The Magic of Recluce
by
L. E. Modesitt, Jr


Recluce Book One Copyright 1991 Edited by David G. Hartwell Cover art
by Darrell K. Sweet A Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty Associates,
Inc.  175 Fifth Avenue New York, N.Y. 10010

Exile-or a quest that might take his life .. .

"So where do I go?"

"You're sure?"  asked Uncle Sardit, his mouth full.

"What choice is there?  I either get plunked down on a boat to
somewhere as an exile, knowing nothing, or I try to learn as much as I
can before doing something that at least gives me some chance of making
a decision."

"I think that's the right choice for you," said Aunt Elisabet, "but
it's not quite that simple."

After finishing my bread and cheese in the strained atmosphere of the
house, I went back to my quarters over the shop and began to pack.
Uncle Sardit said he would keep the chair and the few other pieces
until I returned.

He didn't mention the fact that few danger gelders returned.  Neither
did I.

For Bob Muir, Clay Hunt, and Walter Rosenberry.  Too belated an
appreciation, but real for all the delay.

GROWING UP, I always wondered why everything in Wander-naught seemed so
dull.  Not that I minded the perfectly baked bread routinely produced
by my father or by Aunt Elisabet, and I certainly enjoyed the
intricately carved toys and other gifts that Uncle Sardit miraculously
presented on my birthday or on the High Holidays.

Perfection, especially for a youngster learning about it from
cheerfully sober adults, has a price.  Mine was boredom, scarcely novel
for a young man in the middle of his second decade.  But boredom leads
to trouble, even when things are designed to be as perfect as possible.
Of course, the perfection and striving for perfection that marked the
island, though some would term Recluce a smallish continent, had a
reason.  A good reason, but one hardly acceptable to a restless young
man.

"Perfection, Lerris," my father repeated time after time, "is the price
we pay for the good life.  Perfection keeps destruction away and
provides a safe harbor for the good."

"But why?  And how?"  Those were always my questions.

Finally, shortly after I finished the minimum formal schooling, in my
case at fifteen, my mother entered the discussion.

"Lerris, there are two fundamental forces in life, and in nature.
Creation and destruction.  Creation is order.  We attempt to maintain
it-"

"You sound just like Magister Kerwin .. . "Order is all that keeps
chaos at bay .. . because evil and chaos are so closely linked, one
should avoid all but the most necessary acts of destruction .. ."  I
know perfection is important.  I know it.  I know it!  And I know it!
But why does it have to be so flaming boring?"

She shrugged.  "Order is not boring.  You are bored with order."  She
looked at my father.  "Since you are bored with us, and since you are
not quite ready for the possibility of undertaking the danger geld how
would you like to spend a year or so learning about woodworking with
your Uncle Sardit?"

"Donara?"  asked my father, obviously questioning my mother's
volunteering of his sister's husband.

"Sardit and I have talked it over, Gunnar.  He's willing to take on the
challenge."

"Challenge?"  I blurted.  "What challenge?  I can learn anything ..
."

"For about the first three weeks," my father commented.

"It's not as though you will ever be a master woodworker, Lerris,"
added mother.  "But the general skills and discipline will come in
useful when you undertake your danger geld

"Me?  Why would I ever go tramping off through the wild lands?"

"You will."

"Most assuredly."

But the only thing that was assured then was that I would have the
chance to learn how to craft some of the screens, tables, chairs, and
cabinets that Uncle Sardit produced.  Every once in a while, I knew,
someone traveled from Candar or even from one of the trading cities of
Austra to purchase one of his screens or inlaid tables.

Until I had a better idea of what I really wanted to do in life,
woodworking was better than helping my father keep all the stonework
spotless or mixing clays or tending the kiln fire for mother.  Although
the same traders who visited Sardit also visited my mother's shop, I
did not have the touch for pottery.  Besides, pots and vases bored me.
So did the intricacies of glazes and finishes.

So, within days I had left the neat and rambling timbered and stone
house where I had grown up, where I had looked out through the
blue-tinted casement window in my bedroom on the herb garden for the
last time.  Then, I had walked nearly empty-handed the half-day to my
uncle's where I was installed in the apprentice's quarters over the
carpentry.  Uncle Sardit's other apprentice, Koldar, had almost
completed his term and was building his own house, with the help of an
apprentice stonemason, a woman named Corso.  She was bigger than either
of us, but she smiled a lot, and she and Koldar made a good pair.  He
was living in the unfinished house alone, but probably not for long.
That meant that until another apprentice came along I had the privacy
and the responsibility of the shop in evenings.

Still, it had been a small shock to realize that I would not be living
in the guest room at Uncle Sardit's, but in the much smaller and
sparsely-furnished apprentice's space.  The only furniture was the bed,
an old woven rug, and a single hanging lamp.  The plain red-oak walls
scarcely showed even hairline cracks where the boards joined.  The
polished floors, also red oak, displayed the same care and crafting.

"That's what you're here for, Lerris.  When you learn how, you can make
your own tables, benches, chairs, in the evenings.  Have to fell your
own wood and make arrangements with Halprin at the sawmill for the
rough stock to replace what's been seasoned unless you want to try to
cut and rough-cure the logs yourself.  Don't recommend that."

Sardit as a craft-master was a bit different than as an uncle.

I was going to learn about carpentry, and tools, and how to make
screens and cabinets and tables, right?  Not exactly.  To begin with,
it was just like the pottery shop, but worse.  I'd heard about clays
and consistencies and glazes and firing temperatures for years.  I
hadn't realized that woodworking was similar-not until Uncle Sardit
reminded me forcefully.

"How are you going to use tools properly, boy, if you don't know
anything about the woods you're working with?"

With that, he sat me down with his old apprentice notes on woods.  Each
day, either after work or before we opened the shop in the morning, I
had to show him my own hand-copied notes on at least two kinds of
trees, the recommended uses, curing times, and general observations on
the best uses of the wood.  Not only that, but each card went into a
file box, the one thing he had let me make, with some advice from him,
and I was expected to update the cards if I learned something of value
in a day's work on a wood.

"What did you write down on the black oak?  Here, let me see."  He
scratched his head.  "You spent all day helping me smooth that piece,
and the wood told you nothing?"

Once in a while, I saw Koldar grinning sympathetically from whatever
project he was handling.  But we didn't talk much because Uncle Sardit
kept me busy, and because Koldar mostly worked alone, just checking
with Uncle Sardit from time to time.

After a while, Uncle Sardit even nodded once or twice when reviewing my
cards.  But the frowns and questions were always more frequent.  And as
soon as I thought I understood something well enough to avoid his
questions, he would task me with learning some other obscure discipline
of woodworking.  If it weren't the trees, it was their bark.  If it
weren't their bark, it was the recommended cutting times and sawmill
techniques.  If it weren't one type of wood, it was what types you
could match in inlays, what differences in grain widths meant.  Some of
it made sense, but a lot seemed designed to make woodworking as
complicated as possible.

"Complicated?  Of course it's complicated.  Perfection is always
complicated.  Do you want your work to last?  Or do you want it to fall
apart at the first touch of chaos?"

"But we don't even have any white magicians in Recluce."

"We don't?  Are you sure about that?"

There wasn't much I could say to that.  Practicing magicians, at least
the white ones who used chaos, were strongly discouraged by the
masters.  And what the masters discouraged generally stayed
discouraged, although there seemed to be only a few masters for all the
towns in Recluce.

I guess my old teacher, Magister Kerwin, actually was a master,
although we didn't usually think of magisters as masters.  They were
both part of the same order.  Magisters were those who actually
taught.

So ... I kept studying woods, trees, and tools, and after nearly a year
began to make a few simple items.

"Breadboards?"

"Someone has to make them.  And they should be made right.  You can do
it well enough to keep chaos at bay, and you can select from any of my
designs or try one of your own.  If you do your own, let's go over it
together before you begin cutting."

I did one of my own-simple, but with an octagonal shape.

"Simple, but nice, Lerris.  You may actually have a future as a wood
crafter."

From breadboards, I went to other simple items-outdoor benches for a
cafe, a set of plain bookcases for the school.  Nothing with carving,
although I had begun to do carving for my own furniture, and Uncle
Sardit had even admitted that the wooden armchair I had built for my
quarters would not have been out of place in most homes.

"Most homes.  Not quite clean enough, and a few rough spots with the
spoke-joining angles, but, on the whole, a credible effort."

That was about the most I ever got in praise from Uncle Sardit.

But I was still bored, even as I continued to learn.

II

"LERRIS!"  THE TONE in Uncle Sardit's voice told me enough.  Whatever I
had done-I did not wish to know.

I finished washing the sawdust from my face.  As usual, I got water all
over the stone, but the sun had already warmed the slate facing, and
the water would dry soon enough, even if my aunt would be down with a
frayed towel to polish the stone within moments of my return to the
shop.

"Lerris!"

Aunt Elisabet always kept the wash stones polished, the kettles
sparkling, and the gray stone floors spotless.  Why it should have
surprised me I do not know, since my father and, indeed, every other
holder in my home town of Wandernaught, exhibited the same
fastidiousness.  My father and his sister were both the householders,
while Mother and Uncle Sardit were the artisans.  That was common
enough, or so I thought.

"Lerris!  Young .. . man, .. . get .. . yourself .. back .. . here .. .
now!  "

I definitely did not want to return to the carpentry, but there was no
escape.  "Coming, Uncle Sardit."

He stood at the doorway, a frown on his face.  The frown was common,
but the yelling had not been.  My guts twisted.  What could I have
done?  .

"Come here."

He thrust a wide-fingered hand at the inlaid tabletop on the
workbench.

"Look at that.  Closely."  His voice was so low it rumbled.  I looked,
but obviously did not see what he wanted me to see.

"Do you see that?"

I shook my head.  "See what?"

"Look at the clamps."

Bending over, I followed his finger.  The clamps were as I had placed
them earlier, the smooth side, as he had taught me, matching the grain
of the dark lorken wood.

"With the grain of the wood .. ."

"Lerris .. . can't you see?  This end is biting into the wood.  And
here .. . the pressure has moved the border out of position .. ."

Perhaps the tiniest fraction of a span, if at all, but all I had to do
to correct that would be to sand the other end a bit more, and no one,
except Uncle Sardit, and perhaps the furniture buyer for the Emperor of
Hamor, would have ever noticed the discrepancy.

"First, you don't force wood, Lerris.  You know that.  You just aren't
paying attention any more.  Woodworking means working with the wood,
not forcing it, not working against it."

I stood there.  What could I say?

Uncle Sardit sighed.

"Let's go into the house, Lerris.  We have some talking to do."

I liked the sound of that even less, but I followed his example and
unstrapped my leather apron and racked my tools.

We walked out the door and across the smooth pavement of the courtyard
and into the room Aunt Elisabet called the parlor.  I never knew why
she called it the parlor.  I'd asked once, but she had just smiled and
said it had been a name she had picked up along the way.

A tray sat on the table.  On it were two icy glasses, some slabs of
fresh-baked bread, cheese, and several sliced apples.  The bread was
still steaming, and the aroma filled the small room.

Uncle Sardit eased himself into the chair nearest the kitchen.  I took
the other one.  Something about the tray being ready bothered me.  It
bothered me a whole lot.

The soft sound of steps caused me to look up from the tabletop.  Uncle
Sardit put down his glass-iced fruit punch- and nodded at Aunt
Elisabet.  She, like father, was fair-skinned, sandy-haired, slender,
and tall.  Uncle Sardit was smaller and wiry, with salt-and-pepper hair
and a short-cropped beard.  Both of them looked guilty.

"You're right, Lerris.  We do feel guilty, perhaps because you're
Gunnar's son."  That was Aunt Elisabet.

"But that doesn't change anything," added Uncle Sardit.  "You still
have to face the same decisions whether you're our nephew or not."

I took a gulp of the fruit punch to avoid answering, though I knew Aunt
Elisabet would know that.  She always knew.  So did my father.

"Have something to eat.  I'll do some of the talking.  Elisabet will
fill in anything I miss."  He took a wedge of cheese and a slab of
bread and chewed several bits slowly, swallowed, and finished up with
another gulp of fruit punch.

"Magister Kerwin should have taught you, as he taught me, that a master
or journeyman who instructs an apprentice is also responsible for
determining the apprentice's fitness for practicing the craft."

I took some bread and cheese.  Obviously, the master was responsible
for the apprentice.

"What he did not tell you, or me, is that the craft-master must also
determine whether the apprentice will ever be ready for practicing a
craft, or whether the apprentice should be considered for danger geld
or exile."

"Exile .. ."

"You see, Lerris, there is no place in Recluce for unfocused
dissatisfaction," added Aunt Elisabet.  "Boredom, inability to
concentrate, unwillingness to apply yourself to the fullest of your
ability-these can all allow chaos a foothold in Recluce."

"So the real question facing you, Lerris, is whether you want to take
the danger geld training, or whether you would rather just leave
Recluce.  Forever."

"Just because I'm bored?  Just because I put a little too much pressure
on a wood clamp?  For that I have to choose between exile and danger
geld

"No.  Because your boredom reflects a deeper lack of commitment. Sloppy
work on the part of someone who is doing his best is not a danger.  Nor
is sloppy work when the honest intent is perfection, provided, of
course, that no one has to rely on the sloppy work for anything that
could threaten their life if it failed."  Aunt Elisabet looked somehow
taller, and there was a fire behind her eyes.

I looked away.

"Are you saying that you have honestly been happy trying to achieve
perfection in woodwork?"  asked Uncle Sardit.

"No."  I couldn't very well lie.  Aunt Elisabet would catch it.

"Do you think that it would become easier if you continued to work with
me?"

"No."

I took another slice of bread and a second wedge of cheese.  I didn't
remember eating the first, but I must have.  I sipped the fruit punch
only enough to moisten my mouth, since I was cold enough inside
already.

"Now what?"  I asked before taking another bite.

"If you decide to take the danger geld training, the masters will work
with you for as long as necessary, in their judgment, to prepare you
for your danger geld  After training, you cannot return until you have
completed the charge laid upon you.

"If you choose exile, you will leave.  You cannot return except with
the permission of the masters.  While not unheard-of, such permission
is rarely given."

"Just because I'm bored?  Just because I'm young and haven't settled
down?  Just because my woodwork isn't perfect?"

"No.  It has nothing to do with youth."  Aunt Elisabet sighed.  "Last
year, the masters exiled five crafters twice your age, and close to a
dozen people in their third and fourth decade undertook the danger
geld

"You're serious, aren't you?"

"Yes."

I could tell she was.  Uncle Sardit, for all his statements about doing
the talking, hadn't said a word in explanation.  I was getting a very
strange feeling about Aunt Elisabet, that she was a great deal more
than a holder.

"So where do I go?"

"You're sure?"  asked Uncle Sardit, his mouth full.

"What choice is there?  I either get plunked down on a boat to
somewhere as an exile, knowing nothing, or I try to learn as much as I
can before doing something that at least gives me some chance of making
a decision."

"I think that's the right choice for you," said Aunt Elisabet, "but
it's not quite that simple."

After finishing my bread and cheese in the strained atmosphere of the
house, I went back to my quarters over the shop and began to pack.
Uncle Sardit said he would keep the chair and the few other pieces
until I returned.

He didn't mention the fact that few danger gelders returned.  Neither
did I.

III

LIKE A LOT of things in Recluce, my transition from apprentice to
student danger gelder just happened.  Or that's the way it seemed.

For the next few days after my rather ponderous and serious
conversation with Aunt Elisabet and Uncle Sardit, I continued to help
out around the carpentry shop.  Uncle Sardit now asked me to
rough-shape cornices, or rough-cut panels, rather than telling me to.
And Koldar just shook his head, as if I were truly crazy.

He shook it so convincingly that I began to wonder myself.

Then I'd hear Uncle Sardit muttering about the inexact fit of two
mitered corners, or the failure of two grains to match perfectly.  Or
I'd watch him redo a small decoration that no one would see on the
underside of a table because of a minute imperfection.

Those brought back the real reason why I couldn't stay as his
apprentice-the boring requirement for absolute perfection.  I had
better things to do with my life than worry about whether the grain
patterns on two sides of a table or panel matched perfectly.  Or
whether a corner miter was a precise forty-five degrees.

Perhaps it suited Koldar, and perhaps it kept the incursions of chaos
at bay, but it was boring.

Woodworking might have been better than pottery, but when you came
right down to it, both were pretty dull.

So I didn't mind at all when, several days later, Aunt Elisabet
announced that I had better get my things together.

"For what?"

"Your training as a danger gelder of course.  Do you think that the
masters just hand you a staff, a map, and some provisions, and hustle
you aboard a ship to nowhere?"

That thought had crossed my mind, but I quickly dismissed it in the
face of my aunt's insistence.

"What about saying good-bye to my family?"

"Of course, of course.  We're not exactly barbarians, Lerris.  They've
been expecting you for some time, but you're not an apprentice any
longer.  So what you do is strictly up to you.  The masters at Nylan
are expecting you, and several others, the day after tomorrow."

"That's a good distance .. ."  I hinted, hoping that Aunt Elisabet
would indicate that the masters would provide a carriage, or a wagon.
While I had a few silver pence, I certainly had no desire to spend them
on riding the High Road.  Nylan was a full day's walk, and then some.

"That it is, Lerris.  But did you expect the masters to come to you?"

I hadn't thought about that one way or another.

Aunt Elisabet cocked her head, smiling, as if to indicate that the
sunny morning was passing quickly.  It was, and, if I had to be in
Nylan by the following evening .. .

Another thought crossed my mind.  "When on the day after tomorrow?"

"No later than noon, although I suppose no one would mind if you were a
trifle later than that."  Her smile was kindly, as it usually was, and
the sun behind her still-sandy hair gave her the look of ... well, I
wasn't sure, but Aunt Elisabet seemed to be more than I had thought.
Why, I couldn't say, just as I couldn't explain why woodworking seemed
so incredibly boring.

I swallowed.  "I'd better get going.  That's an early rising tomorrow,
and time to make on the road."

She nodded.  "I have some flake rolls for your parents, if you're going
that way.  And you'll find a set of boots, with the right trousers and
cloak, laid out on your bed."

I swallowed again.  I hadn't thought about the boots, although my heavy
apprentice clothes would have been adequate for most hard travel.

"Thank you .. ."  I looked down.  "Need to say good-bye to Uncle
Sardit."

"He's in the shop."

After going back to my room, I found my clothes had been wrapped in one
bundle, and that someone had laid out not only boots and clothes, but a
walking staff of the heaviest, smoothest, and blackest lorken.  The
staff was almost unadorned, not at all flashy, but it was obviously
Uncle Sardit's work, probably months in preparation as he had cut,
seasoned, and shaped the wood, and soaked it in iron bath  The ends
were bound in black steel, with the bands recessed so precisely they
were scarcely visible against the darkness of the wood.

I held it and it seemed to fit my hand.  It was exactly my own
height.

Finally I shrugged, and looked around for the old canvas bag in which I
had brought my old clothes.  Not that there were many left after nearly
two years of growing and discovering muscles in the process of
woodworking.  Don't let anyone tell you that precision woodwork isn't
as hard as heavy carpentry.  It isn't.  It's harder, and since you
can't make mistakes, not for someone like Uncle Sardit, it requires
more thinking.

The last thing laid out was a pack.  Not flashy, not even tooled
leather, but made out of the tightest-woven and heaviest cloth I'd ever
seen.  Dull brown, but dipped in something that had to be waterproof. I
wondered if Aunt Elisabet and Uncle Sardit felt guilty for deciding
that I didn't fit in.  Certainly the staff and the pack alone were
magnificent gifts, and the clothes, although a dark brown, were of
equal quality and durability.

That wasn't all.  Inside the pack was a small purse.  Attached was a
note.

"Here are your apprentice wages.  Try not to spend them until you leave
Recluce."  I counted twenty copper pennies, twenty silver pence, and
ten gold pence.  Again, a near-incredible amount.  But I wasn't about
to turn it down, not when I couldn't tell what might lie ahead.

I picked up the staff again, running my fingers over the grain,
examining it once more, trying to see how the ends were mated so
closely to the wood that the caps were scarcely obvious.

At least they, or my parents, whoever had supplied me, wanted to send
me off as well-prepared as they could.  I remembered from Magister
Kerwin's dry lectures that danger gelders were only allowed whatever
coins they could carry comfortably, two sets of clothes, boots, a
staff, a pack, and a few days' provisions.

If you decided to return, of course, after your year or more away, and
the masters approved, you could bring back an entire ship, provided it
wasn't stolen or unfairly acquired.  But then, the masters weren't too
likely to let you return if you'd turned to thievery.

I shook my head, put down the staff, and examined the pack, realizing
my time was short.  Inside were another set of clothes and a pair of
light shoes, almost court slippers.

Stripping to the waist, I headed down to the wash trough to clean up
before putting on the new clothes.  Uncle Sardit was humming as he
buffed the desk he was finishing, but did not look up.  Koldar was down
at the sawmill, trying to find enough matched red oak to repair the
fire-damaged tables at Polank's Inn.

I'd overheard my aunt and uncle discussing the fire, acting as if it
had been totally expected, ever since young Nir Polank had taken over
from his ailing father.

"Some have to learn the hard way."

"Some don't .. ."  my aunt had answered, but she hadn't said anything
more once I had entered the house for dinner.

On the wash stones was a fresh towel, which, after the chill of the
water, I gratefully used.  At least I hadn't needed to take a shower.
Standing under even partly-warmed water in the outside stone stall
wasn't exactly warm.  Cleaning that stall was even less enjoyable, but
Aunt Elisabet, like my father, insisted on absolute cleanliness.  We
didn't eat unless we were washed up, and more than once as a child I'd
gone without dinner for refusing to wash.

They both took a shower every day, even in winter.  So did my mother
and Uncle Sardit, although my uncle occasionally skipped the shower on
the days that Aunt Elisabet was out visiting friends.

I folded the towel, and put it back on the rack.

"Getting ready to go?"

Uncle Sardit stood in the shop door, finishing cloth in his left
hand.

"Yes, sir."  I swallowed.  "Appreciate everything .. . sorry I just
don't seem to have the concentration to be a master woodworker .. ."

"Lerris .. . you stayed longer than most .. . and you could be a
journeyman for some.  But it wouldn't be right .. . would it?"

Since he was standing three steps above me, I looked up.  He didn't
seem happy about my leaving.

"No .. . probably get more bored with each day.  And I don't know
why."

"Because you're like your dad .. . or your aunt.  In the blood .. ."

"But .. . they seem so happy here .. ."

"Now .. ."

I couldn't seem to find anything to say.

"Be on your way, boy.  Just remember, you can always come back, once
you discover who you are."  He turned back into the shop and returned
to buffing the already shining wood of the desk, without humming.

All of a sudden, there seemed to be so many things unsaid, so many
things that had been hidden.  But no one was saying anything.

It seemed so unfair.  As if I couldn't possibly understand anything
until I'd gone off and risked my life in the Dark Marches of Candar or
the Empire of Hamor.  Then everything would be fine .. . just fine.

And my parents-they never came by to see me.  Only if I ; went to see
them, or on High Holidays, or if they came to visit my aunt and
uncle.

Up in the apprentice quarters, no longer mine really, I pulled on the
clothes, ignoring their comfort and fit, and the boots.  Then I picked
up the cloak and folded it into the pack, and strapped the old clothes
to the outside.  Those I could leave at home, if it were truly home.
Besides the new clothes and the pack, the staff was the only thing that
felt right.

As I looked around the quarters, I wondered about my armchair .. . and
my tools.  What about my tools?  Uncle Sardit had said something about
taking care of them, but hadn't said how.

I found Uncle Sardit in the shop.  He was looking at a chest, one I
hadn't seen before.

"I thought I'd store your tools in this, Lerris, until .. . whatever ..
."

"That would be fine, Uncle Sardit .. . and could you find some place
for the armchair?"

"I was going to keep it here, but I could take it back to your
parents."

For some reason, I'd never considered the chair as belonging where I'd
grown up.

"Whatever you think best."  One way or another, I wouldn't be needing
it for a while.

"We'll take good care of it ... just take care of yourself so you can
come back for it."

We stood there for a moment, with everything and nothing to say.

Finally, I coughed.  "I'm not a woodworker, Uncle, but I learned a
lot."

"Hope so, boy.  Hope it helps you."

I left him standing there, turning to rack my tools in the chest he had
made for them.

Aunt Elisabet was waiting at the kitchen doorway with a wrapped
package.  Two of them.

"The bigger one has the flake rolls.  The other one has some travel
food for you."

I took off the pack and put the travel food inside, but just strapped
the rolls to the top.  They weren't heavy, and while it was cloudy, the
clouds were the high hazy kind that kept the temperature down but
almost never led to rain.  That early in the summer the farmers would
have liked more moisture, but I was just as glad I wouldn't have to
trudge to Nylan through a downpour.  I had a feeling I'd be traveling
in enough wet weather.

"And here are some for you."

On a plate she had produced from nowhere were two enormous rolls, one
filled with chicken and the other with berries that dripped from one
end.

"If you want to get home by dinner, you'll need to start now."

"Dinner?"

"I'm sure your father will have something special."

I did not answer, nor ask how she would know that my father would have
a special dinner, because, first, she would know, and, second, I was
wolfing down the chicken-filled flake roll.  In all the hurry to get
ready for Nylan, I hadn't realized how hungry I was.  When you chose
danger geld you obeyed the rules of the masters, including their
schedule.

After washing down the last of the first roll with a tumbler of
ice-cold water, I took the second.

"You have enough time not to eat them whole, Lerris."

I slowed down and finished the dessert roll in four distinct bites.
Then I took another deep swallow from the tumbler.

"Do you have your staff?  Your uncle wanted you to have the best ..
."

I lifted the staff.  "Seems to belong to me already."

My aunt only smiled.  "You should find it helpful, especially if you
listen to the masters and follow your feelings .. . your true
feelings."

"Well .. . time for me to go .. ."

"Take care, Lerris."

She didn't give me any special advice, and since I wasn't exactly in
the mood for it, that was probably for the best.

As I walked down the lane with its precisely placed and leveled gray
paving-stones, I felt both my aunt and uncle were watching every step,
but when I turned around to look I could see nothing, no one in the
windows or at the doors.  I didn't look around the rest of Mattra, not
at the inn where Koldar was laying out the timbers from the sawmill,
not at the market square where I had sold my breadboards-one had
actually fetched four copper pennies.

And the road-the perfect stone-paved highway-was still as hard on my
booted feet as it had been on my sandaled feet when I had first walked
to Mattra.

I made it home, if Wandernaught could still be called home, well before
dinner.  But Aunt Elisabet had been right.  I could smell the roast
duck even before my feet touched the stone lane that was nearly
identical to the lane that led from the street to Uncle Sardit's.
Mattra and Wandernaught were not all that different.  Some of the
crafts were different, and Wandernaught had two inns and the Institute
where my father occasionally discussed his philosophies with other
holders or- very occasionally-masters from elsewhere in Recluce.  But
nothing very interesting ever happened in Wandernaught.  At least, not
that I remembered.

My parents were seated on the wide and open porch on the east side of
the house, always cool in the summer afternoons.  The stones of the
steps were as gently rounded as I recalled, without either the crisp
edges of new-cut granite nor the depressions of ancient buildings like
the temple.

"Thought you'd be here about now, Lerris."  My father's voice carried,
although it had no great or booming tone.

"It's good to see you."  My mother smiled, and this time she meant
it.

"Good to be here, if only for a night."  I was surprised to find I
meant what I was saying.

"Let me take the pack and the staff-Sardit's work, it looks like-and
have a seat.  You still like the red berry

I nodded as I slipped out of the pack straps.  My father laid the pack
carefully next to the low table.

"Oh, I forgot.  The top package is for you-Aunt Elisabet's flake rolls,
I think."

They both laughed.

"Good thing we don't live closer, not the way she bakes .. ."

My mother just shook her head, still smiling.

For some reason, they both looked older.  My father's hair was no
thinner, and it still looked sandy-blond, but I could see the lines
running from the corners of his eyes.  His face was still smooth, with
a slight cut on his chin from shaving.  Unlike most of the men in
Recluce, he had neither beard nor mustache.  I could sympathize.
Although I could have worn a beard, I followed his example, not
blindly, but because whenever I worked hard I sweated buckets, and I
found even a short and scraggly beard more of a bother than
shaving-cuts and all.

He was wearing a short-sleeved open-necked shirt, and the muscles in
his arms looked as strong as ever.  The woodpile behind the house was
probably three times the size it needed to be.  Dad always claimed that
handling an axe was not only necessary, but good exercise.

My mother's angular face seemed even more angular, and her hair was too
short.  But she had always worn it too short, and I doubted that she
would ever change that.  Short was convenient and took less time.  She
also wore a short-sleeved faded blue blouse and winter-blue trousers,
both more feminine, but essentially mirroring what my father wore-not
because she cared, but because she didn't.  Clothes were a convenience.
That's why Dad did all the tailoring-except for holiday clothes-for
Mother and me.

He was funny about that.  He refused to let anyone see him work.  He'd
take measurements, fit partially-sewn garments, and adjust until they
fit perfectly, but not with anyone around When I was little, I thought
he must have had someone com in.  But as time went by, I realized that
he understood clothes understood too much not to have done the work.
Besides it's pretty difficult not to believe, when your father
disappears into his workrooms with cut leathers and fabrics and returns
with the products-especially when there's only one door and when you're
an exceedingly curious boy trying to find a nonexistent secret passage.
There wasn't one, of course.

While I was remembering, my mother had poured a large tumbler full of
red berry and Dad, after setting the pack down and recovering the flake
rolls, had disappeared.  To the kitchen, presumably.

"It's too bad you have to be in Nylan tomorrow," offered my mother, as
I eased into one of the strap chairs across from her.  My feet hurt, as
I knew they would with the new boots, but I'd wanted feet and boots
worked together as soon as possible.

"I didn't realize it would happen so quickly."

"Sometimes it does.  Other times it takes weeks," added my father.  As
usual, I had not heard him return.  He was always so silent when he
moved, like a shadow.

"How many .. . will there be?"

"It depends.  There could be as few as four danger geld candidates.
Never more than a dozen.  And you'll lose two before the masters are
through."

"Lose?"  I didn't like the sound of that.  He shrugged.  "Some people
decide they'd rather accept exile than listen to the masters.  Others
decide they'd like to go home."

"Can they?"

"If they can convince the masters ... it happens every so often."

Not very often, I could tell from his tone.  "If they can't?"

"They can continue with their training or go into exile."

I got the feeling that you didn't just go wandering out of Recluce on
any old quest without the approval of the masters.

Before I asked another question, I took several healthy swigs from the
tumbler, then ate some of the plain flake rolls Dad had cut into
bite-sized pieces.  Mother had one or two, which was more than she
usually had before dinner.

"What are the masters?"  I finally asked, not that I hadn't asked the
question several dozen times before of several dozen people.  Usually
the answer amounted to: "The masters are the masters, entrusted with
the guardianship of the Isle of Recluce and the Domain of Order."

This time, though, my father looked at my mother.  She looked back at
him.  Then they both looked at me.

"The answer isn't likely to mean what it should .. ."

"In other words, you aren't going to tell me?"

"No.  I will tell you, as far as I am able.  But I'm not sure that you
will either like or appreciate the answer."  He pulled at his chin, as
he did when he was trying to find the best words to express something
unpleasant.

"Try anyway."

He ignored my comment, and, for a moment, his eyes almost misted over,
as if he were looking a world away.

I took the opportunity to drain the rest of the red berry

My mother refilled my tumbler, and Dad still hadn't said a word.

Finally, he cleared his throat.  "..  . Uuuhhmmm ... you recall .. .
Magister Kerwin .. . when he told you that the masters stood between
Recluce and chaos because they were the defenders of order?"

I found my fingers tapping on the edge of my refilled tumbler.

"Bear with me .. . this is difficult .. ."

How difficult could it be?  Everybody had a role in life, including the
masters.  Either they controlled Recluce or they didn't.

"Perhaps I should go back to the beginning.  It might be simpler ..
."

I managed to keep from grinding my teeth, only because I somehow could
tell that he was not trying to put me off.  But I still couldn't see
why an explanation of who controlled what had to be so difficult.  "...
fundamental conflict between order and chaos, or simplistically
speaking, between good and evil.  Though that's not exactly correct,
because chaos and order do not by themselves have a moral component.
More important, while certain components of order may be used for evil,
and certain components of chaos for good, almost never can anyone
devoted to chaos remain committed to good.  Someone committed to good
finds anything other than the most minor uses of chaos repulsive.  That
distinction is important, because someone committed to order itself,
rather than good, can be corrupted, while seeming orderly in all he or
she does .. .

Curiosity was fighting boredom in my case, and rapidly losing.

"No ... I can see you're bored already, Lerris .. . that explanation is
too long.  Try and remember the beginning, though."

My mother was slowly shaking her head.  Finally, she interrupted.
"Think of it this way, Lerris.  It takes skill to be a potter.  A
potter may use his skill for producing containers.  Those containers
may be used for good or evil purposes.  Most are used for purposes
without much real good or evil.  And most people find a truly beautiful
and orderly vase hard to use for evil things.  In the same way, it is
much easier to use a chaotic or disorderly creation for evil."

That made sense, so far.  "What does that have to do with the
masters?"

"That's the hard part," said my father slowly.  "And we may have to
continue the discussion over dinner, because the duck is almost
ready.

"The masters are responsible for ensuring that things in Recluce are
what they seem to be, for rooting out self-deception, and for
maintaining our physical defenses against the Outer Kingdoms."

"Physical defenses?  Magister Kerwin said that Recluce had no armies
and no fleets, only the Brotherhood of the Masters."

"As you will learn, Lerris, words can conceal as much as they reveal."
He stood.  "Wash up, and we'll try and answer the rest of this question
over dinner.  A good dinner shouldn't be kept waiting."

Since I didn't know when I'd get that good a duck feast again, I went
down to the wash stones to rinse the dust from my face and the grime
from my hands, and tried to figure out a better set of questions.

The duck smelted as good as I remembered, and I put the questions aside
until I had finished my first helping, which included another flake
roll warmed in the oven, sliced and spiced sour pears and some tart
greens.  The duck was tangy, moist, and not at all oily.  Dad was one
of the few cooks I knew who could manage the moistness without an oily
taste-though I'd tasted few enough foods from other cooks.

I decided to slow my headlong pursuit of various foods and took a sip
of water, cold from the deep well.

"About the masters .. . was Magister Kerwin misleading us?  Do the
masters act like the armies of the Outer Kingdoms?  Isn't that a form
of chaos?"

My father chuckled.  "Yes, and no, to the first.  No to the second,
and, if true, yes to the third, although it probably wasn't
intentional, which would mitigate the impact."

"But-"

"Kerwin let you think what you wished, which is a form of deception,
particularly to an agile mind such as yours."  He held up his left hand
and took a brief sip of his wine.

I'd never liked the wine and still preferred cold water.

Mother continued to pick at her meal.

"Some of the masters deal extensively with the Outer Kingdoms, and
counter chaos on a daily basis.  We seldom see them, but they're
properly called the Brotherhood.  They wear scarlet and black.  Then
there are the masters, who wear black when undertaking their official
duties, and whatever they please at other times.  There are others as
well, whom you will come to recognize in the days ahead.

"While each group has specific duties, all their duties revolve about
maximizing reasonable order in Recluce.  You remember the
baker-Oldham?"

I nodded wearily.

"Who took him away?"

"The masters."

"What did they do with him?"

"Dumped him somewhere in the Outer Marches, I suppose.  Or killed
him."

"Do you know what he did?"

I drained the rest of the water from the tumbler before answering.
"What difference does it make?  The masters are powerful, especially
the hidden ones."

"Hidden ones?"  asked my mother.

"The ones no one knows about.  How else would they know about people
like the baker?"

"I take it you do not believe in magic, then, Lerris?"  asked my
father.

"How can I believe or disbelieve?  The practice of chaos-magic is
prohibited, and I've never seen anything that would be called good
magic that could not be explained by either chance or hard work."

My mother smiled, a rather strange smile, almost lopsided.

"What point were you trying to make?  What about the baker?  Why was
that important?  Or was it just to show that the masters control
Recluce?"  By now I was as impatient as I had been when I had left for
my apprenticeship.

"I'm not sure, Lerris, except to show that the masters affect
everything in Recluce.  By the way, the baker is still living, and
doing fairly well in Hamor.  That might indicate the masters are
neither cruel nor vindictive, but only protective of us."

"Then why are they so secretive?"  I was beginning to regret even
getting into the argument.  My parents hadn't changed at all, still
talking around things, hinting, but never saying anything outright.

My father sighed.  "I'm not sure I can answer that."

He hadn't been able to answer that question before I had left,
either.

"Dear," added my mother, "right now we can't tell you everything, and
you want explanations that require experience you don't have."

"That means you aren't going to explain anything."

"Hold it.  You asked about defenses.  I can answer that."  My father
practically glared at me.

I ignored him and speared another slice of duck.

"The Brotherhood does act as our army, and as a navy, too.  As part of
the danger geld choice, you could choose to serve as a border guard
with the Brotherhood, assuming the masters agreed.  The masters
themselves maintain a sort of watch against chaos-magic, even in its
subtler forms, such as shown in the case of the baker.

"The coasters belong to the Brotherhood, although they fish as well as
watch the offshore waters, and each ship that flies the flag of Recluce
carries a member of the Brotherhood as well as a junior master."

"How many are there?"

"Enough," answered my father.  "Enough."

I could tell that was all I was going to get, just from his tone, and,
on my last night, it seemed stupid to refight a battle that would only
end up frustrating us all.  So I had some more duck, and slathered
another slab of the dark bread with the cherry conserve.

"Any new neighbors?"

"There's a young couple building a place on the empty lane, the one
that overlooks Lerwin's orchards."  My mother was more than glad to
lapse into small talk.

My father shrugged and reached for the cherry conserve.

Maybe we were too.  dissimilar.  Or too much alike.

I had a third helping of the duck, as good as my first slices.  I also
enjoyed the lime tarts.

And, for the most part, that was dinner before I went off to Nylan.

IV

SUNRISE FOUND ME awake and washing up, not that early rising was ever a
problem.

As I splashed the cold water over my face to wash away the soap and
scattered whiskers not already carried away by the razor, I could sense
someone watching-obviously my father.  My mother generally rose later
than he did, although neither one would have been considered a night
dweller.

I said nothing as I toweled myself dry, and made sure the razor was
also dry and packed into my wash bag.  Neither did he.

Without looking, I could tell he was smiling, and I refused to
acknowledge his presence.

"I hope you have a good journey, Lerris.  So does your mother."  His
voice was calm, as usual, and that irritated me even more.  Here he
was, seeing me off to danger geld and all the dangers it entailed, as
if I were headed back to Uncle Sardit's on a trivial errand.

"So do I. But I'd settle for survival."

"Don't ever settle for just survival, son.  Survival isn't life .. .
but I didn't come down to preach.  Do you want something to eat before
you leave?"

"Rather not leave on an empty stomach," I admitted, following him to
the kitchen where he had laid out an assortment of fruits, two heavy
rolls, and some cheese and sausage.  The square, perfectly-fitted
red-oak table was bare except for the woven straw mats and the food.

He nodded toward the tiled counter under the open window, where a brown
cloth bag rested.  "The bag has some additional provisions for eating
along the way."

The cloth sack was already bound, but looked as though it contained at
least as much as had been set on the table.

He set down a full mug of freshly-drawn water, knowing I preferred that
to tea or wine, especially in the morning.

I ate, and he sat on one of the kitchen stools, saying nothing, for
which I was grateful.  What was there to say?  I was required to
undertake the danger geld not him, on pain of exile.

Eating what I could didn't take that long.

"Thank you."  I gathered the sack under my arm and headed down to pick
up my pack and staff.

To make Nylan by midday meant moving out without wasting more time. And
what else could I say?

As I stood there on the stones, ready to walk away from my parents, and
my mother who hadn't even gotten up to say good-bye, I wondered if this
would be a final farewell, or what.

"She's awake, Lerris.  But she will not let you see her cry."

Flame!  I hadn't asked that.  Why not?

"Because she is your mother.  You ask us to accept you as you are.
Cannot she be what she is?"

There it was again-that gulf that we never seemed to cross.

"Whether we do cross it, Lerris .. . that depends on you.  We both wish
you well, son.  And we hope .. ."

I ignored the break in his voice as I turned away.  Why in hell was he
upset?  Why didn't he understand?

I didn't look back, nor did I wave.  My first steps were fast as I
marched down the lane, but my legs let me know quickly that I was
pushing, and I eased up before my strides took me clear of
Wandernaught.  I ignored the low hill and the black-columned temple
upon it.  What had listening to all the talks on order done for me?

For some reason, the staff felt even heavier in my hands than the pack
did upon my back.  As my thoughts seethed, something occurred to me. My
father had responded to my feelings, but had I actually spoken them? Or
did he know me that well?

I forced a shrug.  Where I was going that didn't exactly matter.  Not
at all.

The morning was warm, warmer than I would have liked, and I opened my
shirt almost to my belt, but the pack weight on my back left my shirt
damp.  The cloak I would need in the months and years ahead, assuming I
lasted that long, was folded and rolled inside.

As early as I had left, there was no one else on the High Road,
although in the orchards to the south of Wandernaught the growers were
already among their trees, going about their business.

The High Road is just that-a solid, stone road, wide enough for four
wagons abreast.  It provides the central thoroughfare for Recluce, the
one to which all major local roads can link, and all communities are
responsible for its upkeep.  When I was with Uncle Sardit, I spent a
few days helping to replace and reposition several of the granite
blocks, but the stones are so solid and massive that they don't need to
be replaced often.  The biggest problem is keeping the drains clear so
that the rains don't erode the roadway on which the capstones are
placed.  Even that would be hard, because the entire roadbed is solidly
constructed and faced with heavy riprap.

The next town toward Nylan from Wandernaught is Enstronn, more of a
crossroads than a town, where the East-West Highway, almost as grand as
the High Road itself, crosses the High Road.

Outside Enstronn, on the west side, I caught up with a low wagon
carrying a load of early melons.  The driver was walking beside her
horse, singing softly.  "..  . as if I cared, as if I dared,

And the stars are ice, while the High

Road's run, and the winter reigns for the summer's sun."

The song was unfamiliar, and I dragged my feet a bit as I neared her.
For some reason, I wished I could put away the staff, but it was too
long to carry easily while bound to my pack.

Her voice was pleasant enough, although from behind she seemed older
than me.  But she heard me and stopped singing, looking back at me from
under a broad-brimmed hat trimmed with a wide band of blue-and-white
fabric.

I slowed my pace to match her steps.

Dark hair, narrow face, and she looked about the age of Corso,
mid-twenties.

"Up early.  Must be important."  Her smile was nice, too.

"Dangergeld," I admitted.

"You're a bit young for that."

"Not totally my idea."  I swallowed as I answered.  What right did she
have to judge me?

Her eyes widened as they focused on the staff I still held loosely in
my left hand.  "And the staff, that is yours?"

"Yes."  I wondered why it mattered at all whether a black lorken staff
was mine.  A staff was a staff.  Right now it was a bother, though I
knew I would need it once I actually left Recluce.

Her smile turned sad, somehow.  "You'd best be going, then .. . and ...
if I could ask a favor .. . ?"

That stopped me.  Ask me, not much more than a youngster, for a
favor?

"If it's something I can do .. ."

"So cautious .. . yes .. . it's not much .. . I'm sure you can.  Should
you ever run across a red-haired man from Enstronn-he went by the name
of Leith-just tell him that Shrezsan wishes him well."

"Shrezsan .. . ?"

"That's all.  Perhaps too much."  Her voice was businesslike.  "Now,
best be on your way to Nylan."

"You sing nicely."

"Perhaps another time .. ."  She turned to look at the horse, flicking
the reins.

Clearly dismissed, I shrugged.

"Perhaps another time, Shrezsan .. ."

She avoided meeting my eyes.  So I picked up my stride to a traveling
pace and passed through Enstronn without saying a word.  That was easy
enough, because no buildings may be closer to the highways or the high
roads than six hundred cubits.

I spoke to no one else on the High Road for some time, instead turning
over thoughts in my mind and finding no answers.  No one seemed to like
the danger geld  But everyone accepted it as necessary.  And no one
could or would explain why-just great windy platitudes about the
necessity of order in the continuing fight against chaos.  So who was
against order?  Who in his right mind wanted total chaos?  And what did
the danger geld have to do with any of it?

I walked and asked questions that had no answers.  Finally, I just
walked.

JUST BEFORE MID-MORNING, when it became clear that I was going to be
arriving in Nylan at least close to on time, my stomach began to
protest.

After passing through Enstronn, I had also passed by Clarion, and a
place called Sigil.  Despite the elegantly-lettered sign, I had never
heard of Sigil, and that meant it couldn't amount to much.  Though I
strained my eyes to the north of the High Road, and while I could sense
that a few houses lay in that direction, I had been able to see
nothing.

Beyond Sigil the road grew less travelec, and slightly more dusty.  The
sun continued to beat down on the dust and on me.

Ahead a blur appeared on the right side of the High Road.  Even before
I could see it clearly, I recognized it for a wayfaring station.  A
wayfaring station on the way to one of the main ports of Recluce?

Few citizens of Recluce travel that much, and the masters allow even
fewer outside traders upon the isle.  They always seem to know when
strangers land on the open south beaches or sneak through the fjords
punctuating the mountainous north coast.  The mountains form a shield
against the worst of the winter storms, but they also trap the warm
damp winds from the south, which is why the highlands are so damp-
almost a jungle in places.

The traders who have leave to travel Recluce are seldom young, and they
always say little.  Usually they are buyers of art, of pottery or other
crafts.  Sometimes they sell the southern jewels, the yellow diamonds
and the deep green emeralds, that occur only in the far reaches of
Hamor.

I wondered once why everyone used the same coins, before I discovered
that everyone didn't.  Most countries, except for the Pantarrans, use
coins similar to the Hamorians-just like we did-copper, silver, or gold
pennies.  They all have different writing, but the weights are the
same-unless someone's clipped the coins.  Why?  Probably because almost
everyone sells to Hamor.  Even the Austrans, for all their pride, use
coins of the same weight.  They call them different names that no one
uses-even in Austra.

With so few people traveling beyond a few towns, I used to ask about
the High Road, and why it had to be so grand.  My father just shook his
head.  Uncle Sardit never even answered.

As my sore feet brought me nearer to the wayfaring station, the thought
of a short break became more and more welcome.

The stations are all alike-tiled roof over four windowless walls, a
door that can be barred, and a wide covered porch with stone benches.
No furnishings inside, not even a hearth or chimney for a cook fire.
Strictly for a quick rest or a place to wait out bad weather.

After pulling off my boots, rubbing my feet, and taking a sip of warm
water from the water bottle as I sat on the back stone bench closest to
Nylan-the coolest one-I opened the provisions my father had provided.
The leftover duck was still good, and there were the last two flake
rolls, one plain and one stuffed with cherry preserves.  I finished up
by eating one of the two sour pears and saved the other.

As I took the last bite of the fruit, I could feel someone approaching.
So I looked to the west.  Sure enough, a man was leading a horse and
covered cart.  While he looked to be a trader, I took the precaution of
pulling my boots back on, wincing at the blisters I was developing.
After that I replaced the provisions bag in my pack and tossed the few
scraps out for the birds, out beyond the road.

The staff leaned up against the bench, where I could reach it easily,
and my pack was ready to go.  I just wasn't.

"Hello there," he called from the wagon post.  The man was young for a
trader, younger than Uncle Sardit, but with black ragged hair, and a
close-trimmed full beard.  His short-sleeved tunic was of faded
yellowish leather, as were his boots and his trousers.  He had a wide
brown belt on which he wore a brace of knives.  Shoulders broader than
Uncle Sardit, and muscles to match.

"Good day," I answered, politely, standing.  "Heading inland from
Nylan?"

"Couldn't be from anywhere else, now could I?"  He laughed as he said
it, while he tethered the horse, a dark brown gelding.  "And you?"

"From the east ..."

He finished with the animal and stepped up the two stone steps.  "Young
for a my skid to be traveling, aren't you?"

For some reason, his tone bothered me, and I stepped back, ready to
pick up the staff.  "Some might say that."

"Never seen a place like Recluce.  Nobody travels."

"Not many."

"You're about as friendly as the rest, aren't you?  Don't think much of
the rest of the world, I guess."

"Really don't know much about it," I admitted.

"First one I've seen who's willing to admit that there is a world off
this overgrown island."

I didn't say much to that.  What was there to say?

"Strange place.  The women won't look at you unless you take a bath at
least three times a week, and they don't talk to you anyway, except to
buy or sell.  Those characters in black, they have everyone scared, I
guess.  Even the empire doesn't mess with them."

"Empire?"

"Haven't you heard of Hamor?  The Empire of the East?"  By now, the
trader had put one foot up on the other end of the bench.

He was just like all the other traders.  Boring.  He'd seen something I
had not, and that made him feel better.

"You don't like me, boy?  Just like everyone else?  If you want my
jewels, or you want to sell something-Tira!  You don't have anything
worth selling, except maybe that staff.  Good work, there."

He reached for it, as if I weren't standing there.

The staff was somehow in my hands, although I didn't remember grabbing
it, and I had brought it down on the back of his extended wrist.

Crack.  Hsssss.

"Another damned devil-spawn!  .. ."  He backed away, his unhurt hand on
a knife.

I could tell he was deciding whether to throw it, and I could feel my
guts tighten.  I hadn't meant to hit him, or do whatever the staff had
done.

"The masters wouldn't like it if you did."  It was a struggle to keep
my words even, but I managed it.

"Devils take your masters .. ."  he gasped.  But he didn't use the
knife.  He took another long look at me.

I brought the staff down.  It felt warm to me, as though it had been in
the sun or next to the fire.

"So you're another one of them .. ."  He was slowly backing away from
me, although I had not moved.  "I'm nothing .. . yet."

"Damned isle .. ."  He was next to his horse.

I swung the pack onto my back and started toward the near steps, the
ones closest to Nylan.

"You can stay.  You need the rest."

He watched me, but said nothing else.

I could feel his eyes on me, and the hate, deep as the North River in
flood, and almost as wild.  But I put one sore foot in front of the
other, wanting to get as far from the way station and the trader as
possible.

Were all traders like that, underneath, when they thought people were
helpless?  And why had the staff burned his wrist?  I knew woods, and
some about metal, and the staff was just that-lorken and steel .. .
wood and forged metal.  Almost a work of art, and that was why the
trader had wanted it, but no more than wood and steel, certainly.

I knew some staff-play, just because my father had insisted on it as an
exercise.  That had been years ago, before I had been Uncle Sardit's
apprentice.  I guess you don't forget some things, but even remembered
practice and fear wouldn't make a staff burn someone.

Could it be that the trader was a devil?  I couldn't believe that, much
as the old legends spoke of devils that burned at the touch of cold
iron.

I shivered as I walked, despite the sunshine, the heat, and the dust.
Did all the reaction of the woman on the road and the trader have
something to do with me?  Or with the staff?

But there was no magic in Recluce, and I was certainly no magician.

I shivered again and kept walking.

VI

NYLAN HAS ALWAYS been the Black City, just like forgotten Frven was
once the White City.  It doesn't matter that Nylan has little more than
a village's population, or that it is a seaport used only by the
Brotherhood.  Or that it is a fortress that has never been taken, and
tested but once.

Nylan is the Black City, and it will always be that.

From the High Road, at first it looked like a low black cloud of road
dust, then like a small hill.  Only when I came within a kay or so did
I recognize its size.  The walls are not high, perhaps sixty cubits,
but they stretch from one side of the peninsula to the other, with the
one gate, the one that ends the High Road.  I'd seen paintings of the
walls and castles of Candar, Hamor, and Austra, but Nylan was
different.  The walls were featureless.  No embrasures, no
crenelations.  And no ditch, no bridge, no moat.  The High Road ran
straight to the gate.

The other end of the High Road is at Land's End, nearly a thousand kays
eastward.  Land's End is just that-where Recluce ends.  Once it was a
seaport, before the currents and the winds changed the Gulf of Murr
from a sheltered haven into the most storm-tossed section of the
Eastern Ocean.  Ships landed there occasionally, but not generally by
choice.  The only official port was Nylan, which seemed strange to me
even when Magister Kerwin taught us that.

The walls are not the most impressive feature of Nylan.  The cliffs
are.  Black as the stone walls, smooth as black ice, they drop two
hundred cubits to the dark gray-blue of the waves that crash against
them.

I saw both walls and cliffs at midday, with the sun full upon them.
Even in full sunlight, they resembled shadows.  I shivered, grasping my
staff, which felt warm in my hands, as if it were trying to dispel that
inner chill.

Just looking at the massive black metal gates, the black stone, and the
cliffs, I could see why they called it the Black City.  I could also
see another reason to worry about what I was getting into.  Except I
didn't have much choice.

The gate was open, wide open, with no one in sight.

So I walked up the last cubits of the High Road and into the narrow
band of shadow before the gate itself, looking up at the featureless
walls.

"What's your reason for being here, traveler?"

The voice was pleasant enough, and I looked for the speaker, finally
locating her seated on something in a walled ledge seven or eight
cubits above the road and beside the archway.  Where she sat would be
covered by the gates when they closed.

She wore black-black trousers, black tunic, black boots.  A staff, dark
like mine, rested by her hand.  Her hair looked to be brown in the
shadow.

"Your reason for entering Nylan?"

"Dangergeld," I answered slowly.

"Your name?"

"Lerris."

"From where?"

"Raised in Wandernaught; apprenticed in Mattra."

"Just about on schedule."  Her voice was polite, but bored.  "Once you
go through the gate, turn left and go straight to the small building
with the green triangle beside the door.  Don't go anywhere else."

"And if I do?"

"Nothing.  Nothing at all.  Except you'll waste your time, and someone
else's, if they have to go find you.  Anyone who sees you will direct
you back to the orientation building."  Her voice was so matter-of-fact
that I felt chilled again.

"Thank you."

She did not speak, but nodded as I passed beneath, through the archway
that was another fifteen cubits overhead.  The walls were thicker than
I'd thought, perhaps as thick as they were tall.  Up close, each stone
looked like granite, but I had never seen black granite.  Inside the
archway, the shade and the breeze from the water were both a welcome
relief.

Once back into the sunlight, I stopped at the crossroads for a moment
to take in Nylan.  One road went right, toward a squarish and massive
low building.  Another went left, and the largest split in a circle
around a black oak and headed due west.

The city itself was a disappointment in some ways, fascinating at first
glance in others.  Trees, welcome after the featureless plains and
fields that had led up to the wall, were scattered throughout Nylan.
Some of them were apparently ancient, like the huge black oak lying
directly before me that stood taller than the wall itself.  I stepped
several paces to the left and kept looking.  All the ways were paved in
the same black stone as the walls, and the low buildings, none more
than a single story, were also of the same stone.  The roofs were
shingled with black stone, and although the color matched the rest of
the stone, the texture seemed more like slate.

No building was closer than fifty or sixty cubits from another,
although several rambled quite extensively.

The grass was emerald-green, brilliant, in contrast to the sun-faded
grasses I had observed from the High Road and throughout Eastern
Recluce.  Few people seemed out and about, and most of those that were
wore black.

Nylan stretched further westward than I had thought, easily another
five kays before reaching the tip of the peninsula where, I presumed,
existed the Brotherhood's walled and protected seaport.  From what I
could see, the ground sloped gently downward toward the west, allowing
me to see that the pattern I saw close by generally continued further
westward.  The trees and areas of park land made it hard to tell for
certain.

Outside of all the black, it looked pleasant enough, almost like an
oasis of sorts.  But the black was hard to ignore.  It wasn't
depressing.  It was just there.

Finally I flexed my shoulders, grasped the staff, and walked down the
black stone road.  Why the woman had even bothered to say that the
building had a green triangle by the door was a wonder.  The narrow
road ended at right angles to a much wider road heading westward.  The
only building there was the one with the triangle.  I supposed that the
colored shapes were used as some sort of identification.  How else
would you give directions when all the buildings, homes, and shops were
the same color and construction?  It seemed rather ; dull, almost
boring.  If you were as powerful as the masters were, why build
everything the same?

The black-oak door was open, and I walked in.  The door itself was well
made, almost as good as anything that Uncle Sardit had done.  So was
the rest of the woodwork, although I could see I would be bored stiff
if all the masters used were black oak and black stone.

"Another one .. ."

I looked up from my study of moldings to realize that I stood in an
upper foyer.  At the bottom of three room-wide stone steps sat five
people, three women and two men, on two long benches.

I nodded and stepped down, realizing as I drew closer that, with the
possible exception of one of the women, a muscular blond, I was easily
the youngest, and the only one with a staff.  Everyone else had a pack
by their feet.

"Lerris," I announced myself.

An older man, perhaps in his late thirties from his looks, stood.
"Sammel."  He was balding and brown-haired, with deep-set circled
eyes.

"Krystal."  She was black-haired, black-eyed, white-skinned, and thin,
with fine hair that spun down to her waist.

"Wrynn."  Blond, wide-eyed, with wide shoulders and callused hands, she
dismissed me instantly.  '

"Dorthae."  Flat-voiced, olive-skinned, with strawberry ringlets of
hair, she flashed a gold ring from every finger.

"Myrten."  Sharp-nosed, with the eyes of a ferret, and hair like a
shaggy bison, he spoke with a voice both high and cutting.

I nodded to all five of them and came down the steps, unslinging my
pack and laying it carefully in the corner next to the empty spot at
the far left end of the left-hand bench.  I stood my staff in the
corner as well.

"There is one more on the way, or so we have been told," added Sammel
in a quiet and deep voice.  He reseated himself and sat down.

I did not sit down.  My feet were sore but sitting down was boring, and
besides, I hadn't had a chance to look around.

The foyer, waiting room, whatever it was, was maybe ten cubits wide and
not quite that deep.  There were three doors besides the entry, one in
the center of each wall.  The benches were backed up against the wall
opposite the front doorway and the stairs, separated by a closed door.
All the doors were hung to open away from the foyer.  All were
black-stained black oak, bound in black steel, and all were closed.

The walls looked to be timbered and covered with rectangular dark
oak-veneered panels, each panel edged with a finger-width molding.  The
three interior walls were topped with a triangular crown molding.  The
gray-plastered ceiling seemed almost bluish against all the black.

A portrait hung above each bench-a woman on the right, a man on the
left.  Naturally, they both wore black.  Black was getting boring.

Nobody wanted to say anything; that was clear.  I looked at Krystal,
with her dusty-blue smock and trousers.  She looked through me.  But
she was too thin and distracted-looking anyway.

Wrynn wouldn't look at me at all, just kept looking at the floor.  She
had nice legs.  Even the fringed leathers she wore couldn't hide
that.

Dorthae kept looking at Myrten, the thin-faced man, who returned the
look.

Sarnmel just sat there, sadly looking nowhere.

And I wandered around trying to figure out what kind of tools the
woodworkers had used to carve the panels, because I still didn't know
anything about the danger geld except that I had to do it.

What a sorry bunch.

Click, click, click.

Everyone looked up at the newcomer.

She carried a staff, too.  Black as mine, but somehow more .. . used.
Her hair was flaming red, and I could tell that her eyes were ice-blue.
Dust covered a freckled face that made her look younger than she was.
She could have passed for my age but was much older, at least five or
six years.

"What a sorry bunch."  Her voice was cheerfully hard.

"Speak for yourself."  I hadn't realized I'd spoken until I heard the
words.

"I am speaking for myself."

"I'm Lerris.  Who are you?"

"Tamra will do."  Her hard eyes scanned the others and ended up back on
me.  "Aren't you a little young to be here?"

"Aren't you a little presumptuous?"

"Tamra .. . Lerris," interjected Sammel, standing up.  "Whoever is here
is here with the acceptance of the masters.  Can we leave it at that
for now?"

"Fine with me."  I was ready to throttle the red-haired bitch in her
hard-heeled black boots and dark-gray trousers and tunic.  She was
wearing as close to black as she could decently get away with in
Recluce, and flaunting it.

"The masters this, the masters that .. . what difference does it make?"
Her voice was disgusted, but she took off her pack just like the rest
of us as she came down the stairs.  Then I realized she only came to my
shoulder but she had carried a pack fully as big as mine, and while she
was fine-featured and slender, she was not thin like Krystal nor
muscular like Wrynn.  She was about the same size as Dorthae, but she
had a certain presence.

She didn't sit down either, but put her pack at the end of the
right-hand bench, next to Sammel's stuff.  Then she looked at the
pictures, which outside of their somberness seemed unremarkable to me.
She ignored the quality of the woodwork and kept comparing the
pictures.

Since she was ignoring me, like the whole sorry bunch, I walked over
and stood in front of the picture on the left, trying to figure out why
Tamra felt it was so interesting.

The man in the picture was in black, but not in the official-type robes
of a master, and his hair was silvered gold, much like my father's.
Even though they didn't look much alike, the more I looked at the
portrait, the more I could sense a certain likeness.  I pushed that
thought away and looked for the technical details.

A shadowed bar behind his right shoulder caught my attention next.  The
height and the positioning indicated that it had to be a staff of some
sort, but unlike the detail shown in the man's face, none of the
background was depicted clearly at all.

I looked around the room.  Tamra was still studying the other portrait.
Wrynn and Krystal were talking in little more than whispers.  Sammel
and Myrten looked at the stone flooring, and Dorthae sat on the bench
with her eyes closed.

My eyes returned to the portrait.  It was the only thing in the whole
foyer, besides the other portrait, that had any detail.  That had to
mean something-but what?  I shook my head.  More riddles.  The masters
had more riddles than a world full of jesters, and no one wanted to ask
them anything.

For a moment I thought the man in the picture had come alive and was
looking at me, but when I concentrated on the picture, it was as
lifeless as ever.  Accurate, perhaps, but lifeless.

I glanced at Tamra.  She was looking at me.

She wanted to look at the picture of the man.  I could tell.  I nodded
and moved aside.

Not a word from her as she walked over and stood where I had been
standing.  So I walked back to where she had been and tried to
concentrate on the picture of the woman in black.  The portrait woman
was not blond, but brown-haired, and the artist had caught a glint in
her eyes though they were black.  The only live black in that picture
was that of her eyes.

I was no artist, but it seemed to me that the same person had painted
both portraits.  That would have been hard to do, painting a series of
masters, if you knew that these were the people who controlled
Recluce.

Enough was enough, and I looked away from the painting.  Wrynn and
Krystal had lapsed into silence.  Tamra glanced away from me with a
funny look on her face.

"Thoughts?"  I asked, without thinking.

She grinned and shook her head.  Her expression was so knowing that I
immediately wanted to bash her with my staff-except it was sitting in
the corner.  And besides, I had no reason.  I just knew I would have.

"Careful, Lerris," boomed a deep voice.

I jumped.  So did everyone else in the room, even Tamra.

How he had entered unseen bothered me, but the man's voice was bigger
than he was.  He had silver hair and broad shoulders, but he did not
even reach to my shoulder.  For Recluce, I was only a half-head above
average, if a shade broader in the chest and shoulders.

He wore a tunic and trousers of some sort of silvery-gray.  Even his
boots were silver-gray.

"No black?"

Tamra shook her head at my comment.  No one else did anything but
stare.

"As you will learn, Lerris, one way or another, black is a state of
mind."  He bowed to me, then to Tamra, and finally to the others in a
sweeping gesture.  "I am Talryn, and I will be your guide to Nylan and
for the first few days of your stay here."  He gestured toward the
doorway between the two benches, then stepped forward and touched the
wood.  The doorway swung open, and I could see the light flooding from
the room.  "If you will gather your possessions and follow me, we will
begin with a meal."

Talryn stepped through the doorway.

I picked up my staff and pack, then nodded to Tamra.  She inclined her
head to me.  I inclined mine back, but she still waited.

Finally, I walked after Talryn, and Tamra's light steps clicked after
mine.  The others shuffled along after us.

The doorway led not into another room, but into a long corridor lit
solely from a clear glass skylight.  I studied the skylight as well as
I could without losing my balance while trying to keep up with
Talryn.

A series of curved glass panels had been fitted into bent dark-oak
framing for the entire length of the building.  Through the glass, I
could see that the skylight was nothing more than a continuous window
into a small garden above us that filled the center of the building.

On each side of the corridor where we walked were massive stone
supports, clearly bearing the weight of the garden.

Somehow, again, it was disappointing.  The design and engineering had
been well-thought-out and the effect was quite pleasing.  But that was
all it showed: good solid design and good engineering.

Talryn tapped another door, dark oak, at the far end of the garden
corridor walk, and stepped inside.  We all followed into a small
room.

He waited until everyone had gathered.

"Through the door on my right, there are facilities suitable for you
gentlemen.  On the left are facilities for you gentle ladies.  Please
leave your packs and traveling gear in the open lockers.  They will be
quite safe there, and you can reclaim everything after we eat."

"Why different facilities?"  asked Tamra.

"Because, even in Recluce, there are some who hold to the Legend, who
feel men and women are different, Tamra."

"That's just an excuse."

"Perhaps.  You may use the facilities or not."  Talryn's deep voice was
noticeably cooler.  He turned from her.  "Once you are washed and
ready, step through the center doorway here and we will eat.  During
the meal, I will attempt to provide a general introduction to the
danger geld and what it may entail."

The way he stood before that door, almost like a guard, made it clear
that a certain amount of cleanliness was mandatory.  I didn't bother to
wait, but headed toward the facilities.  I was ready for both the
relief and the cleanup, in that order.

Myrten dragged in after Sammel and me, as if he didn't like soap and
water.  That confirmed my opinion of him.

The masters not only had good engineering and sanitary facilities, they
had an ample supply of warm and cold running water, and heavy gray
towels.  It took a fair amount of soap and water to get the road dust
off my face, hands and arms.  I really could have taken a shower,
except the building facilities weren't that elaborate, for all the gray
tile on the walls and floor.  But I felt better, a lot better, by the
time I finished.

VII

THE TABLE WAS filled with platters, mostly of fruit and vegetables,
with a variety of cheeses and some thin slices of meat.  Two smaller
platters bore a selection of breads.  I concentrated on the fruits,
noting apples, sour pears and chrysnets, not to mention the heap of red
berries  The plates were heavy gray stoneware, serviceable and banded
with a thin green border, like something that might have been produced
by one of my mother's better apprentices after a year.

Beside the plates were matching heavy mugs, small towels in place of
napkins, and spoons and forks.  No knives.  The black-oak surface was
polished but bare, without even rush mats under the plates.

Talryn stood by the head of the table set for eight, three on a side
and one at each end.  The space on his right was vacant.  On his left
stood Dorthae.  On her left was Myrten.  The foot of the table was
vacant.

So was the other space on the left, as were all the spaces on the
right.

"If you would take the other end, Lerris .. ."

Since he was a master of some sort, and since it wasn't exactly a
request, I moved over and stood at the end, waiting for the others to
arrive.

Sammel came next, his balding forehead shiny and his remaining thin
brown hair damp.  The loss of road dust and grime made him look
younger.  He gave Talryn an almost shy smile.

"If you would take the middle, Sammel .. ."

Sammel did just what I had done.  He nodded and eased up to his
indicated position.

As he stepped around the table, Wrynn and Krystal appeared together,
still whispering like girls after school.  They stopped as they saw
Talryn looking at them.

"If you would take the place between Myrten and Lerris, Wrynn .. . and
you, Krystal, the space across from her .. ."

That left Tamra, who seemed already to be the last one anywhere.  She
still hadn't appeared and would have to sit next to Talryn.  I didn't
think that was coincidence, somehow.

Talryn let us stand for a little while longer, then nodded.  "Please be
seated.  I think we should begin."

Even before we could get the heavy wooden chairs pulled out, Tamra
appeared.  Her hair was lightly curled and brighter than when I had
first seen her, as if she had washed and shaped it, but it was as dry
as if she had been sitting in the sun.  She had also pulled it back
from her face with a pair of dark combs.

She still wore the gray tunic and trousers, but a blue scarf around her
neck added a touch of color.  All in all, she made a striking
appearance.

Talryn nodded to the empty space at his right.

Tamra opened her mouth, then shut it quickly as Talryn pulled out her
chair for her.  Her ice-blue eyes flashed like sun from a glacier.

Talryn moved the chair so easily that I tried to edge mine back with
one hand.  It didn't move.  I quickly reached down with both hands and
lifted it by its curved arms, sliding it back.  Black oak, shaped and
bent into a flattened point without a crest at the height of the chair
back.  The curved back was supported by four spokes twice the width
used for household chairs.  A flat black cushion covered the seat.

"If you are done inspecting the chair, Lerris, would you join us?"

"Sorry.  The design ..."  I sat down and edged the chair forward to the
table.  Again, it took two hands.

Everyone waited, looking at Talryn.

"Go ahead.  There's no blessing, no incantations, no mysticism-just
good food."  He reached for the platter of breads.  "After all of you
have served yourselves, I will provide the explanation I promised."

I reached for the cheeses before me, spearing several with !  the long
wooden-handled fork, just ahead of Krystal.  She already had taken a
sour pear and a chrysnet.

"Would you pass the cheeses?"  Wrynn asked.  Her voice was flat.

"You done?"  I asked Krystal.

"Yes."  When she wasn't giggling her voice almost sang when she talked,
but it didn't sound affected.

At the other end of the table, Tamra had piled her plate with
everything in sight-sour pears apples, cheeses, breads, and meat.

Beside me, Krystal offered the meat platter.

"Thank you."

She nodded, and, after removing several slices, I took the serving
plate from her and offered it to Wrynn.  The blond woman took twice
what I had heaped on my plate, without looking at me-leaving me still
holding the platter.

"Wrynn .. . would you pass this to Myrten?"

The woman still didn't look at me, but took the platter with a sigh and
thrust it in front of Myrten, almost hitting him in the nose as he bent
forward.

"Thank you."  Myrten's voice was pleasant enough, but it sounded as
though he had polished each word.

Wrynn said nothing to him, either.

I lifted the mug, sipping gingerly, and found it was some sort of juice
combination-light, with a touch of sparkle.

Krystal, to my right, had produced a small knife and dissected her sour
pear into neat slices.  Just as quickly, she had eaten nearly half of
the fruit.  I tried not to gape, instead smearing some red berry jam
over a thick slice of bread and munching through that, interspersing it
with some of the yellow cheese.

"Where are you from?"  I finally asked Krystal.

"Oh, from Extina."

I'd never heard of Extina.

"A little village near Land's End.  No one else has ever heard of it,
either."  The small knife flashed, and the chrysnet lay in quarters,
the pit removed nearly effortlessly.  "What about you?"

"Wandernaught."

"Oh ... is it true what they say about it?"  She giggled, spoiling the
momentary impression of a calm and dark beauty.

"What they say about it?"  I'd never heard anything said about it.

"You know," Krystal giggled again, "that nothing ever happens there
because the Institute really runs the Brotherhood."  She popped two
orangish chrysnet quarters into her mouth, one right after the other.

"Ooooff ..."  I choked on the last part of her question.  The Institute
running the Brotherhood?  That collection of four buildings where
people just gathered to talk to each other?

"Are you all right, Lerris?"  broke in Talryn from the other end of the
table.  All conversation died away for a moment.

I nodded, managed to swallow the suddenly very dry bread, and reached
for the mug of fruit punch, ignoring the glint in Tamra's eyes as she
watched my discomfort.

Krystal, her eyes on me, brought forth the little knife and, with deft
cuts, not even looking, created four miniature sandwiches out of a slab
of white cheese, some dark bread, and one thick slab of buffalo.

I swallowed again.

"Are you sure you're all right?"  Krystal asked, her voice concerned
for the first time.

"Yes .. . just surprised.  I've been to the Institute many times, even
heard my father speak there, but no one acted as though they were
running anything at all-except their mouths.  It was boring .. . very
boring."  I took another sip from the massive brown mug.  "You are
right about one thing.  Nothing ever happens in Wandernaught."  I
stopped, realizing that tears were welling up in the corners of
Krystal's eyes.  "Are you-did I say something?"

She shook her head, pursing her lips together.

Wrynn had stopped shoveling in her food and was listening, as was
Sammel on the other side of Krystal.  Myrten pretended not to listen as
he played with a sour pear  Tamra, Talryn, and Dorthae were discussing
shipping, or ships.

Krystal swallowed.

I waited, suddenly not as hungry as I had thought.

"It's just..  ."  Krystal began, "..  . your father, to even speak
there .. . and you're younger than anyone here .. . and you have to do
danger geld .. ."  She shook her head slowly, the sandwiches left
neatly on her platter.

My head seemed ready to lift off my shoulders.

"Is your father a master?"  blurted out Wrynn.

I shrugged.  "He never said so.  He never did anything that made me
think so, and he never wore black.  I never thought about it.  My
mother is a skilled potter.  People come from as far as Austra to buy
her vases and figurines.  My father was always the holder .. ."

"You sound as though you are reconsidering," observed Myrten.  His
voice was even more polished, as if oil-coated.

"I don't know.  He's always talked a lot about the importance of order.
I found it boring.  Still do."

Krystal sniffed.  "... no mercy .. ."

I didn't really expect mercy from the Brotherhood, but what did she
mean?  "Mercy?"  I finally asked.

"All of you," interrupted Talryn before Krystal could reply, "I
promised you an introduction and an explanation.  I will try to make
both short and then answer questions.  Some questions I may not answer
until later, but I will try to provide as much information as I can."

Once again, even before they started, they were saying they were going
to hide something.  I stifled a snort.

At the other end of the table, Tamra had adopted a look of resignation.
Only Sammel looked really interested in what Talryn might have to
say.

"First, the danger geld  What is it, and why is it necessary?  And,
from your point of view, why were you selected?"  Talryn took a sip
from his mug.

"Stripped of all the piety, rhetoric, and rationalization, the danger
geld is simply a quest, a series of duties, or an exile-or some
combination of all three-to enable you to discover whether you belong
in Recluce, and, if so, in what capacity.  None of you have been happy
in what you have been doing.  Unfocused discontent is contagious and
leads to disorder.  Disorder leads to chaos, and chaos to evil.

"After this meal, you each have a choice.  You may accept danger geld
training, which can last several months, sometimes longer, or you can
accept immediate exile.  If you choose training, then depending on the
results of that training you may be offered one or several options on
how to fulfill your danger geld obligation.  Again, if you like none of
the options, at that point you may choose exile.

"All exiles are transported, with their available funds and traveling
gear, to one of three outside ports, depending on the time of year.
Those are Freetown in Candar, Brysta in Nordla, or Swartheld in Afrit,
north of Hamor."

At the last two names, most of the eyebrows around the table went up.
I'd heard of Brysta and certainly wouldn't have been pleased to land
there.  Nordla was cold, and Brysta was as far north as you could get
for an all-year port.  Above Brysta, the winter ice sheets closed the
coast.  "..  . may not bring more than you can comfortably carry on
your person.  If any of you choose exile, the next departure will be in
about ten to twelve days.  You will remain in Nylan, although you may
participate in any or none of the danger geld training, as you
please.

"For those of you considering danger geld training begins tomorrow.
There will be classes on the details of what the danger geld obligation
entails, on the geography and customs of most major countries outside
Recluce, on their economies and trade, on how money is handled-customs
surrounding funds do vary, by the way-and on weapons familiarization
and self-defense.

"We will also provide some additional background on the Brotherhood,
since some of you may choose, or be offered, the option of performing
your danger geld in some capacity with the Brotherhood, depending on
your own inclinations and the progress of your training.

"As always, your participation is voluntary-with two stipulations.
First, should you choose not to participate in any training, you will
be regarded as choosing exile.  Second, you may not leave Nylan.  Any
attempt to do so will result in confinement until you can be exiled."

"Voluntary?"  snorted Wrynn.  "You don't play the Brotherhood's game,
and you're locked up until you can be shipped off" to Nordla or
Hamor."

"You have already made a choice that you cannot accept living in
Recluce," Talryn observed mildly.

"No.  You made that decision based on your rules," countered the
blond..

Talryn shrugged his broad shoulders.  "The rules, as you call them, are
accepted and honored by virtually everyone in Recluce.  Do you honestly
believe otherwise?  That a handful of masters and brothers who have
never raised a violent hand in centuries could override the will of our
people?"

I almost laughed at that.  The masters controlled all the education.
They didn't need swords.  Besides, a bunch of boring sheep would agree
to any rules that would send the wolves away.  But no one raised that
question, not Tamra nor Wrynn.

Krystal giggled again, and sliced her drying sandwiches into halves,
which she quickly ate.  How she could eat so much and stay so slender I
couldn't imagine.

"Why do you teach us about so many countries, and not just the area
where we will be sent?"  The calm voice was Sammel's.

"You may end up seeing more of the world than you think, and we would
like you to have some idea of where you may end up.  Also, you will
find Hamorians in Nordla and Candarians in Hamor.  Knowing their
differing customs has proven useful to others and should help you."

Myrten gave his head the smallest of shakes.  Tamra stifled a grin,
although I couldn't see what was funny.  Wrynn, beside me, took a deep
breath and exhaled slowly.  Krystal cut a green apple into a series of
intricate slices arranged around the edge of her plate.

But no one asked another question, and Talryn volunteered nothing more
about the danger geld itself.

"You will probably have more questions.  Anyone who does not want to
undertake the danger geld training, please see me when we finish
eating. After the meal you will be shown your rooms, and you may spend
the afternoon any way you like, including visiting the market in the
harbor, or anywhere else in Nylan.

"Breakfast will be at the first bell.  At the second bell, the first
class will begin.  You will be shown the class area on your way to your
rooms."  Talryn stood up.  "Please finish as you like.  I will be in
the next room.  When you are done, gather your things and join me
there."

He pushed back his chair and departed, leaving the door behind him
ajar.

Tamra raised her eyebrows, saying nothing.

"High-handed .. ."  murmured Wrynn.

Krystal began eating the apple slices she had laid out around her
plate.

Myrten pocketed two hard rolls and an apple, and Sammel frowned, either
at Talryn's departure or Myrten's theft .. . or for some reason of his
own.  I took a last swallow from the mug, deciding against another
slice of cheese.  Enough was enough, and I was ready to find out what
lay in store for me.

Tamra and I were the first ones on our feet.  She hadn't eaten
everything on her plate, either.

As I glanced at her plate, our eyes crossed, hers looking at my
partially-eaten meal.  I had to grin, and, this time, she grinned back
momentarily, although her expression hardened into a bored look.

I held the door for her, but she nodded.  "Go ahead, Lerris.  I'll hold
my own doors."

"As you wish, lady."

"And I'm certainly no lady, not in the way you meant."

"I didn't mean anything, other than courtesy.  If you don't like simple
manners ..."  I let go of the black wood of the door and stepped back
into the hallway toward the washrooms where my staff and pack were
stored.

"Touchy, too.  You should have red hair."

I ignored her comments, although I could feel the flush in my face.

"Healthy circulation, if thin-skinned."

Did the bitch needle everyone, or just those she could bully?  I wished
my thoughts were as quick as hers, but trying to match her would just
make the situation worse.

The staff was where I left it, the lorken wood a shade warmer to my
touch.  Was that because we were in Nylan?  Did it have some response
of its own to magic or danger?  I shook my head.

"Why the frown?"  Sammel's voice was concerned.  He probably always
sounded concerned.  He looked like his vocation was trying to do good
whether anyone wanted it or not.

"Just thinking .. . wondering about all the black, whether , it meant
magic."

"It probably does.  The Brotherhood couldn't have shaped the harbor or
the cliffs without some fantastic forces.  But they : mean well, I
think."

"So did Heldry the Mad."

Sammel smiled.  "The Brotherhood doesn't hold mass executions."

I shrugged on my pack.  "They settle for danger geld and exile.  That
way the deaths are on someone else's hands."

"You are rather bitter for someone so young."

"That's easy when you're forced on a danger geld for a reason you don't
know by a group that enforces unspoken rules \ in unsaid ways."

That stopped him long enough for me to step around him and past Myrten.
Tamra's back was in front of me as she passed by the table.  No one was
left there.  Even Krystal had left several of the delicately-cut apple
slices on her plate, where they were now turning brown.

I followed Tamra into the waiting room beyond.  "... That's no choice."
The voice was Dorthae's, and she was facing Talryn.

Talryn smiled a smile that wasn't really a smile, since his black eyes
were hard as the stone of the paved floor underfoot.  "You can choose
either.  Your actions already made that choice necessary."

"What .. . because I wouldn't stay with a man who turned out to be an
unfeeling and unthinking brute?"

"No.  Because you crippled him before you left him."

I winced.  While there was a hardness to Dorthae, I hadn't seen just
how hard she was."  Yet she looked vulnerable standing before Talryn,
even though he was no taller than she was.

Dorthae turned away, her lips tight.

Myrten and Sammel had followed me.  Only Wrynn and Krystal were
missing.

Dorthae glanced at me, saw my black staff and stumbled back toward
Tamra, also carrying her staff.  Dorthae cringed away from the
redhead.

Tamra and I exchanged glances.  She shrugged.  After a moment, so did
I. Clearly, as I had recognized from the encounters with Shrezsan and
the trader, I had some power, associated with the staff.  What it was
.. . that was another question.  Unfortunately, everyone else thought I
had some power, too, and they were just as clearly very wary of it.
Wonderful-heading into a danger geld cursed with an ability I hadn't
even known I'd had, with the whole world ready to pounce on me for it.
Sent for reasons I still didn't understand and which no one would
explain.  Just wonderful.

As I pondered, Krystal and Wrynn had appeared.

"You are all here.  Good," said Talryn.  "Follow me."

VIII

PRETTY MUCH IN silence we walked up a set of wide black I stone stairs.
The side walls were of the same black stone.  All the stone was smooth
but unpolished, and it seemed to absorb light with almost no
reflection.  Each stone was set so tightly in place that the mortar
between each was less than half a fingertip in width.  That thin line
of mortar was black.  So clean were the steps they bore no trace of
dust, although ; the light from the overhead skylights did not fall on
the steps directly.

Talryn and Sammel were at the front of the group.  I was at the back,
just behind Wrynn and Krystal.  From Krystal's , blue leather belt,
darker than her faded blue blouse and trousers, hung two sheaths, both
containing knives, one barely a span in length.  She wore a small
matching blue pack.

"All this black .. . depressing .. ."  muttered Wrynn, shaking her
head, her blond hair fluffing out for an instant.  She ; wore a brown
pack like mine, except hers was stuffed to the bursting point and had
several small bags tied to the outside.

"It smells like power," answered Krystal, touching her hand to the long
black hair she had wound up into a bun after our rather late lunch.
Then she emitted the faintest giggle.  ;

If only she didn't giggle ... I shook my head.  She was nearly a decade
older than I was, at least, with the hint of lines around her
eyes-almost scrawny, except for her nicely-formed breasts.

"Creepy, if you ask me," muttered Wrynn again.  Her right [ hand rested
awkwardly on the haft of a long sheathed knife.

At the top of the steps was a foyer of sorts, windowless, .  and, on
the far end, a set of doors that Talryn held open.

The breeze blowing toward me held a hint of spring, or rain-that clean
smell that follows a good rain when the dust is washed out of the air.
Yet I could see that the sky was as blue and nearly cloudless as when I
had walked under the gates and into Nylan at midday.

"Gather round .. ."

So we gathered.  I gave Myrten a wide berth.  Smooth voice or not, he
looked like he'd steal anything available just to prove he could.
Dorthae didn't have that problem.  She practically cuddled up next to
him.  I stood a pace or so behind Wrynn and Krystal, facing Talryn.

"Right ahead of us are the transients' quarters where you will be
staying.  Each of you will have a separate room," explained Talryn.
"You can sleep there, or with anyone else in your group, as you
please-but only with that other person's consent.  Forcing yourself on
someone else is a good way to immediate exile."

"Now .. . it's that way .. ."  complained Dorthae.

Myrten sniffed.  Wrynn grinned as if no one were about to force hera
thought with which I certainly agreed, wondering absently if, with her,
/ might need that protection.

I glanced around to find Tamra looking at me.  She nodded once, then
transferred her attention back to Talryn, who had continued droning
on.

Had she understood what I had been thinking?  How?  "..  . washrooms
and showers are at the end of the hallway.  The small building on the
other side of the square garden with the fruit trees is the dining hall
where your meals will be served.  You may eat there, or you may pay for
meals anywhere in Nylan.  The choice, again, is yours."  He grinned
broadly. "But the Brotherhood's meals are good, and the price is
right."

"Only your life," said Dorthae softly, but loudly enough to stop Talryn
momentarily.

He frowned, then shook his head.  "Believe it or not, our interest is
in saving your lives, not spending them."  He cleared his throat before
continuing.  "Your introduction to the elements of the danger geld will
start tomorrow after breakfast in the classroom building-that's the one
with the red square by the doorway toward the harbor from the dining
hall.  Now I'll show you your rooms.  If you wish to trade a room with
someone else, you certainly can, provided you both agree."

Without another word, he turned and opened the black-oak door, not even
looking to see if any of us followed him.  Of course, we all did.  What
else could we do?

My room, like all the others, had a narrow bed, just wide enough for
one comfortably.  The wooden frame was, thank-fully, of polished red
oak.  A single sheet covered the mat-tress, and a dark-blue blanket was
folded across the bottom ; of the bed.  No pillows, not that I had
slept with one since I !  had apprenticed with Uncle Sardit, and only a
single small oil lamp on the table.  There was no closet, but a square
red-oak wardrobe, half hanging space and half open shelves.

A braided and multicolored oval rag rug perhaps three cubits across
covered most of the blue floor tiles between the door and the bed,
which was nearly against the outside stone wall.  The half-open single
casement window was in the middle of the wall, just short of the foot
of the bed.

I pulled my cloak from the pack and hung it up, as well as my single
spare set of trousers and tunic.  The order-locked purse was there,
with my apprentice wages, as was another I purse I did not remember.  I
opened it.  Inside were ten more \ gold pennies, worn, nothing more.  I
swallowed.

For some reason, I had trouble seeing for a minute, perhaps because I
recalled the gold penny with the small clip out of it.  My mother had
remarked on it as coming from the buyer from the Emperor of Hamor.  She
refused to let me see her tears, but left me what she could.  I grasped
back in the ; bag for something .  anything.

There was also a short-sleeved summer shirt, but I left it folded and
put it on the second shelf.  My leather case with the razor and soap I
put on the top shelf.  The few other underclothes I had fit in with
room to spare, as did the small ; book my father had clearly tucked
into my pack.

The Basis of Order ... of all things.  Who knew?  I figured reading it
might be something to do.  Especially if the training got boring.  I
didn't leave it out in the open, but tucked it under the shirt.  The
purses I put back in the pack, which I i folded and put on the top
shelf.  They would be safe-that I knew.  I took ten coppers and a
silver penny.

None of the rooms had locks, just bolts that could only be closed from
inside.  Then again, who was going to try to steal anything with the
Brotherhood around?  Even Myrten would hesitate ... for now.

I shook my head.  The hour was early, and even if it were kays down to
the harbor, a good walk, and even if my feet were blistered, I intended
to try it, just to see if I could get a better idea about what Nylan
really represented.  And I didn't want to sit around and think about
either the book or the extra purse.

The staff stayed in the wardrobe along with the cloak.

With a last look at the small room, I closed the door.  Outside, the
central hallway was empty, although I could hear voices in the
neighboring room-Wrynn and Krystal.  Their words were low.

The pathway toward the harbor was easy enough to find, since there were
stone pedestals every hundred rods or so along each of the paths, with
names and arrows pointing out the way.

Harbor-3 kays

North way Depot-2 kays

Administration-1 kay

I kept following the arrows until I reached a black stone wall that ran
north and south from one side of the peninsula to the other.  It was
low, a little over two cubits.  Nor was it really a barrier, since
there were no gates at the openings where the paths went through it. On
one side were the almost park-like grounds that had stretched for more
than a kay, with scattered low buildings.

From where I stood at the top of a long set of wide steps, I could look
over the central part of Nylan-or the commercial district, whatever it
was called.  Behind and over the building tops, I could see the blue of
the harbor and the tops of several masts.

Right beyond the wall, the ground fell away, in a grassy slope that
dropped a good fifteen cubits in less than a hundred.  On the other
side of the downslope, the buildings began-all black stone, roofed in
black slate.  Each stood separately, set back from the black
stone-paved streets and the shinier black curbs.  Unlike Enstronn or
Mattra or even Wandernaught, there were no hitching posts.  Despite the
width of the streets, they did not seem to be designed for horses or
wagons.

People walked the streets, some carrying packages, some carrying
nothing, some in black, some in all colors of the rainbow.

No one even looked up the hill.  So I headed down.

Halfway down, I looked back up.  The wall that had looked so low from
the uphill side appeared at least fifteen cubits high from the base of
the hill.  Even accounting for more stone exposed on the downhill side,
I didn't think the wall was nearly that high.  But speculating on
optical illusions wouldn't tell me any more about Nylan.

Once on the streets of the harbor area, everything felt more normal.
People talked, and I could hear the babble of the market square ahead.
With all the black stone, the city should have felt warmer, especially
on a summer afternoon, but the breeze from the west was cool enough,
apparently, to keep the temperature comfortable.

A sailor, red-haired and red-bearded, gave me a long glance as I
entered the square.  Half the booths, those on the north side, seemed
permanent, workmanlike and well-crafted.  Those on the south side, some
of which were no more than half-tents or canvas-covered tables, seemed
shoddy by comparison.  Several seemed untended.

I nodded.  The outland traders and ships had their wares on the south
side.

"Young fellow-come see the amber from Brysta!"  "..  . fire-diamonds
from Afrit!  Here alone!  .. ."

Still, the calls from the hucksters were muted.  Perhaps thirty
shoppers filled the entire square, split among nearly as many vendors.
Most of the shoppers were young, not much older than me. Dangergelders,
those doing duty with the Brotherhood, I guessed as I looked first at
the booths on the north side of the square.

The first displayed some ceramics.  Good work, but nothing to compare
to my mother's.  The colors were too vivid.  A man sat behind them,
perched on a stool, who gave me a passing grin as if to acknowledge I
would buy nothing.

In quick order, I passed some carved and gilded mirrors; a goldsmith's
display of rings, necklaces, and pendants; a smith's array of assorted
steel tools, which seemed of high quality; leather goods, including
purses, belts, packs, and sheaths for various sizes of knives; a boot
maker display with several gaudy, if well-tooled, sets of boots.

At the woodworking stall, I stopped, surveying the items on display.
All were small-breadboards, book holders, and mostly carved boxes.  No
furniture, except a tiny pedestal table and a two-shelf bookcase of
gray oak.

"You know wood," observed the boy minding the display.  His brown eyes
almost matched his brown hair, and he wore a tan shirt.

"Some.  You do any of these?"

"Only the breadboards.  My older brother did most of the rest, except
the table and the shelves."

"Your father?"

"Mother.  She sells mostly on consignment to Hamor."

The breadboards were adequate, as were the boxes, but I had been doing
better when I had left Uncle Sardit.  Only the pedestal table was
clearly better than I could do.

"You think you do better work?"  asked the boy.

"It doesn't matter now," I answered absently.  Whatever I did from
there on out, it wouldn't be woodwork.

I left without saying more and walked across the square.  The first
cloth-draped table was the trader who had been screeching forth about
amber.  A single look told me that the amber was fair at best, and the
silver settings in which most of it was encased were worse.

The trader glanced away from my scrutiny, not even speaking.

The adjoining table was filled with uncut fire diamonds.  Even from the
spread stones, I could pick out three or four clearly superior to the
others.  Not bigger, just better.  Displaying what I might have called
more order.  But I couldn't afford them, and there wasn't much point in
bargaining over a lesser stone, not when I would need funds more than
diamonds before very long.

Several tables were vacant, their canvas flapping in the breeze, barely
held down by stones.

Further toward the corner closest to the harbor was a tiny man sitting
behind a half-dozen small and elaborately-carved ivory figures.  Those
alone matched the quality of crafts displayed on the north side of the
square.

For a long time, I studied the figures.  One, that of a young man
carrying a dark staff, appealed to me.  Once again, I passed on without
even trying to bargain.  Nor did the trader or carver try to entreat
me.

From the square I walked down toward the four long wharves.  Each gray
stone structure rose out of the dark blue water of the harbor more than
five cubits, with a central paved roadway more than ten cubits wide. At
the first wharf, the one closest to the harbor mouth and farthest from
the center of the market area, was a huge twin-masted and steel-hulled
; steamer.  A thin wisp of smoke rose from the forward funnel, The
ensign I did not recognize, but, with the blue-green background and the
golden crown, I would have guessed the ship was from somewhere in
Nordla.

A half-dozen loading carts, stacked with square wooden packing cases of
differing sizes, waited for the ship's crane to transfer each into an
open forward hold.  What was in the crates I couldn't see.  I walked
down toward the pier.  Although there was a small stone booth for a
guard, the booth, spotlessly clean, was empty.  Nor was there a guard
around.

Click .. . click .. . My boots nearly skidded on the smooth pavement
underfoot.

Whhhsssss ... . Ahead, steam drifted from the small tractor linked to
the loading carts, though they were long like farm carts, each nearly
ten cubits in length.  The sides were of smooth-milled red oak, held in
place by steel brackets.

"Stand clear, fellow."  A woman I had not seen, wearing a set of black
coveralls, waved in my direction then gestured toward the ship.

Whhheeeepppp .. . The crane lifted two more crates, cradled in a heavy
mesh net, up off the next-to-last cart.  The end cart was already
empty.

The woman walked briskly toward me.  Dark-haired, she was nearly as
tall as I was, and as broad in the shoulders.  She smiled.  "Must be
new in Nylan.  Dangergeld?"

I had to nod.

"We're loading furniture right now.  The ship is the Empress-out of
Brysta, Nordla Lines.  I'm Caron."

"Is this your danger geld  I blurted.

She laughed.  "Not exactly.  I started as a purser on the Brotherhood
ships, but traveling got old.  I liked dealing with cargo and making up
shipments, handling the cube and stowage calculations-"

Whhhheeee .. . "-Excuse me .. ."  She was back at the cart, deftly
jockeying two more crates into the net, without seeming to work up a
sweat.

Whheeeeppp .. .

As the net lifted away, Caron returned.  "So that's how I ended up
here.  I have a small farm not too far from Sigil, in the low hills
north of the High Road.  I spend my free time there."

"But .. . don't you need help loading all these ships .. . ?"

"There are four of us.  That's enough.  We don't handle that much bulk
anyway.  The economics don't work, not against forced labor or
slavery."

Whheeepppp .. .

As she turned back toward the loading, I frowned.  For a glorified
stevedore, Caron was unusually bright, and perfectly willing to talk to
a total stranger.  Was she just another Brotherhood type, with quick
and incomplete answers?  In the direct sunlight, even though it was a
shade cooler than normal for a summer day's late afternoon, I was
beginning to sweat.

After wiping my forehead with the back of my sleeve, I looked at the
steam tractor.  Magister Kerwin had taught us about steam-powered
machinery, how it created too much chaos unless properly designed and
handled, and how it generated too much concentrated heat.  Steamships
could handle the heat because of the conductivity of the ocean and
their relative isolation from other chaos-sources.

Whheeeepppp .. .

Another full net lifted away, and the gregarious loadmaster, or
whatever else she was, stepped back toward me.

"What do you think of Nylan?"

"Don't know what to think.  I just got here today."  I pointed to the
tractor.  "That seems contrary to the magisters' teaching."

Caron grinned.  She looked younger-say about Tamra's age-when she
smiled.  "It only seems that way.  If you consider the alternatives in
order theory, the number of bodies required to lift that cub age it
works out about even.  Plus, the fact that we can operate them without
the usual catastrophes scares the hell out of the outlanders."

Whhhhhheeeeepppp .. .

Scares the hell out of the outlanders?  For all of her direct speech,
the woman still didn't really explain things.  I watched as she
single-handedly lifted a bulky crate into the net.  Up on the steamer,
two long-haired, bearded crewmen gawked at the ease with which the
woman handled the heavy cargo.

Whhheeepppp .. .

"Anyway," she continued, not even breathing hard, and as if she had
never left, "loading them like this gets the point across."

"What point?"

"That they'd better not mess with the Brotherhood, or Recluce.  What
else?"

I shook my head.

"Think about it, young fellow.  Sorry I can't talk longer, but the
crates coming up are going to take all my effort.  Good luck!"

She was back at the third cart, the fourth and fifth carts since
emptied of their crates.

Wheeepppp .. .

I was the one shaking my head as I walked back toward the harbor wall
from which the piers protruded.  The wall stood another three cubits
above the pier surface, not really a defensive bulwark, but a physical
barrier that declared to the sailors on the ships that Nylan was
foreign territory.

At the end of the second pier a long schooner was tied, flying the
ensign of Hamor from the rear staff.  Two armed guards stood by the
plank to the ship, half-turned to face each other.  From their posture
it was clear they were not guarding the ship against Recluce, but
discouraging unplanned crew departures.

I strolled toward the third pier, slowing as I saw that the guard booth
was manned.  Tied to the pier were three long and low shapes that had
to be ships, but ships like none I had ever seen.

They were totally of black steel, with no masts, and only a low black
superstructure beginning a third of the way back from the bow.  Their
bows were raked and sharp, somehow sharklike.  Each flew a single
ensign from the jack staff-a solid black flag.

How I had missed them earlier I didn't know, except I could see what
looked to be heat waves surrounding each.

I shivered, even in the warm afternoon sunlight.  Yes, the Brotherhood
had ways to protect Recluce.

"Young fellow, this pier is closed."  The guard in the booth wasn't
that much older than I was, but he wore what was clearly a black
uniform, and I could sense, rather than see, the sword and club.

I just shrugged and turned away, looking down the pier again at the
three strange ships.  The guard watched me with a puzzled look on his
face.

Wasn't I supposed to see the ships?  Had the heat waves been a shield
of some sort?

I glanced around the grassy space on the other side of the harbor walk.
A scattering of people sat on the few benches.  Down opposite the
fourth pier, a meat vendor was selling sandwiches or something to the
crew of the square-rigger that was tied up.

No one even glanced at the closed third pier.  Shaking my head again, I
began to walk back toward the market and toward my quarters, with more
questions and fewer answers than when I had started.

The bell was chiming as I crossed the grass toward the dining hall, and
the blisters on my feet were burning.

IX

MAGISTER CASSIUS WAS black.  I don't mean he wore black.  His skin was
a blue-black that glistened in the sun or the shadow.  His short curly
hair was black, and his eyes were black.  Squarish, he stood more than
four cubits, like a heroic black-oak carving.  The only things light
about him were the whites of his eyes.  He did have a sense of humor,
of sorts.  "Do you favor suicide or murder, Lerris?"  His deep voice
rumbled.  "What .. . huh?"  Once again, he had caught me with my
thoughts elsewhere, wondering, this time, about how the cliffs I could
see through the open window had ever been made so black and so sheer.
After all, just like old Magister Kerwin, he was pounding on and on
about the basis of order.  "I asked you whether you favored suicide or
murder?"  Krystal, sitting cross-legged on her pillow, suppressed
another giggle.  She had on the blue smock-like tunic and trousers,
with sandals.  And she still looked dusty, but that was because her
clothes, pressed and clean as they were, had been washed so often the
blue had faded away in spots.  Tamra continued to look at Cassius as if
he were an insect under study.  Over the gray tunic she had draped a
vivid green scarf.  Each day the scarf changed, but not the clothes.
Either that, or she had a bunch of gray tunics and trousers.  Sammel
looked from the Magister to me and back, then sighed.  I wondered how I
would escape this time.  "Neither ..."  I finally answered.  "Both are
very disorderly."  From the corner of my eye, I could see how Tamra
shook her head.  Cassius almost sighed-almost, perhaps, the most
fallible gesture I had seen from the Brotherhood.  Then he continued.
"We were speaking about order, a topic all of you have been exposed to
since your birth.  Unfortunately, for various reasons, such as Lerris's
boredom, Tamra's equation of order with male dominance, Sammel's
compassion for those unable to accept order, Krystal's unwillingness to
concentrate, and Wrynn's contempt for weakness .. . none of you
can-accept order as the basis for a society."  I grinned, not really
caring if I had been a target with the others, as I watched his gentle
barbs bring the group alert.  But I wondered why he had not said
anything about Myrten.  Cassius turned and jabbed the short black wand
he carried at me.  "Lerris, you find order boring.  Tell us why.  Stand
up.  You can walk around and take as long as you want."  I eased off
the brown leather pillow and stretched, conscious that even Tamra was
looking toward me.  I ignored her, or tried to.  I didn't like being
studied like a bug under a magnifying glass.  "Order is boring.
Everything is the same.  Every day in Reduce people get up and do the
same things.  They do them as perfectly as possible for as long as
possible.  Then they die.  If that's not meaningless and boring, I
don't know what is."  Wrynn nodded, as did Myrten, but Tamra's ice-blue
eyes were hooded.  Krystal suppressed a musical giggle and wound her
long black hair around her fingers, letting the tips brush her feet as
she watched from her cross-legged position.  I didn't know what else to
say.  After all, what I'd said was obvious.  So I stood there.  No one
else added anything.

