylan stood back in the generally unused space on the east side.  If
they could bring in more glass, then perhaps the space could be used
for the children, eventually space for schooling.  And that was
something else-books.  They needed to preserve the knowledge base.

He took a deep breath, trying to regain his mental balance before
crossing the foyer area into the great room.  The great room now held
five tables, although the fifth was sometimes not used, and not full
when in use.

As Nylan passed the empty fifth table, and then the fourth, most of the
newer guards looked down, almost as much as when Ryba passed.  Unlike
the others, Nistayna offered a faint smile, and Niera just looked up
with wide eyes.

"Better eat all your dinner," he told the girl, feeling awkward, but
feeling he should say something.

Istril stood, awkwardly holding a squirming Weryl.  Nylan extended his
hands, and Weryl thrust out his pudgy hands.

"All right, Weryl."  As the boy smiled, Nylan grinned and scooped him
up.  "He's growing.  You must be feeding him right."

Both Istril and Nylan blushed when he realized the inappropriateness of
the remark.

"I tried one of the new blades," began Istril after the awkward
silence.  "I like it even better than the others, even if I won't be
using it in battle for some time yet."

"The new ones are a lot more work."  Nylan paused and shifted Weryl as
his son's fingers probed at his jaw.  "Why do you like it better?"

"It feels more solid."

"It's heavier.  That might be one reason.  There's more iron in it."

"Not that much.  The balance could be better."

Blynnal passed, carrying one of the caldrons filled with sauce and
meat.

"The last of the salted horse meat, dressed and sauced to disguise the
taste."

"Not the last," prophesied Istril.

Nylan glanced across the table, but Siret was not around.

"She's up nursing Dephnay.  Kyalynn was still sleeping," Istril
explained.  "I'll feed Dephnay later."

"How is that going?"  Nylan shifted Weryl again to keep from being
poked in the eye.

"Not that well.  It's a good thing both Siret and I can nurse.  Dephnay
has trouble with even the softest solid foods."

Kadran passed them, hauling a second caldron, this one filled with what
looked to be noodles.

"Fire noodles," laughed Istril.

"They're not bad."

"How would anyone know?  They're so hot you can't taste anything."

Ryba entered the great room, holding Dylless to her.  shoulder, and
walked down the other side of the tables.

"Come on, Weryl," said Istril, taking her son back, "your father needs
to eat, too.  You already did."

"Oooo..."

Nylan gently disengaged Weryl's fingers and made his way to his place
at the first table.

"Do you want to eat first or second?"  he asked Ryba.

"First, if you don't mind."

"No problem."  He reached out and eased Dylless into his lap.

"I can't tell which of you she looks like," offered Ayrlyn, sitting
across from Nylan.  "When I look at you, Ryba, and then at Dylless, you
look the same, except for the hair.  But the same thing is true when I
look at Nylan."

Huldran slid into the seat next to Nylan.  "Too early to tell, but she
seems to favor both.  Doesn't matter.  She'll be a handsome woman
whichever way."

"What do you think of the new blades, Huldran?"  Ryba asked after
chewing and swallowing a mouthful of meat, sauce, and noodles.

Nylan eased Dylless to his left knee and sipped the cool tea, then
reached for the bread and awkwardly broke off a dark steaming chunk.

"Some ways, I like them better.  There's more weight there, and they
seem to be just as tough.  Maybe we should give the older ones, the
first ones, to the smaller guards, or the newer ones."

Her mouth full, Ryba nodded.

"The engineer, he's teaching me how."  Huldran shook her head.  "Never
thought making a single small piece of steel would take so much work.
But the new blades, they've "got enough heft to make it easier to stand
up to those crowbars- the kind Gerlich liked."

When Ryba did not respond immediately, Ayrlyn asked, "Do we have any
idea what he's up to?  Gerlich, I mean?"

"He doesn't like the heat.  So I can't imagine he's too far down in the
lowlands," mused Nylan.

"He's trying to gather an army to attack Westwind.  I suppose," Ryba
added after a pause.

Nylan's stomach sank at the timing of the pause.  Ryba wasn't
guessing.

"Do you think he'll be successful?"  asked Huldran.  "He took a lot of
coin and some old weapons," said Ayrlyn.

"I'd guess we'd see him in late summer, before harvest," speculated
Ryba.  "Hired arms men would be cheaper then."

"He'll try something sneaky.  He's that type," said Huldran.

"True," agreed Ryba.

Nylan grabbed Dylless's wandering hand just in time to keep his mug
from being knocked over.  "Hold it, little one.  You don't drink tea. I
do."

Ryba continued to eat, almost silently, her eyes half glazed over. When
she was done, she held out her arms, and Nylan ate.

Dylless began to fuss, and Ryba rose, nodding.  "Excuse me, but my
young friend here has some plans for me."  With a quick smile, the
marshal was gone.

"She's preoccupied," Ayrlyn observed.

"Wouldn't you be?"  offered Huldran.  "She's got a lot to worry
about."

So do we all, thought Nylan, without speaking his thoughts.  So do we
all.

After the evening meal, Nylan walked uphill in the twilight, past the
doorless and windowless smithy, and then northward until he came to a
small hillock of rocks that overlooked the lander shell still used to
store grasses and hay.  The drying racks, half filled with grass,
stretched across the space between the meadow and the rising rocky
hills to the west.  One empty rack lay broken and sprawled on the rocky
ground.

The brighter stars were appearing in the south, one on each side of the
ice-tipped Freyja.  As the evening deepened, more points of light
appeared, and no star looked that different to Nylan from those he had
seen from Heaven.  Only the patterns in the sky were different.

The wind had switched, and blew cooler and out of the north.  Nylan sat
on a smooth boulder and looked at the bulk of Tower Black, and at the
dark fields beyond, and the lighter stones of the cairns to the
southeast.  So many cairns for such a short time, and he had no
illusions.  The number of cairns would continue to grow.

"Nylan?"

He looked down in the direction of the drying racks.

Ayrlyn stood at the base of the rocks.  "Would you mind if I climbed up
to talk to you?  You look like you need someone to talk to.  I do."

Nylan waved her up and waited until she settled on a boulder beside
him.  Unlike Nylan, who sat in the dark in a shirt, the healer wore
shirt, tunic, and a light ship jacket.

"Neither you and Ryba talk much anymore."

"What is there to talk about?  The situation seems impossible, that's
all.  I feel so awkward.  Weryl's my son, and Kyalynn's my daughter,
and I've never touched Istril or Siret."  He laughed, a soft harsh
sound.  "Except with a wand in sparring.  Yet I feel that Ryba wants me
to ignore them.  Even though it wasn't my idea, they are my
children."

"You try so hard.  Siret and Istril know that."

"Does trying count?  Or is Ryba right, that, in the end, only survival
and results count?"  He cleared his throat.  "Oh, there are all the
religions and philosophies about life being worth nothing if it isn't
lived well-but all that's written for people who have the time and the
resources to read, not for a bunch of high-tech refugees trying to
scrape together a future on a cold mountaintop."

"Go on," said Ayrlyn.

"All I do is cobble together infrastructures that most places have
years, if not decades, to build-and figure out better low-tech weapons
for Ryba to train people to use.  Every time someone dies, it hurts."

Ayrlyn nodded.

"But I'm supposed to ignore that, too."  He paused.  "I'm feeling too
sorry for myself.  The deaths hurt you, too."

"Death's everywhere, Nylan.  We could have died on the Winterlance.
Maybe we did.  Maybe this is all an elaborate illusion."

"It's no illusion."  He glanced up at the cold stars.  "There, I didn't
feel each death personally."

"This might be better," reflected Ayrlyn.  "Death was a sanitary and
distant occurrence there.  It just happened- light-minutes away at the
end of a de-energizer.  No more demons.  Or no more angels.  And we
could ignore it.  Here we can't."

"Most people can-here or there.  We just can't."

Ayrlyn's hand touched his forearm.

"Your fingers are cold."  He took her hand in his, then looked up
again.  The stars above were bright.  Bright and unfamiliar.  Bright
and cold.  He squeezed her fingers, gently.

CII

SIL LEK TOSSES THE scroll, wrinkled and smudged, with fragments of wax
still clinging to one edge, on the sitting room table.  Then he bends
over Zeldyan and scoops Nesslek out of his consort's arms.

"You're the best thing I've seen today, except for your mother."

"I'm a thing now?"  Zeldyan's voice carries but a faint edge.

"Of course not.  That wasn't what I meant."  He looks down at his son
in his arms and puts his forehead gently against the boy's.  "Was it?
We didn't mean any insults to your mother."  .  "Oooooo ..."  offers
Nesslek.

"That's what he thinks," responds Zeldyan, "for all your fancy words."
She smiles fondly at her consort.

"Would you read that abomination I dropped on the table and tell me
what you think?"

"A lordly matter?  Your mother would not approve, my lord."  Zeldyan
smiles again, more ironically, as she lifts the scroll.  "Why do you
want me to read it?"

"You know why," Sillek counters with a laugh, "but I'll tell you
anyway.  Because you're your father's daughter, and you can think. 
He's stuck in Rulyarth trying to rebuild that mess the traders left,
and I need someone with brains that I can also trust."

"Your mother would definitely not approve of that."

"Of course not.  You have brains, and you love me.  She didn't approve
of our joining after she found out I'd fallen in love with you.  "Love
is dangerous for rulers, Sillek."  It gets in the way of honor and
patrimony."  He walks to the window and stands there, still carrying
Nesslek, 'waiting as Zeldyan reads through the scroll.

After a time, he finally asks, "Have you got it?"

"It's a letter from Ildyrom, renouncing all interest in the grasslands.
There are many flowery phrases, but that's what it says ... I think."

"Exactly."  Sillek bites off the word.  "Exactly.  It came with a small
chest of golds."

"That seems odd," muses Zeldyan.  "Last year he built that fort to try
to take them from you.  I wouldn't trust him."

"I don't, but I think the gesture is real, and it's a danger."

"Not having to fight over the grasslands is a danger?"

"All my holders will know that Ildyrom has sued for peace.  Your father
holds Rulyarth, and the locals there seem to be pleased with his
efforts.  We offered a percentage of our trade revenues from Rulyarth
to the Suthyan trade council-"

"You did?"

"It was your father's idea-much cheaper for both of us.  They couldn't
really maintain three ports anyway."

"And we can even if the traders couldn't?"

"If we expand trade, we can.  They just wanted quick golds."  Sillek
shrugs and lifts Nesslek to his shoulder.  The infant burps-loudly.
"The bay is much better than Armat..."

Zeldyan laughs.  "I've heard this before.  What about Ildyrom?"

"It's de monish  We have peace with both Suthya and Ildyrom.  All our
borders are secure-except for those devil women on the Westhorns."

"Oh."  The smile fades from Zeldyan's face.

"You see?  The chest of golds-that's already known.  You can't keep
that a secret.  It even means I can hire mercenaries.  More women have
left the holdings.  Genglois had three petitions waiting for
me-demanding I do something."  Sillek lowers Nesslek and wipes his
mouth gently.

"What will you do?"

"Stall."  Sillek lowers his voice.  "Make obvious preparations.  Send
dispatches to your father.  Stall and hope.  Hope for an early winter,
or the need to do something urgent in Rulyarth or the grasslands."

"And neither Ildyrom nor the traders will offer the slightest pretext
while your stodgy traditional holders bombard you with demands to
reclaim the Roof of the World."

"That's the way I see it."  Sillek sighs.  "But I have a little time.
Not much, but a little.  I can hope."

A frown crosses Zeldyan's forehead, but she forces a smile.

CIII

"WE DON'T TALK much anymore," Ryba said quietly.  "I miss that."

"I'm sorry.  I guess I don't much feel like talking a lot of the time,"
Nylan said quietly, as he rocked the cradle and watched his daughter's
face through the darkness.

"Could I ask why?"  The marshal's voice was calm, soft.  "Is it just
me?  You go off and talk to Ayrlyn."

"I worry, and I worry about things that seem set in stone.  I feel
like, when I talk to you, we talk in circles."  When Ryba did not
answer, he continued, his eyes still on Dylless.  "We go back and forth
saying the same things.  If you try to avoid using force, people die.
If I don't build towers and weapons and what amounts to a low-tech
military infrastructure, people will die.  If you don't play tyrant and
I won't play stud, our children won't have any future."  His voice
dropped into silence.

Again, Ryba was silent, and he continued to rock the cradle and to
watch the sleeping Dylless.  In time, he spoke.  "Even as each killing
hurts more, I become better at making weapons and using them.  I can't
walk away from you, or Istril, or Siret, or little Dephnay who won't
know her mother or her father-not now-but I keep asking myself how long
I can continue doing this."  He gave a rueful grin he doubted Ryba
could see through the darkness.  "How long before I'm so blind in a
battle that I get spitted?  And if I don't kill my allotted one or two,
who else will get killed?"

"You think I like it?"  asked Ryba, her voice still calm.  "I can't ask
anything without the threat of some sort offeree.  I can't get anyone
to see what I see.  If I try to use reason, even you fight me.  If I
use coercion and trickery, then what does that make me?  But I have to,
if I want a daughter, and if I want her to have a future.  There aren't
any choices for me, Nylan.  And there aren't many for you."

Nylan looked back at Dylless's peaceful and innocent face, asking
himself, Were we like that once?  Does life force us into the use of
force and violence, just to survive?

"You have visions of what must be, and when you don't follow those,
people suffer and die," Nylan finally said.  "You've told me that, and
I see that.  I see it, but that doesn't mean I have to like it."

"All I want is for us to be free, for the guards, me, Dylless, not to
be trapped in a culture in which some horses are treated better than
women.  That's not asking a lot."

"It doesn't seem so," agreed Nylan.  "But for us to be free seems to
require more recruits and more and more weapons.  More recruits makes
the locals madder, and that means we have to defend ourselves, which
leads to more deaths, and more plunder.  That allows us to get
stronger, but only if we keep our deaths few, which means better
training and more weapons.  Better training means less food-growing and
hunting, and that means a military culture, probably eventually hiring
out to the powers that be."  Nylan cleared his throat.  "Is that what
you see?  Is that what you want?"

"I wish I could see a more peaceful way, but I don't.  Westwind will
have to hire out some guards, but from what little I do see, we will be
able to prosper by building better trade roads, by levying tariffs on
them, and by protecting them."  Ryba paused.  "I don't see this as the
clear and unified picture you paint, either.  I catch an image here, or
there, and I have to try to visualize how it fits.  I always worry that
I won't put the pieces of this puzzle together right, and that I'll
fail and someone else will die who shouldn't."

Nylan slowly eased the cradle to a stop.  Dylless gave the smallest of
snores, then sighed.  He slipped under the light and thin blanket that
was all he needed in the summer evening.

"Would you hold me?"  asked Ryba.  "I know you've been forced, tricked,
and coerced, and I'm not proud of it.  But it's lonely.  I'm not asking
for love.  Just hold me."

In the darkness Nylan slipped from his couch to hers, where, uncertain
as he was, Nylan put his arms around her, his eyes open to the rough
planking overhead, wondering how long he could hold her, yet knowing
she had no one else.

CIV

"HISSL HAS REQUESTED relief from his post in Clynya for three
eight-days," Sillek says, looking up from the table and stifling a
yawn.  His breath causes the candles in the nearer candelabra to
flicker.

"He's been there for a while, hasn't he?"  asks Zeldyan, gently
bouncing Nesslek on one knee, while occasionally picking up a morsel
from the small sitting room table and eating it.

"Yes."

"Why does it bother you?"

"Terek says he's up to something, something not exactly wizardly.
Strange people have been visiting him-arms men no one recognizes.  He's
been laying up enough provisions for a small army.  Koric told me that.
He laughed.  Said that Hissl has no idea how to do something
secretly."

"He's not... surely he wouldn't try to ... he's not stupid enough for
treason."

"No.  And he's not subtle enough to try it that way.  If he were out to
overthrow me, his best chance would have been to murder Koric and open
the grasslands to Ildyrom in return for support from Jerans.  He is
smart enough to consider that.  Since he didn't, it's something else."
Sillek yawns and looks at his son.  "When will he go to sleep?"

"Soon," says Zeldyan with a laugh.  "Keep talking.  Your voice soothes
him.  So what is Hissl doing?"

"I'm just guessing, but I'd say he's going to mount his own expedition
to the Roof of the World."

"Why?  He wouldn't know a sword from a dagger."

"He is a wizard, and he told Terek last year that he thought the
thunder-throwers of those angel women would not last a year."

Zeldyan frowns.  "Why would he risk such a thing?"

"He dislikes being second to Terek.  He would like lands in his own
right and a title.  I could not back down on my promise on that,
especially if Hissl defeats them, and he knows that.  My word would be
forfeit to every holder and every wizard in Candar."  Sillek frowns,
then stifles another yawn.

"You're more tired than your son.  Perhaps you should be the one going
to sleep."

"I'm not that tired."

Zeldyan laughs and cradles Nesslek in her arms.  "His eyes are
drooping, and I'll be able to put him in the cradle soon.  Your mother
thinks ill of my closeness with him."

"I know.  She says nothing, though."

"You don't mind, do you?  He'll grow so fast.  I saw that happen with
Fornal and Relyn."

"Have you heard anything about Relyn?"

Zeldyan shakes her head.  "Why are you worried if Hissl is going to
attack the Roof of the World?  If he wins, you don't have to go.  If he
loses, he still may weaken them."

"I 'm no longer sure about that.  I wonder if I see Ildyrom's fine hand
behind all this."

"Keep talking," says Zeldyan as she slips to her feet and steps toward
the cradle.

"Terek says that every time that someone has attacked those devil
women, the women have gotten a lot of plunder.  They're selling a lot
of plate armor and blades to traveling traders for supplies.  They've
got mounts and some livestock, and a tower and they're building more
buildings ..."  Zeldyan nods to Sillek to keep speaking as she eases
Nesslek into the cradle and starts to rock it gently.  "... now Ildyrom
is as devious as a giant water lizard and about twice as dangerous.
What if he's backing Hissl, not directly, but through some adventurers?
Ildyrom can't lose.  If Hissl wins, I lose the wizard that's kept him
at bay.  I also lose face, and that's a problem with the holders that
will tie me up.  If Hissl loses, that's worse.  Those angels will have
enough plunder that it will take all the free arms men in Candar to pry
them out.  And even more women will start fleeing unhappy situations
here and in Gallos, and whatever it is, those people on the Roof of the
World know how to fight and to teach other to fight.  So all my holders
will be up in arms if I don't act.  So will Karthanos.  And Ildyrom,
with his pledge not to take the grasslands, loses nothing, only a small
chest of coins.  Even if I win, it will be a bloody mess, and it will
be years before we could consider more than holding on to what we
already have."

"That's more than enough now," Zeldyan points out.  "I know that.  But
from Ildyrom's position, a few coins behind Hissl is a cheap way to
weaken Lornth no matter what happens.  And I can't afford to stop
Hissl, either.  That's what's so de monish about it."

Zeldyan lets the cradle slow and steps back.  Nesslek snuffles
momentarily, but continues to sleep.  She turns to Sillek.  "You can
tell me more later.  We can talk when he's awake.  Unless you're too
sleepy?"

"Never."

"Good."  She leans over and blows out the candles.

CV

THE AIR WAS still, hot, and humid-for the Roof of the World-in the
brickworks canyon.  The three who toiled beside the stream were soaked
in sweat, except where their boots and trousers were damp from the
running water.

One knee-high line of rocks and bricks mortared together ran from the
north side of the stream to the canyon wall.  On the south side of the
stream a trench extended toward the hill that straddled the middle of
the canyon.  There, Rienadre, Denalle, and Nylan struggled to remove
the silty and clay-filled soil, at least enough to provide footings for
the crude retaining wall that would, Nylan hoped, form the millpond.

Nylan paused and leaned on the shovel, wishing he had explosives, even
crude black powder, but while he could make charcoal, he hadn't seen or
heard of anything resembling sulfur or potassium nitrate.  As for more
sophisticated explosives-gun cotton or blasting gelatin-he was no
chemist.  None of them were.

Clank..  .

"Friggin' rocks," muttered Denalle, attempting to lever a stone more
than a cubit long and half as thick and wide out of the trench.  Nylan
lifted his shovel, and the two of them levered it out of the way.

The engineer-smith blotted his forehead and began digging again.

Rienadre walked up from where she had been toiling nearer the stream,
halted by Nylan, and gestured.  "Is where I've outlined that second
channel far enough from the first?"

Nylan stopped digging momentarily.  His eyes followed her gesture.
"Should be.  We'll put a small gate in each spot.  That way we can
drain the pond if it's necessary for repairs."

