Loe raamatut: «The Wars of Light and Shadow»
Janny Wurts
PERIL’S GATE
The Wars of Light and Shadow
VOLUME 6
THIRD BOOK OF THE ALLIANCE OF LIGHT
Copyright
HarperVoyager An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 1 London Bridge Street London SE1 9GF, UK
First published in Great Britain by HarperCollinsPublishers 1999
Copyright © Janny Wurts 1997
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Source ISBN: 9780007101085
Ebook Edition © JANUARY 2008 ISBN: 9780007318087
Version: 2019-01-04
To Jeff Watson, the guardian gryphon in charge of technical wonders without which more deadlines would have been missed
Contents
Third Book
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Map
I. Retribution
II. Recoil
III. Baiyen Gap
IV. Prime Successor
V. Spinner of Darkness
VI. Clan War Band
VII. Threshold
VIII. Evasion
IX. Caithdein
X. False Step
XI. Nightfall
XII. Rockfell Peak
XIII. Teir’s’Ffalenn
XIV. Hunted
XV. Peril’s Gate
XVI. Path of the Damned
XVII. Second Recovery
Keep Reading
Glossary
About the Author
By the same author
About the Publisher
Map
Winter Solstice Night 5670
I.
Retribution
Arithon s’Ffalenn, called Master of Shadow! For the sake of your crimes against our fair city of Jaelot, your spirit shall be delivered by sword and by fire to your rightful hour of death…
– Mayor of Jaelot, decree of execution
Third Age Year 5669
The storm settled over the Eltair coast just after the advent of nightfall. Like the worst winter gales, it stole in on cat feet. The fitful, fine sleet dusting over sere landscape changed on a breath into muffling snow as the temperature plunged below freezing. The moment caught Arithon s’Ffalenn, last living Prince of Rathain and birth-born Master of Shadow, crouched in the iced brush of a hedgerow.
Each labored breath burned his lungs like cold fire. His sprint was cut short, though the city of Jaelot’s stone walls lay scarcely a bowshot behind him. A skulking fugitive hard-pressed by enemies who hunted by sword and by spellcraft, he shot a concerned glance sidewards as Fionn Areth folded, gasping, beside him. The young man had spent the dregs of his strength.
Even the threat of relentless pursuit could not stave off stark necessity: the goatherd just snatched from death on the scaffold could run no farther without pause for recovery.
‘Rest,’ whispered Arithon, as winded himself. ‘For a moment. No more.’
Fionn Areth’s clipped nod showed resentment, not gratitude.
Yet no moment could be spared to treat with the young man’s inimically misguided loyalties. Enemies hounded their backs without respite. Koriani seeresses would be tracking with spelled snares. If the mayor’s armed guardsmen from Jaelot prevailed first, the pair would be slaughtered on the run.
‘They’ll find us.’ Fionn Areth cast a harrowed glance over his shoulder. His chilled hand tightened on his sword grip as he noticed the patrol sweeping the high crenels of the battlements. The flutter of their pine brands speared rays of light through the thickening snowfall. Arithon measured their movement, intent. The alarm bells stayed mute. No outcry arose from the gatehouse. Careful to mask his own tension, he said, ‘Bide easy. The mayor’s guards can’t know we’ve slipped through the walls unless the Koriathain decide to inform them.’
Nor would the senior enchantress, Lirenda, be anxious to disseminate word of her failure. Since her towering arrogance had granted her quarry the opening to escape, she would be loath to approach her male allies. Once again, her order had bungled their promise to entrap the Master of Shadow.
Left raw by the price he had paid to win back his threatened autonomy, Arithon closed with dry irony, ‘From stung pride, I expect the witches will try to recoup their blunder in secret. That’s to our advantage. Thick snowfall should foil their scryers and hide us, at least for a little while.’
Fionn Areth returned a poisonous glower from a face that, feature for feature, was a mirror image of the Shadow Master’s. Having narrowly missed execution and burning for the crimes of his look-alike nemesis, he still suffered the morning’s shock of discovery, that his appearance had been fashioned by the meddling design of Koriani spellcraft. The cruel fact chafed, that he had been used as unwitting, live bait in their conspiracy to ensnare the unprincipled killer beside him.
The betrayal stung yet. ‘Never mind witches,’ he gasped in spat venom to the Spinner of Darkness. ‘The Alliance won’t rest until you’ve been dismembered and burned to serve justice.’