"Lerris, suppose, for the sake of discussion, there is a kingdom
somewhere in this universe-"

"Universe?"

"Sorry.  Just imagine another world.  One where people have all the
children they want, without order, without rule.  One where every
generation, for no apparent reason, all the kingdoms go to war.  The
young men wear their armor and carry their weapons, and one-fifth of
them die.  Some kingdoms win, and some lose, but the only real result
of the wars is that the weapons become more terrible and more
effective.

"More children are born; more go hungry; and more of those who reach
maturity die in the wars."  Cassius paused and looked over the group of
us.  "All of you think about this imaginary world, not just Lerris."

I didn't think long.  So what.  So people died.  People always die.

"Lerris, did you know that five thousand people died in Southern Hamor
last year?"

I shook my head.  What did five thousand deaths in Hamor have to do
with an imaginary world?  What did the imaginary world have to do with
boredom?  Or order?

"Do you know how they died?"  Cassius's voice rumbled.

"No."  How was I supposed to know?

"They starved to death.  They died because there was no food."

Wrynn, sitting back against the black oak that paneled the lower half
of each wall, pursed her lips.

Anyone could die without food.  I nodded.

"Do you know why there was no food?"

"No."

"Does anyone here know?"

"Was that the rebellion?"  asked Tamra.  She seemed amused, as if she
knew where Cassius was leading us.

I wondered how she knew about a rebellion in Southern Hamor.  And who
cared?

"There was food in Western Hamor," Cassius added slowly.  "Enough food
that the price of grain was lower than in years."

Myrten looked puzzled.

"Yes, Myrten?"  Cassius acknowledged the ferret-faced man with the
unruly hair as thick as a buffalo's coat.

"Couldn't they have at least smuggled some grain?"

"The Imperial Army blocked the roads.  Some grain was smuggled, a great
deal, in fact, but not enough to compensate for the fields burned by
the emperor's troops."

There was a moment of silence.

"Lerris, has one person ever starved to death in Recluce?"

"I don't know."  Damned if I would admit the point, although I wasn't
sure which point I wasn't about to admit.

"So .. . you are saying that avoiding starvation is boring?  That
having happy and well-fed people is boring?  Would you prefer to live
in Hamor, where the lack of order leads to rebellions, oppression, and
starvation?  Is death preferable to boredom?"

"Of course not."  My voice was louder than it should have been.  "But
you're saying that boredom is necessary to avoid death or some kinds of
evil.  That's what I don't accept."

"I never said that, Lerris.  You did."

I started to open my mouth, except Tamra snorted.  "Lerris, try
thinking for once."

Krystal giggled.

I glared at her.  She didn't look at me.  Wrynn did, but she was
shaking her head, even as she stretched out those long shapely legs.

No one said anything.

Magister Cassius finally sighed-a real sigh.

"All right," I demanded, "would someone explain to dumb Lerris?"

"You're not dumb," snapped Tamra.  "You just refuse to see."

"See what?"

"Lerris .. ."  rumbled Cassius, "order is necessary to prevent evils
such as starvation and murder.  Will you grant that point?"

I nodded.  "Yes."

"You find excessive order boring, you said."

I had to nod again.

"Do you see the difference between the first point and the second?"

I must have looked blank.

Everyone was shaking their heads.

Cassius took a deep breath.  "Honest order prevents evil.  That is a
truth of life, and also of magic.  On this ... on our earth that truth
approaches a fact."  He paused.

"All right," I admitted, still wondering why he insisted on a
difference between truth and fact.

"You call excessive order boring.  That is a personal value judgment.
When you apply that boredom to order, you are the one who says that
boredom is necessary to avoid evil.  Boredom is not a component of
order.  It is only your reaction.  Boredom is not necessary to prevent
starvation; order is.  You just find that order boring."

Magister Cassius was just twisting words.  Too much order was still
boring.

"You all have a problem similar to Lerris's," continued the black man
in black.  "Tamra-you find order a tool of men.  Therefore, you refuse
to accept our way of life totally because order accepts the valid
differences between men and women.  You feel that women can do
anything, if not more, than men can."

"We can," murmured the redhead, so low that no one seemed to hear it
except me, although she was across the room from me.  My hearing seemed
to be getting better, or perhaps I was more alert.  Tamra smoldered,
but kept it hidden.

I slipped back down onto the brown leather pillow.  The Magister smiled
faintly and turned.  "Wrynn," continued the black man implacably, with
his eyes turning toward his next victim, "you feel that strength is the
answer to all problems, and that, given enough effort, anyone can be
strong.  Your philosophy would leave infants and the sick to grow-or
die-as they could."

"That's not true .."  Wrynn straightened on the pillow.  Her
brown-flecked green eyes turned cold.

"Then," Magister Cassius smiled, "would you explain it for us?  Feel
free to stand or walk around."

I watched Tamra, as graceful as a dancer, yet wound with a steel inside
that would have dulled the sharpest blade.  Her flame-red hair framed a
freckled face that almost-almost-looked friendly when she was not
speaking.  She turned toward me, caught my eyes.  I felt like a cold
dash of water had been thrown across the room at me, and I looked
toward Wrynn.

"Everyone has an obligation to be as strong as they can be.  It isn't
right for the strong to have to take care of those who refuse to be
strong."  Wrynn hadn't stood from her cushion, and her hands were
clenched into fists.  She looked down at the knife sheath at her
belt.

"What do you mean by 'strong'?"  asked Cassius in that low rumbling
voice.

Wrynn looked at the polished black-oak floor planks, then at Krystal,
and finally in the general direction of Myrten, who seemed to shrink
further into the corner.  Myrten always seemed to put himself in a
corner when he could, a corner from where he could watch everything.

The room grew silent.

"You know what I mean.  You just play with words."  Wrynn's voice was
harsh.

I agreed with her assessment of Cassius, of all the magisters and
masters.  All of them played with words, twisting their meanings,
hiding more than they revealed.

"Come, now," Cassius's voice soothed.  "You feel that strength is
important.  What kind of strength?  Is a bully to be admired?  Would
you despise a small woman who required aid to stop a thief?"

"I don't admire bullies.  I don't think much of people who invite theft
or attacks.  And I don't like thieves."  Each word came forth filled
with grit.  Wrynn glared at Myrten, who for some reason looked away.

"So you feel order should rest solely upon strength and
self-discipline?"

"I know what I feel."  Wrynn glared this time at the magister

"Fair enough."  Cassius actually chuckled before wiping the smile from
his face and turning toward Krystal.  "And you, laughing lady?  Why do
you fail to pay much attention to order?  Or to anything?"

Krystal didn't even look up at Cassius.  She giggled and played with
her long black hair.

"Krystal .. ."  The booming voice turned cold.  Even I shivered.

Krystal looked at the floor planks.  "It .. . doesn't help to pay
attention.  Things happen anyway.  Thinking doesn't stop them."  Her
voice was barely above a whisper.  Wrynn sniffed loudly.

"Then you agree with Wrynn?  That violence is the only way in which
evil can be stopped?"

"Sometimes."  She shifted her weight and looked at me.  "What do you
think, Lerris?"

I wished she hadn't made that unspoken request, and especially that
Cassius hadn't caught it.  I coughed, trying to figure out what Krystal
had really meant.  "..  . ummm ... at least sometimes it seems like
perfectly good people can't do anything against evil or against
accidents .. . and sometimes"-I recalled the baker-"people seem to be
punished or exiled from Recluce just because they don't meet some
unseen or unspoken standard.  I guess I see that as unfair, that
because they can't understand or aren't strong enough, they get
punished."

"Do you think life is basically fair?  Or that the Brotherhood has the
obligation to be fair to an individual, when that fairness could
threaten the safety of all Recluce?"

"I haven't seen that happen, I haven't seen any threat of that nature,
but I have seen people who were not bad people exiled or punished."

Cassius smiled sadly, glancing from Krystal, who refused to look up, to
Wrynn, who glared at him, and back to me.  In the corner, Myrten licked
his lips.

"Is living in Recluce a right or a privilege?"  Cassius's question hung
in the air like a spell.

"You're saying it's a privilege, that we have to meet certain
conditions," I snapped.  "That's fine, except no one ever explains the
reasons behind the conditions.  Just mind the rules; maintain order and
banish chaos; and don't ask questions that we don't want to answer."

"I take it that you don't find the explanations satisfactory."

"You're right.  I don't, and I don't think most of the people in this
room do, either."

"So .. . the emperor has no clothes."  Cassius's voice was lower and
softer.

No clothes?  What emperor?  What clothes?

"This .. . philosophy ... is all very inspiring.  But how does this
prepare us for danger geld  Tamra's voice was cutting, and she had
stood up.

"Sit down, and I'll tell you.  None of you are likely to believe me.
But I'll tell you."

I shrugged.  So did Wrynn.  Tamra glared, but she sat back down.

Cassius waited until the murmurs died away.

"It's really quite simple.  Against perfect order, it is almost
impossible for chaos-magic to prevail.  Recluce is based on maintaining
that order.  Some people are order-sources; some people are
chaos-generators; and some people can be either.

"Most people selected for danger geld are either uncontrolled
order-sources, or could generate either order or chaos without knowing
it.  The first step in danger geld is to recognize that all of you have
the ability to either allow chaos a foothold in Recluce or to help keep
it from Recluce.  You have to choose which, and the Brotherhood is not
about to let you make that decision unless you're being watched and
checked or unless you're outside Recluce.

"Since Recluce is not a police state, the best option is to let you see
the rest of the world, or some of it, while you learn and decide."

Police state?  That was an odd way of putting it.  Only Hamor had
police.  For a moment, the room was still.

"So .. . you just throw us out for Hamor or Candar to murder, and
everything stays fine with the sheep who remain?"  Wrynn's voice was
tight.

"Hardly.  The current Emperor of Hamor is the grandson of a danger
gelder who preferred the Southern Reaches and who was quite successful
in taking over the Province of Merowey.  The head assassin for one
major power came from Sigil, not all that far from here." Cassius shook
his head.  "Believe me, the rest of the world will reward many talents.
You're in the greatest danger if you believe in order and reject the
Brotherhood."  His eyes flashed toward me.  "That's because you become
a walking order-source in the realms of chaos and a threat to the
chaos-masters."

"You're saying that because we have talent we have to leave Recluce
until we master that talent?"  asked Sammel.

"Not until you master it.  That could take years.  Until you decide
within yourself your own course of action."

I almost bit my tongue.  It was even worse than I thought.  If I didn't
accept the Brotherhood's stiff-necked order and rules, then I'd be
thrown to the wolves, and, somehow, I didn't exactly see myself as a
chaos-master.  Why couldn't an ethical person use both order and chaos?
Life consists of both.

"What about .. ."

The questions went on, but I didn't pay much attention.  Everyone was
just asking the same things with different words.  So I was an
uncontrolled order-source?  Or worse.  And no one still was describing
what that meant, except that it was dangerous to Recluce.

My stomach growled, but no one heard as they argued with Cassius.

Krystal and I sat there in a quiet island.  She looked at the floor,
and I looked at everything and saw nothing.

THE SUN HUNG like a golden platter over the black stone wall that
separated the Brotherhood's enclave from the seaport- that wall that
seemed so low from the Brotherhood side, and so imposing from the
market square below.

Even though it was but a few days past midsummer, the grass remained
crisp and green, the air clean, and the nights cool-the result of the
Eastern Current, according to Sammel.

I hadn't thought much about it, not until Magistra Trehonna started in
with her maps and lectures on geography, and how the placement of
mountains and currents affected weather.  Then she got into how
geography determined where cities and towns were, and why places like
Fenard, the capital of Gallos, sat on the edge of the hills leading to
Westhorns because the higher elevation made the city more defensible
and the two small rivers provided power for the mills.  The only
interesting bit was how the imposition of order and chaos at what she
called critical nodes could change whole weather patterns.

That partly explained why some of the Brotherhood ships patrolled
certain segments of the northern waters.  But her lectures were like
everything else-a piece of knowledge here, another one there, and a
whole lot of boring repetition in the middle.

So I sat with my back against a small red oak and watched the puffy
clouds in the eastern skies begin to darken from white into a
pinkish-gray.  Just because, I tried to see if I could discover the
patterns behind the clouds, trying to look beyond their surfaces.

Again, I could see the faint heat-shadow-like images I had seen around
the strange Brotherhood ships, but the ones in the clouds were natural.
How I could tell the difference, I didn't know.  But I did.  After a
while, my eyes began to ache.  So I closed them and began to listen.

There were other danger geld groups around.  We met in the quarters and
sometimes talked over dinner.  They weren't much different, except they
looked to be in better shape, and they all seemed distant.  Friendly,
understanding, but distant.

Two of them were seated on a bench on the other side of the hedge.
Their voices carried.  "..  . Brysta, that's what they say .. ."

"At least it's not Hamor .. ."

"Take Hamor over Candar .. . home of the chaos-masters .. . Emperor of
Hamor likes some order .. ."

Cassius had mentioned that Candar was the most chaotic of the major
continents.  Tamra said that was because it was closest to Recluce, and
there had to be balance.  Cassius frowned, but hadn't corrected her.
That meant she'd been right.

So what else was new.  From Frven in Candar, the chaos-wizards had
ruled most of the world-until they'd created a new sun in the sky and
melted most of the capital's buildings and people like wax.  Although
that had been generations ago, the people probably hadn't changed that
much.

"Could I join you?"

I almost jumped, opening my eyes with a start.

The musical voice belonged to Krystal.

"Sure .. . I'm not certain I'm much company."

"That makes two of us."  She tucked her feet under her and settled down
with a cubit of grass between us, shrugging her shoulders as if to
loosen her faded blue tunic.  The long hair was bound up with silvered
cords.  When she wasn't giggling or fiddling with her hair I enjoyed
watching her.  She was as graceful as Tamra, but without the arrogance,
and behind the giggles I suspected there was more strength than either
of us knew.

Thimmmmm .. . The chime from the temple echoed once, calling those of
the Brotherhood who wished to join the evening meditation.  I wasn't
about to, and I'd noticed that Magister Cassius never did either.

Krystal did not move, but the two men on the bench on the far side of
the hedge left.

"They're probably going to give thanks for being sent to Brysta,
instead of Candar."  The words popped out of my mouth.

"Where do you think we'll be sent?"

"Candar," I opined.

"You're usually right ... I mean, about facts .. ."  She looked down at
the grass.

I straightened into a sitting position and stopped leaning against the
oak.  Both tree and ground were hard.  The clouds above the eastern
horizon showed gray, and the breeze from the west picked up, ruffling
my hair.  A hint of trilia tickled my nose, bittersweet orange.

"What will happen to us?"

I shrugged.  "I don't know.  It seems like we're a strange lot, but I
suppose all danger gelders are.  Myrten's a thief, but how he lasted so
long .. . Wrynn's really a soldier, probably belongs in the border
guard.  Sammel's a missionary in a land that already has a faith that
doesn't place compassion above order.  Tamra hates men, and half the
world is male.  Dorthae ... I just don't know .. ."

"And you?"

"Me?"  I shrugged again.  I didn't want to talk about me.  "Like
Cassius says, I'm easily bored.  What about you?"

"I think you're bored because you want to know everything and you don't
want to admit it."

Thimmmmm .. . The second chime from the temple rang, indicating the
evening meditation had begun.

"What about you?"  I asked again.

"Me?"  Krystal giggled just slightly.

I frowned.

"You don't like it when I giggle."

"No."  I looked over her shoulder and down the grassy stretch toward
the small garden just before the wall.  Dorthae and Myrten were seated
on opposite ends of the bench, playing some sort of card game.  That
figured.  Myrten would find something with odds in it anywhere.

"I was contracted, you know.  He didn't mind the giggling too much."

"I'm sorry."  I hadn't thought about that.  I was young.  What if
Koldar or Corso had been picked for danger geld  Krystal was announcing
that the Brothers had pulled her away from her husband lover just like
that.  "I'm sorry."

"Don't be.  It was a good excuse to leave.  He'll be happier.  I
already am."

"Just leaving?"  I couldn't imagine my mother walking away from my
father.

"You look at my hair.  You see my breasts.  So do all the men.  Your
looks are honest, at least."  Her voice was low, almost whispery, yet
still musical.

"True," I admitted.

She readjusted her position on the grass.  Somehow the readjustment got
her almost next to me.  "Do you think about what I feel?"

Actually, I was wondering how she would feel to hold and touch, but
that wasn't what she meant.  "Not at first."

"Oh, Lerris .. ."  her voice died off.

We sat there as the darkness drifted down upon Nylan.

"Would you just hold me?"  Her voice was like a child's.

I did, and that was all I did.  Not that I didn't think about more,
especially later that night, alone in my bed.

XI

AFTER WE WERE well into the lectures from Talryn, Magister Cassius, and
Magistra Trehonna-the lady with the glare that even quieted me-one
morning Talryn marched us down another long but well-lit tunnel and out
into a wide room, sunken partly into the ground.

Underground or not, the overhead and upper side windows admitted more
than enough light.  Unlike the teaching rooms, the stone walls were
plastered over with an almond-shaded white finish.  The flooring was
the strange part, neither wood nor stone, but a greenish and springy
substance that gave slightly underfoot.

The same substance was used for flooring in the exercise rooms where
Dilton tried to force us all into a better physical condition.  I had
tried, but hadn't been able to break even the slightest fragment from
it, even though I could squeeze it enough to press a thumb's width of
it up between my fingers, and the woodworking with Uncle Sardit had
left them strong.  The muscles in my legs were what suffered under
Dilton, especially from the running and stretching.

The best part of the conditioning was watching Tamra and Krystal.  I
didn't really dare to do more than watch with either one.  Sometimes,
as with the time on the lawn, Krystal would sit next to me or ask for a
hug, but she clearly wanted it as a brotherly gesture, or even as a
fatherly one.  And that was the way it stayed, no matter what my body
said.

Why?  Because deep inside the lady, I could feel, not knowing how,
something that I wasn't about to tamper with.  What?  Like a lot of
things, I couldn't say what, only recognize its danger.  Like Tamra,
like Candar.  When I even saw maps of Candar, I wanted to shiver.

My musings stopped when I saw Tamra was smiling.  She still wore the
dark gray, this time with a blue scarf.  No one had said a word about
her clothing.  Then, Talryn hadn't said a word about my dark-brown
garments either.

Against the wall opposite the door we had entered were racks of
objects, some clearly swords or knives.  Half a dozen of each were
racked next to each other, and there were five large racks.

"Candidates .. ."  Talryn cleared his throat.  He always cleared his
throat after he got our attention.  "This is Gilberto."

Gilberto wasn't tall.  I'm taller than average, almost four cubits, but
not that much taller than average.  Gilberto stood nearly a head below
me-more like Tamra's size.  Wearing black trousers and black leathers
over a black shirt and black boots, with his black hair and pale white
skin, he looked like an executioner.

"This is Gilberto," repeated Talryn.  "The world outside Recluce boasts
an array of weapons.  Gilberto will attempt to give you some
familiarity with the most common and some minimal ability with one or
two, assuming you are willing to learn."

Gilberto smiled crookedly, as if offering an apology.  The expression
turned him from a colorless executioner into a sad-faced clown.

Tamra studied him from one side.  I just smiled back at the man.  He
looked funny.  Boring or strange as some of the Brotherhood could be, I
never doubted their abilities.  Krystal pursed her too-red lips, trying
not to giggle.  Wrynn scowled.  Myrten licked his lips.  Dorthae looked
at Talryn, then at Gilberto, without saying a word.

Gilberto acknowledged us, bending forward at the waist.  The gesture
was formal.  "There are weapons on the racks.  Please look them over.
Pick them up.  Handle them -touch at least one of each kind.  Whichever
one of them feels most comfortable to you, please take that one and sit
down on one of the pillows at the end of the room."

The weapons-master's eyes turned cold.  "Do not pick a weapon with your
head.  Do not pick whatever seems the easiest, or the most destructive.
The weapons you use must reflect you."  He paused.  "Later, I will
teach you about other weapons."  He bowed again and gestured toward the
racks.

Gilberto was serious.  I knew that.  So I edged toward the nearest
rack, on which I could see swords-long ones, short ones, and some no
bigger than long daggers.  I looked at a narrow-bladed sword with a
business-like handle, finally nerved myself to pick it up-and damned
near dropped it.  The chill and almost forbidding feel of the weapon
nauseated me.  As quickly as possible I set it down, wiping my
forehead.

"Heee .. ."

Krystal and her damned giggles.  "Go ahead.  You pick one up."

She twisted her hair back over her shoulder and reached past me for the
sword, easily holding it, turning it in her hands.  "It feels fine, but
not quite right."  She set it down and reached for a slighter, shorter
sword, although it had the same narrow blade.

I reached for the sword she had tried, the one I had let go of so
quickly.  The jolt and chill weren't quite as strong, but my stomach
still twisted.

Looking for.  Talryn, I wondered what trickery he and Gilberto were up
to.  But Talryn had disappeared so silently no one noticed his
departure, and Gilberto stood at the end of one of the racks, a
thoroughly impassive, even bored, look on his face.

Tamra came up beside me, grinning, and reached for the sword that I had
tried twice.  Her mouth opened as her hand grasped the hilt.  Then she
tightened her lips, finally setting the sword down.  "Not for me."  A
faint sheen of perspiration had popped out on her forehead.

I repressed a smile and walked down the first rack, looking at the
daggers, many of which were finely crafted, even while displaying
workmanlike effectiveness.  Even running my hands over their hilts told
me that the daggers were equally repugnant.  I had handled knives
before, and I had never felt so repelled.  Clearly a spell had been
placed on the weapons.  But why?

From the corner of my eye, I could see that Tamra was as vexed as I,
and her grin had long since disappeared.

The spears were only mildly uncomfortable.  Next to them were a row of
halberds, their axe-blades polished, glittering.  But when I lowered my
hand to one of the heavy brass halberds, I thought my stomach would
empty on the spot.

Clunk.  I pulled away so suddenly that one of the lower and shorter
halberds rolled out of its resting place and struck the floor.

Even Gilberto turned toward me, his eyebrows raised.

Despite the look, I left the halberd on the floor.  Damned if I was
about to risk disgracing myself on the spot by losing what remained of
my breakfast.

I waved him off, moving from the edged weapons toward the pistols.  I'd
never seen one up close, but Magister Kerwin had mentioned them in
history, noting their limited effectiveness in warfare because of their
unreliability at any distance and the problems created by their
complexity, especially their susceptibility to chaos-magic.

I didn't even have to touch them.  They were just as unfriendly,
although I watched Myrten fondling one almost lovingly.  So I admired
their carved handles and blued steel and barely let my fingers pass
over them, walking down that weapons rack toward the next.

On the next were various clubs.  I tried several, relieved that I could
at least pick them up.  Not one felt comfortable, but my stomach didn't
do flip-flops, either.  The metal ones, like the mace and the morning
star screamed at me to leave well enough alone.  After the experience
with the halberd, Gilberto's instructions or not, I left them alone.

Next to the clubs were some coiled ropes.  They felt all right, only
faintly repugnant-but what could you do with a rope?  How was it even a
weapon?  Then there were some sort of polished handles connected by
heavy cords.  Same thing there-I could handle them, but couldn't
imagine how they worked.

Finally, I came to the staves.  Surprisingly, there were two dark ones,
of a polished dark brown wood-darkened white oak, rather than black oak
or black lorken, like my staff.  Also unlike my own staff, which Talryn
had suggested most strongly that I leave in my room during instruction
periods, none of the staves were bound in metal, although their finish
was almost as fine as that which Uncle Sardit had imparted to my staff.
One staff, which I took, nearly matched my own in length.  The other
was somewhat shorter.  Both were the first weapons, if a staff were a
weapon, that hadn't made me uncomfortable.

With the longer staff in hand, I looked at the remaining section of the
last rack, which contained truncheons.  One, more like a short staff,
although it was pitch-black, beckoned almost as much as the full-length
staff.  I held it for a while, then returned it.

Tamra walked toward the staves.  Her feet dragged, as if she wanted no
part of them.  Her lips were pressed tightly I together, and she
carried no weapon.

Beyond her, I could see Krystal standing by a brown leather sitting
pillow, almost fondling the deadly sword.  Myrten sat, examining the
pistol which he had taken from the racks.

Sammel carried a pair of matched truncheons, and Wrynn was still poking
around the blades.

My eyes shifted back to Tamra.  Her forehead glistened with a layer of
perspiration as she picked up a steel mace with iron spikes.  The mace
head was nearly the size of hers.  Her lips tightened until I could see
the whiteness in them even from five cubits away.  Slowly, she set the
mace back in the rack.

I had to admire her strength, even if she were far more stubborn than
I. But why did she put herself through that kind of torture?  It was
torture; that was certain.  Her hands were almost shaking by the time
she finally reached the staves.

"Think it's amusing, do you?"  Tamra's voice was like molten lead.

I shook my head.  She didn't have to prove anything to me, and she
certainly didn't owe any sort of proof to the Brotherhood.

She looked right through me as she picked up the other dark staff.  The
tension in her body eased, but the frown remained, like a line chiseled
above the ice-blue eyes.  Unlike some redheads, or Dorthae, Tamra
didn't darken her eyebrows, and she seemed to scorn any kind of
adornment except the colored scarves she wore.

"Tamra .. . Lerris ... are you finished admiring your weapons?"
Gilberto's voice was dry.

"Admiring is not the word I would have chosen," observed Tamra, her
voice cold enough now to chill warm fruit juice-instantly.

Gilberto ignored her comments, stood there waiting, holding a short
black baton in his hand, the length of a truncheon, as I scrambled to a
pillow next to Krystal.

Tamra sauntered toward a pillow at the other side of the group, each
step slow and deliberate.  Gilberto waited.  I would have clobbered her
.. . with something.  He just gave a slow and lazy smile, and I
shivered.

Tamra smiled back sweetly.

Krystal giggled.

Gilberto turned to the group even before Tamra seated herself.  "The
weapons you have in your hands are the weapons most suited to your
temperament."  Gilberto's voice was dry.  "That does not mean they are
the best weapons for your defense-right now.  If you choose to learn
them, they will become the best weapons for your defense."  The
weapons-master surveyed the group, as if asking for questions.

"You keep talking about defense," asked Tamra.  "Is your purpose only
to teach us self-defense?"

Gilberto hesitated, glancing toward the open doorway to the tunnel
through which we had entered, as if looking for Talryn.  Finally, he
answered.  "Anything used as a defense can be a weapon.  Violence is
not the way of Recluce, or of the Brotherhood.  You may use what we are
able to teach you in any way you wish."  He smiled faintly.  "Those who
find more joy in using weapons than in avoiding their use will
appreciate Hamor or Candar."

Once again, one of the Brothers really hadn't answered the question.  I
was finding the lack of direct answers tiresome.  I might conceivably
be a child, but certainly none of the others were.  Yet Gilberto
treated all of us as if we couldn't be trusted to understand a complete
answer.

"What do you mean by that?"  snapped Dorthae.  "You're not talking to
children."

Gilberto shrugged, lifting his shoulders with an exaggerated care.
"Very few people in Recluce enjoy weapons.  The opposite is true in
Hamor and Candar.  If you enjoy using weapons for more than exercise,
you probably belong in Candar or Hamor."

Krystal giggled .. . again.  Her hair was up, this time in golden
cords, and instead of playing with it, her fingers ran along the sword
blade.  For some reason, I remembered how surgically she used a knife
at meals.

Wrynn frowned.  She carried a brace of throwing knives.

Gilberto paused while he looked us over again.  "Here .. . you will get
exercise, and you will learn weapons, beginning with the ones you have
picked out.  Not those exact ones, but the same type."

"Why not these?"  asked Myrten, grasping his pistol tightly.

"They're enchanted to seek affinities .. . which reduces their
effectiveness.  Now, please put them back where you found them, and
I'll take you to the student armory, where you will be issued a set of
weapons based around the one you chose."

The whole business seemed odd.  Why have us choose weapons at all?
Certainly the Brotherhood could have told who was suited for what
weapons.  Why did they bother?  And what was the basis for deciding who
was "suited" for what?

"What is the basis for these 'affinities'?"  I asked, as Gilberto
started to turn toward the other doorway-the one across from where we
had entered.

"Your underlying character is the most important thing.  If you have
training with a weapon that is not suited to your character, that can
confuse the issue, but Talryn indicated that was not the case for any
of you."

"How would he know?"  asked Wrynn.

Gilberto shrugged.  "I just teach weapons.  The masters know what they
know."

He wasn't telling all he knew, but what else was new?  That didn't
exactly surprise me.  Gilberto walked toward the doorway, then turned
to wait for us to put back the charmed weapons.

I got up to return the staff.  I liked mine better.

Tamra didn't look at anyone as she walked across the springy greenish
floor toward the racks.  Krystal took a long time to let go of the
sword.

Staying more than a respectful distance behind Tamra, I followed.

The practice weapons were scarred, but sound.  The cutting weapons had
rounded edges, from what I could see, since I received a club, a
truncheon, and a staff.  As far as I could tell, only Tamra, Sammel and
I received no edged weapons at all.

XII

GILBERTO HAD BEEN right about one thing.  Training with the weapons was
hard, and not just physically.  Who ever would have thought about the
proper ways to hold a truncheon?  The staff ... I guess I saw that as
more like a sword or an unpointed spear .. . anything that long clearly
required technique.

Almost all of what I learned was new, and with all the repetition in
the lectures, the weapons classes were usually the most interesting.

"Lerris, used properly, that truncheon is a far more effective weapon
than a knife.  Used properly .. . you're holding it like .. ." Gilberto
broke off and shrugged.  "I cannot even make a comparison."

Most training sessions were like that.  Initially, nothing I did was
right.  The same was true of almost everyone-except Tamra and Krystal.
Gilberto said almost nothing to Tamra, except occasional suggestions.
Krystal he paid more attention to, but not much.  As far as any kind of
blade went, she picked up what he had in mind immediately.

Me ... it was like I had two left thumbs.

"Lerris, stop fighting yourself .. . just relax."

How many times I heard those words, I don't recall; but hear them I
did, time after time.

Once we had some basic idea of what we were doing, Gilberto began
pairing us off-first against him, or one of his apprentices; then,
occasionally, against each other.

Eventually I found myself facing Tamra, not exactly in the field I had
wanted.

We stood on opposite sides of a white practice circle on the spongy
green flooring.  Outside, the late summer sky was overcast, which was
the exception rather than the rule, and the light filtering through the
long and high wall windows was grayish.

Tamra smiled.  Her face lit up when she smiled, but it was not a
pleasant light at all.  "Rules, Magister Gilberto?"  The fingers of her
heavy padded gloves tightened on the hard wood of the practice
staff-the center part that was unpadded.  Not that the padding on the
ends was all that heavy.  Her eyes were on me, as if she were studying
some insect or a painting on a wall.

A wisp of her flame-red hair peeked from under the leather and wood of
the padded practice helmet.

"Tamra .. ."  began Gilberto.  Then he shook his head.  "No blows to
face, knees, elbows or groin."

"I can live with that," announced the redhead.  I thought I could,
also, but I didn't like the look in Tamra's eyes, or the instinctive
ease with which she took her balanced stance.  Then, again, I
overtopped her by nearly a head and probably had twice her physical
strength.  And I hadn't done that badly against Demorsal, one of
Gilberto's apprentices, over the past days.

Besides, Tamra deserved anything I could land on her, the arrogant
bitch.  Always so damned superior, as if she didn't really belong with
mere danger geld trainees.

"Two to one she takes him .. ."  Myrten's raspy whisper annoyed me more
than the bet.  He laid odds on everything.  I couldn't see as well as I
would have liked.  The helmet restricted my peripheral vision, but I
felt as though Myrten had rasped his bet at Sammel.  Sammel shook his
head.

"Start when I tell you.  And stop at the bell.  Do you understand?
Ready?"  Gilberto stepped out of the circle, then glanced at Tamra.
"Tamra?"

She nodded.

"Lerris?"

"Yes."  I nodded without taking my eyes off Tamra.  I didn't see why
everyone thought a match between Tamra and me was such a big deal.  She
clearly had more experience, but I was stronger, and almost as quick.

Myrten probably bet on her because I'd trounced him in the last round.
At least I was halfway decent at something.

"Go!"

Tamra circled to my right.  I pivoted.

Thwack.  I barely managed to throw my staff up to block her first
thrust.

Thwack .. . thwack .. . thwack .. .

I danced back, still on the defensive.

Thwack .. . thwack .. . thwunk .. . "..  . ooooff .. ."  Her last blow
crashed into my lower-right ribs.  Her staff moved like lightning
bolts, flashing this way, forking back, always probing.

Thwack .. . thwunk .. .

Another blow ... to my ribs on the left.

Thwack .. .

Fwooopp .. . My staff slipped past hers and bounced off her upper
leg.

THWUNK .. .

I could feel the floor rising at me, but there wasn't anything I could
do about the momentary blackness and the stars that greeted me.  "...
poor bastard .. ."  "..  . sufficient, I trust, Magister Gilberto?"

I squinted and sat up, trying to still the swirling inside my brain.

"Sufficient, Tamra."  Gilberto's voice was dry.  "Are you all right,
Lerris?"

My head felt like a log flayed out of its bark.  My ribs were an
unbroken ache, and Tamra was almost openly smirking.  "Fine.  Just
fine."  Standing up required most of my remaining strength.

"Why don't you take a hot shower?"  suggested the weapons-master.

I didn't even argue.  Most of the time, whether the water was lukewarm
or warm didn't seem to matter.  The idea of hot water, another luxury
enjoyed by the Brotherhood in Ny-lan, never seemed more welcome.

"Krystal .. . Wrynn .. . long knives .. . use the wooden ones."

My feet found their way, somehow, to the lockers where I stripped off
the padding and the loose exercise clothing that I'd been supplied.

"She was a little hard on you."  Demersal was leaning against the wall.
"..  . Ummmmm .. ."  The tunic was halfway over my head.

"But that's because you're fighting yourself, and you don't even want
to admit it."

"Not you, too?"  I pulled off the tunic.  "Just what the hell do you
mean?  Everyone keeps telling me not to fight myself."

"I shouldn't tell you .. . Talryn says that we all have to discover
ourselves."

"Talryn be damned," I muttered, sitting on the bench and pulling off
the soft exercise pants.  I was going to be sore-really sore, shower or
no shower.  "At least, tell me how to keep from getting killed the next
time."

Demersal grinned.  His black eyes twinkled.  "I just did."  He wasn't
much taller than Tamra, but she never seemed to lay a staff on him.
Neither did I, but he didn't hit me except lightly.

"I'm stupid.  Tell me in another way."

"You got decked when you tried to attack.  Every time.  Why?"

I shook my head.  I wished I hadn't, and put it between my hands to
keep it from coming off.

"I'll ask it another way.  Why did Tamra hit you the hardest when you
attacked?  Why don't I hit you hard when we spar?  You leave openings,
you know, especially when you try to attack."

"I don't know," I groaned.  Questions I didn't need, not when my head
was pounding.

"Because I have the same problem.  I can't attack."

About that time I finally realized what he was saying.  Finally.  "Is
that why I wasn't allowed edged weapons?"  Demorsal looked around the
lockers.  "You believe in order.  You have to.  Use of weapons
conflicts with order.  For you to make an attack, you have to fight
yourself first, then your opponent.  You can't help getting clobbered
that way."

I looked at him.  "Tamra uses a staff, and she clobbered me."

"She's a little crazy, but think about it ... she hit you hardest when
you attacked .. . and I've probably said too much.  Hope you feel
better."  The senior apprentice turned as I stood up to head for the
showers.

The pieces fit, but I didn't like it.  Then again, I didn't have to
like it.  If I wanted to survive, I just had to adapt to my own
limitations.  But I didn't have to like it.  I certainly didn't.

XIII

WHEN I HAD free time, usually in the afternoon of our rest days-every
eighth day of the Temple calendar-I still walked down to the harbor
area in Nylan, checking the scattered ships from across the oceans,
seeing how many countries traded with Recluce and how.

Were they using steel-hulled steamers, or wooden-framed square-riggers?
I never saw anything resembling a galley, although Magister Cassius
indicated some coastal states to the far southwest of Candar, the ones
around the smaller Western Ocean, operated slave galleys for coastal
defense forces.

I always looked for the telltale sign of concealing screens and for the
black ships of the Brotherhood that no one ever talked about.  I didn't
talk about them either, since I wasn't about to admit I had seen them
unless someone else already said something.  None of our danger geld
instructors did.

It was the same old story.  If I asked about something and they didn't
want to talk about it, the answers were always platitudes or so vague
that I already knew most of what they said.

Still, I kept visiting the harbor-usually alone-with some of my danger
geld funds, just in case I found something useful.  I hadn't, but that
didn't mean I wouldn't.

Once Krystal and I went together, on a sunny and cloudless afternoon. A
brisk wind was blowing in from the west, so stiff it tugged at our
tunics and hair.  Krystal had bound her hair up, with the silver cords
this time.

Crackkk .. . thrappp .. . crackk .. . The canvas on the outside trading
tables cracked almost like trees breaking in a storm as we walked
through the center of the market square.  Less than half the booths on
the Recluce side of the square were occupied, and but a handful on the
outland side.  A man in pale green browsed at the woodworker's stall,
and the same youngster sat on the stool.  I grinned, but he continued
to watch the customer.

Just a handful of people, mostly danger gelders or members of the
Brotherhood, wandered around the square.

"There's a weapons table."

"You want to see what's there?"  I asked.  "It won't be as good as what
you have."

Without stopping, Krystal looked sideways at me, raising a dark eyebrow
on a face more tanned than when she had arrived in Nylan.  Her natural
pace nearly matched mine, despite the difference in our height.  "What
I have?  I have nothing except a belt knife and a small cutting knife.
You expect me to step out in Hamor or Candar with those alone?"

"Sorry."

Krystal stopped in front of the table.

On light-blue felt were laid out a number of blades.  A thin man with a
waxed mustache, ropy arms, and a gray leather vest sat on a stool
opposite us.  His expressionless black eyes met mine.

I looked through him.  After all, "I wasn't shopping for blades.

Crackkk .. . The canvas of an empty table snapped in the wind, and the
sting of salt air brushed my face.

The proprietor transferred his unspoken demand to Krystal, who had
lifted one of the thinner blades, the plainest one on the table.  Even
to me, it was the best.  Not that I really wanted to even touch it.

"You like that one?"  His deep voice was flat, almost expressionless,
like his eyes.

She set the blade back on the felt.  "I prefer this style .. . to .. ."
she gestured at a scimitar with a swirled and gilded hilt and guard.
"Do you have any others like it?"

In the hands of the dark-skinned trader appeared two other blades.
Around one glimmered scabrous blood-red force-swirls.  Just looking at
that un patterned display turned my guts.

Krystal reached for it.

"No!  Not that one."  I spoke before realizing it.  But I didn't want
her even to touch the blade, not with the real hint of evil embodied in
the chaos.  For the first time I saw, really saw, a clear distinction
between honest chaos and true evil.

Crackkk .. . The flapping canvas punctuated the moment.

Krystal frowned, but her hand stopped short of the hilt.

"It is said to be cursed," admitted the trader.  His voice was still
flat.

My eyes focused on him, as they had on the blade, but discerned
nothing, not that I would have known what to look for.

"Try the other one ..."  I suggested.

"You're telling me about swords?"  Krystal's voice was anything but
musical, almost waspish.

I shrugged.  "The pattern's .. ."  How could I tell her what I saw? How
can you say that a pattern of force-swirls that no one else sees says
that the sword will lead its wielder from chaos into depravity ... or
worse?  How can you describe a set of unseen forces that are so chaotic
that their only coherence is opposition to order?  I had to shrug
again.  "Please .. . Krystal .. . just trust me."

An odd look, one I couldn't identify, passed across her face and was
gone.

The trader looked at me.  "You are an apprentice master, then?"

His flat voice bothered me.  Something was missing, although I couldn't
say what.  "I am what I am," was my answer-conceding nothing, admitting
nothing.

He inclined his head slightly, but waited for Krystal.

"Lerris .. . what about the other blade?"  This time she made no
movement toward the sword.

The second blade, slightly smaller, showed no force-swirls, only the
honesty of forged metal.

"It's an honest blade, not turned to any use."

Krystal took it gingerly, then examined it in more detail, studying the
metal in the sunlight.  She did all the things with blades that people
who like them do to discover whether they might be right for them, like
flexing them and waving them around, and balancing them to determine
whether they are hilt-heavy or blade-heavy.

She liked it, that I could tell.

So I studied the trader.  Assuming most people had a soul, or that
inner spark that passes for it, he didn't.  There was no life beyond
the physical, and I tried not to shiver.

That didn't make his wares either good or bad, but it meant looking
them over most carefully, and I wasn't sure I was the one to do that.
But the blade seemed all right.

Krystal set the sword on the felt, slowly.

"How much?"  I asked.

"Ten gold pennies."

Krystal looked at the blade.  "It's good, but you could buy a Recluce
ordered blade and a scabbard for that."

"It's not ordered."

I understood immediately.  "That's an advantage in Candar, but not for
us."  I shrugged, and started to turn.

"Eight ..."

"It doesn't matter," Krystal said quietly.

"Six .. ."

The west wind picked up, swirling my short hair.

Cracckkk .. . crack kkk .. .

"Five and a silver," suggested the trader.

"Four and two silvers," I countered.

"Done, apprentice."  His voice was still flat.

"Lerris .. ."

I ignored Krystal, knowing she could not pay for the blade; but she had
not had anyone to help her, and I did not think my mother would have
minded.

"But ..."

The trader placed the sword in a cheap scabbard.

I dug out the price in coins, marveling that I had even thought to
bring enough.

Crackkk .. .

The trader's eyes kept darting toward me.  He took the coins as if he
wanted us to leave, without a nod, and I gave the sword and scabbard to
Krystal.

"Lerris .. ."  She tried to push it back at me.

I pulled my hands away, gambling that she wouldn't want to drop the
blade.  "Let's go.  We can talk on the way."

As we started toward the harbor wall, the trader began to pack his
wares, hurriedly, but I ignored him, looking at Krystal.  I wondered
how he had gotten the devil-blade into the square, but that wasn't my
real concern at the moment.

"It's yours."

"I can't take it."

"It's yours," I repeated, "You need a blade, and you need it before you
end up in Candar or Hamor."

"I can't .. ."

"Krystal .. . you need it.  I know you need it, and you know that. Call
it a favor.  Call it a loan.  Call it anything you want."

She stopped.  We were opposite the fourth pier, the one closest to the
market square, and only a small sloop without an ensign was tied up.
"We need to talk."

"How about here?"  I pulled myself up on the black stone wall.  As I
scrambled around, I scanned the harbor.  Besides the sloop and an old
sailing ship with a combination of masts I couldn't identify, the
harbor was empty.  Not even a sign of a Brotherhood ship.

She set the scabbard and blade on the flat stones and vaulted up next
to me.  We sat with our backs to the water, facing a two-story building
of black oak and black stone.  The sign over the locked double doors
read, in three languages it seemed, "Supplies."  The first line, in
black, was Temple Script.  The second was in green, which suggested
Nordla, and the third was in purple, edged with gold.

It was funny, when you thought about it, that Candar and Recluce shared
the old Temple Tongue, although there were people in all cities who
did, since it was the main trade language, while Nordla and Hamor had
totally separate languages.  I would have expected Candar to have its
own language.

I suppose that was why Magistra Trehonna insisted we learn a little of
Nordlan and Hamorian.

"Lerris."  Krystal's voice was insistent, breaking my reverie,
overriding the lap, lap, lap of the waves against the stone seawall.

I shifted on the hard stone, turning toward her, but letting my feet
dangle.  She was already cross-legged.

"You didn't have to do that.  It's not as though ... I mean, I see how
you look at Tamra .. ."

"Tamra .. . what does she have to do with anything?  She's an arrogant
bitch."

Krystal smiled faintly, but she didn't giggle.  She just waited, and
the water lapped against the stones, and the wind gusted through my
hair and pulled strands of hers from the silver-cords, softening her
straight strong features in the afternoon light.

The sun felt warm on my back, not unpleasantly so, and I waited to see
if she had anything else to say.  It was simple.  She needed a sword,
and I could help.  I couldn't help the world, and I wouldn't help
people who didn't make an effort.  I guess I agreed at least partly
with Wrynn.

"Lerris?"

"Yes."

"Why?"

I shrugged.  "Because you don't ask.  Because I like you.  Because you
take me for what I am.  Because you don't hide behind half-truths and
platitudes.  Lots of reasons, I guess."

She shook her head.  "What do you think will happen to me?"

"I don't know."

Krystal looked down at the rectangular stones, black granite, that
paved the road to the piers.  The seawall where we sat was made of the
same stone.  "I don't think I'm meant to stay in Recluce ..."

I felt the same way about Krystal, but couldn't say why.  So I didn't.
I'd seen her lose herself in fencing with Gilberto.  Already, he was
hard-pressed by Krystal-and he had the experience.  "What will you
do?"

She didn't answer me.  Instead, we sat there quietly.

"It's mine!  Mine!"

From around the corner where the supply store faced the pier dashed two
youngsters-a boy and a girl.  The girl was running lightly ahead of an
older or bigger boy, waving something in her hand.

"You give that back .. ."

The girl stopped at the dark wooden bench before the closed exchange. I
wondered how you obtained currency or drafts or whatever traders needed
that way on rest days.

"All right.  Here's your stinky model.  Let's go out on the pier."

"You go.  I'm going home."  The dark-haired boy tucked the model into
his near-empty pack.

"Oh, come on."  The redhead smiled at him.

"I'm going home."

"Just for a moment?"

"Oh ... all right.  But there's nothing there but that little ship."

"So?"

The two walked past where we sat with only a passing glance, the girl
almost skipping above the stones, the stocky boy plodding after her.

"There we go .. ."  I didn't know why I said those words, but that was
the way I felt.

Krystal glanced over at me.  She shook her head slowly.

I shrugged.  That was the way I felt.  "We ought to be going."

And we did, but neither of us exactly danced back to the dining hall
and the chimes that announced the evening meal.

XIV

AS THE SUMMER drew to a close, some things improved.

As far as weapons practice went, Demorsal had been right.  So long as I
concentrated just on defense with the staff, nothing happened and I got
better-so much better that even Gilberto couldn't break through.  Then
he taught me how to use the staff against blades, and that was
interesting.  Why a swordsman would ever want to take on someone
trained with a long staff was beyond me, but Gilberto assured me that
some would.  So I listened.  Even there, I could barely make one move
toward him.

I was almost disappointed that he didn't pair me against Tamra, but he
just grunted and said, "You're as good as you'll ever need to be with
the staff and truncheons.  Now you need to learn about blades."

That was worse than the staff had been.  Every inch of my body seemed
to have welts from the wooden blades.  I must have used more hot water
in two eight-days than in my whole life.

This time I improved faster, though, because I decided my whole use of
any blade was to weave an impenetrable defense.  I'd never hold out
against a really skilled blade-master, but the idea was to learn enough
to defend against the common ruffian types.

Gilberto insisted I learn attacks.

I was terrible.  "Why bother?"

He insisted.  "There are times when an attack is a defense, and your
body will recognize those times.  You need to learn these
automatically."

Occasionally, as a respite, he let me spar with the staff against
Krystal and Myrten and Dorthae.  That was more for their benefit, in
case they were faced with a staff, but it was still interesting.  Only
Krystal ever came close to touching me.  Of course, I couldn't attack
much, but occasionally I found I could tap them lightly in embarrassing
places.

Krystal laughed.

Myrten looked more like an angry buffalo.  "Think it's funny, do you ..
. ?"

I couldn't help grinning, and, strangely, he grinned back.  "Young-old
magister, you're still a good kid .. ."

A good kid?  Not sure I ever would have called myself that.  Or a
magister.  Me?  But .. .

Outside of the physical training, things got worse ... or didn't
improve.

Magistra Trehonna left, and was replaced by a smiling man named
Lennett, who immediately launched into discussions on the theory of
order.  The theory of order?  Who cared about the theory of order?

Magister Lennett did, it turned out.  And he insisted that we did,
especially Tamra and me.  Tamra smiled sweetly and asked polite
questions.

"Does that mean that a chaos-magician must employ order?"  Her voice
was almost dipped in honey as she leaned toward him.  She eased forward
on the gray pillow where she sat.

How she had found a gray pillow, I didn't know.  The rest of us used
brown.

"Exactly!"  bubbled Lennett.  His eyes danced.

My stomach turned at the sickly-sweet tone.

"Even to manipulate chaos requires the use of order.  In essence, a
chaos-magician sets up a fundamental conflict by his very existence-"

"They are at war within themselves?"  asked Tamra.

That was obvious, but why did Tamra keep playing up to him?  "..  . why
chaos-magicians have short life-spans unless they use other methods to
artificially prolong their existence; and few have the talent.  Fewer
still can master the order-chaos conflict on that plane."

I thought about reading the book my father had tucked away, but I never
got around to it.  Besides, in traveling, I suspected, I would have
more than enough time to read.  "..  . and- Lerris!"

"Yes?"

"Can you explain the magic-reality strength theorem?"

I repressed a sigh.  "That's the idea that the greater the magical
composition of a construct, the less strength it has compared to
something made out of natural materials by hand, rather than by
magic."

"And what does that mean?"  Lennett smiled and looked around the
room.

Myrten was running his hand through his unruly black hair, while
Dorthae looked at Myrten, and Krystal looked toward the afternoon
clouds.  Sammel tried to stifle a yawn.

Tamra smiled brightly.  "It means that magic can diffuse strength or
material over a greater area, but cannot build things that last."

So ... what else was new?  Chaos-magic was great for destroying things,
but you still had to hire stone cutters and masons to build anything.

"That is not precisely correct, as you"-he glanced from Tamra to
me-"will discover."

Myrten snickered.

"Order magic can be used to enhance natural strength, both by providing
a defense against chaos and by strengthening the internal order of
substances."  Magister Lennett shook his head.  "But that is really a
subject of advanced study.  The important point, as Tamra has noted, is
that an equivalently armed individual can prevail against a number of
magical constructs, provided .. . provided you are adequately trained
and weaponed."

"Magister?"  asked Sammel.  "What about cases like the power of the
ancient wizards of Frven?  Or the White Knights?"

Lennett shook his head.  "You are confusing two aspects of chaos.  In
pure destruction or chaos magic-that is, loosening the bonds of order
which hold all materials together-chaos cannot be successfully opposed
except by three factors.  First is will.  Your will to survive prevents
any direct magical attack on your person except by the strongest of the
chaos-magicians.  You are still subject to temptation, and that is
another issue entirely.  Second is the natural strength of materials. A
young person generally has greater resistance to magic, as does a
building built of the strongest stone and best-braced timbers.  Third
is order magic itself, which can suffuse all things with a
strengthening of internal bonds ..."  What Lennet said was probably
true enough, but it was also generally meaningless.  Only a strong
magician would ever try a personal attack.  Anyone using magical
constructs would not employ them unless they were equipped with
superior weapons.  The White Knights had swords that would have made
most great warriors damned near invincible.  I remembered that from my
lessons with Magister Kerwin.  "..  . the greatest strength of chaos is
its ability to thwart complexity .."

"Is that why most nations don't use much steam machinery?"  Tamra
smiled brightly once again.

Wrynn snorted audibly.

I tried to relax.  Theory was fine, but I for one was getting very
tired both of Tamra's phoniness, and of Magister Lennett's enthusiasm
for explaining the obvious and avoiding the explanations behind the
obvious.  What was order magic?  How did it strengthen internal bonds?
Why did no one admit to practicing it?  For that matter, how did
chaos-magic work?

Magister Lennett kept asking questions, and I began to think about
Candar, about what I would have to do, and what I might face there.

XV

FROM THE BEGINNING-or at least it had seemed that way to me-we had been
destined for Candar.  But understanding that, and finding out that we
would actually be leaving Recluce, were two entirely different
things.

We all waited in the same room where we had first gathered after
entering Nylan.  This time, each of us went in to see Talryn
separately.

The dark oak-paneled walls seemed even gloomier the second time around,
and the pictures of the two masters on the wall seemed to have a more
knowing look to them, almost as if they had a secret they weren't about
to share.

I knew that was nonsense, but when I looked at the man in black I
wanted to shiver.  I didn't look at the woman.  She reminded me of
Tamra, for all that there was no physical resemblance.

Sammel went in, and he didn't come out.  I presumed that he left
through the other doorway.  Then Talryn called for Dorthae, followed by
Wrynn and Myrten.  Krystal and Tamra each sat on a bench.  Krystal sat
on the edge, ready to stand up in an instant.  I understood.

I wasn't about to sit anywhere.  I still didn't know much more than
when I had arrived early in the summer, although I was in better shape
and knew enough about half-a-dozen weapons to get myself into real
trouble.

What I didn't know was why I was being sent from Recluce.  Oh, they'd
all explained how I was a danger to the order of our wonderful island
nation.  But not one had explained exactly why.

"Krystal .. ."  Talryn waited by the half-open black oak door.

Krystal stood up slowly.

"Good luck," I said softly.

She gave me a faint smile, then a shrug.

Talryn's face remained professionally cheerful, like that of a
dedicated executioner.

Click.

Tamra glanced up at me from the bench.  Unlike Krystal, she was almost
casual, half-draped along the dark wood.  The sharp blue of her scarf
and the brightness of her hair made her seem somehow out of place in
the somber setting of the anteroom.  "Fond of older women?"

"No.  Just like women."  I was so damned tired of her edges.  She
didn't want to understand anything, just to use it.  "Particularly
women who don't mind admitting that they're women."

"Oh .. . the submissive kind."

I shook my head, not bothering to look at her.  "Good as you are,
Tamra, Krystal could cut you into little pieces.  That's not
submissive, not by chaos or by order.  Krystal is my friend.  That was
the way she wanted it."

"So you're the submissive one, then."  She half-smiled, stretching out
on the bench, cat-like.

I didn't bother answering.  Tamra would twist .. . use .. . anything I
said.  Instead I studied the stone underfoot, trying to touch the
patterns of its existence, trying to trace out the hidden breaks in the
stone.  According to Magister Lennett, all materials had patterns.  The
wood I understood, and, were I ever to work it again, that
understanding would allow me to craft more finely than most journeymen.
The heavier materials-like slate, marble, granite, iron-were tougher.

The stone floors in Nylan were different.  All the stone used by the
Brotherhood was different.  The hidden breaks weren't there, and each
paving stone seemed complete by itself, yet fitted into a larger
pattern.  Worked metal felt that way, but not most stone.

"Tamra."  Talryn merely announced her name.

As she sat up, rather abruptly, I thought about looking up to see her
leave, but kept my head down.  She'd just turn my concern against me.

Click.

Alone in the anteroom, I finally sat down under the picture of the
woman master.  Why did I even care about Tamra?  Krystal needed me more
than Tamra, didn't she?  Tamra didn't need anyone, except to insult
them in order to feel superior.  She was good at that, because she was
better than anyone else, both in brains and physical skills.  So why
did she have to keep proving it?

"Lerris."  Talryn's voice was calm, and this time he wasn't smiling.

I took a deep breath and rose, wishing I had my staff with me.
Everything was packed, but waiting, in the room that had been home for
the late spring and long summer.

He held the door open for me, then closed it.  I stood by the table
where we had eaten so many eight-days earlier.

"Sit down, Lerris."  Talryn took the same chair, the one at the head of
the long table.

I pulled out the heavy black-oak chair.  This time it moved easily.  I
said nothing, waiting for Talryn to say whatever he had to say, since
whatever I thought clearly didn't matter.

"You could be a problem, Lerris.  You keep expecting someone to hand
you the answers.  Life isn't like that.  Neither is the danger geld
Because you demand answers and reasons, no one wants to give them to
you."

I tried not to sigh.  Another lecture I didn't need.

"So I will.  We've discussed it.  You may not believe me now, but try
at least to remember what I'm about to say.  It might save your
life."

I almost smiled at the melodramatic touch, but decided to listen.  It
couldn't hurt.

Talryn waited.

Finally, I nodded.

"First, you are a potential order-master.  You have the talents to be a
chaos-master, but not the disposition.  You aren't contemptuous enough,
and you never will be.  Trying the chaos path will leave you dying
young in Candar, if it doesn't kill you outright.

"Second, you're strong enough to tempt most chaos-masters into trying
to corrupt you.  Third, you refuse to understand that each master must
find his or her own meaning in life."  Talryn sighed.  The master in
silver actually sighed.  "Finally, what we're doing is unfair to
you."

"You admit that?"  I couldn't help asking.

"We admit it."

"Then why are you doing it?  I don't understand."

"Because your doubts and your open skepticism are enough to disrupt
anyone who spends much time with you.  Normally, two masters work with
each danger geld group.  Sometimes only one."

Talryn, Trehonna, Gilberto, Cassius, and Lennett-not to mention the
occasional appearances by others-that totaled five, plus apprentices
like Demorsal.

"Four .. . five perhaps.  It took that many to keep your efforts
damped, and we'll all have to work that much harder for another year to
catch up."

"Why?"

Talryn sighed again.  "You have great potential, Lerris-for order or
chaos.  How you use it is your choice.  That choice is not simple.  Not
at all."

I opened my mouth.

Talryn raised his hand.  "Let me explain.  The reason why you call upon
order or chaos is meaningless.  If you destroy a tree for firewood to
warm a freezing child, you have still given yourself to chaos.
Likewise, if you heal a murderer, you give yourself to order."

"What?"  I couldn't believe what Talryn was saying.

"That's why handling order is so difficult.  You have to have good
intent, and using chaos for a good purpose leads to greater
disorder."

I still couldn't believe him.  "I couldn't even fell a tree to save a
child?"

Talryn smiled sadly.  "I didn't say that.  I said you could not use
chaos forces.  You could use an ax or a sword to cut branches.  Where
physical force doesn't affect human life, it doesn't affect order or
chaos either."

I shook my head.

"Oh .. . it's worse than that, Lerris.  Far worse."  His tone was
almost mocking.  "What I said is not quite true.  You can occasionally
use chaos in service of order-but only when balanced by higher-order
considerations.  Indeed if you choose to serve order, you may have to.
If you wish to be an order-master, every use of order must be
calculated.  You may be lucky.  You may intuitively understand those
balances, but without being able to check such intuition logically, how
will you be able to tell the differences between what is intuitively
correct and your underlying desires-and we all have them- to take the
easier path?"

"You re asking for ... a man ... a woman .. . someone who is perfect ..
."

"Didn't I tell you we were being unfair?"  asked Talryn softly.  His
tone was not mocking now, just soft.

I looked down at the polished surface of the table.  "Are you done?"

"Not yet.  I have to lay our charge upon you.  It seems simple.  It is
not.  You must travel Candar beyond the East-horns to the Westhorns,
and you must not return until you feel you are ready.  You must also
travel alone; that is, not in company of anyone else from Recluce."

"What the hell does that mean?"  I think I glared at Talryn.

He met my glare.  "You will know what it means.  Do you have any more
questions?"

I had lots of them, but they were the kind I couldn't ask.  Why me?
What did I ever do?  Why didn't anyone ever try to explain things?  Why
was everything either on faith or through experience I didn't have? Why
did they train us together and then say not to travel together? "No. 
None that make any difference."

"All right."  He stood up, tired-looking, the first time I had seen him
show any really human feelings.  "I will not see you until you return.
We wish you well, Lerris.  The rest of your group is waiting.  Your
ship leaves shortly."

"Now what?"

"You pick up your things and walk to the pier where the Eidolon waits."
He gestured toward the other door, also of black oak, but did not
move.

I nodded.  "Thank you for your frankness.  I hope I can use it."

The gray man said nothing, just watched me.  So I took the hint,
inclined my head, and walked away from Talryn.

Would we be traveling in the strange black Brotherhood ships that
everyone ignored?  Or in the hull of some Candarian duchy's freighter?
From what Talryn had said, I still didn't know.

There was so much I didn't know.  Even Talryn had behaved as though he
were bending some great rule or tradition to say what he had said.  He
believed it-that was for sure, and that made it a little scary.  Never
to use a destructive power .. . even in the service of good?

I shivered.  My feet carried me down the long underground hallway, well
enough lit by the late afternoon sun, and the green of the gardens
beckoned through the overhead glass.  But I still shivered.

XVI

TALRYN WAS RIGHT.  Sammel, Myrten, Dorthae, Wrynn, and Krystal all
stood outside, waiting.  The late-afternoon westerly swished the leaves
of the red oak under which they had gathered.  Behind us, the danger
gelders quarters loomed black even in the sunlight.

Sammel wore his pack and a pair of short swords-short staves, a closer
look revealed.  Myrten wore no obvious weapons, nor did Dorthae.  Wrynn
had on her belt both a short sword and a throwing knife.  A second
knife was concealed in the hidden thigh-pocket of her trousers.

Krystal wore her faded blues and the blade I had bought her, although
she had replaced the cheap scabbard with an older but sturdier one of
hardened gray leather.  She nodded at me.

I wiped my forehead and nodded back, then walked over to her.

"Talryn was hard on you," she observed.

"I'm fine."  I really didn't want to talk about it.

"Tamra came out looking the same way."

"What about you?"  I asked.

She didn't giggle, just smiled gravely.  "He told me I might be happier
in Candar, and to weigh what I really wanted carefully."

A cold weight settled in my guts.

"Are you all right?"  As she spoke, her hand was warm on my shoulder.

"I'm fine."

"What did Talryn tell you?"  Her voice was gentle, again musical.

I shrugged.  "What he told everyone, I guess.  That I had to find
myself for myself.  Except it's going to take a long time."

Krystal nodded.  Her fingers squeezed my shoulder, then relaxed. "You'd
better get your pack."

"Thank you."  I didn't look at the others as I headed past Wrynn and
Myrten and through the open doorway.  One door was ajar-Tamra's.  I
didn't look inside.

In my former room, my things were where I had left them.  The pack lay
on the bed, the staff beside it, along with the knife-not that I
expected to use the knife for anything besides cutting brush, meat, and
other non-intelligent objects.  My heavy cloak was rolled into the top
of the pack.  With the knife on my belt, I slung the pack half over my
shoulder and picked up the staff.  The door I left open as I left-a
minor protest against the order of the Brotherhood.

Tamra had left her door open as well.

By the time I stepped outside-my feet moving from the smooth stones of
the interior hall to the heavier, weathered, paving-stones of the
walkway that would eventually lead to the harbor-everyone was
waiting.

Waiting with Tamra and the rest was a woman I had not seen.

"My name is Isolde," she announced.  "I will be your guide from here to
Freetown."  Her hair was silver-blond, cut squarely across the back of
her neck, and her eyes were dark gray.  She wore a faded green
one-piece coverall and black boots.  At her belt were a pair of knives,
one on each hip.  The belt was wide, of black leather with a triangular
silver buckle.  "The Eidolon is a Nordlan half-steamer registered out
of Brysta.  We have two cabins, which shouldn't be that much of a
problem since Freetown isn't much more than a day and a half under
normal conditions .. ."

Problem?  Why would two cabins be a problem?  I glanced over at Tamra,
but the redhead was staring at the ground, ignoring Isolde and me. Even
from nearly ten cubits away, I could see Tamra's fingers were white
from how tightly they gripped her staff.  "..  . make the transition
easier, we have an inn in Freetown where you will all stay, assuming
you wish to, tomorrow night.  Once we reach the inn-it's only a short
walk from the harbor-you'll receive a last briefing on the current
conditions in Candar.  Things like which provinces or duchies to avoid,
and why.

"Two days from now, you'll be on your own.  Any questions?"  "..  .
Uhhhhmmmm?"  coughed Myrten.  "Who pays the passage costs?"

"Those have been taken care of by the Brotherhood.  So have your meals
and lodging at the Travelers' Rest.  After that, all expenses are
yours."  Isolde glanced around the group, looking for other
questions.

"Why are we going on a Nordlan ship?"  Wrynn's voice seemed to silence
even the breeze.

"Why not?"  Isolde's tone was amused.  "The Eidolon is headed where you
are going, and it's a lot cheaper than sending a Brotherhood ship on a
special run."

"It also tells the world that Recluce is harsh enough to throw out its
own."  As she spoke, Tamra barely glanced toward Isolde.

The brittleness of Tamra's voice surprised me, as did its ragged sound.
Was this the confident woman who had thrashed me so soundly with the
staff in our initial sparring?  The woman who understood order theory
better than Magister Lennett?

"That is also partly true.  By your actions or beliefs, you have chosen
not to accept Recluce.  Until you do, you are from Recluce, but not of
Recluce."

I almost shivered.  Isolde's matter-of-fact tone was more chilling than
any of old Kerwin's lectures had been.  No threats, no scare
tactics-just a statement.  Unless you believe, you don't belong.

Tamra glanced up from the grass, and I tried to catch her eyes.  No
wonder she was upset.  All the excellence in the world didn't matter,
only what she couldn't bring herself to accept.  The redhead looked
away, back toward the harbor.

"If there are no other questions, let's be on our way."

Slinging my pack onto both shoulders, I straightened, ready to leave.
Sammel and Dorthae stood on each side of Isolde.  Myrten picked up his
pack.

Without another word, Isolde left, leading us straight down the main
walkway, straight through a market square largely deserted, except for
a pie vendor who was closing up and a sailor from somewhere stretched
out on a table, sleeping.

The Eidolon, moored at pier number one, the one closest to the sea,
carried one square-rigged mast and whatever they called a sloop's mast.
A mizzenmast, I thought.  Amidships, between the masts, were two paddle
wheels, one on each side.  A black stack, slashed with a diagonal green
stripe, ran up between the masts as well.  The sails were furled on the
masts.

"Hello, the Eidolon!"  called Isolde.

"Hallo .. . the pier ..."  A tall blond man waved vaguely.

Isolde didn't bother to call again, but walked up the steeply-inclined
gangplank, leaving us to follow.

I followed right after her.  Waiting wouldn't solve anything.

"Stand right over there," ordered our guide, pointing to a clear space
of deck to the right of where the ship's officer waited.

I followed her directions and positioned myself by the railing.  A
quick glance toward Nylan reassured me that I could still see the
market square, though most of the tables and booths had been deserted
even before we had passed by on our way to the harbor.  "..  . eight
passengers, as agreed with Captain Heroulk .. ."  Isolde started right
in with the mate on duty, a man with a short blond beard and a
sleeveless shirt that revealed heavily-muscled and bronzed arms.

At first, as I stood by the rail, I could smell nothing except a
lingering scent of something-salt, soap, varnish.  The deck was clean,
aside from several coils of heavy rope by the foot of the masts.  The
railing, as my fingers brushed it, felt faintly tacky, and glistened as
though recently varnished.

Two sailors stopped their work on a windlass, or something like it, to
survey the group that had trooped on board.

"Witches, the whole lot .. ."  observed the older, a wiry man with
salt-and-pepper hair.

Clank.  His hammer knocked the handle loose from the assembly.  "..  .
see if you can pry loose that broken edge .. ."

"The ship seems clean enough, if small," noted Myrten, stepping up next
to me.

"Small?"

"Haven't you seen the Hamorian freighters?  Some of them are nearly
three hundred cubits long."

I shrugged, not really having thought about it.

"Good thing it's only a day and a half.  I'd hate to go to Hamor on
this.  That would take nearly two eight-days."

Tamra stood by herself further down the rail toward the bow.  I walked
away from Myrten and stood next to her.  She said nothing, just looked
up at the black wall overlooking the harbor area, much as I had first
looked at that same wall, wondering how it could look so insignificant
from behind and so imposing from the waterfront.

"Are you all right?"  I tried to keep my voice low.

"Does it matter?"  She sounded tired.

"Yes."

"Why?"

I didn't know what to say.  "..  . Because."

She didn't say anything.  She just kept looking from the harbor wall to
the hill wall and back again.

After a while, I eased away, thinking she wanted to be alone.

"Oh .. . sorry .. ."  In backing up, I backed into Wrynn.

"Since it's only you, Lerris .. ."

I thought she was joking, but held up my free right hand, since I was
still holding on to my staff with my left.  "I apologize."

"We'll accept," added Krystal with a soft smile.  She didn't giggle.

"All right!"  interrupted Isolde.  "Let's get your gear stowed.  Follow
us."

Wrynn shrugged.  Krystal and I both shrugged back.  All three of us
followed Isolde and another officer-the officers were all taller than
the crew, and had yellow collars on their sleeveless shirts-aft and
down a narrow wooden staircase.  The sailors all called it a ladder.

"I'll bunk with Sammel, Lerris, and Myrten," announced Isolde.  "We'll
take the first cabin."

Myrten's face went blank, as did Dorthae's.  I thought Wrynn and
Krystal nodded, but couldn't see for sure in the dimly-lit
passageway.

The cabin was the size of a large pantry with four built-in bunks, two
on each side, one above the other.  Each bunk had a thin pallet covered
with a faded linen sheet and a folded brown blanket-no other covers.
The floor space between the bunks was less than three cubits.  A single
porthole graced the outboard side, opposite the door.

Two lockers fitted side-by-side under each lower bunk.

Isolde threw her pack on the top outboard bunk.  "Lerris, you're the
most agile.  Why don't you take the other top bunk?"

Since it wasn't really a question, I put my pack up on the other top
bunk.

"You can use the lockers.  No one on the ship will steal anything." She
glanced at me.  "Please leave the staff on your bunk until we land."

Always the staff.  I tucked it next to the pallet, then squeezed my
pack into one of the lockers.  Sammel eased his smaller pack into the
other one.

Myrten was shaking his head as he knelt to get into the other locker.

"Is it all right if we go back on deck?"  I asked.

"Of course.  Just stay out of the crew's way."

So I went back up the ladder.

Whuff .. . whuff .. . Through the timbers I could feel the steam
engine, as if the ship had come alive.  A helmsman stood at the wheel
on the bridge, flanked by a silvered and weathered man I took to be the
captain, since his entire shirt was yellow.

"Lines aboard!"

"Lines aboard, sir!"

Clang!

"Pressure on the boilers!  Stand by for paddles."

Thwap .. . splat..  . thwap .. . Slowly, ever so slowly, the paddles
began to turn as the Eidolon eased off the pier.

I nearly tiptoed to the rail to watch the Eidolons departure.

Tamra stood by the same point on the rail as when I had left her.  She
must have gone below because both her staff and pack were absent, but
her posture was the same.

With its black slate roofs, black streets, and black walls lit by the
low western sun, and with the grass hidden behind walls, Nylan looked
more than ever like a brooding fortress rising from the sea.  Nothing
reflected the reddish near-setting sun, except the water itself.  In a
way, the scene reminded me of one I'd seen in one of my father's
history books-the White City of Frven, under the chaos-masters.  But
Frven had been all white, and it had perished.  Nylan endured, its
black order stolidly guarding Recluce.

A shimmer of distorted air caught the corner of my eye, and I turned my
head to see one of the long and mast less black boats of the
Brotherhood trailing the Eidolon.  A single narrow turret gun bore on
the Nordlan ship, shifting slightly as the Brotherhood ship easily drew
up and took station on the Eidolon's stern.

"You do that so easily."  Tamra's voice was pitched to me, barely
carrying the three cubits between us.

"Do what?"

"See the unseen."

I shrugged.  "I never thought whether it was easy or hard.  I just
looked.  It is a strange-looking ship, though."

"It's not really fair, you know."  The redhead's voice was
expressionless, so expressionless that I felt colder than the sea
breeze whipping through my tunic should have made me feel.  "They don't
care how hard you try.  They don't care how much you learn.  They don't
care."

I edged closer.  "The Brotherhood, you mean?"

"They don't love.  You're the child of one of the high temple masters.
You don't swallow their beliefs, and they throw you out younger than
anyone else."  *

High temple master-my father?

The Brotherhood ship increased its speed and veered toward the right,
pulling up beside the Eidolon.  The impression of order and power
pounded at me from more than a hundred cubits away.

"You don't even know, do you?  Is that fair?"

"No.  But they don't go by what's fair, Tamra.  It's already pretty
clear to me that they go by what works.  If we get in the way .. . then
we go."

She turned to me, and her face was white.  "You agree with that?"  Each
word was evenly spaced, dropping like a hammer on a forge.

I wanted to step back, but the ship lurched, and, instead, I grabbed
the railing.  The Eidolon had passed the breakwater, and the waves were
higher.

Thwup, thwup, thwup .. . thwup, thwup, thwup .. . The paddles churned,
dipping into the water with increasing speed, and a heavier and thicker
plume of whitish smoke billowed from the stack.  "... foresail .. ."
Sailors were scurrying over the masts as well, releasing and adjusting
the canvas of the sails.

"Do you agree with them?"  asked Tamra, thrusting her face closer to
me.

"I don't know."

"Oh .. . shit .. . uhhh .. . arrghhh .. ."

"Can I do anything?"

"Yes.  Just .. . leave .. . me .. . alone .. ."

As I stood there, she emptied the contents of her guts over the side. I
danced away, since I was downwind and didn't have that much in the way
of spare clothes.  But Tamra was too busy turning her stomach inside
out to demand answers to any more philosophical questions.

So I walked toward the bow and watched the black ship heading north,
moving at a speed that seemed unbelievable.  No paddles, no sails-just
a wake, and a thin trail of black smoke.  No one even saw it, except
the two of us; and Tamra was too sick to care, from waves that were
scarcely two cubits high.

Off the bow, the sun dropped toward the now-black waters of the gulf.

Thwap .. . splat..  . thwap .. . The paddles dipped, and the Eidolon
rolled, and we all were carried cubit by cubit, rod by rod, kay by kay,
toward Candar.

Isolde stood at the rear of the bridge, tacitly ignored, while Myrten
shuffled the cards under a swinging lantern and Tamra clutched a rail
still tacky from varnish.

I just watched the white foam spill from the wave crests.

XVII

THE WAVES REMAINED moderate across the entire gulf, giving the Eidolon
a near-constant rocking, pitching motion the entire trip.  The
half-steamer maintained a west-northwest heading.

I hadn't slept well, waking time and time again, but I had slept-unlike
Sammel, who had eventually shared Tamra's discomfort with the ship's
motion, and spent much of the night at the rail.

Isolde slept like a log.  She even snored.  Myrten arrived back late,
and his purses were far fuller than when he had left, proof that
knowing the odds was profitable anywhere.  He also rose first.  Even
his quiet movements were enough to keep me awake.

I followed him up the ladder and onto the sun-splashed deck, where
various members of the crew were already working-varnishing the other
railing, disassembling another winch.  Ignoring the industrious types,
I trailed Myrten into the ship's mess.

Wrynn, Dorthae, and Krystal were already there.

I eased onto one of the oak benches across from Myrten- the table was
empty except for us.

Scruff .. .

Sammel stood there, swaying, but not in rhythm to the pitching of the
ship.  I motioned to the table.  He finally staggered to a spot at the
end of our table closest to the wall and away from anyone.

Breakfast was dried fruit-apples, red currants, peaches- hard biscuits,
and a tea so strong even I winced.  The tea was excellent for softening
the biscuits.

I ate slowly, not looking up.  Clearly, the crew had eaten earlier,
much earlier.  The mess room, under the bridge, took a space not much
bigger than our two cabins together.  The two tables were bolted to the
floor, as were the backless benches.  The grooves in the table would
hold something, perhaps trays for dining in heavy weather.

Sammel tried the biscuits, and a touch of tea.  After no more than half
a biscuit, he got up and left, still greenish around his ears.

Wrynn, Krystal, and Myrten wolfed down everything in sight.

Despite his late night, Myrten looked fresh and rested, although his
black hair was more unruly than ever.  Myrten was the first to leave,
without even a grunt.  Dorthae followed him out, a glint in her eye.
Wrynn fingered the hilt of her throwing knife, then followed the
pair.

Krystal smiled, shaking her head.

"Something funny?"  I asked.

"Not exactly," she answered, except that it wasn't an answer.  She
continued to sip from her mug, but took nothing, else from either of
the polished wooden serving platters.  "That's not an answer."

"Men .. ."  She shook her head.  Her hair was bound up, not in silver
or gold cords, but in dark blue, as if she didn't want to call any
attention to herself.  "Men .. ."  she repeated, as she stood up,
leaving the mug on the table.  Her steps were quick and sure, not that
the deck rolled or pitched much, and she was gone before I could figure
out what I could have said to keep her.

Just as I was finishing up a second biscuit and some dried peaches by
myself and getting ready to leave, Isolde arrived with Tamra in tow.

For an instant, like the palest of china fired by my mother, precious
and breakable, the redhead paused.  "Urrrppp .. ."  The burp destroyed
the fragility.  "Excuse me."  She slumped onto the bench where Myrten
had been sitting.

Isolde poured the dark tea into two brown hard-glazed earthenware
mugs.

"Honey?"

Tamra nodded, swaying slightly to the roll of the Eidolon.

I downed the last of my mug and looked around for a place to leave
it.

"Don't leave just yet, Lerris."

"Where would I go?"

Tamra sighed.  Isolde glared, and I raised the empty mug to my lips so
I didn't have to look at either for a moment.  Then I took the heavy
teapot and poured another mug, dumping in a large glob of honey from
the server, an iron-gray squat pitcher that matched neither the mugs
nor the teapot.

"You're quite a pair," began Isolde, her voice matter-of-fact.  "One of
you believes that success lies in accomplishment, and the other
believes that having answers will explain everything.  One of you hates
privilege but covets it desperately; the other has it and has rejected
it unthinkingly."

Tamra and I exchanged glances.

"You're both in for some real surprises."  Isolde took a deep swallow
of the tea and pulled a pile of mixed fruit off one platter-mostly
dried apples.  Next came some of the squarish and crumbly biscuits. The
guide in the faded green jumpsuit alternated fruit, biscuits, and
tea.

I drank more of my own tea, bitter even with the large glob of honey I
had dropped into it.

Tamra nibbled at a biscuit, sipping from her mug enough to be able to
swallow the crumbs she had placed in her mouth.  Without a colored
scarf, dressed just in dark gray, she looked washed-out, like a limp
china doll.

Finally, as the silence dragged out, I put my half-empty cup in one of
the holder slots in the center of the table and stood up, glancing from
Isolde to Tamra and back.  Neither looked at me, and neither said
anything.  Isolde just kept eating, slowly and methodically.  Tamra
stared at the smooth brown wood of the table beside her mug.

I almost paused to see if either would say anything, but kept moving.

Outside on the main deck, the wind had picked up and whipped through my
short hair.  My steps took me toward the bow, where I stood with the
sun on my back watching the wind carry spray from the crests of the
dark-blue waves.  The Eidolon didn't exactly cut through the sea, nor
did she lumber.  Just like Isolde, the ship was efficiently
matter-of-fact.

That solidity was helpful, because my thoughts were anything but solid.
Me-a potential order-master?  Born to privilege?  Convinced that
answers would solve everything?  How could I even decide what I wanted
to do without knowing?  Talryn, Kerwin, my parents, even Isolde-they
were all saying that everything was obvious, that I was blinding
myself, and that I just had to choose.  Choose what?  What did it mean?
Eternal boredom if I chose order?  Early death if I chose chaos?  From
what I already saw, the alternatives weren't exactly wonderful.

Whhstttt..  . The Eidolon plowed into a bigger-than-normal wave, the
spray from the impact almost reaching the railing where I leaned.  The
ship seemed quieter.

Of course!  The paddles were silent, and the steam engine was cold.
While the wind held, the captain didn't need to burn the coal.

I wondered if my belated recognitions were typical, that I didn't see
things obvious to others until later.

"May I join you?"

I jumped.  Tamra stood almost next to me, not quite so pale as at
breakfast.

"Fine."

"You looked worried .. ."  Her voice was softer, but still carried an
edge.

Did I really want to talk to her?  Ever since I'd started the danger
geld she'd been a bitch.  I sighed.  What would it cost me?  We weren't
exactly going anywhere, and she certainly wasn't boring.

"Yes ... I guess I was .. ."

"You didn't know your father was a high temple master?"

"No."

"I ... I'm sorry .. ."

Her words didn't sound sorry.

"You don't sound sorry."

"Do we have to fight?"  she asked.

"No.  But do you have to doubt everything I say or do?"

"It's .. . hard ... I look at you.  You had everything.  And .. ."

"And what?"

She didn't answer.  Instead, she just leaned on the rail next to me and
looked at the waves.

Silence and the swishing of the sea were preferable to a dubious
discussion.  So I watched the water too.

"Lerris?"

"Yes?"

"I'm sorry."

"For what?"

"For .. . why do you make it so hard for me?"  Her voice was tight
again.

I thought for a moment, biting back what I really wanted to say-that
she was a conceited bitch who wanted to run the entire world.  But what
good would that have done?

Whhhhssstttt..  . The spray almost touched the edge of the deck.

I watched the waves for a while, and she watched beside me.

Finally, I tried again.  "Do you remember when we met .. . the first
thing you said was something like I was a sorry sight .. . when I was
learning staff work, you took the first opportunity to beat the crap
out of me ..."  I looked back at the water, wondering if I'd said too
much, wondering why I even bothered.

"Oh .. ."  She actually sounded taken aback, and it felt like she was
surprised.

I shook my head.

"You don't make it easy, either, you know."  Her voice was quiet.

I could barely hear her above the waves, the whisper of the wind, and
the creaking of the ship.  "What did I ever say?"  I asked.

"That's it.  You never let anyone see you.  You're bored, or very
polite, and we all know what you feel.  That's why no one can get very
close, not even Krystal, and she wanted you a lot."

Krystal?  She was older .. . only said she needed a friend .. .

"You're upset again."

I glared at the waves instead of Tamra.

"And angry."

"Why do you push at me?"  I asked.

"Because .. . I'm scared .. . and you're scared .. ."

Scared?  Me?

"Yes, you, Lerris.  You're scared, scared shitless, no matter what you
tell yourself or anyone else."

Whhsssttttt .. . The Eidolon lurched, and a sheet of water sprayed past
me, leaving me with wet hands and a tighter grip on the railing.

Scared?  Maybe?  But who wouldn't be?

When I looked up again, a lot later, Tamra was gone.  I wished she
hadn't left, somehow.  But she was still a bitch.

The rest of the day held the same pattern.  The Eidolon plowed
west-northwest.  The wind held.  The crew kept working on repairs.
Sammel stayed seasick, and Isolde and Tamra avoided me.  The crew
avoided us all, except to ask brief questions of Isolde.  We ate bread,
cheese, fruit, and tea after the crew did at midday.

I walked the deck, studying how the ship was put together, trying to
sense the underlying patterns, the forces, the stresses.  In a way, it
was like Uncle Sardit's work-simple on the surface, very solid, and a
lot more involved than I had thought.

Tracing the flow of the woods, the way the masts were stepped, the flow
of the hull and the timbers and braces that was easy.  The metals were
harder, especially the mechanical stuff.

Whuff..  . whuff..  .

The belch of the engine and the acrid scent of burning coal broke me
away from trying to feel how the stem and the bowsprit were joined.

Flappppp .. . thwipp .... Aloft, some of the crew were furling sails.
Not all of them, but the mainsails.

A line of green hills had stretched southward off the bow-on the side
opposite where I had been sitting propped against the forward hatch
cover.  When I scrambled up, I could also see a fainter line to the
north, covered with a haze that had seemed more like low-lying
clouds.

Freetown couldn't be that far away, not if we were at the edge of the
Great North Bay.

Splattt..  . thwap .. . thwap .. . splatt, thwap, thwap .. .

The paddles began to bite into the calmer waters of the bay.  Then the
sun dimmed as the Eidolon moved under the high hazy clouds and into
suddenly damper air.

Back behind the ship's bridge, a crewman hoisted a huge Nordlan flag to
the top of the aft mast.  I wondered who the Candarians didn't like.
Except that wasn't the way to look at it.  Who didn't the Duke of
Freetown like?  That was the question.

"Are you ready to go?"  Isolde stood by my elbow.

"All I have to do is gather my pack and staff."

"Leave them there for now.  It will be a while, but we need to get
ashore as soon as the Eidolon ties up."

"Safer for us or them?"

Isolde didn't answer, perhaps because she had left.

The Eidolon, with the grizzled captain on the bridge, continued to make
surprising speed, the engine substituting for the sails, which now hung
nearly limp.  Once we had neared the hills and entered the bay, the
wind had died, as had the waves.

Sammel appeared at the rail, followed by all of the danger gelders but
Dorthae-and Isolde.  Myrten wore a white bandage on his forearm, which
showed only when he reached to steady himself on the railing.

The sun had disappeared totally behind the shapeless clouds by the time
the ship rounded Cape Frentala.  Freetown, at first glance, was not
prepossessing.  Only a single spire graced the gray sky, and the harbor
front was mostly of low wooden buildings.  The piers were of heavy
weathered and unpainted gray timbers, except where a brown line showed
the replacement of an older plank by a newer one.

"Get your gear .. ."  Isolde, now wearing solid black and looking grim,
was talking to Sammel, but I didn't need a personal reminder.  At her
belt was a sword, also black-hiked, and a long knife.

In the short time it took me to go down the ladder and claim cloak,
pack, and staff, the Eidolon was jockeying up to the pier, where a
handful of figures waited.

"Tax guards .. ."  muttered Myrten.  For whatever reason, he stood
nearly next to me at the railing.

"Tax guards?"

"The duke wants his cut first."

"Of everything?"

"Everything.  Isolde will have to shell out a gold penny for each of
us."

"We have to pay to come here?"

"Hell, isn't it?"  Myrten smirked.

I hadn't thought about that.  Would we have to pay entry taxes in other
provinces?  My stock of coins was looking less and less adequate.

"Dangergelders!"  called Isolde.

I turned to see her motioning and followed her gestures.  Someone
wanted us off the Eidolon as soon 'as possible.  The gangplank was
barely in place as we lined up and walked down.  A pair of seamen were
still tying lines to the bollards on the pier.

A round-faced official with gold braid on both shoulders and a silver
breastplate waited at the bottom of the plank.  Behind him stood ten
soldiers, each wearing a sword but carrying a club ready to use.  Their
breastplates were cold iron.  Behind them lurked a shadowy presence, a
woman in white, with the same sense of disorder I had felt once before,
in the blade the trader had tried to sell Krystal.

In the dampness I wanted to shiver, but tightened my grip on my staff.
Strangely, it felt even warmer now than on a sunlit day.

"Dangergelders?"  rasped the round-faced man.  His eyes looked beyond
Isolde, avoided looking at any of us.

"Seven," noted the woman in black.

"That will be seven golds."

"You have a receipt?"

The round-faced man looked to his right, where a thin youngster
scribbled on a tablet, then handed the single sheet to the tax agent.

Isolde offered the coins and took the receipt.

"Weapons?"

"Nothing except the normal-staves, swords, knives, and a few pistols.
All for personal use."

"Magicians?"

Isolde hesitated briefly, so briefly I doubt the official caught it,
before answering.

"No magicians.  Two blackstaflfs."

"That's another four golds."

"Since when?"  Isolde fixed full concentration on the official.

The round-faced man said nothing, but his forehead was damp.

"Since .. . since ..."

"This afternoon, perhaps?"

"Magistra ... it has not been a good year .. ."

"Additional duties are not in the Agreement."

The round-faced man swallowed.  His forehead was clearly wet now, and
not from the dampness of the afternoon.  He swallowed again.

A soldier, his iron breastplate bearing a four-pointed star on the
upper left, eased forward from the armed group.

Isolde shifted her weight ever so slightly, and I imagined she was
smiling, although I could not see her face, wedged as I was into the
narrow space just at the foot of the plank.  Myrten was in front of me,
breathing noisily.  {Crystal's hand was on the hilt of her blade.

"The duke has insisted, has he?"  prompted Isolde.  "With your head on
the line?"

A few drops of rain splattered on my face, and the wind from the hills
overlooking the city seemed ever cooler.  I glanced back toward the
Eidolon.  The weathered captain and two officers stood at the top of
the plank, watching.  All three carried halberds I hadn't even seen
during our passage.

Clearly, we weren't expected back aboard.

"No .. . Magistra .. . but the needs of the duchy .. ."

"Then I demand the right of instant trial."  Isolde took a step
forward, and the tax official squirmed backward.

Myrten looked at me.  I looked back.  Right of instant trial?  Our
lectures hadn't covered that.

"But .. ."  protested the official.

"You wish to repudiate your own laws?"  asked Isolde softly.

The man shook his head mutely.

I jabbed Myrten in the ribs.  "Move.  We're too crowded."  I tried to
whisper, but Tamra looked around Wrynn and Myrten and glared at me.

I shrugged and rolled my eyes.

She shook her head, but edged outward.

"Who represents the duke?"  demanded Isolde, ignoring the shuffling our
movements created.  Her voice cut like a knife.

"I do."  The soldier who stepped forward was the one who had moved
earlier.  He topped any of us, even me, by half a head, and Isolde by
more than half a cubit.  His face was lean, clean-shaven and unscarred,
but his short black hair bore traces of silver, and his eyes were flat
and lifeless.

"Blood or death?"  asked Isolde.

"It has to be your death, Magistra.  You are an outlander, and death is
prescribed if you fail."

"I was talking about you."  Isolde's voice was cold enough to make the
tax official scuttle back further.

The soldier inclined his head.  "That is your choice, Magistra, but I
will fight until I cannot.  That is also prescribed."  His voice was
polite, but rough, as if unused.

One of the soldiers unrolled a reddish cord that had presumably once
been scarlet.  A cord-defined square about ten cubits on a side
appeared on the gray pier planks.  The square was about two-thirds the
width of the pier.

Two soldiers took positions, with unsheathed swords, at opposite
corners.

"Your corners, Magistra?"

Isolde did not take her eyes off the Duke's champion.  "Krystal .. .
Lerris .  take the other two corners."

The tax collector's eyes widened as Krystal stepped forward.  He paled,
I thought, as she unsheathed her blade, and took the corner farthest
from the Eidolon.  That left me the corner only cubits from where I had
been standing.

The wood of my staff was almost uncomfortably warm.  "... black staff
murmured one of the soldiers in the guard group, which had retreated to
the shore side of the pier as if to block our way to Freetown.

"Are you ready, Magistra?"

"I'm sorry for you, Duke's Man."  Isolde sounded sorry, yet I wondered
why she was so confident.  The whole thing was a setup.  The man had to
be the best in the duke's forces.

"Are you ready?"

"Yes."

They both stood for an instant, blades out.  Isolde's back was to me.

The man's blade flashed, impossibly quickly.  Yet, in scarcely moving
her own blade, Isolde somehow deflected the attack.

Flttt .. . . hsssttt .. . . hsssttt .. .

Blades caressed, never meeting directly, edges sliding against each
other.

Clank ... Thud .. .

The Duke's champion lay face-down on the pier, separated from sword and
life.  Just as suddenly as it had started, it was over.

The tax collector's mouth hung open.  So did those of the other
soldiers.

I held my staff ready, wondering what would happen next.

"I trust you will record that the duke's proposed tariff on black
staffs has been nullified."  Isolde's voice had reverted to a merely
matter-of-fact tone at least as chilling as the coldness she had
conveyed moments earlier.  "... uh ... yes, Magistra .. ."

One of the two soldiers who had served as corners began to reel the
faded reddish cord back onto the spool.  I stepped aside, but continued
to watch the remainder of the squad.  So did Krystal.

Two others hoisted the body and began to carry it toward the
horse-drawn wagon that waited at the causeway at the end of the pier.
Another retrieved the sword.

The thin youth scribbled some more onto his tablet, and the tax
collector wiped his sweating forehead with a darkish cloth.

"You understand, Magistra .. . Duke Holloric ... we only serve his
requirements .. ."

Isolde nodded briskly.  "Convey our best wishes to the duke.  We trust
he will wish to continue maintaining the Agreement without further
attempts at one-sided changes."

"Yes, Magistra .. ."  He backed away, then turned.

The soldiers followed him back down the pier.  Not one looked in our
direction.

I looked at Tamra.  She raised her eyebrows.  I nodded.  We both knew.
For whatever reason, it had been an attempted setup by the duke.  And
the Brotherhood had known.  I suspected Isolde was one of the best the
Brotherhood had, and that was scary.  Giving away nearly a cubit and a
half an arm's length, she had dispatched the duke's best in instants.

No wonder the soldiers wanted off the pier.

I glanced back at the Eidolon.  Only one guard remained by the railing,
just a regular crewman.  He grinned at me, then let his face turn
impassive as the captain walked past him to the top of the gangplank.

Isolde turned to face the man.

"Our appreciation, Magistra.  Our appreciation."

Isolde nodded, and he nodded back, then turned back to his command.

"Let's go."  Isolde looked unruffled and was five paces gone toward the
shore end of the pier before we started after her.

By the time we reached the causeway, the tax collector, the wagon, and
the troops were gone, carried into the mist that clung even more
heavily around the wooden buildings of Freetown.

Given all of the bollards on all the three long piers, Freetown seemed
deserted.  Only the Eidolon and a smaller fishing boat rested at the
piers, and there were no traders, no cargos obvious for unloading or
loading.

I caught up to Isolde.  Her steps were still quick, and she didn't even
look at me as we stepped off the pier and onto the stone pavement of
the causeway.  "Will your success teach the duke anything, or will this
.. . embargo .. . whatever it is ... go on?"

"Who knows?"  For the first time, her voice sounded tired.

"You didn't want to do that?"

"Lerris .. ."  The exasperated sound of her voice was more effective
than an explanation.

"Oh ..."

"That's right.  Now, we need to get to the Travelers' Rest before the
duke gets any more ideas.  We'll turn at the next street, if you can
call it that."

The buildings looked almost ghostly in the dim light and heavy fog and
mist.  Every so often, an oil lamp peered through the gloom, or a
single person scurried away from us.

Tamra had caught up and walked beside me as we followed Isolde up the
street away from the harbor proper.  Every step seemed to echo, and no
one said a word.  We just kept walking.

XVIII

THE FOG THINNED by the time we had stumbled and generally trudged
uphill for several long blocks.  In the middle of an open space where
two narrow streets crossed, I paused for a moment.  Over my shoulder, I
could see the mast tips of the Eidolon.

"Ooooff..  ."  Sammel, head down, ran into my shoulder.

"Sorry ..."  I turned and took several quick steps to catch up to Tamra
and Isolde.

Overhead, higher clouds had turned dark gray, and a touch of a damp
breeze brushed my cheek then was gone.  The mist still dropped a faint
gauze curtain over the buildings we passed.  Many were deserted, or at
least dark.  From a handful of windows oozed the golden light of lamps.
The acrid tang of wood smoke mixed with the dampness of mist.

"Ghost town," muttered Myrten from somewhere behind me.

"We're the ghosts," responded Isolde.  Her voice was so low I doubted
that Myrten had heard her.

I supposed we were, outsiders haunting the streets while, inside, the
Freetowners huddled around the lamps and fires that held an
unseasonably early fall at bay.

"Here we are," announced Isolde.

I glanced ahead over her shoulder.

The building's weathered timber walls looked gray, spirit gray in the
thinning mist and growing dark.  But a golden glow poured from every
first-floor window, and the blue shutters were folded back to let the
light escape, almost as if making a statement that the structure would
not draw into itself against the forces of chaos.

"Travelers' Rest" proclaimed the sign hanging over the wide double
doorway.  The doors themselves, their thick brass handles glinting in
the light of the two oil lamps that flanked the doorway, were still
folded back against the wide timbers of the front wall, almost as if
daring the dark to enter.

I took a deep breath, feeling some of the tension begin to leave me as
I followed Isolde through the doorway.

A second set of doors, red oak like the first, although half the
thickness, swung open at her touch.

Within moments we all stood on an open polished wood floor separating a
parlor-like area from a wooden counter.  Like the doors, the counter
was finished and smooth-planed red oak, without ornamentation except
for matching oak coping covering the corner joins.  The wood was
protected by a dull varnish that radiated the gold of the lamps on the
wall.  Right before us was a wide wooden stairway with a
brownish-carpeted runner covering most of the stairs themselves.

To our left opened another archway, through which I could see a series
of tables covered in red checked cloths, with individual chairs drawn
up to each table.

Behind the counter stood a gray-haired woman with a cheerful smile. She
said nothing as Isolde turned and looked us over.

"Each of you has a single room.  It has been paid for.  You may make
other arrangements if you wish.  We will have dinner together in the
small dining room which is behind the one you see on the left.  Meet
there as soon as you are settled.  You can leave your weapons in your
rooms.  They will be safe there.  Now .  please check in at the
counter."

Her words reflected long practice, and while I was wondering how many
groups she had escorted to Freetown, she had already stepped up to the
counter.

"We didn't think to see you again, Magistra."

"The unexpected can change everyone's plans."  Isolde laughed an
off-tone laugh.  "Here's the normal."

Clink .. .

The momentarily-widened eyes of the woman in the faded green blouse
indicated that the payment was scarcely normal.

"Did you meet the new tax collector?"  asked the counter lady.

"Ah, yes.  We also met the duke's new and late champion."

"Oh, dear .. ."

"I doubt the duke's enforcers will be here immediately, but I won't be
staying after this group leaves tomorrow, not this time."

"The new duties are unpopular, and rumor has it that the Hamorian
legate left Freetown rather suddenly.  No ships are likely to enter the
harbor until some certainty is established."  The innkeeper raised her
eyebrows slightly as she eyed Isolde.

"If Hamor is thinking of acting, that's certainly true.  No ships are
likely to be seen."

I didn't frown, but I knew how Isolde was leaving.  The only question
in my mind was what else she might be doing before she left.

"Come on, Lerris.  Don't gape.  Step up."  Isolde had stepped aside
without my noticing it.

"Ah ... a young black staff .. . I'll bet the harbor guard didn't like
that.  Especially now."

"No ..."  I looked at the open ledger, which had a space only for each
traveler's name-no country.  Scrawling down my single name beneath
Isolde's, I started to step away.

"Here's your key, young man.  Room fifteen, second floor at the
back."

The key hung from a brass square nearly the size of my fist.  I took it
and headed up the stairs, not looking at anyone, just trying to keep my
staff from banging on the staircase railing posts.

I followed the upstairs carpeted hallway, also lit by a set of oil
lamps, to the back and number fifteen.  Two doors stood side by
side-fourteen and fifteen.  The key opened my door easily, without so
much as a squeak, then swung quietly closed at my touch.

Click.

The room held a double bed, a low three-drawer red-oak dresser topped
with an oak-framed mirror, a washbasin table with towels, and a
wardrobe.  A braided rag rug covered the wide and polished gold-oak
planks from next to the bed to just before the dresser.  The single
window was closed, flanked by cheerful red-checked curtains tied back
with thick white cords.  A lamp over the low headboard lighted the
room.  The bed was covered with a handmade red quilt showing a pattern
of geometric red-and-white snowflakes.

