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Authors: CJ Cherryh

BOOK: Yvgenie
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***

 

Another handful of herbs. Firelight, fractured in smoke-stung tears. Eveshka drew in a deep breath, deeper still-Papa would say, The magic's not the smoke, the magic's not
in
the smoke—

She recalled an ember in her mother's hand, fire against unburned flesh—magic, against nature—but
not
wholly against nature. Easier to wish the air than the ember, and send the heat away as fast as it could come—

Draga tried her with such illusions, but a young wizard's eye had seen the means: not sorcery, but cleverness. Not magic: seeing to the nature of a thing. Draga's only great magic, her truly dangerous magic—was her own daughter's murder: was death, and a naive girl's wish for life.

The magic's in the thinking. The magic's in facing the
truth,
young fool!

I
was the spell you cast, mother, wasn't I? Kavi only thought he betrayed you. But when you wish something as strong as I am dead—who can know how it might defend itself?

It was such a foolish act, mother. Kavi said you were a fool in all the important ways. Or perhaps you aren't through with your own wishes yet, and
you
wished Ilyana born— though I doubt that, one can never be sure. One can never be safe enough.

Time had been that she had resented her father's meddling, time had been his advice and his teachings had seemed foolish limits. But his daughter wished him back now, if it were possible—wished a ghost out of the earth and longed for even the whisper of his presence.

You never taught me forgiveness, papa, but I try, I do try, the way Pyetr said—and you never trusted him. Why?

Is there foresight? Is it something he would do? Or that I would, for him? Or is it the daughter we would make! Sasha says—the things that will be change with every change we make. Sasha says—that's why no bannik will stay with us.

So there's
no
predicting. Is there?

Pyetr's hands, fingers so long and agile with the dice-teaching Ilyana—

No, she had said. No. Pyetr, it's not a toy for a wizard.
Not
for us—

Why? he had asked. And had not understood her distress.

It disturbs me,
she had written in her book that day.
I don't know why. Prediction

that's what it does. But every time you throw them, every time you hope for an outcome, every time you wish into uncertainty

Pyetr had said, Try it, 'Veshka. For the god's sake, it's just a
game.

It's just a game

She squeezed her eyes shut, pressed her hands against her head, thinking: Is that why you feared him, papa?

You
drove our bannik away, you wanted to pin the future down and you kept after it with questions and questions until it ran away.

Even looking at the future changes it. You have to walk blind or you're not walking where you would have—

I could wish things right. I'm stronger than my mother. Or my father.

If I
kn
ew beyond a doubt. If there were no uncertainty.

There was a sudden chill in the night, a shift in the wind that carried the smoke aside. And in her heart the old Snake whispered:

Well, well, pretty bones. Do you finally need my help?

She felt the thoughts that went left and right of reason. Change? Hwiuur was on all sides of a question at once. Hwiuur
had
no sides. And no real shape, nothing, at least, permanent.

Like Pyetr's dice.


Well, pretty bones, how does it fare tonight? Missing its young one? Its young one's gone where it daren't.

One
wanted
the creature. And so few ever would.

He lunged, he rolled and twisted. She remembered his touch, she remembered the water and the pain of his bite, blindingly sharp.


Wouldn't you like to know where your husband is tonight, pretty bones?

There was cold, there was dark. Time was that she had refused to die. Now there were conditions under which she would not live.

A heart's so fragile, Kavi had used to say.

But a heart's capable of more than breaking, snake.

Hwiuur twisted and slithered aside, blithely, powerfully bent on escape and mischief—on Pyetr, and Chernevog, and the boy. She thought of an aged willow, a muddy grave in a dank, watery den.

And thought of lightnings.


It wouldn't!

Hwiuur hissed, whipping back about.

It's bones are there. It daren't!

She said, as Pyetr would,

The hell.''

She folded up her book and wished the fire
out.

And it was.

 

Pyetr felt a sudden chill—maybe present company, maybe just the persistence of fear in this nightbound tangle. His hand ached with a bone-deep pain. The misery went all the way to his wrist now—he must have fallen on it a while ago. His right hand. His sword hand, if it came to that—though there was little a sword could do against foolishness or jealousy and he could find no enemy but those and weariness. Volkhi had been on the trail too long now; the god knew the white mare had little left, and he feared increasingly that they were lost: Chernevog swore he knew the way and that he had seen Eveshka not far from here, north and riverward, near the leshy ring—wherever that was, in the dark, and without landmarks.

They came to a thread of water between two hills. '' Soon, now,'' Chernevog had been promising him for the last while. Now he said:

Not far.

Volkhi dipped his head to drink. Pyetr let him have his sip, and the white mare had hers, against a last effort, he told
himself, if only the old lad had it left, not to break both their necks.

And when they found Eveshka, the god only hope Chernevog had not deceived him. If Chernevog
had
lied, and meant some harm to her through him

He felt a sharp stab of pain from his hand. He looked down the dark stream course and thought of water—of dark coils, and pain, and the mud about willow-roots, and carried the hand against his mouth.


My hand's hurting,'' he murmured.

It hasn't done that in years.


My sympathies,

Chernevog said acidly.

Is it a cure you want?


No, dammit, I mean it used to do this. Hwiuur's about.''


The creature was keeping company with Eveshka. Not surprising.