Expressionless, Arithon refused answer. He was no less enraged at being made the political pawn in the feud that pitched the enchantresses against the authority of the Fellowship Sorcerers. Since bare-bones survival perforce must come first, he took ruthless stock of bad circumstance.
While night settled like impenetrable felt over the Eltair Bay coastline, he wrested the lay of the land from his reluctant memory. Northward, past the black spur of Jaelot’s walled headland, small farmsteads patched the land like paned glass. The occupants were suspicious and ill set toward strangers, the ancient codes of hospitality long lost since the rising that threw down the high kings. Nor did the countryside offer safe prospects. Tangled cedar windbreaks and hedgerows of red thorn squared the rough, fallow fields. Two vagrants in flight from the mayor’s justice dared not ply the lanes, with their drystone walls high enough to entrap, and their rutted mazes of crossroads. To the east, the salt waves of Eltair Bay thrashed a raked stretch of shingle, and a wind-razed, shelterless marshland. To the west rose the forbidding stone ramparts of the Skyshiels, sliced by ravines of weather-scabbed rock, and mantled in glaze ice and fir.
Fitful gusts already stirred the stilled air, first warning whisper of the bass-note howl yet to build to an oncoming gale. Arithon tucked frozen hands under his cloak. He held no illusions. The snowfall that helpfully covered their tracks, and disrupted the Koriani scryers carried a double-edged threat. The night ahead would bring lethal cold, and blinding, bewildering drifts. Inadequately clothed to withstand hostile elements, he and the victimized herder he had rescued could easily die from exposure.
For the storm that drove in had not arisen out of natural forces. Arithon sensed its song deep in his bones. The subliminal, whining vibration of dropped pressure came exacerbated by the imbalance wrought by disturbed magnetics. Earlier, Dakar the Mad Prophet had served him hard warning: the Fellowship Sorcerers were themselves caught in crisis, distracted by some larger upset. The illicit magics Dakar had engaged to unravel the Koriani defenses in Jaelot had assuredly added more stress to the roiled currents of lane flux. With the surge of winter solstice cresting at midnight, Arithon lacked accurate means to measure the backlash that might follow. As he chewed over that burden of worry, Fionn Areth stirred in the darkness.
Warned by a muffled, metallic ring, Arithon spun. He clamped the boy’s wrist in a strangling grip and arrested the sword halfway pulled from the scabbard. ‘Eighth hell of Sithaer, are you insane?’
‘I should kill you here!’ Fionn Areth gasped through locked teeth. ‘There are widows across the five kingdoms who’d thank me.’
‘They might,’ Arithon agreed, his annoyance turned acid. ‘But a blade in my back won’t see you safe. The opposite in fact. My blood in the snow would act as a beacon for Koriani scryers. If you think you can manage to evade their spelled snares, Dakar has the food and the horses we’ll need. You aren’t going to find him without my guidance. Better to salve your fool’s craving for justice after we’ve scrambled to safety.’
Fionn Areth’s murderous resistance failed to slacken under restraint. Darker truth eclipsed reason. He knew this creature who entreated in pressed self-defense was unnatural, an unprincipled sorcerer whose guileful strategies had slaughtered three dedicated war hosts. Across the continent, men flocked to Lysaer’s sunwheel standard and pledged to the Light to destroy him.
‘Then swear me your bond,’ Fionn Areth insisted. ‘As Prince of Rathain, prove you meant what you said when you offered me trial by combat.’
‘Very well. Accept my given word. We’ll cross swords at the first opportunity, but after we’ve slipped our pursuit.’ Solemnity spoiled by a stressed thread of laughter, Arithon provoked with glib melodrama, ‘Dharkaron’s Black Spear strike me dead should I fail you, though the point will likely prove moot. Koriathain and Jaelot’s guards would end Rathain’s royal line with no help from Ath’s angel of vengeance.’
Fionn Areth found his sword arm released, though his volatile temper stayed unsettled. Ice showered down in cracked shards from the branches as Arithon ducked free of the hedgerow. All animal grace and dangerous focus, he cast no glance backward to ascertain whether his oath was accepted. On the insufferable assumption his young double must follow, he pursued his route across country. Brisk progress was sustained in swift bursts that utilized each quirk of terrain for masking cover.