After hanging my cloak in the wardrobe, I stripped off my tunic and
rummaged through my pack.

The water in the basin was warm, and with the small bar of soap, the
razor from my pack, the water, and the heavy towel, I did my best to
make myself presentable.

The mirror showed me as clean-shaven, tanned, reasonably
decent-looking-but young, still too young to be doing what I was going
to have to do beginning in the morning.

Picking up the tunic and looking it over, I decided it was still
adequate.  Slightly grimy, but wearable, and there wasn't either the
time or the place to wash it.  So I put it back on, and used a dampened
corner of the towel to remove a few of the more obvious smudges.

As I placed the pack in the wardrobe, I had to shake my head.  The
Travelers' Rest was definitely more than it seemed-the sort of inn that
probably only the very well-off could afford.  The staff just barely
fit inside the wardrobe and only at an angle, but, Isolde's words to
the contrary, I didn't really want to leave it in plain view.  The
lorken was cool to my fingers, reassuring me that at least I wasn't in
the presence of overt chaos, although that was scarcely likely with
someone such as Isolde leading us.

With a last look around the room, I picked up the key, opened the
doorway, and stepped out onto the hall carpeting and almost into
Krystal, who was backing out of her room.

"Oh .. . sorry," I apologized.

Clank.  My key jangled against hers.

We both smiled, more from nervous relief than from humor.

"Rather lovely quarters for us outcasts," I observed.

"Lovely?  I suppose."

"You don't think so?"  For some reason, I didn't want to walk away from
her.

"Are you going to change what you are because of lovely quarters?"  Her
voice was both soft and musical, more relaxed than I had heard it.

She had me on that one, and I wondered why I would listen to Krystal,
and think about what she said, when if Tamra questioned me I was ready
to fight.

"What are you thinking, Lerris?"

"Oh ..."  I didn't really want to tell her.  "Just .. . that I can
listen to you, even when you raise questions."

"I'll take the flattery."  She bestowed a soft smile on me.

Clink.  Wrynn stepped from her room into the hallway and looked at
us.

"Are you two going to talk forever, or can we get the sermon and have
some dinner?"  The blond looked at us, then bent over and inserted her
key into the room lock.

I decided not to follow Wrynn's example, since I really doubted that
locking the door made any difference in this particular inn.

"Shall we go?"  I asked Krystal.

"I suppose we should."  She turned and made her way down the hallway
toward the stairs, the sword I had given her still at her belt.

Sammel, Myrten, Dorthae, and Wrynn were already seated at the
rectangular table in the small dining room when we arrived.  The place
at the head of the table had been left for Isolde.

I sat in the vacant chair at the foot of the table.  Krystal sat on my
left and Myrten on my right.  My other choice would have been to the
right of Isolde's chair.  I left that for Tamra.

As I pulled out my chair, Isolde, face washed and hair brushed, stepped
through the archway from the main dining area.  Looking up, I nodded at
her, receiving the barest inclination of her head in return.  She
glanced up one side of the table and down the other side, pausing as
she stopped at the empty space left for Tamra.

Almost as if she had been waiting for the notice, the redhead stepped
through the archway.

Isolde's eyes flicked back to the rest of us, without really looking at
any of us.  "This is the last place where you can freely mention your
origin," began Isolde, her hands resting on the back of the red-oak
chair at the end of the table.  As when we had left the Eidolon, she
wore black, all black.  Tunic, trousers, boots, belt, and neck scarf.
With the pale skin, she looked like a soldier-or worse.  "Once you step
outside the walls of this inn, you are subject to local customs,
thieves, bandits, and soldiers-to mention the most obvious dangers.

"As a practical matter, the road outside the main gates is generally
safe for at least several kays into Candar, except for petty theft and
assault, which can happen just about anywhere."

"Except Recluce .. ."  muttered someone behind me.

"Except Recluce," affirmed Isolde.  "But for various reasons, you have
all found Recluce too confining, or Recluce has found you in need of
the outside world.  It is for that reason that you will travel alone.
You made your decisions alone, and you must face the consequences
alone, at least until you are ready to make your final decisions.  But
you all know that.

"First ... I promised an update on local conditions.  As you discovered
earlier, the duke has decided to use his control of the port to attempt
to raise more revenue.  Most of the trading nations are avoiding the
port, and there will be more unrest in Freetown, enough that you should
probably consider leaving the area quickly.  Spidlar and Hydlen have
taken over much of the trade, and the routes south of the West-horns to
Sarronnyn .. .

"Sligo, north of here, has suffered unseasonable weather, including
early snowfalls, and food is getting scarce .. ."

I couldn't help yawning, but I managed to stifle it without it being
too obvious.  Krystal frowned, though.  "..  . safe to travel in either
Gallos or Kyphros, but not from one to the other because of the
increasing skirmishes along their borders .. ."

Finally, she looked around the room.  "You have had enough lectures-"

I agreed with that wholeheartedly and hoped she wouldn't be using that
as a lever for yet another one.  I was hungry.  "-And I won't be adding
to them-much."

I almost groaned.

"But there is one last thing to consider.  Those outside Recluce refer
to their world, the rest of the world, as the 'real world'.  Candar
will become your real world.  If you die here, and some of you may die,
you will die, permanently.  But Recluce is also a real world, in many
ways more solid than Candar.  You have to decide which world is real
for you.  Which reality, with all its rules-whether they are the rules
of order, or the mixed and changing rules of order competing with
chaos-will be yours."

She gestured toward the archway through which a serving boy brought a
tray heaped with dishes.  "Here is supper.  Afterwards, you may sleep
in the rooms upstairs, or not, as you please.  There will be fruit and
pastries here in the morning.  You may leave when you please, but you
will all be out of the inn before sunset tomorrow.  Those of you
leaving Freetown should not wait until the last minute.  Someone is
always robbed that way.  Given the current mood of the duke, I would
not recommend staying in Freetown, but that is indeed your choice, the
first of many."

Abruptly, she stopped, then pulled out her chair, and sat.  The plates
came down upon the checked cloth, and the innkeeper, appearing from
nowhere, briskly set a glass before each of us.

"Wine or red berry ?"

"Wine," answered Tamra.

"Redberry .. ."

"Redberry .. ."

"Wine ..."

"Redberry," I answered, in turn, watching as the liquid nearly filled
the heavy tumbler, then smiling as Myrten speared three chunks of
steaming meat with a knife and deftly transferred them to his plate.

We were all hungry, even Isolde, and little enough was said until
later, when Tamra sipped from her tumbler, then asked brightly, "What
will happen to the Duke of Freetown?"

Isolde looked up from her plate at Tamra.  Her face was expressionless
even as she smiled.  "Why .. . whatever will be, will be."

"That's not exactly an answer," pressed Tamra.

"No.  It is true and polite, and I will be happy to discuss the matter
with you in much greater depth once you return from your danger
geld-assuming you choose to return and do not find Recluce too
confining."  Isolde returned to cutting a sliver of buffalo from the
slice upon her plate.

Tamra glared, while the black magistra ignored the redhead's
impatience.  I couldn't help smiling.

"You're amused?"  mouthed Krystal.

After wiping the grin from my face, I answered, trying to keep my voice
low enough that it would not be heard over the pleasantries being
exchanged by Sammel and Dorthae.  "Tamra has trouble when people don't
manipulate easily."

"Don't we all?"

I shrugged.  Krystal was probably right, but Tamra's whole attitude was
to insist she was right and that the world should recognize it.

"Good luck to you all."  Isolde's quiet tone stilled the small room.
"From this point on, you are all on your own.  I hope to see you again,
but that is your choice."  She nodded, turned, and walked out, the
heels of her boots echoing faintly on the hardwood floor as she crossed
the empty main dining room.  "... abrupt .. ."  "..  . typical of the
masters .. ."

Rather than say anything, I gulped a mouthful of red berry juice, then
waited, looking to see who stayed and who left, except that the table
quieted, and we all ended up looking at each other.

"For all of the pleasant surroundings, they still don't really care."
Tamra's voice broke the silence.

I pulled back my chair.  "I need some sleep."  I would have liked to
talk to Krystal, but the thought of saying anything with Tamra hanging
on every word bothered me.

"It's early yet," complained Myrten.

Nodding at the innkeeper, back behind the counter, I took the stairs
two at a time.  I wasn't up to another argument, and staying downstairs
would have led to that.  Besides, after the next morning, I might never
see any of them again, and I was getting tired of Tamra's attitude.
Then, it was clear she was tired of mine.

The door opened easily, and I stepped inside.  The room was just as I
had left it, except darker, because the blackness outside was absolute,
with not even a single light showing anywhere when I stepped to the
window.  The fog and clouds seemed thicker, but how could I really
tell?  .  click .. .

As I sat on the edge of the soft bed and pulled off my boots, I heard
Krystal's door open and close, but no sound of voices.  Off came the
tunic and trousers, and I reached up and turned off the lamp.

With the quilt around me, I was asleep in instants, although I thought
I heard a faint knock on my door once, just as I was dropping off; but
I was too sleepy to get up and check, especially since it was probably
my imagination.

Still ... I wondered, but I dreamed of neither red-headed girls nor of
dark-haired women.

XIX

ONCE I STEPPED outside the inn the next morning, I could sense more
strongly what I had felt the night before and what Isolde had alluded
to in saying we would be safe there without weapons.  For all the faded
blue paint on the shutters, the weathered timbers and gray-painted
plank walls, the building radiated order.  No barred windows, no heavy
doors, no guards-just order.  Enough order that it just would not
appeal to anyone bent on disorder.

The clouds and fog of the previous day had vanished, except for higher
puffy gray-and-white clouds that scudded quickly across a bright-blue
fall sky.

I looked at the inn again.  The thick shutters were supported by heavy
iron hinges, with iron hasps for the sliding locks that would be on the
inside when the shutters were closed against weather or other forms of
attack.  The iron was clean and black, the hinges clearly functional.
The red oak of the door had faded under the varnish to a grayed gold
that almost matched the big bronze door handles on the double doors
that were now folded back against the planks for the day.

From a timber projecting above the open doors and perhaps two cubits
below the second-floor window hung the neatly painted sign-Travelers'
Rest.  The gray paving-stones were laid edge-to-edge from the front
wall to the curb, a distance of five cubits or less, and stretched from
one side of the building to the other.  Already, the stones had been
swept.

Glancing up to the room where I thought Tamra had slept, I could see a
glimpse of red through the half-open window.  But the sea breeze
gusting up from the harbor fluttered the fabric enough to tell me it
was only one of the bright red curtains.  Then I looked toward the back
of the building, but Krystal's room window was around the corner.  She
had either left earlier, or was still asleep.

I shrugged and shouldered my pack, which didn't seem nearly so heavy as
when I had left Wandernaught, and, after a last look at the Travelers'
Rest, turned my steps toward the livery stable that had been listed on
the wall behind the front desk of the inn.  If I had to reach the
Westhorns, it wasn't going to be on foot, not unless I wanted to take
years.  A thousand kays or more-I still resented Talryn's flat
pronouncement.  Someone definitely wanted me out of Recluce for a
while.

"Watch it, outlander!"

I dodged a thin man wearing a short cloak, a ragged tunic not
concealing a mail shirt underneath, and a short sword in a battered
scabbard.  Then I smiled politely, and stepped aside.  He stopped and
studied me.

I waited, shifting my hands on the staff ever so slightly.

"Told you to watch it .. ."  His speech had a twang to it.  Above his
short gray-and-ginger beard, his face bore large pockmarks.  The odor
of stale beer, dirt, and other assorted filth almost forced me back
another pace.  "But you look like the peaceable type ... so just hand
over that pack."

I stood there for a moment, frozen, not having expected an attack
within a block of the inn.

"I said, hand it over!"

I smiled, moving the staff up into a defensive posture.  "I think you
have the wrong person."  I hoped my voice didn't shake the way my knees
threatened to.

"Ha!"  His blade whistled out.  "Now!  Let's have that pack!"

All I dared to do was wait.  The sword edge glittered even in the
cloudy light of the morning.

"Be a shame to carve you up, outlander .. ."

I would have liked to shrug, but I didn't, instead watching his eyes.

Clunk.  I blocked the short blade, knocking it away.

"You do know how to use that staff a little, but not enough .. ."  .
clunk .. . clink .. . clunk .. .

The responses were nearly automatic as I concentrated on anticipating
his moves.  . clunk .. . clink .. . clunk .. .

He wasn't nearly so good as Krystal or even Demorsal.  So I waited,
parrying, turning the blade rather than meeting it edge-on.  . clink ..
. clink .. . clunk .. .

Sweat was pouring from his face, and he was breathing hard.  . clink ..
. clunk ... Crack!  .. . Whsssttt..  .

"Aiiieee .. . !"

Clank .. .

Suddenly, it was over.  The small man, not much above my shoulder, I
realized, backed away from me, leaving the sword on the dusty stones,
clutching the back of his wrist where I had struck to disarm him.

"Black bastard .. . witch spawn .. ."  He did not move, but stayed well
beyond the reach of the staff.

I didn't really know what to do.  I didn't want the sword.  I really
didn't want to hurt the man.  He was more hungry than evil, but I
couldn't exactly turn my back on him.

"So ... up to trouble already, Lerris?"

I recognized the voice, took a quick glance over my shoulder to see
Myrten strolling toward me.  Even as I glanced back, the man who
attacked me was darting away down the street and twisting into an
alleyway on the right.

"That was stupid, youngster."

"What?"  Still holding my staff with one hand, I reached down and
picked up the fallen sword.  Just a plain blade.

"Looking away from him.  Good thing he didn't have a throwing knife."
Myrten wore a bright green tunic and dark green trousers.  His cloak
was heavy dark-gray leather.  Like me he carried a pack, but his was
half-slung over his left shoulder.  He looked more like a clean-shaven
minstrel or a hard than the thief I felt he innately was.  Two large
knives hung from his belt, but I could sense the small pistol under the
left-hand false knife.

I looked up the street.  No one else had followed us out of the inn.
Myrten was right.  I shrugged.  "I didn't expect something quite so
soon."

"What you expect isn't what happens, particularly when you get close to
chaos."  He half-laughed.

I shrugged.  "Want the blade?"

"You could sell it," he suggested.

"Me?"

Myrten laughed again, a short bark.  "You're right.  That would be more
than a little out of character.  I'll sell it and split the profit."

That seemed more than fair.  "Fine.  But where?"

"Let's just keep walking.  There's bound to be something."  Myrten
seemed much more at ease on the streets of Freetown than in Nylan.

"What about-"

"We're not traveling together, and we'll certainly leave Freetown
separately."

At the next cross-street, Myrten stopped.  With dirt and clay packed
over the paving stones and squarish mud-holes where some stones were
missing entirely, the street looked more like an alley frequented by
thieves or worse.  Myrten nodded toward the left.

I frowned.

"It's early.  Too early for the real professionals."  Myrten stretched
his legs out, moving quickly, especially for a man so short.

"What about our friend?"

"Him?  He was just hoping for an easy mark."

Most of the doors we passed were shut and barred with cold iron.  Iron
doesn't have any magical power, despite the rumors.  It's effective
because it takes so damned much chaos to break through it that doing it
isn't worth the effort.  That was what Magistra Trehonna had said.  It
made sense, I suppose, which was why swords still carried the day and
firearms were a novelty.

After we had traveled nearly fifty rods down the narrow street,
crossing yet another, wider street like the one on which the Travelers'
Rest was situated, Myrten slowed.

We stopped before a narrow storefront.  The planks were carefully
painted in rust, and the shutters were black, trimmed in the same rust
color.  A square iron hook the size of my fist held open the
iron-banded red-oak door.

"Norn's-Weapons" read the square sign above the iron grate that covered
the single narrow window.

"Shall we?"  asked Myrten.

I tried to sense what sort of place Norn's might be ... and failed.  At
least the shop did not radiate chaos.  Neither did I feel any
underlying sense of order.  "It feels all right."

Myrten hadn't waited for my assessment.  So I followed him inside,
suspecting a neat and dark shop with rows of weapons racked on dusty
walls.  I was wrong.  The bright space inside, no more than ten cubits
wide, stretched back nearly twenty cubits, light conning from a high
roof that seemed more glass than timber.  Ranged along the left wall
were four large cabinets, each standing open to display its contents.

First I checked the nearest cabinet-lightly oiled, polished, with
dovetailed and mitered corners, made of solid grayed oak, originally
probably red oak, with a tracery of fine lines bespeaking age.  It
contained knives, even more varieties than I had seen in Gilberto's
armory.

"May I help you?"  The tanned and white-haired man who waited by the
second cabinet stood a half-head taller than me.  Spare,
wide-shouldered, but his eyes seemed to twinkle.

I studied him for a moment-deciding that he was indeed what he
seemed.

Myrten, for some reason, looked at me.  I nodded.

"We were .. . bequeathed, as it were .. . this blade."

The white-haired man smiled faintly.  "You're clearly from Recluce, and
someone wanted to take advantage of you early."

Myrten frowned.

"Why do you say 'clearly'?"  I asked.

"Your friend"-he gestured at Myrten-"could be from Dirienza or even
Spidlar.  You, on the other hand, would never seek out Freetown.  A
ship from Recluce ported yesterday, with passengers staying at the
Travelers' Rest."

I nodded.  "It's that well-known?"

"Not quite that well-known, but known among those who make their living
that way."

Something about his speech tickled my recall, but I couldn't place
exactly why.

"About the blade .. ."  prompted Myrten.

"Oh, that?  May I see it?  You could set it here."  As he spoke, he
pulled out a sliding shelf from the cabinet.  "By the way, my name is
Dietre."

The cabinet's workmanship was first-rate, since the polished flat wood
scarcely whispered into place.  Myrten set the plain sword on it.

Dietre studied it carefully, then reached toward the base of the
cabinet and pulled a small pendulum from a narrow drawer, adjusting it
before letting it swing over the steel of the blade.  "Hmmmm .. .
neutral, at least."  He looked up.  "Would you mind if I pick it up?"

Myrten looked at me.

"No."

"You're either trusting or very confident, young man."  Dietre
smiled.

"Myrten is good with his knives," I observed.

"I suspect you're better with that staff, and I, for one, unlike the
past owner of this blade, would not care to test you."  He held the
blade lightly, moved it around, balanced it, and then set it back on
the wood.  All his motions were deft.

I felt my earlier suspicions were confirmed, but wondered how Myrten
had known about the shop.

"Interested?"  asked Myrten.

"It's a serviceable weapon.  Nothing more.  Relatively untainted, but
unordered."  Dietre shrugged.  "The going rate for one of these is
around a gold pence.  My markup would normally be two silvers.  On the
other hand, you probably saved Freetown some trouble by handling this
quietly, and I am the West Side councilor.  Say, a gold penny."

"Fair enough."  Myrten didn't hesitate on that, but he glanced at the
third case, the one with the pistols.

"You have some interest in the pistols?  Firearms aren't much good
except for hunting, and pistols are scarcely the best for that."
Dietre's tone was bemused as he lifted the blade and slid the shelf
back into the cabinet.  "Take a look.  I'd like to put this up."

I raised my eyebrows.  Most dealers would scarcely have mentioned
leaving customers with a set of weapons.  Dietre had some protection I
hadn't detected.

The white-haired dealer walked toward the back of the shop, where he
laid the blade on a narrow workbench under a rack of tools.  Then he
walked back to the third case where Myrten was studying the weapons.

I ignored both of them, trying to figure out the patterns of the shop
itself, an island of concealed order in an almost random section of
Freetown.  Behind the front door was a second archway, as thick as the
outer wall.  A single plank covered the bricks or stones.  The framing
pieces didn't overlap the plank edges, though.

How it worked, I wasn't sure, but it was mechanical, and no one was
about to leave the shop without Dietre's permission, open and
unprotected as the place looked.  The cabinets fit the same
pattern-good solid workmanship that would have taken forever to break
into once they were closed.  Impenetrable to casual chaos-use.  "..  .
three golds?"  asked Myrten.

"That's low."

I really didn't care about their bargaining, but I did want my five
silvers.  Buying Krystal her blade had been too impulsive, probably,
and I realized that I could have used those golds.  But she needed a
good blade.  Tamra hadn't approved.  I shook my head, wondering if
anything I ever did would meet with her approval.

"Three and half it is," agreed Myrten.

I turned back to the two, waiting for the settlement.

Myrten struggled to bring out some coins from the guarded pockets in
his belt.  "Two and half to you, and I give the five silvers to
Lerris."

Dietre nodded, neither smiling nor agreeing.  "Whatever's easiest."  He
did not remove the pistol from the cabinet.

Myrten gave me the five silver pennies first, and I put them into the
front pouch, the obvious one.  Then he handed five more to Dietre,
followed by two golds.  Dietre checked all the coins with the
pendulum.

"Chaos-counterfeiting?"  I asked.

"You can never tell."  Apparently satisfied, he replaced the balance
and walked toward the workbench.  The coins vanished into an iron box
bolted to the bench.  Then he walked back toward us.  "Is there
anything else you need?"

"Not here," I answered.

Myrten just shrugged.

"Then .. . good luck, especially to you, youngster.  A lot of people
don't like the black staffers even young ones, and there aren't ever
enough of you to dispel the myths.  Good day."  He turned back toward
the workbench.

I looked at Myrten.  He looked at me.  Then we left.

Outside, I stopped.  "Is Cinch Street the next one ahead?"

"Yes.  If you can trust the map in the inn.  Good luck, Lerris."  He
turned back the way we had come, and I started toward Cinch Street. The
alleyway got narrower with each step, and the eaves of the second
floors seemed to lean down on me.  A shadow fell across the stones and
refuse alike.

I started, then relaxed.  A puffy white cloud had scudded across the
morning sun, and the shadow lifted almost as quickly as it had
fallen.

Outside of a beggar boy who scuttled behind a refuse heap as I passed,
I saw no one until I reached the next street-Cinch Street.  Myrten had
been right.

Turning left, I started uphill.  The slope was gentle, but I had to
watch my steps.  Many of the reddish sandstone paving-blocks had split
or shifted out of place.  Cinch Street had been added later, and more
cheaply.  The paving-blocks in the unnamed alley-street had been of
granite and better placed, even though the way had been narrow and
neglected.

I marched perhaps a hundred rods, almost to the top of the hill, before
I reached the stable.  "Felshar's Livery," proclaimed the
weather-beaten sign carrying simple line drawings of a horse, a saddle
and bridle, and a squarish object that I gathered was a bale of hay.
The gray wood of the sliding plank door was pushed back.

After taking a deep breath, I stepped into the building, a wood-planked
passageway into an unroofed space.  Underfoot was hard-packed composite
of clay, horse droppings, and who knew what else.  In the central
court, a single swaybacked horse was hitched, without a saddle, on the
right side.  At the far end was a smaller horse, a large and shaggy
pony, really.

Crraccckkk!  A whip cracked toward the pony, which lashed both rear
feet toward the bearded man in faded gray.

The man ducked back from the hooves.  "Hamor take you!"

Wheee .. . eeeeiii!

An aura of hatred poured from the liveryman, so strong that I could
sense it without trying.  I swallowed, then called, "You there!  Are
you Felshar?"  "..  . get yours later, beast .. ."  muttered the man,
as he coiled the whip and turned toward me.  His expression shifted to
professed pleasure, but the hatred boiled underneath.

"Felshar will be back in a short time.  I'm Cerclas.  How may I help
you?"  His voice was as slippery as the bottle of leather-oil set
beside the racked saddles by the tethered horse.

I shrugged.  "I don't know that you can.  Thinking about a horse."

Cerclas smiled faintly, his eyes running over my dark brown traveling
clothes and cloak, noting the staff with a frown.

"Horses are dear this year."

I lifted my eyebrows.  "Oh?"

"The drought in Kyphros, and the heavy winter in Spidlar-they were hard
on the stock, and few travelers returned with mounts."

I nodded toward the swaybacked horse-a nondescript grayish color.  It
looked gentle, unlike the small shaggy beast.  "That one?"

"Five golds."  Cerclas shrugged.  "That's a steal.  But feed is dear,
too."

I really didn't want to deal with Cerclas.  The man smelled worse than
the horses, and his eyes were bloodshot and kept drifting to my pack.
Like a lot of the traders who visited Nylan, he lied.  But, even with
my growing awareness of order and chaos, I couldn't tell how much.

"There aren't that many travelers, and there may not be any for a
while.  Your stable is nearly full."  I was guessing, but it seemed
right.

"There are always travelers in Freetown," observed Cerclas.

"What other mounts might you have?"  I walked toward the shaggy
horse.

"A war-horse, a traveler, and some others .. ."

For some reason I wanted to look at the small horse.  A welt the length
of my hand lay across his flank, clearly raised by the recent whipping.
For the moment I merely noted it, trying to understand why Cerclas had
been so angry at the horse.

The animal was well-fed and untouched by anything resembling chaos,
unless it was far more subtle than I could detect.

Wheee..  .. eeeee .. .

I barely kept from jumping.

"Mean little bastard, isn't he?"  Cerclas stood by me.  "If you don't
know horses, stay away from ponies.  They're smart, and that makes them
dangerous and mean.  I can show you some better mounts.  In the stalls
over on the right."

"All right."  I let the liveryman lead me toward the nearest stall,
where a chestnut munched on hay from the manger.

"This one is a battle-trained gelding.  He'll stand up to anything."

I nodded.  The chestnut seemed healthy, well-treated, although there
was something about him that bothered me .. . his size?  I wondered,
looking up at his ears.  Or something else?  "How much?"

"Fifteen golds."

That was a more honest price than the one he had quoted for the
swayback.

"What else?"

"Here we have a mare .. . good traveler, but not nearly so good in a
fight.  Eight golds."

The mare was a blotchy-colored horse, black-and-white patches across
her body, with a short cropped mane.  I liked her less than the
chestnut, and just nodded to Cerclas.  "What else?"

He walked to the next stall, where a hulking brown beast of a horse
munched placidly on hay so dry it crackled.  "Plow-horse broken to
ride.  He's not much good in battle, gets nasty when mares are around,
but could carry 'two of you and your gear.  He could also pull a wagon
if you needed it.  Six golds for him.  He's worth more, but there
aren't many caravans around this time of year, and he eats a lot."

We looked at three others, all broken-down mares.  I didn't like any of
them and found my feet carrying me back toward the central yard.  As I
stepped past the shaggy little horse, I could feel a sense of Tightness
about him, but kept moving toward the overpriced swayback.

Wheuuunnnn .. . The nag's whinny was half-whine, half-groan.

I shook my head.  I'd be lucky if the old gelding made it much past the
gates of Freetown.

"At five golds, he's a bargain," commented Cerclas.

"Is that what the glue works would pay?"

Cerclas coughed into his tangled beard, then straightened and fixed his
glance on my staff.  His eyes widened.  "He's a long way from the glue
works, and you need transportation, I'd venture."

"I do, or I wouldn't be looking at horses.  But even at two golds, this
old fellow wouldn't get me halfway to anywhere."

Cerclas shrugged, scratching the unkempt gray-and-black thatch at the
back of his head, then spat noisily on the clay.

"What about that undersized horse over there?"  I asked.

"That's not a horse.  He's a mountain pony, tough as they come. Felshar
hasn't priced him."

I repressed a smile.  That failure might be enough.  Walking over to
the pony, but avoiding those effective hooves, I stepped up toward his
shoulder.  While I was no judge of horses or ponies, he seemed broader
in the shoulders than some of the larger horses, and his legs, while
shorter, seemed sturdier.

"He might be able to carry me," I let my voice ooze doubt.

"He'll carry you and another," admitted the liveryman, standing well
behind me.

I touched a streak on the pony's flank.

Wheeee .. . The animal twitched, but did not move away from me.

"These welts ..."  I shook my head.  "Still .. . two golds?"

"Felshar hasn't priced him .. ."

I shrugged.  "What good would it be to price him?  Most buyers wouldn't
take him until these heal.  Felshar would certainly know that."

This time I could sense the uneasiness in the liveryman.

"Three golds, if you throw in a saddle, bridle and blanket."

"I don't know .. ."

I shrugged again.  "Well ... I need to check elsewhere, then .. ."

Cerclas scratched his head and spat again.  "Felshar wouldn't complain
too much if I got four ... I don't suppose ..."  He stepped closer to
the pony.

Wheeeee .. . eeee .. .

The liveryman stepped back.

"Let's see the saddle and bridle first .. ."

In the end, I paid more than I had to, three golds and seven silvers,
but I got a decent saddle and blanket.  The bridle wasn't a bit-type,
but a choker, sort of a hackamore.  But I had the feeling that the
force of the bridle wasn't going to matter much anyway.  If I couldn't
persuade that pony to do something gently, he wasn't about to be
forced.

The only other sticky point was the chit.

"I never learned my figures.  Felshar does that."

"Fine.  I'll write it up and you put the chop on it."  I'd seen the
chop hanging next to the boxes where the chits were lying.

"How do I know .. ."

I held up the staff.  "Everyone knows if you carry this, you don't lie.
I couldn't afford to.  The price is too high."

At the sight of the staff, he stepped back.  "I don't know .. ."

"Felshar knows you don't cheat a black staffer and that they don't
cheat you.  Maybe you didn't get an outrageous profit, but you got a
fair price, and you're getting rid of some trouble."  I looked
pointedly at the pony's flank.  "... suppose .. . wouldn't hurt .. ."

That was how I ended up riding down Cinch Street toward the gates of
Freetown.  The old lance cup, with the addition of a strip of leather,
was adequate enough to hold my staff, although I had a tendency to
lurch in the saddle perilously close to the dark wood when I wasn't
paying attention.

The pony's name was Gairloch.  I knew that when I touched him to saddle
him.  He did try and puff out his belly, but, following Cerclas's
instructions, I kneed him, not very hard, and not nearly so hard as
Cerclas recommended, to get him to let out his breath.

Don't ask me how I knew his name, but I did.  That bothered me, but
there wasn't much I could do about it.

Surprisingly, Gairloch didn't rock all that much, and the old saddle
was broken in enough that it wasn't too stiff.  The straps and girths
had been replaced recently, and I had checked the stitching and rivets
to make sure they were solid, but the seat looked like it had weathered
more than a few caravans.

If Gairloch were as adept on the trail as he was in avoiding city
potholes, I would be better off than I had hoped- although, as I looked
overhead, we might be getting wet sooner than I had hoped.

The early morning gray-and-white puffs of cloud were darkening and
thickening as Gairloch bore me onto the worn but even gray stones
leading to the city gate.  The walls were scarcely impressive, rising
only about twenty cubits.  Two squarish towers, each with crenelated
parapets too small to be very useful, framed the gate.  Graying and
iron-bound timbers comprised the city gate itself, a gate that waited
in a recess in the walls behind the towers.  A stone bridge spanned the
space between the towers.  When closed, the gate sat in a stone groove
and was backed with stone on all sides, making it difficult, if not
impossible, to batter down.  But any attacker would have gone for a
less defended point on the low walls in any case.

Set toward the city from the walls was a stone hut, and outside the hut
waited a pair of guards.  As I watched, a small cart, pulled by a
swaybacked horse that could have been a mate to the one I had seen at
Felshar's, rocked over the stone gate groove and onto the pavement by
the guard hut.

The rear guard waved the cart, driven by a woman with straggly hair and
a hooked nose, toward the other side of the roadway.  "Over there.
Don't take the whole road!"

Whstt-chuck.  The long reins clacked, and the cart lurched slightly
away from us.

"Halt!"

The other guard stopped looking bored as he took in my dark cloak and
the pony.

"Where'd you get that horse, boy?"

"Felshar's, officer."  There was no sense in being nasty to the man.
Besides, he was bigger than me, and, if paunchy, probably could use the
sword that one hand rested upon.

"Any way to prove that?"

I shrugged.  "I have a bill of sale with Felshar's chop."  Then I
touched the staff, which was faintly warm to my ungloved fingertips.
"And, besides, would I lie about it?"

His eyes moved to the staff, widened like Cerclas's eyes had widened,
then moved to my face.

"You're young for that .. ."

"I know.  They've been telling me that since the spring."  I unfolded
the thin parchment from my belt.  "If you'd care to look .. ."

The look on his face-that, and the fury behind his eyes-warned me.

Clang .. . thwackt... . whsssstff ... "... Aiiiee .. . thief!"

Somehow, I had managed to stuff the parchment into my belt and grab the
staff from the holder quickly enough to knock aside his sword even
before he positioned himself.  The second tap-and it was scarcely more
than that-was to his cheek, but the brand was instantaneous.

Gairloch didn't wait for my heels in his flank, but began to trot, then
gallop, through the still-open gate.  The gate couldn't be closed, not
in the instants Gairloch took me past the second guard and through the
gate gap in the wall.

Cloppedy, cloppedy, doppedy .. . Gairloch's hooves rang on the stones,
and I dropped the reins and grabbed his mane with my right hand, trying
to keep from hitting anyone with the staff, hanging on as we careened
down the causeway.

"Look out!"

"Runaway horse!"

"Thief!  Traitor!"

A set of peddlers scrambled off the causeway into the mud-filled trench
on the right, and Gairloch angled around a slow-moving wagon pulled by
a single plodding horse which barely lifted its head.  I could have
reached out and touched the dusty harness, so close did we pass.

The traffic on the causeway probably saved us from an arrow in the
back, but by the time we cleared the causeway where the day's incoming
produce and shoppers all funneled toward Freetown, we were out of range
of all but the strongest of crossbows, assuming any were ready and in
place on the guard-tower parapets.

The clippedy-clop of Gairloch's hooves changed to a muted drumming as
he carried me along the packed clay of the highway.  No stone roads or
highways in Freetown, it seemed.  We galloped past a crossroads, which
carried more traffic than the road we traveled, and kept heading into
Candar.

Before too long, I reined in Gairloch, keeping in the middle of the
road, which was surprisingly firm considering the continuing rain and
dampness of the night before.  Gairloch dropped to a trot, then a
walk.

"Good horse."  I thwacked him on the shoulder, careful not to touch the
welt raised by the liveryman.

Whnuff..  .

"I didn't like them much either."

I glanced at the causeway and the dark spot that marked the gate.
Nothing seemed to have happened.  No other horses had followed us.  The
intermittent stream of people, horses, and wagons still headed up the
stone pavement toward the city.

Then I realized I was still holding the staff in my hand.  The wood had
cooled until it was no longer warm to my touch.  Half of the leather
thong I had used to tie the staff in place was missing, ripped in two
when I had grabbed for the staff to defend against the guard.  I
replaced the staff in the lance cup, tying it in place with the
remaining leather.

Looking from the staff to the road, my eyes fixed on the rectangular
stone post by the road.  "Hrisbarg-40 K" proclaimed the weathered
stone.

I let go of Gairloch's mane and straightened up in the saddle, chucking
the reins lightly as we headed down the rise on the road to Hrisbarg.

Already it had been more of a day than I had planned.  Assaulted by a
thief, attacked by the duke's gate guard and probably declared a
criminal in Freetown-all in the first day.  I didn't know where I was
going, except I knew that Hrisbarg was where I had to go first before I
could get to the roads leading to the Easthorns and eventually the
Westhorns.

Would the Freetown guards spread the word?  Or would they take it out
on the other danger gelders  Or had the others left while I had been
haggling with Cerclas to get Gairloch?

My guts wrenched a little, wondering if I could have left Freetown
without causing so much of an uproar.  I shrugged, knowing I couldn't
undo what I had done, but also knowing I might end up paying for it
somehow, some way, when I really didn't want to.  So Gairloch and I
started the long walk toward Hrisbarg.

Thrummmm .. . thrummm .. .

Above us, the clouds thickened and rumbled, promising more rain.

XX

THE MAN IN white smiles, a warm and reassuring smile that spreads
through the coldness of the public room, which the dying embers in the
dark hearth barely warm.  "Innkeeper!  Could we have some warmth?"

As the woman in gray leathers watches from the dark corner table, a
heavy-set man lumbers forward.  He wears shapeless leather trousers, a
worn brown tunic, and a soiled linen apron over which protrudes a
sagging gut.  "Your lordship, there's no wood and no coal, naught but
the little we got on the grate.  The black bastards cut us off, and
there's none to be had for us working folk."

A hissing whisper of agreement wafts across the scattering of men and
the few women who huddle at the tables closer to the near-dead embers
on the hearth.

"Bring me some stones, then."

"Stones?"

"Yes, stones.  You wish to warm your inn, do you not?"

Confusion and hope war upon the innkeeper's face, but he retreats from
the still-smiling man in white, who turns to the veiled woman beside
him and says something in a voice low enough that not even the hovering
serving-girl can catch the words.

At the kitchen door, the innkeeper motions, then speaks quickly to the
pregnant girl who responds.  He remains by the doorway, surveying the
dim and chilly room.

In the shadows, the redhead in gray leans forward and the hood of her
cloak slips back, revealing the clean lines of her face and the fire of
her hair.

A thin-faced man grins through his straggly beard and eases from his
seat toward the table where his prey waits.  His hand touches the hilt
of the sharp knife at his belt.

Even before he has reached the shadows, the redhead has turned toward
the thin-faced man.

"You look like you need a man."  His voice is ingratiating.

"In that case, you aren't the one."

Only the dark-eyed and veiled woman who sits beside the man in white
watches as the thin man edges toward the redhead.

"Uppity wench, aren't you?"

"No.  Just pointing out the obvious."  Her voice is cool, detached, and
her eyes go right through him.

Oblivious to the confidence behind her words, he reaches for the empty
chair.

"I didn't invite you to join me," she observes.

"Don't need no invitation."  He leers and begins to sit.

Her staff and foot move simultaneously.

Cruump .. . Both chair and bearded man crash to the gritty plank
floor.

"Bitch!"  His hand reaches for the knife.

Before he can reach her, she is standing, dark staff in hand.

Thud .. . crack .. . thump .. .

He pitches forward onto the floor.

The innkeeper lurches from his post by the kitchen door.  "There'll be
no fighting .. ."

"You're right.  There will be no fighting," declares the redhead. "When
this idiot wakes up, tell him to be more careful."  She stands while
the innkeeper drags the unconscious man toward the doorway, then
resumes her seat to finish the bread and cheese upon her table.

Across the room, the dark-eyed woman nods and leans toward the man in
white.  In turn, he nods and smiles.

Shortly, the pregnant kitchen-maid struggles to the hearth with a
basket full of dripping stones, looking from the innkeeper to the man
in white.  "The stones you wanted, your lordship."

"Stack them on the grate, if you would."

The girl complies, her eyes darting from the slender lord in white to
the hulking innkeeper.

"Thank you, girl.  Here."

Her eyes widen as she takes the silver, but she inclines her head as
she covers the silver and thrusts it into the hidden pocket in her wide
belt.  "My thanks, your lordship."

The man in white stands and turns to those at the tables.  "All of you
are cold.  Would you like some warmth?"  His fingers point at three
figures at a table near the wall.

"I can tell you have come in from the winter rains.  The warmth is on
me."  He turns and gestures toward the stones, cold and damp upon the
grate.

HSSSSSSSSSSssssss!  A flare of white sears from the grate.

Even the redhead in the shadows winces, and a hush drops over the
tables.

When the brightness fades, steady coals glow from the heap of coal that
has appeared on the grate, and the warmth begins to radiate across the
public room.

The dark-eyed and veiled woman rises and walks toward the redhead's
table.

"Lord Antonin and I would like to invite you to join us," she offers.

The redhead cocks her head, thinking.  "Why?"

The dark-haired woman looks at the staff and smiles pleasantly. "Should
we discuss it here?"

"I suppose not," answers the redhead with a wry smile as she stands and
follows the dark-haired woman.

"I am Sephya, and this is Lord Antonin," offers the veiled woman as she
resumes her seat.

"Be our guest," offers Antonin.

"Why?"  asks the redhead.

"Why not?"  he answers.  "You doubtless have some questions, and we may
be able to provide some of the answers."

As the redhead eases the battered chair toward the table, she studies
Sephya.  Despite a fine figure, the veiled woman is older than she had
first looked, with fine lines radiating from the corners of her eyes
and the color in her face supplied by rouge.

"Why don't you start by explaining why you flaunted your power?  And
why you invited me to join you?"  Her tone is half-humorous,
half-sharp.

"A deed is a deed.  Do you believe that appearances can really deceive,
young lady?"

"Go on," suggests the redhead.

"Actions speak louder than words.  There are those here who shivered
from cold.  Did the righteousness of Recluce warm them?  Will the
innkeeper feed his fire for them from the goodness of his heart?"

"That is a well-used argument, Antonin.  One good action does not make
a man good.  Nor does a single wrong action make a good man evil."

The outside door opens, and a gust of wet chill air momentarily
disperses the warmth from the hearth-until the door closes with a
thud.

"Actions do speak louder than words," Antonin insists, his voice
melodious.  "Tell me why it is wrong to warm those who are cold."

"I don't like answers that are questions.  How about a straight
answer?"  The redhead looks toward the back wall and the door.

Antonin shrugs, as if to deplore such directness, then looks her in the
eye.  "What use is a good thought if it does not translate into good
action?  I'm sorry," he grins.  "Let me rephrase that.  The purists of
the world of magic, such as the Masters of Recluce, believe that the
form of magic determines whether it is good or evil.  They insist that
the use of chaos-magic to warm those who would die of cold or to feed
those who would starve contributes to evil.  I cannot accept that
reasoning.  Is not a human life worth more than a label?"  He shrugs
again.  "I ask you to think about that.  Think about the beggars you
saw in the cold streets outside.  In the meantime, share our meal."

"And?"

Antonin smiles warmly.  "I have certain business with the duke.  If
you're interested in working with us, I will be in Hydolar in somewhat
less than an eight-day from now.  At the Grande Loge.  Either meet us
there, or leave a message."

He takes a slice of meat from the platter and nods toward the empty
plate before her.  "You need to see more of Candar, and to reflect upon
what you would do with your abilities.  Enough of talk.  Enjoy the
meal."

The redhead glances from Sephya to Antonin, but no glances have passed
between the two, nor have any of the twisted energies that she has seen
in Recluce.  Shortly, she spears a slice from the platter, and the
three eat.

XXI

COMPARED TO THE High Road of Recluce, or even to the lesser East-West
Highway, the way from Freetown to Hrisbarg seemed little more than a
narrow lane.  Straight, but narrow.  Right outside Freetown the road
had split, going north, south, and west, and I had taken the one road
that had not paralleled the coast.

Hard-packed clay comprised the center of the road, perhaps as wide as a
farm wagon.  The years of travel had created a surface that seemed to
resist the light rain, at least in the center of the roadway.  Heavy
ruts and churned ground surrounded the hard-packed and level central
section of the highway.

I had tried to unstrap my cloak from the top of my pack while riding
and had almost fallen off Gairloch in the process, saving myself with a
desperate grab at the front edge of the saddle.

Whheeee .. . uhhhh .. .

"All right ... I'm sorry .. ."  So I reined to a halt in the middle of
the road, looking behind again.  We had covered more than five kays
without seeing any pursuit, and the rain was threatening to change from
a fine drizzle into something heavier.

As I clambered off Gairloch, the insides of my legs twinged.  After
only a fraction of the distance we would have to travel, my body was
protesting, not exactly a promising sign.

Thrummmm .. . Overhead the clouds continued to darken, threatening more
than mere drizzle.  Behind the tumbled stone walls beside the road, the
meadow grasses bore only a tinge of green amid the tan of the end of
the season.  The washed-out brown of the long scraggly blades at the
base of the wall testified to more than casual rain, as did the puddles
in the middle of the unmowed field beyond.  At the base of some of the
grasses were blackened stalks, showing rot from the continual rain.

The stony outcroppings even in the middle of the fields, the shorter
grasses on the other side of the wall, and occasional breaks in the
walls and the trampled hoofprints leading across the road from one wall
break to another, all pointed toward the fields as sheep or cattle
pasture.  I had seen neither, unless a few grayish blurs to the south
were scattered sheep or goats.

Thrummmm .. . thrumm .. .

Splatt .. . splattt .. . The cold raindrops on my head prompted me to
complete my recovery of the cloak and to replace the pack behind the
saddle.

My legs twinged again as I climbed back onto Gairloch.

"Let's go."

Wheee .. . eeee .. .

Thrummm .. . thrumnmm .. .

Splattt..  . splatt..  .

Things were going just wonderfully.  After being assaulted, threatened
by a city guard and having to flee, we were now headed through a cold
and miserable rain to a town I knew nothing about, on the way through
more towns about which I also knew nothing, in order to reach and cross
two mountain ranges I had no great desire to reach, let alone cross.

Wheeee .. . eeeee .. ,

Ahead, a shapeless lump appeared on the road, resolving itself into a
coach drawn by a pair of huge horses.  From a short pole beside the
driver, who was covered from head to foot with a hooded and shiny gray
slicker, drooped a reddish flag.

I looked for the less muddy side of the road, and nudged Gairloch
toward the right onto a patch of grass that rose above the churned
road-edge mud.

"Geee-ha aaa

Crack!

A chill accompanied the coach, almost like a cold wind, that blew
softer, yet colder, as it approached.

Crack!

"Gee-haaa!"

The hoarseness and the mechanical nature of the coachman's call twisted
every nerve in my spine as the coach rumbled along the level center of
the road toward me.

The coach itself was of polished white oak, varnished heavily until it
was nearly gold, supported not by iron springs, but by heavy leather
straps.  Even the axles and wheels were totally of wood.  Yet the
coach's workmanship could not be obscured by the mud streaks upon the
wood or by the mist and water droplets which sprayed from it on its
headlong journey toward Freetown.

"Gee-haaa!"  The coachman never looked aside as he drove past.

Behind the coach rode two men, seated side-by-side on chargers that
mirrored the chestnut gelding I had seen at Felshar's.  All the horses
moved at a quick trot, as fast as seemed possible for a longer trip.

Both soldiers wore the shiny gray slickers like the coachman's, but
shorter, more like jackets that allowed them to use either their white
lances, secured in holders like the battered lance cup which held my
shorter staff, or the white scabbarded swords they bore.

The soldier closest to me glanced from under the hood, but his scrutiny
was mechanical, as though he had not even really seen me, or as though
he had seen a figure and passed on that information as he
watched-although his mouth did not appear to open.

For the moment that the coach passed, midday seemed more like a stormy
night.  Then all that remained was a dissipating sense of disorder, the
soft rumble of the wheels fading away, and a hoarse "gee-haaa!"

I shook myself and chucked the reins, hoping that Isolde had completed
whatever she had to do and had found the black ship that doubtless
waited unseen somewhere near the harbor.

Tamra-I hoped her procrastination hadn't left her open to the
chaos-wizard that had ridden in the white-oak coach, but there wasn't
much I could do.  Not then.  I swallowed, wiped the water off my
forehead, and watched the road, noting absently that the coach's
passage had left only the faintest of indentations on the road.

Splatt .. . splatt .. . The cold rain gusted in icy drops from an
ever-darker sky, and I looked for some sort of shelter, but the road
stretched straight ahead, level, for at least another five kays,
bordered by the same tumbled stone fences, the same withered grasses,
and the same distant and scattered sheep.  Not one house nor homestead
had I seen since crossing that first hill outside of Freetown.  Yet the
sheep indicated that someone lived somewhere-and that said that no one
wanted to be close to the road I traveled.  I shivered again.

Wheeee .. . eeeee .. . Gairloch tossed his head and droplets flew back
onto my cloak and face.

"I know .. . it's cold and wet.  But there's no place to stop."

Wheeeee ... "No place.  Nowhere .. ."

So we kept plodding along the road.

No wagons, no more coaches, and a steady beating flow of water from
overhead.  Finally, when my cloak was nearly soaked through, its
treated leather heavy on my shoulders, we reached the first low hill at
the end of that near-deserted meadow valley.  By then, the rain had
eased to a mere chilling mist.

Some scattered pines bordered the road, and the stone walls lapsed into
tumbled low piles of rock.  On the hilltop, more of a hillock really,
sat another pile of stones, the remnants of what had clearly once been
an extensive farm or estate.

There was no immediate sense of chaos or disorder, only a feeling of
age .. and maybe under it all some sadness, although my father, Kerwin,
and Talryn would all have assailed me for ascribing an emotion to a
description of order or its lack thereof.  At least Gairloch couldn't
comment on sloppy logic.

From that second hill, the terrain became less ordered and more wild,
with hills covered mainly with pines, although a few gray oaks, their
leaves turning yellow-brown, were scattered along the lower reaches of
the hills, especially near the few permanent streams.  While there were
countless brooks and streams flowing with rainwater, only one even
approached looking like it had cut a permanent channel.

Again, I shivered.  Whatever it was, as miserably normal as the rain
and the surroundings seemed, the cause of the rain was not precisely
natural.  Why, I couldn't say; but that the extent of the rain was
unnatural was clear, even while I could detect no sign of chaos.

The water was natural.  Gairloch enjoyed lapping it up from several of
the brooks, but when I stopped to let him graze, he did not seem
particularly interested in the straggly grass.  So I pulled myself back
into the saddle and finished munching on the travel bread I had brought
from the Travelers' Rest.

The other unnatural thing was the road itself, which ran straight where
it could and curved gently when it could not and climbed gradually if
neither straightness nor curves were possible.  Once Gairloch and I had
passed through the lower hills, in the higher hills the road narrowed
not a jot.  Nor did the grade steepen.  The sides of the hills seemed
planed away at a gentle angle, without the overhanging boulders or
outcrops I had half-expected to see.

In time, I almost struck my forehead.  "..  . wizard's road ... of
course!"  Magistra Trehonna had mentioned that there were some in
Candar, but I hadn't paid much attention to the details.  She was even
more boring than Talryn.

Wheee .. . eeee .. . added Gairloch.

While I wasn't that good at extending my senses, particularly in the
rain, once I realized what might be there I could almost feel the hard
white stone pavement under the packed clay.

I shook my head as the light dimmed, and Gairloch plodded downhill
toward a few scattered lights that the intermittent stone posts had led
me to believe might be Hrisbarg.

Three or four kays short of the town the road forked, and a large arrow
roughly chiseled into a stone post twice the size of most distance
stones pointed down the right-hand branch.  Above the arrow were the
letters HSBG.

The left-hand road continued straight, without lights or dwellings
nearby, toward the next line of hills.  Only a line of coach tracks
indicated that the road was ever used.

After the turn, the remainder of the route to Hrisbarg was churned,
muddy, and, in parts, required near-fording of the streamlets that
meandered across the excuse for a road that we traveled.  I almost
wished we had stayed with the wizard's road, gloomy as it was, that had
arrowed straight into the hills-especially after it began to rain
again, the cold pelting flow that quickly re soaked my cloak.

Wheee .. . eeeee .. . eeuuhhh .. .

"I agree.  But do we really have any options?"

Gairloch was silent on that point.

The first huts we came to were roofless, dark, and deserted.  Then came
huts with roofs, if apparently deserted.  Finally Gairloch set his
hooves on the thoroughly-churned mud of central Hrisbarg.

The main street in Hrisbarg seemed to consist of equal sections of
puddles and mud.  Instead of stone pavement, or even stone walks with
storm drains, they used mud.  The stores were fronted with raised plank
walkways.  Some had posts and steps for tying carriage horses or single
horses, but most just had plain planks slapped down.

Even in the drizzle, I could see the woodwork of those walks was
abysmal-green wood, rough spiking, not even a rudimentary effort to
keep the walking surface level.

Whhff .. .

Gairloch shook his head and consequently his mane, spraying
pony-scented water all over my cloak and face.  The cloak was designed
for it.  My face wasn't.  My obvious belt pouch had several silvers
remaining, enough for a night at an inn and a stable for
Gairloch-particularly after the day we had completed and the kind of
night it was turning out to be.

One or two stores had oil lamps in front, but Hrisbarg lacked street
lamps as such.  Even with my excellent night vision, I was having
trouble, what with the drizzle and the strangeness of Candar.

Whhhhhuff..  .

Another sound of disgust from Gairloch and another, finer, spray of
water flipped across me.

"All right .. . we'll try to find an inn ... or something .. ."

I began to look in earnest, although I also kept my eyes open for signs
of the road to Hewlett.  The Brotherhood had been singularly unhelpful
with the directions that I needed to spend a full year in Candar and
pass through Hewlett to the cities beyond.

After all, I mean, was my danger geld just to spend time in Candar and
pass through Hrisbarg and Hewlett and get to the Westhorns?  Not bloody
likely.  If they hadn't been so deadly serious, it could have been a
joke.  And, once again, no one told me anything I couldn't figure out
first-except why Talryn had been so insistent on my getting to the
West-horns.

Down a lane to my left I saw a faded sign with what looked like an "H"
and some sort of howling creature.  Outside of a few dark buildings on
the corner and some small cottages huddled further down the road, I
could see nothing.  Nor did I feel anything.  Certainly no inns, road
houses.  So I kept Gairloch headed toward the far end of Hrisbarg.

The sign read "The Silver Horse."  Predictably, since apparently no one
in Candar besides the merchants and the clergy could read, under the
letters was a horse, badly painted, with flaking silver paint that
looked gray in the rain.

With a chuck of the reins, I nudged Gairloch toward the slope-roofed
and weathered building next to the inn.

"Uff .. ."  My legs almost collapsed under my full weight.

"Sir?"  Standing there was a stable boy not much taller than my
elbow.

"Do I pay you or the inn?"  I asked.

"It's three pence a night, five with a separate stall, oats, and a full
manger."

I handed him a penny even before I touched the rolled-up pack.  "That's
for you to take special care of my horse."

"Yes, sir."  The youngster stepped back.

"Which stall?"

"You could have the one under the eaves there .. . ?"

I got the message.  If I took the one with low headroom, none of the
bully boys with the big horses would bother him.  And Gairloch didn't
need the extra space as much as being left to rest and feed.

"That's fine."  I led Gairloch there myself, letting the dark-haired
youngster open the half-door, as much to keep him away from the staff
that could have been a lance in the dim light of the single covered tin
lamp that hung from the beam by the doorway.

Before even starting to unsaddle Gairloch, I removed the staff and
tucked it under the straw by the outside wall.  No one but someone
attuned to order chaos forces would notice it, and it wouldn't be that
much good to me against an accomplished chaos-master anyway.

"I can help you," offered the boy.

I didn't protest as he unstrapped the saddle, since Gairloch didn't
seem to mind, merely whuffing and shaking his head.  Besides, the
youngster's hands were far defter than mine, and my legs were still
shaking.

With Gairloch mainly settled, and the saddle and blanket racked to dry,
I was ready to try The Silver Horse itself.  My leg muscles spasmed as
I limped across the muddy courtyard to the inn.  Faint light glimmered
through the small leaded windowpanes facing the stable.

The open outer door was of rough pine, covered with peeling white
paint.  The inner door, which I checked as I pushed it open, was of
good red oak, but the varnish was worn and cracking and the hinges had
been reset too many times.  It took some time for me to wipe all the
mud off my boots using the worn rush mats, but I managed, not that it
mattered much.  The floor was scarred and stained wood, with dirt-heaps
in the corners.

Inside, only one of the lamps in the narrow hall was lit, and it smoked
and flickered.

"Hello, the inn ..."  I called.

A muffled voice answered from somewhere.  "..  . coming .. ."  "..  .
At this hour?"  questioned another voice, sharper than the first, and
nearer.

Waiting, I looked around the inn.  On my right, through a square
opening the size of a double door, was a dining area, and the faint
glow of coals glinted from the stone fireplace.  On the left I noted a
small sitting area with three wooden benches covered with oblong
cushions.  A second wall lamp, damped low, illuminated the sitting
area.  The bench backs were spooled and unpadded.  In the center of the
benches stood a battered low wooden table, used primarily as a
boot-rest, if the indentations on the table edge were any indication.

As in Freetown and on the road, travelers seemed few indeed.

"Yes?"

The voice was the sharp one and belonged to a waspish lady dressed in a
faded brown dress and stained yellow apron.  Her face was clean, if
angular, and her silver-streaked hair formed a neat bun at the back of
her head.  "How much for a room, and some supper?"  My voice was
hoarse, rough from the wet and cold.

The eyes raked over me.  "A silver a night."  She paused, and the dark
vulture eyes took in my soaked cloak.  "Paid in advance.  That includes
bread and cheese in the morning.  Dinner is extra-what's available on
the bill of fare.  Not much is left tonight."

After fumbling with the obvious front pouch, I produced a silver and
five coppers.  "For me and for my horse."

Part of the vulture look vanished as she took the coins.  "You rode in
this weather?"

"It seemed like a good idea when I started.  Freetown wasn't a place I
wanted to stay.  Then there wasn't any place to stop, and ..."  I
shrugged.

The woman glanced at the door, then back to me.  "Hrisbarg is part of
the duchy, and Majer Dervill likes to stop here."

I got the message.  "Travelers don't always know the local weather,
madam, and I was just hoping for a warm inn and some hot food."

"We can help there.  Just go in and sit down.  Annalise will see to you
shortly.  Unless you want to see a room first?"

"I think I'd like to see the room.  At least to lay out the cloak and
dry out."

"Clean towel and basin are another copper."

"Two towels, with fresh water in the morning," I countered.

She smiled.  "In advance."

So I paid another penny, wondering if I should have asked for a chit,
but deciding against it.  The towels were thick and clean, both of
them, if a shade gray, and the basin held clean lukewarm water.

The room itself was barely large enough to hold the sagging double bed
and battered red-oak wardrobe.  The bed had a single coarse sheet over
an even lumpier-looking mattress, covered with a heavy brown blanket. A
wall sconce held a single scrawny candle that the thin innkeeper had
lit from her lamp.

The door had no lock, but with so few guests I decided to risk my cloak
and pack for the moment.

When I returned to the dining area, another body sat at the table
closest to the fire, a man in a dark blue uniform and a posture that
was arrogant even while slouched at the table and cradling a mug of
something.

I took a wall table for two on the other side, not quite so close to
the fire.

After a casual look at me, the soldier took another deep swallow from
the mug.  "Annalise!"

"A moment, please," returned the pleasant voice I had heard but not
seen earlier.

I stretched out, enjoying the warmth of the room and beginning to feel
more human and less chilled.

"Thank you, Herlyt.  I didn't know we had another customer."  The blond
girl, probably not even my age, nodded to the soldier.

"But ..."  She ignored him and walked straight to my table, long blond
braids swinging at her shoulders.  "Good evening, sir.  I'm afraid the
larder is a little low tonight.  We still have some bear stew, and a
pair of chops, I think.  Wheat or corn bread, and stewed spice apples.
Also some white cheese."  The open smile displayed strong if uneven
white teeth.  The open low collar of the peasant blouse showed some
other strong features, especially as close as she stood.  "Which is
better, the chops or stew?"

"The stew," called Herlyt.  "Take the stew.  Those chops have been
heated every night for a week.  Get me another mug, Annalise."

Annalise raised her eyebrows, then nodded faintly.  "I'll try the stew,
cheese, apples, and a few slices of wheat bread.  What is there to
drink?"

"Mulled cider, hard beer, Largo wine, and red berry

"Redberry."

"Real drinker you got there, Annalise.  Real manly fellow."  Annalise
shrugged as if to dismiss the soldier.  Then she grinned.  "Would you
like anything else?"

"Not right now, thank you."  I managed not to grin back at her, but she
had asked.

Before turning from me, she wiped any expression from her face.  Then
she retrieved the mug from the soldier.  "Another hard beer?"

"What else?  That's all you'll ever provide, and I still have to pay
for it."  The bearded man stared at the fire as tentative flames hissed
over a pair of green logs.

Annalise disappeared through an open door into what I took to be the
kitchen, reappearing with two mugs almost without leaving my sight.

Thump.  Herlyt's mug arrived without a word from the girl.  "Here you
are, sir."  My mug came with a plate that held cheese and wheat bread.
"Are you from Hewlett, Eagle's Nest, or Freetown?"

The stiffened position of the soldier alerted me.

"I guess I'd have to say not any of them.  Came down the coast road and
decided not to stay in Freetown with all the rain and gloom.  They told
me there were no ships anyway."

The soldier relaxed fractionally, and the girl nodded.  "That's a long
ride."

I grinned.  "It's a cold ride."  Then I sipped the red berry breaking
off some cheese to go with a chunk of the wheat bread.

As I ate, forcing myself to take each bite slowly, she withdrew to the
kitchen, and the soldier retreated into his mug.

"Sir .. . ?"

An enormous steaming bowl appeared in front of me, accompanied by a
smaller plate of spiced and sliced red apples.  Both dishes -were heavy
earthenware, with the fine cracks of age radiating through the glaze.

Herlyt had been right about the stew, though; it was spicy, hot, and
tasty.  But I pushed back the bowl before I finished it, knowing that
to eat any more would leave me ill, and then some.

"Will there be anything else?"

I glanced over at the soldier, slumped face down on the table.

"Later?"  I asked, testing her earlier grin.

She shrugged, but did not smile.

"How much?"

"Five or a half-silver."

After draining the red berry I gave her a silver and got back five
coppers, one of which went to her, and into her belt before she went
into the kitchen.

With a regretful look backward, I climbed the creaking stairs to my
room, checking my pack immediately once I had closed the door.  Nothing
had been touched.

Even as I struggled out of my trousers, I wondered if Annalise had
really meant anything by that nod.

She hadn't ... or at least I collapsed into sleep with no gentle
tapping on my door or other interruptions.

XXII

THE MORNING DAWNED no less dreary than the day before, drizzle and
intermittent rain dropping from formless gray clouds that churned but
never seemed to move.

I woke once before I got up, when the angular innkeeper replaced the
water basin with fresh water, both quietly and efficiently, and with
barely a glance toward me or the wardrobe.  After that my eyes closed
but my mind spun, asking question after question.  Like, why was the
Duchy of Freetown getting so much rain?  Or why had a chaos-master been
in the strange coach barreling toward the port?  And why had he used a
coach?

With a groan, I eased my feet over the side of the sagging bed, wincing
as I did.  My thighs were as sore as I could ever recall, even after
beginning Gilberto's conditioning exercises, and my shoulders were
stiff.  Sitting, even on the bed, was!  painful.

Washing helped, as did some stretching.

Then I checked my clothing.  The cloak was dry, all the way through, as
were my trousers.  The dried mud on the legs mostly came off with a
little scraping and the moistened edge of the towel I had used the
night before.  Still ... I could see that washing my clothes was going
to be another requirement before too long, unless I wanted to smell
like the stable.

Outside the wind whistled, and the rain splat ted against the inn.
After dressing and pulling on my boots, I checked my pack, smiling as
my fingers touched the book.  The Basis of Order-\ still hadn't gotten
around to looking at it, but!  supposed I would, sooner or later.  My
father had a reason for everything.

I closed the pack and folded the cloak across it, debating whether to
bring them downstairs with me.  Finally I shrugged.  Why not?

Without even a single light, the narrow hallway appeared gloomier than
the night before.  My boots scuffed on the bare wood of the floor.  "..
. attack on Freetown .. ."  "..  . any of them around here."

I paused at the top of the stairs, deciding to wait a moment to see
what else the speaker said.

"The courier said there were two black staffs and several others,
including a black warrior, a damned woman."

"Majer, I wouldn't even know what a black staff looked like.  All we
have are two commercial travelers and some well-off young student.  The
commercial travelers I see three or four times a year.  The
student-he's barely old enough to let loose on his own."

"Did you see any weapons with him?"

"Weapons?  Hardly.  A short knife."

"Where is he?"

"You might check by the fire."

"Come with me, and point him out, Natasha ... if you would be so
kind."

"Certainly, Majer .. . assuming he is there."

Click .. . dick .. .

As the heavy boots passed the stairs, I eased down the stairs further,
casually, as if I had not heard a word, but trying not to step
heavily.

Annalise stood by the desk counter, her eyebrows raised.  Then she
pointed toward the doorway and mouthed something.

I grinned, waved, and ducked through the main doorway, yanking on my
cloak as I did so.  While the majer and Natasha looked for me by the
fire, I dashed through the rain to the stable, glad I had brought the
pack with me.

Sploosh, sploosh .. . sploosh, sploosh, sploosh .. . My boots sloshed
through the puddles in the courtyard clay.

The wide sliding door was ajar.  The stable boy was nowhere to be seen
as I scurried toward Gairloch.

Rain or no rain, storm or no storm, I needed to put some distance
between me and Freetown's finest.  While they might be persuaded that I
was not a black staff something told me that the majer was under orders
to round up anyone who might be from Recluce.  The questioning would
not be gentle.  I would have liked to see whether Annalise had anything
in mind besides flirting .. . but that was out now.  Besides, she only
had played up to me to avoid Herlyt, or because any man with a horse
was bound to have money.

Trying to saddle Gairloch in the dim inn stable was a joy, knowing that
I didn't have much time.  First, I got the saddle blanket on sideways.
Gairloch whinnied at that, but he didn't actually buck until I threw on
the saddle.

Thunk.  The saddle slammed down on my feet and onto the planking.

"All right, you miserable beast."  I rearranged the saddle blanket,
then eased the saddle into place, but could barely get the cinch
closed.

Gairloch, gray-looking in the gloom, skittered but did not make a sound
as I fumbled with the closures.  Something .."  Finally, I reclaimed my
staff from the straw and placed the black wood firmly, but gently
against the pony's forehead.

"Whuff .. ."  When he let out his breath I yanked the cinch tight. I
suppose I could have kicked him, the way the saddler in Freetown had,
but using violence unnecessarily bothered me .. . besides being boring.
The staff trick worked, although why the pony would pay attention, I
still didn't know.  That bothered me, too, but not as much as kicking
him would have.

I had trouble with the hackamore, until I slowed down and forced myself
to be calm.  All that left was tying my pack in place and putting the
staff in the lance cup.  Then I untied Gairloch and walked him to the
sliding door of the stable.  "Hallo!  Hallo, the inn!"

That voice was too hearty for my liking.  Even behind the stained beams
and planks of the stable door, I could picture yet another duchy
cavalry officer, dripping rain from his shiny blue or gray waterproof,
looking for a warm brew and a solid stew, or for the majer with even
worse news or more punitive orders.

"Damnable innkeeper ... no stable boy on a morning like this ..."

Realizing he was coming in, stable boy or not, I tied Gairloch to the
beam fronting the first stall, then swung the door open.

"You .. . keeping an officer in the rain .. ."  The officer, wearing a
gold leaf on his collar, had been reaching for the door.  He stood at
least a half-head taller than me, and his horse made Gairloch look like
a toy.  "My apologies, officer.  But the stable boy is ill .. ."

"Leave that pony, man, and take care of a real horse!"

"Yes, sir," I answered.  "The end stall on the right is the only one
free.  It's dry and clean."  While I wanted to clunk the arrogant
bastard on the skull, I doubted that I could have reached the staff
before ending up spitted on his saber.

"That's fine, but make sure he gets a rubdown and a brushing ... and no
cold water, or I'll drown you in it."  He thrust the reins at me.

"Yes, sir."  I took the damp leathers and chucked them.  The horse was
better-trained or less stubborn than the ones I'd seen at Felshar's. He
actually followed me.  The cavalryman watched to make sure I was headed
where I said.  "Who has the pony?"

I did not turn, but gave a shrug.  "Young fellow, not much older than
me."

"I'll be back in a shake, man, and don't forget it."  Sploosh .. .
sploosh .  His steps toward the inn were quick.

I wrapped the reins around a post, tying them in a quick knot that I
yanked tight.  Then I dashed for Gairloch, untying his leathers, and
scrambled into the saddle right inside the stable.  I remembered to
duck as we stepped into the downpour.  I was still trying to get on my
gloves as he stepped through the open doorway.  Whhnnnnn .. . Clearly,
the cold rain on his face did not please him, but when the latest
cavalry officer and the majer got together, I definitely didn't want to
be around.

I kicked Gairloch gently with my heels and he began to walk, then trot.
I grabbed his mane to steady myself, but let him move.  The rain, like
icy needles, lashed at my unprotected face and head, since I hadn't
bothered with the cloak's hood.

I was lucky I'd even remembered the cloak, the way things were going.

Guiding Gairloch around the small lake that covered half the road in
front of the dry-goods store, I looked ahead, trying to make out the
turn where the road to Hewlett began.  Supposedly Hrisbarg was one of
the wool towns, the only one inside the duchy.  Hewlett was a wool
town, too, but it was across the border in Montgren, another duchy,
except it was ruled by a countess who didn't like the duke.

I chucked the reins again once we were back into the more solid mud.

"Halt!  In the name of Candar!  Rogue wizard!  Rogue wizard!"

We were turning onto the lane that stretched ahead to the Howlett road.
I kicked Gairloch in the flanks again, and he began to run, but only
for perhaps a hundred cubits before he settled back to a quick walk.
Clang!  Clang!

For all the shouts by the cavalry officer and the chimes on the alarm,
no one followed us, at least not immediately and not that I could tell.
It seemed pretty stupid.  I mean, just because someone thought I was a
black staff from Recluce, and just because I left in a storm, the idiot
was trying to rouse the whole town of Hrisbarg.

Then again, I had been lucky, damned lucky that I looked so young.  Why
was everyone on the entire continent out against anyone from Recluce?
Just what had happened in Freetown?

I kept looking over my shoulder, trying to feel whether anyone chased
us, but could not see or feel anyone.  All I felt was the rain, the
ice, and the cold.

The road was empty, at least as far ahead as I could see through the
mist and the rain.  As Gairloch settled into a walk, I leaned next to
the staff, nearly brushing it with my cheek before drawing back from
the heat.

Trying to feel what might be around, I reached out with my feelings, my
thoughts, trying to get a sense of chaos .. . anywhere.  Other than a
vague sense of unease connected with the road ahead, I could find
nothing.

The staff cooled as we rode westward through the mud and rain.
Traveling the road to Howlett was worse than the road from Freetown had
been.  Water slopped out of the sky and froze in chunks on the browned
and dead grasses.  The rain coated the oaks with ice sheaths, and
turned the thorn bushes that twisted from the shard stone road walls
into a tangled crystalline barrier.

The road itself-half ice, half black mud-squuushed with every step
Gairloch took.  Once again, I missed the desolate wizard's road that
had covered most of the distance between Freetown and Hrisbarg.

Each step of the pony made my stomach churn, and with every other step,
the wind gusted and threw the icy rain under my cloak.  I worried about
his hooves and fetlocks, or whatever they were called; but I worried
more about me.  So we kept going.

As I shivered in the saddle, I recalled fondly the heat of the day when
I travelled to Nylan, at least in comparison to the chill that had
already numbed my legs from boot-top to thigh.  My buttocks remained
painfully un numbed

My staff rested in the lance cup of the old cavalry saddle.  That meant
I swayed into it every so often, since it protruded well above the
saddle.  Flexing the reins every so often split the ice off them, but I
had to keep brushing ice off the saddle and my cloak.  The only thing
the rain refused to freeze to was my staff.

The staff had saved me at least twice, and made me a target of everyone
in Candar, or so it seemed.  This last time, I had managed to escape
without even using the staff, or letting anyone know I had it, but they
were still after me.

We stopped twice, both times to let Gairloch drink and to let me
stretch the kinks out of legs that felt like permanent cramps.

In time, close to midday, the rain stopped, the wind picked up, and ice
began to form on the remaining puddles.  Then I began to sense warmth
in the staff again, as the road straightened and began to climb toward
a low hilltop.  Through the mist I could make out some sort of
building.

"Oh ... of course."  Since the duke and the countess didn't like each
other, the building was a border station ... and another damned
problem, since someone might well have warned the guards.  I shrugged,
pulled off my left glove carefully, and touched the lorken-hot enough
to melt ice, and that meant some sort of danger.

"Well, Gairloch, they said you were a mountain pony ... how much of a
mountain pony?"

He didn't answer, didn't even flick his head, just kept walking.

I tried to think it through.  Probably no one had warned the road
guards.  But even if they hadn't, word would get out that someone from
Recluce had entered Montgren, and no one seemed to be very friendly to
anyone from Recluce, especially black staffers

In the end, the answer was simple-avoid the border checkpoint.
Accomplishing such a simple answer was more difficult.  Tangled low
brush sprang from the roadside at every point, and most of it was
ice-covered.

Reining Gairloch to a halt off to the side of the road by a higher
patch of brush that would shield us from scrutiny, should any of the
guards possess a spyglass, I tried first to study the slopes and the
land around us, low rolling hills covered with sparse clumps of bushes
and an occasional cedar, with white oaks along the watercourse lines
between the hills.

Few people in the duchy lived alone, or away from the towns.  On the
hillside that sloped away to my right, a black line ran nearly
perpendicular to the road-the uncovered remnant of a stone wall nearly
buried by the meadow turf.  But no trees.  As I stared, I could sense
the same wavy heat lines that concealed the black ships of Recluce,
except these were older and fainter and tinged with unpleasantness.

In a way it was too bad the wall wasn't headed where I was, but the
disorder bothered me.

I shrugged.  We couldn't stand behind the bushes forever.

Whheeee .. . eeeeuhhh .. .

"I know ... I know .. ."

So I turned around and let Gairloch pick his way downhill to where the
road turned out of sight of the border post, nearly half a kay.  As I
recalled, there was another brook that looked like it meandered down in
the same general direction as the border post, but with the hill
between us and the post.

I chucked the reins and Gairloch stepped across the flowing water and
out onto the meadow.  Keeping the hill to my right, we began following
the watercourse, roughly parallel to the road.  . ppeeeeepppp .. .

The sound of the insects or frogs or whatever it was reminded me that I
had heard very little, certainly no birds at all, since I had arrived
in Candar.

We crossed a low mound that stretched across the end of the meadow, and
I knew that it had once been a homestead-hut long, long before.

The brook narrowed as we continued and angled more to the left,
southward, than I would have liked; but most of the space was open
meadow, rather than brush or straggly cedars.

Another kay and the brook was barely a cubit wide, and angling back
toward Hrisbarg.

"All right, we go over the hill."

Gairloch shook his head, spraying mist on me, and we started up the
gentle slope, taking less time to reach the crest than it had to circle
the second hill, even though Gairloch's steps grew edgier and edgier as
we neared the crest.

I could sense nothing-neither heat nor cold, but an emptiness, a lack
of even nothing.

Wheeeeee .. .

As we came through the mist to the hilltop, I shivered.

A pile of whitened and glazed stones graced the hilltop.  Two of the
pale white-granite monoliths remained standing, although their crowns
were melted like candles left in the sun.  Surrounding the chaos-circle
was dead-white bleached gravel.  Outside the gravel was a whitish clay
that slowly darkened until it merged with the scraggly grass.

IVheeeeee .. . Gairloch shied from that whiteness.

Less than a hand span from my face, my own staff began to glow with a
black light that urged me away from the stones.

Even with the age of the destruction, even after all the years that had
passed, I didn't even look at the twisted patterns, but edged Gairloch
around the dead-white stones.

Beyond the hilltop, north and west of us, I could see the hilltop where
the border station lay, and the angle of the road descending toward
Hewlett-away from us, of course.

Not until we reached the bottom of the hill and turned back west did I
remember taking a breath.

"Whuuuuuuhhh ..."

My knees were shaking.  For someone who had questioned magic and chaos,
that ancient structure had been pretty convincing.  The whole hill had
radiated destruction.  No wonder people didn't live nearby.

That was the worst.  After that, the scattered brambles, and the wind
that got steadily colder-all those seemed merely natural.  The road
itself was also a natural disaster, churned half-frozen mud, but
somehow Gairloch mushed on.

Someone had to have seen us, but we saw no one, not until we were back
on the road to Hewlett, watching the scattered flocks of black-faced
sheep, and their shepherds bundled against the cold.  Then we passed a
slow-moving wagon heading in the same direction, and an old coach
headed toward Hrisbarg.

Neither driver gave me more than a passing glance.

XXIII

DUSK WAS FALLING by the time we struggled-with stops for water for
Gairloch, and vain attempts to stretch out the permanent cramps in my
legs-along the quagmire that was called the road to Howlett.  Even from
the outskirts I could tell that Howlett made Hrisbarg look like
Imperial Hamor.  Hrisbarg had rough wooden sidewalks; Howlett had none.
Hrisbarg had defined streets; Howlett had a rough clump of structures.
Hrisbarg's buildings had peeling paint; Hewlett's had none.

But the rain had begun to fall as ice-needles, and the wind howled in
from the north, freezing my cloak as solid as plate armor.

Almost at the edge of Howlett was a careless building, accompanied by
another not much better than a large shack-the Snug Inn and its
stable.

Wheeee .. . eeee, was Gairloch's only comment as I led him inside the
stable.

"Three pence, and he'll share a stall with the other mountain pony,"
commanded the heavyset man by the sliding stable door.

I looked at the small stable boy racking a saddle while the big man
collected.  The stable boy shrugged.

In the open space to the right stood an unhitched wagon and a
coach-that same golden coach that I had seen on the road to Freetown. I
looked back at the heavy man to catch what he was saying.

"You stable him .. ."  added the man.  "..  . damned ponies, kill
anyone not their master .. ."

I handed over the three pennies.

"At the end.  There's another one like him there."

I led Gairloch along the narrow way toward the back, and eased open the
stall door, holding it so that it didn't fall off the worn wooden
hinge-pins, then glancing at the bleached and cracked support timbers
of the stable itself, still wondering about the golden-finished
white-oak coach.

Wheeee .. . eeee .. . The whinny of the other pony subsided as I let
Gairloch take his own time.

Both sniffed the air, while I wanted to sneeze.

In time, I got him in and unsaddled.  I quickly stowed the staff in the
straw, along with my pack, and searched until I found an old brush.  By
then, the stable boy not the collector, was watching.

"Any grain?"

He gave me a wary look, and I produced a copper penny.  The boy
produced a battered bucket; and I split it between the two, although I
gave Gairloch the largest share.

Finally, I felt Gairloch was settled enough for me to chance the inn.

Once inside, the odor of unwashed herders, rancid oils, stale perfumes,
and smoke left my eyes stinging.  Squinting through the haze, I peered
over the crowded tables.  Those in the back, toward the narrow but
drafty door through which I had entered, were long trestle tables with
benches.  Beyond them were square tables, of a darker and polished
wood.  Between the two types of tables ran a flimsy half-wall with
three wide openings for the inn's servers.

Everyone on the road to or from Hewlett seemed stranded in the same
inn.  On my side of the half-wall, men and women were shoulder to
shoulder at the trestle tables.  A few of the tables for the local
gentry, or whoever the privileged ones might be, had vacant chairs
around them, but none of the tables were unclaimed.

The Snug Inn, despite its name, was not snugly built.

Uncle Sardit would have listed in detail all the faults in the
construction.  While I scarcely had his experience, there were some
poor design features evident even to me.  The outside eaves were not
long enough to keep the wind from blowing underneath and into the
upstairs rooms.  Likewise, the stone facing of the front wall had been
built for style and was beginning to pull away from the heavy timbers
that framed the side walls.  The curves in the rough beams that framed
both side and front walls showed that they had not been properly
treated or cured.

Inside was worse.  The hallway dividers separating the common and
gentry sections had been carelessly sawed and nailed together with
small spikes, needlessly splitting the wood.  After my short tenure
with Uncle Sardit, I could have done better and probably done it
quicker than whoever had built them.  The gentry's tables were square,
sharp-edged, and probably gave the inn's servants bruises.  Again, a
few minutes with a plane or even a shaping saw would have produced a
better and more serviceable table.

The common tables were green-oak trestles, sawed or split before the
wood had cured.  With the amount of red oak, black oak, and even maple
available in Candar, I wondered why the tables were green oak.

I looked over the mass of people, wincing at the din.  Though I had
stood there for what seemed a long time, no one even looked at me.

Finally, I made out a space on the bench next to a man in a rough brown
coat, halfway across the back of the commons area.  I edged toward
it.

"Watch it ..."

"Young pup .. ."

"My apologies," I offered to the man whose elbow I had jostled, even as
I ducked past him.  He glared over the edge of the chipped ceramic mug
he held to his beard-encircled mouth.

"Won't bring back the mead .. . worthless time for a storm ... Lass!
More mead!"

From the smell, whatever mead was, I didn't have any desire to taste
it.  Nor did I have much desire to stay in the Snug Inn, except that I
was hungry.  Since I hadn't learned how to eat hay or oats, that meant
entering the inn.

I looked at the space beside the man in brown, then shrugged and eased
myself into place, wishing somehow I had brought the staff, but knowing
it was safer in the straw of Gairloch's stall.  I still didn't like
leaving it.

"You?"  asked the brown man, bearded and hunched over his mug of
steaming cider.  From his muscles and his belt, I would have guessed a
carpenter.

Of course he didn't know me.  I hadn't told him.  "Lerris, used to be a
woodworker before I left home."  All of which was true enough.

"Woodworker?  Too damned fair for that."  He glared at me.

I sighed.  "All right, I was an apprentice wood crafter-never got
further than benches and breadboards."

"Hah!  Least you're honest, boy.  No one would admit that, weren't it
true."  Then he glared back at his cider, ignoring me.

Left to my own devices, I waved at the serving-girl.  A black-haired
and skinny thing, she wore a sleeveless brown leather vest and wide
skirts.  She ignored me as well.  So I began to study the people while
I waited for her to get close enough for me to insist on something.

At the table closest the hearth sat four people-a woman veiled below
her eyes, wearing a loose-fitting green tunic over a white blouse, and
presumably trousers.  She was the only veiled woman I had ever seen.
But if her lower face were unknown, her clothes were tight enough to
reveal that her figure, at least, was desirable.

Her forehead was darkish, as were her heavy eyebrows and her hair,
bound with golden cord into a cone shape.  Over the back of her chair
was a heavy coat-of a white fur I had never seen.

Two of the other men were clearly fighters, wearing surcoats I could
not identify and the bowl-cut of hair worn under a helmet.  One fighter
was older, white-haired and grizzled, but his body seemed younger.  His
back was to me and I could not see his face, though I would have
guessed it was unlined, despite the white hair.  The other fighter was
thin, youngish, with a face like a weasel and dark black hair to
match.

Between them, across from the woman, half-facing the fire, was a man in
spotless white.  Even from that distance, more than ten cubits, I could
see his eyes were old, though he looked more like Koldar's age, perhaps
a trace older, perhaps even into his third decade.  But the eyes had
seen more, and I shivered and dropped my glance as he turned in my
direction.

The man in white smiled.  His smile was friendly, reassuring, and
everyone in the dining area of the saloon relaxed.  I could feel the
wave of relaxation, and I fought it off, just because no one was going
to tell me what to feel.  Was he the one who rode in the golden
coach?

"You in the back.  I see you are cold.  Would you like some warmth?"  I
felt he was looking at me, but his fingers pointed at three figures
huddled against the timbered wall behind me and to my left.  The two
men and the woman, all clad in the shapeless gray padded jackets that
marked them as herders of some sort, ignored the question and looked
down.

"Fine," said the man in white.  "I can tell you have come in from the
blizzard's chill.  The warmth is on me."  He gestured, and in our
corner of the long room, I could feel the dampness and chill dissipate,
though we were far from the fire.

The woman looked away from the wizard, for that was clearly what he had
to be, and made a motion, as if to reject the heat.  The two men looked
down.

Me ... for the first time since Gairloch and I had ridden out of
Hrisbarg, I felt comfortably warm, as if the long table where I sat
were the one before the hearth, rather than the farthest from the fire.
Yet the heat thrown by the wizard chilled me as well, inside, and it
felt familiar, as if I too could have called it forth, though I did not
know how.  Nor did I want to try.

At a small table in the corner nearest the hearth sat another man, the
only person in the crowded inn sitting alone.  He wore a dark-gray
long-sleeved tunic, belted over similar trousers by an even darker
belt.  A dark-gray leather cloak lay over the chair beside him.

His hair was a light brown that seemed gray, though from my distance he
did not appear old.

"The man in gray ..."  I mumbled to the carpenter.

"Arlyn, call me Arlyn."  His eyes were glazed, not with alcohol, but as
if he had been looking somewhere else.  "Lass!  More cider."  Arlyn
waved the brown mug in the air.  Several drops of cider splashed across
my face.

After wiping off the cider with the back of my hand, I asked, "Arlyn,
who's the man in gray?"

"Justen.  Gray wizard.  Almost as bad as the white one.  Antonin.
Antonin will take your soul and your body.  So they say."  He waved the
mug again.

This time the serving-girl turned toward us.

"What's for a traveler?"  I made my voice hard.

Her eyes turned to me from the mug she had lifted from Arlyn's hand,
running over my dark cloak, sandy hair, and fair skin.  "Perhaps you
should join the dark one, young sir."

Arlyn looked at me again.

"I doubt I could afford such luxury."

The girl, for she could not have been much older than I, actually
flashed a quick smile before her face turned cold and professionally
false again.  "Two pence for the fire, and five pence for the cider.
Mead is ten pence a mug."

"Food?"

"Cheese and black bread is ten pence; cheese and bear and black bread
is twenty."

"Cheese and black bread with cider."

"Twenty-two pence."  She paused.  "Now."

I shrugged.  "Half now, and half when I get the food.  Someone will
take the cider."

Her face looked bored and tired already.  "Fine.  Twelve now.  For fire
and cider.  Ten when you get the bread and cheese."

I fished twelve pence from my belt, glad in this surly lot that I had
managed some change in Hrisbarg.  "You'll break a traveler in this
weather."

"You could stay outside."  She slipped the coins through a narrow slot
into a locked and hardened leather purse on an equally heavy leather
belt, and handed me a wooden token.  Then she was picking up mugs and
coins all the way along the table, passing out tokens as she stacked
the empty mugs on the heavy wooden tray.

The door behind me opened, and another rush of cold chilled the back
side of the common room again.

A pair of road soldiers stood there, wearing heavy short riding
jackets, swords, and carrying long-barreled rifles-used in
peace-keeping, not in warfare, not when the smallest of chaos-spells
destroyed their effectiveness.

A thin man, wearing a greasy brown apron and waving a truncheon, waved
toward the pair.  "Areillas, Storznoy!"

The bigger soldier-four cubits tall, with as much flab as muscle-jabbed
the other, a man not much taller than the serving-girl.  Then the two
walked toward the innkeeper and the kitchen.

Conversations dropped off to whispers, or less, as the two made their
way toward the innkeeper.

The heavier soldier said something to the thin innkeeper, who looked
puzzled.  The soldier raised his voice.  "..  . said .. . demon
horseman seen on the Duke of Freetown's dead lands .."  repeated the
smaller soldier.

The innkeeper shrugged.  "Demon weather anyway."

"Roaches .. ."  mumbled Arlyn the carpenter.

"Why?"  I asked, wondering about the demon horseman.

"Paid by the Montgren Council to keep the road safe between the border
and Hewlett..  . paid by the Thieves' Guild for an exemption .. ."
Arlyn looked for the serving-girl.  "Where's the cider?"

The road soldiers went through the wide stone arch into the kitchen and
the serving-girl came out, holding high a tray of mugs, somehow not
spilling a one.  Vapor whispered from the hot cider as she neared the
chilly end of the common area where we sat.

Thunk.

Thunk.  The dark-haired server avoided my eyes as she set the mug down
before me and the next before Arlyn.

Thunk.

"Look!"  I yelled in Arlyn's ear, pointing toward the wizard in
white.

The carpenter started, and I switched mugs with him.

"Look where .. . just Antonin .. ."

"He pointed this way," I tried to explain.

"Yell not at me ... youth .. ."  Arlyn growled.

"I am sorry .. ."  And I was, but not because I had yelled.

Arlyn looked at the cider, but did not drink immediately.

I took a sip of mine.  "Oooo .. ."  The searing of my tongue and throat
explained why the carpenter had waited.

A hush dropped over both the gentry and common areas of the Snug Inn. I
saw that the man in white was standing, looking over at Justen, the
gray wizard, whatever a gray wizard was.

"A deed more than a deed .. ."  said Justen, so softly that I could not
hear all of his words.

"A deed is a deed.  Do appearances really deceive, Justen the Gray?"
Antonin stood by his table.

The woman in the green tunic ignored Antonin, her veiled face turned
toward Justen.  The gray wizard said nothing, nor did he even stand.

"Actions speak louder than words.  There are those here who hunger.
Will righteousness feed them?  Will the innkeeper feed them from the
goodness of his heart and deprive his family and kin?"

Justen seemed to smile faintly.  "That is an old argument, Antonin, one
scarcely worth answering."

"Is it wrong to feed the hungry, Justen?"

The wizard in gray shook his head, almost sadly.  I wondered how he
would answer the white wizard's question.

"Is it wrong to feed the hungry, Justen?"

Even the herders in the corner turned toward Antonin.

"You among the herders-does one of you have an old goat, a tired ewe
that will not survive the winter?  Come ... two silvers for such an
animal.  Certainly a fair price."

I found myself nodding.  Even in early winter, a fair price for an
animal that might easily die in the frigid eight-days ahead.

The wizard in gray shook his head once more, then sipped from his mug,
watching as Antonin beamed from where he stood by the table.

"Innkeeper, for the use of your serving table, a silver also?"  The
innkeeper, wiping his thin hands on the greasy apron he wore, smiled
briefly, not with his eyes, as he looked at the crowd.  "Enough,
esteemed wizard, but I would hope in your charity that you would make
good any damages .. ."

"There will be no damages."  Antonin gestured toward the herders.  "Who
will take my two silvers?"

"Here, lord wizard."  A bent man shuffled forward, his curly and dirty
gray hair springing wildly from his head.  His leathers were filthy, so
battered their original color was lost beneath the dirt, and so
tattered that the yarn laced through and around them barely seemed to
hold either his vest or trousers together.  Dirty raw wool poked from
the holes in trousers and vest.

"Bring me the animal."

"Will he slaughter it here in the inn?"  I asked.

Arlyn chuckled.  "You'll see no knives here, youngster.  The one's a
great wizard."

"Too great," mumbled the traveler on my other side, who had said
nothing since I had seated myself.  He turned to his companion, an
older man dressed in faded green with a heavy green cloak still wrapped
around him.

A chill wind bit through my own trousers as the herder left, though the
doorway was open only an instant or so.  Outside the wind was beginning
to moan, and the early dusk was nearly gone.  I wondered how much more
ice would fall before I could leave the inn.  Or would it be snow by
morning?

Arlyn's slurp reminded me of the mug I held between both hands.  I
sipped the cider carefully, but could taste nothing foreign.  Still, I
waited after my first sip.

Thunk.

"Ten pence."  The serving girl laid down two heavy slabs of black bread
and a thin wedge of yellow cheese.  "And the token back."

I handed her the token and a silver.

Now I had the cheese and bread, and wondered if I could eat
it-safely.

As I glanced toward the gentry section, I found the eyes of the gray
wizard upon me..He nodded slightly, as if to say that I could.

I looked at the cider mug between Arlyn's hands.  The wizard's face was
unreadable, which was answer enough.  But why would he even answer my
unspoken question?  And why did I trust the man in gray and not the one
in white?

Taking a small bite from the tangy black bread, I tried to figure out
the answers.  Tamra would have called me a fool for even entering the
inn.  Sammel would have shared the stable with the animals, and who was
to say who was right?

The outside door opened, wider, and the wind dispersed the lingering
warmth that had grown from the body heat of the crowd.  I swallowed
another chunk of the dry bread, washing it down with the lukewarm
cider.

Baaaaa .. .

The herder passed near the end of our table, nearly brushing the man in
green, as he carried a scrawny sheep slung over his shoulder toward the
wizards.

The inn door had shut, and the sudden odor of filthy sheep and unwashed
herder nearly choked me.  Had I not escaped from the ice and blizzard
so recently, I might have been tempted to forsake the stench of the inn
for the clean cold!  of the outside.  Trouble was that the outside was
too cold.

"Watch .. ."  hissed the man in green to the traveler beside me.

Thump.

Arlyn's head dropped onto the table.  The cider mug was still
half-full.  I looked, listened, but he was still breathing.

"Your sheep, scr."  The herder set the animal in the space beside the
wizard's table.

Splattttt .. .

The sheep repaid the warmth by defecating on the rust floor.

The innkeeper looked nervously at the wizard.

Antonin smiled, then gestured.  Both soil and odor vast ished, although
the faintest odor of brimstone remained.

For a moment, everyone stopped talking, even the gentry,"

Baaaa ... "You .. . promised .. . two .. . silvers .. ."

"You shall have them, my man."  Antonin drew the coins from his purse
and laid them on the edge of the table.  . snaaaaath .. . snathh .  , .
Arlyn the carpenter was snoring.

The herder pulled a small iron hammer from his pouch and touched each
coin with it.  They remained silver.

"Stupid .. ."  muttered the man beside me.

The fellow in green nodded.

Stupid?  To check the coins provided by a wizard?  I would have, but
with Arlyn asleep, snoring on the table, there was no one else I dared
to ask why it was stupid.

Antonin stood, swinging his sleeves back to reveal bare arms.  Not
heavily muscled, as I would have expected, nor thin like a cleric's,
but knobby like a merchant's.

"Before you go, friend herder .. ."

The herder turned back and looked down.

"You, my friend .. ."  The white-robed wizard gestured toward the
innkeeper.  "The two largest trays you have."

"Long ones be all right?"

"Those would be best, friend."

If nothing else, the continued use of the word "friend" was not just
annoying, but boring.

With a sour look as he sipped from his mug, the wizard in gray glanced
from the sheep to the wall, then let his eyes pass over me and along
the common crowd.

In the meantime, the innkeeper brought out two enormous wooden serving
trays and set them upon the trestle table just beyond the gentry's
area.  The veiled woman had turned her chair to watch, but the older
fighter at Antonin's table kept his back to me.

The tradespeople, including a woman tinker with a broad face and
muscles that would have exceeded those of either Koldar or his
stonemason wife-to-be, reluctantly shuffled off the benches and stood
at the end of the table away from the innkeeper.

Antonin stepped past two gentry tables, both filled with travelers
wearing fur collars on their cloaks-no women-and approached the
trestle.  He motioned to the herder.  "Pick up the animal and put it on
the table, right over the trays."

The herder did so, nearly effortlessly.

The table shivered as the sheep wobbled there.

"Watch," hissed the man in green.  I was watching, as was everyone in
the inn.

The wizard advanced; the herder stepped back, his hand on the leather
belt where he had placed the silver coins.

Antonin raised his hands.

I closed my eyes and looked down, not knowing why.

SSsssssssssss .. .

Light like a sunburst flared across the room with the sharp hissing
sound.

Even with my eyes closed, the light had hurt.  I squinted, blinking.
The tears helped, and I could see long before anyone else could.
Antonin had a nasty smile on his face, the look of a bully pleased at a
beating administered to a small child.

Justen had an even more sour look upon his face, and the rest-from the
commons to the gentry-were still blotting their eyes, trying to see.
Except for the veiled woman, who was looking at Antonin from deep-set
eyes whose expression was unreadable from where I sat.  "..  . ooooooo
.. ."

"Look at that .. ."

In my observation of the wizards, I had forgotten the sheep.  I tried
not to gape with everyone else.  But I did.  The two trays were heaped
with succulent sliced and steaming mutton, with joints at the edges,
and with sweetbreads piled at each end.  A sheepskin rug lay on the
floor beside Antonin, who was toweling off his forehead with the back
of his wide right sleeve.  Outside of the joints on the tray, there
were no bones.

Sweat suddenly poured down my forehead.  The common area felt like the
kitchen when Aunt Elisabet baked bread for all the neighbors at winter
dawn

I watched as the wizard in white smiled at the innkeeper, then at
Justen, the gray wizard.

"Meat.  Honest meat for those who would go without."  Antonin turned to
Justen.  "Actions do speak louder than words, brother wizard.  Tell me
that it is wrong to feed the hungry."

"It is not wrong to feed the hungry, but it is wrong to feed their
hungers."

I never liked obscure answers, and I didn't like Justen's.  If he
thought that Antonin was a showman, he should have said so.  Or that he
served evil by tempting hungry people.  But he didn't.  Justen only
smiled sadly again.  Did the man ever do anything besides disapprove of
the white wizard?

Antonin the white wizard faced all of us in the common area.  "Come
forward, those of you without a penny for food.  There is enough for a
small portion for all who are hungry."  His voice was hearty and
friendly, and the words sounded genuine, but the real invitation was
the smell of roast mutton.

First came a boy in a patched jacket, the apprentice of some tradesman.
After him came a thin girl in leggings too big and an old herd coat too
small.  Before the shuffle of their feet had reached the trestle table,
half the commons were pressing after them.  Only the whiteness of the
wizard kept the crowd in a line.

Arlyn snored on the table, but the man next to me and his companion in
green had joined the crowd.  Tempting as the mutton smelled, the odor
repelled me as much as attracted me.  So I munched through the rest of
the hard black bread and the thin cheese wedge while the others jostled
for the mutton.

The innkeeper emerged from the crowd carrying the sheepskin, the one
thing of lasting value, and disappeared briefly into the kitchen with
the prize, emerging quickly with a large truncheon and another man with
an even greasier apron and a larger club.

Antonin sat at his table and sipped from a real crystal glass-wine, not
mead or cider, glancing once or twice in my direction.  I tried to
ignore him as I swallowed the last of the cider.

The gray magician-Justen-stood up and pulled his cloak around him. Then
he walked toward me.  I stood, wondering whether to meet him or flee. 
Then I shrugged.

"Let us check the animals, apprentice."

I nodded, realizing that, for whatever reason, he was offering some
sort of protection, and followed him into the blizzard that separated
the inn from the stable.

Whheeeeeeeeee .. . The howl of the wind was lower, only a half-wail
compared to the shrieking that had forced me inside earlier.  The
needle-ice no longer fell, replaced with fine white powder so thick
that it blurred like heavy sea fog.

"You near lost your soul there, young fellow."

I wanted to leave him right then.  Another person knowing better than I
did, ready to preach and not explain.  But he hadn't asked anything. So
I waited to see if he would explain.

He didn't, just walked toward the stable.  I followed.

XXIV

THE WOMAN IN gray watches the roadside from the bench seat of the
wagon, holding her staff tightly in one hand.  She tries not to think
about the similarity between the rolling of the wagon and the motion of
the cargo ship that had so recently carried her to Candar.

On either side of the road, the dull gray-brown of damp and rotting
grass, interspersed with patches of black weeds, stretches to the hills
on the north and to the horizon on the south.  Beyond the southern
horizon lies the Ohyde River, and the point where her journey will
end-Hydolar, where the road and the river meet.

Ahead on the road, she sees three thin figures, their ragged and uneven
walk like that of so many others that she and the wagon have passed.

Crack!

"Hyah .. . hyah .. ."  rumbles the driver without looking at the whip
he has cracked or the two draft horses pulling the now-empty wagon that
had carried cabbages and potatoes.  He wears a heavy belt filled with
more than gold, and a cocked crossbow rests on a stand to his right.
"See anything, Maga?"

On the road ahead, the two younger men ride a pair of rail-thin horses.
The sandy-haired one bears a long rifle, good only against the
desperate, but necessary on the road they travel.

Beyond them, beyond the three figures that the wagon lumbers around,
she can sense only the emptiness of another set of minds, trudging away
from Freetown and the soggy desperation of too much rain and too little
sunlight.

"Nothing except some more hungry people .. ."

"Good for us, at least," rumbles the driver.  "Never got so much for
cabbages and potatoes."

She grips her staff and tries not to think about either ships or the
gnawing pains in the minds and bellies of the vacant-eyed men and women
and children stumbling along the road toward the sunlight of Hydlen.

XXV

"SERS!  THE DOORWAY, please!"  The pleading voice came from what I
first took to be a pile of rags and blankets.  The stable boy had
heaped a worn saddle blanket over a pile of rags and burrowed his own
tattered leathers underneath.  He was huddled in a nook where he could
watch the big sliding door.  Beyond him loomed Antonin's coach, not
quite lit by an internal flame.

"Of course," I found myself saying as I quickly slid the heavy slab
back into place and plunged the stable back into gloom.

