Windwalker (34 page)

Read Windwalker Online

Authors: Elaine Cunningham

BOOK: Windwalker
10.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Get Brindlor,” he said at last.

One of the drow—a young female who had been born to Nisstyre’s first mercenaries—went in search of the deathsinger. They returned shortly. Brindlor sent a quick look of distaste at the faerie elf that had nothing to do with her condition and little to do with the color of her skin.

“Merdrith is not here. You know more magic than any of us. Strip her secrets from her mind,” Gorlist demanded.

The deathsinger sniffed. “Small wonder she did not talk. Didn’t you know that iron draws the life force from some faerie creatures as a rag soaks blood from a wound? Perhaps this elf is one such creature. Cut her down.”

Reluctantly Chiss lowered the chains and snapped off the manacles. What happened next took them all by surprise.

There was no spellcasting, no slow metamorphosis, no warning at all. One moment a battered elf woman lay at their feet, the next, a large black wolf regarded them with gold-green eyes. Her lip curled back in a snarl, her hind feet tamped down, and she leaped.

Chiss went down under her before he could draw a weapon. The wolfs teeth sank into his shoulder, and the massive head gave a savage shake. Then she was up, dodging this way and that as she evaded the swords of her tormenters. She darted out into the cavern with preternatural speed and was gone.

“Find her,” snapped Gorlist, but he already knew that the effort would prove futile. He kicked in frustration at the fallen soldier.

“Drag him out under the sky and watch him until the moon rises,” he commanded. “Perhaps adding a drow werewolf to our band will inspire the rest of you to act like hunters!”

Even as they reached for him, Chiss shuddered and died. They did as Gorlist commanded. Under the night sky they drew swords and waited, some with fascination and others with almost-concealed trepidation, for the transformation to come and their former comrade to rise.

Hours slipped by, marked only by the steady dripping of water in some nearby tunnel.

“The moon has long since risen,” Brindlor said at last. “Bury or burn him or leave him to rot. It matters not.”

“Not a werewolf, then,” Gorlist mused. “What was she, to change like that? A druid? A sorceress?”

“Worse,” the deathsinger said grimly. “The wench is a lythari.”

 

The sky was thick with stars before Liriel finally made her way to her little hut. Fyodor was already there and was busy stirring herbs into a stew.

“You’re cooking,” she observed. “The domovoi isn’t going to like this.”

He looked up sharply. “You’ve spoken with one?”

“We came to an understanding.” She shut the door and untied the mask from her belt, sighing with relief as she slipped back into her own form. Even more pleasant was the way Fyodor’s eyes filled with the sight of her.

“Songs and stories claim that the Seven Sisters are the fairest among women,” he said quietly. “Have the bards all gone mad, or are they merely blind?”

She ran into his arms. For a long moment they clung together, then she led him to the rumpled bed. They settled down side by side, her head nestled against his broad shoulder.

“Rashemen is an interesting place. I was undressed by a domovoi, inspected by a coven of witches, and attacked by a dragon-shaped water spirit and a muscle-bound Rusalka. How was your day?”

“Much the same.”

“Hmmm.”

She lifted her face to his, and for quite some time there was no need for other words. The stewpot scalded, the domovoi sighed, and neither warrior nor Windwalker cared in the slightest.

Much later, Fyodor took her into the courtyard and pointed to the stars. “Do you see that small cluster there, shaped like a crossroads? We call it the Guardians after the spirits who watch the four corners of the year. The bright star there is Mokosh, named for the spirit of the harvest. A similar star pattern marks each turning of the year. Soon we will celebrate the Autumn Sunset, the time when night and day stand in balance and the wheel of the year turns toward winter.”

The drow pulled her cloak closer. “I have heard of this winter. Does it get colder than this?”

“Much, but there is a chill wind tonight. We should go inside.”

She turned wistful eyes toward the forest. Fyodor caught her look and shook his head. “That is not wise. This is a haunted land, and the nights are filled with ghosts. More so in these days than in times past.”

“Zofia said that I should get to know the land’s spirits,” Liriel argued. “What better way?”

He relented with a sigh. “We will break fast with Vastish and her children. Perhaps we could bring a rabbit or two for her pot.”

“Or an uthraki,” she said with a grin, referring to their recent misadventure.

Fyodor’s eyes twinkled. “Why not? Everything Vastish cooks ends up tasting much the same.”