Fionn Areth flanked him through closing curtains of wet snow, dreading the oncoming thud of hooves, and fearing, each step, the clarion cry of the gate watch’s horn at his back. Led on by a felon whose motives were suspect, he nursed his distrust through the erratic sprints between hayrick and thicket and cowshed. The low-lying fields confounded simplicity. The verges were crosscut with dikes and ditches, or brush brakes riddled with badger setts. The ice-capped stone walls could turn a man’s ankle. Despite such hazards, Arithon stayed clear of the cottages with their inviting, gold-glazed windows. The byres and yards with penned sheep and loose dogs were avoided, no matter the punishment exacted by chilled hands and feet and the limits of flagging stamina.
Another pause, snatched in a thicket, while snow sighed and winnowed through the frost-brittle brambles. Under lidded sky, wrapped in lead-sheeted darkness, Fionn Areth sensed Arithon’s measuring scrutiny. However he strove, he could not hide his weakness. Jaelot’s abusive confinement had worn him, and the relentless pace of their flight left him battered half-prostrate.
Each passing second redoubled their risks. The storm would grow worse, and the snow pile deeper. They struggled ahead on borrowed time, against the inevitable odds: at any moment, the town gates would disgorge mounted patrols with pine torches. Guardsmen would ride with the trained trackers lent by Eltair’s league of headhunters. For the prospect of claiming the bounty on royalty, they would unleash their dread packs of mastiffs, cut mute as pups to course human quarry in silence.
In uncanny answer to brooding thoughts, Arithon whispered encouragement. ‘If there are dogs, they won’t scent well in snow. Can you manage? Let’s go then.’ He forged onward, the tenuous landmarks he steered by scarcely recognizable after a quarter century of change. Stone markers and storm-bent sentinel oaks were masked by snowfall and darkness; buildings and bylanes appeared blurred into maddening sameness. No margin remained for mistakes. A single wrong turn would lose his bearings amid the flat apron of coastal landscape. Nor did Arithon dare slacken. Koriathain might guide the mayor’s patrols, intent on recouping their losses. They knew, as he did, the storm would not wait. Posed the grave danger of being outflanked, Arithon chivvied his stumbling double into the lash of the wind.
A dike almost tripped the herder. His sliding descent fetched him short in a drain ditch. The skin of ice smashed underfoot. Muddy water soaked through his fleece boots. Fionn Areth swore in grasslands dialect, his consonants rattled by chattering teeth. As chilled himself, Arithon forged ahead. The mismatched pair splashed over the slough and labored up the eroded berm. A field of corn stubble speared through the snow, rutted mud frozen underneath. Past an osier fence, they flushed a herd of belled ewes, who bolted in jangling terror.
The wind had gained force. Its bite chilled their wet feet and keened through snow-sodden clothing.
‘Not far, now,’ Arithon murmured, then broke off. ‘Get down!’
Dazed to plodding exhaustion, Fionn Areth missed the cue. Jerked back, then knocked prone as Arithon felled him, he stifled a shrill cry of outrage. Disastrously late, he reached understanding: the drumming he heard was not caused by the thrash of bare branches. Flattened beneath the frail sticks of a hazel thicket, shivering under his wadded wool cloak, he held breathlessly still while the torch of an outrider flittered by.
‘Well, we had to expect this.’ Arithon stirred, shaking out clotted snow spooned up by his oversize cuffs.
With the mayor’s guard now sounding the alarm, the countryside offered no haven. Uneasy farmsteaders would be out, scouring their hay byres for fugitives. They would unchain their dogs and round up their horses, and stab pitchforks through the mesh of their cornricks.
Nor did the worsening storm sustain its fickle gift of respite. The snow had already piled too deep. Once a search party stumbled across their plowed prints, they were going to become hunted animals.
‘We’re farther afield than they realize,’ Arithon assured, to every appearance unperturbed as his extended hand was refused. While Fionn Areth struggled erect on his own, he added, ‘Nor will they guess we’ve an ally waiting to shield us. If fortune favors, they’ll keep the belief we’re given to aimless flight.’ For prudence, he chose not to mention that Dakar would likely need spellcraft to further mislead their pursuit.