Whhhhh ...... thip, thub, thip, thub .. . The doorway creaked and
rattled in the wind.

The darkness didn't bother me, since I didn't seem to need much light
to see by any more.  Turning toward Justen, I found he had left and
walked toward the stalls in the rear.

Gairloch was still double-stalled with the other mountain pony, dark
gray with a creamy mane.

Wheeeee .. : nun ... "Good girl .. ."

I should have guessed.  "Yours?"

Justen nodded.

"Gairloch's male."

"That won't matter for now.  Rosefoot's pretty tolerant.  She likes
company.  Where did you get him?"

"Freetown."

Justen nodded again.  "I thought so.  It would be odd for them to have
a mountain pony, though."

"The liveryman led me to believe that was why I could afford him.
Mean-tempered.  I rescued him from the glue-pots."  I shrugged.  "That
was what they told me, anyvway."  I shivered.  The stable was cold. Not
so bad as outside, but not a whole lot warmer than an icehouse.

Justen climbed onto the half-wall that separated the stalls.  To our
right was a tall mare who turned her head in our direction, skittishly.
A white blaze covered her forehead.

The gray wizard crouched on the stall half-wall and eased toward the
outside wall.  Just above him was a squarish opening partly framed with
hay wisps.  He stood up in the opening, his head out of sight.  With a
sudden jump, he pulled himself up into the space above the stalls.
"Come on, youngster, and bring that staff you hid next to your pony.
They'll rest better, and so will you."  He disappeared, and I could
hear the rustle of straw or hay.

"How .. . ?"

"Can't you sense it?"  His voice was muffled.

He was right, though.  When I tried to reach out and feel for the
staff, like farseeing, it almost burned into my brain.  I grabbed the
half-wall for support.  After a moment, I reached down and reclaimed
the dark staff.  To my hand, the wood held only a faintly reassuring
warmth.

Wheeeee .. . Gairloch tossed his head, more like a nod.  It had to be
coincidence.

"Are you coming, young man?"

With a second thought, I reached down and grabbed my pack as well,
brushing off the straw and slinging it half over my right shoulder.  I
clambered up on the wall, then scrambled, far less gracefully than the
gray wizard, up through the square opening.

"Ac .. . chewWWWT

"The dust will settle shortly."  Justen had pulled off his boots and
his belt and was piling more of the loose hay into a bed.

"We're staying here?"

"You can stay where you want.  I prefer not to stay under the same roof
as Antonin.  I sleep better."

I sighed.  There it was again.  More assumptions, more statements, and
no explanations.  "Could you explain a few things to me?"

Justen stretched out on a cloak that suddenly was more than twice it
original size, and looked to be twice as thick.  "A few.  If it doesn't
take too long.  I'm tired, and I intend to leave early tomorrow.  I'm
headed toward a little hamlet called Weevett, and then to Jellico.
Jellico's the town where the Viscount of Certis reigns.  Once upon a
time, Hewlett belonged to Certis, but nobody remembers.  Back then all
it had was sheep, and no one really cared, even before the dead-lands.
Now Hewlett belongs to Montgren, and no one really cares except the
countess."

I frowned, trying to sort out my questions.  Finally, I gave up.  "You
said my soul was in danger from Antonin.  Why?  I mean, how could he
have hurt me that way?"

Wooooooooo .. . rat, tat, tip, tat..  . Momentarily, the wind picked up
and ice chunks rattled against the roof overhead.

Justen wrapped the overlarge cloak around himself.  "Take off your
boots.  Your feet need the air."  He shrugged, trying to make himself
more comfortable on the straw.  "Antonin is the strongest of the white
magicians.  A chaos-master, if you will.  Wielding chaos is
extraordinarily hard on both body and soul, and most white magicians
die young.  Powerful, but young.  Antonin, and Gerlis, and by now I
would suspect Sephya, have attained the power to somewhat postpone
their early demise, by transferring their personality and ability to
other and younger bodies, preferably to bodies already equipped with
the talent and unaware of their own defenses.  You fit the bill
admirably.  That's why I decided to move you away from Antonin.  He was
preoccupied with Sephya and her .. . situation.  He didn't really sense
you.  Your innate defenses are good enough to conceal you from a quick
look."

I shivered again.  "Thank you."  I struggled and eased off one boot,
realizing that while the ice and rain hadn't gotten through the thick
leather, my feet were indeed damp.  The second boot came off easier,
but my left foot was just a trace smaller than my right anyway.

"Oh, don't thank me.  I did it for me, not you.  None of us gray
magicians could afford to have Antonin controlling a body with your
latent powers.  His knowledge is already too great."

"What do you intend, then?"

"Not much.  You can devise your own hell once we're clear of Antonin.
Tomorrow, assuming you're willing, on the way to Jellico I'll teach you
enough to allow you to block anyone from taking over your body without
your consent.  Plus, if there's time, a few other tricks that are pure
black and won't prejudice your decision."

"My decision?"  The words were grunted as I levered off my right
boot.

"Whether you intend to be a black, gray, or white magician."  Justen
yawned.  "I am tired, and so are you.  Get some straw together and go
to sleep.  Rosefoot will certainly let us know if anyone tries to climb
up here.  So will your pony and your staff.  Good night."

He rolled over and left me sitting in a pile of straw, my pack and
boots by my feet, my head twirling with unasked and unanswered
questions, and my thighs aching still from too much riding.

For all the aches and questions, I was asleep before long, listening to
the wooooooooo .. . rat, tat, tip, tat .. . of the wind, ice, and snow,
even as I wondered who Justen really was and whether I should trust
him.  But I slept anyway.

XXVI

WAKING UP IN the Snug Inn stable was nearly the reverse of falling
asleep, except colder and noisier.

Whooooo .. tip, tap, dick, clack .. .

The wind continued to blow, and my breath was frost-steam in the chill
air, so cold that even the dust seemed to have been frozen out of the
air.

Rrrruuuurghh .. . My stomach contributed to the turmoil as well.  With
one eye open I glanced through the gloom toward the other side of the
loft where Justen had spread his cloak.  I sat up abruptly, nearly
banging my head on the roof truss.  The gray wizard was gone.  The
straw had been pushed back into place as if the man had never been
there.

I stretched, jerking myself out of the warmth of my cloak, and brushed
the straw off my trousers and tunic, bit by bit, stepping from foot to
foot on the cold rough planks.  After getting a few stray pieces out of
my boots, I pulled warm feet into the cold leather, wincing as I did
so.

Scrambling sideways onto the planks by the open bay to the stable
below, I stood and stretched again.  Then I glanced down at the ponies.
Both Rosefoot and Gairloch were chewing something more substantial than
hay.

Where had Justen gone?

To the inn?  Or on some wizardly errand?  Or a more mundane bodily
need-one that I needed to take care of as well?

Rrrrrrrrr .. . My stomach reminded me of its very unwizardly needs .. .
that, and the fact that I had yet to think through my trip toward the
Westhorns.  I was still reacting.  The last planned step I had taken
was to purchase Gairloch.  After that, everything had been reaction. 
Not one thumb's worth of travel food lay in my pack or in the empty
saddlebags.

"Stupid .. . really stupid, Lerris .. ."

Somehow, things kept getting in the way.  I had forgotten to stop at
the market square in Freetown because I had wanted to get clear of the
town.  That decision had been sound, but there was no place on the road
to Hrisbarg, and I had been forced out of Hrisbarg and on to Hewlett.
Now I really didn't dare to go back into the inn ... not after what I
had seen of Antonin, and what Justen had said.  Still, perhaps there
was a general store or something, among the buildings standing in the
sea of frozen mud around the inn, where I could buy some sort of
provisions, including some blankets or the equivalent.

I shook my head, then followed Justen's example by shoving the straw
back into place and by shaking out my cloak.  My teeth felt fuzzy, my
stomach empty, and my muscles sore.  I checked my pack, then gathered
both staff and pack for the descent to the stable.

Creeaaa .. . aaa kkk .. . The stable door opened, then slid shut again.
I ducked back out of sight.

"Good morning .. ."  Justen's head popped through the opening from the
stable.  "Give me a hand, would you?"

I was glad to, since he had two steaming mugs, and a large platter,
covered with a ragged cloth, which also steamed.

"I thought you might like something to eat before we left."  He easily
sat cross-legged on the hard floor and picked up one of the cups,
easing the cloth off the platter and revealing four large bran biscuits
and a battered apple.

I sipped the cider, warm but not burning, and over spiced with cloves.
The warmth and the liquid helped ease the headache I hadn't realized I
had.

"You know, young friend, it would help if I knew your name, or at least
what you would like to be called."  Justen took a large bite from the
biscuit he held.

"Sorry .. . it's Lerris," I mumbled, trying not to lose any of the
biscuit crumbs.  While bran biscuits wouldn't have been my choice for
breakfast, my stomach received them gratefully.  "You're Justen?"

He nodded.  "Otherwise known as the gray wizard, that damned fool, and
other less flattering terms."  A deep swallow from the battered
earthenware cup followed.  "The apple's yours."

I didn't protest, and ate it right down to the core, squishy spots and
all.

"Antonin has been requested to assist the new Duke of Freetown ..."

"Oh ... he told you that?  But he was already in Freetown."

"Does that matter?  He serves whoever pays," snorted Jus-ten.  "He
didn't tell me, though.  He told one of his guards, who told Fedelia,
who told someone else."  The wizard finished his second biscuit and
topped it off with the remaining cider from his mug.

Rather than answer immediately, I chewed the last of my second biscuit.
"The old duke's actions seemed designed to anger many people."

"Particularly Recluce," observed Justen dryly.  He stood up and brushed
a few crumbs from his cloak and trousers.

"What would Recluce do?"

"Nothing major-besides flooding the duchy, ruining the fall hay, and
ensuring that no major trade flowed through Freetown until the duke's
death.  Nothing besides destroying-publicly, and with a woman-his
champion, and presumably using the same woman to assassinate him in his
own castle."

I shook my head.  "All of that scarcely seems possible."

"Not any more possible than an untrained black staffer escaping the
duke's guards, riding the dead lands untouched, and avoiding the
attention of the most powerful white wizard in Candar."

I tried not to shiver at his matter-of-fact words, instead following
his example of standing and brushing away the crumbs.  "What next?  Is
there anywhere I can get some trail food and some blankets and a
waterproof travel cloth?"  Justen shrugged theatrically.  "That's no
problem at all.  Expensive here in Hewlett, but .. . necessary."

"Why .. . why are you helping me?"

"Who said I was?  I'm more interested in not helping Antonin.  Doubt is
a powerful weapon.  Once he learns you were right under his nose, that
will create more than a little doubt, and he certainly needs some doubt
in his life right now."  Justen looked below.  "Let's go.  It's still
early, and there's some snow falling, enough to make farseeing
difficult."  He vaulted down onto the half-wall below, then dropped
into the stall next to Rosefoot.

Crack .. . thump .. . thud ... I followed, not nearly so gracefully,
banging the staff on the wall, dropping the pack, and nearly losing my
balance off the half-wall of the stall.

Justen said nothing as he began to saddle Rosefoot.

I looked around.

"There," pointed Justen.

He was right.  Beyond the small door was the outhouse.  By the time I
returned, Rosefoot was saddled, and Justen was checking rather full
saddlebags.  The gray wizard said nothing as I struggled with Gairloch,
offering neither assistance nor criticism.

"All right," I mumbled, after what seemed like forever.

He nodded and opened the stall door.  I led Gairloch out, and Rosefoot
followed without Justen even touching her reins.  Like Gairloch,
Rosefoot wore a hackamore, not a bit.

"Sers .. . ?"  pleaded the ragged stable boy as he eased back the
sliding door.

I looked at Justen, who grinned, then tossed a copper at the smudged
face protruding from the assemblage of leather and rags.  The coach
stood beyond, polished and waiting, but the horses were still in their
stalls.

"Thank you, gray wizard.  Good luck."

"Good luck, Gorling."

Creakkkkk ... I eased onto the saddle, my thighs not protesting quite
as much as when I had left Hrisbarg.

Feather-light and chill, the wind brushed my stubbly cheeks, and like a
gauze curtain, the light snow blurred the hills beyond Howlett.  For
all the howling and rushing of the night before, the storm had
deposited only enough snow to provide a light blanket on the ground.
Each hoof print showed the frozen mud beneath.

A single plume of gray smoke spiraled from the main chimney of the Snug
Inn, and flattened mud around the front doors of the inn showed that
even though it was far from even early mid-morning, many had already
left.  Most of the tracks seemed to lead toward the road to Hrisbarg.

Now that there was a new duke, the merchants and traders were losing no
time.  I shook my head.

Justen eased Rosefoot closer to Gairloch.  "Do you want to bargain, or
to let me do it as if you were my apprentice?  You're paying."

"What do I gain?"

"If I do it, everyone will link you with me .. ."

"But if I do it, they give me greater status and assume I'm the one who
rode the dead lands

"Perhaps not, but they will think of you in individual terms."

"It could cost more if you purchase things.  You're a great
wizard-although they won't cheat you on quality."

Justen smiled.  "That covers it.  It's your choice."

I shrugged.  "I'm not up to being a hero this morning.  I suspect I'll
have plenty of opportunity in the days to come."

"The last building on the right," said Justen.  His soft voice carried,
yet I had the impression that I was the only one who could have heard
it.

Built of the same wide gray planks as the stable of the Snug Inn, with
the gaps between the warped edges chinked with dirty mortar, the
one-story structure bore no sign, and only the planks that approximated
a walkway from a hitching-rail to the battered and red-painted doorway
indicated the possibility of a commercial enterprise.  A single mule
was tethered at the rail as Justen eased himself from the saddle,
stepped across the frozen mud crests, and wrapped Rosefoot's reins to
the post.  I followed his example, far less gracefully.

Crrrreeeaaaakkk .. . The three men seated in wooden rocking chairs
around the hearth on the left side of the room barely moved, even with
the alarm from the hinges of the ancient door.  The fire in the hearth,
consisting mostly of red coals, barely flickered.

Heaped on four tables between the door and the hearth were all manner
of saddle-carried gear-blankets, hand-shovels, hand-axes, canteens,
saddlebags-and the majority were frayed and worn.  To the left, on five
shelves, were arrayed an assortment of small packages wrapped in
oilcloth: trail food.

Justen stepped up to the first table.

"Another apprentice, wizard?  Last time, you said you weren't up to one
more."

Justen gave the heaviest man a rueful look.  "And you said I wouldn't
see you here another winter, Thurlow."

"What do you need?"  Thurlow leaned forward but did not leave the
chair, spindly-looking to hold his bulk.

"Canteen, basic travel food."

"What you see is what there is."

I let my fingers run across the assortment of bedrolls and blankets,
stopping when my fingers recognized a certain tight weave and
waterproofing that matched my pack.

Justen nodded minutely, and I set it aside for the moment, while he
casually picked up a canteen and an assortment of small
oilcloth-wrapped packages.

"Got everything?"  grunted the heavy man as he levered himself from the
chair and waddled toward the tables.

"Just a few things."

"How about a silver?"

Justen shook his head slowly.  "I'm a poor traveling wizard reduced to
taking apprentices, and you treat me like a rich merchant."

The other two men, much thinner than Thurlow, guffawed, but they had
stopped rocking as they watched.

"Pretty young for an apprentice."  Thurlow's deep-set black eyes raked
over me.

"Times are rough all over."

"Seven pennies, but that's because you've always been kind to an old
man."

"What about that bedroll-the brown one?"

"That?  It's Recluce-made, worth at least five silvers.  Something like
that stays dry anywhere but the sea itself."  Thurlow's voice was
indifferent.

"Some folks don't like Recluce products," Justen answered.

"That's true, but they're good, you have to admit."

"How did it end up here?"

"One of their kids-danger gelders they call them-sold it to someone I
knew in Fenard.  Prefect outlawed the sale of Recluce-made stuff.  So
he sent it to Jellico, and I got it there.  The viscount doesn't
care."

"One silver?"

"Not much good to me, but it is worth more."

In the end, Justen paid not quite three silvers for the bedroll,
canteen, and five packages of food.  I couldn't have done nearly so
well.

"Well, wizard .. . you won't see me here another winter."

"And you won't see me with another, apprentice," countered Justen.

They both laughed, and we left with me carrying everything.

Outside, the wind had picked up.

"Ah .. . hum?"

Justen raised his eyebrows as I laid the bedroll over the saddle in
order to pack the food parcels.

I looked back at him.

"Two plus nine," he reminded me.  His face was impassive, but I
wondered if he were trying to hide a smile.

I dredged three silvers from my belt pouch, noting that my funds were
disappearing all too rapidly, and remembering that the bedroll had
belonged to a danger gelder who hadn't gotten very far before he'd had
to sell it.  I shivered, although I wasn't even cold.

A few fine swirls of snow whipped past my face as I packed the food
into one saddlebag, and rolled the waterproof cloth of the one-piece
bedroll into a tighter bundle that I tied behind the saddle.

"We'll fill the canteen along the way, in one of the cleaner
streams."

I also agreed with that.  Hewlett didn't look as if it were the most
sanitary of communities.

Without another word, Justen untied Rosefoot and chucked the reins.  I
was still struggling with Gairloch when he had reached the edge of
Howlett and took the left-hand road.  It took me almost three kays to
catch up because Gairloch insisted on an even walk, barely faster than
Rosefoot.

Even then Justen said little, though we rode side-by-side on the
crooked road.

XXVII

JUS TEN REINED IN his pony.

I did the same, but Gairloch decided he didn't want to stop, at least
not there.  First, I had to lean all the way back, using all my weight
on the hackamore, wishing for the moment that mountain ponies used real
bridles with bits, if only to get Gairloch's attention.

Then, he stopped-all four feet instantly frozen.

Only the stirrups kept me anywhere near the saddle-that, and the fact
that the stubby saddle horn had somehow grabbed my belt and almost
eliminated any future offspring.

"Uhhhmmmp," was all I could say, spitting out horsehair as I disengaged
my face from the now-immobile pony's mane.

Justen managed not to laugh.  In fact, he didn't even grin.  Just
sighed.

Once I was generally back in position on Gairloch, the gray magician
inclined his head toward the left.  At one time there had been a
crossroads, but the post showing the town that lay down the narrow path
to the left had been split by weather and the part with the name was
missing.  The arrow still pointed through the gap in the brush, with
the notation "5 k."  remaining on the bottom on the squarish pillar.

"To the left are the ... is the old town of Fairhaven.  I usually take
my apprentices through there .. . but since you aren't an apprentice ..
."

"Why?"

"Because it gives most of them a unique perspective.  Those few who
totally failed to understand never became masters .  ; ."

No matter where I went, I couldn't get away from it.  More veiled
messages.  Do what you want, but .. .

I shrugged.  "Fairhaven, if you don't mind, then."

"It will add half a day or more to the trip."

"Doesn't matter to me, but if you feel we have to get somewhere quickly
.. . you said Weevett is another day.  There's two days and more hills
before we get close to Jellico."

"It's worth the detour ... in more ways than one."  Justen didn't seem
to make a gesture, but Rosefoot began walking the trail toward
Fairhaven.  Unlike most of the roads I had traveled in Candar (except
for the wizard's road leaving Freetown), the path, though overgrown
near the edges and far narrower than the twisting main thoroughfare,
was straight.

I swished the reins, but Gairloch didn't budge.  Flamed stubborn pony!
Just as I was ready to jab both boots into his flanks, he ambled
forward after Rosefoot and Justen, as if he had intended to do so all
along.

The path seemed scarcely more than an overgrown trail, if that,
straight though it was.  Though I scarcely qualified as a tracker, I
looked for traces of earlier travelers, without leaning too far over in
the saddle.

In the dried mud, perhaps half a kay from the fork, I saw a series of
widely-spaced deer-prints, but neither hoofprints, wheel-ruts, nor
boot-prints.

At one time, the road had obviously been much wider, wide enough for
four wagons abreast, if the regular line of trees behind the low bushes
and undergrowth signified the old road boundaries.  The trees were
white oaks, their branches bare in the cold.

In places, leafless creepers now crossed the track, positioned to
assault the road in the spring.  In less than a handful of years, the
brush would reclaim the trail entirely.

"Justen, does anybody still live in Fairhaven?"

"I'm not certain.  The last time I was here, there were still a few ..
. inhabitants."

"Wasn't it once an important place?"

"Very important.  You can see how straight the road is."

As we approached the top of the gentle grade, the trees seemed taller,
and the wind picked up, with a hint of another storm.

Looking back over my shoulder toward Hewlett, and the not-so-snug Snug
Inn where I had met Justen, I studied the overhanging gray clouds.  But
they looked no different than they had that morning-the almost
featureless gray of winter, without the darkness that usually signified
approaching snow.

I sniffed at the wind, sensing a bitter odor like ashes or slag, which
blew from the direction of Fairhaven.

Had the once-prosperous town caught fire?

Straining in the saddle, I looked forward as the trail crested.

Nothing.  The road continued straight ahead, straight down a gentle
grade into a wide and shallow valley, dotted with small hills and
scattered trees.

I looked again, then at Justen, whose eyes looked straight ahead,
seeing nothing, or perhaps something I could not see myself.  Without
realizing it, I shivered-not from the cold, but from something else.

The taller trees seemed to form a pattern, although I could not discern
exactly what it was.  All of the taller ones seemed to be deciduous,
and only a scattering of scrubby juniper brush showed green against the
browns and blacks of winter.

Closer at hand, about a quarter-day ahead on each side of the trail,
were two large hillocks, or heaps of white clay, or ... "Justen .. .
was this whole valley Fairhaven?"

"As a matter of fact, it was."

Some recollection from somewhere tickled my thoughts, but as I strained
to remember, whatever it was disappeared.

"Those were the north guard towers?"  I pointed to the white heaps
ahead.

"No .. . Fairhaven didn't need guard towers.  Those were the gates.
They were always open."

By now I could see the so-called gates.  Under a light covering of
dirt, the hillocks were a dead pure white.  Nothing grew on them.
Nothing.  As we rode closer, I realized why.  Something had melted the
stone.  Melted it like sugar candy at a carnival.

My eyes flickered from the melted gates to Justen, who was sitting on
Rosefoot with his eyes closed, concentrating as his pony picked her way
past the old towers.

The odor of old slag and ashes was stronger, almost overpowering, and a
cloud of unseen darkness loomed ahead.  Everything looked normal for a
winter's day in Candar: gray and brown, cold and sere, with the
northern wind at my back.  Except for the dead whiteness of the melted
gates .. .

For some reason, I put my hand on my staff, the one that marked me as
different whether I willed it so or not.  The black steel bands at the
top were warm to the touch, even through my gloves.

"Lerris."  Justen's voice was low.  "There may be trouble ahead.  Do
exactly as I say."

"What?"

"Do what I say.  Do not leave the road.  Hold your staff, but do not
unlash it.  No matter what."

His eyes were still closed, his features expressionless.

OOOoooooooooo ... At first, the sound recalled the wind, but the breeze
had disappeared once we passed the gates.  Overhead the sky was darker
somehow, although the clouds looked the same as before, and it was not
even quite midday.

The odor of dead fires and slag was stronger now, but there was still
no sign of anything that had burned, not any time recently.

The leafless bushes by the roadside seemed somehow twisted, and the few
leaves left hanging from the autumn before were all white.  So were the
branches themselves-a near-shining white, although I had never seen a
bush with slick white bark.  Even the bark of the birches was off-white
and rough.

OOOOOoooooooooooo .. .

I clutched the staff with my left hand, gripping the reins even tighter
in my right.  Gairloch plodded on down the gentle grade.

Ahead the road flattened and widened.  Under the dust and mud I could
see traces of stone paving-blocks.  Behind the bushes now were roofless
buildings, only a story high.

"This was the old town center, made of solid stone.  Granite, in some
cases."

I glanced back from Justen, who still rode with his eyes closed, to the
ruins beside the road.  The roofless buildings were more intact than
the gates.  Except for the debris piled around and against them,
several looked as though a new roof and some interior work would make
them habitable.

OOOOOooooooooeeee .. .

"Ahead is the newer town center, where the council held court .. ."

How anything in ruins could be called new was beyond me, and I was
getting nervous about the howling sound.  Jus-ten seemed to ignore it
as he talked and rode, his eyes still closed.

Justen had to be looking at something.  He was a wizard.  Antonin had
said he was, and he had a number of apprentices who had become masters,
or so he had indicated.

OOOOOOOOOEEEeeeeeeeeeee ... The sound was closer, on the other side of
the "newer" town center.

My left hand still on my staff, warmer to the touch even through the
leather of my gloves, I tried to study the ruins, even as Gairloch and
Rosefoot picked their way toward the howling.

The stone-melting that had destroyed the city gates had struck even
more wildly around, the "newer" square.  The ruined buildings were
twisted as if they had been hot white wax flung through a whirlwind and
then stomped flat by a giant foot.

"This was built by the Magician's Council, the old square by the
Stonecutters' Guild."  Justen did not open his eyes, but, for the first
time, his voice sounded strained.

I shook my head.  Why bother with the descriptions?  The place was
clearly dangerous.  By now the smell of ashes made every breath almost
burn.

"Don't look at them.  Just look straight ahead.  Recognition leads to
fear, and fear increases their power."

"Whose power?"

"The howlers' power."

I clutched the staff, ready to pull it free, if necessary.

"Don't!"

I tried to relax my grip on the dark wood, forcing myself to look
straight ahead.

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEeeeeeeeee .. .

From the corner of my left eye, I could see a shape flicker, trying to
grab my attention.

I glanced down at Gairloch's mane, and the whitish shape disappeared.

"With each generation, they are weaker.  And with each person who
passes successfully their powers are diminished."  Justen's voice was
faint, but clear.

The road began to slope upward as we continued southward.

"OOOOOOOOEEEEEEEE!"

I started, looked straight ahead at the suddenness of the sound.

On the trail, standing on a liquid-white paving stone, was a twisted
and turned figure, white and streaked with red, but shining.

I blinked, trying to look down, but the figure seemed different .. .
more human .. . almost as if wearing a red-and-white robe .. . and the
twisted white was more like a reverse shadow cast behind him.

"Mine!"

The robed figure seemed to spring from the pavement, which spread to
resemble a wide avenue, along which tall oaks rustled in the wind.

Mine!

As the second voice echoed in my thoughts, I found the staff in my
hand, up before my face.

The figure hit the staff as if to rip it from my hands, which were bare
against the wood.  The impact rocked me in the stirrups, jolted me back
in the saddle .. . and it was gone.

"Accuuuuughhh .. . " I was half-coughing, half-retching, surrounded by
the foulest odor I had ever smelted, a cross between rotten fish, wet
ashes, and brimstone.  The mist burned my eyes, and I could see nothing
except a tan blur that was Gairloch's mane.

Managing somehow to empty my stomach without losing the staff or my
balance, I teetered in the saddle, finally straightening up.

Justen had said nothing.  But I could tell both ponies were moving
forward, still on the old trail.  By the time I could see and breathe,
I could also see why Justen had said nothing.  He lay spread over
Rosefoot's neck, somehow in the saddle, but very still.

At the same time, the feeling of the white oppression, more sullen than
darkness itself, was gone, although the gray clouds seemed lower than
before, and darker.  The darkness was that of an approaching storm.

Swishing the reins, I tried to get Gairloch to move closer to Rosefoot.
Grudgingly, the pony obliged.

As I drew abreast of the other pony, I could see that Justen was
breathing.  His arms were thrust into sheaths on each side of
Rosefoot's neck.

Mind-throwing?  Had the wizard sent his thoughts elsewhere?  The
sheaths indicated that he was prepared for his body to be carried
without his consciousness.  And he was still breathing.

Still, I rode next to him, hands still on the staff, feeling the warm
wood against my hands.

Something about that bothered me, but I wasn't about to sort that out
until we were out of the valley, well out.

The Council of Magicians, Fairhaven-something in my studies, something
that Magister Kerwin had said, had to do with this place.

OOooooeeee ... The sound hadn't been a real sound at all, only a sound
in my mind.  The howler hadn't been able to make a real sound until I
recognized him.

I let my thoughts seethe, took another look at Justen-who was still
breathing-and wondered what I should do.

Rosefoot kept stepping forward, and so did Gairloch.  So I waited,
wondering where the magician's thoughts had gone.

Ooeee .. .

The cry had more of the feel of a mental whimper, as if whatever cried
were about to die forever.

How something that was dead could die was beyond me, but that was the
way it sounded.

Both ponies kept picking their way up the long gradual trail, still
heading straight south, until we passed through another set of melted
stone gates.  The south set contained dark streaks embedded in that
dead white, as though they had burned and then melted.

The odor died down, and I finally put the staff back in its straps.
Justen still lay sprawled across Rosefoot-still breathing-and the
ponies kept walking.

Then I realized something.  The palms and the insides of the fingers of
my gloves, except for just the fingertips, had burned away; but there
were no burns anywhere on my hands.  Nor were there any other burns on
my clothes; just a line of charred leather, outlining the missing
sections of the gloves.  It was a wonder they had stayed on so long.  I
peeled them off, folded them, and tucked them into my belt.

The afternoon began to grow darker and I glanced overhead, but the
clouds were still about the same.  The wind was picking up, the way it
often did in the late winter afternoons.

"Uhhhhh .. ."  Justen started to shake his head, then stopped as if in
pain, as he slowly righted himself.

"Lerris .. ."  he looked back over his shoulder without finishing the
sentence for a time.  Then he spoke again.  "That should be the end of
Frven."

"Frven?"

"That's what they called it at the end."

This time I did shiver-shudder would be more like it.

Fairhaven .. . Frven.  The second name should have been familiar from
the first.  City of the Chaos Council, brought down in a hail of fire
more than two centuries earlier.  I shuddered again.

"You saw Frven .. . Fairhaven .. . before it became the chaos-masters'
city?"

Justen, still looking back, nodded absently.  "I was younger then."

I tried not to shudder a third time.  Justen looked about my father's
age, and he had been alive two centuries earlier?

"You helped bring it down?"  It was a wild shot, but everything seemed
strange.

"Two ma-magicians created another sun, right above the city, so hot it
melted everything like candle wax in a furnace."  Justen straightened
in the saddle, and I noticed that the arm sheaths had disappeared.  "We
need to keep moving, since it will be late when we reach the main
road."  He shook his head to clear it.  "I should say that it already
is late."

"How can it be late afternoon already?"

"That's a property of Frven.  It used to be much worse."

Justen lifted his canteen and slowly swallowed nearly all the
contents.

The brush and trees beside the narrow road were beginning to look more
normal, with only traces of the shiny whiteness in their stalks and
trunks, but the way still looked deserted.

"Lerris .. ."

"Yes."

"You have a problem ... a real problem."

I sighed.  Now all I needed was someone else to tell me that I had a
problem-a real problem.  But what was I to say to a magician?

"Yes."

"You did two things wrong and one thing right in Frven.  You didn't
listen closely enough and paid attention to that soul-I think it was
Perditis-and almost let him become real again.  That would have raised
every magician in Candar against you both, because Perditis would have
taken your body and soul.  You used your staff for defense.  That was
right.  But then you burned your gloves off to grasp the staff."

"Why was that wrong?  The gloves, I mean."

"Because you used destruction to enable preservation.  That very nearly
cost you your soul again, and might have if I had not been able to
shield you."

"Shield me?"

Justen did not answer immediately, but began chewing some travel bread,
as if he were starving, while he rode.  Finally, he swallowed and spoke
again, his voice dimmed by the faint whistle of the wind and the clop,
clop of hooves.

"I didn't intend staying in the second plane nearly that long, but,
since I was there, I decided to seal off most of the rest of the lost
souls.  Should have done that earlier, I suppose, but it's such
work."

Justen was sounding suspiciously like my relatives, not ever exactly
answering anything while blaming me for my failures.  On the other
hand, I had felt that howler or demon grasping at me, screaming Mine!
Besides, where had the day gone?  We could not have lost five or six
hours on a less than twelve kay trip on a straight road, narrow though
it was.

I sighed again, swaying in the saddle.  Riding was still not natural to
me, and my legs, though in shape, were still not used to the pony.

"All right.  Once again, I seem to be missing something."

"Young Lerris," answered Justen dryly, "you also seem to have forgotten
a few other things, such as letting me know that you are magister-born,
that you carry the staff of a magister, and that you have not chosen
your path."

My mouth must have dropped open.  I could say nothing.  Banister-born?
Not having chosen a path?  The staff didn't surprise me, for some
reason.

Justen shook his head sadly.  "Once again your origin burns through."

"But ..."

"Nowhere else do they send out their best, untrained and untested, to
find their way in a world that either ignores them or tries to destroy
them."

"Destroy?"

"Yes, destroy.  You are from Recluce the beautiful, the isolated, the
powerful.  The island nation that has humbled every fleet sent against
her, destroyed every challenge contemptuously, and refused to take any
real responsibility outside her own boundaries."

"But .. ."

"No .. . it's not your fault, not yet, and I suppose that is why I will
help you, young Lerris.  Then, at least, I will have someone to blame
if Recluce continues to ignore the world.  Not that poor Justen can do
anything about it."

"Wait a moment," I protested.  "You've been around two centuries, and
you let Antonin do all his fancy tricks and you never raised your
staff, never said a word.  Why not?  How can you blame Recluce?  Or
me?"

He just sighed.  "So much potential, and so much ignorance .. . where,
oh where shall I start?"  He eased Rosefoot closer to Gairloch.

The road ahead seemed to merge into a much wider, but heavily-rutted
highway.

"Is that the main road?"

"It is, but the next decent place to stop is about three kays farther
along.  So I'll try to answer your questions .. . while I can."

This time I took a swallow from the canteen attached to Gairloch's
saddle, after looking in all directions.  The main road was empty, as
were most roads in Candar late on a winter afternoon.  I tightened my
cloak against the slowly rising wind.  Most of the snow, small dry
flakes, had blown clear even before we had left Hewlett.  In Eastern
Candar, the snow is light and seldom sticks, unlike the high ranges of
the Westhorns, where winter means snow upon snow until even the
evergreens are buried to half their height.

"Even if you are from Recluce, you know that there is order and there
is chaos.  Magic is either, or some of both.  White magicians follow
chaos.  Black magicians follow order.  And gray magicians try to handle
the best of both, and are regarded with great suspicion by both black
and white."

"White is chaos, but why?"

"Lerris, do you practice being obtuse?"  Justen sighed.  "White is the
combination of all colored light.  Black is pure because it is absent
all light."

That was something that, strangely, no one had ever mentioned-not that
I remembered, anyway.  I nodded for him to continue as we finally
picked our way off the old road from Fairhaven, or Frven, and back onto
the main road.  I could once again see dusty hoofprints, a day old or
more, in the chalky dirt.

"The problem with both white and black magic is their limitations. Most
white magicians are just a little bit gray.  No one can handle pure
chaos, not anyone born since the Fall of Frven.  There are a number of
black magicians.  I can tell that from their actions, but a truly good
black magister cannot ever be discovered unless he or she wishes it."

I must have frowned.

"That's because of the limitations.  Look .. . think of it this way.
Too much chaos and even the internal order of your body becomes
disorganized.  That's what happens, in a way, when you become old.
White magicians all die young, and the more powerful die younger,
unless they switch bodies like Antonin."

"Switch bodies?  But how?"  I kept sounding stupid, and I hated
sounding stupid.  But Justen was answering some questions, more than
old Kerwin had.

"He has worked an arrangement with .. . several local rulers.  He
provides certain services, and he can have the body of anyone condemned
to die.  He's in his fifth body now, but I doubt he can survive more
than one more transfer."  Justen stopped speaking and looked up the
road, as if measuring the distance.  He swayed a bit in the saddle, and
I realized he was pale as fresh-bleached linen.

"You see, young Lerris, with each transfer it takes longer to rebuild
his body image and energies because his soul ages, even though his body
doesn't.  Chaos disrupts the soul itself."

I could see the peaked roof of a wayfarers' hut and the cleared space
surrounding it, as we plodded around a gentle curve-a refreshing change
from the deadly straightness of the road into and out of Frven.

The hut looked empty, though well-kept.  Neither surprised me, for
Justen had indicated Weevett was but a few hours' ride ahead, and most
travelers would prefer a warm inn to the best of huts.

"We should stop."  Justen said nothing besides the three words, and I
realized that it took all his energy merely to remain in the saddle.

Nothing more than four stone walls, two shuttered windows, a door, a
thatched roof, and a small hearth-but it was swept clean and empty, for
which I was grateful.

At the same time I wondered why some poor soul had not tried to
appropriate the place, since it was far more hospitable than the
ramshackle thatched wattle-and-daub dwellings outside Hewlett and,
presumably, Weevett.

Even though I half-dismounted, half-fell off Gairloch, the pony
remained fast as I turned to look after Justen.  The wizard in gray was
gray all over.  He said nothing as I helped him off Rosefoot and onto
the stone bench outside the hut.

With short gusts, the wind was picking up, swirling scattered pieces of
dried and colorless straw around my boots, puffing dust and scattered
snowflakes at Justen's face.

I found a short axe in Justen's pack, poorly-sharpened but adequate,
and carved out some shavings to start the fire.  There looked to be a
small creek downhill from the hut, but Justen needed the fire more than
he needed the water.

The flint and axe-steel were sufficient; but then, I've never had
trouble starting fires.

Justen watched as I unstrapped a small kettle from his saddle kit.

"Going to the stream."

He might as well have been asleep, for all that he looked at me.  For
some reason, I stopped and took my staff from the makeshift sheath on
Gairloch.  The pony tossed his head once, and chuffed.  His breath was
like steam.  I swung the kettle in my right hand and grasped the staff
in my left, though the water was almost within sight of the hut.

As I scrambled down the path, worn down by years of usage, I felt
watched.  But then, one way or another I had been watched all day.

Crack.

Thunk!

A figure in rusted armor lay at my feet, between me and the stream
bank.

The staff had moved in my hand, reacting before I had seen more than a
flicker of movement.

This time I studied the overhanging trees, and the underbrush.  But now
there was a sense of emptiness.

Hssssssss .. .

As I looked back down at the fallen figure, mist began to rise, slowly
at first, then quickly, forming a small luminous whirlwind.  The
shaggy, man who had been inside the armor was gone, and only the rusted
metal links and few plates remained.  Then they began to crumble in on
themselves, and they too were gone.

For somebody who hadn't been sure about magic, I was seeing a lot.  Or
I was losing my mind.  I preferred to think that magic was real.

Scooping up a kettle full of water, I hurried back to the hut.  Justen
had straightened himself up a little, but still sat in the chill
outside, rather than by the small but bright fire.

I hung the kettle on the hook over the fire, then I took Gairloch's
reins and stood there, wondering whether I should unsaddle him and let
him browse or tie him near the hut.  Finally I began to unsaddle him,
lugging the tack and saddlebags into the hut.  I undipped the reins but
left the halter part of the hackamore in place.

Rosefoot whinnied gently, as if to ask for the same treatment.  I
obliged her as well.  By the time I finished, Justen had dragged
himself into the hut and onto the single rude bench inside.

"Any tea?"

"Bring me the reddish pouch."

"This one?"

He nodded, and I handed the pouch, more like a small bag, to him.

"Here.  Two pinches in the kettle."

Using the wadded corner of the horse blanket, I levered up the lid of
the kettle and eased the black stuff inside.  It didn't look like tea,
but within minutes the hut began to smell like sent how tea.

I rummaged around until I found two tin cups, and poured from the
kettle.

Then I looked outside again, but both horses were well within sight,
grazing at a patch of grass sheltered by grease-berry bushes.  By now
it was almost dark.

"The horses?"

"They will be all right now."

"Now?"

Justen sipped the tea from his cup.  His smile seemed lopsided.  "That
blow you landed on the war image echoed enough to warn off all but the
strongest of white creations."

"Warimage .. . ?  White creations .. . ?"  I shook my head.  Again, I
was sounding stupid.

"After you have something to eat, young Lerris.  I could use some
sustenance as well."  The pallor was gone from his face now.  He merely
looked tired.

"What do you suggest?"

"Take one of the green packages and empty it into the pot.  You'll need
some water.  It makes fair stew."

After another trip to the stream, some time heating the water, and some
time waiting for the gooey mess to cool, I was surprised to find it
tasted like stew, and not a bad one.

Then I had to clean up the pot, and repack all the packages.  Justen
watched with an amused look, almost relaxed in the firelight.

As I finished repacking, I remembered some of my earlier questions.

"You never did finish explaining that bit about why Antonin couldn't
grab another body."

"There is nothing else to explain.  Chaos corrupts the soul.  The more
corrupt the soul, the faster it ages a body.  Each transfer exhausts
both body and soul.  At some point, the soul cannot recover enough from
the last transfer before the next one must be made."

"Which body are you wearing?"

"My own.  It's really much easier that way, although it does create a
number of limitations-as you saw today."

"You could have been killed."

"Only if you had been captured.  That was one reason why I had to keep
shielding you and rending the revenants.  You beckoned to all of them,
and you have very few defenses against .. . deep temptations."

I sipped my cool tea.  Justen had long since finished his.

After saying nothing, I finally stood up and added a small log to the
fire.

"Did you mean what you said about choosing a path?"  I finally asked.

"You are magister-born, a born magician if you will, like it or not,
and all magicians must choose a path-black, white, or, for a few,
gray."

"Me?  A magician?  Hardly.  Not a good woodworker, and not a potter.
But a magician?  My mother's a potter, and my father .. . well, I
always thought he was just a householder."

This time Justen shook his head.  "Humor me, young Lerris, and you are
young ."  Humor him?  Why should I?  What did he expect, insisting I
was some sort of magician in secret?"... but you have to make a
choice."

"Why?  I could refuse to choose anything.  Even assuming I'm what you
think I am."

"Refusing to choose is a choice.  In your case, your choice is more
limited because of what you are."

"Huh?"  Justen squared himself on the bench, looking more and more like
Magister Kerwin, though Kerwin was white-haired and frail-looking, and
Justen was brown-haired and thin-faced, with smooth skin.  "If you
choose the white, you can never return to Recluce, for the masters bar
anyone associated with the white from your island nation.  Second, your
soul screams for order and explanation, even though you want to reject
it.  And your desire for order would keep you from mastering more than
the simplest of chaos-manipulations.

"While you are now in effect stumbling through the gray, in the end the
conflict of balancing order and chaos would destroy you.  So ... you
either choose the black, or risk destruction in white or gray ... or
you reject all three .. . and become a soul for a white master like
Antonin to feed upon."

"Wait a moment!  Just like that?  Thank you very much, and I should
become a black master on your say-so?"

Justen pulled his cloak around himself.  "No.  You can do whatever you
please.  You are not my apprentice, only my traveling companion.  Doing
the wrong thing will kill you; but then, doing the wrong thing will
kill anyone, sooner or later.  You just have to decide earlier.  You
can decide I am totally wrong.  You can walk out of here tonight, and I
will understand.

"If you wish to travel with me, you must decide on something.  Because,
undecided, you are a target for every free spirit, and every
chaos-master, in Eastern Candar."

"Where were they before?"

"That was before you used the staff."  Justen rolled over, and was
asleep before I could find an answer.

If there was an answer.  I looked at the fire for a long time.  Then I
checked the horses, then the fire again.  Finally, I pulled my own
cloak about me, determined that I could not sleep.

Once again, I was wrong.

XXVIII

THE MAN IN white sits back in the light-colored wooden rocker.  His
eyes flicker in concert with the flames from the fireplace, absently,
as though he is unaware that his room is the sole one in the inn with
its own source of heat.  "What have you seen so far, lady, of the
goodness of Recluce?"

She purses her lips, but says nothing.

He does not press her, instead remains waiting in the chair, as if
content to let her consider his question fully.

Her eyes slowly move from his lightly-tanned face to the fire, and back
again.  "I have seen suffering, but that scarcely can be attributed to
Recluce," responds the woman in gray leathers, the blue scarf setting
off the brilliance of her hair and the fairness of her complexion.
Standing as she does by the low table, she looks taller than she is.
Her eyes turn momentarily toward the other woman, who sits quietly in
the ladder-backed chair to the left of the hearth.

"Have you watched the rains turn and turn again, soaking the life out
of the fields?  Did you see any ships bringing foodstuffs into
Freetown?"  His voice remains level, mild.

She considers the import of his words.  "You seem to indicate that the
Masters of Recluce created the suffering."  "I would think it was
obvious, lady.  But perhaps you should take some more time to watch and
reflect upon what you have seen."

"I don't think that we need to fence with words," adds the dark-haired
woman.  Her voice is throaty, but businesslike.  "You would like to
learn how to wield your powers for good.  We believe that we can help
you."

"What do you want?"  asks the redhead, still looking at the man in
white.  "You're not exactly offering your help out of the mere goodness
of your heart."

"I could say so, but either I would be lying or you wouldn't believe
me."  The corners of his mouth crinkle, and his eyes lighten for an
instant.  "You have noticed, I am certain, how reluctant the Masters of
Recluce are in using their powers for good beyond the isle itself.  And
I am equally certain that you have asked yourself why they do not help
alleviate the suffering that exists.  Why do they blockade Freetown?"
His arm moves languidly toward the darkness beyond the curtains.  "Such
blockages seldom trouble the powerful.  Only the poor, and those who
work, suffer the lost wages and the shortage of food."

The redhead shifts her weight from one foot to the other, so slightly
that she does not move.  "You talk nicely, Master Antonin, but what
have you done to help the poor?  Besides ride around in a golden
coach?"

"You saw me warm those who were cold, and I have fed those who
hungered."

The truth rings in each of his words like silver, and the redhead steps
back.  "I need to think about this."

"By all means, but you are welcome to travel with me to see first-hand
what I do to lift the suffering imposed by Recluce."

The redhead frowns, but says nothing.

XXIX

WITH THE DAWN, Justen looked almost as young as he had when we had met
at the Snug Inn, except for the dark circles under his eyes and the
tiredness in his voice.

He supplied the packages; I got the water and cooked up some porridge
that looked like mush but tasted more like a good corn pudding.  We
drank some more of the sent how tea.

Justen made no effort to hurry, and that alone told me the wizard was
still exhausted.

As I rolled up my bedroll-much more comfortable, even on the
hard-packed clay floor of the wayfarers' hut, than the scratchy straw
of the Snug Inn's stable-I caught sight of the corner of a book, its
black leather cover worn from obvious use, protruding from the edge of
Justen's pack.  While the volume bore no aura of either order or
disorder, an impression of great age permeated the leather and its
parchment pages.  My eyebrows lifted, wondering what sort of book the
gray wizard had carried for so long, whether it contained spells, or
procedures, or what.

Justen caught my glance, reached down, and eased the book out.  "Here.
You can read it if you want."

"What is it?"

"The Basis of Order is what it's called.  All of the black magicians
use it."

I tried not to swallow.  "Is it that important?"  Justen smiled.  "Only
if you intend to become an order-master."

"Is that an old book?"  I was trying to recover.  "My father gave it to
me when I left home."

"Where are you from, Justen?"

He waved me off.  "No place I really want to discuss.  Do you want to
borrow the book?"

"No .. . not right at the moment ... I don't think .. ."

"Any time .. ."  He lay back, letting his eyes close, appearing, again,
far older than the mid-thirties I had first supposed.  I looked at the
ashes in the not-quite-ruined fireplace.  The age of his book and the
white hair after fighting off the demons of Frven showed Justen was
more than he appeared, and far older.

The Basis of Order?  Just what had my father given me?  Was Justen from
Recluce, or from a Candarian family of order-masters?

Still tossing the questions around in my mind, I re-rolled my bedroll
and tied it tightly into its cover, setting it beside my pack before
heading into the morning to check on Gairloch and Rosefoot.

Outside the air was chill, the dark featureless clouds high overhead,
and the wind out of the north.  The sparse fragments of brown grass
crunched underfoot.

The two ponies had clipped the grass by the grease berry bush, as well
as chewed some of the less-dried leaves from the bush itself.  Then
they had moved toward some higher grass in a depression closer to the
brook, where they continued to browse.

After watching the two munch, and Gairloch toss his head and amble to
the brook for a drink before returning to eat more of the long brownish
grass, I finally walked back into the hut.

Justen's eyes opened.  "Are you ready?"

"To leave?"

"No.  I'm not ready for that.  I meant ready to learn how to protect
yourself from wizards like Antonin or demons like Perditis."

"Fine with me."  I just hoped it wasn't too boring.  Even if it were
deadly dull, the alternative was worse.

Justen sat up, leaning his back against the wall and ignoring the grime
that touched his fine gray linen tunic.  "All it takes is practice.
What you have to do is concentrate on being yourself.  Say something
like, "I am me; I am me," over and over if necessary."

"Why?"

Justen sighed.  "When someone wants to invade your mind, they want to
take away your ego, your sense of being a unique individual.  You have
to fight that.  And there are two steps to fighting.  First is to
recognize that you are being tempted, and second is to assert
yourself."

"What do you mean?"

"I'll just have to show you."  His voice tightened as he looked at me.
"Don't you really want to know the real answers to things, Lerris?  Why
the masters forced you out without explaining?  Aren't you more than a
little bit tired of being put off and told to find things out for
yourself?"

"Of course!  Haven't I said so often enough?"

"Then look at me.  Look for the answers."  His voice shook, but he was
offering what no one else wanted to offer.

So I looked at Justen, watching as the distance between us seemed
somehow to decrease.

Now .. . just think about the answers you deserve .. .

The words were gentle, and I did, wondering why I had been thrown out
before I even knew what I was.

Justen stood next to me.  What wouldn't you give to know the answers?
Just reach out with your thoughts, not your hands, and I will show you
the answers .

My thoughts?  Why not?  Thoughts were just thoughts, and I might yet
find out .

I tried to cast my thoughts, like my senses, toward the figure next to
me.

White!

A white fog that curled around me so tightly that I couldn't see.  I
couldn't speak-trapped somewhere in nothingness; a nothingness bright
enough to burn my thoughts.

Answers .. . answers .. . answers .. . The words echoed without sound
through my head, but I could not speak, could not see.

Was I standing?  I couldn't even see my arms, or move, or even feel
whether my muscles could move.

Justen?  What had he done?  Why?  .  answers .. . answers .. . answers
.. .

In the white fog, that mind-blinding light, were shafts of yellow, red,
blue, violet-all spearing me, slashing at one thought, then another.  .
answers .. . answers .. . answers .. .

Finally, I remembered what he had said about insisting that I was
myself.  But had that been a trick also?  Another way to gain my
confidence?  To catch me in a web of white?  .. . answers .. .

Was Justen really the one who needed the new body?  Why had I trusted
him?

I..  . am .. . me .. . me .. .

Had the white retreated a shade, become not so blinding?  .. . answers
.. .

I..  . am .. . me .. . me .. . Lerris .. . Lerris .. .

I kept thinking the words, repeating them until I felt myself come
together somehow.  I .. . am .. . Lerris .. . Lerris .. ."..  . Lerris
.. ."  The words stumbled from my mouth as I crashed to the floor of
the wayfarers' hut.

Thud..  .

This time, blackness reached out and grabbed me.

When I woke, I was still lying in a heap on the dusty clay, and it was
well past midday.

My head felt as though each of the colored light-spears had ripped
through it trailing barbed hooks, and my tongue was swollen, my mouth
dry.  Still, I slowly eased myself into a sitting position, wondering
what had become of Justen.

I looked over to the bench.

"Oh .. ."

The gray wizard lay there, his hair thin and silver, wrinkles across
his face; he was breathing unevenly.  I glanced at my own hands, but
they were still mine, if shaking.

My legs wobbled as I half-stumbled, half-crawled to Jus-ten's pack and
fumbled out the red pouch.  When I grasped my staff to help me stand,
the reassurance from the wood helped, and I tottered out and toward the
brook.

Wheee .. . eeeee .. . Only Gairloch whinnied, but Rosefoot raised her
head as well, and both watched me as I filled the kettle, trying not to
feel like each chill northern gust would topple me into the water.

Justen was still breathing, but still old, and unconscious, as I
rebuilt the fire and heated the water.

Whatever the potion was that smelled like sent how it killed my shakes
and returned me to the realm of the living-the tired living.  Then I
eased a drop or two onto Justen's dried lips.

"Ooop .. ."  His eyelids fluttered.

Another few drops, and he was able to swallow.

In time he croaked, "..  . some stew .. . the blue pouch .. ."

So I made that.  This time, hearing my steps to and from the brook,
neither pony even lifted a head from grazing.

After a mouthful of stew, which despite its blue tinge tasted like a
venison pie, I looked at Justen.  "Did you have to show me so
convincingly?"  He shook his head slowly.  "Strength rises to strength.
If I had really tried to take you over, not just isolate you, one of us
would be dead."  Some of the silver hairs had darkened and his hair
seemed thicker.  A few wrinkles had eased, and the gray wizard merely
looked old, rather than ancient.  "Did you learn?"

"Uhhh ..."  I thought for a moment.  What had I learned?  "I think so.
That wanting something badly can let someone else enter your thoughts
or body .. ."

"Just your thoughts.  Once they control your thoughts, the body comes
next."

I shivered.  "Would I have stayed in that white forever?"

"For a long time.  An isolated personality dies over time, or goes mad
and then dies.  The white wizards don't talk about it, but it takes
several years, and I once did restore someone.  He avoided me
thereafter."  Justen took another sip of the tea, followed by the
stew.

"Does insisting on being yourself hold off that whiteness if you
realize it soon enough?"

Justen frowned.  "That depends on the wizard.  With someone like
Antonin, you have to reject his temptations from the first.  Give him
the slightest edge, and he'll manipulate your emotions like a minstrel
uses a song.  With a less determined master, or one less skilled, you
can even break free from isolation if you were tricked into it.  When
that happens the energy recoils, and the spell caster gets it back
negatively.  That's what happened to me.  You were so interested in
getting answers, so easily manipulated, that I didn't see how much
strength you had underneath."

I didn't know whether to be pleased at his acknowledgement of my
strength, or irritated at my gullibility.

"Will and understanding are the keys, Lerris.  Not just to mastering
order, but to mastering anything."  Justen leaned back as he finished
the cup of stew.

"I take it we're not going on to Weevett this afternoon?"

"You'll collapse in three kays, and I couldn't even get on Rosefoot.
Does traveling seem like a good idea?"

Put that way, it didn't.

"Besides, you need to do some reading."  He was holding out The Basis
of Order.  "Trying to teach you by showing you could end up making me
permanently old, or killing you."

I reached for the book.

"After you clean up.  At the least you owe me that."

Back to the brook I trudged, still wondering why I trusted the gray
wizard.  Every time I thought about that whiteness where he had almost
entrapped me, I wanted to shudder.  Yet I could tell that he hadn't
particularly wanted to put me there.  And he had paid a greater price
than I had-twice.

That left his reasons untouched.

No answers came as I used a damp cloth to wipe the cups clean after
having rinsed them in water so cold that it hurt my hands to the
bone.

Justen was stroking Rosefoot's nose as I walked back to the wayfarers'
hut, and providing the pony-both ponies with something they ate from
his open palm.  I didn't want to talk to him right then and kept
walking.

Inside the hut, I could see the book laid on my folded bedroll, but I
set the damp cups on one end of the bench to dry.  Then I put another
log on the fire, picked up the book, and sat on the bench where Justen
had been.

With not a little resentment, I opened to the first page.

Order is life; chaos is death.  This is fact, not belief.  Each living
creature consists of ordered parts that must function together.  When
chaos intrudes .. .

Fine.  That I knew, if not expressed precisely that way.

Order extends down to the smallest fragments of the world.  By
influencing the smallest ordered segments to create a new and ordered
form, an order-master may change where land exists and where it does
not, where the rain will fall and where it will not..  .. In contrast,
control of chaos is simply the ability to sever one ordered element of
the world from another .. . focused destruction .

My head was aching after less than two pages, and I closed the book.
How did the philosophy I had just read have anything to do with
escaping the whiteness in which Justen had attempted to trap me?

Closing my eyes, I tried to reason it out.

First, when I wasn't thinking clearly, either in Frven or when Justen
offered me answers, I could be tempted.  And temptation meant letting
my mind open to someone.  Whoever controlled a body's thoughts, then,
must control the body.

But ... if that were so, anyone could take over anyone else, and that
didn't happen.

So ... it took talent .. . but that talent could be blocked or thrown
out .

I opened my eyes and looked for Justen.  He wasn't in the hut, but
outside brushing Rosefoot.  With a sigh, I closed the book and trudged
back outside.

The wind had died down, and a hole in the clouds to the south let in a
stream of sunlight on the hills to our left.

Justen had stopped brushing and was watching the light play on the gray
and brown and white of the hills.

"Justen, is self-knowledge the same as stonework, good stonework, when
it resists chaos?"

He nodded.  "There are dangers."

I must have frowned.

"Not even Antonin can control a poor shepherd who fiercely resists, but
his power is great enough to destroy him or her."

"But you said that Antonin could control me?"

"Through temptation."  Justen kept brushing Rosefoot as he talked.  The
gray wizard's hair was now mostly dark, with only traces of silver, and
only a few wrinkles remained.  "He would take you as his apprentice,
show you how order works, and how you could control chaos.  He would
intoxicate you with the power of destruction-always for good.  Feeding
the poor, clearing the roadways-until the internal conflict between
order and chaos built and destroyed your self-image.  By then, you'd
not want to take responsibility, and Antonin would relieve you of that
burden.  Sephya and Gerlis are more direct."  I shivered, seeing for
the first time, really, what he had meant.  And all that because of not
understanding?

For the first time, then, I got angry, really angry, so angry that my
jaw clenched, and my eyes burned.  So angry that I felt the chill air
around me as a relief from my own heat.

To avoid some minor chaos in Recluce, to avoid a little unpleasantness,
they shipped off me, and Tamra, and Krystal, and all the others,
without even spelling out the temptation problem, knowing that all
danger gelders were flawed, seeking answers or power or something.  And
that thirst would leave us all potential victims of the Antonins of the
world.

Justen watched, an amused smile upon his face.

"What's so funny?"

"You.  You've read a few pages, and you're ready to tear apart all of
Recluce."  He kept smiling.

"How do you know?"

"I felt that way once, too."

"You're from Recluce."

"I didn't say that.  I said that I felt that way," he corrected me
gently.

Wheeee .. . eeee .. . Gairloch jabbed his nose into my shoulder.

I reached for Justen's brush-another item I really needed if I were
going to take care of a horse.  Then I thought about my dwindling funds
and almost groaned.  Everything seemed to cost something .. . and far
more than I had thought possible.

XXX

ABSENTLY FINGERING THE green scarf at her neck before letting her left
hand drop, the redhead looks at the hearth where no fire burns.

Her thoughts turn, as they have so often, to the unanswered questions.
Why has the white wizard been so willing to share his knowledge, to
accept her as an equal, when the Masters of Recluce had so grudged
every speck of knowledge?

The staff warms under her palm as she ponders, not really watching the
white mage as he sits in the chair that is not quite drawn up to the
inlaid table.  He frowns with perhaps the first frown she has seen.

"Why frown?"  she asks.  "These are certainly better quarters than the
inn at Hydolar.  It appears that the viscount does provide for those
who do good."

"You are still skeptical," comments Antonin, his mellow voice
conversational.  "What would it take to convince you?  Perhaps another
technique you can use to improve your understanding?"

Her lips quirk in an expression that is neither smile nor irritation,
but some of each.

"This one is simple enough to show you, just as I showed you how to
cloak yourself from the sight of those who do not need to see."  His
voice assumed the tone of a patient master.  "I promised you that I
would teach you how to reach your full abilities.  Have I not kept my
promise?"

The redhead nods grudgingly.

Antonin sighs softly.  "Then, perhaps I should provide another
lesson-one that will improve your understanding as well.  I assume that
you would like to know why the Masters of Recluce hide such simple
techniques, and why the Brotherhood forced you out without even
bothering to acknowledge your abilities?"

The woman in the green scarf nods again.  "Haven't I said so?"

"You have.  But you have also said that mere words are not enough, that
words conceal as much as they reveal, and that you are more than a
little bit tired of being put off."  He sighs, again softly.  "You will
have to concentrate.  Put both hands on your staff, and look down at
the mirror here."

She frowns, for she had not seen the mirror appear on the table, but
she looks into the misty swirls that resemble white clouds blocking the
images that must exist behind the mists.

"Look deeply into the glass.  Look for the answers."  His voice
resonates slightly.  "The mirror represents the barriers in your
thoughts, the barriers to full understanding.  Think of nothing at all,
of silence, of stillness .. ."

Now .. . just think about the answers you deserve .. .

The words hang in her mind, not in her ears.

What would you not give to understand?  Reach toward the glass with
your thoughts, just your thoughts, not your hands, and I will show you
understanding .

The redhead topples forward before the dark-haired woman catches her
shoulders.

"It took you long enough .. ."

"Sephya."

The coldness of her name stops the woman's mouth.

"Now .. . before she can assert her identity.  Now .. ."  His forehead
is beaded in sweat, and fine lines seem to have instantly aged his
face.

The dark-haired woman grasps the hands of the immobile and wide-eyed
redhead and begins to turn the redhead's face so that their eyes
meet-lined dark eyes and clear blank eyes.

On the table the white mists swirl in the mirror that reflects the
struggle.

Shortly, only a pile of dust remains where the dark-haired woman had
been seated.  As the redhead stands, the fire in her hair flickers,
then begins to darken.

"I never did like red hair .. ."

Antonin passes his hand across the mirror, and the glass reflects the
dark-beamed ceiling above.  "The viscount will be expecting us shortly.
Wake me when the time is right."  He totters toward the expansive
bed.

The dark-haired woman gestures at the dust on the chair, which swirls,
flares, and vanishes.  "And she thought she could trust you .. ."

The white wizard glares, but says nothing as he stretches out upon the
white coverlet.

XXXI

THE NEXT MORNING, which was ushered in by bright sunshine and cold
gusty winds, Justen again appeared to be the not-quite-youthful gray
wizard, up and saddling Rosefoot while I was still rolling my bedroll
and trying to wash and shave in the icy brook water.  The fallen leaves
from the brush around the brook no longer crunched underfoot, but
neither was it warm enough for there to be the moldering smell of
spring.

Cleaner was definitely colder than having a dirty face and hands, but I
swore that Justen hadn't winced when he washed.  Did gray wizards use
their powers to heat cold water?  Probably, but if it were a
chaos-power, I'd forego hot water through magic.  The feeling of
chaos-isolation was too recent.

I wiped off my trousers and cloak as well as I could, wondering how
Justen's light-gray clothes always looked so good, when my own darker
garb was beginning to look ratty.  Then again, I wasn't certain I
really wanted to know.

Wheee .. . eeee .. . Gairloch pawed at the ground, as if to indicate
his readiness to take to the road and that he'd had enough of old grass
and grease berry leaves.

So I strapped on my bedroll and pack and climbed into the old saddle.
"How far is it to Weevel, or whatever it is?"

"Weevett.  We should be there before midday .. . depending on the
road."  Justen rode easily, not really using the reins, nor lurching in
the saddle the way I still did.

With the wind coming at us out of the west, I could already smell the
faintest hint of wood smoke, and over the low hills before us rose only
a single thin plume of twisted white or grayish smoke.  The valleys
were either cleared for pasture or were natural meadows, with no sign
of crop fields or orchards.

Before we had gone much more than a kay, we passed a rude hut set back
from the road on the right and surrounded with a split rail fence,
behind which milled a few hogs.  Someone in shapeless leathers was
pouring water into a long trough.  Beyond the fence grazed several
dozen sheep.

"When did we leave Montgren?"

"Actually, we haven't.  The countess holds Frven, but that really
doesn't count.  Nobody wants that land.  The border between Montgren
and Certis is on the other side of Weevett.

"More guards, I suppose?"

"No guard posts, just two stone pillars.  The countess is a realist.
She just hangs or shoots those who displease her, the ones her few
soldiers catch.  They don't catch too many, since most of her modest
guard is at Vergren."

Vergren was somewhere generally northwest of us, according to the maps
I had studied.

I hadn't traveled all that far, and here I was about to enter the third
kingdom or duchy or whatever.  "Are they all as small as Montgren?"

Justen shook his head.  "Some are, like Freetown.  Hydlen and Gallos
stretch over three hundred kays north and south.  Kyphros is even
bigger, and it's the only duchy that actually would qualify as a true
kingdom.  That has bothered the Prefect of Gallos ever since the
previous aut arch carved out the realm from the surrounding
kingdoms."

The names of Gallos and Kyphros were familiar, but that was about all.
There was something else about Kyphros, but I didn't recall what at the
moment.

We rode past a second rough hut, this time on the south side of the
road, again with a split-log fence enclosing another wooden trough, and
black-faced sheep indistinguishable from those behind the fence on the
north side of the road.

The tops of the gentle hills contained ample trees to supply the rails
for the fences, as well as logs in numbers far greater than necessary
for the few buildings likely to be found in Weevett or those in
Howlett.  Even Vergren-the smallest capital in Candar, famed only for
the diversity of its wool products-would not have made a dent in the
lumber that could have been taken from the heights of the hills,
especially since a fair number of the trees were red or black oak.

In time, as we rode, the huts appeared more frequently, changing from
little more than log hovels into rough-planked houses with thatched
roofs.

By now the sun stood high and white in the sky, but the ground remained
as frozen as ever.  While my breath no longer resembled steam in the
chill air, I alternated placing my ungloved hands under my tunic to
warm them.

Justen rode with his cloak open, without gloves, and without any sign
of discomfort.  My buttocks were sore, my hands chapped and chill, and
my legs threatened to cramp, even with repeated standing in the
stirrups to stretch them.

As we traveled down another of the unending gentle hills, the packed
red road-clay merged, over a kay or so, into a packed sand-and-pebbles
surface frozen into shallow ruts.  Gairloch's hooves clicked on the
smooth small rocks, and I worried about his catching a stone in a
hoof.

The roadside lands bore the winter-stubble of maize and the turned soil
of recovered root crops; the farm houses came closer together.  In time
we descended toward a small river, the first I had seen larger than a
stream since I had landed in Freetown.  Though the river was surrounded
by some low brush, I could see no trees along the streambed either to
the north or the south.

Where the road flattened near the bottom of the hill, it also
straightened and ran arrow-like to an ancient stone bridge across the
river.

"The bridge marks the edge of Weevett," observed Justen.

"Is that important?"  I was bored with the same-looking huts and
houses, with the sullen people who looked away from us, and with the
rolling gray and brown of hill and valley after hill and valley, sheep
after identical and smelly sheep.

"In a way," answered the gray wizard, "since the countess's soldiers do
not have the right of summary justice within the towns of Montgren."

Summary justice?  Again, I nearly winced.  Justen kept reminding me of
exactly how little I knew, and how many pitfalls Candar possessed.

Even before we crossed the bridge into Weevett, the rank odor of
concentrated sheep and wool wafted from the west to greet us.  That,
combined with another ill-defined rancidity which I did not ask Justen
to explain, turned my travel bread breakfast into a leaden mass
squarely in the middle of my guts.

Uuurrrppp ... I winced at the burp, but Justen didn't even smile; he
was guiding Rosefoot around a small wagon pulled by a mule.  A woman in
shapeless herder's gray trudged beside the mule, edging toward the
animal as she heard us but not looking up, not even as Rosefoot
delicately stepped around her.

Whujjjff .. . That from the mule as greetings when we resumed the
center of the road just before the bridge.  Beginning perhaps half a
kay beyond the bridge, cottages clustered together on both sides of the
way.

"We're expected at the Weavers' Inn."

"Expected?"

Justen smiled a thin smile and shook his head.  "Lerris.  Contrary to
what you must believe, gray wizards do not roam the landscape and
travel aimlessly from point to point.  Like everyone else, we have to
make a living."

"In Weevett?"

"Just so."  He reseated himself in the saddle as Gairloch's hooves
struck the granite paving-stones of the bridge.  Click, clip .. .
click, clip .  "May I ask what your commission is here?"

"Oh, so delicately put!"  Justen laughed.  He actually laughed, if only
for a moment.  "I don't believe in glamor, just in a good job and
money.  Some years ago I struck a bargain with the Count of Montgren.
He wanted his duchy to be prosperous and famed for something, and I
wanted a more secure income.  I made a proposal, and he nearly threw me
out.

"Then he thought better of it, but I raised the price.  After all, even
gray wizards have some dignity.  That's why we're here."

"You haven't told me anything," I noted.  "The sheep," Justen added.
"The famous sheep and wool of Montgren."

"I know.  They're famous.  Even some of the weavers in .. . some of the
weavers I know .. . praise the wool."  I paused.  "Are you saying you
have something to do with that?"

"Immodestly, yes.  That is why we are here."

I shook my head.

"Since you are here, you can help."

I didn't like the sound of that at all, but I owed Justen.  "How?"

"Don't worry.  It's a menial job, but purely one of order."

I waited.

"Healthy sheep bear healthy lambs and good wool.  Each year, I check
the ewes and the breeding rams to ensure only the healthy ones are
bred," he explained.  "That means four visits to Montgren, and it takes
several days.  In the fall, I check the lambs as well."

It couldn't be that simple, but I knew little enough to question.  So I
remained silent and let Gairloch follow Rosefoot.

The stone-paved streets of Weevett were narrow, though the cottages
were fenced and set far back from the main ways.  The town layout was
simple.  Two main streets-one north-south, one east-west-met at a
central square.  There were no more than two dozen other streets, half
of which ran north-south and half east-west, creating a grid pattern.

On the south side of the town I could see, over the low one-story
cottages, what appeared to be warehouses or large workshops.

"Carding houses," said Justen curtly.

"For wool," he added even more curtly.

I shrugged.  The gray wizard's mind was clearly somewhere else.  So I
studied the town itself, noting the plain-planked cottages with their
painted and opened shutters, colored-gravel walks, trimmed waist-high
hedges, and now-empty flower beds and flower boxes.  Compared to
Hrisbarg or Hewlett, Weevett was indeed an ordered place.

In the center of the square was a stone pedestal bearing the statue of
a man on a horse; carved into the stone supporting the statue were the
recurring shapes of sheep.  Around the pedestal was a winter-browned
lawn, except on the north side, right under the pedestal, where rested
a small pile of dirty snow.  A low stone wall and a raised walk outside
the wall separated the green from the pavement.

Around the central square were ranged half-a-dozen well-kept stores-dry
goods, a wood-crafter, a produce market, a butcher, a leather-goods
shop, a bakery-and the Weavers' Inn, which from the outside appeared
nearly as ordered as the Travelers' Rest had been.

Across the square from the inn was a two-story stone building, with a
flagstaff from which flew a blue-and-gold banner.  On the blue
triangular lower section was a golden coronet, while the upper gold
section bore a black ram.

Although a good score of people walked to and from the shops and stores
on the east and west sides of the square, no one neared the stone
building on the north side.

A single wagon waited in front of the leather-goods store.

Justen and Rosefoot headed straight for the equally orderly stable
behind the Weavers' Inn, going down a narrow paved alley beside the
tan-painted plank siding of the two-story inn.

"Scr wizard .. ."  the stable boy greeted him.

Justen nodded, flashed a brief smile, and dismounted.

"Are you a wizard, too?"  asked the towhead.

"I am what I am."  I forced a laugh.

Justen ignored us both, uncharacteristically, and unfastened his
saddlebags with quick deft motions.

By the time I helped the young ostler settle both ponies in clean,
adjacent stalls in the airy stable, Justen had disappeared.  Assuming
he had gone to the inn, I followed and found him talking to a
man-presumably, the innkeeper.

"This is Lerris, my assistant this time."

The innkeeper nodded politely, the pointed ends of his bushy mustache
hardly moving at all.  "The room next to yours is his."

That stopped me.  No questions, no problems-just mine.

The innkeeper glanced briefly at me as I stood there holding my
saddlebags and pack; then turned back to Justen.  "I thought you might
bring help."

Justen nodded in return, his thoughts clearly elsewhere.

"Would you like some dinner?"

"As soon as we .. ."

"Ah, yes .. . follow me."

Up the clean and well-varnished white-oak stairs we went, and down a
wide hallway.  We had the two corner rooms.  Or rather, I had a nice
room with a real bed, dresser, mirror, and wash table, and Justen had a
suite, or at least a bedroom and sitting room.

Since the gray wizard wanted to be left alone, I went to my own room,
washed up, and then headed downstairs to fill my quite-empty stomach.

The only problem with the inn was that although it was clean, somehow
it still smelled faintly of sheep and wool.  Did all of Weevett echo
the animals?

The innkeeper led me to a corner table, warmed by a low fire and set
with actual utensils and glass goblets.

By the time Justen arrived, I was drinking red berry and working my way
through cheese and a mutton pie, brought by a pleasant-faced if
heavyset girl who resembled the innkeeper too much for coincidence.

Justen said nothing of a conversational nature until after he had
sipped a golden wine I did not recognize and munched through a slice of
black bread and a hard and pungent white cheese.  Between bites he
gazed into a space I could not see.  "You'll earn that room
tomorrow."

"Is that when we start work?"  He nodded.

I had questions, but the gray wizard wasn't exactly encouraging them
and I was still hungry.  So I ate, and Justen nibbled at his bread and
cheese.

But there was one question that kept nagging me; so I asked.  "You said
that the magicians built the new town center of Fvren, as if that
explained something."

Justen smiled faintly.  "That's not properly a question, but I
understand the import."  He took a sip of the golden wine.  "The older
wizards of Fairhaven understood that chaos cannot build structures
which last-"

"What about the roads?"  "The roads are not quite the same thing. Chaos
is quite efficient at removing rock and stone.  So long as it does not
touch what remains, the roadbed is as solid as the stone which is left.
And the few black wizards used order-mastery, after the stone masons
built the retaining walls and drains, but that was before .. ."  He
shook his head.  "Sometimes I wander too much.  You asked about
building.  Stonecutters build better than chaos-masters.  The old town
center at Fairhaven proves that."

I still didn't have the answer I wanted, but Justen was staring into
space, as if I had called him back into the past.  So instead, I
finished my mutton pie and let him stare.

"Your meal is.  paid for," the gray wizard said sometime later as I
finished a red berry pastry.  He stood up, pushing back the spoke-armed
chair, and nodded!  "I'll see you here at dawn."

I nodded with a full mouth, but he was gone before I could swallow.

There wasn't much else to do except finish stuffing myself.  Then I
rose and walked out into the late afternoon, wrapping my brown cloak
around me.

Fewer souls were visible in the square, but that might have been
because of the thickening gray clouds and the few wispy flakes of snow
that drifted across the stones with the gray winds.

In time, I retreated back to my room and lit the oil lamp.

With a sigh, I recovered The Basis of Order and opened it again.  It
was still boring, or I was tired, or both, and I turned out the lamp
and climbed onto the bed for a nap.

When I awoke again it was pitch-dark, with only a single street lamp
visible through the window.  I ignored the growling in my stomach, and
pulled off my clothes and climbed under the coverlet.  Falling asleep
was still easy.

XXXII

SHEEP-I HOPE never to see another sheep as closely as I saw the sheep
of Weevett, nor to smell them.  By comparison, rancid butter smells
better, at least if it is not too spoiled.

Like Justen, I wore a borrowed herder's jacket and trousers and boots,
though I had to stuff some raw wool into the toes of the boots.

According to the gia^ \vvzatd, what he was about to do was pure
order-magic.  "Just because it's ordered doesn't mean it's pleasant,"
he added.  "That's why I'm free to do as I please most of the rest of
the time."

I followed him from the rough shed to a pen or corral, where there must
have been over a hundred of the black-faced creatures.

Urrrr .. . uppp .. . My stomach protested, although my nose was already
numb, and not from the chill of the wind.  The sun beamed brightly but
not warmly, and the wind whipped a thin coating of snow across the
ground, scudding it into piles here and there against fence posts, in
frozen ruts, and on the sheltered side of the empty wool-sheds.

Briskly, Justen strode over to the gate where a white-haired, lean, and
tanned woman stood.  Her hair was thick, nearly as short as mine, and
she smiled openly at the wizard.  Her gray leathers were clean, and
half a step behind her stood a taller man, balding, wearing stained
leathers and holding a crook.

"Justen .. ."

"Merella."

Then I noticed the squad of cross bowmen ranged along one side of the
shed behind the woman.  Glancing in the other direction, I found a few
other armed soldiers.  My feet carried me after Justen.

"Who's the youngster?"

"My current assistant.  This is Countess Merella of Montgren.  Lerris,
who understands order but not sheep."

The countess's smile became a grin.  "He didn't expect me.  You never
tell them, do you, wizard?"

Justen shrugged.  "It works better that way."

"Pleased to meet you, your highness."  I inclined my head, although I
didn't know what you called a countess.

"It's good to see you, Lerris."  Then the smile was gone, replaced by a
more businesslike look.  "We lost too many because of the duke and the
rains.  Is there anything .. . ?  We separated out the cripples and
brought the least-damaged ones."

"We'll do what we -can."  He turned to me.  "The ewes to be bred this
year come through the chute here one at a time.  We check them to make
sure they're as healthy as they look.  If you feel something .. ."

"I tell you?"  I asked.

Justen nodded, turning to the countess.  "Lerris has a well-developed
sense of order, and that will let me use my energies, I hope, on the
cripples and the problems."

"As you wish-so long as the results stand."  The countess's tone was
neutral, although her voice was harder than before.

Justen looked at the herder.  "Send one through alone first."  .
Bheeeaaaa ... A black-faced four-legged wooly heap bumbled down the
chute-really, just two low fences set three cubits apart-that led from
a gate in one corral to a second empty corral.

I tried to feel the sheep, and the action wasn't quite so hard as I had
feared, since there was no sense of disorder, and even a faint
underlying sense of scheme and order.  Looking at Justen, I said.  "She
seems fine.  No disorder, and a faint sense of order .. . health ..
."

He nodded.  "Can you strengthen that order just a bit?"

I didn't know how.

"Watch and use your senses."

So I did, and what he did to the sheep was like smoothing the grain of
fine wood to bring out its natural flow.  That's not quite right, but
that's what it felt like.

"Send another one."

With the second, I was able to do what the gray wizard had, with a
little help, and by the fourth or fifth ewe I was working alone, with
Justen watching.  Until a larger ewe, perhaps the twentieth, came
skittering down the chute.

Even before the animal got to me my stomach turned, and the beast
seemed to glow in a whitish-red fire underneath its wool.

"Justen .. . this one .. ."

Even the gray wizard seemed to pale momentarily, but he just nodded to
the head herder.  "Pull this one out for the white corral."

"Chaos?"  asked the Countess.  I had forgotten she still remained,
watching the procedure.

Justen nodded as another herder guided the diseased, chaotic animal
toward a smaller fenced area.

By then the flow of animals had increased, and I was breathing sheep,
tasting wool, and feeling ready to baa aa myself.

In some of the ewes, the underlying order-flow was barely there, and
those I strengthened as I could.

Black-face .. . baa aaa .. . oily wool-taste coating my tongue .. . baa
aa .  splaaattt..  . "Fine .. ."  Black-face .. . "Pull this one .. ." 
Sheep gas .  dung , .. oily wool-smells .. . baa aa .. .

The parade of animals seemed endless-until the corral was empty.

I looked up, somewhat dazed.  The countess had left somewhere in the
middle of processing the first corral-when, I could not have said.

"Over here," Justen said.

I thought I saw a few more silver hairs in his head, but that could
have been my imagination.  I trudged in the direction he pointed, my
eyes burning, my stomach turning, growling and empty.

Across the field waited another large corral of sheep.

I glanced upward.  The sun had not even reached mid-morning.  "Oh ..."
That was the way the morning went .. . ewe after ewe, with Justen
looking grimmer and grimmer with each chaos-disordered ewe set aside.

By noon my eyes were blurring, and there must have been close to a
hundred of the chaos-tinged ewes crowded into the white corral.

"Take a rest, Lerris."  Justen's voice was firm.  "We'll get something
to eat before we finish up here, and then ride over to the southern
gathering."

"There's more?"

Justen's smile was half-amused, half-grim.  "You've just begun.  Two
days here, and another two days at the gatherings outside Vergren.
There you don't get an inn the first night, just a pallet and a
tent."

I sagged against the split rails of the corral while Justen approached
the white corral, remaining propped there while two herders funneled
the ewes to him one by one.  This time, he actually touched each one.

When he was finished, about two-thirds had been returned to the herd.
The remaining animals milled around the corral.

With slow, measured steps, the gray wizard moved back toward me.  The
sun glinted on hair at least half silver, though his face seemed no
more wrinkled, unlike the times after Frven.

"Why so much chaos?"  I asked.

"How can you tell?"  he responded, steadying himself on one of the low
chute-rails.

"You've been withdrawn for the last two days, looking where only
wizards look, and paying little or no attention to anyone.  I don't
know you, but it seems more than work."

"You're right."  He shook his head.  "Nature seeks balance, and Recluce
went too far this time."  He frowned.  "I hope," he added under his
breath.

At the last words, I frowned.  "You hope Recluce went too far?"

"Not what I meant.  I hope it is a question of natural balance."  He
pushed himself away from the chute-rail and began to walk toward the
middle shed.  "Let's eat.  They're setting up a table in one of the
sheds."

Dinner was a hot soup, cold sliced mutton and cheese, black bread and
red berry preserves, and as much hot cider as I wanted.  Unfortunately,
to me it all tasted like oily wool.  The food steadied me and stopped
the protests from my guts.  About the time I started to feel human
again, we trooped out to start all over with another bunch of ewes.

Then I climbed on Gairloch and rode to the southern gathering grounds,
where we worked until we could not see.  I could barely finish supper
before collapsing.

The next day was the same, and so was the day after, except that first
we rode until nearly noon.  On each day, the countess appeared for a
time, looking nearly as grim as Jus-ten.

The fourth day wasn't quite as bad, although it was after dark when we
returned to the Weavers' Inn.

"Just take the robe in your room and follow me."

"What .. ."

"We're taking a bath."

And we did, in a small room off the kitchen, with hot water and soap,
and for the first time since leaving Recluce I felt clean.  We left the
borrowed clothes there and wore the robes back to our rooms, where I
found clean sheets on the bed, my own clothes cleaned and brushed, my
boots shined, and a small purse with five gold pennies.

I thought I'd more than earned it.

By the time we actually dined the room was deserted, the fire low.  We
were served by the innkeeper himself.  The veal was tender, the sauce
succulent, and the golden wine like a fine autumn, perhaps the first
time I had really enjoyed alcohol.  Neither of us felt much like
speaking until we had finished the main course and sat looking at a
large red berry pastry.

"You did well, Lerris."

"I see how you earn whatever they pay you," I answered, returning the
compliment as best I could.  "That's hard work."

"There hasn't been that much disorder since near the beginning," mused
the gray wizard, stroking his chin thoughtfully.

"You mentioned Recluce.  What did you mean?"

"I'd hoped that the Recluce efforts against the duke had rebounded, so
to speak, but the signs aren't right.  This is all too recent, almost
as if .. ."

"As if what?"  I took a small bite from the pastry.

He shrugged.  "As if ... well ... as if you had gone with Antonin."

"How could this happen?  Does it take as much work to sow chaos as it
took for us to heal it?"

"Less work.  That's the problem.  Destruction is almost always easier
than construction.  It's as though Verlya or Gerlis were working
together with Antonin and Sephya.  Or Sephya has gotten much stronger."
He shook his head again.  "But that's hard to believe."  He sipped the
golden wine.

"Chaos-masters don't work together?"

"Cooperation, beyond an apprentice-master or a male-female bond, is
almost a contradiction in terms for chaos.  Then again, the great ones
seldom have to, since there are few to oppose them."

"You oppose them," I ventured.

"Not directly.  I'm not order-pure enough for that."  He set down the
glass.  "I'm tired, and tomorrow we start for Jellico."

"Another commission?  More sheep?"

"Actually, in Jellico, it's seeds."

"Seeds?"

"Good seeds beget good crops, and Certis grows oil pods the kind they
squeeze for the scented lamp-oil that Hamor prefers ..."

I yawned.  Some aspects of wizardry and order-mastery were still
boring.  At least, though, the seeds couldn't smell ... I hoped.

XXXIII

OFF TO THE left was a line of trees that met the road about two kays
ahead in what looked to be a grove.  Under the pale blue sky, warmed by
the winter sun, the frost and whatever snow might have fallen earlier
had melted away from the road, and the stubble of the fields and
occasional meadows..  Now that we had crossed the Montgren Gorge and
passed into Certis, the occasional fenced-field and extensive sheep
meadows had largely given way to entirely fenced fields, now covered
with maize stubble or other grain stalks.  The huts were larger, and
many even boasted wood lots back away from the road.  But the landscape
and the countryside were boring.  After all, how much creativity is
there in fences and huts?  And how long can you pass them without being
lulled into stupor by their similarities?

Justen did not talk that much, and I did not press the gray wizard.

Wheeee .. . uhhh .. . Gairloch tossed his head, prancing for an
instant, then slowing down.

Wheeee .. . eeee.  Whatever it was, Rosefoot agreed with Gairloch.

I looked at Justen.

"They're thirsty," he said.

"Is that a stream up ahead?"  '

"I believe so.  There is even a pavilion of sorts there, if I
recall."

"Pavilion?"

"A roof erected on four timbers, nothing more than a rain shelter."

A rain shelter we didn't need, but it was probably better than stopping
by the roadside.

The pavilion was there, but a nearby oak had pulled up its roots,
toppled, and broken the ridgepole.  Between the fallen green oak and
the collapsed pavilion, most of the travelers' area was unusable,
although a path worn by other travelers led down a drop of half-a-rod
to the stream.

At the top of the incline, I dismounted and led Gairloch toward the
water.

Whee .. . eeeee ... He tossed his head, and I studied the trees that
stood back off the watercourse.  I saw nothing.  Then I tried to sense
chaos.  Nothing there either.

"Well .. . here you are .. . drink what you can."  I looped the reins
over the saddle and got out my water bottle.

Wheeeee .. . eeeeee .. .

"I know it's not a warm stable, but it is decent water."  Standing
upstream from Gairloch, I smelled the water, licked it from my hands,
felt it with my mind.  Nothing-just good cold water.  So I drank some,
scooping it up with my hands, while trying not to slip off the brown
grass-tuft where I squatted.  Then, after wiping my face on my sleeve,
I filled the canteen and replaced it in its holder.

Justen-where was he?

I grabbed for the staff, then eased up the incline to the rest area.

The gray wizard was nowhere to be seen, but a man in a soldier's vest
and a chain-mail shirt appeared from behind the mound of collapsed
thatch, a plate skullcap secured with leather thongs.  His sword was
unsheathed and pointed in my direction.

"Another pilgrim .. ."  His voice was raspy, his brown beard scraggly,
and his step measured.

I could have outrun him, even to Gairloch, but I didn't know where
Justen was and who might be with the soldier, and whether they might
have a crossbow, a longbow, or a rifle.  So I took an even hold on the
staff, arranged my feet, and waited.

"What do you want?"  I asked.  It seemed like a fair question, even to
a maniac with a glint in his eye and a sword in his hand.

"Just your horse and your money."

"That's a bit much."

"Damned pilgrim.  You're all alike."

Whssm!

I let the first stroke pass by.

Whhsttt!

Thunk!  Even I was surprised at how unskillful he was, at watching his
sword fly onto the hard clay.

I waited to see if he would go for the sword on the ground or the knife
at his belt.

His eyes darted from mine to the staff and to the sword and back.  Then
he sighed.  "Quarter?"

I nodded.

Click.

I ducked and turned.

Swish.  The blade of the heavier man nipped the edge of my cloak, and I
wished I had discarded it as I staggered sideways.

Thunk.

Clank.  His foot skidded on something, and he stepped back.

I used the instant to duck out of my cloak, regaining a balanced stance
and concentrating on the unshaven and grizzled veteran before me.  His
eyes were bloodshot, but his hands seemed steady enough.

His blade dipped, then turned.

I did not move, watching eyes and edge simultaneously.

He stepped back and sheathed the sword.  "Damned wizards.  Begging your
pardon, scr, but I didn't know which kind you were."

I tried not to let the confusion show as I looked from the one, who was
trying to stand on a very sore leg, to the older man who watched us
both.

Both soldiers' leather vests had two irregular light patches on the
shoulders, with two small holes within the lighter colored space.
Wing-like insignia had recently been removed.

Their chain-mail shirts scarcely qualified as armor, except to protect
against spent arrows and weak slashes, but their swords had been
serviceable enough.

Neither one bore the taint of chaos.  Neither did they exactly. radiate
order.  Which left the possibility of unpleasant mercenaries running
out on their contracts and turning bandit.  I wished Justen were
around, but the gray wizard seemed to have vanished.

"Wizard problems?"  I asked.  "Just wizard problems?"  I added.

The older man, mostly gray-haired although he did not look much older
than Justen, spat onto the road.  The younger looked at the sword lying
on the frozen clay.

"You can get it, if it stays in the scabbard."  I did not relax my
control of the staff until he sheathed the sword.  "You still have to
explain why I shouldn't do something unpleasant to you."

"Ha!  Begging your pardon, young wizard, but you can't."  The older
soldier spat again and looked toward Gairloch, who had edged backwards,
but otherwise made not a sound.

"That's not quite true, friend."  I smiled pleasantly.  "I cannot do
anything destructive, but what if I were to decide that with each
unpleasant act you do, your nose would grow a thumb?  Or that you would
begin to grow again?"

"What .. . ?"  asked the one I had disarmed, looking toward me, then
toward his companion.

The older man swallowed.  "You're young to do that."

I smiled again.  "I don't know if I'd necessarily do it right, but even
a mistake wouldn't hurt me, so long as I don't involve chaos."

He blanched.  "We're hungry."

I nodded.

"That wizard, he didn't keep the duke from getting killed.  Or the rain
from getting the crops."

"Why didn't you stay with the new duke?  Dukes always need soldiers."

The two looked back and forth.

I wasn't sure I wanted to hear the story, but I shifted my grip on the
staff.

Finally, the younger one swallowed again.  "Well ... it wasn't our
choice.  Grenter-he was the squad leader-sent us out to round up some
.. . pilgrims .."  I must have raised my eyebrows.

The older man added quickly, "This was under the old duke, you
understand."

"They must have heard about us coming.  They were all gone from where
they were staying."

"Where was that?"

"In Freetown .. . the Travelers' Rest, it was called."

"Was called?"

"The wizard burned it.  He had a hard time, even with his helper.  We
didn't see that.  Grenter sent us to find them before they left the
city."  The younger ruffian looked around, then back at me, and
swallowed.

A thin cloud drifted across the pale sun and the wind picked up,
throwing a few dry leaves onto the roadway.

"We caught up, Herds here and me and Dorret and Symms, with two of
their women.  Hard blond woman and a looker, black-haired.  I wish we
hadn't found them.  Dorret never knew what happened."

"What did happen?"  I prompted.

"The blond put a throwing knife through his throat so quick I didn't
see it happen.  He's down gurgling and clutching at his neck, and Symms
jerks out his blade and tries to spit her.  Except that the looker has
a blade, and she makes him look like a recruit."

The older man, Herris, coughed and spat.

I looked at him.

"Fydor has it right," he acknowledged.

"There were still two of you."

Herris glared at me.  "The nasty blond had two knives left and she
wanted to use them both.  The other woman's a born killer.  She never
raised a sweat, and she smiled when she killed Symms."

"So you let them go?"

They looked back and forth.  Finally, the younger one looked at the
ground and said.  "I yelled for help, and the second squad came from
the other side of the market, not all of them, but there were three."

"Don't tell me that two women butchered them, too?"  I let my voice get
sarcastic, even though I was enjoying hearing how Wrynn and Krystal had
mangled some of the duke's forces.

"Not all of them.  One guy, Gorson, got away with just losing his right
hand and a shoulder wound.  They killed the other two."

"And you two just left them?"

They both looked down.

Finally, Herns spat again.  "They were witches.  They were from
Recluce.  No way I'd go against devils like that."

"Where did they go?"

Fydor shrugged, his eyes avoiding mine.  "I'd guess they went to
Kyphros.  The aut arch likes good women blades.  They didn't take this
road, and that leaves the mountain road or the coast."

"Scr wizard, you don't look all that surprised .. ."  Herds still
didn't look at me.

"I've crossed blades with the dark-haired one."

"Blades?"

"Staff against blade."

Herris stepped back.  "I'm real sorry, scr.  Real sorry.  Wish I'd
never met either one of you."

Fydor followed his example and backed away.

Then both of them were walking quickly, almost running, looking over
their shoulders as they headed back in the direction of Weevett.

I watched them go, my mouth half-open.

"Very impressive, young Lerris."  Justen sat astride Rose-foot, next to
the toppled oak, watching, as I suspected he had been all along.

That he had left me to fight them alone angered me, even as I was proud
that I had managed it.  But Justen wouldn't care one way or the other.
"How did you do that without the heat waves?"

Justen smiled.  "That takes practice.  You could do it right now with
the distortion lines, but you have to equalize the temperature on both
sides of the mirror to avoid what you call heat waves."

"You didn't answer the question."

"I'll explain some of it while we ride.  The rest is in your book.
Rosefoot had a drink while you were dispatching that pair."  Justen did
not move the reins, but Rosefoot turned and carried him from the
clearing in the wayside grove and back onto the main roadway.

"My book?"

"Lerris, it doesn't take a mind reader to see your thoughts.  You're
clearly from Recluce.  You have the talents to be a first-class
order-master, and you were surprised-not curious, but surprised-to see
my copy of The Basis of Order" The gray wizard looked ahead, toward the
southwest.

I ignored him and went to get Gairloch, not that I had far to go.  He
waited just at the top of the incline.  I almost fell off him,
scrambling into place and trying to catch up with Justen and
Rosefoot.

More smoke plumes rose into the pale blue sky, angling toward the
northwest.  Behind the wind, I could see clouds building again, over
the hills in the distance to the southeast.  With the warmth of the sun
and the southern air might come rain, or worse, sleet.

"How far to Jellico?"  I asked as we came abreast of him.

"More than another day."

"How many other towns are there along the way?"

The gray wizard smiled faintly.  "A scattering, though few with inns,
and fewer still even the size of Weevett or How-lett."

We rode a time further before I asked another question.  "How can you
hide in plain sight so that I cannot see you or the heat waves?"

"That is the same question."  The gray wizard coughed and cleared his
throat before continuing.  "What is sight?"

I tried not to sigh.  I asked a simple question, and, instead of an
answer got another question.  "Sight is when you see someone or
something."

Justen sighed.  "What is the physical process of sight?  Did not anyone
teach you that?"  I looked as puzzled as I felt, not understanding what
he had in mind.

"Light comes from the sun, chaotic white light.  It strikes an object
and reflects from that object.  The act of reflection partially orders
the light.  Those reflected rays enter your eyes.  What you see is not
the object at all, but the light reflected from that object.  That is
why you cannot see when there is no light.  Now it really is not that
simple, but those are the basics.  Do you understand what I mean?"

I wasn't that dense.  "Of course, my eyes see a reflection of reality,
not reality itself.  That means that when I feel things, that feeling
may be truer than sight?"

Justen nodded, without taking his eyes from the road or looking at me.
"Remember that some real things cannot be felt, and many chaos-touched
objects are not real but can hurt nonetheless.  But you are right."  He
cleared his throat again.  "There are many ways not to be seen, but
they all involve two ideas.  The first is touching someone's thoughts
so that they do not know they have seen something.  That is the
chaos-way because it destroys a link between perception and reality."

"The way of order?"  I prompted.

"That is much more complicated .. ."

I nodded at that.  Anything involving order was more complicated.

"Light is not straight like an arrow, not exactly, but like a wave upon
the ocean.  Light can be woven with the mind, although it takes
practice, and you weave the light around you so that it never quite
touches you.  Actually, it is not difficult as an exercise, but using
it can be very dangerous unless your nonvisual perceptions are
well-developed."

"Nonvisual perceptions?"  Just when I got the idea, he added something
else.

"What you call feeling out things .. ."

"Oh ... but why?"

Justen shook his head, muttering something about basic physiology and
wave theory.

Finally, after we had ridden up a gentle slope that overlooked a
park-like setting, unlike the kays and kays of peasant fields, hogs,
and huts we had passed, I asked again.

"Lerris, why don't you use your brain?  It is meant for thinking, you
know."

I waited.

"If you cut yourself off from light, then your eyes don't work either.
No more easy answers.  You ask rather than work things out, and then
you won't remember."

So we rode on, and I ignored the continual growling in my stomach.

XXXIV

JELLICO?  HOW DID it differ from Freetown or Hrisbarg or Hewlett or all
the other hamlets and towns masquerading as places of importance?

No expert yet at judging people or towns (as I was becoming ever more
painfully aware), I did observe that, unlike Hrisbarg or Hewlett or
Weevett, Jellico had walls.  Those walls rose more than thirty cubits
in near-perfect condition, and the massive iron fittings of the eastern
gates were oiled and clean.  The grooves for anchoring those gates and
the stones in which they had been chiseled were swept clean.

A full squad of men-twelve or more, in gray leathers-patrolled the
gate, inspecting each traveler entering, each occupant or citizen
departing.  "Master Wizard, you've traveled our way once again?"  The
serjeant's voice was firm, respectful, but not subservient, matching
the trim gray leathers of his vest and trousers and his well-kept heavy
boots.

Of the other soldiers, two were moving bales and baskets in a produce
wagon pulled by a single donkey, while a third held the harness.
Another was watching as a peddler emptied the contents of his pack onto
a battered pine table set by the edge of the gate.

On the wall overhead, barely visible behind the parapet crenelations, a
pair of cross bowmen surveyed the stone-paved expanse outside the walls
where the inspections occurred.

"Wizards do travel," replied Justen.

"And this young fellow?"  asked the Certan serjeant, inclining his head
toward me.

"Serving as my apprentice-for now, at least."

"That wouldn't be an apprenticeship of convenience, Master Wizard?"

Justen turned his face directly upon the serjeant, his eyes weary with
age, conveying experiences best left un repeated  That was what I
saw.

The serjeant stepped back, then nodded.  "Sorry to bother you,
gentlemen."  His face was pale.

When I lifted the reins, my hand brushed my unseen staff in its lance
cup.  Briefly marveling at my newfound ability to) cloak small objects
by wrapping the light around them, swished the reins and Gairloch
carried me up to the farm wagon.

One soldier had ripped off the wagon seat and was lifting small bags
from the narrow space underneath.  The blond-bearded young driver
trembled in the grasp of the other inspecting soldier.

I glanced back at Justen.

"Hempweed."  Flat, unconcerned.

"No!"  screamed the man.

One of the guards looked at me and I swished the reins again, letting
Gairloch carry me past the granite walls and into Jellico, then slowing
to let Justen and Rosefoot draw abreast.

"Will they execute him?"  I asked.

Justen eased Rosefoot along a narrow side street bearing left from the
main gate highway.  "No."

Even less than fifty rods into Jellico, the viscount's control was
evident.  No street peddlers, no beggars, no litter, no refuse.  While
the streets were brick, they were level, even on the side street down
which we proceeded, even in the narrower alleyways we passed.

"What will happen to him?  That farmer?"

"He's no farmer, just a young idiot hired to drive the wagon.  They'll
brand his forehead with an "X'.  The guards turn back all branded
people.  If ever he is found within Jellico again, he will be executed
in the main square."

"Just for smuggling?"

Justen shook his head slowly.  "The inn is just ahead."

"But why?"

"For disobeying the viscount.  Except for beer and wine, drugs are
forbidden.  So is the practice of magic without the viscount's seal of
personal approval.  So are begging and prostitution, or selling goods
without a seller's seal."

I looked at the space, where, with effort, I could see the staff that
no one but me or another good magician could see.  I shivered.

"We'll stable Rosefoot and Gairloch first."

The Inn at Jellico-scarcely an original name, but Jellico didn't seem a
town for originality.

"What sort of magic gets the viscount's seal?"

"As little as possible.  Healers, mainly of the orderly kind."

"There are white healers?  Chaos-healers?  How could they?"