They set a brisk pace down the rutted dirt road that wound through the fields. Liriel heard a faint rustle to her left. From the corner of her eye she noted a squat, malformed dwarf scuttling through the ripened grain, keeping pace with them. Strings of green hair sprouted from its head like tall meadow grass, and a thick green mustache bristled under a vast beak of a nose. Its large eyes were deeply set and shadowed by beetling green brows, but even at a glance Liriel could see that one was a light green shade and one a brilliant orange.

“A polevik,” Fyodor said in a troubled tone.

“Dangerous?”

“Only if you fall asleep in the field or follow it into the grain. What troubles me is the hour. Usually the Polevik only wander about at highsun.”

“Maybe it had a cup of Zofia’s tea and can’t sleep.”

He chuckled briefly. The troubled look returned to his face. “You know I have a bit of Sight. Before I left Rashemen, I started to see things that should not be there. Ghosts, spirits, even heroes from tales my father’s father heard from his grandsire. They wander about like drunken men locked out of their huts by angry wives, uncertain of where they are or where they should go. It has been so since the Time of Troubles. The magic of Rashemen lies in the land itself and in the spirits of the land. It is not like wizards’ spells, which once cast and forgotten can be learned again. No witch will say so, but I suspect that this magic did not heal as it should have.”

She considered his words, wondering if this was part of the confusing destiny Zofia foresaw.

Before she could give voice to this thought, a bitter wind ripped through the trees with a shrill, almost metallic shriek. Branches rustled sharply. The singing insects went silent, and a small bird fell from its perch. Liriel stooped and picked it up, marveling at how light the little thing was. How cold.

Fyodor seized her arm and pulled her to her feet. “Hurry,” he urged. “We need to be within walls before the bheur song strikes again.”

The urgency in this voice convinced Liriel to run now and ask questions later.

They raced through the forest, retracing their steps. They were almost free of the forest when they saw the old woman. She stood on the path ahead, leaning on a tall wooden staff. Her long, wild hair was as white as a drow’s and her wrinkled skin nearly blue from cold. Barefoot and clad only in rags, she looked as if she would fall if not for the staff in her gnarled hands.

The Rashemi skidded to a stop and put Liriel behind him. “Lightning magic,” he said tersely. “The most powerful you know, and quickly!”

She dug into her coin bag and took out an emerald—the last gem from her share of the deepdragon’s hoard. With one hand she tossed this toward the hag, with the other, she gripped the Windwalker and called forth the spell she had stored within.

The gem disappeared. In its place stood a half-elf female, taller by half than the wizard who had summoned it. Her sharply sculptured body was translucent as glass and green as fine emeralds, and in her hands was a jagged bolt of white fire. The golem drew back her arm and threw the lightning as a warrior might hurl a spear.

A shriek like the clash of elven swords tore from the hag. She lifted her staff and sent a spray of icy crystals flying to meet the oncoming lightning. The bheur’s blast spread as it went into a lethal cone. The frost blast flared into brilliant life as the bolt passed through. It hit the hag and sent her hurtling backward. She hit the base of a pine, hard, and sank to the forest floor.

With astonishing agility the hag was up and running, fleeing back toward the mountains.

Liriel started toward the staff.

“Don’t bother,” her friend told her. “It only is magical in a bheur’s hands. Even if you could use it, some magic is best left alone.”

She caught the grim note in his tone. “I did something wrong?”

“The spell was wisely chosen,” he said carefully, “but you must not summon a golem in Rashemen. Many such creatures were brought against us by Thay’s Red Wizards. Any who see you cast such a spell will wonder where you learned it.”

She shrugged. “There was a book of Mulhorandi magic in the Green Room. I had a lot of gems left over from the deepdragon’s hoard, and this seemed a good use to make of them.”

“Even so, such magic can be deadly in Rashemen. No outlander wizards of any kind are permitted here. Because Sylune was a friend to Rashemen and trained in some of the witches’ minor arts, and because Zofia has taken you under her wing, my people accept you. If they saw you cast such a spell, neither of us would live to see the next dawn.”

Liriel received this news in silence. “No such spells,” she repeated, as if saying that words aloud would make them sound more sensible.

“Only to save your own life. Promise me this.”

The words came quickly to the drow’s tongue, but she found she could not speak them. She shook her head, unwilling to make a promise she doubted she could keep. To her astonishment, Fyodor looked oddly gratified by this.

“The day dawns,” he said softly. “Vastish will expect us soon.”