Inured to harsh weather by his moorland upbringing, the young herder stumbled onward. The overwhelming speed of events had left him too numbed to think. Through bitter necessity, he trailed Arithon’s lead through the banked snow of the sheepfold. Another deep ditch, and a slippery crossing over the logs of a stile, then partial respite as they plunged into the fir copse beyond.
Fionn Areth tripped twice before his dulled mind made sense of his jumbled impressions. In fact, they had covered more ground than he thought. The open land of the farmsteads lay behind them.
An evergreen canopy closed on all sides. The sky was blank pitch. Each gust shook crusted snow from the spruce, a mere clutch of seedlings before the towering growth that ruched foothills to the west. The tumbled chimney of a cottar’s house jagged under the pillowing drifts, the broken yard gate a mute testament to some cataclysmic misfortune. Beyond the old steading, a ravine razed the dell, where the annual spring snowmelt roared in white cataracts to egress in Eltair Bay.
Despite the hard freeze, the crossing was arduous, the undercut banks being ice clad. Jutted rocks caved away at each step. Wet to the knees, and wrung wretched with shivering, Fionn Areth cursed the cold rivulets that chased down his boot cuffs and collar. His gloves had soaked through, the fingers inside chilled to lumps of shrill agony. Close on Arithon’s heels, he panted uphill and crossed the exposed crest, harrowed each step by the howling winds off the seacoast. Descent proved as difficult, the stony soil overgrown with young firs cased in glaze ice, and uncut by even a deer path. Raked and slapped by needled boughs, Fionn Areth broke through to a clearing, too miserable to care that Arithon had reached his obscure destination.
An abandoned mill loomed on the swept shelf of snow, crooked in the oxbow bend of a stream. Its unroofed, square shell carved the gusts into dissonance. The rotted wheel canted in a rimed tumble of frozen waterfall. Nor was the ruin deserted. A stout, muffled figure emerged from its gloom, its waddling stride on the uncertain footing as ungainly as a discomposed duck.
‘Dakar!’ hailed Arithon, sounding weary at last. ‘I want––’
‘You bastard, you just about killed me with worry! Old storm rips my fixed wardspells to static, and you take a fiend’s sweet time to make rendezvous!’ Halted in huffing distemper, the fat prophet who served as the Shadow Master’s henchman scowled.
Blown snow frosted his ginger brows and his unkempt bristle of beard. ‘You don’t hear the horn calls? The Mayor of Jaelot’s sent lancers abroad. I had just about written you both off as meat for the headhunter’s mastiffs.’
‘Dakar,’ Arithon broke in, wrung by a shiver. ‘Did you bring horses?’
‘Dharkaron’s black bollocks! Are you both soaked as rabbits?’ The Mad Prophet flicked his irritated glance from one alike face to the other, spell-carved to match the same chiseled angles under wind-snagged sable hair. Unerringly able to discern the original, he thrust out a forearm to support young Fionn Areth. ‘Yes, I managed to meet your request. We have four geldings, three hacks, and one knock-kneed packhorse. Come in. There’s also a fire and hot gruel, and before you ask, yes. I’ve set masking runes, and have maze wards running against the mayor’s riders at each of the four quarters.’
Arithon winced at the mention of ward sorceries, which, predictably, balked Fionn Areth.
Dakar jerked the boy forward in unvarnished exasperation. ‘Ath preserve idiots with misaligned scruples, come on! His Grace of Rathain might prefer to stay outside and brood, just show me an Araethurian herdsman born with warm-blooded good sense.’
Fionn Areth resisted, given short shrift as Dakar vented his leftover tension through scolding. ‘I’m damned glad you’re alive and still standing to greet me, boy. That won’t lift the blight of Daelion’s curse off the bone-headed folly that spared you! Your prince won’t have mentioned, but the risk undertaken to snatch you from Jaelot takes the prize for catastrophic stupidity.’
At next step, they crossed into the ring of set guard spells. Fionn Areth cried out as a sharp tingle raked his skin. He nearly sprained the Mad Prophet’s wrist in his panicked effort to bolt.
‘Dharkaron’s bleak vengeance!’ Dakar exploded. Fingers locked in the Araethurian’s wet cloak, he held on, his corpulent bulk no more bothered than if he had bagged a struggling game fish. ‘Koriani witches changed your whole face through black use of their sigils of force. What’s a middling weak veil of concealment going to do, except save your skin from execution? Find the sweet reason that Ath gave your goats! Get yourself warm and dry enough to think clearly before you decide we’re your enemies.’