Justen shook his head, and even Rosefoot tossed hers.  "Healing takes
two forms, Lerris.  One is helping restructure and re-order the body,
knitting wounds and bones, using order to create natural splints and
heals, or strengthening the body's resistance to infections.  All that
is order-based.  That's basically what we did with the sheep.  It's
more complicated, but pretty much the same process with people.  Some
infections can be treated by destroying the minute creatures that
create the infection.  That's chaos-based and can be very chancy if you
don't know how to fine-tune your destruction.  Read your book.  The
theory is all there, and I shouldn't be telling you any of this.

"Remember, Lerris, you don't have the viscount's seal.  Whatever
happens, try to remember that.  Being my apprentice wouldn't help.
Reading your book would."

At that point I was ready to take my invisible staff and crack the gray
wizard.  Exactly when had I had time to read anything?  But what good
would arguing have done?  Juste would have asked how long I had had the
book, and then I have to admit I had had the time, until recently.  Of
course it wasn't until recently that anyone had given me enough
knowledge and information for the book to make sense.

In the meantime, as Gairloch picked his way across the brick-paved
courtyard of the inn, his hoofs clicking ever so lightly, I wondered
why Rosefoot's steps were virtually silent.

"Why would some healers be licensed and not others?"

"Money.  A licensed healer pays a percentage to the vis-count."

Once in the stable, Justen and I were left to brush our mounts.  Why
was it that in the larger towns, the ones with walls, the reputation of
the mountain ponies was so fierce that no stable boy seemed willing to
handle them?

With considerably more practice, Justen was finished long before I was,
and suggested that I join him in the inn when I had settled Gairloch
and left my staff appropriately concealed.

Whheee .. . eeee ... "Yes, I know.  There's only hay and no oats, but
I'll see in a while, after I figure out how to untangle this mess."

"Does he listen?"  asked the black-haired apprentice ostler from two
stalls away, where he was grooming a tall chestnut.

"He listens, but doesn't think much of what I say."  I didn't bother to
gauge his reaction as I returned the brush to the shelf over the stall
and slung my gear over my shoulder.

The wind had dropped off, the sun had reappeared, and the courtyard was
almost pleasant as I walked the distance to the inn.

No sooner had I walked inside than Justen took my arm and guided me to
a corner table in the public room.  Most of the tables-all red oak, if
battered-were occupied, and the air was stuffy, the warmth augmented by
the flames of a large stone fireplace.

The dark paneled walls and low ceiling added to the oppressiveness.

"A gold wine," Justen told the girl.

"Redberry," I added.  "What do you have to eat?"

"Mutton pie, mutton chops, mixed stew."

"Try the stew," suggested the gray wizard.

I didn't need much encouragement, not after the days in Montgren.
Mutton was fine, but not every day, and not when everything smelled
like it.

"Recluce is trying something," said Justen flatly.

"What?"  I sipped the red berry which helped ease a slight hoarseness,
a leftover from breathing too much sheep.

"I don't know, but you're part of it."

I just looked at the gray wizard.

"Oh, not consciously.  I suspect you've been used.  That pas an
extraordinarily talented group of danger gelders that the black masters
dropped on Candar, talented enough to confuse any actions the masters
might otherwise have had in Bind."

I took another sip and waited.

"You alone radiate order wherever you travel, yet it's hard to pin it
to one person.  That black-haired blade-she has everyone talking,
almost enough to make them forget the assassin who preceded her.  And
the preacher .. ."

"What about the others?"

Justen shrugged.  "You heard about the blond with the olives, and you
could probably tell me more about the others."

I decided against it.  If Tamra, Myrten, and Dorthae hadn't been
brought to the attention of the powers-that-were, there was no reason
for me to be the one to do it.

"Why do you think it was deliberate?"  I asked instead.

"I don't know, but you're really too young to be here.  That bothers
me."  Justen looked into his glass and said nothing more, even after
the two bowls of stew arrived.

In the end, I went upstairs early, discovering that my legs were still
not quite used to riding.

The single candle in the tiny room Justen had procured, with two narrow
beds not much more than pallets, seemed adequate enough for some
reading, and I pulled the black-covered book from my pack.

The introduction was as boring as I remembered.  I sighed then began to
leaf through the pages, nodding as I saw that] the last half of the
book actually dealt with specific topics-aligning metals (whatever that
meant), detecting material stresses, weather dynamics and cautions,
healing processes, order and heat-based machinery, order and energy
generation.

At that point, I wasn't quite sure whether to start all over!  at the
beginning, or to kick myself.  For nearly half a year, had been
carrying at least some of the answers to my own questions in my pack.
Of course, that assumed that what was written down made some sort of
sense, and that you could actually apply it.  But I neither kicked
myself nor started at the beginning.  Instead, I started on the section
on healing, since I wasn't ready for more boredom.

Not only did the words make sense, but so did the ideas, and I began to
understand why what we had done with the countess's sheep had worked
and what Justen had alluded to in his remarks about the importance of
the body's internal order.

"So you finally decided to see if the book made sense?"

I almost jumped off the pallet when the gray wizard opened the door,
realizing how late it must be by the fact that the candle was near to
guttering out, and how long I must have been poring over the words on
healing by the stiffness in my neck.

"You're that far?"

I shook my head.  "Reading about healing ..."  I confessed.

"You couldn't take the introduction, I gather?"

"No .. . I've tried three separate times, and after half a year it's
still boring."

Justen yawned and began to take off his tunic.  "Go back to it when you
can.  I didn't, and I'm still paying."  He turned his back to me and
pulled off his boots.  "It's time to get some sleep."

I closed the book and began to pull off my own boots.

After the long days of riding, the concentration on the book, and the
comfortable bed, I thought I would drop off to sleep.  Lying there,
exhausted, it shouldn't have been any trouble at all.

Except .. . things tingled at the back of my mind.  Like why Justen's
explanation for his work didn't exactly answer all the questions.  Then
there were Tamra and Krystal.  I'd heard about Krystal, yet Tamra
should have been the more visible.  Somehow, I should have heard
something .. . somehow .. . from her, or about her.

I couldn't believe that^t she had just disappeared, but news didn't
exactly speed from one duchy of Candar to another.

Somewhere I finally fell asleep .. . looking into the darkness .. .
until I shivered with a deep chill, and tried to turn over.  Except I
could not move.  White!

A white fog curled around.  me so tightly that I could neither see nor
move.  I could not speak-trapped somewhere in nothingness, a
nothingness bright enough to burn my thoughts.

You promised..  . The words echoed without sound through my head, but I
could not respond, could not see, twisting as I did within my skull.
Yet the person feeling the whiteness was not me, for all the
familiarity of the feeling.

Was I dreaming?  Or had Justen again enslaved me in that white prison?
I couldn't even see my arms, or move, or even feel whether my muscles
would move.  Yet I wasn't in my bed-that I knew.

You promised to show me the way .. . the way .. . the way .. . In,"the
white fog, that mind-blinding light, were shafts of yellow, red, blue,
violet-all spearing me, slashing at one thought, then another.

Then a door closed, and the whiteness was gone.  Sweat poured off my
forehead as I sat up in the clean darkness.

"You promised ..."  The unspoken words echoed in my thoughts, an edge
to them that was familiar.  But I had never said anything about
promises.  I hadn't thought about promise.

Then, I knew why the words were familiar, and my stomach turned.  I
only hoped that it had been a dream, that Tamra was not trapped in that
same kind of whiteness that Justen had shown me.  But I wasn't sure.
Not at all.

XXXV

WHEE BE .. . EEE .. .

Gairloch was still protesting when I checked on him after a breakfast
of three overpriced and over baked corn muffins eaten next to two
hung-over and scowling cavalry troopers.  As usual, Justen was nowhere
around, having left with the dawn on some wizardly errand.

My haste in downing the leaden starch may have contributed to the
growls from my own guts that nearly drowned out Gairloch's gut-level
protests.

"Plain hay just not enough for you, fellow?"  I set the saddlebags on
the stall barrier, checking to see if my old saddle and the worn
blanket remained where I had racked them.  They were still there, proof
either that the inn was honest or that my gear was worth less than that
of other potential victims.  My still-shielded staff remained tucked in
the stall corner, but I did not actually handle the wood, since the
shielding disappeared whenever my hands touched it-unless I cast larger
shield.

"Better," was all that the gray wizard had said about my concealment
efforts, and that admission had seemed grudging enough.

Wheeee .. . eeee ... "..  . oooo .. ."

Thud.

The soft scream from outside the stable might have gone unnoticed
between Gairloch's protests and my conversation except for the sound of
that impact.

With little thought, I grabbed my no-longer-invisible staff and burst
from the stable, looking around the courtyard.  Not only was the
courtyard momentarily vacant, but I heard nothing for an instant.

"Now .. ."

The voice came from the alleyway, and, like many another perfect fool,
I followed the sound until I came across two well-dressed bravos two
rods or so toward the town center, standing in the morning shadows.
Both looked up and toward me, the shorter one on the right releasing a
woman in ripped clothing, then pushing her toward the brick wall behind
him.

The taller one already had his sword out, but he looked at me, and then
at my staff .. . and laughed.  "You're already dead, boy."  He gestured
to his companion, the one who had held the woman.  "Let's go,
Bildal."

Without even looking at me or the huddled heap on the bricked pavement
of the alley, the two strolled, almost arrogantly, toward the far end
of the alley, the end that opened onto some sort of square where I
could see wagons and horses passing.

Around where I stood, looking from the backs of the departing bravos to
the huddled and silent figure against the bricks, the back walls and
iron-banded rear doors of homes or businesses remained steadfastly
closed, the alley deserted.

I shifted my study to the woman, who looked back at me blankly,
unmoving, although her black eyes moved from my face to my staff and
back.  Tears oozed from her eyes, and her lips were tight.  A reddish
abrasion covered most of her left cheek, as if her face had scraped
against the rough brick walls.  Her clean, white, and plain blouse had
been ripped open across the front, and she hunched her shoulders and
crossed her arms as if to cover her breasts, partly revealed by the
treatment accorded her and her garments.

Despite the gray streaks in her black hair and the pockmarks on her
face, the gaps in her garments showed more of a slender and curved
figure than she would have wished as she eased herself into a sitting
position without using her hands.  Both wrists hung oddly, and the
tears continued to seep from her eyes, though her mouth was set firmly
against the pain.

"Do with me as you will, black devil.  Your days are numbered now."

I must have gaped.  Here the woman had been beaten, assaulted and
nearly raped, and I had saved her from that and possibly worse
treatment, and I was a black devil?

"The viscount will catch you."

I shrugged, feigning a calmness I did not feel.  Since I might as well
be hanged for a wolf as a sheep, I set down the staff and gently let my
fingers touch her wrists.

"Ohhhhh .. ."

What exactly I did, that I could not say, except that with what I had
learned from working the sheep and with something from what I had read,
my mind put enough of the pieces together.  My thoughts and senses
touched the bones and flows and orders and disorders that wound through
and around her system.

"Oh .. ."  she repeated more softly, gazing at her straightened
wrists.

"They're not fully healed, and I can't tell you when they will be,
exactly.  Just be careful."

At that, or because of the sudden lack of chaos within her system, she
fainted, leaving me with yet another problem, and probably the local
witch patrol gathering to collect my scalp.

No one was going to be pleased, not the way things were going.  Not
Justen, not the viscount, not the beaten lady, although she would be
younger and more attractive than she had been in years once she healed,
and certainly not me.

Even so, I couldn't leave her unattended in the alley.  That meant
staggering back to the stable with lady and staff, and hoping that no
one saw.

"What have you there?"  bellowed the old and rotund ostler, appearing
from nowhere as I crossed the courtyard.

"A lady of dubious virtue, and in the morning yet!"  chortled one of
the formerly sour cavalrymen.  "Share your prize, young fellow?"

"First .. . have to collect," I explained.

Justen appeared in the stable door, a bemused expression on his
face-bemused, until he saw the ripped clothes and the bruised face.  "A
healer?"  he asked.

I shook my head firmly.  "Rest .. ."

Justen shook his head.  "Bring her in here."

"Not in my stable!"

A quick something passed from the gray wizard to the ostler, who shoved
the coin into his belt.

"I have to check on feed."  He grinned at me broadly as he headed for
the main street.

The cavalryman half-grinned, half-scowled, but made no move to inspect
the "merchandise" as I stumbled into the stable.

"What did you do?"  hissed Justen.

"Nothing .. . much."  I laid the woman on a loose pile of hay, not at
all gracefully, trying to talk and not to gasp as I caught my breath. I
felt drained, as if I had run a kay or so in heavy sand.

"You idiot.  You healed her.  How many people saw the staff?"

"Worse .. . than .. . that.  Used .. . staff..  . bravos .. . then she
cursed me .. . healed' her anyway."  I began to put the blanket on
Gairloch.

Justen turned to the stable boy standing there open-mouthed.

Without a gesture, the youth collapsed onto the straw.

"What are you doing?"

"Putting him to sleep.  You'll get the credit, provided you get out of
here soon enough."

"Leaving before the viscount arrives with the local witch patrol?"  The
gray wizard stared at me.  "How do you plan to get by the city
guards?"

"Can they stop what they don't see?"

Justen shook his head, then walked toward his saddlebags.  "Keep
saddling."

I kept saddling.  Gairloch didn't even whinny.

"Here."  Justen helped tie a large canvas sack of provisions behind the
saddle.  Nothing special, just faded and heavy gray canvas, filled
almost to overflowing.  The contents had to represent a goodly portion
of Justen's stocks.  Then he concentrated, and the sack appeared to
vanish.  "Remember to do that.  It makes you less of a target."  Then
he grinned.  "I'll get your pack."

I finished cinching the saddle and put the staff in place, then
remembered to weave the light around the staff so that it also appeared
to vanish.  It wasn't really weaving light, but changing the way the
light reflected from the wood and steel, and the steel was the hardest
part.  A lot of steel, and you couldn't avoid the heat-wave effect-that
was clearly the case with the Brotherhood ships.

By the time I had Gairloch ready, Justen slipped back through the
stable doorway, carrying my pack and cloak.  "You'd better get
moving."

"What will you do?"

He smiled sadly.  "What apprentice?  You're a free wizard who deceived
everyone."

"Thank you."  I didn't mean for disowning me, but he understood
anyway.

"I just hope you've learned something from all this.  You're going to
have to cross the Easthorns, but you should be able to handle it if you
take the south pass.  That's the one that the south road from Jellico
leads to.  Now get on Gairloch and make yourself unseen."  He shook his
head again.  "And don't let anyone touch you.  If they have any sense
of order, it could unravel the reflective pattern.  And please read the
introduction to your book before you try anything else."

Those were the last words from the gray wizard as I sat on Gairloch and
wove reflections around us.

Wheeee .. . eeee.  Gairloch didn't like being blind.  Neither did I.
"Easy, fellow."  I patted his neck.

Wheeee .. . eeee.

I patted him again.

Sitting astride Gairloch was strange when I could see nothing except a
featureless black.  Sounds penetrated, but not sight.  But we couldn't
just sit there.  So I nudged Gairloch with my heels and we stepped out
blindly into the courtyard, slowly, since I could not sense people or
objects unless they were close to us.

Click .. . click .. . Gairloch's hooves sounded like thunder in my
ears.

"Stableboy?  Where's the stable lad?  The chestnut needs a rubdown ..
."

We eased around the rotund porter, hugging the brick wall of the alley
until we were in the street, and I turned Gairloch southward, around
where the central square seemed to be.  The eastern gate was the
closest, but instinctively I felt that we had more cover within
Jellico, at least until they talked to either the woman or the stable
boy  . click .. . click .. . . creeakkkk .. . "... hold that wagon ..
."  "... told her that young blade was no good .. ."  "..  . watch
it!"

"Make way!  Make way for the guard!"

Feeling rather than seeing four mounted guards trotting toward the inn
I had just left was more than a little unsettling, since my perceptions
were not sharp, giving me only a rough outline of bodies and objects.

Under my hands, the reins felt slippery .. . and even with the
wind-gusts ruffling my hair and the cold tingling at my ears, the sweat
dribbled down my face and my neck like icy trickles from a glacier.  .
Wheeee .. . eeeee .. .

I patted Gairloch again to steady him.  "... way for the guards ..." 
".. . no horse over there .. . don't care what you heard .. ."

At the first intersection, with no walls to hug, and storefronts and
doors opening on both sides of the road, I eased Gairloch into the
middle of the road, continually patting his neck with one hand and
straining to sense objects and bodies before they could collide with
us.  "..  . guard revolt in Freetown .. shameful .. ."

"Did you hear about the aut arch "... in the market's scarcely worth
eating ..."  "..  . swore I saw a horse there for a minute .. ."

I wiped my forehead, glad that I was not permanently blind, as we
walked dick .  click .. . clack .. . down the stone-paved streets of
Jellico toward the south gate.  "..  .. way for the guard .. . make way
.. ."  "..  after someone .. . second detachment this morning .. ."

Another five men clattered past as I edged Gairloch toward the street
edge.  . Whheeeee .. . eeee .. .

Then we took a wrong turn, leading back toward the square.  "..  . five
pennies for a pound of yams?  .. ."  "..  . try somewhere else, if you
like .. ."

I managed to get Gairloch turned around in the narrow street without
brushing into anyone, but began to wonder if I should have stayed
visible until I neared the gate.  Of course, then someone would have
seen us disappear, and that would have been that.

I sighed-too loudly-next to an open window of a house that projected
too far into the narrow way.

"Who was that?"

Gairloch and I eased back southward.  In careful steps, we finally
reached the southern gate.

From what I could tell, there was nothing different occurring from the
time when we had entered, even if it happened to be another gate. Close
to twelve guards were stationed around the area, but my perceptions did
give me a small jolt.

Shielded much the same way I was, on the open ledge above the gate
itself, rested a large caldron filled with oil.  Under it was a set of
burners -not in use at that moment, thankfully-but I wondered what else
I had missed.  That, and the fact that the good viscount used visual
concealment, sent another shiver down my spine.

Slow step by slow step, Gairloch picked his way through the gate area.
I kept patting his shoulder.  "... under that sack?"  "..  . open the
pack slowly .. ."  "..  . black staffer loose in the city ..."

"Where's Jrylen?"

I didn't like the conversation between the figure that seemed to be the
guard captain and the messenger who had raced up on foot, nor that
Gairloch and I were less than a rod from the pair.  "... on the wing ..
."

"Get him here now.  What does the black staffer look like?"

I patted Gairloch again as we eased through the open gate, slow step by
slow step, and out onto the stone pavement leading southward.  . click
.. . click .. . click .. .

"GET HIM UP HERE!"  The guard captain's voice echoed out toward us.  I
shivered, and not from the wind out of the north, though that was chill
enough.  Crossbows carried a long way.  "..  . hold up here, mother.
Them's guards having a stew about something .."

We edged past the battered and narrow wagon on which two thin figures,
radiating the honest disorder that had to have been age, sat and pulled
a single mule to a halt.  "... keep moving, old farts .. ."

They didn't but we did.  I had to force myself to keep breathing with
each step from Gairloch, to keep patting him and sending reassuring
signals to him.  Without the pony I would have been wearing crossbow
quarrels.

The bitterness of frozen and rotted field stubble swirled past me, and
my legs seemed like they would knot into cramps so tight I would fall
from the saddle .. . and my throat was tight .  , .

When we reached the crossroads a kay from the gate I began to relax,
but did not drop the light-reflective shield.  While I was convinced we
were too far for either an order-master or a chaos-master to detect the
shield, if we appeared on an open road in plain sight of the walls,
even a kay away, it would only be instants before a troop was
dispatched.  And although Gairloch was steady, I doubted that he could
outrun true cavalry chargers on the road.  In the mountains, perhaps,
but not on the road.

So, cloaked from sight, I rode the south road quietly, as the surface
changed from stone to smooth-packed clay, angling always toward the
mountains I could sense vaguely in the distance until I was certain
that the walls of Jellico had vanished behind multiple rows of the low
rolling hills that seemed to lead toward the mountains.

Even past noon, even with the steady kays we had covered, wagons
passed.  Horsemen passed, and two post-carriages.  I even had to ride
around peddlers on foot, and a party of pilgrims, the one-god
variety.

First the hills were low and rolling, covered in winter grass or crop
stubble, the fields arranged in regular patterns and confined by low
stone walls, with occasional hedgerows.  Those huts close enough to the
road for me to sense were ordered enough, if impoverished and stark.

When we crossed another road, running east-west-or so it appeared to my
limited senses-I encountered no more wagons, and but a single horseman,
a post-rider, I suspected.

As the hills had become steeper, the cultivated fields gave way to
grasslands, separated from the road by a stone wall whose maintenance
was haphazard.  The smooth-packed clay turned to mud frozen in ruts,
and Gairloch's pace slowed even more.

Very shortly thereafter, over the crest of the second hill past the
other road, beside a high tangle of brush in a dip in the road, and
after listening carefully for what I might not sense, I unwove the
shield.

The wind was chill by mid-afternoon, and thick gray-roiling clouds had
covered the blue skies of that morning when I had left Jellico.  For
all that, never had the gray of the sky, the sere brown of the grass by
the roadside, the tan-gray of the stone walls at the field edges, never
had they seemed so vivid.

I dismounted and studied the brown tangle where the hedgerow overtopped
the wall, then glanced to the wonder of the clouds, taking a deep
breath of air that seemed fresher just because I could see with my eyes
again.

Near the top of the hill, further along the crest and away from the
road, grazed a handful of black-faced sheep.  Even seeing them was
welcome.

I patted Gairloch.  "You're one hell of a pony."

He didn't even whinny, just accepted it.

I took a long drink from the water bottle.  My throat was dry.  Not
knowing what action might dissolve our cover, I had done nothing but
ride and had held nothing but the reins throughout the long
departure.

Thurummm .. . urummmm ... As if to greet me, along with the thunder,
light raindrops began to fall upon my upturned face.  At that moment, I
didn't care.

XXXVI

BY NIGHTFALL I cared a lot more.  First freezing rain had come down
nearly in sheets, gradually turning the rutted road into a surface as
treacherous as glass.  Like knives, the ice fragments slashed from the
sky.  The hills were steep enough to make climbing impossible, but not
rocky enough to contain caves or outcroppings.

In the end, I figured out what to do.  Under a scrubby tree next to a
stone wall, I created something like the light-weaving, except that it
kept out ice and water.

Easy?  Hardly, and with each rumble of thunder I felt more drained,
though I forced myself to keep eating and drinking, knowing that I
needed the energy to hold together the weather-net that sheltered
Gairloch and me in a barren area, with but the marginal shelter of the
hedgerow and a short stone wall.

Whheeee .. . eeee .. .

"Easy ..."  I patted him for at least the hundredth time.

After the ice-rain came the snow, thick and wet at first, then cold and
fine.  Keeping the finer flakes from us took less energy, and by the
time it was close to midnight the wind and snow had slackened enough
and drifted deep enough against the wall and brushy hedgerow to provide
a natural barrier.  That let me relax my net and build a fire.

The warmth from the small blaze helped as I continued to weave a
shelter and climb into my bedroll.  Gairloch's internal order and
appearance indicated he was far more accustomed to the hard weather
than I, and finally I let go of the weather screen and collapsed into
sleep.

Whhheeee ... uh ... The morning was gray, with windy gusts blowing the
lighter snow into the once-clear area and over all but the warmest of
the fire's ashes.

Yee-ah!  Yee-ah!  The shrill call of the vulcrow jolted me full awake.
Through a half-haze of fine snow-fog and sleep, I lifted my head-and
wished I hadn't, as a line of fire split my skull down the middle.

"Ooooo .. ."  mumbled a strange voice that resembled mine.  The pain
eased, but did not cease as I let my head rest on the quilted fabric of
the bedroll.

Whhhssssssss .. . Even the whisper of the snow echoed like thunder
through my skull.

My arms ached more than in the first days with Uncle Sardit, more than
after Tamra's drubbing me, more even than after Gilberto's hellish
exercises.  "..  . ooooo ..."  I wished whoever was moaning would stop,
but that didn't happen until I realized I was the one doing the
moaning.

Yee-ah!  Yee-ah!

Wheeee .. . eeee .. . whuff..  .

Between the damned vulcrow sitting on the hedgerow and Gairloch
suggesting that it was either time to eat or get up, I eventually woke
up and levered myself into a sitting position, not even high enough to
see over the wall and the snow drifted above it.

My cheeks tingled from the cold, and ice crystals fell from the steam
of my breath.  The fire in my skull not only burned; the bones
surrounding my brain felt like a smith's anvil pounded by an
unrelenting hammer.

Thinking the water bottle might help, I reached through the powdery
snow for it, ignoring the minor arms cramps until I had it ... and
dropped it.  Of course the water had frozen solid.

The fire was warm ashes, nothing more, and light snow covered all but
the center cinders.  How long it took to get the fire started, who
could tell?  My fingers nearly froze, since I had never replaced the
leather gloves I had seared apart in Frven.  The branches I had broken
and set aside for fuel had frozen together.

Gairloch whuffed and whinnied, and each whuff and whinny cut through my
ears like a knife.  My legs cramped at each movement, and the wind blew
out the fire three times, besides flinging dry bitter flakes into my
eyes whenever I really needed to see something.

Order-use magic was out-that is, if I didn't want to finish destroying
my body-and it seemed impossible to get enough warmth to get some water
and food into my system.

On the other hand, I somehow doubted that much of a search for me was
going on, not for a while.  So, after much flailing, the fire burned
again, and I found a small package of pressed grain which I fed to
Gairloch.  Except that I held it, half-leaning against him while he ate
it.

In time, using the one battered skillet in the sack, I melted some of
the snow, _taking a few sips myself but letting Gairloch have most of
it.

Then I ate-what, I'm not sure, but it didn't matter that much-and
crawled back into my bedroll.

The fire was back to ashes when I woke again, and the sky was still
covered with the featureless gray clouds.  The wind gusted, and my head
still ached and burned.

Wheeee .. . eeee "..  . don't like it, either ..."  I mumbled.

The flailing to re-establish the fire was about the same, since I had
to stagger through knee-deep snow down the hedgerow to find enough
branches and sticks for fuel.  But I was getting somewhere.

Sitting by the fire, I ate some more, drank some more, and felt the
headache subside a bit more.

Clearly, we weren't traveling anywhere quickly, and there was no point
in trying, not when the road wasn't even visible except in the higher
and more exposed places where the wind had swept the snow off in order
to build waist-high drifts-if not higher-in the depressions.

While I had no schedule to meet, we had not even reached the true base
of the Easthorns.  Was there any chance of crossing them?

My eyes traveled to the southwest.

Surprisingly, I could see the darkness of conifers on the lower slopes,
as if the mountains had received less snow than the hills beneath
them.

I shivered and forced myself to eat another few mouthfuls of the travel
bread.  Then I told my reluctant body that it was time to loosen up.
The protests were monumental, enough that I nearly lost what I had just
eaten.  So I leaned against Gairloch, my eyes damp in frustration.

So damned unfair .. . but fairness sure as hell counted for nothing.

I kept moving, if more slowly, and melted some more snow for Gairloch
and gave him the rest of the grain cake.  Half of Justen's sack was for
him, a division of provisions that never would have crossed my mind.

As I struggled to lift the large canvas sack of provisions back onto
Gairloch, I wondered how long it would be before I could see things in
advance.  I mean, there was nothing special about the provisions, just
that same faded and heavy gray canvas, still filled almost to
overflowing and representing a goodly portion of Justen's stocks.  But,
in the instants while I was trying to escape Jellico, he had packed
with more forethought than I had since I landed in Freetown.

Justen-I already missed the gray wizard.  Now all the choices were
mine, and it had already become clear just how little I knew about the
real world of Candar.  At the same time, Justen hadn't been that much
better than my father, Talryn, Tamra, or the half-a-dozen others who
had more knowledge than I did-and refused to share it.  Each of them
had given me just enough for me to know there were unanswered questions
.. . and said it was up to me to find the answers.

Yee-ah!  Yee-ah!  The vulcrow was back, probably waiting for us to die,
but I had a different idea.

Finally, sometime after midday, under the featureless gray clouds that
obscured the time, I swung up on Gairloch and let him take his own pace
through the snow.  He avoided the wind-swept areas, still icy, and made
his way along the side of the road.

Unlike me, he seemed to enjoy the ride.

My guts ached, and while the headache had diminished to a dull
pounding, my eyes burned and my hands trembled.

Gairloch walked carefully and I hung on, occasionally sipping from the
water bottle I had tucked inside my cloak, now containing half ice and
half water.

Despite the gusts and the chill, I sweated and the dampness froze on my
forehead, then seemed to freeze-boil away.

By mid-afternoon, as the sky darkened, the lower slopes of the
Easthorns were closer and the snow was only ankle-deep.  More
important, it had apparently not rained first, and there was little ice
on the open spots in the rutted road.  Gairloch still preferred walking
in the lighter snow than on the frozen clay.

The sweats had left me, as had the headache, replaced by a
light-headedness and a feeling of weakness.

I kept looking for somewhere to stop, but the hills had grown
increasingly more barren and rocky as we trudged toward the lower
slopes of the Easthorns, which now seemed to get no nearer.

Meanwhile it got darker, and I peered through the blowing snow as the
wind rose, looking for another hedgerow, another sheltered spot, at
least one out of the wind.

Wheee .. . eeee ... "

"That goes for me, too."  Night had not yet overtaken us, and we could
have traveled longer, but a darkish shape not far off the road resolved
itself into something-an abandoned hut, a way stop  Who could tell?  I
wasn't sure I cared.  I risked trying to feel whether the place was
disordered, and immediately recovered the headache I had almost
forgotten about.  The hut was chaos-free, all four sides, and it had a
roof of sorts, made of slate shingles though half were missing, as well
as an open hearth beneath a hole in the roof.

With no door and two oblong holes where shuttered windows had been it
was drafty indeed, but the remnants of the door and the shutters were
enough for a small fire to warm the space occupied by one tired young
man and a strong pony.

We ate, and we both slept, and the next morning was merely cold, with
stray staffs of sunlight peering through the breaking clouds, and light
gusts of chill air.

Best of all, my headache was gone, though my back was sore and my
muscles ached.  In the warm darkness, it looked as though the Easthorns
had moved closer, as though I could reach out and touch the
conifer-covered lower slopes of the foothills.

That wasn't exactly right, but we did reach the road-marker noting the
road to Fenard by mid-morning, and by then had reached the edge of
where the recent snow had fallen.  While there was snow under the
trees, the occasional tracks on it, and the finger-width distance
between its white and the brown of the tree trunks told that the storm
that had attacked me had not reached the Easthorns.

I shivered again at that thought, looking back over my shoulder, but
saw no one and nothing on the road behind.  I did wish that I had
possessed the ability to conceal Gairloch's tracks, but surviving the
storm and cold had been hard enough.

Not more than another kay past the road-marker we passed a narrow
stream that disappeared underground right to the east of where we
stood.  Warmer than the air, a fog rose from the water, and I let
Gairloch drink as he would while I rinsed the canteen and washed my
face and hands in the pleasantly chill flow.  Before I had finished
washing, my friend and companion found some tufts of grass still partly
green to nibble.

For the first time since scrambling out of Jellico, I could peer into
the supply sack provided by Justen while there was light enough to see.
Even so, I almost missed the off-white square tucked between two
oatcakes wrapped in oiled paper.

Folded into a square the size of my hand, it bore one word-"Lerris." My
head was still swimming and I did not open it, but tucked it instead
into my belt pouch and continued to search for another package of
travel bread.  I found it, and a small pouch of spiced dried apples.

While I ate travel bread and dried apples, Gairloch alternated slurps
of water from the not-quite-underground river with bites from the
narrow stretch of grass nurtured by the spray from the fast-moving
water.

Glancing overhead, I realized that the clouds seemed to be darkening
and thickening once again.  So I finished as much as my stomach would
hold without rebelling and climbed back into the saddle.

Then we started up the narrow road again, winding in and out of
ever-steeper hills, and at each turn I looked for a sign of other
travelers, or wayfarers' huts, or some shelter, with one eye checking
the sky visible in the space between the hills.

XXXVII

SURPRISINGLY, AFTER ANOTHER ten kays or so of trudging, when even the
untiring Gairloch was flagging and I had dismounted to struggle
alongside him on foot, the road began to descend, not much; or perhaps
it only leveled out.

We rested and shuffled on, and rested and shuffled on, and I marveled,
when I wasn't puffing and panting, at the contradiction between the
lack of any place to stop or even rest, and the clearly maintained rock
walls supporting the roadbed and the arched stone bridges.  Guard
rails?  There weren't any.  Nor were there road-markers or signs.  But
there was also no sign of chaos, only solid stonework.

Coming around a wider curve than I had seen so far, the road opened
into a small valley, leading through a snow-dusted meadow of browned
grass toward a group of three low stone buildings.  Plumes of smoke
rose from two of the three, the two on the right.  I climbed back on
Gairloch.

The stone road-marker at the edge of the meadow read "Carsonn."  No
explanation, just the name.  The faintest of mists covered the valley,
bearing an odor I could not place, not of brimstone nor of fire.
Finally, after weaving a shield around the big provisions sack but not
my saddlebags, I shook my head and chucked the reins.

A rail-thin man waited by the central structure, under a peeling sign
bearing a line drawing of a cup.  "Welcome to the Golden Cup,
traveler."  His voice was neutral.

The center building was entirely of stone, even to the peaked slate
roof, except for the roof beams, doors, and narrow windows-built to
withstand storms and a heavy winter.  Yet the meadow grass bore a touch
of green, and the snows along the road, though it was still early
winter, had not yet been that deep.

I glanced behind the innkeeper to catch the crossbow leveled at me from
the stone embrasure flanking the closed double doors of weathered white
oak.  "Not exactly the friendliest of welcomes."  I nodded toward the
quarrel.

"Not everyone from Certis is friendly, and not all travelers claiming
to come from Certis are from Certis."

I ignored the veiled reference.  "A room and some hot supper?"

"Three golds for you, a silver for your horse."  "What?"

"We have to bring the food either from Jellico or Passera."  The
innkeeper shrugged.  "You can travel on, if you like.  Or camp in the
meadow for a silver."  In my shape, and in poor Gairloch's, the
alternatives weren't exactly wonderful.

"For three golds, I'd hope for a hot bath and the best of repasts.  And
more than hay for my horse."

The innkeeper finally smiled .. . faintly.  "Hot water we do have. Even
real soap."

The stone-walled stable was almost empty, though the stalls were clean.
Two mules were at one end, next to a black mare.  A tall bay whuffed as
I led Gairloch past him and two more empty stalls.

Tired as I was, I brushed Gairloch until his coat regained some shine,
letting the innkeeper, who seemed to double as ostler, bring a wooden
bucket of grain.  He, too, for all his bluster, kept a distance from
Gairloch.

In the meantime, I racked the saddle and tucked the provisions and my
staff into a corner above the stall where, invisible as they were, no
one would likely run into them either.  "Little enough food there for
you to travel another four days to Passera, especially for your horse.
There's not much forage."

"I might need to buy some grain cakes, then ..."  I suggested.

"Half-silver for two .. ."

I shook my head.  Commercial extortion, or so it seemed; but I wasn't
thinking all that well and said nothing.  "Supper first," I indicated,
"then a bath and bed."

"Whatever you wish, but we take payment in advance."  Most innkeepers
made a pretense of affability, but not this one.

Supper, taken alone in a smallish dining room with a warm fire and only
five tables, was provided by a plumpish woman wearing a stained white
apron.  It consisted of spiced brandied apples, a thin pepper-laced
potato soup, and thick slices of tough mutton with even thicker slices
of brown bread.  I ate it all, and drank three glasses of red berry

"Quite a lot for a slender fellow," observed the woman, whom I took to
be the innkeeper's wife.  The innkeeper himself had vanished.

I shrugged.  "It's been a long cold trip."

"Mountain weather's been warmer than usual."

"It was warmer than the blizzard on the hills of Certisice, thunder,
and snow up to my knees."

A puzzled look crossed her face, then passed.  "Would you like anything
else?"

"Directions to my room, and then the bath."

"The bath room is at the end .. . that way."  She pointed in the
direction of the stable.  "I'll show you your room."

I barely glanced at the room, apparently the smallest of a half-dozen,
if the doorways and spacing between them meant anything, and left only
cloak and saddlebags there.  My coins were in the openly-displayed
purse and in the hidden slots in my boots and belt.  Then we walked
back toward the bath, down the stone-walled corridors.  Even the
interior walls were of stone, saving the doors themselves.

Hot water they had, flowing from some sort of spring.  The stone-walled
room had been built around the spring, clearly, and the source of the
faint metallic odor in the valley was definitely from the hot springs,
of which there had to be more.

Metallic-smelling water or not, bathing in the rock tub chiseled from
the stone was wonderful, loosening aches I hadn't even recognized.  I
didn't leave that healing flow of heat and relaxation, and dry myself
with a thick brown towel, until I resembled a prune.

I also took the liberty of washing my undergarments and wringing them
out.  After all, for three golds I deserved a few extras, and neither
the innkeeper nor his wife said a word when I walked back toward my
room barefoot and wearing just my trousers, with the rest of my clothes
draped over my arm.

The room, with a single narrow window looking out on the back meadow
that I could not see in the darkness, contained a bed, a narrow
wardrobe, and a candle in a sconce above the bed.  The window, two
spans of real glass on a pivot frame, was wedged shut.

The bed, narrow as it was, actually had sheets and a worn coverlet.  I
thought about blowing out the candle.  Certainly my eyelids were heavy
enough, but the paper corner protruding from the belt pouch recalled
the letter or note I hadn't even read.

So I sat on the bed and unfolded the heavy paper.  The reversed images
of some letters where the two sides had been folded together told me
that, despite the careful phrasing, the words had been placed on the
heavy linen paper in haste.

Lerris In traveling, even a wizard can be trapped while asleep.  Read
the section on wards (alarms) in your book before you sleep in strange
covers.

Try also, for your sake, to take the time to read the entire book
before you make one too many mistakes.  Spend some time doing something
simple and thinking.  You can't think and learn if you're always on the
run.

Since the gray wizard had been right more than once, I levered myself
off the bed and pulled The Basis of Order from my pack.  Then I slowly
thumbed through the end sections until I found "Wards," taking several
deep breaths to keep my yawns from overpowering me.

I didn't quite understand the theory, but the mechanics were less
difficult than healing that damned woman or even weaving my
weather-net.  The interesting part of the wards were that they would
work without my conscious direction.  The bad part was that they didn't
do much besides warn.

I thought there might be more, but if so I wasn't in shape to learn it.
So I slipped the door wedge and bar in place, put my knife under my
pillow, and blew out the candle.  My eyes closed before the light
died.

I woke with a jolt from a dream of endless mountain trails.  The room
was dark, black, yet a ring of light from the wards surrounded the
door.  . iiiittt .. . chhh .. .

I tried to get the sleep out of my mind, reaching for the knife, then
almost laughed.

"Anything I can do for you?"  I called.

The sounds stopped but no one answered, although I could feel two
bodies on the other side of the rough plank door.

I waited, and they waited.  . iiiitttch .. .

"I really wouldn't, if I were you," I added casually, wondering what I
would do if they attempted to break the door.

The prying noise stopped again, and I tried to think, when all I really
wanted to do was sleep.

The wedge wouldn't hold up long, not against a determined attack.  The
whole sneaky effort meant the innkeeper was only after the weak.

I walked across the cold stone floor and let my feelings examine the
door and the frame-solid oak set in stone, with the hinges on the
outside, swinging into the room.

Then I shook my head.  Idiot, idiot .. . the innkeeper didn't want into
the room.  He was placing a bar through the iron handle on the other
side to keep me from going out.  The Stone walls, the narrow window,
all made sense.  The innkeeper just didn't like direct violence.

I checked again.  The two were gone, now that they were convinced I was
safely captured.

Lighting the candle, I stood up and walked to the window.  If the
wedges came out .. . Finally, I nodded and began to dress, wincing at
the chill undergarments.  They were still damp, but I could only hope
my body heat would take care of that.

Then I went to work on the window as quietly as I could, thanking Uncle
Sardit silently the whole time.  Not easy, but the exertion warmed me
up.  The chill and heat had taken their toll on the glues, and with a
little help here and there, I managed to slide the whole window into
the room.

Out onto the frozen grass went my pack, cloak, and saddlebags.  If I
had been a pound heavier I wouldn't have made it through the narrow
opening.

Getting the window back in place I cheated, using some of the
sense-weaving order-strength, but even by my father's lights, using
power to fix something wasn't tempting chaos.

Then, I walked slowly, cloaked in darkness, to the stables.  Gairloch
was fine, munching on some sort of grass.

Setting another round of wards, I recovered my bedroll and curled up on
some straw in the stall next to Gairloch.

The first hint of light woke me, not the wards, which I dropped.  I
saddled Gairloch, listening for the innkeeper and hearing nothing. Then
I used an old staff to pry open the storage closet and took six grain
cakes, which I stuffed into the provisions sack.  I really wanted just
to take them just to pay the innkeeper back.  Besides, with the
provisions from Justen, I wasn't even certain I would need them.  But
the Easthorns looked cold, and Gairloch had saved my neck already and
then some.

In the end, I left four coppers, probably too much, but that was the
least my wonderful innate and growing sense of order would let me
leave.  After all, despite his dubious hospitality, the innkeeper had
bought them somewhere, and leaving the coins made me feel better.

After sliding open the stable door, with the reflective cloak around
us, Gairloch and I stepped out into the silence of the winter dawn.  .
thunk , .. thunk .. . thunk .. . Less than a kay across the meadow, we
came to a brook.  I dropped the shield, looking for signs of pursuit;
but the inn remained dark, without even a plume of smoke from the
chimneys.  After Gairloch drank, I replaced the cloak of reflected
light until we reached the road and the marker that featured an arrow
and the name "Passera."  The edges of the road contained drifted snow,
often up to Gairloch's knees, but the wind kept most of the road clear,
almost as if it had been designed that way.

Still, more than once we had to flounder through crusted and drifted
snow gathered in the most sheltered elbows of the road.

Not knowing who or what to trust, and how, I avoided the next inn,
instead finding a sheltered cleft up a canyon from the road.  Getting
to the cleft and concealing our tracks was more work, in the end, than
fortifying an inn room would have been, but I slept more soundly, even
on the narrow, rocky, frozen ground out of the wind.  And it didn't
cost me three golds or the equivalent duke's ransom, though I did wake
up with the tip of my nose nearly frozen.

Climbing the eastern walls of the Easthorns wasn't quite as
draining-not quite-as surviving the winterkill storm.  While it had
taken two days to escape the storm, it took nearly two days more after
Carsonn just to get to the top of the southern pass.  In that whole
time, I passed three other groups heading toward Certis, all of at
least four riders, and all heavily armed.  They had made my passage
possible, in one instance having shoveled through a small snow
avalanche across trie road.

They never saw me or Gairloch, not when I heard them from a distance
and removed us from the road and their sight.

The weather never changed-cold, cloudy, with gusty winds sweeping in
and out of the canyons and carrying fine dry snowflakes.  What's more,
at the top of the southern pass, there wasn't even any view, just a
crest in the road that ran between two nearly sheer rock walls.  At one
instant, I was riding uphill; and the next, downhill.

Not until I reached the top of the foothills overlooking Gallos,
another day, and another night spent under an outcrop shivering even
within my bedroll, did I find a view.

For nearly three kays the trail down was nothing but an open ledge
slanted against a blackish granite.

Halfway down I stopped, able to see anyone approaching in either
direction, and guided Gairloch into an alcove back from the road.  I
climbed up to a flat overlook to look out over Gallos under the first
full day of winter sun since leaving Jellico.

Gallos didn't look much different from above than I imagined Certis
might have, just mixed and muddy browns, divided by thin gray lines
that had to be stone walls or fences, and infrequent gray-brown and
wider curving lines that were doubtless roads.

Down toward my right, to the north, where the road broke away from the
rocks and entered a line of forested hills that separated the meadows
and hedgerows and stub bled fields from the Easthorns, I spotted an
interweaving of smoke plumes in a cultivated valley.  What I could see
of the valley looked small, in any case.  Passera, I guessed.

Leaning back against the rock alcove with Gairloch right below and with
the afternoon sun warming the black slab behind me, I finally re-read
Justen's note.

I still hadn't had time to read the whole book, and on the mountainside
wasn't exactly the place to do that in any case.  But Justen had been
right more than once .. . and that was more than enough reason to think
about what I was to do before I descended the rest of the way into
Gallos and Pas-sera.

Besides the simple matter of survival, I had two problems-neither
insurmountable, but both requiring solutions.  First, my supply of
coins, not exactly large to begin with, was running short, even despite
Justen's provisions.  The loss of nearly four golds for a short night's
lodging in Carsonn and the grain cakes for Gairloch had not helped in
that matter; although, balanced against the payment for the
sheep-healing, I was somewhat better off than I would have been, and a
good hundred fifty kays further toward the Westhorns.

Second, I still didn't have the faintest idea of the problem or cause
or whatever-it-was that I was supposed to resolve.  This business of
blind traveling and quests was getting tiresome, if not plain boring.

Whatever I didn't know, I did know two things.  If I kept blundering
into towns and problems, sooner or later an unseen crossbow quarrel or
rifle shot would leave me in less than ideal shape, if not dead.  That
assumed that Gallos would allow rifles; some of the Candarian duchies
classed firearms as chaos-weapons, rather than undependable heat-energy
weapons.  But dead would be dead, one way or another.

I'd also realized from the unusual nature of the storm on the hills of
Certis, and from the unguarded look of the nasty innkeeper's wife when
I had mentioned the unseasonable storm, that the ice and snow had not
been entirely natural .. . not at all.  It also meant that someone
hadn't exactly been able to locate me, with magic or otherwise.

Gairloch-the pony was another question I had ignored, and kept
ignoring.  Why did he trust me, and a few ostlers only?  Had his
presence in Freetown been coincidental?  Or a matter of odds?

I looked away from the view of Gallos and down at the not-quite-shaggy
golden-brown of his heavy coat.  No animal less sturdy would have
managed what we had gone through nearly so well.

With another sigh, I reached out with my feelings .. . looking ... .
and came away shaking my head.  Gairloch was a mountain pony, but not
just a mountain pony.  Just as I had strengthened the innate sense of
order within the sheep of Montgren, so had someone strengthened that
order within Gairloch, to the point that the pony would lash out or shy
away from anyone manifesting disorder.  That was all, and yet ... I
shook my head.  Someone, something, had thought farther ahead than I
cared to speculate.  Even with my back against the warm rock, I
shivered.

I still wasn't thinking fast enough.

So I sat on the outcropping and tried to think out what I had to do
next.  I had to learn what was in the book and to apply it.  I had to
make a living of sorts with enough space and time to read.  And I had
to avoid getting much notice.  That was especially important,
particularly if my disappearance from an apparently locked room in
Carsonn were relayed to Antonin or whichever chaos-wizard was after
me.

I didn't understand why, though.  I wasn't as dangerous as Justen, and
Tamra was certainly as much a threat as I was.  I shook my head,
wondering where she was and what she was doing.

Avoiding further notice meant avoiding Passera.  If it took a whole
troop to cross the Easthorns, a single rider would be seen as magician,
or bandit, or common thief, and even given my recent outlays, the
amount of coins I carried would give full suspicion to one of those
assumptions.

All this led to the need to reach Fenard, a town large enough for me to
seek a wood crafter who needed an extra hand without raising too many
questions.

I sighed.  Every time I thought, the problems got more complex and
involved more than just me.

"Come on ... we've got another piece to travel, and a few more nights
on the road."

Click .. . click ... Gairloch's shoes clicked on the smoothed stones of
the highway as it descended down the long slope to Passera, and,
eventually, toward Fenard.

XXXVIII

THE BLOND WOMAN juggles the knife as she rides, glancing ahead, then
back at the rotund trader perched on the gray mare that walks heavily
beside the lead pack mule.  "No trouble yet."

The trader eyes the black-haired woman-shapely, even in the faded blue
tunic and trousers-on the scarred battle-pony, who scans the road
ahead.

The older woman, the black-eyed and black-haired one, turns to catch
the trader's appraising stare.  She touches the blade at her belt, and
a faint smile crosses her lips.

The trader sees the smile and the hand on the hilt of the blade and
shivers.  "See .. . anything?"  he stammers.

"Could be ... there's a line of dust headed our way.  Only a single
rider, though.  No trouble there."

"You fixing to join up with the aut arch  asks the trader, each word
tumbling out almost before the last is finished.

"Why?"  asks the blonde.

"The word is that Kyphros needs blades; the aut arch doesn't care
whether they're men or women, just so long as they're good."

"I don't know .. ."  The blonde's voice is flat.

"We'll see after we deliver you .. . and collect our pay .. ."  laughs
the older woman.

Her laugh is not a laugh, and the trader shivers again.  The blond
woman rides further ahead, and the dark-haired woman's free hand strays
toward the hilt of her blade.

XXXIX

SKIRTING PAS SERA WAS easy enough, except for the river bridge that
held towers and a guard force.  While the towers would hold against
brigands, I doubted they would stop even a few score of well-trained
and armed men.

They didn't have to.  The gate just had to stop us.  So Gairloch and I
waited nearly till dusk, until I sensed the gate about to open and
slipped through going the other direction.  They even left the gate
open while three of them checked under the bridge from the mountain
side.

I didn't wait for them to finish, taking Gairloch step by slow step
across the stones, hoping that the gentle click of his hooves would be
muffled by the rush of the narrow river below the bridge.

All the practice had given me a fairly good sense of place without
seeing, but I still worried that someone could see through the
reflective shield.  In a way, it was faith, sheer faith, to walk beside
an armed guard with a sword ready to use, separated from that violence
by the thinnest of light-curtains .. . and I couldn't even sigh.

Beyond the gate, Passera was open enough, though Gairloch and I quickly
left it well behind as we continued into the forested hills beyond the
town.  I dropped the shield as soon as possible after turning into the
trees once the road curved out of sight.

From that point on, I would be a journeyman woodworker, with only a
horse left because of my unsettled youth and the trouble in Freetown.

With each step toward the plains of Galios, the hills became more
gentle, the trees less frequent, and the air warmer, if a temperature
that left the clay of the road a cold gelatin rather than stone-hard
ice could be called warm.  The rock fences by the road gave way to rock
posts and split rails, and these in turn were replaced by all-wooden
rail fences that seemed too spindly to contain stock or to hold up
against a strong wind.

The infrequent and clear brooks gave way to half-empty or totally empty
canals flowing in grids between ever vaster and flatter expanses of
stub bled fields.

After Passera, I finally stopped in a crossroads with no name and slept
in the stable with Gairloch.  It looked cleaner than the battered inn.
Even so, the cost was three coppers for me and two for Gairloch.  I
didn't ask about a room.

For breakfast, I paid another copper for half a loaf-a small
half-loaf-of brown bread, and a cup of red berry

From there, another day took me into land so flat and treeless that you
almost couldn't tell where the horizon was.  In the middle of the
treeless expanse flowed the River Galios, nearly a kay across and less
than a rod deep in early winter.  Two side-by-side stone spans crossed
it, one for traffic in each direction, each one wide enough for the
largest of farm wagons.  Another night in a stable followed, but the
Prosperity Inn in Neblitt offered edible food and a clean straw-pile
for no more than the night before.

The right-hand road out of Neblitt and the end of the third day brought
me to the low hills leading up to Fenard, and the welcome sight of
trees.  Bare and leafless trees, not conifers, but trees nonetheless.

It also brought the second guard station.

"Where are you bound, young fellow?"

"Fenard."

"For the guards?"

I looked at the two brawny soldiers and shook my head.  "I don't know
much about war.  I'm just a journeyman wood-crafter."

"Where are your tools?"  the narrow-faced one asked.

"That's my problem, scr.  I was in Freetown .. . and things changed
rather sudden-like ..."  I shrugged.

The two looked at each other.  "Any weapons?"

"Just my belt knife.  I can hold my own with it."  The guards, veterans
each, tried to hold back their grins.  So did I. I would have grinned
in their place.

"You understand, young fellow, that if you can't support yourself, you
have to leave Fenard or join the guards?"

"I would?"  I asked, trying to look puzzled.

"You would."

Creaakkkkk ... A wagon pulled up onto the stones behind me.

"Be on your way, fellow."

I flicked the reins, and Gairloch carried me forward and up the slope.
Three hills and a bridge later, and near supper time and twilight, we
stopped at the city gate.  On the horizon to the north and to the west
I could see a glitter of light, presumably the not-too-distant
Westhorns.

Unlike Jellico, the wall around Fenard was token, where it existed, and
the gate was more of a formality than a real check.  A bored and much
flabbier guard than the one at the hillside gate looked at me and waved
me on.

Once in the streets, I stopped a youngster, round-cheeked and grinning,
to ask for directions to the quarter with the most woodworkers.

"Mills, you mean?  They're out the mill gate, not in the city."

"No, fine carpenters, crafters."

"The kind that make cabinets and chairs?"

I nodded.

"That's by the mill quarter, straight down the market street there, as
far as you can go.  A copper, and I'll show you myself, take you right
to the Tap Inn, where Masters Perlot and Jirrle drink.  They might be
there now."

I tossed him the copper.  "I can barely afford that, boy."

The barefoot youth just grinned.  "Come on.  Move that toy pony,"

I could have found the Tap Inn with little difficulty, and even one
copper was getting to be important.  Sometimes you guess wrong, and the
youngster probably needed the copper more than I did.

At the crossing of the unnamed street to the mill gate and the market
street, also without a name written down anywhere, stood a narrow
two-story timber building.  Only the hearth and chimney were stone,
although the street-level walls were a grayed plaster applied over the
old timbers.  The roof bowed, and pigeons roosted under the eaves on
the end away from the hearth.

A portly and balding man stood, in a leather vest and no jacket,
levering a long pole into the street's single oil lamp.  As Gairloch
skirted a tinker and his pushcart, the man coaxed the lamp into light,
even though the sun's red ball had not yet dropped from the twilight
sky.

Two middle-aged men, not quite stooped nor erect, wearing dark cloaks,
stepped into the narrow doorway on the market street side.  As the door
opened, a burst of laughter escaped.  "..  . scoundrels .. ."  "..  .
away from .. ."

My guide pointed.  "That's the place.  The stable's in back."

"What's your name?"

"Erlyn.  You can find me near the east gate most afternoons."  He
turned and was gone, almost at a run.

The Tap Inn was mostly eatery and drinkery, with five empty stalls that
barely merited the title of stable, but there was an overhead loft, and
another copper gained me the privilege of paying three coppers to sleep
there and three more to stable Gairloch.  The stable hand was rushed,
trying to get back to the inn, where-from his club, heavy arms, large
belly, and low voice-his job appeared to be keeping order while
stuffing himself from the kitchen.

"No trouble, boy!  You understand?  Keep that mountain beast under
control, and close that stall door."

I nodded and began to brush Gairloch.

Much as I needed to eat, and to listen to the whispered soul of Fenard
as unfiltered through loosened tongues, I was in no hurry.  I forced
myself, after I had found some grain for Gairloch, to amble into the
Tap Inn through the same side door I had watched the older men enter.

Holding back, I winced at the din while I let my eyes adjust.  Half a
dozen men gathered at the sole round table in the room, each cradling a
tankard-big earthenware mugs, really.

Four widely-spaced wall oil lamps and a low fire supplied the light.
Grease burning off a stove somewhere and green wood burning in the
fireplace supplemented the acrid smoke.  Add to that the sourness of
spilled raw wine and cheap beer, the sweat of working men, and the
combined odor defined the Tap Inn.  I preferred the stable.

Instead, I eased for a small corner table-vacant, as I discovered,
because it wobbled alarmingly on the uneven plank floor.

"Wine or beer?"  The serving-girl had unruly black hair, a thin face
and body, and a livid slash-scar from the right corner of her mouth to
her ear.

"You have red berry

"Costs a copper, just like a beer."  Red berry  Bread and cheese?"

"A copper gets you two slices and a small wedge of yellow.  Two, and
you get four slices and a wedge of white."

"Two slices and the yellow."  I put two coppers on the table, then
covered them with my hand.

She nodded and left.  "Red stuff and a small bread and cheese."

The six men around the center table were joined by a seventh.

"Rasten!  Always the last.  Did your new apprentice have to slaughter
the horse for glue?"

"Double vine for the man!"

Thunk!  Redberry slopped onto my hand, and by the time I looked up the
girl was flirting with the stooped Rasten.  He didn't seem to mind at
all.

A pair, not much older than me, sitting a table away began to talk
louder, to be heard over the older center group.  "..  . you think
about Destrin?  That daughter .. ."

I "... she's nice enough ..."  "..  . no future there .. ."

Seeing the serving-girl coming, I had the coppers and my question
ready.  "Which one is Perlot?"

She jabbed a thumb at the seven, including Rasten the latecomer.
"Silver hair, thin guy next to the fellow nearest the door.  Want
anything else?"

"Not now."

She was headed back to flirt with Rasten.

The bread was neither fresh nor stale, but somewhere in the middle; but
the cheese was sharp and cool, better than I expected.  "..  . benches
for the pits .. . and they wanted black oak, for that price.  Can you
believe that?"  "..  . another wizard loose in the Easthorns .. .
walked through a wall .."  "..  . just an excuse because the fellow
skipped and didn't pay, that's all ."

The pair nearest me got up and left.  No one took their place.

Sitting in the corner on the long bench, I nursed one red-berry, then
another, listening not only to the older group, but to others scattered
throughout the room .. . "..  . apprenticeship?  With his daughter?
That's a prison .. ."  "..  . he'd like those golden chains!  Wouldn't
you, Sander?  Wouldn't you?"  "..  . frig out .. ."  "..  . say some of
the old duke's guard trying to carve out their own place" "..  .
Northern Kyphros .. ."  "..  . wilderness .. ."  "..  . aut arch will
show them ..."  "..  . how you'd like her bed?  ..."

"Let's have another round."

"Who's paying?"

Between the continuing smoke from the kitchen, the pervasiveness of
soured beer and wine, and the acridness of green wood in the hearth, my
eyes burned, but I kept listening, waving away the thin serving-girl
with the scar down her cheek, nursing my second red berry and watching
.. .

Perlot pulled back his chair, and I started to stand up, then sat down.
Approaching a craft-master in a tavern was an invitation to trouble. So
I waited for him to leave before I made my way out to the stable and
Gairloch.

Although the air was cleaner and the stable far warmer than the
Easthorns had been, my sleep was restless, as if the thunder of that
sudden winter storm in Certis still echoed in my head, and I kept
hearing the phrase "another wizard in the Easthorns."  In time I did
sleep, though I woke and washed in the trough before the stable hand
arrived.

He didn't know exactly where Perlot's shop was, but pointed generally
to the far side of the mill quarter, and I greased him with another
copper to leave Gairloch for the day.

"Before sunset, boy!"

I didn't grin, but we both knew that he wouldn't touch Gairloch with
even a pitchfork.  All being late would cost me was money, and I was
losing that fast enough anyway.

Perlot's Grafting.  That was what the sign read.  Under the sign was a
display window with a cabinet and a wooden armchair, both darkened red
oak in the Hamorian style.  The Grafting was better than anything I had
seen since leaving Uncle Sardit, and the cabinet might even have gotten
a nod from him.

Since the door was ajar, and no customers were standing hi the waiting
area, I stepped inside.

On the other side of the half-wall, the craft-master was directing two
others, a junior apprentice, and either a young journeyman or senior
apprentice slightly older than I was, They were discussing the
composition of an oil finish.

"You there.  I'll be with you shortly."

"Please don't hurry on my account, master crafter I answered, carefully
inclining my head.  Then I walked to the back side of the display
window to inspect the three-drawered cabinet, comparing it more closely
to my recollections of Uncle Sardit's work.

"What do you think?"  Perlot's voice was even more raspy in the
morning.

I turned to face him.

"Well .. . you seem to know something about woodwork.  What do you
think?"

I swallowed.  "The finish is superb, as are the proportions.  The grain
on the side panel is angled, not much, but enough to detract.  Since
the joins are hidden, I can't say much about the strength, but the
mitering doesn't jam the wood or leave gaps."

"What about the wood?"

"The cabinetry is better than the oak.  The design would have been
better in black oak, but that might have raised the cost to more than
most buyers would pay."

Perlot nodded.  "You're looking for a job, that's clear, and you know
what's expected.  That's clear, too.  I can't help you."  The words
rushed together, as if he wanted to be done with them.

"I see."  It was my turn to nod.  "Do you know any crafter who might be
able to use a junior journeyman?"

The master crafter rubbed his chin.  "Among the good ones ... no.  We
all have more relatives than work."  Then he laughed.  "If you're as
good as you talk, you might try old Destrin.  He could use the help,
but .. ."  The man shrugged.

"Where could l find him?"

"He has a place in the jewelers' street, across the market square." The
crafter looked over at the youth and the young man, then back at me.

"Is this a hard time for wood crafting

"Not wonderful.  Not terrible.  I'm no Sardit, but sometimes we come
close."

I managed to nod without dropping my jaw.

"You ever seen his work, young fellow?"

"Yes.  I once saw a chest he made-black oak."

Perlot pursed his lips.  "Why do you need a job?"

"I left home young.  I didn't like my apprenticeship.  My uncle said I
was too unsettled.  So I headed for Freetown.  Then, what happened
there forced me to leave .. . rather suddenly."

"It forced more than a few people to leave."  His voice was dry.  "Well
... I wish you well.  Try Destrin, but I'd advise you against using my
name.  That's your choice, of course."

Before I had even reached the door, the crafter was back among the
finishes.

Gairloch remained in the stable while I sought out Destrin, heading
toward the jewelers' street and following the sketchy directions
provided by Perlot.

The structure itself, faced in dark-red brick and sharing common walls
on both sides with more recently-painted houses, bore only a small sign
above the shop door: Wood The house had two doors-one which covered a
stairway up to the second-floor quarters, and an open doorway on the
street level leading into the wood shop

The wide shutters on the lone wood shop window were open though a trace
askew on their hinges, as if the pins were worn down and had not been
replaced in years.  The blue paint on the window casement and upon the
shutters themselves had faded nearly to gray, where it had not peeled
away to reveal a battered and faded red oak beneath.  From what I could
tell, there was a small attached structure in the back that might have
once housed horses.  Certainly the other houses in the area had such
small stables.

I stepped inside the open doorway and stood at the edge of the
workroom.

While the workroom wasn't a disaster, the little signs of chaos were
everywhere-the careless racking of the saws, the sawdust in the chalk
drawers, and the cloudiness of the oil used with the grindstone.

"Yes?"  A dark-haired man-slightly stooped shoulders, thin-faced, and
wearing a clean if worn leather apron over dark trousers-^glared at
me.

"I'm looking for Destrin."

"I'm Destrin."  His voice was thin.

"My name is Lerris.  I understand you might be interested in having
some help."

"Hmmmmmmmm .. ."

"I'd be willing to work on a junior journeyman basis."

"I don't know .. ."

Shaking my head, I let my skepticism show through as I looked over the
incipient chaos, saying nothing.

Destrin stood by a half-finished tavern bench, backless.  The seat was
in place, and he had drilled the holes for the pole legs.  At a glance,
I could tell it was made from three different kinds of wood-scraps or
castoffs, probably.  Not quite a crude piece, but definitely not up to
the quality or the array of the tools, nor to the size of the workroom
or the house or the merchant's neighborhood.

"Well," he demanded in a thin and testy voice, "can you do this kind of
work?"

"Yes."  I didn't feel like elaborating.

"How can you show me?"

I glanced around.  The bins were empty, except for scraps.  "I'll make
something, and you can judge for yourself.  All it will cost is some
scraps and the use of your tools."

"They're good tools.  How can I be sure you know how to handle them?"
His thin voice degenerated into more of a whine.  "Acccuuu .. . uff ..
. uff .. ."  His hand touched the workbench to steady himself, but his
eyes stayed on me.

"Watch me.  Or work on your bench while I show you."

"Hhmmmmphmm."

I took that for agreement and began to rummage around.  In the end, I
found a piece of red oak with some twisted grains at one end that could
be turned to an elaborate breadboard, and some smaller plank-ends of
white oak that would make a small box, perhaps for needles.

That turned out to be the easy part.  None of the small saws or smaller
straight planes had been sharpened in years, and the peg plane was
clogged with sawdust and chips in a way that indicated it had been
forced.  So I cleaned it first, then oiled it and sharpened if.  I
managed to do the same with the other planes, but the small saws were
beyond my ability, except to clean them.

Destrin kept looking at me as I cleaned and sharpened the tools, and
then as I cleaned off the second bench, re-racking all the odds and
ends into the old cabinets that seemed to have a place for
everything.

Only after I had done that, and I realized it was well after noon, did
I lay out the wood pieces for the box.

"Father ..."  A light voice came from the now-open door at the back of
the shop, a second staircase to the quarters.  "I didn't know anyone
was here."  The girl was golden-haired, thin like her father, and
petite, although definitely feminine in shape and demeanor.  Her voice
was thin like his, but not whiny, just thin, or tired.  Her face was
not quite elfin, with a short but straight nose a touch too long to be
called cute, and her eyes were a brown-flecked green.  She wore a faded
blue apron over calf-length brown trousers and an equally faded yellow
shirt.  Her feet were in sandals.

"I didn't mean to surprise you.  My name is Lerris," I told her.

She looked from her father to me and back again.

"I'm trying to persuade your father to take me on as a journeyman."

"Hmmmmphhmmm," noted Destrin.  He coughed again.

I wondered if that were his way of avoiding commenting on anything.
Again, I said nothing as I finished measuring the wood scraps.

"Would you like to join us for some dinner?"  she asked.  "It's only
soup with some fruit and biscuits."

Destrin glared at his daughter.

"Neither one of you knows me.  I appreciate the offer, but, until I
finish something of value for Destrin .. ."  As I spoke I could see the
wood crafter relax.

"Let me bring you something to drink and some fruit at least."

"I wouldn't object to that, mistress, but I need to keep working."

She looked down, then retreated up the stairs.

As usual, everything took longer than it should.  I had to readjust the
wood vise, including a minor repair of the fastening on the bottom
plate, and the sawing took longer because the blades weren't as sharp
as Uncle Sardit's.

In fact, though I only took a few minutes to gulp down the sliced soft
apples she set out along with a battered blue clay mug, it was nearly
supper time before I finished gluing the last joins together.  The
whole time, Destrin had "hmmphed" along with the bench, barely
finishing his by the time I put the little white oak box into the
setting clamps.

It didn't take very long to groove a rectangle on the top and chalk out
a simple four-point star, then carve and chisel out the shallow
design.

The box was good and workmanlike, not exquisite, but better than much
of what I had seen.  "You know woods and tools," Destrin said
grudgingly.  "It's nice," observed his daughter.

"Better than nice, Deirdre.  Fetch a silver or two in the market."  He
almost smiled.

I shrugged, not wanting to correct the older man.  I didn't know
Fenard, but I doubted that the box would fetch more than a half silver.
"Are you interested in a journeyman?"

"Can't pay much."

"I don't ask for anything up front.  You get half of what I can make
and sell.  I pay two coppers an eight-day for room, and another two for
food, but if I clean out the old stable I can put my pony there."

Destrin's head jerked up at the mention of the pony.  "Where are you
from, fellow?"

"Up the North Coast.  I went to Freetown, but I had to leave.  There
was no work after the black ones closed down the port."

"You could afford a horse?"  asked Deirdre.  "Hardly," I laughed. "He's
a shaggy mountain pony, and he doesn't eat too much."

"Another two pennies for the stable."

"Two pennies, but only if I don't make you a half-silver an eight-day."
Destrin reflected, but not for long.  "All right.  And you sleep here
in the shop.  There's a small room in the corner."

That was all I wanted, for the moment.  I needed some funds, some time
to think and to read The Basis of Order, and somewhere to stable
Gairloch.

"You have supper with us upstairs," added the craft-master.  He looked
around the shop.

I understood.  "After I clean up a little."

He nodded.

Destrin was getting a good deal, but he wasn't likely to ask the
questions that the other crafters like Perlot might.

In the end, I didn't eat with them, instead persuading Destrin to let
me get Gairloch and work on the stable.

Unlike the shop, the stable had simply been closed.  Destrin had
clearly never had enough extra wood to use it for storage, and it
didn't take long with the old broom I found to make one of the two
stalls suitable for Gairloch, at least for the night.  Finding time to
get him exercise might be a greater problem, but that worry would have
to wait.

XL

DE STRING HAD SO many problems that it was hard to know where to begin,
and that didn't even count Deirdre.  Some of them were easy enough to
correct, just given a little time and effort, like reorganizing the
shop back to its original and functional pattern.

Some took my own funds, because Destrin didn't see any use in them,
like having the small saws sharpened by a good tinker.  For Destrin
there wasn't any use.  He knew he couldn't produce small work-not good
enough to sell in the market.  But I could, and I needed to sell things
to avoid spending myself out of the last few golds I had.

Even though Deirdre looked longingly at the little white-oak box I had
made to show that I knew woods and woodworking, Destrin agreed that I
should sell it on the following eight-day's-end market.

I didn't intend to sell only one box.  That meant going to the mills to
find woods, preferably scraps.

The first miller, Nurgke, was blunt.  "Scraps?  Not even for sale, not
to you or to Destrin.  The scraps go to Perlot or Jirrle.  They're my
best customers, and they need them for their apprentices."  He had
silver hair and hard brown eyes, arms like tree-trunks, and an open if
unsmiling, face.

Nurgke's mill had two big saws, run by water wheels from a diversion of
the Gallos River.  In spite of his bluntness, his mill conveyed a sense
of order.  Even the stones in the mill-race were set precisely, and the
grease for the water wheels was set in measured dollops for application
by his apprentices.

"Impressive," I told him as I surveyed his operation.  "You prize order
highly."

"I praise profits, woodman.  Order brings profits."

I couldn't argue with that.  "Who else might have wood scraps or mill
ends for sale?"

Nurgke pulled at his long chin, then frowned.  "Well .. . Yuril doesn't
have any arrangements, but he does mostly firs, stuff for poles and
fences, farm uses, not much in the way of hardwoods.  Then there's
Teller .. . but he's almost under indenture to the prefect.  You might
try Brettel.  He used to mill for Dorman."  He saw my blank look and
explained.  "Dorman was Destrin's father.  Best cabinetmaker in Candar.
Some said he was as good as Sardit in Recluce, maybe better."  The
mill-master shook his head.  "Destrin's a good man, been through a lot,
but he doesn't have the touch."  He looked at me.  "Brettel might help
you, but don't sell him a song.  He never forgets."

With Nurgke's admonition fresh on my mind, I rode Gairloch back around
the perimeter road of Fenard, the wide and cleared granite-paved way
just inside the fifteen-cubit-high stone walls, until I got to the
north gate and the north road leading out to Brettel's mill.

The wind whipped around us, and the light dimmed as the clouds
darkened.  By the time we reached the mill, light crisp flakes were
falling upon the frozen ground, leaving a lacy finish over the fields
of stubble behind the wooden rail fences.

I had to wait for Brettel, who was wrestling with the replacement of a
saw.

So I studied his mill.  Like Nurgke's, his radiated order, but with an
older and longer-standing sense of presence.  His mill-race was also
perfectly stoned and mortared, but some of the stones had been
replaced.  The stream dammed for his high pond had to be the one that
joined the Gallos River on the east side of Fenard.

The lumber and timber storage warehouse radiated an age greater than
the stone walls of Fenard, yet there was no debris and the roof timbers
were more recent and carefully varnished.

The warehouse was chill-no fires or hearths with that much lumber
around, but I wondered how much timber and how many planks split
because of the changes in heat and cold.

"You?  Who are you, and what do you want?"  Brettel, like a broad and
bandy-legged dwarf, stood shorter than to my shoulder, and his voice
was a clear tenor.  For all the abruptness of his words, the tone was
pleasant.

"I'm a new journeyman for Destrin, the woodworker.  My name is
Lerris."

"Destrin?  What are you running from, young fellow?"

I grinned.  I'm not, at least not exactly.  I worked for my uncle, but
he said I was too unsettled and told me to see the world and to come
back when I could settle down."  I shrugged.  "You can't see much of
the world when you run out of coppers.  So I agreed to work for Destrin
as a journeyman.  He supplies tools and lodging and gets a large share
of what I produce."

The mill-master looked me over.  "No sign of chaos.  The worst you
could be would be an honest scoundrel, and that's the least of
Destrin's problems.  What do you want from me?  My best-cut timbers
without paying a copper?"  I shook my head.  "I'm not that ambitious. I
prefer smaller pieces for now.  Scraps and mill ends, if you can spare
any."

Brettel pursed his lips.

"I can pay a little," I offered, not wanting to seem too eager, but not
wanting to appear as a beggar, either.

He shook his head with a rueful grin.  "I don't know what you are, but
you're neither a thief nor of chaos, and anything would help Destrin, I
think."  Then he fixed his eyes on mine.  "But leave his daughter
alone.  She's my god-daughter, and while his pride won't let me foster
her, she'll have an honest man of Fenard for a husband."  The last
words were like light iron, and I stepped back.

"I didn't know .. ."

He laughed, and the laugh was deeper, not at all like the tenor of his
voice.  "You wouldn't.  I wouldn't say anything, except you're
good-looking, probably talented, and will leave her sooner or later.
There are plenty of others .. . now, about the scraps .. ."

I waited, trying not to hold my breath.

"Follow me.  You can take anything you want from the burn bin, but
don't leave a mess.  The mill ends are in the other bin.  Those we
sell.  You get out what you want into a pile, then either Arta-he's
the" skinny fellow with red hair-or I will talk about how many coppers
it's worth."

In the end, I gathered one bag full of red and white oak scraps, enough
to do three or four small boxes, and enough mill ends for three coppers
to do a breadboard or two and a small chair.

Brettel watched as I carefully packed the woods into the old basket I
had taken from Destrin's stable.

"Good luck, young fellow.  You seem to know woods."

"Thank you.  What I do with them is what counts."

He nodded and was gone, and I chucked the reins.

Wheeee .. . eeeee.

"I know.  I know.  You don't like carrying wood.  But if you want to
stay dry and get fed, you're going to have to carry wood."

Gairloch carried me out into the wind and the swirling snow that had
covered not only the fields, but the perimeter road, with a light white
blanket.

Destrin "hhhmmmmpphed" as I brought in the wood and stacked it in the
unused bins on what had become my side of the workroom.  He had a fire
stoked in the side hearth and a ragged sweater on under his apron.
"What's that for, boy?"

"Some boxes, breadboards, and a small chair."

"Do a good chair, and it will sell.  Boxes don't do so well these
days."

"If they don't sell, I'll make other things in the future."  Deirdre
just watched until I began to measure.  Then, as if the details bored
her, she slipped through the back door and upstairs.

The hardest thing was not to hurry.  Even though I knew nothing was
going to happen immediately, I felt like every moment counted, that I
should be working all the time, and I did work under the lamp some
nights.

Destrin was wrong.  I finished two boxes, and with the white oak one,
took them to the market on eighth-day.  Getting in cost me a copper,
but I found a spot by the dry fountain, next to a flower seller, and
set out the three boxes on a tan cloth I had borrowed from Deirdre.

The snow had half-melted, half blown away, but the wind still whipped
in from the north, and less than a score of possible buyers wandered
through the square.

"Those are nice, young fellow.  Where are they from?"  asked the rotund
woman with the cut flowers.

"Here.  I'm a new journeyman for Destrin, the woodworker."

"You made those?  You mean he actually has someone who can make things
like old Dorman did?"  She leaned down and studied the boxes.  "Well ..
. they're not as elegant as Dor-man's .. . rather plain .. . but they
look well-made."

"May I see the one on the end?"  interrupted another voice, that of a
slender man in gray leathers.

I didn't like his narrow face or the cold look in his eyes, but I
nodded as I handed him the red-oak box.

The man studied it minutely, looking at the joins, at the grain angles,
and the fit of the top.  Finally, he handed it back, almost with a
disappointed look on his face.  "Decent workmanship.  Fair style."  He
nodded curtly and stepped away.

"I guess that means you're all right, fellow."

"Who was that?"  I asked.  "Some inspector for the local guild?"

"The prefect doesn't allow guilds.  He says they just cause graft and
corruption."

"So who was he?"

"That's old Jirrle.  He and Perlot and Dorman used to fight over who
was the better crafter.  Now he does the fine cabinets for the gentry,
the big merchants, and the prefect."

"Can I see that box in the middle?  How much is it?"  A woman in a
shapeless gray over tunic that failed to conceal her bulk jabbed at the
white oak box.

"A silver," I responded.

"It's not worth more than a copper or two .. ."

In the end, I sold the white oak for six coppers, and the two others
for five-just enough to leave me nothing after the cost of entering the
market, the cost of the wood and paying Destrin's share, and my
eight-day's lodging and board.  That did leave the wood for the chair
paid for, but the lack of profit wasn't the most promising of starts.

XLI

OVER THE NEXT few eight-days, my cash flow improved, and I stopped
going to the market, instead displaying my products on the stage in
Destrin's window.  With winter full upon Fenard, mostly demonstrated
with howling winds, and occasional light snows, being able to sell
without either paying the market fee or shivering on the cold stones of
the square was a definite improvement.  The first chair brought three
silvers, although I ended up having to buy a finish varnish for it and
putting a satin sanded gloss on it.

Destrin "hummphhedd" and moaned, but finally gave in when I insisted
that his cut came after deducting the expenses for materials, since I
was the one buying them.  Deirdre still watched occasionally as I
worked, and Brettel still let me have the small scraps free.  Even the
larger mill ends cost but a few coppers.

Gairloch liked every opportunity to leave the confined stall, and that
was another problem.  Stalls had to be cleaned, something I had
forgotten.  Cleaning the sawdust and scraps from the shop, with the
fragrance of cut wood, was almost a pleasure compared to wielding a
shovel and slop bucket.  Sometimes I even had to wash parts of the
planking-and my hands turned red from the freezing water and coarse
soap-but something inside me wouldn't let me not keep either the stall
or shop spotless.

As I worked more with the tools, and Dorman had left tools every bit as
good as Uncle Sardit's, my hands became nearly an extension of my
thoughts, and I could almost feel how the grains and the strengths and
lesions in the woods flowed together.  Sometimes it wasn't even boring,
and I could begin to understand how and why Uncle Sardit looked at
wood.

"What are you?"  demanded Destrin as I stepped back from the parlor
chair I had gotten a commission for.  It wasn't perfect, not to Uncle
Sardit's standards, but even he would have called it a good piece.  I
had deepened and widened the seat grooves, knowing who would use it,
and the spools and braces were a shade heavier to bear the extra
weight, yet the proportions did not show that extra strength.  "Acuff
.. . cufHf..  ."  He reached out a hand to steady himself.  His face
paled.

I leaned toward him.  "Are you all right?"  "... Be ... all ... right
.. . just an instant .. ."

He wasn't.  Even when he straightened up and stopped coughing, he was
pale.  For the first time since I had come to Fenard, I reached out
with my feelings beyond the woodworking to touch Destrin .. . and
nearly recoiled from the impact.  The threads of order within his body
were faded, dying a fraction of a span at a time.  Yet there was no
chaos, no tinge of evil, just as though he were far older than he was,
as if he were an ancient.

Almost without thinking, I lent him some internal order, a touch of
strength.

"Who are you?"  he repeated, as though his coughing attack had never
occurred, but he edged closer to the hearth.

I wiped my forehead.  "I'm Lerris."

Destrin shook his head.  "A master trained you, Lerris.  I'm a poor
excuse for a crafter, and I know it, but I can recognize quality and
skill.  Sometimes you look like Dorman when you touch the wood, or just
let the plane graze an edge.  You are in a different world.  When you
look at a piece of wood, you look like you see all the way through
it."

I did, but there wasn't any reason to tell Destrin that.  So I
shrugged, and I was shrugging a lot in Fenard.  "Like you, Destrin, I'm
trying to make a living."  "..  . ac cuff  . acuuu .. ."  He waved me
away.

This time, with what I had given him, he recovered quickly.

"Damned chill .. ."  he mumbled.  Then his eyes met mine, and, as if he
recognized what I was, he shook his head.  "What will I do when you
leave?"

I looked back at the chair.  Destrin had raised a real question.  "You
had this shop before I came," I said firmly, but it was no answer, and
we both knew it.

Outside, the wind whistled, shaking the front shutters and rattling the
display window.

"Are you ready for supper, Papa?"  Deirdre stood by the stairs, looking
as petite and fragile as always, as if a good breeze would carry her
away.  Yet there was iron behind that seeming fragility, as I had
discovered watching her negotiate with a merchant's wife over some
curtains she had provided.

"Good time to stop," agreed the crafter.

While Deirdre served a barley soup, it was a hearty soup, and the
biscuits were fresh.  Young or fragile-looking, she could cook, and she
always had a pleasant, if shy, smile.

That night, with my back against the brick of the wall and my feet up
on the pallet that served as couch, bed, and study area, I eased out
The Basis of Order.  The cover was getting battered, perhaps because I
had read through the slim volume at least twice.

Reading didn't mean understanding, unfortunately.  Some things were
easy enough, like the business with the sheep had been.  Or like
helping strengthen Destrin's body to fight the wasting disease.  I
could understand what the disease did to Destrin, but there was nothing
I could do.  Oh, Destrin looked better after my intervention, and I
would do what I could, but slowly, slowly, he was dying.

Even the damned introduction to the book didn't help: "Learning without
understanding can but increase the frustration of the impatient .. ."

Or how about "... All things are not possible, even to the greatest ..
."?

Wonderful, just wonderful.

I closed the book and looked at nothing.

Too many questions kept nagging at me, even as I continued to force my
way through the damnable Basis of Order.  At times, I would sit there
under the lamp, later than I should have been up, knowing that my eyes
would burn the next day, struggling with the conflicts and the
ambiguities.

I couldn't read the book from front to back.  That I had given up
early.  So I read the back sections first, the ones on the mechanics of
order, and I tried some of them out, like aligning metals to strengthen
them or change their characteristics.  Those were easy, at least on
nails or scraps, after a little practice.

And, using a pot of water and a candle as a burner, I could figure out
how the weather modifications worked .. . sort of.  What scared me
there were all the qualifications and warnings about large storms
changing harvests later in the year and creating droughts elsewhere.
But the pot of water and the burner weren't going to change anything
except make the air in the shop a little damper, and that didn't hurt
the wood at all.

So I sat there, back against the wall, feet up on my pallet, trying to
make sense of what I had learned ... or thought I had learned .. . and
realizing that some things were not possible-even for the order-master
I wasn't.

A glimmer of yellow from the shadows caught my eye.  . whhsttt... A
whisper of slipped feet followed.

Deirdre stood back from the curtains to my alcove.  How long she had
been there, I didn't know, but her dark eyes flickered from me to the
book and back.

In my shorts and nothing else, I felt undressed.

"You can come in, Deirdre."

She did, but not far, only just inside the curtain that served as the
doorway to my alcove.  She wore an old maroon woolen robe over a worn
white shift, and her shoulder-length hair was tied back.

"Lerris?"

"Yes?"  I turned and swung my feet off the bed, setting them on the
floor and sitting sideways on the pallet bed.

"Were you once a priest?"  Her voice was soft, as it always was.  Not
timid, just soft.

I did not answer her, and she said nothing, finally sitting on the end
of the pallet, the faintest scent of roses reaching me.

"You couldn't sleep."

She shook her head.  "I worry about Papa."

"So do I."

"I know .. ."  She edged herself toward me.  "He sees it, too.  He
won't say anything."  She reached out a slender hand and laid it on my
forearm.  Her fingers were firm and cool against my skin, and I
swallowed, fighting against wanting to hold her.

"Lerris .. ."  She eased even closer.

I tried not to shiver.  It had been too long since I had held a girl,
far too long.

"Please .. . stay .. . whatever you want .. ."  Even though she had
moved almost beside me, deep within she was shivering, and not with
desire; yet at the same time she was calmly purposeful.

Taking a deep breath, I removed her hand.  "Deirdre .. . I will do what
I can for your father."  I took another breath.  "I want to hold
you-really hold you-and more, but that would not be fair to you or to
your father."  Then I smiled crookedly.  "And if you stay that close to
me for long, it will be very hard for me to behave myself."  I wasn't
kidding.  She smelled warm and wonderful, and she brought home how
lonely it had been.  But she didn't want me.  She wanted me to save her
father.

She edged back, just enough to let me know she was grateful, but not
enough to make me think she found me that unattractive-or something
like that.  I wasn't sure.

"Thank you."  That was all she said, but she meant it, and that was
enough.  She sat there for a time.  Finally, she asked, "Where are you
from?"

"A place far away, so far that I may never be able to return."

She looked at me, and I looked back, and she opened her mouth and then
closed it before asking another question.  "Why are you here?"

"You'd have to say that it's a pilgrimage of sorts, a time for me to
learn, and to decide."

"Have you learned things you didn't know?"  She wrapped the robe around
herself more tightly, reminding me that the shop was chill, that winter
still held Fenard.

The cold didn't bother me as much as it once had, but that was because
I had begun to look at my own internal order, I suppose.

"Some days ..."  I admitted.  "I never seem to learn what I thought I
was going to learn, though."

She nodded at me to continue.

"I left woodworking once, when I was an apprentice, and I wasn't sure
I'd ever do it again.  It seemed .. . well .. . ii was boring.  Why
would anyone want to care about whether the grains lined up just right,
or whether there was too much pressure on the clamps?"  "*

"You seem to like it now .. . some days I stand and watch you, and you
don't see me, even when I'm almost beside you Grandpapa was like that."
I licked my dry lips, catching the scent of her again, and feeling my
heart beat faster.  "You'd better go."

A faint smile crossed her face as she rose, almost a grin, but touched
a little with a sadness I could feel without reaching.  "Thank you."

She was gone too soon, and almost too late, and I wondered what harm it
would have done to have taken what she had offered.  But the words of
my father, and Talryn, and the book hammered at me, and I knew I had
done what was best.  Enjoying Deirdre would have been deceiving her,
and, more important, deceiving me.  Yet my heart was still beating too
fast, and my body ached, and I dreamed of golden-haired girls, and a
black-haired woman, and even a redhead, and woke sweating and sore. But
I woke knowing what I had to do.

XLII

THE SQUAD LEADER looks over her shoulder.  "Tell Gireo to drop back
another hundred rods."  Her body adjusts automatically as her mount
starts down the long slope that will lead to the Demon's Triangle-the
mythical intersection between Freetown, Hydlen, and Kyphros.

"A hundred rods?"

"Twice the separation he's got now."

"But we can't reach him if they attack from the rear .. ."

"We can.  We're not his good-luck piece.  He's a big boy."

"But .. ."

Her hand touches the hilt of the blade.  "You replace Gireo."  Her soft
voice carries across the road, still shrouded in the mist laid down
before dawn.  Under the cavalry cloak and hood, her long hair is
tightly bound up in black cords.

The man shakes his head, but turns his mount back uphill.

In time, the trooper called Gireo urges his gelding up beside the
dark-haired woman who has shed the cloak and folded it into a
saddlebag.  She wears the still-untarnished silver firebird on the
collar of the leather officer's vest.

Gireo's eyes burn as he takes in the slender officer.  On foot he would
look down on the woman by more than a head.

Her eyes seem to look through the fog ahead.

He opens his mouth.

"Quiet."  The word barely carries the distance between them, yet it
arrives with the impact of a quarrel.

Gireo shuts his mouth, but his teeth grate inside his cheeks.

"Gallian regulars," mutters the squad leader.  "Damned ghouls."  Her
eyes look again into the mists.  "Wizard .. . not this far from
Gallos."

She unsheathes her blade, nudging her mount into a quick walk.  "Get
the others to close up ... quietly."

Gireo drops back, but says nothing to the two troopers in file behind
him, as he glances from them to the squad leader.  The road flattens
out as it nears the valley below, and the damp and packed clay of the
roadbed dulls the sounds of the Kyphran squad.

Ahead, a flickering pinpoint of light appears, then disappears,
shrouded and unshrouded by the ground fog rolling out of the Little
Easthorns.

Gireo looks back toward the squad leader, but she has vanished into the
mists.  He frowns, but does not unsheathe his blade.

The Kyphran squad rides downhill.

Whhheeee .. . eeeee .. . eeee .. . . eeee .. . eeee .. .

Clink .. . clunkh .. .

The sound of a single set of hoofs thunders toward the Kyphrans.

"Form up!"  The single command is snapped out of the fog like an iron
lash, and even Gireo turns his mount.

The squad leader lets her charger carry her past the first two files.
"Move it!"

Almost reluctantly, the Kyphran troopers urge their mounts forward into
a trot.

Nearly a dozen Gallians are in the saddle as the Kyphrans break out of
the fog and lumber toward the invaders.

The squad leader has resumed the van, and her blade flashes, though
there is little light to reflect from the cold steel.

Whhhsttt .. . hhstttsss .. . "..  . damn ..."

"Your right, Gireo!"  "..  . aiee!  .. ."

All the sounds are from the Kyphran side.  The Gallians fight
silently.

Whhsttt... "..  . you!"  "..  . chaos .. . bastard .. ."

Whhssttt ... In time, the Kyphran squad draws up not far from the
abandoned fire that still flickers through the morning fog.  One mount
and man are missing.  Another mount's saddle is empty.  A dozen figures
wearing the purpled gray of Gallos are sprawled in and around the
camp.

The squad leader reins up by the fire.  "Gireo, get the weapons and
strap them to one of the Gallian mounts."

"Get them yourself."

The squad leader sighs, but the blade is in her hands.  "Do you want to
die on your horse or on your feet?"

Gireo shrugs.  "You couldn't win on foot in an honest fight."  He
swings off the chestnut gelding.

She smiles and dismounts.

He leaps forward even before her foot is clear of the stirrup.

She dives under his blade and emerges from the roll with her own blade
before her.  Whhssskk ... Clinnkkk ... Whhhstttt..  .

His blade slips from his fingers as the blood fountains from his
throat, as his knees crumble.  "Bitch ..."  Even before he has finished
dying, she has resumed her seat on the charger.  "Hyster .. . gather
the Gallian weapons."

The thin bearded man looks from the giant on the ground to the slender
woman upon the horse.  He swallows, then dismounts without a word.

Two other men exchange glances.  "..  . see how fast her blade is ..."
"..  . kill you as look at you .. ."  "..  . killed seven of the
Gallians, though .. ."

She lets the whispers continue for a time, then clears her throat.
"Let's go."

XLIII

SINCE WHAT I had to do would further upset tradition in Fenard, I
needed someone with a personal interest, and Brettel was the only one
possible.

I kept telling myself that as Gairloch carried me out the north road to
the mill-master's operation.  Perhaps I had just picked the day because
the sun was finally out, and the wind down, and the air so clean and
clear that despite its bite on my face, I wanted to sing.  I didn't.
That would have been inflicting too much on poor Gairloch.

The thoughts of song died as I neared the mill and the gray stone
warehouse.

"Lerris, what brings you here?  Did you finish that chair?"  His silver
hair glinted despite the afternoon overcast, and his smile was
welcoming.

"You gave me the order two days ago.  Good chairs take some time."  I
grinned right back at him, but I couldn't sustain the expression.

His eyes raked over me.  "Come on into the parlor."

"Would that be all right?"

"I'll be there shortly.  I need to tell Arta about some cuts.  If you
want some red berry Dalta will get it for you."  He was off, his short
legs propelling the big torso and broad shoulders toward the mill with
a walk that would have been running for most men.

Wiping my forehead, I dismounted and tied Gairloch to the post,
loosely.  Although he needed no tying, there was no point in
advertising either his training or my abilities.  I wondered if the
people at the Travelers' Rest had ensured that a mountain pony was
always there at Felshar's Livery when danger gelders arrived, or
whether it had been specially set up for me.  Talryn, nursing a guilty
conscience?

Although the afternoon was clouded, the dampness and heat, and the lack
of any breeze at all, created the feeling of walking through a hot bath
in winter clothes.  My growing internal order-mastery let me handle
cold, but heat was another question.

At the long one-story house beside the lumber warehouse, I lifted the
brass knocker and let it fall.

A young woman opened the door.

I smiled in spite of myself.  Seeing the eyes as blue as the sky after
a rain, hair as bright as spun gold, skin more finely finished than the
silk of white oak, and a figure like a temple statue, I could have
cared less that she came to less than my shoulder.

"May I help you?  The mill-master is in the main building .. ."  Her
voice was firm, yet smooth as a good finish on black oak.

Gathering myself back together, I nodded.  "I'm Lerris, the journeyman
for Destrin.  Brettel asked me to wait for him in the parlor."  I
paused.  "Are you Dalta?"

"I'm Dalta."  She smiled politely, with a natural warmth that promised
nothing while cheering the afternoon, and for some reason I thought of
Krystal, though I could not have possibly said why.

"He mentioned red berry

"I'll take you to the parlor."

She even provided me with a glass-a real glass tumbler- of red berry
and I sat in a chair probably made by Dorman, since it matched one I
had seen in his plan book, and wondered what Brettel's consort looked
like to have produced such a daughter.

Then I wondered about Deirdre, and whether what I was planning was
fair.  Recalling Talryn's acidic comments about fairness, I ended up
shaking my head.

"You look like hell, Lerris .. ."  Brettel carried another tumbler, but
his steamed.  The odor of spiced cider filled the room, mixing with the
smell of burning wood from the hearth.

"That's about the way I feel."

"You look like you want to ask for something out of the ordinary."

I nodded.

"Don't tell me you want to marry Deirdre."

"No.  That would be wrong for both of us, but she's part of the
problem."

Brettel sipped, delicately for such a broad man, from the tumbler,
waiting.

"You know Destrin's failing ..."  I began.

"He doesn't look well."

"I can't maintain the business too much longer."

"I can't say I'm surprised."  His face darkened.

"Hold it.  I'm not walking off soon .. . but I need a favor, and not
for me."

He took another sip as his expression slipped back to neutrality.  "Why
are you asking me?"

I decided to blurt it all out.  "I need to train an apprentice for
Destrin.  He has to understand or feel woods, and he has to be older
than the normal apprentice, and I really want him to be suitable for
Deirdre."

"That's a big order.  Who appointed you Destrin's keeper?"

"I guess I did.  No one else was helping him.  Now that I've made
things profitable.  I can't just leave it.  But the time will come ..."
I shrugged again.

"Why can't you stay?"

"For now, I can.  The time will come, probably before too long, when ..
."

"You're awfully mysterious, Lerris.  Why should I do this?"  The man
was pressing, but he had been good to me, and I could tell he embodied
order.

I looked around the parlor, let my senses expand.  No one was within
hearing distance.  "What do you know about Recluce?"

Brettel just nodded, not even looking surprised.  "There's always been
something more about you.  Are you helping Destrin?"

I knew what he meant.  "As I can, but there's nothing anyone could
do."

"You'd do this for him?"

"He's a good man.  Not a terribly good crafter, but a good man.  And he
fights each day because he feels he can offer Deirdre nothing."

Brettel scratched his left ear, then took a long pull.  "Do you have
any ideas where such an unusual apprentice might be found?"

"How about the younger son of one of the wood lot owners or the farms
where you log?  You might have a feeling .. ."

"I might .. . does he have to be older?"

"No .. . but not too much younger .. . gentle at heart, but stubborn,
if that's possible ..."  I closed my mouth, realizing I was revealing
far too much.

"You worry about me?"

"A little," I admitted.

"You should."  Then he smiled.  "But I told you I was Deirdre's
godfather, and whether you came from hell itself, something needs to be
done.  Let me think about it.  There are a couple of youngsters that
just might do."  He chuckled and added, "And their parents would
believe we were doing them a favor."

I finished the red berry while Brettel thought.

"I'll get back to you," he told me while ushering me out.

An eight-day later Bostric arrived.

So did a commission for a red-oak chest for Dalta's dowry, with
instructions to take my time and do it right ... as if I ever would
have done it any other way for Brettel.

Bostric was gangly, red-haired and freckled, initially as shy as a
spooked quail, at least when I was around, and stubborn as a cornered
buffalo.  But he listened, and he could feel the woods.  In his work on
the wood lot he'd even used a saw and tried his hand at carving.  His
figures of people and animals were artistically better than mine.

Destrin just humphed, between coughs and when he had the strength to do
so, and Deirdre made larger portions of the ever-present barley soup.
Boring it might be, but she smiled more, when she wasn't fussing over
her papa, and that was about all I could expect.

I still sometimes dreamed about golden girls, and sometimes about a
black-haired woman, and woke up sweating and worse.  I wondered why I
dreamed of Krystal, but had no answers.  All the time, Bostric slept
soundly in the pull-out pallet we had built for him in the shop.

XLIV

BRETT EL COMMISSION GAVE me another idea.  I decided to make two of the
chests, keeping the pieces for the second red oak dower chest in the
stable when I wasn't working on it.  If I didn't do it, no one else
would, and Destrin really never looked at what I was working on until
it was close to completion.

He was usually wrapped up in his benches and plain tables and fighting
out the coughing attacks.  When he wasn't, he worried about Bostric or
me.

"He's all right, Lerris.  He's just not you."  If I heard them once, I
heard those words a score of times as the winter drew out.

Bostric had more potential than Perlot's Grizzard, of that I was
convinced, but he still didn't have the confidence, and only time would
build that.

First, I made him work on breadboards, but only a few, mainly to give
him confidence.  The market for breadboards was limited, and designing
and carving breadboards that didn't sell wasn't building confidence.  I
called them display pieces, and two actually sold, right from the
window.

Then I talked to Wryson, who ran the dry goods store off the jewelers'
street, and persuaded him to commission a storage chest, a simple piece
but lined with cedar, to provide summer storage for woolens.

Doing it took twice as long, because I made Bostric do a lot of things
I would have done.

"Why don't you do this, scr?  I have to struggle, just getting the
lines right."

"So did I," I snapped.  "But will I always be here?"

"If you're not here, honored master crafter how will I learn?"  He said
it in a respectful tone with a straight face.  Only his eyes betrayed
him.

"I'm not a master crafter  I'm just a journeyman wood crafter

"I understand, scr."

He gave me that hangdog look, and with his unruly red mop, freckles,
and bushy eyebrows, resembled a sheepdog more than an apprentice. Then,
maybe the two were similar.  Sometimes it was hard to remember how
frustrated and bored I had been, and how I would have liked to have
said what I felt.

"But, honored journeyman, I still don't see what you want."

I couldn't help grinning.  "Sorry .. . you're right.  It is hard to
learn how to do."  I took the calipers once again and showed him what I
wanted, then I watched and corrected him when necessary, trying not to
laugh.

In the end, on that piece, everything worked out.  Wryson was pleased,
and placed an order for another chest, but not until early in the fall,
when he would be getting his last shipment of finished woolens from
Montgren.

Sometimes, it didn't work out so well-like the chair for Wessel.
Bostric had trouble with the spooling, and that was my fault.  He
wasn't ready for it, and I had pushed too hard.  We gave his effort,
sturdy enough, to the Temple sisters, and I completed the second one
myself.  The bonus almost paid for the extra wood.

Deirdre turned out a matched cushion that made the piece even more
spectacular, and I made a mental note to have her do more work like
that in the future.  She would be a real partner for Bostric.

After that, I suggested that Bostric try a bench to match the ones
Destrin was making for the Horn Inn, perhaps the seediest drinkery in
Fenard.  At least, the breakage and Destrin's low prices had given him
a steady, if poor, income.

Destrin had hummphed at my suggestion, coughed some more, but hadn't
openly objected.

In the meantime, to try to upgrade Bostric's finishing skills, I had
sketched out a child's table for him, scaling down a simple one from
Dorman's incredible plan book.  Once I had gone through it several
times, and explained the reasons for everything, Bostric finally
nodded.  I could sense the understanding.