He took her hand, and they walked to the cottage where his sister’s family lived. Already smoke rose from the chimney, and a kettle of boiled grains mixed with what appeared to be dried berries bubbled on stove.

Two small boys hurled themselves at Fyodor and attached themselves to his legs. A taller girl, one close enough to maidenhood to be mindful of her dignity, hung back, eyeing her brothers with disdain.

Vastish shook her wooden spoon and gave one of the urchins a light swat on the rump with it. “Do your manners fail you, or just your eyes? Can’t you see that there’s a wychlaran present?”

The children fell back, abashed, and dipped into jerky little bows. “You bring grace to this household,” the trio chanted.

Liriel smiled uncertainly. Drow children the size of these males were still being word-weaned and were seldom seen except by the one or two people who oversaw this training. She had never had anything to do with anyone so small.

She gave her name and received the children’s names in turn. Lacking other ideas, she suggested, “Perhaps a story before we eat?”

The boys greeted this with great and loud enthusiasm, Vastish with a grateful nod. Fyodor settled down and pulled a nephew onto each knee.

“Long years ago, a hero known as Yvengi walked the land. Times were troubled, and many brave men fell in battle. Yvengi’s father was a great warrior, a berserker equal to any man alive, but one day he faced a foe that had neither blood nor breath.”

“The demon Eltab!” the younger boy put in excitedly.

“None other,” Fyodor agreed. “Yvengi knew that his strength and his sword would be powerless against the demon’s armored hide, so he prayed to all the spirits of the land and was granted a magical sword. Not even a demon could stand before Hadryllis. Eltab fled to Thay—”

“To walk among mortal demons!” the child chimed in.

“You know the tale,” observed his uncle with a smile. “Then you know that in each turn of the family wheel—from father to son, mother to maiden—another great sword will be raised for Rashemen.”

“Like yours,” the boy said in worshipful tones.

A deep silence fell over the room. Judging from the stricken expression on the females’ faces and the red flush staining the older boy’s cheeks, Liriel surmised that some important taboo had been broken.

The little one glanced from one face to another, looking as puzzled as Liriel felt. “There is magic in this sword,” he insisted.

Fyodor looked to his sister. An expression of mingled pain and pride crossed her face. “Thrisfyr has the gift,” she said simply. “It is already decided that he will join the vremyonni. He will go to the Old Ones for training before next winter’s snows.”

“A great honor,” he said softly. Vastish smiled but not without irony.

The morning meal passed swiftly with nothing more serious to mar it than a mug of spilled milk. They thanked their hostess and left to tend to the day’s business.

“What was all that about?” Liriel asked softly as soon as they were beyond hearing’s range. “What did the little boy say that made your sister turn pale?”

Fyodor’s shoulders rose and fell in a heavy sigh. “When we first met, you commented on my blunt sword. I told you that it was thus fashioned so I would not cut myself. You thought I was merely being foolish, but I spoke the simple truth. A warrior who cannot control his battle rages is given such a sword, and for several reasons. First, so he is less likely to harm his brothers. Second, so he does not cut himself and die by his own hand. There is no greater disgrace to a Rashemi than this. Finally, so he will die with honor and purpose. The berserkers go first into battle. Any man with a blunt sword leads the way.”

The grim truth came to Liriel slowly. “It is a sentence of death.”

“Yes. Zofia lent this sword magic so that it might cut those not of Rashemen and that I might stay alive long enough to complete my quest.”

“Throw it away,” she said passionately. “Get another sword. Your battle rages are under control—you don’t need a blunt sword anymore.”

“That is not our way,” he said softly. “This is the last sword I will wield. That is our law and custom. I must die with this sword in my hand.”

Liriel’s first impulse was to protest this new example of human stupidity, but memories flooded her mind and stilled her tongue: Fyodor facing drow and Luskan warriors, fighting sea ogres, slaying a giant squid—by cutting his way out from the inside. She relaxed. He had won many battles with that blunt, black sword. Why shouldn’t he continue to do so?

Other books

Veil of Time by Claire R. McDougall
Starbleached by Chelsea Gaither
Onyx by Briskin, Jacqueline;
The Tudor Rose by Margaret Campbell Barnes
Switch by EllaArdent
Whispering Death by Garry Disher
Birthday Bride by Marie Pinkerton
The Formula for Murder by Carol McCleary
Trouble in Mudbug by Deleon, Jana