"Why two?"  puffed Denalle.

"The stream has to have somewhere to go while we're working on the
first one," answered Rienadre for Nylan.  "Same's true when we go back
to work on the second one."

"Just when I think we're done making bricks," commented Denalle as
Rienadre passed, "the engineer comes up with something else.  We'll
never be done."

"We weren't ever done when we were marines, either."  Rienadre started
to walk down toward the stream.  "Rather take my chances against the
locals than the demons of light."

"Maybe," grunted Denalle as she thrust the shovel into the ground. "But
dying here is dirty, and it hurts more."

As Nylan kept digging, his thoughts spun through the shafts, the
gearing and mill structure.  He was probably stuck with an overshot
wheel, just because he knew how to make that work, but somewhere he had
the notion that an undershot wheel was more efficient-or was it the
other way around?  How would he have known that kind of knowledge would
come in useful?

Nylan lifted out another shovelful of dirt and clay.  He had to have
thought of a sawmill, hadn't he?  And half the guards had to bitch
about it, because none of them could see that the mill mechanism could
be used for dozens of applications.  Why was it that no one ever liked
the practical side of things, in songs, tri deo dramas, or in real
life? No, the people who were practical always lost to the warriors and
the glory hounds.  He shook his head and kept digging.

CVI

CLOUDS SCUDDED QUICKLY across the greenish-blue morning sky, leaving
the Roof of the World intermittently darkened by fast-moving shadows.
Gusts of wind, cooled by the ice-capped peaks to the west, whipped back
and forth those few scrawny firs that clung to crevices in the walls of
the narrow canyon above the Westwind stables.

Nylan checked the shovels and other gear strapped to the back of the
mare's saddle.  Another long day of earth-moving and rock-mortaring! In
an eight-day or so, they might even be able to start work on the mill's
foundation.  He patted the mare's shoulder and led her out into the
light.  "Come on, lady."

At the end of the stables, Ryba stood, talking to Istril, Hryessa, and
Ydrall.  All three guards stood before saddled mounts, and all three
were fully armed with twin blades and bows.

Nylan paused, then strained to listen, his hand absently patting the
mare to quiet her.  "... they won't try a frontal attack.  Even Gerlich
isn't that stupid.  So your job is to scout around the area and
discover any possible place they could bring up horses and armed men
... start with the second canyon there.  Look for traces on the trees
and bushes, up high.  Remember, the snow was deep ..."

The engineer-smith swung up into the saddle, teetering there awkwardly
for a moment.  He still wasn't totally comfortable riding, but one way
or another he'd eventually learned.  He didn't have any real
alternatives to horses and skis, it appeared.  He flicked the brown
mare's reins and slowly rode toward the three guards who listened
intently to Ryba.

"Just a moment.  I need a word with the engineer before he heads off
down to the lower works," Ryba said, stepping back from the guards and
turning toward Nylan.

The engineer-smith reined up.

"Do what you can down at the mill over the next few days."  Ryba
lowered her voice.  "After that, I'd like you and Rienadre and Denalle
to stay close to the tower."

"Gerlich?"

Ryba nodded.  "I can't tell when, but it feels like it won't be
long."

"Do you want me to get the weapons laser ready?"

"No.  We'll need that later, when we face a real army."

"If we don't stop Gerlich, there won't be a later."

"I know."

The flatness of her voice stopped Nylan.  After a moment, he said, "All
right."

After another silence, she added, "You can work on more blades, if you
would.  We'll need those, too, as many as you and Huldran can make."

"A good anvil would help," Nylan said.

"Tell Ayrlyn.  It's a good investment."  She flashed him a quick smile,
bright and shallow.

"We'll hold off on the millrace and the mill.  We might get the pond
finished in the next few days.  Then, we can certainly go back to
forging a few blades."

"Good."  Ryba turned back to the guards, continuing almost as though
she hadn't talked to Nylan.  "Gerlich should have left traces, bent
branches, scars.  He might even have marked a trail.  Look for them
..."

Nylan flicked the reins gently, then leaned forward and patted the mare
on the shoulder again as she whuffed and stepped sideways before
walking downhill toward the smithy and the tower.

CVII

SIL LEK STEPS INTO the hot tower room, dim despite the blazing summer
sun outside, and hot and close, even with the breeze seeping through
the two open windows.

Despite his light shirt and thin trousers, Sillek begins to sweat
almost immediately.

"Lord Sillek," says Terek, standing, "I found what you were seeking."
The white wizard rubs his forehead, then gestures to the blank glass.
"If you're ready, I'll try to call it up again."

"Please do."

Terek seats himself on the high-backed stool, shifting his weight from
side to side for a moment.  White mists swirl across the silver of the
glass.  Then, in the midst of the white mists in the glass, an image
forms.  A line of horsemen winds its way along a narrow mountain road
in the glare of the midday sun.

"Yes?"  Sillek's eyes narrow, and he strains to discern details which
would identify the horsemen.  "Who are they?  Where are they going?"

Sweat drips from Terek's face, and the lines in his forehead deepen as
he concentrates.  "I'll try to get a closer picture."

After a moment, the image shifts slightly, to the head of the column
where a white-coated figure rides between two armed men.  The taller
figure wears a huge blade across his shoulders.

"That's Hissl, all right," murmurs Sillek.  "And the smaller one, he
looks familiar, but I don't know why."  He studies the image for a time
longer.  "That looks like the road past the Ironwoods into the
Westhorns, just into the real mountains."

Terek, sweat now pouring down his cheeks, clears his throat.  "Ah ...
scr ... do you need to see ... any more?"

"Oh, no."  Sillek pauses, then asks, "Do you know who the other fellow
was?  The big one?"

Terek clears his throat, once, twice.  "Noser  He feels a little like a
beginning white wizard, but I know I've never seen him."  Terek takes
out a large white square of cloth and slowly blots his forehead. After
a time, he slides off the stool and shakes the white robes away from
his body.

"Hissl must have gathered two score arms men there."  Sillek purses his
lips.

"He wants to be Lord of the Ironwoods."  Terek's voice is flat.

"If he can defeat those angel women, I'd be most happy to grant him the
title and those lands."  Sillek forces a laugh.  "It would take a
wizard to make that maze of thorn trees productive."

"I wish him well," adds Terek.

"I know you do.  He's difficult to work with, isn't he?"  Sillek's eyes
fix on the white wizard.

Terek takes a long look at the Lord of Lornth, then speaks in measured
tones.  "Hissl has a great willingness to work hard, great talent, and
a great opinion of that talent."

"As I said .. . difficult to work with."  Sillek chuckles.  "Don't mind
me, Master Wizard.  And I thank you for your images.  They make things
clearer."

He turns and walks from the small room, adding under his breath, "But
not that much clearer."

CVIII

NYLAN DISMOUNTED AND led the brown mare into the stable.  His working
clothes were almost tatters, and damp through, either from sweat or
water, and his feet squished in his boots with each step he took.  Mud
streaked his arms and his clothes.  As always, his arms ached, and so
did his legs, and most of his muscles.

Still, the footings and the base of the millpond wall were completed,
and he had another day before he had to return to smithing.  Behind
him, Rienadre led her mount into the stables.  If anything, she was
damper and muddier than Nylan.

The engineer-smith struggled with the cinch and girth, and finally
unsaddled the mare.  Mechanically, he brushed her, occasionally patting
her flanks or neck.  After stalling her and ensuring that her manger
was full, he walked silently down the road and past the now-deserted
smithy.  The sun was almost touching the western peaks.  Behind the
faint chirping of insects and the intermittent songs of the green and
yellow birds came the low baaing of the sheep grazing around the
cairns.  "He shivered slightly, knowing there would be more cairns, and
hoping that he would not be laid under those rocks.

He crossed the causeway, entered the tower, and paused.  Ryba, Fierral,
and three guards were clustered around the last table in the great
room.  Nylan extended his perceptions, feeling faintly guilty for his
magical eavesdropping but being curious nonetheless.

"The second canyon over-the one that looked like a dead end?  It's
not," declared Istril.  "It's narrow.  Then it climbs before it widens,
and it's almost a flat run down to the trading road.  I can't say that
Gerlich was there, but there are some marks on the trees, a good four
to six cubits up in places, small crosses, and they were made
recently."

"How recently?"  asked Fierral.

"Last spring or late winter.  The bark's puckered a bit.  In one place,
there's a broken limb that has growth buds that died."

Hryessa nodded.

"Anything else?"  asked Ryba, her eyes circling the table.  After a
long silence, she continued.  "We'll need a place for an outpost-one
that can be watched, but isn't in the canyon itself-and a clear route
to get back to the tower.  I want two guards there all the time from
now on."

"Two?"

"One to watch, and one to get back the warning to us."

"Why don't we just block the canyon?"

"Because then I don't know where Gerlich will attack from," pointed out
Ryba.  "Oh .. . there's a back path from the canyon to the stable-or a
way Gerlich's men will take to try to fire the stables.  Find it, and
work out the best place for an ambush.  That will be a quick way to
take out four of his arms men and they won't be expecting it at
dawn."

Fierral and Saryn exchanged glances.

Nylan slipped past the stairs and headed for the north door and the
bathhouse.  He hoped that Ryba's visions were correct, but he wasn't
about to question her, not when her perceptions had been so accurate so
far.  And this time, if Gerlich did as she foresaw, there wouldn't be
any question of guilt.

CIX

GERLICH HOLDS UP his hand, and the column slows to a halt.  The
early-morning mist rises out of the trees to the east of the road that
continues to climb as it turns northward.

"All right, Scr Wizard," the big man announces.  "Get out your glass or
whatever you need, and scout out that trail."  He points to a gap
between the trees on the side of the road.  "I want you to make sure no
one is on it."

"That's not even a real trail, and it goes right into the mountain,"
protests Hissl.  "What good will that do?"

"It is a trail," answers Gerlich.  "I've scouted it, and it curves
through this slope and rocky ridge and comes out right behind the
tower-inside their watch posts and defenses.  And it's close enough so
that there's a back way to their stables.  You have the map on that,
Nirso."  The hunter nods to the squat arms man riding behind Narliat.

Narliat's eyes flick from the wizard, who dismounts and eases a padded
and leather-covered glass from one saddlebag, to Gerlich and then to
the road ahead.  His lips tighten.

"Worried, friend Narliat?  You have seen what I can do with the blade
and bow, and they certainly will not be expecting an attack-especially
from here."  Gerlich laughs.

Hissl squats on the ground, concentrating on the glass before him, and
the mists that appear.  After a time, he rises, wipes his forehead, and
repacks the glass.

"Well?"

"There is no one on the trail.  It is narrow, but I could see no tracks
and no horses."

"Good."  Gerlich turns his mount uphill, and the others follow.

CX

"FRIED RODENT, AGAIN," muttered Huldran from beside Nylan.
"Demon-damned stuff to put in your guts before smithing."

"The rodents serve two saving purposes," answered Ayrlyn with a smile.
"Serving them saves other food for the winter, and killing them keeps
them from eating the crops.  They like the beans and, for some reason,
they want to dig up the potatoes.  So they also serve who are
served."

Nylan hastily washed down a mouthful of fried rodent meat.  "That's a
terrible pun."  He followed his comment with a mouthful of cold
bread.

"Oooo," commented Dylless from the carry pack Ryba wore.

"That's fine, dear," said Ryba, "but you're not the one who has to eat
it."  Her eyes flicked toward the doorway, again.

Ryba seemed on edge all the time, Nylan reflected, but especially in
the morning, as the days had dragged out since Istril had discovered
what seemed to be Gerlich's back route to the Roof of the World.

"How soon, do you think?"  he asked.

Ayrlyn rubbed her forehead, and Nylan smiled faintly.  Thinking about a
battle and all those who would need healing would certainly give any
healer a headache-at least, he thought it would.

The sound of hoofbeats on the paved section of the road from the smithy
to the tower rat a tatted in through the open windows to the great
room.  Ryba stood, unstrapping the carry pack even before Liethya burst
into the room.  The young guard glanced toward the marshal and then to
Fierral, as if uncertain as to whom she should report.

"I presume the traitor has returned," Ryba said, her voice hard as she
eased Dylless, still in the carry pack to Nylan.

"There are arms men on the trail, scr."  Liethya's voice trembled
slightly.

Fierral stood.  So did Saryn.

Saryn motioned.  "Stable detail.  Let's go."  She left the room almost
at a run, followed by Hryessa, Jaseen, and Selitra.

Fierral added, "The rest of you to the stables-with full weapons."

All the guards at the tables, except for Istril, boiled off the benches
and toward the end of the great room, some hurrying up the stone steps,
presumably for weapons and gear, others straight out the main door.

Ryba touched Nylan on the shoulder.  He turned, the carry pack
unfastened, Dylless in it and looking wide-eyed at him.

"Blynnal and Niera will take care of the children.  Relyn, Siret, and
Istril will hold the tower, if necessary.  Join us as soon as you can,"
Ryba whispered to Nylan as he took their daughter.  Then she was
hurrying for the door as well, picking up her bow and a full quiver
from the shelves by the stairs.

"Off to the slaughter," announced Ayrlyn.  "Sometimes, I wonder if it
will ever stop."

"Not until they destroy us or it's clear we're strong enough to destroy
them."  Nylan shifted Dylless into a more comfortable position to carry
her.

"Demon-hell of a world," said Ayrlyn with a laugh.  She gulped down the
last of her cool tea and added, "Just like every other world."

"You're so cheerful."

"Cynically realistic, Nylan.  I'd like to change things, but I haven't
figured out how."

"That makes two of us.  I'd better stop talking, though, and start
moving."  Carrying Dylless in his arms, not bothering to strap the
carry pack in place, Nylan half walked, half ran up to the fifth level,
breathing heavily by the time he stopped in front of the space where he
kept his weapons.

Dylless whimpered, jolted by his running, and he patted her back and
laid her on the floor momentarily as he pulled out the second blade-one
of the newer iron ones-and strapped it in place.  That way, as Ryba had
suggested, he could throw one, if he needed to, and still defend
himself.  Privately, he wondered if he'd be in any shape to defend
himself if the first blade were accurate.  Then, he could miss, and
without the second blade, he'd be dead meat.

He picked up Dylless and patted her again and again, before starting
down to the third level, where Blynnal and Niera were rearranging
cradles.  Dephnay and Kyalynn were in two of them, and Niera held
Weryl.  The girl handed Weryl to Blynnal, who eased the squirming boy
into an empty cradle.

"Blynnal?"

"Scr?"

"Here's Dylless.  I need to go."  Nylan brushed his daughter's forehead
with his lips.

"We'll keep her safe."  The dark-haired guard and cook took Dylless,
carry pack and all.  "Now, you take care, Scr Mage."

"I'll try."  Nylan took a last look at the children, trying not to
shake his head at the thought that three of the four were his.

He headed down the stairs, then stopped as he saw Siret laying out
quivers by the first window to the right of the south door.

"Do you have plenty of arrows?"  he asked.

"Two quivers."

"If any of them even look like they're getting close, pick them off."
Nylan paused and pointed to the timbers behind the heavy plank door.
"As soon as the last guard leaves, drop those in place.  Don't wait.
And barricade the north door, too."

"I will, Father Brood Hen."  Siret gave him a crooked grin.  "I'll even
close all the tower shutters and windows except the ones that Istril
and I are using to shoot from.  She's up on the fourth level.  That way
we have two different angles."

"See that you keep them closed," Nylan said with mock gruffness.  He
turned to go.

"Scr?"

Nylan turned back to meet the deep green eyes.

"I'm glad you took a moment.  I'll tell Istril."

A dull thump echoed through the lower level, followed by a second
thump, and then a third.  They both looked toward the north side of the
tower.

Relyn strolled forward from the north door.  "The north door's
barricaded.  So is the outside door to the bathhouse, but they could
break through that pretty quickly."  He slipped on the clamp and the
knife over his hook, then the wooden sheath.  "I hope I don't have to
use these."

So did Nylan.

"I'd better go."  The engineer-smith nodded to both, and slipped out
the south door, hurrying uphill.

In the east, the sun hung just above the great forest beyond the
drop-off, and tendrils of mist cloaked the taller distant firs.  Nylan
turned uphill.  To the west, the morning mist was still rising off the
hills.

As he half walked, half ran up the road, Nylan realized one other
thing.  The warning triangle had never rung.  Then, he nodded.  Gerlich
knew what the triangle meant.

By the time he reached the stable, almost all the guards were mounted,
and the three who had left the tower's great room with Saryn were
riding farther up the canyon behind the former second pilot.

Llyselle held the reins of the brown mare for Nylan.  "We thought you'd
need this, scr."

Nylan, still breathing heavily, shook his head.  His slowness in
saddling his mounts was unfortunately all too well known.

"Follow your squad leaders!"  ordered Ryba.

Nylan swung himself up into the saddle, the scabbard on his right side
banging against the side of his leg as he thrust it across the
saddle.

"Squad one!"  Fierral raised her blade.

Across the grim-faced riders, Nylan caught Ayrlyn's eyes and pantomimed
the question, "Which squad?"

Ayrlyn shrugged.

"Let's go," called Fierral, and almost a dozen riders followed her. The
remainder followed Ryba.

After a moment of hesitation, Nylan rode after Ryba's group, where he
and Ayrlyn brought up the rear.

"Do you know the plan?"  he asked quietly.

"Not exactly.  Gerlich is coming down the second canyon, and they'll
try to use the ledges to pick them off, some anyway, before they can
get out of the canyon.  Saryn's supposed to get the ones headed for the
stable, and then rejoin the main group."

"Not terribly well organized," mused Nylan.

"How can it be?  Ryba can't station people everywhere eight-days on
end.  What if Gerlich never showed up?  She's probably got plans for a
dozen different cases."

"Still, it seems risky going put after him."

"It is, and Gerlich probably would have trouble cracking the tower. But
we couldn't survive another winter without livestock and mounts, and he
knows it."

Nylan nodded.  So, to protect the outbuildings and what they contained,
the guards had to take the fight to Gerlich, before he knew it.  He
also realized why ancient castles held everything-a realization that,
as seemed all too frequent, came too late.

"Pickets here!"  called Fierral.  The newest guards- Denize, Liethya,
Miergin, and Quilyn-served as pickets, holding mounts ready, as the
more experienced guards, or at least those more trained, swarmed up the
ropes already fastened in place on the slope.

Nylan nodded as he dismounted and handed the mare's reins to Quilyn.
Maybe things weren't so disorganized.  He and Ayrlyn were the last on
top of the ridge like overlook.

"Down," whispered Ryba.

Nylan went to his knees.  So did Ayrlyn.

Ryba had lined up the guards in two rows, sitting or kneeling, behind
the low scrub on a flat ledge that overlooked the widening opening of
the second canyon.  Fierral was crouched at the uphill end, Ryba at the
lower end.

Nylan studied the placement-hardly ideal, since the canyon walls were
too steep for anything but a mountain goat farther uphill and since
Gerlich's troops only would be in a field of arrow fire for a short
time.  Still if attrition were the idea, it might work, because it
would take time for Gerlich's arms men to circle the hills, assuming
they knew from where the arrows came.

"Listen!"  hissed Ryba.  "You fire four arrows-just four- as accurately
as you can.  You know which row to aim for.  Then you bat-ass down to
your mounts and form up, just like we practiced.  Now ... quiet.  We
wait."

Nylan had no bow.  That was no great loss, since his accuracy with the
weapon was less than most of the guards, especially at a distance, and
the number of bows-the good composite ones-was limited.  Besides, with
everything else, he had scarcely practiced with the bow since winter.

He looked at Ayrlyn, also without a bow, and motioned to the ropes
behind them.  "We leave after they start to fire," he mouthed.

She raised her eyebrows.

Nylan repeated his words, and she nodded.

The sun, early as it was, warmed Nylan's back, but the end of the
canyon remained in shadow.

Nylan nodded again as he realized Ryba had planned better than he had
thought.  Gerlich's troops would come around the final turn in the
canyon with their eyes facing right into the rising sun.  Nylan bet the
big hunter hadn't even considered that fact, but he hadn't the
slightest doubts that Ryba had.  When it came to using force, she tried
to consider everything.

The sun climbed a bit higher, and the air remained still.  Not even a
bird chirped, and Nylan worried about that.  Would Gerlich sense the
unnatural quiet?

The faintest of clinks echoed across the rocks.

Ryba raised her hand, and nearly a score of guards nocked arrows, but
Ryba kept her hand just above shoulder level.

A single rider turned the corner into the low-angled sunlight, his hand
up to shield his eyes.  Two more followed, their mounts walking easily.
Ryba's hand remained up until more than a score of arms men squinted
their way into the sunlight.

Then her hand snapped down.