What do you mean, Not surprising?


He wanted your daughter. But I wouldn't let him.''

Chernevog was a shadow in the dark. A wizard might have told what that meant, whether fair or foul intentions, but he could not.


So you aimed him at my wife?''


You have the worst expectations of me. No. I said I wouldn't let him at your daughter. God! Give me once a moment's credence! It's that way—

A lift of his hand.

I could be there now if I wanted to. But I'll rather you deal with your wife, Pyetr flitch, thank you.''

Chernevog started off down the stream, that ran as a sometimes glistening thread through this trough between the dark hills, a reedless, leaf-paved passage. Pyetr rode glumly beside him: Sasha had to appeal to him to deal with Eveshka,
Ilyana
did, and now Chernevog—there was nothing wrong with Eveshka, dammit, she was Eveshka, that was all—and there was more to her than old resentments and present pain. Even if he seemed himself somewhere to have forgotten that. He had not been able to help her. Or nothing that had happened would have happened.


You amaze me,

Che
rn
evog said.


Snake-

An odd feeling came on him then, as if Eveshka had spoken to him. He stopped Volkhi and listened to the night-sounds and listened to his heart.

He did not
like
what he was feeling. The pain in his hand was quite acute. And he had the distinct impression that Eveshka's attention had brushed past him and fled him in fear. Eveshka? he thought.

And felt Chernevog's cold touch on his arm. Chernevog's horse pressing hard against his leg, the darkened woods become a dizzied confusion to his eyes. He thought, He's killing me; and tried to free himself, but there was nothing hostile in what he was feeling, rather that the danger was elsewhere close, that Che
rn
evog was holding on to him and finding something of magic about him that Che
rn
evog did not, no more than the last time, understand or wholly trust or have words for—

But he wanted it, and the boy wanted it—

Rusalki both, he thought, and tried to get past that veil of dizziness and confusion to reach Eveshka, thought then of Sasha, and how he had continually been driven to come this way, into Che
rn
evog's reach

Things once associated are always associated—he could hear Sasha saying that. No coincidences in magic-He could hear the whole woods, hear the passage of a deer, the midnight foraging of hares and the life in the trees around him; and under it, through it, a sense of balances gone amiss, and something

He did not want to look at that. But he tried. And it made no sense to
h
im. It just was, and Che
rn
evog was there, telling him he did not have to understand, not even a wizard could, but that it was where the silence came from and where it went, and the leshys had kept it in check so long as they could—the stone and their ring and the heart of their magic, that this
thing
wanted to drink down—

The leshys were dead. The leshys had misjudged young
foolishness, and the self-will of two wizards' hearts—he had not brought Ilyana to them in time. He had not wanted to. He had loved her too much. There had always been time—next year and next.

Misighi, holding Ilyana in his huge arms

Misighi, who could break stone with his fingers, returning her so carefully, and striding away from them, never to return to the garden fence, never again that close to them—

God, what did they want? What have they done? If they wanted her, could we have stopped them?

Eveshka—would have tried. Sasha would have—I would
have—

Whatever a man could do, I'd do to get her away from that
thing. ... Whatever all of them could do, they would do to get her
back.

The world went hushed then, so abruptly it only gradually dawned on him he was hearing the wind in the leaves, and Chernevog's voice saying his name, bidding him not fall off, damn him—that he had no right to be alive, no more than they did, and that they we
re, him, and the boy and Cherne
vog together, and that they knew where they had to go—


Come
on,
dammit, Eveshka's going after her.

He found the reins somehow, he found his seat and turned Volkhi uphill, as Che
rn
evog was headed, not breakneck after the first ten strides. In the moonless dark and on this root-laddered ground, there was no hurrying—like a bad dream, in which haste could manage only a numbingly slow progress over one hill and another and onto a level stretch overgrown with trees and thorn brakes.

Bits of white horsehair hung from thorns here, and Bielitsa made one futile protest against a wizard's direction; but Volkhi went, panting now, into a barren starlit thicket with no trees to shut out the sky, with only peeling wreckage of dreadful aspect—leshys, Pyetr realized, all dead.


Eveshka!

he called into that desolation. But no answer came. They rode among dead leshys as far as the stone that
was the center and found smoking ashes beside it, where a fire had been.

That, and everything Eveshka owned, her book, her pack, and her abandoned cloak.


God,

he muttered in despair, but Chernevog wanted his attention toward a gap in the thorns, a broad pathway dark as midnight and more threatening.

Magic had made it. That was where Ilyana was, that was where, Chernevog made him believe, Eveshka had surely gone, and he had no question about following—only about his company.

 

Magic was slipping loose at every hand. Sasha felt it like pieces tumbling out of his hands and there was no way in the world to go faster. Missy was breathing like a bellows even with Nadya's lesser weight and the absence of the packs; young Patches, saddleless, with his weight and the books, Babi's vodka jug and a handful of herb-pots, was blowing lather. It was all confusion of trees and brush and dark hillsides—rough ground, and the god only knew how Nadya was managing, whether it was his distracted wishes for her safety, or her death-grip on the saddle and Missy's mane. Don't lose her, Sasha pleaded with Missy, and promised apples and carrots and every delicacy in the garden if she would only keep Nadya on her back and keep out of trouble.

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