Fionn Areth flushed, grumbled an apology in his backcountry dialect, then relented enough to let Dakar lead him into the shelter of the tumbledown mill.
The roof had caved in to a rickle of slate, but the beamed track of the log carriage for the saw still stood. The planked platform winnowed the worst of the snow. In the single dry corner, cut off from the wind, Dakar had lit a neat fire. A pot of gruel bubbled over the flames. Four horses munched hay, tied by neck ropes to the skewed post of the mill shaft, its base secured by the massive runnerstone that had ground countless harvests of barley. The animals’ warmth blunted the edge from the cold. Beside three heaped saddles, acquired by means of forged requisitions and subterfuge, Dakar had blankets and cloaks and thick boots lined with lamb’s wool. The collection included two buck knives, a hunting bow, and provisions fit for a trek across mountain terrain.
‘Oh, well done, Dakar.’ Arithon unhooked the iced clasps on his mantle, hung the sopped cloth on the sacklift, and accepted the blanket tossed into his numbed hands. Swathed like a wraith, he resumed his expert inspection. ‘Where are the spirits?’
Dakar chuckled. ‘Here was I, wishing the troublesome brains had been frozen clean out of your head. I’ve got spiced wine laced full of restoratives. If you drink too much, don’t damn me tomorrow. You’ll feel like your innards got packed with wet sand, with river rocks jammed in your eye sockets.’
Between helping Fionn Areth, the Mad Prophet unslung a cord from his neck and passed over a stoppered skin flask.
Arithon fumbled his effort to draw the cork. He grimaced, used his teeth, then shut his eyes in distaste and belted a hefty draught. The offensive sting made his eyes water. A husked burr of betrayal roughened his voice. ‘You didn’t mention lye-stripping the tissue off my poor vocal cords. I won’t sing a true note for a week.’
‘And right blessed that misfortune will be!’ Dakar shot back, scathing. ‘Given the powers you’ve roused up in blind ignorance, we’re lucky not to be cinders scattered over the Ath-forsaken dunes of Sanpashir!’
He snatched up Fionn Areth’s discarded shirt, wrung out the cuffs, and hung the linen to dry. ‘You’ll find a clean tunic and smallclothes in the saddle pack.’ At the young man’s hesitation, his moon features knit into a glower fit to torch silk. ‘Don’t even think to protest obligation. You’re the guest of your crown prince. He’s oathbound by law to provide you his best hospitality.’
‘We’re touchy,’ observed Arithon, his thoughtful gaze on the Mad Prophet’s back. He rolled a sawn log closer to the fireside. As though his balance might desert him without warning, he perched. ‘Has your pending fit of prescience not lifted since sundown?’
Bent over, rummaging through saddle packs like a corpulent thresher, with Fionn Areth hovering with bad humor and crossed arms, Dakar grumbled through his beard. ‘I’m hungover. Jaelot’s gin is a grade below horse piss – that much hasn’t changed in twenty years.’
‘I’m remiss.’ A wry grin lit Arithon’s fox features, tinged orange in the flicker of firelight. ‘Why not sample your vile restorative?’ He passed back the flask, while the tireless wind skirled snow devils across the darkened gap of the tailrace.
The Mad Prophet ignored both comment and offering. Straightened up burdened to the chin with bunched clothing, he foisted the pile without apology on Fionn Areth. ‘Put those on.’ He accepted the flask and slapped its gurgling bladder on top of a sheepskin jacket. ‘As soon as you’re dressed, drink up. We’ve got to be moving before midnight.’
Fionn Areth gaped, his arms clutching his third change of raiment since morning. ‘Why can’t we rest here?’
Dakar threw up his hands, eyes rolled to white rings. ‘Because this is solstice, and the lane tides were unleashed to deliver your crown prince to Jaelot.’
When Fionn Areth looked blank, Arithon ventured a more civil explanation. ‘This ruin sits on a natural watercourse. At midnight, a cresting flow of raw power will rip through the site like a conduit. Without the Paravian rituals to mitigate, the flood will rattle and shake any structure not blessed into alignment with the flow of Ath’s greater mystery.’
‘This mill tore to wreckage in the last causal event. And before you ask, yes, it was Arithon who sang the same powers active in Jaelot twenty-five years ago.’ Nakedly worried, Dakar stowed his bulk on a saddle pack. ‘The repeat performance to break your captivity might easily fell the last stones in these walls. You want to sleep under the rubble?’