The second snap was that of bowstrings.

Nylan saw several riders pitch forward and one reach for a shaft
through his upper arm.

"Arrows!"  came Gerlich's bellow.  The big man dropped down low on his
mount almost as the shafts flew.  "Follow me!"

Nylan scrambled back and down the rope, noting just as he ducked that
the arms man he thought was Narliat had 'gone down with at least two
shafts through him.  The white wizard and his mount vanished, just as
the one had in the very first battle on the Roof of the World.

Nylan came down the hillside in a haze of dust and struggled up into
his saddle, trying to get the mare moving toward the canyon mouth,
realizing that, for all Ryba's training, the guards might be too slow
if someone weren't near the canyon mouth to slow the attacking arms
men

He leaned back and whacked the mare's flank, and she jumped forward so
quickly that Nylan almost lurched backward out of the saddle.  He
grabbed the front rim of the saddle with his free hand and levered
himself forward, wondering what he was doing trying to hold off a
charge of horsemen by himself.

Another horse drew up beside him on his right.  "Demon-damned way to
run a battle," yelled Ayrlyn.  "Not exactly the best people to blunt an
attack," he answered without looking at her, just doing his best to
guide the mare around the rocky hill and toward the mouth of the
canyon.

He glanced ahead to his right.  The canyon opening was ahead, and none
of the attackers had emerged.  Maybe Ryba had planned it right.  He
hazarded a quick glance over his shoulder.  At least a handful of
guards were mounted and following them.

He looked back ahead, and the first arms man came charging out of the
canyon, almost without seeing Ayrlyn, lost in the glare of the early
sun.  Although the invader turned toward her and raised a long blade,
she slipped under it, and her own blade flashed, driving into the angle
between chest and neck.  Blood welled up everywhere, as did a white
haze that shivered the healer where she rode, even as she beat back a
feeble thrust from the dying arms man by instinct.

"Back off!"  called Nylan, knowing that she could not see.  That white
impact of death had seemingly shivered against him, against his blade,
but he shook it off.  He hadn't done the killing, and that helped.

Another handful of riders rode out of the canyon, circling south, so as
to avoid riding straight into the sun, and reforming into a line.

Behind him, Nylan could hear hoofbeats.  He hoped there were enough.

An arrow arched over him and toward the invaders, but passed through
them.  Nylan half wondered who was good enough even to shoot while
riding.  That took two free hands, and half the time, he needed one
hand to grab the mare's mane or the saddle to keep from getting jounced
off.

A fire bolt hhissssed past Nylan, its heat skin-searing.  The wizard
had reappeared beside Gerlich, who waved the big sword in Nylan's
general direction.

Another fire bolt flared across the distance between the mounted
groups.

Aeeeiii!

The sickening scream was cut short, as if by a knife.

"Aim for the wizard!"  ordered Nylan, and almost immediately several
shafts arrowed toward the white-clad man.

Nylan could sense the white wizard throwing up some short of shields,
and parts of the arrows flared into flame.  The arrowheads tumbled
forward untouched.

"More!"  snapped Ryba.  "He can't use his powers while cold iron's
flying at him."

How did Ryba know that?  wondered Nylan.  It made sense, but how had
she known?

HHHssstttt!

Another of the wizard's fire bolts flared toward Ryba, and she raised
her blade and half ducked, half parried it.

"To the tower!"  ordered Gerlich, spearheading a wedge of horsemen
aimed slightly to the left of the center of the guards.

The invading horsemen charged forward, and the wizard vanished.  Nylan
extended his senses, probing for the wizard ... and finding him behind
a wall of unseen white.  Maybe ... maybe, he could do something like
that, or figure out a way to break down "Nylan!"

At the scream, Nylan blinked, then lifted his blade as a bearded arms
man bore down.  The engineer wanted to turn and flee, but he'd just get
himself cut down from behind.

Nylan barely managed to get the blade up to deflect the smashing blow,
and his entire arm ached.  He urged the mare sideways, raising his own
weapon again, and hacking the bearded man, who caught Nylan's blade
with the big crowbar.  Again, Nylan's arm shivered, but he actually
gouged a chunk of iron from the huge sword.

He wished he had had the time to try his shield idea, but the arms man
brought the huge blade around in a sweeping, screaming arc, and the
engineer was forced back in the saddle.  He could no longer see what
else was happening, though he could feel the lines of white-red force
flying toward and around Ryba.

Almost automatically, as the attacking arms man overbalanced, Nylan
felt the moves that Saryn and Ryba had drilled into him taking over,
and his blade flashed-once ... twice.

The bearded man's surprised look stayed on his dead face, even as the
white shock of his death shivered through Nylan.

"Move, scr!  Move!"

At the sound of Huldran's voice, Nylan forced his eyes back open,
despite the needles of pain that shivered through them, and weakly
lifted his blade.  Three guards had swept in before him and seemed to
hold back twice their number.

His guts churned, and his eyes burned.  His arm just hurt.

Another arms man rode up, circling toward Huldran's blind side, and
Nylan, again mostly reacting, threw the heavy balanced blade, and
immediately grabbed for his second blade.

As the thrown blade sliced through the arms man chest, Nylan's fingers
groped for, and almost lost, his other blade.  For a moment he sat on
the mare, paralyzed, knives of liquid lightning stabbing through his
eyes, and lines of ionized fire streaming down his arms.

He forced his blade up, but, for the moment, it wasn't needed.  The
last arms man attacking Cessya wheeled his mount, turned, and started
to flee.  Cessya threw one of her blades through his back, then rode
after the trotting mount to reclaim it.

HHHssttt!

Nylan's stomach churned as the ashes that had been Cessya flared into
the morning air, but he forced himself to turn the mare toward the
white-clad figure and raised his remaining blade.  "Let's go."

Extending his perceptions again, ignoring the fire that ran through his
body, he let the mare trot forward, afraid a run would jolt him right
out of the saddle.

Huldran rode on his right, Weindre on his left, and two others he
didn't look back to identify slightly behind.

Another fire bolt flared, but Nylan raised his blade, using his senses
somehow to deflect it.

A third fire bolt slammed at Nylan, cascading around his blade, and
almost singeing his hair.

The engineer felt as though he were riding in slow motion, but he kept
moving, holding the blade like a talisman, ignoring the soreness in his
muscles as he and the guards narrowed the distance between them and the
wizard.

Two fire bolts in quick succession, flashed toward them, but Nylan,
with his senses, eased them aside.

As the white wizard saw the guards beating their way through the arms
men he glanced left, then right, and squinted.

Nylan could feel the sense of distortion, the wrenching feeling
twisting at his sight, and he fought it, muttering under his breath, "I
will.  I will see what is.  I will .. . will .. ."

His head seemed to split as unseen lines of fire stretched from the
wizard to him, but he held firm, his eyes blurring, only knowing that
the wizard's defenders were melting under the flashing, often crudely
hacking, blades of the Westwind guards.

Suddenly, the wizard turned his mount and started to gallop away.  Two
blades flashed through the air.  One struck, almost a glancing blow,
Nylan thought, but the wizard almost seemed to disintegrate.

"Get those blades!"  ordered Huldran.

Nylan, ignoring the blinding knives that accompanied each glance at the
bodies strewn across the area around the fields, and the gash in his
arm that he had not even noticed before, urged the mare toward the knot
of arms men besieging Ryba and the guards around her.

As the two guards reclaimed their blades, Huldran, Weindre, and Nylan
rode over the corner of the bean field toward the dust-shrouded figures
struggling in the mid-morning light.

Gerlich loomed over the group, and his blade cleared a guard from her
mount, almost bisecting her.

Nylan winced at the additional pain of more death, but leaned forward
in the saddle, still gripping his blade.

"Now, we'll see, Angel and Marshal!"  yelled Gerlich, spurring his
mount toward Ryba, pushing aside one of his own arms men as he came up
on her left side, the huge blade spinning like night toward the
marshal, even as she turned.

The dark-haired leader dived sideways as the blade clove through the
neck of the roan.  The big red horse crumbled, but Ryba tucked and
rolled out, staggering erect into a space in the midst of the dust and
horses.

One of Ryba's arms hung loosely as Gerlich wheeled his mount toward
her.

Her shoulders slumped, and Nylan watched helplessly.  Gerlich's blade
rose again.

At the last moment, the forgotten slug-thrower came up ... and four
even shots stitched four welts of red across Gerlich's chest.  The big
blade slipped from his fingers as his mouth dropped open.

As the ten or so arms men turned, as if to attack the dismounted
marshal, Saryn lifted both her blades.  Each glittered like black fire
in the midday sun, each impossibly reflecting the sun.  Saryn and the
half-dozen guards beside her charged the remaining arms men splitting
off half the group and backing them away from Ryba.  The guards' black
blades glittered in the late morning light, glimmered like black
fire.

A second group of five guards, led by Fierral, formed a tight circle
around Ryba against nearly twice their number.

Nylan turned toward Ryba's attackers, and the mare pulled up short,
almost slamming into an arms man mount from behind.  As the man turned,
seemingly in slow motion, Nylan's iron blade slashed.

With the cold white of another death, Nylan shuddered, and his senses
screamed.

No matter how hard he tried to hold on, the engineer could feel himself
slumping in the saddle, almost in slow motion, as the power of that
exploding whiteness slammed into him, and his fingers grasped at the
mare's mane, trying to hold on.  Trying ...

CXI

ZELDYAN SITS NEARLY upright in the rocking chair, Nesslek on her
shoulder, patting him as he cries.  "Now ... now ..."  She nods to
Sillek.  "What did Terek tell you?  You went running out of here like
the Westhorns had burst into flame."

Sillek looks down at the uneaten remnants of his midday meal.  "I'm
worried."

"That is obvious."  She continues to pat Nesslek.

Her son arches his back slightly and gives an uuurpppp.

"There .. . does little Nesslek's tummy feel better?  There .. ."
Zeldyan raises an eyebrow.  "Does this have to do with your
adventuresome wizard's exploits?"

"He's dead.  Somehow they turned his wizardry back on him and cut him
down with cold iron."  Sillek stands and walks to the window, his eyes
looking toward the fields filled with grain turning gold, a gold he
does not see though his eyes rest upon the fields.  "They have demon
blades-or angel blades-or something.  Hissl threw his fire at the head
angel, and she turned it with her blade.  I didn't see it in the glass,
but Terek swears it happened."

"Do you believe him?"

Nesslek whimpers again, and Zeldyan brings him up to her shoulder,
patting him once more.

"I've never seen him look that shaken."

"How many of Hissl's arms men survived?"

"A handful, if that.  They were led by a big man who was one of the
best I've seen.  He had a big blade, as big as my father's, and he used
it like a toothpick.  It wasn't enough."

"What about the angels?"

Sillek turns from the sunlight and the window.  "They lost some.  How
many I couldn't say, but there seem to be as many as before.  Their
leader was wounded, but she was still giving orders.  I don't know
about their mage.  They were carrying him off the field, but the glass
didn't show any blood.  Terek thinks he was only stunned, says that he
tied Hissl's magic in knots at the end."

"You're very worried."

"You know why," Sillek answers.  "They'll get more women after this.
They know how to train them.  They have blades that turn wizards' fire
and cut through plate armor.  They have bows that send arrows through
anything.  I have Ildyrom stirring up rumors that I'm a coward, and
that I intend to turn Lornth over to the women.  I have my own holders
who will demand that I destroy this abomination, and what will I get
out of it?"  Sillek snorts.  "If I'm unlucky, I'm dead.  If I'm lucky,
I'll win a victory that will destroy me.  To win, I'll need to raise an
army-not a force, but an army as big as the one that took Rulyarth-and
I can't pull your father out of Rulyarth, or the forces that support
him.  So I need more mercenaries and levies, and both are expensive.
That means a tax on the holders.  Who else has got coins?  That will
make them mad, and they won't remember that it's their bitching that
created the mess."

"It is that bad, isn't it?"

Nesslek burps again before his father can respond.

"It's worse.  I hate those women.  Just by existing, they're going to
destroy me, one way or another."

"No they won't.  Life is never easy, but you can defeat them.  I know
you don't want to, and I don't, either, but we don't want a holder
revolt, either."  Zeldyan smiles.  "When you come back, then you
certainly won't have any trouble with Ildyrom."

"No.  That's true.  One way or another I won't have to worry about
Ildyrom."  He walks over to the chair.  "Let me take Nesslek.  You
haven't had a bite to eat, and all I've done is talk."

"Careful," says Zeldyan with a laugh.  "You shouldn't let anyone see
you acting like a nursemaid."

"Bother that," mutters Sillek, lifting Nesslek up to his shoulder. "I'm
a nursemaid to all those holders who are afraid that, if those women
survive up on that mountain, they won't be able to keep beating their
own up."

"I never would have thought you'd say that."

"I've learned a lot from you."  Sillek pats his son on the back and
smiles at Zeldyan.

CXII

WHEN NYLAN WOKE, he was lying on his lander cot bed.  The light from
the windows, while dim, burned through his eyes.  He turned his head
slightly, eyes slit, and a sledge smashed across his temples. Whiteness
and blackness washed over him for a time, and he lay motionless, eyes
closed, until the hammering and the knives that slashed at his eyes
subsided.

Slowly, without moving his head, he eased his eyes open.

The gentle creaking of the cradle seemed more like the rumbling of a
mill beside his head, and Dylless's breathing like a high wind that
whipped through the tower.

Ryba sat in the rocking chair, one arm bound tightly in a sling, the
other rocking the cradle.  The left side of her face was scraped and
blackish blue, with thin red lines running across her cheek.

"You ..."  rasped Nylan.  His eyes still burned.

"I know," she said.  "You look almost as bad.  They had to pry your
fingers out of your poor mount's mane."

Nylan tried to move his fingers.  They were stiff, sore.  His head
throbbed even with the attempted movement.

"You don't look that wonderful," he said after a time.

"It's not too bad.  It was only dislocated, but badly.  Istril has some
of the healing talent.  It must go with the silver hair.  It's a good
thing, too, because whatever you did to that wizard backfired all over
both you and Ayrlyn.  Last time I looked she was flattened like you."

"No..."  Nylan tried to moisten his lips.  "I got... through the
wizard.  It was the killing.  Killing's hard on me, hard on healers."

"The killing was the easy part," said Ryba, as though she had not even
heard Nylan's last words.  "Getting guards trained is the hard thing,
and making sure they do what they're supposed to.  These women, half
are scared to lift a blade against a man.  Got to change that."  She
coughed, wincing.

"Sore ribs, too?"

"I don't notice you doing much moving."

"If I did, my head would fall off," Nylan admitted.

"Denize, she froze, just sat there on her mount," Ryba continued, again
almost as though she had not heard Nylan.  "They hacked her apart, and
I couldn't reach her in time.  De-sain, Miergin, and poor Nistayna,
they did their best and it wasn't enough.  The wizard got Jaseen and
Berlis, too."  Ryba shivered, then stopped rocking the cradle.
"Killing's easy.  Too easy for men."

Nylan closed his eyes.  He didn't feel like arguing.  Maybe killing was
easy, but feeling the deaths of those you killed wasn't.  Yet what else
could they have done?  He could feel himself drifting back into
darkness, and he let it happen.

CXIII

THE WARM WIND coming through the open windows raised dust off the floor
of the great room, dust that appeared no matter how often the stones
were swept or washed.

Nylan rested his elbows on the table and closed his eyes.  Finally, he
opened them and took a sip of the cold water.  His body still felt as
if it had been pummeled in a landslide of building stones and
sharp-edged bricks.

He couldn't rest, even though Ryba and Dylless were, and Ayrlyn was. So
were most of the children.  He took another sip of the water and
glanced through the nearest narrow window slot at the green-blue sky
and the scattered clouds of late summer.  Then he held his aching head
in his hands.

Relyn eased into the room.  The former noble wore a hand-dyed black
cloak over equally black trousers and shirt.

"Relyn?"

"I came to thank you."

"Thank me?"  Nylan wanted to laugh.  "For what?"

"For making things clear, scr."  Relyn eased onto the bench across the
table from Nylan.

Nylan studied the man in black.  "My head still hurts, and I guess I'm
not thinking too well.  Just how did I make things clear?"

Relyn scratched his head, then rubbed his nose.  "First, I thought you
had magic that you brought from Heaven.  When the magic from Heaven
died, I thought you had tools from Heaven.  Then I watched as you kept
building things, and I thought that the greatest magic is in a man's
mind."

"It helps to have knowledge," Nylan said wryly.  "Sometimes, the
biggest hurdle is just knowing that something can be done.  Or that it
can't."

Relyn smiled apologetically, but did not speak.

Nylan took another sip of water.  "Now what are you going to do?"  he
asked after he set down the mug.

"For a time, I will try to learn more of the way of the Leg-end, and
the way of order, so long as you and the singer will teach me.  In
time, I will leave and teach others."

"Teach them what?"

"What I have learned.  That what a man does must be in harmony with
what he thinks.  That order is the greatest force of all."  Relyn
shrugged.  "You know."

Nylan wasn't sure what he knew.  "That may not make you all that
popular, Relyn."

"I have already decided that.  I will have to go east, or circle Lornth
and go far to the west.  I would not be well received in Lornth,
especially after Lornth is vanquished."

"From what the healer has discovered from the traders, Lord Sillek has
hired mercenaries, and has more resources than ever before.  Yet you
think he will be vanquished."  Nylan's arm swept across the great room.
"We have perhaps a score and a half, two score at the most, and how
many will he bring?  Fivescore?  Six?  Twentyscore?  Fortyscore?"

"They will not be enough."  Relyn smiled.  "Three more women arrived at
Tower Black today.  There was one yesterday, and two the day before.
They brought blades, and some brought coins.  One rode up bringing her
own packhorse loaded with goods.  She was willing to give them to the
angel even if she could not stay."

Nylan took a deep breath.  "The women of this world are fed up."

"If I understand you, that is true."  Relyn's smile vanished.  "The
longer Lord Sillek waits, the more guards and goods Westwind will have.
Two of those who rode up today already had their own blades and could
use them."

"I'm afraid that is why your Lord Sillek will not wait."

"He is not my Lord Sillek.  A disowned man has no lord.  That is one of
the few benefits."  Relyn laughed.  "And few would attack a one-armed
man, for there is no honor in that.  So, when the time comes, I will
depart."

"Why don't you leave now?"

"I would see the destruction of Lornth.  Then I can tell the world of
the power of the Legend."

"You have a great deal of faith."  Far more than I do, thought Nylan.
Far more.

"No.  This is something I know."  Relyn slipped off the bench.  "You
are tired, and I would not weary you more."

For a time, Nylan sat, eyes closed, but his head ached, and he did not
feel sleepy.  Relyn was talking as though Ayrlyn and Nylan were the
prophets of some new faith, and that bothered the smith, as if his head
didn't hurt enough already.

Finally, he stood and walked to the open south door and crossed the
causeway.  The large cairn was now twice its former length, and Nylan
could no longer distinguish the separate smaller cairns that dotted the
southeast section of the meadow, almost opposite the mouth of the
second canyon from which Gerlich's men had poured.

A crew of new guards, led by Saryn, had already blocked the narrow
passage at the upper end of the canyon and erected a small and hidden
watchtower that overlooked the trail leading there.

How much did you let happen, Ryba, wondered Nylan, because you dared
not risk going against your visions?  Maybe ... maybe there are worse
things than feeling deaths.  Is feeling the deaths of those I killed so
difficult compared to your causing deaths that may have been
unnecessary-and knowing that those deaths may have been unnecessary ..
. and living with those deaths forever?

A small figure sat on the end of the causeway wall, looking toward the
cairns.  Suddenly, she turned and asked, "Why didn't you save
Mother?"

Nylan tried not to recoil from the directness of the question.

After a moment, he said slowly, "I tried to save as many as I could."
By killing as many of the invaders as I could, he added to himself.

"They weren't Mother."  Niera's dark eyes bored into Nylan.  "They
weren't Mother.  The angel let the other mothers stay in the tower."

"Did your mother wish to stay in the tower?"

"No.  You and the angel should have made her stay!"

Nylan had no ready answer for that, not a totally honest one, but he
continued to meet the girl's eyes.  Then he said, "Perhaps we should
have, but I cannot change what should have been."

At that, Niera turned and looked at the cairns, and her thin frame
shook.  Nylan stepped up beside her, and lightly touched her shoulder.
Without looking, she pushed his hand away.  So he just stood there
while she silently sobbed.

CXIV

A STIFF AND cool breeze, foreshadowing fall, swept from the sunlit
meadows and fields through the open and newly hung doors of the smithy.
With the air came the scent of cut grass, of dust raised by the passing
horses, and of recently sawn fir timbers.  Inside, the air smelled of
hot metal, forge coals, and sweat-of burned impurities, scalded quench
steam, and oil.