The table turned out well, although it sat in the window for more than
an eight-day before Wryson, the dry goods merchant, paid two silvers
for it and a matching pair of armless chairs.  I think that was because
the weather had closed in, drifting snow over the roads toward Kyphros,
and an expected shipment of Kyphros silverware had been delayed until
after the holidays.  So he needed a year-end present for his
littlest.

I put my share into the hidden strongbox to go with the dower chest,
and Bostric bought himself a pair of boots, barely used, but an
improvement over his muckers.

Still ... the table had been an experiment that almost hadn't sold, and
that bothered me.  We couldn't count on the weather to save us every
time.

I rubbed my chin, then looked at the white oak I was working for a
corner cabinet.  White oak was so clean, but that meant that any
mistake was there where no one could miss it, at least no one with a
half-trained eye.  Strangely, the same was true for black oak, but for
the opposite reason.  Everyone scrutinized it so closely that
inevitably the flaws were discovered.

With a silent sigh, I looked over the boxes and the side table on the
display stage and out into the mid-morning .. . gloomy as only a
late-winter morning could be in Fenard.

Finally, I added another log to the hearth.

"I'll be back."

Destrin hummphed, hunched himself into his sweater and looked at the
square storage box on his bench.

Bostric, behind Destrin, raised his eyebrows at the box, then looked to
me.  I glared, and he sighed.  Destrin wasn't always communicative, but
Bostric was going to end up with everything, and the least he could do
was accept Destrin's faults.

"Do take care, honored journeyman," Bostric called.  His voice was
mock-plaintive.

I swallowed another grin and drew my cloak around me as I stepped into
the chill on the street, making sure the door was closed behind me.  My
steps carried me toward the market square.

As I stepped onto the sidewalk beside the avenue, one of the few
streets with an actual raised stone sidewalk separate from the road
surface, I could sense a tension in the chill and damp air.  Without
even a hint of a breeze, the odor of wood smoke hung over Fenard,
imparting an acrid edge to every breath.

A tinker pushed his cart listlessly toward the square.  Behind him
waddled a balding and white-haired man carrying a satchel.  Neither
looked up as I skirted them.

Overhead, the sun was lost behind the featureless gray clouds that
appeared unmoving.

Clink .. . clink .. . clink ... At the sound of the coach on the stones
behind me, I stepped toward the bricks of the shop walls.  . dink ..
.

A glimmer of golden wood caught my eye, just as the un smelled odor of
chaos gripped at my feelings, as the chaos-master's coach rolled slowly
by, drawn by the two oversized white horses I had first seen on the
road from Freetown the previous fall.  Behind the coach were the same
two guards on their matching chestnuts, and the same dead-faced
coachman drove.

Outlined in the coach window was the profile of a woman, the veiled
woman I had seen at the inn in Hewlett.  The coach rolled down the
avenue before I really cast my senses at the passengers.

Crack!  The whiplash was metal, but I nearly cringed on the street from
the force of the reaction, and from the immediate dull ache. Retreating
behind the defenses Justen had taught me, I forced my steps to remain
even as I continued toward the square.

"Geee-haw .. ."  The mechanical voice of the driver echoed from the
bricks and stones.

I did not rub my forehead, much as I wanted to, wondering at the
fleeting impression I had received of three people within the coach.
There had only been two, that I knew.

By the time I had passed by the square, with the rusted open market
gates patrolled by the prefect's guards, and was farther toward the
palace, I could see that the heavy iron gates of the palace had already
closed.

I shook my head slowly, turning back toward Destrin's.  Every time I
acted without thinking, I exposed myself.  Now Antonin would know that
there was at least one order-master in Fenard.  The contact had been so
brief, and his response so automatic and contemptuous, that I hoped he
would not recognize me as an outsider or from Recluce.

I hoped, but there wasn't much else I could do, except keep on
woodworking and learning .. . and trying to think before I acted.  And
all of that without letting my boredom push me.

Overhead, the clouds remained gray, but the faintest hint of a breeze
touched my cheeks.

XLV

PER LOT CRAFTING-THAT was what the ornately-carved sign read.  The
chiseled letters, old temple-style script, were painted black.  A pale
hard-finish coat that did not carry the gold overtones of most
varnishes let the warm red-oak tones shine through.

As the morning mist beaded on my cloak, I tied Gairloch to the post in
front of the shop.  The winter had dragged out longer than usual, and
when spring had come, the rains and the cold had mixed, like in the
downpour that flooded the stable because I had neglected to clean the
drainage gutters outside Gairloch's stall.  Cleaning muck, and hay, and
ice chunks, with the rain sheeting across my neck and back-that had
been a real joy, and cleaning myself afterwards hadn't been much more
fun.

"You must really like cold baths .. ."  Bostric had observed with a
straight face in his oh-so-respectful tone.

"Next time you can join me," I had told him, but it had only stopped
the banter for a while, until I was back working in dry clothes.

Recalling Bostric's teasing, and glad that spring had finally come, I
studied the chairs in the window-drawn especially to the sitting-room
chair on the right.  That design I had never seen, not even in Uncle
Sardit's sketchbooks.  The curves of the legs were understated,
minimal, yet made the chair seem more delicate than it was.

"You!"

I looked up at the gruff voice.

A thin man, not much older than I was, a thin film of sawdust stuck to
the sweat on his forehead and wearing a tattered gray shirt under his
leather apron, glared at me.

I returned the look evenly.  "Yes?"

"Are you-"

"Invite him in, Grizzard," added a raspy voice from within the shop.

Grizzard looked puzzled, and I just stepped around him.  Directly
inside the shop were three chairs, elegant in the Hamorian style, but a
trace too heavy in the legs and squared cross-braces.  Between them was
a low table, the kind whose use I had never figured out except as a
place on which clutter collected.

While all the pieces were good, they were clearly high-class rejects,
too expensive for the tradesman, and not quite good enough for the
gentry.  Probably Grizzard's work, rather than Perlot's.  Somehow,
Perlot never would have let a poor piece get that far.

Reddish coals glittered in the corner hearth, with a warmth I could
feel even from the doorway.  Perlot stepped around a bench and toward
me.

I nodded.

"So we meet again, Lerris, or should I say craft-master Lerris?" Perlot
stopped behind the chairs, next to the half-wall that separated the
small waiting area from the workshop.

I bowed to the master crafter and I meant it.  His work was good, some
of it, like the chair in the window, not only as good technically as
Uncle Sardit's, but possibly even more inspired.  "I was admiring the
sitting-room chair.  It's possibly the best piece I've seen like
that."

The narrow craggy face creased as he frowned, and the craft-master
closed his mouth.  Then he wiped his hands on the underside of his
apron.  "Mean that, don't you?"

I nodded again.

"Grizzard, stop standing there like a dolt.  You still haven't finished
the detailing on the chest."

"Yes, scr."  Grizzard scurried around us, the puzzle lines still graven
in his forehead.

"Would you sit down?"

"Only for a moment, scr."  I eased into the chair toward which Perlot
had gestured, and he sat down across from me.

"Like to set things straight, young fellow .. ."

"There's nothing to set straight, master crafter  You didn't know me,
and you had never seen my work.  I could have been a wood-grifter from
Freetown or Spidlar-"

Perlot motioned me to silence, and I stopped.

"You're not.  I've looked at your work.  It's better than any
journeyman's here in Fenard, and it's getting better.  Some is master
craft level, like the chair you did for Wessel."

I must have lifted my eyebrows.

Perlot smiled.  "He asked me for my opinion.  I told him that he stole
it from Destrin, and that it was the best single piece in his house,
including the dining-room set I did last year."

"You flatter us."

"No.  I don't flatter.  It's not Destrin, poor soul.  It's you.  What
do you intend to do?  Take over Destrin's shop, and his daughter, and
put him out to pasture?"  The question was idly phrased, but the dark
eyes hung on me.

I shook my head slowly.  "Sometimes I wish that I could.  It would be
simpler that way.  But that would not be fair nor right.  In too many
ways, I am still a journeyman, with more than a little left to
learn."

Grizzard was trying to listen and concentrate on the detailing, and
both efforts were suffering.

This time Perlot nodded.  "Bostric won't ever be in your class."

"He will be a good craftsman, given time and training."

"He might be."  The master crafter smiled.  "Don't sell yourself short,
young fellow.  You've changed a lot in the time since you came.
Besides, there's a difference between the quality of your cabinets and
the quality of your soul."  He laughed.  "Poor Destrin.  First-class
soul, but .. ."  Perlot shrugged.

"I don't think you can craft good wood without order in your soul," I
added.

"Nor do I, boy.  But an orderly soul doesn't guarantee good work.
Having an orderly soul and being an order-master are two different
propositions."  He stood up.  "What will you do about that chair in the
window?"

"Nothing.  It's your design."  I grinned.  "Now ... if I can find
something as good-and different .. ,"

"You mean that, don't you?"

I nodded.

"Give Destrin my best, Lerris.  Do what you can while you're here."  He
stood up abruptly.

With that dismissal, I also stood, but did take the time for a last
look at the chair before stepping out into the spring warmth.

Gairloch waited patiently, as always.

Wheeee .. . eeee .. .

"I know.  You don't get enough exercise, but I try, and one of these
days, we'll take a longer trip.  Just be glad that you're not hauling
wood for the mills.  You could belong to a carrier and not to a poor
and impoverished wood crafter

Gairloch didn't seem impressed.  So I patted him on the shoulder after
I mounted.  He didn't flatter me, honest beast.

Perlot's comments about Bostric bothered me.  While I wished I could
avoid it, before long I would have to talk to Brettel.  Destrin
continued to fail, and nothing I could do would help but prolong his
failing.

XLVI

TEE EL .. . LEE ELL .. . AN unfamiliar bird warbles from beyond the
olive groves.

Sccuuuff..  . Soft steps cross the graveled courtyard leading to the
cavalry stables.

A single torch flickers in the holder by the stable door, where a tired
youngster wearing the greens of the aut arch snores softly.

As the steps pause, a woman with long dark unbound hair looks down at
the youngster.  She wears a peasant dress, yet carries a bulging field
pack whose straps press into the lithe muscles of her shoulders.

After a sad nod, she eases around the sentry and into the darkness of
the stable, counting the stalls until she reaches the third.

Whuffllll .. . "..  . Easy .. . easy .. ."

In the darkness, the dark-haired woman eases the pack off her shoulders
and lifts the two soft leather bags, and the heavy powder within each,
out of the field pack she has carried from the engineering barracks.
Next she checks the empty set of saddlebags before placing one bag of
powder in each saddlebag, carefully fastening the clasps.  The map she
leaves tucked inside the waistband of the skirt.

She walks through the darkness to the end of the stable, where she
eases the field pack into a corner.  While it will certainly be
discovered in a day or two, how and why it was placed there will not
matter.  Her squad will be leaving to face the Freetown rebels in the
morning.

Her steps, even more silently, carry her back out past her mount and
past the still-snoring stable guard.  In time, she slips into her own
room, where she lights a single candle, ignoring the woman on the
occupied narrow cot.  She rips off the peasant blouse and skirt and
immerses herself in the tub of chill water she drew after the evening
meal.

"At this time of night, Krystal?"  asks a sleepy-eyed blond woman,
sitting up and swinging her legs onto the floor.

"Never .. . again ... no matter what."

"What?"

"It doesn't matter."  The dark-haired woman jabs a hand toward her own
cot.  "See those scissors?"

"Yes.  Why?"

"Would you get them?"

"You're not .. ."

"I am.  Like I said, never again, not even for the best of causes." She
has dried herself and is pulling on bleached and faded undergarments.

"You aren't making sense."

"I am.  For the first time, I am."  Her lips quirk into a genuine smile
as the long black tresses fall away.

XLVII

WITH THE FLOWERS in the street boxes in bloom, and a brisk breeze from
the north, the walk along the avenue was pleasant enough, even if I
felt Bostric was always about to lurch into me.  His feet always
threatened not to follow his body- or the street ahead.

Destrin was back in the shop muttering over a simple box-just a box for
Murran, the wagon-master who carried spices and silver along the
north-south road from Fenard through Kyphros and all the way to
Horgland on the South Sea.  He would probably still be muttering and
coughing when we returned.

No single street in Fenard bore sign, but everyone named them-the
avenue, the street of jewelers, the north road.  I'd learned the names
of many just by listening, but as for the side streets, the alleys, I
doubted anyone who hadn't spent a lifetime in Fenard or a great deal of
time loitering would ever know all the names.

The names changed.  I overheard Deirdre and Bostric talking about when
the grocers' lane had been the place of old inns.  But the avenue was
the avenue, the only really straight and perfectly-maintained street in
Fenard.  That might have had something to do with the fact that it ran
from the prefect's palace past the market square and straight to the
south gate.

Because the day was pleasant, and because I wasn't in the mood for
doing detail work on the writing desk, not with Destrin in good enough
health, temporarily anyway, and because Deirdre was sniffling and
sneezing from the early flowers blooming, I had volunteered to wander
past the market square to see if the cloth merchants from Horgland had
arrived.

Bostric, of course, was happy not to be in the shop, caught between
Destrin's complaints and my demands.

"We're actually taking a walk, honored journeyman?"

"Bostric.  Enough is enough-unless you want to stay with the honored
shop owner and feed the fire."

"While feeding the fire would be a great honor .. ."

"Bostric .. ."

"I'd prefer the walk."

Sometimes, I could see why Brettel had been able to find Bostric so
quickly.  His humor wasn't exactly subtle, yet I had the feeling there
was more depth there, hidden behind the obvious and respectful
disrespect.

Clink .. . clink .. .

I nudged the apprentice, and we stepped toward the shop fronts as the
single post-rider trotted toward the palace.

"Wonder what news he brings?"

"He doesn't look happy.  Perhaps the aut arch .. ."  He broke off as a
soldier in the dark leathers of the prefect neared.

The soldier, shorter and squatter than either of us, his eyes fixed
beyond the street, plunged straight at us, as if we did not exist.

I could sense an emptiness there, no aura -at all, except for a faint
white kernel deep within.

"What-" Bostric looked at me.  "What was that?"

I thought I knew, but only shook my head.  "He had somewhere to go.
He's going to get there without taking a single turn."

No one else on the street-not the man in blue silks and leather with
the long sword, nor the peddler woman with the sack, nor the urchin
with the missing tooth and red hair-not one even seemed to notice the
rigidity of the man's mission as they stepped or scurried aside.

Across the street, between two gray stone houses, there were two boxes
of early-blooming red flowers flanking a narrow street, where with an
almost furtive look the man in the blue silk shirt and dark-gray
leather vest stepped out of sight.

"What street is that?"  I asked Bostric.

"What street .. ."  he mumbled in return.

"That alley over there, between the flowers.  You seem to know all the
streets."

"That's no proper street."  He was flushing.

"No proper street?"  I teased him, a little glad to have him on the
defensive.

"Not a proper street .. ."  His words were dogged, and he didn't even
look in my direction.

"What do you mean?"  I glanced toward the red flowers and the narrow
alley-whose contents were lost in the shadows.

"All right.  I'll show you.  You'll see."  Turning suddenly and
stretching his long legs into nearly a run, he crossed the avenue so
sharply I was hard-pressed to keep up with him.

We were both past the flowers before I had much of a chance to look
around, or to react to the fragrances, a dozen or more different
odors-roses, night fires lilies, and others I could not recognize, so
many that my senses reeled.

Narrow the way was, not much more than half a rod wide, and short, not
more than a dozen houses on each side before curving to the right and
ending in a wall that seemed to separate the street from the market
square.  The polished marble stones were spotless and bore no trace of
horses or coaches.

My eyes strayed up to a balcony not much above my head.  There stood a
woman, how old I could not say, though she was red-haired and older
than I, wearing only a thin cotton shift so sheer that I could see
every line of her body and even the dark nipples of her breasts.  ".. 
. two young gents .. ."

I swallowed.  No wonder Bostric had flushed.

He didn't look at me, but his steps flagged, and he halted.  "Here. The
street of ... ladies .. ."

"Street of harlots, young fellow ... we know what we are."

I didn't see the woman whose hard voice made the statement, since my
eyes, in turning from the redhead on the balcony, had fallen across a
blond woman wearing nothing but a robe, unbelted enough to show small
high breasts quite fully and that she was a blond in all aspects, and
that those aspects were all well-formed.

I think I forgot to breathe; my eyes blurred, and in shaking my head I
looked down the way where a brunette, wearing only a filmy skirt, was
drawing the man in blue silk inside a doorway.

In the open and un glassed window of a house closer than where the
brunette had enticed the dandy lounged another semi-clothed woman, this
one with impossibly-formed breasts, also uncovered, and with the
tiniest of waists.

"Your pleasure here, young fellows .. . two or more, if you wish .. ."
That voice came from the left, where my eyes flickered almost despite
themselves, alighting on the low balcony opposite the redhead.  This
one was black-haired, with long flowing tresses that swirled over the
creamy skin of her otherwise uncovered breasts and shoulders.

I swallowed again, feeling my trousers suddenly far too tight, as I
viewed that hair across the impossibly beckoning breasts of the
raven-haired harlot.

Bostric ... he wasn't as silent as I was ... his breath so loud that it
penetrated my daze .. . partly.  "..  . one of the wood crafters ... I
think .. ."

The identification was so whispery I almost missed it, but the words
sent a chill across my neck, enough of a chill that I sent my feelings
toward the black-haired wench.

"Ohhh."  The heavy and squat woman beneath the illusion radiated not
only chaos, but a coiled illness deep within, like an ooze-green
serpent.  My senses shifted to the redhead above and caught not only
her scrawny leanness, but the long knife along one hip, and the vacant
smile.  What my eyes saw, my senses refuted.  My guts twisted, and I
had to re-swallow bile and whatever else remained from breakfast.

Underfoot, the polished marble turned into rutted and cracked stone and
clay, littered with certain items from the interiors of sheep, as well
as other items.  The odor of flowers was overlaid with other, less
desirable odors.

Bostric stood like a statue until I jabbed him in the ribs and took him
by the elbow.

We both stumbled out into the avenue, though he merely looked dazed. If
I looked the way I felt, morning fog would have looked more
substantial.

"See .. ."  Bostric said.  "See .. ."

I said nothing, just forced my feet to carry me toward the market
square, breathing deeply and trying to get the odor of rotten roses out
of my nostrils and my memory.  Shaking my head and squinting, and
asking myself who had recognized me .. . and why.

I shivered, and reached out again, this time to Bostric, recognizing
the slender thread of suggestion planted upon him.

While it would have been the effort of an instant to snap that thread,
despite the ugliness of that tie, I could not.  So I infused Bostric
with some additional order and let him shake himself free.

"Wheee .. . ewww .. ."

"Yes," I added.  "Let's see about that cloth."

"Cloth?  You can think about cloth after that?"

"It's a great deal safer."  I tried to keep my tone wry.

"Safer?"  Bostric's eyes flashed in my direction.  "Lerris .. . ?"

I knew what he was thinking.  "Yes."  My voice was tired.  "I do like
women.  Healthy, young, and unmagicked women."

"Unmagicked?"

I ignored his last question as we walked past another half-living guard
stationed by the gate to the market square.  The coldness surrounding
him was hard to ignore, but I did, letting my eyes search for the
bright-colored banner that Deirdre had described.

Looking for cloth merchants was easier than speculating on the magic
behind the Street of Harlots.

Even past the empty fountain, halfway across the paving stones of the
square, past the potters' stalls, past the split-wood baskets from the
farms, past the red-and-gold patterned blankets displayed by a twisted
little man, there were no colored banners nor cloth merchants.

Bostric shivered as we passed Mathilde, older but still blond, if
plump, and bulging out of unwashed brown trousers and a tattered and
open cloth coat.  The flowers in her pots were already wilting within
from the chaos contained in her blood.  No evil there, just honest
disorder.

For all Bostric's shivers, I would have bedded a dozen Mathildes sooner
than any of the ladies on the Street of Harlots.  The deeper I looked
at Fenard, the less I liked it.  But would that have been true in any
place where I stayed long enough to really look?

I didn't know.

What I knew for certain was that the cloth merchants hadn't arrived,
and that I had no intentions of going anywhere near that narrow street
again.  '

XLVIII

CLING.

"Wonder who it is?"  mumbled Destrin.

I looked at Bostric.  He stood there, plane in hand.  I looked at him
hard and he jumped, setting down the tool and hastening to the door.

Despite the late spring warmth in the air outside, Destrin had the
window closed, a low fire in the hearth, and an old and raveled sweater
on under his apron as he worked on yet another tavern bench.

The work was going well enough, but every time I patted myself on the
back, it seemed like something like the stable flood occurred.  Regular
storms I couldn't attribute to disorder or Antonin.  Even after my
experience an eight-day earlier in the Street of Harlots, I couldn't
blame the weather on Antonin, and that was the problem.  How could I
separate what belonged to Fenard from whatever the chaos-master was
weaving?

The other problem was that there wasn't all that much I knew how to do
in working with order.  Yes, I could provide support for Destrin,
reinforce Bostric's basic goodness, and help a few good souls resist
the twists of chaos sent forth by whoever was sending them forth.  But
beyond that?  I shook my head slowly.

"You all right, Lerris?"  Destrin bent toward me.

"I'm fine."  And I was.  Winter had departed, and I enjoyed the spring,
watching Deirdre, and visiting the market.  I just didn't enjoy the
heat in the shop.

Wiping my forehead, I studied the grain of the white oak, asking myself
again why I had agreed to do a writing desk.  Without Dorman's faded
plan book, I would have been in even bigger trouble.  Even so, it took
all of my concentration to visualize the desk, to mentally draw the
pieces from where they lay buried in the wood, and try to fit them
together.

That sort of mental exercise helped, not only in Grafting, but somehow
in beginning to understand more of The Basis of Order.  I had read and
re-read the slim volume, and half of it was still unclear.  As was the
desk for Dalta, Brettel's daughter, the desk he wanted as a wedding
gift.  That made the third piece he had commissioned, far more than he
needed to do even as a friend of Destrin's.  Dalta would have an
entirely furnished house before long, and she wasn't even betrothed!

"Here, scr."  Bostric handed a fiat envelope to Destrin, then returned
to smoothing the kitchen table we had roughed out together.

I knew I was forcing the red-haired youth, even more than Sardit had
forced me, but how much time I had I didn't know, certainly not enough,
however long it might be, to carry him through a full apprenticeship.
Already his touch was defter than that of Destrin, and while Deirdre
was older than Bostric, a few years was not insurmountable, and he was
kind enough at heart.

I repressed a sigh.  How had I gotten into this mess?

"Lerris!"

I glanced up.  Destrin had paled.  "Accuff .. . accuu .. ."  He grasped
for the bench.

Bostric looked to me.

"Just get the line right," I told him as I walked around the end of the
bench.

"Look at this."  Destrin rasped, thrusting the heavy paper at me.

I glanced over the announcement.

Be it noted that the Prefect must maintain the defenses of the Kingdom
of Gallos against the growing threat of invasion by the Autarch of
Kyphros, and be it noted that Gallos must combat the unrest in the
smaller eastern principalities of Candar caused by the actions of Black
Recluce.  These demands on the Treasury require an increase in the
quarterly levy.

That was the standard language.  Underneath, a different hand had
penned in darker ink, "Destrin the Woodcrafter, quarterly levy, five
golds."

Originally, the tax bill had showed three golds, but the three had been
crossed out and the five written above it.  The change bore the initial
"J."  A heavy blue-waxed seal had been affixed at the bottom.  "..  .
can meet the first one .. . but we won't eat much but barley soup.
There is no way I can make the second one, even at year-end.  We can't
afford the wood for the holiday buyers if I have to pay five golds."
Destrin leaned against his bench, his breath coming more quickly.

Looking at the thin man, I could see the distress.  His system was
wasting away, bit by bit, even with the order-strength I had quietly
added to his wasting frame.  I didn't know enough to stop the
degeneration, only to give him energy and keep it at bay.

"We'll find a way," I assured him, keeping my voice confident, even as
I wondered how.

"But .. . how?"  The old crafter gulped for air.  "..  . Accuuu .. .
accc .. aa ccc ..."

"We'll find a way."  I looked back at my workbench and the white oak.
"Starting with the desk for Brettel."  I wondered, though.  Just as the
shop was beginning to rise significantly above the expenses, the levy
went up.  The last levy had only been a gold and five silvers.  It had
been doubled, and then someone had added another two golds-scarcely
coincidental, I felt, but who was I to say?

Who set and collected taxes went beyond my knowledge.

I was having enough trouble with wood crafting and trying to read and
learn The Basis of Order.

"You need something to drink after that," I added.  "Come on.  Let's
see what Deirdre has."

Destrin looked puzzled, as well he might, for I had not pushed him
quite so hard before; but his face had gone beyond pale into a grayish
shade, before I added just another trace of order to his struggling
heart and practically took all his weight-not that he was that heavy
any longer-as I helped him up the stairs.

"I'm ... all right .. ."

I didn't say anything as he leaned on me and crossed the room to his
favorite chair.

Her face calm, Deirdre had set down the cushion she was working on and
crossed the large room to meet us.  She said nothing, just looked from
Destrin, still clutching the tax bill in his clawed hands, to me.  Then
she went to the shelf and poured a mug of red berry as I eased Destrin
into the battered armchair.

As the old crafter sipped the juice, I nodded to Deirdre.  "I've got to
check Bostric," I explained as I left.  That much was true.  It had to
be.  The more I learned about order, the more fearful I was of
self-deception, knowing that I practiced it all too often anyway.

The other thing I was going to do was open the windows so Bostric and I
didn't die of heat poisoning.

XLIX

"CAPTAIN TORR MAN WANTS you to take the hill path and hold it against
the rebels," announces the messenger, spewing forth the words in one
long burst before taking a deep breath.  The squad leader looks at the
messenger.  "When?  Are we expecting the entire army of the Duke of
Hydlen to reinforce us?"  A bewildered expression crosses the
youngster's face.  "That was the order .. ."

The squad leader takes a slow and silent breath, then purses her lips.
The wind whips her short black hair away from her face, and the black
eyes turn full on the messenger.  "We have the message."

The youngster shrivels under the darkness of her gaze, then salutes.
"Will that be all, leader?"

"Tell Captain Torrman that we will accomplish his objective."

"What, leader?"

"Tell the captain that we will accomplish his objective."  Her soft
voice is even colder, and the bells that ring in it are the bells of a
funeral dirge.  "Provided he guards the southwest road to Gallos," she
adds.

"Provided he guards the southwest road to Gallos?"  The messenger
repeats the words.

"That is correct.  He must use the rest of his forces to hold the
southwest pass."

The messenger sits astride the pony, his mouth not quite hanging
open.

"That will be all," the officer adds.  "You may convey my reply to
Captain Torrman."

The messenger looks from the cold-eyed woman to the troopers behind
her.  One fingers a knife, and the messenger looks back to the
officer.

"That will be all," she repeats.

The messenger swallows and lifts the reins, then nudges the pony back
downhill.

The squad leader looks down at the valley to the north, then at the
folded square of the map she had needed and paid too much for, for all
that many others would have said she paid little indeed of true value.
She takes one breath, then another.  Despite the cold bath of the night
before last, she feels unclean, as if she had not bathed in weeks.  Her
hand touches the hilt of her blade.  Her head lifts, and she studies
the hills to the east.

The trooper beside the squad leader swallows as he watches his superior
study the map.  He edges his mount sideways toward another woman, a
blond woman with a pair of knives at her belt, the only other woman
trooper in the squad.

"She's not going to follow the captain's orders .. ."  he whispers.

"Look down there," returns the blond, gesturing at the roiling dust
rising from the road at the far end of the small valley they survey.
The packed figures of the soldiers are not visible, but both know they
are there.  "Would you?"

"Torrman's killed leaders for less .. ."

"All right .. ."  The woman wearing the leather officer's vest looks at
the two whispering subordinates, then urges her mount to the east, not
toward the hill path below, but along the ridge line.

"That's not where Torrman ordered us .. ."

The squad leader ignores the not-quite-whispered statement drifting up
from the third file as another trooper grabs the protester by the
tunic.  "..  . remember Gireo, you idiot .. ."

The swallowed gulp almost brings a smile to the blond woman's face, but
the squad leader's eyes remain fixed on the space between the hills.
"..  . don't like this .. ."  "..  . just shut up ..."  "..  .
Torrman's a mean bastard .. . gut the whole squad .. ."  "..  . she's
right.  Take the hill path, and you won't have any guts left for
Torrman .. ."  "... still don't like it .. ."  "... got any better
ideas?"

Even with all the mutterings, the squad follows the black-haired
officer as she picks her way toward the combination dam levee that
holds the irrigation water for the year's crops.  The heavy-set man,
the one who had gulped, looks from the hill road below to the
dust-cloud heralding the advance of the Freetown rebels.

The officer's eyes flicker from the dust-cloud at the northeastern end
of the narrow valley to the trail before her and to one of the
aqueducts that carry the water beyond the valley and toward the dry
steppes of Southern Kyphros.  One hand touches the thin
oilcloth-wrapped bundle behind her saddle, then strays toward the
second and heavier set of saddlebags.

The dust cloud has moved perhaps a third of the way across the valley,
another two kays, when the squad leader dismounts under the iron-bound
gates of the dam.  The cold iron reinforces every joint and every
red-oak timber, bracing the iron-hinged floodgates closed.

Above her and to the south rise the stone walls that contain the four
aqueduct channels.  An iron wheel rises above each tunnel, but each
wheel is locked in place with an iron bar and a double lock.  The locks
are each the size of a farmer's fist.

The squad leader shakes her head as she studies the floodgates and the
iron-bound timbers that hold them closed.  "..  . what .. ."  "..  .
shhh .. . knows what she's doing .. ."

Finally she retrieves an iron bar perhaps two-thirds the length of her
arm from the oilcloth-wrapped bundle behind her saddle, then a short,
rough-toothed bow saw.  She carries both with her as she again
approaches the water gates.

"The olive groves may suffer," she says to no one, "but if the aut arch
could do it, so can we."  After scanning the timbers, she begins to pry
the iron edging away from one.

Puzzled expressions cross several faces, but her squad remains mounted,
waiting.

As she pries the edging away from the wood and exposes the red beneath,
she halts.

"Kassein."

The heavy-set man dismounts, handing the reins to the blond woman.
"Yes, sher?"

"Take this saw.  Cut through this timber as far as you can- until the
saw begins to bind."

"Bind?"

"The wood will try to grab it."  She walks to another timber, and
begins to pry.

The blond trooper hands the reins of two horses to a third man,
dismounts, and walks up to the leader.  "I can do this better."

The squad leader nods and hands the pry bar to her.  "I'm going up on
top.  I'll leave the second saw.  Weaken as many as you can."  Five
quick steps carry her back to her mount.  "Darso, you stay here and
help with the sawing.  Altra and Ferl will stand guard, just in case.
Take turns with the saw."

"I'm not .. ."

"I know.  You're cavalry, not a carpenter.  But if you don't saw,
you'll be dead cavalry.  You can tie the horses to that root there."

Back in the saddle, she nods at the remaining five troopers, and all
six begin to pick their way along the slanting trail to the north,
round and toward the top of the dam.  . creeakkkk .. .

When she dismounts at the top of the dam and glances out toward the
west, the dust cloud has almost reached the middle of the valley. "Damn
.. ."  The saddlebags come off the horse, and she forces herself not to
show how heavy the bags are as she sets them down carefully, well back
from the lake.  She then loosens one set of buckles, easing the
wax-impregnated and oiled leather bag containing the heavy powder out
of the stiffer leather of one saddlebag.  The other saddlebag remains
closed.  With a deep breath, she lifts the waxy leather container and
walks out onto the flat stone bulwark that holds the iron hinges of the
floodgates, finally setting her burden down with exaggerated care.

Creaaakkkkkk .. .

The dark-haired woman studies the gates, trying to determine whether
they have begun to bulge or separate.  "How many have you got done?"
She leans over the stone wall.

"Five completed, maybe another five to go."

The officer looks at the water, lapping less than a cubit below the
overflow spillway, then at the gates.  Then she bends over the wall
again.  "Finish up the ones you're on, and mount up.  Follow us up
here."

"Those beams are solid ..."

"I know.  I know."  The woman with the still-untarnished silver
firebird on the collar of her green leather vest straightens up and
looks at the leather bag resting on the stone by her feet.

With a deep breath, she bends.

"One should be enough .. ."  She studies the dust cloud, and the
ant-like horses that lead the more than a thousand, renegade soldiers
thrown out by the new duke.

Clickedy .. . click .. .

Below, the five troopers scramble onto their mounts and guide the
horses along the narrow path the rest of the squad had taken earlier.

As the blond woman leads the remainder of the squad upward and toward
the top of the dam, the squad leader returns to her mount and extracts
a thin coil of waxed rope from her normal saddlebags.  She carries the
rope back to the dam, where she studies the dark-green water behind the
main floodgates.

In quick sure strokes, she cuts four equal lengths from the coil.  Two
she sets aside.  One remaining section she inserts through a plug in
the coated leather before tamping wax around the edges.  The second
section she ties to the neck of the bag.  Trying not to hurry, she
slowly lowers the bag into the water, paying the rope-around which the
fuse is threaded-out slowly, until the bag rests four cubits down.  She
ignores the puzzled looks from the mounted troops in the defile to the
north of the dam.

At last she ties the connecting rope to the nearest iron wheel, and
threads the second rope through the wheel as well.  After retrieving
the coil and the other two sections of rope and setting them on a
boulder beside where the blond woman now holds the reins to her mount,
she stops.

"All of you-back up and around that corner."

Not waiting to see if her orders are obeyed, she moves almost at a run
to the dam, where she studies the valley.  Should she wait?  The effect
would be greater.  But what if .. . ?  She shakes her head and eases
the striker from her belt.

Scrtcccc .. . click ...... hhsssttttt... A long spark leaps from the
striker to the loosely-threaded rope fuse, followed by a tongue of
flame licking its way toward the water and the bag of powder suspended
in the heavy green below.  "... devils .. . she carried that all the
way from Kyphrien?"

"One white wizard ... all that it would take to blow us all to hell ..
." "..  . demons protect their own .. ."

She sprints off the dike as fast as she can, throwing herself into the
saddle.  For the first time ever that her squad has seen, her booted
heels spur her mount.

Once behind the rocky ledge with the rest of the squad, she reins in
and waits .. . and waits.

"Hell!"

She turns the horse, starting to edge back toward the dam.

CRUUMMPPP .. . The blue-green water surges up perhaps three cubits
above the floodgates.

"Is that all?  .. ."

Creeeaakakkkkk .. . snnaaappp .. . SWUUUUUSHHHHH-HHHHHHHHHH..  .

As the gates buckle open, the spring's accumulated runoff gushes forth
down the narrow gorge, gaining speed as it drops the nearly one kay
toward the narrow valley floor.  "... gods have mercy .. ."  .  wheee
.. . eeehuunnn .. . "... easy .. . easy there .. ."  "... now .. . you
see why you never cross her .. ."

The black-eyed woman, whose eyes are now darker than the black of her
irises, nudges the horse forward to the stone wall, where she can watch
the wall of water sweeping down on the unprepared rebels.

At least one Kyphran banner flutters on the high ground where the
southwest road offers the only escape from the lake that the grassy
valley has become.

The olive groves will suffer, but the aut arch needs trained troops
more than olives.

THE DRAWING WAS simple enough-a wooden armchair, witr^ the five spokes
supporting a simple contoured back.  Dor-man's tools, old as some of
them were, were more than adequate for the job, and in adapting an old
Hamorian design in the faded book, I thought Bostric and I could
deliver the armchairs for less than Jirrle.  The dining set would have
meant bidding against Perlot.

"We can do it," I said quietly.

The glint of gold from the back of the shop told me that Deirdre was
watching from the darkness pooled at the bottom of the stairs that led
up to the family living quarters.  I almost sighed.  She was certainly
pretty enough, and willing, but .. . somehow .. . that would have been
poor repayment for Destrin.  I think both Deirdre and I knew what could
not be, not that either of us was totally happy about it.

"For eight golds or less?"  asked the crafter.  He still had on the
ratty sweater, and the rear window was open but a trace.

I wiped my forehead before answering.  "With what I have in the stable,
plus the logs-say four golds.  Five or six days' work over two weeks.
We bid ten."

"If you can do it, then I'll mark the bid," Destrin said slowly.  His
color remained grayish, despite all I had done.

I didn't like doing work for someone like a sub-prefect, especially in
Gallos, but steady as the income from the benches was, and despite
Brettel's commissions and the work from Wessel and Wryson, there
wouldn't be enough coin to meet the quarterly tax levies.  That left
only a few choices, like indenturing Deirdre to one of the local
gentry, or a work indenture for Destrin himself-not a personal
indenture, but that of all his output to the prefect or a local
merchant.  Destrin couldn't meet the terms of an indenture, and the
default would leave Deirdre penniless.  As for indenturing Deirdre- I
shivered at that.

Since the bids were publicly opened, Jirrle couldn't use whatever
influence he might have to change the award.

Even if we were successful, that only bought Destrin and Bostric time,
perhaps a year.  Unless the levy were reduced, the shop would have to
close.  But in a year, a great deal could happen.

As for me, a lot of questions about the prefect still remained
unanswered.  How could a ruler who opposed local corruption so fiercely
be so close to Antonin and his lady Sephya, who appeared to be nearly
as adept as the white wizard himself?

"You sure we can do this?"  Bostric asked yet again.  Sawdust stuck to
his forehead, glued in place by his sweat.  For once, there was no
mock-respect, no banter, and that told me that even he was worried.

I sighed.  Doing the work was getting to be the least of my problems

"Would anyone like some cold red berry  interrupted Deirdre.  "Allys
had a little ice left over."

I nodded, wiping my forehead again.

"I'll take mine without ice," Destrin whined.

"Ice, please," Bostric added.  "I need to cool off even more now."

Both Deirdre and I ignored his added comment.  Destrin hadn't heard
it.

Deirdre served me first, and I drained nearly all of it in one gulp,
trying to cool off from too much warmth in the shop.  Destrin was
always cold, and while I could take the cold, adapting to too much heat
was far harder.

Finally, I wiped my forehead again.  "I'm taking a walk."

Neither Destrin nor Bostric said a word.

"Will you be back by midday for dinner?"  asked Deirdre from the
stairs, where she had stopped.

"Probably.  I just need some fresh air and to think a while."

She nodded and was gone, her feet barely whispering up the steps.

After leaving the leather apron in my alcove and pulling on one of my
two plain shirts, I stepped out onto the street.

Left or right?  To the left lay the square.  I turned right, taking a
deep breath of the cooler outside air, avoiding a puddle that still
remained from the rain the night before.  The evening showers hadn't
been as bad as the ice and rain storm several days earlier, but for the
past eight-day late spring fogs had clouded the streets in the early
morning right after dawn.  Just as winter had been late in leaving, so
too spring had lingered.

Click .. . click .. . My boots rang on the stones as I ambled down the
street of jewelers and around the corner into the wider street where
the healers practiced.

Not all my time was spent in the shop, nor in cleaning the stable, nor
riding Gairloch, nor in obtaining the woods from Brettel for our work.
Besides my slow night-studies of order, and my cautious attempts at
applying them in small and hidden ways-like creating stronger glues by
working with the internal order of the broths-I also wandered through
the streets of Fenard, just somehow trying to understand why it felt
the way it did.

According to the book, feelings preceded understanding.  I hoped the
understanding didn't lag too much, because I was definitely having
worried feelings, particularly after having seen Antonin and Sephya
entering the prefect's palace.

Even recalling her gave me a chill, more so than seeing Antonin, or
feeling him brushing me aside ... or walking down the healers' lane.

Each healer had a different sign.

Rentfrew-Disease Casting.  That one was in white letters upon a red
background, over a doorway that radiated, to my senses, a dull
white-red.

I forced my feet not to cross to the other side of the pavement.

Clickedy .. . clack .. . clickedy ... A black horse pulled an
equally-black carriage away from an awning-covered doorway further up
the street, heading away from me.

Healing.  The letters were etched into white oak and painted green.  No
aura surrounded that doorway.  Either simple physical medicine with
herbs and the like, or a pretender-or both.

Another doorway bore only the sign of a snake twisted around a staff.
Why, I had no idea.

A woman wearing a heavy cloak and a broad-brimmed dark-leather hat with
a black veil glided from a doorway almost in front of me and back down
the slanting pavement toward the street of jewelers.  The odor of roses
upon roses told me more of what she was even than the sickness buried
within her- that disorder that had so wrenched my guts when first I had
sensed it in such profusion when Bostric had led me into the street of
harlots.  Since then I had noted it within a woman peddling combs in
the square, and even in a lady attached to one minister.

Supposedly, a high chaos-master could remove the disease, but the price
was reputed to be more than most women would pay.

I shook my head and kept walking.

"Love phil tres .. . love phil tres .. ."  hissed a voice from the
shadows, understandably enough, since street peddling outside the
square was forbidden.  The woman's face was thin, scarred on both
cheeks, and pock-marked.  The disorder within was worse, and I hastened
my steps.

Tenterra-Nature's Healer.  A guttered-out lamp, painted bright red,
swung idly in the breeze beneath the sign.  The doorway was banded in
cold iron and barred-a tacit announcement that chaos was barred from
Tenterra's.  So, of course, was order; but who would know?  "..  . love
phil tres .. ."  The words hissed up my spine even after I passed three
more closed doorways and reached the black awning.  The door underneath
was black oak, banded in black iron, and bore no name nor any sign.

I could feel nothing, either of chaos or order, and passed back onto
the far end of the jewelers' street where it curved around and led back
toward the avenue.  Even when you started in one direction in Fenard,
you could end up going somewhere else.

Did I want to pass by the palace gardens?  I shrugged.  Even my simple
shirt felt clinging and warm as the sun struggled to break through the
low clouds that had been fog at dawn.

Two guards, one by each side of the gate, each bearing a halberd in
addition to a short sword, watched as I walked toward them.  If I
looked to my right, I could see the green leaves of spring just barely
blurring the outlines of the oak and maple branches extending above the
stones of the wall.  On the other side of the avenue were the grand
town homes of the ministers.

"You!  What are you doing here?"  The nearer guard lowered the halberd
slightly, as if in threat.

"Just taking a morning walk."

"Not for the likes of you," he growled.

As I drew nearer, slowing and stopping, I could feel the incredible
sense of chaos that enveloped him.  Yet beneath that disorder was a
kernel of something else, as if the disorder had been dropped upon him,
and he had been too weak to resist, but too strong to surrender
totally.

Without thinking, I reached out and strengthened his basic honesty and
order, letting it push away the chaos as I stood there.  "You're right.
I'll be going."  As I left him standing there, I could sense the honest
confusion as he tried to recover himself.

Click .. . dick .. . The sound of my heels on the polished stones of
the street before the ministers' houses echoed loudly in my ears.  "..
. who was that?"  whispered the second guard.

Clink .. . clink .. . The sound of horses and mounted men rebounded
from behind me, and I stepped as close to the side of the street as I
could, looking back over my shoulder.  A troop of fresh cavalry rode in
my direction.  Standing aside in the shadows that had begun to appear
as the sun burned off the last of the morning fog, I watched.

The standard-bearer, younger than me, borne by a chestnut, passed by
with an impassive face and a reek of chaos, a reeking disorder only
compounded by the armed men who followed.

Clink .. . clickedy, click, click .. . clink .. .

As I leaned back against the brick wall of an unknown house, I slowly
gathered my near-shredded senses back into myself, marveling at the
array of chaos-energy expended on the troop.  Marveling-and suppressing
the urge to retch.

Antonin and Sephya-it had to have been their work.

Why I didn't know, but Antonin's hands were on it as surely as though
he had signed the city the way Uncle Sardit signed a chest with his
maker's mark.

With the horses safely past, I eased my steps back toward Destrin's.
Had I been unwise in helping the guard struggle against unwanted chaos?
Probably.  Would I have done it again?  Had there really been a
choice?

I tried not to shrug as the sun ducked behind another cloud and the
shadows faded into gray again.

LI

PATTERNS-THERE ARE patterns everywhere.  That was what the book said,
and what everyone had tried to point out to me.  Just by creating ice
crystals too small to see, some of the Masters of Recluce had started a
change in climate that prostrated the Duchy of Freetown.

People create patterns, too, and by becoming Destrin's journeyman, my
presence was changing the patterns in Fenard.  How much the order I had
added changed things .. . who could tell?

Before I rode Gairloch out to the mill to check the available black oak
for the sub-prefect's chairs, I made sure to cross the market square,
stopping to buy a biscuit, nodding to the few people I recognized or
thought I recognized, and listening, always listening.

The high clouds were hazy and gray, yet the day was humid, almost
steamy, and sweat dripped from my forehead.  The late and short spring
was turning to summer.

The market looked the same as always, a scattering of small stalls,
carts, and merchandise strewn across the open expanse of granite, all
of it able to be moved at day's end when the sweepers pushed through
their brooms and refuse carts and the open space returned to a
cavernous granite-walled emptiness.

The prefect was bright, or his advisers were.  Half a silver a day was
what it cost to use the market if you had a stall, a penny if you could
carry your wares on your back.  For that you got guards posted at each
street departing the plaza and guards who patrolled in leather vests
with clubs.  You also got some guards who looked like merchants and
hangers-on.  If you couldn't fit your goods in a single stall, you had
to find a permanent store or sell to someone who had one.

A fair trade, all in all.  Sellers got a place relatively free from
theft and graft.  The prefect got revenue and information, particularly
since his open market was one of the few in Eastern Candar exempt from
major corruption.  Reputedly the aut arch markets were better, but the
prefect's border posts supposedly confiscated anything coming from the
south without the prefect's authorization.

I hesitated as I neared the fountain.  "..  . did you see the golden
coach?"  "..  . came through the west gate, as if it had come from
below the Westhorns"

The second speaker was Mathilde, the plump blond flower lady whose
flowers seldom lasted more than two days.  People with chaos in their
blood should never handle living things, yet they seem to enjoy plants
and pets and delight in gossip.  She bulged out of a long tunic and
stretched the seams of her faded purple trousers.  Unwashed and gnarled
toes protruded from her battered sandals.

"Probably some retainer of the prefect's," I offered gratuitously.

"It couldn't have been.  There were two armed guards and a blood-red
banner on the coach staff.  The prefect doesn't allow mounted armed
guards inside the city gates, saving his own."

"Maybe they forgot .. ."

"Young fellow, are you trying to provoke me?"

I grinned at the flower seller.  "Just trying to be charitable to the
poor guards that had to chase their boss across the countryside."

"Poor guards, my trousers!  That coach was worth a fortune, and the
geldings that carried those guards were a matched pair.  And I saw a
veiled woman in that coach, the kind they sell in Hamor only to the
wealthiest of landowners.  Not only that, but the coach was of wood and
leather, without a scrap of iron .. ."

I shrugged.  "Some chaos-wizard, then, on his way to help the new Duke
of Freetown.  That's where everyone is headed to make their fortune. He
just stopped to pay his respects to the prefect."

"Wrong again!"  cackled Mathilde.  "The coach is stabled at the
prefect's palace."

"Why does the prefect need a chaos-wizard?"  asked the peddler, as she
unpacked and placed her crooked pots on the ledge by the dry fountain
that had not worked since before I came to Fenard.

"The rumor is Kyphrien .. ."  hissed Mathilde.

Kyphrien?  I almost stopped then and there.  Instead I looked at a
particularly crooked pot, so ugly I could never have been tempted to
buy it.  "Kyphrien?  The aut arch

"Why not?"  asked Mathilde.  "The prefect and the aut arch aren't
friends."

I nodded and put down the pot, well-aware that the ragged man edging up
to look at the other pots on the lower step of the fountain was some
sort of spy for the prefect, and a chaos-tainted one at that.  "Do you
think the aut arch is planning something?"

Mathilde saw the ragged man in the tattered brown leathers that were a
shade too clean and shrugged.  "Who knows what rulers plan?  I just
sell flowers, like you work wood."

Looking at the flowers mock-regretfully, I grinned falsely.  "I'd buy
some, but I'd better get to the mill."

"You still supporting that broken-down crafter?  Why don't you open
your own shop?"

"I'd have little without him.  Someday .. ."

"Oh .. . it's the golden-haired daughter .. . you want it all, you
schemer ."  She leered at me, and the pot peddler looked at us both as
if we were crazy, while the ragged spy looked at no one.

Listening again, I stepped down from the fountain and headed toward
Fair Road.  "..  . never see better-cured leather west of Recluce .. ."
"..  . only half a silver for this, scabbard and all .. ."

"Fresh yams!  Fresh yams!"

Wiping my dripping forehead with the back of my short-sleeved working
tunic, I saw another man in ragged leathers, not following me, but
watching the arms merchant and noting the blades.  "..  . the finest in
worked steel .. . flexible enough .. . sharp enough to cut a spider's
web .. ."  "..  . finest Hamorian cotton .. . cool to wear .. . the
finest in cotton ."

"Winter-saved apples, order-spelled and ready to eat .. ."

I shook my head at the fruit vendor's outrageous claim.  Winter-saved
apples they might be, and even kept in the coolest of root cellars, but
order-spelling fruit took more effort than any order-master in his
right mind would ever want to do-unless you were talking about killing
off the vermin, and cool water and care did almost as well.  "... a
half-copper for a tale of adventure!  A song of joy ..."

A thin woman in rags lingered around the minstrel's corner.  Her
muscles were too heavy and her skin too smooth for her to be the beggar
she played.

I did not shake my head this time, but I wondered what the aut arch
wanted to know, and why Kyphrien was important.

At the iron gates to the market square, gates which were rusted open, I
suspected, three guards watched the road and the passers-by.  Two in
leathers, with their clubs and blades- and one posing as a stonemason's
helper.  The mason was restoring a damaged arch leading into a leather
shop.

The shops on that unnamed street I never frequented, not with my
limited funds and disinterest in pure luxury.

My feet carried me automatically toward the turn leading back to the
alley behind Destrin's and the stable.  Gairloch needed the exercise,
and Brettel's mill was far enough to make it better for both of us if I
rode.

Another reason for Destrin's problems-the shop he had taken over from
his father had catered to the personal needs of merchants and their
ladies, supplying a level of Grafting Destrin could not match.
Destrin's rough benches and chairs belonged in the trade quarter, but
he refused to move from the once-proud house and shop.

Again, I thought about the bid on the chairs for the sub-prefect,
wondering if it had been a good idea, even though I could see no other
alternative.

Gairloch could tell I was worried, and he danced around a lot as I
saddled him.

"Settle down!"  I finally snapped.  And he did.

I kept thinking about the bid on the chairs.

Compared to the work that would be involved in completing the
sub-prefect's chairs, getting the bid for them had not been all that
hard.  Destrin had signed the paper, and I put it in the envelope. Then
we all had gathered on the steps of the sub-prefect's house the next
morning.

"For a bid of ten golds, the commission on the five matched chairs is
let to Destrin the woodworker."

"What?"  Jirrle had been on his feet, his face purpling.  But a younger
man, with similar features, hauled him back down.

"Bids were also received from Jirrle, the wood crafter and from Rasten.
If the chairs are defective, the bidder will pay a default fee of one
gold and the second bidder will be awarded the commission."

I had winced at that, not that I expected the quality to be inadequate,
but was that phrase merely a way to get out of the contract?  I shook
my head, not knowing what exactly I would do if that were the case.

Although Brettel's mill was nearly a kay farther down than anyone
else's, he offered better prices, at least to me.  He also knew what
was happening.  Few of the other crafters talked to me, for I was only
a journeyman working for an excuse for a wood crafter

"Lerris!  What now?  Some seconds on green oak?  Perhaps some red oak
limbs?"

"Actually, I was looking for something else .. . green oak twigs for
baskets!"

Brettel shook his white-and-silver thatch.  "That bad, now?"

I raised my shoulders.  "Black oak."

"So .. . the rumor was true.  You did underbid Jirrle and Rasten on
that chair set.  Jirrle was livid.  He said that Destrin couldn't make
one straight spoke, let alone enough for a single chair.  I agreed."
Then the mill-master grinned.  "I didn't tell him that his journeyman
was probably going to do it all."

"Me?  A broken-down excuse for a woodworker?"

"Is that what he called you?"

"Not to my face .. ."

Brettel's face dropped the joviality.  "Black oak's expensive,
Lerris."

"I know.  We can cover it, and what choice is there?"

"Didn't the tavern benches help?  Those were better than anything
Hefton ever turned out."

"They helped, but the quarterly assessment is coming due."

"Deirdre?"

"Unless we can deliver on the benches .. ."

Brettel shook his head.  "Old Dorman feared this, but what else could
he do?"

I shrugged.  "I owe him something."

"What if the prefect finds out you're a craft-master?"

"Brettel.  I'm scarcely a master.  I never even technically finished my
journeyman training .. ."

Brettel's eyebrows raised, and I realized my mistake.  "..  . but
there's no requirement in Fenard for guild certification .. ."  "..  .
so that's why you chose Destrin .. ."

"I had a problem with the master crafter .. ."

The mill-master nodded to himself, as if I had cleared up a minor
mystery.  "What do you need?"

"Black oak.  I'd like to look at the logs."

Brettel frowned again, but I couldn't help it.  I needed to see the
wood before it was shaped.  We couldn't afford any wastage.

He turned and headed toward the racks at the back of the brick
stacking-warehouse.

I followed, glancing around and noting again how orderly Brettel kept
his milled timbers and planks.

"Here you are.  Graded in size down.  The ones with the two red grease
slashes are a gold per log, the single reds are five silvers, the blues
are two silvers, and the yellows are one silver."

I'd figured it out already, how to use the heartwood for the spokes and
braces and the wood around the heart for the backing and seat plates.
Now all I had to do was find four logs that met the measurements.

"How much more if I ask for the cuts?"

Brettel shrugged.  "Nothing, if you stay and they're normal straight
runs through the saw."

I began checking the blue logs, sensing them as well as looking, but
only two were right, and that meant I needed two reds.

After a time, I pointed.  "These two, and this one."

"I'll give you the bigger one there for five silvers."

I stared again, all too aware of my double sight as I studied the log
Brettel had fingered.  On the outside it looked generous, but the
heartwood was not old and hard and dense, even brittle, but soft and
spongy.  When you bought black oak, you were paying a premium for the
heartwood, so dense it rarely decayed, and so tough that the best in
edged steel was barely good enough to cut and shape it.

"That's not quite right," I told Brettel.

"It's fine," the mill-master insisted.

I shrugged.  "It's not what Destrin needs.  Either this one-" I pointed
to the smaller log to the right "-or that one."

Brettel raised his shoulders, obviously thinking I was crazy, turning
down the larger prime log for the smaller ones.  "Then it's still five
silvers each for the two single reds."

"That's what I'll need."

Brettel didn't quite shake his head as he greased the stump end of the
four trunks with Destrin's mark, a large "D" with a half-circle over
the top of the letter.  "Who's paying?"

"I'll take care of it."  I had the coins in my belt.  While Brettel was
honest, he wasn't about to cut black oak on my word.  I scrambled
around to come up with the coins.

He checked them with the cold iron, just out of habit.  "You want to do
the cuts now?"

"If you can."

"Things are slow today.  With that wizard at the palace, people aren't
working.  They're all afraid to do anything."  He trundled a work cart
to the log pile, then unstrapped the log clamps.

"They were talking about some coach in the market .. ."

"Antonin's, I'd bet.  He's often here to meet with Gollard."

"Gollard?"

"The prefect."

"Does that have to do with Kyphros?"  I wondered how I could help
Brettel with the heavy log.

"Gollard .. . wanted .. . the sulfur springs back ... in the Little
Easthorns."  In between words, with the aid of a steel bar and the
clamps, singlehandedly the mill-master had levered the first log onto
the cart.

"Can I help?"

"Just .. . get ... in the way."

"Sounds like he wanted to make more gunpowder."  Why, I couldn't see,
since anyone with the slightest hint of chaos-ability could set the
devil's brew off from a distance.

"Who .. . knows .. ."  Brettel was working on the third log.  "The aut
arch cavalry .. . carved up ... Gollard's .. . elite troop.  With raw
recruits.  Some wench .. . killed .. . his son-in-law."  Brettel
stopped and grinned.  "Not a few people cheered that."

I shook my head.  After all my time in Fenard, I still didn't know why
the prefect and the aut arch were at each other's throats.  "Why?"  I
asked.

"Why what?"  Brettel handled the last small log as if it were a
toothpick.  I doubted that I could have even moved it.

"Why are they fighting?  The aut arch and the prefect, I mean?"

Brettel strapped the logs onto the cart before answering.  "Rumor has
it that her mother was a wizard's daughter-"

My mouth nearly dropped.  I had assumed the aut arch was a man.  "-And
that the mother used her wiles to split off what used to be Gallos
south of the Little Easthorns.  Then the mother conquered old Analeria
after the prince died.  The daughter took over a few years ago and
added parts of the West-horns that Hydlen claimed, but never really
ruled.  Gollard figured, in his best guess, that the daughter wasn't a
wizard.  So he tried to retake Kyphros.

"He almost made it.  Broke her army and the cavalry, but the peasants
rose and burned their fields and opened the dikes.  The cavalry
couldn't maneuver in the mud, and some mistakes were made.  No one was
clear how, but instead of a victory, Gollard lost half his army and
most of his officers.

"The aut arch started recruiting women, the best she could find."
Brettel shrugged.  "Now Gollard's troops usually lose, but the aut arch
never enters his territory."

By now, we were approaching the saw; the belts leading from the
waterwheel were motionless.

"What cuts?"

Taking the grease pencil, I outlined what I had in mind with each of
the logs.

"Should have thought of that myself."  Brettel pursed his lips.  "Need
to set this up.  I can make these and deliver the planks and those
square sections late this afternoon."

"That would be fine."  I took the hint, and walked back to where I had
tied Gairloch while Brettel began to set up the saw.

Wheee .. . eeee .. .

"All right."  I patted him on the shoulder and pushed his nose away
from my pockets, which were empty.

Kyphros versus Gallos-order versus chaos?  Or was it that simple? Woman
versus man?  The more I found out, the less I knew, and I suspected I
was far from the first man to realize that.

"Come on."  I mounted my shaggy beast and flicked the reins.  "Come
on."

Whheee .. . eeeee .. .

"All right," I said again.

So we halted by the bottom of the millrace for him to get a drink of
the cold water, and I even stopped by the granary and bought a small
sack of feed for Gairloch.

LII

AFTER GETTING THE bid for the sub-prefect's chairs, and after getting
exactly the lumber I wanted from Brettel with a bit extra thrown in for
no extra cost, we still had to actually craft the chairs.

Besides worrying about the actual work, I worried about a lot of other
things.  I worried that Destrin would get sicker and die.  I worried
that Bostric would slip with the plane, or that I would get careless.

I worried that Jirrle would somehow find a way to attack me.  I worried
that Antonin would find out exactly who and where I was and attack.
Even though I ate, I felt harried and thinner.

"You look tired," Deirdre told me.

Since I felt tired, I probably looked that way as well.

Every night I set wards on the shop, but I wasn't sure what good they
would do, and I kept my staff close to my bed.

I used my senses to keep studying the wood each step of the way,
checking to make sure that no hidden cracks or stresses would erupt to
mar the wood or the finish.  When I found two, both Bostric and Destrin
thought I was crazy for refusing to use sections of what appeared to be
perfectly good wood.

"It's good wood, Lerris."

"Not good enough.  It's flawed."

"How?  Where?"

"It just is."  How could I explain without letting them know I was a
beginning order-master?

"If the honored craft-master who claims he is only a journeyman says
so, it must be so."

What bothered me most about Bostric's flip comment was that he and
Destrin both looked at each other, nodded, and didn't say anything
more.

I groused and I growled, and even Deirdre stepped away from me at
dinner and supper.

Not only did I do the smooth finish myself, I even worked with the
varnishes until I had what not only looked right, but felt right all
the way through.  Then I spent time steeping the chairs in order,
reinforcing their strength with order and more order, until chaos
itself might have had a hard time sitting in them.

We got all five chairs done.  And done well.

Brettel lent us his cart and Gairloch even pulled it, with more than a
few protests, to the same front steps of the sub-prefect's house.

I hadn't planned on the welcoming committee.  Not only was a scowling
Jirrle there, but Perlot stood at the back, as did other crafters I did
not know.

The sub-prefect was not there, but a thin man in a uniform, some sort
of functionary, was.

First they had us line up the chairs side by side on the granite
paving-blocks.  In the morning light, the officer stared and scowled.
He looked under the chairs.  He studied the joins, the finish.  He
compared each chair with every other chair.  He ran his fingers over
every exposed surface.

Bostric, standing beside me, began to sweat, even though the day was
overcast and the heat of the late summer day had not yet arrived.

I pursed my lips, knowing that the inspection was far from normal.

The one reassurance was Perlot's presence.  With each inspection, with
each frown by the officer and each accompanying scowl by Jirrle,
Perlot's faint smile became more pronounced.

Finally, the officer turned to me.  "The chairs seem acceptable."  He
pulled out a long paper and a servant proffered a pen.  "Put your mark
at the bottom."

I read the paper, but all it said was that the sub-prefect had accepted
five chairs for the sum of ten golds.  So I signed on behalf of
Destrin, copying his mark as well for good measure.

The officer's eyebrows raised, but he said nothing.

Jirrle edged forward to look at the chairs, finally shaking his head
and looking at me.  For a long time, it seemed, his eyes rested upon
me.  I just waited for the coins, which arrived in a leather pouch.

Although I could tell they were good, I checked each against the steel
of my dagger, since no tradesman would have done otherwise.  The
officer nodded, as if to himself, and seemed reassured.

Jirrle looked back at the chairs, then at me, before walking back
toward the avenue.

The other crafter I did not know also stepped up to the chairs.  Unlike
Jirrle, he stepped up to me.  "Good work."  He nodded pleasantly, and
his whole manner inside and out was honest, even if there were traces
of chagrin beneath.

As the officer's servants began to carry the chairs inside, the officer
sniffed down his nose.  "That is all, tradespeople."

I inclined my head.  "Thank you."

He ignored me and turned.

"Damned fine work there," rasped another voice.  Perlot stood by the
cart traces.

Whheeee .. . eeee .. . Gairloch wanted out of the traces the sooner the
better.  Bostric looked at the pony nervously, then back to me.

"Thank you."

"No.  I mean it.  Sedennial was trying to find a reason not to accept
them, and he couldn't."

I'd thought the same, but the chairs were good.  They should have been.
I'd sweated enough over them.

"You underbid them-more than just a little, given the quality."  The
craft-master's voice was wry.

"Master Jirrle seemed upset ..."  I observed in a neutral voice,
checking the cart harness.

"He was, but he'll get over it.  Good day, Lerris."

Perlot smiled briefly, and stepped out into the lane with his quick
short steps, looking pleased with the world as he left us with a
restless mountain pony and an empty cart.  Most important, we had ten
golds, five of which could go toward the quarterly levies.

"What do we do now?"  asked Bostric, wiping his forehead.

"We get out of here before they tell us to, and we find some more work
to do.  Hopefully, something that you can do more of."

Bostric swallowed.  "I can't do things that good."

"Not yet.  That doesn't mean you can't learn."  I led Gairloch around
to get the cart facing toward the avenue, then climbed onto the hard
board seat.  "Come on."

Bostric scrambled up next to me, and we headed out to return him to the
shop and the cart to Brettel.

LIII

A FACE IN the window caught my eye.  What was Perlot doing at the shop?
Destrin was upstairs resting, and technically it wasn't my place to
meet with another craft-master.

Setting down the plane, I crossed the room, sniffing at the smell of
barley soup drifting down the stairs.  We had eaten earlier, but
Destrin had not, and Deirdre was probably feeding her father a late
noon meal.

Bostric looked up.

"Keep at it," I told him.  "And think about where the grains will
meet."

"It's just a tavern bench.  But I heed the words of wisdom."  I just
looked at him until he began to check the lines of the grain.

Perlot had stepped inside the shop doorway, and stood waiting.  He wore
his working leathers, but he had pulled on a rough shirt and a vest.

"I apologize, craft-master.  Destrin is not available at the moment." I
inclined my head.

"No apologies needed,.  Lerris.  Several of us are gathering at the Tap
Inn after the day ends.  I was hoping you could join us.  Your
apprentice would be welcome to sit with Grizzard and the others."

I kept my mouth in place.  The invitation was serious, and, in effect,
an announcement that the other crafters had accepted me.  Had that been
Brettel's doing?  "I thank you, and would be honored."

Perlot smiled faintly.  "I think we're the ones who are honored.
Destrin is fortunate to have found you.  Until tonight."  He nodded and
was gone.

Only after he had gone did I sigh.  Perlot himself had crossed the town
and the square to invite me.  Maybe, just maybe, my plans might have a
chance of working out.

Bostric glanced up from the bench as I walked back, his bushy red
eyebrows lifted.

"We've been asked to join the other crafters for a drink after work."

Bostric just nodded, as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
For him, perhaps, it was.  I had encouraged him to spend his free time
with the other apprentices, knowing that, if my hopes were fulfilled,
he would need the contacts in the years to come.

Picking up the plane, I studied the internal framework of the chest for
a long time, knowing that something was not quite right.  How long it
took, I didn't know, but I finally ended up planing and readjusting one
of the drawer supports for the second drawer.  From there it got
easier, as I entered the flow of the wood and the design.  Part of the
problem was that the design was an adaptation of one of Dorman's plans,
and even partly original pieces were much tougher.

"Lerris .. . ?"

I shook my head, realizing more time had passed than I realized.

"Yes?"

"Hadmit has closed," Bostric noted tactfully.

The jeweler stayed open later than anyone else.  I began racking the
tools, noting that Bostric had already been quietly putting away
Destrin's tools.

Before long, I had told Deirdre that we were leaving; and we had washed
up and were striding across the square.  The only thing that bothered
me was that I knew I'd have to clean Gairloch's stall when I returned,
as well as get up early in the morning to ride him.

Clink .. . dink .. .

We had to hug the edge of the mill street on the other side of the
square as a troop of the prefect's cavalry rode in toward their
barracks.  Three of the horses at the end were riderless, and a dark
splotch stained the leather of the last empty saddle.

The stink of sweat and blood hung over the riders like fog, not
obscuring the taint of chaos that also clung to them and to the sabers
they bore.  To my senses, the blades shimmered like dull-red embers.

Clink, clink .. . clink .. .

"Make way .. . make way .. ."  .  clink .. . clink .. .

Neither prisoners nor bodies trailed the empty horses.

Looking at Bostric once the cavalry passed, I shook my head.  "Bad
news."

He nodded, and we kept walking.

The Tap Inn had not changed.  Even without a fire in the front hearth,
the main room was smoky, as acrid as before.

"Lerris!"  Perlot had been waiting, and I hurried over, leaving Bostric
to his own devices.

"Sorry.  We worked a shade late, and then we had to wait for the
prefect's troops."

Perlot gestured around the table.  "This is Jirrle, his son Deryl,
Rasten, and Ferralt.  Usually, Hertol is here."  He put a hand on my
shoulder.  "This is Lerris, who has decided to follow Dorman's
tradition and give me a run for my money, or would if he hadn't decided
to make children's furniture better than regular pieces."

They all chuckled at that, and Perlot pulled out a chair.  "What will
you have, Lerris?"

I had to grin sheepishly.  "Just red berry mast-"

"Just Perlot, Lerris.  Just Perlot."

"What's this about troops?"  asked Deryl.

I shrugged.  "Don't know, but about a score of cavalry rode back in.
They lost, it looked like.  Empty saddles, and no prisoners, and they
looked tired.  Some of the horses ..."  I shook my head.

"Hell .. ."  muttered the man at the far side of the round table. "He's
out squabbling with the aut arch again."

The same thin girl with the scar across her face appeared next to
Perlot.  Her face was still thin, but a bulge below her apron indicated
she had been more than merely flirting with someone.  "What else,
masters?"

"Redberry for Lerris, here, and I'll have another beer."  The
craft-master handed her his heavy empty mug.  "..  . the aut arch
already proved, after the way they dispatched those rebels from
Freetown .. ."

"I take it that the prefect should avoid trouble with Kyphros?"  I
asked politely.

Jirrle cleared his throat.  "Gallos has a proud history, and the aut
arch should honor that history and the natural geography .. ."

"What he means," added the balding Ferralt with a grin, "is that the
prefect wants old Gallos back, as well as some other territory .. ."

"Ferralt!"  snapped the older man.  "I said what I meant."

"He's on the prefect's advisory council .. ."  whispered Perlot.

"Are all the aut arch soldiers women?"  I asked.

"Hell no," added Deryl, setting his mug on the table with a thump.
"Just the best ones."

Thunk!  Thunk!

"Here's the red stuff and the beer.  Two, please."

I handed two coppers to the woman.  Perlot looked surprised, but did
not protest.

"Women soldiers are uncivilized," added Rasten.

"What he means," explained Ferralt, "is that they only fight when they
know they can win."

"Like that one Torrman was complaining about?"

"The black-haired one the aut arch promoted over his cousin?"

I swallowed a deep pull of the red berry  "Could someone explain?"

Rasten glared at Ferralt, who grinned.  Finally, Ferralt shrugged.
"Torrman is married to my sister.  His cousin is also Torrman, except
he took service with the aut arch because the former prefect-that's a
long story.  Anyway, the younger Torrman was in line to be
sub-commander, except a new squad captain pulled some stunt with water
and wiped out the Freetown rebels without a single casualty.

"The aut arch promoted her instead.  Torrman challenged her to a duel,
and the bitch made him look silly.  So he played dirty and threw
something in her eyes.  That didn't stop her.  Instead she took off his
sword hand-blind, he swears.  The aut arch gave him a pension-and a
warning."

"You believe that?"  I asked.  I did, but I wanted to know whether
Ferralt had something else in mind.

"It's true," interrupted Jirrle.  "The bitch is from Recluce.  The aut
arch damnable bitch as well, doesn't care.  She only cares if her
troops are the best."

A momentary silence dropped over the table.

"Lerris, what brought you here?"  asked Perlot, almost desperately.

"Recluce, I'd have to say."  I took a sip from the mug, trying to
figure out how to tell the truth without being deceptive myself.  "As I
told Perlot here," -I gestured to the crafter-"after leaving my
apprenticeship, I was trying to make my way in Freetown, when the old
duke ran afoul of Recluce.  The rains came and turned the meadows to
swamps.  The clouds never left, and then the duke was dead, and wizards
were running all over the place."  I winced inside at the slight
exaggeration.  "So I took what I had and got a pony and left."

"Why did you come so far, and where were you from?"  asked Jirrle.

I shrugged.  "As I told Destrin, I'm technically only an apprentice.  I
don't have any guild certification.  Hrisbarg was too small to support
another crafter, and," I raised my eyebrows, "have you seen Hewlett and
Montgren?"

That brought a chuckle from everyone but Jirrle, and I continued before
he could ask me again where I was from.  "As for Jellico, you can't
walk the streets without a permit and a seal.  So what could a poor
apprentice woodworker do?  What would you have done?"  I addressed the
question to Deryl.

"I guess I would have come to Fenard, just like you did.  How did you
get across the Easthorns?"

"It wasn't easy.  It was cold, because I couldn't afford to stay in the
inns there."  And I couldn't, but not for reasons of cost.  Still, the
misrepresentation hurt.  "The heavy snows hadn't fallen, but I had to
wait until a caravan cleared one snowfall from the road.  I was afraid
poor Gairloch would be skin and bones by the time we got to Passera."

"How did you get into Jellico?"  asked Rasten.

"Anything else around here?"  asked the serving-girl.

"Nothing for me," said Perlot.

"Nor me," I added.

"Another mug."

"Me too."

"Not here."

"I was lucky, ran into a healer, and traveled with him for a while, but
he had business in Jellico."

Jirrle frowned, even as he sipped from the heavy brown mug.

"Where did you get that design for the chair you did for Wryson?" asked
Perlot quickly.

I looked through Dorman's plan book, then just made some changes to
make it more suitable for Wryson."

"He's a diplomat," chuckled Ferralt.  "Ingenious way of bracing it.  Do
you mind if I try that?"

"Not at all.  You might find a better way, though.  I did that in more
of a hurry than I would have liked."  Or than Uncle Sardit would have
advised, either.

"Why the child's table?"  That was Rasten.

"That started out as a project for Bostric.  He's turned out to have a
real feel for the woods, and I wanted to give him something that .. .
well ..."  I finally shrugged, hoping they would understand.

Even Jirrle nodded slowly, although the frown never left his face.

"Maybe we ought to do more work like that," began Deryl.  "Some of the
gentry pay well for garb for the little ones.  Why not furniture?  I
once heard about the miniature palace in Hamor."

Thunk!  Thunk!  Thunkl Thunk!  The girl dropped the heavy mugs on the
table like mallets, one after the other.

I glanced over at the table where the apprentices sat.  They looked
more relaxed, which reassured me.  Bostric seemed positively
loquacious.  "..  . then ... he talks about grains, grains, and more
grains, about feeling the wood, like you could see right through it ...
but it's scary sometimes, because I get the feeling he can ...."

"Hell ... all of them can .. . why they're craft-masters .. ."

"One each, gents," snapped the serving-girl, her tone crisper and
shorter than the first time I'd been at the Tap Inn.

"What other projects do you have lined up?"  asked Jirrle slowly.

"Not a lot.  We're still scrambling.  There's a corner chest, and a
dower piece, and another couple of benches for the Horn Inn .. ."

"There will be more," added Perlot, "with all the praise you're getting
from Wessel."

"We do the best we can .. ."

As the door opened, I turned to look, and realized it was pitch-dark
out.

"What about .. ."  began Ferralt as he looked at Deryl.

"I'm going to have to leave."  I eased out of my chair.  "Destrin's not
feeling that well, and I never fed the pony .. ."

"Won't you stay a little longer .. . ?"  grumbled Jirrle.

I could tell his words were false, yet he wanted me to stay.

"I wish I could."

"Perhaps we could hear more the next time," added Perlot.

I just nodded.  In no way did I want to tell more than I had already.
On the way out, I stopped by Bostric's group.  "You can stay a while."
But I didn't wait for an acknowledgement.  "..  . doesn't seem that
scary ..."  "..  . not all that old .. ."

As I stepped out into the night, I tried not to sigh.  Sooner or later,
and probably sooner, the speculation would push me into giving away too
much.  The afternoon clouds had cleared, and the stars glittered, with
the new moon just a crescent above the western horizon.

Further down the market street, the lanterns from the Horn Inn
flickered with the breeze that brought the scent of cut hay from the
fields to the north of Fenard.

Jirrle-the man bothered me, had bothered me from the first time he had
inspected my boxes in the open market.

Even as early in the night as it was, the streets had cleared, the good
and solid citizens for the most part having headed home.  In Fenard,
work started with the dawn.  I suppressed a yawn, remembering that I
had put off cleaning out Gairloch's stall.

I rubbed the end of my nose after the acrid odor of burned grease left
a lingering itch, then picked up my steps as I passed the first
cross-street toward the square from the Tap Inn.

Halfway toward the next cross-street, I stopped, almost paralyzed by
the feel of disorder ahead.  After turning, I took several quick paces
back and into the shadows, wishing I had my staff with me.

Click .. . dink .. . The sounds were faint, almost inaudible.

A cloak of reflection slipped around me, and I hoped I was doing the
right thing, that the danger ahead was merely that of armed assassins,
and not a chaos-master.

Two men appeared, slipping toward where I had been.  While I could only
sense them, not see them, one was older, slighter, tinged with the
white-red fire of chaos.  The other was just a hired blade, faintly
disordered, but not chaos-evil.

They searched each side of the street, moving toward me.  In turn, I
moved from the shadows into the main street, where they would only
look, while they might concentrate and poke into the corners and
alcoves.

Click .. .

The second sound came from behind me, from the direction of the Tap
Inn.

I forced myself to breathe easily, standing flat against a bricked wall
between shops with their night shutters down, feeling exposed and open,
and relying only on a reflective shield.  The knife in my belt felt
inadequate, especially against the drawn blades of the pair that walked
toward me.

From the inn came a second armed pair, searching and moving toward
me.

I almost held my breath as the bulkier assassin walked right by me,
holding a blade at the ready.  As soon as they were more than a few
paces past, I took one quiet step, then another, edging toward the
square and toward Destrin's.  "..  . disappeared .. ."  "... left the
inn.  I saw him."

"He's not here."  "..  . in one of the houses?"

I let them argue, stepping quietly toward Destrin's, not dropping the
cloak until I was safely inside the stable.

Whheee .. . eeeee .. . ccc .. .

"Yes, I know.  Your stall is filthy.  I didn't ride you today, and
you're out of food."

The food came first, and I brushed Gairloch for a while, both to
reassure him and to think.  Then came the shovel and the pail.  No one
had told me about the mess horses make, or the enormous effort it took
to keep one stall clean.

Late indeed it was by the time I got back to the shop, and Bostric was
pulling out his bed.

"How did it go?"  I asked, washing my hands again in the basin I had
refilled.

"Fine.  They say you won't stay here, that you are a wandering type. Is
that true?"  Bostric had had more than a beer.  Otherwise, he would not
have dared to ask the question, "not without his more overly-respectful
tone.

I shrugged.  "Probably.  Go to sleep."

He did, and I thought about the armed men.  Clearly, Jirrle had known
something about it, but whether he had just known or actually put them
after me was another question.  The fact that all their swords had felt
the same told me that they were the prefect's men.

I was running out of time, but so far, no one apparently wanted to move
directly.  That forebearance wouldn't last, and I would still have to
watch for the assassins.

LIV

I DID NOT sleep well that evening, even after setting and checking the
wards.  I tossed on the narrow pallet, sweating as I pondered what I
knew.  The "J" on the tax levy had to have been Jirrle.  Jirrle was
some sort of advisor to the prefect, and Jirrle did not particularly
care for me.

Then, to make me even more uneasy, in the night skies, thunder raged.
Not the thunder of honest clouds striving among themselves, nor the
man-made thunder of gunpowder blasting.  Not even the illusory thunder
of the wind created by chaos-masters bent on enhancing the fears of an
already too-ignorant population.  Thunder such as this had I heard only
once before, on the plains of Certis, when the ice storms and the
blizzard had done their worst to destroy me.

So I tossed and sweated, and, on the other side of my curtain, Bostric
snored-loudly, and without any sense of rhythm.

In the end, I did sleep, and without dreams that I remembered, which
was probably for the best, since I woke with a start just before dawn.
I was soaked in sweat, though the night had been cool for summer, even
for a long summer that was drawing to a close.

After using the facilities off the alley, little more than an outhouse
that drained into a covered sewer, and washing in cool water drawn from
the covered tank in the back, I felt closer to human.  Some fruit and a
biscuit from the tray Deirdre brought down helped more.

We could have eaten upstairs, but in the mornings I never bothered,
since I liked to get started early, especially in the warm weather.

"Why .. oh, why am I apprenticed to a master who loves mornings .. .?"
Bostric looked worse than I felt, but the words were merely a ritual he
intoned every morning.  He splashed his way through a sketchy wash,
then wolfed down what I had left on the tray.

"They're all talking about you .. ."  he mumbled.

"Oh .. . ?"  I was checking the chest against the sketches and the plan
book.

"Jirrle thinks you're from Recluce .. ."

I swallowed a cold lump in my guts, saying nothing.  "..  . Deryl
thinks you want Deirdre and the shop, and Grizzard doesn't see anything
remarkable in you and wonders why anyone is making such a fuss."

Shrugging, I took a last sip of the red berry and set the mug aside.

"Jirrle also told Deryl that the chairs for the sub-prefect were going
to cause trouble .. . but he wouldn't say why."

Trouble?  Chairs causing trouble?  Then I shivered, recalling the
reaction of my own staff to chaos.  Once again, in pushing too hard, I
hadn't thought through the consequences.  And the chairs had been black
oak.

"Are you all right?"  I shook my head.  "I'm .. . fine.  I just
realized I had forgotten something."  Although I knew I needed to talk
to Brettel and I had finished the dower chest for Dalta, I had held off
on delivering it, perhaps because we had received so much from Brettel.
I didn't want to impose so soon again on the mill-master, whether he
was Deirdre's godfather or not.  In addition, Bostric was not quite
ready.  But now I would have to watch every corner for the Duke's
assassins .. .

Despite what I had seen, except for Jirrle, nothing pointed toward me,
yet I felt some greater force was rushing from beyond my perceptions
straight for me.  Or was I just imagining things, believing I could
sense what I could not understand?  The world of order and thoughts
just made life more confusing, not less.

Already, summer was coming to a close.  The grasses were browning, and
the hand of the long hot summer pressed down upon Fenard like an open
stove.  With the heat, the varnishes gave off more fumes, even in the
late mornings.

Although I tried to do the finish work while Destrin took the rests
that grew fractionally longer each day, sometimes he persisted in
tinkering with his benches, even as he coughed his lungs out.

"Ace .. . accc .. . cuuff .. ."  No longer did he pale when.  he
coughed -he was pallid all the time.

"Let Bostric finish those joins," I suggested.

"I just came down.  Are you trying to push me out again, Lerris?  I'm
the shop-master.  It's my business, and no outlander will tell me how
to run it."  He glared at me, even as he had to support himself on the
bench.  "Ace .. . accc .  acuuuff .. ."

"I'm not trying to push you anywhere.  Bostric is your apprentice, and
he's here to help you.  If I can help him learn, fine.  But how can he
help if you insist on doing everything?"  I pressed a touch more order
upon his system, but only a touch.  He was so fragile that anything
more would have done more damage than the coughing.

"Papa .. ."  added Deirdre.  When she talked to her father, her voice
was firm, gentle, no matter what the pain she held inside.

"All of you .. . you all want to put me away .. ."  Even as he
protested, Destrin let Deirdre lead him up the stairs.

I laid down the plane and motioned to Bostric as soon as Destrin was
out of sight.  We looked over the bench Destrin had been resting
against, rather than working upon.

"Can you clean this up and finish it?"  I asked.

Bostric studied the seat plate.  "How would you suggest I fix this?" He
pointed to the beginning of an off-center hole, probably angled when
Destrin started coughing.

"You've got one or two choices-fill it and reset.  Or cut the size and
redo the spokes.  Make it more ornamental ..."

Bostric licked his lips nervously.

"Go ahead.  Destrin can't finish it."  I didn't know how accurately I
spoke.

Whhssttt .. .

Deirdre stood at the stairs.  "Lerris .. . ?"  Her voice was almost
matter-of-fact.  That she stood there at all told she needed something.
Resourceful in all things, from running the accounts to developing her
own cushioning business to running the shop and household food budget,
she had asked nothing-except once.  Yet behind the quiet facade, I had
begun to understand, lay a strong will.

"I'll be right there."  Catching Bostric's attention, I said, "Destrin
and I need to discuss something.  If a customer should show, just ring
the bell, and I'll be right down."  Then I followed Deirdre up the
stairs.  If she hadn't been so upset, I almost would have smiled at
Bostric's hidden appraisal of Deirdre.

"Papa .. . he's moaning, and he doesn't know who I am ..."  The seaming
work she did was neatly laid on her table by the rear window.  She
probably earned more from the sewing than Destrin did from his
infrequent benches, and saved more than that from her handling of his
accounts.

Bostric would do better than he knew, and I only hoped I had the time
to help him be more than she knew.

Destrin lay upon the wide bed, eyes closed, breathing raggedly and
quickly, a bluish tinge to his fingers and a grayish look to his face.
His eyes opened.  "Kyren .. . where's .. . girl"

"I'm here, papa."  Her thin voice was low.  "Kyren ... so ... cold ..
."

As I reached into that frail and wasted body, the burning, the pressure
seared me, and I had to grasp the bedpost, even as my senses touched
the knotted heart, easing a cramp here, letting the blood flow and
strengthening what I could, the parts that had yet enough firmness to
strengthen.  It took a long time, gently as I had to work, and I didn't
remember sitting down.

"Lerris .. . Lerris ..."  A cool cloth touched my forehead.

My head was not splitting, but a dull ache and a great tiredness
encouraged me not to move.

"Something to drink?  Redberry?"  I asked hoarsely.

Deirdre brought me a cup.  A few sips and I felt almost normal, if
light-headed.  I eased myself out of the chair and tiptoed over to the
bed.  Destrin's color was no longer grayish, only pale, and he slept. 
I nodded, but wondered how much longer I could hold him together, and
whether I should, recalling the pain I had felt in touching him.  My
eyes blurred for a moment.

"Lerris?"

I had forgotten Deirdre was standing beside me.

"You saved him .. . again."  Her voice was neutral.

"Yes."  I shook my head.  "I don't know, Deirdre.  I don't know.  He
hurt so much."

She looked at me, questioningly, for the first time with tears flowing
from both eyes.

"I stopped the hurt, but for how long?"

"Poor .. . poor papa .. ."

"Don't let him get up.  Tell him he has a chill."

"How long?"

I knew what she meant.

"If he rests, if he is quietA perhaps half a year, but that's just a
guess.  He could have died today, but he doesn't want to."

I "Poor papa .. ."

That afternoon, I paid Wryson two coppers for the loan of his wagon and
followed it, and the red-oak dower chest, out to Brettel's house.  In
case it was to be a surprise, I had covered it with a blanket.

On the way across the avenue and toward the north road, we pulled up
for a cavalry troop returning.  A single prisoner, blindfolded, hands
tied behind her back, wearing green leathers, swayed on the last horse.
A dark splotch stained her short-cut blond hair.  The prefect's troops
had left her an empty scabbard, perhaps because, disoriented and
wounded, she still radiated order.

The last four horses bore only empty saddles, and the reek of disorder,
of chaos, was faint, as if expended in whatever battle they had fought.
"... make way .. . make way .. ."  .  clink .. . dink ... "Make way ..
. make way .. ."

Sensing primarily tiredness and pain, nothing resembling new-cast
chaos, despite my awareness extension, I waited until the troop had
passed.  Still, I was on edge until the wagon pulled inside the big
stone warehouse.  The woman in green bothered me.  She could have been
Wrynn or Krystal.  She wasn't, but she could have been.

"Lerris, you're earlier than I expected.  I told you to take your
time."  He still grinned.

"Do you want to see it?"  I glanced around.

"Dalta's at the market square."

Using both arms, I moved the chest, still covered, from the wagon.

"Here."  Sperlin-Wryson's driver-got a copper I couldn't afford.  "Just
go straight back."

"Thank you, scr."

Not until the wagon rumbled down the ramp and back onto the north road
did I turn back to Brettel.

"You're thinner, Lerris, hunted-looking."

"We passed a cavalry troop .. . lots of empty saddles."  Brettel just
shook his head.  "Why?  The aut arch isn't bothering him."

I didn't know the answer, either, except there were more soldiers in
Gallos.

"Do you want to see the chest?"  I changed the subject back to the
reason I had come.

"Of course, of course."

After lifting the blanket gently, I waited, watching his face.

He looked for a long time.  Finally, he turned to me.  "I can't afford
that.  That's a piece worthy of Dorman or Sardit- their best."

While it wasn't that good, the chest was exquisite, and equal to the
lesser but good pieces my uncle had done.  But comparisons weren't
fair.  I could see into the wood, and they couldn't.

So we stood there for a time, and Brettel kept gazing at the chest.
"She won't appreciate it."

"She will.  Later, at least."

At last, he looked at me.

"Why are you here?  Now?"

"To ask that you allow Bostric to marry Deirdre."

"Why now?"

"Because Destrin is dying, and I have to leave before it's too late,
and before anything becomes too public.  I only hope I haven't waited
too long."

"There's a problem, Lerris."

"I can see a number."  My voice was wry, even to my own ears.

"While Bostric has taken over the bench work and the simple chests, and
his work is better than Destrin's was, you're still the craft-master
..."

"I'm no craft-master."  I felt I had to protest, but my guts turned at
the thought that I actually might be approaching that level.

"No .. . not if you compare yourself to Perlot and Sardit.  And Dalta's
chest there even gives that the lie.  If you consider Rasten or Deryl
or Hertol or Ferralt, already they can't compare.  Not at all." "Look,"
I said.  "Deirdre's a good seamstress, almost good enough to carry the
household on her own.  It won't be easy for them, but she has a
dowry-"

"She does?"  the mill-master asked.

"I made her a chest like Dalta's, not quite as good, and she has a
small dowry of five golds, not much .. ."

"Lerris .. ."  He shook his head.

"I know .. . it's not really enough, but-"

"Lerris.  What are you?  You're a stranger, who has lived here little
more than a year, who has held death at bay, who has redeemed my
god-daughter's hope and future, and restored her father's honor, and
provided a dowry.  Would that my own sons would go so far."

I was embarrassed at the tears rolling down his cheeks.  So I said
nothing.  After all, if I hadn't done what I could, who would have?

"We need a wedding soon, while Destrin can still appreciate it."

"Have you asked him?"

I shrugged.  "No.  I was afraid to upset him."

"Let me come back with you.  Better now than later.  Ask him while I am
there."

Brettel washed the sawdust off his face and uncovered forearms, changed
from his leather apron into a linen shirt, and mounted a black mare-all
in the time it took me to drink a glass of red berry

We rode back together.  Thankfully, we saw no more of the prefect's
troops.

LV

DE STRING SAT IN the armchair, his face gray-hued under the pallor, but
without the deadly blue of the morning.

"I brought an old friend," I said, but didn't get any further in my
explanation.

"Godpapa!"  Deirdre didn't quite shriek as she saw the mill-master.
"It's been so long."

"Here to pay your respects to the deceased, Brettel?"  Destrin's voice
was waspish.

"No.  I'm here to discuss my god-daughter's future."

"You can't foster her.  I told you that-"

I touched Destrin's shoulder and tried to calm him, both physically and
by infusing him with a touch of order.  "That's not what he means ..
."

Destrin leaned back in the chair, but his color was even a shade more
gray.

Deirdre looked from me to Brettel and back again, raising her
eyebrows.

"May I sit down?"  Brettel didn't wait for an answer, instead lifting
one of the straight chairs from the table and setting in on the worn
wooden planks directly across from Destrin.  "Lerris, get a chair."

So I did, and I got one for Deirdre, and waited for her to sit down. It
was her life we were talking about.  She looked from her father to
Brettel to me once again, then licked her lips.

"What's this about my Deirdre?"  Destrin's voice remained sharp.

Brettel looked to me.

I swallowed.  "I think that she should consider a marriage proposal
..."  I began.

"A master hand with wood you are, Lerris.  But would you do right by
her?"

"No.  I wouldn't.  That's why I'm not asking.  My asking for her hand
could lead to her death."

Even Brettel swallowed.

Destrin, surprisingly, didn't.  He did look at me, long.  "You're
honest, boy.  I won't say much, but could you answer a question for
me?"

I shrugged.  "If I can ..."

"I'll try to be indirect.  Was your wood crafter master the only one
Dorman respected?"

I had expected something along those lines.  Destrin was a poor
crafter, but perceptive nonetheless.  "If I understand those involved,
I think so."

Destrin sighed.  "Had to be.  So ... you're proposing for Bostric?"

"Oh .. . !"  Deirdre covered her mouth, but I heard the dismay, and it
ripped right through my chest, like one of the prefect's chaos-swords
might have.

"I don't have any better ideas.  I can add some to her dowry, and I
have crafted a red-oak dowry chest for her .. . Before long, I need to
leave, or you all could be in danger.  Between Bostric's family and
Brettel ... in the future I would hope that would provide .. ."  My
words trailed off.  I hated making the case for Bostric, and there were
lumps in my chest and in my guts.  My eyes were blurred.

Yet deep inside, I knew I was not right for Deirdre, but that did not
make my task any easier.

"Snnnff."  Deirdre was blowing her nose.

"Hell of .. ."  Destrin shook his head.  "You like her, don't you?"

"Yes.  That's what makes it harder."

"You'd outlive her?"

I knew what he was driving at, knew why he was asking.

"Yes, if I survive the next few years.  Probably by a lot."

Brettel nodded, then added, "Why are you asking this?"

"Because I care, and because it's the only way I can try to protect
her, to allow her as much of her own life as possible."

Both older men looked at each other.

"We'd like to talk for a moment, Lerris .. . Deirdre .. ."  Destrin's
voice was calm, almost relaxed.

Deirdre stood up as I did.  "Papa, Godpapa .. ."  Her voice firmed.  "I
need to talk to Lerris for a moment-alone.  Please excuse us."  She
looked at me with a smile, extending her arm almost like one of the
ladies from the street.

Propped up as he was in his chair, Destrin looked from Deirdre to me
and back again.  His brow mirrored puzzlement, and Brettel just touched
his shoulder and nodded.

I looked at Deirdre, somehow very regal in that moment, even in her
faded blue trousers and blouse and old white apron.  She seemed somehow
relieved, yet, beneath the relief, I could sense the tension, like a
coiled spring, or worse.  So I took her arm, and we walked toward the
far end of the main room.  I stopped, but Deirdre eased me on into her
small room with the narrow bed, scarcely larger than the space I
occupied in the shop below, save she had a window overlooking the alley
and the stable.  Her arm released mine.

Click.

"What .. ."

Her ringer touched my lips to stop my words, and I could tell she was
trembling.

"Lerris .. . ?"  Her voice was uneven.

"Yes?"

"I know you're some kind of wizard .. . but .. ."  She took a deep
breath.  "..  . would you ever hurt me?"

"Of course not," I protested, wondering where the conversation was
going, and why she had closed the door.  That faint scent of woman and
roses reminded me of a night too long before and best forgotten.

"Not ever?"

"No.  Why?"

Crack!

My head rang, and my eyes blurred from the force of her open hand, and
when I could see, I could see the tears streaming from her eyes.  "Why
.. . ?"  I shook my head.

She just stood there sobbing.  "Don't you understand?"

Whatever it was, I certainly didn't understand it, but all I could
think to do was reach for her hands.  She let me take them, and we
stood there for a time as she sniffled out the sobs.

Finally, she swallowed.  "I'm .. . not .. . not a brood pony .. . I'll
... do anything ... for papa .. . and for you .. . but you .. . could
have .. . asked .. . You .. . could .... have .. . asked .. ."

I was the one swallowing then, and finding it hard to see.  Good old
stupid Lerris, working like hell to save the girl, and not even asking
her.  But, even as I kept swallowing ... I realized the tension within
Deirdre was gone .. .

"Sorry.  I just wanted to do what-"

"Lerris?"

"Yes?"  My voice was level, since I didn't know what to expect.

"There's one other thing."

The one other thing was two arms around my neck and warm lips on mine
and a very feminine body pressed close against me.  Very close against
me, and pulling me down onto her and the bed.

We lay there for a long time, only holding and kissing.  Then, slowly,
before I lost total control, I let go of her and rolled away.

She sat up on the narrow bed.  "That's what you're going to miss."  She
smiled sadly.  "And what I'm going to miss."

I just stood there.

"Thank you ... for me, for papa ... for caring .. . and for being you
.. ."

By then I couldn't see anything, but neither could she.  So we ended up
hanging on to each other again, and I cried as much as she did.

Thankfully, neither Destrin nor Brettel interrupted, and, in time, we
pulled ourselves apart.

There wasn't anything else to say, not then.  After we wiped our faces,
she opened the door.  "..  . just fine .. . Destrin .. . too damned
honorable .. ."  "..  . so you say .. ."  "..  . you know it as well as
I do .. ."

Deirdre grinned for the first time, even with the sadness beneath. "You
are too honorable .. ."

I didn't have any choice any longer, not if I wanted to survive.  I
still had to explain it to Bostric, although I thought it was less
likely that he would either haul off and hit me or kiss me.  So I left
the three to discuss details and went down to the shop.

Bostric was working on the tavern bench, and doing so quite
effectively, having shortened the piece to cut out Destrin's
mis-drilling.

I pulled out the two stools and set them by my workbench.  "We need to
talk."

Bostric could read when to tease and when not to.  He took one look at
the side of my face, which was probably still red, nodded, and set down
the shaper.

"Sit down," I said as I pointed to the empty stool.

"Is there a problem?"  For once, he looked worried.

"Yes.  But it's more mine than yours.  Brettel says that your family
has not arranged any future alliances-a marriage or anything like that.
Is that true?"

"That's true."  His voice was cautious.  "I'm the fourth son, and my
brothers are healthy.  The land is too small for me to inherit
anything."

"What do you think about woodworking?"

"I told you.  I'll never be in your class."

"Do you like it?"

The redhead nodded.  "I like the woods, and living in Fenard is better
than the farm."

"What do you think about Deirdre?"

This time his mouth did hang open.  "You .. . can't .. . she likes ..
."  He shook his head.

"I take it that you find her acceptable."  I kept my voice dry.

This time he grinned.

"I have to leave before long.  You know I'm not from Fenard.  Brettel
and I did not want to promise you anything until we saw-" "-Whether I
could be a wood crafter

I nodded.

"But?"

"Deirdre can almost take care of herself, but without a husband in
Fenard, she cannot hold the property.  Destrin can't last much longer,
and I couldn't even marry her out of convenience."  I swallowed.
Leaving Deirdre was going to be harder than I realized.

"You like her.  A lot."

"Yes," I admitted.  "But that doesn't matter."  And when my mind and
heart were only sad, not rebelling at the statement, I knew that what I
said was true.

Bostric shook his head.  "I don't understand you.  You're the finest
crafter in Fenard since Dorman, and you will walk away from fortune and
a beauty who loves you?"

"I don't have any choice, Bostric.  Please don't ask."  I cleared my
throat.  I was still having trouble seeing.  "I take it that your
family won't object.  Oh, and she does have a small dowry."

"No.  They'll be so happy for me, just joyous that clumsy Bostric
actually found a beauty with property-"

"Stop it!"  I put an arm on his shoulder.  "One of us needs to be
happy, and you and Deirdre can be happy together."

"Yes, oh wizardly craft-master."

I punched him on the arm, but not too hard.  "And I'll .. . do
something creatively wizardly if you ever do anything to make her
unhappy .. ."

He paled.  "I think you would."

I shook my head.  "Just love her."  What else could I ask?  If he did
that, most everything else would follow, especially with Brettel's
help.  "I know it won't be easy-not with Brettel looking over your
shoulder."

He looked at me strangely before shaking his head.

Then, for a time, I sat down in my corner alcove.

LVI

DESPITE MY RESOLVE and Destrin's agreement, nothing could be arranged
as quickly as I had hoped.  There were banns to be posted, agreements
to be formalized, and parties to be attended-parties held by Bostric's
parents, by Brettel and his family.  While I went, I stayed as much in
the background as possible, hoping that all the festivities would
eclipse me.  Everywhere I went, I watched, looking like a wolf for the
hunters.  But I never found them, and with each failure, my guts
tightened, as I wondered whether the next instant would find me in the
sights of a crossbow.  Yet until Deirdre was taken care of, I did not
want to leave.  But my staying was stupid, and I wrestled myself night
after night.

As the fall waned, the sun dropped from the zenith, the rains
occasionally fell, and the grasses greened again, Destrin lay stiller
and stiller upon his bed, not even arguing with Deirdre, sometimes
unable even to eat.

Deirdre was quiet, though she still sometimes favored me with a smile,
and I smiled back, and both smiles hurt, and I knew I should leave.

In the end, once again, I had no choice, not if I wanted to live with
myself.  Each day, more soldiers rode out to the slaughter, faces
blank, and they were younger and younger.  Each day, more girls and
women wept and damned the aut arch Only the conflict kept the assassins
from me, I suspected.

Antonin's strategy was working, working all too well, fueled by the
prefect's anger against the aut arch  What could the aut arch do?  Let
the bloodthirsty chaos-ruled Gallian soldiers kill her people and
troops?

Still, I could not afford to take on Antonin himself.  Remembering the
power he had displayed in sweeping me aside earlier in the year, I
wasn't ready for that.  But I didn't think I had to, not yet.