‘I won’t sleep at all where there’s sorcery afoot,’ Fionn Areth retorted. Having suffered the brunt of mistaken identity, only narrowly spared execution for the selfsame sorceries raised by the hand of his nemesis, he gave each fold of clothing his suspicious inspection. If he expected copper-thread sigils worked through the seams of the hems, he encountered nothing amiss. Only sturdy, stitched hemp and plain cerecloth linings. Defeated at last by the merciless chill, he burrowed into a shirt and tunic better suited to his build than the castoffs garnered from the lady’s servant who had helped them evade close pursuit.
While sorcerer and prophet shared out gruel and brisk talk, the herder buckled on his sword, then donned jacket and cloak. Leaned on a post, determined to stand guard, he declined to eat, wary lest he fall sound asleep among enemies.
The contents of Dakar’s flask had a faint, metallic aftertaste. Fionn Areth drank deeply, too parched to realize that the spellcraft he reviled was in fact bound into the spirits. Grasslands ignorant, he gave no thought to question, even as the pungent restorative burned through his body and revitalized flagging, sore muscles. Restored to clear focus, warmed and eased back to comfort, he followed the conversation ongoing between the Mad Prophet of legend and the prince whose appearance the goatherd shared.
‘The Fellowship knows, then?’ Arithon asked concerning the defeated plot that entwined them.
‘Once you crossed through Jaelot’s outer wall, you broke through the ward the witches had set to forestall Sethvir’s earth-sense.’ Preoccupied with securing the saddle packs, Dakar shrugged. ‘Better worry more for Jaelot’s patrols. If I couldn’t scry you, then the Koriani seers are going to be hobbled as well.
Their clairvoyants can’t act in full force for as long as the snow keeps falling.’ The water element in the storm would maze the transmission of spells set through a quartz focus.
Arithon paused with his spoon half-raised, his level glance suddenly piercing. ‘Dakar, that didn’t answer my question.’
The Mad Prophet hunched his thick shoulders. Both hands stayed engrossed with the straightforward task of threading a strap through a buckle. ‘Why can’t you accept that I’m out of my depth?’
Arithon’s expectant silence stretched taut.
‘Very well, I can speculate. Sethvir’s surely known about Fionn Areth’s transformation for years.’ Dakar gave over the truth in stark misery. ‘Since the boy swore the Koriathain his free-will consent over a crystal focus, the Sorcerers can do nothing by way of direct intervention.’
‘Go on. There’s more.’ Arithon let down his spoon, well aware his companion’s diligent tidiness was in fact an outright avoidance.
Dakar jabbed the tang through the leather with a force he withheld from his language. ‘For today’s round of upsets, we’re both in the dark. I warned you before. Something set an aberration through the lane’s flux last night. Such an event on the cusp of the solstice has certainly led to an imbalance. Grievous enough to blind Sethvir’s vision. Or else your bid to reach Jaelot would have been stopped well before the Sanpashir focus reached resonance.’
‘That’s old ground for argument, surely?’ Arithon set his stew bowl aside, banal to the point of disinterest.
Yet Fionn Areth was not fooled. Set on edge by such casual firsthand reference to Fellowship resources and magecraft, he bristled, his unease lent preternatural spin by the spell-charged effects of the wine. Warm food and shelter notwithstanding, he noticed: Arithon had not shed his piercing wariness, either.
Nor was Dakar convinced by lame gestures. ‘All right.’ His capitulation exposed his threadbare fear. ‘I sent for help, a plea made under the permissions you gave to be used in last line of defense. No Fellowship Sorcerer has answered.’
‘Which doesn’t necessarily mean they’ve been sidetracked by a catastrophe,’ Arithon pointed out, reasonable, except for the sly, lightning glance to one side that gauged Fionn Areth’s poorly leashed temper. ‘The Sorcerers might just be allowing matters to run their due course by choice.’
Dakar glowered back, but had the good sense to keep quiet. He, too, noted the dangerous antipathy the herder showed toward Arithon.
‘His Grace will have a plan,’ the Mad Prophet said in a belated effort to soothe. ‘At least, he passed an almighty thick sheaf of orders to the captain he left entrusted with care of his brigantine.’