Nylan brought the hammer down on the faintly red alloy, scattering
spark lets of oxides.  The anvil-a real anvil, heavy as ice two on a
gas giant, if battered around the edges-and the hammer rang.  Nylan
couldn't help smiling.

"Is it good?"  asked Ayrlyn.  "I've been looking for one all summer.  I
got this from a widow not far from Gnotos."

"It's good.  Very good.  It feels good."

"You look happy when you work here, when you build or make things, and
I can almost feel the order you put in them."

"You two," said Huldran, easing more charcoal into the forge.  "You
talk about feeling.  It's as though you feel what you do more than you
see it."

"He does," said Ayrlyn.  "He can sense the grain of the metal."

Nylan grinned at the healer.  "She can sense sickness in the body."

Huldran shook her head, and the short blond hair flared away from her
face.  "I've always thought that.  I don't think I really wanted to
know.  With the laser, I figured that was because it was like the
engineer's power net ... Is all the magic in this place like that,
something that has to be felt, that can't really be seen?"

"In a way you can see it," responded Ayrlyn, brushing the flame-red
hair back over her ear.  "It's a flow.  If it's good, it's smooth, like
a dark current in a river."

"I don't know that it's really magic," mused Nylan, looking at the
cooling metal and then taking the tongs to slip it back into the forge.
As the lander alloy reheated, his eyes flicked to the iron that had
come from a broken blade.  It waited by the forge for the next step of
his blade-making when he would have to flatten the two and then start
hammer-folding them together and drawing them out-only to refold and
draw, refold and draw.  If only the smithing weren't for blades ... He
licked his lips and then he continued.  "You can feel-"

"You can.  I can't," pointed out Huldran.

"You may be better off that you can't in some ways," replied Ayrlyn.

"You can feel," Nylan repeated, "flows of two kinds of energies.
Apparently, the ones I can use are the black ones, or at least they say
I'm a black wizard, and you can build and heal, or they help build and
heal.  The stuff the wizard that came with Gerlich had, and Relyn
thinks he was the same one that was in the first attack, is white, and
it feels ugly, and tinged with red.  It's almost like the chaotic
element in a power net the fluxes that aren't that can still tear a net
apart.  Well, that's what the fire bolts he was throwing felt like."

"Like a power net chaos flux?"  asked Ayrlyn with a slight wince.

"Worse, in some ways."  Nylan looked at the alloy on the coals, barely
red, but that was as hot as it was going to get.  Initially, working
with it was a cross between hot and cold forging, and slow as a glacier
on Heaven.  "I've got to get back to this.  With all these recruits
showing up, the marshal wants more blades, and Saryn wants more
arrowheads."

"You know, scr," pointed out Huldran.  "I could use the old anvil to
make arrowheads or whatever, and we could bring in some help with the
tongs and bellows."

Nylan nodded, ruefully.  "I should have thought of that."

"Does this mean we really need another anvil?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"Well .. ."  began Nylan.  "Since you asked ..."

"I search and search and finally get you an anvil, and now you want
two."  Ayrlyn gave an over dramatic sigh.  "Nothing's ever enough, is
it?"

"No.  But no one pays any attention when I say it.  We make hundreds of
arrowheads, arrowheads that really ought to be cast, and Saryn and
Fierral just want more.  Ryba wants more blades."  Nylan gave back an
equally over dramatic sigh and pulled the metal from the coals and
eased it onto the anvil.  "And it's time to work on this blade."  He
looked at Huldran.  "I can handle this alone.  You go find an
assistant.  One, to begin with."

"I thought..  ."  began the blond guard.

"Rule three hundred of obscure leadership.  If it's your idea, you get
to implement it."

Ayrlyn laughed.  After a moment, so did Huldran.

Nylan lifted the hammer.

The cooling wind swept into the smithy, bringing with it the sound of
the sheep on the hillside, the shouted instructions, and the clatter of
wooden wands from the space outside the tower.  The hammer fell on the
alloy that would be the heart of yet another blade for the guards of
Westwind.

Ayrlyn looked at the hammer, the anvil, and the face of the
engineer-smith and shivered.  Neither Nylan nor Huldran saw the shiver
or the darkness behind her eyes.

CXV

SIL LEK STEPS INTO the small upper tower room after a preemptory
knock.

The mists in the glass vanish, and Terek stands.  Despite the heat in
the room and the lack of wind from the two open and narrow windows, the
white wizard appears cool.

Sillek blots the dampness from his forehead, but remains standing.

"I have but a few moments, Scr Wizard, but since we last talked," asks
Sillek, "what have you discovered about the angel women on the Roof of
the World?"

"Discovering matters through a glass is slow and difficult.  One sees
but dimly."

"Dimly or not, you must have discovered something."

"Hissl was correct in one particular," Terek admits slowly.  "The angel
women have no thunder-throwers remaining."

"What else have you discovered?"  asks Sillek.

"He underestimated the talents of the black mage."

"We knew that.  Anything else?"

"The black mage is a smith, and even without his fires from Heaven he
can forge those devil blades that seem able to slice through plate and
chain mail.  He and his assistant are also forging arrowheads."

"Forging?  That is odd."

Terek shrugs.  "It is slow, but the arrowheads are like the blades,
much stronger, and they can cut some mail."

"Can you tell how many of these angels there are?"

"There are more than two score perhaps threescore, women on the Roof of
the World.  A dozen or so remain of the original angels, and only the
one man."

Sillek nods.  "Then we should have less trouble than my sire."

"I would not be that certain," offers Terek.  "Those who remain seem
very good, and they are spending much time training the newcomers.  I
am not an arms man but it seems to me that they are very good at
teaching our women, or those who were our women before they fled
Lornth.  Some of the women who fled to the angels killed quite a few of
Hissl's arms men

Sillek purses his lips.  "That would mean that the longer we wait, the
better the forces they will have?"

"You would know that better than I, scr."  Terek shrugs.  "I can tell
that the mage is also getting stronger.  He is also building something
else, it appears to be a mill of some sort.  Their smithy is largely
complete, and they seem to have more livestock."

"Demons!"  Sillek looks at the blank glass and then at Terek.  His
voice softens slightly.  "I am not angry at you, Terek."

"I understand, scr.  This situation is not... what it might be."

"No.  It's not."  Sillek offers a head bow.  "Thank you."

After he.  leaves the tower room, Sillek adjusts the heavy green
ceremonial tunic and heads for the Great Hall.

By the side entrance, Genglois waits for him.  "You have a moment,
scr?"

"I suppose so.  Do we know what this envoy of Karthanos wants?"

Genglois shrugs, and his jowls wobble as his shoulders fall.  "It is
said he has brought a heavy chest with him."

"That's not good.  It's either a veiled threat or a bribe.  Or both,
which would be even worse."  The Lord of Lornth stands for a moment,
motionless, then opens the door and steps into the hall, where he walks
to the dais and sits on the green cushion-the only soft part of the
dark wooden high-backed chair that dates nearly to the founding of
Lornth.  He gestures.

A trumpet sounds, and the end doors open.

"Scr Viendros of Gallos, envoy from Lord Karthanos, Liege Lord of
Gallos and Protector of the Plains."  The voice of the young arms man
in training almost cracks.

As Viendros marches in followed by two husky and weaponless arms men
carrying a small but heavy chest, Sillek stands and waits for the
swarthy envoy to reach the dais.

Viendros offers a deep bow, not shallow enough to be insulting nor deep
enough to be mocking, then straightens.  "Your Lordship."

"Welcome, Scr Viendros.  Welcome."  Sillek gestures to the chair beside
his.  As he does, the arms man behind him turns his heavy chair.
"Please be seated.  You have had a long journey."

Viendros offers a head bow.  "My thanks, Lord Sillek."  He sits without
further ceremony, as does Sillek.

"What brings you to Lornth?"

"My lord Karthanos would wish to ensure that you do not misunderstand
the events of earlier this summer.  I was sent to convey both his
deepest apologies, and his regrets, and his tokens of apology."

Sillek forces his face to remain polite, his voice even.
"Misunderstandings do occur, and we are more than willing to help
resolve them."

Viendros glances around the Great Hall, then lowers his voice slightly.
"I am not an envoy by choice, My Lord.  I do not know the fancy words.
I was sent because I am an arms man from a long family of those who
have served Gallos."

"Gallos has been well served by those who bear its blades," Sillek
agrees.

"Lord Karthanos was-how can I say it?-surprised by the unfortunate
occurrence which befell your sire on the Roof of the World.  He was
further .. . upset, if I might be frank, that you chose to do nothing
about that occurrence, especially when it became clear that the evil
angels were luring women from Lornth to the Roof of the World.  With
the best of intentions, that of assisting you in regaining control of
that portion of your realm, he dispatched a small force, well armed."
Viendros takes a deep breath.  "My brother was the chief arms man of
that force.  He did not return."

"I understand few returned," Sillek says quietly.

"Lord Karthanos also understands that a force led by one of your
wizards recently traveled to the Roof of the World and failed to
return."

"That is true," Sillek admits.  "Although I must point out that while
that effort had my blessing, it was not backed by my coin or men."

Viendros swallows.  "This is difficult, you understand.  I know that
your sire and Lord Karthanos had other ... misunderstandings in the
past, but such ... misunderstandings should be put aside, if
possible."

"What does your lord have in mind?"  asks Sillek.

Viendros holds up his right hand.  "A few words more, first, if you
please."  He clears his throat.  "Lord Karthanos was fortunate to have
a wizard, not so powerful as yours, but one skilled with the glass, and
thus Lord Karthanos saw a portion of the battle.  I would call it a
slaughter myself," added Viendros.  "Now, after seeing that fight, he
understands the cruel position in which fate has placed you.  He also
understands the reasons for your ignoring the Roof of the World while
reclaiming the ancient right to the river to the Northern Ocean."

Sillek nods and waits.

"Lornth is respected, most respected, and Lord Karthanos has been most
impressed with the manner in which you have conducted your arms men Yet
you have refrained from attacking the Roof of the World until your
borders were more secure to the west and the north.  Again, this
appears most wise, especially considering the might of arms of the
angels.  Yet my lord Karthanos is greatly concerned-"

"As am I," interjects Sillek.  "You may understand, however, that it
will take a considerable force to subdue the angels, and one removed a
great distance from Lornth itself."

"Yes.  This also occurred to Lord Karthanos."  Viendros turned to the
arms men who stand by the chest.  "The chest contains a thousand golds
for your use in reclaiming the Roof of the World."  Viendros withdraws
a scroll and extends it.  "I am also bid to tell you that Lord
Karthanos will place score forty arms men under your orders for this
campaign. All will be paid from his treasury.  They will be under my
command, and subject to your orders."

"That is most brotherly .. . and most generous," says Sillek.  "I am
overwhelmed."

Viendros snorts.  "I am not a diplomat, Lord Sillek.  It is not
generous.  It is a necessity.  Those women have already created much
trouble, both for Gallos and for Lornth, and those troubles will only
get worse.  You cannot, without the support of Lord Ildyrom and Lord
Karthanos, afford to hazard your forces so far from Lornth.  Nor would
Lord Karthanos expect that, given the surprising abilities of these
strange angels."  The envoy/armsman shrugs.  "There you have it."

"Yes, we do."  Sillek smiles, a warm smile, yet somehow distant.  "Will
you remain with me to assist in planning this campaign, or will we meet
later to discuss the particulars?"

"I am at your immediate disposal."

"Then let us find something to eat."  Sillek rises.  "We have much to
do before the rains of autumn arrive."

Viendros smiles, the smile of an arms man awaiting a mighty battle.

CXVI

NYLAN STUDIED THE timber that would be the shaft linking the unbuilt
wheel with the unforged collar.  The shaft, a smoothed and peeled log,
lay on the clay next to the wall that would hold it.

With the charcoal stick Nylan made a template on the wooden disc he had
brought for the purpose, noting the dimensions with one of the pocket
rules from the landers.  Then he wrapped the disk in a rag and carried
it to the brown mare, where he eased it into a saddlebag.

Then he walked back up on the mill foundation and surveyed the layout
again.  He frowned.  Bearings-he really needed bearings-but a grease
collar would have to do.

"You don't like it, after all this work?"  asked Ayrlyn.

"It's fine.  I was thinking about bearings.  And about the wheel
itself.  And the gears we need to get the blade moving fast enough to
cut."  His eyes darted to the millpond walls, and the water sluicing
out of the open gate, and then to the nearly completed millrace where
Weindre and Quilyn were laying the last stones.

Next would come the actual walls, built up from the mill's foundation,
and eventually the mill itself, assuming that Nylan could forge or
otherwissmake the reducing and transforming gears, assuming that Ayrlyn
and Saryn could build the mill wheel.  Assuming, assuming ... He wanted
to shake his head and scream.  Nothing was ever enough.  From
brickworks to smithy to sawmill to who knew what next.  From blades to
arrows to throwing blades to strange magic.  And with each new
building, each new idea, he could sense ever-growing resistance.  Why
couldn't they see?

"Are you all right?"  asked the healer.  Nylan forced himself to take a
long slow breath, then another.  "As right as anyone else here, in this
crazy world where nothing is ever enough."

Ayrlyn looked at him.  "That was true on Heaven, and I imagine it's
true everywhere, in every universe that has some form of human being.
The general condition of being human is that nothing satisfies most
people for long.  Those with no power want power.  Those with power
want more power.  Those with food want more food or luxuries.  Those
with a roof over their heads want a castle.  But everyone wants someone
else to do the work."  She shrugged.  "So what else is new?"  "Thanks
for cheering me up."  He walked down off the mill foundation and toward
the brown mare.

"Nylan, please don't get short with me.  I'm not a demon or a local.  I
don't take glory in killing, and I don't like weapons, and I've more
than tried to be helpful."

The smith paused.  He took another deep breath.  "I'm sorry.  What you
said upset me.  I know human beings are human beings, but I guess that
I felt that the 'nothing is ever enough' feelings were the result of
our modern technology, and you're telling me-rightly, it appears-that,
even when people can barely survive, they'd still rather kill and
plunder because someone else has more.  Or build arsenals of crudely
effective weapons because other people feel that way."  He untied the
mare, then climbed into the saddle.

Ayrlyn mounted the gelding.  "Generally, there's more charity and less
violent self-interest in more technological societies than in low-tech
ones.  You can't get to high-tech levels without a greater degree of
cooperation-not usually, anyway."

"Great.  You're telling me that technology enables ethics."  He flicked
the reins, and the mare began to walk toward the trail that circled the
cliffs and would eventually lead them to the ridge road.

"Not exactly.  Stop playing bitter and dumb.  You know it's not that
way.  Technology allows, in most cases, comparative abundance.
Comparative abundance means that the powerful and greedy can amass
power and goods without starving substantial chunks of society to
death-in some societies, anyway.  Sometimes, it just leads to the
technological society being more merciful to its own underclass while
exploiting the light out of another society.  Technology doesn't make
people better.  Sometimes, though, it mitigates their cruelties."

"You're even more cynical than I am."

"You're not cynical, Nylan," Ayrlyn said gently as she rode up beside
him.  "You're angry.  You want to know why, because you thought it
would be different here, and it's not.  Power still rules, and if you
want to control your own life, you have to be powerful.  Especially in
a low-tech world.  Ryba understood that from the first."

"She certainly did."  Nylan looked at the road ahead, uphill all the
way to Westwind.  "She certainly did."

"What do you want to do about it?"  asked the healer.

"I don't know.  Everyone else has answers."  He flicked the reins.
"Relyn's turning what I believe into a frigging religion; Ryba's turned
power into a belief system; Fierral accepts Ryba as marshal and
goddess.  Me-I just want to build a safe place, and I keep finding out
that it takes more and more building, more and more weapons, and more
and more killing.  We're in the most remote place on the continent, and
it's still that way."

"You're angry."  Ayrlyn's voice was soft.  "You're angry because what
you see seems so obvious, and no one else seems to understand.  People
want what you build, but they ever so reluctantly and quietly want to
help less and less."

"So I look more and more unreasonable, more and more obsessed, more and
more like a joke, because people don't understand what it really takes
to build an infrastructure."  Nylan snorted.  "Ryba says that's the way
it is, and that I have to accept it.  I'm angry because ... frig!  I
don't know.  There ought to be some way to change it, and I can't find
it."

"You're a builder, Nylan, a maker, and you want to make the world
better.  Everyone else wants control, not real change."  Ayrlyn paused.
"Except Relyn, and he's not just founding a new religion; he's making
you its prophet."

"Me?"

"Who else?  Prophets have to be men."  She shrugged.  "This place could
use a new religion, but new religions don't always follow their
prophet's words."

Nylan shook his head.  Relyn couldn't be that crazy, could he?  The
engineer's free hand brushed the front rim of the saddle.  Then he
swallowed.

CXVII

SIL LEK MUNCHES THROUGH a honey cake, trying not to scatter too many
crumbs on the small table.  From the cradle in the corner of the
sitting room comes an occasional snuffle or snore.

"I can't believe it.  I'm here, and he's actually sleeping.  He's
really sleeping."

"He does sleep," points out Zeldyan.

"Not often.  Not when I'm around."  He forces a leer at his blond
consort.

"Later," she says, gently taking his hand.  "You're still upset."

"Upset?  Me?  The oh so cool and disinterested Lord of Lornth.  How
could I be upset?  Lornth is more prosperous and secure now than in any
time in centuries.  Is anyone happy?  Of course not.  All the holders
are ready to throw me out unless I march an army to the Roof of the
World and destroy a tower and two score women, and, yes, one black
mage, whose crime seems to be that he builds good towers, and forges
excellent weapons of self-defense.  Actually, they wouldn't throw me
out.  They'd execute me for treason.  And you and Nesslek as well, at
least Nesslek.  Why?  Because they're afraid that they'll have to treat
women more like people.

"If it weren't for their demon-damned pigheadedness, we'd be doing
well.  We've gotten back the grasslands.  Your father is getting
Rulyarth organized, and trade duties are beginning to flow in, and soon
your brother can take over there."  Sillek takes a deep pull of wine
from the goblet.

"Why would you have Fornal there?"  asks Zeldyan.

"Your father has asked that he not be my permanent representative
there.  I could use his counsel closer, and both Fornal and I could
benefit from Fornal's service in Rulyarth.  So, I imagine, could your
father," adds Sillek dryly.

"Yes, Fornal does chafe at Father's counsel."  Zeldyan smiles.  "But
you really think you must attack the Roof of the World?"

"No more than fish must swim, birds fly, and men die, and they will.
Between Karthanos, Ildyrom, and my own beloved holders, I'm going to
have to attack the Roof of the World.  Karthanos got rid of any choice
I might have had, without saying a word."

"How?"  asks Zeldyan.  Her voice conveys that she knows the answer, but
she wants Sillek to speak.

"He sent me a thousand golds and offered score forty arms men as well
as an experienced commander.  What does that tell you about his
resources?"

"Are you suggesting that the most honorable Karthanos has intimated
that, unless you remove the women from the Roof of the World, he will
indeed remove you as Lord of Lornth?"

"Unless I overlooked something, I think that was the message."  Sillek
downs the rest of the wine in a single gulp.

"Perhaps you should talk to your mother," suggests Zeldyan.  "She has
much experience in such intricacies."

"She'll only suggest that I take all the coins and all the arms men and
reclaim my patrimony.  She's played that tune from the beginning-with
all her little talks with 'old' friends and her letters-all the signs
she thinks I'm too stupid to see.  And I can do nothing because all
those old friends would agree with her, and I'd have even more trouble.
After all, I only told her not to talk to me of honor."  He toys with
the goblet, then sets it down hard.  "Besides, even I can see I have no
choices."

"Then let her convince you," suggests Zeldyan.  "It will make her
happy."

"No, only justified, but it's a good idea.  I don't know how I managed
without you, dear one."  Sillek laughs, rises, steps around the table,
and lifts her into his arms.  "It's later, now."

"You are impossible."  But she lifts her lips to his.

CXVIII

DRY DUST SWIRLED Into the smithy, both from the road and from fields
that had not seen rain in more than an eight-day.

Clung!  Clung!

Nylan struggled with the metal on the anvil, a chunk of iron that
neither looked circular nor like a gear.  Even the hole in the center
was lopsided.  Finally, he took the tongs and set the misshapen mass on
the forge bricks, then wiped his forehead with the back of his
forearm.

"Does the whole thing have to be of metal, scr?"  asked Huldran from
behind the older, makeshift anvil, where she continued to hammer out
the arrowheads that ought to have been cast.

"It would be stronger."