I pushed Bostric unmercifully, mindful of Brettel's concerns, not
daring nor wanting to leave Fenard yet, not until I could be assured
that Deirdre and Bostric would be all right, yet worrying that my
continuing presence might endanger them all.

At the same time, I was all too aware that, despite my efforts to learn
the knowledge contained in The Basis of Order, all too many sections of
the book I had merely learned by rote, without really understanding
what lay behind and beneath them.

There was no one to ask, especially about the more cryptic phrases-the
ones that seemed so simple, like the one that read, "and no man can
truly master the staff of order until he casts it aside."  Or the one
about "love no one until you can love yourself, for love of another is
merely empty flattery and self-deception for one who cannot accept
himself without pretense."  The second one sounded right enough, but
how honestly could a man love himself without pandering to his own
wishes to see himself as he wished?

Then there was the one that went: "Order and chaos must balance, but as
on a see-saw.  The power of chaos is for great destruction in a
confined area, for order by nature must be diffused over vaster realms.
If you would battle chaos, or establish order, you must limit the area
and the time in which it must be balanced."  While that one really
seemed simple, I didn't have the faintest idea of how to limit chaos.

Knowing I could not limit chaos did not keep me from walking the
streets more often.  I finally had let Deirdre sew me a set of clothes
suited to holidays and relaxation -still of dark brown, but the fabric
was a close-woven cotton.  When she refused to let me pay more than the
fabric cost, I put the difference in the hidden strongbox that would be
her dowry.

"Now you look the craft-master," Bostric had said, and I wished he had
been joking.

I had just shaken my head.

The first real chill dropped on Fenard early, even before the early
melon harvest, although it did not frost.  I ambled through the market
at midday, hoping to pick up some fresh melon for Destrin, the
honey-sweet kind that eased the dryness in his thin throat.

White clouds, tinged with gray, floated above the western horizon, as
if coming from the Westhorns, but the breeze was light, and the warmth
almost summery.  I wiped my forehead more than once as I looked for
some of the light green melons.

Ahead was Mathilde, the flower lady, who kept casting her eyes at the
long wall, as if trying not to.  That was where the prefect displayed
the results of his justice-the heads of those who displeased him.
Usually, the heads were those of common thieves, or a deserter from the
prefect's guards, or a murderer.

I looked up there.  This time, there were two heads.  I could feel the
chill in my guts and the bile in my throat as I saw the woman's head,
seeing the short blond hair-Wrynn?  Then I looked again and saw the
dark splotch on the short-cut blond hair and the difference in the
shape of the face-recognizing the captive I had seen being brought back
by the prefect's soldiers.  But it easily could have been Wrynn, and
who knew where she was?

Whispers went around the square, and the whispers weren't for the
Kyphran soldier, but for the other head-that of an older man, who had
clearly been blinded and tortured first.  "..  . why .. ."  "..  .
devil chairs .. . someone said .. ."  "..  . killed the whole household
.. . the prefect did .. ."  "..  . why the sub-prefect?  .. . don't
understand .. ."

I did not run, but stood there, stone-still behind Mathilde.  The
example of the sub-prefect left my guts churning.  Because the man had
displayed something of order in his house, or because ordered chairs
had burned someone of chaos that had been his fate?

The golden coach was gone, with Antonin in it, and now I was out of
time and out of excuses.  No guards had yet moved against Destrin or
the shop, and none moved the streets while I stood in the square, but
that could change.

My head and then my feet turned toward the avenue.  I walked to the
shadows by the palace and cast a cloak around myself, letting my
feelings sense whether a guard troop might be moving into the city.

First, there were the two guards by the main gates.  While scaling the
wall looked easier, I had no idea what wards Antonin or any other
wizard might have placed there.  Wards couldn't be used on the main
entrances, or they would be warning someone every instant, especially
during the day, since there were bound to be soldiers and ministers and
horses in and out of the palace all the time.

I just stood there beneath the wall, far enough away so that my
breathing would not be heard, and sat down in the shade and waited.

Clink .. . clinkedy .. . dink .. .

The first horse passed by, heading for the barracks, carrying another
chaos-ruled killer.

I kept waiting, my heart still beating too fast.  . clickedy .. . click
.. . clickedy .. . click .. .

The delivery wagon never reached the palace gates, but turned at the
sub-prefect's vacant house.  . click .. . click .. .

Another soldier, this one walking tiredly toward the barracks.

I took a deep breath, trying to relax.  The relaxation lasted until the
next sound of hooves.

Clickedy .. . click .. . clickedy .. . click .. .

"Hold it."

Unseen, I eased toward the rider and his horse, another one of the
chestnuts.

"I'm Captain Karflis with a message for the Military Council."

"Yeah, he's Karflis.  He shows up the day before the council meets."

Click .. . My foot caught on a curb my senses hadn't distinguished.

"What's that?"

I froze, knowing they couldn't see me.

"Relax.  It's broad daylight.  There's no one in sight."

Creakkkkk .. .

As the iron gates swung open, I followed the good captain on foot, and
not too close to the rear of his horse, but close enough that any sound
I might make would be covered by the louder impact of the chestnut's
hooves on the stone of the courtyard inside the gate.

I stopped as he dismounted, sensing almost a fountain of chaos
somewhere off to my left.  The captain, however, turned right, and I
decided to go with him.  Following the captain into the palace was
almost as easy, since he walked with a heavy tread and his boots echoed
on the marble floors.

From the courtyard, where he left the horse with a military ostler, or
whatever they were called, he passed another pair of guards in the main
hall.  Then he bypassed the grand staircase and walked through a small
archway to the side, leading to a narrow corridor that opened into
another hallway at the back of the palace.  After a left turn, he
walked through a red oak doorway with an elaborate stained-glass mural
inset over the open door.  My senses did not distinguish the scene all
that well, except there was a lot of lead around the glass panes.

"Captain Karflis.  You are expected.  The marshall is inside."  Another
pair of guards flanked the closed door to the right of the desk where
the other officer-I assumed that from the gold on his shoulders-was
sitting.

This time, I barely made it inside without getting the door shut on me,
and I actually brushed the captain, recoiling from the swirling chaos
locked within him as I did so.

He brushed at his coat.  "Spiders ... or something .. ."

"How goes it, Karflis?"  The marshall was thin, that I could tell, and
his voice was flat and cold.

"The aut arch refuses to attack until our men cross into her territory.
She has a new weapon that flings crossbow bolts in greater numbers
beyond the range of our wizards to detect them."

"How effective is it?"

As Karflis continued to stand facing the marshall and to report, I
studied the room, from the high and arched ceiling to the cold, if
large, hearth, from the table with four chairs around it to the large
desk behind which the marshall sat.  "..  . not much more effective
than crossbows .. . really .. ."

"You have heard of her strike here?"

Karflis bowed from the waist.  "Scr?"

"Devil-forged chairs, spells upon once-loyal soldiers .. ."

Both men were filled with that tight and coiled loop of chaos, but in
the captain's case, the order beneath, that core of honest blackness,
still refused to submit, and I gauged the strength of the chaos, then
reached for the captain with my senses, making a change here and there.
Nothing that would be obvious for a while.

The marshall bore no trace of order, only a white-red coil of disorder
and evil.  Since I could not destroy, not if I understood the
implications for myself, I just gave him some well-needed rest, and he
fell asleep on his desk.  Within instants, he was snoring.

I would have liked to hear more, but what he said would have made no
difference, and attacking the palace, in my own way, would force
Antonin and the prefect to look within the palace, rather than in
Fenard-at least for a while.

Karflis looked around in confusion.  "Hersil!"

Click!

"He just fell asleep as I was talking."

The two guards had crowded inside the room, their swords drawn on the
captain, and the officer who had been outside followed, barely a step
behind.

Like the marshal!"  the two guards were lost to order, and I put them
to sleep as well.  While it was only temporary, a little confusion
would not hurt.

The other officer gaped as his guards sagged into sleep.  "Wizardry!
There's a wizard around here!  Call Tallian-"

Putting him to sleep took longer, because I was already tired.

I sat down on the thick plush carpet whose color I could not determine
from my sense of place alone, and thought.  What I was doing wasn't
going to work.

Out of five men, four were beyond redemption.  While I could easily
have removed the chaos from their souls, that chaos was so much of
their being that they would have died, or been mindless idiots.  And
besides, destruction was destruction, at least according to the book.

I shook my head.

Karflis stood there, also shaking his head, confusion over his own
mental state warring with confusion over the collapse of the marshall
and the three others.

A thought occurred to me, and I let my feelings reach for the sleeping
young officer, trying to see if I could determine the source of that
chaos.  Only a hint, but it pointed, if pointing was the right word, to
something else, that something I had sensed in entering the palace.

I got up, as silently as I could, and walked over one guard's sleeping
figure and through the now-open door and back into the outer office,
leaving one still-puzzled captain behind.

Back down the marbled corridors, past three or four sets of guards
until I could sense that deadly fountain of chaos- a tumbling stream of
white.  My hands were trembling ... so I sat down again in a corner,
where anyone passing would not trip over me, wondering what in hell I
was doing wandering the corridors of the prefect's palace.

After a time, and with a silent sigh, I stood, feeling like a mouse in
a house full of cats, or dragons, assuming such beasts existed
somewhere.  Slow step by slow step, I neared the chaos pool.  Except it
was just a fountain in the courtyard, a simple fountain to the eyes.
The courtyard was paved in granite and the walls just simple stone
walls.  The fountain was a jet of warm water coming from a man-sized
stone vase.

The courtyard was not even guarded, but then again, it didn't need to
be.

Even for me, it was like walking against the ice storm on the plains of
Certis, of battling the heart of a thunderstorm, or worse.

A fountain of warm water, that seemed all, but the warmth came from
deep below, fueled by some sort of chaos, and twisted by something
beyond, like a mighty lock of something insubstantial.

With my thoughts I could trace the twisted patterns, but that did no
good, because they weren't patterns.  They were chaos.  Each time I
tried to follow a line of force, it seemed to dissolve.

Then, I remembered a passage from the book, the one about bringing
order from chaos-about creating a mirror of order.  The reflection of
chaos as order would either order it or destroy it-if the mirror of
order were stronger than chaos.  If not ... I didn't want to think
about the consequences.  So I summoned up my own strength and began to
create a sort of mirror around the fountain, a pattern like what I
could sense, but ordered.  I struggled to reflect the odd twists,
turning them into a deeper harmony, substituting order for chaos, in
equal shape and force, and it was strangely like working out the
pattern of a chest or a writing-desk.

My eyes blurred, though I could see nothing.

My legs trembled, and I sat on the granite stones.

My arms felt like water, and I let them drop.

My head was throbbing, and splitting, and I let it, but I struggled,
fighting to reflect that fearful pattern, realizing that I might well
end in that white prison demonstrated by Justen if I did not succeed.

My eyes twitched against closed lids.

My breath panted as though I had run uphill for kays.

And I held the mirror pattern against the fountain.

Clunk.

The blurriness was gone from the blackness before my unseeing eyes, and
my legs remained weak, but did not tremble.  My head ached-but both
patterns were gone.

Only the splash of water remained.  "..  . help .. ."  "... Tallian ..
."

I began to walk toward the other courtyard and the gates, understanding
that there would indeed be hell to pay, and before too long, either.
"... wizardry!"

"Tallian says to check around the fountain!"

Two guards ran past me toward the fountain courtyard I had left, one of
them nearly hitting me as I dodged against the wall.

In all the rushing, I just waited until the gates opened.  Then I
walked to the market square area and reappeared out of the shadows, not
that anyone was watching, with the half-dozen horsemen speeding from
the palace.

I did not quite run to Destrin's, belatedly realizing what could well
happen.  But I did burst in the door.

"Bostric."

"What .. . ?"  One look at me and his face was probably as pale as mine
felt.

"How fast can you and Deirdre get to Bread's?"  The most-recent
journeyman in Fenard gulped.

"Never mind.  Just get Deirdre down here.  All hell is about to break
loose."

"But .. ."  "Do it."  I gathered my staff and pack, the book, and the
small strongbox with Deirdre's dowry, before hurrying out to the stable
to saddle Gairloch.  He didn't even whinny.

When I got back into the shop, Bostric and Deirdre each carried a small
sack.

Deirdre looked at me.  "Papa ... he won't leave .. ."

I dashed upstairs.

Destrin sat in his armchair.  His eyes were clear.

"We need to leave, Destrin."

"No."  He shook his head.  "You're right, Lerris-wizard, or whatever
you are-but I'm not strong enough to keep up with you young people. You
can care for my Deirdre.  I can't, and I'll slow you down.  And I'm
almost dead anyway ."  .. would have died seasons ago without you."

"We can take you."

"I'll fight you, young wizard."  He smiled a yellow-toothed grin.

I could tell he would.  "Good-bye, then, Destrin.  I won't be back."

"I know.  Take care for my Deirdre."

There wasn't much else to say.  I reached down and hugged the cranky
old man, but my steps were heavy down the stairs.

"You .. . couldn't ..."

I looked at Deirdre.  "He'll fight to stay in his house.  Trying to
take him would kill him."

She nodded, but the corners of her eyes were wet.  Then she ran
upstairs again.

I pursed my lips, wondering how soon the soldiers would reach us.

"What are we doing, Lerris?"

"Going to Bread's."

It seemed like forever before Deirdre came down, and her eyes looked
back up the stairs.  "He .. , said .. . he'd scream and yell ... if I
didn't go .. ."  Destrin would be cranky to his last breath.

Then I felt like hitting my head with my hand.  I tiptoed back up the
stairs.  With Destrin it was easier than with the guards.  Almost
before I could react, he was asleep.

He weighed little enough, even for me.

Deirdre's eyes widened as I carried him down.

"He's just asleep."

I put Deirdre on Gairloch, just so she could hold the sleeping Destrin,
and we started out, my feelings extended as far as I could.

I didn't like what I was about to do, but, again, there wasn't any
choice.

"Bostric?  Deirdre?"

They looked at me.  "I'll be right with you, but you may not be able to
see me.  If the guards see me, they might ... get upset ..."  I
finished lamely.  What I said might be true, but I didn't know.  They
might be more than upset to see me, but with Antonin off fighting the
aut arch I wasn't sure if anyone had actually traced back how the
chairs had come to the sub-prefect, or if anyone really cared.

I just couldn't chance it.

"If you say so, wizardly one," quipped Bostric.

Deirdre looked at me.  "Whatever you say."

Bostric frowned, but I'd be gone before long, and he would have her all
to himself, the lucky bastard.

So we set out toward the north gate.  Even carrying the staff that I
had used so little over the past year, all I could sense was a vague
confusion in the direction of the palace, even after we reached the
gate.

The guards scarcely gave them a second look, although I did weave a
light cloak around the sacks and packs.

When we reached Brettel's I reappeared.  It was still mid-afternoon,
with the dusty dryness that comes when the crops are nearly all in and
the grass has browned.  In the unseasonable heat, I felt like I had
been up for two days straight.

"You were here."

"I said I would be."

"Lerris?"  I turned to the approaching mill-master, feeling my legs
tremble, and sat down abruptly before I fell, still holding the
staff.

"You're hurt!"  Deirdre exclaimed.

"Just tired."  I glanced up at Brettel, who looked like an angry giant
from my viewpoint on the ground.

"I should have known."  His eyes were focused on the black staff.

"All hell is breaking loose," I added.  Not only was I exhausted, but
my speech was getting repetitious.

"What did you do?"  The mill-master looked less than amused.

"Me?  I just created a little order."

Brettel snorted.  "Get Destrin into the guest wing, the bed in the
small room."  He was talking to Dalta, the blond vision.

Enough energy returned to my legs that I could stand.  "..  . Bostric
will stay in the mill quarters with Arta, and Deirdre will sleep
somewhere in the main house .. ."  He turned to me.  "What about
you?"

I shook my head.  "I need some food and rest, but staying here is too
dangerous to you.  Even being seen here isn't good."

"No one here will speak."

"No one saw me come here," I affirmed, leaning on my staff.

He looked both worried and relieved.

I waited until the others began to follow Dalta.  Then I handed him
what had been in the strongbox.  "That's Deirdre's."

He didn't insult me by insisting it was mine or any such nonsense, just
accepted it gravely.  "Thank you."

"Thank you.  I regret having to leave so soon, but .. ."

"Now-" he began.

"Do you really want to know?"  I asked.  My voice was hoarse and
tired.

He nodded.

"Antonin set up a fountain of chaos in the palace.  They must have
bathed the soldiers in it or something.  That's why ..."  I shook my
head.  I couldn't explain exactly why the fountain had turned them into
mindless creatures ready to follow any order, but I knew it had.  That
was why the officers stayed away.  They had to think.  Besides, they
were already corrupted.

Brettel frowned.  "You seem to think Antonin is evil, Lerris."

Was a goat stubborn?  "Yes."

"Does that make the aut arch good?  How do you know she isn't worse?"

I nearly shivered right there, in the heat and all.  Given the history
of Candar, the legacy of Frven and the White City, it was a good
question.  And I didn't know the answer.  Finally, I shrugged.  "If
that's the case, neither one is going to be very happy with me."

Brettel smiled wryly.  "I'm glad you feel that way, but I'm also glad
you refused Deirdre.  You're either going to be very powerful or very
dead before long."

The sadness in his eyes told me which he thought it would be.

I slept the rest of the afternoon, although I had never been able to
sleep in the light except when I was sick.  But then, I'd never melded
chaos and order before.

Deirdre woke me.  She did it with a kiss on the cheek-a gentle one-then
sat down at the foot of the bed-Brettel's bed.  Who his wife had been,
I had never learned, except she had to have been beautiful and
special.

"Will you come back?"

"Not unless you treat me like Brettel."

"That will be hard."

We both knew that.

"Would anything else be fair to Bostric?  Or you?"

She kissed me again, lightly, as she stood up.  "Supper is ready."

By the time I washed, everyone was gathered around the big table-Dalta,
Deirdre, Bostric, and Brettel.  Destrin, they said, was still resting,
but seemed fine, if pale.

The stew was good, the berry biscuits better, and the conversation
nonexistent.  It was time to go.

Deirdre, Bostric, and Dalta stood on the porch, waiting, as I walked to
the stable with Brettel.  Inside were two newish saddlebags, stuffed,
in addition to my own older saddlebags and bedroll.

"You didn't have-"

"Lerris."  The tone was firm.  "You didn't have to do what you did. All
I ask is that you do your best to keep the innocents from getting hurt
too badly."

"I'll do what I can."  I knew exactly what he meant.  Whether what he
wanted was within my power was another question entirely.

I saddled Gairloch, then put the staff into the holder, and added the
saddlebags.

"Do you know where you're going?"

"Kyphrien first, to answer your question."

"And then?"

"That depends on the answer.  Probably into the Westhorns to find
something I've avoided."

Brettel pursed his lips.  "Good luck."

He walked me part way to the road.  Even though she never left the
porch, I could tell Deirdre was crying, and my own breath was ragged.
For some reason, as I turned Gairloch onto the north road in the
twilight and drew my reflective cloak around me, I thought of Justen,
the gray wizard, wondering how many good-byes he had said over the
years, and how many times he had returned to find only change and death
waiting.

LVII

IN ADDITION TO making my way to Kyphrien, that maligned capital of
Kyphros, I had one other little chore to attend to, one I wasn't
exactly thrilled about as Gairloch and I plodded back around the north
road again.

This time I chose the east gate, not because east was where we were
going, but because the guards there were the sloppiest.  Nothing ever
came from the east.

The main trade roads ran north and south, and south was the road to
Kyphros, which is where I was headed and where the prefect's troops all
rode or marched.  The east road, as I well knew, only straggled across
broad farmlands from the Easthorns, and few traders or anyone else
traveled that route.

Sloppy or not, I stopped well beyond the guards, listening behind my
cloak of light, and checking the ramparts above the gate.  There were
no bowmen on duty.  The sun had dropped behind the city, and the
shadows were long.  "..  . Rephren should be here .. ."  "..  .
bastard's late .. ."

Creaakkkk .. .

"Another damned farm wagon."

"It's your turn ..."  "..  . lazy frigger .. ."

As they turned to the farm wagon, I dropped the reflective cloak and
let Gairloch walk toward the guards.

Click .. . click .. . click .. .

"Where he'd come from?"

The stouter guard turned to me.  "Where to, fellow?"

I gestured vaguely.  "The mountains."  With mountains in three
directions, it was an honest answer, especially since it was true.

"What's that?"  He pointed at the staff, which I had purposely left
unconcealed.

"That's my staff."  I edged Gairloch practically on top of the poor
man, forcing him to back up.

"I don't know .. . wasn't there something .. . ?"  He frowned, looking
at the other guard, who was pawing halfheartedly through empty sacks
piled around a few open sacks of potatoes in the wagon bed.  A grizzled
farmer, clearly waiting to head home with what he had not sold, watched
silently from the wagon's bench seat as the younger guard checked the
produce.

"I'm sure there was, officer," I said politely, "but since I'm
leaving-it can't matter that much."  I flicked the reins and guided
Gairloch around him.

"Wait .. . you!"

At that point I drew the cloak around us, and spurred Gairloch down the
stone ramp.

"Wizard!  That fellow was a wizard!"  "..  . huhh .. . what fellow ..
."

I left them to sort it out.

Cling!  Clang!  Cling!  Clang!

By the time the alarm chimes rang, I had eased up on Gairloch and began
to let him walk until we reached a narrowed lane, which would, in time,
wind its way back around Fenard to meet up with the south road toward
Kyphros.

Before long Antonin or Sephya, or both of them, would be back.  They
could not have missed the change in the city's order-chaos balance.
Even now I could feel it, and I suspected a great many illusions were
wearing thin, perhaps even those cloaking the street of harlots.  Then
again, understanding how even I liked to deceive myself about women,
perhaps not.

Gairloch walked on, his steps shorter, as they always were when he
walked blind, until we were shrouded by trees and shadow, and I dropped
the cloak.  Night would be as good a cloak for a time.

Wheeee .. . eeee

I patted his shoulder.  "I know.  You, don't like the darkness. Neither
do I."

It was well past full night, and moonless, before we turned onto the
south highway.  The section we traveled was empty, but the dust bore
the traces of horses-another cavalry troop, I thought, headed toward
Kyphros.

I did not see any trace of coach tracks, nor sense any lingering odor
of chaos, but I kept my ears open for the drumming of hooves as
Gairloch bore me southward, past farm cottages faintly lighted by
single candles or lamps, past darker clumps of sheep behind railed
fences, past the occasional howling dog.

Some sort of insects whirred and chirped and buzzed.  And I rode
steadily onward into the night.

In time, we came to another river, spanned by a stone bridge, a bridge
well-mortared and solid, the sort of bridge that would resist any
chaos-master's efforts.

A thought occurred to me, and I grinned.  The bridge was solid, and
over running water, which might help.

So while Gairloch drank, I studied the bridge, finally drawing from the
calmness around me a greater sense of order, and of purpose, and
infusing it into the stones.  Lying there on the long fall grass, I
thought long and hard, trying to recall more from the book, knowing
there was more I wanted to do.

But I waited, letting my mind drift through what I had learned until
the knowledge returned to me.

Then I tuned the bridge to the order underlying the superficial chaos
of the river, and to the order of the deep stones underneath.

I almost whistled as I remounted Gairloch, except I was tired again.
Using order was work.  The hard white cheese that Brettel had packed
helped restore me, as did the water from the canteen I had filled at
the river.

That bridge was going to cause Antonin, or at least the prefect's
chaos-washed troops, some trouble.

By the time the crescent moon had appeared, both Gairloch and I were
tired, and took refuge in a copse of trees-a wood lot really-not too
far from the road.  I did set wards before I collapsed on the
bedroll.

Again, I dreamed of a black-haired woman, but the details eluded me,
and that bothered me.  Were my dreams pushing me toward Krystal because
she was from Recluce, or for better reasons?

A bright gray sky woke me, sunlight diffused through high thin clouds.
That, and the extraordinarily cheerful sound of some bird I did not
know and wanted to strangle.

After stowing my bedroll and saddling Gairloch, I rode until we crossed
another stream, where we had breakfast.  By now we were in the flattest
of the low rolling hills between Fenard and the Little Easthorns, that
not-quite-mountain range that ran nearly three hundred kays north and
south to connect the Westhorns.  with the proper Easthorns.

In her generally boring lectures on geography, Magistra Trehonna had
noted in passing that the Little Easthorns were contrary to normal
geology and might well represent a very early attempt at geological
chaos-mastery.  If so, the perpetrator probably had not survived the
attempt, one way or another.

I doubted the theory, especially considering the effort it took me to
accomplish generally minor tasks like neutralizing chaos fountains and
order-trapping bridges.

Theory or not, we had another day or two of travel and more than a few
bridges to cross before we reached Kyphros ... and I had more than a
few questions I needed to ask myself.  More important, I needed answers
for myself, and I was the only one who would find them.  That was all
too clear.

LVIII

AFTER TWO DAYS of riding through the boring rolling hills of Southern
Gallos, two days of avoiding towns, and two days of dried fruit, travel
bread, and hard cheese, and stream water, I was ready to leave
Gallos.

Only twice had we had to leave the road to avoid the hard-riding troops
of the prefect.  In both cases, the cavalry detachments were headed
toward Kyphros, not back to Fenard.  On one other occasion, we caught
up with three wagons filled with supplies and had to sneak around
them.

Except for that time I rode openly, without shields, feeling that the
locals wouldn't care who rode by, and that using order might call more
wizardly attention to me than necessary.

Late on that second day we came to the first bridge over the
Southbrook, a structure half-timber, half-stone, which required three
spans to cross the slow-flowing water.  But it was past mid-morning the
next day before we reached the second bridge-a single stone span.

With that second bridge over the Southbrook came the reminders of
war.

The odor of smoke drifted toward me first, faint, like the leftover
burnt wood smell in an uncleaned fireplace that has stood unused over
the summer.  Acrid, like charred leather, like the hides left from
burning diseased animals.  Pervasive, like the unseasonable clouds and
fog that had clung to Freetown.

Wheee .. . eeeee .. . Gairloch tossed his head.

"I know.  If it smells that bad to me, it's worse for you."

His steps clattered on the paving-stones of the bridge, echoing into
the morning.  The echoes rebounding from the stone walls of the bridge
were the only sounds.  Even the insects were hushed, and not a single
birdcall warbled or whistled through the air.

I shivered.

Beyond the bridge, the road began to wind and climb toward the
not-so-distant hills beneath the Little Easthorns.  Everything was
relative, I supposed.  Without having seen the Easthorns, I would have
found the dark slopes on the horizon impressive.  Now they just
appeared as another barrier.

The hills belonged to the aut arch which meant that we were nearing the
border between Gallos and Kyphros.

With the wind from the south came more of that lingering acrid-sweet
odor of ash and charred hide.  Gairloch whuffed again as he carried me
southward over the stone bridge and onto the packed-clay highway
heading uphill.  The browning grasses beyond the road edge were damp,
and not with dew.  Gairloch's hooves left clear imprints in the
dark-red clay of the road.  Whatever rain had fallen the night before
had not carried much beyond the Southbrook or the hills of the Little
Easthorns.

The sky was a crystal blue and cloudless, promising one of those late
fall days that reminded me more of summer than the approaching
winter.

Yee-ahh!  Yeee-ah!  The distant call of the vulcrows echoed through the
stillness of the morning.  Ahead and slightly to my right, over the
crests of perhaps three hills, circled two of the black birds.

My hand edged toward my staff, which I had not bothered to conceal. The
sun was a white-yellow point in the sky, somehow not really connected
to the damp road clay, the circling scavengers, or to me.

Gairloch was thirsty, and I pulled up on the reins and guided him back
off the road and down toward the shore of the placid river, stopping on
a sandy stretch not much wider than Gairloch's length.  From a
half-submerged log, a small turtle glared at us, then scuttled off his
perch.

Ploppp .. . Only a faint rippled pattern even marked that the turtle
had been there.

I dismounted, looping the reins over the saddle, and let Gairloch do
his own drinking.

Yee-ah!  Yee-ah!

My eyes returned to the vulcrows circling in the distance, but the
calls had come from closer birds.  Closing my eyes to what I could see
with my eyes, I cast out for the vulcrows and the source of their
interest.

With my still-sharpening sense of place, I could sense Gairloch
placidly chewing leftover green grass by the river bank, and almost
could I feel the color of the grass.  Then ... it could have been my
imagination.

Beyond Gairloch, beyond the near hills .. . someone .. . something .. .
was out there.  I tried to project my senses beyond Gairloch, beyond
the river, more toward the hills ahead, in the direction of the
vulcrows' calls.  . darkness, and shiny brass, and blued steel .. .

The prefect's soldiers.  Waiting ahead.

Turning my attention behind me, back into Gallos, I searched .. . and
found more darkness, more brass and blued steel, riding up from behind
me on the road that would lead them and me onward into Kyphros and into
more death on both sides.  Wonderful!  I had the prefect's troops in
front of me and behind me.

I opened my eyes and looked back across the bridge toward the rolling
brown plains that I knew remained behind me, behind the hill, then
eastward at the light dusting of snow on the very tips of the uncovered
rock of the Little Easthorns.  Further to the west, to my right, just
barely visible, a hint of gray clouds had begun to billow, as if to
represent the chaos of the wizard who resided in the rocks of the
unseen Westhorns that lay beneath or beyond those distant clouds.

The Westhorns, and Antonin, would have to wait, at least for a while,
until I had seen enough of Kyphros and the aut arch to ensure the
answers to Brettel's questions and my own doubts.

While it was just past mid-morning, the menace that awaited me lay some
distance ahead, and like Gairloch, I was thirsty.  Hungry or not, I
also needed to eat.

The river water was cold, cold enough both in drinking and in washing
the grime from my face to encourage my appetite, and to open some trail
bread and dried fruit from two packages near the top of the saddlebags
provided by Brettel.  Being able to perceive what was inside closed
sacks had some advantages in the dark and when you didn't want to open
sealed provisions.  I grinned, thinking how I had wondered how Justen
always knew where things were.

Still munching on the bread, I wondered about the soldiers ahead, and
about the vulcrows, the ones I had not seen, only felt, over the next
hill, and those circling further away.

The breeze from the south increased, and with it came the odor of ashes
and charred hides.  I had to concentrate to finish the slice of the
second dried apple.  After filling my canteen and taking another long
swallow of cold river water, I reclaimed Gairloch from his browsing.

"Come on.  It's time to figure out what's ahead."  Whuff ... Gairloch's
steps became more skittery as we neared the top of the hill beyond the
bridge.  Yeee-ahh, yeee-ahh, yeee-ahh .. .

Just before the crest of the hill at the right edge of the road was a
square limestone marker, no more than knee-high.  Only two
words-"Kyphros" set above "Gallos," with a line separating the two. But
someone had tried to scratch a skull next to the "Kyphros."

Casting my senses ahead of me, I could feel nothing living .. . except
for the vulcrows perched in a barren low tree just beyond the hilltop.
Whuffl..  .

We passed the marker and continued over the crest, the odor of ash even
more pronounced in the light breeze.  "..  . uuugggghhhh ..."

My guts nearly wrenched out of my body, and I swallowed hard to keep
the just-eaten bread and fruit within me.

Except for the two vulcrows perched on the leafless trunk of a white
oak, nothing lived.

Except for the road, which only bore a white dusting, thick white ash
covered the entire hillside nearly a kay in every direction, so white
that it first looked like a blanket of snow.  Only a few blasted tree
trunks, all white oaks, poked through the calf-deep ash.  Yeee-ahh ..
.

The pair of vulcrows flapped into the late morning sky, heading south
toward those circling the higher hills.  Wheeeeeeee .. .

I didn't blame Gairloch as he pulled up short of the ash.  "Easy .. .
easy ."

There was nothing there.  My staff was cool to the touch, and nothing
lived.  Nothing.

But I knew that the white ash represented the remains of men, women,
horses, grasses, trees, birds, insects, and even fall flowers.

My guts twisted again.  Wheeeee .. . eeeee .. .

"Easy .. . easy ... we have to go on."

More than ever I had to go on, deeper into the war zone that was
Northern Kyphros, deeper into the destruction that seemed so
unnecessary to me, and so critical to Antonin and the white wizards.
"... come on ..."  I patted his neck and flicked the reins.

Skittish step by skittish step, Gairloch carried me straight down the
ash-dusted road.

At the bottom of the hill the ash ended, almost as though a line had
been drawn, and the fall grasses and the scrub brush resumed.  The road
clay was again damp, and I wondered if the rain had been created to
damp the ash into place.

I shook my head.  Who knew why the chaos-wizards did all that they
did?

Yee-ah .. .

The echoing cry of the vulcrow reminded me there was more of the
same-or worse-yet to come.

At one time, the hills had been farmed.  The stone pillars of fences
remained, as did a few rotting split rails.  Every so often, we passed
a chimney emerging from a thicket of bushes or even standing alone and
rising out of a hummock of grasses.

The hills were not wild again, nor were they tame, but somewhere in
between.  Abandoned apple trees still ran in orchard rows with gaps
showing those that had died and not been replaced.  Taller blocks of
mixed oaks and conifers outlined old wood lots while scrub oak and red
berry meadows indicated once-cleared fields.

With each hill, we neared the circling vulcrows, and an underlying
sense of white menace.

Yeee-ah, yee-ah '..  .

To the west, the clouds kept building.  My stomach continued to
churn.

Finally, I put a shield around me.  Not one that would just keep me
from being seen.  Like me, any chaos-wizard could have seen through a
visual reflective shield.  This shield would keep someone from throwing
energies at me.  Light is energy, and if I could keep light from
touching me, I ought to be able to keep from being turned into white
ash.  The only problem was that I still couldn't see with my eyes
because the shield kept light and energy from touching me.

I wondered why I didn't cool off, but my body did generate heat.  That
brought up another question-like why my body heat didn't fry me inside
my shell-but I let my thoughts work on the shield .. . and the shield
let energy escape.

Could I build a shield that worked both ways-letting no energy enter or
escape?  Probably, but for what reason?

Wheeee .. . eeee

Yeee-ah .. .

By now it was early afternoon, and we had nearly reached the top of a
particularly long hill.  From what I could tell, the vulcrows were
circling over the next hill.

I cast out my senses.

The fight was over, for the soldiers were methodically moving on foot,
their horses tethered or picketed.

A point of white resided there as well, a living point of white, a
chaos-wizard.

There was no point in trying to avoid the soldiers, not with more than
a score of them plus a wizard who could track me.  But I didn't like
it.  I had no desire to be any sort of hero.  I just had less desire to
be run down until I was too exhausted to fight.  Besides, the soldiers
couldn't fight what they couldn't see.

The wizard was another question.

Still ... I looked behind me, as far as my senses would carry me.

I wished I hadn't.

Wheeee .. . Gairloch tossed his head, as if in warning.

More than two score cavalry had passed over the South-brook bridge and
now trotted onward, less than two long hills behind.  Behind them .. .
much further behind, I could sense a rolling wave of chaos; and I
couldn't tell for sure, but would have been willing to bet that it
centered on a white-gold coach and Antonin.  Where he had been when I
disrupted the prefect's chaos-fountain, I didn't know, but he was
definitely on my trail.

All of this had developed because I'd wanted to do something to repay
Destrin for his support and to ensure a future for Deirdre.  But given
the results, and Justen's warnings, and Antonin's meddling in the war
between Gallos and Kyphros it wasn't as though I had much choice.
Someone thought there was a real wizard loose, and all my actions had
pointed to me-and I scarcely knew what I was doing.

So they wanted me, whatever the cost.  All too predictable.

I glanced back over my shoulder.

Wheeee .. . uhhhh .. . wheeee.

Gairloch's protest jerked my head back toward the crest of the hill
before us.

Right-handed, I chucked the reins.  "Come on, old fellow.  We can't
exactly turn back."

Whheee.

"No, we can't.  The prefect might let you haul baggage carts, but I'd
end up at the festivities in his central square.  The central
attraction, you might say."  I extended my left hand toward the staff,
still safe and waiting in the saddle holder.  "Oooo .. ."  The
subjective heat flashed to my fingers even before they reached the
black lorken of my staff.

Something was definitely waiting over the crest of the trail, where
those soldiers and their attendant wizard waited.

I shrugged.  What choice did I have?  A few worn-out soldiers and a
less capable wizard ahead, or fresh troops and Antonin behind?

The choice was clear enough.  I just didn't like either alternative.

I wiped my forehead, even though I knew neither the sun's heat nor
glare had reached through my shield.

Wheeee .. . ccc .. .

"I know.  There are evil types behind us and worse in front of us.  But
you're going to have to give up the idea of hauling baggage for the
prefect."

Again, I tried to sense what lay over the hill crest before me,
whatever it was that Gairloch disliked.  All I could feel was a sense
of heat, of the fire that was the chaos trademark.

Wheeee .. .

"I know."  I chucked the reins again.  Then I grabbed for my staff.

Tra .. . tra, tra, tra.  The faint sounds of a horn echoed from behind
me.  Just wonderful.  On a beautiful, sunlit fall day in Candar, I was
sitting in the middle of a road between Gallos and Kyphros.  A
wonderful day for a picnic or even a ride.  Too bad there were
bloodthirsty Gallians behind me and in front of me, and a wizard with
each troop.

Wheee .. .

"I know.  It wasn't exactly my idea, either."

So we crossed the hill crest and started down.

Clink .. .

Downslope, more than a score of armed troopers were mechanically
looting what had to be bodies.  The mechanical nature of the movements
told me that the victors-this time-had been the prefect's troops.

"Harmin!  Form up your squad!  Wizard says there's an armed man
coming."

In spite of myself, I grinned.  Me, an armed man?  With a small knife
and a staff that was only defensive?

"Deres, Nershal, move it!"

Five mounted figures drew together and began walking uphill.

Clink .. . clinkedy .. . dink ... "How far?"

"Right at the hilltop!"

"There's no one there!"

Nerve-wracking as it was, I guided Gairloch onto the side of the road,
into the grasses, gambling that the scrunched sounds of damp grass
would be less obvious than hoofprints suddenly appearing on the clay
road.

The nearest rider passed less than two arm-lengths from us as the five
men headed up the road.

"Check the road for hoofprints!"

Somebody was thinking-unfortunately.

We kept moving toward the troop.  The wizard, a blob of white mounted
on a horse that was probably also white, waited in the shade of a tall
pine downhill from the man who shouted the orders.

Wheeee .. . eeee .. .

"What was that?"

"Quiet," I whispered into Gairloch's ear, patting his neck.  "Quiet ..
."

We had to get closer to the white wizard, but not seem as though that
were my purpose.  So I kept Gairloch headed downhill, paralleling the
road.

"He's past you!  You idiots!  Turn around!  Look for hoof-prints! Marks
in the grass!"

By then we were nearly abreast of the heavy-set officer who bellowed.
Beside him were two other mounted men, plus two prisoners on
horseback-at least they were blindfolded and had their hands tied
behind them.  And I was powerless to do anything to save them-not with
my own order powers, at least.

Still ... I found myself turning Gairloch across the road, straight
toward the officer.

"He's headed toward you."  The flat voice carried uphill from the
shaded wizard.

"He's headed this way!"  The officer yanked his sword out, as did the
pair beside him.

Hsssss ... "Aeiiii .. . damned ..."

Hsss .. .

Clang ... "Harmin!"

Wheeee .. . eeeee .. .

Almost easy, it was.  Just a quick blow with the staff to the wrists of
all three men-who still couldn't see me.  So chaos-filled were they
that the mere touch of the staff was agony.  And I encouraged their
horses to run-after knocking the reins of the two captives' horses from
the hands of the third man.

Then I jammed the staff back into the holder and used my knife to slash
at the bonds of the prisoners.  That took too long.  Trying to cut
through rope from pony-back isn't easy.

Whhhhsttt!

A bolt of pure chaos-fire licked around me, and I expanded the shield
around the two.

"Hold still!"  I hissed.

"Mmmmmppphhhh .. ."

Gagged, of course, and probably telling me to get on with it.

"Harmin!  Get the bastard!"

Whhhsssstttt .. . Another sheet of flame cascaded off my shields.

I cut the woman's wrist a bit, but finally severed the heavy cord, and
pressed the knife into her hand.  "You'll have to free your friend!"  I
snapped, reaching up and yanking off the blindfold.  "Don't scream. You
can't see me!"  "..  . not a silly bitch like .. ."  she muttered as
she used her other hand to rip off the blindfold and the gag.

Gairloch wheeled away from the two captives.  While I would have liked
to run like hell, unless I kept the wizard busy there was nothing to
keep him from frying the captives.

So we charged, as much as a mountain pony and an idiot wood crafter
with a little ability with order-magic and a good staff could charge.

Whhhssstttt .. .

The heat and force nearly collapsed my shields in on me, somehow drawn
to the staff before me.

Thumpedy .. . thump ... Gairloch's hooves actually drummed on the
meadow turf, and I grabbed for my staff again, hoping my trembling
knees could hold me in place on the suddenly very unsteady Gairloch.

"They're escaping!"

"Who's escaping?"

Whhhsttttt!

The staff deflected the fire, but that was all it would do, gathering
some and letting the rest sheet off, almost as if I were fighting with
it, rather than with the other wizard.

Whhhssttttt!

"You see that?"

"Forget the wizards!  Get the captives!"

"Where are they?"

Whhhstttt!

Gairloch and I half-tumbled, half-thundered downhill toward the wizard
on his white horse.

Whhhstttt!

"Just keep going ..."

I got the staff ready.

EEEiiiii!  .. .

The white horse turned.

WHHHHSSSSTTTTTTTTTTTTT!

"Aeeeeeiiii .. ."

"Ouuuff .. ."

Staff and fire bolt had met at the white wizard's fingertips.

For a long instant, I sat there, momentarily near-deaf with the hissing
still crackling in my ears .. . shaking my head .. . before realizing
that the white horse had reared, and that a dead man lay on the turf,
still dressed in white.  Even as I watched, his face turned to ashes
and bones, and then the bones began to disintegrate .. .

"There he is!  Another wizard!  A black one!"

My shields had gone with the clash, leaving me in full sight of too
damned many Gallian soldiers.

"Jernan!  The captives!"

Shaking, head splitting, guts turning, I nudged Gairloch past the heap
of ashes that had been a white wizard, and back toward the road.

"Use your bows!"  bellowed the heavy-set officer.  "Your bows,
idiots!"

Somehow I gathered enough of a light shield around us, just enough to
cloak us for a while as we both staggered away.

"He's gone!"

"Guess where he is!"

I don't know what they did-except that if they shot at us, they missed.
I did know that I was now in big trouble.  Antonin wasn't about to
overlook the killing of another white wizard, however accidental it
might have been.

And the aut arch troops, assuming the captives made it back safely,
wouldn't be thrilled about a black wizard running around loose, either.
While I wasn't a black wizard, that was bound to be the way I would be
described.

My head ached.  My buttocks ached.  My eyes burned.  My ears kept
chiming in discordant minor keys, and there was a taste of bile in my
throat.  I'd played hero, and rescued two whole captives-maybe-and
alerted every white wizard in Candar.

Whheeee .  , .  eeee .. .

"Yeah ... I know .. ."

Somehow we tottered along through the afternoon, at least long enough
that the simmering disorder that represented Antonin and the mess I had
made disappeared behind us.

In the meantime, the clouds from the west rolled in.

Thurrrummmm .. .

The hills became more than hills and less than the East-horns, and the
road stopped rising and falling and turned into a near-steady grade.

Long before sunset, I turned Gairloch up a deserted arroyo that had
tufts of grass and a clean, if narrow stream.  There was an overhang
sheltered from both the road and overhead observation.

Then I unsaddled Gairloch, stacked the saddlebags, unpacked the
bedroll, and collapsed.  I did manage some silent wards, and a type of
shield I'd read about but never tried.  It didn't make us invisible,
just reduced the level of order that escaped from around us, something
not very useful in hiding from bandits, but very useful in hiding from
Antonin.  The problem was that you couldn't do both at once.  At least
I couldn't, and Antonin was the bigger problem in the dark.

Wheeee .. . eeeee .. .

Slurrrrppppp ... A wet tongue woke me into near-darkness.

Thurrummmm .. .

Despite the thunder, no rain had fallen.

The ringing in my ears was gone, but not the shakiness in my hands, or
the splitting headache that felt like thunder between my ears.

After crawling down to the brook, dunking my head and drinking, the
shakiness subsided to an occasional tremble, and I realized my crawl
had covered my trousers with mud.  I also realized that Gairloch was
hungry.

"Good horse .. . good pony ..."  I patted his neck, but he nipped at me
just enough to indicate words weren't what he wanted.  Two grain cakes
took care of his problem.  He was a pig, but he'd saved my neck too
many times to count.  So I munched on travel bread, ignored my headache
for a time longer, and brushed my four-footed savior.

Then I had some fruit and more bread and went back to sleep.

In the morning, I washed the mud off my trousers and laid them in the
sun to dry.  We both ate again before I washed myself up and even
shaved.  I was in no hurry.  Antonin clearly hadn't followed me, since
I was still alive, and there was no point in heading into more trouble
immediately.  There was also no point in malingering.

So, slightly after mid-morning, I resaddled Gairloch, packed up the
gear, and headed back to the road.

In one thing, I had been wrong.  Coach tracks marked the cracking clay
of the road.

I shivered, but there was nothing else I could do.

LIX

IN A WAY, following the coach tracks was a relief.  At least, I knew
that Antonin was not tracking me directly.  But then, I wasn't sure
that he even knew that I-Lerris-existed.  The other thought, even more
disturbing, was that he didn't really care, that nothing I had done
mattered.  Even worse was the thought that perhaps my actions actually
benefitted the white wizard.

I frowned at the thought.  Antonin had only seen my face once, in a
crowded inn, and he had never heard my name.  There would have been
nothing to connect me to the ordered woodwork or even to the disasters
I had created in Fenard.  So all that he probably knew was that someone
was working order in Gallos and Kyphros-someone strong enough or lucky
enough to destroy a white wizard .

That destruction I still did not understand fully, except how close I
had come to being destroyed myself.  Nor did I understand why Antonin
had not immediately set out after me.  I could only shake my head and
press on.

Gairloch dutifully carried me onward until we were clearly into the
tree-covered rocks of the Little Easthorns, steep hills I would once
have considered mountains.  But then, the way I viewed a number of
things had changed.

Around midday, when I was looking for another stream or at least a
shaded place, we came down another incline into a small dry valley.
Gairloch skittered slightly.  Underfoot the surface seemed flatter, and
I looked around.  On the right was a thick grove of scrub juniper
bushes.  On the left was a large and whitish boulder.  I reined
Gairloch to a halt.  Whheeee .. . eeee .. .

My spine tingled as I studied the rock that looked no different than
any other rock along the dusty road.  I glanced toward the scrubby
off-green of the junipers, felt the same way.  Something .. .

I closed my eyes and concentrated on sensing what was really there.

Or, as it turned out, what was not there.  Neither the juniper nor the
boulder was really there-just the semblance of each.  Behind the
semblance was the flat white surface of another wizards' road-one that
flew as straight as an arrow down a narrow valley that appeared to
stretch east from the Westhorns all the way to the Easthorns.

How many of the damned roads had the old chaos-masters built?  Was that
how they had held together their evil empire?  How had the illusion
lasted so long?

Then I felt stupid as I thought it out.  The road was old, but not the
illusion.  Antonin and his coach-they used the road.  No wonder he
seemed to be everywhere.  Then I began to look at the coach tracks.
There weren't any.  Something had smoothed them over.  None ran down
into the valley, and none ran out.  But they had led to the crest of
the hill behind me.

So the chaos-master didn't want his secret roads noticed.  I smiled
briefly and flicked the reins.  "Let's go."

Before riding on, I noted where the road ran for future reference.  The
road wasn't evil-just its uses.

We spent another night in the Little Easthorns, up another narrow
canyon with a stream that did not merit the name, and even less grass.
Gairloch had almost finished off the last of the grain cakes, and I
began to worry whether I would have the coins necessary for food once
we reached the more inhabited sections of Kyphros.

I washed out one set of underclothes and laid them on the rocks,
wringing them dry, wondering as I looked at the overhead clouds of gray
whether I should have done so.

After sunset, the thunder rumbled like coach wheels down a canyon road,
like Antonin riding forth and sowing destruction across the Vale of
Krecia.  I thought that was the name of the place where I had met the
white wizard, and if it weren't .. . well .. . one name was as good as
another.  The flashes of the lightning hid behind the clouds in the
northern half of the sky, back-lighting those dark sky-mountains.

For all the thunder in the heavens, the air remained warm enough that
the light breeze was welcome.  I ended up tossing off the cloak and
lying on the bedroll barefoot, sleeping in just shirt and trousers.

The rain promised by the thunder did not arrive, and, in time, the
clouds overhead vanished and the stars shone like tiny lamps in the
sky, clearer than I had seen them since I had landed in Freetown, and
nearly as clear as on a midwinter night in Recluce.

Dawn crashed down on me like a tide of light, or so it seemed, with the
red ball of sun bursting from a dark sky within instants.

With no reason to tarry, Gairloch and I headed onward and downward.
Being on the southern side of the Little Easthorns made a difference in
one respect.  Kyphros was warmer, a lot warmer, and drier.  Even with
just a shirt and no tunic, I was sweating-and it was well into fall.

What the place would be like in the summer, I wasn't sure I wanted to
find out.

Each step Gairloch took on the hilly road toward Kyphrien raised a
reddish dust.  Orchards seemed to prevail on the hillsides-orchards and
grapes.  The trees were of two kinds-gnarled olive trees with small
pale green leaves, and some sort of fruit with which I was unfamiliar.
There might have been several related types or different varieties of
the same type.  Whatever they were, the greenish fruits all grew on low
spreading trees with dark-green leaves that might have been shiny
except for the autumn dust.  Some of the green fruits seemed to have an
orange color mixed with the green, but since none of the trees were
that close to the road, I really couldn't tell.

Unlike the stone and red-oak houses of the more northern
principalities, the houses of Kyphros were white; but it wasn't the
white of chaos, just a soft off-white painted over timber and stone and
plaster.  The roofs were mostly of red tile.

Wheeee .. . eeee ... "It's hot, and you're thirsty.  So am I."

We kept riding, but only.  until the next crossroad, which consisted of
half-a-dozen houses and a small building with a shaded porch.  By then
it was near midday.

I wiped my forehead as I dismounted in front of the building.

"Could you tell me where I might get some water for my horse?"  I asked
a tanned youngster with shaggy black hair, a boy who might have reached
to my waist.

"We have some.  You will have to lead your .. . horse .. . around the
back."  He pointed around the left side of the building.  "Barrabra!  A
traveler!"  Then he was gone.

I scratched my head, itchy from the sweat and heat and dust, before
taking the reins and trudging toward the corner.

I stopped suddenly.  Around the white-plastered corner of the building
were several men armed with swords, waiting, and the fear they would
have denied boiled from them.  I didn't want to fight, and I didn't
want to run.  So I stood there, reins in hand, wondering what I would
do next.

Finally, I reached back and took my staff.  That was all I had.  I'd
never gotten my knife back from the Kyphran soldier in all the
confusion with the white wizard.

I spoke loudly.  "If I really meant you harm, don't you think I would
have fried you where you stood?"

Two of them dropped the swords and ran.  One shook his head.  The
biggest charged around the corner waving the blade in a way that showed
he had no idea of how to use it.

Thunk.

Clang.  The sword banged against the wall and dropped into the dirt.

"Just leave it there," I said tiredly.  "All I wanted was some
water."

"But .. . you're a wizard .. ."  He was dark-haired, well-muscled, and
wore faded white trousers and a sleeveless shirt.  On his feet were
sandals, not boots.

"Says who?  You made enough noise to warn an army."

"What are you?"  He looked past me to the other man creeping up behind
me.

I half-turned in order to watch them both.

The man who had come from the rear did wear boots, the same pale-green
uniform, including the green leather vest, that I had seen on the
prefect's captives, and the way he carried the sword was more
professional.

"Who are you?"  asked the soldier.

"Me?  I'm a woodworker at heart, who happened to displease the prefect
of Gallos."

"Likely story."

He was right, unfortunately.  In his position, I wouldn't have believed
me either.  I shrugged.  "All right.  I'm from Recluce, and I created a
little too much order in Fenard, partly through woodworking, and now I
seem to have every white wizard in Candar after me."  *

"That's not much better."  He waited, however, probably for
reinforcements.

So I wove a shield and disappeared.  Then I knocked his sword from his
hand while he was gaping.

While he was meditating on that, I reappeared, presented the sword back
to him with my free hand.  "It happens to be true, and I'm getting a
little tired of playing games."

He paled slightly.  "What do you want?"  He sheathed the weapon.

"I'm trying to see if someone I once knew ..."  I raised the staff.

For the first time, he actually looked at the staff, realized that it
was black.  So help me, the man turned even whiter than the wall.  He
swallowed.  "Why .  ?"

"I need to know."

"Is she a black-haired blade that can destroy any man?"

I hadn't thought of Krystal in quite that way.  "One of them was
black-haired and a master with almost any kind of blade.  Black-eyed,
pale-skinned-"

"Hell .. ."

I turned on the other man, who had edged toward his sword, still lying
not that far from my feet, "Just hold it right there."

Footsteps thudded on the ground.

"Do I have to disappear again?"  I asked the young soldier.

He shook his head.  "No.  Noser  We're supposed to bring anyone from
Recluce in to see the sub-commander.  Those are the standing orders.  I
should have remembered.  The sub-commander was-"

"The sub-commander?"

"She's in charge of training.  She does many other things, and she's
also the aut arch champion.  Perhaps all that is not so wondrous to a
magician like you, but she is famed and fabled .. ."

It didn't surprise me-not after recalling the shy lady who had
dismembered the apples so quickly, or the woman who had been pressing
Gilberto by the time she left Recluce.

"He's going to Kyphrien to meet the sub-commander.  I will be the one
to carry out the standing orders and to convey him there, for has he
not found our way station  The way-station of Pendril and Shervan ..
."

The others stood back, and that was how I met Shervan.

"You water your horse, and Barrabra will fix you something to eat. Then
Pendril and you and I will saddle up, and we will depart for Kyphros,"
Shervan announced after ushering off the half-dozen armed and
able-bodied citizens of the little crossroads.

"That's not a problem?"

Shervan shook his head.  "I must only apologize that we did not
recognize you.  It has been so long .. ."

"So long?"

"We used to receive the pilgrims from Recluce, but seldom do we see
them any more."

I nodded, knowing why-Antonin.

Whuuuff..  . interrupted Gairloch, as if to ask about the water I had
promised.

"Scr?"  called a strong feminine voice from the covered portico.  The
shade kept me from seeing more than an ample figure.

"That's Barrabra," explained Shervan.

"I need to water my horse .. ."

"That's a horse?"  asked Barrabra, still shrouded by the portico.

I smiled.  "He's enough of a horse to have carried me through the
Easthorns and the Little Easthorns."

Shervan looked toward the portico with a look I could not quite
decipher, but would have said embodied the concept of "I told you
so."

I took the reins and led Gairloch around the building to the watering
trough.  Shervan followed, still talking.

Unlike some towns I had seen since leaving Recluce- places like
Hrisbarg, Freetown, Hewlett, and Weevett, to name a few-the rear of the
whitewashed stone or brick buildings was as clean as the front, and
similarly shaded by the protruding tile roof.  The housing design
confirmed my feelings that in the summertime Kyphros was hot indeed.
"..  . and the Gallians, they just keep coming.  We never fight unless
we have the advantage, and we must kill three of them for every one of
us they get.  Having the hills and the mountains there helps, but just
two eight-days ago some of them got as far as Sintamar."  Shervan
grinned.  "They didn't get back."

I watched as Gairloch drank from the trough, carved roughly from
limestone, glancing back toward the north and the clouds that were
again building over the Little Easthorns.  They didn't look natural,
but who was I to say?  "Those clouds-" "..  . and the only other one
was the knife-thrower .. . such a-"

"What knife-thrower?"

"You were asking about the clouds, scr?"

"Later.  What were you saying about the knife-thrower?"

"I have never seen such a knife-thrower.  Never.  Noser the clouds, we
did not used to have clouds such as those .. ."

"What about the knife-thrower?"  I interrupted.  "..  . not since the
days of the Great White Wizards, they say.  You were asking about the
knife-thrower.  Yes-that was the best.  The cowardly Gallians-that was
before they became the mad dogs they are now-they ran from the black
horse, anywhere to escape the knives and the sword.  Such a pair they
were!  Never had we seen such a pair!"

I was getting ready to strangle the cheerful Shervan, especially since
Gairloch had finished drinking.

Whheeee .. . eeee .. .

I fished out the remaining grain cake from the right-hand saddlebag
provided by Brettel.

"How-how did you do that?"

"Do what?"

"That food for your horse.  You made it appear out of thin air.  Never
have I seen that.  Not even the Great White Wizard could do that, I
would bet."

I sighed.  I'd totally ignored the shield around the second set of
saddlebags, that minor bit of order-control that left them out of
sight.  Now Shervan would be telling the world about my marvelous food
creation.  "No .. . no.  I didn't make it.  There's a hidden sack
there.  That's all."

"Hidden sacks!  What will they think of next?"

"When will we leave for Kyphrien?"  I asked desperately.  "Tendril has
to get his horse, and you need to eat, and we need to put your horse
with his hidden sacks in a shady place to rest while we eat.  Then we
will go."

I didn't quite roll my eyes.  "Let's eat, and you can tell me about the
marvelous pair and the knife-thrower."

"Shervan!  Stop flapping your tongue and let the poor wizard have
something to eat.  The rest of us would like to talk to him, too."
Barrabra stood on the raised step that led from a narrow archway in the
back of the structure.  Her figure was as ample as I had guessed, but
her hair, unlike Shervan's short and coarse black strands, was nearly
white-blond and shoulder-length, swept away from her broad face with
green combs set above each ear.

"Yes.  Yes.  You see why Barrabra is the one who runs the store.  She
keeps her mind upon what is important."

"Shervan!"

The young man shrugged at me and smiled.

I shrugged back.  "About my horse?"

"Ah, yes.  This way."

The side of the structure that we had not yet been to was the stable,
empty except for a single palomino.  Inside the heavy walls and through
the wide circular archway, the air was cool and still.

"You may use any of the stalls, but Pabblo does not like all horses
..."

I took the hint and put Gairloch in the stall farthest from Pabblo.  I
did not unsaddle him, nor did I close the stall.  If I had to leave
quickly, I certainly wanted to be able to do so.

"It's about time," observed Barrabra as Shervan led me into a long dim
room dominated by a long polished red-oak table.  On each side was an
equally long and backless red-oak bench.  At each place was a large and
empty bowl with an equally-proportioned spoon.

At the table sat another youth older than the boy who had greeted me, a
girl with golden hair like Barrabra's but barely coming into womanhood,
and just showing curves under her maroon shirt; and two men even
younger than Shervan, but wearing the same uniforms.

A woman easily three times my age sat in the middle of the side of the
table opposite the door where I had entered.  Her gray hair was worn in
combs like Barrabra's.  Like Barrabra, she also wore
three-quarter-length trousers with wide legs, and a loose shirt with
sleeves that ended above the elbow.  While the younger woman's garments
were a dark green, the ancient's were a pale yellow.

Click .. . click .. . My boots clattered on the tile floor.

"He doesn't sound like a wizard," complained the old woman.

"Grandmere!"

"He doesn't."

"I saw him pull a cake for his horse out of thin air!"  announced
Shervan.

"You're calling that pony a horse?"

"He's cute," added the boy who had first greeted me.  "I wish I could
have a-little horse like that."

"It's time to eat.  It's past time to eat.  So sit down.  No, not
there!  You give the wizard the chair."

Shervan bowed and gestured to the chair at the head of the table.  I
supposed I should have refused and offered it back to him, but the
confusion of the conversation was disorienting.

I sat.  The place on my right was empty, and the blond girl was seated
on my left.

The room was suddenly silent.  I swallowed, and it seemed like an
eternity before I realized, silently thanking Magistra Trehonna as I
did, that Kyphros belonged to the one-god believers.  I swallowed again
as everyone looked at me.

"In all times ..."  I began slowly, and as I began I could see the
tension on the other faces ease.  "In all times, there has been
disorder.  It is the job of right-thinking people to bring order from
chaos .. . may we have the will to bring that order.  May we have the
strength to resist evil and do good."

I bowed my head, since I had no way to end the prayer, not that I could
voice.

"Peace under God .. ."  added Shervan.

"Very nice ... it was strange, but nice .. ."  said one of the other
soldiers.

"He sounds like a wizard," added the old woman who had just said that I
didn't sound like one.

"Where's the food?"

"I'm getting it, I'm getting it!"

An aroma of spices and meats entered the long room even before Barrabra
arrived with the tray, bearing a huge casserole which she set in front
of the older woman before heading back to the kitchen.  One saving
grace was that I wouldn't need the knife that I didn't have.  I
fingered the empty sheath, wondering if I had really wanted to carry
the knife at all.  But that was silly.  At least, I thought it was
silly, but I still wondered.

"Spiced lamb chili, my favorite!  You remembered."

The second tray held two enormous freshly-baked loaves of bread, and
that was followed by a pitcher of something and a tray of battered
mugs.

With that, Barrabra plopped herself onto the end of the bench next to
me and looked at me, face to face.  Her breath was like cloves, strong,
but not unpleasant.  "Do you have a woman, wizard?"

I swallowed.

"I don't think so, Barrabra."

"Well, do you or don't you?"

"Pass the chili!"

"Just take a chunk of bread, and send the loaf to the wizard."

"My name is Lerris, and I'm-" I was going to say that I wasn't a
wizard, but the words stuck in my throat.  That scared me, the thought
that I was even partly maybe a wizard.

"He says his name is Lerris."

"That's better than calling him wizard.  He's too young to be called
wizard, even if he is one."

"I want the chili!"

I looked frantically at Shervan, but he just grinned and plunged his
spoon into the bowl of chili, whatever that was.  In his other hand, he
held a large chunk of bread.

"About your woman?  Is she young?  I'll bet she's thin and
harsh-tongued.  She probably would starve you to keep her looks, just
like a northern woman."  As she talked Barrabra ladled her bowl full of
the spicy mixture from the casserole and began to fill my bowl.

"Here!  You need some teekla."  Those words came from the other side,
from the blond girl who looked like a younger and thinner version of
Barrabra.

My eyes darted from one to the other.  At that point, the bread tray
was thrust under my nose, and I broke off a large chunk.  "Barrabra, he
can't have a woman.  I'll bet he didn't even have a sister.  Did
you?"

"No," I admitted, taking a spoonful of the spicy mixture and swallowing
it.

"Ooooff..  ."  I swallowed again and grabbed for the mug.  Hot? Spicy? 
Neither was an adequate description of the chili.  It didn't burn; it
seared my throat all the way down.

"Not the teekla, silly.  You eat the bread.  That's the way you do it,"
advised the girl, her tone patient and condescending simultaneously.

Since the teekla, with its unknown fruity taste, hadn't eased the fire
in my throat and stomach, I chewed off a large corner of the chunk of
bread, swallowing as evenly and quickly as I could.

With the back of my hand, I wiped the sudden tears from my eyes, but
the burning had in fact diminished.  ", .. the post-rider said the
madmen lost one of their wizards .. ."  "..  . Haylen's cousin said a
wizard freed him .. ."

"Ha!  He didn't want to admit he got careless!  That's all."

"Some more chili, please."

"When are you going to take me to Kyphrien, Shervan?  You promised ..
."

Amid the friendly chaos, I took another spoonful of the chili, the
stew, whatever it was-a much smaller spoonful, accompanied by a much
larger mouthful of the heavy bread.  The combination seemed to work.
Only my forehead broke out in sweat this time.

"You never answered about your woman, wiz- ... I mean, Lerris."

I took a small sip from the mug.  "Right now ... I don't have one. It's
not wise-"

"I told you, Barrabra!  He doesn't look like he knows women."

In that, certainly, the girl was right.

"Hush, Cirla."  Barrabra held her hand up.  "Not wise?  Is it wise to
be tempted by every pretty face?"

"I have a lot-" I struggled with both her question and another spoonful
of chili.

She shook her head.  "You men.  You think that women are fragile, that
only men can do the great deeds."

"I never said that .. ."

"It is not what you said, but what you thought.  Would you rather live
in Kyphros under the aut arch or under a madman like the Prefect of
Gallos?  Great deeds .. . phew www ... dreaming of great deeds only
leads to great evils, and too many men dream of great deeds.  Give me a
solid man any day, one who loves an orchard."

I thought about woodworking, but decided against arguing my case.  She
would have found something else to throw against men.  Instead, I
struggled with the chili and listened.  "..  . their soldiers are
younger each season .. ."

"And so are ours.  We're all bleeding to death .. ."

"Pass the bread."  "..  . we'll stop in Meltosia.  Even from there,
it's a good day's ride."

Barrabra stopped talking and kept exchanging glances with the girl
Cirla.  I ignored both, trying to pick up on what Shervan and the other
two soldiers were discussing, but there were too many interruptions. So
I ate, slowly and carefully, wondering exactly how badly my stomach and
guts would torture me in the days ahead.

The midday meal ended as suddenly as it began.

"Enough!"  announced Barrabra.  "You all would sit here all afternoon
if you could.  The wizard must go to Kyphrien, and Saltos and
Gerarra"she pointed at the other two soldiers" must take the watch
station from my Nicklos and Carmen."

"So soon?"  pleaded the youngster.

"So late.  Shush!  Clear off the table.  Out to the kitchen."

I retreated to the stable with Shervan.  "Your sister?"

"How did you guess?"

"A look, and the mention of her Nicklos."

Shervan began to saddle Pabblo.  I rummaged around and found what
looked to be a short stack of grain cakes.

"If I could purchase some of these .. ."

"No ... no ... they are yours.  We have fresh grain and grasses."

"I can't just take them."

Shervan shrugged.  "Then .. . someday, sometime, make us a gift.  Make
it for Barrabra."

I thought I understood.  "I will."  Another obligation, but what other
choice was there?  Gairloch needed travel food as much as I did.  Maybe
more in the dry Kyphran climate.

Clinkedy .. . clink .. .

"Pendril is here."

The other trooper was heavier than Shervan, older, with a flowing black
mustache.  "Come on, Shervan.  You want to get to Meltosia before
Parlaan's closes?  He's riding that pony?  Ah well, wizards will be
wizards .. ."  Pendril shook his head.

Shervan winked at me.

I didn't shrug, but I felt like it.  Instead, I flicked the reins, and
Gairloch carried me out into the full afternoon sun.

The road out from Tellura and toward Kyphrien was the same as the road
that had led me into the little crossroads town-hot, dusty, and up one
rolling hill and down the next.

Shervan rode his palomino Pabblo, and the other trooper- Pendril, who
had not been at the noon meal-rode a black-and-white spotted gelding.
Both horses reminded me exactly how small Gairloch was.

"He moves quickly for a pony," said Pendril.

"And the wizard rides well for a wizard, too."

"Are you sure he's a wizard?"

"Am I sure?  Let me tell you .. ."

In the first five kays we traveled, Shervan must have told how I
disarmed him and how I had made a grain cake appear from thin air in at
least three different ways.

By then, the sun had touched the clouds in the west, and the
unseasonable heat began to dissipate.  I wiped my forehead and began to
enjoy the ride, noting that the hills were flatter, not quite so
barren, and that some fields held goats- but only in the fenced
fields.

"Ah .. . yes .. . the aut arch  Any unfenced goat is considered a game
animal that anyone may kill or capture-unless it is branded.  But if it
is branded, the owner must pay two coppers to ransom it back."

I frowned, but I didn't need to.  Shervan kept explaining.

"The goat, you see, it will eat anything, and if it eats everything,
then the desert will come.  We need the goats, but we need the trees,
especially the olives and the lemons and oranges."  He shrugged.  "We
also have a lot of good goat dinners."

"I haven't seen any buffalo."

"Kyphros is too hot for them, except under the West-horns," explained
Pendril.  His voice was lower and slower than Shervan's.  "Few of us
would live near the wizard mountains, especially now."

"The wizard mountains?"

"That is where the clouds that bring lightning and fire come from,
where the white wizards live, and where too many people have
disappeared.  To go to Sarronnyn, it is better to go south first, to
use the southern passes, or to go north of even Gallos.  Going north is
not possible any more, either .. ."

"My father said that Sarronnyn was bright, with grassy hillsides, not
as cold as Gallos, and not as hot as Kyphros, and the women were always
friendly, and they liked strangers.  That's what he said."  Shervan
looked ahead at the dusty and hilly road, then continued without a
break.  "My father, he used to drive a road wagon for Wistar, but that
was when the middle road was open to all, and it took only four days to
Sarronnyn, not an eight-day and more like now.  That road wagon, it
took four horses to pull it, and it glistened like red gold.  I
remember when he put me up on the seat and let me hold the reins."

Shervan looked back behind us.  No one was there.  I had already
checked.  Although we had overtaken a small wagon loaded with covered
baskets and had passed a post-rider headed back in the direction of
Tellura, the road was lightly used.  "I see no one.  Do you think we
will see one of the Finest?"  asked Shervan.

"Here?  So far from the hills?"

"But the wizard should see some of the Finest."

Suspecting I had seen a few of the Finest as captives in Fenard, I let
the two talk as the horses carried us down the road and further into
Kyphros.

Meltosia was nearly a repeat of Tellura, except that, instead of just
five or six buildings, it had nearly a dozen, one of which was a long
house that took in travelers.  Mama Parlaan's house could not have been
called an inn, not even in comparison to the Snug Inn in Howlett.  But
the rooms were cool and the pallets on the hard wooden bedframes clean.
The evening meal was another spicy casserole-goat, I gathered, but I
didn't ask.

Breakfast was hard rolls not much after dawn, and Shervan woke as
talkative as he went to sleep.

"A wonderful morning to be alive.  Look at the pink above the hills,
and the dew like pearls upon the yucca.  A good day for a long ride,
and it will be a long ride to Kyphrien, but a sunny one.  Don't you
think so, Pendril?"  Pendril earned my gratitude by grunting.  The
midday meal was in a barracks of road soldiers in a place whose name I
never learned, distinguished mainly by the fact that the small post
controlled the bridge over the first river I had seen in Kyphros-a
snaking tongue of water no more than fifteen cubits wide and less than
a cubit deep.

"But when the spring floods come, then the waters sweep everything
before them and the land is underwater for kay upon kay."

I hadn't asked, but Shervan answered the questions I might have posed,
and all too many even I wouldn't have considered.

That was how we reached Kyphros.

LX

"THIS IS AS far as we go," Shervan had told me as he and Pendril
escorted me to the low walls around the guard complex.

"Why?"

"Our job is just to get you here.  We're outliers, and we're not
allowed within the walls.  That is, unless we are mustered in for
training or for special duties, and that does happen."  He shrugged,
almost dropping his reins, "As for us, we keep the way station for
stray wizards and let Barrabra tell us what to do.  What else can we
do?"  He smiled apologetically.

I smiled at his expressive face.  Since I knew but half the story, I
couldn't say whether the restriction made all that much sense, but who
was I to quibble?  "So what am I supposed to do?"

"You stable your pony in the main stables.  You just ride right through
the gates on the left.  Then you go to the building with the green flag
and ask to see the sub-commander.  They will mumble and mutter, but you
just tell them everything and insist on your right to see the
sub-commander.  Just insist on it.  I'm sure you'll find some way to
convince them."

Both men laughed at that.

Their confidence was touching, if misplaced.  And I couldn't deny that
it had been a relief to ride the last day without having to weave
shields or worry about being denounced as a wizard or keep hiding from
everyone.

So I rode up to the gate, where the guard looked me over, then back at
the pair of outlier soldiers.  "What did you drop on me?"

"Orders!  He's supposed to see the sub-commander."  Shervan didn't
exactly keep a straight face.  Pendril looked in the other direction.

"One of those?"  The gate guard shook his head, then looked at me. "The
stable is on the left.  Once you get your .. . horse .. . settled, go
straight across the yard to the main building.  Don't go anywhere else,
or someone's like to draw before they ask questions."

The stable was right where it was supposed to be, a solid red brick
with a slate roof and a slight but not overpowering odor of horse
manure.

"Official business?"  asked the ostler, practically running me down
even before I had both feet on the ground.

I nodded.

"Sign here."  He handed me a flat square of parchment and pointed to a
line under the words "stable permit."  He stepped back.  "If you can't
sign, use your mark.  Get an officer or a serjeant to chop this.
Otherwise it's a copper a day.  If you lose the permit, it's two
coppers a day."  He looked at me and at Gairloch.  "Mountain pony?"

"Yes."

"If you want to stable him, you can have the last stall on the
right."

Since it wasn't really a request, I led Gairloch to the last stall and
unsaddled him.  I did shield the saddlebags, just as a matter of habit.
But I brought my staff with me.

The ostler looked at it with respect.  "Seeing the sub-commander?"

"That's what I understand."

"Good luck!  Tough lady.  Go to the red archway, over there, under the
green flag."

With that I walked less than a hundred cubits, where I found another
guard, standing beside the doors under the red-painted archway.  Then I
looked at the young redheaded guard.  "I need you to take a message to
the sub-commander."

"The Sub-Commander of the Guard-a message from a .. . what are you?"

"A woodworker, among other things."  And I was, more of a woodworker
than an order-master, when you got right down to it.

"A message from a woodworker?"  The youth in the worked
leather-and-brass vest shook his head in disbelief.  "She wouldn't even
bother to look at you, fellow."

The wooden beam framing the open door, the beam against which, he
leaned, scarcely looked able to support him, let alone the archway,
what with the cracks and the age of the dusty structure.  At the
moment, I was tempted to dip into chaos and age him and the structure
further, but .. . trusting in Justen and the book, I only sighed.  "A
wager, perhaps?"

"Ha!  What would you have to wager, except your hide?"

"Say a couple of silvers that you can't touch me with that fancy
sword-my old staff against your new sword."

I placed my hand on the staff.

He didn't even seem to notice its appearance, so surprised was he with
my suggestion.  "That's dangerous, fellow.  I might take you up on it.
It's a crime to strike a member of the aut arch guard."

"Is it a crime to strike your weapon?"

"No."  He looked puzzled.

"Well, that might make it harder.  Say a gold and you carry my message
to the sub-commander."

"And when I win?"

"You have at least some of my blood and a gold penny."

"How do I know you're honest?"

I sighed.  "Because the penalty for being dishonest would likely be my
head."

"You don't sound like a woodworker .. ."

The youngster was sharp, almost brilliant.

"I never said that's all I was."

His small eyes looked me over, and I could see the scheming
beginning.

"I wouldn't, if I were you.  The sub-commander already knows where I'm
from, and there's not one of you that could best her blade."  The words
didn't come out quite right, but he didn't seem to notice.

"How would you know?"

I managed to keep my face impassive.  Sometimes, I actually can.

Then he swallowed.  It took him a moment, but, like I said, the young
man was almost brilliant, at least for a Candarian.  "You put your
staff against her blade?"

"That was some time ago.  Doubtless she has improved."

Improved or not, he suddenly realized how close he had come to
disaster.

"I could just take your name .. . and leave the decision to her .. ."

I inclined my head to him.  "That might be best.  My name is Lerris."
Of course, that was all that I had ever wanted, but nothing anywhere
was straightforward, and for whatever reason, I really hadn't wanted to
demand to see Krystal.  Call it stiff-necked pride .. . whatever.  I
still had some.

Still shaking his head, the redheaded young trooper yelled into the
barracks.  "Bidek!  Get on up here."

As soon as another young buck, this one heavier, sloppier, and darker,
as well as more disapproving, appeared, the nameless young guard
marched across the open courtyard-one of the few in Candar that was
actually paved with level and solid stones-and disappeared into a
granite three-storied building.

While I waited, I made a few more mental measurements of the area
around the doorway, mainly to test the age of the wood, since I had an
idea for my defense that would not violate the rules of order, since it
was strictly creative.

Using it wasn't necessary, since three guards marched from the wing of
the structure into which the young guard had disappeared.  He followed
behind them a moment later.  All four stopped short of me.

The center guard, wearing clean green leather and a blade that radiated
effectiveness, looked at the staff and nodded.

"The sub-commander bids you welcome, order-master.  Would you be so
kind .. . you are most welcome .. ."

He definitely wasn't used to inviting guests into the guard's domain. I
smiled pleasantly.  "I appreciate your courtesy and would hope you
would be so kind as to lead the way."  "..  . order-master .. . oh,
shit .. ."  Both the nameless young guard and Bidek looked as white as
the face of chaos as I saluted them with the staff and followed the
three troopers into the granite building and up three wide flights of
stairs. The door was bound in solid iron, and the knocker would have
waked the dead.

The dark-haired lady opened it herself, and her eyes did not even
flicker as she silently stepped back and let us enter.  Krystal's
quarters were almost lavish for a professional soldier's base, with two
large rooms, a conference room with a large rectangular table and heavy
wooden armchairs which opened into a covered and railed third floor
balcony, and a bedroom study although I only glimpsed her more personal
quarters as I stood in the conference room.

A large and sturdy oak beam stood behind the door from the main hallway
to her quarters.

"The order-master, commander."

"Thank you, Statcha.  You may leave us."  Krystal wore green leather
trousers, tighter than in Recluce, with a short jacket over a green
leather tunic.  The jacket was ornamental, not designed for battle, and
bore gold braid across the left shoulder and matching four-pointed
silver stars on the narrow lapels.

I could feel Statcha's eyebrows rising.

Krystal laughed, although she had not yet even turned her eyes to me,
and her laugh was more musical and more relaxed than I had heard it.
"You know I have nothing physical to fear from one man.  And an army
could not save me from a chaos-master or an order-master put against
me."

All three men backed away, as if they had been lashed, yet her words
had been gentle.  As she talked, I let my feelings reach out to her
blade-surprisingly, that same blade I had bought for her on a day that
seemed almost part of another life-and found .. . that the unordered
steel had assumed a rough order.  As had Krystal.  I shied away from
reading her feelings, knowing I was afraid to find out how she felt.

Clunk.

"Lerris."  Those black eyes turned on me, damping the fire of
instinctive command that I had suspected, but never seen.  "You look
older, wiser."

"I doubt that I'm much of either."

She smiled.  "That alone says you're both.  It's good to see you,
although I didn't doubt I would sometime."

I raised my eyebrows.

"You don't belong in Recluce, and sooner or later .. ."  She shrugged,
then looked squarely at me.  "Why did you come?"

"I needed to find out about the aut arch

"Then why did you ask for me?"

I admired the directness.  She was still gentle, but the gentleness had
been reinforced with steel.

"Because ..."  I took a deep breath, then shook my head.  "I don't
know.  It seemed the right thing to do, and I'm glad I did it.  But I
can't tell you why."  My pulse seemed to race, as though I were somehow
lying to myself, and that bothered me.

"You don't like not being able to answer my question."

I grinned, sort of.  "You're right.  I don't."

Her eyes brushed past me, then centered back on my face.  "Stories
about you are circulating all across Candar-except no one knows who you
are.  When I heard about the black-staffer who dared the dead lands it
had to be you.  When I heard about the gray wizard's apprentice who
healed a slut in Jellico and disappeared in plain view .. ."

My stomach twisted a little.  If Krystal knew .. .

"Were you the one who destroyed the white wizard near the Vale of
Krecia?"

"That was an accident," I admitted.

The sub-commander shook her head.  "Still the same combination of
confidence and modesty."

"Modest?"  She ignored my protest, looking at the doorway, then back at
the desk in the bedroom study  "Will you stay?"

"No.  Not for long, not if I'm to help you before it's too late.  To
undo what I may have done."  At that moment, I wanted to stay, to watch
her smile and hear the musical tone of her voice, but the order within
me refused to lie to her or to me.  "I'm not yet the order-master you
called me, and I may never be.  I haven't finished what I must."

She shook her head, and I realized that the long black hair was gone,
that her hair, rather than being bound up with silver or gold cords,
was scarcely longer than mine.  "I would like you to stay for
dinner."

The words were not a request, simply a direct preference, but Krystal
no longer had to ask for anything.

I thought.  Leaving tonight wouldn't solve anything, and Antonin did
not know who or where I was-yet.  Certainly he would within days, but I
had to sleep somewhere, and a good night's sleep with the aut arch
guards, even in a dusty barracks, would beat another night holed up in
a canyon or a thicket.  "Yes."

"Let's sit on the balcony for a moment.  I need to be at a meeting with
the aut arch before too long.  After that, we can really talk."  She
walked toward the shaded balcony, where she took a padded chair, and
gestured to the one across the small table from her.  "I'd offer you
something, but I'll have to leave before it comes.  I'd rather hear
from you-what you are doing, and why you wanted to see the aut arch

"I'm here to warn you, assuming you haven't heard.  The prefect has
decided to throw in with Antonin.  I made the mistake of taking on one
of his ... I'd guess I'd call him an ally, if the chaos-masters have
allies.  That was the white wizard I ran into."

"Antonin?"  Her face reflected puzzlement.

"The most powerful of the chaos-masters.  He did something to Tamra and
seems able to defy the Masters of Recluce-at least for now."  I
paused.

"Have you seen Tamra?"

My guts twisted again.  "I haven't seen her face, but I've seen traces
of her.  She's tied up somehow with Antonin, I think against her
will."

"Against her will?  I can't believe that.  Are you sure?"

What could I say to her?  The silence drew out, and I looked out onto
the paved yard, noting that the afternoon shadows cast by the building
in which we sat enshrouded the stables and the front gate.  Outside of
the footsteps and a few voices, the yard was quiet, orderly.

Krystal waited, with the same grace I recalled, but with that added
strength, almost like a cat that could spring from total relaxation
into an attack.

Finally, I tried to explain.  "Chaos is ... different.  You can't use
chaos even for the best of reasons without risking being trapped by it.
People told me that, but I wasn't sure.  They were right, and I was
lucky to meet a friendly gray wizard before finding too much trouble."
I forced a laugh.  "By then soldiers in only two principalities were
looking for my head."

"How did you escape from Freetown?"

"I bought a horse and rode out."

Krystal chuckled.  "It wasn't that easy, knowing you."

"It wasn't."  I didn't elaborate.  "What about you?  I understand they
burned the inn where we stayed."

"I claimed to be from the north and took on the local blades.  That
included a few of the old duke's bravos.  Then I waited in the hiring
hall until the new duke took over and agreed to terms with Recluce.
That got me a contract with the first road-merchant to visit.  When he
reached Jellico, we had enough to buy nags for the trip over the
southern passes to Kyphrien.  I hired on with a freelance arms-master
who trains bullyboys for the merchants, learned what I could.  He
suggested the aut arch who likes having women soldiers.  Kasee liked
me, and I started with a western road patrol.  There were a lot of
casualties.  When the Duke of Freetown's defectors tried to carve out
that abortive duchy .. ."  She frowned.

"You were the one?  I've heard stories about you for nearly half a
year."  I'd guessed she had been the road commander who had opened the
reservoir gates on the supply train, effectively ending the siege of
the border fort taken by the defectors.  I'd meant to ask about Wrynn
and about the incident with the Duke's troops.

Krystal actually flushed, although the paleness of her skin had been
replaced with a faint golden tan.  "What about this Antonin?"

"He's the one who's turning the prefect's troops into chaos-tinged
maniacs.  That's why they never surrender, always fight to the
death."

She pursed her lips, nodding slowly.  "We'd thought it was something of
the sort.  There are no order-masters in Candar, not that we can find."
She looked up.  "I can't stay now.  I really don't have time to get you
settled.  Would you mind waiting here for me?  You could wash up, and
there's some fruit over there."

Again, her request was not a request.

"How long?"  I saw her face stiffen.  "I didn't mean that.  I just
worry about Gairloch-my horse .. . and I'm not exactly presentable."

"Oh .. . I'll be back well before dinner."

I shrugged.  She was the sub-commander, gracious as she had been. "I'll
be happy to wait."  Surprisingly, I was.  I needed time to think. About
a lot of things.

"You're certain?"  She stood.

So did I. "As certain as I am about anything these days."

Then she leaned forward and gave me a friendly kiss.  "I'm glad you
came.  Relax if you can."

The kiss was just friendly, but as she turned and left she smiled, and
I wondered.

Besides wondering, I washed my hands and face, trying not to use all
the water or make too much of a mess.  Although curious, I did not look
at any of the papers on the desk in her bedroom.

Instead, I sat down on the long couch, except that I was tired, and I
was not sitting and thinking for long.

Click!

"I see you waited."  Krystal's voice was cheerfully brisk, but I had
trouble appreciating it, since I was trying to wake up from the
afternoon nap I hadn't expected to take, realizing that it was nearly
twilight.

"Long .. . meeting ..."  I yawned between words and struggled to my
feet.

"There are too many long meetings these days.  Will you be all right
for dinner?"

"I just have to wake up.  I sat down and .. . then you were back
here."

Her lips quirked, and I could see a few gray hairs among the black as
she stepped nearer.  "Lerris .. ."  Then, she shook her head.  "Later.
I need to change, and you need to get into something-"

"A little less travel-worn?"

"Do you have something?"

"It's plain, but I left my bags in the stable."

"I'll send-"

This time I shook my head.  "They won't find them."

"I see.  You have learned a few things."  Her tone was light.

"So have you, lady, I expect."

"Herreld is waiting outside.  Have him escort you there and back. We'll
worry about a bed for you later.  You can change here for dinner, if
that's all right."

The word "dinner" disoriented me, after more than a year of hearing
dinner as the noon meal, but I recovered and nodded.  "No.  Whatever's
easiest."

Krystal was already heading for the door, and I followed, and just kept
going, straight for the stable to recover my pack and better clothes,
such as they were.

LXI

"THIS DOORWAY."  KRYSTAL inclined her head toward a carved entrance
flanked by two green-clad guards.  She wore her sword.  She probably
slept with it.

Only the guards' eyes moved, checking me out, but I had left the staff
in Krystal's quarters.  I decided to wear the empty knife sheath, since
in some principalities, failure to wear a knife carried certain
implications.  I didn't remember if Kyphros were one, but if it
weren't, no one would care one way or the other.  If my pack and staff
weren't safe in Krystal's quarters, they weren't safe anywhere in
Kyphrien.

"This is a small dinner.  The aut arch wanted to hear of your
adventures."  She guided me into the room.

A state dining room it was not.  The imperial-style black-oak table was
covered with a green linen cloth bordered in gold.  The utensils were
silver, and the plates were of a china nearly as fine as my mother's
best.  The "informal" dining room was not much bigger than my parents'
dining room, nor much larger than the dining area of the way station
where I had eaten lamb chili two days earlier.

A good dozen wall lamps provided a brightness not often seen at an
evening meal in Candar.  I supposed the aut arch could afford the extra
lamp-oil.

We stopped almost after entering the room, and well short of the six
people who stood talking by the bay window on the other side of the
table, a window that overlooked Kyphrien and the scattered lights of
the lamps and torches of the city.

"Krystal."  The woman in the green silk jumpsuit with black hair shot
with gray spoke.

Krystal inclined her head.  "Honor."

"Would you introduce your friend?"

"This is Lerris."  Krystal named the six.  "Her Honor the Autarch;
Guard Commander Ferrel; Public Works Minister Zeiber; Llessa, sister to
Her Honor; Finance Minister Murreas; and Father Dorna."

"Honor," I murmured to the aut arch  "I am honored to meet all of you."
In a way, I was.

"Krystal said you were young," observed the younger woman who looked
like the aut arch except her black hair was without the graying
streaks.  "I wouldn't have guessed from her description."  The comment
was made with a smile.

The Public Works Minister, thin and white-haired, only nodded, as did
the Finance Minister, a heavy-set woman with square-cut short white
hair who wore an ornate green tunic over equally ornate trousers.

"Peace," was the only word from Father Dorna, a functionary in the
religion of the one-god believers from his aura and garb of black, who
radiated neither order nor disorder.

Krystal still wore green, a plain green silk blouse with no frills and
a high neck, the same green leather vest, and matching green
trousers-cotton, I thought.  She wore no jewelry, no rings, and she
looked professional, like the aut arch champion.  She walked the same
way, her eyes never quite at rest.

The only one dressed more plainly than Krystal was me.  My best clothes
were the dark-brown cotton tunic and trousers made by Deirdre.  Good as
they were, certainly not of the quality of those worn by Krystal or the
aut arch

"We should be seated."  The aut arch simply pulled out the chair at the
head of the table, then pointed at the chair to her right.  "Lerris, if
you would."

Krystal took the seat across from me, and Father Dorna sat on my right.
At the end of the table was Llessa, the only woman wearing a dress.

I attempted to seat the aut arch but she avoided the question by
seating herself before my hand more than touched the back of her
chair.

"No ceremony here.  My name is Kasee."

I just nodded, not certain exactly what to say, as mixed greenery was
placed on the plate in front of me.

"Krystal says you know something of the reasons behind the apparently
senseless attacks by the Gallians."

"Some few things," I said, "and some few thoughts as to why."  Since
the aut arch began to question me before taking a bite of the greenery
on her plate, I decided that, informal dinner or not, the main course
was information, and the chef was a young man named Lerris.

I looked at Krystal.  While I thought I saw a momentary twinkle in her
eye, her expression was polite and impassive.

"Does the name Antonin mean anything?"  "..  . devil .. ."  That came
from my right, from the priest.

"He is reputed to be a white wizard who lives in the West-horns,"
responded the aut arch  I didn't think of her as Kasee then, no matter
what she had said.

"He is a white wizard.  He has allied himself with the prefect, or
spends so much time in Fenard that he might as well be allied."

"What does he supply, exactly, to this alliance?"  asked Ferrel, the
white-haired Guard Commander, whose words were as precise as her plain
green tunic.  She and Krystal were the sole diners visibly armed.

"Chaos .. ."

"In what form, if you will?  What does he gain from it?"

I took a deep breath.  "I don't have all the answers .. . but ..."  I
continued before the Guard Commander asked yet another question, "he
opened a chaos-fountain in the guard quarters in Fenard.  The fountain
had the effect of submerging reason, since reason is a function of
order.  The fountain made the soldiers more obedient to commands issued
with a-I guess you'd say-chaos-link.  I mean, they're more likely to
fight and kill blindly."

I could feel Krystal's concern behind her impassive face.

"How did you discover this?"

After forcing myself to take a sip from the crystal goblet and
discovering it contained red berry I answered.  "I felt it from where I
worked in Fenard.  So I-well, it's really not that simple.  You see, if
Krystal hasn't told you, I left Recluce as a danger gelder  My charge
was to reach the Westhorns and to make a decision as to whether I would
serve order or chaos blindly.  I had a ... few problems .. . along the
way .. ."

No one commented.  So I kept going.  "When I got to Fenard, I needed
time to think .. . and money.  That was why I took up wood crafting
again while I tried to work things out.  The chaos in and around Fenard
kept increasing, not so much that it was that noticeable at first.
Antonin-his coach began appearing at the palace more and more.  More
and more cavalry troops were raised and sent against Kyphros.  The
quarterly tax levies were raised, doubled in fact."  I stopped and took
another sip from the goblet, then used the fork on the greenery.
Everyone else was eating.  I could as well.

"Could you explain the form of the chaos this .. . Antonin .. . used?"
asked Ferrel.

"I don't know that I could name it, but it feels white with an ugly red
core."  I sipped the red berry again.  "And it chills me right
through."

"You can feel it?"  the priest demanded.

"Any order-master could.  That's how strong he is."

The servant I barely saw began removing the empty salad plates.  Mine
was still mostly full.  I took another bite.

"Why is this any more dangerous than any other weapon or the fires that
the white wizards throw against our troops?"  The Guard Commander was
persistent.

"Because it will destroy you from within," I snapped, angry at her
apparent denseness.

"Scr .. ."  Her voice hardened.

"Ferrel."  The aut arch voice was ice.  Even I shut my mouth.  She
looked at me.  "I suspect I know what you mean, order-master, but would
you explain your last statement."

I swallowed, wondering if I could really put what I felt in words. "All
right.  Please excuse me if I'm not clear.  You have to understand that
much of this is new to me, and that very few masters this side of
Recluce have been permitted to learn it .. ."

"Permitted?"

I ignored the question from the Finance Minister, figuring that only
the aut arch counted.  "The strength of chaos is that destruction can
be focused.  Order cannot be concentrated in the same way.  Likewise,
order is a passive defense, in that chaos cannot destroy absolute
order. Absolute order precludes chaos, but only by restricting its
presence from where there is already order."  "... gobbledygook .. ."

I ignored that also, trying to find the words.  "What Antonin is doing
is creating a greater potential for chaos in both countries.  By
sending out Gallian troops to their deaths, he increases anger in
Gallos, both at the prefect and at Kyphros.  He increases anger and
disorder in Kyphros.  By increasing disorder, he makes more people
susceptible to chaos and less willing to abide by the rules of order,
more willing to become part of the killing.  I don't know the complete
link, but as the disorder increases, so do his powers."  My stomach
twisted as.  I began to realize what part I had unwittingly played in
Antonin's game.

"I see."  The aut arch voice was cold.  "If you are correct, we cannot
win.  If we defend ourselves, we increase the disorder, and if we do
not, we perish, and our suffering and deaths will thus increase the
disorder."

I wished she had not put it that way.

"Why has not mighty Recluce opposed this great white wizard?"  asked
Llessa, her voice cutting.

Krystal looked at me.  "Do you know?"

I thanked her with my eyes for the direct question.  "I do not know for
certain the answer to that question.  I do know that Recluce seldom
meddles with nations other than the coastal trading powers."  Even that
evasion turned my guts again.

I was reprieved, momentarily, from more twisting by the arrival of the
main course-skewered and highly-spiced lamb.

"You are saying that this wizard has no real military aims at all,
then?"

"His aims are power for himself, and the white wizards who follow him.
He would destroy both your countries, I think, to increase those
powers."

"All of this is very theoretical and philosophical," interjected the
Public Works Minister.  "Could you tell us what, specifically, you have
done against this danger?  If you have done anything besides observe,
that is."

Instead of snapping at him, I chewed and swallowed the lamb cube in my
mouth.  If I were paying this highly for my meal, I deserved to eat
some of it.  The only problem was that no one else talked while I ate,
and the silence was leaden.  I ended up opening my mouth again after
several more bites.  "I have done what I could.  I destroyed the
chaos-fountain, and, although I did not mean to, also created the
events that led to the death of a score or more of the prefect's more
chaos-ridden troops, including the sub-prefect."

"You did not mean to stop chaos?"  demanded the priest in a high
voice.

I sighed.  Explaining the intricacies was getting more and more
dangerous, and I knew none of the people except Krystal.  While not a
one manifested chaos or disorder, they could easily order my death for
less fantastic reasons.

"You sound almost exasperated, young order-master," observed the aut
arch "Perhaps you could explain your feelings first."

Shrugging, I turned to her.  She was the judge, anyway.  "You have to
understand that I am not from Kyphros, nor from Gallos.  A crafter in
Gallos took me in, and enabled me to learn more of both order and
woodworking.  The disorder threatened his family.  I employed order to
strengthen honestly his business and his health.  I also, being what I
am, could not but help embody some order in the chairs and cabinets and
tables I produced."  I turned to Krystal.  "Would you recall what
occurs when a black staff strikes chaos?"

She did not quite frown, but paused.  "Doesn't the staff burn someone
possessed of disorder?"

I nodded, then I grinned, looking around the table.  "My first mistake
was to craft some black-oak chairs for the sub-prefect.  My second
error was to make them as perfect as I could and to infuse them with
order to strengthen them."

They all looked puzzled.

"What do you think happened when the chaos-tainted advisors of the
prefect sat in those chairs?"

"Ha!"

"Ohhhhh .. ."

I nodded.  "That meant I had to leave Gallos, but I could not leave the
crafter unprotected.  After all, the chairs would be traced in time to
his shop.  So I entered the palace in an attempt to do something-what,
I was not sure.  That didn't work out because I found that attempting
to force order on anyone unwilling to receive it is difficult at best. 
I "did neutralize the chaos-fountain and turned it back into mere
decoration.  Then I left Fenard and came to Kyphros."

"Did you have anything to do with the death of the white wizard?"  That
question came from Ferrel.  She sounded vaguely amused.  Why, I
couldn't imagine.

"That was a lucky accident."  I tried to stuff another lamb cube into
my mouth before answering another question.

"Accident?"

"Well , .."  I mumbled, before gulping the piece of lamb.  The meat
burned and scraped all the way down my throat.  "All I wanted to do was
to let the two Kyphran captives free.  But the wizard kept throwing
white fire at me .. . and his fire and my staff collided too close to
him."

"How did that happen?"  Ferrel was almost smiling, I could have
sworn.

"I charged him .. ."

"Do you have a warhorse, order-master?  A charger?"

"No.  Just a pony."

Someone sniggered.

Ferrel glared at Llessa, who paled.  That surprised me.  Then she
turned to the aut arch who looked amused, rather than surprised, and
added, "It sounds fantastic, but it happened that way.  Except for one
detail.  No one saw our friend here.  Is this yours?"  She held up my
belt knife.

I nodded.

"The unseen wizard who defeated the white wizard cut the bonds of my
lieutenant, left the knife in her hands, and told her to cut the other
captive free.  She did not see the charge, but she did hear the white
wizard screaming about an unseen armed man.  She also saw the fire
bolts striking against something until one exploded right in front of
the wizard.  Our friend here-or someone dressed exactly like him and
riding a pony exactly like his-appeared for just an instant."

She handed me the knife, which I quickly replaced in the empty
sheath.

"You didn't tell me all of that," Krystal added dryly.

I think I flushed.  "It seemed pretty dumb.  I never meant to take on a
full white wizard.  It just happened."

"What are you intending to do next?"

"I don't know.  I just don't know."  Except I did.  So, of course, I
had to tell them, or suffer indigestion.  "I don't have much choice.  I
have to go find Antonin."

"The Great White Wizard?"

"Yes."

Ferrel looked at the aut arch and the aut arch looked at Krystal. 
After that, they let me finish my dinner.  I mean, what else was there
to say?  They did talk, finally, among themselves.

"Has he always been this modest?"  Ferrel smiled as she asked
Krystal.

"He was never boastful, but he seems more quiet."

"I still don't understand about Recluce."  The voice of the Finance
Minister was sharp.

"Perhaps the sub-commander or the order-master could answer your
question," suggested the aut arch  "Krystal?  We ought to let our guest
have a few moments' peace."

A wry look flashed across Krystal's face before she spoke.  "Recluce is
governed by the Brotherhood.  They are black order-masters.  Recluce
has always let chaos rule in any area outside Recluce unless the
Brotherhood feels that chaos threatens or hurts Recluce.  Anyone they
think might ever create disorder must either leave or undergo a trial
by exile to prove their commitment to the absolute order of Recluce."

"Everyone?  Surely the children of the powerful .. ."  questioned
Murreas, the heavy-set Finance Minister.

Krystal and I exchanged glances, an exchange noted by Kasee, although
she said nothing.

"No," responded Krystal after a brief hesitation.  "They are true
believers.  I know of a case where the son of one of the highest of the
Brotherhood was exiled years earlier than any other child would have
been, perhaps to prove that no one is above the law."

Llessa looked at me from the other end of the table and nodded nearly
imperceptibly.

Hell, all of Kyphros would know my history before I ever got out of
Kyphrien, the way things were going, and there wasn't much I could do
about it.

After the dinner came small cups of a hot mulled cider, along with a
nut-filled pastry soaked in honey.  It took my best behavior not to use
my fingers to wipe up the last of the honey from the plate.  I didn't
want to disgrace Krystal, but I'd had few sweets since leaving home,
and hadn't realized how much I had missed them.  "..  . will you be
staying long?"

I'd missed the first part of Minister Zeiber's question, but the intent
was clear.

"No."

"And what are your plans?"

I shrugged.  "To do what has to be done."

"This is rather ambitious.  Also, rather vague."