"Couldn't the wood people make something like a wheel, with holes in it
where you put through sort of square metal pegs?  You could put flanges
on the bottom so they wouldn't slip out, and a smaller wheel inside the
other."

Nylan squinted, trying to visualize what the blond guard had suggested.
Then he shook his head and laughed.  "It would probably work better
than what I've been trying to do.  In making wooden wheels you can
wet-bend the wood.  Yes, it would work."

"You think so?"

Nylan pointed to the miss happen metal.  "Look at that.  That's
workable?"

A thin woman, painfully thin, wearing leathers from the plunder piles,
with dark smears that had been blood, stepped into the smithy. "Scr?"

Nylan turned.  "Yes."

"I was bid ... If you please, scr ... the marshal..  . she ... scr-"

"I take it that the marshal requests my presence?"  Nylan asked to cut
off the painfully slow speech for the new guard.

"Yes, scr."

"Fine."  He set aside the hammer.  "I assume I'll be back before too
long, Huldran.  Use the good anvil."  Nylan looked back at the
messenger.  "I don't know everyone anymore.  Who are you?"

"Meyin, scr."

"Where are you from?"  The smith stepped from behind the anvil.

"Dinoz, scr."

Nylan had never heard of Dinoz, but he'd never heard of most of the
small towns from which the new guards had fled.  "East or west of the
mountains?"

"It's in Gallos, scr."

"Let's go."

Nylan followed Meyin down the road toward the tower.  Nearly a dozen
new guard recruits were practicing on the sparring ground.  On the
stretch of meadow between the road and the fields another handful ran
through exercises with wands on horseback.

"Looks more like a boot camp .. ."  Nylan muttered to himself.  "Then
it is."  How long could Ryba build her forces before someone else
decided to take a crack at Westwind?  An eight-day?  A year?  Who
knew?

Ryba sat behind a small flat table in the corner of the top level of
Tower Black, military and cool-looking in the gray leathers.  She
nodded, pushing aside the quill pen and the scroll.  Nylan stepped into
the room, and Meyin slipped down the steps, closing the door behind
her.

As he eased onto the stool, Nylan's eyes flicked to the empty cradle.

"She's down in the nursery area with Niera and Antyl."

The smith-engineer looked blankly at the marshal.

"Antyl's the one who's so pregnant that I couldn't figure out how she
got here."

"Oh, the one with the burns?"

Ryba nodded.  "What were you working on?"

"Gears for the sawmill.  I managed to get the collar for the mill wheel
done, but I was having trouble.  Huldran came up with a better idea."
Nylan shrugged.  "I should have thought of it-or asked-sooner."

"The sawmill will have to wait-maybe until next year."

"Trouble?"

"We've had trouble from the day the landers planet fell  Ryba glanced
to the window, her eyes traveling to the ice needle that was Freyja and
then to the western peaks.  "It's beautiful here.  If they'd just leave
us alone-but they won't.  We're going to have to win a big battle.
Soon."

"How big?  How soon?"

"Before mid-fall, perhaps sooner.  I can't tell yet, but some of the
latest recruits have been bringing tales of arms men gathering in
Lornth, and of lots of mercenaries being hired.  I sent Ayrlyn out to
get more supplies, and more information."

"Maybe Lornth expects trouble elsewhere."  Nylan worried about another
scouting run for Ayrlyn, but forced his concerns to the back of his
mind.

"No."

"Visions?  Images?"

"Those and all the scattered reports."

"So we need a super weapon  A magic sword that slices arms men in
quarters without anyone holding it?  Or perhaps a magic bow?"

"Nylan."  Ryba's voice was as cold as the ice on Freyja.

"I'm sorry.  What am I supposed to do?  Make more blades?  Even with
better blades, we still lost a lot of good guards."  He cleared his
throat, his eyes flicking to the window and Freyja, the ice-needle that
sometimes seemed warmer and more approachable than Ryba.

"We can't afford those kinds of losses again," Ryba said.  "Even with
all the new recruits ... we can't train them well that fast, and half
are scared to death of men with weapons.  It takes time to overcome
that."

Nylan rubbed his forehead.  At times, especially when he thought of
weapons, his head still ached.  "Huldran is working on arrowheads.  She
can't give them that final ordering, but she makes good arrowheads.  I
can make more, too.  I don't like it, but I can.  Or blades.  What do
you want?"

"The weapons laser.  I told you we'd need it for the big battle.  How
usable is it?"

"We've got one bank of firm cells left.  They're at about eighty
percent and deteriorating-probably won't be much good past the coming
winter.  The generator's gone; so we're stuck with what we have in the
cells."  He looked at the marshal.  "How big a battle?"

"I don't know the exact numbers, but they'll have enough troops to
cover the ridge fields.  They'll have some siege engines for the tower.
That's why I told you to save the laser for the battle with this Lord
Sillek.  He's supposedly using all his loot from taking over that
seaport for just two things.  Fortifying his hold on the conquered city
.. . and building up and buying arms men

"The laser won't be enough, then."  Nylan massaged his forehead again.
"We need some defensive emplacements.  I have an idea-if I can have
some guards."

"How many?  I don't have that many of the original marines left."

"New ones will be fine, with maybe one experienced one."

"Can you tell me what you have in mind?"

"It's an idea.  Call it a booby trap.  One way or another, it will
work."  He sighed.  "It will work.  Everything I build works."

"All right, but stop feeling sorry for yourself about it.  It takes
strength to survive here, and there's nothing either one of us can do
about that."  The marshal paused, her eyes straying to the window
again, before she continued.  "There's another thing.  From what Relyn
learned from the two survivors, before we sent them off, Gerlich was
stupid, and this Lord Sillek isn't."

"Stupid in what way?"  asked Nylan.

"Gerlich got caught up in the fighting and forgot his original plan.
The wizard was supposed to throw fire bolts at the guards and
incinerate them one by one.  Instead, Gerlich charged, and when
everyone got mixed together, the wizard couldn't."

"That was probably because you parried that wizard's fire," Nylan
said.

"Parried?  I didn't do that."

"I saw it.  You threw up the blade, and the fire bolt turned."

"It must be your blades, then," Ryba laughed.  "The great smith Nylan
whose blades turned back the wizards' fire."

Nylan not only doubted her analysis, but failed to see the humor.
"That's probably why Gerlich ordered the charge.  He thought the
wizard's fire wouldn't work, and that the guards would pick off his men
one by one."

"Our arrows can't pick off a thousand invaders."

"That many?"

"That few, if we're lucky."

Nylan stood.  "I think I'd better figure out more than a few tricks."

"Nylan ... we still need arrows and the laser."

"I know-and magic blades, and a complete set of armaments from the
Winterlance."  He tempered his words with a forced grin.  "And a lot of
luck."

"We can't count on luck."

"Of course not.  We're angels."  He inclined his head.  "Maybe Relyn
can pray to his new religion."

For the first time in seasons, Ryba looked surprised.  "His what?"

"Once we destroy Lornth, he's going out to preach the faith of the
angels, the way of black order-something like that.  He's convinced you
and I and Ayrlyn will change the world."

"I can't say I like that.  Not at all."  Ryba's fingers seemed to inch
toward the blade at her hip.

"Let him go," Nylan said wearily.  "If we win, we can use all the
propaganda we can get, and religion's good propaganda.  If not... it
doesn't matter."

"It won't be the same.  It won't be Westwind-what we believe.  The last
thing this forsaken planet needs is a new messianic religion."

"No, Ryba, he won't follow your vision.  You're the only one with your
vision, but I'd trust his version more than any alternatives that might
crop up."  He took a deep breath.  "Let's worry about this later."

Ryba shook her head.

"Relyn's one man.  We have to fight a frigging army first.  A lot of
your guards respect Relyn.  It wouldn't exactly help morale ..."

"All right... but after this is over ... we'll have to settle that."

Nylan nodded and rose.  "I'll see you later."  He knew how she would
settle the issue, and that bothered him, too.  Would she always be like
that?

"Nylan .. . just do what you can.  You work hard, and it will be
enough.  Trust me."

"I have, and I am."  As he stepped back, before turning toward the door
and the steps, he gave another not quite false smile, thinking, And
look where it s gotten me!

CXIX

SIL LEK PAUSES BEFORE the open tower window, letting the faint breeze,
warm as it is, lift the sweat off his face.

Despite the late-summer heat, the lady Ellindyja sits in the alcove,
away from the breeze, wearing a long-sleeved shirt and an over tunic
The embroidery hoop in her lap shows the figure of a lord, wearing a
gold circlet, with an enormous glittering blade ready to fall upon a
woman warrior in black.  The face of the lord is blank, unfinished.

"How nice to see you, my lord," she says politely.

"You are looking well, Lady Mother."  He offers a slight bow as he
turns from the window and steps toward the straight chair.

"Well enough for an old woman who has outlived her usefulness."  She
threads the needle with crimson thread, her fingers steady and sure.

"Old?  Scarcely."  Sillek laughs as he seats himself opposite her.

"Like any grandmother, I suppose, I see more of my grandson than his
father.  He looks much like you.  And your lady is most solicitous of
my health and opinions."

"You imply that I am not."  Sillek shrugs.  "I am here."

Ellindyja knots the crimson thread and takes the first stitch,
beginning a drop of blood that falls from the left arm of the lord in
the embroidery hoop.

"You know of Ildyrom's envoy, and his proposal .. ."  Sillek lets the
words trail off.

"I was under the impression that it was somewhat more than a proposal.
He sent a sealed agreement, a chest of golds, and removed all his
troops back to Berlitos."  Ellindyja completes another loop in the
first droplet of blood.  "That should free you to reclaim your
patrimony."

"With what?"  Sillek laughs.  "I have nearly a thousand arms men still
in Rulyarth, and that doesn't count those supplied by Gethen."

"I understand-or was I mistaken?-that Lord Karthanos offered to place
score forty troops under your command for the purpose of taking the
Roof of the World."

"You understand correctly."  Sillek leans back in the chair.  "It is
truly amazing that my former foes have suddenly become so solicitous of
my need to reclaim my patrimony.  Truly amazing."

"Those who do not use resources while they can often wish they had."
The needle flashes, as though it contained a silver flame.

"A good thought, provided one knows the price of such resources."
Sillek leans forward slightly.

"You lost a wizard-a foolish one, but a strong one-because you
attempted to regain your heritage indirectly.  Indirection does not
become your father's son."  The first droplet of blood is complete, and
Ellindyja's needle begins the second, darting through the pale linen
like a rapier.

"I suppose you're right, especially since I have no choice."

Ellindyja sets the embroidery hoop down, and her eyes fix on her son's.
"Lord, you never had a choice.  A lord whose holders believe he cannot
hold his own lands will not trust him to guard theirs.  A lord who
allows their women to flee will find his holders demanding his women,
and his head.  A lord who will not protect his holders against attacks
on what they hold dear cannot long count on holding even his own tower,
let alone his lands."  She lifts the embroidery, and the needle
flashes.

Sillek nods ever so slightly, but says nothing.

"It has been so nice that you came to visit me, dear," Ellindyja says
sweetly.  "And do tell your lady that I appreciate her kindness.  I
would not keep you now, for there must be much you must do."  The
needle knots at the back of the second droplet of blood.

Sillek rises.  "I do appreciate your wisdom, Mother, and your
indirectly forthright expressions, as well as all those conversations
with your old friends, which have helped to leave me little choice.
Still, I trust you will recall that I sought your counsel before I
began my preparations to reclaim my patrimony.  And I will certainly
convey your thanks to Zeldyan.  She is most respectful of you."

"And I of her, dear."  Ellindyja smiles as Sillek bows before
departing.  "And I of her."

CXX

"EASY, EASY THE three new guards, led by Ydrall, eased the heavy
section of log into the hole.

Nylan nodded.  "Wedge it in place with the heavy stones."

Two of the guards began to roll a round stone toward the hole while the
other two braced the log in place.

Nylan surveyed the two lines of holes.  Each hole was about eight
cubits from the next, and the first line lay just short of the top of
the ridge on the tower side, below the narrowest point between the rock
outcroppings that constricted the open space on each end.  Still, the
distance was over two hundred cubits, and that was a lot of engineering
in what might be a very short time.

If he couldn't complete the pike line he had in mind, perhaps a cable
that could be raised at the last moment would provide some carnage.
Nylan massaged his temples.  Ryba's thoughts about power
notwithstanding, designing destructive systems still gave him
headaches.

A single horse broke away from the mounted drills and started up toward
Nylan and his crew.  After leaving the paved lower section of the road
by the tower, Saryn turned her mount from the packed clay trail and
rode up across the grassy slope toward Nylan.

"The marshal said you were going to try something else," Saryn said as
she reined up.  "Are you putting up a fence?  Those posts are more than
a half cubit across, and you've sunk them nearly two cubits deep. Isn't
that a lot of work?  A fence isn't going to stop a horde of arms men
not for long, anyway."

"It's not a fence."  Nylan offered a wry smile.  "And it is a lot of
work.  If I get time, there will be two lines of these posts, and what
goes with them."  Nylan wiped his damp forehead.

"Do you want to explain?"  Saryn surveyed the lines of holes, turning
in the saddle.

"Not really, except that I'm trying to put something together to cause
trouble for any attackers.  If I can get it in place and it works, then
I'll let you know.  If I don't, then I won't feel so stupid for
promising something."

Saryn shook her head as she rode back toward the road.

Ydrall watched the exchange with a puzzled look.

Nylan hoped everyone stayed puzzled.

The idea was simple enough-semiautomatic pikes-a whole line of pikes
attached to stringers or crossbeams, weighted to slip up at the right
angle and set to ground if a horse and rider impacted them.

Nylan had set them on the flat just over the crest of the hill.  All an
attacker would see would be a line of squat pillars, with nothing
between them until the last moment-he hoped.

As the crew finished wedging the second post in place, he nodded to the
third hole.  "Let's try for another."  He picked up one section of the
harness, and they began to drag the log toward the next hole, while
behind them, two of the guards tamped soil in between the wedging
rocks.

Below them, another crew supervised by Weindre was building a fortified
platform for the weapons laser-to the east of the road leading down
from the ridge.  The platform would allow the laser a sweep of the
entire downslope.

Lasers and semiautomatic pikes-what a strange combination of weaponry.
Would it be enough against thousands of attackers?

Nylan doubted it, but what choices did they have?  The locals seemed
enraged enough to tear apart anyone from Westwind if they tried to
flee, and most of those on the Roof of the World, for one reason or
another, could not survive elsewhere.

"All right," Nylan said.  "Let's get this one in place."  The sound of
stonework drifted up from below, along with those of practice wands,
and horse drills, carried by the wind that bore the faintest hint of
fall.

CXXI

SIL LEK WEARS A purple tunic over a lighter shirt, and maroon leather
trousers.  The scabbard holding the sabre at his side and his riding
boots are both scarred and workmanlike.  He carries a heavy leather
jacket in his left arm as he stands by the door.  "I need to go."

"I know."  Zeldyan offers a gentle smile.  "Be careful."

"I always am."

"Don't be a hero," says Zeldyan quietly, holding a squirming Nesslek,
whose fingers grasp for the blond strands held back from his hands by
her green and silver hair band

"I have no intentions that way-as you know.  My idea is to win, not to
follow some outdated idea of honor."

"Please remember that."

"I will.  If... though ... If it comes to that, you have what you
need... Summon your father..."  His voice turns husky for a moment.

"I know.  It won't be necessary."  Her tone is bright, despite the
darkness in her eyes.

Sillek enfolds them both in his arms, and his lips and Zeldyan's touch,
gently, desperately gently.

Nesslek's fingers seize his father's tunic and twist.

Sillek reaches up and disengages the chubby fingers.  "You, young imp.
Always grabbing."

"Like his father," Zeldyan says gently.

Sillek holds his son's fingers, and his and Zeldyan's lips brush again,
more delicately, more longingly than the last time.

CXXII

"... WHAT NEWS DO you have, Ayrlyn?"  asked Ryba.

Five people and an infant had gathered around the head table in the
great room-Ryba, Saryn, Fierral, Ayrlyn, Nylan, and Dylless.  Dylless
dozed in the carry pack on Nylan's chest although, he reflected, she
was already growing too big for it, and her upper body half sprawled
out of the pouch and across Nylan's chest.  He patted his daughter's
back gently.

The two fat candles on the table created a circle of dim light that
barely included the table and those around it.

In the gloom, Nylan glanced across the table at Ayrlyn, her hair still
damp from the shower she had taken immediately upon her return from her
latest trading scouting venture.  She returned his glance with a faint
smile, then turned toward Ryba, and began to speak.

With his free left hand, Nylan idly brushed the bread crumbs off the
table as he listened, ignoring the creaks of the crickets that had
begun to invade the tower.

"There's nothing absolute yet, except that Lord Sillek has either just
begun to move his army, or that he will shortly.  Everyone seems
certain that he is getting reinforcements from the Lord of Gallos, and
that the Lord of Jerans has sent gold and a pledge of peace."  Ayrlyn
took a sip of cold tea from her mug, then set it back on the table.

"In effect, we have three local kingdoms determined to wipe us out,
just because we've armed some women and given others a place to flee
to."  Ryba laughed harshly.  "It's wonderful to be so well liked."

"Giving women an option is radical, even revolutionary, in this
culture.  It has been in most non cold-climate cultures," pointed out
Ayrlyn.  "People with power don't like change.  Just by existing, we're
creating change."

"We'll keep doing it," said Ryba, asking, after a moment, "How did you
do with your trading?"

"Trading-not that well.  The word is out everywhere.  We couldn't trade
for much.  All the traders felt we should be paying double or triple."
Ayrlyn gave a half smile as if she were anticipating the next
question.

"But the carts were full," said Fierral, as if on cue.

"Peasant women, herders' women, even a trader's consort-they gave me
things.  There are linens, bandages, salves, and food-all in small
packages.  There are even coppers and silvers."

"You can't tell me that every woman in Candar is praying for us," said
Saryn.

"Hardly," answered Ayrlyn.  "Some in the small towns, places without
names, spat at us.  Some towns closed their shutters.  But we must have
traveled through ten towns."  She shrugged.  "Figure two women a town
and every tenth herder's woman, and those who gave were generous.  We
had to keep ahead of reports that would have sent a large force of arms
men after us.  The locals wouldn't dare."

"Any other word on Lord Sillek?"  asked Ryba.

Dylless murmured, and Nylan patted her back.

"There are plenty of rumors.  He's hired score ten mercenaries from
someplace called Lydiar.  He's raised score fifty arms men in levies.
Lord Karthanos is sending score forty arms men and siege engines.  The
Jeranyi women will ride against the evil angels-"

"Forget that one," Ryba suggested.  "There won't be a woman in those
forces.  Not a one."  "-a dozen wizards will join Lord Sillek.  Not a
single wizard will oppose the angels.  For almost every rumor, there's
one on the other side."

"Wizards?  They can be nasty," pointed out Saryn, "especially if there
are a lot with this Lord Sillek."

"According to Relyn," Nylan pointed out, "good wizards are rare.  One
thing that's kept all of Sillek's enemies from overwhelming him has
been the fact that he had three.  One we killed.  That leaves two.  I'd
guess we'll face both, and I doubt anyone else will risk lending their
wizards."

"Two wizards, and up to two thousand troops.  We've got sixty
bodies-not guards, just warm bodies, one sort of wizard"-Fierral nods
toward Nylan-"a few gadgets, and one laser good for a very short time.
I can't say any objective assessment of our situation would give us
much of a chance."

Ryba's glance turned to Nylan.  "How is your work coming?"

"The pikes have been the hard part, even without iron tips.  Tomorrow
we should finish the first line up on the ridge.  Two more days should
see the second line done.  The laser emplacement walls are complete,
and we can have the laser in place almost in moments."

"What exactly are your defensive surprises?"  asked Fierral.  "You only
test them when it's raining or in the darkness."

"That's because of something Relyn said.  Narliat mentioned it earlier.
I'd forgotten, though.  Ryba knows."  Nylan looked at the marshal.

She shrugged.

"These wizards seem to know a lot.  Relyn says that some have a special
mirrorlike glass and that they can see events through it.  They can't
do it well in the dark or through running water.  Rain is running
water."  He cleared his throat and patted Dylless again.  "What's up
there are what I'd call automatic pikes.  When I pull a cord, they'll
snap up into place."

"That means someone will have to be up there," pointed out Fierral.

"That's one reason why there are two lines," answered Nylan.  "There's
about thirty cubits from the rise to the first row.  I checked the line
of sight, and you can't see the posts until you pass the crest.  Now,
if they charge quickly, then a bunch of them are going to get spitted.
If they go slowly, they'll have to stop, and that should make them good
targets for arrows."  He shrugged.  "I know it means four to eight
guards will be exposed, but they can lie flat behind the posts until
they trigger them.  After that, I really don't think, if they hurry
back to the second line and trigger those, that anyone will be paying
attention to them."

"How well do these work?"

"So far, every time."  Nylan gave a sardonic smile.  "That means
something will go wrong when it counts.  Even if one or two don't work,
it's going to slow them down a lot and allow you to pump a lot more
shafts into them."

Fierral nodded.  "I can see that.  I hope that we can get maximum
impact from everything."

"When will they get here?"  asked Saryn.

"Sometime in the next three to five days, I'd guess," answered Ryba.
"Unlike the bandits, or Gerlich, this won't be a sneak attack.  They'll
attempt to move in mass and not get picked off piece by piece."

"Why?"  questioned Saryn.

"Because they don't have high-tech communications.  Everything's line
of sight or sound."

"What are we going to do?"  asked Nylan.

"That's simple," snapped Fierral.  "Shoot a lot of arrows from cover as
they advance.  That's so they stay bunched up and use those little
shields.  Then we'll form up out of their bow range and try to delay
them so the entire attacking force is concentrated on the tower side of
the ridge.  After that, we hope you and the laser, and anything else
you can come up with, can incinerate most of them.  Otherwise, we're
dead, and so is Westwind."

"I think Fierral has stated our basic strategy clearly," said Ryba. "Is
there anything else?"

After a long silence, she stood.

Ayrlyn looked at Nylan, giving him the faintest of head shakes  He
offered a small nod in return.

As the silence continued, punctuated by the crickets, the others rose,
Nylan the last of all as he eased off the bench slowly, trying not to
wake Dylless.

Nylan and Ryba walked up to the top level of the tower without
speaking.  Ryba closed the door, and Nylan eased Dylless out of the
carry pack and into the cradle.

Later, in the darkness, as he rocked the cradle gently, Nylan asked,
"Even if we win-"

"We will win," Ryba snapped, "if we just do what we can."

"Fine.  Then what?  The laser's gone.  Probably half the guards or more
will be gone.  What happens with the next attack?"

"There won't be one."

"Why do you say that?  We've been attacked for almost two solid years.
What would change that?"  He tried to keep the cradle rocking evenly.
"You're the one who tells me that force wins, and that people keep
trying."

Ryba shrugged.  "After the destruction of the combined army of three
local nations, who could afford to even suggest another attack
immediately?  And if he did, how could he be sure that his enemies
wouldn't find his undefended lands easier pickings?"

"Sooner or later, someone will try."

"Three years from now, Westwind will have a considerable army of its
own, with alliances and a treasury."

Nylan shook his head, glad Ryba did not have his night vision.

"Don't doubt me on this, Nylan.  I'm not saying it won't be costly, or
that it will be easy.  I am saying that we can win.  And that it will
be worth it, because no one in our lifetime will try again-if we do it
right."

Dylless snuffled, then settled into a deeper sleep, and Nylan slowly
eased the cradle to a stop.  Before long, it seemed, she'd be too big
for the cradle.  He wondered if he'd see that day.  Ryba had said
Westwind would prevail.  That didn't mean he would, and he wasn't about
to ask-not now.  He wondered if he really wanted to know-or feared the
answer.

He eased into his separate couch, looking past Ryba's open eyes to the
cold stars above the western peaks.

CXXIII

NYLAN RAISED THE hammer and let it fall, cutting yet another arrowhead,
knowing that it might not matter, but not knowing what else he could do
while they waited for the ponderous advance of the Lornian forces.  Not
that one more arrowhead probably ever made a difference in a big
battle, except to the man it killed.

He lifted the hammer, and let it fall, lifted, and let fall, and as he
did, from the smithy, he could see the constant flow of messengers and
scouts, tracking the oncoming force and reporting to Ryba and Fierral
or Saryn.

As he set the iron into the forge to reheat, the triangle rang, twice,
then twice again.

"That's it, scr," announced Huldran.  "Time to make ready."

"Ready for what?"  Nylan hadn't paid that much attention to the signal
codes.  Two and two, he thought, meant the arrival of Sillek's force in
the general area.

"The scouts and the pick-off efforts."  Huldran set down the hammer and
the hot set she had been working with and racked both.  Nylan followed
her example with his tools.  It wouldn't hurt to check on his pike
arrays and make sure all the laser components were ready to set up.

After banking the fire, as he left the smithy, he glanced at the
afternoon sky, with the scattered thunderclouds of late summer rising
over the peaks.  Surely, the Lornians wouldn't attack late in the
afternoon?

He headed down to the tower.  When he started across the causeway, he
looked up to see Ayrlyn waiting by the door.

"The end of the golden age," she said ironically.

"What?"  Her words halted him in his steps.  "What do you mean by
that?"

Her brown eyes seemed to flash that dark blue shade, and then her lips
quirked.  "If the angels win, then women will throw off their shackles,
and men will see the past as the golden age.  If we lose, why then, we
will have been that bright shining age forever aborted by the cruelty
and stupidity of men."  Her tone turned from faintly ironic to bitterly
sardonic.  "I think that's the party line."

Nylan thought for a moment.  "I suppose that is the official line.  The
problem is that it's got a lot of truth within it, especially on this
planet."

Ayrlyn gestured to the causeway wall.  "Why don't you sit down?  They
really don't have any use for a healer who loses her guts when they
kill someone, or for an engineer who'd rather build than kill.  Not
today.  Tomorrow they'll need us both."

Nylan hoisted himself up on the low wall.  "I haven't seen you this
bitter, I don't think ever."

"I haven't been."  She paused while she climbed onto the wall.  "I'm
tired, Nylan.  I'm tired of having to heal people because no one can
ever solve anything except with force.  I'm tired of being thought of
as some sort of weakling because killing men upsets me.  Frig it!
Killing anything upsets me.  It's just that a lot more men have been
killed around here lately."

"That's true."

"I'm tired of traveling and trading, and seeing women with terror in
their eyes, seeing women barely more than girls pregnant and not much
more than brood mares.  Ryba may be right, that force applied in large
enough quantities is the only solution, but I'm tired of it."

"So am I," Nylan said, almost without thinking.  "And I'm tired because
nothing is enough.  More arrowheads, more blades, more violence.  And
what happens?  We've got one of the biggest armies in this culture's
history marching after us.  And if we do manage to destroy it?  What
then?"

"Why .. . everything will be roses and good crops and strong healthy
baby girls, won't it?"  Ayrlyn sighed.  "And warm fires, and good
meals, and smithies and sawmills and ... and .. . and ..."

"Of course.  Isn't that the way the story's supposed to end?"

Ayrlyn laughed, harshly.  "Frig .. . frig, frig ... the story never
ends.  People fight, and fight, and fight.  If you win, you have to
keep fighting so others won't take it away.  If you lose and survive,
you have to fight to live and to regain what you lost.  Why?"

"Because nothing is ever enough," Nylan said harshly.  "We talked about
this before."

"And nothing ever changes?"

"Not yet.  Not that I've been able to figure out."

"Nylan .. . ?"

"Yes."

"If we get through this, can we try to change things .. . so it's not
just fight, fight, fight?"

He nodded.

"You promise?"

"Promise."

For a time, they sat there silently, hands clasped, watching the
departures and the hurrying guards, until Kadran came out and rang the
triangle to announce supper for those few left in Tower Black.

CXXIV

NYLAN LAY AWAKE on his couch, his ears and senses listening to the
gentle sound of Dylless's breathing, his thoughts on scattered feelings
and images-including an evening meal with only a handful of guards even
there, most gone out into the twilight with full quivers; including the
idea that the whole world was decided by violence and where no
achievement or possession was ever enough.

His breath hissed out between clenched teeth.

"Are you awake?"  Ryba asked quietly from across the gap between
them.

"Yes.  It's a little hard to get to sleep, no matter how much you need
the rest, thinking of two thousand men who want to kill you and destroy
all you've built."  Nylan really didn't want to discuss the problems of
violence and greed with Ryba.

"They won't do it.  Not if we all do our parts."

"You've said that before.  I know in my head that you're probably
right, but my emotions don't always follow reason.  You seem to have
more faith than I do that we can destroy a force close to fifty times
our size."

"Fierral thinks our archers have already taken out between a hundred
and two hundred of their arms men  She still has a few out there, the
ones with night vision," Ryba said.  "Tomorrow, if we can take out
another two hundred and get them in a murderous mood coming up the
ridge, your little traps could add a hundred or two more.  We might get
them down to an even thousand before you have to use the laser."

"And ... poof... just like that, our troubles are over?"

"What's gotten into you, Nylan?  I know you don't like all the killing,
but, outside of dying or running like outlaws until we're hunted down,
what choices do we have?"  She paused.  "Oh, I forgot.  We could spend
the rest of our very short lives barefoot and pregnant and beaten,
unless we were fortunate enough to subject ourselves to someone who's
as kind as you are, and I've met exactly one of you in a life a decade
longer than yours."

Nylan had no answer, not one that made sense.  Logically, what Ryba
said made sense, but he wanted to scream, to ask why logic dictated
violence and killing, when the only answer was that only violence
answered violence, and that some people refused to give up violence.

"Your problem is that you're basically good and kind, and you really
have trouble accepting that most people aren't, that most people
require force or discipline to live in any sort of order."

"I see that part," Nylan conceded.  "What I don't see is why people are
like that.  War leaves a few people better off, but most worse off.
Sometimes, it's even necessary to survive, but that means that the
other side doesn't."

"Look at those Gallosian men who attacked earlier this summer."  Ryba's
voice was low and cool.  "They couldn't conceive of women like us. They
wouldn't face it.  They would rather have died than faced the idea that
women could be as tough and as smart-and they did.  You have to face
the facts, Nylan.  Most people's beliefs aren't rational.  They
wouldn't do what they do if they were.  But they do, and that's the
proof."

"I suppose so."  Nylan took another deep breath, trying to keep it low
and quiet.  He didn't want to talk about it anymore.  He just wanted to
know why people were so blind.  Sure-violence was always successful for
the strongest, but only one person could ever be the strongest.  So why
did so many people delude themselves into thinking they were that
person?  "I suppose so ... and I can see what you say.  I don't have to
like it."

"Neither do I."  Ryba yawned.  "But I can't change people."

Nylan wondered if she really wanted to, but said nothing in the
darkness.  He turned to watch the cradle, hoping that Dylless might
understand, yet fearing that, if she did, she would not survive.  He
studied her profile in the silence until his eyes got heavy, until he
dropped into an uneasy sleep, far too late, and far too close to an
early dawn.

CXXV

THE TRIANGLE RANG in the darkness, and Nylan bolted upright.

Ryba moaned in her sleep, and Dylless snuffled and shifted on the lumpy
cradle mattress.  Slowly, the smith-engineer swung his feet onto the
floor.  He sat on the edge of the bed for a time, until Dylless began
to whimper.  Then he eased his daughter from the cradle, and half sat,
half fell into the rocking chair, with her on his chest, where he began
to rock and pat her back.

The triangle sounded again, once, and Ryba mumbled, "Not yet."

Nylan agreed with the sentiment, but waited until Ryba shifted her
weight again with another groan.

"The great day has arrived," said Nylan.  "I hope it's great.  Better
yet, I hope they just take their army and turn around."

"That won't happen," mumbled Ryba groggily as she turned in his
direction.  In the dark, she fumbled with the striker for a time before
she could get the candle lit.  "I still don't understand how you can
see in pitch-darkness.  Demons, it's early."

Nylan patted Dylless, but her whimpers rapidly progressed toward
wails.

"She's hungry," he pointed out.

"I can hear that.  Just let me get half-dressed."  Ryba pulled leather
trousers off the pegs and stuffed her legs into them, then pulled on
her boots, leaving the thin sleeping gown in place over trousers and
boots as she walked toward Nylan and their daughter.  "Would you take
Dylless's cradle down to the main level while I feed her?"  asked Ryba.
"After you get dressed, I mean."

"You can feed her now?"

"Who else?"

Nylan stood, then handed Dylless to her mother.  Even before Dylless
started to nurse, the wails stopped.

"Greedy little piglet."

"She's not so little anymore," Nylan observed as he began to don his
leathers.

"She's still greedy."

Like the whole world, thought Nylan, but maybe I can change her a
little.  After he dressed and strapped the pair of blades in place, he
lifted the cradle, stepping carefully so that he didn't trip on either
cradle or blades.  He snorted, thinking how pointless it would all be
if he tumbled down four flights of stone steps before the battle.

"I'll bring her down in a moment," Ryba said.  "Go ahead and eat."

"Fine," he grunted, struggling through the door with his burden.

After he slowly trudged down the steps and set the cradle next to the
others carried down by either Siret or Istril or those who had helped
them, Nylan paused.  He saw a hand wiggling and walked over to look
down at Weryl.  Flat on his back, his son studied his own chubby hands,
his short fingers intertwining, then separating, as if they were not
really connected to his own body.  Antyl-the new and very pregnant
guard-stood watching.

Nylan bent down and touched Weryl's arm lightly, trying to offer some
cheer.  After a bit, he straightened.  In the next cradle lay Kyalynn,
being rocked by Niera.  His other daughter's eyes were wide in the
dimness, but she only looked, first at Niera, and then at Nylan.

Nylan walked around the cradle so that he could bend down without
getting in Niera's way, and he touched Kyalynn's wrist.  Her eyes
turned to him, deep green and serious as he looked at her.

Finally, his eyes burning, he stood.  He swallowed, took a deep breath,
and started toward the great room.  Though his guts were tight, he knew
he had to eat, as much as he could stomach.

"I saw that, Nylan."

He looked up as Istril stood there: Then he shrugged.  "What can I say?
I didn't have a lot to do with their birth, but nothing can change that
they're my children."

"You had a lot to do with their birth, just not their conception."
Istril swallowed.  "I hope Weryl grows up like you."

"I hope he grows up," Nylan said bleakly.

"He will.  I can see that."

"You, too?"  Nylan forced a chuckle.

"Me, too."  Istril paused.  "You're not riding with the guard?"

"No.  I'm supposed to stay with the laser, and try to hold off their
wizards in some way that I haven't really figured out.  So I don't have
to worry, in the beginning, anyway, about arrows and blades."

"That doesn't reassure me, Nylan."

"What you're wearing doesn't reassure me much, either."  Nylan looked
at the silver-haired guard, in full battle dress with twin blades, and
the bow and quiver in her hands.  "What about... ?"

"Weryl?  There are more than score eighty arms men out there, and two
of those small siege engines.  Every person counts.  Siret and I drew
straws.  I won, or lost, depending on how it goes.  Yesterday, she went
out with the sniping detail.  You know they got almost two hundred of
the Lornians, especially in the darkness?"

"What about their wizards?"

"They can't see that well in the dark, and Saryn had the tactics laid
out well.  Only one shot from each position, then move.  When you've
got twenty kays of trail to leapfrog along and they don't dare leave
formation, it's not that hard."

"Of course," Nylan said, "by this morning those fifteen hundred or so
who are left are ready to kill us all, preferably by attaching sections
of our anatomy to horses traveling at high rates of speed in different
directions."

"Probably.  We just have to kill all of them.  Then they won't be a
problem."

Nylan looked at her.  He thought he saw a faint hint of a smile.  Then
again, maybe he hadn't.  "That's not a solution that works well over
time."

"No.  It'd be a lot easier if most men were more like you, but they
seem to be more like Gerlich."

Nylan's stomach growled, and his head felt faint.

"You need to eat, and so do I."

Nylan nodded, and they walked toward the great room, where the tables
were mostly filled.  The candles helped dispel some of the predawn
gloom, but not much, and they flickered with the breeze through the
open windows.

Istril sat down at the second table.

Ayrlyn-dark circles under her eyes-nodded as Nylan sat down at the head
table.

"You're tired," Nylan said, reaching for the pot that held the bitter
tea he needed-badly.

"It was a late night."

"You went with the archers?"

Ayrlyn finished the mug of tea.  "I can see in the dark.  It helps."

Sensing her exhaustion, Nylan stretched across the table and refilled
her mug.

"Thank you."  The healer put a chunk of bread in her mouth almost
mechanically, as if each bite were an effort.

"Do you want some meat?"

"No... thank you," the redhead added.  "It's not your fault, Nylan, but
it was a long and hard night."  She slowly chewed another piece of
bread.

"It's too early," grumbled Huldran.  "Bad business to fight before
dawn."

"We're not fighting before dawn," said Fierral.  "We're eating."

"How did it go last night?"  asked Nylan.

"Well enough that any other idiot would have turned around.  There are
bodies everywhere along the road.  Their commander was smart enough to
keep them moving, and not try burial.  They've got a half-fortified
encampment a valley or so down out on a rise that's surrounded by
grass."  Fierral chewed through a thick chunk of bread, and then a
lukewarm strip of unidentified meat that Nylan had tried and choked
down despite a taste like gamy venison.  "We didn't get many after they
camped.  Too open."

"We got a lot, and lost a few ourselves," Ayrlyn said tiredly.

Nylan understood her exhaustion went beyond mere tiredness, and he
wondered how many she had healed, or had been unable to heal.

Ryba, fully dressed, had carried Dylless into the great room, although
she had left her bow and blades on the shelves by the stairs.  As she
seated herself, and Dylless, she answered Ayrlyn's comment.  "That
leaves a lot, and us with fewer guards."

Nylan repressed a wince, wondering how Ryba could sometimes be so
insensitive-or so strong-as to ignore such pain.  Which was it?  he
wondered.  Then his eyes crossed Ayrlyn's, and he offered a quick and
apologetic smile.

He got a brief one in return.

"We'll have the first of the picket posts set in a bit, scr," said
Fierral.  "I had some of the newer guards out real early, scrounging
shafts and weapons from the ones that fell last night.  They should be
back not too long after dawn, well before the army starts moving."

"Men are slow in the morning," mumbled Huldran.  "Excepting you, scr,"
she added to Nylan.

The smith-engineer wondered why he was the exception to everything-or
was that just because Ryba needed him?  Or because he disliked the use
offeree to solve everything, even when he was guilty, or more guilty
than just about anyone, of employing it?  He took a sip of tea, then
lowered the mug to his chin, letting the steam seep around his face.

After a few more sips, he slowly chewed a strip of hot-sauced venison,
and then another, and then some more bread.  All of it tasted flat, but
he kept eating.  "... engineer's off somewhere ... got that look ..."
"... wouldn't want to be in his boots ..."

"I would."

"That's not what I meant..."

In time, he looked up.  Ayrlyn and Fierral were gone.  The tables were
half-empty, and Ryba was wiping her face one-handed, juggling Dylless
on her leg.

"Can you take her?"  asked the marshal.  "Antyl and Blynnal are keeping
the children, while Siret holds the tower..."

"I know.  Istril told me."  He stood, then took his daughter, still
looking at her mother.

"You know what you're going to do?"  Ryba asked.

"It's pretty simple, in theory anyway.  You and the guards get them
bunched on the hillside, and I fry them.  That doesn't take into
account that they may not want to bunch or that their wizards may have
other ideas, or that the wizards may be able to block the effect of the
laser.  Or that the wizards may be able to fry me.  But," he concluded,
"I understand the plan."  He paused.  "Was there any problem getting
some of the newer guards to trip the pikes?"

"No.  There were a handful who'd have done it on a suicide basis."

Nylan winced.  "There's a lot of hatred here."

"There's been a lot of hidden hatred between men and women in a lot of
cultures, Nylan.  It's just more obvious here."  Ryba half turned.
"I've got to go.  Ill either check with you or send a messenger once
we're set."

Nylan shifted Dylless to his shoulder and patted her back as he walked
slowly to the other side of the tower, trying and succeeding in not
tripping over the pair of blades he wore.

He eased Dylless into the cradle, then patted her arm and touched her
smooth cheek.  She smiled, then threatened to cry as he stood.

"Istril told me you were here earlier."  Siret had just handed Kyalynn
to Antyl, and she stepped toward Nylan.  The silver-haired guard had
deep circles under her green eyes, and a narrow slash across her
cheek.

Nylan reached out and touched the skin beside the wound, letting a
little order seep into it.

"You didn't have to do that."

"You didn't have to go out last night and try to reduce the odds
against us."

They just looked at each other for a long moment.

Then Nylan cleared his throat.  "Take care of them.  Just .. . take
care of them."

He turned and headed up the steps to the fifth level and the components
of the weapons laser.  Huldran joined him on the way up.

The sun had just begun to ease above the great forest to the east of
the cliffs when Nylan carried the weapons laser head and cables across
the lower meadow to the crude brick revetment.  From the raised
position on its platform on the highest point of ground east of the
tower, amid the fields, the weapons laser had a clean field of fire in
nearly any direction.