"It is vague," I agreed cheerfully, with a growing awareness of the
man's underlying venality.

Krystal's face was impassive, but I could sense the humor beneath the
facade.

"I am afraid tomorrow will come early," announced Kasee the Autarch.
She rose from her chair.  "Krystal, thank you for sharing the
order-master with us.  And you, Lerris-we appreciate your candor and
your willingness to enlighten us."  The ruler nodded toward the Guard
Commander.

"Thank you, order-master," added Ferrel, "especially for your rescue
attempt and the 'accidental' charge.  You saved a good score by taking
out that wizard.  I enjoyed returning your knife, and I won't disabuse
the guard by revealing the 'accidental' nature of your success."

"I appreciate your kindness, and your retrieving my knife."

Ferrel nodded and followed the aut arch out.  We were right behind,
but, outside the dining room, in the wide red-oak paneled hallway, the
aut arch and Ferrel headed right.  I followed Krystal to the left, down
the dimly-lit halls, feet echoing in the hushed corridors.

In time, we reached Krystal's quarters, where the faithful Herreld
waited.  He had the door opened even before we had finished turning the
last corner.

"That will be all, Herreld."

He looked at me and back at Krystal.

"If I need anything, I'll ring the order desk."  Her smile was
pleasant, but formal.  "Good night."

"Good night, commander."

Thunk!

Krystal dropped the heavy bar in place with the ease of long
practice.

"He wasn't too pleased to see me come in."

Krystal didn't answer the question, instead unbelted her sword and
carried it into her bedroom.

Thud .. . thud .. . The "thuds" came from the heavy boots, not the
sword.

She returned barefoot, still wearing the blouse, vest, and trousers she
had on at dinner.  "Let's sit on the balcony for a little while."

Outside, a cool breeze caressed my face.  Krystal took the right-hand
chair and seated herself in the darkness.  I sat and looked over the
railing.  There seemed to be more lamps in the guard yard below than in
what else I could see of Kyphrien.  Even the area below seemed
dimly-lit for the guard force of a capital city.

"People go to bed early."

"The price of candles and lamp-oil has doubled since midsummer."

"Oh ... the war?"

Krystal snorted.  "Oil comes mainly from Spidlar or Certis, and the
prefect won't let the merchants cross Gallos to reach us.  He also has
an agreement with the Viscount of Certis.  Between the two of them and
the merchants' greed .. ."

"Food?"

"We eat a lot of goats, cheese, and olives these days.  And beans.  We
mustn't forget the beans."

"You sound tired."

"I am tired, Lerris.  We all are.  Me, Ferrel, Llessa, and especially
Kasee.  She's aged ten years in the past year.  Dealing with Murreas
alone is no banquet, but we need her as much as the Finest."  She
leaned back on the balcony chair in the darkness, her voice low.

"Obtaining the best troops money can buy?"  That had to be the
strategy.  While Kyphrans like Shervan and Pendril were fine people,
they didn't make the disciplined force necessary to pick off Antonin's
madmen one at a time.

"It's getting harder and harder, and we're paying three times what the
new Duke of Freetown offers.  Right now the Finest are two score
short."

I didn't know what to say.  Instead, I reached over and squeezed her
leg, just above the knee, trying to send a little order and strength
her way.

"Thank you.  Sometimes ..."

I wished she had finished the sentence.  There wasn't enough light to
see her face, and my order-senses didn't read facial expressions well.
Only a faint wistful longing surrounded her.

"You wish what?"  I finally asked.

"That some things had been different.  That I were younger.  Or .. ."

Again, she left the sentence unfinished, and I didn't ask.

"Sometimes, I do too," I found myself answering.

"You need to find some answers inside yourself first, I think."

She was right.  Until I dealt with Antonin, or he dealt with me, there
would be no answers.  I sighed.

"Hell, isn't it?"  Her voice was dry.

I had to chuckle.  I wasn't quite up to laughing, but her tone was so
wry I couldn't help it.  It was hell.  Sitting on that cool balcony in
pitch dark overlooking a city whose streets I had never walked, I
talked to Krystal, the sub-commander, the aut arch champion.  I looked
at a doorway that had once been open, a door through which I had not
dared to walk.

Why?  I couldn't say.  Would that door be open to me again?  I didn't
know that either.

"I wonder if Kyphros needs another good wood crafter .. ."  I mused
instead of confronting myself.

"There aren't many good wood crafters anywhere.  There aren't many
masters at anything anywhere, though."

Again, that lingering silence fell, and I heard a single set of
footsteps on the stones below.  In time, they died out.

"Do you like being a master of the blade?"

"Sometimes.  When it's used for good."

"And the other times?"

I could feel her shrug, though she did not move from the chair.  "You
try to do as little damage as possible.  You can't support the best of
rulers without some injustice.  Wrynn never understood that."

"What happened to her?"

"Nothing.  Not that I know of.  She didn't stay with the Finest long.
She headed toward Sarronnyn through the southern passes, looking for a
place where the people were strong and fair-minded."

"Poor Wrynn."  I felt sorry for her.  Wherever she went, she wouldn't
find what she was looking for, just like I hadn't been able to find the
clear answers I so desperately wanted.

"She won't find them," Krystal confirmed, almost reading my thoughts.

"Did you find what you were looking for?"  I asked, not quite idly.

"Part of it.  I'm doing what I'm good at, and it has some value."

I didn't ask about the rest.  One look around the dinner table would
have been enough to answer that.  Instead, I looked out at Kyphrien,
noting that the candles, lamps, and torches were fewer now, as more and
more citizens went to bed, stopped carousing, or whatever.

The breeze had picked up, bringing the first hint of chill since I had
crossed the Little Easthorns.  The faint smell of smoke came with the
breeze, the smoke from torches and ill-adjusted oil lamps.  Unlike
Recluce, Kyphros and indeed, all of Candar, did not use coal-gas
lamps.

Krystal's chair creaked.  "Lerris?"

"Yes."

"I need some sleep."  She stood up and stifled a yawn.

It wasn't a question, and it wasn't an invitation.

"Oh .. . sorry.  I'll get my things."

"You can stay here.  If you feel comfortable about it."  Then she
added, and I could hear the smile in her words, "That's just for
sleeping."

Lonely as I felt, and much as I would have liked to hold her, and be
held, she was right.  Not that I liked it, but she was right.  I had
too many unanswered questions I had not even faced.

"Besides," she added with a short laugh, "it will add to my image,"

"What?  Having a poor woodworker stay overnight?  That will improve
your image?"

"Come on inside.  You were never a poor woodworker."

"I was a terrible apprentice."  I followed her in, letting her close
the door.  A single lamp burned in the main room.

"That was then."  She gestured.  "You want the bedroom or the couch?
It's long enough and firm enough."

I opted for the couch, ignoring the possible play on words.  The
quarters were hers, after all.

"Good night."  She did close her door, if gently.

Despite my unanswered questions, the couch was comfortable, and I slept
more soundly than I had since leaving Fenard.  I did not dream, nor
wake with cold chills, nor hear the sound of coach wheels in the sky.

I did wonder, before drifting off, what had happened to the lady who
had once wanted me.

LXII

I WOKE UP early, in the chill winter grayness before true dawn with the
blanket actually around my shoulders, looking at the ceiling and
wondering.  I had been drawn to Tamra and later to Krystal-but for
different reasons, very different reasons.  Krystal was my friend, yet
my dreams of her were far more than friendly.  And Tamra was a spoiled
bitch, yet I still dreamed of her, though less frequently of late. What
had changed?  Or had anything?  Or did I dream of Krystal because she
seemed more attainable?  Or ... "You're a confused mess, Lerris ..."  I
muttered under my breath.  Acknowledging it didn't solve my confusion,
but it might lead to more useful thought on the subject-assuming I had
time to think about it.

As silently as I could, I sat up, glancing through the single window. A
few thin wisps of smoke already rose into the cloudy sky outside.
Krystal's door was shut, but she was awake or just waking up.

I stretched, knowing that going out and achieving the impossible by
defeating Antonin still wouldn't resolve the questions whose answers I
had sought.  Was I going after Antonin in search of a glorious defeat
in order to avoid admitting that there were no clear answers, or that
they weren't what I wanted?

I shivered.  That might be part of my problem, but it wasn't all of it.
After all, Justen had mucked around the edge for centuries, probably
watching white wizards like Antonin burn themselves out one after the
other.  That was fine, if you were after a long life, but more than two
centuries after the fall of Frven, Candar was still a conflicted mass
of warring duchies.

I stood up, letting the blanket fall, and gazed out at the eastern
horizon, a faint red pink that subsided back into gray as I watched.
Just in shorts, I wasn't even cool, not once I was awake.

Click.

Krystal stood behind me, but I didn't turn immediately.

"Good morning."

"Good morning."  I left the study of Kyphrien and turned toward my
hostess.

"Woodworking must be good for muscular development."  She wore a
once-green scuffed leather tunic over a faded shirt with green leather
trousers and battered boots.  Some of the tiredness was gone from her
eyes.

"You're ready to go," I observed.  "Some sort of hard work."  She
grimaced.  "Training."

Another set of pieces clicked into place in my thoughts.  "You're
trying to buy time while-"

She nodded.  "It's not working.  The losses are too high."

I understood immediately.  With Antonin's chaos-support, the prefect
didn't need extraordinarily well-trained soldiers.  The aut arch did,
and after a time the numbers who could be bought shrank, and only so
many had the inclination and talent, and even fewer could be trained at
any one time.

Krystal presented a wry smile that held little amusement.  "We do what
we can."  She looked at me again, and I felt embarrassed.  "Much as I
like the view, you need to get dressed.  We eat together with the guard
in the morning."

I put on my traveling clothes, including the knife that Ferrel had
returned at dinner, as quickly as I could.  Krystal was doing something
at her desk when I peered in, staff and pack in hand, ready to go.

"Records, papers, and accounts," she explained as she pushed back the
chair.

"Surely you don't have to do the accounts for the guard?"

"Chaos, no!  But what tactics you can use depend on your equipment and
your supplies.  Not even the Finest can fight without horses or food."
She kept talking as she belted on the sword and pulled on the short
jacket with the braid that served as her emblem of office.  "Certain
tactics cause a higher death rate for horses, and mounted troops need
reserve mounts.  While we have a grain levy, there's a tradeoff between
increasing the levy and taxing something else to buy the grain .. ."
She shook her head.  "I'm just beginning to understand a few of the
complexities.  Sometimes, fighting is the easiest part."

I nodded, thinking as we walked out the door and past the
near-permanent sentry guarding her quarters.  I ignored his hostile
look, reflecting on what she had said.  Certainly, money was important
to something like woodworking, but I really hadn't thought about it as
the basis for fighting and warfare.

In that light, what Antonin was doing made even more
sense-unfortunately.

"You're quiet," observed Krystal, not slowing her steps one whit as she
took the wide stairs down toward the ground level of the building.

"Thinking .. . Almost every day I learn something new, and it seldom
answers the old questions.  Just adds to the unanswered questions."  My
guts twisted slightly at my overstatement, and I added another few
words.  "That's the way it seems, but I guess that's because the
answers you find seem simple compared to the new questions."

In turn, Krystal was silent.

The low-ceilinged guard mess hall contained space for more than a
dozen-score guards at the long tables.  Not quite half the seats were
filled as we entered.  Only a handful of heads turned, mostly of
younger men, as Krystal marched up to the serving table.

She took a single slice of thick bread, a scoop of some sort of
preserves, a slice of hard white cheese, a boiled egg, and a steaming
cup of a tea so bitter that I could smell it without even nearing the
huge teapot.

The cheese and egg were beyond me.  I had two slices of the warm bread
with the dark preserves, a battered apple, and tea.

Krystal sat at a table in the middle of the room, alone except for me.
As I sat down on the worn red-oak bench next to her, I caught sight of
Ferrel leaving the mess, also wearing battered leathers.

"You'll pardon me," Krystal said, with her mouth full.  "I'd like to
eat before business begins."

I frowned.  Business?

"Any guard can approach me now, ask questions, or make suggestions.
They may not be quite as forward with you here, but there will be
some."  She continued to munch slowly on the bread she had spread
thinly with the preserves.

Me, I had slathered my bread with the sweet preserves, enjoying each
bite after my days of travel.  Belatedly, I realized I did not remember
much of what I had eaten the night before.  I had eaten, that I
recalled; but besides the salad and the lamb, I didn't recall what had
been on the plates.

"Commander?"  ventured a hard-faced woman wearing a single thin gold
stripe on the shoulder of her vest.  "You sent for me?"

I almost choked, wondering when Krystal had sent for the woman,
wondering if she ever slept.

"Yes, leader Yelena.  Would you be interested in an escort mission?"

The sub-officer's eyes flicked from Krystal to me.  "I'd like to know
more."

"Where are you going, Lerris?"

I had to swallow several bites of apple and swig the too-hot tea.  I
didn't know exactly.  What I wanted was to find the wizards' road that
ran down the Little Easthorns without retracing my route from Gallos.

"I'd like to see a map," I began, "but, in general, along the old road
to Sarronnyn, the one that no one uses now."

"The chaos-road?"  suggested Yelena, her voice fiat.

I shrugged.  "I don't know what it's called.  But that's where he is,
beyond the point where the hidden wizards' roads connect."

Both Krystal and Yelena turned to me.  "Explain," demanded the
sub-commander, her voice as hard and authoritative as I had ever heard
it.

"There are hidden wizards' roads throughout Candar.  Sometimes the
current roads are built right over the old roads built by the white
wizards, but many of the old roads are hidden.  There's one that runs,
I think, the length of the Little Easthorns.  It crosses the road from
Gallos to Tellura somewhere after the top of the pass."

"Why didn't you mention this before?"

I was more than a little puzzled at her coldness.  "First, you never
asked.  Second .. . oh, shit ... I see what you mean ..."

Now it was Yelena's turn to look puzzled.  I thought Krystal had
softened slightly.

"Logistics?"  I asked.  "Troop travel?"

Krystal nodded.

"I don't think it will help, but, if you get me a map, I'll show you
where it goes."  Another thought struck me.  "But unless you have
another order-master, it won't help.  Where it crosses, the road is
cloaked with illusions.  Antonin hasn't shared the roads with anyone,
but I think he uses them to let everyone think he is everywhere."

"He's been successful in that," snapped the sub-officer.  "I'll get a
set of maps."

Once she was out of earshot, before anyone else neared, I looked at
Krystal.  "I'm not a military strategist, and I don't appreciate being
accused, even silently, of incompetence.  I admit it.  I don't know
your business.  Don't expect me to."  I tried to soften my tone.  "I
know you're against the wall.  I can see it.  I'd never withhold
information or help, not knowingly.  But I'm still having trouble
learning my own business, let alone trying to understand yours."

Krystal pursed her lips, then met my glance.  "I'm sorry."  Her tone
was still flat.

"Krystal .. . the first time I could have told you about the road was
last night.  Could you have done anything about it any earlier?
Besides, I didn't even know there were any wizards' roads in Kyphros
until I found that one, and I came straight to Kyphrien."

The stiffness finally receded.  "I am sorry.  It's just .. ."

"It's that bad?"  I asked.

"Yes.  It's that bad.  Maybe worse.  Look around."

I did.  For a long time.  Then I swallowed.  Fully a third of the guard
were bandaged or otherwise disabled or incapacitated.  Most of the
sub-officers and officers were women, and most of the men were scarcely
older than I was.

I should have seen it.  No matter how good she was with a blade, no
matter how smart and mature, a woman would not have ended up as the
number-two officer in a kingdom's military force in little more than a
year unless the losses were horrendous or the talent pool small.  I
suspected both.

"I'm sorry.  I'll do what I can."  I meant that not just for Krystal or
for me, but because of what the people around us represented-the
struggle against an old chaotic rule and an attempt at ... I didn't
exactly know how or why, but what I saw accorded with my idea of what
order should be, not necessarily what Talryn or Recluce thought of as
order.

"Thank you."

"Commander, why were the road-patrol rotations changed yesterday?"
asked a young man with a scraggly yellow mustache.

"That's because .. ."

"Commander, will there be additional mounts .. ."

"Commander, how do we get the duty rotation .. ."

"Commander .. ."

I edged away, letting Krystal deal with the guards who approached,
marveling at her patience and understanding.

Yelena walked in carrying a long leather tube.  I gestured to her, and
commandeered a near-empty table.

"Do you have one that shows the border beyond the Southbrook?"

After sifting through the parchments, she laid an older map on the
table, smoothing it out.  Some of the mountains were named, and the
road line matched what I remembered, but the pattern of the peaks was
not complete.

I measured roughly, thought, and measured.

Finally, I noted an area.  "In this area, and it runs due east and west
..."  I tried to describe the thin valley that she should be able to
see beyond the illusions, and what the road looked like, and how the
long-gone wizards of Frven had planed off the sides of mountains to
build their roads.  But they had used order as well, somehow.  Chaos to
destroy the mountains and to create the hidden road valleys, and order
to reinforce the stonework and the bridges.

"Can you pass that on to someone else?"  asked Krystal.

I hadn't realized she had stood behind us.

"I think so," responded Yelena.  "You still want me to escort the
order-master?"

"If you would find that acceptable."

Yelena nodded.  "How many, and when do we leave?"

"Two plus yourself."  Krystal looked to me for the second answer.

"Shortly.  The sooner we leave, the sooner ..."  I didn't know what
would be sooner, or even what exactly I might discover, but all of us
were running out of time.

"Where are we headed?"  asked Yelena.

Explaining that took a bit longer, and more struggle with the maps, but
there was an old road that looked like it went where I wanted and, if
the maps were correct, joined with the old main central pass road that
led to Sarronnyn.  That was the road that no one took any longer
because they never seemed to arrive on the other side of the
Westhorns.

Finally, I looked up.  "That's the best I can do."

"Yelena?"

"It will be interesting, commander."

Interesting-that was one way of putting it.

"Well ... I guess I'll get Gairloch."

"What ... do you have a mount?"

"Oh .. . Gairloch is in the stables by the gate."

"We will meet you there."  Yelena inclined her head to Krystal. "Honor,
commander."

"Honor, leader."

I followed Krystal from the mess into the main guard yard, where we
stopped in an open space.

"Make sure you're doing this for yourself, Lerris."

I shook my head.  "Nothing's that simple."

"I guess not."  She smiled with her mouth, not her eyes.  "Then, try to
do it mostly for your reasons."

"I'll do what I must, and we'll sort out the reasons later.  All
right?"

She nodded.  "Fair enough.  I won't say to take care.  But ... do come
back to sort out those reasons."

I wet my lips, feeling the cool wind chill them as I did.  With all
that I felt, there was little to say.  "Until later."

"Until later."

I looked down, then back into her black eyes, seeing the tiredness
again.

She raised her hand in a gesture that was part benediction, part
salute, and I inclined my head to her, then turned while I could.  I
did not look back, but kept my eyes fixed on the building that was the
stable.

Yelena and two others waited, already mounted, as I walked up with my
staff and pack.

"Where's your pass?"  demanded the ostler.

"Oh, hell ..."  I had never bothered to get anyone to sign the damned
parchment square.  "Just a moment."

"Leader Yelena?"

"Yes, order^ master

"I forgot to have the sub-commander autograph this pass."

"Autograph?"

I kept from shaking my head at the brown-haired sub-officer with the
long nose and square chin.  "A pass to release my horse."

"Pheww on a pass!  Get your horse."  She rode into the stable in front
of me.  "..  . on official business for the Sub-Commander.  None of
this crap about passes!"

The ostler was backing into a corner as Yelena threatened to ride him
down.

I ignored them both and quickly saddled Gairloch, recovering my
saddlebags in the process.

The ostler swallowed as I rode out.  "Good .. . day .. . order-master
.. ."

"Good day."  My tone was not totally cheerful.  I hadn't wanted to pay
for the stable, since my stock of coinage was scarcely deep, and having
to ask for Yelena's assistance bothered me.

"That's a horse?"  asked the sub-officer.

"No, this is Gairloch.  You don't think I could really ride one of
those monsters you use, do you?"  I grinned at the dour officer.

"Glad you recognize it, order-master."  I almost fell off Gairloch when
she smiled back.

The other two looked at each other and kept their mouths closed as we
rode out through the gates into Kyphrien.

Even in the gray drizzle that had begun to fall, the city was
light-whitewashed walls, red tile roofs, and limestone- or marble-paved
streets.  People talked, like a city of hundreds of Shervans.  "..  .
best breads in Kyphros, by exclusive patronage of the aut arch .. ." 
".. . and you could have crossed the river barefoot, he drank so much.
Never have I seen an animal drink so much, and beyond that .. ."

"Your fortune, not even a copper!  Who will grudge a mere copper for
knowing all that will befall you."

"Hezira, I said, there's to be none of that.  No, none of that,
Hezira-that's what I told her, but, of course, she didn't listen.  Why
would she listen, with her high house and her silk gowns?  .. ."

I eased Gairloch closer to Yelena.  "Is it always this noisy?"

"No."  She shook her head.  "It's usually noisier.  This is early.  It
gets louder later."

"Look at the pony!  See the pony, Berrna!  He must be a northern pony.
He's so shaggy .. ."

Outside of the aut arch walled residence-not really a castle or even a
palace-and the associated guard area, Kyphrien was an open and un
walled city, where the houses and businesses scattered farther and
farther apart as we headed north and west toward the Westhorns I could
not see. There never was a point at which I could have said Kyphrien
ended and the countryside began, but we were on another gently rolling
road even before mid-morning.

The drizzle had damped the dust, but not yet turned it into mud.
Gairloch matched the pace set by the brown gelding carrying Yelena
without seeming to strain, and we traveled through the morning without
talking, which was fine with me, especially after the hubbub that had
been Kyphrien.

Yet I liked the country, found it friendly, even if it were not as lush
as Gallos or even Recluce.  The spareness of the colder and rolling
hills, which steepened within kays to the northwest of Kyphrien,
appealed to me.  I even noted several locations that would have been
ideal for setting up my own woodworking-with streams high enough for a
water supply, not far from the road, and with ample and varied timber
within carting distance.  I shook my head-planning to be a work worker
still?  Uncle Sardit would surely have laughed.  How well he had
wrought he did not know.  Or maybe he did, and I was the one who didn't
know.

Thoughts of working wood would have to wait.  If I could deal somehow
with Antonin ... if ... I cast my thoughts back over my last
encounter-the one with the white wizard-recalling how I had fought with
the staff to control my defenses and my energies.  What had that
meant?

There had been something in the book .. . something .. . I could not
recall it, but made a mental note to look it up.

Midday found us halting beside a stream that bordered the road, but we
did not actually cross it.

"That's not really a bridle," noted the young man who had followed
behind me.  "How do you control him in a pinch?"

"I never thought about it."  I pulled out some hard white cheese and
offered him a piece.

Wheeee .. . eeee .. .

Yelena was watering her horse, and, deciding that Gairloch was thirsty
as well, I looped the reins over the saddle and thwacked him on the
flank, watching as he ambled into the water ankle-deep.

The soldier had taken the cheese, but he looked away suddenly as
Gairloch left me.

The other trooper, a woman probably my own age, with short sandy hair
and green eyes, surprisingly dark skin, and a ragged scar running
across most of her right cheek, stepped closer.

"Cheese?"  I offered.

"Thank you."  Her voice was simultaneously grave and cheerful.  "Are
you .. . the .. . order-master?  .. ."

I grinned.  Why not?  "I'm Lerris.  Yes, I'm the one from Recluce who
knew the sub-commander.  She's my friend."

Her eyebrows rose, and I could imagine the stories already circulating
through the guard.

"In addition to being a blade master I added, "she is also a lady. And
my friend."

"I didn't mean ..."  I waved her apology off.  "Rumors are rumors.  I
care for the lady a lot, but that's all until we have done what has to
be done.  Then we'll see."

"Are all the men from Recluce like you?"  "..  . Aaaccccuuu ..."  I
almost choked on the cheese.  "..  . No.  Probably none of them are as
dense as I am."

"The order-master is joking, Freyda," interrupted Yelena.  Her voice
was cold, but her eyes were smiling.  "You'd better water your horse.
We're not stopping that long.  You, too, Weldein."

When the two were out of earshot, the sub-officer looked at me. "You're
more dangerous than you look."  But she was almost smiling.

I shrugged.  "I can't not tell the truth, and that makes it
difficult."

"You can't?"

"Not without paying for it somehow."

She was the one to shake her head.  "I'm glad I'm just a leader."

As I reclaimed Gairloch and fed him some corners of a grain cake, I
thought about what she said.  I had to agree with her.  The more I
learned and the more I could do, the more complex it got.

LXIII

KYPHROS WAS BIGGER than I thought.  The way the West-horns angled
westward as they marched south meant that we had to ride two days to
reach the foothills that almost matched the Little Easthorns in size.

I had guessed that at some point the road, since it was an older road,
would cross the wizards' road for which I searched.  I didn't know
that, but it seemed right.

The first night we actually stayed in a small inn in a town-Upper
River.  Why it was called Upper River, no one knew, and Yelena's maps
showed neither Lower River, nor even a stream called Upper River.  The
inn was clean.  That was about all.  Dinner was overcooked goat steaks
smothered in a strong cheese.  The beds sagged, and I shared a room
with Weldein, who by then was scared stiff of me, although I had said
nothing, and who snored loudly.

The second night we stopped in a place called Quessa.  Lodging was in
one of the soldiers' way stations there, but staffed only by a couple.
I could guess where the soldiers were.  The dinner meal was another
spicy casserole, followed by a huge fruit cream pie-much better fare
than at the inn at Upper River.

Quessa itself was fair-sized for the relatively isolated area in which
it stood, with more than a score of houses and stores serving the
surrounding farms and orchards.  The people were still what I thought
of as Kyphran stock, with dark skin, darker hair, and broad smiles.
They also talked and talked.

I retreated to the large guest room, the one that Telia and Bardon
insisted I must have, and closed the door.  The lamp by the double-wide
bed was bright enough to read by, and I had some reading to do.

It didn't take long, and all that I found was what I had remembered, a
single paragraph, not even a long one.  The key words were simple:
"Order cannot be concentrated in and of itself, not even within the
staff of order, and no man can truly master the staff of order until he
casts it aside."

Except the words were wrong, somehow.  No matter where my staff was, it
still gathered order and repulsed chaos.  For a long time, I looked
through the pages of the book, but nothing else shed light on that
paragraph.

After I replaced the black-covered and well-thumbed pages in my pack, I
stared into emptiness.  The pieces were there- that I knew.  How they
fit, I didn't.  The white wizard had died when my staff had touched his
fingertips, or at least when it had gotten close.  The staff had been
nearly as close to other sources of chaos without that violent a
reaction, and if a simple staff could destroy a chaos-wizard someone
would have gone against Antonin long before.  Unless there were reasons
to maintain chaos .. . I didn't like that thought at all.

So I tried to sort out my feelings about Deirdre, Krystal, and Tamra,
but the thought of sorting out those three was enough to exhaust me on
the spot, and I blew out the lamp and slept, sort of, until the gray of
dawn crept through the window.

The next day brought more talking over breakfast.  The trip carried us
into wilder countryside, with the end of the orchards and fenced
fields.  The clouds had dissipated, but the chill remained, and we rode
in a bright chill toward the unseen Westhorns.  By mid-morning, the
road straggled through underbrush that had begun to reclaim the less
time-trampled edges of the road, and the lands beyond the road that had
once been grazing lands were dotted with mature trees and scattered
brush, including thickets upon thickets of wild red berries

A sense of unease lay over the road, growing as we climbed each of the
ever-steepening hills.

Yelena's face grew tighter with each hill, and the bigger horses
strained and began to puff.  On a particularly high hill-crest where
the road was wider, perhaps because the hummock of stones and fallen
timbers looming in the brush back from the north side of the road might
have been an inn or roadhouse in times past, I motioned for the
sub-officer to stop.

For the first time, looking to the west, I could see the white-tipped
dark bulk of the Westhorns.  Even from where we had halted, still a
good thirty kays from the foothills beneath those massive slopes, I
could also see that they were indeed impressive, and that at least
another day of riding lay before me.

"We're getting close, I think.  I can feel chaos ahead."

Yelena squinted against the cold bright sunlight.  "We're still quite a
ways from the Westhorns."

"I can make it from here.  You're needed against Gallos."

Yelena shook her head.  "Order-master, what would happen if I had to
tell the sub-commander that we left you this far short of the
Westhorns?"

I sighed.  She was right.  "All right.  Let's go.  But if there's too
much chaos ahead, I want to be able to send you back."

"Why?"

"Because I might have trouble protecting you."  I laughed harshly.  "I
might have trouble protecting myself."

The chaos I sensed seemed to recede as we rode westward.  Either that,
or it was stronger and more distant than I had thought.

By nightfall, we still seemed scarcely closer to the base of the
Westhorns, although we could see some of the nearer peaks, their
ice-covered spires glinting rosy in the sunset.

We camped in another long-deserted farm, sheltered by a single standing
stone wall.  I set wards, but nothing woke me, and the fourth morning
of the trip dawned as gray as the morning when we had left Kyphrien.

I wondered how many more had died on the hills of Northern Kyphros
while I rode on my fool's errand toward the Westhorns.  Then, again,
what else could I do?  No warrior, I could but try to bring order where
I might.

In a way, that was similar to woodworking, except in crafting I built
upon the natural order, whereas in order-mastery- I thought-I tried to
strengthen natural order to repulse an unnatural disorder.

"Cheese?"  I offered some to Weldein, absent-mindedly.

He took it, equally abstracted, as he looked from the hillside, where
we had camped not far from a small brook, toward the mountains.  Then
he looked at the white cheese, as if wondering how he got it.

"Eat it.  It's good cheese.  A mill-master gave it to me."

"Why?"  asked Freyda.

"Because I helped his goddaughter."

"Was she pretty?"  Weldein inquired.  His tone was polite.

"Very.  Unfortunately," I added.

The two exchanged glances, and, for some reason Weldein blushed.

"She didn't like you?"  That was Yelena.

She did like me."

"If she was pretty .. ."  Weldein sounded confused.

I really didn't want to explain, but I sighed and went on.  "I found
her attractive.  She was capable and bright.  That just made it
worse."

"So you left her for duty?"  Yelena asked.  "How noble .. ."

"No."  My voice was cold, but I couldn't help it.  "I left because I
had a job to do, and because I realized there was someone else still in
my heart, and because ..."  I broke off.  What I would have said would
have sounded unforgivably pompous.  So I shut up.  It was probably
true, but it was arrogant.

This time all three exchanged knowing glances, and things were even
worse.

"What about the goddaughter?"

"I found her a good-looking and talented husband who loved her, and
provided a dowry, and we both cried like hell."

That shut them up, but I felt petty about it as we packed the horses
for the coming day's ride.  Finally, I stepped over to Yelena.  "I'm
sorry.  I didn't mean ."

She smiled, as softly as I had seen her smile, and touched my arm
briefly.  "Don't be.  It's good to see that great order-masters are
human, that they love, and make mistakes."

I shook my head.  "I'm not a great order-master."

Yelena swung onto her brown gelding.  "Then there are none."

I pondered that as I climbed onto Gairloch.  Perhaps that was the
problem, that there simply were no great order-masters to combat the
great chaos-masters like Antonin.  Then I frowned.  A simple solution,
too simple.  And simple and easy answers were almost always wrong.

By mid-morning, the feeling of impending chaos was stronger, much
stronger, and not receding.

The road had not been used in some time, except for a single rider
whose prints appeared now and again in the sheltered spots in the clay.
How long since the prints had been made, I could not tell.  Nor could
Yelena.

"We have not had a great rain since summer."  She pursed her lips.

I could feel the energy ahead, perhaps as near as over the next
hill-crest.

Overhead, heavy gray clouds rolled.

Thurummmm .. .

No rain fell as we rode up the especially-steep hill.

"Stop," I said, feeling the chaos pressure.  "There's something
ahead."

"Armed men?"

"No."  I sent my perceptions forward, but could only detect a small
hump in the road, somehow tied down with chaos.  Nothing else.  "I
think it's all right for now."

The hump was a body, or what was left of it.

Yelena rode almost up to the figure, then dismounted, standing back
from face-down remains.  "Outlier's belt."

"Careful .. . there's chaos there."

The sub-officer nodded.  "I know.  We've seen this before."  She drew
her sword and touched the body.  A bright blue spark flashed against
the steel.  She glanced at me.  "That's another trick of the white
wizards."

Even from where Gairloch and I had stopped, the heat from the spark
momentarily warmed the chill noontime air.

She used the sword to lever the body over onto its back.  The Kyphran
soldier's face was a charred and shattered mass-the target of a
fireball thrown by Antonin or Sephya or some other chaos-wizard.

I could guess what happened.  The outlier had been lured or charmed
this far out and then destroyed.

"Chaos fed on him.  Too bad we can't feed on chaos.  We'd never go
hungry any more."  She motioned to Weldein.  "Let's take care of this.
Not much time, but there are stones there."

In the end, all of us created a cairn by the side of the deserted
road.

As we remounted, Yelena's remark got me thinking.  In a way, chaos fed
on chaos.  The stronger Antonin became, the more he could destroy,
which increased the amount of chaos in Candar.  In the whole world,
really.  If the old masters were right, increased chaos had to be
balanced somewhere with increased order.

I swallowed hard.  If what I thought was true was in fact true, Talryn
and the Brotherhood had a lot to answer for, one hell of a lot.

That didn't resolve my particular problem.  While I was getting
stronger, Justen had been right.  It was a slow process.  Antonin could
literally tear holes in mountains and buildings and infect whole
cavalry troops with chaos.  It would be years, if ever, before I could
confront Antonin directly-and that wouldn't help Krystal or the aut
arch or the people of either Gallos or Kyphros.

Justen's method was clear.  He kept reinforcing low-level order
everywhere around Antonin, from healing in Jellico to sheep-ranching in
Montgren.  That order limited the indirect spillover of chaos and
protected most of the innocents.  Just as clear was the fact that
Antonin was willing to let all of that low-level order build up,
because it allowed him to increase his powers.  Which, in turn, let
Justen exercise his powers .. .

I rubbed my temples with my fingertips.  Was the whole thing an
exercise in circles?  Was any wizard, white or black, really being
honest about it?  Was this the reason why no one had answered the
questions behind my questions?

"What now, order-master?"

I understood.  Now she had the reason to be dismissed- and Krystal
needed them in the Northeast more than I needed them here.

"This is as far as you go, sub-officer.  This is where chaos starts."

"Are you sure?"

I nodded, wanting to ensure that all of them carried the same message
back.  "I can't protect you and search for the white wizard, not
without endangering us all.  I thank you for the escort, for the
company, and for your understanding."

"Thank you, scr."

"Thank you .. ."

Yelena held back a moment when the other two turned their mounts. "We'd
like to see you again, scr."  Then, the hardness returned to her face,
as the discipline reasserted itself.

I watched the three until they were out of sight, checking to make sure
no chaos waited for them, but I could detect none-not in that
direction.

Toward the Westhorns-that was another question.  Supposedly, the old
road should cross the wizards' road before too long.  Supposedly .. .
but things never quite turned out as they were supposed to.  And when
they did, I was finding that I wished they hadn't.

A cold wind blew from nowhere, almost more in my mind than across that
high slope where I began the last, solitary part of my quest-if quest
were what it was.  Why was I traveling a near-abandoned road toward a
wizard who had swatted me aside like a fly the last time we had met?
What did I think that I could possibly accomplish when Talryn or Justen
had been able to do nothing?

Then again, had they really tried?  Who was telling the truth?  Or was
anyone?

I shivered, but Gairloch lifted his head, as if to say we should get on
with it.

LXIV

ANOTHER FIVE KAYS beyond the hill where I had helped bury the unnamed
and unknown Kyphran outlier and where I had separated from my escort,
barely into the edge of the foothills, the old road crossed the
wizards' road.

I didn't even have to look for illusions.  I did cast my perceptions
around and found traces of older chaos, indicating that, at one time,
some magic had been cast to cloak the road.  That had been seasons, if
not years, earlier.  I shivered.  That Antonin saw no reason to hide
his road was chilling in itself.

The unnatural valley ran straight east and west, and the trace of coach
wheels ran straight and true down the center of the road.  Hoofprints,
recent ones, flanked the wheel traces.

I took a deep breath.  Suddenly, I had to ask myself what I was doing
in the middle of a wilderness looking for a chaos-master.  I didn't
have an answer.

Instead, still damning myself for a fool, I turned Gairloch onto that
clay-covered and white-paved road and threw my senses ahead of me.
Then, remembering what I had done earlier, I used the shield that
reduced the ability of a chaos-master to discern the order I
represented.  That shield left us fully visible, but the greater danger
was from white magicians, not from ordinary or even chaos-touched
soldiers.

In the distance, actually into the Westhorns themselves, there was
another lurking mass of chaos energy, but nothing nearby.  Nothing-not
wild pigs, not goats, and definitely not people.  About what one would
expect around an isolated wizards' road.  For now, that was fine with
me.

Even on Gairloch, as opposed to a coach, riding on the even surface was
considerably speedier than on the old road from Kyphrien.  Despite what
I recalled from my conversations with Justen, I found it hard to
believe that the wizards' road could have lasted so long.  Then again,
only the road and the heavy stone bridges had really endured, and
Justen had said that the construction had been done by honest stone
masons reinforced with black order-masters, before .. something had
happened.

Once again, I hadn't quite gotten the whole story.

By twilight, we had traveled nearly into the lower reaches of the
Westhorns themselves, and those lower mountains loomed so high into the
western sky that we had ridden the entire late afternoon in shadow.
Their distant pinnacles glittered with reflected light, a cruel white
that made the peaks a fitting home for chaos.

Not that I had wanted to ride poor Gairloch as long as I had, but it
was twilight before there was a canyon away from the road that had
water, and was passable enough for us to get well clear of the wizards'
way itself.

We struggled up a rock-and-grass slope, around a bend, and behind
another boulder before I felt we were removed enough from casual
scrutiny.

Whheeee .. . eeee .. . Gairloch was nuzzling at the saddlebags even
before I had them off.  His nose was wet-and cold from the brook water
that felt like liquid ice.

"Don't drink any more," I snapped.  A lot of really cold water wouldn't
do him much good.

I even touched him and let my feelings run through his system.  He
either hadn't drunk that much or could handle it.  Still, I worried;
but then, I was worrying about everything.

He took the grain cake as soon as it appeared, almost including my
fingers in the first greedy bite.

"Gairloch!"

He didn't pay much attention, but I hadn't really expected that he
would.

After dried fruit, travel bread, and the last of the white cheese, I
laid out the bedroll under an overhang.  The sky was clear, the stars
sparkling like faraway lanterns in the blackness; a chill wind whistled
down the canyon.  I slept inside the bedroll.

The stream gurgled, and I slept-in a way.  I dreamed that I was
refereeing a fencing match between Krystal and a white knight, except
that the white knight was Antonin, and he kept throwing fireballs at
me, and laughing.  Every time he threw a fireball, Krystal looked at me
and stopped fencing, and he would slash her on her blade arm, until her
arm was dripping red.  The dream seemed to last all night, and I woke
in cold sweats, although the dawn was filled with ice.  Frost covered
the grass, and a thin layer of rime ice covered even the fast-moving
waters of the brook.

The season wasn't quite winter, and in the low Westhorns it was colder
than the coldest of days in Recluce, or most days in Kyphrien, I
suspected.

Wheeee .. . Gairloch's breath was a white cloud.

"I'm getting up."

When I started moving, I was warm enough, though.

After giving Gairloch a little grain and letting him graze on the
sparse grass, I did my own munching on the remaining dried apples from
Brettel.  My supplies were low, probably less than an eight-day of
trail food, but one way or another, I wouldn't need more than that.

The apples weren't enough, and I opened the wax on the last package of
cheese, a brick yellow cheese harder and less tasty than the white. The
trail bread helped, but I limited what I ate and repacked the rest.

Then-carefully-I reached out with my senses to the wizards' road.  It
was as deserted as the night before, with no sign of use.

Long before the sun cleared the hills behind us, -Gairloch and I were
riding deeper into the Westhorns, deeper along the narrow and
artificial valley.

In time, having seen nothing unusual, and having sensed nothing beyond
the traces of chaos on the road, we began to near the mass of
chaos-energies I had first sensed the afternoon before, somewhere on
the other side of an even narrower gap in the huge rock wall that"
except for the path of the wizards' road, seemed to block any westward
passage.

Wheeee.  Gairloch tossed his head, as if in warning.

Ahead, the pass opened wide in the morning sun, the sun that warmed my
back, grassy slopes rising gently, then ending abruptly on both sides
against the rock and crags that distinguished the Westhorns from the
lesser mountains of Candar.  The pass was avoided by almost
everyone-that much was clear from the gravel and clay that held only
the traces of Antonin's passage.  A few low thorn berries and scrub ash
bushes grew alongside the road, with its unvarying width of more than
fifteen cubits.

In casting my perceptions ahead, I could sense nothing.  Nothing.  Not
even rock, or trees.

"Hellfire ..."  I muttered, realizing what that meant.

Antonin couldn't distort what I saw, but he could prevent my sensing
anything at all, except for the feel of chaos itself.  That meant there
was something to sense.

Just for the hell of it, I would have liked to create a good solid
thunderstorm, but with chaos ahead, using the energy wasn't a good
idea.  Besides, while I still resented Justen's comments about
frivolity becoming chaos, I had listened.  And I couldn't think of an
orderly reason for the rain.  Had there been an artificially-caused
drought, use of my talents to create rain might enhance order. 
Maybe.

Wheeee .. . uhhhh .. . wheeee .. .

Gairloch's protest jerked my head back toward the road that slowly rose
before us for perhaps another kay.  Studying the few trees, scraggly
conifers and pines growing at helter-skelter intervals from out of the
knee-high mountain grass, I could see nothing lurking around or behind
them.  Nor was anything visible on the upslope before us.

Right-handed, I flicked the reins.  "Come on.  We really don't have
anywhere else to go, old fellow."

Whheee.

"No, we don't."  I extended my left hand toward the staff, still safe
and waiting in the saddle holder.  "Oooo .. ."  The subjective heat
flashed to my fingers even before they reached the black lorken of my
staff.

Something was definitely waiting over the crest of the road.

I wiped my forehead, suddenly sweating in the cold glare of the winter
sun.

Wheeee .. . ccc .. .

"I know.  There are evil types in front of us."

Again, I tried to sense what lay over the hill-crest before me,
whatever it was that Gairloch disliked.  All I could feel was a sense
of heat, of the fire that was Antonin's trademark.

I glanced at the hillside to the left and right of the road.  Did I
really have to keep to it?

A quick survey answered that question.  All those short and
gently-sloping meadows ended in piles of jumbled rock at the base of
rocky slopes that would have taxed a mountain sheep.

I looked again, realizing belatedly what had happened, shaking my head
as I did.  Once the pass had been a standard narrow gap-or just a solid
wall of rock.  Then, someone, something, a long time ago, perhaps as
far back as when Candar had been united under the Wizards of Fairhaven,
had blasted through.  Not only had they built the wizards' road, but
they had rearranged the entire geography.

Maybe, just maybe, Magistra Trehonna had been right.  I definitely
didn't like that thought.

With the help of the weather and time, the sheer facings had crumbled,
leaving what seemed a narrow natural ravine running into the Westhorns.
But any crumbled rock had been periodically removed from the road
surface.  Under Gairloch's hooves was the same white road surface-the
same wizard-stone-that paved the streets of Frven.

Not that any of that exactly helpeo" as Gairloch and I proceeded toward
the crest of the pass, toward that narrow gap in the sheer stone wall
that towered hundreds of cubits upward.

Wheeee .. .

On the edge of the hard surface lay a brownish square, the tattered
remains of a pack or something, and, in the higher grass behind .. .
fragments of white.  I swallowed.

Wheeeee .. . eeeee .. . Gairloch's steps skittered.

"I know."  I chucked the reins again and looked up.

Ahead, arrayed a half-kay ahead, blocking the entrance to the narrow
pass, was a troop.  A white-clad, white-faced wizard troop of warriors
.. . soldiers at least they all had weapons that glinted in the
near-noon sun.

I wiped my forehead again with the back of my sleeve.

In front of the silent, ghost-white apparitions rode a knight on-what
else-a white horse.  The horse, over four cubits at the shoulder, stood
there in the sunlight.  Neither the horse's metal breastplate nor the
knight's unburnished plate armor reflected the sunlight.  Knights had
never enjoyed much success, except in service of chaos, because that
much plate was a wonderful place in which to concentrate fire.  Of
course, this knight had probably served chaos far longer than he had
ever wanted to.

A damned knight.  In more ways than one, I knew.  Behind him waited a
pack of armed figures, not exactly men.  Unhappily, each of those
figures carried a sword which glinted and looked razor-sharp.

The knight's helmet visor was down, and he carried a lance pointed in
my direction.  The lance looked to be a solid pole with a glistening
white tip-chaos-tipped, if you will.

Ml of the predictability of Antonin's tactics did not make them less
effective.

The white horse lifted one hoof, then another, carrying the silent
knight toward me at an even pace, no spring in his steps, and no
wavering.  The knight said nothing.

"Easy ..."

The white-haired, white-faced, white-clothed figures began to walk
also, their armor creaking like unoiled doors, without rhythm, without
order, their swords almost flapping to an unseen and unheard breeze.

Wheee .. . Gairloch kept moving, if slowly.

"I know.  It wasn't exactly my idea, either."

Farther ahead in the grass to the right of the road were some more
white fragments.  I glanced from the ghosts to the bones and the
tattered leathers.  My eyes scanned the rest of the high grass,
glimpsing a few other remnants of other travelers.

The bones were real.  So not all of the figures could be illusions; but
were they all real?  My senses didn't say, because the blankness that
enclosed the pass ahead foiled that.  Still ... I grinned, half-scared,
half-elated, and flicked the reins, then dropped them on the saddle,
grabbing the staff with both hands as Gairloch trotted toward the
knight and I bounced along with him.

The knight's lance came up slowly, almost as if drawn toward the staff,
the white tip glinting in the light, red behind the white of chaos.

Whhhhsttt... A line of fire flew toward me, spattering off my staff.

Thumpedy, thump .. . Gairloch carried me toward the lance.

Whhhhsssttt .. . The second fire-line curved toward us, again spraying
around me.

Thunk .. . thunk ... I knocked the slow-moving lance aside, then struck
the rear flank of the white horse.

Hssssttt..  .

Holding the staff in my left hand, I grabbed the reins and yanked
Gairloch to a halt.  Like a snuffed candle, the other white apparitions
had vanished, leaving only the knight and horse-which, as I watched,
sagged into a heap on the road, dwindling in size until only a pile of
copper armor remained; that, and a long wooden lance with a
still-sharpened tip.

The dead zone remained, and I could sense nothing, except with my eyes.
Nor could I hear anything, no bird calls, no whistle of the wind, not
the slightest of insect chirps or whines.

"Come on ... let's get moving."

Gairloch didn't object as we rode into the narrow space.  My eyes
flicked from one smooth wall to the other, from the smooth stone in
front of me to the cliff edges above, to the sky over that.  All it
would take would be one large falling rock-there was nowhere to go.

Then, again, if Antonin blocked the road, he would only have to unblock
it, and who but an idiot would challenge the ghost horde?

I looked back and shivered.  Slowly, a mist was building around the
copper armor.

"Let's keep moving."

A lot of energy had been used to set up that defense, and all I had
done was to bypass it; not even contain it, just get through it.

Once the high rock walls dropped away on each side, so did my inability
to sense what I might not see.  Gairloch had carried me nearly a kay
further into the Westhorns.

Again, I glanced back, but the knight was out of sight.  So was the
white horde.  But they were waiting, mindlessly, for the next
travelers.

The beauty of the defense was that what happened didn't matter.  Some
people died.  Some escaped, but the deaths and the tales of those who
did escape added to Antonin's strength and people's desire to keep as
far away from the haunted road as possible.  With war between Gallos
and Kyphros, who was about to send enough talent and force to clean up
an unused wizards' road?

Yeee-ahh .. .

The vulcrow's ugly call reminded me to stop woolgathering and start
concentrating again.

I did.  That was a mistake, because I asked myself what I was doing on
the road in the first place, or the second place, for that matter.
Antonin had brushed me aside like nothing.  And if my dreams were to be
trusted, he had even trapped Tamra, who had been far warier and more
capable than I. So what was I doing riding toward his stronghold?

"What am I doing?"  I repeated out loud.

Wheeee .. . uhhh .. . That was Gairloch's only reply, but he kept
putting one foot in front of the other, as if he had no choice.

Maybe that was the answer, the only answer.  With all the deaths, and
all the sacrifices, maybe I really didn't have much choice either.  I
didn't like that thought, either, since it made my stomach tighten up,
and that meant I did have a choice.

Some choice-cut and run like all the other black masters had for so
long; or, probably, get incinerated by the greatest white wizard in
generations.  That was a choice of being a live hypocrite like Talryn
or a dead hero like that poor Kyphran outlier.

"Wonderful choices ..."  I muttered under my breath.

Yeee-ahh .. . answered the nearby vulcrow.

I glanced up.

In the cloudless winter blue sky north of where I rode, two other
vulcrows swept in slow wide circles.

Once again, the road stretched ahead down a narrow valley, straight for
at least another two kays before it began a gentle turn toward the
right, northward.

The mountain grass beside the road was all brown, but I saw no more
horses as Gairloch carried me toward the wide curve and I followed the
grooved coach traces back toward Antonin.

Mid-morning came and passed.  I rode silently along the slowly-rising
road, a road so dry that only a few stunted bushes and-patches of
mountain grass grew.  A road so silent that the occasional screech of
the single vulcrow that followed us, and the sound of Gairloch's
hooves, were the only sounds echoing between those rocky walls.

The pair of vulcrows remained circling behind us and to the north, but
the one continued to follow us.  I knew why, but doing anything about
it would have been stupid.  The less capable Antonin thought I was, the
better.

Before noon, I stopped at the first water, a brook barely a cubit wide.
Gairloch appreciated the water, cold as it was.  I did also, and fed
him some grain cake, not much, and let him browse on the scattered
roadside grass.  I appreciated the yellow cheese and travel bread,
though they were sustenance and not much more.  Eating beat starving. I
threw a morsel toward the vulcrow that perched on the rocks on the far
side of the road.

For a time, the bread lay on the grass untouched.  Then, with a rush,
the scavenger swooped down and bore it back to its rock perch.

After saluting the black-feathered creature, I continued slicing and
eating cheese.  I'd never been the type to tear it right off the
block.

The silence continued, and I wanted to talk, even to the vulcrow.
Instead, I packed away my remaining travel food, filled the water
bottle, and climbed back on Gairloch.

The rock walls flanking the road seemed to get whiter and deader, and
the silence increased.  Not even insects chirped, and the only living
things were a vulcrow, a pony, and a damned idiot.  In the high
distance, the cold reflection of the high Westhorns glittered.

I kept riding.

Until I found the gates.

At first glance, the valley continued as it had for all too many kays,
long, narrow, straight, and dry, the clay-covered white pavement
stretching out before me.  On the north side, there was a dip in the
high rocky walls, and the grassy stretch that led to the near-sheer
rock was nearly flat.

I blinked and looked again, sensing the illusion.  Behind the apparent
grass and rock lay another narrow passage.  Unlike the road, the rock
walls of this entrance were not timeworn and smooth, but sharp and
clear, and the imprint of chaos was far more recent.

As Gairloch stood there, reined to a halt, I studied the reality behind
the image, wondering if anything created by chaos could be said to
represent reality.

The passage through solid rock was not that long, perhaps fifty cubits,
and the rock face through which it had been cut was far shorter than
most of the valley walls, less than thirty cubits above the road at the
highest.  Still, to destroy that mass of rock was impressive.

Midway into the passage were two heavy white-oak gates, their hinge
brackets mortared into the rock itself.  Both gates were closed.

Blocking the illusion from Gairloch, I nudged him forward.  To any
bystander, we would have appeared to walk into solid rock.

No chaps-forces touched the gates themselves, save for a thin link
across them.  A heavy but simple latch kept them closed.  While I could
have rerouted that thin link and opened the gates without breaking it,
I did not.  After all, what simple black staffer would have known
that?

As I opened the latch, a spark flew, but nothing else happened.

Gairloch and I rode through, and I dismounted and re-closed the gates.
Simple courtesy.

Once through the passage, the road ran between two treeless and rocky
hills, then sloped down to a rock-strewn plain stretching for half a
kay toward a towering and shimmering white cliff that held swirling
chaos-energies, and glowed even under the noon sun.  Beneath the cliff
was a castle, composed of a stone house and a wall.  The white stone
house, barely visible to me even from the top of the hill, must have
stood at least a full three stories high, with a white tile roof.
Around the house ran a wall of white granite, merging with the cliff at
each end.

I shivered.  I really wasn't sure I wanted to be there.  In factI knew
I didn't, but I'd backed myself into my own particular corner. How
could I not try to stop Antonin after all I had said and seen?  How I
could possibly succeed was another question.

After another shiver, I looked down at the castle.

No doubt about it-the structure was impressive, but it was small,
smaller than I would have thought for a chaos-master of Antonin's
standing, and simple.  No towers, just a sheer wall jutting out from
the flat cliff rising behind it, pierced by a single visible gate.  A
narrow ravine, too deep to see the bottom from the entrance road where
I sat upon Gairloch, and too raw to have been naturally caused,
separated the castle and its walls from the more recently created
wizards' road that I had followed from the original wizards' way.

Beside the newer road that led from the sharp-cleft rock passage and
the castle gates ran a narrow brook, and a few patches of grass
sprouted here and there.  I dismounted, not wanting to bring Gairloch
into that castle.  Again, I could not explain why.  I did not unsaddle
him, but left him free to browse in the shaded area by the brook.

Then I took the staff and began the walk along the sunlit road between
the two hills and down toward the castle.

Once I was halfway down the hill, I could see a simple railed and
wooden span crossed the ravine, a span scarcely more than a rod in
length.  It was not a drawbridge, but a plain wooden structure,
probably of heavy pine that could be easily fired with
chaos-energies.

The castle itself could have been taken within a few days by a
competent army-provided the castle's master were not a chaos-master,
and provided that any army could have been coaxed into the Westhorns to
begin with.

I shivered.  The whole place was even more forbidding than Frven, more
desolate than the patch of desert created between Gallos and Kyphros by
Antonin's reckless use of chaos supposedly on behalf of the prefect,
but clearly for Antonin's own benefit.

Not a single banner flew from the white castle.  Not a single plume of
smoke drifted from the eight chimneys, yet the heavy white-oak gate was
open and the road ran straight from the gap in the hills to the ravine
and the bridge to the castle.

Like a perfect painting, the castle sat framed by the high cliff and
the ravine.

I shivered again, wondering why I was even trying.  Then I thought of
the nameless outlier, with her blasted face, and the beheaded blond
soldier on the prefect's wall, the fountain of chaos, and, more
important, the smugness of the Brotherhood, building isolated order,
using Antonin as he used Justen.

There was one other factor-I had been used, just as Jus-ten had.  It
was the only thing that made sense.  By fighting the prefect, my
attempts at order had led to greater disorder and greater conflict
between Gallos and Kyphros.  No wonder I had been unmolested until I
left.  I had done exactly what Antonin wanted.  I almost retched right
there on that dry and barren road, wondering at the same time why I had
to have been so damned slow and stupid.

Instead, I straightened my steps and marched onward toward the ravine
and the bridge across it, guessing that the longer before I had to
raise a shield, the better.  I did let my perceptions sense the area
around me, to alert me if Antonin should begin to mass forces against
me.

I had thought about ringing the castle with a balance barrier, but
traveling the ravine and climbing the hill would have been difficult
without using order-mastery to bridge some of the gaps, and that use of
order would have spelled out my presence like fireworks in the night
sky.  Not to mention my abilities.  And even had I been able to create
that large a barrier, it would have failed my purpose.

I needed to get to Antonin face-to-face, and I suspected that he would
let me, if only to get an explanation of how I had eluded him thus far.
That was a gamble, but not a big one.  Besides, I really didn't have
much choice.

So step by step I walked downhill, further from Gairloch with each
stride, closer to the hidden fires that shimmered behind each stone of
the white castle, closer to the fears that threatened to paralyze my
spine.

LXV

NOT ONE SOUL-not even a demon-looked from the empty parapets as my feet
scuffed the white stone of the road that arrowed straight for the
white-oak bridge and the open gate beyond.

With each step a puff of white dust rose, then fell, in the noonday
stillness.  Not a breath of air carried down that narrow valley, and
the winter day felt like a bone-dry summer afternoon.  The ice- and
snow-tipped peaks of the Westhorns glittered like glass on their
heights to my left, as indifferent as to what might happen as they had
been to the rise and fall of Frven or the honest and deadly strategy of
Recluce.

Thud, My first step on the wooden span reverberated like muted thunder
from the narrow ravine below, all red rocks, needle-pointed and
razor-edged.  At least there weren't any bones, not that I could see.

Tharooom .. . thud .. . tharooom .. . Walking the white fir was walking
across a massive drum.  Antonin's coach must have vied with the real
thunder when it rumbled across his bridge..  .. Tharummmm .. .

Creaaakkkkk .. . The heavy wooden gate, set on massive bronze hinges,
eased open even more widely as I watched.

No one appeared.  No thing appeared, either, but I could feel the
creatures of chaos beyond that open gate-red-sparked and dead-white
beings that made the lingering demons of Frven seem merely plaintive.

My fingers were slippery on my staff, and I wanted to wipe the sweat
off my forehead.  Not all of that dampness was from the heat.

Tharuum .. . thump, thuuuud..  . The drum echoes of the bridge told me
that my steps were not exactly even, or ordered.  I repressed a laugh,
but why I thought it was funny I couldn't say.

Creakkkkk .. . The solid oak gate opened wide to the courtyard beyond
the wall, and to the main floor windows, all casements, and all open to
let in air and light.  No figures appeared anywhere, even as my feet
again touched the solid white stone beyond the bridge and outside the
gate.  Again, I could feel the unseen chaos-energies swirling around
the courtyard.

I swallowed and stepped up to the gate.

"Hello the castle."  The stone swallowed my words, rather than echoing
them.

No answer.

I looked around the gate, let my feelings sweep the courtyard, but the
space was vacant.  Not cloaked, the way the white knight had been, but
vacant.  I took one step up to the gate, and another around it.  My
feet carried me past the gate, and I looked back.  The heavy oak
structure remained on its hinges-open.

The white-paved courtyard, less than thirty cubits square, was empty
and bare, except for a mounting block designed for a carriage, and a
carved design above the doorway of the carriage-entrance.  The open
windows were hinged open slightly beyond the roof line.

Like the castle gate, the doorway above the carriage steps beckoned.

Both of its unadorned, gold-varnished double doors stood ajar.  A glint
of bronze told me that they, too, were set with bronze hinges.

Even with my feelings extended, I could sense nothing living nearby,
just the swirling chaos-energies, a deeper underlying chaos, and a
greater and a lesser concentration of living white fire on the floor
above.  That fire had to be Antonin-and some other white wizard.

Thrap!  Thrap!  I banged the heavy brass knocker far harder than
necessary, and the sound echoed into the corridors beyond the doors.

This time I waited.  One did not enter the domain of chaos totally
uninvited.  Standing there-staff in hand, shifting my weight from one
foot to the other-I wiped the sweat off my forehead with the back of my
sleeve, still marveling at the unseasonable heat, and wondering if the
castle were an extension of chaos, or of the demons' hell itself.

I swallowed, then began to examine the stone around me, and the wood of
the doors outside which I waited.

Uncle Sardit would have frowned.  Even Bostric would have frowned.  The
mitering on the panel edges was rough, with gaps big enough to slip a
knife through.  The spaces between the frame and the stone were even
wider, as if hurriedly installed, or by poor crafters indeed.  The
golden varnish had been slopped on, in some places actually showing
where raised globs had dried, without even a sanding or a second
coat.

Although I did not know stonework, the same careless finishing was
evident there as well, with blocks joined and held in place by mortar
of differing thicknesses, rather than having the mortar as a sealant
for solid and well-fitted stones.

Thrap!  I knocked again.

Click .. . dick .. . click .. . The steps were slow, like water
dripping from a leaky shower.  Had I even seen a shower since Recluce?
.  click ... A thin footman not much taller than my shoulder stood and
opened the left door fully, stepping back as he did so.  His hair and
skin were white, as were his jacket, boots, and trousers.  The whites
of his eyes were reddish-tinted.  Only his pupils were black.

"The master bids you welcome."  Hoarse and mechanical, his voice
sounded as though I were the first person to whom he had spoken since
he died.  Then again, maybe he only looked dead.  Although he might be
alive, he bore no energy save chaos, and without it he would have
ceased to be.  That in itself was another paradox-pointing out that
even chaos-masters had to use some order.

"I would like to see him."

Without another word, the white footman turned and started down the
wide white marble hallway and toward a set of circular stairs.

Click.  Behind us, the doors closed.

I grasped the staff, knowing its comfort was short-lived, and followed
the footman to the grand staircase.

Once more I was disappointed in the workmanship, especially to see such
a well-proportioned and superior design flawed in execution, with
columns more than fractionally off-center and stone joints with
thumb-width gaps instead of hair-thin lines.  Everywhere lingered the
hint of a white haze, a dust not quite dust that did not exactly settle
on the unevenly-polished marble floors.

Another lack bothered me, but not until I was halfway up the circular
staircase did I observe the lack of wall decorations-no paintings, no
wall hangings, not even any carpeting.

The whole castle reeked of being unfinished, clearly finished as it
was.  The lack of order?  I wondered, but kept pace with the silent
footman.

At the top of the staircase, he turned left for several steps before
stopping at a closed doorway that seemed to lead back toward the front
of the castle.

Creakkkk .. .

Oak doors should not creak, not well-made doors, but those of the white
wizard did.  I shook my head, then followed the footman inside.

As I entered, I glanced up at the vaulted ceiling, supported by white
oak timbers set twice as close together as would be needed for a normal
structure.  A faint smile tugged at my lips.

Like the rest of the castle, the great room was white-white marble
floors, whitened granite walls, and white-oak framing and doors.  The
inside wall-the one containing the poorly-fitted double doors through
which I had been conducted-was of white-oak paneling, and not the best,
either.  Even without looking closely, I could see the small lines
showing that the mitering and joins were often not flush.

My nose tickled, perhaps from the white dust that my boots had raised
as I walked into the room.  At the north end of the room towered a
whitened granite chimney, fronted by a white marble hearth.  A small
pile of ashes lay on the stones, but there were no andirons, grates, or
screens, and the ashes were cold.

The inside wall, the one of white oak, bore no pictures, no decorations
save the paneling itself, although a half-dozen wall brackets bore
unlit white-brass lanterns.  Identical lanterns were affixed between
the casements of the long floor-to-ceiling windows that punctuated the
outside wall.  Each window, composed of perhaps twenty diamond-shaped
leaded panes with an amber tint, opened on pivot bars hidden in the top
and bottom of the white-oak frames.  Even with all the windows open to
the air, the amber tint of the glass cast a golden glow on the room.
Despite the open windows, the air bore a hint of ash.

At the south end of the room was the only furniture-a modest circular
white-oak table about four cubits across, surrounded by five matching
chairs with golden cushions.  Against the wall were two serving tables
of white oak.  The left one bore a tray of covered dishes.

At the table sat two figures.

The silent white footman marched until we were almost at the table,
bowed, then departed, leaving me standing there, staff in hand.  With
his reddened eyes, his gaunt and pallid face, his lank white hair, and
his jerky gait, he looked like a marionette-the white wizard's
puppet.

Antonin and the dark-haired woman-Sephya-looked up from the table, the
ever-present white oak under a golden varnish.  Steam rose from their
plates.

"Would you care to join us?"  His voice was pleasant, as if I were an
old acquaintance making a social call.

I smiled politely, just as I had been taught to do, but my stomach
twisted at even that deception.

"Not if phrased quite that way, most accomplished of white wizards."  I
bowed.  Bowing didn't bother me.  He was accomplished-no questions
about that.

"The young fellow has respect, Sephya.  You must permit him that."
Antonin took a bite from his plate after he spoke.

"He has manners, my lord.  Those are not quite the same as respect."
Her voice was deferential, not subservient .. . and vaguely familiar.

I turned toward the woman, studying her directly.  Apparently-dark
hair, but not even shoulder-length, eyes whose color seemed to shift
between gray and blue, and a pale complexion.  Beneath that ... I
swallowed, and forced my thoughts elsewhere.

One problem at a time.

"He is also perceptive."  She took a sip from the glass goblet.  "A
shade dangerous.  He might even have been a worthy adversary, were he
not so impetuous."

I swallowed again, realizing that she was delicately trying to get me
angry, in such a way that I wouldn't realize exactly what she was
doing.  "You do me too much honor, my lady."

"She is known for that," added the white wizard.  His voice bore an
edge.  "You haven't exactly explained why you marched down my roads and
up to my doorstep.  Or a few other minor inconveniences, either."  He
arched one eyebrow-the right one-and I had to admire that little
trick.

I shrugged.  What could I explain?  That I had decided to destroy him?
I decided to say nothing.

His eyes seemed to grow whiter as he watched me, but I looked beyond
him, trying to measure the chaos that centered, as much as chaos could
center anywhere, within and around the room.

"You've provided an interesting puzzle, black staffer  You could be
rather helpful in some ways."  The white wizard smiled and lifted his
arm.  A small fireball appeared between the thumb and forefinger of his
right hand.  "Perhaps you would like to learn the workings of fire?
Bringing greater knowledge to mankind?"

My skin itched, and the room felt darker, though the sky outside was as
blue as ever and the golden light still filled the room.

"To all people?"  I forced a laugh, which was hard, because my throat
was as dry as a desert.

"You came to me.  You are seeking answers, after all."  The fireball
vanished as he lowered his hand, pushed back the chair, and stood.

I did not smile, but took a deep breath.  Antonin was not quite as tall
as I was, and his arms were still the knobby arms of a merchant.  I
stepped back and looked toward the wall of windows, wondering absently
if Gairloch were still waiting patiently beyond the two rocky hills
that flanked Antonin's private road.  "I did," I finally admitted.

"For what?  The answers that frightened Recluce refuses to share?  Or
the power that belongs to all true seekers of knowledge?"  His voice
had softened, mellowed, filled with the sound of reasonableness.

"Recluce has no fear of you, or of me."  As I said the words, the chill
I felt from their truth, from my stomach not turning, almost had me
shivering.

"Indeed?  Then it must be true, if you say so.  Yet you hesitate in
joining us in the search for the answers that Recluce hides from all
the world?"

"I'm not sure that a wizard's seeking answers entitles him to receive
them, any more than a ruler's starting a war entitles him to victory."
My words were a stupid response, tumbling out almost thoughtlessly.

Antonin frowned.  He had moved a step or so closer as we had spoken.

"He seems somewhat reluctant to pledge his service to you."  Sephya's
laugh was hard, and the sound tore at my chest.  "Or even to carry out
his own quest for answers."

I nodded toward her, trying not to take my eyes from the white
wizard.

"Do you wish to enter the white fellowship?"

"Hardly."  I laughed, except the sound resembled choking because my
heart was pounding and my mouth dry.

"He is brave, Sephya," the white wizard announced.  "Brave, but not
terribly bright."

I agreed with his assessment-completely.

"So-..  ."  Antonin raised his arms.  "Let me show you some answers."

Whssstttt... A cascade, of fire streamed from Antonin toward me.

Instinctively, my staff blocked the torrent of flames that cascaded
around me, blazed blackly.

Antonin smiled.  "A good staff there.  But a staff cannot answer your
questions."

WWWWWHHHHHSSSTTTTTTTTT!

Fire flowed everywhere, and my ears whistled and rang from the blaze
that surrounded me.

"A very good staff."  He raised his arms once more.

The theatricality of the gesture irked me.  He scarcely needed to raise
his arms.  Chaos and order are molded by the mind, not the hands.

UWWWWWWWHHHHHHHHHHHHHSSSSSSSSSSTTTTTTTTT!

The force of the fire nearly knocked me off my feet, driving me back
away from the table, leaving me tottering above the stone flooring.

"Are you sure about your decision?"  Antonin asked, his voice once more
reasonable, as if he had not just attempted to incinerate me.  His
hands remained poised.  "Knowledge belongs to those who seek it, not
those who deny it or flee it."

At that point, I acted on faith, not quite sure why I did what I did.
Straightening up and taking my staff in both hands, I brought it down
across my knee.  It bent, but did not break, and a sharp pain ran up my
leg.

"That's hardly the way," said Antonin mildly.  "Just set it down."  He
pointed to the stone tiles by my feet.  Fire surrounded him, an unseen
white blistering flame, and cold red hatred, even as he stepped toward
me yet another pace.

Casting the staff aside wouldn't be enough-that would just divide what
order I possessed.  But I had not been able to break it and my leg
throbbed from my failed attempt.  The lorken was tough.  And it was
finely crafted-Uncle Sardit's best.  Yet I knew that the best of tools
could be a crutch, even if a finely-crafted crutch.

"Just set it down.  The staff hinders your search for answers."
Antonin's voice was friendly, persuasive.

I gripped the lorken more firmly.  Mind over matter?  Was that the
answer?  Whatever it might be, that seemed the only hope.

BREAK-that was what I willed as the hard black wood came down across my
knee again.  BREAK .. . BREAK .. . BREAK!  Crackkkkk .. .

That black lorken that had turned swords, resisted stone, and stopped
iron bars-that iron-bound and indestructible staff-cracked as easily as
though it had been a softwood stake.  Coolness -a black coolness that
quenched the burning with which Antonin's flames tried to bathe
me-flowed from the broken ends of the wood, settling in and around
me.

Without a word, I cast both pieces of iron-bound black wood at his
feet.

Even Antonin's mouth dropped open momentarily, before he danced back
from the cold iron on the black wood.

As he gaped and dodged, I stepped forward, drawing a reflective shield
around us, except this one was inside out, directing outside energies
away from us.

His mouth continued to sag as I turned toward him.

"You .. ."

IWWHHHHHHsssss ... His fire trickled away against the black coolness I
held around me, and his hands dropped to his waist.

He tried -to raise one hand, again, but that shiny dark hair had begun
to silver, even in the instants since the reflective shield had
isolated us.

Whhhhssssttt!

Another blast of fire slashed at me from Sephya, spraying away from the
shield I had thrown around Antonin and me.

Click.

Antonin had a short bronze sword in his hand, although wrinkles were
appearing on his face.  Behind Antonin, Sephya drew a thin blade.  She
edged toward us.

I dropped down and dived for the floor, grabbing one half of my broken
staff and flinging it at Sephya.

Clunk!

"Ohhh .. . shit .. ."  The staff fragment dropped inside my own
shield's edge, bouncing on the white marble, stopped cold by the
tiniest residual order it bore.

Give me your energy .. give it to me..  . Antonin's thoughts clawed at
me, demanding the sense of self I had wrapped in the blackness I
held.

Now .. . give .. . give .. .

Like a vise, his thoughts encircled me, within the circled shield I
held.

I am Lerris ... I am me .. . me .. . Just as Justen had taught, I hung
on to myself.

Whhsstttt..  . Antonin's fire was barely more than the fireball in his
fingertips earlier, but it burned at my face, and I squinted.

Sephya advanced slowly, as if unsure exactly what to do.

Thwick!

Antonin sliced at me with the short sword.  I rolled away, getting my
feet under me, concentrating on keeping the shield around us both.

Give!  Give!  .. . Like a white hammer, that demand pounded at me.

I circled away, concentrating on being Lerris, holding that barrier
tight around us.

The chaos-master's hair had turned totally white, and began to fall
like snow.

Hsssttttt!  I reeled backwards, a searing pain across my shoulders,
feeling like I had been slashed from behind.

Clank!

"Oooo .. ."  Sephya exclaimed.  The blade she had held lay on the
floor, white-hot from trying to pass the shield I held.

Thwick.

I skipped sideways, losing part of my tunic to the copper blade as
Antonin used my lapse of attention to strike.

GIVE .. . give .. .

Thwickkk!

I dodged again.

Twickk!  .  and again .. . "..  . think .. . smart .. ."  mumbled
Antonin.  "You'll never go home now .  you know too much .. ."  His
words slurred, and his hands were shaking, and the short sword dropped
as if it were too heavy to hold.

Give .. . The last thought was nearly plaintive.  Whhhssstttt!

Still another of Sephya's fire bolts flared against the shield.

Clunk ... Antonin lurched toward me again, after dropping the
now-too-heavy sword.

I dodged, but not quickly enough, as his fingers ripped at my forearm.
Each fingertip felt like a brand across my arm, and I forced order at
those chaos-dripping burn wounds, shoving Antonin back at the same
time.  "..  . damned .. ."

I gulped as I looked at the white wizard.  The hand that had clutched
at me-burning three white scars that still smoldered-that hand
shriveled into ashes.  And the black imprint of my hand on his shoulder
burned through the white robes.  As I gaped, the white-clad figure
staggered, shriveling and collapsing onto the marble in a crumpled
heap.

Whhhhssstm!

"Noooooooooooooo!"

Sephya's scream echoed through the great room.

Since she had been unable to penetrate the shield I ignored her,
ignored the searing in my arm, and concentrated on keeping the shield
intact until the heap that had been the white wizard was truly dead.

Thhuuurruuummmmm ... A low roll of thunder rumbled on and on, as if it
radiated from where I stood, rolling outward like ripples from a
boulder cast into a pool.  . thuuurrrummmmmmmmmm ... CRACK!  A blade of
lightning flashed outside from a cloudless sky, and I flinched, but
clutched my thoughts tight around the shield.  . thhhurruummmm .. . The
growling in and under the skies, and the lingering echo of the single
lightning bolt, rolled and kept rolling outward and away from the
castle, until the thunder and the lightning were mere echoes far out
across the Westhorns.

Not merely physical, those sounds had carried far beyond my hearing,
and I shivered.

With a deep breath I dropped the shield and turned toward Sephya.  She
had squared her shoulders.

Whhhhstttt!

The heat seared around me, but I deflected it, letting the white flame
sheet around me.  I took a single step toward her.

Wwuhhhssstttt!

Another step carried me through and past her fire bolt

Whhhsssttt!

Moving as though through glue or old varnish, I managed another long
step.

She backed up almost to the hearth.

Whhsttt!

A knife-another one of the bronze blades-appeared in her hand.  "Touch
me and you lose her!"

I stopped.

She lifted the knife and reversed it.

I threw all the order I had left in me at the knife, trying to order
the copper and tin, bend it away from chaos.

"Ohhhhhhhh ..."

The muscles in her arms stood out as she tried to bring the knife
toward her body.  I staggered toward her, pouring all the
order-feelings I could toward her.

"Ugff..."

Clank ... Her legs bent, then buckled as she collapsed against a chair
and bounced onto the floor.

I half-walked, half-dragged myself across the white marble squares,
toward the doll-like figure sprawled between the white-oak table and
the hearth.

After kneeling on one knee, I turned her face up.  The slash across her
fair neck was more burn than cut, ugly as it looked, although the blood
didn't help appearances much.

I left it alone, afraid that any more order-meddling was dangerous, at
least until I gathered my own thoughts and strength back.

A quick look toward the white wizard showed me but a heap of white
ashes.  Even as I watched, the white ash turned to dust, and the dust
vanished into the white haze that still filled the castle.  Only the
white robes and matching white boots remained upon the white tiles of
the floor.

I looked back at the unconscious Sephya, noting the slight build, the
reddish tinge of hair beginning to replace the black.

My stomach twisted, even as I gathered my last energies to break
another mental lock-this time, the one Antonin had provided for the
woman who had tried to keep eternal youth by letting Antonin's promises
ensnare another near-innocent from Recluce.

I had guessed but not known what had been done to her, not as Sephya,
but as another soul trapped in Antonin's web.  In a way both Sephya and
Tamra had been trapped.  Yet Sephya had agreed, knowing that Tamra
would in time wither away under Sephya's personality as reinforced by
Antonin.  The white wizard had not lied, exactly; rather, he let Tamra
think she was about to learn how to control the powers she had always
been denied.  Tamra would not have known that Sephya would control her
body.

Thanks to Talryn and Recluce, Tamra had never learned, just as I had
not learned, that she already possessed that power all along.  Except
Tamra had refused to accept her power, insisting that someone else
declare her worthy; while I had kept asking for the reasons, instead of
acting, and the reasons had nearly become an excuse for not acting.

I took a deep breath, knowing what had to be done before I lost my
nerve as I feared my father had.

"Lerris, you can't do that!"

I ignored the caution from somewhere far away, too far away for me to
worry about as I looked into the closed eyes of the slim, red-headed
figure.  Tears were streaming down my face, but they, too, were distant
from what had to be done.  If I had listened .. . but that was another
question, and we all choose our own demon-inhabited hells.

One deep breath, and I plunged, deep into the darkness, away from the
swirls of my own thoughts, away from the crumpled clothes that were all
which remained of the white wizard upon the floor of his
about-to-crumble fortress an palace.

Call the depths of the mind white darkness, the chaos that preceded
chaos.  Call them what you will, but they are chaos, a chaos so
formless that it cannot bear description.

First, to find within that chaos the patterns that were, that had been.
What those patterns really were, I did not try to discover, for that
would have been yet another rape.  Instead, as I discovered, touched,
each gossamer thread, I restored it, not reading it, or the joys,
tears, anger or boredom it held, but replacing it as it had been before
Antonin had changed Tamra's temple to Sephya's harlotry.  Even so, the
hidden feelings plucked at my own fears, my own worth.  Had I the
right?  Who appointed me custodian?  To decide who should live and who
should die?

I did what I had to do.

How long that took .. . that was how long it took ... as long as
destroying Frven took my father, for it had to have been him and
Justen, the brothers-one building a nation to ensure chaos would never
rule again, the other trying to minister to the damned and their
descendants in hell.  As long as crossing the dead lands ... as long as
my refusing to understand the eternal penance that had ensnared my
father .. . and Justen, the damned gray wizard, perhaps the only true
gray wizard.

One thread of memory, then another, and for all that I did not look as
each was replaced, with each thread grew the sadness.  With each thread
grew the river of tears that should have flowed from the Westhorns to
the Easthorns and emptied into the Great North Bay or into the Gulf of
Candar.

With the return of each original thread, a false thread floated free,
moaning as another part of Sephya died, somehow clutching to remain as
I plucked it away from the underlying sadness and the hard-plated
gentleness of the redhead I had never really known or seen.

With each thread, I severed my ties to Recluce, for I was destroying a
soul to save another.

The last threads I replaced by feel, for even the eyes of my mind were
filled with tears.

Then I stepped back into the amber light of that damned white palace.
That was all I could do before my knees buckled and my own private
darkness buried me.

Yeee-aaaahhhh .. .

Yee-ahh ... It would have been nice to be wakened by a beautiful lady,
or even a friendly one, but it didn't happen that way.

Yeee-aaahh .. .

My mouth was dry, dust dry, and an invisible smith was using my head
for an anvil.

Yee-ah .. . yee-ah .. .

My forearm burned and ached simultaneously.

Yeee-ahh .. .

My knee throbbed, and sent shivers of pain to my already beaten
skull.

Yeee-ahhh .. .

On the roof above the open window, a vulcrow complained that he
couldn't get to the raw meat that was me.

After lurching into a sitting position on the rough marble floor, I
slowly looked toward the pile of white garments and the white boots
that had been Antonin.  The white shoes were gone, and the remnants
were still remnants.

Then I looked toward the woman who had been both Sephya and Tamra.  She
had curled into a ball next to the white-oak table that was already
beginning to sag.  In the diffused light, her hair was the red I
remembered.

A cool wind blew through the open windows, and the weaker
late-afternoon light and the shadows outside told me I had been lying
on the stone too long.  My sore body agreed.  uuummmmmmmmm .. .
uuummmmm .. .

The sound of strained stone transformed my too-leisurely observations
into motion- slow motion.

First I gathered myself together, standing carefully.  Then, after
walking to Tamra, I stretched out a hand, gingerly, and touched the
bare skin of her forearm.  Nothing.  Nothing but the lingering odor of
chaos, and an overwhelming sense of pain and loss.

Slowly, gently, I pried her limb-by-limb out of her ball and onto her
feet.  Like a puppet she allowed me to, her eyes open but blank, almost
like a china doll.  Such a physical coercion wasn't a great idea, I
could tell, but I could not carry her.  With Antonin's castle sounding
near collapse around us, my options were limited.

Together we tottered step-by-step out of the great hall, down the
circular staircase, and out the sagging double doors.

Creeeakk .. . scrunch .. . creaakkk ... The heavy fir bridge creaked
and sagged, but held long enough for us to cross.  My heart was
thumping loudly enough to hear, and my mouth was so dry I could not
close it by the time we stepped back onto the road on the other side of
the ravine.

Yee-ah .. .

I ignored the damned vulcrow and concentrated on putting one foot in
front of the other, taking a deep breath after every other step.  My
steps got shorter when we reached the slope up between the hills.

Tamra walked more easily, copying my pace, unthinkingly.

The shadowed spot by the brook where I had left Gairloch was no longer
shadowed, but Gairloch was there, looking up from the water.

Wheeee .. . eeeee .. .

"Yes, I know.  I took too long," I mumbled as I struggled to open the
water bottle.  The liquid helped, enough for me to realize that it
would have been a lot easier to drink from the brook.

The brook water was colder, and Tamra followed my example, after I told
her to drink.

Then I got out my meager store of food, mostly travel bread and the
yellow cheese I didn't like all that much.  I sat on a small boulder by
the brook to open the packages.  My stomach didn't seem to mind the
taste of either, and some of the shakiness left my legs.

I offered a piece of bread to Tamra.  She took it, looking at it
blankly.

"Go ahead.  You can eat it."

She did, mechanically, those eyes still china-doll blank.

It was going to be a long trip back to Kyphrien, a long trip indeed.
Slowly, I chewed enough of the bread and drank enough of the water that
my head cleared and some of my strength returned-enough for me to touch
that scar on Tam-ra's neck and begin the healing process.  She didn't
need any external scars.  The ones inside would be great enough.

Tamra didn't protest when I boosted her onto Gairloch.

Wheee .. . eeee .. . He objected, skittering aside, nearly pulling the
reins from my hand.

"Easy there," I mumbled.

Wheeeee .. . eeeeee .. .

"I know .. . but help me out .. ."

Long wasn't the word for the ride back toward Kyphrien.  Until close to
sunset, when I finally found another brook and a semi-enclosed spot off
the wizards' road, Tamra and I had alternated riding Gairloch, except
that he got nasty if I didn't stay close by.  She just looked blankly
into space, whether riding or walking.

After we dismounted and struggled off the road, we ate- more travel
bread and the bitter yellow cheese, plus some very dried sour pears
that I had to wash down.  Tamra didn't even pucker her lips when she
ate them.

As the light died, I put up double wards, which took most of my limited
strength-wards against Tamra, and wards against any other outside
intrusion.

Neither was necessary.  When I woke the next morning, Tamra was looking
blankly into space, sitting on my bedroll.  So tired I had been that my
cloak had been enough for me.

"Are you all right?"  I asked.  She wasn't, of course, but I had to
ask.  She said nothing, china-blue eyes taking in whatever she faced,
but seeing nothing.

She would eat if told, as well as do anything else, including rather
necessary functions.  That part was hard for me.

The second day was better, but only physically.  Tamra remained silent,
puppet-like.  I could sense no active chaos around or within her, and
somewhere deep inside was a coil of tight-sprung order that I dared not
touch, though I could not say exactly why.  I hoped Justen, the healer
as well as gray wizard, could help.  In some things, gall was no
substitute for experience.

So we rode on, and on, past the narrow gap once guarded by the ghost
knight.  I saw only the greened copper of a lance tip lying on the left
side of the wizards' road, but not even dust or ashes of the knight.
The bones and ragged fabrics from packs and clothes remained.

The second night, in the hills outside the Westhorns themselves, was
worse.  I woke more than I slept, and I swore Tamra just lay on the
bedroll staring at the dark clouds overhead, clouds that never rained,
never thundered, just shut out the stars.

Before mid-morning on the third day, after we had reached the old road
to Kyphrien, a familiar figure appeared on the road, moving quickly
toward the Westhorns.  Two familiar figures-one on a charger, one on a
shaggy pony, accompanied by an armed squad of the Finest.  I didn't
recognize any of the other riders.  They had two riderless horses, just
in case.

"Yelena .. . Justen .. ."  My voice was rusty, flat.  I wasn't exactly
thrilled to see Justen, as if somehow seeing him meant I had failed
somewhere.

"Congratulations, Master of Order-Masters."  He inclined his head as if
he meant it.

Yelena did not meet my eyes, instead looking at Tamra.  The
subofficer's hand remained close to her well-ordered iron blade, and
her lips were tight.  "What did ... what happened?  Is she captive ...
or what?"

I looked at Justen, without words.  Finally, I spoke.  "White prison. I
did what I could, but her soul is twisted into the tightest order-knot
within .. ."

He looked back at me, levelly.  "Did you hear me?"

"I did.  I did it anyway."

He shook his head.  "She cannot live with those memories."

"I know that!"  I snapped.  "Why do you think I restored her old
memories?  She may not remember anything."

"How did you do that?"  His words were carefully spaced.

"I just did it.  It's like weaving light or energy, except it hurt
more, and I didn't get all the pain, just the memories.  The pain's
separate."

"Order-masters?"  began Yelena.

I understood.  "Yes.  We can talk as we ride, and Tamra needs better
care than I can provide."

Justen looked away from me, not even meeting my eyes.  Instead, he rode
next to Tamra, talking to her in a low voice.  Even when we stopped for
a midday break, he barely looked in my direction.

No one else looked in my direction, either, not when they thought I was
watching, except when we stopped.  Then they would offer, most
politely, some fresh travel bread or white cheese or fruit.  The yellow
cheese supplied by Brettel had served me well, but its limited and
bitter taste left much to be desired, and that was a charitable way of
putting it.  So I appreciated the white cheese and dried apples.

Once back on our mounts, though, everyone kept a comfortable distance
from Gairloch and me, as if I were contaminated or something.  Hell,
they even talked to Justen, and he was a gray wizard.  Not even Justen
seemed comfortable near me.  So I rode quietly, drawing into myself.

How was I any different from Antonin?  I had used every power I knew
and some I had only guessed at.  Was I going to be another gray wizard?
Or worse?

LXVI

ONCE AGAIN, I watched the sun rise and the morning unfold from a
balcony in Kyphrien.  I stood alone in the early morning.  This time
the winter sun was chill.  The cold refreshed me as the brisk wind
whipped up from the city, bringing the odor of fresh-baked bread, as
well as the odor of goats.  Somehow the goats didn't bother me so much
any more, but that might have been the result of an eight-day's worth
of meals centering on roasted, stewed, brazed, and baked goat presented
with equally diverse spices and side dishes by the aut arch chef.

At least the breakfast rolls I had brought up from the mess-staying in
the guard mess for any length of time created a profound and drawn-out
silence as every single guard seemed to look at me- contained no goat
meat.

My balcony was the one next to {Crystal's, with an iron grillwork
doorway between the two.  Though there was no lock, I had not opened
the door since I had yet to see Krystal.

The sub-commander had not been in Kyphrien when we had returned, but,
instead, had used the disruption I had created to destroy the remainder
of the prefect's border force.  Without the backing of chaos, the young
Gallian troops were no match for the Finest, or even for the better
local outliers.  I hoped that the talkative Shervan had managed to
weather the action, though I wasn't certain I was ready for
conversation with him any time soon.

Whether I was really ready.  for another conversation, the one with
Krystal, was another question.  Like me, she wasn't the same person who
had left Recluce.  Like me, she had forged herself in her own fires
into a different kind of steel.  I had no doubts that, even with a
black staff in my hand, her blade would have proven superior.  Then,
again, no one was a match for Krystal there, except perhaps Ferrel, and
I wondered about that.

Justen had taken Tamra under his wing, as I had hoped, and she had
begun to respond.  I had only seen them from a distance, but the gray
wizard had himself another apprentice.  It might do them both good.

Thrap!

I wanted to ignore the knock on the door, but did not, instead walking
back inside to the iron-bound red-oak door.  The order arrayed on the
other side could only have been one person.  I lifted the latch.

Justen stood there.  "May I come in?"

"Be my guest."  I stepped back, aware that the gray wizard had the
slightest hint of wanness about him.  All the bowing and scraping was
already getting to me, and it had barely been an eight-day since I had
stumbled from the ruins of Antonin's castle.  You would have thought
that I had done something great-like leveling a few mountains, or even
crafting the most beautiful chest ever seen in Kyphros.

Bravado, luck, and applying whatever skill I had-that was what I had
done, not quite like the effort to do a chest or table perfectly,
though they were far more alike than I would have guessed when I had
first apprenticed to Uncle Sardit.

The other thing I had done, almost unconsciously, was to be honest with
myself.  Not that I really had much choice otherwise, but that was the
other difference between Antonin and me.  It had taken a while, most of
the ride back to Kyphrien, to figure out the answer to my question. How
was I different from Antonin?  Even Justen had been different from the
white wizard.  Could I have ever imagined Antonin working with smelly
sheep?  And that was the real sin-the real evil-of the white wizards. 
Pride.  The conceit that they would impose their will on the world. 
Without even mentioning it, Justen had made his point with the smelly
sheep of Montgren.  And I hadn't even realized that I had learned.

"May I come in?"  he repeated.

"Oh, sorry.  You reminded me of something."  I moved aside.

Justen stepped inside.  I gestured toward the balcony.

Click.

I shut the door.  We walked in silence outside into the chill, since I
didn't feel like being closed in.  The.  granite of the guard buildings
was also getting to me.

"So why does everyone have to skitter out of my way?  Uncle Justen?"  I
added.

He nodded.  "Was it that obvious?"

"Probably, but I didn't see it until I went after Antonin.  I'm still
angry as hell at Talryn and Recluce.  And my father."  And I was.  The
idea of being sent out as his penance, so to speak, grated on me. While
I could understand-now-why the answers I had sought were not possible,
Recluce had no excuse for the excessive secrecy.

"Talryn's probably quaking in his sandals."  Justen's voice was not
quite tongue-in-cheek.

"I doubt that.  He's probably happy to be rid of me."  Strangely,
although I was angry, I wasn't that angry, and I was less concerned
about Recluce than about Kyphros and Gallos.

"Could I ask how you-" Justen's tone was deferential.

"Luck, bravado, stupidity-the usual ingredients of so-called
heroism."

"Lerris."

I shrugged.  "Chaos-order balance.  Simple-enough."

Justen looked bewildered for the first time.

"Chaos is concentrated anarchy, if you will.  Order is diffused by
nature.  They have to balance.  Recluce has gotten stronger by letting
Candar create more chaos, in effect letting ..."  I was the one to
shake my head.  "You know that.  You're the one who pointed it out to
me."  I stopped as Justen shook his head slowly.  "I swear you did. But
after making Antonin stronger, helping him create more chaos, I didn't
have any choice."

The gray wizard looked even more .. . appalled.  That might have been
the best word.

I tried to explain what he already must have known.  "Order, except in
special circumstances, can't be concentrated.  I'm not talking about
reinforcing already-ordered people-or sheep-or chairs, but pure order.
Chaos can.  In effect, because order and chaos must balance, the higher
the diffuse order in an area, the greater the potential for chaos.  So
my efforts to increase order in Gallos just allowed Antonin to create
more chaos."  Another thought struck me.  "I suppose that meant an
overall decrease in order-chaos energies somewhere else, but I haven't
worked that out.  Anyway, once I figured the balance and my
contribution, I didn't have much choice.  I was as guilty as Antonin
for the destruction."

My guts protested.  "Not as guilty," I corrected myself, "but I
helped."  Justen shook his head, and I ignored the gesture, just
wanting to finish answering the question.

"Anyway, all I did to Antonin was throw a reversed shield around us, to
reflect energy away from as small a circle as I could hold.  He
maintained himself by drawing from the chaos-forces around.  With the
shield up, he couldn't draw, at least so long as I could keep him from
taking my order-energies."  I shrugged.  "Without that energy, he just
died."

Justen nodded.  "How many people could build a screen like that?"

"Probably any good order-master ... I didn't think about it."

He nodded again.  "How many black staffers could and would break their
only defense in front of a white wizard?"

"That was stupid, I guess.  I didn't know if it would work, but holding
onto it wouldn't have protected me for very much longer, and the staff
kept getting in the way.  Besides, that's what the book said."

"You're right.  But... no one else, not since before Frven, has stood
face-to-face with the highest of chaos-masters and triumphed."  Justen
gestured out at the town.  "You wonder why everyone bows and scrapes
and won't look at you?  That's why.  You wonder why Talryn is quaking
in his sandals?  Every chaos-master and order-master in the Western
Hemisphere heard Antonin fail-"

"That's fine, except I'm not an ancient order-master.  I'm even ready
for Tamra's bitching.  At least that's real.  I'm ready to go back to
crafting.  That's real, too."

Justen smiled.  "Who said you couldn't?"

"Right!  Good old Lerris is so smart ... so why didn't I at least pick
up some of Antonin's ill-gotten loot before I dashed out?  I might have
three gold pennies left in my pouch.  That's not enough even for
tools."

"I suspect that the reward the aut arch is about to confer-"

"Another ceremony?"  I groaned.  Having half the city lined up at the
gate and waving banners-very quietly-had been bad enough.  Even Yelena
had looked in my direction and grinned.

"Your burden to bear.  That's another price for heroism."

None of that answered my questions, but then, no one else would
probably ever answer them.

"How's Tamra?"  I changed the subject.

"Ask her yourself.  I'll send her up here shortly."  He smiled.  "She
will bitch at you.  She told me she would."

I let him go.  He wasn't about to answer the real questions, not the
ones I wasn't about to ask, and that still hadn't changed.  So I
waited.

And waited.

And waited, remembering in time that Tamra had never been punctual for
anyone.

Click.  She didn't like knocking, either.

Those blue china-doll eyes, cold as ice, took me in as Tamra
stepped-clothed in dark-gray once more, wearing a bright-blue
scarf-onto the chill and sunlit balcony.  Her red hair glinted in the
light as she edged up to the railing; then she turned to look at me.
She was wearing it longer, with matching black combs sweeping it away
from her face.

"Good morning, Lerris."

"Good morning, Tamra."

I walked over to the edge.  I was careful out of habit not to stand too
close-either to the railing, or to Tamra-and looked out on Kyphrien.

As the silence continued, I said nothing, for it was not my turn to
speak.

A puffy white cloud edged toward the sun, casting a brief shadow across
the narrow walled balcony where we contained a corner of Recluce, a
corner that needed to be expanded beyond the black walls of the
Brotherhood, beyond the black walls of Nylan and the narrow confines of
the High Temple.

"I should thank you."  Her voice was as flat as I had ever heard it.

"Don't.  The one who deserves thanks is Justen."

Her hand came to her mouth, but she still did not look in my
direction.

"If Justen hadn't given me just enough hints and forced me to answer my
own questions, neither of us would be here."  My guts twisted
slightly.

"You believe that?  Or is it just more poor little Lerris?"

Good old Tamra!  I actually grinned.  "More poor little Lerris, of
course.  But remember that I die have something to do with rescuing
you."

"Do you really expect me to fall at your feet and be eternally
grateful?  To mirror your great shining light?"

I kept grinning.  She sounded like the Tamra I recalled.  "Well .. .
eternal gratitude would be nice ..."

"You're still impossible."

"Only sometimes.  The rest of the time, I look for perfection."

She didn't answer for a long time.  Finally, she said, "I meant what I
said about not falling at your feet."

"I know that.  You want to get out your staff and thrash me soundly
again."

"I can't do that-you broke your staff."  Then her voice dropped.  "We'd
fight too much, and if we didn't, I'd hate you, and if we did, you'd
hate me."

She was right, but that was one of the answers I had figured out
already, one of the few.  There were hills south of Kyphrien, not all
that far away, with water and trees, even some of the right kinds of
trees.  "You're right.  I realized you were right, back when we talked
on the ship.  I just wasn't bright enough to understand.  Now it may be
too late."

"What will you do?"  She ignored my unspoken real question.

"I have an idea.  But I don't know if the sub-commander of Kyphros
would be interested in a mere woodworker who occasionally dabbles in
order."

For once, Tamra looked surprised, almost foolish.

"Or having him build a house on a hill not too far from her place of
business."

Her mouth opened a shade wider.

"Or having a redhead whom I regard as a sister come to visit
occasionally."  For a time, but only for a time, she was speechless.

"You're .. . still .. . impossible.  You honestly think ..."

"No.  But I can hope."

I left her there when I saw green leathers on the adjoining
balcony-green leathers, black hair, and black eyes.

The Sub-Commander unlatched the doorway, and I walked onto her
balcony.

"You were successful, I hear."  The music was still there, linked
within the order she had found.

"So were you, I understand."

She looked over my shoulder.  "How is Tamra?"

"Bitchy as ever, thanks to Justen."

"Give him hell, Krystal!"  called Tamra before leaving my balcony.

"She does seem recovered."  Krystal's lips turned up at the corners for
a moment.  We still stood there looking each other over at arm's
length, or more.

"Recovered enough," I answered, wondering why I was dancing around all
the things I wanted to say.  "Enough."

In the end, I stepped forward and took her hands.

And, like Tamra would have hoped, she took them back, walking to the
railing and turning to look out on the city.  "You may think you have
your answers, but did you ask me?"

My stomach turned.  Why was I always doing the same thing, assuming I
knew what was best for the women I cared for?  "No.  I apologize,
Highest Sub-Commander, for possibly thinking that the affections of a
woodworker who dabbles in order could possibly be of interest to you."
I swallowed, looked down, wondering how soon I could get the hell out
of Kyphrien-except I needed whatever reward the aut arch might offer.

Krystal shook her head sadly.  "You're still doing it."

"Doing what?"

"You won't ask anything of anyone.  You may want answers, but you never
ask for help.  There's a difference."

I shrugged.  There wasn't much to say.  I looked at her short and
graying dark hair, although I knew enough to keep her young, just as my
father had my mother; at the broader shoulders that carried half the
weight of Kyphros on them, and shook my head.

Krystal looked vaguely amused.  "Just a moment.  I've worn this damned
sword straight for the past five days."  She unbuckled the belt and
laid both sword and belt on the table.

"Damned sword?"  I asked.  "Not any longer.  It's ordered."

"Stop assuming things."  She stepped around the table.

"What?"

"Like whether I would be or wouldn't be this or that.  I am.  I always
have been."

"Been what?"

It was another stupid question, but it finally didn't matter.  This
time, her hands didn't stop at my fingertips, nor mine at hers.  We
couldn't say anything more.  Even the gusts of the full winter wind
didn't bother us.  Then again, we didn't stay on the balcony long, and
she had already barred the door.

Someone knocked, of course, but that was later.  Much later.

L. E. Modesitt, Jr."  lives in Cedar City, Utah.

TOR BOOKS BY L. E. MODES ITT JR.

THE SAGA OF REC LUCE

1 The Magic of Recluce 2 The Towers of the Sunset 3 The Magic Engineer
4 The Order War 5 The Death of Chaos 6 Fall of Angels 7 The Chaos
Balance 8 The White Order 9 Colors of Chaos 10 Magi'i of Cyandor 11
Scion of Cyandor

THE SPELL SONG CYCLE

The Soprano Sorceress The Spellsong War Darksong Rising

THE ECOLITAN MATTER

The Ecologic Envoy The Ecolitan Operation The Ecologic Secession The
Ecolitan Enigma

THE FOREVER HERO

Dawn for a Distant Earth The Silent Warrior In Endless Twilight

Of Tangible Ghosts The Ghost of the Revelator

The Timegod Timediver's Dawn

The Hammer of Darkness The Parafaith War Adiamante The Green
Progression (with Bruce Scott Levinson)