Behind him followed Huldran and three of the newer recruits, none of
whose names Nylan knew, carrying the heavy firm cell block and the rest
of the equipment.

Nylan positioned the tripod, then clicked the firing head onto the
swivel.  After that came the power cable.

"Let's move the cells to the center here," he suggested, and one of the
new guards, a mahogany redhead, helped.

After that he straightened and looked at the three new guards.  "That's
all we need for now.  Go do whatever you're supposed to do."

"We're supposed to guard you," the redhead said.  "Oh ... all right.
Then get as many shafts as you can and whatever else you need and
report back here.  When the time comes, try to use arrows and keep them
at a distance.  The farther away the better."

"Yes, scr."

The three guards started walking toward the tower.  Nylan shook his
head and turned to Huldran.  "I'll check this out while you get our
mounts.  When you get back, I want to inspect the pike lines.  Is that
all right?"

"I get to walk up to get the horses and bring them back, and you get to
ride?"  asked Huldran, raising her eyebrows.  "I thought it was a good
idea," said Nylan.  "Sometimes, scr, you still have certain male
characteristics."

They both laughed.  Then Huldran trotted uphill along the paved road to
the stables and the corrals where not only the horses were, but where
the sheep had been gathered.

As the early golden light fell across the meadows, and the fields,
Nylan slowly went through each and every connection, letting his senses
check the lines where the flows would follow.  He did not power up the
system.  He could sense that it would work, and he knew that he would
need every erg of power, and probably a lot more.

When he had finished, Huldran had not returned, and he looked out to
the west, to Tower Black standing in the light against the shadowed
rocky hills that rose eventually into the higher peaks of the
Westhorns.  In the flat morning light, the Roof of the World was quiet
except for the steps of the last guards heading up to the stables.  The
grass hung limp in the stillness, dew glittering like tiny diamonds in
the light.  The scene appeared almost pastoral.

As Huldran rode across the grass, leading the brown mare, Nylan took
another deep breath, conscious that he had recently been taking a lot
of deep breaths, a whole lot-and that nothing had changed.  He still
had to destroy hundreds of men, just so Westwind would be left alone.
He walked behind the emplacement and started to check the mare's saddle
before he mounted.

The triangle rang three times-twice.  A squad or group of guards rode
down past the smithy and the tower, and over Nylan's short bridge and
up the hill past the end of the paving.  As they vanished over the
crest of the ridge, the triangle rang again in triplets, and Nylan
swung into the mare's saddle and started toward the pike
emplacements.

Another set of riders passed the tower, and one turned her horse toward
the laser emplacement, then changed her direction toward Nylan.

Behind her, the three newer guards hurried across the meadows, followed
by a man in black-Relyn.

Nylan reined up and waited for Ryba.

The marshal drew up beside him, and began to speak.  "The Lornians are
forming up and beginning to march toward the flat down on the other
side of the ridge.  The scouts say that they're two kays down past the
flat."  The marshal glanced toward the sun.  "I'd guess it would be
after midmorning before they'll be in your range.  Longer if we're
successful."

"Then I hope you are most successful," Nylan said.

"We'll see.  That's something I don't know.  I'll try to send you
messengers, if we have any to spare."  Her eyes were bleak.

"Don't worry," he answered.  "I'll do what I can."  As if I had tiny
real choice at all, between you and them.

As Ryba spurred her horse back toward her guards, Nylan glanced to the
great forest beyond the steep eastern cliff that dropped away in its
nearly sheer fall.  The forest was almost a black outline against the
morning sun, and Nylan's eyes rose to Freyja, glittering mercilessly in
the cool and the clear morning light.

After a moment, he urged the mare up the hill.  Rather than dismount
and risk revealing too much, just in case the Lornians' wizard could
see what he did, he rode past each post of the lower line slowly,
letting his senses range over what he had constructed.  The weights and
links seemed sound, and all the cords were in place.  Then he repeated
the effort with the upper line before easing the mare up to the crest
of the ridge.

All he saw on the northeastern side was what he always saw.  There were
no massed bodies, no horse soldiers, just grasses and road and trees.

He squinted and studied the area to the west.  Perhaps there was a low
cloud of dust rising above the trees that bordered the wide meadows
leading toward Westwind, but the trees shielded his vision.

After a time, he turned the mare and rode back down the road and across
the meadow to the laser.

"See anything, scr?"  asked Huldran as he rode past the front of the
quickly bricked emplacement.  "Some dust, I think, but it wasn't moving
that fast."

"It never is," said Relyn, "unless it's on the field and moving right
toward you.  Then the horses and dust rush at you.  At the same time,
you feel like they move so slowly."

Nylan reined up and tied the mare in back, beside Huldran's mount where
she would be largely sheltered from stray arrows or crossbow bolts or
whatever missiles the Lornians might employ.  Then he checked the laser
again.

For a while, as the sun climbed, and he began to sweat under the
leathers, he walked back and forth.  Then he wandered out into the
grass.  Except for the six of them, the entire Roof of the World
appeared empty.  The tower was barred and silent, and even the insects
seemed quieter than normal.  Or was that his imagination?

"Why are battles always fought on clear days?"  asked Nylan to no one
in particular as he sat down in the narrow slit entry, his boots
resting on packed clay that had once been grass.

"They are not," answered Relyn from the left side of the emplacement.
"I have fought in rain and mud.  Not snow."

The smith-engineer nodded.  Then he looked at the man in black.  After
a time, he got up and walked back and forth behind the silent and still
unpowered laser.  He looked at Relyn a moment, then beckoned, and
walked away from the emplacement, letting the one-armed man follow.  He
stopped a hundred cubits out into the meadow and turned.

Relyn frowned.  "What is it?"

"After this is over, it's time for you to leave-as soon as you can."
Nylan glanced uphill, but nothing had changed.

"The Angel?"

Nylan nodded.  "One way or another, I won't be in very good shape after
this.  Too much killing is hard on me."  He met Relyn's eyes.  "I
promised.  But don't lay a hand on anyone, or I'll chase you to the
demon's depths."

Relyn shivered.  "I would not, not after all this.  Not after what I
owe you."  He shrugged, then smiled bitterly.  "First, we must
triumph."

"Don't prophets always win?"  Nylan gave a wry grin and walked back
toward the laser emplacement.

Relyn followed more slowly, fingering his chin with his left hand.

Huldran glanced from Nylan to Relyn, then just shook her head.

Shortly, a small group of riders appeared just over the crest of the
hill, but turned their mounts to face the other way, presumably down on
the advancing Lornians.  Nylan thought he saw Ryba's latest roan, but
he couldn't be quite sure.

Nylan was blotting his forehead, and even Relyn had opened his jacket
by the time a single rider cantered down the road from the ridge. Nylan
didn't know her name, though he had seen her in training, and she rode
well.

"Scr!  The enemy is about a third of the way up the ridge.  The marshal
said that she won't be able to send any more reports."

"Fine.  Tell her to make sure the field is clear when the enemy comes
down.  Do you understand that?"

The guard's face crinkled.  "The field must be clear when the enemy
comes down?"

"The field must be clear of guards when the enemy comes down."  Nylan
corrected himself.  "Do you have it?"

She repeated the words, and Nylan nodded.  Then she turned her mount
and started back up toward the ridge.

Relyn looked at Nylan's face.  "You plan some terrible magic."

"It's not magic.  Not mostly," Nylan added as his head throbbed as if
to remind him not to lie, "but, if it works, it will be terrible."  He
muttered under his breath afterward, "And if it doesn't work, it's
going to be terrible in a different way."

"What do you want us to do?"  asked one of the new guards.

"When the engineer works his magic," answered Huldran, "his body will
be here, but his thoughts will not.  Our job is to protect him from
anyone who would attack."

Nylan hoped no one got that near, but somehow nothing worked quite the
way it was planned in any battle.  Or in anything, he added mentally.

As the faint and distant sounds of the tumult mounted and purple-clad
riders finally crested the ridge, Nylan powered up the firm cell
assembly-seventy-seven point five percent.  Could he smooth the flows
for the fiery weapons head, the way he had for the industrial laser
heads?

Another wave of purple riders reached the ridge top, and the Westwind
guards began falling back, drawing back across the ridge top, sliding
westward toward the road to the tower.

The Lornian forces slowed where the pikes should have triggered, but
Nylan could not see what exactly had occurred, except for the unseen
whiteness that signified death and more death.

Nylan sent out his perceptions, his eyes still on the hillside above.
He could almost sense the Lornian commander, the arrows falling around
him as the man gestured with the big blade.  Idly, Nylan thought that
he could have shot the man.  Then he nodded, and his stomach chilled
into ice.  Ryba had ordered her guards not to kill him.  She was not
aiming for the defeat of the Lornians.  She wanted to keep the Lornian
army whole and moving into the laser's range, and she was gambling on
the laser and Nylan to destroy them totally.

"Damn you!  Damn you ..."  he muttered.

Suddenly, as the Lornian forces began to move again, to flow around the
east end of the pike defenses, the remaining visible guards seemed to
peel off the hillside behind the pike lines and ride westward toward
the tower.  The flow of arrows dropped to a few intermittent shafts.

Ryba reined up on the lower hillside, just above Nylan's bridge, and
the remainder of the guards did also-not much more than half a score.
Even if some guards remained in the rocks and in the ridge trees,
casualties had been high-as usual.

Nylan hadn't seen Ayrlyn, not since breakfast.  Why did he keep
thinking about her-because she was one of the few that seemed to care
about more than force?  Because he had come to care for her?  He shook
his head.  The only thing he could do now was use the laser.  His
thoughts traced the power lines, and slowly smoothed out the fluxes and
the swirls within the cells.

Slowly, slowly, the black and purple mass on the hillside continued to
move, mostly westward, holding to the high part of the ridge slope,
although a lobe offerees seemed to swing downhill.

Nylan let his senses settle into the laser, let himself feel the
equipment again, as his eyes and senses also measured the hillside, and
he took a deep breath.  More than a third of the attackers remained
shielded by the curve of the hill.

"Why is he waiting?"  whispered a voice.  "Leave him alone.  He's got
to get them all at once.  Too many are hidden by the slope of the
hill," hissed Huldran.  As the sweat dripped from his forehead, and he
absently brushed it away from his eyes, Nylan continued to watch, to
sense.  As the dark forces swelled and surged across the hillside
toward the thin line of guards, he waited.

Finally, as he tasted salt and blood, he triggered the laser, and the
beam flared, and spread into a cast of light that did nothing, just
sprayed reddish light across the advancing Lornians.

"What's with the laser?"  snapped Huldran.  "We've got power."

"The wizards.  They've got shields."  Nylan extended his senses toward
the focal point of the shields, stepping toward Huldran as he did.
"Ease it right, more, more.  Hold it there!"

White-faced, Huldran helped him ease the laser eastward.

The focal change failed to help, and another flare of light lit the
hillside, even as the Lornian forces reached a point less than two
hundred cubits from Ryba and the guards.

"Shit!"  He could sense the interlocked shields of the two wizards on
the hillside, and his mind and fingers tried to tighten the focus of
the beam, to swing it right against those red-white shields.

The energy in the firm cells seemed to build, and Nylan could sense the
surging power, surges with far more energy than those cells could have
possibly contained, as well as the invisible hands of the white wizard,
probing, jabbing.

The engineer concentrated, ignoring the nearing hoofbeats, ignoring the
raging chaos in the power cells behind him, trying to focus his energy
and order into the thinnest, sharpest needle of order and power.

The white shields pulsed, and the needle halted.  Nylan concentrated
harder, and the black needle probed at the reddish-white shields,
narrowing, narrowing.  Nylan squeezed all the firm cell energy into
that needle, driving it, hammering like a smith might hammer a
needle-thin chisel against the joints in armor, relentlessly probing.

His eyes burned; his head felt like an anvil he was using, as though
each thrust of the laser and the chaos somehow added by the white
wizards rebounded back through him.  His fingers were locked on the
laser, as though held there by an electric current that flayed his
nerves.

Still, Nylan hammered the needle against the white-red shields, forcing
more and more power into that thrust, more and more chaos, more and
more disruption, fighting the chaos backlash, and the lines of fire
that felt as if they streamed from the white wizards and fell like
lashes across his mind and body.

The shields of the white wizards wavered, and Nylan eased every erg of
energy, chaotic and non chaotic smoothing it into an overwhelming tide
of massed energy that cascaded against the pulsing white shields of the
struggling Lornian wizards.

Something has to give... has to... has to, thought Nylan as he strained
against the barriers that protected the Lornians.

CRRUMMMMMPTTT!

Energy flared across the Roof of the World, and the sky shivered and
the ground shook, and all three wizards were clothed in flame and
chaos.  At that moment, Tower Black, rearing mounts, guards, arms men
and wizards were suspended in a timeless instant-bathed in fire, bathed
in chaos, bathed in order.

CXXVI

"LEAVE THE SIEGE engines at the bottom there," Sillek orders
Viendros.

Viendros nods, as does Koric from beyond the Gallosian commander.  If
they can clear the field, then there will be time for the engines.  If
not, they will never get close enough to use them.  The Gallosian rides
back toward the lagging equipment.  ' Arrows continue to fly from the
trees on the left, and from the rocky jumble on the right.  Sillek
occasionally glimpses a slim figure retreating uphill as the Lornian
force, under the two differently shaded purple banners, continues
forward.  The lancers advance almost in circles, keeping the horses
moving at angles and turning abruptly to cut down on the ability of the
angel archers to predict where the horsemen will be.

The foot keep their small shields raised, and many arrows either stick
in the shields or bounce off.  A fair number penetrate defenses and
bodies, and several dozen bodies sprawl across the hillside behind the
advance, as has been the case for kays.

"Keep moving!"  Sillek orders.  A flicker of something catches his eye,
and he turns to see a squad of fast-moving angels riding toward the
lead lancers.  Almost before he can see what has happened, the angels
have ridden farther uphill and into the dark cover of the high firs.

What Sillek can see are four or five riderless mounts and a slight
slowing of the advance.

"Send a troop after them!"  he orders Koric.

Koric looks puzzled.

"They'll do it again.  After the next quick attack send twice that many
riders after them."

"Scr..."

"I know.  Most of them will get killed.  But if we let them slow us
down much more .. . we'll take even more losses from those damned
arrows."

"We could turn back."

Sillek laughs.  "I wouldn't last two days if I brought back an army and
no victory."

"We could wait."

"Every day we'd lose another hundred troops.  How long would they stand
it?  How long before I had no army?"  He raises the sabre for
emphasis.

Koric nods reluctantly, then summons a messenger, who rides around the
main body and to the vanguard.

Halfway up the long slope another squad of angels darts from the woods,
slashing at the left flank of the lancers.  Two squads of purple tunics
race after them, catching one trailing rider, and slashing her from her
mount.

The lancers slow, but do not stop as they near the trees, then
vanish.

No one else attacks while the main force slogs another three hundred
cubits uphill, while Viendros rejoins Sillek and Koric.  Then a single
mount staggers out of the trees, a purple figure sagging in the saddle.
No other lancers return.

"Demons!"  mutters Koric.  "They're worse than the Jeranyi."

"Far worse," agrees Viendros.

"Keep moving!  Do the same thing if they attack from the flank again.
One more attack, and we'll have the crest."  Sillek turns to Terek. "Is
the crest still clear, Scr Wizard?  No pits in the ground?"

Terek bounces in the saddle, then answers.  "No pits.  I can sense
that.  The ground is solid, and clear except for some posts.  They look
like they started to build some fences.  I saw them working on the
fences days ago, but they're gone now.  All that's left are the posts.
Can your horsemen avoid them?"

"How big are they?"

"Like a tree trunk, shoulder-high.  I would say ten cubits apart."

"That shouldn't be a problem."  Sillek nods to Koric.

"We need to charge them, to cut them off," says Viendros.

Another squad of angel riders flashes down to less than a hundred
cubits from the advancing lancers, reins up, where the riders draw
short bows.  The two dozen arrows almost wipe out the front row of
horsemen, and the advance slows.  A second angel squad appears on the
right quarter, and also lets loose their arrows.

"Shit .. ."  mutters someone.  "No one shoots that hard from
horseback."

Sillek wants to agree, but looks at Koric, then turns to Terek.  "Are
there any foot, any pikes, anything like that on the hill crest or
beyond?

"Just the posts, scr."

"Koric," Sillek orders, "send all our lancers right after those riders.
Clear the hill crest!"

"Yes, scr!"  Koric nods, and beside him the trumpet sounds, and sounds
again.

"Mine too, I think!"  snaps Viendros, and he spurs his horse uphill.

Almost in insolence as nearly two hundred lancers begin to trot
forward, sabres at the ready, the angels wait, and loose another
horseback volley.  Only a dozen riders stagger in their saddles or
fall, and the angels fall back.  In fact, they gallop away as though
demons were pursuing them, and the lancers charge over the hill crest,
pressing their mounts.

The hill seems to shiver, ever so slightly.  Then, a wave of screams,
mostly horse screams, echoes down the hillside.

"What?"  Sillek turns to Terek.

"A terrible hidden thing ..."  stammers the wizard.

"You said that there were no pits, and that they had ridden over the
entire hillside!"  Sillek rides around his own forces, ignoring the
wizard and heading over the hill crest, ignoring Koric and his own
guards.

As he crosses the crest, he reins in, staring at the mangled remains of
more than fifty horse impaled on the line of pikes that had appeared
from nowhere, suspended on heavy cross poles from the so-called fence
posts.

Arrows start to fall once more, centered on the foot trying to hack
through or climb or slip through the pike wall.  Behind the pikes,
those foot levies not struggling to chop the wooden pikes clear of the
stout frames are dragging bodies away from the pike line.  Yet the
arrows, the demon-damned arrows, sleet down from everywhere.

Sillek waves to the first rank of the foot.  "Clear those pikes.  Now!
Clear them!"

Viendros, from the western side of the field, echoes the orders.

Koric, riding hard, has caught up with his lord, and he repeats the
command.

By standing in the saddle, Sillek can make out a second line of posts,
almost concealed in the high meadow grasses beyond the lower grass of
the ridge crest.

"Stand down," hisses Koric.  "You're making yourself a target."

Sillek lowers himself into the saddle.

"Charge again!"  demands Koric.

"No!  Not yet."  Sillek twists in the saddle.  "Terek!  That second
line of posts down the hill.  Burn down the post on the end.  The last
one.  Turn it into cinders."

The white wizard frowns.

"Do it.  There are more of those de monish pikes attached there.  You
burn it, and we can sweep around those defenses on the left side away
from the tower and the road."

"There are archers on that side," points out Koric.

"There are archers everywhere, it seems."

As Sillek and Koric talk, the two wizards concentrate.  Then one fire
bolt and another flash toward the big squat post.  The post remains
standing.

"Well?"  asks Sillek.

"It's green wood, scr, and it's infused with order."

Another volley of the deadly arrows sheets into the front ranks, and
horses and men fall.

"You sure they are only score two?"  rasps Koric.

"They're angels, remember?"  counters Sillek.  "Do you want to fight
them when they've built up to score twenty?"

Koric shakes his head.  "We'll get them."

Another set of fire bolts flare at the post, and another.

As the wizards work to destroy the lynch post, as the foot levies and
engineers hack away the barrier of pikes and bodies, the arrows keep
falling, and horses and men scream.

Then one line of the crude angel pikes falls, and another, and the
remaining lancers start forward.

"To the left!"  yells Koric, riding forward, and sending his remaining
messengers out.

The left end lynch post of the second pike line crumbles into ashes,
but the next line of pikes springs up to the west of the last section,
and a handful of angels sprint downhill from behind the posts.  A
half-dozen overeager lancers spit themselves on the second line of
pikes, but one of the few cross bowmen slams a bolt between the
shoulder blades of a fleeing angel, and the woman pitches headfirst
into the grass.

"One less evil angel," mutters Terek.  Sillek studies the field,
watching as the remnants of the angels, a handful on foot, less than a
score on mounts, draw up on the new paved road above a new stone
bridge, a thin line between the advancing forces and the tower.  "It's
almost a pity," he murmurs.  "A waste."

"Don't feel sorry now, My Lord," rumbles Koric.  Sillek shakes off the
feeling and sheathes the sabre.  Then he pulls forth the great blade
from the shoulder scabbard, a blade as near a duplicate to his father's
as he has been able to have forged.

"Scr!"  yells Terek.  "The wizard's down there, in that little stone
fort, and he's doing something."

"Well, undo it!"  snaps Sillek.  "That's your job."  He glances over
his shoulder to see that the last of his forces are clear of the de
monish pikes and ready for the assault on the remaining angels.

The trumpet sounds, and the Lornian forces move forward, a trot for the
lancers, a quickstep for the foot, ready at last to avenge all the
hurts, the wounds, the deaths suffered on this campaign into the cold
and unfriendly Westhorns.

Sillek raises his blade and rides forward.  So does Viendros.

As they do, the hillside is bathed in red light-a red light that burns
faintly, as though the sun had grown hotter, or Sillek had stood too
close to the fire.  The Lord of Lornth turns in the saddle, not
slowing, to see Terek and Jissek, almost frozen in their saddles.  Even
Sillek can sense the immense forces that surge between the two wizards
and the small fort on the flat below.

"Faster!"  he yells to Koric.

Koric looks to the wizards, and then jabs the bugler, and the quick
advance call rings out over the hillside.

Sillek gallops toward the angels, aiming himself toward the tall
black-haired woman.

Another wave of red light flashes across the downslope, and Sillek
urges his mount forward, knowing he must reach the angels quickly.

The ground trembles.

Sillek spurs his horse forward.  Yet another two hundred cubits
separate him from the angel forces, and the ground trembles again.

Then, a single shriek and a dull rumbling sound that lasts forever and
yet is instantaneous cross the hillside, and Sillek feels as though a
mighty blade of fire and destruction slams toward the hillside, toward
him, as the heavens turn brilliant, burning white, as the air sears
hotter than noon in the Stone Hills.

"Govern well, Gethen," whispers Sillek, and, as the incredible flare of
whiteness flashes out from that focal point around Terek and Jissek,
Sillek feels himself flaming, and he holds, for a moment, the images of
Zeldyan and Nesslek, even as his great sword melts in his hand, and he
with it.

The hillside shudders, and a dull huge clap echoes off the rocks and
the surrounding higher peaks, echoes, and reechoes, like a chain of
images trapped in mirrors facing each other, getting fainter and
fainter, and stretching farther and farther away.  The earth tremors
echo each other, and flashes of light, like whole-sky lightning, blaze
across the Roof of the World.

Then ... ashes fall like snow across the hillside, burning like fire as
they touch the dry grass west of the devastation.

CXXVII

CRUUMPPTTT!!!

The building of intertwined chaos and order stretched and stretched
through an endless and timeless moment, then ... A miniature sun-a
green and gold fireball-flared in the middle of the hillside below the
ridge and east of Tower Black, transforming the soldiers and horses
around it into statues of gray ash, then flattening those fragile
shapes with its shock wave.  The incineration and flattening effect
flared through those Lornians farther away as the circle of destruction
widened almost instantaneously.

For a fraction of an instant two white-clad figures seemed to stand out
against the tide of destruction, as if standing on a crumbling cliff
before a tsunami of chaos washed over them, before they too flashed
into fire and ashes.

Nylan staggered, but continued to concentrate on focusing the laser
even as he felt that wave of whiteness and mass death screaming toward
him.  With eyes already blind, knives stabbing through his skull, he
forced the last ergs of power across the hillside, incinerating all
that moved toward the road, raising instant funeral pyres-and the shock
waves echoed and reechoed across the Roof of the World.

Perhaps a handful of riders pounded downhill toward the laser, toward
the smith who wielded its dying hammer against the remnants of the
Lornian forces on the hillside.

As Nylan shuddered under the first of the chaos waves that battered
him, clinging to the laser, the five lancers charged the small fort.

For a moment, nothing happened, as the new guards stood stunned, eyes
wide at the conflagration and shock waves that had roared across the
hillside, at the swirls of ashes and flame, at the charred shapes
heaped and tossed like burned limbs from a wildfire, then swirled into
less than ashes.  At the outskirts of the destruction, charred bodies
tumbled into heaps.

"Fight!  Frig it!"  yelled Huldran, and her throwing blade cleared the
wall and slammed into a lancer's shoulder.

Then the others, the white-faced guards, reacted, and three arrows
flew, one striking another lancer.

Relyn jumped before Nylan, and the short blade he had once scorned
flashed.  The lancer fell.

The smith-engineer sagged against the burned-out laser, and his body
still shook as the waves of unseen whiteness hammered at him, as he
twitched in the grip of chaos and terror unseen to those beside him and
around him.

On the western fringe of the hillside perhaps half the Westwind guards
stirred, but nothing else moved, except the fine ashes that rained
across the Roof of the World, except the last dying flames.

The rapidly mushrooming storm cloud that had begun to cover the entire
sky, growing blacker by the moment, swallowed the sun, and the dimness
of an early twilight covered the Roof of the World.

Then Nylan's legs collapsed as he slid to the packed clay beside the
tripod base of the laser.

The single remaining Lornian lancer spurred his horse northward and up
the east side of the ridge.  No one pursued, and ashes and rain fell
across the Roof of the World.

Soon, so did thunder and rain and hail, the hailstones falling and
clumping in piles, white as bleached bones, cold as death.

CXXVIII

"RYBA, THE LEAST of the rulers of angels, thus became the last of the
rulers, and the angels, having fallen from the stars after the time of
the great burning, came unto the Roof of the World, where they had
descended on the winds from Heaven.

"There, in the tower called black, builded by the great smith Nylan at
the behest of Ryba, there they took shelter and gathered their strength
together, and abided until the winter should lift.

"Yet since then, upon the Roof of the World, as a memory of the fall of
the angels, winter yet remains.

"When the first great winter had passed, then Nylan the smith builded
yet another forge, a forge of men, not of Heaven, and with hammer and
anvil, forged yet more of the black blades of death, the twin swords of
Westwind, and after that, forged he the bows of winter, small enough to
be carried on horse and powerful enough to split plate armor, and Ryba
the angel was pleased.

"Then, as prophesied by the demons, then came those men who were the
descendants of the ancient demons, and with their fires of chaos, fell
they upon the angels, for the descendants of the demons were fair
determined to drive the angels from the world, and to ensure that no
woman should prevail, nor rule herself nor others.

"The lightnings were cast against the tower called black, yet that
tower held fast against the lightnings of chaos, and against legions of
arms men more vast than the flow of the great rivers, more numerous
than the locusts.

"When she determined that the men who assaulted Westwind were of the
demons, with a great sigh, Ryba reclaimed the fires of winter and with
those fires and with the black blades of Nylan that were sharper than
the edge of night, she and her angels smote the demons.  They destroyed
all but one, and drove him into the east, leaving none upon the Roof of
the World.

"So after that time, whenever angels departed the Roof of the World,
whether unto the southlands or the western ways, they carried forth the
message of Ryba: Remember whence you came, and suffer not any man to
lead you, for that is how the angels fell..."

Book of Ryba

Canto 1, Section II [Original text]

CXXIX

NYLAN WOKE, BUT could not move.  His face burned, and his eyes stabbed
so much he could neither open them, nor see.  He listened, and even the
words fell on him like hammers, most rebounding, their meaning lost in
the force of their impact.  "... not a mark on him ..."  "... more than
that in him ... who else... strong enough to hold a thousand deaths
..."  "... it's all in his mind ... guards died ..."

Ryba's words-"guards died"-stabbed through his ears, and he would have
lifted his hands to close them, but could move neither hands nor head,
and again he sank, not into darkness, but into a sea of white chaos
that burned his body and soul, into a river of fire that flared from
the sky he could not see and singed his body like an ox upon a slowly
turning spit.

An ox, he thought, a dumb ox... and then, for a time, he thought no
more.

Cool cloths bathed his face when he awoke again, if indeed it were the
second time, for that was what he remembered.

Blinding light flared through his eyes, tightly squeezed shut as they
were.

"Are you awake, Nylan?"  asked a husky voice-Ayrlyn's voice.

He started to nod, but white needles stabbed through his brain, and
instead he rasped, "Yes," afraid to move his head.  Even thinking hurt,
each thought like a thin knife.

"You need to drink, or you'll die.  I'm going to put a cup to your
mouth.  Don't worry if you get wet."

Nylan eased his mouth open, and swallowed, then opened and swallowed,
ignoring the unseen white knives that slashed his face but left no
marks, just pain.  Some little of the blinding agony eased as he drank,
as the water ran across his cheeks and chin, as Ayrlyn softly blotted
away the dampness, a dampness welcome for its cooling.

"In a bit, you'll need more."

"All... right... now."

He drank more, and the dryness in his throat subsided, and he slept,
still flayed with red-tinged white whips that left no marks, but
scarred his sleep and soul.

Over the next uncounted days, he drank and slept and drank and slept,
and finally ate, until one morning, he could finally leave the single
lander couch with Istril's and Ayrlyn's help and sit in the rocking
chair that had been moved beside the couch for him.

But the pain and glare were so bright when he tried to open his eyes
that he nearly doubled over.

"Ooooo ... I even felt that," said Ayrlyn quietly.

"So did I," added Istril.  "I think it will be a while before you want
to try to see again."

"What's wrong?"

"We don't know," admitted Ayrlyn.  "You ought to be able to see, but
whatever you did with that laser had a backlash, and it's not exactly
psychological-it had an effect on your entire nervous system.  It
should wear off, but it's going to be eight-days or longer, maybe years
before the pain leaves totally."

Nylan didn't want to deal with that, not then, not ever, but it didn't
seem like he had much choice.  "Where am I?"

"You're on the other side of the sixth level.  Ryba was afraid that
Dylless would disturb you, and here was the best place.  Also, with her
shattered arm-"

"Shattered arm?"

"Flying debris," Ayrlyn said dryly.  "Everything was either blown off
that part of the hill or turned to ashes."

"What's left?"  he asked.

"Away from the hill above the tower... most everything," Istril
answered.  "We had another rush of women.  We're short of trained
guards, but there are more than enough bodies to keep things going.
Saryn's working on training, and Siret and Weindre are helping.
Huldran's trying to forge the pieces for the sawmill, and in time we
might be able to sell timber or planking.  Blynnal's found another
cook, and the food is better yet."

"I have noticed that.  ""Nylan paused.  "What about Fierral?"

The silence gave the answer.

"Who else?"

After a moment, Istril answered.  "Denalle, Selitra, Quilyn-those are
the ones you knew."

"So .. ."  Nylan tried to count them all in his head.  "We landed with
thirty.  We have nine left.  Great survival ratio."

"It's better than everyone dying in orbit," said Ayrlyn.

"Or being a slave," added Istril.

"What a wonderful world.  What a wonderful life ..."  He stopped.
"Don't mind me.  It's just hard.  Darkness, it's hard."  His mouth and
throat were dry, and though he swallowed, they remained dry.

Ayrlyn's hand touched his, and he was surprised at the warmth, and the
huskiness in her voice.  "We know."

"We know," echoed Istril.

Later, as he rocked slowly in the chair, steps echoed through the white
darkness that enshrouded Nylan, hard firm steps that Nylan recognized
as Ryba's.

In the darkness, he might be able to open his eyes for a few moments
before the pain became too great, and, in time, he supposed, his normal
vision might return.  But he preferred to keep his eyes closed when he
had no immediate need to see, and he had no need or any desire to look
upon Ryba.

"How's your arm?"  he asked.

"Ayrlyn says it will heal straight.  So does Istril.  She's giving up
the blade, except as necessary in emergencies, to be a healer.  She had
to.  Ayrlyn was down for quite a while."

"I thought that might happen."  Eyes still closed, he massaged his
temples, and then his neck, hoping that would help relieve the pain.
"What else is new in the sovereign domain of Westwind?"

"I'm sending Lord Sillek's blade back, and his ring-a bit melted around
the edges-that was all we could find in that mess.  With them go some
fancy language.  It's an effort to make peace-in return for keeping the
Westhorns, this part, anyway, clear of bandits."  Ryba cleared her
throat, and Nylan could sense that she leaned against the lander
couch.

"Will it work?"

"Yes," Ryba said calmly.  "Lord Karthanos has already sent an envoy
disavowing the use of his troops and a small chest of golds as a
payment for our efforts to maintain the Westhorns, as he put it, 'clear
of any impediments to travel and trade."  "

"Convenient to blame poor dead Lord Sillek.  He probably wasn't even a
bad sort," Nylan said.  "Like a lot of us, he probably just got pushed
into a situation from which there wasn't any escape."

"He was bad enough to kill a lot of guards, and bad enough to lose an
entire army.  That will do for me, thank you.  And anyone who lets
himself be pushed into that kind of situation probably shouldn't be
running a country."

"We didn't do much better.  Nine out of thirty, isn't it?  And how many
of those who came to us are dead?"

"It's better than the alternative.  Over time, probably only you,
Saryn, and Ayrlyn could have survived in the lowlands.  The rest of us
were all Sybran."

"That's true.  We didn't have too many good alternatives, and the
locals left us even less choice."  Nylan didn't feel like arguing, not
when he knew there was no purpose to be served.  Not when he knew that
Ryba was right.  Right she might be, but again, he realized he wanted
to be neither captain nor marshal.  Apparently, neither he nor poor
dead Lord Sillek had any business running a country-or a ship-not when
men and women only respected force and always wanted more.

"And your friend Relyn disappeared right after the battle.  He was
considerate, though.  He took a Lornian horse and not a thing from us.
You warned him, didn't you?"

"Yes."

"I trust we don't live to see his new faith threaten us all," Ryba said
tiredly.

"It won't."  Nylan could feel that it wouldn't; despite his threats to
Relyn, he'd felt that way for seasons.  Relyn needed the faith of
order, and others would, too.

"I hope you're as good a prophet as an engineer."

So did Nylan, but instead of admitting that openly, he asked the
question to which he already knew the answer.  "Would you mind if I
just turned this side of the tower into my quarters for now?"

"No.  I wondered when you'd ask."

Nylan heard the sadness, and the acceptance, and the inevitability in
her voice, and he nodded, saying, "I know you did what had to be done,
and I did what I did in full knowledge."  But it hurts, and it always
will, and every time I open my eyes for the rest of my life, I "II know
what I did, and you don't even understand why I did it.

"You'll go down as one of the great ones, Nylan, and you're a good man,
but you still don't accept that the world is governed by force.  Cold
iron is master of them all."

"Now," he agreed, without opening his eyes.  "Now."  But we can try to
change that, and that's worthwhile.

"Always," answered Ryba.  "Always."

CXXX

ZELDYAN ENTERS THE tower room, flanked by Gethen and Fornal.  All wear
white armbands, and the faces of all three are stern.  They glance
toward the alcove.

Lady Ellindyja rises, setting the embroidery on the far end of the
bench.  "Your Grace."  Her eyes fix on the blond woman, as if Zeldyan's
father and brother were not present.

"My lady Ellindyja, and grandmother of my son, I came to wish you well
in your time of grief and loss."  Zeldyan offers a head bow, one which
is but the minimal formality.

"Your courtesy does you well, inasmuch as your grief must be even
greater than mine own to have lost a mate and a lover and your son's
father all at once."

"Great is my grief, as is yours.  Yet I thought of you, and of how
painful it must be for you to remain here, where you have lost so
much."  Zeldyan takes one step beyond those of her father and brother,
so that she stands that much closer to Ellindyja.

"This little is all I require."  Ellindyja's eyes harden.  "And I
trust, regents of Lornth, that you will not take this from me."

"As regents, we must look to the welfare of Lornth, and ensure that the
gains made by Lord Sillek are preserved for his heir and his people."
Zeldyan's voice is smooth, almost soft.  "He sacrificed much to the
cause of Lornth, and I would not see that squandered."

"You are all so devoted to Lornth.  So devoted that you ensured that
the one who showed the greatest concern would not be considered as one
of my son's son's regents."  Ellindyja turns her eyes on the
gray-haired Gethen.

He does not flinch, and his gaze is steady as he answers.  "That
decision was his, My Lady.  You know that.  Know also that we, and the
holders, agree in that decision.  Those same holders also felt that the
gains attained from the acquisition of Rulyarth should not be
jeopardized by any effort to reclaim the wilderness on the Roof of the
World."

"Wilderness now?  I can recall when the area was prime summer
pasturage.  And when they were screaming to reclaim it."

"Wilderness," affirms Gethen.  "My losses there have matched yours, and
the holders scream no longer."

"Your losses are nothing as to what will happen to Lornth if those
angels are not driven back to whence they came."

"There are times, lady," returns Zeldyan, "when the wisest course is to
recognize what is.  For a modest sum from us-"

"One might term it tribute."  "-they have agreed to maintain the new
borders and to ensure the peace in the Westhorns."

"Whatever one calls it, the service is worth the price," adds Fornal.
"They have destroyed every raiding band in their territory, and they
have made the mid-Westhorn road the preferred trading route from
Gallos.  Already the traders are talking of doubling their runs and
using Rulyarth instead of Armat."

"Those women will destroy Lornth."

"Attempting to defeat them has nearly destroyed us already," answers
Gethen.  "Karthanos has disavowed his agreements, and without the
buffer of Westwind, we would be hard-pressed to hold Rulyarth."

"Westwind?  You have recognized this... bastard... tabletop ... a place
that has less than score two in their keep?"

"The number is more like five score now," says Fornal dryly.  "With a
mere two score they destroyed more than two thousand arms men  Would
you care to lead the next force, Lady?"

"Do not be unkind, Fornal," says Zeldyan.  "Lady Ellindyja has suffered
deeply, as have we all.  As have many of her old friends."  Zeldyan
bows deeply, cutting off the discussion, her high-collared tunic severe
against her chest and beneath her silver-corded hair and coronet.  "The
world should see more of you, Lady Ellindyja."

"I have no desire to see more of the world."

"Alas..."  Zeldyan inclines her head slightly.  "For the sake of
Lornth, and for the sake of your son's son, the time has come for you
to be seen in the world."

"You would take what little that remains to me?"

"The world would take it, Lady.  You may leave of your choice or face a
hearing of holders, who may not be so generous."  Scr Gethen bows.

"A hearing of mongrel landowners?"

Fornal takes a half step.  "I lost my brother to your devices.  My
sister has lost her lord, who wished not to face the witches of heaven,
and you sit here and deny your schemes, the ideas you placed?"

Gethen extends a hand.  "We wish you the best, Lady.  My lady Erenthla
bids you join her in Carpa."

"Oh, a gilded prison, now?"

Gethen shrugs.  Zeldyan's eyes harden, as do Fornal's.  All three stand
like crags of the Westhorns-looming over a field to be stripped and
turned.

Ellindyja bends and picks up the embroidery.  "Never let it be said
that I would stand in the way of Lornth.  And it has been a long time
since I have talked to Erenthla."

She nods to the three.  "I will make ready."

EPILOGUE

NYLAN EASED OPEN the south door to Tower Black one-handed, carrying
Dylless in his right arm.  He stepped out into the dampness.  To the
south, all but the base of Freyja was shrouded in the heavy clouds, but
even the lower cliffs that Nylan could see were already sheathed in
snow.

For a moment, the smith and mage rested his cheek against his
daughter's forehead, ignoring the questing fingers that pulled at his
ears.  He let his eyes fall on the small brick fort-now empty-that had
held the laser, and the rows of cairns in the southeast corner of the
Roof of the World, cairns from which blood flowers had sprouted and
half wilted.

Despite the fine mist that dropped from the dark clouds, mixed with the
smallest of ice flakes, Nylan walked out across the causeway.  There he
turned and forced himself to look up to the ridge.

The paved section of the road nearly reached the ridge crest, and the
darker hues of the newer stones showed the progress made since the
battle.  A pile of unused stones stood at the end of the paved section,
waiting to be used to transform more mud and clay into an all-year
road.

Nylan's eyes slowly moved eastward across the hillside.  In the damp
late autumn air, after the rains, the black and white had faded into
gray, and a few sprigs of fireweed had sprouted, along with some
grass.

For a moment, he closed his eyes, then opened them.  The expanse that
had been seared by the laser remained gray, faded gray.

He supposed everything faded in time.  And in time, new life filled in
for the old.  He disengaged Dylless's fingers from his earlobe and held
them, his green eyes meeting his daughter's green eyes.

Behind him, he heard the tower door open and close, but he continued to
stand on the damp stones of the road, ignoring the small, sharp knives
in his eyes, holding Dylless and taking in the sodden gray ashes that
had been flame and fire, man and mount, green and grass.

Then he turned to see who had followed him.

Ayrlyn, red hair as intense as the gray ashes were dull, crossed the
causeway, carrying Weryl.  She smiled.  "He wanted to see where you had
gone.  So I brought him."

Nylan smiled at the healer who had begun to heal him, and they turned
back and looked once more at the gray hillside, framed by rock and
tree, where life again had begun to sprout.

L. E. Modesitt, Jr."  lives in Cedar City, Utah.

TOR BOOKS BY L. E. MODES ITT JR.

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